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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-05-28 - Orange Coast Pilot'He Felt Ps1ch~· el· c Showers' '-"""'---~= • Huntington Pair~ Meson DAILY PILOT Held 0 Nixon Pla11s Clemente Work Stay? President Nixon is considering a five. day trip to San demente starting perhaps late next week in advance of the celebrated White House wedding of his daughter, Tricia, and Edward Finch Cox. Reports have come from Washinglon, D.C., in recent days that the chief ex- ecutive had been planning to exchange the hubbub of pre-wedding arrangements for a work ing va cati on at La Casa Pacifica . Mrs. Nixon fir st mentioned the chance! for the trip a y,·eek ago, but oHicial Wh ite House spokesmen would not confirm the report. Highly reliable loca l sources have said that the trip "has been kicked around'' in \Vashington for the past several days. The first lady mentioned to a While I-louse reporter that Mr. Nixon might be considering a stopover in Tulsa. Okla., on the trip west, y,·hich could take place June 5. According to in itial reports of the im- pending visit, the President would return to the capital on June 10 -well enough in advance of rehearsa ls for the wedd ing rites scheduled for the White House Rose Garden. The Nixons' last visit to the Soulh Coast was a long weekend early this month highlighted by an ornate ceremony 11t Camp Pendleton \\'here the Con1- n1andcr-ln-Chi ef greeted troops of the Isl ~1arine Division return ing from Vietnam rombal. Afler a fe1v dr izzly days. it'll be sunny and warmer for the holiday weekend. High temperatures along the coast should get up\.to 70 de· grees. INSIDE TODA\' The hifl ba 11d ar4' back at Di.~- 11 t ylo11d th.iJ 11.olido!I weekcNd ond theu've brought rhe1r /ot·o~­ itf' uocalistj w1t/1 them. Today~ \Veeke1ider lias pictures and a stor!I about Ill e bas/1 . •irttu 11 IHll'" U C•ll10r11I• I C~OKkl'" Uit f , .. .,111..i l l"" (tlftkl lJ Crwu-4 II Dt'1~ N1tk1' 11 E4llef11I l>lft ' l"l111nc1 lt•ll 14t .. .a.itl 11 .t.1111 LI.....,, 1l Mt lrlltl I Me• lft St rwlc. 11 ' • Sex Fil1n-Haid * * * 10' * * * •n FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 28, 1971 VOL. ''· 110. 111.' SECTIONS,~ l'AGES • • oar1n,__ Ill u a • Psychedelic Thrill Told ., ·ne l'lissed In Slayings I ~ By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI FACES MURDER TRIAL Suspect Gig Peters Harbour Couple, Mesa1t Arr ested On Porno Raps A Huntington Harbour couple and a. Costa ~1esa man have bee n named in co nnection y,•ith $500,000 worlh of sex ri lms and photgraphs seized Tuesday in \Vcstminster. Police said today felony complaint!! charging conspiracy to distribute and sell pornograph y would be sought against the trio as y,•el\ as 10 ''John Does." The Harbour couple, Frederick A. 1Aar. 34, (also known as Pete Voss ) and hi.s wife. Mrs. Kay Nancy Loar. 31 , (also kno1411 as Kay N. Liebfricd) of 5062 Hum- bolt Ave .. were named by police as 0y,·ncrs of th e business· where the sex materials "'ere found . The third man, Joseph Reitano, 58, of 168 Lexington Ave .. Costa Mesa, alleged- ly received some of the sex materials in a Santa Ana store he owns. Reitano is currently free on $12.500 ba il pending appeal of. his convi~tlon .in an earlier pornographic case, police said . lie also faces misdemeanor charges stem- ming from the sei7.ure of 38,000 pieces of pornographic materials ~en f\1ay 11 in r ountain Valley. Lt. Jack Shockley of Westminsler said so far there is "no connection " bely,·een the Westminster operatioo .and .the roun-. lain Valley case. ''Reitano ha ppens to be involved in bolh. bu t it is not a direct link,·• Shockley charged. The "John Doe'' warrant!! are re- quested as a prolCCtion in case in- vestigators uncover other ind1viduals as yet unknown . Shockley explained. \\'hen pol ice entered Kayna Company. 15144 Golden \Vest St. on Tuesday, they hauled out 20.500 reels or film and 300.000 photographs. Or an g e County District Al1orney Cecil Hi cks called It "the biggest haul of ~See PORNO, Paget) I 01 lllt DtllY l'lltl Stiff A stunned cou rtroom audi ence heard a former Orange County Jail inmate testily Thursday !hat Gig Peters, a former Hun- tington Beach High School honor! stu- dent. felt "psychedelic showers of golden electricity fall on his shoulders" arter allegedly murdering hus parents. Peters. 21 . appeared for a pre-trial hearing at West Orange County Judicial Di strict Court Thursday before Judge Celia Baker. He was ordered to stand trial on two charges of murder in Superior Court June II. The jail inmate. a l9-year-0ld youth with a bushy red beard and a penchant for street language neologisms. wa! iden- tHied as Fred Wheeler, a transient. He told the court that he and Peters shared an isolation cell in jail. sl\OrUy ,., after Peters was charged with strangling hi!\ mother. Flora, a teacher at Corona dct Mar's Lincoln School. and stabbing his father. Charles. April 21. "He told me he strangled his mom and stabbed his dad. in that order," Wheeler testified, tugging at his mustache. "He said it took a long time to ~et his mom dead . She scratched him and he bit her on the hand ." As Uie defendant was guarded by two bailiffs. \Vheeler further told the eourt that Peters admitted to the slaying.s almost immediately after the y became known to each other. "I asked him. 'Did you do it?' and he (See PETERS, Page ti · Rre'.nc1t Girls 'Pla y Dirty' '· .T\.tESE PATRONS SURVIVED THE FARM WORKER EXECUTIONS Suspec! In. Killings Frequented Bars Looking For Laborers ' . .. SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI ) Wino Mee•i~•g The two men who managed the \'isiting French women 's ba!lketball learn denied today lhc girls don 'l Head Count in Bonanza · f){ubhouse wash, but said they do walk around By JACK v. FOX ~here were r>4 sa loons in a 'four-block their hotel corridor.s in scanty ... ,_. th · tit t b b d YUBA CITY (UPI 1 - The y,·!nos came s1r.,1c .... · e pros u c.s g r a : e ung:r;~~~f~n director Gilbert Gon-shambl.ing into t~c Bonanza Club on D fougs~~~~.r~ r~:fr~~;5·'~:~i~~~~Y~1":~~ dal and Coach Joe Jaunay said a Street . in ~1arysv11le shorlly after 9 a.m. -sambl'lrs. lived ;rg,J(~wascno tomor ... maid's allegation that the girl's As each appeared, his fellow drif•ers let t ow. 1-r:. ,; .' , ~· · t,.,_~ : : .~\" 1 , ! don't wash wa.s untrue. out &•!ilheer. · • · 1 TIMii!!~ifs-.".lft'.~681· Lutth\!"-ibAJtM of! The girls denied it aS Y.'°e\I. "they ·· 1 ••,u-,_.c;, __ __._.__olJ.I~""~ _.;: · ". ~vi.ter·S'boo.~nlifer 6rt lh ". ci>rnmu. nf.ty said \Mf• u~ .. their ~wn "ltrwft!"'' · ",..,.,.. • ._..~ .. ralher than the hotel towel!!, and "Therc·S Al. He didn't get you. Al!" Y.hich now is staunch Rcpubhcan. h1pp1c-' l('~s and one of the most lush agricultural the hotel maids, always finding At the New Palm around the corner. areas in all the United Satrs. clean linen fn the hotel bathrooms. Rose the barmaid said one of her had jumped to the wrong con-customers always had milk in the morn· clusion. A k>cal newspaper . the Evening Jrig. But on Thursda y he ordered a double Journal. said the girls grabbed the shot of Old Crow and a beer chaser. maid who had made the remark.s Among these los t souls there was no about their not washing, stripped • dQub,t that the victims of Yuba City·s .her and scrubbed her In a bathtub . meMJtnurtkrs came from thei r ranks - The French national team ts skid row in the Ty,·in cities of ~1 arysville participating in the current sixth and Yuba City, separated by the Fealhcr worrd women'.s basketball tourna· .. Ri\ter. i · I S P I •1 1)lf! 8'JWM once \Vere 11 legend or the .__m_cn_t_n_•_0_•_•_0_· -----~ J / riJj-ro~ng "·est In the gold rush days; t , , ' • Prarhes, tomatoes. prunes, watermelons, stray,·bcrries. walnuts and almonds grow in the valley. Acre!! of lcrtfle land arc covered wlt h waler - no .. dcd paddies that look like southeas t Asia . But like the frulL murdr.r~ hnvc ~cem4 cd tn come in clusters to Cllli fornln. Cht1rlcs Manson ha.11 been convicted ot 6cvrn anrl i.s being tried for two more. Las t year Dr. Vlclor Ohta . hl.11 wHc, two IS« TRANSIENTS, Page %) I Many Grave~ Predicted; 20 So Far YUBA CITY <UPI) -The Sutler Coun-- ty sheriff said today "many'' mort graves may slill be uncovered In the erchards along the fi'ealher River where th~ bodies of 20 mass murder victim• bave already been found. Deputies using a trench digger con- tinued Lheir grim work, more than a week since the first bodies turned up and two days after Juan Corona, a 37-year~ld farm labor contractor, was arrested and charged with murder. Sheriff Roy Whiteaker, under a court erder nol lo discuss evidence, refused te give reporlers any information about how he linked Corona to the slayings o! lhe middle-aged transient farm hand!! whose hacked bodies were round in the orchards and along the river banks of this central California farming region. The sheriff, however, said he e.xpected the digging crew.s to find more bodies. They are working "in an area where there may be many graves," he said. A small "sketch or diagram '' wa.s found in Corona's home but lhe .sheriff said it was not a map to the .graves. He fiaid the sites were chosen because of in-- dent3tions in the ground. He .said he lloped that the digging was near an end but "as long as we keep makin1 recoveries we w!ll continue to search." Whiteaker refused to say whether 1 transient picked up in nearby Marysville as a material witness in the case had given any information. But he 1aid the man y,·as not in jail . Five more of the victims were te~ talively idCntificd . The sherirf said they were Don Smith, of Atlanta , Ga.: Bill Kemp, Baton Rouge. La.; James Howard , Jonas Smallwood and Elliott Riley, for whom no home cities were known . Earlier lwo victims \vere identified as Kenneth Edward Whita cre. 40, ol Alameda, Calif, and Sigurd Beirman 63 pf Marysville. · · ' All the •ictims were between 40 and 63 yea rs old and ,were believed to be transient farm workers. One may have been' a Negro but the others were .all ''anglos." \Vhitaker said he had determined RO special significance 10 the fact that none or the victims were Mexicans like Corona. • Cnrona, rat~eF of four small girls, was arre5le<I earl,Y Wednesday .after the ninth ,body•hikt ~ unearthed. Court record!! show Corona was com· mitted by a brother to a slate mental hospital for three month! in 1956 as being "cOt1fused and diso riented . . . (suf· fcringJ delusions and hallucinations." Psychiatrists diagnosed him as 1 schizophrenic. He was released from. De witt State •lospital at Auburn, Ca!U., as ·'recovered'' on April 18, 1956. Officials have not dlsclO.!led any ap. p1'rent motive for the slayings. Depulies. using a trench dlgginl bnckhoe al times and puffing cigars te kill the steneh of dead bodies, rtmoved the hacked remains from shallow grave1 Into hearses for transpon le a mortuary In neighboring Marysville. • ' 1 I I \ ! • z DA.IL Y PILOT s Reds Fight Hard Battle lnCamoodia SAIGON (AP) -North and South Vie~ namese forces clashed bloodily for the third straight day in eastern Cambodia today and the Saigon command claimed control or the bomb blasted town or Snuol. Al the same lime, new battles flared in the central highlands of South Vietoam and near the A Shau Valley in the coun- try's e1.plosive northern sector. The South Vi,tnamese claimed 403 ~emy troops killed in the three-front fighting, a claim Open lo some doubl Only a relatively few enemy weapons -21 by official count -were recovered from the battlefield!. Jn addition, many cf the clailned North Vietnamese dead ~·ere killed by allied air strikes and artillery. The count was based on reports from aerial oMervers, and thus was an esitrQate at besl Agllinllt these claims. South Viet.. namese IGSSts were reporttd officially as 12 killed and 52 wounded. Field reports told of a hlgher 'toll, notably in the fighting ln eastern Cambodia. This fia;bting centered at Snuol, a small rubber plantation town 10 miles west of the South Vietnamese border and 90 m!lu north bf Saigon on Highway 7. ·J\.tany of Snuol'a few hundred houses were de6ttoyed or damaged a year ago durtng the big U.S. South_ Vietnamese drive into eastern cambod1a and more destruction came in the latest fighting: The town has been contested since 'Vednesday morning when a 500 man North Vietnamese force attacked the South Vietnamese defenders inside Snuol and at four points close by. The North Vietnamese reached Snuol's market place, but the South Vietnamese r eported they regained control Thursday aflernoon although conceding that small pockets 0{ enemy troops were still there. Marine Admits Attack on Girl; A waits Sentence' A camp Pendleton f\farine arrested in San Clemente on allegations that be raped a 14-year-0ld girl in a motel room afu:.r the child's mother encouraged the ~ua\ assault has pleaded guilty to ra_pe charges in Orange County Superior Court. Judge. Byron K. M~r..t illan ordered ?.1arine Robert Dean Smith, 21 , to ret~n to his courtroom June 14 for sentencing that could put him in stale prison for ~be next to years. He called for a probation department report on the young defen- dant. 'The victim's 53-year-0ld mother is cur· rently undergoing psychiatric: testing and is due to be returned before Judge McMillan for further court action June 15 She also faces rape charges. San Clemente police said the woman took Smith and her daughter to a local motel room and actively tncouraged the f\iarine to rape the girl with a view of ••calming her down ." Officers said_ the girl was raped on at least t:w'o occasions. both of which were sanctioned by her mother. Police were alerted to the incidents by the \'ictim"s sister. who allcged}y told ?f· ficers that the Marine v.·as a family friend who was talked into the sexual at· tacks on the daughter by her mother. It is alleged that Smith took the mother's auto and credit cards after committing the second offense against the girl. He was found asleep in the car in Gila, Ariz .• and retumed to Camp Pendleton authorities for prosecution. DAILY PILOT OllANCit: COAST l"UIL1~1NG COMl"AN'( l•lt•rf N. W•H Prn lllltnt •M •lilllllttw J•c.\ It. C url•'!' ~ p,_ld.nl •"' G-11 MIMIW 1k1m11 ic •• .,a l:•!11t Tk•••t. A. Mur,lri!Re ...... llll!ft9 15.dflOr Ch•rl•• H. l 11111 l lc.lriartl '· N•ll NtlOl~I ~IMflll<lt l dllol'a ....... 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""9crTlllWI "' """" U,IS _,"'111 W l'l\tll 11.IJ ~"' "'1nt•rr 'Wa1,,..,,.,..., u.n '"911111•1· Friday, May 28, 1971 DAILY PILOT St•ff PllOll Fron• Page 1 TRANSIENTS MEET . • • children and ;i SC<.'rctary were slain and t.ossed into their swimming pool in Santa Cruz. San Francisco's Zodiac Killer - still uncaught -claims something like a. doien vic tims. BODY AFIER BODY But even I.hose gory heights were soal- ed this week when sheriff's deputies, wearing gauie masks and puffing cigan: to reduce the stench, dug up body after body on the ranch of Jack Sullivan five miles north of Yuba City. from neat graves strung for half a mile on the riverbank beneath a prune orchard . One man had 32 cents in his pockets, another $9. The remainder had no wealth. One had a temporHry drive r's license. Another had a wrist band from a ~ital Bnd a social secu rity ca rd. One w iden· tified because two or his toes were iss· Ing. One man had on three pairs of trousen:. One man was nude except for • shirt. They lay on their backs, their arms above their heads. Most had their shirts pulled up over their fa ces. All were Laken to the Twin Cities Mortuary which ordinarily handle s one deat.h a week. Identification was gruesome and grim. Some were men nobody wanted and nobody missed. Some had isolated lhemselve~ from their families for years. others went into the: labor cOntr1cllq business. In the central valley migrant workl'!rs are a nl'!Cessity for the land- owners. The transients range from about 2,000 in !he winter months to 20,000 when the peaches end other crops are In harvest Mexican nationals wllh "gretn cards" sy,·arm into the area in the summer. But when the orchards need pruning and thin· ning, the contractors seek out the •·toca!s" and the best source11 are the hars on Marysville's skid row where on a sober day a man can pick up $20. That was Corona 's calling. By word of mouth. Mexican workers came to him. But in the duller seasons, he spent much lime in the Bonanza Club, the ~ew Palm and the other dives of a miniature Bowery. He was there on business ac· cording to the men who knew him, ht never took a drink, he never smoked . One man v.·ho knew him well ill Ted Ramirez a barber of Mexican e•lraction v.•ho is married to a girl named MacKenzie. a descendant of the Stuart clan. Like all barbers, Ramirez: likeii to talk. II QUIET FELWW "He was a quiet fellow," Ramirez said. '"He would sit and shoot !he breeze. But then suddenly you'd be oU on an entirel1. different direction In the convtrsalion. AWARD CALLED A CROWNING ACHIEVEMENT TO A FINE JUDICIAL RECORD J~ge Brute Sumner, C'1ief Justice Traynor and Judge Franklin G. West "It really grabs you v.·hcn some guy·s wife calls from Me:ii:ico or Arkansas and asks if we have found their husband -a man they haven't heard from for a year or so," said a sheriff's deputy. "They v.·a nt to know and then again, they don't want lo know ." The first body was discovered on r.Iay 20 by a Japanese Farmer named Goro Kagehiro. He noti ced a hole in an orchard , and when he came back that evening he found a mound of fresh earth, He dug and found a body. He reported it to the Sutler County Sheriffs Office. "He v.·ould be in here llhe Bonanza) 11' the morning asking if anyone wanted to pick up a few bucks in the orchards. Maybe four guys would say 'okay' an d they would pile into that red and white pickup of his and go off. '"Then someti mes he would come in late at night and line up guys to work the next day. He never got in arguments. I knew him and all his brothers. They i;tarted leaving about two years ago." Judge, Bruce Sumner Receives Bar Tribute Nearly 200 Orange County judges and lawyers gave Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner a tremendous ovation Thursday when the Laguna Beach jurisl accepted the annual Franklin G. West award from its previou11 recipient, retired Ca\irornia Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Traynor. Watched by retired Superior Courl Judge Franklin. G. Wesl, the jurist whose name "'as given lo the Orange County Bar Association 's yearly tribute. Judge Sumner told the Santa Ana meeting that her.as "deeply grateful that my work on the California Constitutional Revision Commission has been so recognized." "I could not but be impressed by your tremendous record in other fields." he was told by Justice Traynor. "You have served three times in the Legislature. part of that time as a Republican whip. you have a g1orious war record and you have served faithfully as a public defender. "'This can only be a crowning achieve- ment in such a fine record," the former chief justice said. The legend on the handsome silver tray presented to Judge Sumner records that he was the runaway choice of the bar association as ··an ind i\'idual who has made a significant contribution to ad· vance and elevate justice and law." HC' v.•as named to the \Vest award alter the bar recognized that lhe commission on v.•hich he presently serves as chairman has deleted some 30,000 words from a California Constitution that one! contained 80.000 words. He v.•as recently honored by both houses of the Lcgi~lature ror his work on a commission that is now concluding the work it began in 1964 . Deeply moved. Judge Sumner asked 1he meeting lo recognize that some 60 Californians had worked with him on the commissioo and that his fellow judges on the Superior Court had v.·i11ingly stepped in lo help him out when his duties took him to Sacramento. "Our work on the commission is nearly complete' but v.·e have many other things to consider in the field of rtvislon." Judge Sumner said. "I am sure that with the kind or support t have enjoyed these other issues will be similarly resolved." Mesa Housewife Surprises Burglar, Tied, Assaulted Running back inside to call a garage for a stalled car. a Costa Mesa v.·oman surprised a burglar Thursday, who grab· bed, bound, blindfolded and raped her on the bedroom fl oor. 'The 25-year-old victim sai d she kept calm and reasonable out of fear for her life and was not otherwise injured. She.called police to the 200 block of Knox Street shortly before noon to report the incident. after the stocking-masked intruder fled and sbe worked loose from his adhesive tape bindings. Officer Charles P. Hamilton sa\d the victim had left for work al 10 a.m .. but her car wouldn't start She told of asking a neighbor for help. but he was too busy, so she v.·ent into !be howe again and had dialed tv.•o digits o! Over 50 Linked To Drug Counts By Grand Jrn·y :r..1ore than 50 persons. many of them juveniles, were indicted today on na rcotics charges by the Orange Coun ty c:rand Jury in th e \\'ake of mass arrcs1s bv Fullerton police . ·Twenty-four of the defendants named bv the investigative panel had been ar· rfsted by noon today. It is expected that several of them will be arraigoerl lo Superior Court this afternoon and Tues- day. All Uie adult defendants alrc:uly under arrest hall from Fullerton, An11heim. Buena Park. Placentia, Yorba Linda 11nd Garden Grove. ln,·estigators refused to release detail! on indictces currently being 50Ugh t by police in at least se\"cn Orange County ('(Immunities. Investigators said co nsiderable quan- tities of narcotics had been confisca ted 1n the three·month invest1gat1on by Fullerton polict that preceded lhe Jn· dlctmenl. The final tally nf the drugs seized and the defend~nts involvrd m:iy \\·ell makt1 tht drug round up one of lhll larges1 in county history. they said. Fullerton police and n11rrnt1cs in. • vestigators from the districl altnrnry·" office co!laboraied in 1hc thrl'C·lnonth probt th at produced today·$ 1ndictmen i... the garage number when suddenly grab· bed from behind. ··rm sorry you walked in at a time like this." sbe quoted the husky. 20ish. mask· ed burglar as say ing. The v.·oman said she \\"as forced to her knees, v.·i th a three-fool strip of tape bin· ding her hands in front and patches plac- ed over her eyes. Guiding her into the bt'droom. the burglar disrobed the helpless v.·o man. pushed her to the floor atop t\\·o pil!ov.·s and completed the assa ult. She sa id the rapist expressed both regret, fear of a seven-year prison sentence and a conflicting feeling about it. ··1 get sort of a kick out of Ibis," she quoted him as saying during the act. The victim said a woman neighbor came lo the window at one point to ask if i:.he had contac!€d a garage lo start her car. She said ~he considered crying for help. but her captor made it menacingly clear rh1s \\'ould be da ngerous. although she didn 't know if he V.ilS armed. From Paye l PETERS ... said 'Sure'," \\lherler told the court. in· dica11ng thal Peters appeared to he ~waying and 5himmying 10 imaginary 1nusic during the conversation. "He said after he stabbed, his dad. he \\·as getting a real buzz on. lie said he felt psychedelic showers of golden elec· tnc1ty fall on his shoul ders after he did ii . I asked him if he was loaded and he ~aid he v.·as loaded on acid for eight n1onths, but not then." Fron• Page l POR NO ... pornography e,·er made in the coun ty." He also ,·owe11, '\\"e're not gning to lt?t th is rounty ~conlf" a d1stribulion cen ter for obs~ne m.1terial." Police described the mo\'ies and photos found ln Westmlnster as "hRrd core pornography sho\\'1ng cxpliclt sex 11cl!." They are In black and "'hile, :ind the movies are the type shov.·n at stag parties or peep shov.·s. police said. -~~~~~~~~~- Atkins Pleads Guilty in Death Of Musician LOS ANGELES iAP) -Susan Den ise Atkins, sentenced to death in lhe slayings of actress Sharon Tate and six others, has pleaded guilty to killing a musician. A judge immediately sentenced her lo li fe imprisonment. The slender brunette. her head shaved anrl tbe faint "X" symbol of the Charles Manson clan scratched on her forehead, changed her plea of innocent Thursday in Superior Court. "She is a person who would be dangerous to lhe community," said Judge Raymond Choate. "She should spend the entire term of her life in custody.·· Miss Atkins, 23, who testified at the Tate trial that she killed musician Cary Hinman two years ago. v.·as about to be tried wit h r..1anson and another of the cult leader's followers for the murder when she sv.·it ched her plea, Trial proceedings !hen were delayed. Hinman. of r..tal ibu, v.·as slain at his home. Another Manson clan member. Robert Beausoleil, 24, was convicted and M!ntenced to death last year for the kill- ing. One of the reasons members or the r..tansoii hippie style "family " killed ~1iss Tate lwo weeks later, the district at- torney has said, was to free Beausolei l from custody. Authorities described !he Tate slayings as similar in appearance lo the Hinman death -an apparent allempl to make police think Beausoleil was in· nocent. Eise nhower Sets Ont :Fo r l\f editerranean \\1AS HINGTON" IAP) -Ens. navid Eisenhower. President Nixon's son in law. departs today for service aboard the ~uided missile cruiser Albany, scheduled 10 \"!Sit the Mediterranean during the next {\YO months. SECOND BOD'' f ive days passed and then Roy Duron, a foreman at the Sullivan Ranch, was trild by one of his laborers that while discir(: the rO\lo'S bet ween the prune trees he noliced an indentation . Detective Sgt. John Purcell and Detective Jerry Gregory \\"enl to lhe scene and found a 11econ d body. It rained and rained on Tuesd ay. but in tbe downpour and on through the nigh1 , and into the next day. and the next, deputies dug up bodies. So1ne v.·ere in a p€ach orchard, the others in the soft loam of the Feather River bank, in graves 312 root deep and 6 reet long. The victims had been hacked lo death by a machete or heavy knife. The fatal blow v.·as at the back of the neck. All v.·ere men. They ranged in age from 40 to 63. At 4:30 JI ·~·· Wednesday, sheriff's deputies v.?'.t to the home or Juan \'eilliho Cc 1\1, 37, in a quiet street of i;;mall horn Jin Yuba City. It is a wood house of beige colo r with a brick frontplace . A plaster angel two feet high stands on the cement porch. Corona answered the door. He Is a good.looking J\.1exican, one inch short of six feet. He weighs 200 pounds and his black hair is parted in the middle. His wife Gloria is about 40. They have four daughters. Corona speaks fair English. hi s wife almost solely Spanish. WENT QUIETLY The officers told him he was charged \\'it h murder. Corona pulled on his gray \1·ork pants, cowboy boots and a green S"-'ealer • ..He went along quietly. \\/hen the patrol car arrived at the courthouse. a sta lely white build ing with columns that could pass for a southern mansion. officers gave him a blanket to put over his head to thwart nev.·s photographers. Corona is ont of five brothers who came to this area from Jalisco, ~1exico, the first in the early 1940s. The big thing then \\·as lhe Bealt Army Camp. then a staging area and nov.· a large Air Force base. 0Ae of the brothers opened a bar. The Corona's attorney is Roy J. Van Der 11euvel. He is a public defender in Sutter County and also has practiced law here for the past six yea rs. Van Der Heuvel, allhougll refusing to discuss material fa cts in the cue under a court gag order, shook things up a bit on the day of his appointment by saying: "They have the wrong man." Sheriff Roy Whitea ker is convinced they have the right man. \\lhiteaker is 31, one of the youngest Jaw enforcement officers ever to ho!d such a post. He also Is the coroner for Sutter County, although a pathologist pe rformed the autopsies. "This is the rnan.'' Whiteaker said. He said that before Yuba City Judicial Court Judge J. J. Hankins ordered everyone to clam up about the killing. That order has left ne\lo'Smen scratching in vain about a motive. SCHIW PHRENIC According to court records. Corona had spent three months in the Dewitt State Hospital at Auburn, Calif., in 1956. Sul· fering from "delusions .and hallucina· tions'' arid was diagnosed as a 11chizophrenic. He was released three months later as recove red. One of the first two bodies identified v.·a~ that of Sigrid Emil Beierman, 63. of r.1arysville. Police said Beierman last 11i·as seen entering a 1970 van driven by Corona. This report was checked ou t after Beierman was reported missing several weeks ago, then it was dropped until his body was round. It apparently helped lea d Sutter County officers to Corona. although they, under the court order, would not say so. One of Corona's brolhers. Pedro, did not leave the area when the others did. He described Juan as "the best brother I have. He sends money every week to our mother in Autlan and takes care of any of the brothers who come up here." Juao·s wife Gloria, through ao In· terpreter, said he "always treated me right and never was violent ~·ilh me or our four children.'' She shook her head ."I'll never believe th is." she said. •·1 can't understand ii.'' The district attorney, who eventually will prosecute the case. is another young man. His name is D. Dave Teja . Ht Is o( East Indian descendant. savvy, cooJ. exforb ~uart ~~ -·--- CAMPAIGN DESK 379. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HER ITAGE NEWJ'OIT STOii Oftl.N ,llDA.Y 1"fl t NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Westcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Professional Interior O.tlgners Av1ll1bla -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 34S North Coast Hwy. Phone: •9U55 I 'h•M T•ll "-Melt ef O,_,e C_..,_.-40.1161 > • :: " ·, :: • • • • ., . . ,, I • .....,.c_o_ • • ... 7 -- Huntington Beaeh Foun-tain Valley VOL 64, NO. 127, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA OU ur er ' 'Many More' Due? Yuba City Body Count Hits 20 YUBA CITY fUPl) -The Sutter Coun- ty sheriff said today "many" more graves may still be uncovered in the orchards along the Feather River where the bodies of 20 mass murder victims have already been found. Deputies using a trench digger con- tinued their grim work, more than a Harbour Pair Face Sex Fil r11 Counts A Huntington Harbour couple and a Costa t.1esa man have been named in connection with $500,000 worth of sex films and photgraphs seized Tuesday in Westminster. Police said today felony complaints charging conspiracy to distribute and sell pornography would be sou~t against the trio as well as 10 "John Does." The Harbour couple,· Frederick A. Loar, 34, (also known as Pete Voss) and his wife, Mrs. Kay Nancy Loar, 31, (alao known as Kay N. Liebfried) of sod Hum- bolt Ave., were named by police as owners of the business where the sex materials were found. The third man, Joseph Reitano, 58, or 168 Lexington Ave., Costa Mesa, alleged- ly received some of the sex ma lerials in 11 Santa Ana store he owns. Reitano is currently free on $12,500 bail pending appeal o~ his conviction in an earlier pornographic case, police said. He also faces misde meanor charges stem· ming from the seizure of 38,000 pi~s of pornographic materials taken Pi-1ay 11 in Fountain Valley. ti. Jack Shockley of Westminster said so far there is "no connection" belWttn the Westminster operation and the Foun- tain Valley case. '"Reitano happens lo be involved in both. bu t it is not a direct link." Shockley charged . The ''John Doe'' warranlS are re- quested as a protection in case in- vesligators uncover other individuals as )'Ct unknown, Shockley explained. \Vhen police entered Kayrus Company. 15144 Golden \Vest St. on Tuesday. they hauled out 20,500 reels of film and 300,000 photographs. Or an g e County District Attorney Cecil Hicks called It ''the biggest haul of pornography ever made in the county." He also vowed, '\Ve're not going to let th is county become a dis1ribulion center ror obscene material." Police described the movies and photos round in \Vestminster as "hard core pornography showing explicit sex acts." They are in black and white, and tht movies are the type shov.'TI at slag parties or peep shows, police said. Recall Petition Found Com plete In Seal Beach A recall petition against Seal Beach Cily Councilman Thomas Hogard has been certified as complete by City Clerk Jerdys \Veir. Proponents of the recall agai nst Hogard had been given a JO.day extens'°n last month to muster the necess8ry &ignatures for the petition. Mrs. Weir reported that the petition contains 543 valid signatures. Only 490 were needed lo 'Set 1 recall election. It Is expected that the date for Uie elec- tion v.·ilJ be established at the June 7 c:ouncil meeting when the certified 11gnatures v.•ill be surrendered by ti.fn. Wrir. llogard's rl?(ail stems from actions he and 1wo othi!r councilmen. Morton A. Baun1 11nd Conv.·ay Funrman (already recalled), took as a three-way voling m11- jorlly. Recall drives against all three were J;iunchcd when they voted to fire City ~tanager Lee Ri sner last summer. BBum races a rccall eltttlon July 20. "·eek since the first bodies turned up and two days after Juan Corona, a 37-year-old farm labor contractor, v.·as arrested and charged v.•ith murder. Sheriff Roy Whiteaker, under a court order not to discuss evidence, refused to give reporters any inform ation about how he linked Corona to the slayings of the middle-aged transient farm hands whose hacked bodies voere found in the orchard! and along the river banks or this central California farming region. The sheriff, however, said he expected the digging crews to find more bodies. They are working ''in an area where there may be ma ny graves," he said. A small "sketcn or diagram" was found in Corona's home but the sheriff said it was not a map to the graves. He said the sites were chosen because of in- dentations in the ground. lie said he hoped that the digging was near an end but ··as long as we ketp making recoveries "'e will continue to search." \\'hiteaker refused to say whether a transient picked up in nearby A-1arysville as a material witness in the case had given any information. But he said the man was not in jail. Five more of the victinu were ten- tatively identified. The sheriff said they were Don Smith, of Atlanta, Ga .: Bill Kemp, Baton Rouge, La .; J ames HoWard, JOna1 Smallwood and Elliott Riley, for whom no home clUH were known. Earlier two victims were identified as Kenneth Edward Whitacre, 40, of Alameda, Calif., and Sigurd Beirman, 63 of Marysville. ENZYME ' ANALYST BEDARD COLLECTS SCIENCE HONORS HUntingtori Beach Girl, 14, W1nt1 to be• Surgeon All the victims were between 40 and 63 years old and were believed to be transient farm workers. One may have been a Negro but the others were all "anglos." Whitaker said he had determined 'u> specia l significance to the fact that none of the victims were Me1icans like Corona. Enzyme Expert Huntington Girl Wins. Sweepstakes Corona, father of four small girls. was arrested early Wednesday after the ninth body had been unea rthed. Court records show Corona was com· (See BODlES, Page !I Legal Help, Set By Free Clinic The free clinic of liuntington Beach will be offering legal aid as part of Its regular program, according lo Mrs. Hannab Alekoumbides. spokesman fo r the clinic. Legal aid will be provided by a local at- torney every other Tuesday from 6 p.m. to IO p.m. at the clinic, 222 5th St. Th e service was introduced this week. Mrs. Alekoumbides said the clinic has received $250 from the Huntington Beach Assistance League. The money will pay one month's rent. The clinic has been operating since April. The Communications Workers o f America. local 9510, also has joined the list of donors by givlng an examination table to the clinic and by providing a monthly donation of $25, she said. By TERRY COVILLE Of lllt D1i1Y 1"!'-1 Sti lt An apple a day may keep the enzymM In play. Thal simple, but serious warning comes from 14-year-old Pam Bedard. who just v.·on the sweepstakes trophy in the state science fair for her study of enzymes. "Enzymes are catalysts necessary for chemical reactions in the bod.v, such as the digestive process of breaking do\11n food," explains the Ocean View School District's young researcher. "People should eal more ra"' food . lt"s high in enzymes." But put down soft drinks, forget about night time pain relievers and be\\'are of aspirin products -they kill enzymes. Pam, an eighth grade student at Meadow View School. Huntington Beach. spent seven months tracing the affects of heat and chemicals on enzymes in prepared food. She wrote 43 letters of inquiry lo food companies and researchers; she con- ducted fi ve heat and chemical ex· ptrime'nts, and she made an 82-pa1;e logbook of her study. Pam found that canned foods have no enzymes and cerlain products such as Coca Cola, Excedrin and Anacin, kill enzy mes in the body. "I found that when food is processed in heat .above 120 degrees its enzymes are dead. Canned food is processed and pack· ed al 18ll degrees," she explained. She arrived at her conclusion ·oo heat through ;in experiqient with fresh. pineap- pli! ahd Jello. "I sub jected slices ofJresh pine.apple to various temper-atures then , placed the sllces in Jello to see if the Je'no would ~ct," she related, ''Pineapple slices that faced temperatur~s above 120 degrees allowed the Jello to set." Each Jello package says don't use with fresh pineapple. The reason is simple. Pineapple h.as an enzyme ca I I e d Bromelain which breaks down the protein in Jello and stops its hardening process. Pam found that temperatures above 120 degrees killed the Bromelain and allowed the Jello to set. Canned pineapple also features no Bromelain. "The . ~lflount or enzyme destruction depends on the heat and length of lime (See ENZYMES, P•ge %) Beach Cof C Tight Lipped ' Wlio's Financing Huntuigton Municipal Study? By ALAN DlRKIN lndications are that about half the 01 ~ 0.11, l"ll1t s11t1 _ amount has been raised so far. The Chamber of Commerce will not President Allen Klingensmith said that reveal any specific Information on ~ho is · "a tremendous number of buslnesse.s, paying for a $9,500 study of Huntington representing a real wide variety of the Beach's municipal finances. membership" had responded to an appeal The 90-day study by Ernst and Ernst or for contributions. Santa Ana.bas been given the unanimous t Peter Horton. last yea r'! chamber backing or the city council. president and head or the committee that 'The financial analysts have betn • picked Ernst and Ernst, commented, ;i;ssigned the task of examining the city'! ' "'The feeling of the ·boaPd wa"S not to put current fis-cal picture and proposing a • O\ll any information on the St\ldy until we five-year financial plan based on hnve something to talk about." estimated income and expenditures. !!orion said that. although l~ chamber Chamber offi cials were asked for in-was sponsoring the analysis. Ernat and rormalion on the numbtr of member~ Ernst had been in structed to regfrd the sponsoring the study, IJleir nam es and cily 11s ilS client. He said that this meant their contribution!. but the board nf that preliminary and rlnat re?C)rts on lhe direclors opposed the release o( this In-1tujly would be given to t~e city council formation. and staff as: well as w the cbamber. ''All aspects of the exercise are to be treated as client confidential." he added. "Whatever is made pub_llc will be largely op lb the councU and ·ciiy ttaff." · 11\e study beg;in. this· rrionth ·and representatives from · Ernst . and Ernst· have a ti ended thrtt city ·council blKSget study '1ts.sions. · • 1'bc budget will be ·examihed· again by the city council in a meeting in the coun- cil chambers at 7 p.m. Tuesday. • Councilmen will Weigh cuts sua~ested by City Administrator Doyle Miller to wipe out a projected $552,000 deficit. Among !he recommended cyts are 11 ''5.500 slice from the. U~rary fund Md $71.000 from lhe parU program-coupled with the transfer of monies from other funds to Ule a:encra.L ope/atlng fu.ncL -• ·- FRIDAY, Mlj-Y 28, 1971 • r1 ' Ex-cellmate Of Suspect Testifies By RUDI NIEDZIEU!KI Of l'llf O.llY f'llel li.H A 1tuMed courtroom audience heard a former Orange County Jail inmate testify Thursday that Gig Peters, a former Hun· tington Beach High School honors stu• dent , felt "psychedelic showers of golden electricity fall on his sbouldtr:s" after 1llegedly murderin.-his pare11ts. Peters, 21, appeared for a pre-trial hearing at West Orange County Judicial District Court Thursday before Judge Cella Baker. He was ordered to stand trial on two charges of murder in Superior Court June 11. The jail inmate, a 19-year~ld youth with a bushy red beard and a penchant for street language neologism!, was iden· Ufied as Fred Wheeler, a transient. He told the court that he and Peters shared an iso lation cell in jail shortly after Peters was charged with strangling his mother, Flora, a teacher at Corona del Mar's Lincoln School, and stabbing his father, Charles, April 21. "He told me he. strangled his mom and stabbed hi.1 dad, in that order," Wheeler tesli!ied, tugging at his mustache. "H• !lid it took i Jong Ume to get his mom dead: She scratched him and ht bit her on the hand." . Al lllf dd'11dant WU fUl~ed by two boi1Ul1, Wheoltr lurthtr told the eourt that Peters· admitted to the tllying1 almost immediatdy after they became known to each othtr. ... • "I asked him, 'Did You dcl ,it?' and he said 'Sure!," Wheeltr told Ult .,..n. fn. dkalJnC that Peters appemd to be awaying and 1bimmyinc to Jma&ftWy music during the conver1aOon. "He said after ht stabbed his did, he was getting a real buu on. He aaid be felt psychedelic showers of golden elec· tricity fall on hi.II shoulders after he did it. 1 asked him if he was loaded and he said he was loaded on acid for eight months, but not then." Peters, who wa! being defended by Los Angeles attorney Barry Tarlow, respond- ed to the courlroom drama with cryptic 1milu. At ·one point he turned in his swivel chair to 1mile at the aud ience but was lm111ediately tw'ned around by 1 bailiff. "He alw1ys smiles. he 1ays that'• his psychological advantage over thf: cops, because no matter what they do, they can't tear his spirit down ," Wheeler told the court. Other testimony offered by Whetler linked Peters to a bii arre revolutionary philosophy which w<1uld have 30,000 Red Chinese invading the country at any mo- ment . ''He thought about It (the killings) for two years. He wanted to do them a favo r so they wouldn 't have to go through the (See PETERS, P11e ZI Beach Trustees Filing Lawsuit Against Teacher A Huntingto11 Be.ach High School teacher suspended last month after he allegedly 1pe.nt a night In Las Vegas with a 16-ycar~ld female student he later· married is named as defendant in an Orange County Superior Court suit filed by district trustees. The action authorized by the. Hun· Ungto"n Beach Union High School District board now seeks the dismissal of Clarence L. Netwig, 47, a counselor at the high school. Net wig, who once worked as an ... In· structor in industrial 1rta at the same. school, was 1~pended for "Immorality, pe:nls~t violaUon of rules and unrltness for service" April 13 afttt the board heard charges that be took the IS.year-old girl with him to Las Vegas March 10. ~ suape.nslon al Netwig; 6451 Vatche.r Drive Huntington B!aeh," wu confirmed by th< board April 21 an.r a h•aring into the ,allegations filtd a~a.inst him. DI.strict Sijperfntendent J1ck S. Roper was not available tor copunen~ tod1y. Deputy County Counl•I R. R , F.n~ebretsen today confitmed t h a t Net wig is now mArried · to the 1tudenl n11med In lhe Superior Court petition filed by his office. Engebrctstn tit.plained that the lawsuit Is part or the process re.quired by Ca'ifornia law for dismissal of a tertlflcated employe. • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS 0 FACES MURDER TRIAL Suspect Gig Peters Huntington Man Bound, Robbed Of $445 in Crush A re tired Huntington Beach resident "A'ho was asked for help by a stranded tl)Otorlst, was bound and robbed in his homt by the man and a companion Thursday morning. Polict said the victim, Tom McBride, 65, of 6242 Chele Circle, reported the loss of $4.55 in cash-after the two meu ransacked his home. McBride told officers fle answered hi1 doorbell at about JO a.m. and was con- fronted by a man who told him his car had broken down and asked to use th e phone. Wh en the man told him the phone was broken and attempted to shut the door, the motorist and a companlon shov· ed it open forcing their way Into the house. The first man pull ed out a revolver and ordered McBride into the bedroom. McBride told police he made a Junge. for his son's dii/ing knife which was lying nearby, but his assailants stopped him. They forced him into the bedroom where they bound him and tied him to the bed with a sheet. Police said the men at- tempted lo gag McBride, but he tol d them, "I have cancer and you 'll have a murder on your hands." They left him with a set or pajama lops covering his 'head and ransacked the house. McBride said the money was in his pants pocket. After the men left. the victim freed himself from the bed and still bound. crawled next door where neighbors freed him and called police. The two bandits are both described as male Caucasians in their mid-twenties to early thirties. One, who was called Deke had a thin face, long dark hair and a medium build. police report. The other was or a stocky build with an Afro hair style. Teen Vote Measure PROVIDENCE CAP) -Rhode Island T1iursday became the 30th state to ratify the proposed amendment to the U.S. Con- slitutiOJI to all ow 18 year olds to vote in all election s. Ora~~oan l\'eather After a few drizzly days, it 'II be sUnny and warmer for the holiday weekend. High temperatures along the coast should get up to 70 d~ grees. INSIDE TODAY. Tht big barid art back ot DU· ne.yland thU holiday Wttkend and thet1'ut brought their favoY· itt vocalists wit? them. Toda11'1 Wtt~tndcr ha& pictures at1d a story obout the ba.sh. lll"tttt It INtlllt 11 c.111 .... 11 • -~=~:. u, 11..! '""l(t u Cl9n""""' 11 Oc11• Nt~I 11 l!dtt11111 ..... • •lflMCt 1'·11 ....__ 1• AM l 1Jlt.n It #MIQlel f Mlft hi l•l'\'ICI 11 -..... MV111ll ''""' Ml Nll!Mal II'°" W Or1"tt .Cllf"ll~ If .,..,.,,,".. ·~u •-r. , ... ,, Sl9ck Mu·111tt »t1 Ttt.wltlt• i1 Tk1lfl"I tf·tt Wlllfltr 4 ~-tn'ltfll·1 ,..., 1)-14 "I"" ,,....,, ... WNlltNtt tWI ) I I \ I ( ~ DAIL V PJLOl H Fro"' Page I PETERS ... revolution. He IO\'ed 1bem," commented the former Inmate. "He said he y.•anted to come back to trial. HI! wanted the publicity, He wanttd to Jell ute world about the revolUUon. He told me be alroody hid his 1tai.ment for the jury." Earlier, Peters younger brother, Peter J. Peters, tt>ld Judge Baker that his brother bad confessed to the murders alter he awoke on April 21. "He held me by the arms and said, •Petey, 1 just killed Mom aRd Daddy,'" sobbed the lJ..year old youngster, "He said there was going to be a war goon and be was sending Mom to heaven and ptJl DJd O\U of his mi~ry." During that alleged conversation, Gig Peters supposedly had "a far ay.·ay look in his eyes ." according to the younger brother'5 testimony. Peter Peters. who is now in the custody (lf an aunt and uncle, said be tried to go to his parents' room that morning but found tbe door lockect. AA he wu getting dressed, be heard something that sound- ed like a yell or a moan. Later, Gig also was to have told his f)ther brother, Tony, 17, about the double murder. ·•1 beard Gig say·to him. 'If you'd been taking LSD like I have, you're commHted against the human race,' '' Peter told the court. f"rlday, May 28, lC)7l Ul"I Telfflllltl Tony Peters made a short appearance In the prisoner's box Thursday. He was bound by a straightjacket after allegedly biting and kicking bailiffs wtien he was ~Id he would have to testify, Tony, who is facing juvenJle charges as an &e· cessory to the crime, was not called te the stand, however. Before Gig Peters was bound over for trial, his defense attorney sald doct-Ors had examined the defendant and COD- i;idered hlm capable to stand trial. Tarlow added, though, that the 1ame physicians considered him in.sane at the time of the alleged 1laylngs. THESE PATRONS SURVIVED THE FARM WORKER EXECUTIONS Suspect In Kiiiings Frequented Bar• Looking For L1bortr1 While being held In jall, Pet.rs was a~ Jeged to have engaged in continuous rou- tines of aberrant behavior, according to 1he testifying inmate. He was alleged to ha ve bounced his eyebrows, kick his foot into the wall, and engage in unorthodox: tneditations. Peters was arrested by Huntington Beach Police at the Tijuana border one day after the bodles of the couple were found dead at their 301 Lincoln Ave , home. Tarlow had surrendered Peters and his 22 -ye ar-old girlfr iend, Anne Bartholome\11', arter an all-points bulletin had bee1:1 issued for Peters throughout the western states. 1.fiss Bartholomew, originally charged but later released, sat in tbe audience throughout t.be preliminary bearing. Dressed ln brown pants with a peace aymbol belt and a white T·shlrt bearing clasped hands and the i!Jslgnia "Holding Together," she gazed at Peters for several minutes at t.be close of the .bear- ing. Separated by the prisoner's box and a barrier, Peters responded with. a pr~ longed smile and a soundless "Bye, bye," before being taken away by the bailiff. Crashes Cram Freeway Lmies A series of rear-end collisions this morning snarled northbound lanes of the San Diego Freeway ln the El Toro area, backing up traffic for lwo miles. Ambulances to6k an undetermined number of persons from the stretch betvt'een El Toro Road and the in- mchange of the San Diego and S a n t a Ana Freeways. The extent of their in- juries waa unknoYl'Tl. Wreckage was being cleared away at noon and California Highway Patrol of· fictrs kept traffic moving slowly through the rain-slicked area. Observers said five to six separate ac· cidents were involved, most with just two cars each. OU.Mal COAST DAILY PILOT Oil.ANG!: CO.AST PUllLl1HINQ C"OM,AMV lobert N. Wet4 Prnio.it e"lll P111111.....,. J1cl-It, Curle'( Viet l"rnld.,1 lfld C0-11 Mlfllgtf ,~.,,. •• w: ••• 1r • ,!I.,. ThoM11 A.. M111,Jii111- M•Mtl"I Edl!Df' Al•~ DirUI'! Wftl Or1111C County l:dller Albert W. l1t11 M._li!D EdlW H11tf .. Mt1 IM&k OHie• 17t7l a.11h l e11l1•1rtl M1lllt1t Alllilre11: P.O. lea °'190, t2l•t I -°'""' l....-ll•dll ft: l"lf•I AVWl\lf c.t1 Mlle: UI w.r ••v 11r..,. Nt'W'Pll"l 1-11: lm NIWP)l"t lou:t\'11'1 ltn Cl.,...,11: )a) folOl"!ftl El C.1!'11119 AMI Tll.,•111 l714J 14Z-4l11 • Cl_....41 .w ... t1dl 1 "41°U11 CWWfclflt. lffl, Ml\Of CH" ~16t11f'il ~ .... y. Ne -ttw\a, l1h11tr1l ...... ed•lll --If ~"-fl ""'""" _., ........... llC ... ~ tf*ltl ,.. ""'"'"" ... C1111'Yf111111 ......... . ' I Wino Meeting Head Count in Bonanza Clubhouse By JACK V. FOX YUBA CITY IUPJ) -The winos came shambling into lhe &nanza Club on D Street in 1>1arysvi\le shortly after 9 a.m. As each appeared, his fellow drifters lel out a cheer. ''Hey, Sarge , you made it!" "There's Al. He dldn"t get you, Al!"' At the New Pa lm around the corner. Rose the barmaid said one of her customers always had milk ln the morn· ing. But on Thuri;day he ordered a double shot of Old Crow and a beer chaser. Among these Jost souls there was no doubt that the victims <1( Yuba City's mass mUrders came from their ranks - skid row In the Twin cities of Mar ysville and Yuba City, separated by the Feather River. The towns once were 11 legend of the ri~roaring west in th e gold 111sh days. There were 54 saloons in a four-block stretch, the prostitutes g r a b b e d customers off the street and the miners, Joggers. railroad men . cowboys and gamblers lived as If there was no tomor· rO\V. Those days are gone, but the shakes of Sutler's boom linger on In a community which now is staunch Republican. hlppie- less and one of Ule most lush agricultural areas in all the United Sates. Peaches, toma toes, prunes, watermelons, stra\\•berries, walnuts and almonds grow in the valley. Acres of fertile land are covered with water - flooded paddies that look like southeast Asia. But like the fruit. murders have seem· ed to come in clusters to California. Charles J\.-lanson has been convicted of seven and is being tried for two more. Last year Dr. \1ictor Ohta, his wife, two children and a secretary were slain and tossed into their swimming pool in Santa Cruz. San Francisco's Zodiac Killer - still uncaught -claims something like a dozen victims. BODY AFTER BODY But even those gory heights were scal- ed th is week "'hen sheriff's deputies. \\'earing gauze masks and puffing cigars to reduce the stench. dug up body after body on the ranch of Jac:k Sullivan five miles north of Yuba City, from neat graves stru nf:! for hair a mile on the rive rbank beneath a prune orchard. One man had 32 cents in his pockets, <lnnther S!I. The remainder had no \1'ealth. One had a temporary dr i\'er's license . Annther had a \ITist band from a hospital and a social security card. One y,·as Iden· !Hied becau!e two of his toes were: miss· ing. One man had on three pairs of trousers. One man 11·as nude e:itcept for a shirt. They lay on their back5. their arm~ above their heads. 1.lost had their shirts pul!ed up over their faces. All were taken to the Twin Cities r.1ortuary v.·hich ordinarily handles one death a ·week. Identitication \\'as gruesome and grim. Some were men nobody y,•antcd and nobody mi ssed. Some had Isolated lhP.mselves from their families for year$. "It really grabs you \1·hen some guy·s '''ife ca!Js from ~1exico or Arkansas and asks if we ha\'e found their husband -a man they haven 'l he ard from ror a year or so." said a sheriff's deput)'· "They \\'Rnt to know and then again. they don't want to kno\I.•."' The first body was dlscovertd on ~lay 20 by a Japanese farmer named Goro Ka!lchiro . He noticed • hole In an orchard, And when he came back th::it r\·ening he found a mound ol fresh earth. He dug and found 8 body. He rC!porled it U> the Sutter County Sherifrs Office. SECOSD BOOV f il'e d11ys passed nnd then Roy Duron. 11 foreman at the Sullivan ~nth, v.•11 told by one of hi! laborers that while 'dlscil\1 the rowa btlY.'e4!n the prunt trees he notictod :.n lndcnlatioo. Detective Sgt. t ' John Purcell and Detective Jerry Gregory went to the scene and found a second body. It rained and rained on Tuesday, hut In !he downpour and on through the night, and into the next day, and the next, deputies dug up bodies. Some were Jn a peach orchard, the others in the soft loam ()f the Feather River bank, ln grar.tes 31A foot deep and 6 feet long. The victims had been hacked to death by a machete or heavy kn ife. The fatal blow was at the back of the neck. All were men. They ranged in age from 40 to 63. At 4:30 a.m. Wednesday, sheriff's deputies went to the home of Juan Veilliho Corona, 37, in a quiet street or small homes in Yu ba City. It is a wood house of beige rolo r wlth a brick fronlplace. A plaster angel two feet high stands on the cement porch. Corona answered the door. He ls 1 Sood-looking Mexican, one inch short of six feet. He weighs 200 pounds and hi!: black hair is parted in the middle. His wife Gloria is aboul 40. They have four daughters. Corona speaks fair English, his Y.'ife almost solely Spanish. \V ENT QUIETLY The officers told him he was charged with murder. Corona pulled on his gray work pants. cowboy bools and a green sweater. He went along quietly. \Vhen the patrol car arrived at the cour1house. a stately "'hite building with columns that could pass for a southern mansion , officers gave him a blanket tG put over his head to thwart news photographers. C<lrona is one or five brot hers who came tG this area from JalisC<l, Mexico, !he first in the early 1940s. The big thing then 1vas the Beale Army Camp, then a staging area and now a large Air Force base. One of the brGthers opened a bar. The others went into the labor contracting business. Jn the central valley migrant workers are a necessity for the land· owners . The transients range from about 2,000 in the winter months to 20,000 when !he peaches and other crops are in harvest. From Page l BODIES ... mltted by a brother to a state mental hospital for three months in 1956 as being "confused an d disoriented . . • (suf· fer ing) delusions and hallucinations.'' Psychiatrists diagnosed him as a schizophrenic. ~le \\'as released from De11.·ltt State 11ospita l at Auburn, Calif., as ""recovered"' on April 18. 1956. Officials have not disclosed any ap- parent motive for the slayings. Deputies, using a trench digging backhoe at tlmes and puffing cigars to kill the stench of dead bodies, removed the hacked remains from shallow graves into hearses for tr11ngport to a mortuary in neighboring ~farysville. Identifica tions have been hampered by lhe lraiy;ient life of the farm workers, many of whom had not been in touch with their famil ies for years. The victims v.·ere hacked in the back of the head with a heavy, sharp instrument. possibly a machete or meet cleaver. All 11.·ere buried on their backs, with arms raised in a supplicati ng position and shirts pulled over their bloody beads. Eisenhower Sets Out WASHINGTON (AP! -Ens. Dovld Eisenhower. President Nixon's son in lay,·, dcpnrts today for srrvice aboard the gulded missile crulstr Albany , scheduled to visit lhc flfed iterr111ne11n durlng tht next two months. -- Funding District Hears 1913 Act Provisions By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. o.IW fOllN Stiff The me of 1113.Act provisions to fund l!vtral comm.unity service projects ls a "very proper avoidan<:i! of a bond elec· tlon" Coast Community College District trustees have been advised. Districl Chancellor Nonnan Watson told trustees Wednesday "it is very true that usine the 1913 act avoids a bond Issue." He added, however, that employing the 1tate statute to provide needed com- munity services was one way the district could serve the community in a way that ts legal and proper. Under the 1aw, rommunities within the college diatrict would form assessment districts to pl.en and provide recreation and other facilities at Golden West and Orange C<last Colleges. Dr. Walson told ttusttts the Huntington Beach City Council already bu approved From P-.e I ENZYMES .•• food is exposed to It," tb.e young science whiz explained. She found through experiments with other food slices that Coke and Excedrin kill most eniymes, while Anacin kills 1ome. "There are about l ,000 enzyme types," 1he added. The main point of Pam's project is that heat and chemlcals dt affect enzymes which are necessary to the body. Her ad- vice la that people eat more frW or raw foods, because the body can't produei! enough enzymes on lt.s own. She couldn't say bow critical C\UTent food processing ls to enzyme intake for average persons, but !ell it was getting worse. Pam's display or her enzyme study ritst won her school science contest April 16, lhen captured the Ocean View district tIOe April 23. On May 16 she picked up five awards, Including the sweepstakes trophy in biological science, at the Orange County Science Fair held at the county fairgrounds ln Costa Mesa. This week Pam won the sweepstakes trophy competing against 2.1 other California eighth graders in the state 6clence fair now on display at the Los An~eles Space Museum. She is now eligible for International competition ne:s:t 1pring, Im. Was she confident'! ''Oh yes. I felt very good about the project. I thought It had a good chance." Now Pam plans an additional study of eneyme.s, just for her own pleasure. "I'm going to dive into the relationship between enzymes and DNA -the pattern maker for all genetic Jnfonnation," she 1ays. Pam , by the way, hopes to be a general IW'geon when she's ()(d enough. She iis the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Bedard. Mr. Bedard is 11 scientist with McDonnell· Douglas. Indian Graves Found GREEN VALLEY (UPI) -A major Indian burial ground may have been dis- covered in this community southwest. of Lancaster. according to Antelope Valley College anthropology professor Roger Robinson. Robinson said Thursday that three skeletons were uncovered Tuesday by \\'otkmen digging a trench for a pipeline. The skeletons were turned over to the coroner's office but ii was dete rmined that they had been buried for many years. ' I ii) principle the formaUoa or a Golden West College Asseument District: The Coli:ta Mesa ,City Council will consider thf Idea at its June 7 meeting. The Golden West district would provide an estimated $960,000 to pay for td· dilional handball courts, softball fields, a swimming pool speaker s y s t e m , television and comptuer cabling, parkin& and a recreation pavilion. The college district board Wednesday night appointed architects to develop the plans. Wat.son said the plans must be a~ proved by college trustees and the state Division of Architecture. A public hearing also would be required. Construction would begin in the fall , if the idea is a~ proved. \Vat.son said. The five.year bonds proposed to pay for the projecl!s would be paid off by enacting a tax rate of about four cents per $100 assessed valuation, actordiog to Wabon. _ The propoW for Costa Mesa would U,. elude development of improved walkwaya 1nd lighting at OCC, street and parking improvement. resurfacing of tennis courts, rehabilltaUon of the swimming pool, upgrading of stadium lights, resurfacing and fencing of the running track and cabling for computers and telec()mmunications equipment, Trustee Robert Humphreys of Costa fl.lesa indicated the district must better inform the members of the city rouncils involved if the proposal i.! to be ap. J)l'oved, Humphreys' assist ant cit}' attorney for Costa 1.fesa, declined to speculate on how the proposal would be received by the council. None of the trustees indicated they disapproved of the project at Wecj. nesday's meeting, and no action wu taken. The it appeared on the agenda u an information item. * u · u u * * Trustees Approve BUls For 2 College , Projects Coast ColJlmunity College Distri ct trustees have approved bids totaling mort than $1 million to build an en- vironmental studies center at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa and equip the telecommunications facility at G<llden West College io Huntington Beach. W.F. Shirley ConstrucUon Co. of Pasadena was the successful low bidder for the environmental center with a bid of $543,174. The building is due to open in laboratories sad office space for the col· Jege 'a environmental training program, The buildings will be relocatable, being constructed In a modular manner similar to the method used in constructing tht district's administration building. Three separate bld Items for equipment Coast Dries V p For Memorial Holiday Weekend Slackening drizzles by tonight and Sllfl- ny, warmer days .through Monday are forecast for tbe Memor)al Day weekend by the National Weather Service. The low pressure area that brought gray skies and showers to the Orange Coast Thursday and today was reported dissipating. Orange Coast residents slaying home for the three-day observance can e1pect customary early summer night and morning low clouds . aod fog but it will quickly burn away . Temperatures will -be up to the mid·70s, with overn ight lows In the 60s, running 10 to lS degrees higher in the interior and desert regions. High winds in desert areas are e1· pected to dit down, while San Diego Coon - ty areas hit with below-freezing tem- peratures, ice, sleet and snow will alst get relief. Offshore ·winds will run JO to 18 knots in the afternoons for yachtsmen and power- boaters. "'hile ski enthusiasts y,•i\I find the general mountain snow level at 5,000 feet. at Golden \Vest's television cenler tot111I· ed $510,000, Philips Broadcast Equipment Corp. of r..rontvale, N.J. was the lowest or four firms offering bids meeting specifications for television broadcast camera and con· trol room equipment. Tn.lsteu approved acceptance of the firm 's $«0,608 bid for the color television equipment. Tektroni:s: Inc. of Orange wu the lone bid~r and will provide $40,000 worth of osc1.ll05ropes and waveform monitoring eqwpment at a net rost to the district of $20,000. The firm wlll provide a $20 000 educational grant contribution. ' Reichel Electric Inc. of West minster was granted the rontract for st u d I 0 lighting equipment. The firm's bid of 149,977 was not the lowest of all bids sul>o mitted, but was the lowest of three bids deemed to have m e t specifica· tions. Acey·Decy Electric Construction Com- pany of Hollywood offered an al- ternate bid of $30,490 u s J n g lighting equipment that did not match lighl.J presently owned by the district. Tht firm's bid bond did not arrive until after bids were opened, Chancellor Norman Walson said, making the bid ineligible for consideration. District Urging Nod on Override ·- Fountain Valley School District ls ask- lng voters in the June 15 election to mark "yes" on their ballots to the high 1chool district's $2.08 tax override request. Trustees of the elementary 1ehool di.strict have approved a resolution sup. porting the Huntington Beach Union High School District in it.a quest for mort • operating money. lf the high school district loses the · election, its tax rate will drop to 85 cents. : It is currently $1.31 per $100 assessed . valuation. . Vo~ers within the F'ountaln Val ley ~ district have suppported two previous high school attempts to get a higher tax rate, but both overrides Jost because of ' heavy ··no" voles from other portions of the high school district. exforb &quart ~ ------ CAMPAIGN D1S1C WHli pewtor~ilt !;no, Slioff ~ t....i;.... doors. 379. 01:,\.LERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEC -HERITAGE T N!Wl'Ol!T BEACH 1727 w .. t.i111 Dr., 642-2050 OPEN ,RIDAY 'Tll ,9 NIWPOn STOU OP1N PlfDAT "TU. t P1or.alon1I lntwiot- O..l9nort Av•lllillo -AID INTERIORS ,..._ TeH ""'9 1111• .. Or.,. Ca ata l t0.116J LAGUNA KACH 345 North c .. ,, Hwy. Phono: 494-6551 • . Movie 'Fox' Zanuck Wins Fight l\~W YORK (UPI) -Darryl F. Zanuck is still the fox of Hollywood. He has come out on top again in his latest battle of 45 years of Hollywood wars, A Zanuck·led ma:iagement team has been involved in a proxy fight to retain f'i'lntrol of Twenlielh Century-Fox • Film Corp. against a group of insurgent 1tockholders backed by Zanuck's estrang- ed \vife and their son. Judges who counted the shares voted at the compan y's annual meeting i\tay 18 ~aid Thursday unofficial returns sho.,..•ed the management reta ined conlrol by about l.S million shares out of 6.4. million voted. A spokesman for the dissidents, Charles M. Lewis. partner in lhe Wall Street brokerage house of Treves & Co., sail the losers migh t challenge the results in court. He said-the dissidents have until the (If. ~ ficial announcement of the vole on June 8 to check and challenge the proxies voted by management. He did not say which proxies might be challenged . Sourcts close to Corporation Tru st, the firm which counted the votes, said management got enough votes from brokerage house proxies to win in spite of an v cha llenge. The votes by 10 mutua l fuiids holding shares in Fox v.·ere reoorted about evenly divided. Zanuck's position with Twentieth Cen- tury was uncertain today . He is chairman of the board but offered his resignation at the May 18 meeting in Wilmington. Del.. as a concession if managem ent retained control. The apparent victory Thursday means 'ZanuCk either can rtmain as chairman or go through with his resignation and head up an independent production unit with Fox . Since he is 68. he would have to retire as chairman in about 17 months anyway. Fox president Dennis Stanfill , who replaced Zanuck in that post last winter, remains in control of the company. Zanuck. who became a titan of the in· dustry after coming to Holl ywood lrom \Vahoo, Neb .. 45 years ago. saved Tu·en· lieth Century-Fox from bankruptcy in 1962 by taking over Lhe presidency i::hortly after the company slipped into the red by spending $40 million to make thr movie "Cleopatra." The company under Z a n u c k ' s leadership surfered heavy losses in 1970 111though it operated at a prorit for the first quarler or this year' Zanuck 's estranged wife, the former actress Virginia Fox. and their son, Richard, whom Zanuck fired as president of the studio in December. voted their 103,000 shares for the dissident.s. ' Special Ha%ard Diving for golf balls in pond at Hidden Hills Coun · try Cl ub, Jacksonvil le, Fla., may be hazardous to health in the future. State ga1ne and rish officer Robert Brantley had a little problem convincing 11· foot al ligator he should make llis new home at the golf course. The gator ·.vas brought to the links after residents in Lak~ City complained that he was crawling into their backyards. Over 50 Linked To Drug Counts By Grand Jury More than SO persons. many of them juveniles, were indicted today on narcotic s charges by the Orange County Grand Jury in lhe wake of mass arrests by Fullerton police. Twenty-four of the defendants named by the investigative panel had been ar- rested by noon today. It is expected that !'evera\ or them will be arraigned in Superior Court this afternoon and Tues- da y. All the aduH defendants already under arrest hail from Fullerton, Anaheim. Buena Park, Placentia, Yorba Linda and Garden Grove . Investigators refused to release details on indictees currently being Sought by police in at least seven Orange County communities. Investigators said considerable quan- tities of narcotics had been confiscated in the three-month investigation b y Fullerton police that preceded the in· · ·dictment. The final tally of the drugs seized and the defendants involved may well make tht! drug round up ·ont! of the largest in county history, they said. Angela Davis' Attorney Makes Dismissal Plea SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Arguments for dismiss al of an indictment against Angela Davis in lhe ~1arin County Civic Center shootout have been completed at a stormy all-day session disrupted by her codefendant. Ruchell l\1age e. who shouted , kicked and spat on his attorney. Superior Court Judge Richard E. Arnason. the sixth judge in the case , had r-.1agee removed fro m the courtroom Thursday and went ahead hearing the TRACK, FIELD ~IEET DELAYED Tonight's CJF track and field championshp meet has been postponed until r.1onday night at 8 <l'clock because of rain and v.·et grounds. Cerritos College will still be lht! site for the meet, which has at· tracted IS Orange Coast area in- di viduals plus three relay teams from area schools. long delayed motio n to free the 27-year· aid l\iiss Davis. She has been in jail since last December. "J'd like to ask you to dismiss tbe in· dictmcnt now, get this phony prosecutio n over with and let Angela go home,"' said Michael Tigar, one of ber lawyers, in concludi ng the arguments. Arnason took the mot ion under sub- mission and set next Wednesday ror con· sidering further motions. Among these is an objection by the state to turning over police records in the case to the defense counsel. The judge ordered Deputy Atty . Gen. Albert Harris lo turn over to the defense autopsy reports on the four victims of the Aug. 7 shooting -Superior Court Judge Harold Baley, Sa n Quentin convicts James l\1cCl ain and William Christmas. and 17-year-old Jonathan Jackson. Jackson. brother of George Jackson of the so-callej "Soledad Brothers ," smug· gled guns into Haley's courtroom and gave them to McClain, who was on trial there, and to Christmas and Magee. v.·ho v.·ert! there as witnesses, the 1tate charges. H DA.ILY PlLOT i Cambodia Clash S. Viets, Reds In Bloody Battle SAIGON (A P) -North and South Viet. namese forces clashed bloodily for the third straight day in eastern Ca mbodia toda y and the Saigon co mmand claimed control of the bomb blasted town of Snuol. At lhe same time, new battles flared in the central highlands of South Vietnam and near the A Shau Valley in the coun•. try's explosive northern sector. The South Vietnamese claimed 40.1 enemy troops killed in the three-front fighting, a claim open to some doubt. Only a relatively few enemy weapons -21 by official count -v.·ere recovered from the battlefields. In addition, man y ()f the claimed North Vietnamese dead were killed by allied air strikes and artillery. The count was based on reports from aerial observers, and thus was an esitmatc at best. Against these claims, Sout h Viet- namese losses were reported officially as 12 killed and 52 wounded . Field reports told of a higher toll , no tably in the fighting in eastern Cambodia. This (ighting centered at Snuol. a small rubber pla ntation town 10 miles west of lhe South Vietnamese border and 90 miles nort h of Saigon on Highway 7. Many of Snuol's few hundred houses v.·ere destroyed or damaged ;a year ago during the big U.S. South Vietnamese drive into eastern Cambodia and more destruction came in the latest fighting. The town has been contested sine• Wednesday morning v.·hen a SOO man North Vietnamese for ce attacked the South Vietnamese defenders inside Snuol and at four points close by. The North Vietnamese reached Snuo\'1 market place, but the South Vietnamese reported they regained control Thursday Buena Park Tot Dro,vns in Pool A Hi-month-old Buena Park boy drown· ed in a backyard. combination fishpond- reflecting poot . Thursda y night, the Orange County Coroner's Office reported. Randal Simpson, 60n of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Simpson. 7377 El Prado \l.'ay, failed to respond to resuscitation efforts by the parents, ambulance crew and doc· tors at Lincoln Community Hospital. In vestigators said that children playing in the backyard after dinner apparently left open the gate In the fence 1ur· rounding the pool. afternoon. although conceding that small pockets of enemy troops were still there. The new fighting broke out barely more than a quarter of a mile west of Snuol at 9 a.m. Friday and continued for three hours. I.he Saigon com mand reported. A command spokesman, Lt. Col. Vge Tyxung Hien. said: "There are no mors enemy in the town of Snuo l. Jt Ls under the control of South Vietnamese troops." Nixon Mulls Coast Visit Next Weel<. President Nixon is considering a five. day trip to Sa n Clemente. starting perhaps late next week in advance of the celebrated White House wedding of his daugh ter, Tricia, and Edward Finch Cot. Reports have come from Washington, D.C., in recent days that the chief ex· ecutive had been planning to exchange the hubbub of pre-wedding arrangements for a '>1-"0rking vacation at La Casa Pacifica . Mrs. Nixon first mentioned the chances for the trip a week ago, but official Wh ite House spokesmen would not confirm the report. Highly reliable local sources have said tha t the lrip '"has been kicked around" ln Wa shington for the past severa l days. The firsl lady mentioned to a \Vh ile House reporter that Mr. Nixon might be considering a stopover in Tulsa . Okla .. on the trip west, which could take place June S According to initial report!! of the im- pending visi t, the President would retur n to the capital on June 10 -well enough in advance of reh earsa ls for the wedding rites scheduled for the \Vhi te House Rose Garden. The Nixons' last vi sit to the South Coast wa11 a long weekend early this month highlighted by an ornate ceremony at Camp Pendleton where lhe Com· mander-ln-Chief greeted tr.>0ps of the Isl r.tarine Division returning from Vietnam combat. l\1rs. Quinn Sues SAN JOSE (UPll -The wift1 of Lee Quinn . a sailor who disappeared at 6el with his 111-girl crew, has filed suit in Superior Court for ber husband's $2 1,000 estate. The Homes are priced from 33,950 The Way of Life is Free! Living is what you want to make of it in a big, beaut iful ne w home at Oceanview Park ... now offering lmmediale Occupancy in th e Final Unit ... excell ent Conventional Fina ncing with low, low down payment ••• and you own the land! Quality 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath Traditional Design 2 Story Homes ucco a HOMES OCEANVIEW PARK SERIES The Only New Close-In Homes In Costa Me;a Surrounding the Beautiful New 21h Acre Marina View Park -.. ,,, ... f«lOllo . Sales Oflic! and Furnished Models at 19th Street & Whittl1r Avenu e Phone (714) 546·0337 Fro,,, ( ., An1e1,, WY, - ADAMS AVE. t l ~"Olh•f ~w·~'~ dli t /"fll'ltfl/., a!co{01 I HOMES I 1 \ f tAJl V PILOT Frldlf, MlY 28, 1971 -·----. Scliool Outing .-At·ge11tina's IG.dnape1·s .Rail ·Crash Kills ' Seek Food 45in W.Germany ROSARIO , Argenuna (U PIJ-The .Jelt- iM kidnapera of Britl.sh Consul Stlnley Sylve&ter demanded today that SS0.000 v.•orlh of food be distributed among · Rosario's poor in e:i:change for his release. Tbe "People'15 Revolulionary Army" <ERP) a1so demanded the Swift and Co. meat packing plant in Rosario take back the .4 ,000 or so "'·orkers it s~spended for economy reasons. Sylvester is the plant's manager. The ERP, in its hftb co!!lmunique on Sylvester. said ii v.·ould put the M·year· old diplomat-businessman "on trial!' if iL!i conditions were not satil5lied by 5 p.m. The organization abducted Sylvester out.side his home last Sunday and has de· nounced him and Swift and Co. in previous communiques as exploiters ef !he Argentine workers. Police have arrested more than 30 persons for quesUonlng about the_kldnap. The ERP threatened Thursday to execute Sylvester il police found the hide away were the organization said it was sub- mltting him to "people's justice." An earlier communique said Sylvester u·a5 in good health. It contained photographs or the hosta1e and a letter tram him to his wife. The latest note was sent to UJe nev.·spaper, La Ci pita.I. Among the other cOnditions to be met before the U·bttur deadline, the message said, were: Restoration of aU back pay to the workers and improvements in the plant's laboi: policies, working conditlons and social benefits. The communique called the demands ''indemnification" to the workers for the management's "prejudicial at titude ·1 towards them It enumerated the provisions for the poor as sugar. cook.in& oil and flther foodstuffs and blankets. Regal Cheek? A magazine edited by one of her privy councilors said Thursday that Queen Elizabeth had 'truly regal cileek' in ask- ing her subjects for a pay raise "'·bile her personal fortune mushroomed. Laos, Thailand Get Viet Blaine For Dope Rise SAIGON IUPJ) -South Vietname5e cabinet members. prodded by the United States to do something about the drug traffic that has made an estimated one out of every 10 American servicemen in Vietnam a heroin addict, put most of the blame today on Thailand and Laos. They said these two neighboring coun- trie.s, both close allies. are the source of most of the heroin in South Vietnam. as reported Tuesday by a U.S. Congressional investigating team. RADEVORMWALD. Germllly (UPIJ A two-car train c1rryJn1 schoolchildren borne from an ouUng crashed head on Tburtday night into a fast freight, killing 40 children and. five adulll in West Germany's worst postwar crash. Authoritiu blamed the crash to- day on "human error." A railroad official went further. He laid the blame at the door of a frei&ht train englneer who, he r;aid, drove through red stop signals. The 6.l-lon diesel locomoti ve hauling five freight carg rounded a bend on the single-line track skirting the river Wup- pe.r and slammed into a twin car rail unit carrying 100 schoolchildren and their supetvisors back frotn a day's graduation outing to the north r;ea part of Bremen. Police said 40 children, between 14 and 16 years old, died in the crash. together with two teachers, the two-man crew ol the rail car and the mother of one pupil. Twenty six others, mostly children were injured, A police spokesman said the two trains "'ere traveling at about 40 miles per hour when they met in the middle of a long curve. The locomotive smashed into the front coach of the red railcar, ripping lhe l:iOdy off its frame and crushing it to a fraction of its normal length. The second passenger car was hurled from the track. The children were only 15 minutes away rrom a reunion with their parents at Radevormwald, an industrial town of 23,000 inhabitants on the outskirts of the Ruhr. Jochen Stemmer, 15. was in the·back of lhe leading car when the crash occurred. Lying in a hospital bed with a broken leg and internal injuries he told UPI "the kids had been singing . . . we v.•ere almost home. There was a crash and 1 flew over the seat in front but alter that I don 't remember anything." A clerk at Radevormwald town hall, who uked not to be klenUfied, u.id she followed other people attracted by the sirens of police cars, fire engines and ambulances speeding to the scene, about two miles from the town. "What I 1aw was terrible," she said. "The first of the rail cars was crushed so much that I felt I could have held It within the width of my arms. "We saw parts of bodies sc1tttred all over the terrible: 1ctn1 and the injured children were 1cre1mina:. Many t1f the children were thrown through the win· dow1 of the aecond rail car and were lying there ." The Injured children were rmhed to nearby hospitals and the dead were laid out in rows of coffilll inside a gymnasium at Rade vormwald . Grief-stricken parents, many sobbing uncontrol!Ably after identilying their children among the dead, stood in g?'OUJ'.11 among the coffins. On a nearby blackboard an official chalked the names of the dead and In· jured as they were identified. The accident was the worst railway disaster since the state of West Germany v.·as created in 1949. The public prosecutor at Radevormwald. responsible f o r in· vestigaling such accidenti; in his district, said the crash "apparently stemmed from human error." A railw a ys !Spokesman s a i d the accident did n o t result from a mechanical failure on either train. He said the engineer of the fre ight, who survived the crash wi thout &erious injury, was being questioned along with the signalmsn responsible for the stretch of single line track. "One of them must be respo!Sible." he said. "But we caMot yet 1ay which of them it WIS." SALT Bargaining Ends in Vienna But they did not comment directly al their news conference on another charge in the Congressional report: that "politi· cians in both Laos and South Vietnam'' are in the heroin business. 200 Police Land ·to Guard VIEN'ri.'A (AP) -Negotiators for the Unit!d Stat.es a11d the Soviet Union ended the fourth round of the Stratt>gic Arms Ltmitalion Talks fSALTl today and agreed to resume negotiations in Hel.sinki oo July 8 The Congressional report was issued Tuesday in \Vash ington foUowing an ln· tensive investigation In South Vietnam. The chief author was Rep. Robert Steele 1R-Ccinn.). Mafiosi Exiled to Island The talks allernale between the Aus- trian and Finnish capitals. A communiqu e distributed alter the session today said . "In the ~urse of the Vie.Ma phase ol the negotiations. the deleiations contin· ued consideration of queslions dealing with the limitation of strategic arma- ment s. "At the l1nal stage, there w1s an eJ. change of views on matters stemming frllm the snnouncement on May 20 on the understanding between the governments of the U.S. anl:I the U.S.S.R. regardin~ further development of the negotiaUons." This report said be t\11een 25.000 and 40.000 American servicemen in VielnRm now are addicted lo heroin. The total U.S. force in Vietnam at present is 282,600. Today°.!i South Vietnamese news con· ference "'as given by five cabinet ministers. plus other hJgh officials. They reported on a si:ii:-week drive to clamp down on the narcotics traffic. finanre Minister Nguyen Bich Hue, asked where the heroin originate!li, r;aid, "\\·e do kn ow that the planes in v.•hich It is found come from Laos and Thailand." F'ILl CUDI. Sicily tAP) -Tv.·o hundred police in battle gear landed on the rebellioua island of Filicudi today to en- force the erile of 18 repu ted Mafia bosse.s. The re.sidents promptly an· nounced they would abanion the island in prate.st. -., Un.shaven and red 'Yed after three sleepJegs nlghts. islanders watched im- passively as the police disembarked at the main port after coming from Sicily. Then their sgitation committee issued ~ communique saying the inhabitant.s Tougl1 Customer Wirks Battling Envoy Thwarts Kid!tap ' WiJ'.• SAN SEBASTIAN. Spain (UPI) -Four iunmen pounced upoo French Co111sul - General Henri Woliner Thursday night cu tside his home, stuck a submachine gun and a pistol in his fa ce and tried to abdu ct him. Woliner threw a few punches and a few unpri11tab!e invectives and the men fled. "! v.·ould ra ther be shot than abd uc- ted." said \Voliner. a stocky, balding , S8- year-0Jd father of three. "So I hit back- even though rm suffering from lum- bago." heard the scuffle, but went about her chores inside the house. '"She thought the noises came from an argument bet~·een drivers 1n the street,'' the diplomat txpla1ned. 'What's ivrong with a welfare plan that takes from the poor to give to the poor?.' The assa1 lanW.. bt'!Jeved to be Basque nationalist extremists. jumped Woliner at his doorstep when he came home from work. One of them tried to throw a coat over his head . bu! \\'ollner dodged it. ignored the guns a11d let them have it, cursing loudly. '"The Bri tish are a bit stoic. you know." The Basques inhabit a region 011 the Franco-Spanish frontier. They ha1•e their own culture and I.heir own language and a fierce pride that drives iheir desi re for their own, autonomous government. A militant group kidnaped West German Consul Eugen Beih[ in San Sebastian last year during a trial of the compatri- ot.s in Burgos, but released him un- harmed. \Voliner dismisse<I his aggres sive coun· terattack with a classic Gallic line . ''It was not a que5lJ011 of courage, but of virili ty." \\loliner's British-born wile, Doria, Amarillo, Tex., Pummeled Howling Winds Record Velocity of 60 mph California Thr•t '~•• co•11er•1DI• c'OVd•"tu .,,,. ~ou•~•r; (•hter•I• 111•• "~r• "''°' O<Cl \! .... 11 rf l• O• ''""' l""r""' !• "'e "~''" 1;0 \0111 M>"I~•> 1' '"''' f•I• w<!" I Ul'V WlflM lfl !ht tll! I~ "'' 11W"1e1• .,,,.,II. T"e LOI .t.flttlft o••t "·~&CC II"'"'' II•"' 1"8wl!•1. CIN rl•• •o •••!ly 111•·~ t• , •• ''"'"""" "'"" •• ,.,.,,¥ ... ,.,,.,. ~l"O••t!U"ll. TMe•'• t•..ilc ••~ C1v1~ Ct•+•• "'t~ Wt! -.. rom~t•M wl•• Tllu•1d1v'1 ''· T~t low ltlf>lt"' will ... , T•• .. W•\ "" t•• '"""""" "''" .... Ylf!'V'"' "'""" levtl• lC , ... , ~·· ,..1111 .... N "h "' 11• lft '"' ~lfl Gt~•l•I •"" ,..,,..,..,, Wt1•~1 \11lln1 •I'd 05 """' .1,,.,,.,,, •. !•t11!el ,.,., ·~·'· , .... 1... '9 ""'Iv •VI'"" tl1' '"" 111t._ 1'<·••1 w••• •••• ~ w""' •~• w•t•• 11/J Tl!erl Wt•I 10 1'11 U "'"'I ,.., "OU' Wl"fll lfl .,., '"'"""'" IW)l,o"'l l ... 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" ~...,.., .• " " 1"!•11111.1•1~ " " let1lt l'd " " lttl>lll , ..... .. " ltHI l lUll • n " ·~ " • M l t t'll"!•'lto " ., •• Lelli• " " h it t..1-1 CllV .. • ''" 0 1110 • r k 'I l'r1Mht~ " r. M were "constrained by events" to leave the Island if the underworld u.llea re- ma ined. They made preparations to leave. The 200 or so residen!J: of this fishing iiiland charge that the u:ile of Mafia suspecU will spoil tourism. The police came after the Mafia chiefs . and their police escort iipe.nt their second back breaking night on chai rs , tables and the floor of a lonely seaside care and a requisitioned hotel under construction. The police landing wa11 hampered by the refusal of local fishermen to help in the operation. ·• The fi shermen responded to an ,qppeal to help in transporting the polictmen from their launch to the shore by de- fiantly setting off to sei'I. After the police landed, the residenlJ caucused hurriedly. They rejected a pro- posal to strengthen barricades blocking the road Into the village, and another to launch a guerrilla operation against the unwanted invader.s -the police and the Mafia bosses. Calling for •·good sense" and non- \•iol ence, the f ilicudians '-committee said il hoped authoritlea would change their minds and ''recognize the just reasons of our people" in asking that the Mafiosi be sent elsewhere. 2 More Villages Periled by Lava Flow Fro1n Etna F'ORNAZZO, Italy tUPI J -~1t . Etna, pumping and belching molten lava at an increased rate, menaced two additional farming villages today on its heavily damaged southeastern slopes. Renev.·ed aclivity from Europe's tallest \•otcano rai!ed new fears amon1 local farmers and 1cientist1 alike. Vulcanalogisl8 1tudying Etna's w or-st eruption since 1823 aaid there was no way lo forecast the currenl lava flow or Etna's unpredictable activity. Columns of dense black smoke apouted throughout the day from craters on the eastern and southeastern sides and sclen- lisU saJd tM activity could be the signal ror renev.·ed eruption . The current erup- tion is now in its 54th day. T\110 new lava flows boiled down the mountain in lhe dircclfon of the townii of Sciara and Giar re and stood about sit· tenths of 111 mile from the former and 2.S miles from the latter . Giant ditchdiggers ind earth movina machines moved into 11ction on the out!klrls of the towns. which along with F'orn1uo are the three v1Il1ges lhre1t· ened by the lava, to tuMel trouJhs ttt hold the Jav1 back from lhe towns . Today, the fiery 1tream from Moun I Etna 's "'orst volc1nic eruption in 43 years "'15 gnswin g at houses on the vtll1ge'1 northern outskirt&. Scientiata 1a.ld II ma)' tum ay.·11y aaain . ll! it did two da y1 110. or it may wipe Fornauo off tht m1p. The 470 inhab1tan~ of lh!s farm ~m­ munity, located at a heiji'.ht ol 2.&47 feet on the north eal!tern aide of Europe·, talle st voJca na, thought they were s11vtd when the main 1tre1m cit lav1 from a 55- day-Old er uption veered away from rornauo Wedntsday after hitlin& •· rldJ• of solidified lava from put years. Seek• Ofllre U.S. Sen. Robert Tait Jr. (R· Ohio) announced Thursday that he will run as a favorite son candidate in 1972 in an effort to get a slate of delegates com- mitted to President Nixon's re- nomination. India, Pakis~a1i Appeal for Food For War Victims NE\V DELHI (UPI) -\\'hile their troops fought along the fr ontier, lndia and Pakistan made separate 11ppeals to- day for food shipments lor the hungry victims of the civ il war in East Pakistan. A 1pokesman for the state of \Vest Bengal in Eastern Jndia said the slate has asked Prime Mini!;ler Indira Gan· dhi 's government to start sending im· mediately the 200.000 ton1 of rice it has promised to refugee camps along the border. The spoke~man said the st.ate \o;ould find it difficult to feed the refugees from ils own stocks. West Bengal Slate has the largest con- centration of the 3 5 million East Pakistanis Mrs . Gandhi 11aid have fled the war into India . The other re fugees are iiheltered in two other states and ter- ritorit's on Tndia·s 1.400-mile frontier with Esst Pakistan. The nev.• agency Press Trust of lndia. quoling West Bengal '!! Chief Minister Ajoy Kumar Mukherji. gaid there were plans lo transfer i;omr of the refugees under military supervision to the interior. The government earl ier h11d said lt \1•anled to keep the refugee camp! close In the harder to facilitate repatriation of the Bengalis. The official rad in Pakis1an, in a broad- cast mon itored Jn New Delhi. announced today the Islamabad government of President. Agha Mohammad Yahya Kh11n h;i.s appealed to ~everal nations for 250,000 tons or food grains for relief opera!ions in East Pakist;in. The r11dio said Yahya also had asked for vehicles and communications equipment . The tension between New Delhi and Islamabad since: the civil \Yar brake out in East Pakistan on March 25 has buill up during the pasl v.·eek with increasing reports of cross-bQ£der military sortie11 and shellings from both sides. The Press Trust of Ind ia said Thursday official sources a\onii: lhe Northern fron- tier told of Pakistani federal troops emplacing heavy guns and digging en- trenchments along the border near th• Indian state of Assam. . ' • ' . • ·---,. Cool ita Pool . . I Egyp~ Russ_ Sign Treaty Of Alliru1ce By ne A1,oclated ~e11 The Soviet Union and Egypt siJ;ned a lS year treaty of friendship and cooperation Thursday night, renewing their clO•• aUiance in the wake ttf Egyptian Prul· dent Anwar Sadal'1 purge of his rlvala for power. The pact signed by Sadat at1d vlsitin& President Nikolai V. Podgorny provides for continued Soviet military, economic, political and scientific aid. The two governments also p I edged "nttnin• terference in the internal affairs of each other," which would be interpreted as a Soviet abandonment of the leftist !eiders ousted and arrested by Sadat in the re- cent Egyptian power slruggle. In the military sphe~, tbe Rusaiant promised the Egyptian! arm a •and military training lo enable them to win back the Sinai desert from Israel. The treat)' said arms and equipment would be supplied to Egypt "with a view to strengthening its capacity to eliminate the consequences of aggression as well 1s increasing · its ability to stan d up lo •C- gression in general ." The h\'O governments also p!ed1ed lo "concert their positions" if a threat to peace arises. Observers in Cairo re1ard· ed this as a Russian commitment ot deeper -and perhaps even direct - military involvement if Egypt an.d Israel eo lo war again. The treaty also calls for expanded cooperation in a vast number ol fields : industry, agriculture, waler conservancy, irrigation, development of n a tu r a 1 resources, electric al power, personnel training, trade. shipping, science, the arts. literature, education. be a It b services, press, radio, television , cinema, tourism. physical culture, workers' organizations and cultural and scientific institutions. The two governments also a1reed lo consult regularly "on all impotUnt ques- tions affecting the interests ef both states." The treaty is subject to ratification, but this is considered a formality . Podgorny and Sadat si1ned the treaty al the end of a three day visit by the Soviet president. who was returning to Moscow today. He had hurried to Cairo after the recent shakeup wh ich removtd some of the Kremli n"R closest Egyptian allies. and the treaty was viewed a.s a Soviet endorsement of Sadat's con- tinuance in power. Podgorny. speaking at a din ner he gave. for the Egyptian presi den t after the sign- ing of the pact, said the Middle East situation remains "tense and dangerous,'' and lsraers refusal lo wtthdraw 111 troops from Arab lerritory occupied Jn. !he 1967 war had stalemated peace negotiations. Responding, Sadat said the treaty "ex- presses our firm and u n s h a k a b I e determination to sland up to aggreS!ion ." He repeated Egypt's demands for the Israelis to pull back from 11!1 occupied lands and the right of Palestinians to &ell determination. Narcotics Destroyed LOS ANGELES tUPI) -Two m111Jon pills. 3,000 kilos of marijuana. and 1 quantity of heroin were destroyed Thurs- day by stale narcotics agents. Attorney ~neral Evelle J. Younger sa id the drugs. valued at more than 11 million, were burned at an undisclO&ed slle. The drurs had been confiscated hy police agencie! durin1 the past 1evtra1 months. ---. . .. •' - Wading in a downto"'n Detroit pool and tossing 1 frisbee.. tius young lady ketf>' herseU and a few passersby occupied on 1 warm &pring day. • ' . • . • • , ' . ' " ' ... •• ' ' Mideast Curbs Faisal Proposes Action by Nixon Cl1icago Political Figm~e Vanishes QUEENIE -By Phil lnterlandl ll-IANK GOODNESS IT'S FRIDAY I • Raps Sought Against 3 In Slaying DREW, f\.!iss. (UPI) Authorities today m o v e d swiftly to M?ek indictment.,; against three young white men acrosed of killing a teen-age Negro girl in t his small Mi!!i!sippi delta town. Frank 0 . Crosthwait Jr., prosecuting attorney f o r swinower County. said he wt1uld present the case to the next term or the Grand J ury \\·hich convenes June! 7. The three men were being held in a maximum security unit at the stat!! penitentiary fol\ov.1ing their arrest a fe\v hou rs after Jo Etha Collier. 18. was shot dov.'n Tuesday night on a Drew street. They were charged with murder. The thrtt were identified as Wayne Parks, 23. a ct1Uon farmer from Drew ; his brother. Wesley Parks, 36. a mechanic at ~lemphis, Tenn.: and their nephew, A 11 en Wilkerson, 19, a recent h.igh 1<:hool g raduat e from Memphis. WASHING TON (UPI) - AfLer getting a full drea& welcome at the White House. King Faisal ol Saudi Arabia publicly urged President Nix- on to exert his influence to curb aggression by Israel in the Middle East. The leader of the oil·rich Arab state, clearly referring to l!rael, but talking only of ''certain powers," told Nixon that the situation "certainly requires the attention of you, Mr. President, and your na· tion ." Speaking on a red-carpeted platform oo the White House south lawn, Faisal sald "this ~ion which exemplifies itself in the occupation of our holy places and the sub- WayCleared For Seale's Freedorn CHICAGO (AP) -A federal appeals court has cleared the way for freedom for Bobby G. Seale, Black Panther party leader, while his appeal or a rour year contempt sentence is pending. Attorneys for Seale and the government were to meet lQoo day with Judge Luther hl. Swygert to work out details of his release. It was unkno.,.,n whether Seale would be released ln Connecticut or \\'hether he \\-'OUld be brought to Chicago and released. jua1Uon of our people has broucht about ..... diaa,..... ment between your country and ours." In the future , he said, "We hope these good relations will be re-established." Nixon In turn replied that he was ';looking forward to the counsel or a senior statesman with whom we can work for a just peace in the J\liddle East and all parts of I.he world." Faisal and Nixon then retired to the President's oval office for their first formal meeting. At the end or the 7~ minute conference. P r e s s Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler aakl they di.acussed "many world problems, especially the aituatlon in the Middle East." Alt.hough he did not go intQ detail, Ziegler said Faisal ex- plained his "special interest in the Holy City of Jerusalem." now occupied by I s r a e 11 forces. The king, who is winding up a goodwill tour of the United Stat.es, sees himself as the guardian of the J\1 oslem holy places in Jerusalem, Alecca and Medina. He also has in· sisted on Israeli withdrawal from all territory seized dur- ing the 1967 war. FDA Praises Unit Report On Problems HUNTED ALDERMAN Chicago'' Hubb1rd 3 Foreign Boats Ram U.S. Nets ... BOSTON (UPI) -Tbr,. foreign trawlen p I o w e.d through the nets of an American Jobst.er boat early today for the second time in less than 24 hour s, the Coast Guard reported. The vessels -at least two of them Russian -cut through the nets of lhe Westport·based United States about 67 miles southwest of Nantucket Island al about 6 A.M. EDT today. 1be cmst Guard Cutt.r Vigilant was sent to the scene aod reported an hour later there were 47 Russian trawlers in the area. It marked the second WASHINGTON (AP) straight day of incidents for ('r(lvernment decisions on the the United States. There wa s ~-~ safety of food and drugs are no damage report for either ""'?!A':. Investigators !aid no mo tive had been established for the shooting, which brought bitter reaction from black leaders and touched off p rotest marches Thursday afternoon at Dre w and neighobring Ruleville. A representative for Seale posted $25,000 bond Thursday shortly after the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Seale could remain free while appealing his four year con· tempt sentence handed down during the Chicago riot trial. too often based on politics incident. 'VAIJ rather than good science, al----------:....----"'------ FBI agents. acting on orders from President Nixon, have joined in the investigation to determine •.1:hether any federal law was violated iii the killing. • Pre.sidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler announced Thursday in Washington that N'lXon had instructed Attorney General John Mitchell to ob- tain all information on the case to determine whether any federal jurisdiction was in- volved . Zieglet said the Presi- dent regarded lhe shooting as a "deplorable and appalling act.•• The bond was granted over the government's continue.d objection based on Seale's Connecticut murder kidnap trial which ended in a mistrial Tuesday. The government contended that Seale should not be released on bond because he was not acquitted in Con- nectio.it but that the charges were dismissed because of. a deadlocked jury. Judge Orders Garrison .. To Let Clay Shaw Alone blue ribbon advisory com· mitlee reports. The Food and Dr u g Administration. hailing the report as sound and helpful, said it is already im· plementing commillee recom· mendations for acientific buf- fers against economic and political pressures. The five man panel cf university scientist! concluded after a year'• investigation that despite pockets o f laboratory excellence the FDA is not equipped to grapple with many of the difficult, technical que stion! of consumer pro. .. tection. ' r, "It currently fa ces .,4 enormous responsibilities for consumer protection and the J public health but with limited ~ resources, cons l r i ct ed perspective and little .e:olid constituency in the public or , medical and scientific establishments," the com· mittee said of the FDA. NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - A federal court Thursday ruled district attorney Jim Gar· rison, for personal gain. used unrell'able witnesses to build a flimsy case again s t businessman Clay Shaw dur- ing ~ "baseless investigation , flf lhe John f . Kennedy assassination." .. "This court , considering all ef the evidence. finds that Garrison un d ertook his baseless investigation with the speci(ic intent to deprive Shaw of his rights under the . , . Constitution of the United States," said U.S. Distri ct Judge H.erber t W .. Christenbe rry. UPI T•lt11hOltl Christenberry ordered a , 1 permanent injunction ' barring 1 Garrison from further pro- secution of Sbaw on a perjury charge ln Louisiana courts. GARRISON TARGET Elated Clay Shaw Brass Meet At Previe'v WASHINGTON !U PI) -~" . Mrs. Joseph Kennedy and J\1rs. Dwight D. Eisenhower led 3.500 other guests Thurs- day night in participating in a "gala preview;• at the new John F. Ke n!1'dY center for the performing arli;.... .,.~., The huge marble structure on the Potomac River will not be opened to the public until Sept. 8. The preview fl'9.turtd dining and dancing. and the crowd Jn.. eluded a political, social and entertainment w«ld elite. The order, for awhile at least, ended Sha'l's four-year, 87-day <1rdea1 as a man implicaUd in Al.so representing the Ken- Oswald was the lone assassin. nedy family were Sen. and THEIFS ONE THING YOU'LL NfVER FIND IN MY STORE • , • • • , •nd th•t's pr•1sur• to buy. My 11!1•· men won't pu1h or prod or follow you •round br••thing down your nick. Th•y'v• b11n put through th• Jeck Bidwell Good S•l1sm1n Tr1ining Cours1. If you n1e d h1lp, w•'ll b1 pl1•1•d to 9iv1 you •• mu ch or 11 little •• you w1nt. But you'll n1v1r b• pres1ur1d to buy onythin9. After all, w1 w1 nt you to clothes we sell. , " Gardens MEMORIAL DAY SPECIALS From Our l\'ursery DICHONDRA ---·-···· .................. -95c Patch up b1r1 spots-st•rt • new l•wn. HI SPRAYER DELUXE GARDEN SPRAYER $:: !~~;::;r::!; ;~~:r·: ......... -................................... -....... ~ 5'' TUBEROUS BEGONIAS For your lhacl1 tarciet1 ······························································- FUCHSIAS Haglnt ond upri11tt .... -.. -................... -................................... 1 tol HANGING BASKOS 99C CARNATIONS '" Individual pots. ftlOlt YGrlotlft .................................. -... -...... 3 for $ I OO CLEARANCE SALE Stepping Stones Aggregate &: Concrete 200/ooFF INFLATABLE KIDDY SEAT hcellent for picnics, poolsld1, camping, T.V., det1 ••• Jn1tant comfort ·····-····································-····~····-·-··- From Our Patw TWO TONE RAnAN CHAIRS 2uJ vatua Brown Jord•n, Ta miami & K1ilua Sele price• held over for Memori1I Day For the Pool 79' FPLOOOALTRAINGDISOA~~t~g~.c~th Hnd R01t ... ... _ .... : ', 9,:: Compllfo with bltterl11 -·---·-·-- 21 ZJ Nowport llYd. 11801 Harbor llYd. COSTA MESA CiARDEN CiROVI the 155assination of Pn!sident Kehn<dy. Shaw was arrested ~1arch l, 1967, and charged by Garrison with conspiring with Lee Harvey Oswald and other~ to assassinate Kennedy. Gar- Non, at the same time. de- nOunced tbe Warren Com- mission report which fQ\lnd On March 1, 1969, a state Mrs. Edward M. Kennedy, court jury deliberated only 55 Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy. minutes after a 40-day trial widow of tht late Senator : and l-467 Vie l ido, N1wport 8e1ch -67l-•S IO 646·39Z5 534-6774 and acqui tted Shaw. 1 _J'~''~':· ~Pe~U!~r~La~wf~e<~d~, ~the;l~a"~======~~===========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Three days later Garrison President'! sister. charged Shaw with perjury for testifying in his trial he did not know Oswald and the other alleged coconspirators. used cars used but not abused 11venly-ones at ~f!i aoo HAMOR !LVO. / dosrA MBA (714)MCMl110, Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: '* llAINOfFICf:Dth&.Hlll,Lol~•l23--135t f * WILIHl .. £9lORAMl!WCYPLACE:3833WDahlre .,. Blvd,. L.A. • 381-1285 LA. CIVIC ClNfER: 2nd&. BrotdwlY • !28-1102 * HUNT1NQTON illACH! 91 Huntington tinter• (71'4) 817-1047 IANT A A.NA I.CAN IEMCI A.QIHCY1 * 1905 N. Main sl • (714) 547-0257 * IANTA MONICA: 711 wnshl" Btvd •• 39$0748 * SAN NDRO: 11th &Paclfle • IS1-2S41 '* WUT coVINk Eastland Shopping Ctr.• $31-2201 * pANOftAMAC1TY:ae1e van NllYI Bfvd. • 1&2-1111 1t T.ARZANA: 11711 V1ntvra Boulevard• 34$-M14 T LONG IEACH:Srd & Locust• 437-7481 ()poo _..,.-I ., to J p!I D1t~ Hom-! lln to 4 "' Assns OVER $800 MILLION Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ••. Just Join 6lke . II Idem Oub With a $2~ balance In your aavlnga account, you are eUglblt to become a member. 8ubltantlal uvtng11re svaHabte when purchulng m1ny Item• Including automoblln, fUmlh.lre. appllances. Jewelry. Plua many free aervlcea-money order11 aafe deposit boxe1, etc. Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMPOUND!D DAILY AND PAID QUAJl'TIRLY,• 5.00•1°.s.13°'° Puabook; No Minimum. 5.25°1°-5.390/o Three Month Certlflcato; No Minimum. 5.75°1••5.92°/o On .. Yur Certificate; $1.000 Minimum. 6.00°/o.6,18 °/o Two-Year Certfflcatei $51000 Minimum. •£"tc1,.,,. Annual Eamlnga • INSURANCE TO '20,000 J • a DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE More Belt-tightening Although salary negotiations have jllst begun, West Oranae County elementary and bigh 'cbool teachers may also feel the plnch of the current recession. Belt·cinching techniques will 11ndoubtedly be requlr•. ed in many districts, especially the Huntington Beach Union Hli:th Sc hool District \'l'hich could face a Joss of $4 million in operating funds this June. . High school administrators have all but said .that there will be no pay raises for anyone if the dlstricl is unable to win.its June 15 override election. The teachers. nevertheless. have asked for a six per· cent pay boost for a salary range of $7.400 to SlS,461. They have llffered to pay their raises back if the financial hardship should occur. but it is doubtful ""hether such Jn arrangement is legally feasible or workable. Ocean View School District elementary school teach· ers have also asked for their annual raise. They have pro· posed an increase in starting salary from $7,173.to $8,000 and a ceiling salary hike from $13,935 to $16.000. A further proposal by the Ocean View Teachers As· 1;ociation calls fof an automatic $1 ,000 raise every three years for teachers who have been '"~th the district for more than 10 years and \\•ho have earned more than 45 units of graduate work. Even though their salary negotiations are far from being settled. it is generally conceded that the Ocean View dislrict is in a better position to give the teachers some kind or pay adjustment since a major budget cut is not predicted for the next school year. Teachers in the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District are in a tough sala ry battle (or the second straight year. Teachers h~ve asked ro~ a. 4.9 percent ove~· all salary raise to meet the cost of hv1ng. plus an add1· tional £our percent. Trustees, however, have adopted a "salary freeoo,'' which means no pay ralses, period. unW board members determine how much money there Is next ye•r. That doesn't leave much room to bargain and teachers are justifiably upset since other districts Jn less healthy fi· nancial positlon have been at least \\1illing to talk about ialary possibilities. Unlike other dis tricts, teachers in the Fountain Val· Jey School District do not discuss salaries until mid·year 1January·February). For the most part, the picture ls one of more belt· tJghtening -and some almost certain unhappiness. A Puzzling Situation lt seems puzzling that a special committee is need· ed to close a co.mmunication gap between the Fountain Valley City Council and its planning commission. But city officials have asked Cou ncilman George Scott. Co mmi ssion Chairman James Dick. City Attorney Thomas Woodruff, City, Manager James Neal and Plan· ning Director Clinton Sherrod to clarify actions taken by the planning commission and the city council. They \11on't just relate \\'hat action took place, but v.•hy. Recent controversies over zoning caused ?\1ayor Ed· \vard Just to appoint the liaiso n coinmittee. Several zon- ing items went back and forth bet\veen the council and commissioners \\1ithoul any satisfactory a<"lion . Si_nce councilmen and com rnissioners seen1 to agree there 1s a _problem of communications, perhaps the 1ia1· soo committee can help. It seems like adding one more layer of explanation and discussion, but it's probably worth a try. • H 'Airlines Are Prone to Use Gobbled ygook Dear Gloomy Gus N ATO Troop Strength Battle Continues j\!,~i·:.'Y, }~ H~0 : ..• ~t -~--\"~~ •. J ............ ,~-....: ' One of the many specialty magazines I read regularly. in the relenlless quest for column m1teri,al, is "Air Line Pilot.'.' In its pages. 1 layman learns an awful . lot about airlines. and nying, that he might otherwise ne\•er know. One of the articles that pleased me most. in a recent issue, was \l.Titten by Robert Buckhorn. the aviation editor of UPI , the news service. Buckho~ was dealing with the common complaint by pilots and airline people ~ene~8;llY11 that the daily press ''overs1mphf1es or "distorts" aviation stories. Some of this is simple ignorance or hash~. BucKhorn admits: a reporter may confuse a "precautionary landing" "·ith an "emergency lending." or a "flight recorder " with a "cocKpit voice recorder." The trade press. on the other hand, rarely makes such mistakes. BUT BUCKHORN, a recognized and respected expert in the field. charges that a great deal of the "ove.r-simpHfica· Uon" of the media "springs from the ·in· dustry'1 inability to co mmunicate." The apecial jargon or aviation is somelime.s aimed al preciseness: just as. often. it may be aimed at obscuring the facts behind a lot of fancy v~biage. As an ex.ample. he ciles: "The cause of the crash was tht pilot's fa ilure to main· la in sufficient altitude to avoid neighbor· ing terrain ." Translation : ''The plane flew into the side of a hill." Or this classic bit of official gobbledygook: "The pilot's apparently unrecognized descent While we're looking at tax loop- holes, v.·hy not lake a look a1 "wel· fare loopholes" -all !host: poor little illegitimate children support· ing their useless mothers. -C. A . rl>ll fMklA f'ffteCtl r11•11ri• 'l!tw1, Ml MC11Mlrfll' ltltM llf tM IMWUIHt, t..-i• ~' Ht _.,. M 01-1' 0 111, D11t1 ,lltl. to an altitudt: be Joy: that of tht airport." THE FAA DOESN'T speak of "parachutes ,'' but of "at:rodynamic personnel decelerators." Engines don 't "fall off": tht:y always · ' de I a c h ·lhemse.lvts" from airplanes that nt:vt:r "crash.'' but only make ''uncontrolled descents into the ground ." U an ov.ersimpLificalion, or even an outright error of fact. appears in 11 story, Buckhorn asserts, it is not deliherale, "but it could be lhe result of some pom- pous, confusing, and unnecessa ril y .co.m· plicsted pronouncement by an airline lawyer, economist or engineer." AND WHAT IS TRUE here is equally true in dozens of ather fields. ~fOBt groups are interested in covering up the~ mistakes or ineptitudts, to save their reputatians or to guard against lawsuil.3. The people they hirt a! t h e i r "spoKesmen'' lo deal with the media are primarily conce.med with making the group look good , and nat with the plain facts. Tht mass media ovtr-simp\ify becau5!': the special interests ovtr~omplicale and obfuscate the issues v.ith legal and ttchnical terminology. When I he parachute fails , thty wanl to blame it on the weather. A Nation of Beggars To the EdilDr: \\'ith all our riches. \\'e have become, in a few short years, a nation of beggars - begging our enem~s for mercy instead of clobbering them in lhe. first place. The silly begging began when L.B.J. of· fered \IM!tnam a billion dollar! of tax money lf they would quit fighting. The futile begging has been going an ever since. Let's \ooK at some of ii: l. Secretary of State Dean Rusk begged Hanoi for evtn a feeble sign that wo1.1ld indicate a w\l\ingnt!! to negot1a1t. One Dtan Ignored . 2. The Paris begging 15 almost comical. , J TIIE POW WIVES have. begged to no avail. 4. A Te11s millionaire beggar, ROM Perot, "'a5 refused by Ha noi. 5. A begging group offering thfm.stlves tn exch11nge for "P0\'¥"1 "'as laughtd at by both Hanoi and mt. 6. We begged North Korea to lree Bucher, and we Jost his 1hlp. 7. Tht calley conviction appeased the enemy atJd cave camfort . a. We .1ppeased South American pirates for hijacking tuna boats. t Even Blng Crosby has • plan to brlbe Hanoi. 10. And a new Texas group l~ &oing to :Piela to bea: Hano.I for something. AND THERE'S NO telling bow many otber kookl will try this fut ile gimmick. But this mnUnuous begging does give aid and comfort to the enemy. and in time al war which the Con;res-1 ii too cowardly to dec:Jart a& thl• time, such aid and com· Letters fram readers are welcomt. Normall11 t.()riter.s ;hould convty the ir messages tn 300 words or le~s. Tht right io condense letters ta fit spac« or 1:Zimlnatl!: libl!:l 13 re.served. All lgt- ters must fn.cludl!: .signature and mail· ing addre.ts, but t1amts ma11 be witJi. held on .,.tquest i/ sufficient rell!on Is apparent. Poetry will not be pub· lished: fort would be called treason. We are a nation of beggars. our rulers are the culpri~, and the ta.xpayer i!l the np. MILT BASHAM •1Ur•. Robe r t Smith' To U.. Editor: Although I hav4! be~ rather weary af Womtn's Lib sln11ns ind attitudes. I mUJt admil that I have: becomt: more aware of tht frequent. ofte:n inadvertent. indignity imposed upon them. To be specific, I have come: to que.stlon the journalistic practk:e af rt.ferring to "·omen by their h~band 'a give:n and surnames. Why !ihould a woman bt refer· red to 1s "~lrs. 'R6btrt Smith"? Her name isn't Robert, and she daesn't belon1 ta him. Alrtady, she has given up her family name. I would sugge1l that it would lend 1 dei;erved dignity to a v.·oman if she "'ere to be referred iO u Mra. t.ouiae i Rebert) Smith. WM. LYON, Ph.D. Mansfield Is Still Not Satisfied WASHINGTON -Less than l\l.'O month.s before the Senate erupted into a critical dispute over Sen. J\f i k e ~1ansfield 's propo~at for removing U.S. troops from Europe, the Pentagon was explicitly warned lhal the troop con· troversy cauld flare out af control on the Senate floor. 11Je warning was issued behind closed doors by Sen. John C. Stennis, O.Miss., the experienced chairman of the Senate Armed Services Cammittee. Ironically, St.ennis v.·as the floor leader who had to quell the Senate uprising 'll'hen, to the Nlxon administration's e x pressed surprise, the troop Cilntroversy broke during deba te on extending the military drafl . Stennis interrupted I a t e f\1 a r c h testimony by Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor to caution that, as a Jong lime supporter af NATO. he v.•as concerned lhat a troop debate mig ht break loose in the Senate and become "uncontrollable." He said the Pentagon should be \\'ilhclraw. ing non-cambat troops from the 300,000 now stationed in Europe. THE SENATOR also suggested that the United Slates might give NATO allies a year's advance warning that it was going to withdraw a specific number of troops !ram the NATO support force and thus ease the impact in Europe. ' Alle u-Go ldsn1ith Reso r, apparently un impressed by the Slennls alert. replied that there would be only small savings from brin ging troops home. He added that the presence af same 525,000 troops and dependents in Europe accounted for a little less than a billion dollars or the big deficit in the U.S. balance or payment/\. In the end. thank.-; to Stennis end a strange a~sortment of allies ranging from Dean Acheson to Leonid Brezhnev, Mansfield's proposal v.·as rejected. The Senate vole. a rather easy 61 to 36, was interpreted as a victory for President ~ixon . The President will be mistaken, hO\\'Cver. if he concludes that he has re.ally v.·on anything big or if he assumes that last v.·eek's Senate vote has really settled 1he troops conlroversy. He had , in feet, won na more than an initial skirmish in what prom ises to be a con· tinuing battle aver troop strength in Europe. DEMOCRATIC LEADER f..1ansfield has made it clear that he will raise the Issue again If withdrawals do not materialize in lhe negotialions envisioned by Brezhnev's fortuitous statement. Paradoxically, it v.·as the Russian leader's hopeful comment which really "'On the day for Mr. Nixon and his NATO policy. There remains a Senate sentiment, running to many more than 36 votes, "'hich favors some wilhdraw;;il from the U.S. NATO force that has bef:n substant· ial\y unchanged for 20 ye11rs. That sfn· • timenl should not be underestimated. Had the Russians not i n v a d t d <.;.zechoslovakia in 1968. the Senate.might ,,.ave spearheaded a movt for con- gressionally·ordered NATO troops reduc· !Ions at the lime. The late Sen. Richard B. Russell. D-Ga.1 was ready then t.o lend his towering prestige to a reasanable troop 1vi1hdrawal. If negotiations 1vith the \Varsaw Pact do not begin rather quickly, of if they drag along with no results, a new Mansfield initiative could have a wholly different outcome. WHY SURPRISE? -It should also concern President Nixon that the top· echelons of his administratian were caught by surprise when Mansfitld acted lo tie !he troop rl!duction proposal ta I.he draft hill. Even if Resor relayed no signal from the forthright Stennis camments, there wa s plen!y of advance warning. Mansfield announced publicly in December that he would not be 5atisfied "'\th a mere expression of Senate sen· timent on the troop issue this lime. The Democratic leader said he wau!d act to force the removal al some ur the NATO garrison in the new Congress. All the evidencf' is that administration leaders at the capitol passed the word that a shov.·dov.·n could come quickly, as soon as the recent dallar speculation focused public attention on the co~linuing balance of payments deficit. THE EVIDENCE IS. in fact. that with warnings a,bundantly at hand. the Nixon \\'hite House v.·as simply unimpressed. Like a military headquarter.s supplied v.•ith good intelligence but unable to in· terpret. lt. Mr. Nixon's Whitt House coul d nol believe an important legislative battle "'as in prospect. The incident serves as a rem inder that the Nixon White House. unlike the White House under Johnson and Kennedy, has no policy-level advisers who were trained at the Capitol and are quickly capable of judging, from a variety of confusing reports. just v.•hat is going to happen in the House -or. especially, in the sometimes erratic Senate. By Robert S. Alita Navy Hides Costly Helicopter Goof WASH1NGTON -The Navy is stuck with defective flight decks and other fi:ully helicopter facilities on mpre than 150 of its ships. The 740 drane hellei!plers built for tht: ships have either crashed, been crated and stored or otherwise. relired from their anti-submarine wark . In the process, the Navy has sq u a n· de.red almost $1 bil· lion in public funds. The admirals have hidden the magni· tude of this loss fram Congress and the nation. E v e n more outrageaus, the Navy is still building the faulty gear into ils nev.·esty proudest destroyers. The drone choppers themselves \\'ere phased out in 1966. They were i;upposed fo clatter up from the ship platforms, zero in on subs and dispatch them v.•ith torpedo bombs. In stead. the drones plummeted into the sea like rotten Apples in a windstorm. or disappeared into the blue, never to be seen again. THE UNf\1Ar\'NED craft, called DASH far Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter, even had bad luck fin the graund . Three were burned up In truck accidents. For reasons anly the Navy knows, ane ol these Edsels of the air w11s consigned to tht Smithsonian museum. We learned of the billion~oll•r· boon· doggle from a classified Navy report prepartd by trouble shooter Rear Am . John Bulkeley. The N1vy had good B y Ge orge --- Dear Gt0rge : ~1y wife hasn't 1pcken to me In mare than seven weeks now and lhls 'ti tht: third time I've v.Tltlcn to you 11bout it . SILEj'lj'T TREAntE~i' Dear S.T.: Ye!, it Is -the thlrd time. Just how long do )'t!U plan to gloa.t about this &itua!ion, anyhov.·? { Jack Anderson reason tfl hastily classify this 168-page document. Jn it, Bulkeley siizlcd on discovering an "uncertified helo platform" on the USS Knox, ane or a spanking new group of destroyers. He a]so turned up a "useless .•. hangar and Jp.5 fueling system. "DASH .•. PLAITOR.\1 can only be us. ed as a Vert Rep pick up.'· he growled, meaning that choppers can hover to pick up or drop supplies, but caMot safely land on the platforms. The Admiral wrote thal the ~avy. not the contractors. "'ere to blarne. ''G0\1ernment Responsible'' v.·as his t.crsc judgment on the goof. \\'e checked olher Navy ships lo find oyl whether the long.fiefunct DAS~[ sYstem hnd been built into them . We fuund more than 150 ships \\•ith bum plal· forms, faulty hangars, and useless con· trot rooms. · The ships equipped to handle worthless iirones. according to analher internal Navy document, reads like a "Who's Who in the U.S. Fleet" M10NG THESE are the destroyer USS 'J . P. Kennedy, the vaunted nuclear ' deslroyer USS Truxton and e v e n destroyer tenders Uke: the USS Dixie. Boring the Bartender Remark! th11l a bartender gets tired or hearing : ""'hat do you have to do to get a drinJ on the house here-get a ladder and climb up on tile roof?" "You know those JO different drinks the litd ies 11t the back table ordered, Alfie? \\iell. hold 'em. Thf'y've ell changed their minds again ." ''\\'hen I feel l'\•e had enough to drink. i .. .::.. -' -1 ..;;~ I ,1!,.;;, ,·~ ashore at rich.',' -/ you won't have to tell me. I'll tell yOui" "Did you knaw the Pilgrim fathers Jandl!d where thfy did beeause tbe ~fa}ilov;1er had ~ out of beer? U they hat! had a few more k<'_gs abo11rd Lhty might have come Btacb and all d1ed "''OU ~IEAN ''OU never heard of i Esklmn Teardrop? \Vell. first you-." "I'm not 11sking you to load my drl , Alfie. but don 't you think you ought D pour al least enou&h to cover the: bottof!' • ---r· ! H'a l Boyle \...,~ i ---.. ~--. ·----/ of the glass?" ''\\1el1. happy daze. l always say, What do you alv.·ays say~·· "I can whip anybody at the bar half my sl2e-<1r even smaller." "I know you've heard all my old troubles. Alfie, bul how would you like. to be the: first lo listen to 8 couple or my new ones?" "Put this one on tht cuff. too. Alfie, and v.·~n my ship comes in the first tllb 1'11 pay Is your$." ''''OU ~tEAN ''OU never ht.11rd or Chfncse Singsong Punch? \\1ell. first you-." "The la5t three rounds were for the rond. \\'hat 'll we make this one for?" "!l's n long time betwcr.n drinks. Alfie. Too Ion~ .if you Rt<k me.'' •·tr you had 10 gel arthrili11. Alflt. why did you ha ve ta iet It in your pourlna: arm ?" Some had been modernized with DASH platforms at huge eicpense long after the program v.·as officially declared a flop. Shamefaced N11xy experts expla ined private ly to my associate. Les \Vhitten, that barnacle-encrusted admirals had in· iisted an building the shi ps' platforms without ever being f'Ure that the drones would work. When the unmanned chop- pers flopped into the sea, the 1dmiral1 kept building more platforms in the hope that a new helicopter could be de veloped to use them. But the new helicopter pro- gram also fizzled. NOW, THE NAVY is praying that 1till another Light-weight helicopter, or a heavier chopper will work. In either case:, the old DASH facilities would have to be modified at extra cost lo the taxpayer. Officially, the Navy told us that the cost of the debacle was ""ay below 11 billion. But it acknowledged that 336 af the drones had been lost. mostly througl1 crashe8. The rest have been mothballed at even mort expense to the U.S. Treasury. ar pressed into makeshift limited dulies. "Maybe," said one Navy wag gloomily, "we can put wheels on th em and use them for go-carts.11 ' I -----Friday, May 28, 1971 Tht tditorlal page of the Dallft Pilot 1etk.t ta inform and stim- ulaU readeri b11 presenti11g thts n111wspapc:r's opinians and com- mentary on 1op1cJ of inttresc and slQnlflcQ'llce, by providing a forum for the t~culon a/ our rttJdtrs' apirr:ions, and bt1 presentinq the diverse trlttD- point.s a/ Informed oln1rt>tr1 and spok11m1n on topic1 of the dau. Robert N. Weed, Publi•her 111 1, .. I Year's Finale Busy 1ne1nbers of the Huntington Beach Assistance League are concluding their successful year's activities ·\vith a burst of co111bined fun. business and the all irn- portant changeover of leadership for the year to con1e. friendly infor1nality \vill keynote the installation of ne\v officers following a noon luncheon planned in the Airporter Inn on Thursday. June 3. f\1en1bers and friends are invited lo join the party, which also is planned in honor of provisionals of the league and its Silver Anchor Auxiliary -not only those ne\v to the status, but all provisionals received since fall . fo'ollo"'ing the maxim of business before pleasure, there \\'ill be a business session called to order al 10 a.m. precechng the luncheon program. Taking over the ga"'el from J\·Irs. Gilberl Turnbull \1•ill be l\·lrs. Richard Crouch. Other ne\v officers \Vho \rill serve in the coming year inrlude the ~Imes. \Villiam J1enry. Charles Otis and Melvin Penhall, vice presidents . .-\lso joining in the leadership of the league. \vhirh con tributes hundreds of volunteer hours yearl y to its thrift shop and clinic for speech defects in children as its main philanthropies. are the Mmes. bouis Lapthorne, corresponding secretary; Berrell Rei s, recyrding secre· lary. and T{obert ~turray. treasurer. Others \Vill be the J\imes. Richard Cra1\'fo rd . r\S· sisteens coordinator; Arthur Ne1\'li11, hospital activilies chairman: Robert Seybert. district social service; Ray Lamoureux. gift shop chairn1an: \Vill iam Ru ssell. house chairman; Kenneth Konopasek. public relalions: Gary hliller. regional council representative: Jack Colvin. al · ternate. and Raymond \\'alker. thrift shop chairnian. Co ntinuing the "fun" part of the day. those 1vho uish may remain for bridge follo\ving the luncheon and in· stallation. l ' I I~ ; \ " BEA ANDERSON, Ed;to• l'rld1r, Mar 11, nn Ptl t II • League With Honors • ' READY TO SERVE -Eager provisionals of J-luntington Beach's .A..ssistance League rleft to right), J\lrs. John Gera and J\1rs. Norma n Farrell get into "harness" for next year's efforts in manning , .)Ill their Thrift Shop.· Tying the official apron string':<; is incoming secretary, Mrs. Louis Lapthorne. , Dinner Ceremony Anchors Lift For New Crew II. \VIII be an chors a\vcigh for ne\v officers of the Assistance League o( 11untinglon Beach's auxiliary \vhich serves the community in one of the most import.- ant of all volunteer efforts-hospital service. lnstalJation cerc1nonics on \Vcdnesday, .lune 2, in J1 unti nglon 11arbour's lhe \Vhistling Oyster will be pre- C'eded by a 6 p.n1. cocktail hour and 7 p.m. dinner. Taking over the role of chairman of the Sliver An· chor r\uxiliary for a second ter1n \Vil] he t.1 rs. Owen r.1iller. Irving ('assini. administrator for lluntington Inter- community llospital 1\·here league n1e1nbers put in their niany hours of sei·vice, wilt be in charge of installing the new leaders. Those joini ng Mrs. Miller in voJunteer efforts to asSist hospital patienLo;; and visitors during the coming year will be the Mmes. \Vilfred Rose, Gary Clopp and Darwin Kassell, vice chairmen: Others are the J\.1mes. Gordon Brock, recordinl secretary; Robert Langer, corresponding secretary; Rob- ert Freman. treasurer: Patrick McGinnis, schedulinf chairman, and Joseph McGi.nley, public relations. SAMPLING THEIR FARE -New offic- ers of Silver Anchor Auxiliary are Oeft to right) Mrs. \Vilfred Rose. Mrs. Owen Miller and ?i1rs. Gordon Brock. Mini Va 'cations Offer Maximum Matrimonial Benefits DEAR ANN LANDERS : w a~ delighted to read that you ·are in favor of married couples escaping from the hum- drum of daily living and checking into a. motel for the night I can tell you from experientt it has kepi our marriage from bogging down -or ma ybe even from falling apart. Cy and I have been married 12 years. We have three healthy. norn1al children. but they are a handful and I need lo gel a\vay from them periodically. Two years ago v.•hen the baby v.·as six monlh!! old. I felt as if I was cracking up. E,rerylhing got on n1y nerves r-.1y doc1or $Hggesled lhal my husband and I take 1 1rcE'kend trip. ··Jus1 drh to of I ANN LANDERS ~ son1e~·here-." he said. -I'll always believe that weekent! saved my sa nity. The simple luxury of sletping late for two glorious mornings in a row n1ade a new woman out of me . That f'X· perience was so wonderful my husband and I decided to go again in 90 days - and we did. but just for one night. ~We couldn't afford to pay a sit ter for longer \ Aller the second tr ir> v.'e n1ade uri our minds lo treat our~clves to one night ~way every 90 days and not let anything interfen!. We gel a great kick out or it v.·hen the desk cltrks give us the eye. \Vt know whal they 're thinking and we reel wicked and nudge each other. Our best talking is done on these one- night trips. Al hon1f' there are too n1any inferruption$: -too much !o do -or we ;ire too tirC'd , Ifs '''ondc rlul to hi' nlflne !or 18 ·hour~ with no kids yclHn,1t. no phone ringing. no hoo~work nr cooking. Nothing lo do bul enjoy one another's company. Fnr 1hose cru1ples who think they can't afford it. let me say it's cheaper than a nervous breakdown -or a divorce. One ni11h1 in a hotel can be thf! best Ma~riage . Saver in ll~ 11·orld. And lhe value of THAT can 't be measured in dollars and cent~. -r-.llt & ~1RS. SO HELP ~1E OEAll ~1.&~I.: I ret.-tived maoy leller1 !!uch :is yot1rs, and I thank yo11 . l1E1\R ANN Li\NDEHS: \\It have known each other for 10 years. He s;ays he i~ in love wi!h me. I KNOW I am in lovf' with him . \Ve havt all the import11nl 1l11 ng~ in cnn1n1on: religion. education , age, physical allraction. The problem : l can't nail him down. No matter what a~ proach I use he simply refuses to make a commitment. I've told him on several occasions to get out or my life if he doesn't want to marry me , but he won't. And J guess I don't want him to. Ile is the only man I have ever loved and he knows It. t am not Interested in going out 'A'ilh anyone else. Neither is he. llow did a sensible girl like me gel trapped like this ? Whal can I do about him ? -NEW HAi\1PSlllllE OEAfl llA~IP : You can't do anything about hlm -a1 evidenced by Ute history flf your nunRnce -but yo u can do snmethinR about your5elf. fact the fa cts. I Do you want lo be a wife aod mother! If 50, you'd helter drop thl1 bird wlllle yoar reproductive machinery 11 1tlll fanc- tioning. If, on the otht.r·hand, he meant so much to you that you 1lmply ca1not envision a IUt without him, you'll ll1ve te settle for the relationship on, hi• tenn1 and hope that one day he will cbaa1e llll mind attd want to marry you. How far should a teenage couple eo'! Can necidng be safe'! When does it becom<; too hot lo handle? Send ror Ann Landers' booklet. "Necking and Pettine -\\lhal Are the Limits?" Mail your re- quest to Ann LAnders in cart of the DAf· LY PILOT enclosing 50 cenUI In coin an4 a long. stan11X'd. se lf-addressed envelope. • .. • 14 OAJLV PILOT Ftld•y. M1128.1971 ~Decking the Hall ~:-Pecorating the Comrpunity Congregational Church, Corona del 1'1ar for an up- coming luncheon are Mrs. John L. Kent. outgoing president of the Women's Service Fellowship Oem and Mrs . Roy H. Richard. incoming president. The final event of the year will take place \Vednesday, June 2. ,• Community Appeal Scouts Seek Identity Local control cry during di scus1ions. is ofttn the poll tic al Taking up the banner is the ,Girl Scout Council of Orange County "'hlch Is undergoing a 'gti'uctural reorganiiation bas- ed on the concept of com· munity identification . The council ls changing from the neighborhood and district subdivisions to com- munity associations a n d seri.·ice areas.. ''Before a district would take portions of 'many cities." ~frs. \Vayne I.. Hanlon. a spokesman for the Huntington Beach Community As.~oci~­ tion. "Tl was very difficult lo get logelher with people in the community. \Ve are un· dergoini;: a revision of bou n· daries to further community relations." lrhe new associations 1vill in· volve civic, communit.v ;ind professional groups includin,1t: the city fathers. parks and recreation orficials. Restructurin~ should enable the Girl Scouts to be m1lre responsive tc> !he community by develc>pini;: direct com· munications •with adults 11nrl youth organizations. added Mrs. Hanlon. CITY PARTICIPATION Idea lly, there Y!'ill be cc>m· munily association in each of tne 23 separate citie5 wit hin Uie county rathtr than the Rrevious 13 districts, said !11rs. '.Barbara West, lie I d staff supervisc>r for the council. "The neighborhood plan is giving way to service units comprised of consultants. leaders. organizers that wilt service the troops," she ad· ded. "We are hoping to draw the community into developing a better program and more opportunity for the girls." Huntington Beach residtnts August Rites will gather al 7 .30 p.m. Tues- day, June I, in the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria; Fountain Valley, 7:30 p.m .. Monday. June 7, in the Foun· lain Valley Hlgh School. and Lagu11a Beach at 7·30 p.m., Monday. June 14. Interested persons may con· tact the Girl Seoul Council for further lnformalion. Harborite to Marry An Aug. I wedd ing in I.he Newporter Inn is heing plan· ne d by Holly Heflin and Tim P . Shepard. Parents of lhe engaged cou· ple are Mr. and Mrs. Ross E. Heflin of Newport Beach and ~1r. and Mrs. Patrick R. Shepard of Los Gatos and former Newport Be a ch residents. t.1iss Henin Is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, studied at the Sorbonne and earned her BA in French at the University of California, Sanla Barbara where she pledged Chi Omega. She now is teaching at Vandeoberg Air Force Base. Her fiance. al so B NHHS i:iraduate, studied at San Diego and Sa n Jose State cnllegcs, and now is slud yi np; psychology and city a n d HOLLY HEFLIN regional planning at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. LEGAL NOTICE , __ _ IU,11101 (QUIT 0, ~ T·771lt Calendars Circled LEGAL NOTICE I ITATI 01" CALl,OlllHtA '01111 NOTICE TO (llllDITOllll THI COUNTY 0' OlllAHOI TO THI Cllll!OITOlll$ 01" JOll!'M I . HI. A...U" CA'lllTIElll. TllAHSFl!'lllOlll · ,urw•M lo Variety Spotlighted Liincheons. coffee11 a n d cocktail parties fill the calen- dar for many area organlia· lions as June arrives and the club year closes. Women'• League Honoring the newly licensed architects in Orange County with a cocktail party will be the Women's Architectural League. Mr. and Mrs. David KJages will open their Laguna Beach hflme for the affair Saturday, June S. Those to be honored Horoscope include Rodney L a u t e r , William Scrlmpler, Michael Hadley, Rlcllard Nat I and , Edwin Van Den Bo.uche, Peter mt.sch and Will Foster and their wives. Others are Roger Shleppy, Ernest Adams, R ob er t Homacek, F. W. Cubit and Richard Jones and wives. Junior League F:>Uowlng a 9!30 a . m. business m e e t I n g Thurs· day, June 3, mtmbel'! and guests of the Newport Harbor Sagittarius: Study Gemini SATURDAY MAY 29 By SYDNEY O~fARR ~tars as&0eiated tbe \\'ltb planet Aries. Tbe number related to the "'red plaaet'' Is 9. fllars, among otbtr things, depicts Initiative, pugnaclousnes1, direct COD· frontal ion, action. Many persons born u.nder Arlts display qualltles which are ~tertian: they are leaders. ready to fight when Ibey lblnk tbe cause is right. An Aries person tan be headstrong. In· dependent and an original thinker. Of all the signs. Aries ts least likely to takt a back seat. transactions. Your position Is stronger than you think . Don't 3eJI yourself short. Insist .:in equitable arrangement. Aim at quality. Heed voice of ex· perience. AQUARIUS fJan. 20..Feb. 18): Finish rather than initiate projects. Get overall view. Some may try to push or rus h you. tt1ainlain balance. Long· range view now will be con· structive. Relative is im· pa tient. PISCES !Feb. 19-li-farch 20 ): Stick to !acts. Get help where needed. Applies also t o physical weUare. D o n • t neglect health. New approach ls apt to succeed. Leo in· dividual could play prominent role. Be receptive. HOTICI 0' HIAlllHO OF ,ITITIOH leocllol!• "'" •nd 6107 ol '"'9 Cel111w'11I• '0111 ,IOIATI! OF WILL AND 1'011 Unllorm Comm.,tl•I Cooh, YOU Ir• LITTlllll Tl!ITAMIHlAlll Y llet•bY 11(11111.0 •l ltlllowt: l!llllt of HAllll:Y MONTGOMEllY, lr•nlf••DI 11 •bol>T 10 ,,.,~, t l•tn1f1r DKtlH1I •1 Ill• 11nde11lol\f0 M:EL5EY CAVID NOTICE IS HE ll;EllY GIVEN 11\tt CYril (HASE, Tr•n1l•rt1. In b!ilk. 1tl of !tit . , A. Frll1 "'' Iii..! llert l!\ • 1>1tlflo11 tot m1tul111, ..illOllt1, tnl':l\1.,_1., or .,..,, Junior League will hear J im oroo111 ot will '"° "" IU11•nt• of L.i1t11 ln111111or1, •nd 1Qu!pm1n1 of "'" c1n11n SI I I I d lt\!lmtnll•y lo l'ttl•IOl'M'r ••lettntl ID (ltHI clt1nln1 Ou1l!\tlt ~-" ., eeper , .ree ance wr ter an w111c,, 11 "'""tor 1ur111.,. P•rllcy11,.. ,..., "C••tle••1 C•r~t ct111n1"'': ,11 o1 wt.Id• past president or the Orange '"•I ,,,, lime '"° Plett ol .... ,1 .. , 1111 11 loc .. td •• Jl5 M1tnell1 St'"'' (1111 r. H. · I Soc' ''"'' h11 betft •ti lot Ju111 11, 1111, 11 M111, Coun!Y ol Or•n.,, Ctll!or!\lt, ....,unty l310r1ca lel y. 9:10 I m,, In 1111 courtroom DI Dt1>a•I· l"• Prlunr n•m• Of' Mmti "'" M El S I 'IJ mitnl No l OI 1110 tOIJ•!, t i 100 (Ivie buslnHo •Odreu11 of 1111 '''"'"'Ill' tM rs. mer prou Wl open c1n•1r Ori•• w111, In tti• City of Sin" t r1m!1rte ••• •• tollow•: htr Orange home for the event An1, C•lllornla. Tr1n1r1ro•. J05e~ E. c .. 111., tJ5 . . D•1td M1v JJ, 1t11 Mtonoll• S• .. (0111 M•S•, CAlllor1'1t which will be followed by a w, E. sT JOH N Tr•n•f*"'· io:11u~ 011r1<1 c,,..,; nu luncheon cwn1y Clt•k Port M•r111t P1 .. Ntw100r1 •••t~. c1o1. • l'l!TER C. TOlllNAY All olllt< t>uslntn n•m•t •nlf Mld•ll .. I UOO At11111, lu/11 H~mMr '°' uud b~ 1n1 Tr•n1ftro• wllllll'I 1111 tllrtt Co111 Mtll, C•lllH"I• HO• Yl.lrl !•11 O•l!, lO l•r II kno'"" ltl lllt lei : (IU) J•l·otH Trt"tl•rtt, •'"' N0<>1 Scripps Alumnae Alltr"'r for '•llfl0<>er Tiit butt tr•11iltr h lo H <1>111ummt!ltd A panel of Scripp& College PVb!lllltd Or•n•r COii! Dtllv l'llot Mtv •1 UNITED CALIFORNIA II AN II:. U. 1t •nd Jun1 J, 1911 1)1().11 W•rt11r '"" Mt!n 0111<•, 1JOI Jou111 Mtln financial planning experts will s1ru1, S1nt1 An•. ceunty o1 or1n11. discuss privatt co JI e g LEGAL NOTICE C•lllcr•I•, on °' ,111r Ju"• J, n11. OtltO: MtV 14.. ltll budgets ·wit h the Orange Coast IU,lllllOR COU•l OF THE ;:~~~~ •• ~:~Id Ctl••• Chapter of Scripps College 1rA1E o" CALIFORNIA 'o• unitff c1111or,,11 1,,,. Alumn ae during a luncheon THI cou,',.", .',',,,0111.t.NGI. J•1 »u111 M•!" s1rtt1 .. J1nt• A..,, Ctllltrnl• U7t7 Wednef>day, June 2. HOTICI 01' Mt:AlllHO 01' PETITION 11cr•w Ht. 111-16U '°0'111 "1101All! OF WILL I.NO l'OR P11Dll1fte<I Or1n11 Coott.t 0.,1, "llol, The effecl nf the stock LfTTEIS TI JTAMEMTAlllY M•• 11, ltll 1.m.11 k I d (HO IONOJ mar es on en owments and E1111• o1 JOlEPH OE F11;L1PPts. LEGAL NOTICE the ri sing cost of education DPc••1~ ·11 '--· NOT ICE 1$ HEllEllY GIVEN tlltl --ocOCCCO-CC0-7'~=~=--Wl ~ major concerns when c.i~trlm• Dorris io:otiz 11,1 tlleo "''"", Cl!llTll'ICAll o' 1u111o11111 the group meets in the Balboa .... 1""" •o• p•oDtT• ot .,..,u ,,,., ,0, l'tCT111ou1 "'•M NAMI l1su•ncf Of Lt!11r1 t tll•mtn!•rv lo P•ll· Tl\• l'1!dtrsJ1...,, do ""'•bv c•rll l'f fhtl Island home of 1.1rs. R. B. 11on1r rt1e,.n<1 to "'"le" 11 .,,..,, '"' tll•• ••e co,,.,ut11111 • Du11ne11 '' nn Smith lurtht• o•rhcui..ri. '"" Ill•! In• limo ~"'1 Nor!,, F•lrvi1w Slr•ll, 5.tnlt Aftl, ' ol•ct at ne•r,ng Int ••me 11•S be.n IH Ctlll11rnl1. unoer Ill• hcll!lou1 firm ntm• !or Junt !), !911, ., t :)() •.m,, !" 1n. ot Hl·llROW tNVE STMENTl, '"" '"''' C.OU•troorn ol Deotrtmtnt No. l ol ••Id 11ld firm lo com""""" of !h• lof l-1"• tOIJrt. ti 700 Civic C•n!er Orlvo Weit In Plrlon" Wl>ol• n1m•1 In lull '"" plttts Family Service !llt CllY <II S1nt1 Ant, C1 tltornlt. ' of ••1ldtn<• ''' •l tollow1, lo.wl!: Wine "'ill flow and the D1teo M•v 15. lt71 Wlllltm c. lrown, 1JIS lt96tam•re W, E. Sl JOHN 11:011<1, LOI Ante le1, C•llfornl• 'lllt))f. cheese will be plentiful when C01Jnrv Clerk io:urr H. H•l111r. "' c1111 Yutct. "" I "Oll!'llT A. tEA5TMAN ll\ou11nd Otks, C•lllornl• tl:i.11. memui::rs an t ~nests of the 2m Htrbor Boul•Ytrd D•t.a M•v 11 , 1•11 Jewish Fan1ily Service gather Sui!• Numbtr .101 w11•11m c. Brown Colli Mt ( Uf J tHH Kurl M. Hel11tr at 8 p.ITJ. Thursday, June 3, Ttll uui'~'•o·O·llGorn. STATE OF CALIFOll:NIA. for a Wine-tasting party. All•rntv tor 'ttlliontr COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, II. Put>ll>h•d O•~n•• Coatt O.i ly PPIOI Mtv On. M•Y ?I, lt ll. ~for• mt, • llo!1rv Ti cke1s at Sl.50 ""r ""rson ~•. lt 1no Junt 3, 1,11 !lll·lt PuOI« In 1nd. !or 1110 St•TI. tt•-•llY e• ~ 1----:-::::-::c-:c::::==--""-, ,.,,..,,.d Wlll1•m C. l •own •"d Muri H. are available for the affai r, to• LEGAL NOTICE H111>1• ""°'"" •o m1 to De 1~1 per1"'1 t k I · T I B h "'"o"" n•m11 ••• 1uoscr1t1e<1 to •11111o111~1" a e Pace Jn emp e el 1nsrrumen1. •nd 1ck110Wl•d9•d ltl m1 111,, Sholom . Sanla Ana, by cal !in11 HOT1c1 o~ 01s10Lu110H 1nev •••c11reo thf "'""'· lh J · h l'> CONTI NUATION OF IU 51 NESS (OFF ICll L $EALJ e ew1s family Ser1·ice at Pu,.u1n1 1,., m1 oroYh•eni or Se<:tlon Milton Div" 534-5270. t51llS 5 of In• C01por•tlon1 Codt ol th<'. No11ry Publlc.C1lllcrnl1 St11e ol C•lftot1l1, nDh<I 11 llereOy 1:v1" Prlnclo•I Ott!cO In The ser\·1ce is a nonprofit 1~11· LDS An,.11l Countv h. h Tnt 01rlnenhoo lltretolo•t •" 111 rn 1 My CommlulOl'I Eu>lru agency 11-' JC c 0 u n s e 1 s ~·""e<"" CHA RLES \/IHCENT PICKUP JU'lf n, "" families and individuals fln '"° HU!IEllT Pl(l(Upo, urn11• tt\I lie· MILTON DIVIS. Ally. bl . !1!1ou1 t1•mt of PICKUP PRECISIO~ tUI Wlllhlr• lhfllt. pro ems of ad justment. GEAR COMP.llNY. City ot cc"• Mtl•, 11v1r1v HH11, C1fll. ttt1• P are nl-child relationships (oun•v 01 O••n1e. ~1111 o1 C•!1I01nlt, is P11bt;1,,eo O••• Co••• o.11v .,11e1. . • now dluolv.O bv mulu•I con-.t11. MIY :Ill, Jlnt 4. 11. 11, ltn 13111 ·11 marriage and old age. HUREll:T PICKUP, 01 '"" ti1v of cos11 Mtw. coun•v ot Or•not. s1a11 ot LEGAL NOTICE League Juniors Cafllornl•, n11 wl!hdr•wn from lftd llt••f---------·-----c•o~ed To be ••>«llleel In tlle condu<lln1 Ct;llTll'ICATll 01' IUllN!;Sl ol lfld busl,.,H, uld CH.II.ALES VIN. FICTITIOUS 'tlM HAMI Art. Is · A . .1 CENT Pl(M:UP. ol •II• Citv o! Coste l ht u..O••sl1nf'd c1o ht•tbv clr'lllY tlrtl IS In clron Wl I be the Me11. C01Jntv ol O•t"9t. s11te of rh•v ••• <ondu<tlni • 11m1teo t>••T ... rillllo theme flf the invita!ional cof· c1111crn•1. w•ll heretl1•• condu<t ••io 11u11"u' ,, Gen•••I ,..,,,,..,.,, t>t lSIJ f I d f II' d t>u.•lne1• ~nd 11 1nt111.a 10 all Tn• aue!s of lOP•I. G1rdtn (;rev•. c1mor,.11 fU.111 ee p anne Or e nel!day, !l•d 1lulln1" •nd ~~ 1ssum•d i nd wltl unde• l~t flc!ll~s firm n1m1 9' IN'. June 2, by the Jun ior AUX· OIY all ouh!~nd•ft1 /ollll~1!lon1> o• ••111 COME . t>ROPERTY ASSOCIAT ES •!'Id .1. · bu1lt1tn ht•tlolo•e ano htrfalTet In· 11111 Sf•d firm 11 tomoo1NI ol lhe fOlloW· I iary, Newport 8 e a ch (urred. lno oe,.on1. wno1• n1m•1 In full i nd AR IES f"f•·ch Zl·Api·i·I !DI.· Assistance League sa111 P1•1Mrth•<> 11 di••olved 11 01 Mav Pl•c" 01 r11 ldence 1r• ,, 1011""''' ta.w!I: 1•...., • 11, 1911 Levis "· To•lo, un M1nn1n1n lttd> Friends appear em otio nal. Guests ,~i ll be shown the Charin v1ncent Plc~vo ll01J1ev1rd. M1n111tten ll11ch. c11. 9026' . . H4J>t•I P•cWuo L1rry N. WOodY. 115.11 Too11, Gtnttn Some fly off handle now at Children s Denta l }I ea ! l h oubh1h1c o.,,,,. Co•u 0111~ f»1e1 Mty G•ov1. ca11to•nl• •1&.:1 s!ightesl provocation. Re alize Center Thrift Shop and Soci·a1 11· ivn 111•·11 wnnen our h1nd1 thi1 d•~ of M1y. 1tn, • Lnul1 F. l'orlo this and tread Hghtly. Do what Service off ices while local and L1rrv N woo11. t •• d b be ' ' 't' ,. " d. I . LEGAL NOTICE STATE OF (All~ORN IA mus ~ one, ut gracious VIS! mg ar 1s .. <; !Spay their COVNTY OF LOS ANGELE S .••. about it . Don't arouse needless work and demonslrate their Cl!111F1c.1.rE ol' 1us1N11:1s on t~11 d•r 01 M11. A.D. ,,,,, bllor• t ' f l'ICTlllOUS H.l.MIE mt, !ftO und•rsltntd. 1 Nolt•Y PuDllt In an agoni sm. era ts. Tiit undefllont<I dOl's c••tllv one 11 •nd !or s11d cnun•v •nd St•te, r111<11,.. TAURUS (April 2().1\lay 20): Mrs. David Ba rnes j s .iuct1111 , bu•ln•.i 11 111 w. 111111 er.'.; tt•••tln,, du11 comm!111°""' •nllt .•wern. On b h, d th ch · . c05t, Mi i.ii. (lllflll'llil, undfr tlle !It· ,,._,ona IY •oPlt•ld loul1 F, Tor10 ""' e e 1n e scenes ac-airman of lhe event \\'hlch 1iuou. 1orm "'"'' 04 0 c. COMPOS iTtON L•rrv H. waoav ~new" 10 m1 10 M "" tivates career areas. You get takes place 1n the Assistance ~ERv1cE •~a tht1 ••le 11•m 11 <omoolf<I ,..,""'' """°" n•m•• •r• 111111er!blof ,. 01 r~t touowino ,,.,.0~. wnoH n•mi in '"• .,.l!h!~ ln1trumen1. I nd •c~nowlfd9eof needed push . Routine i~ sub-League Center. rull ~"0 oiKe 01 ••siaen<• ;1 .,, 10110.,,~ to "'1 '"~' thtY t~•(ul..ci '~ 11m•. J·ect to abru I h Do 'I Dor!1 I. C•no•kY, l&ll) s. A111er '', '" wnn•11 wn,.eot, • h•"• h••'u"'• "' p c ange . n b Stni8 Ana, c,11,0,,,11 92107. · mY "'"" '"".•II••"' "'~ olfl(l11 lt•I ""' be caughL short-handed. Be Re ekehs o.iecr M•v 1& 1911 a1v ar.a re1r '" Wtll <er11tr<•11 llrtt •Mvl d Dorl1 11' C• ..... ~Y "'''"'" rea y 'bfol~ c h a I 1 e n g e • A fund-raising luncheon. sro·~ ::.',',",'M. •,;:,·.o..'~,",",,· :_ou,,••, ',-,,, <O"J01c~~~ •• s~~~~n11n responSI 11(\'. I th .,,. .. , 0 • No!frv Public . C1l•lornl1 GEt.1JN'l (". ay 21.Ju•c 20)·. flpen o e public. ls planned P~bh< '" '"" for •••d S•tTt. ,,.,K>r111tv L01 An"1e1 Countv "' " b •j R tPp•tro.(I ODii> II. CPllOl~Y ~~w~ lD me }!old off .on journeys, if prac· Y 1• esa cbekah Lodge at •e H 1111 ..eflon wlloH ~•m•" •v~K,•D ';;.~.,.cf1~';'.1::1"" E~•if•• !\·cal. Check deta1·1s, 1'•clud1·,.., 11 :JO a.m. Thursday .June J •d ia !h• w11h1n inurum•nt end GEit,t,LD G. WDll'SOH, Attv. ,, "& . • • ' •tk newledQed ••t •••cu!tld tllt wmt. Itel A 1 t s I fl appointments and reserva. in the Mercury Saving s (OF~1c~~L,.,.si!.~1 Mor1oro L~1 A;;~.: •. ~!1i1~~·ft11',s:.!:, • tions. Some re.latives now tend building, Huntington Beach. No!1•Y Public. ce11torn11 Publlsn..i 0••"•1 Coe•• Dii!v '11tf• Prlnc lo•I OlllCI In MIY 11, Jun1 •. 11. 11. 1'11 lJU.n to be contrary. Be forthright, 8 h · L d o .... ,. coun•r but respect older individuals. UC enan 0 98 Mv Comm!nlon E~olrtt April 9, !fl.S ' CANCER (June 21.July 221: Traditional Scottish dances Pyb1 .. ~10 0r1n1e co1n1 D••IY Pilot, "'4t-I Mate t . . MtY 11 •nd Jun1 •. II. ll. nn lJlS.11 FICTITIOUI IU5lNl!I , par ner 13 aggressive Kuna '~''' will be performe d for the Lady NAMI ''"'IMENr concerning money mailers. Be ROBYN BA USER.MAN Buchanan Lodge of Huntington LEGAL NOTICE bu~j~tss ':;1~wl•1 P•rtona 1r• eo1,,, receptive. Stick to principles, _Beach whenn members gather -CEllTl,ICATf OF IUSINf:SS LAGUN A ITAllLES. 460 Molly Sl•Mf. but be willing to make in Lake Park Cluhhouse al ,1c1111ou1 NAME L•tun1 •••ti!. C•ll!ornl• .,~,1. G.ortt M. Grlllln, <1611 Holly Strp t, reasonable concession. Then h I 6:30 p.m. Friday, June 4, for a du~~.' .. ,":'~~11~~~ :,~j,f';';i;<:s'• ~1i°,.~· L11u111 1e1c~. c1111ornl• t'IUI, M1c11111 You UJll·malel g t Bet t 1 ,.,, J. Mur•hY. 111 E11r w11nu1. eo.11 Y e your Way. ro a pot UCk dinner. The event wil] Huntlntll'I !ltl<h, Ctllfcrnlt 91646, undt• Mes•. Ctll!ornlt '1lll . LEO (J I "A 22 ) k lh · . •~t •ltt1tl01J1 llrm name of VIEW ,.. 1 u y ....,. ug. : mar e SJ.Xth anniversary of ESTATES tNllESTMENt GROU• •• , IS buinfSI 11 Mini «WldUtl td bf . P bl' I · ' Gtftlf•( Ptrtnttt111p. u IC re ations 1s area now the group. 1~11 ••id 11.m 11 <""'~sl'd o1 111t 10110.... 11v G~r•• H. Gr111.n that need I t' B R I d In• "'10t'IJ, wll(I~ ntmes In full I ntl T~I· 1t1!1mtnt flleel Wilh tllt COUfl1v s c ose scru 1ny. e evea e R s •ltc•s <'ll ••lldtnce ••••• follow,; Clerk Ill 0•1n11 COIJnly on: M1v It, 1t71. SUre YOU temper jUStiCe y,•ith OSe OC iety Dev•d A. Knl<>Ofr, Gent•tl Ptr!ner. RY 8'Yer!v J. Mtado&•, mercy. One who blo~·s off ~~1111:,~~~·u c1•cl1, Hunt1n11on lle•th. 011111"' cour:tv Ct••• PuOll1n.(I Or•ntt COIJI Ot!!y Plllf, steam w1'JJ be sorry the •e•t 1.lrs. Dorothy \Vhisler, e te.,v 8· 1<n~1~•·· 111.1 L• M1nch1 Mev 11, June •· 11. 11. 1n1 lll>n " Cl•tlf, Hu11tll'91Pn llearh, (•ll!orni. moment. Realize this and be At Party hybrid izer and one of the ,,~, c1u > 1.u . .s.u.. Sff.se.61~. Patl'e•t COOO(ry's foremost aU[hOrJ'fl.eS James N11I Sen«11•1. lr.l $1rlnd, 11 • M•n"lll•n Blt<h, (ll ltor"I• 901116, (213),' J-------,~~-----VJRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 \: on roses. will speak before the Jl•-HIO. sn~o..an• '·71'1 Y I I CJ I · d and J · Orange r. I R Soc. I Rlcn1,a C GertHn. .,,, E!der l'ICllTIOUI IUllMISI ou may ee restricted. tied ose r1en s re at1ves -..uun Y ose 1e y. Avtn~t. s •• 1 llettl!, Callfornl• 10,.0, NI.Niii llATIMl.HT down -this ls but temporary. of Rflbyn Bauserman and The meeting is planned fnr uu1 Jtd·ln•. 5Jl·~·21<M> Th@ 1011cwrnt 11tr1on1 •r11 lfeln• ' h J 7 " T d Donald P•troek LtlYfY. llllJ Lo~'"'" bullfttH I t: Refuse to let impulse rule f\.1zc ae E. Schramm o f :..., p.m. ues ay, June 8, in Sl•lfll, Ger"'" G•ov•. c1111c."1' 91u 1. wesl RAY Piii!: SCHOOL.'" Mort11 logic Tak t t 1· Newport Beach learned of the Westminster Civic Cen-c11•1 •"·"''· sss."6·Jm. Vilrt. c051e ""'''· · e One S ep a a !me. Wlllltm W. V-1vtr, 900 5"~ lane, ROllt• L Herl10,. Ull! Whit• Otk •t, Progress may be slow but can t heir engagement during a ter'3 recreation building . 1.01 ... co•o~• de1 Mar. c.ilfor"r' co111 Mu•. No•m• c. Htr1i..,, 1w b t · · th I · Coa t 26l!. PUI ~•"lOS•. !J2·.So!·lll0 W~ilt 0•~ St .. Cati• M•1~. e steady, Act accordingly. par y given in e rvme st l 1(1nntm E. llnc'gren. 6011 ~. lievil•r>O Tnls Dul!"tll It belllt (0,,.,UC!tld by ,,, LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c!. 22): Count ry Club. AvtnY1. wn.1111r. Calltar"l' to601, 111a1 lndlvldu~I. H fl ~• J T E D •96-lati, !11·•8·1161, Rogtr L. lo'ert<ao Don 't get caught in middle <i [ osless was the bride-elecl's i... Jim•• "••cock. Jr. 'll• &•Yinore No•m• c. H .. 1101 dispute among friends. Those mother. Mrs. Shir 1 e y S T A T E S ~;~~·5~~;;.,:i,•<"· cai.ro."1'· ciu! •l9· c1!~~1 0,110~~';;':;'c!~:v ;~'"M!~' 1,~.i;-;;~ who argue now may be allies Bauserman of Huntington NA TIO ~'AL Gorcon 11:. s1"'"°ra1, Jtos ft••lln•d 9• BIEVE •Lv J MAOOO:ir:. Jn near future. K•ow th'• and Beach. J... Av1nut, Loi Anv•111, c1111orn11 tOOJ6, Py~111~!:"'br~~!.'.:'11,,',",," •• ,,, ''"" " ~ B A ~, K Cl111 11~.Jn•. ~1·2•-•is.i. .... ..... . maintain neutral s tan c e . An Oct. 23 wedding i~ be ing 1... Jo~n H. GIOOOnl, llJIS So. tlr!1hlwell M~y ll, Jun• •. 11. "· 1111 ll&J.11 G . ' ' d' d planned m' St A d ' SOUTH COAST PLAZA Av,nu1. "•'•"'OUM. C•ll le•n·• 901ll. em1n1 1n 1vJ ual does much · n re w sl c11J 1 •JJ.nu. J11.0J.11si LEGAL NOTICE talking. Presbyterian Church, Newport BRANCH w1111,,.,, Hcw8rO Gibbon•. 16512 ~'"°' --.:c-::o-::c==~=~~-Beach. t~"· No l. Hul'!in~!o~ !l11c~. HOTICI!' 0' IHTIHTION lO f;H•••• SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): NOW o••• Cfll!orn·• '1~1. OU) Ul·'50•, j,\j.Sf. lH lHL!: IALI DI" ALCOHOL IC Obtain hint from Tauru! Miss Bauserman is a 11~1 11v111:Ao11 d f Iv . D1t1d April !7, 1911 MtY J6. 1tn message. Practical actions gra uale o arren High l SATURDAYS Div.a .11. Kn•poer To Whom 11 M1v cn"c''"' I t d I h Id School Downey I ( I e n d e d G•"•••I P1r1rvr $ubl•tl to IHU•r.t• of !h• loetn1f 10-re a e 0 ome, f) er in· . I S•~·· ol C1llt01nl1. O•tnte County: oh•:r .... "Gll(f 11 11trtDY •Ivon "'" ~ dividuals are necessary. What Orange Coast College and is a1 On Aor11 tJ. 1t1t, toetor1 me.• No•erv u...:1r111n..ci ~·-"' 10 .. 11 •ko"9!1c former American A Jr J j n e sl t '• t P.M. .,ublle in •nd for 1110 s''"· "''"""'ll v H~•·•~s •t •~• 11r1mT•11, 01i(ro~ •• appears to be opposition is "ON THURS ••Ptl•eel D1vld A. Kn.i•111r -11(1 ... 11 lo mo /Olll'IWI! I·• J steward "' ·• · 10·5 P.M. , ., -,1 ,,. , JJ\e y to boomerang in your ess. ,AIDAYS 10,, '·"· o 1,,, 111r11n w11o1t "''"' 111ub1<:r11>o ....... u u1t 0111, crut• M-. H l. f '! d "' l'CI lo 111e wllhl" !nllrum tnt '"a Puriu1n1 To llKTt ln1tnllOt1, the Uf1. fa vor. Be confident. er tance, son o 1• r. an 17141 140-5211 . LKetld 111: K~flOWtlldoe<i ,.,, ••tcu1.a ,,,, *•'"•· der1lgM<1 ;, u•11v1ne 10 1h• D1o~f'f"'tt1' SAGl1TARJUS (Nov, 22· Mrs. Dick Schramm of So. c: ... , PliN, C:•sN "no !OFFICIAL SEAL! ot Al<Ollollc l1v1rtw Control "" 1.,.,. H to ' d f "' Tom A. Ltllrtrl •n<t DY lr•n1/er II In t!C""811c btYtr-DeC. 21 ): Study Gem In I ous n, IS a gra uate 0 I Nol1r1r Publlc·C1ll!orn<1 .,. ll<en11 ... !lltSI o-emlM• •• fo.llllwl t Millikan High School "ng I.HI. Viet .,,..,,.,,.,,"'''' i"ro11CIO•I Olllct In ON SALE GE NERAL ( ....... Flft message. You receive social · i..<.J 1 o""'' coun•v Pubht E111,.. Pl1et1 invitations. But don't attempt Beach and attended Norwalk H. M. STOL TE My Comml11lon E~plru Anvon~ Otllrln1 to Dr1>lt1! th• IHIJ~llC• St I ~ h ' J C J J / Jt<lll•rv J, 1'15 ol 11K~ llc•.,.t mtr lilt 1 vt•lllfO proltlll to do too much at onct. One:,~·~a~·~~~·ec~n~1~c~a~~-o~~e~g~e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'.l~~'~':'~'"~"~H~O~·~·~-~~<~M~"~°'~"~·~'i"'~'I ~· 4nY o•ll(• of fh~ D•~•·•me"r o1 \\'ho plans agenda could ski'p Norwalk, Conn . M•Y 2111"" Ju"'•· u, 11. un 1311.1i A1c.c>!'tot1c R'Y"'" C0Mre1. e• b• m111 19 th~ Ot1>1r1m•11l ol t tcotlol•r II••,•••• some important details. Do LEGAL NOTICE con••cl. 1l1S o •••ter. s1e:'•""•Mo (•l1ferni• OlSJ<. ·~ •• 10 b• ••c•lv•d your o"'Tl checking. wl1hh JO d'" 01 lh• det• ,~. "'""""'"' CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. I s b T d I NOTICI! 01' TlllAN~l"ER 0'""'''"' wor• 11 .. 1 Ml!l,d. 1!t!lftt ee y 0 ay s Nallc• i, ~•r1by 9lv•n '""t an J1Jn• l, 'lrOUnG• fer d•"l81 •I OrowlatO bV llW. 19J; Be wary in financial '~ll fl\tT1 mt!IX!!n11 l>M~I"~ hliu .. ,~. D••"'···· ."'" n~w ll(tfl••C !er "'• lm•c~!""v i nd f'QUl 1>mtn1, v•lllclu 1111 o! •lco~clot ~llf(••tu Tht form o1 Want Ads 1•u•"ltur1 1u1>0!111 tnd ln~!t1tcr1ts. fh~ vtrlllctilon ma• be ot>!tln•d lr~m tny If· r•~r•ri. n! vu.,..• Clt•u! Co"'"'""Y• A !let of "'' Oeotrlm•n• n1r l"t'1l'lo. h•vlno 1h """C•oal t>l•c• o! JA l'•N GOL" PllOMOl!ON blJ\H\·~· •I ~y•nu• <E. CilY Of Vu,.... {U 5 A 1 INC'. e Go golf1ns: lh1~ ;\lf'moriii l I"'""'• Ceu,,•v, 11«10111 .tnt o•rrn•r• In G..,,.,. w I~. Sf'< """i<h •.• r c l~VP<lm•~I! I ~(. " Pub!.lh•d Ortnll@ c.,., .. Otlly •l!ot, Day \1f'ekcnrl' Takr aJ011g C•ltto•"•• Ccrpor•!lon ~•vlftt 1 0,1,.0081 M1Y lt. 1111 1.J:J0.11 V.'i th ynu 3 11·oods. 9 1p;ni, Dl•t! er nu1•ntu "' 111 Lido P.ir~ Orly•. I Nt..,,Orl llt•rh (1llfflrn1• •nd E1<tint1on LEGAL NOTICE V.'Pdge 11.nd A he11.u11tu go!! l"•ul! CcmDtnv, t CorPO••tio~ of'•--------------hag. so reasotiah!c• c11i111r"'" hf111"' • "r1nc1.,.1 "'''' 0r1 I b~•.nt•l •I lll IE•1I Common.,.•1•·~ ,4llJ? T"'O members of the Costa • Like Anhquf'~ ~? llOW•ll· ,.11venu•. Full•r!OT'>. (•Titorn·•· Woll "' CL!:llTt"CAlE OF IUllHIJS. Mosa Art Leag•-'II be hout mU!tlC'. ' Anl>nue "~~"•rr•<t to "~"1'' l'' ~' 1 "~ '1tl1r1ou1 H.l.MI "" vn •~ro<uu,.,.r C11•oo••"on. 1 c~'l>Dl••ian c• Tht undtri!i"fll dotl ttrlilw .,_ Ii °""" honored as June Anistll-<!(·th~-p1ano,o; t-tr. ~a l. 1n ()Ur C•l·tor••· "'11''~ w111 "'11"'~'" n" '"° t1l.'Ct1"" •Ml , .,Jn '°' Artistrv I Exhibited LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE h b . tJ /'"" Ju"t I, !fll. nltctl o• butll'•fu L• .,.,v, $unit1 .:::. ~t lotornlt, u:.:i:~:.; mont y the Newport Bt'ach mist-e anous M!Cl!On. l~e S!ttf ol .llro1on~ IGCl!M ti Av•nul lltt11!1M Urm n•-of TUll:c·s .,.. l~tl J unior Ebell. • Need &«lme furniture fo r 1•E. Yum• '"" '°1 "•rmt• Awtnut, •"hi tlrm 11 comD01td 01 tllt fo11aw1,.. The "'Orks of ~!rs. '!•-·el • , c'',"'i"'' 11111 " ~~d''"" '" '"-Stitt ot oerJon, .,,.too•• ,....,. rn iun ,,.. •ltct We/come Mat Colored Orange Delegates representing auxiliaries throui!hout the state "'111 learn more about What 's Happen ing In Children's Home Society "'hen thl'y ga ther in the NC\\'· porter Inn Thursday and Friday. Ju ne 3 and 4. for an annu~J \vork,!;hop. Ne'v officers of lhe Orange County Council preparing an appropriate \\elcome to Or· a.nge County are (lefl to right ) the Mmes. Robert \V. Vernon, Ri chard A. Se\~·e.11 and Anthony G•Jewskl. .. . 1• , , lhRI lillle hf-RC'h cnttage . / 11 orn.i1 •t ll1 E1•• Ce"'"""""''"" Cl ••11cH"•• •r• •l to110W1 · Coleman and '.•rs. •'l•ry Long Hov.• '''OUld '.-u J1ke 10 "Y•nl·• ~ .. o•rton. C•1•'N"•1 '"° now"' ''°°'""' J 1r11"'' ''" S•ltkt•d or ,•i ., E eh!h St•HI. L<n A"l!t!f' C1l1l11rnlt A1 Hunll~ltln l"Ch ·' \\.'ill be exhibited throughout 1Jtarr out "1!h 11 rw1n lw><I, • •r•u1• "' ·~· ••·o "•"S'"' "•c'' D111d M•v u. 1111 h l,..,,, ... Atrl<ullurt! (O•PO•A•!on Wll T~·· J. Kl•tlf I " month in the t.1arrneri. ('ha1T5, chesi. a "on! n12 ~comt ll!>IJ"~ '" D11 '"' .i•t>h o1 ,~. St•11 oi c111'°'"''· Or•n•• Couftty · Library, Ne~1port &.?ach, .Jnd &Om~ riL!iht's1 Get 0•"'"f•th•D·lrtn1lf rDr. Yum1 C11ru1 (~. On M•v u. 101, /\•for• ,.,,, 1 ""'',. '! c ... _ D'""· I~ fy!I PuOilt .~ .,,., !e• Jl•!I Jlttt .• .,a.on.n , rs . oleman will display un:m All in ll\'.lfld rond1· Anw u""110 t•f!lltor o1 vu""• c11ru. ·~"•'""' T1'0m•i J 1r11..., t-n 11 :::l heads, figure~. 11till lire 1ntt tion And !or "nl.v 11 /~w c•-.n•nv "''Y ~·'D"'" "·' c1•1"' 1~ Poc11>c 1e &t ·~• ~~"111 "'~ou ~•m• 11 tubl(rftt. •~ ~ oMl~t A••,tu11,,.,1 C:~ro·•••e~ 11 r~, l'CI 111 tht wlttlln 1~111umpM ind landscapes Jn 1liJ y,•hlle ~fr5, oN$$. Olldrfll nt!t<t ~·low •c-~~WlfdO"tl ~. ftl(~IH W.t 11m1, l 'JI If 11 I • T I A11••"11" Of IOl'lt!CIAL SEAL! .ong "'I () er or 8 s , akr of f11r lh"' ""~kenrf c J ~"'-0. Au111~,., • ., •tnr'"''"'''" JE•N L. ;0115, Seascapes, ho!ll llnd WEii.Cr pJC In lh15 bPaUfJIUJ J!lif'I 4. Picll,c l't~•!~t Ag,,cylturt C~•l>O•~t.~n No:orv "~~!le (t!llftt~<I ' I I 1:~ w ... e 111f'o·~ S"••T l'r.rc11111 Olhtt 11'1 lures in oi . Both arti513 h111ve ~Pf'td Flrtblrd. 11nd get t111 A •o•'~'· c.r,rtr~1• t0tl•1 Dr•~e, co~"IY won award~ in numerous/ thf're faJI. Cl' o Br. !•111'! Ter..,!~•1 Ann1 .. ""' COf"m1.,1~" ••111,,, ~o• '""Ii'' toO!<ll M1•cn J, 1t1J juried &hows. ''---------------------------J •u~''•h•d 0•1n1r Coot 01111 "•1'<•. ~~~h·~··'I O••n~· C••i• n111v Pilf', · Mt• )0, 11. 1'11 1171.11 M11 1i, J!, JI •"<I Ju~t '· lt71 11,M.7! 7 7 Newport Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 64, NO. 127, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES DAILY P'ILOT lll!t Pholt Going Howaiiota Darlene Bechtold , 24 , a secretary at Newport Beach City 1-:laJI. found 'this piece of tropical real estate near Lido Isle . Since she was born in J-:la\vaii, it make her feel right at home during municipal observance of Hawaii \Veek. 'fhe special observance continues through Monday. Reagan Pledges State I Education Tax Credits By TOM BARLEY Of 1M1 01Jtt P'llM ll11f Gov. Ronald Reagan pledged 'Phursday night in Anaheim his support for what he said v.•ere "definite moves to provide r;ubstantial tax credits for California's educalional instilulions." The governor told more than 800 guests 1t a testimonial dinner for Orange Coun- 1y industrialist J . Simon Flour that a tax break for the state's universities and col· Jcges "might be the best and most ac· ceptable form of government aid we can come up with." Reagan hinted at !he possibility of tax relief during a talk almost entirely- devoted to what he said was ''the im· pcrative and vital need to sustain private colleges that have traditionall y provided the executives and business leaders who are the backbone of our nation." But he made it clear that the tax relief program he suggested would be extended to California colleges and universities in both the private and public sectors. The governor refused to elaborate on his proposal during questions that follow· ed the testimonial dinne r. He praised FLuor as "a man who has 'elflessly insured the welfare of his fellow .men and those who work for him and with him throughout a business career that has enriched all those who know him in a cultural sense alone." Fluor·s "'ork as chairman of the Chap- man College board was "typical of a man who has shown much more th an most men what the private school can achieve in its contribution to our way of life," Reagan said. The dinner, organized by Chapman College trustees. drew guests from the business, educalional and show business fields to the Anaheim hotel. Art Link.letter was master o r ceremonies and the guest !isl included President Richard Nixon's brother, Donald Nixon of Newport Beach, the Andy Devines, the Don Delores, Sen. James Wbetmore and Irvine Company President William Mason. A telegram dictated by President Nixon In the White House earlier that day wal'i also read during tbe series of tributes le Fluor. Fluo r was presented with 11 paint ing or himself in oils and it was announced that 30 $500 scholarships bearing his name would be made available to schools in the Independent Colleges of Americ a educa· tional organizalion. Joint Use of Toro Field Seen Aviation Solution By ALAN DmKJN 01 "" 01nr P1i.1 '"" The short·range 50\ulion to Orange County's aviation needs is for joint use of El Toro ftiCAS by military and com· mercial Jets. · Long-range problc1ns \VOuld be solved bv creating an inte rnational air.port at Camp Pendleton. This is the vicY.' of Roger S\ates, th'alrman of lhc Orange County Airport Commission, as he outlined· lhtm in a Be~ch Safety Week in Newport Newport Beach wUI recogniu National Beach Sa fety week with an open house at 'the Marine Safety Division headquar· ters at the Newport Pier and a display at Fashion Jsland. The week, t.tich continues through Tutt.day , is-spoMOred by the National Surf Life Saving A!>!ocl•tlon of America ana is designed to promote beach safety and education. The open hou!tt a! lifeguard headquar· lers wUJ take place Saturday from 9 a.m. lo 5 p.m. and w!ll Include a lour ct the building uPon request. talk at a civic luncheon in Hunlington Beach Wednesday. Al the luncheon , sponsored by the Hun· tington Beach·Fountaln Valley Board o( Realtors, Slates also called ror the county to create an airport authority. ''The biggest problem is that the supervisors and members of county com· missions are all political animals," he said. "They can't always vole their con· victions." He said it was often the uni nformed voter that influenced county decisions on airports. but added that "counties are not 'built with a la int heart." "We need to create an airport authority that would take some ti.eat frorb . the elected people," Slates CO~l;l~t The airport commissiO{ler araued that the El Toro facility ~Id l>t converted into a joint use airp:irt In nine months at a cost of from S3 million LO $4 mi!Uon, "''a drop in lht bucket" compared to the estimated $25(),000 ~t Of building 1 new one. He said that a "tremendow amount" of Navy and ~tarlnt jet.s were flying out of El Toro at prtsent tnd clalml!d there would be no lncl'f:ase In noise levels. No private planes would be allowed to t1se. El Toro. They would use Orange County Airport whlch would become a non·jet fa cility. EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, <!:ALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1971 TEN CENTS Yuba Toll Reaches 20 Sheriff Expects 'Many' More Hacked Bodies YUBA CITY (UPI) -The Sutter Coun- ty &heriff said today "many" more graves may still be uncovered in the orchards along the Feather Rive1 "·here the bodies of 20 mass murder victims have already been found. Deputies using a trench digge r con· tinued thefr grim work, more than a ":eek ~ince the first bodies turned up and two days after Juan Corona, a 37·year-old farm labor contractor, was arrested and charged with n;urder. Sheriff Roy \Vhiteaker, under a court order not to discuss evidence, refused to SI2.7 Millio1i give N:porters any in!ormation about how he linked Corona to the slayings of the middle.aged tranl!ient farm hands v.'hose backed bodies were found in the orchards and along the river banks of this central California farming region. Tbe sheriU, however, said he expected the digging crews to find more bodies. They are working "in an area where there may be many graves," he said. A small "sketch or diagram·• was found In Corona's home but the sheriff said it was not a map to the graves. He tiaid the sites were chosen because of in· Cut-down Budget Told in Ne~port By L. PETER KRIEG or Ill• 01ur Piiar s11tt A $12.7 million municipal budget. ref\ecling stringent council guidelines of a $1.20 tax rate and 15 percent across·lhe· board cuts in most operating accounts, was unveiled today by acling Newport Beach City 11anager Philip F. Bet· tencourl. The proposed spe nding package is up $500,000 from the originally·approved 1970.71 budget , and is more than $800,000 higher than the current ·budget as revised by the council in February. Bettencourt asks for no new personnel, another council guideline, and has left ' more than $350,000 unappropriated to cover employe salary increases that are now being negotiated. The budget projects a $57,000 general fund surplus at the end of this fiscal year, June 30. City councilmen will conduct a public hearing on the 1971·72 budget June 7. They have until June 30 to approve it. The proposed tax rate of $1.20 per SlOO assessed valuation, down from the cur- rent year's SJ.225, is tentative, pending the establishmen of a new property tax base by County Assessor Andrew Hin· shaw. This is due in Augu st. Bettencourt has predicted the assessed valuation in Newport Beach will in crease 7.6 per cent, from $295,909,000 to $318,500,000. This is only one-third the jump reported the previous year when Newport Beach homeowners found their assessments up more than 21 percent on the average. Reviewing the 15 percent spending cuts nrdered by councilmen. Bettencourt said, "While funm for staff travel and meeting appropriations and for dues, subscrip- tions and training have been almos t uniformly reduced 15 per cent. it would not be possible to ad here to inflexible maintenance and operation cost reduction formulas and honestly maintain the present level of services." The touncil had d i re c t c d that ''Lhe presen t level of services be main· tained." Bettencourt ssiid he pruned nea rly SI million from departmental requests in preparing the budget document. Forecast in the budget is a $1.5 million Jncrease in revenues from all sources for all funds. the largest a $500,000 increase in general fund revenues, from $6.5 million tc $7 million. Bettencourt says the city should receive $2.55 million from property taxes, up $170,000; $1.73 million in sales tax * * * Newport Budget Only Tells Part Of Taxing Story The firoposed $1.20 tax rate in thtr Ne1vpor1 Beach municipal budget in- cludes four separate tax ing funds but is only part of the taxes resident! will be paying next year. Within the city lax rate, which as pro- posed is down two and one·half cent.I (from Sl.225) the current fi scal year, residents would pay 79.22 cents for the general fund, 13.5 cents for parks and recrealion, 12.41 cents for libraries and 14.87 cents for the retirement fund . All these rates are per $100 valuation. Jn other words, an owner of a home valued at $50,000 would be assessed at 2S percent of marktt value; $12,500 and would pay $150 toward ctty government. In addition. however, ht 1nust also pa1 next year about 50 percent more than that to Orange County, at ll~asl four times more to the Newport·Mesa Unified. School District, nearly $75 to Ofange, Coasl College and about $60 for district taxes. . ' revenues. up Sl52,000 and S731,000 in licenses and permits, up $85.000. A breakdown of expenditures shows $2.2 million for capital Improvement s, Sl.3 milllon for utility operations, $2 million for geoeral government costs, $4 mill ion for public safety. $2 million fo r public works, $381.000 for libr11ry opera· tions and $644 ,llOO for parks, beaches and recreation. The $8.1 million in comPined general fund spending includes SS.6 million in salaries (plus whatever raises are negotiated ). $1.1 million for maintenance and operation, $243,000 for equipment, $832,445 for non departmental upense3 and $508.250 for capital imp rovement pro- grams also noted in the Beparat'e capital budgeL Noodtpartmental C<>sls are such lhinp as insurance, tax rebates, workmen'• compeniaUon and utilities. Capital Improvement projects listed as general fund expenditures inc I u de S250,000 in non-gas ta:ir road projects, and such things as variow harbor and tidelands, drainage, sewer and park and recreation projects. Major operational costs include $2.1 million for the police department, Sl.15 million for the fire department, $347 ,000 for marine safety and '393,000 for com- munity development, the new superagen· cy created by tbe merger of the planning and building departments. It will cost taxpayers $508,000 for refuse collection, S412,000 for parks and parkway maintenance and $419,000 for the employes' retirement fund. * * 1:r More Operation Space Needed, Says Manager Newport Beach urgently needs more space for municipal operations and it needs it now, Acting City Manager Philip F. Bettencourt said today. In a budget message to the city council, Bettencourt called the present po Ii c y fa cility "primitive" and "antiquated" and said both police and general off ice facilities are overcrowded. He said existing facilities "do not pro- vide tile efrlcient and pleasant working environ ment that is important for employe morale, high productivity and effective citizen service. "Steps must be taken to meet these urgent long-standing needs this fiscal period," he said. Bettencourt cited the planning efforts of the city in recent years towards a new civic center at Newport Center and said financial details of the project should be ready by July I. A fall bond election for the project ·is tentatively planned. Describing the existing city com plex at 3!l00 Newport Boulevard, Bettencourt said, ''The present police-facility ls primitive . vasJ\y overcrowded and is an anUqu.ated operational center for a city with the affluence and trliditional h i g h regard and need for effective law en· forcement servicel5. ''The 1eneral government buildings are also badly overcrowded and divided among variM uriconnected buildings and Jotations." Becau~ the elly Is plaMlnf the civic cinter, Bettencourt said be "reluctantly" struck $25,000 Jn requests for "only mlnlmal ofnce re£Urblshing and btt· termenl1 for the present facilities ... lfe said he alAO elltninated $57 .ooo for Improvements to . lbe city yard on Superior Avenue, but stressed the. need for the.le. Improvement.I and sald a study of the problem "wUI become a priority item" next year. , ·-· dentations In the ground. He atid he hoped that the digging was near In end but "as long as we keep making reeoverles we will continue to search." Whiteaker refused to say whelber a transient picked up In nearby Marysville as a material witness in the case had given any information. But he said the man was not in jail. Five more of the victims were ten· tatively Identified. The sheriff said they were Don Smith, of Atlanta, Ga.; Bill Kemp, Baton Rouge , La.; James Howard, Jonas Smallwood and Elliott FACES MURDER TRIAL Su1pect Gi9 Peter1 Coast Dries Up For Memorial Holiday Weeker-µ/, Slackening drizzles by tonigbt and &un- ny, warmer days through Monday are forecast for the Memorial Day weekend by the National Weather Serv ice. The low pressure area that brought gra y skies and showers to the Orange Coast Thursday and today was reported dissipating. Orange Coast residents l'itaying home for the three~ay observana can expect customary early summer night and morning low clouds and fog but it will quickly burn awa y. Temperatures will be up t11 the mld-70s. with overnight lows in the 60s, running 10 to 15 degrees higher In the in terior and desert regions. High winds in de sert areas are ex· peeled to dit down, while San Diego Coun· ty areas hit with below-freezing tem- peratures, ice , sleet and snow will al so gel relief. Offshore winds will run 10 to 18 knots in the afternoons for yachtsmen and power· boaters, while ski enthusiasts will find the general mountain snow level at S.000 feel. Small Airplane 'Buzzes' Coast· . ' Calls Pour In A small pl ane that buzzed the Newport Beach shoreline at a scant 40 feet alti· tude prompted more th.an 100 telephone calls to police late Thursday night. The switchboard manned by Officer Ray McCabe lit up like a Christmas tree as the aircraft zoomed from Corona de! M11 r to West Newport . Watch Commander Lt. Kelson McDan- iel said McCabe did his duly well, hand· Jing the scores of irate citizens' calls . No clues could be uncovered today as to origin of th~ 5m11ll plane which quick· ly leR after the 10:30 p.m. low·level run. Orange County Airport COnt rol Tower· pusonnt l loc k UD and leavt at 10 p.m., 11nd l!Aid today they had rectived no rt· part of the annoying incident. Teen Vole Approved PROVIDENCE (AP J. -Rhode bland ThursdJy became the :JQth state to ratHy the propo~ed amendment to the U.S. Con- 1tllUtion lo 11low 18 year olds to vote In •ll eleetlona. · Riley, for whom no home cilies were known. Earlier two victims were identifi ed as Kenneth Edward Whitacre, 40, ot Alameda, Calif., and Sigurd Belrmap, 63 of Marysville. All the victims were between 40 and 63 years old and were believed to be transient farm workers. One may have been a Negro but the others were all ''anglos." Whitaker said he had determined 110 special significance lo the fact that none {Set BODIES, Paae ZJ Psychedelic Thrill Told In Slayings By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI th• 01ltr P'l .. r St11f A stunned courtroom audience heard a former Orange County Jail inmate testifJ Thursday that Gig Peters. a former Hun- tington Beach Hi gh School honors stu· dent, felt ''psychedelic showers of golden electricity fall on his shoulders" after allegedly murderin2 his parents. Peters, 21, appeared for a pre-trial hearing at We st Orange County Judicial District Court Thursday before Judge Celia Baker. 11e "·as ordered to stand trial on two charges of murder in Superior Court June IL The jail inmate, a 19-year-old youth with a bushy red beard and a penchant for street language neologisms, was iden- tified as Fred Wheeler, a transient. He told the court that he and Peters &hared an isolation cell in jail shorUy after Peters was cha rged with strangling hi!! mother, t'lora, a teacher al Corona del Mar's Lincoln School, and stabbing bis fatber, Charles, April 21. "He told me he strangled his mom and stabbed his dad, in that order," Wheeler testified, tugging at his mustache. "Ht said it took a long time to get his mom dead. She scratched him and he bit her on the hand." As the defendant was guarded by two bailiffs. Wheeler further told the court that Peters admitted to the slayings almost immediately after they became known to each other. "f asked him, 'Old you do it?' and he said 'S ure 1," Wheele r told the court, In· dicating that Peters appeared to be swaying and shi mmying to imaginary music during the conversation. "He said aft.er he stabbed his dad, he was getting a real buzz on. He said he felt psychedelic showers of golden eleo- lricity fall on his shoulders after he did it. I asked him ii he was loaded and he said he was loaded on acid for eight months, but not then ." Peters, who was being defended by Los Angeles attorney Barry Tarlow, res pond· ed to the courtroom drama with cryptic smiles, At one point he turned in his swivel chair lo smile at the audience but was immediately turned around by a ba iliff. "He always smiles, he says that's hi1 psychological advantage over the cops, because no matter what they do, they can 't tear his spirit down," Wheeler told the court. Other testimony offered by \Vheeler linked Peters to a bizarre revolutionary philosophy which would have 30,000 Red Chinese invading the country at any ma. ment. "He thought about it (the killings) for JS.. PETERS, Page ZI _, Oruge Cout l\'eather After a rew drizzly days , It'll be sunny and warmer Cor the holiday weekend. High temperatures along the C<>ast should gel up to 70 de- grees. INSIDE TODAY T he big bands art back at Di&· neyland thi$ holiday weekend and the y've brought their favor- ite vocalilt.r with them. Today 's Weekender has picture.s ond a story abo~ thl? ba.!h. l lrtllt If lo.II"" 11 C1tllor11t1 t (119(11lllt u.. • (llUlll.. ,, ..... Ctmlu II c .. n...,.. u ~ltft l'lllk •• lf l!.irtrltl ,,,. I F lfllMI lf.21 Ht NIU" 11 """" ~........ lJ Mlllk• I Mtll hi St,..,ltt lt Mt1 .. , t'·" M11h11t P't lMk 1t Nttft!!tl N..,,_ M °''"'" C-IJ II Jlt11t11r1111t U.21 1-11 , .. ,, llttll M1rlllf1 )I.ti T ... "1tlflll t' T ... tttn J7·1' w .. 1111r • W-'1 NIWI 11•14 W""'41 """ 4-S Wffi11!Mltr U·# " - "t DAILY PILOT N f'rlday, M~ 28, 1971 From Page I PETERS ... two years. He wanttd to do them a favor so they wouldn't hlve to go through the revolution. He loved thecn," commented the f orrner inmate. Funding "He said be wanted to come back to trial. Ho wanted the publtclty. He wanted to tell 'the world about the rev olution. He told me he already had his statement for the jury." ) . District .Hears 1913 Act Provisions • Earlier, Peters younger brother, Peter J. Peters, told Judge Baker that his brother had confessed to tbe murders after he awoke on April 21. "He held me by the arms and said, 'Petey, I just killed Mom amt Daddy,'" sobbed the 13-year old youngster. ··He said there was going lo be a war 600n and be was sending Mom to heaven end put Dad out of his misery." During that alleged conversation, Gig Pet.ers Supposedly bad "a far away look in his eyes." accordi113 to the younger brother's testimony. Peter Peters, \•:ho is now in the custody of an aunt and uncle , said be tried to go to his parents' room that morning but found the door locked. As he was getting dressed, he heard something that sound- ed like a yell or a moan . Later. Gig also was to have told his oLher brot.her, Tony, 17, about the double murder. "l heard Gig say lD him, 'If you'd been taking LSD 1ike I have, you're committed against the human race,' " Peter lDld the court. Tony Peters made a short appearance In the prisoner's box Thursday. He was bound by a stralghtjacket after allegedly biting and kicking bailiffs when he was told he would have Lo testify. Tony, who Is facing juvenile charges as an ac· cessory to the crime, was not called to the stand. however. Before Gig Peters was bound over for lrial, his defense attorney said doctors bad examined the defendant and con- Lidered him capable to st.and trial. Tarlow added, though, that the same physicians considered him insane at the time of the alleged slayings: While being held in jail, Peters was al· leged to have engaged in continuous rou- tines of aberrant behavior, according to the testifying inmate. He was alleged to have bounced his eyebrows, kick his foot Into the wall, and engage in unorLhodol' meditations. Peters was arrested by Huntington Beach Police at lhe Tijuana border one day after the bodies of the couple were !ound dead at their 301 Lincoln Ave. borne. Tarlow had surrendered Peters and his !2-year-old lirlfriend, Anne Bartholomew, after an all-points bulletin bad been Issued for Peters throughout tbe western states. Miss Bartholomew, originally charged 11ut later released, sat in the audience ~ughout the preliminary hearing. Dressed In brown pants with a peace 1ymbol belt and a white T-shirt bearing :lasped bands and the insignia "Holding rogetber," she gazed at Peten for 1everal minutes at the close of the hear- ing. Separated by the prisoner's box and a barrier, Pc:!!rs responded with a pr~ longed sm •·c and a soundless "Bye, bye," before beir.g taken away by the bailiff. Cras lie s Cram Fre eway Lwies A series of rear-end collisions ·this norning snarled northbound lanes cf the 5an Diego Freeway in the El Toro area, )acking up traffic fer two miles. Ambulances took an undetermined 1umber cf persons from the stretch >etween El Toro Road and the in- terchange of lhe San Diego and S a n t a t.na freeways. The ea:tent of their in- Uries was unknOY.'TI. 'Vreekage was being cleared away at lOOn and California Highy,·ay Patrol of- 'icers kept traffic moving slov.·Jy through he rain-slicked area. Observers said five to six separate ac- tidents were involved. most v.·ith just two ears each . OU N61 COAST DAILY PILOT d"AAHCi'E COAST .. UILISHIMO COMl"AN't lobwt N. 'Woo~ l"r•:o.if •"'9 ""'&Ii.Mr J1Jc a. c,,,,1,., \'l(.r ~I oNI G-.1 M1Mttf' l''"''' l(,;.it Edf!W llio''"' A. Murpl<l~t Mt,..ll·"CI EdllOI' L. '•'•• Krle9 Nf'WllO'i BOich Cltr fGltot ttew1'9" ....... Offlt• ]JJ] N1wporl lo..,ltYt•d M'1illn9 Acfcf1111: ,.0 . I•• 1171, 92,6l °""'°""" c••· N,e,., DI Wat ••Y 1ff'eet t..o•-ludl: n: l'Otat ,t,~"'ve 1'11111tlftf11ti 8Mtll: \717Ji 8Md'I &ovi.r.. ... hl'I Cltmmiw: • Hwfh ire."'~ ..... OAILV '"IL.OT, Wllfl ""'ldo i. t"M.,lllod lftt H...,.,.,_., h Miit'*' •11Jy tl!C11!1 ~ <lltJ 11'1 .-1r11fl tdllllltlt tor L1t1111a letcll, ,,,.,.,...,., loKl'I. Coll• ,,,..., """''iftOl'el'I 8titdl. P-1111'1 Vtl!Oy, '°'" Cle-/ C1t*tr-... lr•lt .. tk. •lrll w11'1 -, ...... l .Oii ..... ,.,lllCloll ,.-l11tl ... ...i.tll " ot a war ••r s1rw .. Co.t• .v.o..1. 1 Ttl•plllttu 171 41 14Z-4ZZ1 Cl-.IW A"-"klilt MZ-S 67a THESE PATRONS SURVIVED TH E FAR M WOR KER EXECUTIONS Suspect In Kii iings Frequented B1rs Looking For Laborers Wino Meeting Head Count in Bonanza Clubhouse By JACK V. FOX YUBA CITY (UP I) -The wioos came shambling into the Bonanza Club on D Street in !(1arysville shortly after 9 a.m. As each appeared, his fellow drifters Jel out a cheer. "Hey, Sarge, you made it ~" ''There's At He didn't get you, Al :" At the New Palm around the corner, Rose the barmaid said one of her customers always had milk in the morn- ing. But on Thursday he ordered a double shot of Old Crow and a beer chaser. Among these lost souls there was no doubt that the victims of Yuba City's mass murders came from their ranks - fikid row in the Twin cities o! Marysville and Yuba City, separated by the Feather River. The towns once \\'ere a ·legend of the rip-roaring west in the gold rush days. There \\'ere 54 saloons in a four-block stretch. the prostitutes g r a b be d customers. off the street and the miners. 'Joggers, railroad men, cowboys and gamblers lived as if there was no tomor- row. Those days are gone, but the shakes of Sutter"s boom linger on in a community which now is staunch Republican, hippie- less and one of the most lush agricultural areas in all the United Sates. Peaches, tomatoes. prunes, watermelons, strawberries. walnul3 and almonds grow in the valley. Acres o[ fertile land are covered with water - flooded paddies that look like southeast Asia. But like the fruit. murders have seem· ed to come in clusters to califomia. Charles Manson has been convicted of seven and is being tried for two more. Last year Dr. Victor Ohta, his wife, two children and a secretary v.·ere slain and tossed into their swimming pool in Santa Cruz. San Francisro's Zodiac Killer - st ill uncaught -claims something like a dozen victims. BODY AFTER BODY But even those gory heights were sc.al· ed this week when sheriff's deputies. wearing gauze masks and puffing cigars 10 reduce the stench. dug up body after body on the ranch of Jac k Sullivan five miles north of Yuba City, from neat graves strung for half a mile on the riverbank beneath a prune orchard. One man had 32 cents in his pockets , anotb<>r $9. The remainder had no \11ealth. One had a temporary driver's license. Another had a v.Tist band from a hospita l and a social security card. One was iden- tlried because t\\'O of his toes were miss- ing. One man had on three pairs of trousers. One man ""as nude ea:cept for a shirt They lay on their backs. their arms above their heads. ~lost had their shirl!I pulled up over their faces. All y,•ere taken to the Twin Cities ttfortuary "'hich ordinarily h11ndles one death a .week. ldentiflcation y,·as gruesome and grim. ~me V.'ere men nobody wanted and nobody missed. Some had isolated themselves from their families for years. ''It really grabs you \\'hen some guy·s \1·ife calls from 1'les:ico or Arkansas and a!ks If v.·e linve found their husband -A man they haven 't heard from for a ye:ir or so," i;:iid a ~heriff's deputy. ''They want to know 11nd then again. they don 't v.•ant to know ·• The: first hody \vas db;covered oo P.1ay 2(1 by a Japanese farmer named Gorn 1\a~ehiro. He noticed a hole In nn orchard. and "·hen he came back th:it f'vening he found a mound of fresh f'arth. He dug and found a body. ffe reported it to the Sutter County Sher1frs Office. SECOND MOY Five days passed and then Roy Duron, 11 foreman-at the Su111van Ranch, -was lnld by one of his laborer1 that while discing the rows between lhe prune tret1 he notietd an indcnt11Uon. Detective Sgt. J ohn Purcell and Oetect1ve Jerry Gregory went to the scene and found a second body. It rained and rained on Tuesday. but in the downpour and on through the night, and into the next day, and the next, deputies dug up bodies. Some were in a peach orchard. the others in the soft loam of the Feather River bank, in gra\'es 31,2 foot deep and 6 feet long. The victims had been ha cked lo death by a machete er heavy knife. The fatal blow was at the back of the neck, All v.·ere men. They ranged in age from 40 to 6J. At 4:30 a.m. Wednesday, sheriff's deputies wenl to the home of Juan Veil!ihc Corona, 37, io a quiet street Qf small homes in Yuba City. It is a wood house of beige color with a brick frontplace. A plaster angel two feet high fitands on the cement porch. Corona answered the door. He is a good-looking Mexican. one inch shor t of six feet. fie weighs 200 poWlds and his black hair is parted in the middle. His wife Gloria is about 4-0. They have four daughters. Corona speaks fair English, hia wife almost solely Spanish. WENT QUIETLY The officers told him he was charged with murder. Corona pulled on his gray work pants, ccwboy boots and a. green sweater. He went along quietly. \Vhen the patrol car arrived at the courthouse, a stately Y.'hite building with columns that could pass for a southern mansion, officers gave him a blanke t to pul over his head to thY;art news photographers . Corona is one of five brothers who came to this area from Jalisco, t-.1c~·c~ the first in the early 1940s. The big 'b then \11as the Beale Army Camp, th staging area and .ROW a large Air Force base. One of the brothers opened a bar. The others wenl into the labor contracting business. ln the central valley migranl workers are a necessity for the land· owners. The transients range from about 2,000 in the winter months to 20,000 when the peaches and other crops are in harvest. From Page 1 BODI ES ... cf the victims were t-.texicans like Corona. Corona. father of four small girls, was arrested early Wednesday after the ninth body had been unearthed. Courl records show Corona was com- mitted by a brother to a state mental hospital for three months in 1956 as being '"confused and disoriented . . • (Sul· fering) delusions and hallucinations." Psychiatrists diagnosed him as a schizophrenic. He was released from Dewitt State Hospital al Auburn, Calif., as "recovered" on April 18. 1956. OfUcials have not disclosed any ap- parent motive for the slayings. Drputles, using a trench digging backhoe at times and puffing Ciiars to kill the stench of dead bodies, rtmovcd lhe h.11cked rema ins from shallow gravu inlo hearses for transporL to a mortuary in neighboring Marysville. tdlntificalions have been hampered by lhe 1r11nslent life or the farm workers. many of "·horn had not been in touch with their famillcs for yean. Tht!: victims were hacked In tbe back of the head Y:lth a heavy. sharp instrument. po53ibly a machete or meat cleaver. All were buried fln their backs. wllh arms raised Jn a SUPJ:llicating position and shirt~ l'Ulled t ¥er their bloody heads • • I ' , By GEORGE 1'EIDAL r Oi .WM DllJY ,1111 11111 The uae of !913 Act prov isions to fund aeveraJ C()mmunlty service projects is a "very proper avoidance of a bond elec· tlon" Coast Community College District trustets have been advised. District Chancellor Norman Watson told trustees Wednesday "it is very true that using the 19t3 act avoids a bond issue." He added, however, that employing the state statute: to provide needed com- munity se rvices was one way the district could serve the community in a way that is legal and proper. Under the law, commWlitles wilhin the college district would form assess ment districts to ph:n and provide recreation and other facilities at Golden West and Orange Coast Colleges. Dr. Wal,.,on told trustees the Huntington Beach City Council already has approved Peers Cheer Laguna Jiwist At Ceremony Nearly 200 Orange Ccunty judges and lawyers gave Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner a tremendcus ovation Thursday \vhen the Laguna Beach jurist accepted the annual fo'rankJin G. West award from ilS previous recipient. retired califomia Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Traynor. Watched by reUred Superior Court Judge franklin G. West, the jurist whose name was given lo the Orange County Bar Association's yearly tribute, Judge Sumner told the Santa Ana meeting that he was ''deeply grateful that my work on lhe Cslifornia Constitutional Revision Commission has been so reccgnized." "l could not but be Impressed by your lrtmendous reccrd in other fields,·· he was told by Justice Traynor. "You have served three limes in the Legislature, part of that time as a Republican whip, you have a glorious war record and you have served (ailhfully as a public defender. "This can only be 1 crowning achieve- ment In such a fine record," the formtr chief justice said. The legend on the handsome silver tray presented t.o Judge Sumner records that he was the runa~boice of the bar association as "an individual who has made a significant contribution to ad· vance and elevate1ustlce and law." He was named to the West award aftec the bar recognized that the commission on which he presently serves as chairman has deleted some 30,000 words from a California Ccnstitulion that once contained 80,000 words. He was recently honored by both housell or the Legislature for his work on a commission that is now concluding the work it began in 1964. Deeply moved, Judge Sumner asked the meeting to recognize that some 60 Californians had worked with him on the commission and that his fellow judges on ~he Superior Ccurt had willingly stepped in to help him cut when his duties took him to Sacramento. "Our work on the commission is nearly complete but we have many other things to consider in the field of revision ," Judge Sumner said. "! am sure that with the kind or suppcrt 1 have enjoyed these other Issues wlll be similarly resolved.'' ln prlnC'Jple the forrnation ol a Golden West Ccllege Assessment District. The Costa Mesa City Council will consider th~ Idea at its June 7 meeting. The Golden West district would proyJde an estimated $960,000 lo pay for ad· ditional handball courts, softball fields, a swimming pool speaker s y 1 t e m , television and comptuer cabling, parkinc and a reereaUon pavilion. The college district board Wednesday night appointed architeets to develop the plans. Wat.son sald the plans must be ap- proved by college trustees and the state Division of Architecture. A public hearing also would be required. Construction would begln in the fall , if the idea is ap- proved, Watson said, The five-y ear bonds propased to pay for the projects would be paid cff by enacting a tax rate of about four centJ' per $100 usessed valuaUon, 1eeordlng to Watson. • The proposal for Costa Mesa would in- clude development of lrr'fproved walk)'t"•YI : and lighting at OCC, street and parking improvement, resurfacing of tennis courts, rehabilitation of the swimming pool, upgrad ing of stadium lights, resurfacing and fencing of the running track and cabling for computers and teleccrnmunlcaUons equlpmenl Trustee Robert Humphreys of Costa Mesa indicated the dlstrlct must better Worm the members of the city councllt involved ii the propo.'lal ls to be ap- proved. Humphreys' 1 s s I s t a n t city attorney !or Costa Mesa. declined to speculate on how the proposal would be received by the council. None of the trustees indicated the1 disapproved of the project at Wed- nesday's meeting, and oo action wa.1 taken. The it appeared on tht agenda. u an information ite:m. * * * * * * Trustees Approve Bids For 2 College. Projects Ccast Community College District acceptance of the firm 's $440,llOll bid for trustees have approved bids totaling more than SI million to build an en- vironmental studies center at Orange Coast College in Costa fl.1esa and equip the telecommunications fa cility at Golden \Vest College in Huntington Beach. W.F. Shirley Construction Co. of Pasadena wu the successful low bidder for the environmental center with a bid of $543,174. The building is due to cpen In laboratories and office space for the col· Jege's environmental training program. The buildings will be relocatable, being con structed lo a modular manner similar to the method used in constructing the district's administ ration building. Three separate bid items for equipment at Golden West's television center totall· ed SSl0,000. Philips Broadcast Equipmenl Corp. of :t-.-lontvale , N.J. \\'as the lowest of four firms offering bids meeting specifications for television broadcast camera lJ'ld con- trol room equipment. Trustees approved the color television equipment. Tektronia: Inc. of Orange wa.s the lone bidder and wlll provide $40,000 worth of oscilloscopes and waveform monitoring equipment at a net cost to the district of $20,000. The firm will provide a $20,000 educaticnal grant contrlbutico. Reichel Electric Inc. of Westminster was granted the contract for s tud I o lighting equipment. The firm's bid ef $49,977 was not the lowest cf all bids 1ub- mitted, but was the lowest of three bids deemed to have met specifica• tions. Acey-Decy Electric Construction Com- pany of Hollywood offered an al· ternate bid of $30,490 using lighting equipment that did not match lights presently owned by the district. The firm's bid bond did not arrive until after bids we re opened, Chancellor Norman Wat,,on said, making the bid lneligtble for consideration. Writer Held in Newport On Police Assault Charge Nobody had a good time Thursday night when pollce went to an apartment where lhe entertainment editor cf a Newport Beach tabloid was entertaining a young lady. Barry R. Loud, 21 , of 3041h l&th St., was finally arrested and booked on sus· picion of assaultiRg a police officer. Patrolman Don Chandler was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital for Injuries suffered when his left hand was allegedly forcibly smashed into a fence outside lhe residence. He also said ht was elbowed in the stomach while attempting to subdue the suspect with the help of his )llrtner, Offi. cer John Furrow. They were dispatched at 10: 10 p.m. after an incomplete telephone call from the address, to check for poaslble trouble, Reports said Loud waited them to er· der the girl out. while she in turn wanted . tht olficers to order the host to reconnect some wiring she claimed was maliciously disturbed to stall her car. . Investigators said words were ea:chang· • ed, relative to civil rights, trespassing laws, their knowledge cf police proced- ures and other matters. The scufne responsible for the ms- pect's arrest allegedly occurred after Loud became loud and boisterous outside, leading them to attempt to search him for weapons. He was in custody this morning, with bail set at $500. erlorb j,quatt ~ -·---- CAMPAIGN DESK With pewter gnt l>oso. Sllell lielilni:I ternbOur-doon. 329. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DR EXEC -HERITAGE NIWPOIT STOU Of'IM AIDAT 'T1L t NEWPORT llEACH I n7 WMt<llff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'Tl~ 9 Profetslon1I Interior 0..lgnen Av•ll1bfe -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA lrACH 345 North c .... Hwy. Phone: 494&151 ,.._ t• "-.... 8' 0...... c Ip ltt 1JIJ " • .. ' I t I • I I • l • • I ' i ! . r D.ln. y Plt.O'f § -Mideast Curbs Faisal Proposes Action by Nixon 01icago Political QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandl Raps Sought Against 3 In Slaying DREW, f\1iss. (UPI) Authorities today m o v e d s~·iftly to seek indictments against three young white men accused of killing a teen-age Negro girl in l his small Mississippi della town. ' Frank 0 . Crosthwait Jr., prosecuting allOrney for Sunflov•er County, said he would present the case to the next term or the Gr<fnd Jury which convenes Junel 7. The three men were .being held in a maximum security unit at the stat~ penitentiary follovdng their arrest a few hours aftt!r Jo Etha Collier. 18. "'as shot down Tuesd ay night on a Drew street. They y.•ere charged with murder. The three were identified as Wayne Parks, 23. a cotton farmer r r 0 m Drew ; his brolher. 'Vesley Parks, 36, a meehanic at Memphis, Tenn.; and their nephev.', Allen Wilkerson. 19, a recent high school graduate ~om 'fi.femphis. In vesligators said no motive had been established for the shooting. "·hich brought bitter reaction from black leaders and touched off protest marches Thursday afternoon at Drew and ne ighobring Ruleville. FBI agents, acting on orders from President Nixon. have joined in the investigation tG determine whether any federal law was violated in the killing . Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler announced Thun:day in Washington that Nixon had instructed Attorney General John Mitchell to otr. lain all information on the eage to determine whether any federal jurisdiction wai"i in- volved. Ziegler uid the Presi- dent rea:arded the i"ihooting as a "deplorable and appalling act." W ASHJNGTON (UPI) - After getting a full dreu welcome at the White Hou~. King Fa1sat of Saudi Arabia publicly urged President Nix- on to exert his influence to curb aggression by Israel in the Middle Easl The leader of the oil-rich. Arab state. clearly referring to Israel, but talking only of "certain powers," told Nixon that the situation "ctrt.ainJy requi~ the attention of you, !\fr. President, and your na- tion." Speaking on a red-carpe~ plat.form on the White Houi"ie south lawn, Faisal said "this aggrl!:!!ion which exemplifies itself in the occupation of our holy places and the sub- W ayC1.eared For Sea1.e' s Freedo1n CHICAGO (AP1 -A federal appeals court has cleared the y,.·ay for freedom for Bobby G. Seale. Black Panther party leader, while his appeal of a four year contempt sentence is pending. Attorneys for Seale and the government were to meet to- day with Judge Luther M. Swygert to work out detaili!: of his release. It was unknown whether Seale would b e released in Connecticut or \\1hether he would be brought to Chicago and released. A representative for Seale posted $25.000 bond Thursday shortly after the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Seale could remain free while appealing his four year con· tempt sentence handed down during the Ch.icago riot trial. The bond was granted over the government's continued objection based on Seale's Connecticut murder kidnap trial which ended in 1 mistrial Tuesday. • The government contended that Seale ghouJd not be released on bond because he \\'IS not acquitted in Con· necticut but that the charges were dismissed becalli"ie of 1 deadlocked jury. Judge Orders Garrison To Let Clay Shaw Alone J -l Figure_ Vanishes JucaUon ol. our people 1w brought about some disagree- ment between your country and ours." In the future , he said, •·we hope these good relations will be re-established." Nixon In turn replied that he was "looking forward to the counsel of a senior i"i~tesman with whom we can work for a just peace in the MJddle East and alJ part& of the world." Faisal and Nixon the n rttired to the President's oval office for their fir.st formal meeting. At the end of lhe 75- minute conference. P r e s s Secret.uy Ronald L, Ziegltt said they discu~ •·many world problems. especially the situation in the Middle East." Although he did not go into detail, Ziegler saJd Faisal ex- plained bis "special interest in tile Holy City ol Jerusalem," now occupied by l 11 r a e 1 i forces . The king, who is winding up a goodwill tour ol the United States, sees himself as the guardian of the fl101lem holy places in Jerusalem, ·Mecca and 1'-ledina. He also has in· sisted on Israeli withdrawal from all territory seized dur- ing the 1967 war . FDA Praises Unit Report On Problems HUNTED ALDERMAN Cliicago'a Hubbard 3 Foreig1i Boats Ram U.S. Nets BOSTON (UPI) -Three foreign trawlers p Io wed Ulrough the nets of an American lobster boat early today for the second time in less than 24 hours , the Coast Guard reported. The ve:i;sels -at least t"'·o of them Russian -cut through the nets of the Westport-based United States about 67 miles south\\-est or Na:ntuc.kel Island at about 6 A.M. EDT today. The Coast Guard Cutter Vigilant was sent to the scene and reported an hour later there were 47 Ru111ian trawlers in the area. It marked the second ... WASHINGTON (AP) straight day of incidents for Government decisions on the the United States. There was ~-~ sa fety of food and drugs are no damage report for either "<// ... ":. too often based on politics incident. 'YAJI rather than good science. a.1-----------'-----"'----- blue ribbon advisory com- mittee report.s. The Food and Dr u g Administration, hailing the report as sound and helpful, said it is already im- plementing committee recom· mendations for acientilic buf- fers against economic and political pressures. The five man panel of university .scientists concluded after a year's investigation that despite pocket! o f laboratory excellence the FDA is not equipped to grapple with many of the diff icult, te<:hnical questions of consumer pro-, tection. , fj ''ft c urren tly faces enormous responsibilities for consume r protection and the public health but with limited rei"iOurces, coni"itricted perspective and little solid constituency in the public or medical and 1cientific THHE'S ONE THING YOU'LL NEYER FIND IN MT STORE • , • Gardens MEMORIAL DAY SPECIALS From Our 1Vurser11 DICHONDRA .... -·· ... . ........ 95c ""' Patc.h up bare spots-•+•rt a new l•wn. HI SPRAYER DELUXE GARDEN SPRAYER ~: !;::.::;::.~: ;~;t:'. ___ ... , ......................... m ............... --.... ~ 591 TUBEROUS BEGONIAS . For yo"' lllatlo ........ ........ .......................... .................. ... ....... 3 t.r $1 OO FUCHSIAS Ho•9lo9 ood upright ··················-···················-·-··-·············· .. ···· l '"I HANGING BASKOS 99c CARNATIONS lntflvldual poh, rnoat varieties ··-···--···········---····-···-···-·-···-·· CLEARANCE SALE 3.., '1 00 NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -A federal court Thursday ruled district attorney Jim Gar- ri:i;on. for personal gain. used urireliable witnesses to build a fl i msy cai.e against businessman Clay Shaw dur- ing a "baseless investigation of the John F. Kennedy assassination .'' • ., establishments," the com- \ mittee aaid of the FDA. • • • •nd th at's pr•ssur• to buy. My sa fes· men won't push or prod or follow you •round bre•thing down your n•clr. Tftey'v• be•n put through th• J•clc Bidwell Good S•lesm1n Tr•in in9 Cours•. If you need help, we'll be ple•s•d to give you as much or •s. little •S you went. But you'll never be pressured to buy anything. Aft•r •II, Stepping Stones Aggregate & Concrete 20o/ooFF "This court. considering all tif the evidence. finds that Garrison undertook his baseless investigation with th.e :""'-:.. i!ipecific intent to depr ive Shaw tr. e>f his rights under the ... Constitution of the United ' States." said U.S. District • rudge Herber t W. Christenberry. Ul'I Ttlt-~t,. GARRISON TARGET Elated Ci t y Shaw Brass Meet At Previe'v WASHINGTON (UPI) -!r- Mrs. Joseph Kennedy a.nd •' Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower led 3,500 other guests Thurs-• day rUght in pa.rtioipating in a "ga)a prt:view" at the new John F. Kenned y center for the performing art.ti . The huge marble structure l on the Potomac ruver will not be opened to the public until Sept. 8. The preview fe.:itured dining and dancing. and the crowd in- cluded a political , social and entertainment world elite. Christenberry ordered A permanent injunction barring Garrison from further pr~ aecution of Shaw on a perjury charge in Louisiana courts. Tbe order, for awhile at least, ended Shaw·s four-year. 87-day tirdeal as a man implicated in the assassination of President Kennedy. Also representing the K~ Oswald was the lone a.ssas&in. nedy famil y were Sen. and w• want you to clothes we sell. lik e us •s well •s the 1'467 Vi• Lido, Newport B••c.ft -"673 -4510 INFLATABLE KIDDY SEAT Exc.ellent for plcnlc1, pooltJde, carnphtt, T.V., den ,•'• lnJtant eornfort ······-·-················-····-·····-···------ From Our Patio TWO TONE RAnAN CHAIRS••·•• v.1 .. Brown Jordan, T ami1mi & K1ilu1 S•le prices held over for Memorial Day For the Pool 79' FLOATING SAUCER With H .. d .... '-·········-······· '19" POOL RADIO ~~~~."!i~ .. 11 •• 1 .. ····---···--·---s 19" 212J Nowpo<I llyd. COSTA MUA 646-3925 11101 Hatbor lhd. GARDEN GROY! 534-6774 Shaw was arrestedll\farch 1, 1967, and charged by Ganii"iOn with conspiring with Lee Harvey Oswald and others to -as1assinate Kennedy. Gar· rison. at the same time. de- nounced the Warren Com- mission report wh.ich. found On Ma:rch 1, 1969, a state ~1rs. Edward ~f. Kennedy, court jury deliberated only SS Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy, minutes after a 40-day trial widow or the late Senator; and and acquitted Shaw. -M~"~·~Pe~te~rJLa~w~lor;d~,~th<;~la~te~======:;:============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Three days later Garrison President's sister. charged Shaw with perjury for testifying in his trial be did not know OS\\·ald and the other alleged coconspirators. used cars used but not abused seventy-ones at ~~~ tm0 HAABO" BLVD./ COSTA MESA {114) 640:f100 Choose Ohe of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: * MAIN OfFICE: tin l Hiii, LOI Angtlel • 923-1'61 f * ~LIHlftl 9': GM.MERCY PLACl:3m Wlllhlrt1 81Yd., ~ •381--1285 U. 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Plus many tree 1ervlcu -money ordera. 11fe depcalt boxu, ttc. --~ ~- ,· COAST l; -AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS -·-~----~· Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMPOUNDED DAJLY AND PAID QUMTULY.• 5.0Q01•-5.13'Y• Puebook; No Minimum. 5.25 •/o.5,39'Yo Thl'M Month Certificate: No Minimum. 5.750/•-5.920/• On•YNr C1rtlftcat1; $1 ,000 Minimum. e.00•1 •• a.1aOJ• Two-YNrCertineate; $51000 Minimum. •Etftctf~ At1nu1/ E1.1ttlngs INSURANCE TO s20,ooo • . . ' • DARY PROT EDITOIUAL PAGE Spell Out the Dangers ln what seemed to be one great and universal sigh of despair. the Newport Beach City Council this week adopted a policy statement on potential state controlled coastal planning and develophlent. During the brief deliberations there were allusions to the predominant belief that "some kind of coastal controls bill" will pass this year. Reporl.!i from Orange County legislators confirm ~at judgment. Comments such as "we've got to make sure it's the least damagin& possible" came from several councilmen. To a man adamant in their personal opposition lo a state takeover, the councilmen's statement does not, how· ever, reflect ringin~ criticism of the idea, or sound a strong enough warning. The problem, of course. in fighting the state's plans is that no one really knows -least of all the legisla· lure -what the state really seeks to accomplish. The state seems bent on establishing some kind o! super· agency for administering a program for which no criteria have been developed. ln summary, the council policy statement acknowl· edges the state's right to act to protect the coasUine from unwise use or exploitation, but urges that applica· tion of state mandated criteria be left at the local gov· ernment level. The council urges that state criteria not trample on constitutionally guaranteed property rig~ts. Most importantly. the council urges that the fina.n· cial burden of coastline preservation and public use not fall on the communities and landowners in the coastal area disproportionate to benefits. No one seriously disputes that use of the actual coastline property belongs to all the people of California. not just to those of us fortunate enough (or smart enough, if you like) to live along ii. What is wrong with many of the proposals being considered is that the state would be setting up another Airlines A re Prone to Use Gobbledygook ~ --.. ~:. J. Harris ~···~·'· :... One of the many 15pecialty magazines I read regularly. in the relentless quest fOr :olumn material, Is "Air Line Pilot." In !ti page!, a layman learns an awful lot tbout airlines, and fiying, that he might itherwi:se. nev@r know. One of the art.icle1 that pleased me :nost. in a recent issue. was written by Robert Buckhorn. the aviation editor of lJPJ. the nev•s service. Buckhorn was tealing with the common complaint by pilot.s and airline people generally that :he daily press ··oversimplifies·• or "distort.s" aviation stories. Some of this is simple ignorance or ~aste. Buckhorn admit s: a reporter may ~nfuse a "precautionary la nding" wlth tn "emergency landing.'" or a '"flight recorder" \\'ilh a "cockpit voice recorder." The trade press, on the other aand. rarely makes sucb mistakes. BUT BUCKHORN, a recognized and ~specttd expert in the field , charges :hat a great deal af tht "over.slmplifica· J:ion" of the media ''gprings from the in· dustry's inability to communicate." The cpeeial jargon of aviation is sometimes Urned at preciseness; just as often. it may be aimed at obscuring the facts oehlnd a lot of fancy verbiage. A:s an example, he cites: '·The cause of the crash was the pilol's failure l-0 main· lain sufficient altitude to avoid neighbor· ing terrain." Translation: "The plane new into the side of a hill." Or this classic bit of official gobbledygook: "The pilot's apparently unrecognized descen t Dear Gloo1ny Gus The Irvine Company·s idea of greenbelt is two golf courses 111 1 row /Irvine Coast and Big Can· yon;, both private. -E. L. P. nth ,..lur. ,.,IKn ,..,.,... vl•wa. "'' 11te1u1rllr ""'N 11 "" "'"'"''"· ,..,. '"'r Mt -v• ,. •1"'"' Ou1,. n.111 Piltl. to an altitude be.low that of the airport." THE FAA D OESN'T speak bf ''parachutes," bu t of ··aerodynam ic personnel decelerators.'' Engines don't "fall off ": I.hey always '·d etach themselves" from airplanes that never "crash," but only make "'uncontrolltd descents into the ground." If an oversimplification, or even an outright error of fa ct. appears In a story, Buckhorn asserts. it is not deliberatl!!, •·but it could be the rtsult of somt porn· pous, confusing, and unnecessarily com· plicated pronounc@ment by an airline lawyer, econo mist or engineer." AND WHAT IS TRUE here is equally LnJe in dozens of 4lther fields. Most groups are interested in covering up their mistakes or ineptitudes, to save thtir reputations or to guard agairuL lawsuit.,, The · people they hire a1 t h e i r •·spokesmen" to deal with the: media arl!! primarily concerned with making the group look good, and nol. with tbe pl•in fa cts. The mass media over·simplify because the special interests over-complicate and obfuscate the issues v.·ith legal and technical terminology. When Iha parachute fails, Uley wan t to blame it on the weather. A Nation of Beggars To lbe Editor: \\'ith all our riches. we have become~ in a few short yeari. a nalion of beggars - begging our enemies for mucy instead of clobbering them in the first plact. The silly begging began \\'hen L.B.J. of· le.red V~tnam a billion dollars of tu money if they ·y1ould qui\ fighting. The iuti!I!! begging has been going on ever since. Lefs took at some of it: t. Secretary of State Dean Ru sk begged Hano i for even a feeble sign that would indicate a willingnes.s to negotiate. One Dean ignored. 2 The Paris begging Is almost comical. 3 THE PO\\' Wl\'ES ha\'e begged to no avail . 4. A Te1as millionaire beggar. Ross Perot. "IA·as refused by Hanoi. $. A begging group offering themselves in exchange for POW'1 y,·as laughed at by both Hanoi and mt. 6. We beggti:J North Korea to free Buclxr. •nd we l~l his &hip. 7. The Calley convict.ion appeased the envny and gave comfort 8. We 1ppeased South American pirates !Dr hijacking tunJ boall. t. Even Bin& Crosby b.!ls a plan to bribe Ba DOI. 10. And a new Teias lfOUJI 11 going to ParlJ to be& HJnOl for something. AND THEllE'll NO IA!Ulng how mMy oth!r kooa wlU Ir)' thlJ flltlle gimmick. But this continuous btgglne does give aid and comfort to tM eoemy. and in tJme of •ar which the Concras Is too cowardly to declare it thla Ume, .uch aid and com· ·----, .,.._ ...... , ' ·. ... Letters from reader1 art wtleomt . Normally writtr1 1hould convey thtir messages i11 300 words or less. The right to condttnse letters to fit spoct or elimin.at. libtl is rtstrvtd. A.IL ltt· ters must inchtdt .signaturt and mail· i·11g address, but namti may be with· held on request if 1ufficitnt rtason is apparent Poe!ry will not be pub· lished. fort would ht! called treason. We art a nation of beggars. our rulers are the culprits, and the taxpayer is the sap. MILT BASHAM •Hrr. Robert Smith' To tht Editor: Although l have become r•ther weary of Women·s Lib slogans and attitudes. l must admit that r have become more .a"'•are of the frequent. often in•dvertent, mdignity lmposed upon them. To be specific, I have come to question the journalistic pr11clice of referrln& to women by thtlr husband's given and surnames. Why should a woman be refer· rtd to as "~1rs. Robert Smith"? Her name isn't Robert. and she doean't bflong Ill him. Already. &be bas &lven up her family name. I would auggtsl that It would lend • deserved dlgnlty to 11 womlll lf ahe were to be referred to as ~tr1. Louise (Robert) Smith. WM. LYON. Ph.D. layer of super-government -one lhat is not responsible to the voters. This agency would suddenly become expert and alJ.powerful in all matters alfecting not merely the shoreline but literally every aspect of life Jn the com· munities of the coastal area. Considering Newport's background of long exper· lence \vith this problem, and with so much to be lost from state blundering in this area, we wish the Newport council could sound a stronger warning and assert a stronger leadership role. Program for Dropouts Orange Coast College has announced expansion o! a program to inspire high school dropouts and potential dropouts. This summer the $40.000 program will not only serve more students but will offer a "'ider variety ol training. Last year the college brought 70 minority studenl.5 on campus for training in four areas: photoi.:raphy, woodworking, electronics and architectural drafUng. This year, some 300 will be involved in subjects ranging from architectural drafting to vocational orien· talion. The project is a model of partnership funding using district resources, state and federal money to serve the community:1 The money has proved to have been well spent. Of 13 participants last year who "'ere eligible to go to college in the falJ, 11 entered college. They are 11 young people \Vho at the beginning or :summer sho\.\1ed all the signs of dropping out of a poten· tially productive life. bu t changed their mind s. The program deserves full support of the com· munity as it begins to widen its horizons this year. N NATO Troop Streng th Battle Continues - Mansfield Is Still Not Satisfied WASHINGTON -Less than twl'I months before the Senate erupted lnl o a critical dispute over Sen. J\1 i k e Mansfield's proposal for removing U.S. troops from Europe. the Pentagon was explicitly y,•arncd that the troop con· troversy could flare out of control on the Senate floor. The warning was issued behind closed doors by Sen. John C. Stennis. [)..~l iss .. the experienced chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Ironicall y. Stennis was the floor leader y,•ho had to quell the Senate uprising when. lo thP. Ni1on adm inistration's e 1 pr I!! s s' d surpr ise. the troop controversy broke during debate on e:ittending the military draft. Stennis . interrupLcd I a t e ~I a r c h testimony by Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor lo caution thaL as a Jong time supporter of NATO. he \\'BS concerned that a troop debate might break loose in the Senate and become "unconlrollable.'' He said the Pentagon should be \\'ithd raw. ing non-combat troops from the 300,000 now stationed in Europe. THE SENATOR.also suggested that I.he United States might gi ve NATO allits a year 's advance warn ing that it was going lo withdraw a spec ific number of troops from the NATO support force and thu.5 e83e the impact in Europe. Alleu-Golds1uith Resor, apparently un impre ssed by the Stennis alert replied that therf v.·ould be only small savings from bringing troops home. He added that lhe presence of some 5~.000 troops and dependents in Europe acrounted for a little less than a billion dollars of I.he big deficit in the U.S. balance of paymenl'i. In the end. thanks to Stennis and a strange assorlment of allies ranging fro m Dean Acheson to Leonid Brezhnev, Jl.1ansfield 's proposal 11as rejtcled. The Senate ''ole, a ralh@r tasy 61 to 36. y,·as inlerpreted as a victory for Presidcnl Nixon. The President y,•ill be mistaken, hoy,•e1•er. if he concludes that he has really won an.vthing big or if he assumes that last week "s Senate vote has really ~etlled the troops conlT01·ersy. He had, in ract, won n() mnre than an initial skirmish in what promises to be a con- tinuing battle over troop strength in Europe. DEMOCRATIC LEADER Mansfield has made it clear lhat he will raise the issue again if withdra"·a!s do not materiallze in the negotiations envisioned b,v Brezhnev·s fortoilous statement. Paradoxically, It was the Russian leader's hopeful comment which really \\'On the day for Mr. Nixon and his NATO policy. There remains 1 Senate sentiment, running to many more than 36 votes, which favors some withdrawal from the U.S. NATO force that has been substanl· ially unchanged for 20 years. That sen- timent should not be underestimated. Had the Russians not i n v a d e d Czechoslovakia in 1968. the Senate mi@:ht have spearheaded a move for con- gressionall y-o rdered NATO troops reduc· lions al the time. The late Sen. Richard B. Russell, 0.Ca., was ready then to lend t'iJs lowering prestige to a reasonable troop 1l'ilhdra"·a1. If negotiations with lhe \Varsaw Pact cln not begin rather qu.ickly, of if they drag along with no resu lts. a new r.fans field initiative could have a wholly different outcome. \VHY SURPR ISE? -11 should also concern Pr@:sident Nixon that the lop- echelons of his administration were caugh t by surprise when Mansfield acted to tie the troop reduction proposal to the draft bill. Ev.en if Resor relayed no signal from the forthr ight Stennis comments, there was plenty of advance warning. Mansfield announ ced publicly I n December that he would not be satisfied \\'ilh a fnere expression of Senate sen· timent on the troop issue this time. The Democratic leader said he would act to force the removal of some of the NATO garrison in the new Congress. All the evidence is that adm inistration leaders at the Capitol passed the word that a showdown could come quickly, as soon as the recent dollar speculation focused public attention on the continuing balanct of payments deficit. THE EVIDENCE IS , in fact . that wit h y,·arnings abundantly at hand, the Ni1on \Vhite House was simply unimpres.sed. Like a military headquarters supplied \l"ith good intelligence but unable to in· terpret lt, Mr . Nixon·s \Vhite House could not belie\'e an important legislative battle "'as in prospect. The inciden! serves as ;i reminder tha t !he Nixon \Vhite House, unlike lhe While House under Johnson and Kennedy, has no policy-level advisers who were trained ~t t~e Capitol and are quickly capable of Judging , from a variety of c<>nfusing reports. just what is going to happen in the House -or. !!!Specially. in tht sometimes erratic Senate, By Robert .S. Alita Navy Hides Costly Helicopter Goof \\'ASHINGTON -The Navy is stuck with defective flight decks and other fc..ulty helicopter fac ilities on more than 160 of its ships. The 740 drone helicopters built for the ships have either crashed, been crated and stored or otherwise retired from their anti·submarine work. In the process, the Navy has sq u a n· dered almost $1 bil· lion in public funds. The admirals have hidden the magnl· tude of this Joss from Congress and the nation. Ev I!! n more outrageous. the Navy is still building the faulty gear into Its newest, proudest destroyers. Tile drone choppers themselves ~·ere phased out in 1966. They ~'ere supposed to clatter up froni the ship platforms, zero ln on subs and dispatch them ~'Ith torpedo bombs. Instead . the drones plummeted into the sea like rotten apples In a windstorm, or disappeared inl-0 the blue, never to be :seen again. TIIE Uf\'MANNEO craft, called DASH for Orone AnU·Submarlne Helicopter, even had bad luck on the ground. Three were burned up in truck accidents. for reasons only the Navy knows, one of these Edsels of the air was c<>nsigned to the Smithsonian museurn. We learned of the billion-dollar "boon- doggle from a claSllffed Navy report prepared by trouble shooter Rear Am . John Bulkeley. The Navy b•d good B11 Geor11e --~ Dear George: , ~fy "·lfe hasn 't &poken to me In more lhan seven weeks now and this lis the third time I°"e written to you about it. SILE~"T TREATMENT Otar ST.: Yes. It is -the lhlrd time. Just bow lone do you plan tn aloat aboUl this situa tion. 1nyhow? ·, ( Jack Anderson • reason lo hastily classify this 168-page document. Jn it, Bulkeley sizzled on discovering an "uncertified he.lo platform·· on lhe USS Kno1. one of a 1panking new group of destroyers. He also turned up a "useless ... hangar and Jp.5 fueling system. "DASH ... Pl.ATFOR~t can only be us- ed as a Vert Rep pick up,'' he growled, meaning that choppers can hove r to pick up or drop supplies, but cannot safely land on the platforms. The Adm iral "'rote that !he Navy. not the contractors. were to blame. "Government Responsible'' \.\·as his lerse judgment on the goof. \Ve checked other Navy ships to find out "'hether the long-defunct DASH system had been built into them. We found more than 150 shi ps with bum plat· forms. foully ha.1gars1 and useless con- trol rooms. The ships rquipped lo handle worthless drones. according lo another internal Navy document, reads like a "Who 's Who in the U.S. Fleet." A~10~G THESE are the destroyer USS J, P. Kennedy, the vaunted nuclear destroyer USS Truxton and e v e n. destroyer tenders Uke the USS Dixie. Boring the Bartender Remarks that a bartender gets tired of hearing: "\Vhat do you have to do to get a drink on the hou se here-get a ladder and cl imb up on the roof~" ..You know those 10 different drinks the ladies til the back table ordered. Alfle? \I/e ll, hold ·em . They've all changed their minds again ." "When I feel I've hnd enough to drink, you won't have 1n d • . .;_.. ~ f I 1 '• ·' _.\ I ...,,,._ _, ashort •t ~1iami rich.'' tell me. 1'11 tell you.·· ··Did you know the Pilgrim fathers landed where they did because the Mayflower had run out of be:er! rt they had had a few more ki:_gs aboard they might have come Beach and all died "\'OU P.IEAN YOU never heard of JJ\ Eskimo Teardrop? Well. first you-." •·rm not ask.Ing you to IOJd my drink. Alfie , but don'l you think you ought to pour at Jeasl enough to cover the bottom Hal Boyle l _ .... ·----· -__ ..,;/ [_ nf lhe glass?" "\Veil, happy date . I Always say. What do you always sa y'.."' "I can whip an ybody at the bar half my size~r even sma ller.'' "I know you\•e he.11rd 1111 m~ old troubles. Alfie, but how \.l.'OU!d you like to be the first to listen to a couple of my new ones?" "Pul Olis one on lhe cuff. too. Alfie, and when my ship comes in lhe fir.st lab I'll pay ls yourg." "YOU ~1EAN YOU ne ver heard of Chinese Singsong Punch? Well. first you-." .. The \11st three rounds "·ere for the road. \Yha1 ·11 v.·e make this one for?'' "ll1s a long tlme between drinks , Alfie. Too long .ll YO\I ask me ·• "If you h!ld l-0 get trthr1bs. Alfie, why did you nave to get It in your pouring arm?" ' I I Some had been modernized with DASH platforms at huge expense long after the program was officially declared a flop. Shamefaced Navy e:itperts explained privately to my a:o1sociate , Les Whitten, that barnacle-cncru~ted admirals had in· sisted on building the ships' platforms v.·lthout ever being sure that the drones "'ould work. \Vhen the unmanned chop- pers fl opped into the sea. !he admira ls kept building more platforms in the hope that a new helicopter c<>uld be developed to use them. But the new helicopter pro. gram also fizzled. l'\O\\', THE NA VY is praying that still another light.weight helicopter, or a heavier chopper will work. In either case, the olrl DASH facilities would have to bt modified at extra cost to the ta1pa yer. Officially, the Navy told us that the cost of the debacll!! "IA·as y,·ay below St billion. But it acknoy,·ledged !hat 386 of the drones had been lost, mostly through crashes. The rest have been mothballed al even more expense to the. U.S. Treasury. or presstd into makeshift limited du ties. ··Maybe,'' said one Navy wag gloomily, ""'' can put wheels on them and use them for go-carts.'' --~-- Friday, May 28. 1971 The tditorial page o/ the Dcilv Pilot itek.s to inform and atim. ulott readers bu pre.stnting thtl ntwspoptr'1 opinions and com. mentary on topics of interest and significonct, b~ providing 11 forum for tht t xprtisfo,. of our readers' opiniom, ttl!d bv prestnChlg the diverse vicw- t>oint.t of in fo rmed ob1trvtr1 and 1pokesmt1l on topiei tJf th• dau. Robert N. Weed, Publisher t ~ I I I • ' 1 l I I r .. t. . ' . ' • .. ' • ..... .. i" \ ' . ,. ' .. ' '· ' c/ •, I • .., < • t " . I • f •• 1 , t ,. ' ·' < \.. ,., , ! "''j •'"' (. l ~ ' ' ' OVER THE TOP -'fhe mercury soaring lo the $250,000 mark gives cause for smiles from /left to right) Angelltos de Oro in- coming president Mrs. George L. \Voodford and 11rs. Marshall Nledecker, lasr year's leader. The figure represents total funds given to Big Brothers of Orange County in the auxiliary's 10 years of service. Debutantes on Wing Wi Id Blue Yonder Beckons at Sunrise They \r ill have their heads in the clouds -literally -on Sunday, June 6. "rhe 15 debutantes of the National Charity Lea gue , Ne,vport Chap- ter. \\'ill take off on that date at the preda\\1n hour of 6:30 bo und for Cata · lina Isl and. Pilots \Viii be Dr. John DaPrato Granzella and Dr. Gerald Francis Doan. Dr. and ~!rs. Granzella and Dr. and lVl rs. Ro)•al Duane Tucker \Viii be hosts for a sunrise breakfast al the Airport in the Sky on Catalina, \Vhere plans undoubtedly "'ill be discussed for the Debutanle Ball planned in the Ne\\ porter Inn on Nov. 27 . . \11 debutantes have n1et the requirements for presentation at the ball through their corn munity service and hours spent at the Ticktocker 1'hrift Shop. according to iVlrs. Richard Lansing La\\'rence. league chapter president. Proceeds from the thrift shop help to support the John Tracy Clinir Den1onstration I·Jon1e in Costa Mesa for deaf and hard of hearing preschool children. Planning to be present for the party flight \\'ill be the J\lisses Joyce Louise Cald\vell. Carol Chapman ConnaUy, Pamela Puni\\'ai Conover, Jana Granzella, Karen Irene Hodges. Kathleen 1'1arie Langenbeck. Anne Aileen La\rrence. Jolie Janene LeBoeuf. Chloe Mcintyre, Deborah Elaine Meany. Candace Penelope ?i·loses. Tria Ne\vcom, Mary Loraine Steen, Jamie Lou St~·ll and Patricia Ann Tucker . ~men BEA ANDERSON , Ed;to• • ... ,. u A Million Thanks Due If the spring flowers in the Newporter Inn had a golden tinge, they \\.'ere taking on the glow from justi- fiably proud members of Angelitos de Oro during their luncheon installation. Ne\V officers for the auxiliary to Big Brothers of Ora nge County v.1ill be led this year by J\1rs. George L. \Voodford Jr .. \Vho accepted the gavel from Mrs. Mar- shall Niedecker. Glo\vin g in men1ory is the achievement of the past year when a total of $250.000 was presented to William Brooks, president of the Big Brothers, representing pro· fits from the Gold Book and the Spring Ball. Accepling responsibility as me1nbers of the board for the coming year \Vere the J\1mes. \Vilfred A. Berls, vice pre.~ident; R. J. Stoddard, recording secretary; Wil· liam 1\. Thon1pson, corresponding secretary. and Joseph L. Carver, treasu rer. 1\ special salute was given to Gold Book editors of the pa st decade for their joint efforts in producing the 10th anniversr1ry edition. They included the Mmes. Al· bert 1~. Maxted, \Vil\iam f<,1iller . .John F. Porter. Edward E. Sharp, Mark Soden, Donald \Vood'"ard, ~rugh K. ¥/right and Berls. Also receiving special recognition \Vere associate members, the Mines. Jules Axelson, Sydney Bartlett, Allan H. Crary, Verne Dudley. Lyman H. Farwell, George M. Holstein, John R. Lavelle. Claude L. Patter· son, Angus S. Richardson. Joseph Rig gs. Tremaine Treat, Louis A. Turner. Dean Q. Waddell. Thomas P. Walker, Cora Peggy Wallace and Thomas C. Webster. , . . · ·' :: . . . .. .. :· •: PREFLIGHT CHECK -~1aki n g certain that all is in perfect order for a Catalina flight on Sunday, June 6, are (left to right) the coming president Mrs. George L. Woodford Jr. and Mrs. Marshall : Tucker, National Charity League debutantes. :: .. . , .. ;: Mini Vacations Offer Maximum· Matrimonial Benefits •• : ' ' • ;• DEAR ANN LANDERS: wa s delighted to read that you are in favor of married couples escaping from the hum- drun1 of daily Jiving and checking into a niote\ for the night. I ca n lell you from experience it has kept our marriage from bogging do\1 n -or maybe e"en from falling apart. Cv and 1 ha ve been married 12 year~. \Ve · ha\'e three health~'. normal children . hu1 they are a handful and I need to gel away from then1 periodica lly. Two years ago when the baby 1l'as six months fJld . I felt as if 1 v.•as cracking up. Everything got on my nerves. ~fy doctor ~uggested that my husband and I lake ll 11cekend trip. "'Just dnve off ANN LANDERS son1('wherr .·' he said . r I'll ahYays beliei:e that weekend saved n1y sani1 y. The simple luxury or s\ecpin,c late for two glorious mornings in a ro11• niRrl(' a ne\v v.·oman out of me. That ex· perience was so wonderful my husband and I decided lo go again in 90 days - and we did, but just for one night. !We couldn't afford to pay a sitter for longer. I After the second tr ip we made up our mind s to treat ourselves to one night il\1'8.Y every 90 days and not lei anything interfere . \\'e get a great ki ck out of il when the desk cle rks give us the eye . We know what they're thinking and we reel wicked and nudge each other. Our best lalking is done on these one- ntghl trips. At home there are too many interruptions -too much lo do -or we are too tired . It's wonderful to be alone for 18 hours· with no kids yelling, no phone ringing, no housework or cooking. Nothing to do . but enjoy one another's company. for those couples "'ho think they can't afford ii. let me say it 's cheape r than 1 nervous breakdown -or 8 divo rce. One ni~hl in a hotel can be the best ~la rriage S.111·er in the world. And the val ue of THAT can"! be measured in dollars and cenr~. -~IR. & ~fRS. SO HELP ME DEAR i\1.&i\1.: I rectlved many lellers 1uch as yours, and I thank you. DEAR ANN LANDERS : We have known each other for 10 years. He say.oi he is in Jove with me. I KNOW I am in love with him . We have all the important things in common: religion. education, age , physical attraction . The problem: t can't nail him down. No matter what ap- proach I use he &imply refu:ies to make a commilment. I've told him on several occasions to gel out ol my life if he doesn1l \\'ant to m;irry me, but he won't. And I guess I don"l v..·anl him to. He is lhe only man I ha ve ever loved and he knows it. I am ncit interested in going otil wilh anyone else. Neither i.oi he . How did a sen.~ible girl like me get trapped like this? What can l do about him? -NEW HAMPSHIRE DEAR HAMP : You can't do anything about him -as evidenced by the history of your romance -but you can do 1omelhing tbollt yourself. Face the tacts. Do you wa nt to bt a wife and mother!' U ' IO, you'd better drop this bird whUe yo·ll' reprodu ctive machinery ls 1tlll fan~ tiooing. IJ, on the other hand, be mea• so much to you that you •Imply cu .. envision a life "'il bout him, you'll have fi , , settle for the relationship on his terD\1- and hope that one day be will change ldl· mind and want to marry you. .. How h1r should a teenage couple g~ Can necking be safe ? \Vhen does Jt become too hot to handle ? Send for Al\ft Landers' booklet, "Necking and Pettini -What Are the Limits?"' Mail your ~ quest to Ann Lander.oi in care of lhe OAP LY PILOT enclosing 50 cent& in coin •Ifl a long, stamped, self-addrt.oised envelope.~ • I . 1 ' .J OMLV PILOT Calendars Circled LEGAL NOTICE , __ _ I Ul'••101t COU•T 01' W-T·111H ITATI' 0 1' CALl,.OllNIA '0111 HOTICI' TO Clll'OITOlll LEGAL NOTICE Variety Spotlighted THI' COUNTY 01' OllAHOI TO THE CllEDITOllS 01' JOSI'~ r. NI. A.aJtt CAlllTU!ll, TltAN5FElt011: 1'11,....,."' '9 NOTltl' 01' Nl'AIUNO 01' l'ITITION .kdJom 611l •NI tltl ef ..... (.1,11 .... •lt !JOit l'ltOIATI Of' Will ANO ,a. Unllo•rn Cornrn9f<l tl C&elt, ¥1111 •re llTTlltl TltTAMINTA•Y MrlOv Nlllfltd tt !ollfw•• Ellll1 ol HA•RY MONTGOME:•Y, TttllllttOI' II tllOl/I lo tl'l tkt 4 lrtrtlor DkttMd. IO !111 und1r1l1Md Kl!"LSl.Y OAVID NOT ICE IS HEll!•Y GIVEN llltl C~•H CHASE. T•111,ltt11, In bulk, 11! llf Ille Luncbeona, coffees a n d kt'.11t-partles filrdrta1e dar for many area organiza. tk>ns as June arrives end the club yt:ar closes. Women 's League Honoring the newly licensed architects in Orange County with a cocktail party will be t h e Women's Architectural League. Mr. and Mrs. David Klages will open their Laguna Beach home for the affair Saturday, J Wlt. S. Those to be honored Horoscope Include Rodney L au t e r , William---5crlmpler,-Michatl- Jladley, Richard N a t I a n d , Edwin Van Den Bosscbe, Peter Ultsch and Will Foster and their wives. Others are Roger Shleppy, Ernest Adanu:, R ob e r t Hornacek. F. W. CUbit and Richard Jont:s and wives. Junior League Following a 9:30 a .m . business m e e l l n g Thurs- day, June 3, members a n d guest& of the Nt:wport Harbor Sagittarius: Study Gemini SATURDAY. , . • It. l"rllr 1111 11110 lll•':ln 1 1>tl!li1n for rr11111.1l1, 1u1>oh••. ,.....,:111""1"' or Oltl•r Junior League will hear Jtm 1roo11t o1 w•ll •no •or luu1nc:1 01 Let11r1 1 .. v1ntor1, 11111 eQ11l~1n1n1 ., 111.11 c1r111" ••-~• fr••'•nc W •t d T11t11n1nr1r¥ lo Pt!lll-r r1!trtnc1 to c1n,.1 tlf1nln1 &u1lnt11, .,_,. 10 ~...-.-•. -~ C....~~r ~-w111~1> !1 rn1e11 tar '"""'' o•rlltwl•••· •na "C••Utr'1 C•r111t ci.1111"'" 111 el wlllclt past president of the Orange tfiil 1111 r.;r., 1110 -011e1 01-"llr1rTr1..,,.1· +.--.-.. )lf-M11111no-fl,_, CMt• Co H. . I Soc' ''"'' "'' Dffll ltl IO• June 11, 1'11, •• MUI, Count¥ or Orin ... c.itfol'nlt. unty istonca 1ety. t:JO 1"', h• '~• courttoom o1 o101r1. T111 .,.,,,,, n6rrl1 .,. ... ...,,, •<Id M El S I "II "'"'' No J o• ttlO covrt, 11 100 Civic bu1ln11t 10dr1u11 of tl!t T•t1111tr.-oN:I rs. mer prou "'l open c1n11r D•I¥~ weu. 111 rn1 cu, ol S•n!t T•1ntlrree ''' 11 1111aw1: her Orange home for the event An1. c11110!'11J1. Tr1n1t1ror. Joul'll E. c1111.,, 1u hi . Ottld MIV 21, 1'11 M1gnollt $1. Co1!1 Mtw, C1t11Drnl1. w ch Will be followed by a W, IL $T JONN Tt1n1!ert1, KtlltY 01vld °''"· 11U luncheon County c11rt Porr M••Ut• Pl., H1w1>9rl il•tcll, Ctllf • PITllll C. TOlllHAY Ail ot"" llw1ln1u 111m11 •nll .t<Mi•M .. I Scripps Alumnae IJOO Adtm1, Sun1 Mumltr '°' u1eo llY '~• Tr1n1f1ror wllllli• ,.,, ''"" C11tt Mtlf, C1Ultrftl1 •HU Yet" 111! 0111. 10 ltr 01 ll:llOWll It '"' Tth 014) mnst Tr1n1ltru, ~·•: Non• Attor"'y fer "t1lllG11tr Tiit bwl~ tr1"11t• 11 ta 111 ~umrntftd A panel of Scripps College Publl"'ed D•tntf Co11t Delly Piie! M•Y ti UNITED CAl"OltNIA • A H I(. f. i'-'-·c"..::'"c'c'c"c":':':·:":':' ____ :':'""=':tl w1r"'r •llCI M11n on1c1, 1J01 SOll!ll M•I" 1nancial planning experts will st•fft, s1n•1 A"•· COii"" et °'•"''· discuss private c 0 11 e g e LEGAL NOTICE c1111orn11, 011 or '"'' Junt '-ltl'I, O•lf'O: Mty JI, 197l , budgets with the Orang@ Coast SUPlllllOll COUlllT a, THI ~:~~~-:-.. o.:vld Cll111 Chapter of Scripps Collegt: STATE 0 , CAlt,OlllNI A 'Oil U111llf C1llfllnl1 ltlllr Alumnae during a luncheon TH• cou,',.'r.•.•,,ouNcos 1•1 ,..,.,~ M•l" 11rett .. k nit A111, C1UMl'nlt nnr Wednesday, June 2. HOTICI 0' ........ IHCJ a, PI TITICIN EM••• No. lll·l6Jf ,a. ,ICllATI 01' WILL ANO FOi P111!tl1r..d Ortntl Cotti OtliY ll!lrt. The effect of the stock LITTl'IS TllTAMINTAltT M•Y ,., .,,. .... ,. k d INO aOND I mar ~l~ on en owments and E•!et1 el JOSEPH OE l'ILL IPPIS, lht: rising cost of education D1cr.,1ro LEGAL NOTICE "II b . NOTICE 15 HE ltEl&Y GIVEN tt.11 --c;;;c;;;~::Cc:=CCCOC7==--Wl e major concerns when Ct1 n1rJm1 Oorrl1 Kotu "'' 111.., ""''" 1 Clt.Tl,ICATI o' autlN lll lhe group meets in the Balboa ot1111011 1or 11•00111 o1 w111 • ...., 1or '1cT1T1ous ''•M MAMI lnu1nc1 of Ltlttrl Tn r...,tn•irv 10 PttJ. The Ulldtrt l•nH oo 11tr1bv <••II.., t!ltl Island home of Mrs. R. B. 11on1• r111r1nc1 10 w111<1> ;1 mao1 f(!<" •key 1•• '°""""lino • 11u1!no11 11 tt" Smith l11r!htr 01rlkultr1 , Ind thtl !ht 11...,1 •"d Nortll Ftlrvltw S•r111, ltrtft A111 , · •l•c• ot 1>10•1111 '"" umi hes 11.,._n •ti C1lll01'11l1. u11111r ti!• l•tllllou1 firm 111m1 Family Service •or Ju111 II, ""· II t :JO ....... !11 1ne el Hl·IROW INVESTMENTS, •'!Ill •1!>1t Cour!rootn el Otpfrlrntnl No. J of l•ld Jtld I/rm 11 C.01TUIOlld DI t1!1 lo/1-IP'lt tovrt, ti 1'00 Civic. Center Orlvt-Wet!, In "'-''• WllOM n•m11 In fv lt IN Plt(l-S !ht Cll\I ol Stn!t Ano, Ct!lfornio. el t!ll!lence trt 11 follow•, •-II: w· "II fl d th Dlteod ~y JS, 1t71 Wlllltrn C. Brown. 1lll lll-1tt lfle W I OW an e W. f . $T JOHN Ro&O, LOI An1ele1, Ct llfornlt JQDU, cheese will be plentiful when counrv Cl••• ii:urt k. He1n1r, •fl Coll• Yue<•· be d •Oii.iT A IASTMAN T110U1•llCI 01~1. CalU0tnl1 t!MO. mem rs an guests or the ,,,. "1,1111; '°"11,1,.. 011t0 M1y "· 1t11 Jewish Family Service gather suni Numlllr 101 w11111m c. ••owt1 .-MAY 29 transactions. Your position is st.ranger than you think. Don 't 11:e!J yourself 5horl. Insist on equ itable arrangement. Aim at quality. Heed \'Oice of ex· perience. C ! M C Iller M:url H, Helts1r at 8 p.m. Thursday, June 3, T:~, 'e11:1·tM·.)O 1111 tJlM STATE OF CALIFOllNIA, for a wine-tasting party Allor111v for Pt1ltle1!1f' COUNTY 01" LOS ANGELES, u . ~ By SYDNEY OfttARR ftl ar1 associated the planet Aries. The number related to the "red plant:l" 15 t. ~1ars. among other things. depict~ Initiative, pugnacklusness. dlrett con· frontatioa. al.'tion. ~I 1 n y per1on1 born under Aries diJplay qualit ies which are Martian: they are Jt:ader1, ready to fight when Ibey think the cause i1 right. An Arit:s per&on can be headstrong. ln- depeadent a.nd •n orlglnal thinker. Of all the 1lgn5, Ar\e1 ts least likely tn takt: a back AQUARI US (Ja n. 20-Feb. 18 ): Finish rather than initiatt: proiects. Get overall view. Some ma y try to push or rush )'OU. i\1aintain balance. Long· range view now will be con- structive. Rt:lativt: is im· patient. • Pybllsn.o Or11111 Cotll Otlly Pllo! MtY On M•v )I, \fll, blfort mt. I Nth•Y Tic kets at Sl 50 ""r ""rson .,., 19 •nll June l lfll ll1t.11 Pu1>11~ In ind ior •110 s1111. ttrtontllY • t'~ !"" ' oo...,ortO Wi!lltm C llrown •"" Kul"I H are available for the affair, to LEGAL N'O'TICE H1luer ~r>OWn 10 mo 111 b1 1111 pernni I k I T I .. ~oi. n1mt1 •'• luDtcrlbtO lo lllt ""thin a e Pace in emp e Beth in1tr11,.,1nt, 1nC1 1c•-•tottc1 to '"' t1111 Sholom Santa Ana b)' calling NOTICI 0' DISICILUTION J"eY ,.eculf'O lf\e ....... h '. · ' . CONTINUATION OF I USINEIS (OFFICIAL 5EALI t e Jewish Fa1n1!y Ser\'ICe at Pur•uinl to '~• orovliions 01 5e<•;"" Milton 01 v11 ,. -:Decking the Hall ·~Decorating the Community Congregational Church. Corona del 1'lar for an u~­ ·toming luncheon are Mrs. John L. Kent. outgoing president of the Women s Service Fellowship Oeftl and Mrs. Roy H. Richard. incoming president. The final event of the year will take place Wednesday, June 2. >community Appeal Scouts Seek Identity Local control cr y dur ing discussions. Is often the pol itical Tak ing up the banner ls the Girl Scout Council of Orange County which is undergoing a atructura! reorganiiat.ion bas- ed on the concept of com- munity Identification. The council is chanKing from lhe neighborhood and district aubdivisioru to com- munity usoelaUons a n d urvice areas. "Before a dis trict would fake portions of many cities," Mrs. Wayne L. Hanlon, a spokesman for the Huntington Beach Community Associa- tion. "tt w.u very difficult t!'t get t!'tgether with people in the CMlmunlty. We are un· dergolng a revision of boun· darle11 to further community relations." The new associations will In· "-Qlve civic, communify and 'Professional groups includin11 the city fa thers. parks and recreation officials. Restructuring should enable the Girl Scout!I: to be mnrt: responsive lo the community by developing direct com· .munlcations ~·i!h adults 11nd youth organizations. added Mrs. Hanlon. CITY PARTICIPATION Idt:atly, tht:re will be com· munity association in each of the 23 &ep.arate cities within .pie county ratht:r than the previous 13 districts, 1aid Mrs. Barbara West, l i e I d atalf • supervisor for the council. ··the ne ighbo1 hood plan is giving way to service units comprised o r consultants, leaders, organizers that will service the troops," she ad- ded. "We are hoping Ui draw the community into developing a heller program and more opportunity for the girls.'' Huntington Beach residents August Rites will gather al 7·30 pm. Tues- day. June I, in the Hunt ington Beach High School cafeteria: Jo"ountain Valley, 7 . .m p.m., Monday. June 7, •i n !he Foun· tain Va lley lligh School. and Lagu"a Beach at 7 30 p.m,, J\fonday, June 14. Interested persons may con· tact the Girl Scout Council for further infonnalion. Harborite to Marry An Aug. I v.·edding in the Newporter Inn ls being plan- ned by Holly Hefl in and Tim P. Shepard. Parents of the engagt:d cou· pie are ?\-1r. and li-1rs. Ross E. Heflin of Newport Bt:ach and li.1r. and Mrs. Patrick R. Shepard of Lo! Gatos and former Newport 8 each residen ts. ~t 1ss Heflin Is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, studied at tht: Sorbonne and earned her BA in French at the Uni\•eri;:ity of California, Sanla Barbara where she pledged Chi Omega. She now is teaching at Vandt:nberg Air Force Base. Her fiance. also a NHHS graduate, 1tudled at San Diego and San Jose State colleges, and now U 1tudylng psychology and city a D d HOLLY HEFLIN regional plaMing at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. • ·• J Welcome Mat Colo re d Orange '"" PISCES (Feb. 19-March 2n ): Stick to facts. Get help where needed. Appliu also t o physical wt:lfare. Don 't neglect health. New approach is apt to succeed. Leo in- dividual could play prominent role. Be receptivt:. 534-5270 ISlllJ S o! tne Corparf!lon1 Coor of 111~ Notory Publi<-C•l•lor11l1 . St11e ol Ct1Uon11, nollrt 11 lll•tt>y 11v1n Princootl Offla In The ser\·ice is a nonprorit '"''' Los An11el11 c1111111v h. h '"• ,,,..,.~11111 he•ttolor• 1 •1.itr11 , My Co,.,m1111on Ei11lr11 agency V.' IC c 0 u n s e I s lltlWten Cl-<ARLES VINCENT PIC l(UP June 11, 111• fam ilies and individuals on 11111 HUllEllT PICKU,. under ft>t-fie, MILTON OAVI$. Atty. b . hllou1 n1mt al PICKUP PRECISION fl11 WlhMrt l lvd. pro !ems 0 f adjustment. GEAll COMPANY, City "' Co1ta Mt11. ltvt•IY ""''· Ct lll. Hilt P ar e nt-child relau·onsbi.ps co.1nrv of 0••1111•, 5!••• ., c1111°"ni.. k PubUSl'!t<t O••"ll• co111 DtllY 'lie•. . ' -OIHolvtd bY mu1111! constnt. MIY 21. JltM 4 II, 11. 1171 1.91-11 marriage and old age. HUllERT PICKUP, el tt>e City ol Co1t1l-------·------- M111. CounlY of 0•11Mt, 51tlt of LEGAL NOTJCE L J • CtlllOl'lllt, P'la• wllMr•wn from eNI 11111--~~~~~-------ea9Ue UnlOrS Cllltd to be IHGCltltO In lllt COllOUCllllt Cl!llTl,ICATI. 0, IUllNISI of •• r~ llu1!n1u, t/ICI CHA ll~ES VIN-FICTITIOUS PllM NAM• Arti t · A 1. .1 CENT PICKUP, of mt Cll'Y of CO!le Tiit UNltrtltnlll Clo Mrtl!Y cwl1'Y ltltl s s In c Jon WI I be the Mt11, cou111v o1 o •• .,..,, $tet1 of they '" c1111ouctlnt • 11...,11111 °"""'""''" theme of the invitational cof-c1111or1111, will 111r-.tt1r <Oflduc1 ... 111 t>oJ1ln111 11 Gener•I Pt rt_.1, et 1"&1 f I busl.,.,. •"" 111111111111to 111 1111 1ntts ot TOPtt. Gtrd1n Gro•t. C1llfor11l1 t'lUCI, ee panned for Wednesday, 1110 bY1lne11 el'ld ~'' oswm ed 11'\d wm undtr 1111 11ctltlo<.I• 11rm "'"'" .r IN• J une 2 by the Junior Aux-OIY •11 0<1l1l1ndl"' obllt•lionl of ••Id COME PROPERTY ASSOCIATES 1116 .1. ' 11w11nes1 htretelor1 11111 hereafter 111. tr.et 1110 1rrrr1 I• comoo,111 ol 1111 folkrw-i iary, Newport Be a C h <11""°· '"' oe•tc1ns, w1101e n1me1 111 lvlt t "lt ARIES (March 21 .Aprl.1 191 . Assistance League $110 otr1nerthlP 11111notved ••of MtY Pl1cn or ••1101n<t ••• '' 1o11-1. to-w11: • II. 111!. lovl1 "°· Torlo, 1'21 Mt"lltffl~ l&tlCll friends appear emotional. Guests will be ghown the c~er1e1 vlnttni Pickup aou11v••d. M•""'"'" 111cJ'!, c11. teu• , i-t~llt•' ""Imo Larrv N WDoOy. U~J Tl>Cltl.. Gtrden Some fly off handle now at Children's Dental He a I th P111111111r<1 or1111e co1u 0111y !l'lie< M•Y G•ovt. c1r11or"1' t'641) slightest provocation. Realize Center, Thrift Shop and Social "· 1'11 11n·'1 w;t"et',!~; ;~T'.',1~11 d•, °' M•Y· 1•n. this and !read lightly. Do what Service offices while local and L•"v N. WDoOY bed . . . . . ' LEGAL NOTICE STAlE OF CALIFORN IA musl one, but be gracious v1s1t1ng artists display their couN1v OF Los ANGE LES. 11. about iL Don•t arouse needless work and demonstrate their c1Rt1,1cATI. o' 1usrNe:ss On,,,;, CltY of MtY, A.O. 1t11, before . f l'ICTITIOUS NAME m~. fh1 UflOtrtltnfll, t NO!trv P111!lk. In antagoni sm. era ts. . . Th e 11...,,.,;,n.a <kw• ,,,111v int 1, ca"" •NI •or 1110 '°""" ""' 11111. '"IOI~• TAURUS (April 20-~lay 20); li-1rs. David Barnes 1 s auc11"' , 1W1•n11• 11 111 w. 1nn S•. '""'Pin, Cllll¥ commlulol!td 1"° .worn. • h · . C1>1!1 Mne, Ctlll<'J(nlt, uNlt• '"' toe. ~•sc"11iy •P~trtd lou11 I'. Torie tfld One behind the scenes ac· c airman of thf' event v.·h1ch 1,11.,.,, 11,m ntm• o1 0 c COMPOSITION L•rr¥ N. WDoO¥ k..,...." •o m• 10 be tho I. I y t·" J · h A · •eo E oe'"'"' wt>Cllt n1mt1 ••• 1u1!1crli.od lot 1va es caret:r areas. ou get GJ\es pace m t e sststance ~ vie '"" "'" ••10 ll•m 11 cOf'!'oos..o ,,,, w1.,.1n 1 .. ,,,u,,,..n!, '"" •cknowlliClfH Le C or It.• lollow·n• Plfl4fl. -• ntmt ln needed push . Routine is sub-ague enter, 11111 .ond ol...:e "' n·de<'<• 1, M 101i-. •o "'' •111• '"•Y ••1<111111 "'' ''"''· ' ' · Ill Wltn•H Wllor..,., I t\tw• h•"u"WI 11rl )·eel tO abrupt Change. Don"l Do•u II. (_fnO•~Y. :Jlj,O S. AIOtr 5I., mv no"" 1nO 11! .. .0 rr1¥ oltlclt! IM I 1111 R b k h S•nt• /I~~. C•lllornlt 12/01. . . be caught shorl·handed. Be e e a s °"'"° M1v 7!. itn ~.~11~:::' Y••r .n ..,,;, cu1!11c111 '"$! i 11o ... d f h I I Do•·• II C•noskY tea y or c a en g e I f d . . I S!tlt ol C.1llfo•nl1, o •• ,.,. Cnunlv : COFFlC••L SE AL) respons ibility. A ~ .. -ra1s1ng uncheon , on Mey ,., u11, bl'°"' "''· • No11•v ~:~!'.vP;.;::;;-~ c111wn11 GE~fJ1''1 l'lay 21.June 201·. ope n lo u1e publ ic, Is planned P.il>l•c •n •NI tor •••a s1•1t. M•Y>n111y L"' Angel•• '""'"1' ' b ., R be ~Po•4•"<1 Do•" B CtllCI-¥ ~..own IO ,.,. ,, ' . . e Hold off on journeys, if prac-Y "esa e kah Lodge at 10 "' '"' oe•son """~ """'e ., tut''""· ,~~v ;f';';;:-011 •oi••• · I Che 11 .JO a.m. Thursday Junt: 3 ,o 10 tnr wltll•n 1n•1r".,.."1 •no GE.lllALO c. woL,ION, AffY. lica . ck details, including . · · •c~"" ... 1"°'ed '"" e••c111..i rne ,.,.,,. •tti 1 , s 11 a ppointments and reserva-Jn . the Mercury Savings (OFF1c1~l sEA LI ui A;;.1: •. 1~~11,~1;"'1,':.0:,11• tiorn. Some relatives now tend building. Huntington Beach. ~ ",rv 11;1~1o.1°~ni;, Put111>11ec1 O••"•• cont D•llt Plitt, p~,:;~11 u0,;~~e ~n' ern11 Mt¥ x . jun•" 11, 11. un nu.n to be contrary. Be forthright, Buch a nan L d Or1n11• Cow"'v LEGAL NOTICE but respect oldt:r individuals. O ge ,.,..,. '""'"'''""" E•P"'' ·~·If '· 1975 CANCER (J une 21-July 22 ): Traditional Scon · h d """1o1n•o o-~n-oe co...r Dt •lv Pilot. F74'4 M t rt . . IS anCCS Mtv i't end June 1, 11, 11, 1'11 lll5·11 ,ICT!TICIUS aUUNISI a e, pa ner JS aggressive Kwn1 Phtt• 'v iii be performed for the Lad y NtME JTAT•MINT concerning money matters. Be ROBYN BAUSERMAN Buchanan Lodge of Huntington LEGAL NOTICE bu:7:,,1•:~1~1111n1 P••tc1n• ••• ~·~• receptive. Stick to principlt:s, .Beach \Vhenn memhers gather --CE1triF•t•T1E 0 ., •uuNisi LAGuN• STA1LE!. 1611 1-1011v 11 .. 11, but be w1·111·ng t ake Lak p L•Qun• Bt1cn, c1111orn11 t'KSI. o m in e ark Clubhouse at F1cT1r 1ous NAM' vro•Q• 1-1 Gr1111". 1611 Ho11y '''"'· re •• onable Conces'l·on Th n •·Jo F ·d T~t una••110"•0 0011" ce,11tv ho 11 ccn. 1 0 •• c . , · e B h I "· p.m. rt ay. June 4. for a ,.,11c,,,.11 " ""''"•is 11 ,111 Prince•' Cltcie. •sun1 ea.., .. 1i.1orn • t16SI. Mlc~t•l It. I I I t t J Mur1>n¥. 111 Etl! Wt lnul, Costa )'OU u 1ma e y ge your way. e ro a potluck dinner. The event v.·ill HuntlnQ!Of\ ll•acn. C1IUornl1 •16 ... un~~· M"$,IJ, C•lllo rnlt '16'1. I LEO (J I 23 A 221 , , tl!P 11(1,l•ou• '""' neme of VIEW Tiii o ' ' ' UY • ug. : mark the sixth anniversary of ESTATES INVESTMENT Gll OU P •no c;,n.:.1 ~~~t'n':,.:10ri_--ng «1t1ductfod bl" • Public relations is area now the group. 1~u ••lo 1••m h com""'"' o1 me k!llow ly G•orvi H c;,111;" that net:d5 clost: scrutiny. Be Revealed Q :i: •• ~·~~~.~'i1<1~~~:·.,;"'.".'';'011~':.1full fl\I> c 1!~~1 ... 1~::'::'v'·"'c.,:;~et~ ;!'"...,,~11,,c'(;~:" i;:urt: you temper justice with Rose SoGiety Dav" • Kn'"""" G•n•r•I Per1"''' 11v 11~v••IY J. M•"""" ~Ill Pt1ntr11 C"c!e, HuMinV!Oll Beacl\, Oe<>u•v C&ur.tv Cltrt mercy. One who blows off ce+lfo•n•• Pu\11,,.,.., orin11t Cotit o111y l'l!n', steam will be sorry lhe next ~l rs. Dorothy Whisler. 8 T•·•v B kn•ooer. 71~' L1 A11.,.n1 M!v ll, Junt •. 11, 11, u11 1n,s.11 A h b . C.l•CI•, H11n11,.91on B•ecn. C1lo!ornl1 ---· moment. Realize this and be t Party· Y r1d izcr Md one nf the ti~" 111•1 ••7·iM-o. 5'•-~1-615'. LEGAL NOTICE I. 1 country' f t th ·1· J•m'" Nf•I Senecn~•. 11).1 St'•~d pa Jen . S orem".ls au on 1es M•n~t:11n ee•cn. Cll•!orn•• Kll6d, 11111 1-------0-=cc------ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): on roses. "'ill speak before the l11.1uo. 111 .. o.in• F-1n2 0 C<J ll lCftlrO C. Gort1en. "1111 EIClt• FIC:TITtOUI IUllNl!JI You ma y feel restricted. lied Close friends and relatives rangt: unty Rose Socit:ly. Av•nyr, se11 eoacn. c.nrorn11 90110, MAMIE STAnMtNT d th' · b t of Robyn Bausennan and The meeting is plann£d fnr n1l1 i'6·Jnt. u1.Sll-'1«1 Tft~ t<11iow.~g i>er....,,1 ., • ....,"' own -IS IS U temporary. nc"110 p11,1c~ Ltiv11, 111n Lo~9"en 1111s.n1•1 11 Refuse to let impulse rule ~1lchat:l E . Schramm of i .45 p.m. Tuesday, June 8, in !tr roer. G1ro1n Grov1, c11110'"'' tl0-11. wcsr BAY PRE SCHOOL.,,, Minto I · T k Newport Bt:ach learned of !he Westminster Civic Cen. 111•1 1•1.t111, su. .... Jteo. v11ri, cou1 M•••· og1c. a e one step at a time. w.r11."" w. v1110,11ti. t«i 5~, L•"•· Rover L H1•11ot. uos W111t1 01k 11 . Progress may be slo w but can their engagement during a ler's recreation building. APr ..... coron• ~•! M1r, c1111orn11 Cot1• "'•••· No•m1 c. M1rn:11t. uas · ··----------"---·! 91111. 111 11 l••·l'llJ~, "'·~·ll•O Whit• 01k St., co111 Mt11 bt: steady. Act accordingly. party given in the Irvine Coast11--l(~nr1e1n E.. LINl;ren. 1111n ~ MtYlltno Tl\fs t1v11neu 11 1111110 CbndUcttll llY 111 LIBRA (S Country Club. Av~nue. """''"•'· c~1lrcrnl1 9~1. !llli 1"0•vinu~1 ept. 23.Qc{. 22); t l!!rl()'U, UO.•a.1161. Ro;er l -1-<"!IOt Don't get caught in middle of Hosles.s was the bride-elect's v N I T E n .J tf!'lll '••coc.~. J'. iJU lll Y\"Ott Normt c. "'"l•Oll d. l f . d Th mother. Mrs. sh,. r I 'y s T A T E s 'N•I•, lonv ''I'"' C1ll•orni1, (21JI IJ9. T~I, ll•ltmfnl !II.a Wit,. 11'11 c-tlf 1spu e among r1en s. OSt: JHJ. S6e-ll·l!JO Clerk or O••noe couMy on M•~ 11, !'71. who 11rgue now may be all!es Bauserman of Huntington NAT l A N A 11 Gc•non 11 s 1~vbola1. s~s e1~to•n 11¥ BeuER Lv J MADDOX . Beach . II L A"P"11~. Lo1 .l.nQtl.,, Ct•ltorn•• t0054 DeP11!y Co11,,11 Clt rk In near future. Know thb and BAN 11111 11~l•;•. 1,..1,.~111 • MPub11'""° o •• ".,.. cn••t Dt11v ""~+, maintain neutral s t ance . An Oct. 23 wedding is being -K Jnt.n M. c;.n"""'· 11?11 so. B••;M .... ,11 •v ''·Jun•" 11• 11. 1"1 1111 11 • pJ d · SI A d • SOUTH COAST PLAZA A••nu~. ""r1maun1, C1i•IO'n'1 t0l1l --··· Gemini individual does much anne in · n rew s l1•J1 1ii.111•. ,11 -~1 11 1J • LEGAL NOTICE talking. Presbyterian Church, Nt:wport BRANCH 11.11111"" ,..o.,..,o c;1cbon•, 16~/l S•t:>n! B h I l•~• No ,, '"uMin~ten lfocn. NOTICE OF INTI NTICIH TO ING.I.II SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No\'. 21 ). t:ac · C•lt<o•nle •10•1, 111•1 l•l .. Sll~. ~l.·Ji. IN TME SALi o~ ALCCIHOLtc Obi · h" f MJSS BR userman is I NOW OPEN n•~ llEUERAGES ain int rom Taurus 011td •or.1 1J. "" M•Y ,., Hll message. Practical actions graduate of Warren Hlgh 1 SATURDAYS o~v·a A 1(~1001r ro wnem 1t M1v Ce01C1•n: re]a'·d to home. older 1·n· School Downey, 1 t tended G·~~•8 1 Pe•1~,, ~u111te1 10 inu•n~• ef ,~. 11c'"" .... I.<: 51•11 el (•hfornl~. Or1n11 Cou~•v DH•d !O", !1011Ce i) ftt•I"" 1lv1n 11\f! •l>I dividuals are necessary. What Orange Coast CoUege and Is a o" An•ll 1J. n1i. b•to•• me.• No•• ..... we.:rrs1~,,t<1 D•ooot"" to »II 1)(.oflo111: .p-ars t b ·11 ls fonner American Air 11 n e SI ' •• P.M. '"C11< '" 1na lo< ...... o S•••e. Mr-IClnAllv ~. -•PfaOe• 11 !l\e Prtm1,••· CltKrotH II ,,.., O e oppos1 on MON.·THURS. •01,.o•ea 01v•o A 1C~1na•• k...,w~ to ...,, o11cw1 . llkeJy to boo I stewardess. 10·5 P.M. 10 D• •111 ou11>11 wP'!Cl1 n1mt I• iuriacri1>-JODO c1vct>ou11 llo1d. Co111 M1w. merang n your f' FRIDAYS 10·' P.M . ..i IO !II• w1111111 lrutr11mfnl Ind Pur1~1nt ro JWCll 11\tpntlon, tl\1 Ull-favor. Be confident. Her Janee, son of ?\fr. and (714) 540·1211, Locetetf lit : •c-.._1eo:r;111 "• ••tC.ut.o th111m1. d•rtlgnt<1 '' 1oot'1"' kl •h• o .... r1rr11n1 SAGI-ARIUS Mrs. Dick Schramm 0 rl So. c .... •1.... COl"l'lC !•L SEAL \ ol Akol'!cllt 111111••-C11111rol for lu ..... 1 1 (Nov. 22· Coit• Mno Tom A l•tv•" 1nc1 llv tr1"1f1r et .,, 1l<ollollc ~, .. • 21): Study Geml n 1 Houston, is a graduate of Not1rv Pu11Uc·c111k!•n•• •te 1ocen1t 1or 1ne11 ~...,1,,. ... 1o1.,,.,..., ~l illik H" h School Lon All!. Vk1 ''"·>M•11•1•t Pr<nclDtl Olllct 111 ON SALE GE NEltAL ll&Ol'll ~Id• ssage. You receive social an 1g • g o''"'' cou"'Y a~""' e111n; P11c11 Invitations. But don't aJ'·mpt Beach end attendtd Norwalk! H. M. STQLTE WY camrnlnlon f••l•t• 1.nvonr 01tl•ln1 to orote~t ,~, luw•nc• ~ S T hnl a] 11 Jtnu••Y l , 1tn cf tuc~ Ucenlt ...,,y l>it 1 ~trlfltll prolt•I tO do tOO much at Onci!. Qne late ec C C 0 e i e l>ubll'~"n 0••"9" Ce.!>1 0411~ 1>•101. " ""' Oiiier et 11\t 0PD1rl,.,ont ol ho I t~N~O~f";·~·~Jk~.~Co~nn~.-----~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~I'~'~"=•=•"" J11ne I 11 11 \tll lJH 11 Alco•n••c fl1vueeo Cont•ol, er b¥ mtll ,. W pans agenda COU]d !kip . • II\• D~oertm•"! of llcll'>ol>< ll••.,101 somt: important details. Doi LEGAL NOTICE con1•0•. nn O 5••••'· 51c•1mtn•e. C•l1to•n . Ul l•. 10 ll T1> b• rtCl1Yt4 )'OUr own checking. wi1•1n JO a••• ot ,~. 0111 '"' .,.,,,0u d CAP RlCORN I Dec. 22.Jan. I S T d , NOT1c1 oF TlllANs,1111 ""''"••• .... ,., tor.i •0•11a, u1•1n1 ee by 0 ay S Noll<• " h!•tb• 9,vrn !~M nn Ju~~ 1. lr&11M• '"' !ltnl•I •• ~rovlCltd ~Y liw. 19)· Be "'ary in financial 1911. •t••t• +,,t111(f•nn o•c~,n~ ~n"'' Tf\t "'""''"'' 1.-nnw l•t•n1•d lnr tft ' I m"'"ln••v ond •'luoom•nt. v•nic "•<. ••'f ot •lc.,,,o<.c Dovr••oe1 rn1 '"'"' el tur"i!u•t sunrf>t< •n!I •nvtnln"''· !•• v•rit•c•t1on m•V D• nh••ln<'CI ••o..., 1ny .,, Want Ads "'"""'!• nf Vu,,.• Cd<U! (om8tnv. • !lt1 nl !f\t DtPa•lm•M A ""''"'''~oo. ~.v,no 111 "''nc10,1 ol•c~ of JAl"AN GOL F PROMOTION t o t hu"""" •! Av•no• <!;. (•!• 'II y 1,mo <US A l INC. r Is ry • Go ~ollin" fhl~ :'l!Pnlor111J I "'"mt Cou~IY, i\rlZN•• ,!f\t n1r!r.••\ In Gl'O•O• w l!o. ~ b ., wl!lcn ••t l , c ln•t•lm•n•t Inc 1 l>yb"'"~"' O•t n .. Co..11 DtlTy I'll"' Day 1reekcnrt: Take ,,.Jona c111to•nl1 CnrPO•l!lnn ~ov1n1 • 1>rino1011 MtY U . 1'11 1J.J11.1i E h b u11h )l>U 3 V.'ood5, 9 iron•, I nr•ct nf ~.,,.., .. , •t 111 Ll<10 Pa•~ or1v•. X I• I• ted N•"""" 1111,11, c1111or11I• t nll' E1oi"1ton LEGAL NOTICE ""tlg~ and a ~auti tu! golf 1,,uu COf'!'o•n•. • c"'""'"lon 01/-----.:__:.:_:_::_::._ __ _ hag. M> rf'asona.b!f'.' •Colototnlt "•v•n• • rr ·"t •n•I DI•<• of ~ j b"••ntJI •• JJ7 E•ll Crmmonw,tl!• ""'1111 'fwo members of the Costa • Ltke AnllQUf'~".'~ JIOW·R· Av•nwe. "11111'10"· Cill•c•n•~. '*!11 11t CllTll•I CITI O' IUJtNlll. """ll~rr<'CI !o P~e<!lc l I I II t ! n I 'ICT!TICIUJ HAMI ~1e~a Art League will be houl music:'".' Anuquc "''"'111111••! Cc•lll'I••"""· • _coraM•llo" o• T"e u"o''"'"eo ..,.1 ,.,11,, ~· 11 ~ honor_, as Jun Art1"s•· ·I th p••-'"· S•t. In our l'"''°'n••· wh1c" w111 "''"'1''" on i n(! 1111K111111 • 111111"'" •• um , __ CU e Ul"'OJ " .:• _.,..,, tfllr JUM I, 101, Ple<tl o'lf bull .... n tn ,.,.,. $u"lll &-.c~. (tlllt>rMlf-:-...::i.~1:::; month by the Newport Beach milct!llanous Aection. 1~e s1111 01 Anr""' 1oc11M1 11 Aw""" 11c1111°"' 11 .... n1 .... e1 TU Rc·s ,1111 111., J . 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S$SS. 1dd,.11 no•eo b•low 1r.ro..-111191t1 "' t•Kv•ea 1111 '""'" I Alltrtlt'I of IO~FICIAL Sl ll L\ Long ~·111 off t r f I o r I 1 s. • Takt l'llf fvr the \\•Pk11nrf c 1 L/\NO, A~t~o"'"° ••~···•"''" ,., JEtl'I L J01i r stli8CIM5, boot and Wiier pJC· in th1S hfoaufihtJ 1$70 4• ttocll.c L••~ll'l1 10''"11"11'1 Cft•!'C•t•·~'I 'loltrv llu&•lc • C11 'o•ftlt t'" 1~0 Wt!! !o ... tft U·,~• P• r>el~•I Ollltt I" Delegates representing auxiliaries throughou t t he sta te \VIII learn more abnut What'& Happening in Children's Home Soci ty y,·hcn they gather In the New· porter Inn Thursday and Friday, June 3 and 4, for an annual y,·orksh op. New c:i(ficers of the Orange County Connc1l preparing an apr.roprlate "'eicome to Or· inge County are Oeft to right) the Mmes. Robert W.' ernon, Richard A. Sewell and Anthony G1jew•ki· tures in oi l. Both artists ha\•e 1petd r 1rebtrd, •nd ge t lo1 •~1ttf1 , c111•ornlt f10\H 0••"'" C011n•y Won .w'rd. l•n DUJO•rotJl ll thl':re f&•I . fl 0 llO• S•"~ Ttrm!ftll '-""'"·· 1.1¥ (:Of'!'MIU•Oft !o••ttl lo• AnMlt• IOOl•I Mtrc~ 1. lfll Ju rieQ shows. .._ __________________________ _, 1 •vei.·~·~ O•tnt• Co.ott C• 1v .,.... l'u!!ll•ft-..:1 '1••"CI• CNi• 01.,1 "'ft' • M•¥ I), 11, lt11 12" II M•v 1&. ll. tt llld Ju~• .. 1111 11i..,1' • ' ' < I ~ ! ~ Costa Mesa Today's Final EDI TIO N N.Y. Stocks \IOt:. 64, NO. 127, 4 SECTIONS, +I PA$ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1971' TEN CENTS Yuba Toll Reaches 20 Sheriff Expects 'Many' More Hacked Bodies YUBA CITY (UPI) -The Sutter Coun- ty sheriff said today "many·• more graves n1ay still be uncovered in the orchards along th e. Feather Rive1 "'·here the bodies of 20 mass murder victims have already been found. Deputies using a trench digger con- tinued their grim work. more than a "''eek since the first bodies turned up and t\VO davs after Juan Corona . a 37-ycar-old farm Jitbor contractor, was arrested and charged with murder . Sheriff Ro y Whiteaker. under a court order not to discuss evidence, refu sed to • 'Legal, P1•ope1·' give reporters any informa tion about how he linked Corona to the slayings cf the middle-aged transient farm hands whose hacked bodies were found in tbe orchards aod along the river bank.5 ef tliis central California farming region. The sheriff, however. said he expected the digging crews lo find more bodies. They are working "in an area where there may be many graves." he said. A small "sketch or diagram" \vas found in Corona's home but tne sheriff said it was not a map to the graves. He &aid the sites were chosen because of in- Board Told Tax District dentatioos in the ground. He said he hoped that the d1gging was near an end but "as long as we keep making recoveries we will con tinue to search." Whiteaker refused to say whether a transient picked up in nearby Marysville as a material witness in the case had given any informalion. But he said the man was not in jail. Five more or the victims were ten- tatively identified. The sheriff said they \vere Don Smith, of Allanta, Ga .: Bill Kemp. Baton Rouge, La.: James Ho'>'·ard, Jonas Smallwood and Elliot t Would A void Bond Issue r Ul'I T1lf!lllttt THESE PATRON S SURVIVED THE FARM WORKE R EXECUTI ONS Suspe·ct In Killings Frequented Ba rs Looking Fo r Labo rers Wi110 Meeting Head Cou1it iii Bonanza Clubhouse By JAC K V. >'OX YUBA CITY (UPI) -'Ibe winos came shambling into the Bonanza Club on D Streel in Marysville shortly after 9 a.m. As each appeared, his fellow drifters let out a cheer. "Hey, Sarge, you made it!" ''There's Al. He didn 't get you, Al!" At the New Palm around the corner, Rose the barmaid said one of her cwtomcrs always had mllk in the morn- ing. But on Thursday he ordered a double shot of Old Crow and a beer chaser. Among these lost souls there was no doubt lhat the victims of Yuba City's mass murders came from their ranks - skid row in the Twin cities of Mary sville and Yuba City, separated by the Feather River. The towns once ¥-'ere 11. legend of the r ip-roaring \Vcsl in the gold rush days. There 1,1•ere 54 saloons in a four-block i;tretch. the prostitutes g rabbed customers oH the street and the IT).iners. Joggers, railroad men. coY:boys and gamblers lived as if lhere 1,1·as no tomor- row. Those days are gone. but the shakes of Sutler's boom linger on in a community which oow is staunch Republican, hippie- less and one of the most lush agricultural areas in all the United Sates. Peaches. t omato es , prunes. ..,3termelons, strawberries, walnuts and almonds grow in 1he vall ey. Acres of fertile land are covered with water - flooded paddies that look like southeast Asia. But like the fru it. murders have seem· td'to come in clusters to California. Charles Manson ha s been convicted of gevcn and is being tried for two more. },.!Isl year Dr. Victor Ohta . hi s wife , two children and a sec retary were slain and tossed into the ir swimming pool in Santa Cruz. San Francisco's Zodiac Killer - still uncaui;ht -claims someth ing like a dozen victiQ'IS. asks if we: have round their husband -l!I man they haven't heard from for a year or so." said a sheriff's deputy. "They V.'ant to know and lhen again, they don't v.'ant to know." The first body was discovered on May 20 by a Japanese farmer named Goro K<ie:ehiro. He noticed a hole in an orchard, and when he came back that evening he found a mound of fresh earth. He dug and found a body. lie reported it to the Sutter County Sheriff's Office. SECor-..rn BODY ' Five days passed and U1cn Roy Duron, a foreman at the sUnivan Ranch, was 1.oki by one of his laborers that while discing the rows between lhe prune !rec! he noticed an indentation . Detective Sgt. John Purcell and Detecti ve Jerry Gregory "'enl to the scene and found a second body. It rained and rained on Tuesda y, but in the downpour and on lhrol.l,l!:h the night, and into the next day. and the nexl, deputies dug up bodies. Some "'ere in a peach orchard, the others in the soft loam of the Feather River bank, in graves 31h foot deep and 6 feet long. The victims had been hacked lo death by a machete or heavy knife. The fat al blow was at the back of the neck. All were men. They ranged in age from 40 lG 63 . At 4:30 a.m. Wednesday, sheriff's deputies went to the home of Juan Veilliho Corona , 37, in a quiet street of small homes in Yuba City. ll is a wood house of beige color with a brick frontplace. A plaster angel two feet high stands on the cement porch. Corona answered the door. He is 11 good-looking Mexican, one inch short of six feet. He weigh.s 200 pounds and his black hair is parted in the middle. His '>''ife Gloria is about 40. They have four (See TRANSIENTS, Page %) By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 lll t 011lf Piiat 511tl The use of 1913 Act provisions to fund ~everal community service projects is a "very proper avoidance of a bond clcc· lion" Coast Community College District trustees have been advised. District Chancellor Norman \\latson told trustees Wednesday "it is very true lha t using lhe 1913 act avoids a bond issue ." He added . however. that employing the state statute to provide needed com· munity services was one way the district could serve the community in a way lhat is legal and proper. Under the law, communilies within the college district would form assessment districts to pl.:n and provide recreation and other facilities at Golden West and Orange Coast Colleges. Dr. Watson told trustees the Huntington Beach City Council already has approved in principle the formation of a Golden West College Assessment Di::trict. The Costa Mesa City Council will consider the idea at its June 7 meeting. The Golden West district \vould provide an estimated $900,000 to pay for ad- riitional handball courts. softball fields , a swimming pool speaker s y s t e m . television and comptuer cabling. parking and a recreation pavilion. Th e college di strict board Wednesday night appointed architects to develop the plans. \Vatson said the plans must be ap. proved by college trus tees and the state Di vis ion or Architecture. A public hearing also 1,1•ou\d be required. Construction v.·ould begi n in the fall, if the idea is ap.- proYed, Watson said. The five-year bonds proposed to pay for the projects would be paid _ off by enacting a ta1 rate o! about four cents per $100 assessed valuation, according Lo \Yatson. The proposal for Costa Mesa would in- cl ude development cf imprwed walkways and lighting at OCC. street and parking improvement, resurfacing of tennis courts, rehabilitation of the swim.mini pool, upgrading of stadium lights, resurfacing and fenctni of the ruMing track and cabllng for computers and telecommunica tions equipment. Ttuslee Robert Humphreys of Cos~ Mesa indicated the district must bettcf"· inform the members of the city councils involved if the propollal is to be ap. proved. Humphreys' a s s Is t an t city attorney for Costa Mesa, declined lo speculate on how the proposal would be received by Lhe counci l. Mesa W oma11 Surprises Burglar; Tied Assaulted Running back inside to call a garage for a stalled car, a Costa ~1esa woman surprised a burglar Thursday, who grab· bed , bound. blindfolded and raped her on the bedroom floor. The 25-yea r-old victi m said she kept calm and rea sonable out of fear for her life and was not otherwise injured. She called police to the 200 block of Knox Street shortly before noon to report the incident. after the stocking-masked intruder fled and she worked loose from his adhesive tape bindings. Officer Charles P. Hamilton said the victim had left for work at 10 a.m., but her car wouldn't start. She told of asking a neighbor for help, but he was too busy.'° she went into Lhe house again and had dialed two -digits of the garage number when suddenly grab- bed from behind. "I'm sorry you walked in at a time like th is," she quoted the husky, 20ish, mask· ed burglar as saying. The woman said she was forced to her knees, with a threC"foot strip of tape bin· ding her hands in front and patches plac. ed over her eyes. Guiding her into the bedroom. the burglar disrobed the helpless woman, pushed her to the floor atop two pillows and completed !he assault. She said the rapist expressed both regret. fea r of a seven-year prison sentence and a conflic ting feeling about it. "I get sort of a kick out of this,'' she quoted bim as saying during tht act. The victim said a woman neighbor came to the window al on e point to ask if she had contacled a garage to start her car. She said she considered crying for help, but her captor made it menacingly clear this would be dangerous. although she didn 't know if he was armed. RODY AFTER BODY But even those gory heights were scal- ed lhi s week 'vhcn sheriff's deputies. wearing gauze masks and puffing cigars to reduce the stench. dug up body after body on the ranch of Jack SuUivan five mUes north of Yuba City. from neat graves strung for hair a mile on the riverbank beneath a prune orchard. Reagari 011 Edtication One man had 32 cents in his pockets, 11nother Q . The.remainder had no wealth. One had a temporary driver's license. Another had a wrist band from a hospital and a social security card. One was iden· tlried because two of his toes were miss· jng. One man had on three pairs of trousers. One man was nude etcept for a shirL They !Ry on tOO ir bncks. their arms above their heads. Most had their shirts pu\IM up over their faces. All were takc11 to the T\\·l n Cities ~1ortuary ¥-·hich ordi narily handles onf' death a wrtk. Identification was ~ruesome and grim. Some were men nobody wanted and nobody mlsstd, Some had Isolated 1tirmsclve:s from Ulcir familieit for yea rs. "It really grabs you when some guy .. s v>'lfe calls from Mexico or Arkansas and Tax Credit Support Told By TOM BARLEY 01 tile DallJ "1191 1!1H Gov. Ronald Reagan pledged ~rsd.ay night in Anaheim his support for what. tie sai d were l'definite moves to provJde substantial tax credits for C11ifornia's edticational Jnstltutions." Tilt governor told more than 800 guests at a testimonial dinner for Orange Coun· ty Industrialist J, Simon Flour that a tax break for the state's universities and col· leges "might be the best and most ac· ceptable rorm of government aid we c.11n come up with." Reagan hinted at the possibility of tax relief during a talk 11!mo~t entirely devoted to wllat lie said wa~ "the im· perative and vltal need to sustain private colleges that have tradltlonally provided the executives and business lellders who are the backbone of our nation." But he made it clear that the tax relief program be suggested would be extended to California colleges and universities in both the private and public sectors. The governor refused to elaborate en his proposal during questions that follow. ed the testimonia l dinner. He praised FLuor as "a man who ha:ri selflessly insured the welfare of hl!I fellow men and those who work for him and with him throughout a business career !hat has enriched all those who know him in a cultural sense alone ." Fluor's v.ork as chairman nf the ChPp. mt1n College board w11.~ "typical of 11 man who ha~ shown n1ucr1 n1ure ihan mo:st men wh at the private school can achieve in its contribution to our w1y of Jlfe,'' Reagan said. The d1nner, «ganized by Ctiapman College trustees, drew euests rrom the buslneS!, educational and show business fields to the Anaheim hotel. Art Llnkletter was master o r ceremonies · and the gut1l list Included President Richard Nixon's brother, Donald Nixon or Newport Beach, the Andy Oevines, the Don Oefores. Sen. James Whetmort and Irvine Company President Willi3m .fl.t1son. A lelegram dich1ted by President Nixon Jn the White Hou!e earlier that day w3s l'llso read during the series of tributes le Fluor. Fluor was presented with I painting (If hlmself In o11s and it was announced that ~o $500 'chot11f'lhlps bearing his nam e would be made av11lable to schools in the J ndependent Colleges tl America educa· Uonal or&tnlzation, FACES MURDER TRIAL Suapec.t Gig Peters Agencies Geared For W eekeinding U.S. Drivers Nationa l, slate and local agencies lhroughout California today were gearing up lo keep holiday pleasure high and death. injury and property damage low over the Memorial Day Weekend. The roster includes the: Californill Highway Palrol, loca l police, state and national parks services, plus lifeguards, marine agencies and many others. Ir your plans aren't made, a state parks official offers lhis advice : stay home. Pre-reservations have left only 15 of 1he state'!'! 90 parks with camping facilHics not filled to capacity, with little chance of them remaining so by Saturday morning. "We 're urgi ng people not !o try to get Into the remaining parks," said one spokesmen. National parks facilities will be available only on a first-come, first-serv· ed basis and all will probably be filled. Highway safety Jaws will be enfo rced to the maximum degree to keep accidents down, with as many CHP officers in the field as can be dep loyed. Authorities expect all recreational facilities to be crowded, with sunny and warmer weathe r anticipated to draw capacity beach crowds too. Coast Dries Up For Me1norial , Holida y W ee kend Slackening drizzles by tonight and sun· ny, warmer days through Monday are forecast for the Memorial Day weekend by the National Weather ~rvlce. The ·low pressure area tha t brought gray skies and showers to the Orange Coast Tbursday and today was reported dissipating. Orange Coast residents staying home for the three-day observance can expect customary early summer night and morning low clouds and fog but it will quickly burn away. Temperatures will be up lo the m1d-70s, with overnight lows In the 60s, running 10 to t~ degrees higher In the interior and de.«rt regions. High v.'l nds in desert areas are ex· peeled to dil do'>'·n. while Slln Diego Coun· ly areas hll with below-frcezinR trm· peraturrs, Jee, 1leet 11nd snow will also gtl rellef. Ollshore wind !'! will run 10 lo 13 knots in flit Bfft:rnCUn!'! rur ft1Chf$tnen and power'• bo.!ller!'!, whlle ski enthusi11sl.! will find the tieneral mountain snow level at $,000 feet. Riley, (or whom ne home cities were known. Earlier two victi ms were identified as Kenneth· Edward Whitacre. 40, of Alameda, Calif., and Sigurd Beirman, 63 of Marysville. All the victims were between 40 and 63 years old and were believed to be iransient farm workers. One may have been a Negro bul the others wera 111 ''anglos.·· Whitaker said he h11d determined "o special significance lo the fact that none {Stt BODIES, Page ZI Psychedelic Thrill Told In Slayings By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI or 1111 01111 Piiat 11111 A stunned courtroom audience heard a former Orange Count'y Jail inmate lestify Thursday that Gig Peters, a former Hun· tington Beach High Schoo l honors slu· dent. felt "psychedelic showers of golden electricity fall on his shoulders" after allegedly murderini his parents . Peters. 21. appeared for a pre.trial l1caring al West Orange County Judicial District Court Thur sday before Judge Celia Baker. He was ordered lo stand trial on two charges Of murde r in Superior Court June 11. The jail inmale, a !~year-old youth with a busby red beard and a penchant for street language neologisms, wu iden- tified as Fred Wheeler, a transienl He told the court that he and Peter• i;hared an isolation cell in jail shortly after Peters was charged with strangling hJs mother, Flora, a teacher at Corona del Mar's Lincoln School, and stabbing his father, Charles, April 21. "He told me he strangled his mom and stabbed his dad, in that order," Wheeler testified, tugging at his mustache. "He said it t0;0k a Jong time to get his mom dead. She scratched him and he bit her on the hand." As the defendant was guarded by two bailiffs, Wheeler further told the court that Peters admitted to the slayings almost immediately after they became known to each other. "I asked him. 'Did you do it~· ind he said 'Sure!," Wheeler told the court, in· dicating that Peters appeared to be swaying and shimmying to imaginary music during the conversation. "He said after he stabbed his dad, he v.·as getting a real buzz on. He .said he felt psychedelic showers of golden elcc· tricity fall on his shoulders after he did it. I asked him if he was loaded and he said he was loaded on acid for eight months. but not then ." Peters, who was being defended by Los Angele s attorney Barry Tarlow, respond· ed to the courtroom drama with cryptic smiles . Al one point he turned in his swivel chair to smile at the audience but was immediately turned around by a bailiff. "He always smiles, he says thal's his psychological advantage over the cops, because no matter what they do, they can't tear his spirit down," Wheeler told the court. Other testimony o[fered by Wheeler linked Peters to a bizarre revolutionary philosophy which wouldJhave 30,000 Red Chinese invading the country at any mo- ment. "He thought about it (the killings) for (See PETERS, Page ZJ Orange Coast Weather After a few drizzly da'ys, It'll be sunny and warmer for the holiday weekend. •Hgh temperatures along the coast should get up to 70 de- grees. INSIDE TODAY Tile big bmids are back at Di.!· neyland thi1 hotlday weekend and they've brought their favor• ite vocalist.t with them. Today'1 Weekender has pictures and o: s1ory about tll e bash. a1n~, 1• aelllM u C1lllw11l1 I Cl'ltclllllt II• I Ci.,!lllH JI.ff Gt!ftlc'I 11 c,...~ .... ,• 11 Dttl~ Nttlc'tt II l!Olltrl•I Pitt t fllftl•lt• 1'·2' .. _""' u Allll Ltlllltn It MIH".1 t MM Ill Jtrvl<t 11 l Ntvi.t 17•1' M~IUll "llflllt It Nt>ltf!tl Ntwt ._, Orl"lt CtUllfJ' I• lln1twr1111t tJ.r6 '""" ,,_,, Sttcl MH,tll •11 Tt1tf111t11 1, Tl\f1"'" U•lt w"""' • w_,,,, "''"' 1i.11 Wtrio. Ntwa ... W"" ... '' I>» • ,, ~ OA!l Y PILOl c Friday, May 28, 1971 Joint Usage Of El To r o Di scusse d By ALAN D!RKIN Of 1M Oelh' f'll9t Sttlf The sbort·range aoluUon to Or1.1tl• Ccunly"s aviation needs is for joint use of El Toro fl.1CAS by military and com- tnercial jets. Long-range problems would be solved by creating an International airport it Camp Pendleton. This is the vie'A' of Roger s.lates, chairman of the Orange County Ai.rpOrt c.ommission. as he outlined them. in • talk at a civic luncheon In Hunhngton Bt>ach Wednesday. At the luncheon. sponsored by the HUJ't tington Beach.fountain Valley Board of Realtors, Slates also called ror the county to create an airport author\ty. "The biggest problem ia that the !upervisors and members of county com· missidns are all political anima~:· he ,;aid. "They can't always vote lhetr coo· \'ictions." He said it was often the unl_nformed voter that innuenced county d~c1s1ons on aimorts. but added that "counties are not built "'ith a faint heart." "We need to create an airport authority th at would take some heat from the eJected people," Slates ~mmented. The airport commlssroner argued that the El Toro facility could .t>t converted Into a joint use airport in nine n:io~ths .~t 8 cost of fro m '3 million to S4 m1lhon, a drop in the bucket" compared to the es timated $250.000 cost of building a new one. 1,. 1 He said that a "tremendous a~un o Navy and Marine jets were flying out of El Toro at present and claimed there \\'Ould be no increase in noise levels. No private planes would be allo.,.,·ed to use El Toro. They would use Orange C.ounty Airport ·which would become a non-jet facility. Atkins Pleads Guilty in Death Of Musician LOS ANGELES (AP) -Susan Denise Alkins sentenced to death in the slaying• of a~ Sharon Tate and aix other1, has pleaded guilty to killing a musician. A judge immediately sentenctd her to U!e lmprisonmenL The slender brunette, her head shaVflll Ind the falnt "X" symbol of the Charla Manson clan scratched on her forehead, changed her plea of Innocent Thursday in Superior Court. • "She is a person who would be dangerous to the community," &aid Judge Raymond Choate. "She should spend the entire term of her life in custody." Miss Atkins. 23, who ~tified at the Tate trial that &he killed n'luslclan Gary Hinman two yeara ago, was about to be tried with Manson and another of the cult leader's follov•ers (or the murder when &he switched her plea. Trial procudln&• then were delayed. Hinman, of Malibu, was &lain al his home. Another Manson clan member, Robert Beausoleil, 24, was convicted and 5entenced to death la.st year for the kill- ing. One of the reasons members of the ro.tanson hippie style "family" killed Miss Tate two weeks later, the district at- torney has said, was to free Beausolell from custody. Authorities described the Tate slayings as similar In appearance to the Hinman death -an appannt attempt to make police think Beausoleil was in· nocenl. OU.Nil COAST DAILY PILOT OllANGE COAST f'UILISHIN6 COMPANY Robert N. w,,d f'res:.12"1 11f'ld P'l!Olllller J1,li: R. Cutl•v vice ,.,u~""' 1nc1 G'""'1 Ml""" Tko/1'111 1< ..... a Edi:o- T1'.o..,1t A. M11rp1'oi"• M1"Jgl119 EdllOr C:olffi Mes• Offk• e J JO Weit 81y Str•1t M1ili"~ Aclclniu: 11'.0 . low: 1 s•o. 92626 OtMr Offlul s~ F11 ..... Mesan Arrested French Giru 'Play Dirty' SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) In Porno Raid The two men who managed the visiting Fr-tneb womtn'I basket.b&ll-- ttam denied today lht cirll don't waah. bu~ aald they do walk around their hotel corridors in scanty und erwea r. DAILY PILOT Sti ll PM .. A Huntington Harbour couple and a Costa Mesa man bave been named 111 connection with '500,000 worth of sex fl\ms and photoaraphs seized Tuesday in Westminster. Police said today felony complaints charging conspiracy to dl!tribute and gel\ pornography would be sought aiainst the trio as well as 10 "John Does." The Harbour couple, Frederick A. Loar , 34, (aJso known as Pete Voss) and his wife, Mrs. Kay Nancy Ular, 31, (also known as Kay N. Uebfried) of 5062 Hum- bolt Ave., were named by police .as owners of the buslntss where the sex mate.rials were round. The third man, Joseph Reitano, 5&, of 168 Lexingtoa Ave., Costa Mesa, alleged· ly received some of the sex materials in a Santa Ana stort he owns. Mixing Art, Polities Reitano is currently fre.t on $12,500 bail pellding appeaJ o! his convict.ion In an earlier pornographic case:, police said. He also faces misdemeanor charges &lem- ming from the seizu_re of 38,000 pieces ?r pornographic materials taken May 11 m Fountain Valley. Laurie Bale, 13, a student at Costa ~1esa's Te \Vink.le School. com· pares art opinions with state Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-Newpor t Beach). 1'bey met during recent exhibit at South Coast Plaia of 2,800 pieces of art from schools throughout Orange County. Some of th~ art will be selected fo r display in Senator Carpenter'~ Sacramento offices. Lt . Jack Shockley or West minster said so far there is "no connection" between the Westminster operation and the Foun· tain Valley cast. F rom Po.g e 1 TRANSIE NTS ME ET . •• "Reitano happens to be involved in both, but it is not a direct link," Shockley charied: daughters. Corona apeab fa ir English, his wife alm°'t solely J!panish. The officers told him he wa11 charged v;ith murder. Corona pulled on his gray work pants, <XlWboy boots and a green sweater. He went along quietly. When the patrol car arrived at the courthouse , a stately white building with columns that could pass for a southern mansion, officers gave him a blanket to put over his head to thwart news photographen. Corona is one or five brothers who came to this area from Jalisco, P.1exico, the first in the early l!HOs. The big thing then was the Beale Army Camp, then .a slaging .area and now a large Alr Force base. OJte of the brothers opened I bar. The others went into the labor contracting business. In the central valley migrant workers are a necessity for the land· owners. The transients range from about 2,000 In the winter months to 20,000 when the peaches and other crops are in harvest. Mexican nationals with ''green cards" swarm Into the area in the summer. But when the orchard! need pruning and thin· ning. the contract.ors seek out th e "locals" and the best sources are the bars on Marysville's skid row where on a sobtt day a man can pick up $2{). 1t.arted leaving about two years ago." Corona's attorney is Roy J. Van Der Heuvel. He is a public defender in Sutter County and also has practiced law here for the past six years. Van Der Heuve.I. although refusing to discuss material facts in the. case under a court gag order, shook things up a bit on the day of his appointment by saying : "They have the v.·rong man." She riff Roy \Vhiteaker is convinced they have the right man. Whiteaker is 31, one of the youngest Jaw enforcement officers ever to hold such a post. He also is the coroner for Sutler County, although a pathologis t performed the autop!ies. "This is the man ,., Whiteaker a.aid. He said that before Yuba City Judicial Cour t Judge J. J . Hankins ordered everyone lo clam up about the killing . That order has left newsmen scratching in vain about a motive. Laguna's Judge Sumner Praised At A wards F ete Nearly 200 Orange County judges and lawyers gave Superior Court Judge Bruce Su mner a tremendous ovation Thursday when the Laguna Beach jurist accepted the annual Franklin G. West award from its previous recipien!, retired California Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Traynor. Watched by retired Superior Court Judge Franklin G. West, the jurist whose name was given to the Orange County Bar Association's yearly tribute. Judge Sumner told the Santa Ana mHling that he was "dteply grateful that my work on SCHIZOPHRENIC the California Constitutional Revision According to court rteords, Corona had Commission has been so recognized ." zpe.nt lhree months in the Dewitt St.ate "I could not but be impressed by you r Hospital at Auburn. Calif .• in 1956, suf· tremendous record in other fields." he fer ing from "delusions and haUucina-was told by Justice Traynor. "'You have lions" and was diagnosed as a served three times in the Legislature, schizophrenic. He was released three months later as recovered. part of that time as a RepubUcan whip, one of the first two bodies identified you have a glorious war record and you .... ·as that of Sigrid Emil 3eierman, 6.1, of have served faithfully as a public ~farysville. Police sa id Beierman last defender. The "John Doe" warrant.a are re- quested u a protection in case ~ vestigator1 uncover ot~r indlvidual1 a1 yet unknown, Shockley explained. When polict entered Kayrus Company, 1~144 Golden West Sl on Tueaday. they l)auled out 20,$00 rtela of film and 300,000 photographs. 0 range County District Atk:nley Cecd Hicks. called it "the biggest haul of pornography tver made in the county." He also vowed, 'We 're not going to lel this county become a distribution center for obscene material." Police described the movies and photos found in Westminster as "hard core pornography showing explicit ae:i acta." They are ffi black and white, and the movies are the type shown al st.a& parties or peep shows, police said. . Delegation director Gilbert Gon· dal and Coach Joe Jaunay said a maid's allegation that tht girl'• don 't wash was untrue. The girls denied it as well. They n id they use tbeir own towelt rather than the ho~I towels, and the hotel maids, always findlnt clean linen in the hotel bathrooms, had jumped to the wrong con- clusion. A local newspaper, the Evening Journal. said the girl! grabbed tha maid who had made the remarks about their not washing, 1tripped her and ~bbed her in a bathtub. The French national team 11 partlclpatll\I in the current 1ist.b world won<fn's basketball touma· ment in Sao PauJo . Frotlt p .. ,, J PETERS TESTIMONY . •• t.,.,·o years. He wanted to do them a favor so they wouldn't have to go through the revolution. He loved them." commented the former inmate. ''He sai d he wanted to li,Ome back to trial. He wanted the publicity. He wanted lo teU the world about the revolution. Ht told me he already had his statement for the jury." Earlier, Peters younger brother, Peter J . Peters, told Judge Baker that his brother bad confessed to the murders after he awoke on AprU 21. "He held me by the arms and 1aid, 'Petey, I just killed Mom and Daddy,''' zobbed the 13-year old youngster. "He said there was going to be a war soon and he was sending Mom to heaven and put Dad out of his misery." During that alleged conversation, Gig Pete rs supposedly had "a far away look in his eyes,'1 according to the younger brother's testimon y. Peter Peters, who is now in the custody or an aunt and uncle, said he tried to go lo his parents' room that morn ing but found !he door locked. As he was getting dresse d, he heard something that sound- td like a yell or a moan. Later, Gig also was to have told his ether brother, Tony, 17, about the double murder. •·1 heard Gig say to him , 'If you'd been taking LSD like I have. you're committed against the human race,' " Peter told the court. Tony Peters made a short appearance in the prisoner's box Thursday. lie was bound by a straightjaclcet after allegedly biting and kicking bailiffs when he was told he would have to testify. Tony, who is facing juvenlle charges as an ac· From Page l cessory to the crime, was net called to the stand, however. Before Gig Peters WI! bound oYer for trial, his defense attorney said doctors had examined the defendant and con4 side.red him capable lo stand trial. Tarlow added, though, that the 1ame physicians considered him insane at the time of the alleged alayings. While being held in jail, Petera was al· Ieged to bave_engaged in continuous rou· tines ol. aberrant behavior, according to the test.ilying inmate. He was alleged to have bounced hit eyebrows, kick his foot into the wall, and enga1e in unortbodo:I: me<f.itatiOllS. Peters wa1 arrested by Huntington Beach Police al the Tijuana border one day alter the bodies of the couple were found dead at their 301 Lincoln Ave. home. Tarlow had surrendered Peters and his 22-yel r -old girlf riend, Anne Bartholomew, after an all-points bulletin had been issued for Peters throughout the ·western slates. f\.1iss Bartholomew, originally charged but later released, 5at in the audience throughout the preliminary hearing. Dressed in brown pant! with a peace symbol belt and a ·while T-shirt bearinC clasped hands and the insignia ''Holding Together," she gazed at Peters for aeveral minutes 1t the close er the hear- ing, Separa ted by the prisoner's box and a barrier, Peters responded with a pro- longed smile and a soundless "Bye, bye," before being taken av.•ay by the ~Uiff. Crashes Cram Freeway Lanes BODIES •.. was-seen entering a 1970 v~n driven by "This can only be a. crowning achieve-~· · h 1· d " lh f m• A series of rear-end collisio111 thiA Corona. This report was checked out ment 1n sue a me recor , e or r h, I · 1· ·d morning snarled northbound lanes of the after Beierman was reported missing c 1e JUS ice sa1 . several weeks ago, then it wa5 dropped The legend on the handsome silver tray San Diego Freeway in tht El Toro area, ·- That wu C.orona·s calling. By word of mouth, P.fexican workers came to him. But in the duller seasons, he spent much time in the Bonanza Club. the New Palm and the other di ves of a miniature Bowery. He was there on business ac- cording lo the men who knew him, he never took a drink, he never smoked. until his body was found. It epp81ently prese11ted to Judge Sumner records that of the Yictims .,.,·ere Meticans like backing up traffic for two miles. h lh h · f th b Ambulances took an undetermined ~. helped lead Sutter County fJfficers to e was e runaway c 01ce o t ar Corona. One man who knew him well is Ted Ramirez a barber of Mexican extraction who is married to a girl named l\-tacKenile, a descendant of the Stuart clan. Like all barbers, Ramiret likes to talk . QUIET FEILOW "He was a quiel fellow," Ramirez said. "He would sit and .shoot the breeze. But then suddenly you'd be off on an entirely different direction in the conversation. "He would be in here (the Bonanza) in the morning asking if anyone wanted to pick up a few bu cks in the orchards. Maybe four guys would say 'okay' and they v;ould pile into that red and white pickup of his and go off. "Then someUmes he would come in late at night and line up guys to work the nezt day. He never got in arguments:. I knew him and all his brothers. They Corona, although they, under the court association as "an individual who has Corona. father or four small girls, was number of persons from the stretch '. order, would not say so. made a significant contribution to ad-arrested early Wednesday alter the ninth betwee n El Toro Road and the in-:: One of Corona's brothers. Pedro. did va nce and elevate justice and law." body had been unearthed. terdlange of the San Diego and Sant a not leave the area v.•hen the others did . He was named to the West award after Court records show Corona was com· Ana Freeways. The extent of their in- He described Juan as "the best brother l the bar recognized that the commission milted by a brother ta a sl'lte mental juries was unknown. have. He sends money every week to our nn which he presently serves as hospital for lhree months in 1956 as being Wreckage was being cleartd away at mother in Autlan and lakes care of an y chairman has deleted some 30,000 words "confused and disorie nted . . . (suf-noon and Californ ia Highway Patrol of· of the brothers who come up here.'' from e California Constitu1ion that once fering) delusions and ha llucinations." ricers kepi traffic moving 1towly through Ju an·s wife Gloria, through an in· contained 80.000 words. He was recently Psyc hiatrists diagnosed hlm as a the rain-slicked area. terpreter. said he ''always treated me honored by both houses of the Legislature schirophrenic. He was released from Observers said five to six separate ac- right and never V.'as \'lolent .,.,·lth me or for his .,.,·ork on a commission that is now De.wilt St ate Hospital at Auburn, Calif., cidents wert involved, most with Jutt two our four children." C'Oncluding the work it began in 1964. a~ "recovered" on April 18, 1955. cars each. She shook her head, "I'll never believe , .:=:=:'.'.'."~:..:::.:~~::::_.:::_:::::.::_ __ _::~:::;:::.::_::.:...:::..::'C:::_'.::_::::::_ ___ _::=:_::.::::_: ________ _ this," she said. "I can 't understand ii." The district attorney, who eventuall y will prosecute the case, is another young man. His name is D. Davt Teja. He. is of East Indian descendant, savvy, cool. Under the b1slructions, Corona once •again was shielded by a blanket when he made his first court appearance Wed· ne.sday. The public and the press were barred from Judge Hankins' courtroom. exforb j>quart Tru stees Approve Bids For 2 College Proj ects ~ -··---- CAMPAIGN DESK Coast Community College District acceptance of the firm's $440,608 bid for trustees have approved bids totalin g more lhan i i million to bulld an en· vlronmenta1 studies center 11t Orange Coast College in Costa ~1esa and equip the: telecommunications facility at Golden West College in Huntington Beach. W.F. Shirley Construction Co. of Pasadena was the successful low bidder for the envlrOnment!l center with 1 bid of $$43,174. The building is due to open in laboratories and office space for the col· lege's environmental training program. The buildings wil\ be relocatable. being constructed in a modular manner similar to the method used In constructing tbe dislrlct·s administration building. Thrte separate bid Items for equipment at Goldtn \Vesfs televisi on center total\· ed SSl0 .000. Philips Broadcas1 Equipment Corp. of Montvale, NJ . wss I.he lowest ot Wur firms offering bids mtetlng s~clrJca lions for televiluon broadcast camtra and c:on- trol room equlpment. Trustte1 approved the c:<Jlor television tquipment. Tektronix ·inc . of Orange \\'BS the lone bidder and v.·ill provide $40,000 .,.,.orlh of osc:illosropes and v.•avelorm moniloring equipment 11t a net cost to the district of $20,00.l The tirm .... ·ill provide a $20,000 educational grant contribution. Reichel Eleclric Inc. of Westminster was granted the contr11ct for s I u d Io lighting equipment. The firm's bid of $49,977 was not the lov.·est of all bids 5Ub• rn itted . but was the 10 .... ,est of three bids deem~ to ha.\•t m e t 1pedfic.a- lion1 . Acey-Decy Electric. Conslnlctlcm Com- pany of Ho 11 y ,.,. o o d offered an al· 1crn11te bid of $30.400 us i n g lighting equipment that did not match lights rresenUy owned by the distrirt. The firm's bid bond did not arrive unt il after bids were opentd, Chancellor Norman \\'a!Mln said, making lhe bid ineligible for consideration. With pewter gill bue. Shelf b.hin~ tambour doors. 379. DEALERS FO R: HENREDO N -DR EX EL -HER ITAGE ' NIWPO IT STOii OPIN ,llDAY 'TIL f NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WHlcliff 0 •., 642-2050 OPEN FRI DAY 'TI L 9 Profe11lonel lnt•rlor Designers Avail able -AID INTERIORS ft•A• T•ll "" Mo•• of Or•"'• C:•11•ty-S40·116l I LAGUNA l !ACH 345 North C011t Hwy. Phone: 494-6.551 , ! I • Frldu, Mu 28, 1~71 DAILY PILOT S Mideast Curbs · Chicago Political Figure Vanishes QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandl .....• ~ .... •, ,.,. ... : .. Faisal Proposes Act-ion by Nixon ' -"THANK GOODNESS IT'S FRI DAY I • Raps Sought Against 3 In Slaying DREW, r.Uss. (UPI\ Aulhorities today mov ed 1v.·iftly to seek indictment! against three young \\'hite men accused of killing a teen.age Negro girl in t h is small Mississippi delta town. f'rank O. Crosthwait Jr., prosecuting attorney f o r Sunflllv•er County, said he v.·ould present the case to the next lerm of the Grand Jury v.•hit'h COTI\'Cne~ .June! 7. The three mrn \\'ere being held in a n1asimu1n security unit at the stat~ ptnilentiary rollowing their arrest a few hnurs after .lo Etha Collier. 18. \.\'IS shot dO\\'n Tuesdli.V night on a Drew street. They v.·ere charged v.·ilh murder. The three were identified as Wayne Parks. 23, a C-'tton farmer from Drew ; his brothtr. \\'esley Parks. 36, a mechanic at h1emphis, Tenn.; and their nephew, A 11 en Wilkerson. 19. a recent high school gr ad uate from Memphis. Investigators said no motive had been ertabllshed for the shooting. \•.'hich brought bitter reaction from black leaders and touched ciff protest marches Thursday afternoon ;it Drew and neighobring Ruleville. FBI agents. acting on orders from President 1'ixon, have joined in the investigation to detennine whether any federal law "'as violated in the killing. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler announced Thursday in Washington that Nixon had instructed Attomey General John Mitchell to ob- tain all information on the ease to determine whether any federal jurisdiction v.·as in· volved. Ziegler said the Presi· dent regarded the shooting as • "deplorable and appalling aet.n WASHINGTON (UPI) - After getting a full drt111 welcome at the White House, King 1'"'aisal of Saudi Arabia publicly urged President Nix· on to exert his influence to curb aggression by Israel in the Middle East. The leader of the oil-rich Arab state. clearly referrln~ to Israel. but talking only of "certain powers," told Nixt1n that the situation "certaiflY requires ihe attention of you. ~tr. President., and your na· lion ." Speaking on a red<ar}ieted platform on the White House south lawn, Fain t said ''this aggression which exemplifies itself in the occupation of our holy place.s and the sub- WayCleared For Seale's Freedo1n CHICAGO !AP ) -A federal appeals court has cle-ared the way for freedom for Bobby G. Seale. Black Panther party leader, while his appeal of a four year contempt 3entence is pending. Attorneys for Seale and the government v.·ue to meet t& day with Judge Luther M. Sv.'Ygert to work out details of his release. It was unknov.TI whether Seale 'A1JU\d be released in Conneclicut or whether he would be brought to Chicago and released. A representative for Sea.le po.sted $25,000 bond Thursday shortly after the 7th U.S. Circuit Court or Appeals ruled Seale could remain free while appealing his four year con· tempt sentence handed down during the Chicago riot trial. The bond 'A'as granted over the government's continued objection based on Seale'.s Connecticut murder kidnap trial which ended ill a mistrial Tuesday. The government contended that Seale zhould not be released on bond becawe he v.•as not acqullt.ed in Con- necticut but that the charges were dismissed be<:aJJSe of a deadlocked jury. Judge Orders Garrison To Let Clay Shaw Alone Jua:ation ol. oW' people bas ' brought about IOtne disagrtt· men t betWMn yoor country and oun," Jn the future, he said , "We hope these good relations will be re--estabUshed." Nixon in turn replied that he was "looking forward to the counsel of a senior statesman v.·itlt whom we: can work for a just peace in the Middle East and all parts of the world." Faisal and Nixon the. n retired to the President's oval office for their first formal meeting. At the end of the 7~ minute conference. P r e :s s Secretary Ronald t:. Ziegler said they dixussed "many world problems, especially the situation in the Middle East." Althciugh he did not go into detail. Ziegler said Faisal ex· plained his "special interest in the Holy City of Jerusalem." now occupied by I s r a e I i forces. The king, who is v.·inding up " goodwill tour of the U11ite-d States, sees himself as the guan:han of the ~1oslem h-Oly placts in Jerusalem, Mecca and Medina . He also has in- :sistfd on Israeli vdt.hdrav.·al from all territory 1eized dur· ing the 1987 war. ' FDA Praises Unit Report On Problems HUNTED ALDERMAN Chicago'• Hubb•rd 3 Foreig1i Boats Ram U.S. Nets BOSTON (UPI) -Three foreign trawlers p Io w ed "through the net! or an American lobster boat early tod ay for the second time in l~s than 24 hours, the Coast Guard reported. The vessels -Al least tv.·o of them Russian -cut through the nets of the Westport-based United states about 67 miles 50Uthwest of Nantucket Island at about 6 A.M. EDT today. The Coast Guard cutter Vigilant wa1 sent to the scene and reported an ~ later there were 47 R ussi an trawlers in the area. l t marktd the 1ec ond \VASHINGTON (AP) slraie;ht day of incidents for GCl"lrnment decisions on the lhe United St.ates. There "''a5 ~-~ safdy of food and drugs are no da mage report !or either "YI~":. too often based on politics incident. 'YA.JI ratitr than good science, al-----------'-------'"------ blutr ribbon advisory com· mitee reports. ,.........., T1e Food and Dr ug Administration. hailing the rep>rt as sound and helpful, sail it is a lrea d y im· plf!llenting committee recom· "'·!~ mmdations for scientific buf-'.}Il l~!~~" feJS against economic and poitical pressures. The five man panel of !l!l1f/ffJ urive~ity scientists concluded after a year'• investigation tl"l t despite pockets 0 r l~ratory excellence the FDA iii: not equipped to grapple with nany of the difficult, technical <Jlestion! ()f consumer pro- ttction. "It c urre n t ly fa ces 111ormous responsibilities for eonsumer prcitection and the public health but with limited resciurces, con stri ct e d perspective and little aolid ·~ const~y in the public or THDl'S ONI THIN~ YOU'LL NEVER FIND IN MY STOU • , , Gartlens MEMORIAL DAY SPECIALS .• ')!?,',-. • -, .• ~·-.... . ' > l ):ti.• ...i\.. •• ' -• .. ;, ~ , '\ ,<Jli:,.IJ!(«, ... o~<O ' From Our Nursery DICHONDRA .. ____ .................. 95c P•tch up b•r• 1poti--1t•rt • new l1wn. HI SPRAYER DELUXE GARDEN SPRAYER mP:~~::.:~~:;;~::: ................................................... ~595 TUBEROUS BEGONIAS "°' yowr lhodo ..,.i.. ................................................................ 3 far $1 OO FUCHSIAS -.1 ...... """~' ................................... -·-·-·-------....... 1 tel HANGING BASKETS 99C CARNATIONS . lnd!Yldwal poll, '"°'t worlotln .................................. ----.. CLEARANCE SALE 99' ,. medical ihd scient if ic establishments," the com· ; mittee said of the FD A. • , • •nd th1t's pressure to buy. My s1le1- m•n won't push or prod or follow you around bre•thing down your neck. Tl<iey 've been put through the J1clc Bidwell Good Selesmen Training Course. If you need help. we'll be pl111ed to 9ive you es much er 11 little 11 you went. But you'll nevtr be pressured to buy cmythin9. After ell, Stepping Stones ACJCJN9Gte & Concrete 200/ooFF used cars used but notabµs aeventy-ones at ~~ , I Brass Mret At Previe'v we w1nt you 'fo c.1othes we sell. Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: + llAIN OfffCE: Ith l Hiii, Loi Anoe!• •W..1351 1 '* W1LIHIAE 9l GPlAM!llCY PLAC1:*3Wn.hlfli BIYCL, L.A. • 331-1285 LA. CMC C!NTE": 2nd & Broldwly • 821-1102 * HUNTINClTONllACH:l1 HuntfnatonOlnllr• {714) at7-1047 IAHTA ANA LOAN HJMCI AGIHC'YI * 1905 N. Main SL. (714) 547.t2!7 * SANTA MONICA: 711 Wllthl19 81Yd. • -.0741 * SAN PIDRO: 10th a Pacific• 151-2'41 '* WEIT COVINA: EatUand Shopping Ctr.• ~1-2201 .. PANORAMA CITY: 1816 Van Nll)'I Blvd.• 812-1171 "*' TAftZANA: 1a1s1 V•ntur1 Boulevard• :MS-Nt4 * LONQ ltACH: 3rd & Locutt • 437-741 Open s.atwdlYs-9 am tot p11 Diiiy Hours -! 1111 to 4 Piii ASSETS OVER ssoo MILLION ... INFLATABLE KIDDY SEAT hcellOftt far plc•lcs. poohldo, camp! .. . r.v .. d• .•• ln-t ~--............ -...................... -........... -....... .. 79' From Our Patio TWO TONE RAnAN CHAIRS 2us v.1 .. Bro wn Jordan, Temiemi & Keilua Sile prices held over for Memoriel Dey For the Pool $14" FLOATING SAUCER With Hiid ... , .. -.... ·-··-·-·--., , .. POOL RADIO ~=~~. ·~~ ..,,..,,., -------'I 9" • 2121 Newport '1Yd. 11801 H-llN. COSTA MISA GARDIN GROVI 646.nzs 5:144n4 Art Linkletter Shows You a New W~y to Beat Inflation ••• Just Join ~ ~ With a '2,!IOO balance In ,.,.,. alVlng• ""'°""~you are oliglblo IO bacomo a mom bar. lubo1antlll eavfng1 are availeblo when purcllulng many llolllt Including aulOmobllol, fumlture, 1ppllenc:o1, fawolry. Plua illany free Hrvlcea-money ord1ra. uf1 d1po11t box ... 1to. -~--~ "\ ,· COAST 1· AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS I . . ' ~-------" Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COllPOUNDID DAILY AHD PAID OUA11111LY.• s.00•1 •• 5,13"" l'ulbook; No Minimum. 5.25°/•-5.390/o ThrM Month Cortlflcalo; No Minimum. 5.75°'•·5.92"• On•YNt Certlftoale; $1,000 Minimum. 8.000/•-6.18"' Two-Year Cortlflcalo; $5,000 Minimum. •Ett.ctJvt Annuli Eamfngs • • INSURANCE TO s20,ooo I • z ~All Y PllOT c Joint Us ag e Of El Toro Discussed By ALAN DIRKIN Of ... Delft' Plttt illlf ne short·range solution to Oran&• County•1 aviation needs is for joint use. of El Toro MCAS by military and com· mercial jei.,. Long-range problems would be solved by creating an international .airport at Camp Pendleton. This is the vie w cf Roger Slates, chairman of the Orange County Airport C-Ommission. as he outlined them in 1 talk at a civic luncheon ln Huntington Beach \\'ednesday. At the luncheon. sponsored by the H~ lington Beach·Fountain Valley Board of Realtors, Slates also called for the coWllY to create an airport authority. "The biggest problem i1 that the gupervisorg and mem~rs of county ~m­ missions are all political anbna~. he said. "They can't always vote thelf' con· \·ictions." 1fe said 1t was often the un~n!'ormed voter that influenced county dec1s1ons on aimorts . but added that "counties are not built with a fain t heart." "\Ve need to creale an airporl autho rity thal v.·ould take some heat from the elected pe<iple,·• Slates commented. The airport commissioner argued that the El Toto facility could be converted lnto a joinl use airport in nine months at a cost of fro m $.l million to $4 million. "a: drop in the bucket" comp~r~ to the estimated $250,000 cost of bu1ld1ng a new one. .. 1 He said that a "trem~dous amount o Navy and Marine jets were flying out of El Toro at present and claimed there Y.'Ould be. no increase in noise levels. No pr ivate planes would be. allov.·ed to use El Toro. They would use Orange County Airport v.·hich would become a oon-jet fa cility. Atkins Pleads Guilty in Death Of Musician LOS ANGELES (AP) -Susan Denise At.kins, 1entenced to dulh in the 1layinga of aclrel& Sharon Tate and 1ix others, has pleaded guilty to killing a musician. A. judge immediately 1entenced. her to life imprisonment.. The &lender brunette, her head shaved ml the faint "X" symbol of the Charla Manson clan scratched on her forthe1d, changed her plea or innocent 'nlursd1y in Superior CourL • "She is a person who would be. dangerous to the community," &aid Judge Raymond Choate. "She should spend the entire tenn of her life in custody.1' Miss Atkins, 23, who testified at the. fate trial that she killed musician Gary Hinman two years ago, was about to be. tried with Man.son and another of lhe cult leader's £ollov.·ers for the murder when s;he switched her plea. Trial proceedina;s then were delayed. Hinman, of Malibu, was slain at his home. Another Manson clan member. Robert Beausoleil, 24, was convicted and i;entenced to death last year for the kill- ing. One of the reasons members of the f<,fanson hippie style "family" killed Miss Tate two weeks later, the district at· tomey bas said, was to free Beausoleil from custody. Authorities described the Tate slayings as similar in appearance to the Hinman death -an apparent attempt to make police think Beausoleil y,·as in· nocent. OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT OllAMGE COA.ST PUtL-1$MING-COMPANY Ro\tert N. W•ed Prei:d.,.T end Plltllilllff' J 1c.lr: •· Curl1y V"9 Jlorold"" •N ~•l MeMOtl" Tllo,..•• Ke ... a EC1110!' lhol"I•• A. Mur11liioi• M•nlillfiO £d111lf' Ch .tit! H. Loos R.ic!.t•d P. Ntll ~"'!'~; M111191nu Eo 11c.n. Cost• N••• Offk o • l JD Wtil l •Y Street M1i1i~g Adcl.-.,1: P.O. lox 1561), 9162• Ot\er Off"- TMplrto• 11141 M2-4l21 CloulriH .Atff'ffllli .. 642°5671 a,yri.,.1, 1t1!0 Cl•t flOO (llut Publill,111"" ~1111. Ne .,.,.., tfOl"lt:t,. mu1trll•~ U ..... lllJ rnttl... II IOW''"""'"'" ......... ,,.., bO ....,.ucni wl"'°"'• 111KLll ,... ~ oi af'~rtf'I; •"'"""· S«Of.d c.lf• pOlli .. 11tld ., "''"""""" ... ,II .... OMI• Mew, Cl ll,,,,..,fl $lilttrlPI .... "" ''"'"'" 11.JS -•IPll'fl ll'f '''"' ''·'' ~I'; ft"'ltel'Y lllallMrleM. IO' H "*''""· ltlixing Art, Politics ' Laurie Bale, 13, 1 student at Costa ?.1esa's Te '¥inkle School. com· pares art opinions wi th state Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach). They met during recent exhibit at South Coast Plaza of 2,800 pieces of art from schools throughout Orange County. Some of th~ art will be selected for display in Senator Carpenter's Sacramento off Lees. From Pa.ye l TRANSIENTS MEET . •• daughters. Corona speaks fair English, his wife almost solely Spanish. The offiCt'f'S told him he was charged ·with murder. Corona. pulled on his gray work pant.s, cowboy boots and a green sweater. He went along quietly. When the patrol car arriv ed at the courthouse, a stately white building with columns that could pass for a southern man,,lon, officers gave him a blanket to put over his head to thwart news photograpben. C.Orona is one of five brothers who came to this area from Jalisco, ~1exico. the first in the early 1940s. The big thing then was the Beale Arm y Camp, then a staging area and now a large Air Force base. ORe of. the brothers opened a bar. The othera went into the labor contracting business. In the ce.ntral valley migrant workers are a necessity for the land· ownen. Tbe transients range from about 2,000 in the winter months to 20,000 when the peache& and other crops are in harvest. Mexican nationals "'ilh "grern cards" swarm into lhe area in the .summer. But when the orchard! need pru11ing and thin· ning, the contractors seek out the ''locals" and the best sources are the bars on Marysville's skid row where on a 1ober day a man can pick up $20. That was Corona's calling. By word of mouth, ~fexican workers came to him. But in the duller seasons, he spent much time in the Bonanza Club, the New Palm and the other dives of a miniature Bowery. He was there on business ac· cording to the men who knew him, he never took a drink, he never smoked . One man who knew him well is Ted Ramirez a barber of Mexican extraction who is married to a gi rl named MacKenzie, a descendant of the Stuart clan. Like all barbe..,, Ramirez likes to talk. QUIET FELLOW "He was a quiet fel lov.•," Ramirez said. ''He would sit and shoot the breeze. Bul the n suddenly you'd be off on an entirely different direction in the conversation. "He would be in here (the Bonanial in the. morning asking if anyone wanted to pick up a few bucks in the orchards. Maybe four guys would say 'okay' and they would pile into that red and wtute pickup of his and go off. "Then sometimes he would come in late at night and line up guys to work the ne.1t day. He never got in arguments . I knew him and all his brothers. They glarted leaving abo ut two years ago." Corona's attorney is Roy J. Van Det Heuvel. He is a public defender in Sutter County and also has practiced law here for the past six years. Van Der Heuvel, although refusing to discuss material facts in the case under a cour t gag order, shook ihings up a bit on the day of his appointment by :saying: "They have the wrong man." Sheriff Roy \Vhiteaker is convinced they have the right man . Whiteaker is 31, one of the youngest law enforcement officers ever to hold such a post He also is the coroner for Sutter County, although a pathologist performed the autopsies. "This is the man,'' Whiteaker s.aid. He said lhat before Yuba City Judicial C-Ourt Judge J. J. Hankins ordered everyone to clam up about the k.ilHng. That order has left newsmen scra tching in vain about a motive. SCHIZOP HRENIC According to court records, Corona had spent three months in the Dewitt State Hospital at Auburn. Calif .. in 1956, suf- fering from "delusions and hallucina· tions" and v.·as diagnosed as a 11chizophrenic. He was released three months later as recovered. One of the first two bodies identified was that of Sigrid Emil Beierman, 63. of ~1arysville. Police said Beierman last was seen entering a 1970 van driven by Corona. This report was checked out after Beierman v.•as reported mUssing several weeks ago, then it v.·as dropped until his body was found. It apparently helped lead Sutler C-Ounty officers to C.Orona. although they, under the court order. v.·ould not say so. One of Corona's brother s. Pedro. did nol leave the area when the olhers did. He described Juan AS "the best brother l have. He sends money every week to our mother in Aullan and lakes care of any of the brothers who con1e up here." Juan·s v.•ife Gloria. through an in· terpreler. said he .. always treated me right and never v.·as violent v.·ith me or our four children.'' Sh<' shook her head ."1'11 never believe this," she said. ''I can't understand il." The district attorney. who even tually will prosecute the case. is another young man. His name is D. Dave Teja. He is of East Indian descendant, savvy, cool. Under the i11structions, Corona onc:e ·again was shielded by a blanket when he made his first court appearance Wed· nesday. The public and the press were barred from Judge Hankins' courtroom. Trustees Approve Bids For 2 College Projects coa st Community College District !ru.sters ha ve approved bids toLaling more than $1 million to build an en- vironmental studies c<'nler 11t Orange Coast College in Costa l\lesa and equip the teleeommunlcations facility al Golden West College in Huntington Beach. W.F. Shlrlty Construction Co. of Pasadena was the successful low bidder for the environm!ntal center with • bld of $543,174. The building is due to open In laboratories and office space for the col· lege's environmental training program. The buildlng:s will be relocatable . being constructed in a modular manner similar to the method used in constructing the district's administration butldlng. Three separate bid 1lems for equipment 1t Golden \\'cst's televislon cent.tr total!· ed ISI0.000. Philips Bl'tladcast Equipment Corp of Montvale, l\ J .. was the lowest o( fuur firTN offertng bids meeting sPE'cif1cat/ons for television broadcasl c11 mera and (()0· trol room equipment. Tru!i.ces 1pprovtd acceptance of the firm's $44-0,608 bid for the color television rquipmenl. Tektronix lnc. of Orange \.\'as the lone bidder and \.\'iii provicle $4-0,000 worth of oscilloscopes and v.·aveform monitoring equipment 11t a net cost to the district of $20,000. The firm Y.'ill provide 11 S20,000 t ducational grant contribution. Reichel Electric Inc. of Westminster \\'as granted the contract for s t u d I o lighting equipment. The firm's bld of $49.977 v.'aS nol the lov.·est of 11\1 bicls sub- milted, but v.·as the lov.·est ol three bids deemed to have me I apeciflca- tions . Acey-Decy E\trtrlc Construction Com- pany of ~lollywood olfere:d An 111· teirnate bid of $30,490 us I n g lighting equlpm<'nt that did nol match lights prP:r:enlly ov.·ned by I.hr district. The firm's bid bond did not arrJ\'e until after bid" were opened, Chancellor Norman \\'al.\On said, making the bid ineligible lot conslderallon. Sex Films Mesan Arrested French Girls 'Pla y Dirt y' SAO PAULO. Brazil (UPI) In Porno Raid The two men who managed the visitin& French women'a baskelball learn d<iiled tod1y the .~~ don't wash , but said they do w1Li: around their hotel corridors in scanty underwear. A Huntington Harbour couple and 1 Cost• Mesa man blve been named in connection with $500,000 wor th or sex films and photoaraphs seized Tuesday io Westminster. Police said today felony complaints charging conspiracy to distribute and 11ell pornography wodid be &Ought agalruit the trio as well as 10 "John Does." The Harbour couple, f'rederick A. Loar, 34, (also known as Pete Voss ) and his wife, Mrs. Kay Nancy Loar, 31, (also known as Kay N. Llebfried) of 5062 Hum· bolt Ave., were named by police as owners of the business where the 1e:1 materials were found . The third man, Joseph Reitano, 68, of 168 Lexingto. Ave., Co.sta Mesa, alleged· ly received gome of the se:i materials in a Santa Ana store he owns. Reitano is currently free on $12,500 bail pending appeal o! his conviction In an earlier pornographic case, police said. He also faces misdemeanor charges stem- ming from the seiiure of 38.000 pieces of pornographic materials taken May 11 in Fountain Valley . t.t. Jack Shockley or Westminster said so far there is "no connection " belween the Westminster operation and the Foun- tain Valley case. ''Reitano happen~ to be Involved in both. but it is not a direct link.'' Shockley charged. Laguna's Judge Sumner Praised At Awards Fete Nearly 200 Orange County judges and lawyers gave Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner a tremendous ovation Thursd ay when the Laguna Beach jurist accepted the annual Franklin G. West award from its previous recipient, retired California Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Traynor. Watched by retired Superior Court Judge Franklin G. West , the jurist whose name was given to the Orange County Bar Association's yearly tribute. Judge Sumner told the Santa Ana meeting that he was "deeply grateful that my work on the California Constitutional Revision CommiS!ion has been :so recognized." "J could not but be impressed by your tremendous reror'd in other fields." he was told by Justice Traynor. "You have served three times in the Legislature, part of that time as a Republican whip, you have a glorio us war record and you hav e served faithfully as a public defender. "This can only be a crowning achieve- ment in such a fine record," the former ch~ justice said. The legend on the handsome silver tray preser1ted to Judge Sumner records that he was the runaway choice of the bar association as "an individual who has made a significant contribution lo ad- vance and elevate justice and Jaw." He was named to the West award after the bar recognized that the commission on which he presently serves as chairman has deleted some 30,000 words from a Califnrni~ Constitution that onci contained 80.000 words. He was recently honored by bolh houses or the Legislature for his work on a commission tha t is now concluding the work it began in 1964. '-~fl,, .• I , The "John Doe'' warrantl art re. quested as a prote<:tlon ln case U.. vestlgators uncover other indivldual1 11 yet unknown, Shockley explained. When police enW"ed Kayrus Company, 15lM Golden West St. on Tuesday, they hauled out 20,~ reels of film and S00,000 photograph.!. 0 range County District Alt<rney Cecil Hicks called it "the biggest haul o( pornography ever made in the county." He also vowed, 'We're not going to let this county become a distributiori center for obscene material.'' Police des9fibed the movies and photos found In Westminster as "hard core pornography showing e:iplicit sex acts:." They are 1n black and white, and the movies are the type shown at sta1 partlet or peep shows, police aald. Delegation director Gilbert Gon· daJ and Coach Joe Jaunay said • maid'& allegation tha t the girl'• don 't wash was untrue. The girls denied it as well. They 11id they use their own towels rather than the hot~-1 towels, ind the hotel maids, always finding ('~an linen in the hotel bathrooms, had jumped to the wron& con- clusion. A local newspaper, the Evening Journal, said the girlJ grabbed th• maid who had made I.he remarks about their not wuhlna:, stripped her and scrubbed her ln a bathtub. The French national team ll parUclpaUng In the current 1itlh Wiirld women'a bu ketball tow-na• ment in Sao Paulo. From Page I PETERS TESTIMONY • • • two years. He wanted to do them a favor so they wouldn't have to go through the revolutio n. He loved th'.em," commented the for mer inmate. "He said he wanted to <i.ome back to tri al . He wanled the publicity. Ht wanted to tell the world about the revolution. He told me he already had his statement for the jury.'' Earlier, Peters younger brother, Peter J. Peters, told Judge Baker that his brotber bad confessed to tbe murders after be awoke pn April 21. "He held me by the arms and said, 'Petey, I just killed Mom and Daddy,'" 11obbed the 13-year old youngster. ..He said there was 11:oing to be a war soon and he was sending Mom to heaven and put Dad out of his misery." During that alleged conversation, Gig Peters supposedly had "a far away look in his eyes,'' according to the younger brother's testimony. Peter Peters. v.·ho is now in the custody of an aunt and uncle, said he tried lo go lo his parents' room that morning but found the door locke d. As he was gelling dressed. he heard something that sound- ed like a yell or a moa n. Later, Gig also v.•as to have told his ether brother, Tony, 17, about the doublt murder. "I heard Gig say lo him. 'If you'd been taking LSD like I have, you're committed against the human race,' " Peter told the court. Tony Peters made a short appearance in lhe prisoner's box Thursday. Ht was bound by a slraightjacket after alleged ly biting and kicking bailiffs when he was told he would have to testify. Tony, whtt is fa cing juvenile charges a1 an ac· From Pagel BODIES. •• &f the victims were Mexicans like Corona. C.Orona, father of four small girls, was arrested early Wednesday after the ninth body had been uneartbed. Court records show Corona was com- mitted by a brother le a st1;1e mental hospital for three months in 1956 as being "confused an d disoriented . • . (suf· fering) delusions an d hallucinations.'' Psychiatrists diagnosed him as a schiwphrenic. He v.·as released from Dewitt Ste le Hospital ~t Auburn, Calif., a~ "recovered'' on April 18, 1956. cessory to lbe crime, ••s net called to the stand, however. Before Gig Peters was bound over ftlr trial, his defense attorney said doctors had exam ined the defendant ind con- sidered him capable-to stand trial. Tarlow added, though, that the same physicians considered him insane at the time of the alleged slayings. While being held in jail, Peters •as al· leged to ha ve.engaged in continuous rou· tines ol aberrant behavior, acoording to the testifying inmate. He w1s alleged to have bounced hUi eyebrows, kick his foot into lhe wall, and engaae In unortbodo:I medilatlm111. Peters was arruled by Huntington Beach Police at the Tijuana border one day after the bodies of tbe couple were found dead at their 301 Llncolt Ave. home. Tarlow had surrendered Peters and his 22-yea'.r -ol d girlfriend, Anne Bartholomew, after an all-points bulleUn had been issued for Peters throughout the western states. l\1iss Bartholomew, originally charged but later released. sat in the audience througbout \be preliminary bearing. Dressed in brown pants with a peac1 symbol belt and 1' white T-shirt bearin& clasped hands and the insignia ''Holding Toge ther:• she gazed at Peters for several minutes 1t the clese •f tbe hear- ing. Separated by tht prisoner's hox and • barrier, Peters responded with a pr~ longed &mile and • 50undle51 "Bye. bye," before being take n away by the bailllf. Crashes Cram Freeway Lanes A series of rtar-end colli1ion1 this morning snarled northbound I~ of the San Diego Freeway in the El Toro area, backing up .traUic for two miles. Ambulances took an undetermined : . number of persons from the stretch : between El Tom Road and the in-: : terch ange of the San Diego and Sant a Ana Freeways. The extent of their in- juries was unknown. Wreckage was being cleared away 1t noon and California Highway Patrol of- ficer11 .kept traffic movin1 11owly through the rain-slicked area , Observers said five to 1i1 1eparate IC· cidents were involved, most with just two cars each. exforb &quart ~ -·---- CAMPAIGN DEsK With pewter gill bue. Shell b.hin~ +•mbour doors. 379. DEALERS FOR : HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE • NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WHtcllfl Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 NIWPOIT STOii OPIN •tlDAY 1tL t Profe11ion1I Interior De1lgners Av1U1blt -AID INTERIORS J\1ft• Toll '1M Mltf of O r11191 Co11111tr-J4111·126) LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. Phon9' 494-655 I , FrldtY, May 28, 1971 ~AILY PILGT 1J Mideast Curbs · Faisal Proposes Action by Nixon ' Chicago Political ._Figure Vanishes QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl .. ,, ........ ~-;~ - Raps Sought Against 3 In Slaying DREW. Miss . !UPI) Authorities today m o v e d Jwiflly to seek indictments again.st three young \\'hile men aceused of killing a teen-age Negro glrl in t b i s small Mississippi delta town. Frank O. Crosthwait Jr .. prosecuting attClmey for Sunf\oy,·er County . said he "·ould present the case to the next term of the Grand Jury v.·hich C(Jnvcne:ii: June! 7. The three men v.ere being helcl in a n1axim um sec urity unit 11l the st at'! peniten tiary following thei r arrest a few hours afler Jo Etha Collier. 18. v.•as shot dO\\'n Tuesday r.ight on a Drew street. They "'ere charged v.·ilh murder. The three were identified as Wayne Parks. 23, a cotton farmer r r o m Drey,·; his brother, \Vesley Parks, 36, a mechanic at l\temphis, Tenn.: and their nephew, A 11 en Wilkerson. 19. a recent high l!chool graduate from ?1;1emphis. In\•estigators said no motive had been established for the shooting. which brought bitter reaction from black lf'ader~ and touched off protest marches Thursday afternoon ~t Drew and neighobring Ruleville. FBI agents. acting on orders from President Nixon. have joined in the investigation to determine whether any federal law v.'as violated in the killing . Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler announced Thursday in Washington that NU:on had instructed Attorney Gtrieral John Mitchell to ob- tain all information on the case to determine whether any federal jurisdiction v.·as in- volved. Ziegler said the Presi- dent regarded the shooting as a "deplorable and appalling aet." WASHINGTON (UPI) - Afttr getVng a full dress welcome at lhe \\'b.ite House, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia p..iblicly urged President Nix- on to exert his influen<:e to curb aggression by Israel in the Middle East 'Mle leader of the oil·rlch Arab state. clearly referrin~ to Israel, but talking only of "cert.a.in powers." told Nil(l)n that the situation "certaifily nquires the attention o( yoo , 1'1r. President, and your na· lion." SpeakinF on a red-carpeted plat!orm on the White House south lawn, Faisal said "this aggression which exemplifies itself in t2>t occupation af our holy platt.s and the sub- WayCleared For Seale's Freedo111 CHICAGO 1AP 1 -A fe deral appeals court has clf'ared the '.l.'ay for freedom for Bobby G. Seale, Black Panther party leader, while his appeal of a four year contempt sentence is pending. Attorneys for Seale and the government were to meet to- day with Judge Luther ht S'.l.'Ygert to work out details of his release . It was unknov.:n whether Seale v•ould b e released in Connecticut or v.·hether he would be brought to Chicago and released. A representat.h·e for Seale posted $25.000 bond ThurMiay shortly after the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Seale could remain free while appealing his four year con· tempt senten<:e handed do'.\l\ during the Chicago riot trial. The bond was granted over the government's continued cbjeclion based on Seale's Connecticut murder kidnap trial whi ch ended in a mistrial Tuesday. The government contended that Seale 1hould not be released on bond because he ~·as not acquitted In Con- necticut but that the charges were dismissed because of a deadlocked jury. Judge Orders Garrison To Let Clay Shaw Alone JU&ailon ol our people has bmugtit about some di.lagree- ment between yoor country and ours.'' ln the Cuture, he said, '1We hope these good relations will be re-eslabllshed ." Nixon in turn replied that he '.l.'as "looking forward to the counsel ol a senior statesm1n "'ilh whom we can work for a j115t peace in the fttidd le East and all part! of the world." f'aisal and Nixon then retired to the President 's oval office for their first formal meeting. At the end of the 7f>. minute oonlerence. P r e s s Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said they discussed "many world problems. especially the &itualion in the Middle East." Although he did not go into detail. Ziegler said Faisal ex- plained his "special interest in the Holy City of Jerusalem.'' now occupied by 1 s r a e 1 i forces. The king, who is winding up 11 goodwill tour of the Uniled Statt~. sees himself as lhe guardian of !ht: fl.1ostem holy placts in Jerusalem, Mecca and ftied ina . He also has in- sist«! on 1sraeli \\'ilhdrawal from 1111 territory i;eiJ.ed dur· ing the 1967 war. FDA Praises Unit Report On Problems HUNTED ALDERMAN Chicago'• Hubb1rd 3 Foreign Boats Rani U.S. Nets BOSTON !UPI) -Three foreign trawlers p I o we d through the nct..s; cf an American lobster boat early today for the second time in less than 24 hours, the Coast Guard reported. The vessels - at least l\l'n or them Russian -cut through the nets of the Westport-based United Stales about 67 miles &0uthwest of Nantucket Island at about fi A.M. EDT today. The Coast Guard Cutt.er Vigilant was sent to the 5CeDe and reported an hour later there were 47 Russian trawlers in the area. It marked the second 'VA.SHINGTON <APt straight day of inridenls for Govtrnment decisions on the the United States. There was ~. ~ safdy of food and drugs are no damage report for either ~/~':. too cften based on politics inciden t. 'YAJI ratl'er than good science, al----------'----_..::;'----- blu tt ribbon advisory com- mitff: reports. I"""'"' .,.,..,......,.,,..,.-.,,..,.,,..-,--.,.--· T1e food and Drug Adi;1inistration. ha iling the reµ>rt as 30und and helpful, saiJ it is already im· plmienting committee recom- mmdations for scientific buf- f cl5 again.st economic and poiltical pressures. The five man panel ofll,~i~~~ wt versity sclenlists concluded after a year'• invt.Wption th.t despite pockets of lci:>oratory excellence the FDA is not equipped to grapple with n any of the difficult, technical qiestions of consumer p~ ltction. • "It e ur re n lly fa ces ·~ S'lormous responsibilities for • , consumer protection and the ..; pub\ie health but with limited resources, constricted f1 perspective .and liUle aolid ( const ituency in the public or · THIH'S ONI THINCO YOU'LL NEVER FIND IN MT STOU ••• 1 • • •nd that'1 pr•11ur• to buy. My s1l•1· rn•n won't pu1h or prod or follow you NEW ORLEANS tUPI ) - A federal court Thursday ruled district attorney Jim Gar· ri.son. for personal gain . used unreliable witnesses to build a fl i ms y case against businessman Clay Shaw dur· ing a ''baseless investigation nf the John F'. Kennedy " medical and scientific establishments," l he . a round bt•t+hing down your ntclc. Th•y'v• bt•n put through the J1clc Bidw•ll Good Stl•1mtn Trainin~ Cour••· If you n••d h•lp, well b. pl••s•d to giv• you ., much or 11 littl• •s you want. But you'll n•v•r be pr•11ur•d to buy e111ythin9. Aft•r t ll, assassination ." "This court. considering a\1 t1f the e\1idence, find~ tha l Garrison undertoo k his · .... baseless investigation with the ....... . specific intent t.o deprive Shaw t\i"'.\• cf his right.s under lhe . . . l1, ' ' , (.onstilution of the United \ • \\ \ Slates," said U.S. District :'\ ) .. , Judge Herbert W. \ , f f :· Christenberry. : ~ Christenberry ordered a 1 permanent injunction barring · .~ IJ,I Ttlt,l\tte Garrison from further pro- secution of Shaw en a perjury charge in Louisiana courts. Tbe order, for awhile at least, ended Shaw·s four-year. 87-day GARRISON TARGET El1ted Cl1y Shaw mittee said of the FDA . Brass Meet At Previe'v we want you to clothes w• ,.11. \\'ASHINGTON (UPI) -•, · . 1'1rs. Joseph Kennedy and t; ~~ Mrs . [)v.·ight D. Eisenhower ' ·.c led 3.500 other guest.c; Thurs· day night in participating in a •·gala preview" al the new John F. Kenned y center for the perfonning arts. The huge marble structure on the Potomac Ri ver ~·ill not ,_. .;. ,, be opened to the public until • ,• Sept. a. I , 'T'he preview featured dirting and dancing. and the crowd in- cluded a pollticaJ, social and ~ntertainment world elite. ordeal as a m~ implicated in the assassination of President .Al.l!o representing the Ken-1 ~~~ Oswald v.•as tbe lttt assa.Min. nedy family were Sen. and 11 KeMedy. 1"167 Vi• l iclo, N•wporl Beach -673 -45 I 0 Gartlens MEMORIAL DAY SPECIALS From 011r l\'11r1er11 DICHONDRA -·-----····· -·----_ --· _ ..... 95' P•tch up bar• spot1-1tart a n•w l•wn. HI SPRAYER DELUXE GARDEN SPRAYER t~~;~.:;t~:;;~~7: ................................................... !591 TUBEROUS BEGONIAS For your shade ..,.i.. ............................................ ................... 3 for $1 OO FUCHSIAS Hetl"' ""41 upritilt .......................................... ,,,, ___ ._ ... _ 1 .. I HANGING BASKETS 99c CARNATIONS tnclMdual pots, "'°'' "rletln ............................... , .. _ .•. -..... 3 for $1 OO CLEARANCE SALE Stepping Stones Aggregate Ir Concrete 200/ooFF INFLATABLE KIDDY SEAT bcellOftt for picnics. pooklde, .. mpl1MJ, r.v., dell ••• lnltGnt cotnfort ···-···-··-··--·-·············-····--··---- From Ollr Patio TWO TONE RAftAN CHAIRS 2us v.1 .. Brown Jord•n, T amiam i &: K•ilua Sele prices held ov•r for Memoritl 01y For the Pool 79' FLOATING SAUCER With H11d .... ,,_ ............. __ ,_ '19" POOL RADIO FIHtlng R.C.A. • 19t1 Compltt1 with btttwl•• ··~ __ _ 212J Newport ltfd. 11801 Harbor llvd. COSTA MISA COARDIN COROVI '46·3925 SJ4.6n4 On 1-Iarch 1. 1969. a state ~In;. Edward M. Kennedy. court jury deliberated only fl.S Mrs. Robert F . Kennedy. minutes after :i 4o-day trial wtdow of the late Senator; and and acqwtted S!law. J~;lr~•~· ~Pe~t~e~r ~La~·~·J~or~d~.~the~~la~i.~======~============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Three days la ter Garrison President's sister. char~ed Shaw 1'ilh perjury for Shaw was arrested March 1, 1967, and charged by Garrison with conspiring with Lee Harvey Oswald and others to assassinate Kennedv. Gar- rison. at the same lime. de- nounced the Warren Com· mission report ""'hich found testifying 1n ht~ trial he did not kllow OsY:aJd and the ether allegitd coconspirators. Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ••• Just Join Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: used cars used but not abJ,Jsed 11venty·ones at ~~~ ftCO HAPlllOft !lVO.ICmA M!SA (714) 64MIOO , . .-llAINOfftcl:lthlHl11,LolMoeltl•m.1S51 "g * WILIHIA! It QMMl!JllCY PLACl:31SSW!tlhll'I Blvd., L.A. • -..1 m LA. CMC ClNTER: 2nd&. Bl'OldWly • n.1102 * HUNTINGTON l!ACH: 11 Huntington Center• (71•) 887·1047 IANTA AHA LOAN IUMCI AOIMCYI * 1905 N. Main St.• (714) 647.Q2!7 * SANTA MONICA: 711 Wllthl1'981Yd. •-..07'8 * IAN ,.DftO: 10th l Paclnc • 131·2341 * WOT covtNA: EalUand Shopping Ctr.• 3'1·2201 • PAHORAMA CfTY: 1811 Van Ntrys Blvd •• m -1171 * TARZANA: 11751 Ventura Boul1verd • :J.45.M14 + LONQllACH:3rdlLocust•437·7411 Optn StturdlyS-1 am to 1 pit Dilly Hours-t 1111to4 pr11 ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION 6:7he Jns.WS Oub With I $2,SOO boJonce In your 11Ying1 accoun~ you ore e!Jglbl1 lo become a member. 8ubo1ontlel llYinga 1ra IVlllablewhen purchulng many Jlema Including 1utomobll11, luml1Ura, 1pplltncaa, Jowalry. Plua many free urvlcea-money ordera. llfl dtpoalt boXll, etc. l:OllPOUNOID Dlll.Y AHO PAID QUMTlllLY,' 5.00°1°-5.13~ Puabook; No Minimum. 5.25°1°-5.39"- Thl'll Month Certlflcole; No Minimum. 5.75o/o .;,5.92o/o On•Y•r C.rtlncate; S1 ,000 MJnlmum. 6.00%-6.18~ Two-Yaar Certlflcate; $5,000 Minimum. •EftHtJVt Annull Eamtng, • INSURANCE TO $20,000 .. ' DAU.. Y PU..OT EnITORIAL PAGE A Superb Opportunity Support !.< growing, both locally and in S.cramen!D, for creation of a 300-acre wilderne5s park ln Costa Mea:a. Jt is support well deserved. The park area is on surplus state land, wh ich con· taitts an ancient Indian burial ground rich in archeologi· cal lore. The site is the largest between San Diego and Santa Barbara. State officials have already informally sugges.ted the city consider accepting the land west of Fairview State Hospital as a park site. If negotiations at the Sacramento level do lead to a transfer of control and ownership. the land will indeed be an impressive gill Based on current realty values, it il. worth about $12 million. Public use is always given priority in such surplua Jand disposal and State Director of Parks and Recrea· tion William Penn Mott Jr. agrees the aite, dating back 10,000 years in primitive California history, must be preserved. ' The existing golf course facilities, and nearby Esta~· cia Park. with iU Diego Sepulveda Adobe State Histor1· cal landmark should make the wilderness park concept even more important and attractive to the state. The state helped create one green area by leasing for $1 per year excess hospital land now occupied by the grassy. lagoon·dotted public ~olf and country club. And the state has indicated it 1s pleased with Costa 1.tesa's performance in turning the hospital land into an attractjve public facil ity. Proposals for a green belt up the Santa Ana River to the mountains add a closely-related benefit, one which could be financed by various federal grants and funds. County cooperation here is virtually assured. Few communities and counties have bad the pot.en• Airlines Are Prone to Use Gobbledygook One of the many specialty magazines I read regularly, In the relentless quest for column material, is "Air Line Pilot." In ita pages. a layman learns an awful lot aboul airlines. and flying, that he might otherwise never know. One of the l.rticle1 that pleased me most. in a recent issue. was written by Robert Buck.born. the avlaUon editor of UPI, the news service. Buckhom was dealing with the common complaint by pilots and airline people 'enerally that the daily press "overs1mplifies" or ''distorts" aviation stories. Some of this is 1imple ignorance or haste, Buckhorn admits: a reporter may contuse a "precautionary landing" wlth an "emergency landing." or a "flight recorder" wilh a "cockpit v o Ice recorder." The trade preu. on the other hand. rarely makes such mistakes. BUT BUCKHORN, a recognized and respected expert in the fiield, charges that a 1reat deal of ~ "over-simplifica· lion" of the media ··springs from the in· dustry's Inability to communicate ." The 1pecial jargon of avlition is sometimes aimed at preciseness: just as often. it may be aimed at obscuring the facts behind 1 Jot of fancy \'e rbiage. As an example. he ciles : "The cause of the crash was the pilot's fa ilure to main- tain sufficient altitude to avoid neighbor· ing terrain " Translation: "The plane flew into the side of a hill," Or tl1is classic bit of official gobbledygook : "The pilot's .appartntly unrecognized descent Dear Gloomy Gus OCC is still living in the dark ages: "Only Fathers Invited to Sports Banquet." Whal if father is out of the country ? Is not the . mother the father? Who started th is Father.Mother title in the first place? -C. J. l'lllt feelllN l'9N(fl .......... ¥11Wt, Mt -.HMl'"ll"t' fMM •I "'' ..WWI-. lltlf ,..,, "' -w• .. ••-r •11t. 01llT '""· to an altitude below that of the air port.'' TH£ FAA DOESN 'T speak ol ''parachutes," but of "aerodynamic personnel decelerators." Engines don't "fall off'; the y always ' ' de t a c h thmuelves'' from airplanes that never "crash.'' but only make ··uncontrolled descents into the ground .'' If an oversimplification. or even an outright error of fact, appears in a story, Buckhorn .asserts. it is not deliberate, "but it could be the result of some pom· pou11, confusing, and unnecessarily com· plicated prono~cemenl _by ~? airline lawyer, economist or engrneer. AND WHAT IS TRUE here ls equally lnle in dozens of other fields. Most groups are interested in covering up the!r mistakes or ineptitudes. to save their reputations or to guard against lawsuil.11. The people they hire as t h e i r "spoke!men·· to de.al with the media are primarily concerned with making the group IOC!k good, and not "''ilh the plain facts. The mass media ove r-simplify because the special interests over-complicate and obfuscate the issues with legal and technical tennlnology. When I he parachute fails , they want to blame it on the weather. A Nation of Beggars To the EdiUJr: !-'1th all our riches. we have become. in a few short years . 1 nation of beggars - begging our enemies for mercy instead of ("!obbering them In the first place. The silly begging began whrn L.8.J. of· fered Vietnam a billion dollars of tax m(Jney if they "'ould quit fighting. The futile begging has betn going on eVer g.ince. Let's look 11t 1rome of ii: t Secretary of S1ate Dean Ru sk begged Hanoi for eve.n a feeble sign that would indicate a willingness to nego1 iate. One Dean ignored. 2. The Paris begging Is almost comical. 3 TI:IE POW WIVES have begged to no avaJI 4. A Te1:as millionaire beggar, Ross J>uot. was refused by Hanoi. !. A beggini: group o!fering themselves ln exchange for POW's was laughed at by both Hanoi and me. 6. We beged North Korea to free Bucher. and we lost his ship. '7. The Calley convlclion appeased the enemy and gave coi'nfort. 8. We •rpeased South Americ<1 n pirates for hijackin& tuna boata. 9 £\'tn Bin& Cl'osby has a pl110 to bribe HAnoL to. And a new Tes11 croup Is going to Paris to bti Hanoi for somtthlng. AND TllERE•s NO telling how many otbe.r lcookl will try thls futile gimmick. But lhi1 c:onUnuom hesginc does give aid and comfort to tht fDCJ?\Y. and in time of wu whJch tht Concresa I.I too cowardly to declar• 1t lhll time, 1ucll aid and com• --' Letter& from reader.s art welcome. Norm4UI/ writers should conve11'tlttir nussagtl i" 300 words or le.ts. The right to condenst lttttr.s to fit gpace or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters must includt signat11re and mail· ittg address, but nam~ll may be with· tield on f"equest if sufficient reason i.s apparent. Pottry will 7!0t be pub· lished. fort would be called treason. We are a nation of beggars, ciur rulers are the culprits, and the taxpayer is I.he sap. MILT BASHAM '~Irr. Robe rl Smllh' To the EdlU>r : Although t have become rather ,.,·eary of Women 's Lib slogans and attitudes. J ml.Ml admit that l have be.come more a~ar1: or the frequent . often lnldverte.nt, Indignity imposed upon them. To be specific , I have come t.o question the journalistic practice of referring lCI "'·omen by their husband "s given and gumames. \Vhv should a "·oman be refer- red to as "P.:trs. Robert Smith"~ Her name Isn't Robert, ~nd she doesn"t belong to him. Already, she has civen up her famll)' name. I would suggest that it would lend a deserved dlgnity to a woman II 1he \\·ere tD bt referred to as Mr1. Louise 1RobertJ Smith. WM. LYON. Ph.D. tial for such a , cornpatible, vJt!-1 combinaUon &ince the Southland be1an its 1apld W'Da~~tion a dozen years ago, Properly planned, It could be an historic, esthetic lihowplace for rest, recreation and enjoyment of genera- tions yet to come. City ~ff~c~als are. \~Orking on it, but there is a good deal the tnd1v1dual c1t1zen can do to help at this stage by writing to state Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) and Assemblyman Robert L. Burke (R-Hunting· ton Beach) by Jetter or postcard. They have local offices listed in the telephone dll'ectory. P eople of Distinction Distinguished people in many fields of endeavor make the Orange C.oast their home. The Orange County ·Press Club has just saluted 17, picked by men and women of the local media as 1970 Headliners of thf? Year. for notable achievements. Unanimous pick (or star billing as Woman of the Year was Coron~ del Mar's Ruby Keeler, who ended a 41 ·year retirement with a smash comeback on Broad· way, She is joined by El Toro POW wife Carole Hanson· legendary av iation pioneer Frank Tallman; .nationai cham~ion. U.C. ti:v ine Swimryier Mike Martin: Newport Beach s 1nlernat1onal yachting champion William P. Ficker and eminent space scientist Krafft Ehricke, of Laguna Beach. They join a distinguished parade ot county resi· dents honored by the local news media in recent years. And all Orange County joins in the salute. c • NATO Troop Strength Battle Continues Mansfield Is Still Not Satisfied WASHINGTON -Less than lwo months before the Senate erupted into a critical dispute over Sen. M i k e Mansfield's proposal for removing U.S. troops from Europe. the Pentagon was explicitly warned that the troop con· troversy could flare out of control an the Senare floor. The warning was issued behind closed doors by Sen. John C. Stennis, 0-Miss., the txperience<I chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Ironicall y, Stennis \\'as the floor leader who had to quell the St.nate uprising "'hen , to the Nixon administration's e x pressed surprise. the troop controversy broke dur ing debate on extendiilg the military dri!fl. Stennis interrupt.cd ·J a I e M a r c h testimony by Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor to caution that. as a Jong lime supporter of NATO, he "'as conce rned that a troop debate might break loose in the Senale and become ··uncontrollable." He said the Pentagon should be withdraw. ing non-combat troops from the 300,000 now stationed in Europe. TRE SENATOR also suggested that the Unittd States might give NATO allies a year's ad vance warning that it was going to \\'ilhdraw a specific number of troops from the NATO support force and thus ease the impact in Europe. , ! Allen-Golds1nith .. Resor, apparently unimpressed by the Stennis alert. repUed that there would bt cinly 1mall savings from bringing troops home. He 11dded that the presence of some 525,000 troops and dependents in Europe accounted for a little less than a billion dcillars of the big deficit in the U.S. balance or payments. In the end. thanks to Stennis and 3 strange assortment cif allies ranging from Dean Acheson to Leonid Brez.hnev, ~1 ansfield's proposal was rejected. The Senate vo te. a rather easy 61 to 36, v."as interpreted as a victory for President Nixnn . The Preside nt will be mistaken, however. if he concludes that. he has really won anything big or if he assumes that last week"s Senate vote has really settled the troops controversy. He had, in fact, won no more than an initial skirmish in "'hat promises to be a con· linuing battle ov~r troop strength in Europe. OEMOCRATTC . LEADER Mansfield has made it clear that he will raise the issue again If \\'ilhdrawals do not materialii.e in lthe negotiations envisioned by Brezhne\' s fortuitous .statement. Pa.radoxically1 it was the Russian leader's hopefbl comment "M'hlch really "·on the day f(f Mr. Nixon and his NATO poH<y. •\ There rem~s a Senate ·sentiment, running to nr4-ty more. than 36 votes. which favors Sfme withdrawal from the U.S. NATO forte that ha11 beft1 substant- ially unchange4 for 20 year!i, That sen- timent should rtt be undereslmaled. Had the Riss1ans not n v 11 d rd Czechoslovakia in 1968. the S nate might ha ve spearheaded a move for CC1n· gressionfllly-ord1red NATO troops red,ut· !Jons al the lime, The late Sen. Richard 8. Russell, D..Ca .. rwas ready then tn lend hi~ towering ~sllge: to a re:isonable trnop 11·ithdra"M·Al, If negotiation, with the \'larsa w Pa ct d.-. not begin r<\fler quickly. nf if they drag along wil k no results. a new Mansfield {nitialue could ha ve a wholly differe,nl outcome. WHY SURPR15E'! -It should also concern President Nixon th at the top- echelons of his administration were caught by surprise when Marisfield acted to lie the troop reduction proposal to the draft bill. Even if Resor relayed no signal from the forthright Stennis eommenf.!l, there \\'as plen!y of advance w11rning. Mansfield announced publicly J n December that he would not be sa~isfied with a me re: expression of Senate sen· timent on the troop issue this lime. The Democratic leader said he would act tet force the removal ol some of th• NATO garrison in the new Congress. All the evidence is that administration leaders at the Capitol passed the word that a showdown rnuld come quickly, as soon as the recent dollar speculation focused public atlent.ion on the continuing balance of paymenl.3 deficit. TH.E EVIDElli"CE IS, in fact, !hat with warnings abundantly at hand, the Nixon \Vhile House was slmply unimpressed. l.ike a military headquarters supplied with good intelligence but unable lo in· lerpret it. Mr. Nixon 's \Vh ite House could not believe an im partant legislalil'e batllt1 was in prospect. The incident serVes as a reminder that the Nixon White House. unlike the White House under Johnson and Kennedy, ha.!1 no policy-level advisers who were trained ~t ~Capitol and are quickl y capable of Judgmg. from 1 variety of confusing reports, just what is going to happen in the House -or. especially, in tht AOmetimes erratic &!nate. By Robert S. Allen Navy Hides Costly Helicopter Goof \\'ASHJNGTON -The Navy is sluck "'ilh defeclive flight decks and other ff..ulty helicopter facilities on more than l:Jll of its ships. The 740 drnne helicopters built for the ships have either crashed, been crated and stored or otherwise retired from their anli·submarine work. In the process. the Navy has ! q u a n· dered almost SI bil· lion in public funds. The .admirals have hidden the magn i· tude of this loss from Congress and the nation. E v e n more oulragf()us. the Na vy is slllJ building the faulty gear into it.s newest, proudest destroyers. The drone choppers themsel ves were phased out in 1966. They were suppased lo clatter up from the ship platforms, zero in on subs and dispatch them wllh torpedo bambs. Instead, the drones plummeted into the sea like rotten apples in a windstorm . or disappe;ire:d inlo the blue, never to be seen again. THE UNr.tANNED era.f t. called DASH for Drone Anti·Submarine Helicopter, even had ba.d luck on the ground. Three were burned up tn truck accidents. For reasons only the Navy knows, one cif the~ Edsels of the air v.·as consigned to the Smithsonian museum . \\'t learned of the bUli-0n-dollar boon- doggle from a classified Navy report pttpatied by trouble shooter Rear Am. John Bulkeley. The Na\)' h11d good 811 Ge orge ---, Dear George: M)' wife hasn't spoken to me In mon! than seven "''teks now and this ds the third time l'\•e writtt.n IO you abClut I!. SILENT TREATMENT 0ellf S.T.: Ytt. Jt Is -Ole third time. Just how lone do you plan to 1loat about Lhll sltualion. •nyhO\\'? Jack Anderson •. reason to hastlly classify this 168-page document. Jn it, Bulkeley sizzled on discovering an "uncertified helo platfcirm" an the USS Knox, one of a spanking new group of destroyers. He also turned up a "useless ... hangar and Jp.5 fueling system. "DASH ... PUn'ORM can only be us- ed as a Vert Rep pick up," he growled, meaning that choppers can hover to pick up or drop supplies, but caMot safe ly land on 1he platform s. The Admiral wrote Iha! 1he Na1·y. not the conlrac·ors, "'ere to blamt'. "Government Re~pnnsible'' \\'as his terse judgmen! on the ~oof. \\'e che<.·ked other Navy !ihi11s lo find nut whether the long·defu n<"t DASH system h::td been built into t1em . We. founrl more. than l!Hl ships with 1um plat· fnrms, faulty ha.1gars, and useless con- trol rooms. The ships equipped to h11nrlle "Orthles.~ drone s, according to ano the r Internal Navy document. reads like a "W10'1 Who in lhe U.S. Fleet." A!t10NG THESE are the destro"er USS J. P. Kennedy, the vaun!ffl nuclear destroyer USS Truiton and e v e n destroyer tenders Uke the USS 1Dixie. Boring the Bartender Remarks thal a bartender gets tired of hear ing : •·\Vhat do ~·ou ha ve to do l.o gel a drink an the houst here-get a ladder and climb up on the roof:'., "Yoo kflQw those 10 different drinks the ladies at the back table ordered. Alfie:' ~ \Yell. hold 'em. They'\'e. all changed their minds 11gain ." "When I feel I've had enoui;:h ta drink. i .. .::.. -' -1 .:~ ' .... -:..;:\ \-,,.. ,/ ashore at ~t1ami rich." ,YOU won't ha vt' to tell mr. I'll tell you.'' "Did ~OU know Ult Pilgrim fathtrs landed "'here they riid because the :itayflower had run out of ~er? If they , had had a ftw more ke_gs <1board tl1ey m1gl1t have come BeRch and alt died "\'OU r.1EAN YOU oever ht.ard of an Eskimo TeRrdrop~ Well. first you-." "I'm not asking you to INd· my tl rlnk, Alfie, but don't )'OU think you ought lo pour 1t least tnoua:h \o cover the bottom r t Hal Boyle ·-· of lhe glass?" "\Veil. happy daze. l alwa ys say, bat do you al\\'ays say!'' "I can \\'hip anybody at the bar hallmr sii.e-or even smaller." "I know you've htllird all my old troubles . Alfie, but OOw v.·ould you like to be the first to listen to a couple ol my new ones~·· "Put th is ooe on the culf. too. Alfie, and when my ship comes ln the flr1I tab I" JI pay is yours." "\10U ~tEAN vou Mt\'er heard of Chin ese Singsong Punch? "'ell, first you-." · "Tht 111.st lhrtt rounds \\'Pre ror the rn11d. \\.h11 t'IJ "·e make this one for :·· "lf"s a lnng time bel\\'etn drinks. A!rle. Too long .If yciu ask me.'' , "If you had lo get arthr itis, Allie, ...,·hy did you have to cet It in yoor pourin& arm?" Some had been modemized 1-1•1th DASH platforms at huge expense long after the program was officially declared a flop. Shamefaced Na vy exper!s explained privately to my associate , Les Whitten , lhat barnacle~ncrusted adm irals had in· sisted an building the ships' plalformit ~·ithout eve r being sure thal lhe drones would work. When the unmanned choi> pers flopped into the sea, the admiralr kept building more platforms in the hope that a new helicopter could be developed lo use !hem. But the new helicopter pro- gram also fizz.led. NO"'· THE NA VY is pra ying that .still 11nother llght-weight helicopter, or a heavier chopper "'iii wnrk. In either case, the old DASH facilities would ha ve to bt mod ified at exlra cost lo !he taJ:payer. Officially, the Navy told u1 that !he cost of the debacle was way below ll billion. But It acknowledged Iha! :186 of the rirones had been lost. mos!ly through .. crashes. The rl'st ha ve been mothballed .<1t even more expense to the U.S. Treasury, or pressed Into makeshift IJmited duties. "Maybe,'' said onf' N11vy wag gloomily, "we can pul wheels on them and use thrm for go-carl.3," <'j ----~~ Friday. Ma y 28, 1971 The editorial pag1 of the Dail 11 PiWi 1cieks to inform and 1tlm- u/ate readi!!!r.s by prtsenting this newspaper's opinion.s and com. mentory on topic1 of in11rt1i 0 11d .'ignifico11ct , by providing a for um for tht expr11.sion of our reodtrs' opinions. and b11 prl'.Stllting tht dlv1rs1 vftw- pain ts of lnformP.d ob.,et"Wr.s a11d spoke1m1n on topic.s Of tht dav. Robert N. Weed, Publisher .. ·I ' • • .. ) .. " ' ·: Saddleha~k EDITION VOL 64, NO. 127, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES OU e 'Matay ,IHore' Due'l Yuba City Body Count Hits 20 YUBA CITY <UPI) -The Sutter Coun- ty sheri!f said today "many" more gra ves n1ay still be uncovered in the orchards along the Feather River where the bodi es of 20 mass murder victims have already been found. Deputies using a trench digger con- tinued their gri m work, more than a v.·eek since the first bod ies turned up and two days after Juan Corona, a 37-year-old 6 Counselors For Smnmer Job s Needed A community-wide recreation program is being laooched in El Toro with the 6earch for counselors for various sum- mer activities . Interviev.·s arc being taken on Saturday 1l 10 a.m. in Royal Savings and Loan in El Toro. Three girls and three boys will be hired who reside in either El Toro or Lake For· rest. 'They must be between the ages of J6 and enjoy working with younger children. The summer program . finance by County Service Arca funds in El Toro, is administered gy the San Joaquin Elemen· tary School District and coordinated by the Aliso Valley Homeowners. Bill Milan, president of the homeowners, will in- terview candidates for the position. The program i! conducted by two senior and l\.,.o junior counselors at Aliso, administered by the San Joaquin Elemen- tary school children throughout the sum· mer. Fiesta Advance Tickets on Sale Ad vance-sale tickets lo rides during the 1nnual Fiesta La Christianita carnival "'iii go on sale at San Clemente businesses next week. The presale. said sponsori ng chamber of commerce spokesmen. would mean a savings of 75 cents for a block of live carnival ride bids. Booth pr ice during the fiesta days will be 35 cents per ticket. Under the pres.ale arrangements five tickets will sell for one dollar. The advance sale is new to the fiesta this year. said chamber aides. The annual celebration of California'~ first Christian baptism will take place during the second weekend in July. Or~::a:••t Weather After a few drizzly days, ll'll be sunn y and 'varmer for the holiday weekend. 1-ligh temperatures along the coast should get up to 70 de- grees. INSIDE TODAY Tl1e big band are back at Dis· neyland this holiday 1ceekend and tht:y'V£ brought their favor- ite vocalills with them. Today's Weekender has pict'ures and a story obout Ille bash. ''"~ ,. '"""' " Ct1Uor11!t • CttttM111t U1 I CIHllllttl )1..U -C1111k1 II c,.11wtt4 11 Detfto Ntlkll 11 1:d""IM l"tM • •lfl-• 1'·11 Hlf9KH't U """ Ll fltf" ll M1i!M• • Mt 11 11\ llf¥fCI 11 """''" ,,.,. ,,,,111111 ..... ,. Hllll'll .. N ... 1 4'1 Ori-(-If II RnlllH'lllfl 1J.'4 '-'' ,.,,, 11tt• Mlftltll Jt.11 Ttltvlllltl 11 TM1'9r1 ,,.,. Wtllll9t 4 Wtffllll'I Ntwt IJ·lf W1fl~ N""' 44 W.tltllfff 1Wl farm labor contractor, was arrested and charged with murder. Sheriff Roy Whiteaker, under 1 court order not to disc uss evidence, refused to give report ers any information about how he linked Corona to the slayings of the middle-aged transient farm hands whose hacked bodies were found in the orchards and along the river banks of this central California farming region. The sheriff, however, said he expected the digging crews to find more bodies. They are working "in an area where there may be many graves," he said. A small "sketch or diagram" was found in Corona's home but the sheriff said it was not a map to the graves. He 5aid the sites were chosen because of in- dentations in the ground . He said he hoped that the digging was near an end but "as long as \\'e keep making recoveries we will continue to search." \Yhiteaker refused to say whether a transient picked up in nearby Marysville as a material witness in the case had given any information. But he said the man was not in jail. Five more of the victims were ten- tatively identified. The sheriff &aid they were Don Smith, of Atlanta, Ga.; Bill Kemp, Baton Rouge, La.; James Howard, Jonas Smallwood and Elliott Riley, for whom no home cities were known. Earlier two victims were identified as Kenneth Edward Whitacre, 40, of Alameda, Cali f., and Sigurd Beirman, 63 of Marysville. All the victims were between 40 and 63 years old and were believed to be transient farm workers. One may have been a Negro but the others were all "anglos." Whitaker said he had determined JIO special signifi cance to the fact tha t none of the victims were Mexicans like Corona. Corona . fa ther or four small girls, v.·as arrested early Wednesday after the ninth body had been unearthed. Court records show Corona was com · milled by a brother· to a state mental hospital for three monlhs in 1956 as being "confused and disoriented . ... . (suf· fering) delusions and hallucinations." Psychiatrists diagnosed him as a schizophrenic, He was released from Dewitt State Hospital at Auburn, Calif., as "recovered" on April 18, 1956. orncials have not disclo sed any ap- parent motive for the slayings. Deputies, using a trench digging backhoe at times and puffing cigars to kill the stench or dead bodies, removed the hacked remains rrom shallow grave!! into hearses for transport to 1 mortuary in neighboring Marys vi lle. Jdenlifications have been hampered by the transient life or the farm worker~. many of whom had not been ir1 tou ch "'ith their fan1ilie1 for years. The victims were hacked in the back or the head with a heavy, sharp instrument, possibly a machete or meat cleaver. All were buried on their backs, with arms raised in a supplicating position and shirts pulled over their bloody beads. New Saddleback Valley Chamber Officers Named Two new officers and four new direc· tors have been elected by the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce. New officers will be Edward Olson, flrst vice president, and James Bierlein, second vice president. Serving as director will be Franklin L. Allnutt, James Decker, John Swetech and Leonard Whipple, all El T o r o busineumen. other officers lnclude Tom Winget., president : Arlttha lforlon, secretary; Dr. Herbert L. Be ire le, treasurer. Other directors include R I c h a r d Birchall, Chester Briner. Bob D1nneron, Everett Hart, Vincent LaVertu, Harold Ledbetter, William Wdb:, and James Ma· rUon, chamber manager. The cha mber will meet four times • yeJr in general session and every month for board meclings. The next general meeting will lake pl11ce in Scplt:mbcr. • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 28, 197J • ur er ' r1 ' Special Ba:ard Diving for golf bbl'-s in pond at Hidden l~ills Coun· try Club, Jacksonville, Fla., may be hazardous to health in the future. Stale game and fi sh officer llobert Brantley had a little problem convincing 1 i- foot alligator he should make his new home at the golf course. The gator was brought to the links after residents in Lake City complained that he was crawling into their backyards. D01cn the Mission Trail Academic Honors At Viejo Higl1 ~1ISSION VIEJO -Recipients of ~1i!lsion Viejo High School's highest academ ic honors at graduation were an- nounced today. Tied for highest honors were four students: Teresa Lyons, Pam Matsuoka, Steve McConnell and John Nimno. High honors also will be awarded to Lucy Dunn, Richard Gillenwaters, John Long and Suzan Murphy . The students will be honored during an assembly June 1 at which lime all atudents winning scholarships and other academic awards will be named. • Jr. llig/1 Da11ce r.tISSJON VIEJO -Junior high school students in ~1ission Viejo are invited to a dance tonight. • The event will hail the coming or sum· mer and will take place in the Monlan- oso Recreation Center from 7 to 9:30 p.m. 7 to 9:30 p.m. The cost is 50 cents for members of the Recrealion Center and $1 for non members. " • B each Part11 Set LAKE FOREST - A Memorial Day beach party will be hosted hy the Beach and Tennis Club for Lake Forest teen· agers. Nixon Reported Plamiilig 5-<lay Trip to Clemente P.resident Nixon ls considering a five. day trip to San Clemente starting perhaps late next week in advance of the celebratf.d White Hciuse wedding of his daughter, Tricia, and Edward Finch Cox. Reports have come from Washington. D.C., in recent days that the chief ex- eeulive had been planRing to exchange the hubbub of pre-wedding arrangements Capistrano Ma11 New Chairman For Boy Scouts \Ves Klusman of San Juan Capistrano has been elected chairman of the El Camino Real District of lhe Orange Empire Boy Scout Council. He succeeds Dana Point resident Rod Holtz in the of· lice. Several committee chairmen also were appointed during the recent district meeting in San Juan. The new chairmen are Robe.rt Bradley of Dana Point, cam· ping ; Ch0rles Bartok of San Clemente, acliviti·es; C. Richard Lemon of Laguna Beach, finance; Edward Saxon of San Juan, public relations, and Michael Johnson of San Clemente, leadership training. The scouting group also mapped plans for the next two months' activities, which will include the annual Cub Scout Olym-- pics set for June 19 at San Clemente Iligh School. Membership figures as of this month show 1,548 boys are active in district scout activities, with rolls expected to swell to 1,811 by the end of the year. for a lvorking vacation at La Casa Pacifica. Mrs. Nixon first mentioned the chantts for the trip a week ago, but official White House spokesmen would not confirm the report. Highly rtliab\e local sources have said that the trip ''has been kicked around" in Washington for the past several days. The first lady mentioned to a White House reporter th at Mr. Nixon migtit be considering a stopover in Tulsa. Olla., on the ltip wesl, which could take place June 5. According to initial reports of the im- pending visit, the President would return to the capital on June 10 -well enough in advance of rehearsals for the wedding rites scheduled for the White House Rose Garden. The Nixons' last visit to the South Coast was a long weekend early this month highlighted by an ornate ceremony at Camp Pendleton where the Com- mander-In-Chief greeted troops of the 1st Marine Division returning from Vietnam combat. Children Car Seals Ruled to Be Unsafe WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) warned parents today that some children's car seats provide no protection and could even aggravate injuries in a crash or sudden stop. The FTC advised parents shopping for car seats to check tbe date of manufact- ure-on the label and' buy only one made after April 1, when safety standards became effective. It said some hazardous models made before April I still were ·being sold. Despite Controversy Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS 0 Ex-cellmate Of Suspect Testifies By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 Ill• o.u ..... 1i.1 , .. ,, A stunned courtroom audience heard a former Orange County Jail inmate testify Thursday that Gig Peters. a rormer Hun- tington Beach lHgh Schoo l honor.s stu- dent. felt "psychedelic shov.·ers or golden electricity fall on his sho ulders" after allegedly murdering hus parents. Peters, 21, appeared for a pre-trial bearing at \Vest Orange Count y Judicial District Court Thursday before Judge Celia Baker. He was ordered to s~nd trial on two charges of murder 1n Superior Court June 11. The jail inmate, a 19-year-<ild youth with a bushy red beard and a penchant for street language neologisms, was iden. tified as Fred Wheeler, a transient. He told the court lhal he and Peters lihared an isolation cell in jail shortly after Peters was charged with strangli ng his mother, Flora , a teacher at Corona del Mar's Lincoln School, and stabbing his father, Charles, April 21. "He told me he strangled his mom and 1tabbed his dad, in that order," Wheeler testified, tugging at his mustache.. ''He said it took a long lime to get hi! mom dead. She scratched him and he bit her on the hand." As the defendant was guarded by two bailiffs, Wheeler further told the court lhat Peters admitted to .the slayings almost immediately after they became known to each other. "I asked him, 'Did you do ii?' and he said 'Sure~." Wheeler told the court, in- dicating that Peters appeared to be swaying and shimmying to imaginary music during the conversation. "He said after he stabbed his dad, he was getting a real buzz on. He said he felt psychedelic showers of golden elee. lricity fall on his shoulders after he did it. I asked him if he wa.s loaded and he said he was loaded on acid for eight months, but not then." Danny, 4, Making Fine Recovery After Surgery Four-year-old Danny Jones of Sa n Clemente was report ed making ''ex· cellcnt'' progress today in his recovery from highly critical open-hea rt surgery and a bout with pneumonia . family spokesmen said Danny pass ed another tense period Thursday v•hcn a respirator which has helped him breathe for several weeks was removed for more than three hours. Physic ians had ex pressed fears the youngster would have formed a. dependence on the machine which has been attached to a tracheotomy. Danny underwe nt the d a n g e r o u ~ surgery earlier th is month for repair of several openings in his heart -hole.! which he has had since birth. President Nixon had wished the youngste r well dur· ing a brief visit al the Weslern White House. After the surgery Danny contracted pneumonia. but the in r I am mat I on , spokesmen said, is clearing up rapidly. The boy remains under intensive care al Children's Hospital in Los Angeles. The event will lake place fro m noon lo HJ p.m. at Aliso Beach in .Laguna . Cost for food and beverage is SI per person . Sign up can be made al the club office, San Onofre B.luffs Opening Boys Clnh Carnival At Capistrano Plaza The Soulb Coast Area Boys Club carnival opened for a Memorial Day weekend run Thursday evening at the Capistrano Beach Plaza. The carnival, ottering several rides. plus booths and food stands, will be tbt club's major (und-r11ising event to finance i:umme r activJOcs for youth! throughoUt the South Coast area . Despite the uncertainty over plans for coastal territorf immediately upcoast, San Oaofre Bluffs State Beach will prob· ably open on an unimproved basis by July t. Local area manager Jewell N. Caughell B<iid that funds for planning and develop- mtnt of the rtcently leastd 3.5-mtle beach are in lhe 1tate's bud&et for next fiscal year. The opening. he s(reiscd, would be on about the same basis as the inaugural li:astcr Week use of lhe rugiwd $<'C\ion of coastline. · ~ . - I Chemical tollets will provide the only sanitary faciliUes, and no potable water Is expected lo be brought In. U&e at the beach dW'lng the Easter holidays was substantial, officials said. Included in the funds next fiscal year would be money for sewage and water services ultimately planned for the area. Ultimate planffirii of the Mach area is 1Ull cloudy.· he alress~. because or the conrusJon aurrounding President Nixon.'" declaratlqn J111st March lhat 2.6 mlles or beach lmmedlitcly north of San Onorre Bluffs ,.,.ould be granted to the state a1 well. A powtrful Congressional committee has recommended against Including lhe Marine Corps Enlisted ~len·s Beach clut» in the offer. Elimination of that are• v.•ould make level a c c e s 1 ac- quisition tough. State pa rks planners have sald that only If suitable accr:ss could be found would the new beach be suitable for maximum use. Presently steep trails have ber:n cut for p~estrlan Jcccss to the scenic beaches. I i.o.IL Y PJL(l I SC Joint Usage Of El Toro Discussed By ALAN DIRKI N C» "'' D•UY f'IWI Sltlf The ghort-range sol ution t.o O'ange C.Ounty's aviation needs is for joint use of El Toro f\.1CAS by tni!ltary and com• mercial jels. Long.range problems would be solved by creating an international airport at camp Pendleton. This is tht view of Roger Slates, chairman of the Orange County Airport Commission, as he outlined lhem in a talk at a civic luncheon in Huntington Beach \Yednesday. Al the luncheon, spoll!Ored by the Hun- tington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors. Slates also called for lhe county lo create an airport authority. ''The biggest problem is that the supervisors and members of county com· miss.ions are all polili cal animals," he said. ·'They can·t al ways vote their con· \'ic tions.'' He said it was often the uninformed voter that influenced county decisions on airports, but added that "counties are not built "·ith a faint heart." "\Ve need to create an airport .authori ty !hat would take so me heat from the ~lected people," Slates commented. The airport commissione r argued that !he El Tore) facility could be converted mlO a joint use airport in nine months al ' rost of from S3 million lO $4 mi llion, "a irop in the buckel" compared to the !Stimated $250,000 cost of building a new ·>ne. He said that a "tremendous amount" of ~avy and Marine jets were flying out of ~I Toro at prese nt and claimed Utere •'Ould be no increase in noise levels. No private planes would be allowed to 1se El Toro. They would use Orange ::otinty Airport which would become a 10n-jet facility. Slates considered that Camp Pend leton •·as the only logica l site for an in- ern ationa l airport in Orange County. He ~id the county could get it from the ederal government for nothing if the and was ever released. The a1rporl commissioner concluded by ;aying that if Camp Pendleton became an nternational jet airport, jets could be lhased out of El Toro. Doheny Parking Lot to he Used As Camping Area A long strip of beachfront parlting lot it Doheny State Park Beach has been 1ressed into use as temporary camping ,rea during summerlong rebuilding al he facility. But despite the inconvenience to 'isitors, the new area manager of the tale parks 6ystem predic ts ca pacity ummer crowds in the camping area. "Reereational camping is just so hard o find, that people seem satisfied \\ith vhatever they get," said Je\\·ell N. ;a ugh ell. He said that the summer season eservations "·ould no! be accepted iecau.se of the construclion progra m; hat campi ng \\'ould be on a first-O:lme, V-St-served basis. Construction workers are rebuilding oermanent campsites and restrooms at he park. The temporary camping area might be tsed for the same use after the su mmer :ons!ruction, Caughell said, possibly as IJl area to accept overflow groups of :ampers. OIAHGl COAST DAILY PILOT OAANG:Z. COAST f'Uf1Ll$HIHG-COMPANY Jt obett N. Weed PrniO..,t end Puol!iMr Jecli: Jt. C ur1ev v ;c.1 Pr"'lclen1 """ G-tfll••I Mtn1;tr Tho11111 Kt tvil EO•IOf Tho11111 A. Murpl'li"' Mtfllfl"ll Ed•""' Ch•lles H. Loos ll:i•"-••d P. Nill ,AH(lll"• M111aglrlt EOl!ora ..... u11• .. Miii Offlc• 212 f or11t Avt"u• .M.tlli119 1ddr1n: P.O. Ber 666, t?65? S.11 Cle1H11'-Offk• 305 North El C1111i110 R.11 1, 9267? Otlttt OHien CMlt Mr••· m Wtd ll l V Str ... 1 NtwllO•I lie~<~' ll~ lll1wr1t>r! ll""'"e.enl' HUllTl"Jl!Clfl ... ,~: PllS ••• ,~ lloultvt rd Hawaii Nuptials Wedding bells will ring June 13 in Hawaii for Michael Reagan, 26, son of Gov. Reagan and Pamm Putnam, 19, daughter of Atlanta Fal· cons' assistant football co ach, Duane Putnam. Young Reagan's mother is actress Jane Wyman, the governor's first wife. Re,agan Pledges State Educatwn Tax Credits By TOP.1 BARLEY Of ll!t Dafl1 l'lMr Sltll Gov. Ronald Re aga n pledge d Thursday night in Anaheim his support for what he said \\'ere "definite moves to provide substantial tax credits for Califorcia's educational institutions.'' The governor told more tha n 800 guests at a ·testimonial dinner for Orange Coun· Marine Admits Attack on Girl; A waits Sentence A Camp Pendleton Ma rine arrested in San Clemente on allegations that he raped a 14-year-old girl in a motel room afte_r the child's mother encouraged the seJ:Ual assauU has plead ed guilty to rape charges in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. McP.1illan ordered Marine Robert Dean Smith, 21, to return to hi.s courtroom June 14 for sentencing thc,t could put him in state prison for the next 10 years. He called for a probation depa rtment report on the young defen· dant. The victim's 58-year-old mother Is cur· rently undergoing psychiatri c testi ng and is due to be returned before Judge ,.1cMillan for further court action June 15. She also faces rape charges. San Clemente po lice said the woman took Smith and her daughter lo a loca l motel room and actively en couraged the ,.farine to rape the girl with a view of •·calming her down." Officers said the girl was raped on at least two occasions, both of which were sanctioned by her mother. Police were alerted to the Incidents by the victim's sister. who allegedly told of- ficers that the ,.1arine was a family friend who was talked into the sexual at- tacks on the daughter by her mother. It is alleged that Smith too k the mother's auto and credi t cards afte r committing the secon d offense against lhe girl. He "'as found aslee p in the car in Gila, Ariz .• and re turned to Camp Pendleton authorities fo r prosecution. Thurston School Will Star on, TV Laguna Beach·s Innovative Thurston Intermediate School \viii sta r in a 10- minute segment of the CBS-TV Charutel 2 &ix o'clock news program ~1onday. A Channel 2 television crew visited the &:hool Thursday lo photograph the unique plant and interview students and teachers on the flexible scheduiing program. Decision to feature the school was made after a member of !he television team visited Thurston on its recent International Day an{ decided the story of its unusual plant and program would mterest viewers elsewhere. ty indu~trialist J. Simon Flour that a tax break fnr the state's universities and col· leges "might be the best and most ac· ceptable form of government aid .,.,.e can come up with." Reagan hinted at the possibility of tax relie! during a talk almost entirely devoted to what be said was "the im- perative and vital need to sustain private colleges that have traditionally provided the executives and business leaders who are the backbone of oor nation." But be made it clear that the tax relier program be suggested would be extended to California colleges and universities in both the private and public sectors. The go vernor refused to elaborate on his proposal during questions that folio"'· ed the testimonial dinner. He praised FLuor as ··a man wbo has selflessly insured the welfare of his fellow men and those who work for him and with him throughout a business career that has enriched all those wbo know him in a cultural sense alone.'' Floor's work as chairman of the Chap- man College board was "typical of a man who has shown much more than most men what the private school can achieve in its contriblltion to our way of Jlie," Reagan said. The dinner, Clrganize d by Oiapman College trustees, drew guests from the bus iness, educational and show business fields to the An ahe im hotel. Art Link.letter was master of ceremonies and the guest list inc luded President Richard Nixon's brother, Don ald Nixon C1f Newport Beach, the Andy Devines. the Don Defores, Sen. J ames Whetmore and Irvine Company President William Mas.on. A telegram dictated by President Nixon in the White House earlier that day was also read during the series of tributes le Fluor. Fluor was presented with a painting of himself in oil s and it was announced that 30 S500 scholarships bearing his name would be made available to sch ools in the Independent Colleges of America educ a· tional organization. Citron, County's Tax Collector Handed Setbacks Orange County Tax Collector Robert Citron was a double loser before the Board of SuperviS-Ors this week. First he lost the right to place a $25,000 microfilming job with an outside firm tn his now notorious battle with county Data Services DireclOr Robert Fanner. ( Later, Citron lost in a fight w! Supervisor William Phillips o v e ne1vs papers selected for publication of delinquent tax li sts. The lax collector was finally forced to add lhe Fullerton News-Tribune to four other papers he wanted approved. Citron had proposed to print the June 8 list in the DAILY PILOT, the Anaheim Bulletin, the Orange County Evening News and I.he Orange City Newa • Authorities TrY. to Curb Highway Holiday Deaths Kational, state and local agencies throughout California today "·ere gearing up to keep holiday pleasure high and death. inJury and property damage tow over the r.1emorial Day Weekend. The roster includes the California Highv.·ay Patrol. local polict, state and n11t1onal parks services. plus lifeguards, marine agencies and many others. 11 your plans aren't made, a s!ale pnrks official offl'rs lh1s 11dvice: slay home. Prc·reservatlons have left only 15 of th e ttllte ·s 90 parkll \\'1th camping facilities .not filled to capacity, with little chance o[ them remaining so by ~urday morning. "We're urging people not to try to get into the remalnJ ng parks," said one .!ipokesmen, National parks facilities will be available only on a first.co me, firs t-serv- ed basis and all \\'ill probably be rnled . Highway safety la\\'S \\'ill be enforced to 1he max imum degree to keep accidents down, wit" as many CHP (lffice rs in thfl fitld as can bt deployed. Authorities expect all reerealional racilllles lo bt crowded. with su nny i nd warmer "·e11ther anticipated to draw capacJty be•ch cro11o•ds too. Comedian Jessel Talks In Tustin lly PATRICK BOYLE Of "'' 09/IJ' "''-' Iliff The short man with • big nose &iu!Oed Into the nearly empty aud itorium and the sparse crowd immediately began to ap- plaud. "You're not too many, but you're oh so good," George Jessel said. "I've been married to more people than are here tonight.·• And so. the 73-year-old entertainer, his hair slicked straight ba ck and carrying a shiny black cane, began to do that which has made him famous -tal k. In the hour that follo\\·ed, he didn't get lo the an· nounced topic of his remarks -"Enter· talnment and l h e Communications Media·• -but he touched on almost every other subject, much t.o the en- joy ment of the sparse audienct. Held Thursday night at the Foothill High School auditorium , Jessel's talk was the last of the ''Artists' Lecture Series" sponsored by Saddleba<'Jc: Community College. About 50 people, mostly middle aged adults, attended the free event. Known as an actor, entertainer and movie producer, Jessel came dressed in a p.5eudo--mililary unliorm , wearing three general's atars given him by Gen. George Patton. Among lhe various medals on his chest, he pointed out the Distinguished Service Medal presented him by Gen. Creighton Abrams during a recent visit to Vietnam. Intergpersed with .several ris<fue jokes which kept the people laughing, Jessel made many serious ttmarks on the cur· rent state of world affairs. These are a few of the things he said. On Vietnam -"If we don't sto p the Commies somewhere, they will be righ t here in the Foothill auditorium. The Democratic senators opposed to the war have entered a word into our minds we have never known before -fear," ''In all my trips t.o Vietnam, I have never seen a boy under Ute influence of drugs or drunk." He .said the morale was "very high" and that most of the men re- enlist. On the William Calley affair and My Lal: "We never know what we will d1> under the stress of circumstances. We give the Vietnamese everything and when we leave they throw hand grenades at us." ' Jessel r;a id a gr enade had been thro "·n at him, but had failed to explode. ''If they hadn't stopped me, I would have killed that IO-year.old boy." On law and order -"Some (If our la"'' are as out of date as rubbing flint together to build a fire." Curtis F. Moss Rites Saturday Services will be held at 11 :30 a.m. Satu rday in St. George's Episcopa l Cha pel, El Toro, for Curtis F. Moss, 92 ~· Calle Ar agon, Laguna Hills, who died Wednesday at South Coast Community Hospita l. He was 69. Mr. Moss, a four·year resident of Laguna Hills, is surv ived by his widow, Vivian; a son, James G. of Wi nnetka, JU.; a sister, Grace Lash of Sarasota, Fla.: and by three grandchildren. He was a member of St. Georgc·s Church and of the Elks aod Kiwanis lntemational. Befort his retirement, Mr. ~1oss was sales manager for Kona Com- munications. The Rev. Frederic k C. llammond will offic iate at the Saturday morning services, which will be followed by burial at El Toro Cemetery. McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary, directors. DAILY f'ILOT Sl9ff f'ri. FATHER SPARROW EXAMINES HIS FUTURE BROOD Randy Henniger Keeping Incubator ~t 100 Degrees 'Sparrow Dad' Attempting To Hatcl1 Five Small Eggs By FR EDERICK SCHOEMEJIL 01 tht 011!r ,1111 Stiff Randy Henniger, 15, of 790 Nycs Place. Laguna Beach, is becoming something of an orn ithologist in his spare time, as he attempts to hatch five sparrow eggs that he saved fro~· doom over t"·o weeks ago. Randy. ""h e playi ng baseball with David and J es l\1arple of 7fHI Bar· racuda Way. noticed that the l\1arple boy's father. Thomas. \\'as removing the nest ""i!h fi~·e eggs from an· overhang on the roof. ''lie was going to throw the nest out. but we retrieved it and decided to see if ,,...e could hatch the eggs," Randy recall· ed. To facilitate incubation of the five eggs, Randy emptied his fish aquarium, placed the eggs with the nest in the tank, and set up a heat lamp to keep the temperature at 100 degrees. "The body temperature of the sparrow Is 99.9 degree~." Randy explainer!, "so we figured that 100 legrccs would be a good incubalion lemperature." The five eggs, not longer than three quarters of an inch , had been in the aquarium for 17 days \Vcdnesday. The eggs, according to Randy, should hatch between 14 and 18 days alter being laid. ''\Ve're just waiting and hoping, right nov..,·• If the egi::s -or some of them -do hat.ch. it takes another hve days for lhe little birds lo be able lo fly. Randy said they expect only one of !he five lo make it through to maturity. ''Those are the odds nature gives us," he noted. After getting the eggs, Randy called the SPCA for tnform alion on how lo care for them . !'They "·eren "t able to help me -all lhev kno1v about are dogs. So [ 1\•ent to the library and found nothing th:.:::e. as well.'' Finally, Randy asked Laguna Beach High School biology instructQrs John \Vilkerson and Charles Reich for in· formation on caring for sparrow eggs. The tv:o instructors referred Randy to the 11agnolia Bird Farm in Anaheim, \\'here he received most or the in· formati on for caring for the eggs. In addition to the 100 degree tern· pcraturc, the eggs must be turned every ~1~ht hours, i>Q that the embryos will jell properly. ··or course, the eggs are very fragile and should be left alone as much as possible," Randy said. ··rube very happy if only one makes It lhrough,'. said Randy, "'ho is being called "Father Sparrow" by friends and family. VFW Post Honors U.S. War Dead Rites honoring the fallen members or !he U.S. armed forces will be held Mon· day in San Clemente's Old Plaza Park, sponsored by George E. Smith Post 7142 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The Monday Men1orial Day observance \I ill di fer from the many previous years, stressed post officials. because of the change in holiday designations this year. The memorial observance will begin at 10 a.m. and conclude at noon. The program v.'iiJ include participation by a score of local organizations, rlonating floral arrangements. The flowers \Yill be placed at graves of servicemen in local cemeteries at the end of the San Clemente rites. An address is scheduled by Lt. Col Jer· ry Asher of the Army Resfrve with in· vocation and benediction from the Rev. Dan Jordan: A ~iarine Corps firing squad \\'ill deliver a rifle-salute. exforb ~quart ~i -··--.. ~--- CAMPAIGN DESK Wil~ pewler gilt li<ise. Shell behinij iomliou r-doon. 379. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -H~RITAGE MIWPOl:T STOll MIN NIDAT 'TIL t NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wtstcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Prof•1slonal lnt•rlor D•1ignlrs Avall1blt -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co1 't Hwy Phor.a: 494.6551 f'Nllf Toll Ft" Most of 0'0119• Co,11ty-S40·126J ' • . • ) ·' ' ' r ---• • p •• Lag~na Beaeh ' EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stooks .VOL. 64, NO. 127, ~ SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 21, 19?1 TEN CENTS Yuba City Body Count 20, Possibly More YUBA CITY (UPI) -The Sutler Coun· ty &heriff said totlay "many" more graves may still be uncovered in the orchards along the Feather Rive1 where the bodies of 20 mass murder victims have already been found. ~ De~ies using a trench digger 'con· linued ' grim work, more than a \\'eek since e first bodies turned up and two days after Juan Corona, a 37-year-<tld farm labor contractor, was arrested and charged with murder. Sheriff Roy Whiteaker, under a court t rder not to discuss evidence, refused to OU Kids Alo1ie give reporters any Information about ho.,. be linked Corona to the slayings of the middle·aged lrans.ient farm hands whose hacked bodies were found in the orchards and along the river banks of this central California farming region. The sheriff, however, said he expected the digging crews to find more boclles. They are working "in an area where there may be many graves," he said. A small "sketch or diagram'' wa:i; foun d in Corona's home but the sheriff said it was not a map to the graves. He said the sites were chosen because of in- dentations in the ground. He said he e 3 Held on Dope, Child Neglect Laguna Beach narcotics agents in the company or county marshals serving warrants Thursday night arrested five persons suspected of m a r i j u a n a possession at two separate homes. Three Nixon Mulls Coast Visit Next Weeli President Nixon is considering a five. day trip to San Clemente starting perhaps late next 1veek in advance of the celebrated While House wedding of his daughter, Tricia. and Edward Finch Cox. Reports ha ve come from Washington, D.C .• in recent days that the chief ex- t'!cutive had been plaMing to exchange the hubbub of pre.wedding arrangements for a working vacation at La Casa Pacifica. Mrs. Nixon first mentioned the chances for the trip a week ago. but official White House spokesmen "'ould not confirm the report. Highly reliable local sources have said that the trip "has been kicked around " in Washington for the past several days. The first lady mentioned to a \Vhite }louse reporter that Mr. Nixon might be considering a stopover in Tulsa, Okla., on the trip west, which could take place J une 5 According to initial reports of the im· pending visit, the President would relurn to the capital on June 10 -well enough in advance of rehearsals for the wedding rites scheduled for the White House Rose Garden. The Nixons' last visit to the South Coast was a long weekend early this month highlighted by an ornate ceremony st Camp Pendleton \\'here the Com· mander-ln-Chie( greeted lr.:iops of the 1st 1.1arine Divisio n returning from Vietnam combat. Orange Coast Wencher or the five are also booked on child neglect charges. Authorities said the agenls went to 364 Nyes Place at 10 p.m. with the marshals to arrest a man for non·support of his child. The person named in the warrant wa:s not apprehended and police found on- ly three children aged 2, J and 7 alone in the house. While waiting for the children's guar- dian to return, the agents allegedly saw a small quantity of marijuana lying on a table in the bedroom. After about a half hour wait Gregg Stuart Sheldon, 20, of 483 Oak St.. returned to the house and told the officers he was babysitting the three children. A short time later, Elizabeth F. Leeds, 29. a transien t. also arrfved and was soon followed by Donna Lea Campbell, 25, resident of the home and mother or the children, police said. The narcotics agenls took all three into custody on suspicion of possession of marijuana and of child neglect. The three suspects are to be arraigned today at South County Court. The children were released to the custody of a family friend. In a separate incident al 8 p.m. Thurs· day, the agents and marshals went to 2563 Glenneyre St. in search of a narcotics suspect named in a warrant. The suspect was not found, but police ar- rested Beverly Jean Potier, 24, and William George Hooper, 31, both of that address. The agents allegedly found 24 ounces of marijuana at the home. TRACK, FIELD MEET DELAYED Tonight's ClF track and field championshp meet has be en postponed until Monday night at 8 -0·clock because of rain and wet grounds. Cerritos College will still be the site for the meet, which has at. tracted 15 Orange Coast area in· dividuals plus three relay teams from area schools. Si91i Disp11te,... hoped that the digging was near an end bu.t "as Jong as "'"'e keep _making recoveries \\'e will continue to search." Whiteaker refused to say whether a transient picked up in nearby Marysville as· a material witness in the case had given any information. But he said the man "'as not in jail. Five more of the victims were ten· tati vely ide ntified. The sheriff said they \Vere Don Smith, of Atlanta , Ga.; Bill Kcinp, Baton Rouge, i,,a.: James lfoward, Jonas Small"·ood and Elllotl Riley, for \\'horn no home cities were kno1vn . Earlier l\l.'O victims were identified as Kenneth Edward Whitacre, 4tl, of Alameda, Calif., and Sigurd Beirman, 63 of Marysville. All the victims were between 40 and &.l years old and were believed to be transi ent farm workers, One may have been a Negro but the others were all ''anglos.'' Whitaker said he had determined 110 special significance to the fact that none of the victims "'·ere ~1exicans like Corona. Corona. fathrr of four small girls. was arrested early \Vedncsday after the nintb body had been unearthed. Court records show Corona was com- mitted by a brother to a slate mental hospital for three months In 1956 as being "confused and disoriented , , . (suf· !ering) delusions and hallucinations." Psychialrists diagnosed him as a schizophrenic. He was rel eased from Dewitt State 11ospital at Auburn, Calif., as "recovered" on April 18, 1956. Officials have not cUscioSed any ap.- parent motive for the slaylngs. Deputies. using a trench digging backhoe at times and puffing cigars to • ur er ' r1 ' • . ' . . DAIL 'f PILOT Slllf ...... AWARD CALLED A CROWNING ACHIEVEMENT' TO A FINE JUDICIAL RECORD • Judge Bruce Sumner, Chief Justice Tr1ynor ind Judie Franklin G. West ~~~~~~~~~~- Historical Unit Sets First Meet The newly formed Laguna Beach Historical Society will pre.sent its firs t public program Thursday , viewing the Arl Colony through the eyes of a quartet of local history buffs. The 7:30 p.m program in the Woman's Club, 286 St. Ann ·s Drive. will include a film. "The Laguna Beach Story,'' reminiscences of La guna by Genevieve Daniels, Richaro Jahraus, Glenn Vedder and Bea Whittlesey and a presentation ot ''Music o! Old Laguna Beach" by Gwen Yarnell of the Laguna 1'-1oulton Playhouse. Harry Jeffrey, lemporary chairm an of the group, "'ill present a resume. "The }fistorical Soc iety -Where \Ve Go from Here." Refreshments and a social period will follow the program which is open to the public free of charge. ,Jurist Lauded Judge Su1nner Wins Bar Awa.rd Nearly 300 Orange County judges and lawye rs gave Superior Court Judge Bruce Surnncr a tremendous ovation Thursday 1\•hen the Laguna Beach jurist accepted the annual Franklin G. \Vest award fr om its previous recipient, retired California Sut1reme Court Chief Justice Roger Traynor. Watched by retired Superior Court Judge Franklin G. West the jurist whose name "'as given to the Orange County Bar Association 's yearly tribute, Judge Sumner told the SAnla Ana meeting that he was "deeply grateful that my work on the California Constitutional Re vision C'1mmission has ~n so recognized." "T could· not but br imnressed by your lrcme:idf'US rec"rd in other fie11~." he was told by Justice Traynor. "You have served three times In the Legislature, part of that time as a Republi can whip, you have a gtorlous war record and you have served fa ithfully as a , public defender. "This can only be a crowning achieve- ment in such a fine record," the former chief justice said. The legend on the handS-Ome silver tray presented to Judge Sumner records lhat he was the runaway t'!hoice or the bar association as ''an Individual who has rn11de a significant contribution to ad· v:ince and elevate justice and law." Mc was named to the West award after the bar recor,nized that the commission r•1 whi ch he presently serves as chairman has deleted some 30,000 words from a California Conslitulion that once contained 80,000 words. He was recently honored by both houses or the Legislature ror his work on a commission that is now concluding the work it began in 1964. Art er a rew drizzly days, it'll be sunny and 1Yarmer for the holiday weekend. High temperatures along the coast should get up to 70 de- grees. INSIDE TODA\' Sweepstake Winner Cited Deeply moved , Judge Sumner asked !he meeting to recognize that some 60 Californians had worked with him on the commission and that his fellow judges on the Superior Court had willingly stepped i11 to help him out when his duties took The big band are back at Dis· ne yland tins ho/ich:iy weekend and they've brought their favor· ite vocalists with them. Todoy'a \Veckender hos pictures and a story about Ille bash. Slrt1'11 ,. "'-YWI 17·2' sw11.,. " Muhlll l'w1Mh " Ctllltrnlt ' HUIHll ·~ ••• Clltc•lfl• "' ' Or1nN C111n11 .. Cl111!flt• 11 ... '''""''"'' ,,.,. CM!lkl " 5-lt , .. ,, c .. uw••• " "'" /lllft~tll lt·Jl Pttll! Ntlk tl " 'ftlt.,l1ltR " t:•li.rlt l ..... ' Thtttton .,.,, "'"'"'' ,,.,, Wtt!l!tt • Mt .. Ht .. " w-·· Ntw• lJ.1t .. "n Llndlrt " Wff• ·-· •• Mtl! .. 1 • Wnli:t!Mltr ""' MM 1111.,..rct .. Laguna Beach's quaint Pepper Tree Paseo, recent wiMer of the sweepstakes award in lhe Mermaids ' annual com· munity beautification contest, 1$ In viola- tion or the 'sign ordinanct, buUding direr;. tor Clyde Springe confirmed toda y. Paseo 0\\'ner · Harry Howard , who ac- c;eptcd the beauty award only la$t "''eek, 5aid he had almost simultaneously re«ived from the city a letier nollfying him of the sig n violation. lie said he had turned the letter over lo Fred Rlchman, under whose owncr1hlp the Pepper Tree Paseo recently un- derwent • widely acclaimed remodeling jo.b. ConHrmlng issuance of the 1t11er, Sprlnge said , "Being attractive is not an excuse for violation of the sign ordinance, The fact is that these signs were erected v.·lt.hout a permit and in a manner, Joca. lion and arrangement not consistent withe the sl~n regulalioris. t don't say they're not altractive, but they need a voiriance." · Sp1"n ge maint;iined that the pro~rly ownt!rs had been no1Ulcd "over ;;ind over·• of the violation and directed not to install the Blg!Jf without applyin1 for a permit, which could h~ve.J>ttn i~"med with some modification of the projected aJgn prt>-gram. ,I He said the signs in front of the Pasee> at 440 South , Coast Highway wire no particular problem,· except that they might exceed allowable sign area for the fro,ntage. a fact that could be determined in a permit application. Scattering or signs on !he alley to the rear howtver, is "another story," the building official said, noting that some isigns ti od been removed and then ''replaced still incorrectly." "l jus.t feel that ll we have a sign or. dlnancs. everyone should be rc4uir.ed 10 abHttr 15y IL." sild Sflrln'ge. "It'& pqsslble to have an attrbctlVe violation, but U't rtlll a violation. r• him to Sacramento. · "~r wor',lt on the commission is near:ly col!lplete but we have many other things to consider In the field of revisicil\." JudJ!e Su,.nn(!r said. "I am .sure !hat with · tr .. kind of subpor1. T have en}oyed tt#ese other issues 1vlll be similarly resolved.'' Teen Vole Measure PJlOVlDENCE (AP) -Rhode Island Th ur&day ~Clme the 30th a:tate to ri lify , the proposed 'amendment to the U.S. Coo. 1Utulion to a1low 'I8 ytar olds to vote in all elections. " kill the stench of dead bodies, removed the hacked remains from 5hallow graves in to hearses for transp-0rt to a mortuary in ne ighboring Marysville. Identifications have been hampered by the transient life of the farm workers, many of whom had not been in touch with their familie s for years. The viclims were hacked in the back of the head with a heavy, sharp instrument, possibly a machete or meat cleaver. All \\'ere buried on their backs, with arms raised in a supplicating position and shitt~uiled over their bloody beads. 0 Ex-cellmate Of Suspect Testifies By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Hit 0•111 l'li.t Ir.II A stuMed courtroom audience heard a former Orange County Jail inmate testify, Thursday that Gig Peters. a former Hun- tington Beach High School honors slu· dent. felt "psychedelic showers or golden electricity fall on his shoulders" 1fter alleged ly murderin.11: his parents. Peters, 21, appeared for a pre-trial ... hearing at West Orange County Judicial District Court Thursday before Judge Celia Baker. He was ordered to stand trial on t\\'O charges of murder ill Superior Court June t I. The jail inmate, a 19--year-old youth with a bushy red beard and a penc hant for street language neologisms, was iden- tified as Fred Wheeler, a transient. He told the court that he and Pe ters shared an isolation cell in jail shortly after Peters was charged with strangling his mother, Flora, a teacher at Corona del Mar's Lincoln School, and 1tabblna: his father, Charles, April 21. "He told me he strangled his mom and stabbed his dad. in that order," Wheeler testified. lugging at his mustache. "fle said it took a long time to get hiS mom dead. She scratched him and he bit her on the hand." As the defendant was guarded by twe> bailiffs, Wheeler further told the court that Peters admitted to the slayings almost immediately after they became known to each other. ··1 asked him, 'Did you do it?' and ht said 'Sure!," Wheeler told the <:aurt in· dicating that Peters appeared to' be swa~ing ~nd shimmying to imaginary music during the conversation. ''He said after he stabbed his dad he was gelling a real buzz on. He said he felt psychedelic showers of golden elec- tricity fall on hU! shoulders after he did it. I asked him if he was loaded and he said he was loaded on acid for eight months, but not then." Peters, who was being defended by Los Angeles attorney Barry Tarlo1v, respond. ed .to the courtroom drama with t'!ryptic smiles, At one point he turned in his swivel chair to smile at the aud ience but \\'as immediately turned around by 1 bailiff. "He always smiles, he says tha t's hi s psychological advantage over the cops, t ecause no matter what they do, !hey can't tear his spirit down." Wheeler told the court. Ex-drug Users Sing in Choir A SS.member choir made up ln part of former drug users will perform at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the Laguna Beach High School auditorium. Known as the Melodylttnd Chromatics, the group is directed by Moiry Quintana and will be accompatUed by piano, gu itars, brass and p e r c: u s s I o n in· 1Hruments. The singers are associated 1\·i;h the t>.1ciodyland Drug Prevention Center in Anahei m. The group htis ,given more than 200 pe rformances to schools, cburchc:s and clubs throughout Southern Calllorni,. They were efso recenlly featured Jn Look M<'gazinc:. The co ncert is sponsored by lhc Young Life club at the high school and ad· missi on is SO cents per pcr5on. • Z DA.IL Y PILOl SC Jon1t Usage Of El Toro Discussed By ALAN DIRKIN Of 1111 D•llY l'llOI Si.It The shorl·range solution to Or.1.nge County's aviation needs is for joint use: of El Toro ?o.1CAS by military and com- mercial jeta. Long-range problems v.·ould be solved by creating an International airport at Camp Pendleton. This is the vie"' of Roger Slates, chairman of l~ Orange County Airport <'.!Ommission. as he outlined them in a talk at a civic luncheon In Hwitington Beach \Vednesday. At the luncheon, sponsored by the Hun- tington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtoni, Slates also called for the county to create an airport auth.ority. ''The biggest problem is that the &upi~isors and members of county com· missions are all political animals," he F;aid. "They can't alwa)'! vote their ton• victions.'' He said it '111as often the uninfonned voter th.al influenced county decisioru on airport.s. but added that "counties are not built with a faint heart." ·•we need to create an airport authority Lhat \\'Ould take some heat from the elected people,'' Slates .commented. The airport commissioner argued that the El Toro fac ility could be convertl"d tnto a joint use airport In nine months at a cost of from $3 million to $4 million, "a :irop in the bucket" Cflmpared to the estimated $250,000 cost of building a new i>ne. He said that a "tremendous amount" of Navy and Marine jets were flying out of f,J Toro at present and clai med there l\"Ou\d be no increase in noise levels. No prii+ate planes would be allowed to 11Se El Toro. They would use Orange ~unty Airport which would become a oon·jet facility . Slates considered that Camp Pendleton ~as the only logical site for an in- 1.e:rnational airport in Orange County. He '3id the county could get it from Lhe !ederal government for nothing if the 'and was ever released. The airport commi!sioner concluded by '8ying that if Camp Pendleton became an nternaUonal jet airport, jets cou1d be >hased out of El Toro. Doheny Parking Lot to he Used As Camping Area A tong strip of beachfront parking lot 1t Doheny State Park Beach has been >ressed into use as temporary camping 1rea during summerlong rebuilding at tie facility. But despite the inconvenience to risitors, the new area manager of the itate parks system predicts capacity tUmmer crowds in the camping area. ''Recreational camping is just so hard o find, that people seem satisfied with ~hatever they get," said Jewell N. :aughell. He said that the summer season "e!ervation5 y,·ou\d not be accepted .ecause of the construction program: hat camping \\'Ould be on a lirst-<:0me, irst-served basis. Construction workers are rebuilding 1ennanent campsites and restrooms at he park. The temporary camping area might be ised for the same use after the summer :onstruction, Caughell said, possibly as m area to accept overflow groups of ~ampers. OIAHGE COAST DAILY PILOT OltAHG! COAST PUal.l•HlfiG -::OMl'AHY lt ab•rt N. 'We•d ,., .. .,.,,t •"" Puoi1111tr Jnc\ R. Cuole., Vk • Prnldtnl 1nd ~•I Mfftt!IC' TJ.o"''' ktt~il COilW Th""''' A. Mutflloi"• M1n11li"8 E01IOI' CJ.1r1tJ ).!. taa1 R;,i,,.,J P. Ntll ,1>u1111n. ll11n•gln11 r::o110t, L .. 111• hecll Office 11? Foro•I Av1nu• Mailiftg addr•ll' P.O. Ba .. 6ti6, •2652 50111 c1.,..~,. Offke 305 North El C1ml"" At.•I, •2671 Oth1r Olfic11 Ce1lt M•~•· m Wt» ll•'f !.!r""I l>ilWl>O!I llH<h'. l lll N1w:a•• llw :'"''"" >;.,,,1,11g1on llt•c~: 1ms 8r1<h 1.w1 .... 1rd OAILV PILOT, wllll ""'ic;, 11 c-lftfd th• H~~·-· !. WO!kflfO dtll'>' er<tll! ~Uf'I· cit'>' 111 MCtorl!e tcllhOM far \..fllunl 11•1<~, He•""': llMtll, Cool• Mnl, 14..,11,..1"" llM<I\, F-i.ln Vtllfv, Sin Clt ...... 1t / C•J>!•lt-••d S'dl:lk bU11', t lo'I will! on• ,1111,_1 .onio.1. 1'rl...:J11t1 prll>liM 111w 11 ar ,1» Well lltt SrrH;, C•ll Mn .. } F'rld11y, May 28, lC)71 Hawaii [W1iptials \Vedding bells 'vill ring June 13 in Hawaii for Michael Reagan, 26, son of Gov. Reagan and Pamm Putnam, 19, daughter of Atlanta Fal· cons' assistant footbaJJ coach, Duane Putnam. Young Reagan's mother is actress Jane Wyman, the governor's first wife.· Reagan Pledges State Education Tax Credits By TO~f BARLEY 01 lfHI O.llY ,llot St•fl Gov. Ronald Reagan pledged Thursday nighl in-Anaheim his suppjlrt for what he said were "definite moves to provide substantial tax credits for California's educational institutions.'' The governor told more than 800 guests at a testimonial dinner for Orange Coun- Marine Admits Attack on Girl; Awaits Sentence A Camp Pendleton Marine arrested in San C1emente on allegations that he raped a 14-year-old girl in a motel roo m aft(r the chik:l's mother encouraged the selUal as,,ault has pleaded guilty to rape charges in Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan ordered ?i.tarine Robert· Dean Stnith. 21, to return to his courtroom June 14 for sentencing that could put him in 6tate prison for the next 10 years. He called for a ·probation department report on the young defen· danl The victim's 58-year-old mother fs cur- rently undergoing psychiatric testing.and is due to be returned before Judge McMUlan for further court action June JS. She also faces rape charges. San Clemente police said the woman took Smlth and her daughter to a local motel room and actively encouraged the ?i.farine to rape the girl with a view of "calming her down." Officers said the girl was raped on at least two occasion!, both of which were sanctioned by her mother. Police ~·ere alerted to the incidents by the victim's sister. who allegedly told of· ficers that the 1tiarint was a family friend who v1as talked into the sexual at· tacks on the daughter by her mother. It is alleged that Smith took the mother's aulo and credit cards after committing the second offense againsl the girl. He was found asleep in the car in Gila, Ariz .• and returned to Camp Pendleton authorities for prosecution. Tl1urston School Will Star on, TV Laguna Beach's Innovative Thurston lntermediale School will star in a JO. minute segment of the CBS. TV Channel 2 6ix o'clock news program h!onday. A Channel 2 television crew visited the i;chool Thursday to photograph the unique plant and intervie\\' students and teachers on the flexible scheduling program. Decision to feature the school was made after a member of the television team visited Thurston on its recent International Day and decided the story of its unusual plant and program would interest viewers elsewhere. ty industrialist J. Simon Flour that a tax break for the state's universities and col· Jeges "might be the best and most ac· ceptable form of government aid we can come up with." Reagan hinted at the possibility o[ tax relief during a lalk almost e.ntirely devoted to what he said was "the im- perative and vital need to sustain private colleges that have traditionally provided the executives and business leaders who are the backbone of our nation." But he made it clear that the tax relief program he suggested would be extended to Cali forn ia colleges and un iversities in both the private and public sectors. The goverrior refused to elaborate (In his proposal during questions that follow- ed the testimonial dinner. He praised FLuor as "a man who has selflessly insured the wellare of his fellow men and those who work for him and with him throughout a business career that has enriched all those who know him in a cultural sense alone." Fluor·s work as chairman of the Cha~ man C.Ollege board wa5 "typical of a man w~o has shown much more than most men what the private school can achieve in Its contribution to our way of life," R~agan said. The dinner, organized by Oiapman College trustees, drew guests from the business, educational and show business fields to the Anaheim hotel. Ari Llnkletter was master o f ceremonies Bnd the guest list included President Richard Nixon's brother, Donald Nixon of Newport Beach, ·the Andy Devines, the Don Delores, Sen. James Whetmore and Irvine Company President William Mason. A teleg ram dictated by President Nixon Jn the White House earlier that day was also read during the series of tributes te Fluor. Fluor was presented with a painting of himself in oils and it was announced that 30 $500 scholarships bearing his name would be made available to schools in the Independent Colleges of America educ.a· lional organization. Citron, County's Tax Collector Handed Setbacks Orange County Tax Collector Robert Citron was a double loser before the Board of Supervisors this week. First he Jost the right to place a $25,000 microfilming job with an outside firm in his now notorious battle with county Data Services Director Robert Fanner. Later, Citron lost in' a fight with Supervisor \Villi.am Phillips over newspapers selected for publication of delinquenl tax lists. The tax collector was finally forced to add the Fullerton News·Tribune to four other papers he wanted approved. Citron had proposed to print the June 3 list .Jn the DAILY Pl.LOT. the Anaheim Bullelln, lhe Orange County Evening Ne1,11s and the Orange City News. Authorities Trr. to Curb Highway Holiday Deaths Na Uonal. state and local agencies throughout Californi a today v.·ere gearing up lO keep holiday pleasure high and death. injury end property damage low over the a.femori al Day \\'ttkcnd. The roster includes the California H1ghvray Patrol. local po lice, slate and national parks srrv1ccs. plus lifeg uards, m11rine agencil~s and many others. Jr your plans aren't m11de. a state; park!! official of fer..s this advice: stay home. Pre·reservations h11vc left only JS or the ststc's 90 parks with ca mping facilities not filled to capacity, ·wl!h llttlc chance of them remaining so by Saturday morning. "We're urgk\g people Mt to try to gel in to the remaining parks," said one spokesmen. National parks !Acilities will be available only on a first-come. first·serv· ed basis and all v.'111 probably be filled. Hlgh1,~1ay safety l&v.'s will be enforced to !he maximum degree to keep acc::ldents rlov.'n, with as many CHP officers in the field as ran be deployed. Authorit ies expect 111! recreational f,oicilitics to be crowded, with sunny and y,·armer weather anticipated to draw capacity beach crowds too. , Conwdian Jessel Talks ln Tustin By PATRICK BOYLE Of Ill• D.lllY ,lift J lllt The short man with a big nose shufOed lnto the nearly empty auditorium and Lhe sparse crowd immediately began to ap- plaud. "You're not too many, but you're oh so good," George Jessel said. "I've been marTied to more people than are here tonight.'' And so, the 73-year-old entertainer, his hair slicked straight back and carrying a shiny black cane, began to do lhat which has made him famous-talk. Jn the hour that followed, he didn 't get to the an· nounced topic of his remarks -"Enter- tainment and t h e Communications Media'' -but he touched on alm06t every other subject, much to the en- joyment of the sparse audience. Held Thursday night at the Foothill High School auditorium. Jessel's talk was the last of the "Artists' Lecture Series" sponsored by Saddleback Community College. About 50 people, mostly middle aged adults, attended the free event. Known as an actor, entertainer and movie producer, Jessel came dressed in a pseudo-military uniform, wearing three general's stars given him by Gen. George Patton. Among the various medals on his chest. he pointed out the Distinguished Service Medal presented him by Gen. Creighton Abrams during a recent visit to Vietnam. Interspersed with several risque jokes which kept the people laughing, Jessel made many serious remarks on the cur- rent state of world affairs. These are a few of the things he said. On Vietnam -"If we don't stop the Commies somewhere, they will be right here in the Foothill auditorium. The Democratic senators opposed to the war have entered a word into our minds we have never known before -fear." "In all my trips to Vietnam, I have never seen a boy under the Influence of drugs or drunk." He said the morale was "very high" and that most of the men re- 1 enlist. On the William Calley affair and My Lai : "We never know what we will de. under the stress of circumstances. We give the Vietnamese everything and when we leave they throw hand grenades at U.!i." Jwel !aid a grenade had been thrown at him, but had failed lo explode. "If they hadn't stopped me, I would have killed that 10.year..Qd boy." On Jaw and order -"Some of our laws are as out of date 11s rubbing runt together to build a fire ." Curtis F. Moss Rites Saturday Services will be held at 11 :30 a.m. Saturday in St. George's Episcopal Chapel, El Toro, for Curtis F. Moss, 92F Calle Aragon, Laguna Hills, who died Wednesday 11t South Coast Community Hospital. He was 69. Mr. Moss, a four-yea r resident of Laguna Hills, Is survived by his widow, Vivian; a son, James G. of WiMetka, Ill.; a sister, Graci Lash of Sarasota, Fla.; and by three ~andchildre.n. He was a mem¥!' Of St. George's Church and of the Elks and Kiwanis International. Before llls retirement. Mr. Moss was sales manager for Kona Com· munications. 'llhe Rev. Frederick C. Hammond 'viii officiate at the Saturday morning services. which will be followed by burial at El Toro Cemetery. McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary, directors. ' ' DAILY l'ILDT Sl•tf ,llti. FATHER SPARROW EXAMINES HIS FUTURE BROOD Randy Hennigar Keeping Incubator at 100 Degrees • 'Sparrow Dad' Attempting To Hatch Five Small Eggs By FREDERICK SCHOE~tEHL Ot l~t D•ll1 1'1101 Stiff Randy Henn iger. 15. of 790 Nyes Place. La guna Beach. is becoming something of an ornithologist in his spare time, as he atlcmpts lo hatch live sparrow eggs that he saved from doom over l\\'O "·eeks ago. Randy, while playing baseb all with D<ivid and Ja mes f\.1arple of 758 Bar· racuda \\'ay, no ticed that lhe f\.1arple boy's father. Thoma s, \Yas removing the nest v.·ith five eggs from an overhang on the roof. "He was going to throw the nest out , but ~·e retr ieved il and decided to see if we could hatch the eggs,'' Randy recall- ed. To facilitate incuhation of the five egg!'!. Randy emptied his fish aquarium. placed the eggs with the nest in the tank. and set up a heat lamp to keep the temperature at 100 degrees. "The body temperature of the sparrow Is 99.9 degrees." Randy explai ned, "so v.·e figured that JOO legrees would be a good incubation tem perature.'' The five eggs, not long£'r than three quarters of an inch, had been in the aquarium for 17 da ys \Vednesday . The eggs. according to Randy, should hatch between 14 and 18 days 11fter being laid. ''We're just wailing and hoping, right nov.'." If the rggs -or some of them -do hat ch. it takes another fi\·e days for the little birds to be able to fl y. Randy said the y expect onl y one of the five to make it through to maturit y. "Those are the odds nature gives us." he noted. After getting the eggs, Randy called the SPCA for information on hOll' to care for !hem. "They v.·eren't able lo help me -all thrv know about ;ire dogs. So I \\'ent to the library and found nothing th;:.:e, as y,·ell." Finally. Rand y asked Laguna Beach High School biology instructors John \Vilkerson and Charles Reich for in· formation on caring for sparrow eggs. The t\\'O instructors referred Randy to the Magnolia Bird Farm in Anaheim, v.'here he received most of the In· forrnation for caring for the eggs. In additi on to the 100 degree tem· perature, the eggs must be turned every tight hours, so that the embryos will jell properly. "Of course, the eggs are \'ery fragile and should be left alone as much as possible." Randy said. "I'll be very happy if only one makes It through ," said Rand y. who is being called •·rather Sparrow" by friends and family . VFW Post Honors U.S. War Dead Rites honoring the fallen members of the U.S. armed forces v.·ill be held Mon- day in San Clemente's Old Plaza Park , sponsored by George E. Smith Post 7142 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The h1onday t1emorial Day observance \viii difer from thr many previous years, stressed post officials, because of the change in holiday designations this year. The memorial observance will begin at JO a.m. and conclude at noon. The program will include participation by a score of local organizations, donating floral arrangements. Th e flowers will be placed at graves of servicemen in local cemeteries at the end of the San Clemente rites. An address is scheduled by Lt. Col Jer- ry Asher of the Army Reserve with in- vocation and benediction from the Rev. Dan J ordan. A Marine Corps firing squad will deliver a rifle salute. -.;.::-=...- CAMPAIGN DESK With pewter gill b.se. Slielf b.hinCf I amt;o11r .doors. ,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ DEALERS l'OR: HENREDON -DR EXEC -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1121 w .. tt11ff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'Til 9 NIWPOIT STOJIE OPIN FRIDAY 'TIL t Profession•! Interior Designers Ava ll •ble -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co.st Hwy Phone: 494-6551 ""-Toll fr .. Me•t of O~ C09nty-5-40.12'l I j .. . • • • •, 7 ' --. . ... ~ ...... - 1 'l'oday's Final San (;le1nenie (;apistrano EDITION N.Y. Stocks VOL 64, NO. 127, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES OU e ' 'Many More' Due? Yuba City Body Count Hits 20 YUBA CITY IUPI) -The Sutler Coun· ty sheriff said today "many'' more graves may still be uncovered in the vrchards along the Feather River where the bodies of 20 mass murder victims bave already been found. Deputies using a trench digger con· tinued their grim work, more than a week since the first bodies turned up and two days after Juan Corona, a 37-year-old 6 Counselors For Summer Jobs Needed A community-wide recreation program ls being launched in El Toro with the search for counselors for various sum· mer activities. Interviews are being taken on Saturday at 10 a.m. in Royal Savings and Loan in El Toro. Three girls and three boys will be hired who reside in either El Toro or Lake For· J'('Sl. They musl be between the ages of 16 and enjoy working with younger children. The summer program, finance by County Service Area funds in El Toro, is administered gy the San Joaquin Elemen· tary School District and coordinated by the A1iso Valley Homeowner&. Bill Milan, president of the homeowners, will in· terview candidates for the position. The program is conducted by two senior and two junior counselors at Aliso, administered by the San Joaquin Elemen· tary school children throughout the sum· mer. Fiesta Advance Tickets on Sale Advance-sale tickets to rides during the 2nnual Fiesta La Christianita carnival will go on sale at San Clemente businesses next "'eek. The presale, said sponsoring chamber of commerce spokesmen. would mean a savings of 75 cents for a block of five carnival ride bids. Booth price during the fiesta days will be 35 cents per ticket. Under the presale arrangements five tickets will sell for one dollar. The advance sale is new to the fiesta this year. said chamber aides. The annual celebration of California's first Christiari' baptism will take place during the second weekend in July. Orange Coast l\'e ather After a rew drizzly days, it'll be sunny and warmer for the holiday weekend. lligh temperatures along the coast should get up to 70 de- grees. INSIDE TODAY Tltt big band arc back at Dis· neulnnd thU holiday weekend and they've brought their /au°"' itt vocalists with the1n. Todau's \Vttkender ha.1 pict1.1re1 and a story about the bash. l lrll" 11 lt•ll... " C•ll'-'-I C11te•lnt U• I CltUlllff J1"'6 c-1<1 u Cr9n -• II °'"'tfll !ffflcll 11 IUUttrlll I'•" I ""'-· lt·tl tMr.K-u .1111111 L•Mt tt lJ M•U•• I -111 l•tvlu •t fMVlol '1·tf Mvtv•I ''""' M Htllll!ltl ...,., l•J o, ..... ,_,. lt llt1l•vrt11r. 11·26 5-11 , .. ,, lfK• M•l'lltll Moll T ..... 11111111 11 TMt ltn 11·2' Wt•tfllr I W-111'1 "'*""' IJ.11 Wttioll H-... w ........ , U4I farm labor conlractor, was arreste d and charged with murder. Sheriff Roy Whiteaker, under a court order not to discuss evidence, refused lo give reporters any information about how be linked Corona to lhe slayings of tha middle-aged transient farm hands whose hacked bodies were found in the orchards and along the river banks of this central California farming region. The sheriff, however, said he expected the digging crews to find more bodies. They are working "in an area where there may be many graves," he sa id. A small ''sketch or diagram" was found in Corona's home but the sheriff said it was not a map to the graves. He said the sites were chosen because of in· dentalions in the ground. He said he hoped that the digging was near an end but •·as Jong as we keep making recoveries we will continue to search." \Vhiteaker refused to say whether a transient pi cked up in nearby Marysville as a material witness in the case had given any informaUon. But he said the m~n WIS not in jaiL Five more of the victims were ten· tatively identified. The abtriff said they were Don Smith, ol AUtnta, Ga.; Bill Kemp, Baton Rouge, LI.; James Howard. Jonas Smallwood and Elliott Riley, for whom no home cities were known. Earlier two victims were identified as Kenneth Edward Whitacre, 40, of Alameda, Calif., a.od Sigurd Beirman, 63 of Marysville. All the victims were betw!en 40 and 63 years old and were believed to be transient farm workers. One may have been a Negro but the others were 1.JI "angles." \Vhitaker said he had determined 10 special significance to the fact that none of the victims were Mexicans like Corona. Corona, father of four small girls, was arrested early Wednesday after the ninth body had been unearthed. . Court records show Corona was com· milted by a brother to a state menial hospital for three rrt(lnths in 1956 as being "confused aad disoriented . . . (suf· fering) delusions and hallucinations.'' Psychiatrists diagnosed him as a schizophrenic. He was released from Dewitt State Hospital at Auburn, Calif., as "recovered" on April 18, 1956. Officials have not disclosed any ap- parebt motive for the slayings. Deputies, using a trench digg ing backhoe at times and puffing cigars lo kill the stench of dead bodies. removed the hacked remains from shallow graves into heai:ses for transport to 1 mortuary in neighboring Marysville. Idenlificatlons have been hampered by the transient life o( the farm workers, many of whom had nol been in touch with their families for years. The victims were hacked in the back or the head with a heavy, sharp instrument. possibly a machele or meat cleaver. All were buried on their backs, with arms raised in a 1upplicalin1 position and shirts pulled over their bloody heads. New Saddleback Valley Chamber Officers Named Two new officers and four new direc- tors have been elected by the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commer~. New officers will be Edward Olson, first vice president , and James Bierle.in, secOnd vice presidcn't. Serving as director will be Franklin L. Allnutt, James Decker, John Swctech and Leonard Whipple, all El T o r o businessmen. Other officers Include Tom Win1et.. president ; Arletha Horton, secretary; Dr. Herbert L. Beirele, treasurer. Other dire<:tors include R I c ha r d Birchall, Chester Briner, Bob Dameron . Everett Hart, Vincent LaVertu, Harold Ledbe.tter, William Weill, and James Ma· nion, chambtr manager. The chamber wlll meet four times a year In general session and every month for board metllngs. Tht ne1t i;cner•l meeting will take place in September. I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 28~ 1971' • er ' r1 ' Special Ha::ard Diving for golf balls in pond at Hidden Hills Coun· try Club. J acksonville, Fla., may be hazardous to health in the future. State game and fish officer Robert Brantley ·had a little problem convi~cing 11· foot alligator he should make his new home at the golf course. The gator \Yas brought to the links after residents in Lake City complained · that he was crawling into their backyards. Down' the Mission Trail Academic Honors At Viejo High MiSSlON VIEJO -Recipienls ot ~1ission Viejo High School's highest academic honors at graduation were an· nounced today. Tied for highest hooors were four sludents: Teresa Lyons, Pam Matsuoka, Steve McConnell and John Nimno. High honors also ~·ill be awarded to Lucy Dunn, Richard Gillenwaters, John Long and Suzan Murph y. The students will be honored during an assembly June I at which lime all students winning scholarships and other academic awards will be named. • Jr. Uigh Da11ce ~i!SSTON VIEJO -Junior high school students in Mission Viejo are invited to a dance tonight. The event will hail the coming of sum· mer and will take place in the Montan. oso Recreation Center from 7 to 9:3o p.m. 7 to 9:30 p.m. The co.st is 50,unts for members of the Recreation Center and $1 for non members. • Beacli r .... 111 Set LAKE FOREST -,,_ Memorial Day beach party will be hosted by the Beach and Tennis Club for Lake Forest teen· Nixon Reported Planning 5-day Trip to Clemente President Nixon Is considering a five. day trip to San Clemenle starting perhaps late next week in advance of the celebrated White House wedding of his daughter, Tricia, and Edward Finch Cox. R.eporls have come from Washington, D.C .• in recent days that the chief ex- ecutive had beeil planning to exchange the hubbub or pre-wedding arrangements Capistrano Man New Chairman For Boy Scouts 'Hes Klusman o( San Juan Capistrano has been elected chairman of the El Camino Rea l District of the Orange Empire Boy Scout Council. He succeeds Dana Point resident Roel Holtz in the of· fice. Several committee chairmen al.so were appointed during the recent district meeting in San Juan. The new chairmen arc Robert Bradley of Dana Point, cam· ping · Charles Bartek of San Clemente, activities ; C. Richard Lemon of Laguna Beach, finance; Edward Saxon of San Juan. public relations. and Michael Johnson of San Clemente, leadership training. '!'he scouting group also mapped plans !or the next two months' activities, which wiU include the aMual Cub Scout Olym· pies set for June 19 at San Clemente High School. Membership figures as of this month show 1.548 boys arc active in di slrict SC<Jul activities, with rolls expected to swell to 1,811 by the end of the year. for a working vacation at La Casa Pacifica . Mrs. Nixon first mentioned the chances for the trip a week ago, but official White House spokesmen would not confirm the report. Highly reliable local sources have said that the trip "has been kicked around" in Washington for the past several days. The first lady mentioned to a White House reporter lhat Mr. Nixon might be considering a stopover in Tulsa , Okla., on the trip west, which could take place June 5. According to lnilial reports of the im· peoding visit. the President would return to the capital on June 10 -well enough in advance or rehearsals for the weddlng riles .scheduled for the White llouse Rose Garden. The .Nixons' last visit to the South Coast was a long weekend early this month highlighted by an ornate ceremony al Camp Pendleton where the Com· mande r-ln-Chief greeted troops of the 1st Marine Division returning from Vietna m combat. Children Car Seats Ruled to Be Unsafe WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Fe<leral Trade Commission (FTC) warned parents today that some children'' car seats provide no protf!ction and could eve·n aggravate injuries in a era.sh or sudden stop. The FTC advised parents shopping for car seals to check the date of manufact- ure on the label and buy only one made after April 1, when safety standards became effective. It said some ha:z:ardou~ models made before April I still were being sold. agers. n •4 c • The event will take placo from noon to veSpto.e Of&,,,rOVersy TEN CENTS 0 Ex-cellmate Of Suspect Testifies By RUDI NIEDiIELSKI 01 I~• O•H1 l'llo! 5"11 , A stunned courtroom audience heard a former Orange County Jail inmate testify Thursday that Gig Peters. a former Hurl" tington Beach High School honors slU· deal. felt "psychedelic showers or golden electricity fall on his shoulders" after allegedly murdering bus parents. Peters, 21, appeared for a pre-trial hea ring at West Orange County Judicial District Court Thursday before Judge Celia Baker. lie was ordered to stand trial on two charges of murder 1n Superior Court June 11. The jail inmate, a 19-ycar-old youth l''ith a bushy red beard and a penchant for street language neologisms, was iden- tified as Fred \Vhecler, a transient. He told the court that he and Peters shared an isolation cell in jail shortly after Peters was charged with stranglil'lg his mother, Flora, a teacher al Corona de! Mar's Lincoln School, and slabbinC his father, Charles, April 21. ,;He told me he strangled his mom and stabbed his dad, in that order." Wheeler testified, tugging at his mustache. •·He said it took a long time lo get his mom dead. She scratched him and he bit her on the hand ." As the defendant was guarded by two bailiffs. Wheeler further told the court that Peters admitted to the s\ayings almost immediately arter they became known to each other. "l asked him. 'Did you do it?' and he said 'Sure!," Wheeler told the court, in· dicating that Peters appeared to be swaying and shimmying to imaginary music during the conversation. "He said after he stabbed his dad, he was getting a real buzz on. He said he felt psychedelic showers of golden e!ec· tricity fall on his shoulders after he did it. I asked him U he was loaded and he said he was loaded on acid for eight mooths, but not then." Danny,4,Making Fine Recove ry After Surgery Four-year-old Danny Jones of San Clemente was re?Qrted n1aking "ex · cellent'' progress today in his recovery from highly critical open·hearl surgery and a bout with pneumonia . Family spokesmen said Danny passed another tense period Thursday when a respirator which has helped him breathe for several weeks was removed for more than three hours. Physicians had expressed fears the youngste r would have formed a dependence on the machine "'hich has been attached to a tracheotomy. Danny underwent the d a n g e r o u s surgery earlier this month for repair or several openings in his heart -holes which he has had since birth. President Nixon had wished the youngster well dur· ing a brief .~~it al the \Vestern White Jfouse. ... After the surgery Danny contracted pneutnonia. but thei n f I animatio n, spokesmen said , is clearing up rapidly. The boy remains under intensive care at Children's Hospital. in Los Angeles. 10 p:m. at~liso Beach · in Laguna. Cos t for food and beverage is $1 per person. s · · 0 f B'l ff: 0 • Sign~p~anbomecl<~tlh<club·olfico. an n.o , re .. u S· pen1ng Boys Club Carnival At Capistrano· Plaza The South Coast Area Boys Club carnival opened for a Memorial Day weekend run Thursday evenin1 at the Capl.str"ano Beach Pta:z:a. The carnival, offering several rides, plus booths and food stands, will bt the club's major fund-raising event to finance summer aclivltics for youths lhroughou l the South Coast area. Despite the uncertainty over plans for aiasltil territory immediately 1,rpcoast, San Oaorre Bluffs State Beach ·will pr<Jb. ably open on an unimproved basis by July l. L«al arta man11ger Jewell N. Caughell said that funds for plaMlng 11nd clevelo9. menl . of the recently leased 3.S-milc bench are in the state's budget for next fiscal ytar. The opening, he 11trcssed, would be on about the sarue basis as the Inaugural Easter \Ve.ck use of the ruge:ed section of coastline. \ ... • ChtmlCal toilets will provide the 'only sanitary facilities, and no potable water Is expected to be brought in. Use at the bca~ during the Easter holidays was ~bstantlalt orflclals said. Included in the funds next fiscal year would be money tor sewage and water services ultimat~ly plallfled f?f. the a~ea. Ultimate planning of the beach area is !ililt cloudy, he stressed , because of the confusion surrounding President Nixon·~ dech1ratlnn last March that 2.5 milc1 of Mach Immediately north or San Onofre • Bluffs would be granted to the state a1 well . A pov.·erfu\ Congressional committee has recommended against including the Pt1arine Corps Enlisted lt1en's Beach club in the offer. Elimlnalion of that area would m'1ke level a cc cs s ac· qu isltion tough , St.ate parks planners have ~aid that on\1 If sultrible access could be: found would the ncW beach be suitable for maximum use . Presently steep trails have been cut rot pedestrian access to the scenic beaches. 2 DAILY PllOl SC Joint Usage Of El Toro Discussed By ALAN DIRKIN 01 tM DlltW JOii.i 51111 The short-range solution to Orange county's aviation needs is for joint use of El Toro MC>t by military and com· mercial jets. Long-range problems would be solved by creating an international airport al Camp PendJeton. This is the view of Roger Slates. chairman of the Orange County Airport commission . as he outlined them in a talk at a civic luncheon in Huvtington Beach \Vednesday. At the luncheon, sponsortd by the Hun· tington Beach·Fountain Valley Board of Realtors, Sla'te!i also called for the county to create an airport authority. ''The biggest problem is that the gupervisors and members of county com· missions are all political animals,'' he 6aid. "They can't always vote their con· victions.'' He said it was often the uninformed voter thal influenced county decisions on airports. but added that "counties are not buill with a faint heart.'' "\Ve need to create an airport authority lhat would take some heat from the elected people," Slates commented. 11ie airport commissioner argued that the El Toro fa cility could be converted Into a joint use airport in nine months at a cost of from $3 million t.o $4 million, "a drop in the bucket" compared to the estimated $250,000 cost of building a new one. He said that a '"tremendous amount" of Navy and Marine jets were flying out of E:I Toro at present and claimed there l'.'Ould be no increase in noise levels. No private planes would be allowed to llSe El Toro. They would use Orange :aunty Airport wh ich would become a .\On-jet facility. Slatei; considered that Camp Pendleton ,,.as the only logical site for an in- '.ernatlonal airport in Orange County. He 1aid the county could get it from the ~eral government for nothing if the and was ever released. The airport commissioner concluded by ~ying that if Camp Pendleton became an nternational jet airport, jets could be >ha.sed out of El Toro. Doheny Parking Lot to be Used As Camping Area A long strip of beachfront parking lot 1t Doheny State Park Beach hai; been 1ressed into use as temporary camping 1rea during swrunerlong rebuilding at he facility. But despite the inconvenience to 1isilors, the new area manager of the 1ta.te parks system predicts d:pacity 1ummer crowds in the camping .area. "Recreational camping is just so hard 0 find. that peopll' seem satisfied with vhalever they get."' said Jewell N. :Sughell . He said that the summer season 'l'servations \\'Ou\d not be accepted iecause of the construction program; hat camping would be on a first-come, irst-served basis. Construction workers are rebuilding 1ennanent campsites and restrooms at he park. The temporary camping area might be lSed for the same use after the summer !<lnstruclion, Caughell said, possibly as lJl area lo accept overflow groups of ~ampers. OIAN~I COAST DAILY PILOT ORANG;: CO.UT PIJILISMING COMPANY Rob1rt N. W11d Prn~t ~ P110llihlr J1c\: R. C11rl1y Vici Pra.l0et1I 1M e.. ...... M•n.ww TI.om•• K11vil EO!!or l ho"''' A. Murphint M1111g•r>11 Edll•>r Ch11l11 H. loot Jl.ic~11d P. ~ltll >n l1ttn. Mt,..9;ng Eolia•• L•t1111• lte&h Office 21? Fo111t A~1nu1 .MAilin 9 11ldr~n: P.O. Bo• t.116, 92b52 S111 Cl1lfttlltt Office JDS Nodh El Cimino R.111, 9Jfl72 Other Olflc11 Centi ,,.,,. lXI we.: 1!1'1 Sl•"'t t.itwl)O•f lht(~· ~)J) ,., .. _, .Oii ,~ ..... >Ju~1,t19!C, 81•,h: 17171 Stit h llcultvtrd Hawaii Nuptials Wedding bells will ring June 13 In Hawaii for Michael Reagan, 26, son of Gov. Reagan and Pamm Putnam, 19, daughter of Atlanta Fal· cons' assistant football coach, Duane Putnam. You~g Reagan's mother is actress Jane Wyman, the governor's first wife. Reagan Pledges State Education Tax Credits By TOM BARLEY Of !Ml O.llY Plllt Sllll Gov. Ronald Reagan pledged Thursday night in Anaheim his support for what 'be said were "definil.e moves to provide substantial tax credits for California 's educational institutions." The governor told more than 800 guests at a testimonial dinner for Orange Coun- Marine Admits Attack on Girl; A lvaits Sentence A Camp Pendleton Marine arrested in San Clemente on allegations that he raped a 14-year-old girl in a motel rodm alter t.be child's mother encouraged the ~uaJ assauU has pleaded guilty to. rape charges in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. r.1cMUlan ordered ~farine Robert Dean Smith, 21, to return to his courtroom June 14 for sentencing that could put him in state prison for the next 10 years. He called for a probation def}artment report on the young defen- dant. The victim's 58-year-old mother Is cur- rently undergoing psychiatric testing and is due lo be returned before Judge McMillan for further court action June 15. She also faces rape cha rges. San Clemente police said the woman took Smith and her daughter to a local motel r'oom and actively encouraged the Marine to rape the girl with a view of ••calming her down." Officers said the girl was raped on at least two occasions, both of which were sanctioned by her mother. Police were alerted to the Incidents by the vicUm's sister. v.·ho allegedly told of- ficers that the Marine was a family friend \vho \\'SS talked into the sexual at~ tacks on the daughter by her mother. It is alleged that Smith took the molher's auto and credit cards after committing the second offense against the girl. He was found asleep in the Cflr in Gila, Ariz., and returned to Ca.mp Pendleton authorities for prosecution, Thursto11 School Will Star on, TV Laguna Beach's innovative Thurston Intermediate School will 6tar in a 10- min ute segment of the CBS-TV Channel 2 six o'clock news program Monday. A Channel 2 television crew visited the school Thursday to photograph the unique planl and inter\•iew students and teachers on the flexible scheduling program. Decision to feature the school was made after a member of the television team visited Thurston on its recent International Day and dec ided the story of its unusual plant and program would mterest viewers elsewhere. ty industrialist J . Simon Flour that a tax break for the slate's universities and col- leges "might be the best and most ac· cept.able form of government aid we can come up with.'' Reagan hlnted at the possibility of t.ax relief during a talk almost entirely devoted to what be said was "the Im· perative and vital need to sustain private colleges that have traditionally provided the executives and business leaders who are the backbone of our nation." But he made it clear that the tax relief program he suggested would be extended to California colleges and universities in both the private and public sectors. The governor refused to elaborate on his proposal during questions that follow· ed the testimonial dinner. He praised FLuor as "a man who has selflessly insured the welfare of his fellow men and those Ylho work for bim and with him throughout a business career that bas enriched all those who know him in a cultural sense alone." Fluor's work as chairman of the Cha~ man College board was "typical of a man who has shown much more than most men what the private school can achieve in it.9 contribution to our way of life," I Reagan llald. The dinner. organized by Chapman College trustees, drew guests from the business, educational and show business fields to the Anaheim hotel. Art Linkletter was master of ceremonies and the guest list included President Richard Nixon's brother, Donald Nixon of Newport Beach, the Andy Devines, the Don Defores, Sen. James Whetmore and Irvine Company President William Mason. A telegram dictated by President Nixon In the White House earUer that day was also read during the series of tributes to Fluor. Fluor was presented with a painting of himself in oils and it was announced that 30 $500 scholars.hips bearing his name would be made available to schools in the Independent Colleges of America educa- tional organization. Citron, County's Tax Collector Handed Setbacks Orange County Tax Collector Robert Citron was a double loser before the Board or Supervisors this week. First he lost the right to place a $25,000 microfilming job with an outside firm in his now notorious batUe with county Data Services Director Robert Farmer. Later, Citlon Jo.st in a fight with Supervisor William Phillips over newspapers selected for publicat.ion of delinquent tax lists. The tax collector was finally forced to add lhe Fullerton News-Tribune to four other papers he wanted approved. Citron had proposed to print the June 8 list in the DAILY PILOT, the Anaheim Bulletin , the Orange County Evening I\1ews and the Orange City News . Autl1orities Trr. to Curb Highway Holiday Deaths National. stale and local agencies throughout California torley ""ere gearing up to keep holiday pleasure high and death. iniury and properly damage low over the ~lemor.ial Da~Weekend . The roster includes the Calllornla Highway Patrol . local pohce. stat" and national parks services, plus lifeguards, marine agencies and many others. lf your plans aren't made. a r;tate parks off icial offers this advice: stay home. Pre·reservations have left only 15 of the state's 90 parks with camping facllltlies not filled to capacity, wllh llttle chance of them remaining so by Saturday morning. "\Ve·re urging people not to try to get into the. remaining parks," said one spokesmen. National parks facilities \\'ill be avai lable only on a flrst-comf', first.-serv· ed basis and all will probably be filltd . Highway i;afely la~'S will bf' enforced to !ht maximum degree to keep accidents down. ~·lth as many CHP officers in the field as can be deployed. Authorities txpect all recreational faclllties to be crowded, with sunny and \\'armer weather anUcip.ated to draw c1tpaclly beach crowds too. , Comedian Jessel Tal·ks Jn ,.Tustin ,. By PATRICK BOYLE 01 "" 0.11,-l"!i.1 ll•ff The short man with a big nose shuffled Into the nearly empty auditorium and the sp1rse crowd immediately began to ap- plaud. "You're not too many, but you're oh so 1ood," George Jessel said. "I've been married to more people than are here tonight.'' And IO, the '73-year-old entertainer, his halr isllcked straight back and carrying a shiny black cane, began to do that which has made him famous -talk. Jn the hour lhat fol:owed, he didn't get to the an- nounced topic o; his remarks -"Enter· tainment and t h e Communications Media" -but he touched on alm06t every other subject, much to the en- joyment of the sparse audience. • Held Thursday night at the Foothill High School auditorium, JesseJ's talk was the last of the "Artists' Lecture Series'' eponsored by Saddleback Community Colle1e. About 50 people, mostly middle aged adults, attended the free event. Known as an actor, entertainer and movie producer, Jessel came dressed in a pseud<rmllltary uniform, wearing three general's stars given him by Gen. George Patton. Among the various medals on his chest, he pointed out the Distinguished Service Medal presented him by Gen. Creighton Abrams during a recent visit to Vietnam . Interspersed with several risque jokes which kept the people laughing. Jessel made many serious remarks on the cur· rent st.ate of world affairs. These are a few of the things he said. On Vietnam -"If we don't stop the Commies somewhere, they will be right here in the Foothill auditorium. The Democratic senators opposed to the war h&ve entered a word into our minds we have never known before -fear." "ln all my trips to Vietnam, I have never seen a boy under the influence of drugs or drunk." He said the morale was •·very high " and that most of the men re- enlist. On the William Calley affair and My Lai : "We never know what we will do under the stress of circumstances. We give the Vietnamese everything and when we leave they throw hand grenades at us ..• Jessel said a grenade had been thrown at him, but had failed to explode. "lf they hadn't stopped me, I would have killed that 10.year-old boy.'' On law and order -"Some of our laws are as out of dale as rubbing flint together to build 1 fire.'' OAILY l"ILOT Sl1ll Plltlt FATHER SPARROW EXAMINES HIS FUTURE BROOD Randy Henniger Keeping Incubator at 100 Degrees 'Sparrow Dad' Attempting To Hatch Five Small Eggs By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL 01 ~· t111J1 Piiot 51111 Randy Henniger. 15. of 790 Nyes Place. Laguna Beach, is becoming something of an ornithologist in his spare lime. as he a!lempts to hatch five sparrow eggs thaL he saved from doom over two weeks ago. Randy, \\'hile playing baseball with David and James f\·larple or 758 Bar- racuda \Vt1y, noticed that the Marple boy·s father. Thomas. was removing the nest with five eggs from an overhang on the roof. '·He was going IC> throw the nest out. but \\'e retrieved it and decided to see if \\'C rould hatch lhe eggs," Randy recall- ed . To facil itate incubation of the five eggs. High School biology instruclors John \Vi!kerson and Charles Reich for in- formation on caring for sparrow ecgs. The two instructors referred Randy to the l\Iagnolia Bird Farm in Anaheim, \Yhf're he received most of the in- format ion for caring for the eggs. In addition to the 100 degree tem- perature. the eggs must be turned every eight hours. so that the embryos will jell properly. ··or course, the eggs are very fragile and should be left alone as much as possible,'' Randy sa id. ··rn be very happy il only one makes It through," said Randy. who is being called "Father Sparrow" by friends and family. Curtis F. Moss Rites Saturday Randy emplied his fi sh aquarium , placed the eggs will\ the nest in the tank. and set up a hl'at lamp to keep the temperature at JOO de grees. "The body temperature of the sparrow is 99 .9 degrees ." Randy cxpl:iined, "so \\'e figured !hat 100 Jcgrccs '~ou\d be a good VFW Post Honors U.S. War Dead .1 Services will be held at 11:30 a.m. Saturday in St. George's Episcopal Chapel, El Toro, for Curtis F. Moss, 92F Calle Aragon, Laguna Hills, who died Wednesday at South Coast Community Hospital. He was 69. Mr. l\1oss, a four-year resident of Laguna Hills, is survived by his widow, Vivian ; a son. James G. of Winnetka, Ill.; a sister. Grace Lash of Sarasota, Fla.; and by three grandchildren. He was a member of St. George's Church and of the Elks and Kiwanis International. Before his retirement. r.tr. Moss was sales manager for Kona Com- munications. The Rev. Frederick C. Hammond will officiate at the Saturday morning 6'ervices, which will be followed by burial at El Toro Cemetery. McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary, directors. • incubation temperature ." The five eggs, not longer than three quarters of an inch. had been in the aquarium for 17 days \Vednesday. The eggs, according to Randy. should hatch bchveen 14 and 18 days after being laid. "\Ve're just waiting and hoping, right now.'' If the eggs -or some of them -do hatch, it takes another fi ve days for the little birds lo be able to fly. Randy said they expect only one of the five lo make it through to matu rity. "Those are the odds nature gives us," he noted. After getting the eggs, Randy called the SPCA for information on ho\Y to care for them . "They \\'eren't able lo help me -all lhcv kno'v about are dogs. So l v1ent lo the library and found nothing lh~c. as well:' Finally, Randy asked Laguna Beach Rites honoring the fallen members of the U.S. armed forces will be held Mon· day in San Clemente's Old Plaza Park, sponsored by George E. Smith Post 7143 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The Monday l\fcmorial Day observance will difer from the many previous years, stressed post officials. because of lht change in holiday designations this year. 1 The memorial observance will begin at t 10 a.m. and conclude at noon . ' ! The program \\'ill include participation by a score of local organizations, donating fl oral arrangements. The flowers \\'ill be placed at graves of - servicemen in local cen1cteries at the end of the San Clemente rites. An address is scheduled by LL Col Jer· ry Ash er of the Army Reserve wilh in- vocation and benediction from the Rev, Dan Jordan. A Marine Corps firing squad will deliver a rifle salute. . -~ - i • ' exfotb ~quart ~~ ----·-- CAMPAIGN DESK With pewter gilt !>.se. SheH behin(f taml:iour doors. ¥~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEe -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wo&tcllff Dr., 642-20SO OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 HIWP'OIT STOii Ol"EH FRIDAY 'TIL t Professional Interior Designers Av•ilable -AID INTERIORS ,._. T•ll FrH Mott of 0,-.. Cont) 540-12') LAGUNA BEACH 345 North CO.st Hwy Phone: 494-655 1 • . • .. ' ' ' • ' i t ' • • • i • I ' ' ! • j i • • • l DAILY PILOT 1$) "i • What Fund Is Best? NOTICI INVITtN• alDi t U"••tOll COUllT OP TH• NOTICE IS HIElll.•Y CilVIH ll'wf ,.,_ tTATI 01' CALl•OlllNIA •0 11 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ,..1411 ,.IC'tlTIOUI I U$11t•St NAM• lTATIMINT I O.,CI of Tr111IHI of lllf llw11l11l1 Vl ll.-t THI COUNTY 0' OIAHOI lolOTl<I TO ClllDIT911S $ I k C I Ht , 4"N1U Tt>. tJ'loOl 0 ,,, I of O•lllff °"" v, H•. .......... su ,111101 COU llT 0' THI 11: lollowln• 111nan 11 Cit!~ 1:11.itiilell Mutuals Survey Shows It's Risky to Tr y to Figure ~·:~nlt, •Ill •K1lv1 -•1 1t1c1~,;;" 10 NOTIC I GI' MIAllNO Ofl Pll'TITION STATI ... CALI POllN14 PClll lAGVHA J11LU co1r,u111s. um ~ M, Oll t"'t l"h 111¥ fll -· •at POii PltOIA'TI 01' WILL ANO IOlt THI COUNTY 01'" OltANOll (.ilt Ot LI L11ll1, l •toJnt 11111l. c;.., "" olllC• ,, 11ld Kllool dl1lrld •u•Cl>e•· t.lfTillll Tll!'IT•MINTIUtT 111111 II CilOltGli A. DUDllY. "'" • lllt Oe.,.ttni.nl ti wh ltll tir'M 11111 ftld1 E11111 ti VICTO!lt At.•Elltf Wl!:1iE1t, l>«•tff'lll c;. .HI! L G 23 M di tof' .. 111 be --••ff ~· th+ fu•11iilll11411 OKtMl'CI. Nol le• '11 herffY .iv.., t. ttldl10r1 el L••~• N~t.'~~'1.'1 Oii.if .1 ol 1clenc• H 11IOM<on1 •rod •11 ... !1•1. NOTtCf IS Hl!iltEl!IV 01VIN 'Th1t "le 11'1• lblve ••"'911 41C•4onl 11\tl l!I 'Tllll ftulllllU II k ll\t C4'MIKIM' ,11 !if LOS ANGELES (8W) Picking I.he top performance funds: in the mulu1l fund growth performance r aces is not only difflcult ror the average investor but probably nol even a good idea lO at- tempt, says a survey by Fundscope f\.fagat.inc. The Fundscope survl!y says that perhaps the wisest over· all course for those investors who hive 80me Interest In cur· ' Colony Kitchen s rent )'leld, who are dililurbed by short.-term market dips, and who a re interHled in achieving growth without ei- c es s I ve risk"'' ... is to generally avoid those funds making the largest gain in " rising markel, as they generally also su ffer the largest losses in a declining market.'' Fundsco~ asks: Can the average conservative investor reduce risk and still rea p ulisfying rewards? It .SU&· gests I.ha( investors may if Utey lnVest In a package or runds whose pallt records in- dicate these funds avoid up and down extrernes and tend to produ c e .. middle-cf·the-- road" ·r esults. These are the fWlds which arl!: neither top gainers nor big l0&ers. FLlndscope studied ·a 44- monlh "bear market round Look at Head Pliony $10 Bills Around U y ou h ave a $10 bill in your pocket, pull lt out and gaze into Alexander Hamilton 's eyes. He may be an imposter. On the genuine greenback, the head stands out sharir- ly from the bac kground. Eyes appear lifelike. And the background is a· fine screen of regular, unbroken lines. On a c ounterfeit bill, the port r ail may merge with lhe bac k.ground. The eyes and olher fac ial features may be dull or smudgy, while the face may seem unnaturally white. The backg'round m ay be dark, with some irregula r and broken lines. According to lhe U.S. Secret Servict, $6.5 million in counterfeit money has been confiscated in the greater Los Angeles area since December. "The most common denominations being Coisted o n Southlanders are SlO and $20 bills," the servic! reports. "Summer is a prime time for counterfeiters to d ish out bogus money, v.·ith so much tourist spending going on." Expanding"----------~ Colony Kllchens, J n c , Newport Beac h based chain of company-owned and operated restaurants in California and Arizona, reported sales of $5,585,560 for the n ine months ended March 31, 1971, c om- pared with $4,623,000 for the liame period in 1970, a 21 per- cent increase. Net earnings after state and federal taxes were $153,635 against $117,776, a gain of 30 percent. Earnings per share were 25 cents on 624,684 com- m on Mares outstanding com· pared with 19 cents on 624,682 shares last y!ar, or 31 percent h igher. Bruce E. Def\.1ers, presidenl, gaid future gross sales will be i;ubsta ntially higher because they will reflect acquisition by Colony Kitchens of n i n e Phoenix-based Hobo J o e's r estaurants in Arizona. and opening of additional C.Olony Kitchens units in California . H obo Joe·s !!iales last year were $.1.7 million . Colony Kitchens will also make its first venture into and beyond the R ocky M ountains with the opening of two new units naml!d Mr. Up in Denver jn June a nd Omaha in July. ~ir. Up is a new concept featuring restaurant over a service station at a key freeway location. A Mr. Up will also open a t Diamond Bar, Calif. in J uly. A pilot unit has been in operation over a year al Tustin, CA SH HAS NO SEX Senior Citizens Property Tax Aid Forms Now in Mails Claim forms for 1971 Senior Citizens Propert y Tax Assistanc e have been mailed accord ing to Martin Huff. ex- ecutive officer of the Fran- chise Tax Board. The forms were mailed to the 62,000 persons who filed claims and received a reim- bursement last year. as well as tG individuals who have already requested forms, Huf! Homebuilders Revenue Rises P resley Development Com· p any, Newport Beach·bas!d homebuilding firm , repor ted revenues of $12.702.822 and 11tfer-tax earnings o f $58.1,855 for the firs t quarter ended April 30, 1971. Revenues and earnings for the similiar per iod a y!ar ago we.re $4,176,274 and $133,757, respectively. Earnings per shar! for !he q uarter were 6t c ents (5fi cents fully diluted), compared to 16 cents (14 cents fully diluted for the first quarter of last year. said . Other persons w h a believe they may qua lify should w r i1e or contact the nearest office of lhe Franchise Tax Board. Almost n in! m illion dollars in assistance was paid to claimants last year, Huff said. :ind the payn1ents averaged $137 each. The number o r claims received last year was lower than expected which in- d icates that many qualified persons did not apply for the a ssistanc e due lhen1, he said. To reCf:ive assistance, claimants must be 65 years old or older ; must own and oc- cupy their home; must have paid lhe property taxes on the home; and mus t have a tota l household income of Jess lhan $3,350. Qualified individuals can receive both the Senior Citizens Properly Tax A ssista nc e and the 1-fomeowners Property Tax Exemption. Claims and r equests for claim forms should be directed to Senior Citizens Proper t y Tax Assistance, P .O. B ox 1588, Sacramento, California 95807. Claims for assistance mus t be filed before October JS, 1971. trip'' -the period from the $11,.111e1 le M 1111111o111c1 111 •C<M<I'-• ltkNtcl1 h•1 111N1 1 .. ro111 • ""'ltlon tor --11i v1111 ctalfM • .,.11111 ~ u lCI dlvlclllil. ., w1111 •Ntlfleu 111111 l'IO'"' on tilt tn tht arollolt."' wilt •nd !or hw1nc1 ol 1.ottot• 4Klcltlll ••• rMUl•td 11 li lt 1hf.m w1111 0.0.den L c; -.:;. market low of October 1%6 •11•ch11ln• o"'r1,,..n1 11"'ttl. Foun111n T'1'''""""'v te Po1111-r. ''''"roe' " 11.,. n.a111,, vll\ldlert. 111 t11t ot1ice el T~l• 1111trriinl fl;,., wl!h 1111 aiullft IQJ 744) lo the markel hJgh of Vtllfv School Ohlrkl, N\ln'lllolr OM .... ICll 11 m1M for l11rlllef' Nrllc11l1ri, Ind "'' (Ill~ .. N Ibo.,. MllllMI <tuft, tt Cltrk of°'''°"' CeuM..-IHI 11\I) It. ltJ1 L\tMt.euw 1.1 .... <••,.., • T 1llllrl •M ltltl U.t fll'<'lt t rod 1lat1 t • 11t1r1,.. "'' to Pttsonl 1--.1111 11\ot nteen1rr "utllllllld o...,.. coa11 0111v Pl~, December 1968 i D J 985), then H•wl•M ~h1f1, Fou11lt l11 v •I I• r , 1•m• 1'1aa lill•n ••I •or J11,,. 11• 1''1• •1 .-Nr1 10 In• 111'1dtttl1nt0 u tl\ot 11tk o 1111..-11 29 WWI Jlllll 4. 11, ,,,1 1-.,, back d•wn t• "• market low c1111ornl1 '2JIOI. t :>O ' rn .. In Ill• cour.,..,.. °' Ofl•rt· " 111•1!1. WUll•m• • ktent~, 51111• 1000, • • v v UI l!IY OltDElt 01" THE m1<1t Ne. ) t i 11!d tour1, t 100 Civic 4-il lwlh OJI.,. SI., LM llintllel, Call!, '• of M av 1970 (0 J 631 ). 80 -'ltO 01' TltUSTEf$, C•11t•r O•lvt Wt••· ln ""' CllY 01 ''11" 'CI014 wt>ldl i. Ill•.-'''' el bv1lnou" Ille LEGAL NonCE .,_ ~ FOU NT .. IN V•L.t.EY •n1, C•ll~nl1 , unoi roltlltll In 111 m11!tr1 Pfif!tlnlllt kt .. :,,t Exc\udlng aJl funds that SCf!OO L. OISTlllCT 01trd Miv II, ltll 1M t \Ull tt 1tl• llKtdtnl, wll!oln four 1'·11'1 ... scored top IO per cent rrsull.! Cltrk 01 1n1 l!loarcl Coul'!l"t Clftk nctllt1 NAMI ITATIMINT WILl.1-'M C. CltAHf, W. E. ST JOHN mt11lht tMtr the llr1I a.1bllc1tlon Of 111h l'ICTITIOUJ t UltN•IS "";,.•, for lhe 1966·68 ma1·ket-rise Publl1h'!<I Or•nlilO Cu11 O•llW Piiot. CMA1t1.•• c. MOltlHON 011~ Ml~ u l tPI 1'1\t' fol1Dwl111 COl'Nfl llon I• .v.., JI , 11, 1'11 111 4-11 11t1t M1u1cllur.tn1 AVlll;lf PEAllL. 'e OUOl.E Y bv11,,.11 •I; 9 period, and a ll exceeding the i: ~ri~'t:;1.?i!~i.r.wi ,.... E~K11.,1, ~. tht w111' Mtll ACt.E MA?OA. 21• H••l'f'. average decline o f alt funds 1 tt ,.11111 tt 111d •"'H•nt •111)1v1r1, cesi. M111, c1111or1111. • : LEGAL NOTICE A"""''l"1t~f 1111' ''"''' 'Wttll1111• & .. ,.~•" MCOOrwtld 1nd O'aor11, Inc .... • for t he 1969-70 market drop,J-------------,----1 ,.111111111.,. 0 ,,,,... Co•it Oi l!¥ ,.11,1• twit• i-.'" "· 011¥• 11. c11111rn11 ttrPOttlllHI. JOI w111 Hu~ the Fund""""'"' surve" found 68 NOTIC• TO Cl l 01TOI• Mo n n. 11 1'11 IJlil.11 I.JI A1111111. C11!I, ... ,. llfltlO" O•lv,, Mon•O\llt . Ct llfo•11l1. 'ddl ,-::'-d 1'nd h SUPllllO• COUltT Of' 1"14• ' • ' All1rn11t ,., ••t<~lrllt Tftl• bl/1111101 Jo (Olldl/(lff ,., Mc0041d m1 e-o ·u1e-roa u s a\. J'D..1"• 0,. CALll'O•N•.t.. ,.0• LEG" NOTICE Plll-4Hl,I,, •NI o· .. ,+,, 111e. • c111f11'1111 corw.111o1t •• '.. ~ Pllb!ltnel Or•"'t C0t1I 1>11;., f'ilot. 111 Ht re!tl F, Grttnt, # Ing above aver age THECOUNTY01110 , rf N•. A .. ,.,. •·••••• M11 lo. 21. 21 Incl JIWll ... 1tn \11).' Pro1W.<1I f the . L ... T~I. 111t1m1n1 WU IUM 'Wllh the (..,,.. pe onnances or entire E1l1!1 el EVE\.YN YOSHI!: l CllTll'ICAT• 0,. I UllN•ll -... (lt•ll o' Ott n•• CounlY 1111 MIY 12, be k t n<I · "01.Vl!.lt, Dectt'oH. ar mar e rou trip, as NOTICI!· tS· HEllE•v GIVEN 10 "" "'cr1T1ou1 NA111• LEGAL NOTICE 1•11. -asured 1"n e n d d 0 11 a r crt<1not1 111 ,,... ""°"' n•mod '"'"'"' Tiii U11d1"111wd d0t1 <H111'f "" I• (OI\· Gitt. Alk1111 &. M•1111l11t u.-~ • 11111 1~ "'"-Mvint denno •t •ltttt ~ .d11Cl\llt @ !f</11-WH 11 UOI Gwl•!t•nd Cr.. Allorntr• 11 l.1• !~Its. Mkl llt<ldent t•t ,.....,l<NI 11 !lit ti..,n1, Hutlllflfl"' •Heh. ClllfOthlt. Utldtr •kt .. u Wltplr1 i1~l..,1r• wllh '"" 11e<;_tnir..-vtu<lll•t, In the e!llc• lk llllou1 ll•m n1m1 tt PltOFESSIONAL •All :"11 I.II A11111t" C1Ut.r11t "'41 Fundsco.pe sought the ol 1h• Cit•~ et lf'll ·-INillf<i "'"'"· flf' SEltVICE co ...... 1MI 1•ld llrfT! h Com· 1UP•••o• COUltT l'Olt 1'H• Tt l: UlJ) 4"-Utl .nswe lo ••1"s q (' , "H 10 llfntn! 111tm, wllft tho llKIUttv POHd of Ill• ttt!QWI,.. .. ,.,,..,, Wl\0•1 If.IT• OP (AL.ll'OltNIA "01 T•Utt4 r ... UC! Jon. OW Vtu<ll••t. 111 "'" 11-.. 1 ....... 1t 11\t eltlC•• ~In lvll •l'ICI pltC1 el ftlldtllCI I•.. THI COUNTY 0 1 OltANG • Publis""'d Ortntt (Hit 0 1111 Pll:llt. would you have come out 44 01 l'IAllwOOo, •ooEN ANO ADKINSON . ktl-a: 111. At'"' M1v 14, 11, ,. "'' Ju111 4, u11 11*'' ths I t "f . J~ MtwPOfl Ct11t" o.i.... S11l11 w1111r 1"r1nc l1 1!111••111. '4 11 o•o•• TO SHOW CAI.II• •• PRTIT ION'J----~~,,,-.,..-,-,,,---~ mon a er 1 your 1n-oo. ~ ... .,.,1 •••ell. c11c1w .. 11, w111ot 11 Gu11tr111(f er.. Hltftt!n119"I •t•ck, ,.01 CHANG• 01 NAME L EGAL NOTICE vestment in one of these f unds "'f •'M• o1 bu•i-• o1 "'' uno•••I•""" '" c .111orn11 n.1& In 111e ""'".,. ot "'" AHtkttllfl '"•----------------,_, rlh be t i! m•U•rl -tllftllll l(t !tit 1>1111 ti 11!0 011.0 M•¥ I, lt11 C1'11ntl ti N1m1 of llOY EUGENI! •tEN,1 • Was WO $10() a t the gin dtcldtnl, wl1t'lln ffl\/r .._1h1 1t11r "11 • Wtlt•r F. l!lll•IHI JJl., 1 Ml ... r, MOULTON·HIGU•L. ning of the bear marke-1. round tlr1t ~blle1llon al ffl\1 MIU, 'Sltlt ot C1Ulornl1, O•l lltl Cou11ty: WHEJI EAl l.1!1 O•lt Or1r. Mtltlonu. WATR• OllfllltT .• D•lf<I M1t •• 1t '1 On M•r .. 1171, 11o11 ... ""'· • Nellrv 11. lle•tlll el •DDl1C•lll ltov E111tM "'"· MOT1CR INVITING SlfALaO •IOI · trip?" Jehn Mtlndl P11bllc. lfl l l'ICI !er llld Sll lf, PtrlClllll!"t Jr., t mi le llndtr 11 Vtlfl of ltt, k11 111. ,Olt TMI' CONSTltUCT10N 01' • Adm\n!tt•t !or wll!I tht ''"''"' W1lt1r ,.,1nc:11 llur11u •11own ..., 1 Nltllt11 w!lh ll'lt cl..-ll ol 11111 ,..,,, CONTltA(T NO, l ·I Invested in any of the 63 .. 111 tnM•td ,, "'• 11 m1 10 be Ill• ,.,..., w11o11 n"'" I• for 1n o•CI•• c111ntln1 '""'k•nt'1 ..,..,, c10-VAL~RY 11A11KWAY • •• m j d d I e •Of· the.road •• 111, •l 11'1oo lbttvt •vl>•C•!beil lo tho wllhlft ln1lr11m111! •lld f•em 11:~, £1111 ... 81111, Jr, le ltclHlrl HIOH ~··•jUlll 'T•ANSM1$SIOlll f!tmtd Otcldt nl •CltNIWltd"d ho t~HUtM TM....... E11tt111 DYl fl MAI N lfltT•NSION • performers." its surv ey HAltWOOO, SOll•N ANO ADKIN SON lOf'f'fCIA I. $E,A1.I IT u OI Ol!ltED tn11 t it HflOlll t~ Thi 961•11 el Ol•tclO<I tf lhl Moll. Poll Ofllf:1 ••• IM1 M1rv •et1'1 Morion """" In •~• 1bttv1·•nlllloa mt!!lr ••· Nl1111I W1ltr OIJtrl<! ot O••ftff C011ot!W. reveals , $100 would have end· Ntw11erf •••di, t.littr"'• tU•I N11!••Y Publlc-C1!l•etnl1 •••r betor• 1111> ce1111 •• '':io A.M •• .,,, C•!lltrnl1, 'h1r11111111r in llHl"ll ln•l•l'lt• ed Up WOrth at Jeast $J2 1.60 .Bt Tt1 Int) •4•·1tU l"rlni;lpf l 0111<• In J11 ... 11, lt7l, In 11!1 cour1toom el Dto1rl• reftttlfd to 11 "Ol•lrkl.'' clo lltrrbv Inv ..... AllltMYI fft A•rnlnlllr•llr Ot•n11 Coun!Y rnM I No. >· 11 1n1 teurlholl" IO(lltd 11 1111111 ltlclt for Ille lol!owln1 dttcrl the May 26, 1970 market bot· P111tll1Mcl Or1nt1 Cotti 01lly Piiot M•V M~ Comn'llnlon E~olrtt IW Clvlt Ctllltr Ori~• Wt ll, 111 1nt CllY ""'bile -..or•: TM Cons1tuttlon .,r (Ofllrl(t tom. T he survey shows that 10 7• l4. 21• H. 1111 lotT·1l Publli~~11 ~·.~!~! Cotir 0 111,. Pl!n1. al ••n•• A111. Countv •• Dr1ftfe, ~:.,._:,:~ ~::;:.ni~,~..,. M~~~k'E.!j,n:=: of lhe 68 Would have end-• >"n.i---!:F.C1u:-Jffimic:e---·i'.".'.~''...'.':.'.":0-'~'~~~C'~·~·~· ===:-...:.'~=·~>~ll C1llklrnl1, end lt'llW Cl\IU, II Ill•, Wit~ • a.i ' ' ' ' tht N !lt!on lor (htn11 of n1m• lhould f\OI •-"''' wlln 111 t Pl'urt..,.1<11 -•k t '""'•" th lo 10 t f th LEGAL NOTICE "" , tea 1.1 ""-n In c11t1u ,,.. c1t1er1bH' e P percen or l' LEGAL NOTICE IT ''1~ Fu1tTME1t c11:01!11Eo th•t • th• 1111n1, .,.,111,,, ar1w11101. 1tt11on1 ·~ bear-market round trip, pro-suPEltlOll cou1tT ol' TM• """ ,, 11111 o"''" '' •how c~uu b• •PK!llc111on1 "" 1\1• in lf\t 1111u of e"""'• d . e d-d Ila It ra g IT•T• 01 CALIFOINI A l'Olt 'T·m M PUltlii.t>•cl 1 .. the 0111~ Piie! .• ll~•l>•l>U Enolnttrln1, (\t So.Ill! L•Ofl St•••'· 51n UCJng n 0 r rf:8U S n • Tl'\f COUNlV 01' OJIANGll NOTICE 1"0 Clfl!OITOll l el .,,..,.,1 (\rcul1tlon orlntfll In'"" Ct.>un• A<11, (1llt0tnl1, Wl\ICh doc11mo1111 tfl bv ing from $144.10 to $163.50 NI, A·""' SU PElllOlf COUll T 011 THI 1~ ol Ot•n••· c1mornl1 01\CI. Wttk 1or 11111 "''"flC• lncoraor•lld 1'1trt lll, Fer NOTICE OF HEAJllNll OP PliTITION STATa 011 CALl l OllHIA 11011 four 111cc1ulv1 Wit-• P<le< 1t 1"41 Cll!t lutthtf Ptrll(lll•to, ttlfrtMf h htrt~v The Fundscope Ii u r v e y ,Olt ,..OIATE 01 WILi. Ai'IO ,011 Tl'llE COUNTY 011 Oll AHGI ,., tor lwtrlnt on th• HlllllHI. m•dt t• M!d p!1111, Prolli.1, e1r1w11111, points out that since a 1100 in-LETT I' Its TISTAMIENTAlfY 11'10 Ht ..... nit DA TEO~ M•• 1. 1111 .. cli111• '"" lpf(itl(tflon• tor Int •Del~• I ONO I E1t•!"' of CAllL MALl AJI , •~• CAltL HAJIMON G. SCOVIi.LE: cl•>c:rlllecl lmpt,,..tml nl ffllll!ld "CIHltr•ct vestment in the blue chip , E•t•t• or Ge:11111UoE STOCKTON, JEJIME M.4LT11iJ1. Ot<t11H. J.,.,.0 01111, Oocwm.enh """' C.anotr 11 c t ltn 1)o J I d · I A ALSO KNOWN AS GERTRUDE M. NOT ICE 15 HEllE8Y GIVEN le 1t>t S11H •l11• Court SDKillctlilHI• Ind CIHlolrucHlll Plol\I lor w ones n ustr1a ver age STOCKTON, AL SO tt"IOWN AS Gf.JI· crMl1 .... ol 1,... •t10v1 llitMt<I ~tcH111t OUltYaA, CAltl"RNTelt & IAllN(S lh• c11111t•uc11.,,. of Conl•ICI ...... 1.t. w as worth $99.80 on ""iay 26 TllUOE w. STOC KTON. ANO AS GE i · *"•! 111•••sons1'11¥1"1 cltlm1 •D•lnot 11'1• I T ; t•N•IT J. SCl'IAG. Jill., Crown v.11 ... P1 r-w1r H1911 "'"""' ' ••Ill dl<:tdlnt ••• tlOlllrtcl to Ill• Alltr~YI 11 L•w ~ ' , M ' ' , ' ., , t970' '"e e~ o r the be TlfUOE E. WELCI'\, DECEASED. ••t llUll U IHI ... ot1fll0f\. ~ ... Pi ii\ u1 '"" ar 111om, w1111 "'' 01Ktntr1 """'"""· In ll'lo u u MHA•-, ... 1ev1,. ond IPKlflci llorto ..,,., 111 .111rckt!.ld " market round trip,", •• Surely NOT ICE 1$ HEllE8Y GIVl!N Tftll oU k• DI th• clerk ,, lf'll IDOV• t Mll1M l t ol Ottlc• ••• 1111 111• ofti(1 ol 110¥1~ Efltlfl .. rlnt '"' t!D.00 Afl>ff! E, SlocklOll h11 lllf<I 1'1tt•ln I P<tll· CDU•I tr 111 proi•nf lllt m. wl!h 1,.. ll<"Cf .. N--' 1•1<11, C1UfetRlt .U.J Hf •fl. Cht(~ mutt b9 midi PIYfttlt lo the 63 middle-of-th-,.~d funds llOfl for P•Olt•1e ot will Ind !or IHUI Mt ol ' ' ' '"'' U> -,,_ M .. -,...., Lt tloro TtlllMtflt ttY lo Pot lllontt fNo s~rv YoUChtt1. lo lh• uncl•r•I•~ ti *"" 1 • • "' oul!on·Nlt uol Wttff Dlotrlct. which productd above average ,_, ••!t,.nc• 10 _Ith ;i mt11• 10, <1111<• 01 ""r 1!1et11•v1. MCKENNA ANO Attw11111 fff Plllllllllf' Pu"111nl 10 *"• 1.111or caa1 01 ~ lt•tt ' I '°tTTING, P, 0 •o• 'llJ, Sullt Iii, 111CIO Publli/llNI Or1n•1 (Hit 0 111..-"!!01. nl C1lllO•lll1, !M Mo\llton.HltWI W•to end results (]( $121.6(1, Or f11rlf'11r P'<llcutort. •nd 11\ol Ille 1 "''I ll<! '' 1' R d • l 11 Hiii C•llfor<1 l1 Mt • t, U, J1, JI, 1f11 10U.11 Ol11rlct f'lt• •l(tdtlllfCf Int pr1~1llln< Pltct ol f'l•1•ln• Int , ...... 1'11• bttn 1-i Ol'I Ofl • ••u • '• higher. ma" be described a s 1 J ,.. 10 1" 1 1 ,.10 , m 111 '"' 11w. w1'11<h 1o 111. nl•c• el l!!ltlflfn ef •llt or 11er di"'" w1tc• 01 '"' loc:•Htv 111 l .,,. u ' ' 1 ' ' "'" \/f\Clt ttlt nod 1<1 111 "''ti "" 11•r!1lnl,,. w11/c11 11111 work It to IHI ~•dormff It &I satisfaclory performers." CDU•I•"""' of OtDl•lmffl! Ht. , ot ••Id ,,'"• tl1•1t "' 11111 ~•ttd•nt. within'"'" L EGAL NOTICE II dth ll"" 1 .. '"• ~(IU"''"" C~lllor11l1 touff. 11 /()D Clv!c Otlv• ~111• 111 "1• CITY Oflilll illtr 1111 11 .. 1 •vbllct tlon of !1'111 M••!tr l1bor A~r...,,t11t 111111 lfl lllt ef. A "middle • or. the • r oad" of Sinlt "'"•· C•llfof nll . "'•I • !IC• ol !tic "'noc .. 114 Gtnfttl Canlr.tcl(lf rf he Dtlod M11 !I, 1'l l "'~t~ Mov 13, 1111 of Arntrlc1, Sovthcrn C1U!ot11l1 C1'1aottr pe ormer, t survey says, is w, E. sT JOHN KA.TE MALT All: Aov•1tT1SaMaNT 1101t •101 coole1 v• •~• ,.,..,.1 1.,, ... 111n• ,11, 0, a fund that scores a SatisfaC· Cnuntv (!1til E••cu!rl• Nollet I• ll•rtbY 1lvtn lh11 ll\1 8oa•d ol Ht dlt m w11to •• dtltrml11t!I bY ,1111 NUlllWITI, HU llWlll ANO lllMlll <11 tf'lt Wii i nl !ht T•uolctl of fh o (0111 Community (olltge Ol1trlct ,,. 011 fllt ti II• prlnclatt llll CI tory (above a verage or near o .. nn4 '"'91 ftt>ov• n•"''" c1o••d•n1 n111r!d of or1n1t counw, l>•••ln11ttr "' b\1111110. 10 wl! i Mon"'" eiv p1111, ) b I Ht,.,otl 811cf'I, Ctllltrllll tNil McKFNNA •HO l'!TTINO rt!c.,td te 11 lf'11 "Ownt•", wUI tM:f!Vc ~ull• lGl, L•tuno Hla~tl. Ctlltornli , *• a ver age ut not spcc lacu ar Tot: Utol 11J.to11 I v: orvlll• w. McC1rr1n uD to, but .,.,t 1111r fhon 1:» t ,m. M111· rf<l11ttt11 11v $cctlon llll 01 11\t l i t.or COllt. gain in rising m arkets, and an Anirn•11 l•r "1'1111111' u1t1 1:1 '••• •••• 011. Jun• 1. nn. •••Itel bid• '"' the the Con•••Uo• '" wl'IOm 111. r.0111 .. n Publl1ll•d Or1na1 (Ooll Cli!IY l'llll!. Looun1 Nl~1, Cl111trnl• t1U1 1w1rd o! ton!r1ct lo Fu•n!i.t> •f'ld ln111N llc"IOI' 11 •wotdf<i INlll PCll! a tDIY average or better· than· M1 v 11, 11. 11, 1•11 12,..11 Toi, ino ••·l .. , Tt P• l'l1vet/RKorcl1tt 111 ()wnet·Fu,.,1,11. •h•r""' 11 ~•ch 1o11 •lie. average perfonnance in a .1"'"'"' '•• •••<ulrl• "' C•rrol• 11 Gc11c11.n Wt•t C•llctt. Hun. Pravlc11"' '"•' ""' •nd IHl .. h•ll 11""'' P11t1ll\hed Ort n.,. t "1t 0•111 Piiot, tl111ton llro(/I, ColllOHtlt . lh1 tllll prfY•l!lng rott1 o1 '"'''• llilll H declining market. ending wlth LEGAL NOTICE M•v 14. n. 71 •nd J""" •. 1111 nn.11 l11eh blG• 111111 ~ rKe!vf<I 1n tf'I• eftlct 1>1!111 lor •nY wo•klf\O tlmt me•• 111111 beUe than.-averag ound trip ---------"' 111• •urcll1••11• A11n1 In '"' •19111 ....,,. 11u•lt11 •n• -ci i.1111,, Cloy r · e r IUPEltlOlt tOUI T o" 'THI LEGAJ .. N£mCE Admlnlllr1t10<1 •u11e11,,., CN1t Cornmunlt'r whtrt 1u'h wor• It ,111111,14 In ''"' .,, results. ]f there i! a moral, STATli OF ca L.111011N1a •011 Coll••• Olotrlu . 1110 Ad•m• Avenu•. e11r,....d1n1rv Hnt •eencl•• c•u••d 11y 11,,, the survev ... ~. it is "that a 1"HI' COUNTY 01 OI ANOlf 1"-41111 (0111 Mou, Or.IO'Hi• (O\/lllV. C•litorn10. If-, " d•llltr to t!tt OI' P•oPl•l"t '"" 1 ~ NI. A·Hlll (l'.TIFICATI! OI' •UllNl'll 1nd 1h1ll lie OH1'+d incl -llCIV rtod llloublt llrnf on S...llCltY l'lct lhtr itvon fund that keeps much 0( what NOTICI! 01' H•AJllNO OP PITITION l'ICllTIOUJ N•M• •lovd 1! th• '"°"' 1t1!f<I llmt In lllt Ifft! llotklov1, 111 Wit! Htw ..... ,.., Ot'y, • "OJI PllOI ATli 01' Wl\.L ANO "011 Tl'le llnd _,1, d 0 .. , c .. Uty ho (I tOfl. 61>1rd llaoon, or""'"' d1•lt 111lld ll>'•llo<., Mtmoti•I Oov, JulY .th I.I llar C.o ~~Ii;: ~:i :t o~dc:: :o 8~· ~~!io~·· TllTAMINTAllY ( N 0 ~~~:~ ... M°'.:i:i·i~.l~.;~l~l u~:,"1111\~··~r:· l<1E1::11 A"';1~I·•~~~':" ·(~l!~!,i.; Incl "" ~;;~:1::, o~:;: TD~~~:!;l?url~:,Y ~~ d uce satisfactory end·result;~ ti!:'::!....°.: -~At.uA"u'it..,1.~~G~!~~~~:!i ~~t'Eves':~~ ~~·;.;1c~•f •ndwft~!~1.::~ i::.'.":::i• :~ ~~~.~":!:,1~::~11:~:,,.~~,;~ ~': P!'11:°'1oe''~;"~,11,.1o;n~~·c; .. ~1..;0:,~~ The F"nd•~pe SU'"fY ...,..._ II 1.Ji Ult-' L, HAGERM.IH , Oato•led. ll•rn 11 CClfllPCIHcl al lho touo,.ln• "''""'· tllt _.n1nen1 controcl d0<11me111t, COPlfl 111 00) mo,1 111111 loutncvmt n '"'tor lllt ~" • .. .,.,. NOTI CE 15 HEllE8Y Gl\/EN 1'!111 """""•me 111 11111 I nd •l•ct ol rttldtllC• al 1ht Cont•l cl Oocw<ne,n!1 trt . ..r-"" <••fl or workm•n ln•olvfd, ' eludes that for th! cautious in-E•\>lrl T. H1etrm1n, 111<> ~1111w<1 11 E. T, 11 •• !oll•w'· 111, •nd -n 10 publl< rn•1tcllon Jn '"" 11 •11.rr bl m•lldt10tv YPllfl •nv c-. H1tt•m•n no• 111.., ll••fln • .,UlllHI tor Wtltt r 6• Clondo,.,.n, toO 511 1.1111, elllcc 1f 11\ot PYrc/1111,.. Awent 1M m1y trKt.,. to "'l'lom 1 Conlrict 11 1.;;1, vestor a m id dle-or·lhc·road ••eb11t o• wm •ncl let lu u•ni;t of 1.1Utr• Co•ont 0,1 M•• Ctlll Ill ottt1lnfcl b1 pu1111111 or wrlt1•n ,,. 1nd upon 111, iubcontri c•<1r ""•r hi ~ f d be · J h t the T••ttmt,,t•rv IO PtH!lOM~ (No 11-l. O It<! M j ' · .,11,1r Pov NU 1,.11 lfton tlot t ld u I 11'1 un may )US W a "'"""'' to _,ch h mt" tor tun,,., 1 w.~1:, .,n~llencltnon E1c'n bid 111111 ti. med• civt on 11'1• la 111 l•Ctortto, work~'" :,:•:!,~11;"~! dOC!Or Ordered: SatiSfSC(Ory P1t llcul1t1 , lfld lh1I lh• limo "'" "'Ct Sttlt Of (•IUornl• 0'1"9' (OUlltv· "Form of Pr-Ill" turnltlltd wll1'1 tlCll trnoloyecl I>~ 1ht rn ln lhl •~•Cllllon of n ht h I ' h • el r.1'1rl111 I~~ Hmt l'ltl bttn "' •:• J11111 On Mi r S, 1111,' bo1or• mt, • Nol•rv Ut al C011t•1cl Documtnl1. '"""'''· T1>1 p1111lly !or t1!1ur1 lo t growl reSU ts Wit OUl ex ?•. 1'1t. It f >0 •.m., I" !flt tour! °""' ol Pubhc fn •llf for l tlll Sll!o °'"ont llY Et cll bid •h~ll IHI tccornpofll.O bv t Ply nortwit1'1 Ii ~I IPtcillf<I I S lit! ~· cessive up or down flue· 0••••1""'"1 Na. ' 01 ••Id c111Jrt, 11 100 •P•••rtd w11tt r •· c11n111no~ ~ .... wn te c1r1111.o., c•111''"' '""' P•••Dlt to"'' 01 tho L•bor c...,,, n •c n '''J Civic Ctllltr Olive Wut, In Ille C•!v of mi lo H the •orion whOlt nt mi 1, iui.. Ow<1•r, 11• •ltlll•clorv l ld l ond In ltvor Tl\~ Co<1lr•cror 111111 PIV '''"'' tuations in price. 51n1• ,.,.,, c 1n•orn11, Ktlbed 10 !ht within lnoi,,,mollt •nd el th• ow...,,, f~•cyt.., bv lllf bllklor •• 1u1>1,umc1 1>•rme1111 to h w< k t nd Dt1td M~¥ 1?, 1'11 ltkllC>WltllG•d h• ••etut..S 11\t u m• 1•lncl•1I 1nd • 11tl1l•Cletv 1urtl• C""1· no•ded ro ,.,,111, l~t .:::-,; min W, E. ST JOHN, !O~F ICIAL ~EAL,· ' lllllY t i \11re!Y. In 111 •mount NI !tu 1•1¥tl •nll IUblllltflCt llfV,;.,tnli '~Sii Co1111tY Clttk. M1•v l!leth MO<!Ofl l1'11n llVI 11erc1nt 11'-l ol tht bld. Tl\• <ltf111"" In !h• IPpllctbl II •• ••M'* J, JOftnllln. Nollrv Publlc·Ct llfo•nlt (,flt<k o• blCI bend lllt U bf llYtn 11 • bt1111i11!nt t trtcmtn!I 111.:i ~%h"-Cllvi Ill Uhlon 61~k Pl111. "tlncloo! OUICt In •u•r•n1t1 th1T Ille bid<ltr will t•Kult tl\1 ~Ptrtmenl 01 ltl(luilrlol 11 1 11 11 1 ll•t Ml ltulll Ltkt AYtftu t. Ot•n•t c:..,ntv Ullll•lcl II I! bt "-W•rded lo hl111 In cot\-corot nct •1111 k cllon !l1J: 1 1 ~n • t ¥· P111-1~•. C1lll1rnl1 f11 t1 M C I I E I '°'"'1!¥ will\ 11\t Conlloct 0ocumonl1 incl (<>di · o I lflor Ttl: !11l ) ttJ.JfO t r 111·t161 .. :.11 ;m;-;,~1 Dn XII ''1 Wiii ••avid~ fl\f tll•"'v bond •• -· ••• Alt~111l11n 11 dl•KllCI ' I . Att1rn1Y ftr: P1Ullt111: Publlo~od. (i,.~~· Cotll Dtllv ,.,1.,1, aul•tlll wl!llln 1111 Cl•VI tlttr t10tlllClll<1n ol Stcrlon• ll1l.S Ind lll~ .• h"0~•::~•ltn' 11'1 '~" 0 "11-1 ' t D•ilv Pllo•, Miv 7, 1~. 11. 11, \t11 lOll-11 1ht 1w1rC1 el 1111 tDnlratl lo lht bldd•r. A CD<11 CD"<t•nlne tno tmptovm 1 '"°' Publ •1<191 CH• Ltltor 111<1 M11tr!ot1 •ond 111 1111 •MO\/ftl 0,.ntlce• by 111, Conlt 1 t n Ct •P- Mutual Flllld Mtv l'I, 2'11 •nd Junt S, lt71 11!1 11 LEGAL NOTICE o1.IO._111 tho Ct nlrtcl 1NI 1 1.,f<1•mt nct tonlttclai lll'l<lor him ''"'fir 1n1 •111> l----,;-;;;;-;c:-::;::::;:;;;;;----l-------,,-,,=------· I llond In th• 1moun1 of lCIO.,. ot th• c~ ~•<Uo11 171/ s, ., ,;y,,nclt4, ,,,_...,.1,,, lh• r 1r1<t ••t , ... 111r•c1. c .... t.1t1or or out>c 1 LEGAL NOTICE P-41711 Thi Owntr ''''''" the a•lvlf1•• of , .. lro:<1"-1mt11 111 •nv "'"''""' 1'"•1etrlne ClltT11'1C•T• OF I Ul lNllJ, IKtlnG •n• •nd •II bkh ..... Wl lU• •nv Cuptllon 1D •POl1 •PPr•ntlctlbtt fie• P ... lftt l lCT1TIOUI NAMR lrrt1ul1t!tltt "' lnlormolUl11 In 1nv bla "'fnlk:Ulllll CDmfT!lll to Int lel111 I C• ,,,, Vndtt1l1nod clDOI <••Illy th• 11 (IHI· ... In lht blllldlM ,._ ' ... nt ftllt lllt tu .. ,, (RllTll'\CATI! OF •USINISS, t · "'" P<lltl C work1 ..,ohtl Ind Wltldl o •1CTITIOUl NAMR d11C!ln1 I bv1lnou •I :HIJ Sovo"tll "(", WAQE I AT I : ""lnlllot t 11\t l llPflnl/ct i.t>I 1 • 1"11t llndt<1li1'+d doll ctrtlh tt1ty 1,1 H1111111111on lt1cn. C1llt1rnl1, utldor Ill• Pur1u•nl ta 11\f ltbor Cllclo ot !lot Sttl• 11\U trodl for 1 c 1111 O 0•N•1rn In C-IK!ini 1 t.inlMn ti lJOI E, Cetll lklllWIUI Utrn n•rnt ol COH(Ef'TS •"" ol C1lllotnlo, loutl1tt11 C•lllorn!1 l u1ldl110 Tiii <•tllll(.t!I wllltr I '11 11 of llltf ... 11, Dir ectors Capital Fund, Inc. H!wtv. c.,,0111 dtl Mor, ,...., 1CS Miln st , 11111 ••kl tl•rn I• corn"''"' 01 tho 101· 1nd Con•t•uctlan T,..,,, c 01111 c1 1 •, '"'"''k " 1, 1 • 10 '~ tl'lt r11io ot shareholders have bee:n told 11111ot, C1lo!or1111, undu 1110 11ct11lou• Jowl111 1>trto11. wl'lo\1 "'""' In !vii '"" 61111111111 '"" t11111lructl1H1 T•ldn Council ulf<I In 111 0 1ourneymin 11111 will bt firm ni m1 11t Al 5 ICE Cl£AM PAllLOJI Pit'°' OI •P•lcltnc1 h •• le!lowl' o! Or1n11 Ca.univ, tn1 ollcl 9tttd of ll\ot rtrle :i 1"' °'";11fte• of the U>'llflCI, the mutual fund w h i c h I nd Yl OL O •CE (JIE•M PAlll.011 •flcl J\1111111 M . MU••kl, )QS 1111 "(''. H11fl· T•11•t111 htl llCl flllllld Ille ....... 1 II "''" Cll le fO\/tMy'"'n In · · led · 0 C 11111 ••Id tl•m I• tom110Jld t f Int tonow. 11,...ton 9•1c1'1. P••v•lllnt rttf 11 "' clltm w11,1 tor ;fc <•H• ""•11 not 11'!1 lfn ttt.n one I• or1gi..ia 1n range ounty , , 1 ,, "' Ottld M•• 1,, 1111 "''" "'n 11, 1'Pe ,, wort l'<'l•n n•""' 10 "1 ••,epr: nt H•lont. Wllfllf n1mt• n II • Jv!ll!n M, Mlltlkl t~•<•" '"' ''"''"' .. ,, •• ,,, ·-•••••. A. Wh•'I ""'"'PloYm e11! In 1n, •••• ,, has achieved lhe highest aitc,, 01 •t11"""'' .,. •• 101 1o~' "" '"" b ,11 1 All•t<I l . Incl Mlld•td M. •t11r1'1, ~:tt Sl•I• or C.11Uornl•. O••n•• Covn tv · Id 1h• •ucc111t11I ltldott. Ind ,,..,. ..... ' • Dlllt I PP•t Mlctlllle gro~·th rate among all funds Luk'""'· c,r.,.., dtl Mtr. on M•v 11. !flt, b•rot1 mo. • Nol1rv 11,.v1m11, '''" ,,. ,.,.111nH In 1,;0 cornm11re• 1111 ·~c•to•o tn , .. ,,.,. in the United States for the l2 0,1.., M•• 1,, 1171, Public In 1na to• ••Id sr01 t. oari11011llY ·~d11c111on1 •dDfllld i.1 !I'll 8oird i nd "' IS"-In 1n, 'Ill c11v1 prior " ttlt ,,.lld•od Ill, l!eltri n e1>.,.1rfcl JuCl!l!I M, ,,.l,.•k l knctwn •~ mo l te 01 111!"" bflCIW, O""'' lor tt•tlUCl l•, or months ending April 22, 1971 , Atlrtd L. 6tl11fll !e lie lilt' ~ro11n -DH n•rn• I• ll>b>c:•1b· Anr cl111Ulc1tlo11t not 1Mlc!out4 Ind 1· Wlltn Ill• llllMOI• Of IPPrt ntlc11 I~ d. t l" I t . 5U!t ol Ctlllornlt, Ott nt e C0unt.: .., lo lh• .. i1n1n ln11rum•111 Ind btl-ll11td 1n111 bf p1ld •I th• tYrtont !•••Mn1 In Int ••tt ••ctt<11 1 •Illa 01 accor 1ng 0 a na 1ona ra 1ng °"Mt• 1• "11, b••o" mt, 1 Nol••v ••~11.,..11<11111 'h' ••tcutfd '"' ""''· w101 ,,,, tor 1n1 •o~llciblt lr•dc •nd ""'to II••·•• service. ""bile Jn 1nd tor 111c1 51~11. otflon•11V !OFFICIAL ~E•t.I c1t11Ulc1t1on In 1111e1 wltn 10Dllc•bl• C Wh•n 1hf •••O• ctn 111.,.. !hll 1J h Cotmty-held Sets Record b IDIJ••rtd Mildt.., M. 8•1hfll Ind Altr•d M•ll.Y ~ElH MOllTO~ Trod•• Covncll1. If ......... 11111<1 bflOW r1Pll C.f\O It lt fU I/JO ,, 111 Lawrence A. Lue be, pre!ll· L l!fll"" ~now11 10 me 1., bo !ht 0.,,0,., No!••v Public. C•illorn•• "" nett cu"""' or '" r.vliecl bv !•bot m•ml>orilllp th .. 111111 1ocr•nllcet1tl? CORONADO ! BW ) dent, told shareholder s the -o•e nem•l •rt tuboc•lb•cl 1a 1110 wltf'lln "'111'10•1 OtlLct 111 •aroemonh <1u•lt11 11>1 blOdl~• 11m1 or 1''1"1na IHI ~n 1nn~11 b11l1 111 t!wlCl1 r ln•1•vrn•nl """ •t~nowltclgtd tllov Ortn~• C"""1" c""1!rudl0<1 llmt 1Yc1'1 rtvlilOfl• '11•11 bo or loc111v. or • 1 ·ri.1oncy ha.11 no sex," accord· Fund's net a ss et value as o •c111tc1 111, ,,..,.., ••· M• Commti110" E•Pl•~1 con1>dtr•d , •• ~1 o• 1~, btlow lilled o . Wf'lon tht Contre.icr 11roYl0tt r d h I · l D • A "J 22 h d · d 59 96 lOFFl(lll.L ) $[Al.1 AP•ll t, 1t1J . 1 r11u, Any 1'1•tl!h. w~llttt. v1to11on. ,,.,. tvlOtnc1 that l\ot •ma1ov1 rttl•ttr-.l ing to ame psyc nogis r. LOS ANGELES -(BW) p11ny also sells Tahiti power pr1 a increase . Mt rY l!•!h Morion P~1>ll•n1<1 Orano• Ca••1 D••1Y Poio , moil"" 0, 01111, btnot11o 1~111 ltt ln 10• ••1Jren!lct1 an 11!" 1111 t•nt,1~11 011 Joyce Brothers. Radlon Jnc. wi"ll strengthen i'ts boats, o utboard motors, boat percent to $7.2.1 per share Not1r¥ Pub11t . c1tuornt1 M•' 1'· n. 71 ~ 1· 1"1 i iu.n d111111 10 tn• b110 .. u111c1 ... ,, 11111. •11 •nnuo11vtr•o1 o1 n<it ''" 1h1n '"' h 80,h I l'rlnclbtl O!llct lfl APP1t•NTICIS : •tPrtnl!ce !o olaht lovrncvmin. Speaking to I e annua I · i b t railers, accessories and from $4.57 per share one year Oro nto ceun!v LEGAL NOTICE At1•nlla11 1i dl1tcl1<1 ••!hf 1rovl1lont 01 llle Conl••ctor I• ,.011ir1d to m•k• convention of the California e isure t me group Y llC· marine hardware. ago This net asset gr owlh was My comm1111e11 E•Plro• L11>or CD<lt St<ll&n 11n.s conc•rnlna c°"1r11>vH011• to fund• •1t1b11.v.tc1 let 1h1 B k A D B th quisilion of Harrison's Boat h ·h. h ll t I Aer11 1, 1•11 '"'"'~vmtnt ,, 11Pttntlct1, i'~rn1n111r111cn 01 ~aar1ntk1•hlo "'"'''m• an ers ssn., r. ro ers Sales of lhe 18-year'{l)d com· 1 e ig esl amo ng a mu u:1 Pub111~~ or•~•• c.,.11 0111v ,.;101, NOTltE o, TllU1t11•5 JAL• 11 •eout••• t0flt11uot1 or 1yb. ' n. •m•lo•• ,,,111•re<1 ,,.,,,,11t1cet 11, 'al.d m oney r'"pons ibiJitv is a Center, Santa Ana , retailer of t I fun•-l1"sted 1·n the Mutual M1v 21, 11 •rod Ju111 1, 11, 1t11 11n.11 NO, 1·11·1Ull co111roc•o•1 •malov1n1 t11doim1n Jn 1nv I011•111rrn•n 111 •nv •Par1nt1c11bl1 tr.at ""' / pany are a a current annua WJ o~ w""n•Ml•1, Ju... 11t11, 1•11. ,, """''"11ct•bl1 ... ,ut•tl"" la •PPiY 10 th• on •Yeh <Ofll•.i:11 •nd u athe1 C1H1tr1etor• matter of training rather than power plea sure boats and r ate or about $1.5 million. r· u n d Performance Analysis •l•vt n e·ci.x~ •.m., II Soutll F•Oll1 ll>Plk ll>lt lolnl IPl>•t11Uc1llllp comrnlt!ee "" 11\1! l>Ubl!( work • 1111 ... mt-lntt ICll:h LEGAL N TICE En!r•llC"-ol tn~ Old Or•nwe Cou<11v !or 1 ct r!lfi(l lt al ••oro•U •nd !l•lni Int conttlb<illon• innate ability . related ~uipmenl, ii was an· Present mana gement will re· publi~hed hy the Arthur Lip-0 CGYrtnou,t 1n lht "° l!lloc' 011 wnt S•n1• ,.11, Of 11>1>rt 11llc11 te l011rnt vmtn u•H Th1 Con!rtC•or 1nd ,,., wbcon!r~~or ''Our cultural lraining has nounced by R oland J . May(){... main, Mavoeue said, per CoMV'lration. 'lbtal a ssets An~ 1ov1•v1•0 ... F..,,,,,,,, w .. t s1~111 IHI '"' cont•1c1. ull<I•• him •h•ll cema1, wltf'I th• ., J ',.., NOT1C• OP 1"11U$TRE'S SAL• Slrot l", In l~t (!Iv 01 S111l• A111, (.,,,lt•tlor m1v "° rt1111lrt<I I• mt~e tUl<emtnh <II SK tl""1 )111 S tlld 1n 1 4 In d esignated that men n ot le, Radlon president. Prorils from the newly ac· increased from $1.7 million to T.o. N•. ,. .. ,, c111rernl1, un1TED CAL1Fo11Nt" 1ANK, c011u l1>u1lon ,., ,..,.,nt1ct•1'll• ••-•tr11. tnt ~ ... 01ovme111 o• •PD•tn111;,,. · women are more suited lo The agreement in principle qulred co mpanv will help S6 o million fo r the same 'T.S. Ni. 1·nflt 1 r1111t1• or 11Kc•uor l•u11,, 111111t• •~t contrt ctor •nd 1111>cantr1t1 ... , .11111 111<1 1111"'"'u1on rtt•Hvf ta •POr11111"'ihlo l · On 'ThurM111, Ju"" 10. 1111, 11 1·on Offd •' Truit m1dt bv C•rl T, lluiHll, compl..-•II~ Stcll.n 1717.• In !ho cmpllN· •!•nd1r(H. "'''' Kllldul~1. •nd ""•r ·~· banking and financial matters, calls for Radlon to prchase t he further d e v c J o p m e n t of period. A M • Gl6RAt. TA• DEED COMP AN1 •• ,,. 11nm•""" min. ..... •tcor1111<1 mt111 ,, '°'''"11c11. Qul•tmtn!• m1v .,. et>t•lntc1 1,_ "'• nd ' • · · F . cl11lr •~nltd Tt111i,.1 llnclt• '"" Febrll•r• ti~. UU, Jn l!ooll 11JI. P•t• 111 Ftr 1111ormelltn rolollv~ to 10. OlrectCI< al lndu•trl•I 1toi1u0111, 1_. 11111,1~ but this social CO 1l1on1J1g IS privately owned company for Radlon·s le isur e time g roup, James A. Craig, und vice PVr111•nt 111 O••d o• Tr11u rt<ordM Junt DI o111c111 ••cord• of °''""' cou111,, ••tnl1ctt1'1IP ,1,...,.,4,, conttef oiroctor '"' Admln111r11or ot "'"•••ntlctiftlp, l•n not entirely factual, and an undisclosed amount of which already i n c I u des president and pr!Sidenl of the >0. 1110• •• In••. Na. 1Mn. 1" Miit •m . t 1111orn11. •l•en •o "<11•• •{I 1n. o1 111<1ut1t111 11t1111on1. sin '"••Ml1co. F••ncl•to. c1to1.,.. .. 1,, 11• •1om .,,. 019• IH. of Olllclll ll ecordo I~ lllt elflc1 dtltl•Cl...,n Jn lovor of l!••lfltK e A, ro,, Colllornl1. or 01~111111 or APDttllli(t'll\lt D!vl•lon of ""P•t~tltfll!ip Slt ncllrdl 11111 women are just as capable in cash. I slander Yac hts. Mayotte said. F und managers, Directors of '"' Cov1111 R1corc11r el Or•n•• Countr. 1 w>dOw. 11v , •• ..,,. of th• Dt••<~ ~' ,.,. sttnc1110, br•ncn lfflco•. '" br•nch 0111,,1, d t m o n' t. r Y H • " 00 t ( has Th" [ lh th" d .. t . ' t• gement Co pnral1"on Sai"' Cl lltornl•. 11111 Ollliltllon1 IKUrtd lhtrtbv, netlct of CAlt PINTl•S! HOT ICE IS HEll E9Y GIVEN !I'll tltt reg a r o arnson s a cen er JS S e 1r acqu1s1 ion in 1>1ana r , ..., Wt LL SELL •T 11u61.1c AUCTION TO ,.111cn Dr••cn "''' rttorllt<I Jtnu••v ::1h. C••Hn1t r '' 11 Mouuon.Nl•u•I Wiit• 0111,10 wl" ric•lv• rl!llponslbititles ." exclu!ive Orange C o unty less lhan two months of com· the Fund is continuing to con· HIGHEST •100 E11 FOR CASH !0•111>1• 1911, 1n •-t JU. ,.,,, '"· 01 •1111 01. F<1rtmi11; •«•lvtt ,,., !tu thi n 60 c•nti 1t11"' b101 "' 11>1 0111c1 •f 8°'1' • th r t d I h . s R th t d . I centrate on issues in co ~! !lmt O'I 1111 Ill llWIYI mo ..... llf lh• llcl•I ll«O•d•, wilt ••II ti 1111bllc 111tllen "" /'IOU• ..,..,,. 11\t ll Ill• l'leut1¥ •tit ol En1 lnoor1,,., •11 Sou•n Lvon Slrttl $1n1A Dr. Brolhers IS e 1rs ea ers ips in ea a Y • panies a U'CCt Y sup-n-1un11.., 5~~~''h •' "'' 'ou1ft1 ''~' '7:,'11'1Ct ,0 "'' "1""''' bllldu tot t •1h, Piv1111, 111 111, hit""•* C••toen••• ct•n ovor wnic11 An•. c1Hror"1' u• 10 tht hour .; 10 . 00 "1oman to be Invited lo ad-Caravelle and Delta Inboard plement Radlon's ex Is ting itruction, retailing, financia1ll 0 1"" ,,,.., coun Y our ww, 1owrw1 """'' 111 !ht un11"' s11111 •• int 111 !Wt.• ••11>11111111111w 1 •c , vo 1 ,. , AM. on Ju11f n. 1111, " wh1,~ 11 ..... ,1111 dr'•• the associ"a ti"on. and Outboard boats. The com· servi·ces and offshore dri"lli"n :'11"' 1Jn1 "'' d'OG i~iock ~ w~,, 1 S•::~ 11m1 11r ''"· w1111<111t w1rr1n11 •• 10 111i.. "Pn111m1llc Nt111r "' Pow1r s111ier." Pl•t • 1111v w111 "' 11ub11c1. °"""c1 •nd <» operations . g. "' out~•• ormu " PO'IHH!on or oncumb••nct1. lf'11 lnt1r111 t.AIOltR ltl ! •tfll, S•lcl 1t11111 bl11t .i.111 be lor !ft~ -------------------------------1--'----::========================--i:t•••t~, 1~~11:• t11•• Ctl~~nll ~I llGh~ \; ~111v1vlcl It 1110 !\OW hl lCI Dv 1f!d lru1tt1 l.•bo•tr, Gtfltrol tr Contltucllon J4.f'S dOl111 ot !~t aubllt wo•~ hitr•lnbtlCl<t lease the new look of leadel'shlp {!) V la it Nabers' "Aulhorized" Cadillac ltat- Jng Oopartment for outstanding e xcellence In fleet lea1lnq er Individual lea s lng . A large 1electlon 11 now available to c hoose from. We will purel'lase your preeent c ar for top price. Service la our moat Import· ant product. 11venty-on .. at ~~~ 1600 HAAllOA 8LVD, /COSTA MESA C714) 640-a1oo '71 Chevrolet Vega Coupe BETTER TO LEASE FROM MacHowar<b AUTO & TRUCK LEASING 124 Harbor Blvd, •I fiost, -Sania An• Telephone ~31 -0607 b: ~"11no,: ,~:Ide~::'.,, T~u~t In~ ,:0. undn 11111 D•ed al Trull lfl tho ••-•Iv 011"'•tttt ol Pnoum1llc, <;.,, E t•~ltl< n.,crlbtd I nd Ol'dt•td 111 Tiit 1tld rttolu· Pfrt 111 ittcl In !l id C011nl '"" lh!f 1ll11•1t 111 01 111~1 CouM1, C•lllo•"ll Toot1, \/lbr ttln• M1cn1,..1 &. olmflot 11111, di ~lbf<Clv ,,. v Otocrl~ •I ' mtc1'1•nlt~I tno1o not I t fl • r 1 1 1 I y Eich llld er 1tro~11t 1h11! be mid• ll'JI ~el u cf T••cl No ltN 11 thOWll 011 T1'1ol POrllOI' el l.ot I ol f'1lrvltw rl~nll!ecl f'ltl•l11 J .XIS Ind 1ubmltlld on o t<1rm 10 tit Clbltlfttd II 1 MUI rtco•d'cl In °e"'I• 'n , Pote! 41 Ftrmo, ff\ lhl CllV OI Co1lt Miii, '°O•~rn1n1 Net l•n !~•II SO (•nt• atr h°"'r I~• Oltlto <11 Sov!t E11t111t trl111, 411 11.u!t'I 1.,q ,, ol Mlittlllflello.o• M•cl •teorih Counlv ol Or•nt o, Slit• •I Clllforn!1, rno•t t~1n 1n1 h..,•I• ••1• ot I~• llltllf111 L1on Strtot, $t Mt 11.~1, C•lllOl'llll. l!Hll ,, o· .. ~·~ Cou"IY Ct!llo,nl• • II ........ , tf(Ofcllcl In ....... 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It~\ tllllllYtd In ''" l•ttllllo!I of 11'11 ~~1~1(1, lf'lo l11torrn1llon lot llieldfr\, t!llCl'\H ·ta \~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "' Dtb\111 Incl l ltt llen ,, StN lo " ''"''" •f'ld llllttMfl Of Int l•UllH, •d· Nt lllfter "''' w11 ....... M1 tltl "' • •nd • ''" o!"" llld lerm lhtll '"'"~II •K•rlllNI In 111• (GUiii) Whitt "'' •••I v111<11. It t nr, Ufldtr !tie lttm.1 "' 11111 111<1td "' hlrlV•flV• Id) •• ,. '"ti' lilt l~OUll! f\ltfr ClfKt~ 1'1•rtln .... Alll ll 1rootrtv I• •oc•••d Oted. 11111111! lhf•!'llfl. '"" 10.•11 ... !11 •·r· '" , ... 11'1• -1111\t '"''"I, .1 .. Ooc:On'll. ••rf n! .... (Oll!••cl ' ::::1 0111! M•v 10. ,.,, u-!d ~IN! .. I ot "" Nott lfCll•tcl bY fOAJIO 01' TllUST•E• Tht Meu llett-NI"'" W11ff Olttrkl Gtl!llAl.TAlt !)EIO COM,AHV 1111 Ottd, WU~ IMor~ot tn••oon lrtm Jwlr COA.Sl COMMUNITY t11tr11t• th• lltM to •t!td ltf1 l~ll t i •• •tld Tru11~. • lltlh, 1110 •• 111 llkl Nolt ••ovllff. COt.L.01 C!STltlCr Dldt o• l>Cl•l!OllJ el 111¥ Ind t ll ll!cl• .. 19 Kid L f 'A k And ' '" TtTL.I INS UllANCE Dtttcl Mtv 11'11, 1'11 Or1~11 (ev<11? w1lv1 t llY t111trm11111 1~ 1 lie llltl If. " earn rom <: y ANO T'lllUIT COMPANY. UNITED CAl.lfOllN!,t, •lHK, C111t1 Mf1.I, C11lltrnl1 IK!td o, ll w 0 0 t i A1~111 Trwtln Sl•ntd. NOltMAN t . WlTSON MOUL ION NIGUl!L Ry LOOEMA I), CO"f'""AN H••cld $. ,_, '"""'''1· WI T!.I! OliTll fCT Au11'1orl1td Slt~llllrt ,tijfl>ot'lltd 1l1n1•w1 llotrd ft! T•u11tfl 8¥ All•lftd•r &awl1 11131 T·TSlf, l'tetn J11111 1. 1111 , l :JG • m SICt-!tt• Puttll1htd t>tntl Ce11r O&llY •111!1. •11btl1k11 D11~1t Cl.I I! 01ltv fl ltet, l'Uftll!htd Oft~lt. (01\f Ot llv ~110!, P11tlll~lotl 0•1,,.f C:t•lf 01Uy l'llCtl, __ , M•v ''· l1 , JI, 1 11 1t1111 N•• JI, n •no Junt I, 1"1 UOl 1! ,,.,., "· "· ,.,, ,, .. II Mt• ,. '"" Junt I, !,,, 1'lll!-ll -, . 20 DAILY PILOT SC LEGAL NOTICE ------~ LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL l'\OTICE lllll :ri•• IU,.1!'.lllOll COURT 01' THI STATE 01' (Al l'OflN a FOii THI COUNTY OP OllllNGf NO ••Ill lt(!Tltl: 01' llE•ll NG O• •MENDEO ,.ETl1 ON FOR PROa•Tf OF W LL AND l'Ofl Lt£TTERS TESTAMENTllllY f i • t c AC.NE~ (E(El A fll•N( & D t•&• 0 NOT c.e: s HF~FaY (' VEN n. (;ltllNT al GAN 1'111.ll NC S c V• o" r KIDS o~ v ""' "" LIKE IJNCLELEN LEGAL NOTICE , 11'1 ' C.TITIOUS llJSINl't NAME ITATIMl!NT OVER THE COUNTER ·~l1tlv• lllltMIN., ~"111111 I f ,,.,.. ,..., .. , t A.M INm ... , .. ,. 'IC11 ff Ml IM'liffi rtOll ., lMrlllfllo _,._ .,. CMIM"f"" NASO Ll1t1ng1 for Thursd1y, May 27 1971 .:;-1m:---,.,.,,,~- .. ... A 0 "c A TS nc AVM Cl> CC---'----'-" :~ '"' n~ LEGAL NOTIGE Mm• 1----------------l"'ckl 1n W NOTICll -YO C•EOITORI !dllt ll:o; ~ tS.'' jU 601UCCI A 1\11 A bu~l •n•• ••bou om mod' /j Uff 110 Tiit ntmll t l\ll bul Mt• •dO tntl of A ~ • lilt on••• II I • ... 0 I C Nonntn J l ddt JOI e Ed-• 1 A con lb A, 1111><11 Co 0 n 1 •cion E Tilt ,.,.""-' and bu1 ntu 1tkl eu•• of : "Te~~d ll'lt .l!\!lt ff l (t A I 8tV Tllam1• M Gte•on J t t M A d E<1u GlffJOn ~1 £ Ed9tw• t /.,.t ._ yn Sac 8•-C:• O<'ll • ._.,..Cm ._ o l'I<! bu• ""II n•Mt• tnd •dd eue1 ._ phnm u1ei:t bvllle t n5 1 o wl\n nee ve•1 •onGe<1 •• l'<llJ H • •• l11>own IO ~• •m !lu'P •tUfe "' I e Nont AM Eu• The !Qc•t on •"" 1•n~ • d••~ P on p1 :~ n F ~S Ille Pf-IV o bt! 1n e t<I •ft .,..., Fu n s (1(11. " 1de 1 • """' .-iu prnen ._..., G "' ..... .000 ... Pl • Cl • n h1mou Of ... M~d CP • lr.d l>ul .... u known •• The G• ev ,t..m Te ev 507 E Ed111wt t Avt 111 bo.1 Am Wt d C• lo Al'l•ll e 1 t Anhfu' II t n1 t o M (On ~n:;tl nldn 1 u1l ~ • lhn~ 11: : ~M";~Y '"' T 11'11 t 111 Pub "'~ Otn11t (O<ll Dt y P 1(1 M•v '' t IJ09o.J LF:GAL NO'J'ICE wnottt "'"''' t I •uO• n1 um•n •nd 1c•ll(>w ldlltd Ku od fll \tMr OFF Cl•L SEALI M•vllehMoon No1vP~b c Ct on 1 P l>C OtOttln O &not '""" v MY CD!'nm 'on E~P ti ,t..p ' '.s P ub ~hfd 0 tn~t Co.o1 Mtv , 71 and. "'':"~':_::'_c:,c:_c_:.-'.::C.C I: row t t Aloli:UI I If Mutual Funds l EGAL NOTJCE LEGAL NOTTCE '"'::t·'-----= ------1 ----------·~---I F 10 7 F CTITIOUS eus NISI HI.Ml STl.Tl.MENT Tht le ow nt 1tt '"" l de"' bu1 nen service dedicated ... don't hesitate 1avanty-one1 at ~1!~L~ ?690 HARBOA llLVD I COSTA MESA {114) 6401100 l(ids Like to Ask Andy ... • n ,. '" .. "! ,;} Complete-New York Stock List HO ,.. • . ~· d » i t.o ~Vo 1-ui: ' ,., '' 4J'lo 41 J7h 5 ~1\lt ' S1Vo 3 lto I' "' . " d " "~ rt ' • ~ .. • " ' ' ., " u ':: .. • • • ~ • H5 17 " " l• ..... n ' Jl ''"' . " l l ' "' " " I '~ •• ' • ,. , '" '" ' ' ... ' , •• • l' • ll-,.. ' ' •• .. " " " " • • • " " m "' • " ~ .. • '" ' "' • J •• 'I "" ~ 'l ' • J " ,1 • • " " " ' " ' • " "' ,. • ' • • . ., '" " .. "' " " • • " • ,,. " ,. . " ,.. ... " .. ... " " '" n. '" "" '" •• ... " .. Jr' " • ll ""' ... ,,. " ' . "• " l" .. 11 • " . '" "" " ,,. • ,.. .. •• "" " »• " '" ,.. M •• '" • • • " il · U • " . "'' "" ., . .. " • • ' . " • " .. •• ,. •• "" '" ... ' . 'I" ' ' ' . Jf: "' .. ~ i • ,. • Friday ~s Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List llM ~···---~------~--~ u..1 "._.. l" ci.e a. ii&·.. . n· L ~· ... f (.11J fj ~"1 \,, • lo Steek Leader• MOST SllAJIES .... .. • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,~-:-:::;;:;;-:;;;;;;:-;;;:;;:;::-:~] .... lillf I S•ltll Hitt C.W..I lili191 U. C-. QI.~ DOW JON•I •Vl•A•el <Mt I Mltill t.-Ci... Cllt !Mt I Nltl ~ c ... (•• Nnl 'V0tkrAl'l f l11o1l Ov"' J-•v• -..1 21 ... ,... 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Sllo + S•ltw•v Sir \lO tOll t Tt d -.11 Ill "'•• ~" 'i·· ~." ~'EIV YORK (UPI) -The stock market eoded Tw•" at 1'l 1 "" '''" """ UJ ~·~~""Ii 'I » • ltt'.·'.,', i:i.... wrii iok• 1 ' "' • I.ii ,. .. ~ 11 Twt~I Ct~t llU 11 1 •o I o + .r. 11.'11 An oe t• 11 j·l·t + 10 W <k• Co.~ 1 '°t :i..: 'A 'l ,'t • k : 1; !f~ -t ~ slightl~ ht"her on re la tivelv l1~ht turnover Frida y Tvl•• Coto 'u' v'\'i "• 1''" + '"~£!-~c~ ~ .• •• ut 't!t. 't;•o -1 !! :::: '111~~ .. 1:1 iil J•'• ,. ~.,; .. .u •Jo :I\; " a r --"f:n=,'c~·""te1 • ;:: w '"'' Co ' o~\!o .:1, u\•-; 54 " u<. ~ -1\ A though b1:rga1n hun tin g elped give the ma r u AL I"( no• JS 4 1s , """ + ~ v , c ... 1 0 ~ ,,1'41 ., d , -.,, wm1 ~o ... t11.1. ,. o 11 ~ Mt'Tlt '' <• u 1• II 1 •I dl.o -l "' Fl ft kot1 °'I " "/" c MotttnS 1"' • ~o ' IX! L ~•Tt '"I WI u 1 1, = . tm: •• ,, M1rt1t 1 it :u j'" qi~ 10• + "Con•¥ "" fi 1 >0, +l\1 j•n~"' n Metttl lh 10 t 1 " ,.,, -Line """ l 1411 -t fn11tt wl A Mu, "ti 0 11 jl'I Jl I -'t ~&M ). H I -1 111111tt r" • MMllbT• 'f ' '• , tt0 i \t ~ltt n, j' • ':!~ r M•tl M(ll I I Ill. II • ,. ~ I w v11• IO. I : 1 ~ j• "I " MGIM l l 't 1010 1 , , t n11 .. l '' ,,. +" '' ,, O> ! 1•"' UVt l4V.-.. t.. I I d J k lh J k d t UAL or.O Jl" )J JJ"+""v •c~ wiii I I 11\, J'l.t -~w..,, •••tt • 40 ,.,, 3''r -+,. u~ s11: i'l io !~;; .. e a s ea y oo e usu a pre wee e.n cau ion uA11co 1 , 1, •" •'• .,. -+ i, v ,lcomD .H 11 , I' + w w"" ~ .. ' •> ., •1"" 1 1 y~ l lR: ·~~ -=-~ kept manr Investors on the side lines tlf..c f~ 1,'/ ll ~~ ~\~ u~ + :: ~= tr: 1 ~I Ml u~ tt; : : -,. :::1~1"~ r:. ;' :'i~ 111~ ~:t -+'1- Mllrnmf l(I lM 110 P. • U , \t "' ,. JO MC'!tl'to yJD J J-'-i::&.rt..o "'IGIC 11v 10 111.l 16>.> 'I • It'-Ntt 'rfJltl r~ lb ~!ell G1 VI 1 II IJ t>.r. If tllolla.I .... U• Cl-<>o Ttxt \ ntl IO midi Tulle I n J JS + ~ Tt.0 G•o M~rodo ~ SO lli /j • 111,, "' i Tt~PLd 10e M !'"IT,, i 1 11 ., ... _...,,.SvlG IM ..., ,.I.Ii 2tl• 2t\o +'ot TtJUI l,t1 0 11 ,,,, 11~ Despite recent br11ht economic statistics Ron un• (o • ' '"' '"' "'' -,... "' " •111• 1 1 1t1" 1<11•;. -11.1. w' P 0" '° i1to11 10t ~ 1os , , .. , ... , ,. ... "" "• !.l!oi -~· Id c ( w E H t & d r Un "IV I"' 11 111'> JI~ ,."~-· ...... 1, ··-!Ill, i; .. " ""'+ \ltWl1c ,, 11' 31 Ii. I, ... 11.. .. M Vt' I 01 '111 '' 0 u..:. 'I ' -14 "Sl!G 1n.u ?110 l • 111 111 ,,, on tf' Ml dill t olO olO ll') • l 4 <.104 ~.lEG PIJOJ I.JO ""'""'""+ '-ltxlr ortOI M1••1;tl1 I JO 71 S4 i. J~ S.0 ~ -~ PSfG itll 40 t ltto lt\, lt\o .,. ""lt~, 011 .. Ju 1: ~ w.. ~ a ooper o u ton Co sa1 a Jot o In un C.•mt ~tJ "° ,,..., "0 • 1" ifDi ... n w c , 11 ~ 11 11v. ~ m: ~·· ~;: .:::_1: divtdUaJS With money l O IR\leSt Still are UncertllQ tl~~·~:.~ I 1~ :~::: '! ~ ::•• + "'~~ntt,:pl.r ~ i•a r,. ·,: .... au +I"' :~vi: :!o 1~ IO ~: ,i:: ~ i ff ~~ .~;. !r' .+ 11o about the econom} 1 He noted that ~omt money g~}\-1,zij 1'T .. 't: :! :!~ ... 1w ~~k~~ :,11•1 ,t :W 211\o li''": +'Iii :~..!1~•1 >t ,? J 0 .J~! ~ • !.! l>'t u,J;! »16.=~ that wouJd have been comlng int() stocks 1s going un0 c. 60 11° r,'" J" l"' +,,. vw1.un11 n 'xlf\.'o 1"' ""' woctw ""'o ., 11 •'"" u\4 M ii rid ._, H 3' J!\ ~ +I /Ou Sv11 II• , .. Ml,."""~ ~ Mn~ M 111 11 llt•i l • I • 'S 11\11 •111111 -TllioltM ... M 11t1Pl ! I '.Ill t , .... It~ It ' -.. tlJll 14 1 l•'-l t\'t + Th.,...lltl 1..&4 Mu•1··· i•tU ,.,,., PJrwlM\ .. 11111 1• .... ,n. '"" 1<..,~=1t:'1:: MIPt~ .t, J •''''ti ~ ti• l>Ull~nfl lh 6 4\1 tr ..... le •w M!SJlt y 1•1 111 111, Ill.. I• o + \> Pvll' NH fA jJ :ll ll" 1•'4 -+ ... 1 ,, '' D -... Jllto ... " Ibo d be fh h Id 80C• pllJO .~ ll o ~-v. -W TI-w.~,',"~ '••'1!' F .. nJ>'-•' ~ ,, .. • ''" -•t• lll o n ' cause o 1g er y1e s " ,,,,, , , ,, , ' .... , ,,, • -I 1 .. Ml: U!i4 J.1 , unon P•c •J • ., .... -z wKhC1 t 1t :It•"• •I 4 -\•Wu Ur..-•• u IS•' u' ., 11lo 1J n ... ... Shortly before the final bell the Dow Jon ts In t>R P·~. .. ,,' ~ •• n • ~.· -,_ Wocllill 1 01• :u H ' )OJ.: 11~ t .... x~ •• c . •o .,., llJ 0 )1).111 10• 0 -,,, ... • •••-O) > ~ -.,. t4 •-.. Wli<lff" 16 :tf\\ mo 2f,.. ~XIT• Inc: )• ~ JI 1'1.o ..,., -• d t J/< h d203 t90781 St d d Unlon•m to tl "• 111. ll -W•-H ,.. l j' )tto lt'•-""Y!'4i!D l lO , u , u 11" 0 11-1 4' d 4' + !• US !Ja Ygr age \\IS I el J '-il0 tr Un rov• If 11 JI 10 , 71 w o !llu1r o0 t 1\1. 11"-1 -lo t1i. (9 • u lU )t l.11 :r--l. 1 M~ C•"l I 60 J 7f'o 11 o 1'1< l>ueD e In ,3 lf IJ 1 •>! IJ\'f -fl Coto l :It Nff'ull5 .in 11 11 o !' o 11 o _,. ; />ill Ct m 40 I 12 1 l 'l +I.Ii l •twtM 50 M'*IOI ''° !l ,, n , !• " Put!PL '" 11 l6 ,. :1111 Tll"lt II(, .. """"' I 10 Ill JI lJ HI Pu "''" 1 ii U ,; ~ JJ,l .. ll. T m•IM r 50 ........... ~Do• l • lt 11 1 I -•u t~CD ... 1J.O lilt 1' " -\.oT"'k"' 1 10 Mtlvtid "' J ,,,_. "'"' 1 .. -.... Pu t~ 11 " I ,. ~ ,, T thR Iv '°" •111\oJI ll'-+• &Po 50 tock1nde sho•da (023tl unov•11 1 r1010•,10• •o• l ao1 Mu•to l!ltl.ii ' .. o l••f>fAto lXl ~lO~JO ~-' Uo 11 , JI""+ I Ori S X e gll00 Un thH1 •O ll .O o l'f'• •Oo +I Wfwa lP\Co 0 '"° '' t l -•]tDIO ... O/n JJ l!o J< J•o , M 111 1111 •• U , II~ U -'---T<lllt Sf' 1 20 =<II M I t t lt Q.R ToD n'ck oO I """ 11\11 t1" -99 83 Unl ft fr I IO t• O )ti< Jt o -1 Wone ;•ti I "o M U -'•lo1tlNO<" •I I J U .. , tl\lt t I ll'4o tl\o IJ"-Uni! •l'ldl 31J JI )S flt 11 \I > .. "WI II -· U I)~ O ZI > , (OtD 10 •! o jj '', -"" 15" 1' JI o ll Jlto .,. o Ou•~ DI! I 160 4 ,• oJ il -l. \•1o1..iol IO MOl"DEO 10 'Ji JI ,. lluo u llltl • u 11 • .,.,_,i Totlhsh"' ' 1111> 2t H Of the 1 633 ISSUeS CrOSS1ng the tape 711 glUn U fl II .i :Ill U l n-t U • '" T lo We •1ce 60 I! )0 ""' 1(1 -t-0 Ztn ~ ~ •O l' 4t o It ~ •t 't -t " ~, 16\;, ~ +"' Uni(• 7~ JI t~ t '"' + Wt•n< ell JO .»l'1 lOI-> 30\oo lu n ~~ !I '~ 7 l 1 "> i,, ;,U I U ; Jllo lllo ll .. +. , 1~•:1,::,.111,. 'il flo h ll!t = •"' r,.11, U IM ~1:,~r 11'1 Ul Mh jl .-, .._ gu•IO• t! I ' f' ,~, ll"> -1 t 1ne Ct te Nv5tC111J! ,J lJ'' f ~: ~ • =:~a1"~'"•J l~ I!: tt! ~ i ~ ;~·:~:, ~r 1; ~ ~ !lv. ~ ~ ed and 587 declined A turnover or around 12 000 ~~ ~.~ ~1 .~ 1:(0 : ' 1:·: -~ :: ~f"'. \10 1tJ ,,.,. 111• i'r" + : coov '" N eov "Th• A• °' • •d , , .. rn 1u ... 1011o »lli+111 OOO sharescomparedw1th l2 810 000s'hartdtradtd Hn,r~. ,, 1 ni.. '0 ' -1 w11~C, , .. ,,',~ ~1\1 J.,,,_ s~-·f,~~~~~~~~~~~ ,111J Jn 1~ "1 ,~ 't Z * Roolo All't 'J ''"' 1~ Ufl. ""lr11Wl'ln tJt " u~ U\lr "" v ' ' I • •I• I. I-0 W11h Gr• ti 1 n ... 1 .. lS IU't 11IWI lll'I + 141 Thursday UnJ..-.111 1 1 •l 0 U\Jo 43 \11 -.. w .... II '°' , H . 1' I• + .... ~ 1',. '., .. ,"" Elec•·onics traded lll both d1rect1ons \111th some ~:'~'(" 1 » lt f, ~1l0 ~' = ..t =:i~~'Jcl;,tt = U.., ij:: U(: -... Final St ocls 4 1114 I lh -\lo U U~ Pk M" llN llo JIO W•Yll OM 11 Ii 10to,, 1 1-. lM\i 'i-/0 .. 1" n. '"' + " of the computer 1tocks 1n revuse aear following IJ5 "'dG 1 M i 1 .. 14 .. .,. .,,., + ~ wr•~ un ' , 1" tat M.,-1~ 5h 11 u 11 , 7; 0 1• , • , ,•,•,v!;.1,"",,, r lO 2tV. M Ito t r1Mmr1 U Mfl"No t& 16' 3'V. jl\• ""' 1 .,. 1j 'I ,,.., t~, ,, Tr1n1<1111 • MIJICW"O • '° IM IJ"' I ti ~IO: l •Vlheotl .. 11 l h 2t 1""' t'" T'1nKl1 I,,., M!Fuol s I.. 1 oil o '21~ fl~_ •o I'"•" i>I I 11 I ll\, !f:i.ii ~ 1 T •••Ira H In AR Homo Mn11n I» • 1r · 11'> ll-"-11~ ... C•DI . lS2 '"ii" 1't ltT•••ll••" t lJt » 11 m1 + .. • u! 11'1~• ,,. •1 n, •, 11 • "" + o W••'"""d 1• 10 , '"' 10.11 t 4N u" '* -v. IBM s announcement Thursday that 1t cut some u Fors 1 "'• •• l _,. J.1 w~~ D• '" s. io "' 10 -+- Mu"le o .t i • l"i u" u \ -, ill B•lt )S II )II~ J.~ -TrlCtn ltto A\~L ll'll 40 n J\\ 1~ • •~d,.. ce ~ '1 • v. lo\ 1,(1 Tr•vlMI u '' H \11 1:1\'f D l4 US FrHt I 00 ,..:u 1' 't JS o 16 ' l •1 W•1 Mii '1 OIOJ ~) ~ .n ~ 4?/ -.. ., "~ tit;\ 2'1to -prices on computer parts us Gvo1m 1 n,; ~~ f~ ~ ~:1: 1 w•'• •,,,,co111• 65 ,;1! ~: Jit ~ 0 : ff~ tr~ ff~=~ 81 'L*:~ *= ii ,.. ,,.,., u 11i.. +"''•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,!~us P ~Ch 11 f: Y:! M~ ~1 ~ • ~::~t • 1f.r11 1 1 iJi:": }s,; 11' ~"; '!J:::==============' M\111lrt1 111 0 1 ~ '"' t\• lh m" !OD '° JI i« -t-n i TrlCM •rt.le M19,..VCt l 10 21 II " 1J,. u RttV Ill 1.JO l 341, llho ~ ' 1•"-1,,. .. """'"''n li,, ' .. H V. 11 • Reich CPI .10 l! ·~· '"' "' -+ Tft•lc1n• Mur•h DI iO )I .U'41 lllf JI>• + '•' 000b Sir '°o jf 11 1! -.... TllW ll'IC 11 M~r'""°" 60 I tl ~ 2l • 11 c l 10 11 1\'li ''°"' 2f1.~-'-Al Tt.W it11 l0 11 17"'1 ~ 11 + "'-11 USilC~ 1111 XI U l) Jf\o 3:1 • •o W!P l't• I ~ "'4 -+--uu "~u-.+v. US l!'>Otfl ><l t31.;1ll .... 1~-·W•nA Jll a )0\30 ~ -N-Reoulll c Co ~l 7lo 11" J>,i Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List " ,, .. s. ::r.bl11.d1 r 1: u~· TI:t l!" + ,,.. 7,1 SI I)... o lhvJo DS '' J Ji\i 2tlo lO ~ -+ "" 11 1 ?1 1 R•vtrCo~I I •~11 ~tl1t-... ll M oll•U •illevon 111 •10 t -IO lt Jj .. ,,, 1J ~ ille•Chn I ~ I lt .O JP l1 -I '° 1410 '' 2• • 11._.c on ll J ~\ ... 41 o •J , -1, ..i It 11 11>.. -o illt •ft •G l'o lt1 6lT il il -... Ml ~' .. '> :~ = '! R,!',~.~ >,~ Ml n tt\li 12 ~ -'° M H • • t• ll"" !''• 11 ° -'. N!W Y01 1f ~A"I '•lll V t <{ll•'ltH n 1~1 i~: t;,,., + ' :t:111~0 ~·: o ~: ,:•: I: : -o .._,.,, Cl " IW.U l•U11~1 • Ctt 11119 Nol (WI J lllt-L.IW CIMO Cftf JUG 6'° I 6 -o11t ch0sOll N I U\, Ullo l !~ "' ' U 11'• ]J .. o ill chM• t I "' 1,°' •,, ... 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IJ\'I ll o -~ llo z 0 -fl• fl .. ~ llld•J "" Hit• LN Clllt (ft .. " ' ·~ I " " • ' .. '! " ' • ' ' • • fl ' " • " " • 'l fl ' '" ~ ' • " ... "' ... .. •• ' . " Ith •• ,,. .. "" ' .. • '" "" "' 10•o " " "' .. " .. " •• ... lllo .. • • i1 , . ' . " 11 01. 11 r· 1: i . " ' ,,. IJ t l.. I 1 • 4 lt • ,. • ' .. 1• •• . " ., j • I JI~ •• ]I 4h 1 ,,, 1\o ,. -' I o I '-Al O • O\o t \, 1• II• ... .... • ~ .t. • J1 5,_ ... ~~ ~~:;'' u .. "'• t-4 f t -lo lil 1Ao . . -. t .. -\, l •o 11 .. 'i-• ' . 21• 1JI. -•• I > 1 '> • •• ~o -10 lelo'o -" "' ' J 0 J\ -olllo •1lt,, J !01 I I o t • • lo 1'S I-I& lll tit ... 1. I • I -> .. .. -~ J'• 1'• ~ \• t , ,i ~ I\ ' • ' I J'0 ; • -I• ~ • J \ 11 " . ' ,;.. 1: . " • U l.oi I • ll ~ ..... . .. b i "" ' • ~ ' ' ' ' " -· t o 'II ... • • ,, 0 • ' ... ' ... 11 II t ' I ' ' 11 0 ti• " ' J• 1• • • • . • . l .. •lo .... \lo Finance Briefs ClllCAGO <UPI\ The M1 !w11ukce Railroad s board of dirtclors has decided lo creatl'; .t holding firm lent.Jt heJ.r called C h 1 c • I G Mii waukee Corp lo btrome th! rorpora It parent of lhe rarlroad and tnaage 1n bus1nies 1 d1 11t rs.if1cat1on Tht ratio for e1ch angt nt secur11Jes ot tht propostd hold ng company for t.eCUr111e5 of the railroad rnmpany his "llol yet bten detennlntd TULSA ! UPI f -Re•dlng and Ba tes OHshor t Dr1ll!ng Co said l!.!I ~ub ~1dl11r y , Assoc11ued Pipe l 1ot Con lractor.!I Inc l.!I joining Pan canit Jndu11tr1e11 I Id of Calgary in an equ111 ventu re to creait a company to cngal{e In plpehnt bu1lri1n11" 10 Canada Tht new company .s head quarters will be in Calgar> IVASll!N GTON IU PJ) Gene ra l Dynam ics Corp ha! obtained a 14 5 m lll1nn Na\y contract to convert t h e nuclear subm arine L1faye1te from th~ Pol1tr1s m 1~s1te S}~tem to tht Pn l! t 1 don S)'.!lltm • ' '1 ., • • fl • .. ' . •• .. 1' • ~ -,.., I !l Iii l · ,;i----------· -----' . " • " '" " " • " ' ' . ll •• • • " ' l• ' ~ lll , 0 •l ?t l 140 " fl u ·~· ' ', JO I 1$ It 1-o Sh I 'j'• • • )I t o . ' . ' l~o . . .. 100 " 0 ···~ 11 ,. • 11 ·~· ' lt • ' ' 11 1Jh n i~;: ' " " "' '' ,, .. ' '" u J\o ti JI fl .. H 14\, " . " . 'I '! .. " . " n~· ~ 'ii: 1l fJ I . .. 7 1" 1• IJ -12 , -10 Symbob 1! '1l J Sol l•• I ev u 1 t u~&I c o 2 l JI ... 0 U11 t1' o .,,,.....,, n&t<1 t ll ti I • l 0 ) 0... i n•nf' n "o 10 •to nt •D • trt •~nu•t f \/o t 1 -on l>u le,,..•n 1 but~ on ~• 11 1u• • .. ~. ~ 1• ••rn •"nu• d'c 11 t0n S•t•• o• t t O ... >.. •• t 0 vlOtllOI 0 OOYlllt n o ne dtl I 1"' 11o -0 n••d •• 11u 1r •t 11tn '"' n "'It J I li .., 111 IO'"nt fl!llM •• 2J , ,:'• ~ 01 • A •o •~ • or tll 11 b Annu• rt 1 l lt 1 \-DU0 1 0<1 d •d•"d l-l lUCll ne d v '' 11 1•..,d d-Otc 1tct er ••d "!'11 t ut 4\li 4 J. • t 1 It t oc• O •llloncl, ,._,., d 1111 Y••• '- 1 I ~ "'I loi • Mk du nt lt T! totlm1!.., (t lll Jl \o U•o -•iv• u• tn •• d • ltncl e ••-<111 bu 19') %111 : 0 _ :111 t •-0.c 1rtt e ,ol• oo l•r 111 I j . J 0 IWNf 11-DI<. I .. I F '' d •Ill !Itek l 2 _..,,.vldtf\IJU lf ll""' --Dt<lfflt N d 1. I -· !h 1 Ytl I ll •cuMu o Vt "'" w " 4; • .,. I i I• dOlld• f~ ••rro ' n Now i.,.,. •-~ ~ Jl: :j ~l'•ld Ill o v•o d vkloonlJ ""trf'<I ~ .. m o n >o _ , ''"" 0 ne •c °" ti"" 1 11 t • l •"il '• t _ 0 mttlln1 r Dt c ttd• ••d 11ltlt1 ~t ·~I -+\.118(.-dWdtn& ,_,,, ntKk..,.,.t J)\t lJ\o -' tJ'D H l"'l If (II~ Yl l\>t lft .. -<! • dll'l<f 11 lt -• or ,, .. tlrlllu1iell d11t 11 \lfO o +,,., l ~l 't lllH ft""lt "• '"'-\~ ., I ' llh 11\•-"' C.-...1..i •-•dvt•llf v-Eot1 v '" I"' dtncl ,,.. II t• !~ "'I. 1)1 .. 1 ..... l • ' • ; • ... -...nt-11 ••-I• , IPll ~w-W!I~ ...... l lh l• ... ,1' ••n I ..,.,_w " ... ,,.~II w ... Wh•~ I . ~ , I -1"6 rlw •d ... 1-wMn ln ulll. llf-N~l 11v 1Jo1•t f •t ve y l • i \ _,. \lo vt-~ ti•~~ri.rtlcY II' rt<•lvt"~" ~ 'il 2,,_ -• Mfn• l&ftlllltM ulldor !Pit a1hl!rvt t "I f • 1 +-, Acl '' 1~• •• 11111,.,tt 11 tut~ ta-u" 711, -t: M ii ., i i-I• ft I •1• ct-(tl'I I f & O• ,,,.., Ith ti•• lt-J '""''' J-0.tl "' •11 l-M8~.., 1~.,_ ~ • :;-.: -• 11t161ltll I\' l!!\••l'M hi"'' u• tv 1"ll ti -\\ ..,_Nbl di~ dt l•t l? •-t. ,..."'" .. t l.t " -+ ""'"' llltltll I•• ... • 22 DAILV PILOT Friday , May 28, l CJ7 l . . OAKBURNE BRIQUETS by Kingsford Get a bag. set up the. barbecue. get the family together. and take a moment lo· really think about how lucky we are lo live in America. Sure. gripe. but we can be fair to our country. can't we? 51 HOT & COLD CUPS A fun.ny deal here. Ifs that extra cup that makes our fellow tradesmen gnash the teeth .... How do they do Jt, Chau?" We don't know. we just put the extra cup in for the fun of it . -.. . . -'.: : r l~::'--"' They say this Is better. Bums nice. no big flare-up. <You know, no matter what l ask them. they always say ifs better.) .... . . . . . . KING O' LAWN 18" ROTARY MOWER The big beast with the 4 cycle engine and the reliabilily we have come to expect from this firm (and it it ever disappears. out they go). Recoil starter. 1tagg8red wheels for close cutting. 49a1 WITH GRASS CATCHER • · BEilDJHG PLINTS lf I named all the kinds we -have you'd only snort . and say 1 was slrelching it a bit. 10 come end see the selection fo r yourself. 29~RAY KING O' LAWN EDGER Another reliable dude. Full adjustment Jor any angle ol trim or .d.ge. Four cycle en~ine (can't you see it pulled by four kids on their bikes?) 5487 N0.206 ' ' • 4x8 FOOT PARTICLE BOARD First off, the stuff ls 3/16ths thick. which is good for bench tops. shelf and cabinet work. and other stuff. Saw it. drill it. glue it, just like wood. but no grain warp or split. (Must be .something wrong somewhere, Margaret), DEALS GOOD ·4:..,..---~ THURSDAY THRU MONDAY ONLY • (May 27th lhru May 3lsl). PICNIC JUG OPEN MEMORIAL DAY 9 to 6 PM Plastic thing. easy to wash out. no rusl. no shallering. Nice for camping or pop to take to work. (Watch whal he puts in it. Mom.) 97cG~L. &-FOOT STEEL WALL POOL 5a1 S ix foot diameter. Kids can have a lot ol fun with this. Pop. you can cool off too, Vinyl liner. INFLATABLE AIR MATTRESS 93c Stu If it under your s leeping bag and rest easy. Use ii around !he pool for a Jun !loot. SUMMER SCHEDULE Gather v1ith us every WEDNESDAY EVENING al the lodge hall at our LA MIRADA STORE at 7:30 PM whilst the wonders of doing it yourself and pocketing the lobor costs unfold. The genius will teach you all. Be there. ~""',! .: )!1 ~~~"'I' CAST ALUMINUM COOKER Kettle top opens s moothly while a cting as a windbreak. Convenient towel bar handle and stainleas steel burner. Sunburst grill drains grease into removabl• cup. 97 FREE CLASSES June 2 "Lawn and Garden Care·· by Harvey Wallbanger of Bandini June 9 "How to Insulate Properly" by Quiet Sam of Modern Materials ,c .. UMBRELLA RECOVER Nice multi-color deal with the fringe. II the p ole is g ood. why buy a new umbrella. Fix it. you thrifty guy. 9a1 150 FT. RE-WEBBING Same goes for lawn chairs and chaise. G ot a choice of colors and you can reweb easier than digging into the pocket for new furniture. ·~-------..... ------------· -.--...... ~ ----~ ·-I II t I --• -·- AUTO COOLANT SYSTEM Good boilover protection , recovers the fluid. ln a freeway jam. you'll find ii worth its weight in goli;i. 197 CAR TOP CARRIER Double carriers for boards. luggage, skis. or anything else you want to rack up there. (Maybe you'd like to buy a little lumber to test ii with). 3a1 I 44 QT. COOLER CHEST Terrific cooler Jor those hot days to come {Th•y keep promising). Just leave room Jor the ice. O.X.? Hi impact plastic with Jock·top. 9 .a1 .. 8 DICH FAN. - If It ain't hot enOugh for you now, it ~ill be. Save now before the light.of greed comes QI\ in th•' bosses· eye,. ~ ' ' 441~·· PANTYHOSE So you paid over two bucks a pair and 1>till , • • "Look Dear. another pair shot:• This way you won·t cry so much. PR • NEW MOD CONVERTIBLE SWAG LITE listen. it comes in Lipstick Orange. Grass Green. and Mellow Yellow. These colors you·ve got to see. even if if was a yo-yo . 697 NATIONAL INTERIOR EXTERIOR VINYL 2 87 GAL. Pretty good paint so don"t let the price talk you out of it. Colors too. (How many? Don't ask). REDWOOD STAIN Doing a fence? Boy. will it slurp it up. so this may be the best saving in the ad ior y ou. CONCRETE MIX Add water. stir, and call your mother·in- law out Jor a test cast. (Only kidding Mom. we love ya!) 49c so LB. 4x8 FOOT EXTERIOR SHOP PLYWOOD Today. we find guys who couldn't drive a nail building the whole darn room. II you need to get a bargain. this is for y ou. 2 67 '11 INCH RUSTIC XKE PANELING Here' a your chance to add so me warmth to !he livingroom . bedroom or den. There are a few slight imperfections which make lhis bargain price possible. but we defy your friends to find them after you've decorated. (II th•y do they're looking too hard.) . • ~ . • • .. .. I l ., ., ~ " " ,. l ~ ~· I ;; .. '• ) ·l •• i~ ., .. • • ' l ' Movie 'Fox' Zanucl\: Wi11s Figl1t NEW YORK IUPJ ) -Darryl F. Zanuck is still the fox of Hol!ywood. He has come out on top again in his latest battle of 45 years of Hollywood wars. A Zanuck.Jed management team ha!'i been involved in a proxy righl to retain control or Tv.:enricth Century·Fox Film Corp. against a group of insurgent stockholders backed by Zanuck's estrang- ed ·\\.'ife and their son. Judges who counted the shares voled at lhe company's annual meeting ~1ay 18 said TbW'sd_ay unpfficial returns showed the management retained control by about 1.5 million shares out of 6.4 million voted. ' A spokesman for the dissidents, Charles M Lewis, partner in the Wall Slreel brokerage house of 1'reves & Co., 6ail the losers might challenge the results in court. He said the dissidents have until lhe of· ficial announcemenl of the vote on June 8 to check and challenge the proxies voted by management. He did not say which proxies might be challenged . Sources close to Corporation Trust, the firm v.·hich counted the votes, said management got enough votes from brokerage house proxies to v.·in in spi!e or any challenge. The votes by 10 mutual fund s hold ing shares in Fox were reported about evenly divided . Zanuck 's position \~ilh Twentieth Cen-- tury v.·as uncerlain today . He is chairman of the board but offerc<l his resignation at lhe r..tav 18 meeting in Wilmington, Del.. as a cOncession H ·management retained control. The apparent victory Thursday means Zanuck either can remain as chairman or ~o through with his resignation and head up an independent production unit with }'ox. Since he is 68. he v.·ould have lo retire as chairman in about 17 months an.vway. Fox president Dennis Stanfill. who replaced Zanuck in that post last winter, remains in control of the company. Zanuck. who became a litan of the in· clustry after coming to Hollywood from \Vahoo. Neb., 4~ years ago, saved Twen· tieth Century-Pox from bankruptcy in 1962 by taking nver the presidency ~hor!ly after the company slipped into the red by spending $40 million to make fhe movie "Cle<:ipatra ," The company under Z a n u c k ' s lr;idership suffered heavy losses in 1970 although it. operated at a profit for the fi rs! quarter of this year. Zanuck"s estranged wife. the former ::ictress Virginia Fox, and their son, Richard. whom Zanuck fired as president nf the studio in December. voted their JOJ.000 shares for the dissidents. I ·-' ~ - !Ji ' LAGUNA BEACH SOFTENS UP; AT LEAST ON THE COLOR OP.-CITY VEHICLES P1trolm1n Din Busli, Street Inspector Pliilip H1ndy Model New Look in Equipment Dowi1to,vn Basin Model Approved By City Cowicil With approval of lhe Laguna Beach Ci· ty Council, cl!y planners will have a $4 ,700 dov.'nlown basin model to v.·ork v.·ith to design the future lace of Laguna Beach. Planning Director \Vayne Moody told planners r.1onday night he felt a model of the land area from the Fesli11al of Arts to lhe fl.lain Beach , stretching from l.£gion to Aster Streets would be a "valuable tool " to work with for future planning. He said 1he six foot by eight root model could be built al a cost of $4,700, con- siderably below a $40.000 figure proposed by the city council several years ago on a scale of one inch to each Iii reel. The present model would be designed nn a I inch to 40 foot proport ion . r.1oody added the Down t l'I w n Businessmen Association and the Citizeni> Town Planning Association have offered tn he lp fund the project. Laguna ·soft~· Color of Vehicles-Toned Down Pale blur city mainlenance lrucks and pristine white police patrol cars are help.. 1ng give Laguna Beach a new "sofler" look. All si x of the Polic~ Department's squad cars oow are solid white wilh a di screet seal on each side, instead of the tr11ditionat police car black-and-white con1bination . The idea or v.•hite JXl!ice cars, already in use in NewJX)rt Beach and a number of nlher communities, 1vas proposed by former chief Kenneth Huck in the in- terest of giving the police c!eparlmenl a little "softer '' look, according to acting chief Capt. David Brown. Two of the white cars were purcha11ed new as replacements and the others were repainted lo match. Brown said. Not to be outdone in conlributing to the lmpoved ci ty image, the Department of Public \Vorks decided to switch the -colo r of its maintenance vehicles from the traditional bright orange lo an attractive sky blue. Th~ vehicles, some 30 in all, include dump trucks, pickup trucks, street i;wecpers and sundry nther11. though public works director Joseph Sweany said he didn "t think the street sweepers would be included in Ule "new look" right away. From now on, Seany said, all new replacement vehicles ordered for the ci!y v.•ill be light blue and any vehicle needing body maintenance will gel. a coat of blue paint. ·'The idea.·· said Sweany. "is lo change the image of Laguna Beach to something more ·resorty' and different from what everyo ne sees back home." It has been customary for city. county and state public \VOrks departments to use orange vehiclel! to provide better visibility for crews working on highway maintenance and the like. Sweany said. llowever in a ··tow speed" community like Laguna Beach, the color really doesn't make that much difference. so long as the vehicles are equipped wi~h flashing warning lights. By dressing up lhe maintenance vehicles, Sweany said, he hopes the men working with them will have "more of a feeling of beloniing to"Laguna Beach." s DAIL V PILOT :J La9111aa Briefitag Drug Off enders 'Baffle Courts' Judges a.nd law olficials know how to handle murder, rape, burglary and other crimes, but for the most part they do not know how to handle adrug u,.ser, • profu· 50r of police science to I d a Laguna Beach audience this week. Appearing as guest speaker in the t.aguna Coor,dinating Council's . drug prevention guidance series, Richard Grace. former state narcotics agent, described a pilot program for court reform proposed by him and how in· 15tituted in Queens. New York. The program. wh ich Grace said is being considere d for introduction into.the Caiifornia judiciary system, provides i;pecialized drug problem courts. J udges, team consultants and officers in the spec- ial courts would have specialized traio· tog in psychological aspects of cases re• Ialing to narrotics and dangerous drugs. "Al the pre11enl time they are not train· ed and th ey know it," s~id Grace. "They f i n d lhemseJves dro~ning in the morass of drug problems. There must be ;i definite distinction in the handling and the sentencing of those engaged in the Orug traffic for gain and those who are sick people, whose dependence on drugs is physical and psychological." Grace desc ribed a regional plan which ma v be initiated through the California lns.titute of Criminal Justice at La Verne Colle!:(e. un der which 15 or 20 judges would participate in a two-week. live-in educationaJ program to enable them to become more efficent, espeei.ally in the handling of drug cases. He suggested that 3 similar regional pilot program could be initiated in lht: Laguna area. with the cooperation o! in· terested members of the judiciary. Many existing rehabiliation centers, (;race said, are fa iling because of in· adequatt: facilities. funds and methods of psychological and psychiatric treatmenl. Tht most long-lasting results, he said, are co ming from the self-help programs 11uch as Teen Challenge. the Seven-step Program, haU-way houses and the flielodyland Drug Prevention Center. l\'lrs. Quinn Sues SAN JOSE (UPI) -ThP. wife or Lee Quinn, a sailor who disappeared at sea with his all-girl crew, has filed suit in Superior Court for her husband·s $2 1,000 estate. Quinn, 43. hasn't been seen or heard fro m since he left Japan in October en route to Vancouver with three female crew members. '# ' PRINCIPAL SPEAl(ER James Gilbert American Legion Leader to Speak At Laguna Fete Pasadena allorney James A. Gilbert, nationaJ committeeman of the American Legion. \Vill give the principal address at Memorial Day ceremonies in Laguna Beach Monday. The traditional observance wilt take place at II a.m. at the memorial shaft in Heisler Park. under the sponsorship er Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5868 and American Legion Post 222. A 30-minute band concert by the Laguna Beach High School Band under the directio n of Frederick Stoufer will precede the formal program. After representatives of local organita· I ions have placed floral tributes at the base of the shalt. a salute will be fired by a squad from the Marine Corps Aii' Sta· lion. El Toro. 1 The public is Invited to participate in the Memorial Day rite by William Irvine, O>mma nde r VFW Post 5868 and Lesley Ch atham, Commander American Legion Post !22. The Homes are priced from 33,950 I The Way of Life is Free! Livin g is what you want to make of it in a big, beaut iful new home at Oceanview Park,., now offering Immediate Occupancy in the Final Unit.., excellen t Conventional Fina ncing with low, low down payment .. , and you own the land ! Quality 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath Traditional Design 2 Story Homes utco a HOMES ... OCEANVIEW PARK SERIES The Only New Close -In Homes in Costa Me:;a . .,.. .. . ·--~··-, ~----"': .l!.6...:io' ilU.o~ -.... .., ............ .. Sa!es Office and rurnished Models at 19th Street & Whittier AV"enuc Phone (7J4) 546·0337 h I A,,otfHlr Oll•lftr d•~•kip1111n1 b, N EWPOl'fT BEACH slcola I HOMES • " ( Ol!LY PILOT A1·gentina's IGdnapers Seelc Food ROSARIO, Arge1dina tUPl)-Tht \eft. 1st kidnapers ol Britl1h Consul Stanley Sylvester demanded today that $60,000 worth o! food be distributed 1mon1 Rosario'a poor in e1chan1e for his relelM!. The "People's Revolutionary Army'' f ERP) also demanded the Swift and Co. meat packing plant in Rosario take back the 4,000 or so workers it su1pended for ecol'lomy reasons. Sylvester is the plant'1 man.11er. The ERP. in Its fifth communique oo SYivester, said it v.•ould pul the SI-year· old dlplomat·bus.ine.ssman "on trill" if tu conditions v.·ere not satisfied by S p.m. Regal Cheek? School 'Outing Rail Crash Kills 45in W.Germany RADEVORMW ALD. Germany f UPI) A two-car train c a r r y i n 1 1cboolchildren home from an outin& crashed head on Thursday night into a fast freight . killing 40 children and five 1dult.s in We11t Germany's wor11l -pMtwar crash. Authoritiell blamed the cra11b t& day on "human error.'' A railro1d official went further. He laid the blame at the door cf a. fre\Jhl train engineer who, he said, drove through red &top signal!. The 6.1-ton di~sel ll'>Comotive hauling five freight cars rounded 1 bend on the sin1le-!inf; track skirting the river Wup. per and slammed inlo a twin car raU unit carrying 100 schoolchildren and their supervisors back from a day's graduation outing t11 the 11orth sea port of Bremen. A clerk at Radevormwald town hall, who 11ked not to be identified, 11id 1h1t. follcwed t>ther ·people attracted by the sirens of police ears, fire engines and ambulances l!peeding to the scene, about two miles from the town. "What I saw was terrible," she uid. ''The 'first oJ the Tail can was crushed so much that I felt I could have held it within the width of my arms. "We 11w parts of boclit1i scaltered all over the terrible _scene and the injured children were ACrtaming. Many of the children were thrown through the win• dows cf the teeond rail car and were lying there." The injured children were rushed to nearby hospitals and the dead were laid out in rows of coffins inside a IYftlllUium at Radevo rmwald . The organization .abducted Sylvester outs!dt b.is home last Sunday and has de· nounced him and Swift and Co. in previous communiques as exploiters ef ... the Argentine worker1. A magazine edited by one of h e r privy councilors said Thursday that Queen Elizab~th had 'truly regal cheek' in ask· ing her subjects for a pay raise while her personal fortttne mushroomed. Police said 40 children, between 14 and 16 years old, died in the crljh, together with two teachers, the two-man crew of the rail car and the mother of one pupil. Twenty sl1 others, mostly children were injured. Grief-stricken parents. many l!Obbing uncontrollably after identifying their children among the dead, stood in groups among the coffin!. Polite have arrested more I.ban 30 persons for questioning about the k1dnap. The ERP threatened Thursday tG uecutfl Sylvester if police found the hideaway "·ere the organization said it was sub- mitting him to "people'• justice.'' On a nearby bl1ckboard an official chalked the names of the dead and ln· jurerl as they were idenlifled, ~ An earlier communique said Sylve.st.er Laos , Thailand Get Viet Blaine For Dope Rise A police spokesman said the two train! were traveling at about 40 miles per hour when they met in the middle of a IQllg curve. The locomotive smashed inlo the front coach cl the red railcar, rlppin11 the body 11ff its frame and crushing it lo a fra ction of its nt1rmal length . The secon d passenger car was hurled from the track. The 1ccldent was the worst railway disaster since the st.ate of West Germany was created in 1949. l v.·as in good health. It contained photographs of the host.age and a letter ~ from him to his wUe. The public pro~e c utor at The latest note was .&ent to the ne~·spa p!r. La Capital. Among the other conditions lo be met belore the 12-hour deadline. the message said, were : R~toration of all back pa y l11 the 1,1.·orkers and improvf'!ment..s in the plant's labor pohcit1i, working conditions and 6oci~l benefits. The children were only 15 minutes awa y from 11 reunion v.·ith their parent."' al Radevormwald, an industrial lov.·n of 23,000 inhabitant.s on the outsklrus of the Ruh r. Rad evormwald, responsible r or in· vestig1tin& l'iuch accident~ in his district. uid the crash "1pparenlly stemmed from human error." A r 3 i I w a y s spokesman a a id the 1ecident did n o l result from a mechanical failure on either train. ·• Thf! communique cal\f'!d the demands ~ "1ndemnilication'' t!I the workers for the SAJGON IUPil -South Vietnamese cabinet members. prodded by the United States In lio something about the drug traffic that has made an eslimated one out of every 10 American servi~men in Vietnam a heroin addict. put most of the blame today on Tha iland and La11s. Jochen Slemmer.!$. was in the back of lhe leading: car when the crash «curred. Lying in a hospital bed with a broken leg and internal injuries he told UPI "the kids had been singing • . . we were almoat home. There was a crash and I flew over the seat.in front but after that I don 't remember anything." He said the en,11:ineer of the rreight. who survived the crash without serious injury, was being questioned along with the sirnatman responsible for the strelch ol sin1le line track. management's "prejudicial attitude" : towards them ' It enumerattd the provisions for the ' pear a.s sugar. cooking oil and ether ~ foodstuffs and blankets. They said the1e two neighboring coun- tries. both close allies, are the source cf most of the heroin in South Vietnam , as reported Tuesda y by 1 U.S. ConiressionaJ investigating team . "One of them must be resp11nsible, .. he said. "But we caMot yet say which of them It was." ' ' ; SALTBargaining Ends in Vienna But they did not comment direclly at their nr.ws conference on another charge· in the C.Ongres!llonal report : that ''politi· clans in both Laos and South Vietnam" are in the heroin business. 200 Police Land to Guard VIENr\A I AP ) -Neaot.iator1 for lht t'niled States al!d the Soviet Union ended the fourth round of the Strate&:ie Arms Llmitatlon Talks (SALT) today and agreed to resume negotiations Jn Helsinki on July 8 The talks alttrnate between the Aus· tr1an and Finnish capitals. The Congressional report was issued Tuesday in Washington following an in· tensive investigation in South Vietnam. The chie( author was Rep. Robert Steele IR·CoM.). Mafiosi Exiled to Island were "constrained by event!'' lo leave the isl~ if the underworld exile,o; re- m1 ined. They made preparations to h!aVe. A communique distribut!d after the ... sesSJon today gaid : This report said between 2S.OOO and 40.000 American ~ervicemen in VietnlllTl now are 1ddicted to heroin. The lot.al U.S. ferce in Vietn1m at present is 2fi2.~. Today's South Vietni1mese news con· ference wall given by fivtt, e1binel miniaters. plus otber high t1fflcials . They. reported nn a 1i1-week dri ve lo clamp down on the narcotic,; tr1ff~. FtLJCUDl. Sicily I AP) -Two hundred police in battle gear landed on lht rebellious island of YUicudi today to en- force the exile of 18 reputed Mafia bosses. The rtllidents promptly an- nounc!d they would abandon the island in protest. The 200 or IO residenlll of this fi&hin1 islanrl charge that the ezilt of Mafia suspects will .&poil tourism. . .. .- • • • "In the course oi..the VieMa ph1se of the negoliations, the delegatlOrl! contin- uer! consideration of questions dulint with the limitation of 81.rategic arma· ment s. "Al the hnal stage, there was an ti· change of views on matters stemming from the a111nouncement on May 20 on the understand ing between the government s of the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. regarding further development of the negotiations.'' Wicks 'What's wrong with a welfare plan that take& from the poor to give to the poor?.' Finance l'\tinister N11:uyen i\ich Hue, 11sked where the heroin orlginatei1. u.id, "\''e do know that the planel'i in which il is found come from Laos and Thailand." Un.-.h1ven and red ry!d after three !llleeples~ night11:, islander! watcher! Im- passivel y as the police disembarked al the ma.in port after coming from Sicily. Then their agitation commillee is.sue d a communique saying the inhabitants Tough Custome1· Battling En voy Thwarts Kidnap SAN SEBASTIAN. Spi11n !UPI\-Fnor iunmen pounced upon French Co"sul. General Henri \\'oli ner Thursd.ly night ouuide his home, stuck a submolchinf'! gun and ol pistol in his face ind tried to abduct him. Woli ner threw a few punches and a few unpri"table invectives and the mtn fled. ''I 14'0Uld r.:1 lher be shot than abduc- ted.'' said Woliner. a !locky. balding.~­ year~ld father nl three. "So 1 hit back- even though rm ~fering from lum- bago.'' The assailants. hel1eved lo be Basque nalionali.st extremists, jum ped Woliner .11 his doorstep when ht came home from work. One nf thtm tritd to throw 11 eoat over his head, bu! Woliner dodged it. ignored the guns a11d let them havt it. cursing loudly. \Voliner 's British-born wife. Doris. heard lhe scuffle. but went a bout hu chores inside the house. ··she thought the noises cam£ from an argumenl between drivers 1n the street," the diplomat explained . ''The British are a bit stoic. you know " The Basqufs inhabir a re,111on l'lPI rhe Franco-Spanish frnn11er. They ha ve their t1wn cul!ure and their own language and a fierce pridt> that dr ives rheir desirp for their nwn, auronnnlnu~ gQvernmenl. A militant group k1dnaped \Vest Germa n Consul f~ugen Reihl in San Sebast ia n la~t year rluring 11 trial of !ht compalri · oL~ in Burgos. but released him Un· harmed. \\'oliner d1sm1ssed his Bggress1ve coun· terattack with a classic Ga JLic line "It "''as not a queslioJIJ cf courage. but of virility.'' Amarillo, Tex., Pumm~led Howling Winds Record Velocity of 60 mph California Tte·t ... ,, tc•l•ee••lllo c111<111·~11 6•" !.eU'"'"" C:llllO'"'I 1911• t~tV ..,.;,.. eo:t •'''""' •••• e• "•~· '"""'"' In m1 •~"" •i ll "''" Dl'rlllln• !I "'" ltl• ..,.11~ 'UJ"' win& I• ••1 111• ••II , ... lOl,I!~, •• ~ .... ,, Temperature& I Y U~tTIO l'ltll$ tNT lll:N4fl0,,.ll f-N •l •u••I f"!:f l>rt(•••lt "O• lfl• ll>f 7-.•our Itri~ 1~111•3 11 I I "' Hit~ 1.•w ""'· " . .. " The policl! came after the Mafia chief~ ind their police er.cort llpent their second back breaking night on chairs, tables 11nd the floor of a lonely seaside cafe and a requisitioned hotP.l under construction. The police land ing was hampertd by the refusal nf local fishermen to help in the operation. The fishermen rt..sponded to an appeal to help in transporting the policemen from thf'!ir l.iiunch to the shore by de· fiantly setting orr to se11 . Ar1er the police landed. the residenl!i caucused hurriedly. They rejected a pro- posal to strengthen barricades blocking the road intn the village, and another to launch a guerrilla operation against the unwanlrrl invader! -the police and the Mafia bosses. Calling for ··~o00 ,.en.se" and non· violence, the Filicudians' committee said it hoped authoritit.~ would change their mind!'i a.nd "rttopize tht just reasons of t1ur people" ill askil'lg that thr. Mafiosi be lien! elsewhere. 2 More Y illages Periled by Lava . Flow Fro1n Etna F'ORNAZZO, Ita ly t UPI I -l'\11 Etna , pumping and belching molten lava al an 1ncreued rate. menaced two additional !arming vill ages loday on ill! heavily damaged southeastern 61opcs. Renev.·ed activity rrnm Europe's lallest volct1no raised new fears among local farmers and sclenti1ls Alike. \lulcanalogist.s 1tudying Etna's w o rs t eruption since 1923 said there was no way lo fnrecast the current lava flow or Etna.·5 unprt.dictable Activi ty. Columns nf dense black smakr. spouted throughout the da y from craters on the ea~tern and soulhea,o;tern sides itnd scien· tist.o; said the activity CQuld be thr. signal for rtnewed eruption. Tht current erup- tion is nnw in it."' 54!h d::i y. "'' L .. Anttl•• ••1• ~•II 11tt11f'lln1! "•"' •l'>e"''"· c<t .. •~t '" e1•11, 1u•·~ '" 1"i• t •!t"'O!l" wll~ lllt•nv ,...,,..,, l""n"'•"''"· l"'lt•'I ~·•ll•Cltif Clvlt c..,,.,. ••t~ w1• "I co,.,.et'"!I ,..,.~ f~u•l~tY'I ~ l•• '""' -l•M wit! AIM~t••m 1.111~·· A•cM•ltt leJ!t<'I ll"ltWfl!Vllll 1 u1111c C~••le!tl C~lt1t~ Ci.,tlM 1!1 c1ove11.,• " " .. " " " . " . " . 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" . .. . " . " " • • . ~ • • " ... " ~ • • " ., M p " " " M '" " .. " " • • .. " • " " • " • • • • " ' mountain in the direction nf the towns nf Sciara and Giarrr and stood About slz· tenths of a mile from the former and 2.S miles from the latter. Giant ditchdigger$ And fll.rth movin g machines moved il'lto Action on I.ht .., ouUklrt.s of the towns, v.·hich along with Fornau.o Me the three vlllAge! threRt- .n ened by the lavi1. to tunnel trou&hs to bold the lav11 b•ck frflm the towns. Today. the fiery stream from Mount Etn1 '1 wor11 l \·oleanlr erupt.Ion in 43 years was 1n11wln1 •I houses on the vllla~e·a northern out.~kirl.oi. Srltnllsl.! 11;1!d II may tum away again. as It-did two rlay1 •10. or it m11y wipe F'ornauo off tht m•p. The 470 inhabitants o( this farm com· mWllty , located at a height of 2.64,ftf!t nn lhe northeastern side or Europe 's 1..' ~llellt volcano, thought they were 58vrd u '>''hen t.he m1in 1tream of lava from • Mo d1y-<1ld eruption veered a .,, a y frnm Fornauo Wednesday aftet hitting a rid&• . &1 of solidified lava from past )'ears. Seek• Oflice U.S. Sen. Robert Tall Jr. IR· Ohio) announced Thursday that he will run as a favorite son candidate in 1972 in an effort to get a slate of delegates com· mjtted to President Nixon's re· nomination. India, Pakistan Appeal for Food For W ur JI icti 1ns NEW DELHI (UPI! -\\lh1le their troops fought along !he frontier, India and Pakis tan made separale appe;:ils to- day for fond fihipments for the hungry victims of l.he"tivil wi1r in East Pakistan. A spokesman for !he state or \Ves~ Bengi1I in Eastern India said the state hi1s askeri Prime Minister Indira Gan· dhl's i:overnment lo start sendin,E lm· mediately the 200.000 tons of rice it hall promi.~ed to refugee camps along the border. The spokcsman :iiaid !he sta~e '"ould lind it difl icul l to feed the refugees from iL! nwn stocks. 'Vesl Bengal StalP. ha.~ !he l;iri;esl con· c:entri1tion of !he :J $ million East Paki5tanil'i l'\1rs. Gandhi said have fled the war into India. The other refugees are sheltered in two other states 11nd ter- ritoriell on Jndia 'l'i l.400-mile frontier with East Pakistan. The new agency Press Trust of lndia. ouolin 2 West Bengal's Chic! r.tinister Ajoy Kumi1 r Mukherji, said there \vere plans tn transfer some of the rrfugef'!S under militar y supervi~ion ll'l the interior. The governmenl earlier had said it wan ted to keep lhe refugee camps close In !he border In facilitate repatrialion of the Ben~al is. The official r;idio P;iki!ifan . in a brnl-ld- cas\ monitored in New Delhi. announced tnd;iy !he lslamah11 rl government nf Presi dent Acha Mohammarl Yahya Kh11n h'l.'i appealed to several nations fl'lr 250.000 Ion~ nf food i;::rain!i for relief opera tions in F.a!it Pakist an . ThP radio said \'ahya alsn had asked for vehicles anf'I communications equipment . The tension between New Delhi anrl l!ilamabarf since the ci\·il war broke out in East Paklst.an on f\farch 25 has built up during the past week v.·ith increa!ling reports nf cross-barrier military sorties and shellin,i:s from both sides. The Presl'i Tru.o;t of India said Thursday nUieii1l sourceli .:ilong the Northern Frnn· tier told of Pakistani federal troops P.mplacing heav y guns anti digging en· trenchment.' along the border near the Indian state of Allsam. -r"' --- Cool in P(tol Egypt, Russ ' Sign Treaty Of Alliru.1ce By The Associated Pre~• The Soviet Union and EiYPl signed a 11 year treaty of friendsi)ip and cooperaUon Thursday night. reoewing thtlr c!Osa alliance in the wake t1f Egypti an Pr.esl· dent Anwar Sadat's purge ef his rival! for po"·er. The pact signed by Sada! and visitini Presiden! Nikolai V. Podgorny provides for CfJntinued SovieL military, economic, political and scientific aid. The two governments also p 1 e d g e d "nt1nln· lerference in the internal affairs of each other.'' "'hich '<''ould be inlerpreted as a Soviel abandonment of the leftist leaders ousted and arrested by Sadal in the re· cent Egyptian po"·er struggle. In the military sphere. the Ru.ssian.!I promised the Egyptians arms ind military !ra ining to enable them lo win back the Sinai desert from Israel. Th11 treaty ~ald arms and equipment ~·ou!d be supplied to Egypt "with a view to strengthening its Cilpacl!y to eliminate the consequences nf aggression as well a~ increa sing its ab ility to stand up to ag· sressinn in general." The t"·o governments also pt~dged lo "concert their positionll'' if a threat to peace ari ses. Observers in Cairo regard· ed !his as a Russi an cnmmitmtnl of deeper -anrl p!rhaps even direct - military involve ment if Egypt and Israel go lo war aga in. The treat y als11 calls for expanded cooperation in a vast number of fields : industry. agriculture. "'ater conservanc y, irrigatit1n, deve lopment nf n at u r a I resources, electrical power. personnel training, tradt. shipping. science. the arts. !itl'rature. educ::itirin, he a 1 t n services, press, radio, television. cinema, !0urism. physical culture. workers' organizi1tions and cultural llnd scientific institutions. The two governments 11lso agreed to consult rei;:ularly "on all important ques- tions aHecting the Interests t1f b!ltb states." The trea1y is subject lo ratification, but this is considered fl fnrm11lity. Podgorny .:ind Sadat signed the treaty al the end of it three day visit by the Soviet president.. who was returning to Moscow today . He had hurried lo Cair11 after the recent shi1keup which removed some of the Kremlin 'p; closest Egyptian allies, and the treaty was viewed a! 1 Soviet endorsement of Sadat's con- tinuance in pn"·er. Podgorny, speaking al 11 dinner he gave for the Egyptinn president after the sign· ing of the pact, said the Middl!! East situation remai ns "tense and d11ngerous.'' and Israel's refusal to withdraw ill trnops from Arab territory occupi!d irt !he 1967 war had atalemated peace negotiations. Responding. Sadat said the treaty "l!'X• r resses our firm and u n sh a k a b J e determinatinn to ~land ur to aggression ... He repeated Egypt's demands for the lsraelis In pull back from all flCCUpied lands and the right of Palestinians to sell determination. Nar cotics Des troyed LOS A.'iGELES ( UPI J -Two milhon pills. 3,000 kilM of marijuani1. and a quantity nf heroi n were desrroyed Thurs- da y by !late narcotics agents. Attor ney General Evelle J. Younger said the drugs. valu ed al more than St million. \\'ere burned at an undisclosed site. Tht drugs had betn confiscated by police agen cies during th e past several months. --I ..... I -I ' .J -:a.. Wading in a downtown Detroit pool and to~lllli a fr1 &bee. this young lady ke11>s herself ind a few passersby occupied on a warm sprinJ'. day . ' , ' I Frld1r. M1y 28. 1~71 t AJLY PILOT 5 Mideast C:orbs Faisal Proposes Action by Nixon Cliicago Political Figiu~e V mrishe s QUEENIE - By Phil lnterlondi 'n!AIJ K GOODNESS IT'S FRIDAY I ' . Raps Sought Aga inst 3 In Slaying DREW, Miss. (U PI ) Authorities today m o v e d swiftl y to seek indictments against three young white. men accused of killing a teen-age Negro girl in this small Mississippi delta town. Frank 0 . Crosthwait Jr., prosecuting att.omey for Sunnower County. said he would present the case to the next term of the Grand Jury v.•hich convenes Junel 7. The three men v.·ere being held in a maximum :security unit at the slat! penitentiary following their arrest a few hours after Jo Etha Collier. 18, was shot down Tuesday night on a Drew street. Trey were chargtd with murder. The three v.·ere identified as Wayne Parks, 23, a cotton farmer from Drew; his brother. Wesley Parks. 36, a mechanic at ?-.lemphis. Tenn.: and their nephew. A 11 en \\'ilkerson, 19. a recent high school graduate from Memphis. Investigators said no motive had been established for the shooting, which broughl bitter reaction rrom black leaders and touched off protest marches Thursday afternoon at Drew and neighobring Rulevllle. FBI agents. acting on orders rrom President Nixon, have joined in the investigation to determlne whether any federal law \\'IS violated in the killing. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Zlegler announced Thursday in Washington that Nixon had instructed Attorney General John Mitchell to ob- tain all information on the ease to determine whether any federal jurisdiction was in· volved. Ziegler said the Presi· dent regarded the shooting as a "deplorable and appalling ad." WASHINGTON ( UPll - After getting a full drtss ll'e\come at the White House, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia publicly urged President Nix· on to exert his influence to curb aggression by Israel in the Middle East. The leader of the oil-rich Arab state, clearly referring ta Lsrael. bul talking only or •·cert.a.in powers," told Ni1on that the situation "certainly requires the aUenlion of you, Mr. Presidenl, and your na· tion ." Speaking on a red<arpeted platform on the \\'hite House south lawn, Faisal said "this aggrwsion which exemplifies itself in the occupation of our holy places and the sub- WayCleared For Seale's Freedo111 CHICAGO (AP) -A federal appeah court has c\eart.d the ~·ay for freedom for Bobby G. Seale, Black Panthu party leader, while his appeal or a four year contempt sentence is pending. Attorneys for Se ale and the government were to meet b day with Judge Luther M. Swygert to work out details ot his release. It was unknown whether Seale would b e released in Connecticut or v1helher he \\'OU/d be brought to Chicago and released. A representative for Seale posted $25,000 bond Thursday shortly after the 7th. U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Seale could remain free while appealing his faur year con· tempt sentence handed down during the Chicago riot trial. The bond was granted over the g0¥ernment'1 continued objection based on Seale'• Connecticut murder kidnap trial which ended in a mistrial Tuesda y. The government contended that Seale should not ht released on bond because he v:as not acquitted in Con- necticut but that the charges were dismissed becall!e of a deadlocked jury. Judge Orders Garrison To Let Clay Shaw Alone NEW ORLEANS !UPI) -A federal court Thursday ruled district attorney J im Gar· rison. for personal gain. used unreliable witnesses to build a flimsy case against businessman Clay Sha'v dur- i!lg a "baseless investigation of tbe John F. Kennedy assassination." ju1auoo ot. our people has brought about some di.saartt- ment betWttn your country and oura.'' In the future, he said, "'We hope these good relations will be re-estab!Lshed." Nixon Jn n,n~~li@d th1t he was "looking forward to the coumel of a .senior statesman with whom we can work for a just peace in the Middle East and all parts of the world." F&i.Y:l and Nixon t h e n rttired to the Prtsidmt's oval olfice for their first formal meeting. At the end of the 7~ minute conference. Pres 1 Secretary .Ronald L. Zitgler aa.id they discu53ed "many wofld problems, e9pe.Cially the 1ituaUon in the Middle Ea.st." Although he did not go inta detail, Ziegler said Fai.saJ ex· plained hLs "apecial interest in the Holy City of Jerusalem," now occupied by I S r a e I I forces. The kina. who is winding up 11: goodwill tour of the United States, .sees himsell as the guardian of the Moslem holy places in Jerusalem, Mecca and Medina. He also has in- sisted oil Israeli withdrawal from all territory aized dur- ing the 1967 war. FDA Praises Unit Report On Problems HUNTED ALDERMAN Chica90'1 Hubb.trd 3 Foreig1t Boats Ram U.S. Nets BOSTON (UPI I -Three foreign trawler& p I o we d through the nets of an American lobster boat early today for the second time in less than 24 hours, the Coast Guard reported. The vessels -al -leasl two or them Russian -cut through the nets of the Westport-based United Stat.ea about 67 miles southwest of Nantucket Jsland at about ti A.tit. EDT today. The Coast Guard CuUtr Vigilant was sent to the scene and reported an hour later there were 47 R ussi a n trawlers in the area. It marked the s e con d WASHINGTON (AP ) straight day of incidents for G<>vernment deeisions on the the United States. There was -S... ).c: safety of food and drugs are na damag e report for either "'<{/A':. ((:;' too of(en baud on politic. incident. ·~11'1• rather th&n good science, a,1...:===---------'------"::...:. ___ _ blue ribbon advisory com· mittee reports. The Food and D r u g Administration, hailing the report as sound and helpful, said it is al r eady Im· plementing committee recom· mendation.s for scientific buf- fers again.st economic and political pressures. The fiv e man panel of university .scientists concluded after a year'• investigation that despite pockel!I o f laboratory excellence the FDA is not eq uipped to grapple with many of the difficult, technical questions of consumtl pro- tection. "It c u rrently faces enormous responsibilities for consumer protection and the public health but with limited resources, constrict e d perspective and little 10lld constituency in the public or medical and .scientific establishments," t h e com· mittee said of the FDA. Brass Meet At Preview THlll'S ONE THING YOU 'LL NIYIR FIND IN MY STORE , , , ••• •nd that's pre,,ure to buy. My sele•· men won't push or prod or follow you around breathing down your neck. They've been put through the Jeck Bidwell Good Sa lesman Trainin9 Cours e. If you need help, we'll be plaased to 9i.-e you •• much or a' little as you want. But you'll n•ver be pre11ur•d to buy uythhtt• After all, we want you to cloth e' we sell. lik e u1 as weU a' the "This court. consider ing all t1f the evidence, finds that WASHINGTON (UPI) -·•' Garrison undertook his .\;. Mrs. Joseph Kennedy and baseless investigalion with the .....t"."·) Mn. IN:ight D. Eisenhower specific intent to deprive Shaw (\: · • led 3,500 other guW Thun- (Jf his rlghU under lbe ..• ·, day night in participating in a Constitution of the United :\. ''gala preview" at the new St.ates," said U.S. District John F. Kennedy center for Ju d ge Herbert W. theperformingarts. Christenberry. . The huge marble structure Christenberry ordered a on the Potomac River will not permanent injunction barring 1 be opened to the public until Ga.rri50n from furthe r pro-Sept. 8. UPI T•l••~m "'--' f t -• dtni g secution of Shaw on a perjury 11ie preview ea U1"«1 n charge in Louisiana courts. GARRISON TARGET and dancing. and the crowd ln- Tbe orde.r, for awhile al least, Elated Clay Shaw eluded a political, social and ended Shav:·s four-year, 87-day entertainment v.·orld elite. ordeal as a man implicated in Also representing the Ken. the as.sa.ssinaUon of President Oswald was the lone assassin. nedy family wert Sen. and J\eMedy. On Marcb 1, 1969, a state Mrs. F.dward P.f. Kennedy, l-4 67 Via Lido, Newport Beach -673-45 10 Gardens MEMORIAL DAY SPECIALS From Our Nurser11 DICHONDRA ..... ... . ................... 95' Patch up b•te spots-,tart • new lawn. HI SPRAYER DELUXE GARDEN SPRAYER ~ :1::.:;::~:; ;~:·: ___ ........ . .. ............................... ~ 5 95 TUBEROUS BEGONIAS fer Y°"r shade ..,.,.,. ···························--·······. ········--·· .............. . 3,.,.'1 00 FUCHSIAS H""'Iot ..i •prl<Jht ................................. ········-·······-·-····-····· 1 901 99' HANGING IASKDS 99' CARNATIONS lodMd .. I pall, mast YarlotlK ····································-···-······ 3 ,... $1 OO CLEARANCE SALE 200/o Stepping Stones Aggregate & Concrete OFF INFLATABLE KIDDY SEAT lxcollt0t hr Jllc•lcs, poolside, campl•t. T.V., dlft ••• Instant comfort ···········--········-··-······· .. ····-············-····-79' From Our Patio TWO TONE RAnAN CHAIRS 24.tS Value Brown J ordan, Tami ami & Kailue Sale price1 ha ld over for Memoria l Day For the Pool FLOATING SAUCER With H .. d .................................... '19" POOL RADIO ~~~~~.•;;ti; ••"""' . .. ·---·· _ . .. '1 9" 2123 Nowpan 1i.d. COSTA MESA 646-JUS 11801 Harbor llYd. GARDEN GROVE 534-6774 Shaw was arrested l\1arch 1. court jury deliberated on1y SS Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy, 1967, and charged by Garrison minutes after a 40-day trial widow of tht late Senator; and v.ilh ccnspirlng v.·ith ~ and acquitted Shaw. l-~~1~rs~. ~P<~t~•~r~La~wf;ord~,~the~~Ia~te~======~============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Harvey Oswald and others to Three days later Garrison President's sister. au1ssinate Kennedy. Gar· charged Shaw with perjury for risen. at the same time, de-testifying in bis trial be did nounced the Warren Com· not know Oswald and the other mission report which found alleged coconspirators. ~_:;.~~-'-~~~-! used cars used but not abused a1Y1nly·on11 at ~~~ llDOHARIOR BLVD./COITA MUA (714)6404100 • Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: + llAINomcl:tth&HUf, LotAnQt••l23o1151 t W1LIHIPll II GIUlllltCY Pl.Ael:*S wn.tll" Blvd.., L.A.• SU-1215 LA. CMC CIPf'fU: 2nd & BroldWay • &28-1102 * HUNTINGTON llACH: 11 Hunll"O'°" Centlr • (714) 117·1G47 I ANTA ANA LOAM llPIVICI AGIHCY: * 1905 N. Main St.• (714) &47 .. 2!7 t IANTA MONICA: 711 Wllehlre lf¥d. • -.0741 * UHHDR0:10lh &Pacil\C •U1~23'1 * WUTCOVINA: EaaUand Sf'ltlpplng Ctr.• 331·2201 * PAHOIUJllA CnY: 1611 Yan N!')'I Blvd. •192·1171 * TAltZANA: 11751 vencura B®Jevlrd • S46-M14 * LONG llACH: 3rd & LocUlt •<437·74*1 ~---1-11 1,. fJol!lllon-1•114,. ASSETS OVER $800 .MIWON ,. Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ••• Just Join &M lmldem Oilb Wl1lt • '2,500 bolanco In youruvlngo account. you ar• •llglbl• to beoom• a mtmblr. SUblllntlal uvlng1 are avtll1ble whon purch•lngmanyltomo Including 1utomobll11, fum lturo, appl-. fowoliy. Pluo mony tr1e 111Vlole-money ord•rm, •fo d-lt boXll, otl:. Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMJOUNDID DAILY AND PAID OUARTPLY.• 5.00°/••5.13o/o Pa11book; No Minimum. 5.25"/o.5.39•/o ThrH Month Certificate; No Minimum. 5.75"•·5.92"• On•Y•tCeMlncalo; $1 ,000 Minimum. 6.00.Y.-6.18o/a Two-YHrCertlflcate: $5,000 Minimum. • !tttctl"9 Annu1J Eamlrtgt • INSURANCE TO $20,t . l I I • I I • • • 011: Into the Night • • • After a brief respite of short agendas and reason· able hours, the Laguna Beach City Council 4 • alippine . b,ack to its 23·item, five-hour meeting pattern. Not to be outdone in the coastal hot aif marathon, 5'n Clemente recently logged 'an aJJ.tlnte record with a "J)\tbllc hearing that pushed a council session into the small hours. Since city councilmen and staff are hurytin. a.nd _ ugually put in a solid eight hour workday before the council session. it is hardlY reasonable to ex·pect them to remain brightly alert and productive tllroujlh these e.ndless nights. · Nor is it necessary. \Vhen a meeting promises to bl lengthy, sensible advance· pruning of the agenda U in order. Similarly, a potentiaUy long pubJjc hearing should be pfltteded by a firm re9_uirement that speakers refri.i.n from repeating information already presented and a &peaking time lunit should be announced. U it still is not possible to handle all neces.sa.ry busi· ness in twice-monthly sessions. the council& will have to consider more frequent, short.er meetings. They Were Out of Line Laguna's newly elected school trustees ·were out of line in their unsuccessful attenlpt to block routine ex· tensiOn of the contracts: ot three top adminlBtrators. None of the three trustees baS 'experience so ·far in school district operation·. None has a child attending a school in the district and·two have not yet been seated on the board. Yet they sought to delay the scheduled contract re· newals ur!til they have· De~n sworn:in, p"t'esumably fe~I· in& qualified to step in and make major administrative chang~s. When the new trustees have · logged a year or so of practical experience in running a school district and working with the staff they should be qualified to decide what changes may be necessary and. bow they &boUld be undertaken. It was for the precise purpose of permitunc fiexi· bWty that Lagun1 administrators were placed ,on two· ·year. Tather tl)an the customary fourl)'ear, contracts. But iood apecialisU and administrators &re not interested in employ.ment on a year-to-yea, basi! in the Laguna dis· trict. or any othef diatrlcl . Laguna Beach has built up an enviable reputation around the county and state for quaJity of education. And quality education is the primary obligation and overriding public trust of school trustees. Interes ting Legal Angles San Clemente might be the only city around which has chosen to restrict the use of a legal public access easement to golf carts only. That was a ch·oice made recently by councilmen after ·one of the longest public hearings on record - debate on the thorny acce.ss problems relating to propos· als to build condominiums on acreage inland of the city· owned. golf course. Residents near the links were understandably UP" 1et at the J>rospect of substantially increased traffic on U,eir already too narrow winding streets. And having 1.ut-o traffic cutting across the fairway between the tee --and the green doesn't do much for a golf course. These •coocerns have pushed the councilmen into the legally qu~stionable position that only golf c:arts may use the easemerit which is, in fa ct, wider than some of the city's W$ting streets. Through the years, property deeds and council res· olutions ·have cerlified that the easement exisl5 as a pubijc accesa· ihto the acreage now proposed for devel· opment. The e~sement was re-affirmed in 1963 when the owner gave the city ol ,San Clemente land for a ball park, city i;toras:e yard and firing range. The council ·has been warned the unique decision limiting. use of the roadway to goU carts could spawn .tn inttresting civil lawsuit. Determining the' right-of· way between automobiles and flying golf balls could be another interesting legal entaglement. s Airlines Are Dear Gloomy .Gm NATO Troop Strengtlt Bottle Cotttinues Prone to Use Gobbledygook One cf the many specialty magazines r read regulaz:ly. ill the relentless quest for column m1lerial, ia "Air Line Pilqt.'" In its pages, a lt yman learns an afo'ful lot about airllne1. and flyiD1. that ht might otherwi.st never know. One or the artlclu that pleased mt most. in a recent issue, was written by Robert Buckhorn. the aviation editor of UPI. the news service. Buckhorn was dealin1 with the common comp.laint by pilot& and airlbie people , 4enerall)' that the daily press "overs1mplifid" or "distort.s" aviation stories. Some ()f 'this is simple ignorance or haste, Buckhofn admits: a reixirtel"·may ccnfuse a "precautionary landln&'' with an "emergency landing," or a "flight recorder" with a "cockpit "o ice recorder." The trade press, on the other hand. rarely makes such mistakes. BUT BUCKHORN, I recognized and respected expert in the field , charges that a great deal of'the "over-simplifica· Lion" of the media "spring.s from the in· dustry's tnabillty 'lo communicate." The special jargon of avi1tion is sometimes aimtd at preciseness: just as often. it may be aimed al obicuring the facts behind a lot of fancy v.,.-biage. As an txample. he cites : ,;The caust of the crash w1s the pilot's failure to main· lain sufficient altitude to avoid neighbor· ing terrain." Translation '. "The plane flew into the side ol a hill.·· Or this classic bit of official cobbledygook: "The pilot"s apparently unrecognized descent ·While we're Jooking al U.1 loop- holes: why not take a look at ''wel· fare loopholes" -all those poor little illegitif!Ule childrtn tupport- i.ng their useless mothus. --C. A. nii. ... hi,. ,...,..,.. ,.....,.... ,,,._ - ........ 1" ....... 9f llM ............ lt!Mll t WI" "' _ .... ,.. .... , .... 0.11' ...... lo an altitude btlow th1t of the airpcrt." THE r.U .. DOESN'T speak ol "parachutts." but of "aerodynamic personnel decelerators.·• Eniines don "t "fall off": they always '''detach ~ms:e)vea" from airplanes that never "cralh," but only make "uncontrolled deScents into the ground .'' tf an oversimplification, ()r even M outright error of fact. 1ppe1rs in a story, Buckhorn asserts, it is not deliberate , •·but it eould be the r!!!ult of aome pom· pous, contusing. and unnec.t'Sl•rily _co_m- plicated pronouncement by an airline lawyer, economist or en&ineer." AND WHAT 1S TRUE hert is equally true in doiens . o( other field.I . MO!t groups are interested in covtrine up the!r mistakes or ineptitudes. to ·save their reputatiOru or to guard 11&Wt lawsuit.. The. peopl• they . hire u t h t i r "spokesmen" to deal · with the media art primarily concerned with m1kin1 lht group Joo\ iOQd. and net with>-&he plain facts. . The mass media over-simplify bf:caust the apecia1 interest! ovU-compkic1lt and obfuscate the issues with le1al and technical terminology. When t h t parachute fails, they want to blame it' M the weather. A Nation of Beggars !o the Editor: With all our riches. •·e have becomt. in 1 few 1hort )'ears, a n1tion of becgars - b!:gginc OW' enemies for mercy instead of clobbering thtm in the flnt p\act. The &1\ly begging btgan l\'ben L.8.J. (If. ferff Vietnam a billM>n dollars of tax m".lney if tht')' would quit fighting. The futile tiq:glng has been going on tver 1ince. Lefs look 1t IOl'M of it : t. Secretary ol State Dean Rusk begged Ran<Yi fCJr even a feeble sign lh1t would incUcate a willin1ne11 to ne&otiatt. One Dean ignored. 2. The Plris ~Aini la almo&t comical. 3. THE POW WIVU ta''e btggtd to no avail. 4. A Te1a1 millionaire beggar. Ross Perot. was refused by Hanoi. 5. A beUin& group oJferlng tmmselves tn e.rchange for POW's •u laughed at by both H1nol and mt. fi. We beg;ed North Xoru to free Bucher, and we JOit hb lhlp. 7. The Calley conviction appeased the enemy al'Jd gave comfort. a. We 1ppeased South American piratea for hijack.inf tuna boat.. 9. Even Bins Qoosby bu a plan to bribt Hanoi. JO. And a new Te1a1 iroup ts coins to P.irb to bfc H1.no1 for ibmething: AND TREltE'S NO ltUlnJ how many other kooka ~ try th1' futile gimmltk. But tlU1 mntlnuout be11ln1 does give aid and comfort to tht enemy, and In time of war wllld> the °'"Ir"' 11 too cowardly to declort al tlllo U..., 1Uch lid and c:om· LeUtr1 from rtacUr1 arc tctkonu. · NoP"'fR4ll11 wrikr• ih.ould conv111 their mcslOg'u m 300 wordi or U~-TM right to condense letetr1 to fit .IJIGCC or tliminotc fU)el is r11trv1d . All l1t-- ttrs·mu.ft include sianatUrt and moil· h1g addrta.s, but names ma.11 be t.MU., • Jie!d on. request iJ lu.fft"titnt rtCfOft i$ apporcnC. Poetr11 tcill n'ot bt pu~ liJhtd . fort would ·ti! called trt110n. We are a nation of beggars, our ruler1 -lit the culprlll, and the. tup1yer ta the. up. MILT BASHAM ' ·~lri. Robe r t S111il h'· To the Editor : Although#J hive becomt nlhtr 1't lr'Y of Women's Llb slogans and· •ttltuclee. I mu.st admit th1t J havt btcom• ~ •ware of the frtqutnl. often lnadvtrttdt. lndi&nity Imposed upon lhtm. To bt spedflc. l h•vt comt to que1Uon the joutn1liltlc ..-•ct.ice of referrina, to Women by the.tr husbmrs 1iven and 1umamt.s. Why should a woman be refer· red to 11 "Mra. R.obttt Sm.Ith"! Her n.am·i isn't Robert. amttht doesn't belan1 to him. Already, she bat liven· up her family name. I would IUllW that 11 would ltnd a deserved .diplty to a woman tc sht were to be rererTtd to &1 Mr1. Lou1M (Robert) Smith. WM. LYON. Ph.D. Mansfield Is Still Not Satisfied WASffiNGTON -Le&s than two month! belore the Senate erup!td into • critical ,di!)'>Ut.e over Sen. M i k e Mansfield'• proposal for removing U.S. troops from .Europt. tht Pentagon was explicitly wamed that the troop con· troVersy could Oare out of control on the Senate floor. The w&rning was issued behind closed doors by Sen. John C. Stennis. 0-Miss., the t1perieneed chairman of the Senate Armed SUyi«s C.Ommitttt_, ·Ironically, St.ennis was the floor l~ader who had to quell the Senate uprising when, lo th e Nixon administration's t x pressed aur)>rise. the troop controversy broke durlnc dtba.tt on e1tendinl the military dr•ft. . Sttnnil1 interrupled ·I a le M 1 r c h testimony by Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor to caution tha t, as a long lime aupporl.er cf NATO, ht was concerned that a troop debate might break loose in the Senate and become "uncontrollable ." He said the Pentagon 1hould be withdraw - ini noa.combat troops "from the 300,000 noW 1tationed in Europe. THE SENATOR also suggested that the United Statu might givt: NATO allies a year 's 1dvance waming ·thaL it was going w -withdraw a specific number of troops frtlrn the NATO suppcrt. force and thw e•M thf: impact in Europe. Allen.Coldsmith Resor , apparently unimpressed by t~e S'tennil alert, replied that there would be only sm1ll savings from bringing troops home. He added that the presence of &0me 525.000 troops and dependents in Europe accounted for a little less than a billion dollars of the big deficit in the U.S. balance of payments. In the end, thanks to Stennis and a strange as.wtmenl of 11llies ranging from Dean Acheson to Leonid BrHhnev, Mansfield's proposal was rejected, The Senate vote, a rather easy 61 to 36. was interpreted as a victory for President Nii:on. The President will be mistaken. however. If he C<lncludes that he has reall y won anything big or if he assumes that last week's Senate vote has real ly !eltled lht troops controversy. Ht had. in fact, won no more 1han an initial skinnish in what promises to be ;i ron- tinuing battle over troop strenglh in Europe. DEMOCRATIC LEADER Mansfield has made it clear that he will raise the Issue again if withdrawals do not materialize in the negotiations env isioned by Brezhnev 's fortuitous statement. Paradoi:ically. It wa~ the Russian leader's hopeful comment which reall y won the da y for Mr. Nii:on and hi:i NATO policy. There remains a Senate &ent1menl, running lo many more than 36 votes, \j,•hich favors some withdrawl'll from the U.S. NATO lnrce that ha$ been substant- i;illy unchanged for 20 years. That sen- timent should not be underHtimated. Had the RuS!ians not in v ad e d Czechcslovakia in 1968. the Senate might have . spearheaded a move for COf"' gress1onally~rdered NATO troops red!JC. lions at the time. The late Sen. Richard 8. Russell , D-Ga .. was ready then to lend his towering presligt to 1 reasonable lr'10p \Yithdrawal. H negotiations wilh the Warsaw Pact do not beg111 ralher quickly, ol if they drag ;ilong with no results, a new M::insfield initiative could have a wholly different outcome. WHY SURPRISE? -It. should also conct>rn President Nixon lhal the lop- echelon.!I of his administration were caught by surpr ise 1>.·hen Mansfield acted to tie the troop reduc tion proposal lo tm draft bill. Even if Resor relayed no signal (r·om the forthright Stennis comments, there Y.'ilS plenty of ad vance warning . Mansfield announced publicly 11'1 December that he would not be satisfied with a mere expression nl Senate sen-- liment on the troop issue this time. The Democratic leader said he would act to force !he removal of somt of the NATO garrison in the new Congress. All the evidence i~ that administraho!\ leaders at the Capitol p1sstd !he word that a showdown could come quickly. as soon as the recent dollar speculation Focused public attention on the continuing balance of payments deficit. THE EVIDENCE JS. in fa ct , that with warnings abundantly at hand. lht Nixon White House was simply unimpressed. Like a military he;idquarlers irupplied "·ith good intelligence but unable lo in- terpret ii , ~1r. Nixon's White House could not believe an importanl legislative battle was in prospect. The Incident serves as 11 reminder that the Nixon \Vhite House. unlike the White Houst under John son and Kennedy , has no policy-level advisers who wtre trained at the Capitol and are quickly capable of judging, from a variety of confusing reports, just what is going lo happen in the House -or. especially, in the sometimts erratic Senate.. By Robert 5. Alle1t Navy Hides Costly Helicopter Goof WASIDNGTON ' -The Navy is stuck with defective flight decks and other ftuUy helicopter facilities on more t.han IM of its ships. The 740 drone helicopters built for the ships have eithe.r crashed, betn ' crated and atored or other•lst retired from· their anti-submarine work. In the process, thfo Navy has 1 qua n- dered almost SI bll· Uon in public fund$. The. admirals hive hidden the m1gnl· tude of this la«s from Congru.s and the nation. E v e n more . outrageous. tht Navy is still buiktipg tbt r1u1ty · 1ear into il.s newest, proudelt destroyers. TM Ctrone choppers ·them.!lllves •ere ~~out.in ·1166. Tt\ey wue supixised to clatter up from the ship platfonns, tere ii\. <¥' su~ and di!pat.ch them with torpado bombs. Instead. the drones plummeted. into the gea U1':t rotten •pplt$ in 1 wiJld.ltonn, or disappeared into O\e blue, never to be seen again. THE tJNMANNEO craft. alled DASH for Drone Aflti·SUbmarine Helicopter, evt11 had bad luck on tht around. Three Wett burned up ln U:UC1': accidents. For rtuons only the N•vy knows. one ol these. Edsels of the 1lr •11 consigned to tbt Smithsonian museum. We leatned o( thl ·bllUon-dollar booft. dogle from a daulOed N•~ report preparOd by trouble olMJOler Rear Am. John 'Bull<eley, The Navy had pd •v Geo,..e --- Dear Georae: P.ty wife hasn't :rpoten to me in more the even qeQ now and thls i8 the third timt I've written to you ab<M.Jt it. SJIXNT TREATMENT Dur S.T.: Yes, it 11 -lht third time. Just how }Oftl do you pllll to 1loal about this tltuation. anyhow! ; · :J~ Jatk Aridenlc>.n · '.ii .. ~ ~~4 . \"'""f, ~. -• ., ., ~ ~ reason to hastily classify this 168-page document. In il, Bulkeley sizzled on discovering ;in "uncertifitd helo platform" on the USS Knox, one ()f 1 spanking new group of destroyers. He also turned up a "useless ... hangar and JP~ fueling system. "DASH ... PLATFORM can onlv be us· td as a Vut Rep pick up." he irowled, meaning that choppers can hover to pick up or drop supplies, but cannot &alely land on the platforms. The Admiral wrote that lhe Navy, oot the contractors. were to blame. "Government Resixinsihle" y,·as his lerse judgment on the goof. We checked other Navy ships lo find out whether the Jong-defunct DASH system had been bu ilt into them. We found more than 150 ships with hum plat- forms. faulty ha,1gars, and useless con· trol rooms. The ships equipped to handle worthless drones. according to another lnternal Navy document, reads Hkt I "Who 's Who in the t.: .S. Fleet." AA-10NG THESE are the destroyer USS J. P. Kennedy, t~ vaunted nuclear destroyer USS Tru:a:ton and e v e n destroyer tenders like the USS Dixie. Boring the Bartender Remarks that a bartendtr gets tired or hearing : •·what do you have t.o do to get a drink on lhe house here-get a ladder and cLimb up on the roof?" "You know thoM! 1n dif ferent drinks tht. ladies at the back table ordered. Alfit? "'ell, hold ·em. They'vt all changed their minds 1g11ln. '' "When I feel I've had enough lo drink, 1shore al Miami rich." you won't havt to tell mt. I'll tell you.'' "Did you know the Pilgrim fathers la nded where they did because I.he Mayfloy,•er .had run out of beer~ If lhf:y had had a fr.w more ktgs aboard they might h~vt come Beach and aJl ditd "YOU ~IEAN YOU nt''U he1trd cf an Eskimo Teardrop? Well . f\flt you=." "I'm not 11.sklng you to load my drlnk. Alfie. but don·t you think you ought lo pour al least enou&h to ~ver the bottom --- or the glasr;~·· "~'ell. happy da zt, I always say. What do you always say?" "I can whip anybody at the bar balf my slie:--or even smaller.'' "I know you 've heard ell my old troubles. Alfit, but how would you like t.o be lhe fir:st to lislen to ' couple of my new ones~·· "Put this one on lhe cuff. loo, Alfie. and when my ship comes in th! first tab ru pay is yours." "''OU !lo1EAN \rou never heard of Chinese Slng~ng Punch ? Well. flrst you-." • "The last thrtt round! were !or the road. Wh11t'll we: makt this one lor~·· "It's a Jong tlmt bttwttn drinks. Alfie, Too long ,if you fl!k me " ·•If you had lo gel arthritis. Alfie. why did )'OU have to aet It l.n your pourln1 arm?" Some had been mod ern ized with DASH plaUorms at hugt expense long after tht program was offici all y declared t1 flop. Shamefaced Navy experts explained privately to my associate, Les \fhilten, that barnacle-encrusted 11rlmirals had in- sisted on building the shi ps· plaHorms without ever being sure that the drones would work . When the unmanned cho~ pers flopped into lhe se a, tht: admiral1 kept build ing more platforms in the hope that a new helicopter could be developed to use them. But I.he new heli c()pler pro- gram also fizzled. NOW, THE l'OAVY is praying that still another light-weight heliccpter. or a hea vier chopper will work. Jn either ca.st, the old DASH facilities wou ld ha1·e lo be modified at extra rost to the taxpa yer. Officially, the Navy told us that the cost of !ht: debacle was way below SI billion. But ii acknowledged that l3fi of the drones had been lost. mostly through crashes. The rest hive been mothballed 11t even more expense lo the U.S. Treasury. or pressed Into makeshift limited dulies. "fi.1aybe," said ont Navy wag gloomily, "we can put wheels on them ind use them for go-carts." • --W- Frid a y. May 28, 1971 Tht tditoria! pog1 of thl DaUu Pilot sttkl to inform 1utd t !i""' ulatl rtadtrt b11 prtsen.ting thts tt.twspoper't opinioni and com- mentnr11 on topfes of irtltrtst and 1ignificancc, b~ providing o forum for tht exprtislon of our reoder1' opiniom, and b~ pre.tenting tht divcric vkio- point.f of inf<>rmed ob••rt1er1 an4 1poKt1mtn on ropics o/ th• dau. Robert N. Weed, Publl&ber ~· Japanese Unchanged On China By HENRY &COTT STOKES L•"H" Fll\fMl•t Tlm•1 -UPI TOKYO -Despite a gene ral Improvement In the tone or relations between the United States and Communist China. the Japanese so far show no change in their basic policy toward Peking. An exchange of table tennis teams between the United Slates and China, and the ac· companying publicity about the new mood bety;een Peking and Washington. has not made any grave dent on the official Japanese determination to stick by the line pursued by the Tokyo government for the Jast 20 years or more: official recognition of Taiwan and Chiang Ka i-shek, and resolute refusal to consider any betrayal of the Taiwanese and their old leader. This is the fundamental fact tha t gov erns all Japanese ac- tions al the official level. For instance, Japan and China can agree on limited cultural ex· changes ·-on a par v:i1h the table tennis games between America and China : Japanese sportsmen. too, wi!I visit China in increasing numbers. and journalists from this country are likely to visil Peking with increasing frequency from this ·summer on. The number of Japanese journalists. gymnasl.s, dancers aad the rest going to China is certain to increase steadily. The Japanese government will be quite ready to grant them passpor~. and will raise no opposition to their acceptance of Chinese visas. But the Japanese govern· ment shows no signs or draw· .ing any poltilical conclusions from th e increased amount of cul tural contacts between lhe two countries. There are always the two cards which Japan might play by way of political concessions to China -agreement to allov.· the official export-import bank lo finance trade v.·ilh China. and, .!iCCondly, a ctiange in the policy of Chinese membership in the United Nations. There are matters which ha ve been discussed endlessly in Japan during the 1as1 half· doien years. the pro-Chinese element proposing that one be played, and The authorities giving no indication that they are ready to do so. The debate continues loday, and all one can s,ay is thsit there is still no indication of a change Jn policy. As for the Uniled Nations 11nd China. diplomats here have bee n hinting for much of this yea r that Japan's policy might be altered to permlt China lo enter the United Na· lions on a simple majority vote : but Japanese Foreign Minister Aichi has sn far show· ed no signs of committing his ministry on this poinl. It is still "too early" lo make a decis ion. Japanese diplomats say. 1.1•ith the autumn se5sion of the United Nations still far 1wsiy. It all comes ba ck to Taiwan again. The Japanese are just not prepared to go back on the ir promises lO Taiwan and to Ch iang Kai ..shek in person . Ha ving established diplomatic relations with Taiwan 20 yea;s ago. and concluded a peace treaty with the government or the island, tch Japanese are not prepared to Jet them drop, and to settle for diplomatic rt.lations wilh Peking alone - the only conceMion thal would really Impress the Communist Chinese. In the meantime t h e Japanese can do plenly in the commercial field. Trade with Chin11 reached a post·1.1·ar record or $822 million last yea r taking two-wa y trade -and tbe pro..~pecl is for another big • .. BOLD PRICE SLASHING ON MOST WANTED lltMS THAT MRYONE NEDIS. ; • DON'T MISS OUT! UNBEATABLE VALUES ••• TYPICAL OF THE GREAT BUYS YOU DEPEND UPON fJOM WHITE FRONT STORES ONE DAY SALE I I I SATURDA Y ONLYI . ~ . • SAVE 33°/o-3X5 FT I AMERICAN FLAG 2 piece 6 ~ metal pole. cord and IOOl.Jnting brackeL ·Flag etiquette book irM:luded. OUR R!G. DISCOUNT PRIC! 2.99 199 TANYA HAWAIIAN TANNING OIL Show oil the smootll"I bn on tile beach! Pro-tEcts against sunburn, lets you brown! 7 cz. OUR R!G. DISCOUNT PRICEl .79 139 UMINUM FRAME · SCREEN DOOR R1.1strroof libergtass screen; pneumatic closer: 6" ~itkplate: air-cbetk closu1e. Inside lock. #95·1 OUR R!G. DISCOUNT PRIC! 10.95 899 LADIES' DRESSY PATENT SCUFFS .Man.made patent ti ppers; 1riple-str2p; hidden gore. little heel: black, white; sizes to 10. OUR R!G. 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' l ' If iur .,. ... ~· •• " di o? ii '" ng le- \ ' . • • . • . .. ' • CHECKING •UP• Miss ouri Meru1 s 'Dugout Cru1o es' By L ~I. BOYD \\'HEN A \\'0'.\1A:~ goes to the grocery store alone. her a\·erage tab is $8.25. If h e r husband g~ v.1th her, lilt a verage tab runs $ I 3. 2 S. That's v.1lat researchers at South Dakota University found out. Illumina ting! Tho se figures sound a little low. but I.he pnncipl~ is clear, at any rate. If you·re on a budget, young lady, just leave the old boy honle. To snap beans or whate\'er. CO RR ES PO N D ENTS repor1 : The human beings in Vermont now outnumber the cattle there. FinaJ ty, finaUy . . . Arizona law technicaUy requires a y,·orking wife to lum her paycheck over to her husband , .. Fire\vood is run-- ning aboot $:;() a cord in New ''ork City ... A spiritual medium in Uls Ange les specializes in COO\'trsation v.·ith ~arted parrots ... And '.\i issouri originally did not mean "muddy water," as so frequently reported. bu t meant ''dugout canoes." BETTER NOT call yourself an authority oo the Bible unless you can specify the spot therein where mention is made of camels that wear necklaces . • • NOW OUR LA!\GUAGE ~tAN is busying himself in a search for English \\"Ords that end in ''eny." So far, he 's only found '"deny" and "progeny." CUSTO~IER SERVJCE: Q. "\\'hat proportion ol the men around hert use electric razors?" A. One out or four is the claim ... Q. "Can you make a 6 out of the numeral IX by .adding one continuous line?" A. That's not so tough, sir. J ust draw the letter "s" in front of it ... Q. "What's the ave-rage age of our U .S Senat.on'! And represen· tatives?" A. Senators, 56.~ )ears. Representath·es, 51.9 years. AS TO THE ORIGIN of lhe \\'Ord "sirloin," am oov.• ad· vised the story about how one English king dubbed h 1 s beefsteak ··Sir Loin" is pop- pycock. The .... ·ord actually comes from an old French word. "surlonge ," meaning top of the loin. Oh, }'OU knew that? All right, but did you know the cavalryman of Genghis Khan customarily tenderized his dinner ste ak by Mding on it all da y? Bet\\'etn himself and his horse. A DOCTOR recently guessed my weight within one pcun~. Before putting me ()n _ his scales during a r o u l 1 n e physical. I'm six feet. He guessed 200 po unds . ··~arkable'.'' said I. "'Do it dailv" srud he. "and I haven·1 beeii. 'more than three pounds off in 20 years." That old boy knows his livestock, sure enough. Thi.ti col umn today seems to be running a. little long on beef. doesn 't it? l'\o matter. HOW CAN A GIRL koow whether a fellow is falling in love with her? So inqu ires a feminine subscriber. That's not too difficult. Our Love and \Var man says the first sign of true devotioo: shows up v.'hen the lad starts tO tell the lady all about himself, lak ing particular care to enumerate his "tauJts. 1f he admits he snores. she can expect a pro- posal within the week. )'our questions a·nd com· me nls ore welcomed a11d wilt be used in Check ing Up wherever po ssible. PteOJe address your let ters to L. Af. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875. Newport Be a ch, 92660. Year-round School Voted by Assembly SACR A~tENTO !UPI) - · California children could go to · sc hool all year under prcr ' visions of a bill backed by : Gov. Ronald Reagan and pass- : ed Thursday by the Assembly. The measure by Sen. Clair . W. Burgener (R·Sa n Diego) "·as sent back to the Senate for approval of Msembly changes on a 56-1 vote. The Jone dissenting vote was cast Co rvair's 'Problems' Recounted LOS ANGELES (AP I -A former re search and devr:lop- mr:nt technicia n for th e Chevrolet Division flf General f.1otors Corp. says Gt.I ex- ecutives 'A·ere aware of the rear-engine Corvair's handling problems before 1t was mArket ed. I George Caramannil. 'A'ho said he v.·orked for Chevrolet for 13 years before resigning in 1970. said the Corva ir pro- IOl}'J>t: rolled over 'A'hen it was first tested in 1959. Edward Cole, now General ~lotors pre.sldent, and Frank Winchell, Co I e ' s assistant. knew about the car's stability proble ms. Caramann• said in an intervie\v Thursday. His first job ·with Chevrolet, CaramAnna s a i d , v.·as to prepare a pre-test vehicle for the Corvair engine and rear suspension. The prototype v.·as a Germa n Porsche fitted with C or v air c omp fl nents. Caramanna said. II had the same structure as the production Cori:air. he t'Ont1nued. Hayakawa Ge ts One J\lorc Year by Assemblyman John t.l1ller (D-Berkeley). The measure allov.·s school di'.strict~ voluntarily t& switch to an all-year, quarter system. with the permission of the superintendent of publ ic in- struction. Burgener s a i d \\'ilson Riles, state superin· tendent of public instruction, and Reagan backed the bill. "lt wiU only work if it has local community support," said Burgener. "lf the parents don't \\'Ml it, it won 't work." He said it 'A'OUld save the school districts money because the school buildings and bu ses "'·ould be used year round and not sit idle for three months as they now do. Three.fourths of a school district's children v.·ould at- tehd school at the same time v.·hile the remaining one-fourth i,ras on about a three-w eek vacation. said Burgener. The shifts would rotate. broken up by the three-week recesses. but students still would attend school for about 175 days each year. Burgener said schools In Chula Vista woul d tie1in th e system on July 1. flt said it was arranged so that all children in the same familv an d f r om the same neighborhoods v.·ere in school at the same time. He said teachers, if lhey wanttd, could teach all year instead ()f nine months. "If they v.·ant to teach 12 months, thpy'd get higher pay," said Burgener. "They can do the ir moonlighting en the campus." Younger Names Son To P os t LOS At\GELES jAP I - State All)'. Gtn. Evelle \'ounger ha!'i appointed his 28- l ear~ld son. an honor la"· school graduate and a former SAN F'RA l'\CISCO I UPI ) -Policeman, as a s~ial Assi1- Dr. S. l. 1!1yakaw1 will re-tanl attorney general to head main as S•n f'ranci~ st11.te a stalt'A'ide fight against college'& president for a year crime, Son,ger than hls scheduled The attorney general an- retlrtmtnt. nounced Thursday that Eric 1t---wu-d llclo1ed Ttwr.Jday-¥ounger. hi1 only child. Y.'ill th•t C1.1lrornia State College take • year 's leave of 1bsenct Trustte1 hid voltd lht ell-from a private law firm ttn1ion tor Hay1k1wa ~·ho on startln& June 1. A spoke1m1tn July 11 will be 16, the usual !iaid Youn1er·s salary will be retlrv:ntnl 11e l.n lhe 1y1tem. s1 .ns a month. Se1ta te U1ait Actio1a Bu dget Bo ost ecl by $1 Billio11 SACRA~tl'.:.\''fO IUPJI - The Senate Finance Com· mittee has tentatively agreed to increase Gov. Ronald Reagan's proposed state budget by nearly SI billion. Chairn1an Randolph Collier said Thursday he would sub - mit 1he proposed $7.5 billion spe nding program to (.'{Jnl- mlttec 1ne1nbcrs Tuesd:iy for a vote. ·'If they think the.'ie pro- grams are necessary. they can put their money l\'herl' their mouth is." the crusty Yreka Democrat told a newsman. Committee staff estimated tht' state must generate S836 million in new revenue - a major tax increase -to balan ce thee x pend it ur e blueprint. Reagan's proposed budget for the new fi sca l year begin- ning July I called for spending $6.73 billion to operate state government and p r o v i d e assistance to local school districts. The Assembly \\Pays and '.\leans Committee, 1he lower house's counterpart to the :oenate finance committee, ap- prov ed two weeks ago a budget of $7.06 billion. Traditionally the Senate has held ti ghter pursr strings on state spend ing, but apparently !his year senators plan to break precedent. Although both houses must reconcile the amounts in the final version of the budget. the governor has the last \\'Ord. The Senate added $146 million more than the lo'A·er house for l>.1edi-Cal for a tota l program of $735 million and ordered fu ll fin ancing of all "'elfare programs w i t h an open-ended spending plan. Dis ta f f B arte nders Get Cou rt Blessing SAN FRANCISCO 1AP) -Tbe C8lifomia Supreme Court has struck down a law banning lady bartenders, saying the pedestal upon which .... ·omen are placed is too often revealed as a cage. In a unanimous decision, the court ruled Thursday that the law violates the U.S. Constitution's equal protection clause. The courl also said the law tran sgresses on the explicit ban in the state constitution against dl squalUying any per· son because of sex from "entering or pursuing a lawful busi· ness, vocation or profession." \Vomen should not be excluded from barlending: "(or their own safelv," but sho uld be: permltted to take their chances al ong With men when they are otherwise qua!ifi~ for the job, Associate Justice Raymond E. Peters wd m the court's opinion. HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT : 5881 Warner at Springdale in Huntington Beach FOUNTAIN VALLEY-1~ M•gnoll• St. al Talb<lrl FOUNTAIN \IALLEY-ltUI HarbOr Ill,,,.&. 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"°"t rttl .,.,th line'. •t1Lllclllol Pcrl«.tlybokinud Outd oot.u,.on ~ltd giosl: "111. %ebco %ee Bee Spincast Reel rmnou, Zebco $319 reel or a ~t price. ,J4.9a Vol.! lJ9" Tru: Temper Spin Reels A nt\.reverw, big ~'6 -boil, oll !fie feG · turts VQU wonr at b•g sa"l"Rt '5" Sturdy Metal Tackle lox ' Slunfy, ""lift con-$496 fi1t'll f troy. ~Yal!Iebco Spin Combo ! t'C". 6 ft. ~in $577 . r«I w,, n '707' "";., .. ,ng~!. ' ··-··~-$7 mt'lal '"""" wttn cGmfortobl1, od· 77 )uflobl1 Mod rtY-. So .... ,J5.21 . $J3'1 Value! !'olor111 Deluxe Ice Chest ~ $10" N .... Do11 br1. D«k91' l'oly k• ct>nr. Sfpaf'Vt1 apo(I lot ui.- t.ill, 1tc. • $t.4t-JO Qt. l'.tr IH C"-t 77• * .. • !leg. 99' Royal Oak Charcoal Reg. 6~ 9Vt1 Colorful Play Ball Reg. $41' Polaroid '108' Color Film It's Easy to Make Home Made Slush with the new ICY MUG ,:0 ~!1! I ~ ..... ,.. ill ... , •• ,.., Tha rno5t elrclllnp: Jcf10 I tht me ••• tl•n pour 'ii OarOllrid ••• ~Imply ploc9 tl'lll ft01.1n l'!OrHOllk; cap1Ul1 Jr! -\!~~ °'"' .... wtmlld', cold btvlr- s495 Value! Vinyl Tufted Chaise Pad '211 Beach .. ct lest $1'' Sturdy hrld-wood1-••'" ....,..,_ ,nfpldcov1r. Adjl,lf.labl.J 39',,Vlsta Pak Fl9 Bars ~ 291 """""" ........, 11(1 "°"· l i t Yalutl HersliiJ•lln ~-... 59t-.. ~···· tto.--4 pinto,. delldolm,0 wld tr.at ... kick •ill low.. Witll Adj111toble Flrepori 111, llOW Ot this ssn 1pec:tac11lor Tllrltty 1o•l11ts of S2.0T. lat•• twl11 1rlll cooklnt or10, romo•obl1 1191, $7.88 Voluol folding Aluminum Chaise Lounge 1" tubul•r fro- ••• w .. tMrpro1f ,,1 s 101011 -·~· s4n bl119. Adl11•tt to 5 pa1ltl1111 for comfort. So•• ,,.., 1/l . 13" ... cb , Umbrella , $311 l eroe -tii.r,.. 111iont¥lnyl""'°' b,.llo In !l bright fDMt! Great for -~- l or cool drMrto o:-ofort '" ttw w o r"' """lh1t ehlod. Vn1r. otftl to ltt air d=lo11. ,. I.,. • rrtdty, M•Y 28, 1971 DAllY PILOT 8 --"--'---'-----~ ~ -----'----""'--"' Deserter Left Bis Life Behind By LUCl~'DA f'l\ANKS Af\'D PETER FREIBERG U"l"I l"r•u 111tel'flal .. 1111 for drug peddlers. He at' din-father wrote him a letter. showed of b om bed· out months on unemployment ner at the aame cafe every "Your mother is feeling ter-hospitals and schools. bf;nefits. Si8 a week plus room night, went to the library after rlble abou~ this," Lhe letter In the end , howeve r. John rent, and then fln1tlly 1ot a joh dinner and spent quiet even-read. "Please, please do your 11ays hl8 view of th'-seven-day in • brewery. AllhouRh he had lVhtn John PicCMllO dt· ings in a rooming house with family a service. forget conferenct changed. He dislik· picked up a fair amount of serted from. tltt Army on his first girl friend, whom he everything you·vt' done. It's ed the pr11.l5e ot the North Swedish, he &Lill felt isolated Stpt. 20, 1967, ht Irf L mor,. had met in a luncheonette. not ll:D late . Please accept Vletn1mese who ga ve the from his Swedish working than hrs family arid friends "I knew my sanity depended from me a ret.urn ticket deserttrs a heroes ' welcome , mates. Like many foreigners, behnut. lie 1vas f orcP<I to on makin.11 the most of my homt.'' presenting them \.\'ith \.\'hite he founcl the Swedes aloof and discard old habits and at-new freedom. on proving I John wrote back : flowers and rings. reserved . ritu.de1 which had go vern-could be a succe~s." he say11. "Dad. that won't be "It made aome of us "I felt l wa11 alwayl'i on the e.d Iii! 19 years of lif t . He '"If I failed in this, I knew It necessary. the U.S. govern-uneasy ." he say!!. "We wanted outside looking 1n," he l'iays. was 110 Lo11ger !he h igl~ "'ould make. my act ot dese.r-ment would gladly pay my to think or ourselves a! jusl "You had to know someone for school boy his friends dt.s-lion me.aninglesa in my own wa y back." ordin11.ry a:uy!'i who tried to moolhs and monlhs before cribrd ru 01mlrss ctt?d bor-mind." L.. make a deciston of con· they "'ould introduce. you to d A I . . h American deserlers ucga n ,,,.,·,nee." their friends.'' e · S a ugillve, ' was FOOTSTEPS lo pour intn Sweden during the "" He was dcprcss•d al th• forced fo drato on potential d '" he llt lier knew ht Jiarl. Jnhn finall .v v.·earied of the ir;pring of 1968. from C11na a, CULTURE SHOCK Lhought that to be re.ally hi!Jl- furtiveness of his life in Se11t-the slBtt's, snuthea:st Asia anrl In the. summer of 1968, John py he would h11 ve to btcome Afl~r dl'scrting from r·ort II'" of always htin,i:: arraid C.ermany. The press. both e.xperienced the culture. :shock immer~d in Swedish rather Dix, Nev.· Jers.ey, John went to "'hf'n he ht>11rd footc;teos fnrel~ and Swedish. sw::irmPrt v.·hich hit.~ most deir;e.rter11 than Amcric11n culture. Toronto to behind him. He reart of the. into Stockholm ir;ee.kinR: oot after the flrsl few months of H '· "· · h k rl•serters at random . A r~w nf e ~gan to re.memU'Cr wit pie up the fnur sailors from the U.S. .,, exile in Swe<le.n. "'hen they nostalgia Rll the things he S50 he had Na\'Y aircraft car r if' r. !ht> early de serter5 g n 1 firsl atTive, they are bUO)'•d Id '· bl t b k . ln•ether •nd nroon1·,,d the wou ne ver""' a e o go ac ~an!fcrcr:~... lnlrepirl, who nn Oct. 2:t. 1967, A "m, r 1• c, 0 Oes"e"rters Com-up b.v a l'ien&e of freedom and 10 -the. librarieg full of w .. a.Jr.. becl'lme the. firs! 11t>rvict>mrn a curiosity about their new English languoge. books his di an bank In desert and receive. l'l~.vlu m millet. I AOC ) In rorm 11 unilecl · ' front. Later. the AOC \vas !n s11rroundlngs. They naturally workbench and carpenter's \\·hen he had in Sweden. John decided to band together 11nd are ex· tools in Lodi. gone AWOL tt>~l fale. help out new arriviils ;ind hi!arated at being p&rt n( a "I h· .. th t s· k fee!' two weeks He went tn Ne"'' 'York in late heenmc 11 central organiz11tinn common cause. Then tht'y ""' a ic ing you earlier. He ~ Februa ry 1968. and applied fnr for the deserter community in gel whfn you know you cannot S"·eden . begin lo lhink abnul the. 1r· st.op time." he. s1ys. '>''enl to the -a ttuick pa~oort undrr his revocab1lity nf their l'iilua· To ease his clepressim . John anti-f!rafl union for help. real name.. te.ltin,I! the nrficia!~ The deserter.!!, mns11 y sons tions; lhe.y become homesick ; strengthened his friendships John was part of 11 new he had ,!!:Otten 11 las1·minu\e. nf working-class fam ilies wi1h they begin to d 0 u b t, with Americans in Sweden and phenon1e.non which faced the acceplance a! an Enl!lish only hi.R:h school education.c, reconsider, and become channeled his energies inll} antiwar movement in late university Rnrt had lo be thrre. knew litllt of Marx nr ~1:1n. frlghtcned. Thi5 is the time working for the. ADC. by thi s 1967. The drafl resistance within d11y5. The passport. Nn. Nevertheless the AOC JMn v.·hcn many go back. time a strong organization grouj)s ""'hich b u r g e 0 n e d J206222. wa!'l ,r11nted. -"'ith becttme a radic:il irrnup. The John ran up against the dif· 1-1<hich printed two magazirtt"S, throughout the country in the nn questions asktd -on Feb. politics nf the ADC members ficulty 111 dese.rters have. in solicited donations { r 0 m beginning of the year were 2fi . v.·erc slogans and I h 'i r getting jobs. He found that Swedish church groups , and geared fo the upper middle-"II was the i:reatesl feelin,I! m0Uv11ion was often just • Swt.dish employers !ended lo had set up a home in northern class, well-educated boy who In have the. freedom tn be. netd to belong somewhere. hire only Swedes and most Sweden for rehabilitating had acce.!'ls to draft-dodging myself again. I didn 't havt tn Jt AOICALIZED deserters got only the menial deserters addic ted to drug5. I h · A sneak around any mnre and it · h · f t.or. d I th f JI f 1968 S A_, crack dn1•"n on dr11rrter:;, delaying the granting of work pt>rm lt.& to some deserters and r.efusing residence permits to , others. l\IASS RALLIES The de,;erters reRc:\ed by or~aJ1 izi11g mass rallie1 and dr.1nonslratinns. John played a key part, traveling around lhe country making spcechf's , urg- ing thal deserters be granted the same ··political a~ylum"' gi ven lo defectors from totalitarian countries. Th Is gives them the same rights 11s a Swedish citizen a n cl guarantees they cannot b!' deported. The Swedish govern- ment, anxious not to imply the United States is a dictatorship. admita deserters under a clau.~e of "hum11nltarian as vlum," v.·hi ch makes them li11.ble to deportation . The deserters gained public ~upporl and in 'f'ebru11ry 196~. the i~sue was debated in the Riksdag (parl iament! and a comprorn15e reached. It pro- vided that de.6erters cou.ld be deported only if they cnm- mited "'grave crimes." Activity In the ADC began to dwindle. Many deserters drop- ped out of !he organi:r.ation and went off lo 01.her cities to do lheir own thl,ng:s. John moved to Solna. a 1uburb northwe.st of Stockholm, snd began a new phase in his lite as an exil e. ( 1Ve:it: /Jtsr nchuntme11t n11d 11 dream ). cfee~ OPIGINAL OIL foiAINTINGS (from 24x36 on Canvas Europe) HUGE Select ion -of ALL Sizes WHOLESALE PRICES I !Look for th1 Littl1 Yell ow Cott19•) 369 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa FRIDAY · SATURDAY · SUNDAY -11 to 5 Phone 645·5360 ec n1ques . s antiwar senti-1.. •,E ve r y 0 n e becomes JO 5 in ac 1es an n e a o . wo:uen . ~ ~ t · -" k. d f W8'.'i almo5t ;is if the wnr '' restaurant kl'-he"'"'. norhanc under pressure from! men 1ncreas=. a new tn o · h " radicirlized when they gel "' "" r-I"' 'IJ~ d f t _, h k \\'as telling me I was ng t, John ti··-" for 1 , v, r a f the US go,·ernment "-gan •-'V-'il e e.c or emergcu -I e war -here." John says, "It is a1 _____ = __________ ._. ::_ ____ . _~..::._w-'------"'-"'-'------'"""""' i~g-class GI li ke John Pie-heJ~~~s-lhrew nut hi~ John natural Jirsl reaction. 1 ciano. r.1ark !OCial securifv card and remember how bitler 1 w11s. The Toro n to Anli-Drall lhf' next clay he · t.onk the. f\.1y country wa:o; my enemy Unio n expressed shnck that h h d " d · because it h<'ld taken away my lh C · h d money e a save11 ur1n' . e anad1an aut oritie.s ha 1 k. · freedom and fnr,..d m• ;nlo • ive mon!hs nf 1\'or 1ng in .... ,. turned John over to lht> U.S. Se;ittle ::ind booked rlntn the. choice which might ruin my military police durin11 hs Italian liner Cristoforo Colom-IHI'." previous AWOL and offered lo 00 for N!!"les. Before he ll'ft , ,Jnhn b«amt .:in active ADC get a lav.'yer lo defend his h" called hi' aunt from New member. Ht J!re"' a bearrt and case I.Cl stay in Canada. John . Ynrk irnd told her In inform mnus!Rche but sav!I he. refused declintd but accepted a train his parent' thlll hf' wi1~ l!afe. to take dTUJt5 or Cut hi!! shirts ticket (rom them to Seattle, and nn hi!{ wav In Swede.n. frnm American fi,qgs . He Wa!h. .fnhn :1rrived in StnckhnlJTI in bec•me known 115 the When John reached Seat1le, ~farch 196R. one nf lhe fir~t "stralehl" nf the AOC 11nd the be had nothing in his pocke.t American rle~e.rters to retiuest nrf!11nizatinn n(ten used him 11s but some loose change and the ::is.vlum. With !he h"IJI of their d i p In m 111 when phone number of a contact Swedish lawye.r Gnran F'r:inck. ne~oli;itin,I!' with the Swedish given him by the. anti-draft who hlls been h 11 n d Ii n e government. union. The contact found him cleserte.l' cases , i n c e the On Julv 4, 1968. ht' joined the a temporary place lo stay. Tntl't'pid foor. John'! f'eque~t ADC in intirchin~ on !he U.S. John rose at 6:30 a.m. every was l!rante.d and the lSwedish embassy to dis r up I To- day and walked the streets un· l!OVPT"flml'!nt paid for his hn"rrt dependence Day celebriitions Iii he found a job and a room. 111t f~e horn" of 11 socialist on the embassy la"·n. Poli~ NEW IDE!\'TITY fam ily, the Olaf Anderssons. moved in when sevtral of the demonstrator' spal on the "I knew 1 had to do GAVE SUPPORT American flag and John. everything quickly -a place "The Anderssons gave me 11mnng three pe-onle 11rreste.d . to Uve, a job, a complete new the 1.upport I nl!!eded to get on lflent a d;i v in jail iind recelv-, identity," he gays. "I was my ftet," say.• John. "Jt had ed 11 $14{1 fine. I more down-to-earth • n d Men ,. long lime since 1 had I.ater that month . .John was I clearheaded than 1 eve.r was enjoyed th! security or home amnng R small grauo chosen before ()f since." life. the conversations over to represent the American John threw out his d<lg tag <!inner ." rle!lerter community at the and hid everything else which John fell he was particularly Com m uni s l International could ide.ntify him. including lucky during the first difficult Ynuth Conferen~ in Sofia. his military identification card six months as an American Bulg;iria. He wa5 111 first im- and letters. He even clipped exile. Many deserters had no pressed by the Norlh Vie.t- lhe name tags out ()f his shirts family like the Ander»0n.~ to oame!'le who JnvJted I he and unde.rwear. He parted his look after them; they had no deserter!! lo meet a Snulh hair a dif(erent way. gre.w it money. few friends . and had Vietnamese 1choolle.acher longer, but not too Jong, and to peddle drugs to eat. whose fa ce was b a d 1 y took out a &oeia\ security card Back in Lodi, John's night disfigured by what I hey under the name John Clark. had seriOtJ sly upset hi 1 described as an American He wrote (IUl a biography of parenls. Two wee.ks after he napalm attack . John was this new person and memori:r.-had arri ve.d in Sweden. h i s · 1ickened hy pictures lhe.y edit so he would never slip upl.============================"11 and tell the same person a dif- ferent story. He mRde a study of how ether deserters had gnlten ciruKhl . He staye.d away from a.ntiwar organizations. kept his association v.r!th o I her deserter!! to a minimum and irvoided the Seattle Port Authority Building, a ha ven! I Aa~ ·I· c:-~ \4;J NEW CROP BABY KOi CARP .... ... .... $3.50 ' .• .. $8.00 .$15.00 .. $28.00 The perfectionist's watch An Dmf!gl Constellation chronometer Is 1very1peci1I w1tcb. To 0 OMEGA Dbt11in 1 chronometf!r rating 1 \vetch must pirl'iS 15 d1yg of 'nueling te1l1 cnnducttd by .. s .... ·iss Governmtntobservatory. Eirch \\"at ch is tim"d in fivl! different l.:==~u·'--... ~Ti~r====-fi-~mst-pas111crni: ,.,,m·~,e~b~.~.~iif;;:;:ex~p~o~,~.~a---------1"~ ~ to extreme hc11L 11nd Arcti c cold. 10 25 50 100 LILLIE~ 2 for $5.00 WATER HYACINTH 5 for $1.00 ALSO TANKS FILTERS STANDS ACCESSORIES Pacific Goldfish Farm \11111' Ul l'"OM 1t-._.c.11t1M fMt. O,_i1 M1-rlel D1y H••t 1!11"•1'11 It,, W"1Ull+11t1ir Oil tllt S•11 Dl9'• llf'filwlf 11 ee~ ...... , a ••t•• 1'1·1111 • E\'ery Omf!g~ CQnsteH11ion chronomster j s accompanied by 1 certific1te atle.stin,: to its incredible 1ccur1cy: 11"1 the. u\limete witch to giv1 or receive. "••!·••""'~' Ce<>'tt'l•"tn ellfG~or1111u "''!~ 1'ty·ll•l1 d•I!.1'·1•"'111 , ,811: SOhd &!lid *-'11•Jtlltle~1 f.Uf, "'"t~·"~ 6•1tl ll t 1111.Mt 511111...,11 c~1~ 1011otld 1oid l ls.IJ Ol'llt• tll~tltlltlte" U\11~1111'111'1 ire,., ~!t • "'llO• \NO''IMO Cl'4TI" "°' .,., ............ '(l.rik .,. .. , ... , (INTlll llldl • '""'" ©~ C:...1-'rlMI JO·'l'U ) 1 DODGE CAR PRICES ~ • START AT COLT HOT NEW SUB-COMPACT WITH A lOQ.HP PUNCH I IT PROVES "SMALL PRICE" DOESN'T MEAN "SMALL CAR'.' GET A FREE AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION WHEN YO\l BUY! • Monufocturer's Suggested Refo il Price for Dodge Colt 2-door Coupe, with all slondord equi pment, a s shown. Price includes destina tion charges, but does not include state or local foxes. title or license lees, or other Dealer-establi shed charges, if any, for Deoler-instol!ed equipment or services. DESTINATION CHARGES A.RI INCLUDED. Come in and see th e car wilh more of everylhing I Four Colt rnodels : Coupe Jshownl, Hardtop,' 4-Door Sedan,Stot1on Wagon, at odditionol charge. Order yours today I AMfllCA'S NO. I COM,ACT VALUEI The Dodge Pr ice Fighlers" new Demon is sized with the comoocts-priced with the minis l Room for five odu!ls. Huge trunk. Choice of economy engines, Sixes or VSs. Wide choice of op hons. too I Check Demo,, b&fore you buy ony small earl REPEAT 0, A SIUOUD lost-r, this hordtop bro~e oll so les records I We sold out I This year, ........ ..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=--'-.:.o.:_u_r S~"l~ingeT hordlop is on even ,. · ""' deob-Whon.you.buv- ., . th 1s specially equipped hardtop, you gel the automatic trans- mission FREE. Check ovt the "success sellout" now I Dodge ~ A/JTHORIZED OEALERS • • f) DAILY PILOf For Tl1e Reco1·d Birtlis MOAG MaMO•IAl MOSP'ITAL M •V 1. IJll M;u:n": c'r.','1,,0:i.11~:i .. ~·~t!r:: ~~~ ro- M •. '""' Mrl . .J!enltv W1vn1. 111·.\ M~.·~~ c~:~~ J:~~· i1i'~no1. 10..o. JJ111 S!rff'I, Hvt1tlM1l0<1 ll11Cll. Olr> Mr 1nd M11 .\nTllo•w Onn•tt, .. n ..... ~''~n~111 J.:~~"R1~~~'!a "(~,~ 1111 ~111 PA<Uic, S•nlf An1, ol•l M r lrl<I "''' j;tof('r M""llO'I, l~ SoU<luna L&no, (or11r11 Ori Mir, O<>v M r l "CI M11 J1m~1 Folll, ll)fll Mon•ovf1. Co"• M•••· oul ...... , 1, 1'11 Or. 1M M•> Mtll\t"' G-on1. llo M~''!~"",~;"Cortg!,~~1 ;~'tn:~.1 70t'> E1>1 81v ..,,....,,. ll1lbQ.O, O"I M•. 1nd Mrl Gllt>erl Pl1•t tntl1. lUO W1ll1cr Avtmw, (0,11 M•••· ol•I M1v I, 1111 M r ~"" Mtl w ...... Mlllrr. 11K ~·II snon(lll, ~1nJ1 it.no, -Mt '"" Mr1. Alt>erl (Ol""•CO, llUO flOlllrl (O<>rl, Foo11l11n Yllle•. °'" fl.< ll>d Mfl. Horold ..ICll\n....,, 1h E1•I 1.ir. Pl•<•, Apl C, Co1•• Mou ber Mt. •nd M" llrv•n O••l•, 11371 lot C1<>•rlot, Flkln••;n V•ll1y. Mr •RO M'I Ron•la 11(,•mr" t(I) 1(...,,,111. AP1 H, '"'M"'"'""' B••cr., ~. "" •"" M•• o.:.r..1a M<I(;.,,,.,..,, ioon Str•llon W•v \•"'' Ant, 9lt1 M•Y 4. 1911 ' Mt •ncl M,., Wll!l•m GfHlir', )Il l P•C•llC Av1nu., '""' Mt••· t i•! Mr lt\d Mr1 W1rr•n W ~11v1n1, )U(l1 El C•n••a•, Mlu111n v1110, •"I Mr 1na M•1, Rlcn,ra Cr.u•cr., 1"' Or•no• A•tnu•. Co••• Me••· bar M 1. '"" M". J""n M•P>ontv, llf) M~ltc=~· l~~~'."• y;~~'V $••nly, Ill AvOC41(1o STrr o!. (OSI~ Me••· be• ~. s. ltll M • •nd Mfl J""n l, Fo" l09 M•moh" Sl•ttl. No. ), H.in!ln1ro., l'lr•rr.. 9lr1 Mr •na Mro M•vrv Mv•'s. lOOt MN.on!•ln Vl•w Orlvt, L"runt Brien, olrl Mr .,,., Ma, O•vld Heotr, }lJ Wl•"f'r. S•nlt A.na, bev Mr •na M,., Rlcn,ra Roll'<.,,.. 1~701 MDIII• Vftdt, L•oun• Nltut l, oi•I Mr. l r"l(I M,.. Juliu\ A.>tnrnl>l•t, JI•! Slcllv. (C>UtM~:·:: l~','1 Mr 1<>d M•o. Roborl Ptrlln, ~» Otf\111, Corooo .tel MH. oor+ Mr .,,., M ... Wtynt Arnokl. ll/6J ..... IC•nflelt , Vt l•Mlt. oirl Mr 1nd Mr• Oon~ld Of' I• Houu.ovr. llll W••' Con1t•I A.vr""•· A1>!. 11, S•n•1 A.nt . olrl Mr •nd M•~ O•vld lannlnor. l"l't Sn•tfl•ld L•n•, 1<unli<>11"'1 Boocn, t lrl Mr, '"" Mrs. T"<>mt l Hocko•omflll, 14lll Otuon1Mr• Autni>f, Tu1tln, t lrl M• Ind "'" Rtvm-Rlvtrf lit E•sr 11\1 , "PJ. '· Cost• Mt•• '"' M • •no Mri $1~utn H!rloou'•fl. <j/ Cool• M••• Srrerl. Co•lt ,,.,,,, bou M•• 1, 1n1 Mr, •nd Mrs. O.ouid Hooldn" 1'01 Pitch Circle. Hunll<>11on l tt tll, llmoo Mr. ll>d Mt1. Normtn F, A.bl•!!, 1nt OtSolo A.u"""', C051• Mt,., bey Mr. tnd M.,, Llova Wlll!t. 21*1 D•Solo A.u'""" Co111 MHI, boy Mr. •nd Mrt. MlchH! J, MtCl••~u. 6(W.. a J<>.o..,,, c ... r. Mtw. bev Mr. '"" Mro Wl!lltm N1l1lt , 212 C•llrlllo, Co••• Moat. olrl Mir I, 1'11 Mr. t no M". John Wllt1!on. 1231 St1rllt Ro•d. Lt pun• l••cll, bou Mr •nd Mr1. John SPlflm•n. 110 Con!., Slrfflt.No. 2, CM1• M•11 olrl M<. ""' M•1. r<erml! P•hl, 1111 Pom. b~• Lt nt, Ntwi>ort Bt•ch, beu M•, •nd Mr>. llontkl W-rull, 1510 1lrw•u Orlue. (c.111 M.,..,, bev Mr Ind Mt1. ll<lberl Ht l>dtrlon, HU, No. C. Wet!m!n1ttr. 1tr1 Mf. •"" M ... Jtc~ Mu,,11!•. HU !.ou!n Ced•• Slrffl. S.onlt An.o, •!rl Mr ~net Mro JOl!n W Mon•oomt rv, ~':.~n.':i;.r11ut1on Drlut. Hun11.,.1.,.,, M•' ,, 1'11 Mr. tnet Mri , J•n W!<ttn, llU No S•cr1mrn10. 0••<>1•· bev Mr. •"" Mn. Otuld ~°''''• 174 E, lltnv...,, F~~r~1~111~T" bou M• tt>d Mro. JOl!n l , Ortwrv, '11'1 Set•IOr L•fle, Hun!lnoton l'lo•rll, ol•I M•. •"" Mrt. ~r•!d A. lr"""•u. IOlf ll"""n Pt .• Coil• M•.s•, bov Mr •I'd Mri. Micn•ot P. '"'""'"°"• J11 .. .-.11 0.., Cor-, boV Mr. '"" Mn. M•Cll••l ..... Boo•nt . •IOil w H_e...,., l'l•c•. S.O"'• A.nt, bov M• •"" M ... Ill-la l!:t'ICln••· 1"11 So, P•rl Or. ~•n1• ""' b<lu M•v 11, 1"1 Mr '"" M" Jtmes M B•lm., 1oon 81om.ort, Huntlnoron Bet<~. glr1 Mr. '"" M" Notm11 H. J-·· , ..... ,, N . Z•vn, An1~tlm, bcu Mr t nll Mrs Willlf m 0 llu•~e. 61' A. C1u-.1e A.vt N•w"°'I Br•c~. !loov Mr •~d M" L•"v W Ctnllr v, 1110 CUii o,. Nf.;J>Orl !t•cll. oir! Mr 1n<1 M,.. """'' K Fl1~erl¥, 2!1' l!:ldffl AVf Cell• Me•"· •Ir! Miu 11. 1n1 M• •nd M•• Jolin H. '"'"°''"'"· 701 C•r"•'•C n Coron• d•! Mlt, ol•I M• •nd """· Ron•ld F, ~loll>. l lJ l!O<:ll••lrr ~r ... r. (o\I• M•U. II<>• M• '"" ""''· Wli!lom R. Lt!orr. llff a.~ .. Str•el. Co•tt M•••· Olrl "'" '""" M" l lcllo•d L. D•vl1, 6000 G•rdpn G•ou• l'llvd .. We•lmJ.,.ter, '" Mr •nd Mr1 tucl•" C Hiii, t7l1 PIP!"1 l!ev•T Cltci,. H11t1ti""'"" fl••<"· ol•I M.r. •~d "''I. HUOO W. (8tV•f. 1000'" E; B•lbat 81ua , llllllol, eld M• ""d M" Eu••no F, Hutm1. l01'l M•~nol!f, HuntlM!on Bt•<.11. t l•I D ent 11 Not ices MtCA.11: •o~·r ,. M rC •b• l11 " l'lolno Cllkld o ... ., l~oun• r•hourl 0.011 o! dtl!ll, M~v n. s ........ a ov .,.,,,, "•'"''"' •on, l'•••n: a•uo~•t;, Suu n"t Ct•''"" "•••· r''" mal~r' M" rlor•nc• McC•Ot; '" '"'• M•• Oarot"Y 1.1.,..i.no. belft er 1u;. ""''· ""•Olt O•l•t l,dt lt•V•<t• W•ll M .. rid S••u•O•• 11 AM. "•C<ht Virw ,,.....,.,..,.1 "''" S""trr r Ltoun• ll••<ft Me>r!u•tv, Ooreclo•• MOSS Cu•h• r: Mon ••• t•. o1 '"1 F Col1t ,.,,,,,.,, lltun• l'Hlh 0 11f of Oot tft. ""' )t \u•v1Vra ov "'•'• VIY•f"· "'"· J""'' D Mo••· o• w,n•e••t. 111 .. ,.,," '"''' t'Ond<•·•'d•tn: I"'"" M" Grocf l~•"· Sor1•oto ~.o.,a1 l'une•.i \fr•1tu. ~•lu•n• .. II JO •M. S• GOllrtr EP!l<OPll Cnt<>•I, El Toro McCormicl! L•oun• "'''" Mo""''' O"fCIOro l'ILSTL llMw•ll F "•all Sr 691! 5 Hookrr, L"" ,ono•I••· O•r. ol d••t", M•v 11 Sr rulc•1 "'""'"' •• ""'''" u,,,.. Mortu••v. lTE>'eNSON ( Frld.iiy, M.ty 28, 1 ~71 Neo Natal Setup Medical Cente1· U11it Aids 'Preemies' By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ot Ills Ot ll'r PINI lt•fl ORANGE -A baby so tiny it tould be held in :i man'11 h:ind lies in the glare of a blue light. Several v.·ires from the miniscule body to a bank of machines which surround <he absurdly large looking in· cubator. Pla stered on one end is a card giving the baby's name and noting that she is a girl born live days ea rlier. Weight at birth is recorded at a meager ont: pound f1ftttn ounces. An alarm rings and a nurse rush es lo the covered crib. The baby has stopped breathing, causing a drop in heart beat rate. The alarm is activated by thl' machine moniloring the hea rt beat v.·hich i5 simultaneously sen. ding a light shock through a wi re attached to the baby's left heel. The little leg kicks out when the current runs through it, but the baby starts breathing again and the hearl beat climbs back to a safe levf'I. This is a famil iar scenario in 1he neonatal intensive care unit at Orange C-Ounty Medical Center. It was because of situations like that of a the premature baby's that !he in· tensive care nursery was con- structed at th e hospi tal. Dr. Bruce Ackerman. who is in charge of the facility, said it has been operaling since /'\ovPmber !ft•hen a portion of the pediatric section of the center was remodeled to create the intensive care nursery. The unit was developed at the f\.1edical Center for a variety of reasons. Ackerman L.. explains. "To begin with. about 10 perctnl of the babie.3 delivered in the county -about 200 a 111onth -are born here."' he said. ''And under t h ose circumstances it's advisable to have the equipment for any eventuality. "Also, the majority -0f the patients who come here are in · digenl and probably wouldn't be able lo afford transferring a critical baby to a similar unit in a private hospital." The physician. who is a pediatrics lectu rer for UC Irvine's medical sl'hoot al the hospital. also crediled Lhe use of the medical center for the schoors leaching hospital and a growing interest in the pro- blems of the newborn for the de\·elop1ncnt of the nursery. ··There is a similar one at Children·s Hospital of Orange ·county, but ii is for infa nts of all sizes, nol just new borns and does not ha ve the elec· Ironic equipment and some of the other fP:atures that we ha ve here," Ackerman said. Located on the hospitars se· cond floor, the nursery con- si~ts of a large room where the special cribs and in· cubators are localed and a lab and surgical area. The nursery can hold up to nine babies at a time "'ilh one nurse assigned to two infants, In a regular newborn nursery, there is usually one nurse for every 10 babies, the doctor said. The babies that are placed in intensive care aren't alwa ys premature. although preem ies do make up a large portion of the unit's patienl.'5. "Actually, we 're desig11ed to handle any critical infant," Ackerman said. Porsche. The nurses who staff thr unit are specialists who have been trained for their roles in the unit, ··There is a certa in amount of lab work-gas levels in blood. blood acidily- which is required immedlately on a fairly regular basis for these patients, And rather than try and gel it done through the Ja b wh ich sCrves lhe entire hospital, "'e've trained our nurses In do it here . "In addition to gelling in- stllnlaneous results, it has the advantage of the nurse know· ing the patient. so she can spot an error in the ·results right away," he noted. In addition to the nurses . the nursery is served by a group or four interns and residents \.\'ho are on dut y continually. And backing the physicians in training are Ackerman and his colleagues in the pediatrics department. One of them, Dr. Margaret Ingram developed the machine that kept the premature baby breathing. Since it was opened, the unit has tr eated 120 patienl11 from all parts of the country. Some were bor n in hospitals other than the medical center. Ackerman said an unu sual aspect or the unit i!I a lransporlatiOfl 11ystem that h;is been de veloped so thal the l critical babies can be transferred from o I he r hospitals with a minimum risk. "We have an ambulance lhal is equipped with some or the equipment that we ha ve here in the nursery. We send the ambulance with a doctor and nurse from the unit to the hospital that is transferring the baby. "Jf the baby iJ e1lremely '· crit ical, the treatment can start immediately and con· tinue In the ambulance. With the mobil intensive. care. unit, the baby ls provided with respiratory support as well as heart beat and temperature monitors," he s.aid. Ackerman said he feels the unit is proving il!I worth. Before the medical school located at the medical center in 1967, the. rate of infant deaths per live births was 23 per 1.000. This year the mortality rate wi ll probably be about 10 per 1,000 Jive births he said. Ackerman is o b v i o us I v pleased with the results, b1,it he isn't satisfied to stop lhere. "The survival rate for transferring patients is not as good as the ones who are born here. so we'll be !ft'Ork ing on a red uclion there. "And it will be a few years yet before we will be able to examine our former palients In see if we 've made any gains in preventing or minimizing the dangers or brain damage in these kinds of babies," he said. Farn1 Bureau Officers Toltl SANTA ANA -New officers for the Orange County Farm Bureau have been installed. Elected president for 1971-72 w;i.~ Donald C. Marshburn -0f Yo rba Linda. Olher officers installed included Jack O. Chri,,tensen. Placentia, 1st vice presiden t: Hitoshi Nitta, Santa Ana , 2nd vice president, and Richard f'. Ev a n :s , Orange, treasurer. "'Audi. Beach Man Sentenced NEURO MUSCULAR RELAXATION wltll l•tl Cll•rl•.1 h t111•f, D.C. e N•w Meth1d • FrHd•lll F1•111 l•ll'ti•• Phv1ict ! & E"'olion•I SANTA ANA -A Hun· tington Beach man who ad· milted planning the robbery of a Huntington Center shoe store while he was awaiting trial for his role in a Fullerton holdup has been sentenced in Orange Cou nty Superior Court to six mon ths to life in stale prison for the priOr offense. e 1'roH11 Tlt•rapw 1 .. d •11 Dr. Swtherla11d'l Tecll11l11w1 Michael Eugene Bruce, 23, or 5021 Pheasant Circle, got the prison term from Judge Byron K. l\.1cMillan. He wa s e P•l~I•• -Dn1tl"s APP'T. NICISSAl'f MON.-WID.-1'1111. 492-3532 also ordered to serve three 1~6 A". S.11• Youth Draws Sentence years probation lmmediate!y , .. _...,.••,•.._<,<00m•'·"•"•'•C•'•'•' _.._; afler release 1· SANTA ANA -A man whol" admitted beating a young at· •1 !endant at a Westminster drivein restauranl -0ver the head with a bottle has been sentenced in Orange County Superior Court to four months in county jail and probation. Dennis Lee Harwood. 20, Norwalk. drew the sentence rrom Judge Byron K . ~lcMillan after he pleaded guilty to charg es of assault with a de adly weapon on 18- year-old Kenqall Spicer. Officers who arrested Har- wood at the .Jack·in-the·Box drive-in. Broo khurst a n d McFadden, last Nov. 14 said he was one of a group of seven young men who attacked Spicer IMPORTANT PUBLIC ART AUCTION Sponsor•cl by ST. JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH Oil Paintings -Wood Carvings Ivory .tnd Rare Ob jects FRIDAY EVENING, May 28, 8 P.M. EBELL CLUB SIS W. Balbo1 Blvd., Balboa Pr•ui•w from I 0 AM until Auction No Admilsion Ch•rg• ALL-DAY CLASSES Enroll Now Fall Semester Kindergarten thrv 8th Grade HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS •Teach inf the 4 R's with phonics • Daor·to·Door Bos Service • Before and After Stboo/ Cilrl •Reasonable Taition (Day Com.p st.arts June 21 throughout summer. Summer School siarts J·u/11 6). 111 F•11111t•l11 Yelley 1 'IJS lroolrllwnt '""' f62·Jl12 K •• , , • .,, 11hild1111 111 1•od ll•11d1 • .. ....... Volkswagen. I I I i (••o! J S••v•Mll1' .. ,,. 16. I••• af lOC&O Son Jutn Cau". ~"""'"'" V1ll1• 0•1• r• o••'"· """' 11 .•• flo•• A1.e.....,,,,1 H01P"ll S"'' ••O OV l.(ln Cr"'' Stt•rn· ion. of '"' ~O'T>f. ""''""" 11.,o•r• Holf "'""· o1 11110,..," ""'· C•hf: 1•'~'" .,..,.,. HO•!m•n, 0f0V•llf, (~l•I; '"'"'· l •.t•• ""''m•• N•"Pll'+ !••<" "•"'•I• M-lt. Fo~n<t •n 111•lr•. rirot~r ... l'r•d HOiltn•n. On1t "O• 'lt'<ltr tf>d lt<i<!"f Y H~ttmt~, B••<>·• ~ "•" ~fr•"''· i.r . .,.,., ,,.., 1•. 10 •Y.. la<1it """""""I r~1Ptl, """''""' C1hr, ln't"'""'• Pt> m""'" ,,..,,.,,, 0 H0•0 -..... -------~·-"----Ho •o• -' ···~---J ARBUCKLE & so~ WESTCLJFF fl.10 RTUARY m E. 17th St.. Costa ~fesa ........ • BALTZ l\IORTL'AR IES Corona drl l\l•r fiil-!l•SR Cost1 ~fr5a fii6-%414 • BELL BROADWAY l\10RTUARY 110 Broad"''Y· Co~t• l\fesa LI 8-3433 • J\1rCOR~OCK LAfi UNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. 49•·!1415 • PACIFIC VIEW J\fE!\fORIAL PARK Cemetery J\fort111ry Chapel 2SOO Pacific View Drive Nt.•'POri Beach, California 14U'/OI • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 71101 .Bolu A"t. "'estmlnater tU4S!S • S~UTH'S MORTUARY m Miio SL »Mil• H11nUn5to1 Beac• ' Now, For Your Convenience, Chick Iverson Has Centralized All Three Cars At One Modern Facility Be cau se Chick Iverso n is one of the largest dealers for Vol kswagen, Porsche, and Audi in Southern California, he has been able to bring all t hree lines to one central location -his new, modern headquarters on East Coast Highway at Bays ide Drive, -· -Here, the discriminating car-buyer-can-shoP<1t-his1efscrrn;-matching his-choices to his budget Compare t he economical Vo lkswagen with the sport-styled Porsche. Evaluate the sensation of European highways-the Audi. Test-drive any of t hes e fine cars, and find the one that feel s "just right" to you. Courteous salesmen and expe- rienced finance experts wil l ma ke your purchase a real pleasure. Wh ile there, take a tour of the ·most modern and complete service fa cilities in California. See the very latest in service and diagnostic equ ipment and know that any futu re service re· qu irements will be handled by factory-trained experts, using the fin est in electronic and mechanical devices. On ce again, Chick Iverson has put you, the customer, first! T ... w.1t Cotst Le ader in S•l•s for Europ11•n IJ11iuery Now open Sundays 9 am to 6 pm • •A.l90A. ISLAND PORSCHE AUDI \ Frlif.-y, May 28, 1971 OAILV PILOT J. l . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. ' Perilous to Ignore Tllese Stormy Gals of Nature WASHI NG TON !AP) -Us· ing a llttle fla tlery, the Na. tional Weather Servicl! said it v»ill continue to naml! hur. ricanes after women on the theory tbat Betty sounds more powerful than Bob. "We Intend no s I u r on women,'' Weather S e r Yi c e director George P. Cressman said. "In fact, quite the op- posite.'1 ''Hurricanes are among the most awesome forces in nature," he added. "No other storms equal thtm in com- bined strength, length n( hfe and power. Forecasters regard them with great respect.'' But the Weather Servicl! acknowledged the use of feminine names to designate SAVE '5 Qn '14.95 Magi.Cube Camero Suturdo\ .ind .';un1/u\ ()n/\' 991 l i6X Magi.Cube cam· era with banery-less flash operation. Cart· ridge film. Complete outfit. Save now! Camera Dept. Girls' Knit Tops or Shorts Sears Low Price Cool solid or striped 1ops. Cotton shorts in brighc. prints or solids. Sizes 7 to 14.Stockupnow! Girls'Wur Dept. Sel!ri Low Price Terrific assortmen1 of boys' trunks in a wide varieiy of colors and pauerns. Sizes S, M, L (2-6x) Children~ Wt#'I' Dlfrt. Saturda\ and 5unda) (JnlJ' $leach ."iaturda\ and _';un(/a\ (Jn(\' 10-GaL Aquarium & Reflector Separately $17.48 Stainless steel 10-gal. aquar- ium with reflector. Clear safe. ."iaturdu\' "nJ 5iun,/u\ (Jnl\' ty•tested glass. Fu n for the I 097 whole family. Save now) GarrlmShop I hurric11.nes has brought crili. cism from women's liberallon groups, "some of v.·hom con· sider it derogatory." _ "'hat t get lilerally hundreds the practice." \\'ar ti, v.•hen forecasters than coordinates on" map. of letters on our system of The scrvict> nott'd !he prac-found it easier to designate a "A storm with a girl's name designating hurricanes;• said lice originated during \\'orld hurricane by name rather had personality." Dr. Robert H. Si m P 5 0 n · -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Just the same. it announced 21 female names chosen for the 1971 crop of hurricants that may be born in the Allan· tic. the Caribbean and the Gulf of f\.1exico. director of the Nahonal Hur· ricaoe Cent" •t Miami, Fla. KIRK JEWELERS Tl MEX REPAIR "Most of them are from COSTA MESA women, usually asking for a H•b•r C••t•r-545·f41S "Never a year goes by but hurricane to be named after them. The last poll we took turned oul 20 to l Jn favor or S.4JIE 300/o on •2.79 l 00 Slide Troy• '"turda\ and \undo\ ()nf\' 197 100 slide capacity. Non·spilL Fits #9851 slide projector. Easy storage. Buy now a[ this ]ow price! Camera Dept. Sears Pillow Spectacnlar Terrific Vaine! Standard size polyester fiber- fill with floral priot conoo .°'iulurda\ onJ .\)11n 1/a\ (Jn/\' cover. Attractive colors. 2 $3 Qneeo Size 2 for S4 King Slu 2 for .IS for Do111tStia D.pt. - ' SAVE 21 %,SS.99 4-F oot l{ailing Sectio11.1 - SAVE 250/o o!l 89• Big 60-U.. Bag 4 Concrete Mix t~y! 77 SaLand 66c 4.f~ adjwtable raH· Sun.Only! iog section. Use on Easy to mix with flat surface or bend of water.Forfixingfouo. srep. Use for indoors, ! datioos and repairiog coo! neps,wallsandpatios. Bui!Jinn Mattri4lt Building Mattria!t Dept. Depr. HUNTINGTON BEACH Authnrlzed Oran1te County SALES ANO SERVICE SAVE $2 ! Fringed Squaw Boots Suede leather fringed squaw boot, cushioned insole. Colors t o choose from. Women's sizes. Hurry in! Saturda} and ."iunda} On/)·.' Shoe Dept. Regular 397 $5.99 •• ' " • 1 ~. ~----..·· '"·~ = 3-Position Vinyl Recliner Regular $149.95 Saturda}· 1Jnd Sunday ()n/ \ ' • Comfortable recliner with ex· tra wide sear. Reversible foam larex seat cushion. Easy-care glove-leather-sofc.viny I cover. Save now! Fumittm Dept, SAVE $2! 9788 Sears Portable Picnic Grill Regulor $5.99 18-in. bowl, chrome plated grid. Crank ra.i se and lower. Side bandies, 7-in. legs. Grear pre-Memorial Day Savin,g! Houstwares Dept. Saturda\ t1r1J '\,1111,/a\ ()n/\' 399 • , Sheer One-Size Stretch Hosiery Suturdu\ un,/ Sundn\ (Jn/\' 3prs.99C Ulrra sheet mesh knit with nude heel. One size fits 8\'2 to 11. Bare beige, sunsei, mocha. Sears low, low price! HosilrJ Dept. Print Percale Yardage Sears Low Pri.ce 36-ioch all cottoo percale prints iB bright summer col· Saturda} unJ Sunda\ ()n/\' ors. Machine washable for 3 8 easy care. Hurry io! C Yardage Dept. ;rd. I Sears "Ready-Stick" Tiles .'iaturda) und Sun1/o\ ()n/y' Rego Jar 45c each 12x12-in. tiles are easy to illSlall.Justpeeloff adhesive back. Gnaran· teed to stick. Hurry! 3 oc Limited quantiiy. each F loorrovtring Dept. ,l.;,e1tur1f11\ u1u/ ';1111 ,/1 •\ (!n/1' Sears IUIHA PAllt TA l-4400, 111-4»0 IL MONTI GI ~4911 I.ONG lfAtH HIE 5·0121 POMO"A NA 9•1111 SOUTH COAST PLUA 14N»J tHOUIAHD OAKI 491-45.•t lOllAHa 142•1111 CANOOA PAllC J.40-0U1 GUHDALl CH .S·1004, a """''11 OLTM,JC &. SOTO AH W21l COJl'"OH WI 6-2HI, ta N7•1 HOU.TWOOD HO f•S,41 OllANOIE •:174100 SMl:t,aollUCl:ANDCO, COVtNA tH-ff11 • INGl.IWOOD OI. 14121 PAIADIHA •&t-3111, ~51-4211 ,,..,l••tlaT 12 NMnto s P.M.. .... tltrwkr.tiaOA.&tetrao P.M. ••• S..hl._• O•l7,deM•6P.M.. Tuea., Thun.,Sat. • , ,1(0 wt ..... ,.J JAHtA ANA Kl 74271 J~NTA n INttMI f44•I011 ~ANT.\ MotnCA IX W711 VAlUT PO ~-146 1, fM·2220 VRMONT PL f •1911 I I I . • I :~ . . • • , f II our !IC-... ... ••• ms •b lfl! • it In• !Ing ..... 'll· '"" fpe • • J 2 DAil Y PILOT ANIMAlogic .,.....,. i;....-~~~ I u ''CAREFUL WllERE. You "5"fEP-,.,,,":l t-s Pl6MY COUNl"R'f'/ .. Men in Service Airman 1'homa5 W. .Silva Jr.. sen of Mr. and ,.1rs. Thomas \V. Silva of !OS Hun· tington St.. •1untington Beach. has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. lie has been assigned to Keeo;ler AFB. 1'1iss. for training in the <·om- n1unications field. Air 111 an Silva. a 1968 gradua!e of Hun- tingtGn Beach High School. received Rn A. A degree in 1970 from Golden \Ve s I j College. Second Lieutcr.anf \tichtiel F . Napoli lano. son of ti1r. and ~lrs Theodore S. Naool1tano, 243 N. Californ ia St.. Burbank. has bet>n a•\•ardcd sih er "'in~s upon graduation from l 1• S. Air F'orce navigator training 111 Mather AFB . Calif. Lieutenant r:apolitano Is being assigned to Forbes AFB. Kan. •le will serve with a uni! of I.be Tactical Air Com- mand "'hich provides tQ1nb~t units for air support of U. S. ground forces. The lieutenant's "'I f e . Barbara, is the dau~htcr of 1'1r. and Mrs. Robert C. Schenk. 9821 Clove rdale , \\'estminster. Ronald L. Fisher. son of Mr. and P.1rs. !11arion l •. Fisher. 1753 Tustin Ave .. Costa Mesa. has been promoted lo staff sergeant in the U. S. Air Force. Sergeant F isher, an air transportation specialist <it Bien Hoa AB. ViP.tn<irn, ~ervls \\'ith a unit of the Pacilic Air Forces. headquarter~ for air operations in Southeaoe:t Asia. the Far East and Padific area. The sergeant Is a 1967 praduate or Newport 11 arbor Fl igh School. Newport Beach. Ainnan Jon M. Purdue. son of Mrs. Gladys A. Tweedle vf 2617-D Florida St.. •lunlington Beach. has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, 1'ex. lie has been assigned to Sheppard AFB. Tex.. for training as a medical service<; specialist, Airman Purdue i<; a 1970 graduate or Huntington Beach High School. Navy Seaman Apprentice ftlichael B. Rucker, s 11n of Mr. and ,.1rs. Lester B. Rucker of 201 .JoAnne Place. Ncwporl Beach. has graduated from training at the R e.c r u i I Training Command. S a n Diego. lie is a J9i0 graduatf' flf Ne"•port Ha~bor High School. 1\e\vporl Beath. Navy Officer Candidate (;uy ,., de Paul. son or r..ir. and .,.irs. Arthur de Paul of 715 Patolita Drive, Corona del ,_,1ar. has reporled to the A v1a- tion Officer Candidate School at the Naval Air Station. Pensacola. Fla.. for flight taining. ,,.iarinc St>cond l~ieutcnant Jl ar,•ey L. Tedrord n1 . son or P.1r. and Mrs. Harvey L. Ted- ford at 160 E1nera!d Bay. Laguna Beach. has graduated from th e Environmental }-'light Indoctr ination School at 1he Naval Aviation Schools Command. Pensacola. Fla. U. S. Air Force Sergeant John C. Jacobs. snn of Mr. and ~frs. Hubert E . .Jacobs. 528 Laguna Pl .. Seal Reach, has arrived lor duty at llofn Aircraft Control and Warning Stalion. Iceland. Sergeanl Jacobs, an ad- m inistrative specialist, is assigned to a unit of the Aerospace Defense Command which protects the U. S. 11gainsl hostile iiircraf\ and missiles. He previously ser\•ed I t Beale AFB. KIDS LOVE UN CLE LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT !l ' ~C1i±ki I .. JUST SAY CHARGE Ill 1/2 OFF WOMEN'S PANTS • Stretch denim pants 244 • Bold stripes; side zip • Ad justable waist • Gold, no vy; 10-18 REG. 5.99 FOLDING BEACH CHAIR 288 • Cool viny l webbing • Sturdy aluminum frame • Folds for storage • Be comfortable RIG. 3.49 VINYL WINDOW SHADES •Translucent vinyl • Em bossed fini sh • Big 37'//' x 6-feet • For added pr iva cy 88 4 REG. 1.69 1 /3 OFF SNEAKER SOCKS! • Cotton-nylon -snea ker 33¢ socks; 3 pair in pkg • Fit sizes 9 lo 11. • Low, anklet length REG. 2/$1 ATTRACTIVE AREA RUGS .. . ' •I I I • ' } I ' ' I <• : -ii l . , I • Big 6 x 9-fool rugs 1s88 • Nylons, wools, acrylics • Finished edges • Many lovely colors SPECIAL s2.s4 • Tunic top set; Novy or brown polka dots; 10-18 • Crystal-pleated set in navy, red; 8-16 RIG. $12.-$14 SAVE 520 ON ELEGANT CRACKLE GLASS LAMP WITH VINYL SHADE 2988 REG. 49.95 • Exqu isite footed lam p of amber cra ckle glass • Vin yl shade; nile light • Great accent piece for corner table CHOICE OF GREAT VACUUMS •Canister or upright 2 788 • Beater br ush upright • 3/,-HP canister • Fast rug cleaners! YOUR CHOICE HOT ROAST BEEF SANDWICH PLATE 99¢ • Open-face hot roast beef sandwich with gravy • Fluffy mashed potatoes • Delicious Saturday treat POLAROID COLOR FILM! • Great color film 361 • Instant color pictures • Special low pr ice • Stock up now on film REG . 3 .95 ,f,.~, , ~ . I ,~~1 · ·~ , ~' ~ " l ,~~IJ \-~ /1,. ~~/, ~-• •~~· 1· ' I ~~/·, \·~//1 ' -~ I 11.51 OFF OUTDOOR SPEAKER • Indoor or outdoor • Free standing, wal l mount; weatherproof • l imit 4 per customer REG. 14.SO COZY 5-LB. SLEEPING BAG • 5-lb. a cry lic sleeping bag; plumply filled • Cotton flannel-lined • Full canopy for shelter 14s8 REG. 29.99 ~ -- ma ~£Dwooo STAIN .. ))1 I STURDY 50 ' GARDEN HO SE DURABLE REDWOOD STAIN • Sturdy plastic hose • Has brass couplings • Shop Words for a II your gardening needs SHOP MON THRU SAT. 'Ill 9·30 SHOP SUNDAY I? 10 S PM! TORRANCE cit! omo fashion square phone $.42-6971 166 SPECIAL • Renews, preserves wood's natural beauty • For indoor, outdoor use • Weather resistant SPECIAL LA CIENEGA FULLERTON lo tJ eriego or 18th st. hone 8J6-7922 f.arbor al orarigerho1pt ohone 714.879-2500 NORWALK HUNTINGTON BEACH impe .,ol ot nor .... ol~ bl~d ed1n~er or beo<h koulevord lione 868 0911 p one 71 4-892·6611 HANDSOME WOOD PANELING PATRIOTIC 4-PIECE (LAG SET • Phillipine Mahogany veneer paneling • Random-grooved 4 x 8' • Ea sy-care finish SANTA ANA bristol ot seventeenth phone 5<17-68•1 VENTURA 500 W>uth mills rood •t 5·5•21 642-75•1 266 • 6-ft. aluminum pole, . halyard, and cotton flog in outfit 2s8 • Sewn stripes REG. 2.99 SPECIAL PANORAMA CITY ROSEMEAD tobias al ro1c:oe 1ose~od blvd. at son bernord<no hone 89•-8211 he.wa -phone 573-3110 CANOGA PARK COVINA loponio j.lozo borronco ot s.on be1no1dmo hone 8 ·1000 ""wo'I' -phone 966-7 4 I I l I I P"tl~1y, M11 d , ltll Ins ide Look at Art Tour Force Speclacular vie\vs of the Laguna Beach coastlin e. gracious at1nos· phere of Spanish Jiving. a quaint cottage and an exotic Japane~e setting \vill blend into a lovely picture for the annual Artists' 1-lome Studio Tour on Saturday, June 5. 1' Afterward art lovers \\•i.ll be the guests of the A(filiales of the I.a· guna Beach Art Gallery and director 1'homa s Enn1 an. flop leftl '"ho sho\vS ~1rs. \Villiam Bru~gere. hostess chairman, one of many paintings available for silent auction during the afternoon. On the tour. a Japanese garden an d pool ,,·ill '''elcomc vicv.·ers to the Oriental world of Bennett Bradbury-famou s throughou t the \Vorld for his marine paintings. In th e next photo. the artist explains his technique to J\lrs. Daniel Geary. assistanl chair111an . Romeo Reyna-\11eave r. potter, painter and sc ulptor-is famous for tapestries found in collections throughout Sou th Amerit:a. At left. in hi.s Spanish style home \Vhich reflects the charm of early California, he displays a 17th century Spanish n1adonna for P.1rs. IJzintris Val\i s. The Marine Drive home of Virginia Nixon leads visitors into a studio located above the rocky coastline. Known for her collages. Mi ss Nixon in- troduces Mrs. James Thon1as. treasurer. to "l·lello Up There." Al so in cluded in her collection are object" d'art from the Orient. The eottage studio of ~1aryella and James \Va rren reflects a mod ern Influence. f\1aryella 's paintings llre a rare cornbination of oil and \vax pencil, \vhile James builds shaped canvases in muted acrylic tints. Partici pants of the tour from noon until 5 p.m. may lake advantage of lea and docent tours from 3 1o 4 p.m. in the art gallery. A silent auction i.c; the feature in the evening. Tickets at $2.50 for adults and $1 for children are available at the gallery. • • 1'1t1 II Mini Vacations Offer Maximum Matrimonial Benefits DEAR Ai"lN LANDERS : wa s delighted to read that you are in favor of married couples escaping from the hum- drum ol daily living and checking into a niotcl ror the night. I can lei! you from experience it has kept ou r marri~n1 bogging down -or maybt even fron1 fa lling apart. Cv and I have bren married 12 yea rs. "'e.have three healthy, normal children . hut they are a handful and I need to gel ·~·;iy rrom them perlodlcally. Twr. years ago when the bab.v 11 as su mon!hs old, I fell as if I wa,~ cravking up. E1·erylhing got on my ner1·e~. ~y doclor sua~esled lhal n1y husband ::inf! I take a \\'CCkcnd I rip "Jusl flrlvr off ANN LANDERS snmr'A'hcre," he said. I'll altA'ays btlieve that y,·eekend saved rny sanity. The simple luxury or sleeping late for 1''''0 glorious mornings in a row n1ade a new woman qui or me . That ex· pcrience was so "ondcrrul my husband and I decided to ~in in 90 days - 811<1 tA'e did. but just for one night. !We couldn't afford to pay a slltcr for longer.) Arter the second trip we mafle up our minds to treat oursclve" lo one nighl , ' away every 90 days and not lei anything interfere. \V e get a greal kick oul or ii when lhe desk clerks give us the eye. \Ve know 'A'hat they 're th inking and we reel wicked and nudge each other. Our best talking is done on these one- night trips. Al home there are too mri ny inte,rrupt ions -too much to do -or we are too tired. trs wonderful lo be: alone ror 18 hours with no kid! yelling. no phone ringing, no housework or cooking. Nolhing to do but enjoy one anothtr'1 ... -ompany . F'or those couples who think they can't 11fford It . let me say it's cheaper than a nrn·ou~ breakdown -or a divorc:t. One night in a hotel can be the best ~farriage Saver in the 'A'Orld. And the value of THAT can 't be measured in dollars and cents. -Mlt & MRS. SO HELP ME IJEAR ~1 .&1\1.: I received many lellers such as yaurs, and I thank you . DEAR ANN LANDERS· WP ha ve known ea ch other for 10 years. He !'ll)'ll he ls in love with me. I KNOW I am in love with him. \\1e have all the important lhlngi;; In co1nn1on: religion. education, age. physical attraction. The problem: t can 't nail him down. No matter what ap. proach I use he simply refuses to make a com mitment. I've told hlm on several o<:casions lo get out of my lire if he ~sn'l 'A'tlnl to marry me. but he won't. And I guess I cton'l want him to. lie is the only man 1 ha\·e ever loved and he knows it. 1 am not interested ln ,11oing out with an yone else. Neither ts he . llow did a scnsiblt p;irl like me get trt1pped like this? Whal can I do about him? NF:\V HAMPSlllRF: DEAR llA1\JI': Ynu t11n'l dn anylhlnJl'. nhl)ut him -as e1'idencrd hy the history nl your romance -hu'l you ca n do anmelhlng about yourHlf. Face the facts. Do you wnnl lo be a wife and molher1 ti 10, you'd belier drop lhls bird while your reproductive machinery Is 1tlll func-- tioninl{. If, 011 the olber hand, be meau so much tn )'11U that you simply taftltOl cn\•lsion a lift without him, you'll have lo settle for lh-e relaUonshlp on his terms and hopt that one day he will change lalt minrL end went to marry you. llow ft1r should a teenage couple go~ C11n ..JleckinM be safe ? Yt1hen dot~ it bel.'01nc too hot to handle? Send for Ann 1.an1lcrs' bOOklct. "Necking and Pelting -\Vl'l>it /\rt' thf' Limits?" Mall your re- . que~I to Ann Landers in ca re o( the DAI .. l.V PILOT enclosing 50 cenl.s In coin and a long, stamped. self.addressed envelo~ j ..j Ut.l l 'i' PILOT frid.iy, May (0, 1971 llecking the Hall .. Decnratin ~ the Community Congregatio nal Church. Corona del tllar for an up· . l:.oming luncheon are T\lrs . John L. Ke n t. 011tgoing presi dent nf the Wo1nen 's Service fellow~h i p Heftl and fi·lr~. Roy II. Richard. incn1ning president. The final e\'ent of the year \\"ill take place \Vednesda y. June 2. ;communit y Appeal Scouts Se ek Identity 1..ocal control cr y during discussions. is oflen 1he po! i t i c a I Tak ing up the banner is !he Girl Scout Council of Orange Cou nt y \1•hich 1s und ergoing a at.ruclura! rcor,i:anizat1on has- ed on the concept of com- munity 1dentificalion . The council l!I chang1n£ from th e neighborhood and district subdi\'1!>ions to com- munity associations a n d service areas. "Before a d1f.trict would t11ke portions of many cities," Mr.~. \Va.vnc L Hanlon. a spokesman for the Huntinglnn Beech Community Associt1· Lion . "It "A'i! very difficult 1n get together with people in the community. \Ve ar e un- dergoing a revl!!ion of boun- daries to further comm111111v r~!'ltions." · ',.he new associa11on~ will 1n- wHve c!vir. com muni l\' fl!ld P.ro!essionRI ,i:rnups 1nrludlnr. the city fathrrs. parks and recreation official~ ; Restructurini:: should cnahlf' Uie Girl Scout~ In be more r:fsponsh'e tn thf' communit y !;tr· develop1np dirrcl com· tfiun1calions \\'ilh adults fln rl ~th ori:aniza!ino~. adpcd ~rs. Hanlon ~irv PARTICIPATIO'I : Ideally, there "'1!1 he com· rTiuniry associ;nion 1n each nf !Le 23 ~para tr c1\1C's 'ol•ithin !Iii!' counr v rather th::an the Ji'el'ious 13 dist ricts. !'aid ~1r!\ ~trbara \Vest, f i e 1 d stall supervisor !or the council. "The neighborhood plan ls givi ng \vay to service units comprised o I consultants, leaders. organizers !hat will service the troop<i," ~he ad- ded. "\Ye are hopinR In dra1I' !he community into de \'elopinR a better program and more opportunity for !he girls." Hunlington Beach residents August Rites will gather at 7·JO pm. Tues- da y, June I. 1n the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria : Fount ain Valley, 7.30 p.m., ~1nnday .. June 7, in !he Foun- tain Valley High School. and l,,agu na Beach at 7:30 p.m .. ~111nday, June 14. Interested persons may co n- tacr the Girl Scout Council for further information. Harborite to Marry An Aug. I wedd ing in the J\"ewporter Inn is being pl<in· ncd by Holly Heflin and Tin1 P. Shepard. Parents of the engaged COLI• pie i:i re Mr. and ~1rs. Ross E. Heflin of Newport Beach and i\lr and ~·lrs. Patrick R. Shr p;ird of Los Ga1os and fflrm C'r Ne"'JXlrl Be a c h rc~idcnt~. ~l 1~s Hefl in is a J!"r;'lduate of NC'\1·port Harbor High School. .,!udied al the Sorbonne and earned her BA in French at the Lini\"crsity of Cali forni:l, Santa Barbara \\'here she pledged Chi Ome!ila. She 00\1' is leaching at Vandenberg Air Force Base. Hl!'r f1ance. also a NHHS graduate, studier! at San Dicgn and San Jose State colleges. and now is s tud y 1 n i:: p!\ycho!ogy and city a n d HOL LY HE FLIN regiona l pl anning at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. We lcome Mat Colored Orange ciclcgatcs r~rc~en tin s auxiliari es throughou t the !ilalP "·!JI l(!arn more ;i l'Jout \fhat's llappening Jn Children's llotne Socie ty u hen they $:ti the r 1n the I\c\\'· pbrt.er In n Th ursdil.V and Friday .. June 3 and 4. for an annual \\'ork5hop. Ne\\I officers of the Oran~c Coun tY Council preparing an ap propri ate \l'elco me to Or· 1nge County are <left lo ri ght ) the ~lme! Robert\\'. \·r rnon, Richard ,\, Se\\·ell and Anthony GaJ O\\!-kJ • su•11101t C:OUltT 0, Ttotl: T-11119 liT.t.TI 0, CALl,OltNtA •Olt NOTICI TO C:llOITOll Calendars Circled LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE THI C:OUNTY o• OltANGI. lO "THE ClllED1T011i OF J05fPI( t . N•. A-MJtt C"'l"t!fl. TAANSFl!lt01; Pu11.u111t to J<IOTIC:I! 0" HIAllNG 0" "ETITION S~llot" tlb$ •nd •IOI ol the C•!llfw'n\• ,01 •1110lATll Of' WILL AHO f'OI Unllorm C:omm.,Cl•I Cllllt, YOU ''' Ll:TTllli TllliT.t.Ml.HTAltY Mreo..-l'Olllltd I• tol-1; E•l•tt ol H#IAJtY MONT C.OMEllY, Tr•llS!ltM ll •boo/I lo tr:t-t I tt1r,tltr DK''*· la I~• ull6t"l1n~ KEL.SEY trAVIO NOTIC:E IS 1-llillEtlY GIVEN T~•I (¥•11 (MASE. 1•tn•ltrt1. In bul\. tll el !he II. Frl!1 ~ •• II~ h1rt•ll • Hllllon IO< m•l••lt l•· o.uppll••· nw•=lllncl!M ... '"'"' Junior League ~·ill hear J im proi..tt ol will 1ncr h1• lnu•nu ol Lttte,. lnven•otr. 1..a MUlomtn• of 1~11 ctrttln Variety Spotlighted Luncheons. coffees a n,d cocktail parties fill the calen- dar for many area organlza. tions as June arrives and the club year closes. W omen15 League Honoring the newly licensed archilecls in Orange County with a cocktail party will be the Women's Architectural League. fo.ir. and Mrs. David Klages will open their Llguna Beach home for the affair Sll turd1y. June 5. Those to be honored Horoscope include. Rodney L a u t e r , William Scrirnpler, t<.tichael Hadley, Rich1rd Natl and , Edwin Vin Den Bossche, Peter Ultsch and Will Fostt:r and their wive11. Others are Roger Shleppy, Ernest Adams. R ob er t Homacek, F. W. Cubil and Richard Jones and wive5. Junior League Following a 9:30 a . m, business m e e ti n a: Thurs- d1y, June 3, members and guests of the Newport Harbor Sagittarius: Study Gemini SATURDAY MAY 29 By SYDNEY Oft1ARR Alars is the associated with number related planet Aries. The to the "red planet" Is 9. A1ars. among other things. depicU initiative, pugnaciousness, direel c1:10· frontalion, action. ~I a ny pl"rsons born U11der Aries display qualilief'· which are t.larlian: Ibey are leaders, ready to fight when they think the cause Is right. An Aries person can be headstrong, In· dependent and an origina l thinker. 01 all the signs, Arie!!i Is least likely to take a back seat. transactions. Your position Is stronger than you think. Don't sell yourself short. Insist on equitable arrangement. Aim at quality. Heed voice or ex• pericnce. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18 ): Finish rather than initiate projects. Gel overall view. Some may try lo push or rush you. '-1aintain balance. Long• range view now will be con· structi\le. Relati\le is im· pa lien!. PISCES (f"eb. 19-March 2D): Stick to facts. Get help where needed. Applies also to physical welfare. Don ' t neglect health . New approach ls apt to succeed. Leo in- div idual could play prominent role . Be receptive. SI . T••l•mtnll•• lo Pl!lliontt rtltr0t•C:• to <••ffl tl••"l"t IKl•IMtl. ~Oflf!Wn •• eeper, free.lance writer and w111c:n 11 m•dc tor 1v.rne• P••t1c:u1irs. •'Ill "C:1r111r'l c1o•et C1t1111n1" 111 11 whlcl'I Past president (I( tM Orange •~11 1n1 ''"'' 1nc1 1111c:r "' 11t1t ln1 111t ;, 1ot11~ •• ns M111wi111 s1 ... 1, c1a11 . , . t1mt n1• 1>e1n "'' lor June 17, 1'71, 11 Mtw, C°"""' ol 0..IMt. Ctlllarnll. County H1stor1cal Society. t ;JO , m, r .. "" <ou•lrCIO<"I o1 0,111,1. Tne 11<11en1 "'"'' or .... mt• 1'111 . ... ... , No. J ol •tie! CO<J••. " 100 Civlt b~•lntU •Od .. IHI ol !hi ,,,,.,,,,or ..... 1'-1rs. Elnlcr Sproul will open Ctnle• Orlv• wu1. 1n 1nr c111 111 s1n11 r''"''''" •r• ••follow•: h. 0 g h f th t Ant, C1lllornt1 Tr1n1leror, JMtllll E. C•r!lot, tll r ra.n e ome or e even 0,110 M•r 11, 1,11 M•g ncli• ~1 .. co••• M•••. c:~11111rn,1, whlch will be followed by a w E. ST JOHN Tr•''"''"· 1(1111• o.v1c1 c11•••· nu f ""a" (Ollnt• Clerk PMt Mtrttlt Pl .. N•WPOrl ol•1C:~. Ctll l un~n. PIT•R c. TOllNAY All 01n1• l>u•lntn n1mtl tncl ..:Id••~··· 1500 At1am1, Jultt N~mbt• 20• u••tl b• 1h~ l ••"•!tfO• w•lf!ln l~t lh••• Scripps Alumn a e Col11 Ml ... C•lllet~!I 'H2' ~t1r1 1111 PtJ!. "' !tr ti 11:<1<1w11 I• tht l1h (1111 .MO-ttJI Trantl••e•, Aro: Ncn• AtttrlltV ltr •tlltlef!tr l"• bu!~ 1r1n11er It ta bt con•u'""''ltd A ""nel of Scrip"~ College Publ!"'M 0rl"9• Co.11! O.lly P>IQI M•Y ti UNITED CALIFORNIA • AN I(' I"'" t"' 11, lt tnd Junt J, lt11 IU0-1! l'l•m4'r an<I Mltf\ OUl(e, !Ml Sou"' Mlln financial planning erperts will ST•••t. ~•n11 "'"•· C011n•1 •' or1f\11. LEGA OTIC (•litcrniJ, on or '""' Junt 1, lt11. discuss privale co 11 e g e L N E 0.1.11 : M1y J1. 1•11 bud " •th lh Q C (1----1(1IS'Y 01v ltl (hl>t gc WI e range oas IUPElllO• COURT 01' THI l•tn•I•••• Chapter of Scripps College STAT• Of' CALIFORNIA '0• UnUH Ctlllotllll ...... Alumnae during a luncheon TMI. co~~-T!.~~,.011AHGt: ~!~1: ...... 1::.~~~1of::i: ttn1 Wednesday, June 2. NOTICE O' HlAltlNG Of' PITITION Eur•• .... 111·1.Uf ,0. •IOIATI OF WILL AND 1'011 Publi1nM Ortl'llt Cott.I O"l"f ~'"''• The effecl of the stock L•TTlll TISTAMINTARY Ml• 79, ltll l»f.11 IMO •OHOI markets on endowments and E1111e e1 J051!PH oE F tLL1PP1~ the rising cost of education Orcr••..:I ' ·1 · NOTICE 15 HEllEllY GIVE'N tn~1 LEGAL NOTICE CE lllTl,-ICATE Of' •USINlll FICTITIOUS l'llllM NAME Wl I be major concerns when C111'1etomt Oorrt1 K"'tr h11 111111 ~•·••n • the group meets in the Balboa "'1"'" lor 11•~11• o1 wiu • ..i ror IJIUI N;I <ti Len ... Tt•l•mtnll N to P•li-Th• u,,., ... lvntCI 110 tir•tbr Ctr1111 .... , Island home of Mrs. R. B. ........ •t!trlnct la whlUI 11 mM• lor ·~'v ... c~llft'll • 1>u1ln•n •• 1111 S · h •u•1nrr .,.r tltulir1. ind 111•1 lht tlmt IN! Norin F1lrv•tw Sltttl. Sant• .t.111. ml! · el•<• al htltlft'll IM iimt ht• bffn UI Ctll!Mnl•. uncrer •~• tlcl•l\O<JI lln" "•"'t !M June 11, lt1t. •I t :JO •.m .. lfl lhl <ti . Ml-BROW INVl!STMENTli, fnd •1111' c:outt•oom of Deotrlment No l o1 •till ,.,. l"m " <omPOlf!d (If IN +ollew!111 Fam ily Servi ce court, •t 100 Clvot C:enrer Drl'vt Wttl, In """"·'' ""'GM n1mt1 In lull •I'd ol1ets tnt (llY"' Sint• • c: IUor r ol rt1•dtnc1 •re•• lallow1, 10-wll: Wine will flow and the oa1t11 M1v 11. u;,•· ' "'· w11111m c. Br.,.. ... uu •111e0fllt•t w E ST JO HN Ito.a, Los #lnorle1, C1lltornl1 ..,,,,,, cheese will be plentiful when c.iiiniv c1 .. k Kur1 H, Htlutr. "" c1111 Y11tc:1. be ltOIEltT A EASTM.t.N T1>ou11"4 Ot~l. Ctlll11t11l1 t1360. mem rs and guest!! of the Jlto H••too~ tauiiv•rt1 01•..:1 M•.v 11. 1•11 Jewish Family Serv ic~ gather su111 Numb•• »1 :;'~1:;•:;. ~·.1~~:~" at 8 p.m. Thursdav June 3 Co•.••,,..., •. C•lllornlt tl6N ~TATE OF CALIFOii,N IA, . . . • • Toi . t1U) S•O·OIH COUNTY OF LOS ANGE'LES u for a wine-tasting party. Allorntv lor ••!lllontr on M•Y ?1, 1t11, b~,0., ..; •• ~ 1.11111,v T. k Publl•htd Orant• Co1st OlilY Polo• M•• Public Ill ..... '"' Stld Sl•lt. rt•1&111ll¥ JC e!S al $\.5() per pcrsnn l~. 1t 1nd Jun•], lf'1 1111·'1 toota'td Wlllltm C. Br11w11 eM Kur! M, are available for the affair to LEGAL NOTICE ..,,1utr -...... n '' mo 10 b• •h• 11••..,.• t k l . T ' ... ~O!iol' fll...U .,. 1.-l>SC•lt.tl IO lh• ~1~1 .. a e pace in emple Beth inll•um1nt, '"" 1t1tnow1ed1H i. mt th1t Sholom Santa Ana by calling NOTtc:• Of' Dl5SOLUTtON "'ev ~~,,u1e<1 t~• ••m•. th ·. · ' [OHTtHUATtON 0, •UllNEll (OFFICIAL SEAll e Jewish Family Service at Pur•ut nl 10 1111 orov111oni 0, so<r•o~ M1 ~•" 0•¥•• .5.34·5270 lJ(W.S ol '"' C0tpori non• Clldt o1 tht Nolfrv Publlc..C:.iit.1•11!1 ' , . Sttlt ol Ctll h>nlt, l'O!lCt 11 ~trtb~ tlwn PrinclD1I Oltlc:t In The service 1s a nonprofit t1111: L"' An"'" C:ounrv h T~· 01'1nt'll'l ip htrelolo•t ... 11. t f\ I M• c: ..... mlnloll l s t lrt• agency w !ch c 0 u n s e I s Mtwet" (HAllL'ES VIHCfNl PICKUP JUM 1l. "'' families and individuals 0 •"" HUllEIT PICM:U•. "'""'' ll'lt lie. MILTON DAVIS, .t.111 . n ll!lou1 l'11m1 01 PICICUP PflECISION fl71 Wl11l'llro 11•4. problems of adjustment, GE•• coM""'"'v· c•"' "' ,.,,, .......... lt•••l• Mm1. '""'· ""' parent-child rl!'lationships CountV ot O••ne•. 11111 o1 c11HMnll, 11 •Pub~"~ o''1, co1••,,7101ll• D•l&T, • • l'OW dlnolvM bv mulual <Of'ISfnl. IV ,., Jlno •. . IL l.lll-11 marriage and old age. HUBEltT PICICUP, OI "" Cl!• ol C61!t '-It••· Counl• o• Orlntt. Sl•t• ol LEGAL NOTICE League Juni ors C1lll!lf11I•, l'ltl w1111t1•twn lrom '"ti trtt•l---ccc. -----c111M lo bl ••>0el1IK !n ll'lt collllucll"I Cl'llTIF ICATI Of' 1Uli1Hl11 OI 11111 t1u1l11t11, Ind CH#lll.LES Vl"I· FICTITIOUS FllM NAME Ar · . C:ENT PICICUI', OI ll'lt CllY ol Co•I• Tht undttll•nK do l'l•r•bv C"1•1Y "''' lists Jn Action will be the Mn1. Count¥ OI O•t,,..t. s111e .,1 11ttv ,,. conauCllno 1 llmltN 111nnertfll<t theme of the invitational co!-ci11tor,,11, will ~trt11tt• '°""u" ••Id "'"1""' 11 Ge11tr1 I P1r11wu, •I 1ut2 f I d W Ollalneu •nd 11 t"tlll.O 10 111 "" ,,..,.cl To•••· Gordon G•a~t. C1fllarnl1 '16M), ee P •nne for ednesday, 1tld 1Kt11n'n 1nc1 1111 •uumetl 1nc1 wit I u"ci•r '"' 11,1.1io.J• f••m ,.,..,, e1 •~· June 2 by the Junior AUX· DIV 111 ouht1ndl"' ct1ll•t1io"• ol 1•ld COME' . PAOPED;TY ASSOCl.t.TES ..... .,. ' N bu1lne11 herf!olllft 1'111 htro1f11r In-"'•! st·~ firm I• <,,,..POtfd ..i 1~1 lellow-1 iary, ewporl Be a ch currtCI. ln1 ~er•o"'· wf!o•• n•mri 1~ full •"" ARI ES (' ·larch 2l·Ap•·,·I t•I. Assistan ce League Said "''"'""10 11 11111.,t••d •1 o1 M1v Dl•c~ c1 tt1lo1nc1 A••., 1011fl'f<i, ie.wot: • 11, 1'11 L"'1<> F. lnrlo, un M1nl'lt!l•n S11<h Friends appear emotional. Guests will be shown the Cl'ltdt• v•ntent Plc~u• aouie•••d, M•""'"'" B•••"· c11. teN' . , · ... Utltrl Pli•u11 Ltrrv N WOOllY, 11§61 T111>11, Gtrfln Some fly off handle now at Children s Dental He a Ith Pub111~fd 0•1.,1t Ce.•I 01111 P11o1 M•r Gr•••· c11110'"'' •1uo slightest provocation. Realize Center, Thrift Shop and Social 11• "71 111'·11 wu"'t'cu°:': ;~;a,:.;~11 d1v of Mwt. it11. this and tread llghtly. Do what Service offices while local and L•"v N wootJv t ·-d b t . . .,. . . LEGAL NOTICE SlATE OF C#ILIFOltNIA mus 111: one. u be gracious \IJSJ mg artists display their couNTV oF Los ANGELE'S,"· about IL Don't arouse needless work and demonstrate their c1•TlfltCATr o" •ut1N1.11 on 1n11 o•v ~1 M•v • .t..o. 1'"· bt'&r" • {( fllCTITIOUI NAMI "''· 111• Unde•S•PnH:!, t Na1*'Y Pu•llt Tn antagonism. era s. T~~ undtrilinN dOO"• «•Ill• IJ'lt 1, con-•"" !or ••'d co1mt• ind s111~. re11Cln• TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Mr s. David Barnes i s ducting • Ollilnt•• 11 "' w. 1t1h 5t., 'II"'~'"· dutv tommiu:o~ea ind •-•"· 0 h h · . Co•1• Ma l Ctllfllfn\t uf'ld•• !ht fie !t"10n1lh• •PD••rl'<I Ltu" ~-Twle tnll ne be ind the scenes ac· c a1rman of the evenl which 1n1ou• fl•m ~•mt o1 0 C. coMPo~iT•O~ L••,.., N. wooov ~ ....... n •• "'' 10 bo "'' livates career areas. You get lakes place in the Assistance ~£,11v1cE •"" •~·· 111d 11rm 11 '""''''""d ~:;"'..;'1~~1~~:,r~.!.':'!: =~~ ~:~a;::.:; needed push. Routine is sub-League Center 01 tho '0110 •·n• D"'°"· w111>1t nt"'• In 10 "'" 1n11 '"'' ••ecufto lh• '""" • 1~11 •"" aloKI ol •Mielence I• •I lollow•· !ft Wl tnn• w~•toel. 1 ht ••~.,...;"'° i•I J·ect to abrupt change Don't Dllrl• s. ceno•~•. llXI s. ,1.1c.., s1. -• R b k h S1nl 1 •n1. Ct lll11tnll •1107. m• h1nd Ind •lh•ld ""¥ ollotl•I •t•I 11>1 be caught short-handed. Be e e a S o.1t0 M•v 11, 1911 !~~11~~ • 11' 1 " 11111 '"''''""" '1 "' •M~• ready for ch a I le n g e, Dor" 8 C:enoskY c0Fi:1c1•t st ... LI A fund-raisin" luncheon 51111 cl C:t!olarn••· Oran1• Count.: Lou11 P J""'" responsibility. ,& , • On. Mlv 16. 1111, l)tlort me, I Nott,.. N~••r~ Puallc. C•lll~fl•• GE~111''1 f~1ay 2!.June 20)•, open to the pubhc IS planned PuPl•t 111 and •or 1•1d s11••. o••M>n~ll• LM ... ,,11•1e• coun•• by 'f R bek h' , -• l tDP•""' 0..,1, ti. Cen&llv known 111 ,.,~ MY Comm'1IJo<. E'ID •u Hold off on journeys. if prac· 1' esa e a 1.A.iuge a '0 b• 1"• "''°" ..... c .. "'"'" •• 1«asc"b· Mt• 11. 1tn ' tl.c•l. Check deta1·1s, m· clud1·,g 11 :30 a.m. Thursdav, June 3, en to •n• wl1h111 '"'''um•"' •I'd GEll;AlO G. WOLf'ION. """· . th M s' . .,~-ltdg~ ..... t•tcu!lld .... 11m•. llDI •••. ,, .... Slt(I, lull• 111 appointments and reserva· in .. e ercury av 1 n g i; 10FF 1c1.t.L Sl!A L! u.1 ""'""· c.111.,,,1, '"" lions. Some relatives now tend bu1ldmg, Huntington Beach. ~:i';rys;~bl~~~':iitornii "ub1111>~ ortn•e co•" 0111..-"1111, Pr lnclOll Oflot• I" M~Y lt. JUM ~. !I, II. 1t11 1112.n to be contrary. Be forthright, 8 h L d or1n1t C011nly but res""'cl older ind ividuals. uc a nan O ge Mv c: ........ 1111011 E•D"•' LEGAL NOTICE I'~ Apr!I t, UIS CANCER \June 21-July 22): Traditional Sc tr h d 1>ut1t11~1e1 °'"'"" c ... 11 011..,, 1>1101. ~1~u M•te, partner 1·s a•gress1·"e .,, be rf 0 IS ances Mlv "Intl Junt ~. 11, II. 1'71 1]15-11 l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISI • ~ KUii.i ·~··· \VI pe armed for lhe Lad y N.t.MI STATEMIHT concerning money matters. Be Buchanan Lodge or Huntington LEGAL NOTICE ,,T,",!·u",','?". 1"1 11t' 10'" ••• dd•n• r S · k t · · \ ROBYN BAUSERMAN ... recep 1ve. !Jc o prmc1p es, Beach whenn members gather ,1111,1,1cat1: 0 , i uli!NIS• LAGVN.1 sr•~Lts. ""'° Hotiv '"'''· bu' be Wl.lil"g t make · Lak p L1eun1 Btac:~. C1!11or1111 '1651. o tn e ark Clubhouse al "1cr1T1ou1 NAMI Gtor•• H. Gr1n1,,, 060 H111y s1re•1. 'easonable Concessl·on Then h I ,.,, F .d J 4 r Tl\t undtr1llnlld ""'' ctrt!h it 11 COii· •••••••• ,. ,,,., ' ""' .... ' · B · p.m. r1 ay, une , nr a d~!I"' 1 1>1Jtl..e11 11110 Prlnt,11 cirri.. J MurPl'o•~ ";11 ~~:~ 'wtlflll·1, ~'~ you ultimately get your way. etrot a potluck dinner. The event will Huntln1!on lttc:~. C•lllornl• fl~t, ......... M .... C•h•orno8 '1611. LEO 'July 2.1 Aug '2) k h · h '"" !lc11tlou1 firm "1me of Vli'W T~ll builnt 1 s tltln -·""-I" " -. • : mar l e SIX! anniversary of l!!T.ITES INVESTMENT Gll;OUP •nt Ge"tr•I Ptttn· ... ·~I~ ' ~""'""' It Public relations is area MW lhe group. 1~tt 1•1d 11rm i. c:OfllPOttd Of ll'lt •ollO"<t· Bv G•o••• ., Grlth" th ( " d I t• B R I d Int e>ef1on1. Wl'>olf .... m,. In fy ll 11111 T~\1 1111tmo"1 t•lod wolft "1t C:cunly a ee S C 05e SCrU Jny. e evea e Dllttl ot rt1ldtnct '"fl lollewl: (1tr11; of 0•1ngt (CUMV or!. MtY It lt11 sure you temper justice with Ros e Society 0••1d "'· Kn•oot•, u'""" "'''"'" av lk••"• J M.~ ' · 1111 Prln<en Clrt lt, Huntln11en lt•th. D!IUIY {ouri; Cler~ ' mercy. One who blows off C:t11•orn11. •ur.1;,~.., o •• ,,., coe11 D•I'• "lief steam \.\'ill be sorry the next ~trs. Dorothy Whisler, a Terrv B. Kn•~"'· 1u1 L• Me"th• M1v 21. Jun• •. 11 , 11, 1r11 1lM-1i h Clrtlt, Hunllntton Be•c.11, C:•l!tor"lt"----ccc~-------.C:'-. P.tl.,,, country's foremost author1·i1·es J•mt• Ne11 s.n..:na1, 1~ !t'•""· OTICE moment. Realize this and be A f Party ybridizer Md one of the •16 .. 1 (n•i a..1-w.s.i. w•-n-•1» 1 LEGAL N . M1,,.,.1n1n Blt<h. Ctl!lornl1 l'OlM. !21]) 1-----~ ------- VIRGO (A""· 23-Sept. 22 \: on roses. will speak before the Jl•-UIO. Jn..iu n• ~-11•, ~ 0 Co llllcn1ro (. Gtr!H"· 411 f lat• FICTITIOUS IUSlfl l lli ''ou may feel restricted , tied Close fr iends and relati ves range unty Rose Society. olvtnue. se11 •••th. c111111rn•• 90140, N.t.Mf liT.t.t1MaNT do~·n -this is but temporary. of Robyn Bauserman and The meeting is pl &Med for u111 JIJ6.:mt, U3·SC-1'M) T~t touow•n~ Pl't$ortl •r~ fl>ln • Oo111!d P•lrltlt L•••tv. l:llll L-d•n bull""' ti: Refuse to Jel impulse rule Michael E. Schramm of 7:45 p.m. Tuesdey, June 8, In s1r111. G••Oen Grow. c:1u1orn11 tlt.11. W!Sl B ... Y P~E SCHOOL. 711 Me..re I . T k Ne rt Be h I d f lhe Westminster c1·v1·c '-n· (1Ul "'·fllJ, U!-'6-Jtto. Vlit1, Cm•• ....... . ogie. a e one step al a time. wpo ac eamc o v:: wu111m w. v-ruti. t00 1,1 L•"•· ""''' l M••tt .... 14'M wn1 .. O•~ ,, . Progress may be slow but can their eng•gement during a ter's recreation building. AD• .... coron1 011 "''" c11uorfll• Co•t• MtH No•"'• c. Mtrn.,, 1w f16?S. 111•) 6-lf·l'tlS.., Ul·S6-1l10. W~1!t o.~ St. Coil• Mn• be steady. Acl accordingly. parly given in the Irvine Coastl Ktnntll'I E unc11r,n. ton s Mtullin<1 T~., ~uslneu t1 1111111 conouc1..i ~r '" LIBRA (Sept. 2.1-0cl. 22).· Country Club. Avtnut. Whl!htr, C1l•!ornt1 t0601, Hill 1""•v1au•1 V N I •9~1ott, ~u-.u.11 &1. "°''' L. l-ltrlln• Don't get caught in middle o( Hostess was lhe bride-el!:ct's T E D J~m,, Pe8coc•. Jr. •111 B•••1tcr• . Norm1 c. Hff!1c1 dl.spute among fr1·,,ds. Those mother. Mrs. sh 1· r l e yl ST A TE S w11~. L<rnv Be.e11. ca11Jo•nl1. (2111 ~i,. T~" .io11m1111 Med w11n '"• ccunrv ~ j JIJ. !M·ll·?IJO. (llt~ <t! Orin" '°""" 1111 Mt• lf, ltll, who argue now may be allies 81userman o f Huntington N A T I O N A L Go•t1<1n ii, s1~v1>e•o•. Sllll! etdfc'd 1'" BIV!ll L v J. M.t.Ooox. I Bea h Avtnut, Lo• .l ngeltJ. (itllornlt 9()(1$6, OtPulV {ouMv Cltrk n near future . Know this and C · B A u1i1 116.111., 5611•1• 9H~ M Pu11"1h•d o''"Of' c~"'' o.11v •n..,, maintain neutral st 8 n c e, An Ocl. 2J wedding is being N K Jo/In H. GlbbO"" 1J111· ~o. ar19M,.,,11 av"· Ju"'•. 11. 11. "" 111.1.n G · · · d I d pl•••ed '-St A d • 'OUTH COAST PLAZA Av•nut. P•r1mouM. C1H1ornl1 9011l ----em1n1 1n lvidua o~ much '"' u• • n re w s .;i 111i1 &.JJ.na,, 11•.c1.11sJ. · LEGAL NOTICE talking. Presbyterian Church. Newport! BRANCH w.111a"' How1<0 Glbt>cn•. 1.1111 sit>o• ------------ B h Line "'o 1. Hunll"O'O" B••c~. NOTICI 0~ ll<ITINflON TO INOA•a SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): e1c · c11•10'"'• .,u,. (1111 ••?·,5'l•. ~11. 1N t11e 1.t.L1 o, •LcoHOL•C Obtain hint from Taurus Miss Bauserman is a NOW Ol'EN "~' e111ED;AG1s d ( f W . h 01!1'<1 #I Dfil ll, ltl1 MIY JI, l"I mtssage. Practical actions gra ua e o arren Hig SATURDAYS oev111 • Kn•P""' To wnom 11 M1~ conctrn· related to home, older m' • School Downey, attended Grn•ttl P1r1ne• SutH•c• 10 •nu1nt1 ot tnr llctni. ••· Or IS•••• ol C1iolor.,11. Or•ntt County· •""' 10<. not.ct 'I h1'1bV ,1"'" 1n11 - dividuals are necessary. Whtit ange Coast CoUege and is a o" A•ro• 13, un. Mlort mt. • '°lo1~,. uni:t~•tn!<I .,_ .. •o 1111 1•co11tu~ former Amen., •• A 1· 11· n es ' ,. p M Public: '" ..... tor ltld St11t. ~er1on111, l)tver•91, •I lh• ........ t .. tlU<rl ........ ap~ars to •-oppos1·t1·on 1·, .. , r · · o •••" -~ ~ I MOH.-THURS, 1 O 5 'M '""'"''"" tvllf A Kn1ootr -nown IO mt .,,w1 likely to boomerang in your stewardess. FRI DAYS • · · •o °' ·~• 01tM111 ""'oH n&m• "1ubK•·b-:mo c1ul>"Ou•• "lo•d. co.1• MKt. favor. B. COnfl .dent. Her fiance , son of r.lr. and 10·6 1'.M. f<I tc 1h• wtlhl n ln•uumr111 •1'11 Pu:•u•n• tD '"'" '"""''Of'. "'' .,,,. 171 41 540·521 1. Locet•d I•: 1c:•nc"'ltd•" ho tXt<Ule(I '"" s1mt, d~n•9noa 11 ~""lvm• 10 '"• Ot••••mtnl SAGlliARrus (Nov. 22· fo.1rs. Dick Schramm 0 f S•. Ce101t Ple11a, Cott• M-• !OF FICIAL $f#IL1 c• Al«>•"la•rc BtYt'l!lt c ..... iro l lllf i. ..... H ,_ · d f .. a fom A l1fv1r• ""'~ b• '''"''~' ol •n •lcollOllc bt•t•· Dec. 21 ): Study Ge m \ n I ouswn, IS a gra uale O 1 No1t1• Publlc-c1r.to•n1• ·~ 11,tn•• 1.,.-lhn• ,,....,., .. , ,1 1111-· mess.g.' You r.cel .V< SOCll f ~fiJlikan Hi•h School , Long Aul. Viet •rtt.-M1n11tr """'1°'"1 Oll•ct In ON ~ALE GENEll#IL !B!Jr\,I F~ e o,.~9, CO<Jn1• Publi< E~lln• P!•<•! invitations. But don't attempt Be11ch and attendrd Norwalk! H. M. STOLTE "y Comm111•on E~D:••• •n•Of'lf <1••'""" '" o•ott1t •h• ,,..,."'. State T h · J C \ \ Jenutr• l. 1'/J mr lu<n UconH "'•v mt 1 •or ltl.., ''''''' to do too much at once. One , ec nlca o e g e a,,01,,,,..., OrA,,.. ,0,,1 0,,,. P"o1. •1 •~• 11111,. 01 1nr o .... r1m-..1 ,., u·ho plans agenda could .5kip:[,~-~N~o~rw~a~lk~.~C~o~n~ni;,iiiiiiiiimiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1M•• 111 •""Ju""•· 11 ••. "" 1Ju.11 '" 1 "'""''c l!t•••••• c:""1'"1. 11t b• ,..,u •• ______ ,.~. o .... ,,m•"' "' .t,1(-.. fl~v••·•· some important details. Do LEG c:""1ro1. 1n1 o sir.... s1c•i,,,,n1o. be k AL NOTtCE c.111_..,ni• •ui•. 10 •• 111 "• rott1v~t1 your own c C ing. w•!h•n JO ~··· or ,~. 011t 1ne ''"Mind CAPRI CORN (Dec . 22-Jan. I S b Tod 1 NOllC:E 0" TllAHSFElll """'""' w• .. 1;,., oci11•0. 111t1nt 19) B ee y ay s "let!<• I• ~ffebY Qlven t~01 an Junf 1. G'Ollnd! !or aenlal OJ a•ovlald b~ Jtw, : f' "'ary in financial n11 , ••••h lnc:tu<i.n,. .,...:-·~9 11eu" Tn• •·•m"'' "" ""w llt•n•...i tor """ ,m~chln"'• ""a ...,u•D"'~"'· ••hltl••· Jtlt ol •l<ollclle Otvt,•9tS. Th t fftrm "' Want. Ads 11urn•1u•• •uDDlit• """ ln•en•o•I.,, lht v••iffc~•lon mo• b• <tbl~ln•d ••om •n~ 11• ~rco.,., el Vumo Clt•u• Como~"•· " f<et ol "'• Dto1t1m1~• Artl'strv l otrlntr•~•D, h1v!119 lt1 ar,nCIDll Dl1c:1·o1 J'J'IN GOLF P1'0MOTION l>u1!"r11 1! Av•nu• •E , Cllv 111 Yumt. fU SA l IN(. • Go golf1 ni= Ill!~ :'olf'mnri .t.I Yum• Cou~!v, •rl1on• ,l h• m•tln.,1 In G...,,.t• W lie, 5"<. ' D k w~ICI' "" T C lnvp11,.,~n'1 I~< 0 Publlt~N Orin.,. (NII O••l"f ~Iii ay \l"l"l' rnd: TAkP along C1liforn11 Ccr11ort!lo" ~avl~• 1 0,1nc'111~1 '-l•Y U. ltll • •ll&n' d NtNPOrl 91tc~. (lllltlrnlo l"C l!•tllntto~ LEGAL NOTICE Exh I • b 1 • ted v.·1tn sou~ "oods, 9 iron~. P1•<• "' bu•l1>tu •' 111 L1e1a ,.,,~ 0.1 •• , "''' ge and A br11 111ifuJ goll Fruit com .. onv. t Ccrl>('•ll n" 11,, _________ :.:.::._ __ _ bag . w N'lllSOn&blt: C•l••e·~1• "•~·n• • nfi~c,•11 cl1e• .,,1 T I bu••"t'• •• JJ1 E•11 Com'Ntn"'ttlln P~llSI "'() member$ O( the Costa • Like Anl1QU£'~~1 110>1-a. 1-'•...,ut. '°"11"'10"· C:1lilornt1 wl!I bf CllflfftCAll o, IUS IHlll. 'lcsa Art ' -Ill •--.. 1 .. .. ''~"""'"" •o P1c•11c L '' h • 1.,, '''' ;o ~ague W uoc: """ OlUSlC. · Anl]QUf' #11rocullu••I Cor11e•t1"'"· t CorPC11t1• n 1 T tTIOUi NAMI honored as June Artisls-o(-thu·1 PlllllOS ere, Sa t. Jn our c1111arnt1 w~<cn .. 11, ..,.1,,.,1,. Oii 0 0 ht untt .. 11 .. to '""' c1rt1t• 111 It t-!•'"' Ju..e 1, ""' l!lltll et llutlnt,.'': ::'11"9 t l>UllMit II 14'21 GN1! Ht.,., month by the Newport Beach miscellanous 54!C'tion. I"'' s11,, 01 •ro1on1 1o<11f<I 11 Avtnut uc~i1~"~~,!....l~~~ ~i u~;1~:1 "::'" 111";,j Junior £bell. e Nttd !Orne lurnllUN' for •'-· y.,..,,, '"" ioi "'••m•• •~•nut. 11111 ti.m 1, COM-td o1 1111 lei~ The works of '·' frs. Mar1•el ,'•mot, '"" 11 te1t1••uti 1" lllt s111• o1 --.. w''"'' """" 111 '"'' '"" •lte• 1hil l llltlt bc<1 rh N1!111 gr., I •l·'a•nl• •• lll E1JI Commonwt11t11 d rt~iatnci ,., 11 fool-· Colen1an and ~rs. r.1sry Lon" How "'OUitl ·'"" ,,.,, '" "'•<nu•. "'"11"''<1'1. Cti.•orni1 t,.. 11'!1 Wt11 T_, J. Ku"'· .,,, ·s.i.c••"' °' I 3 [l1~tn Slrffl, llll ..... 1,1. C1Utornl1, •• H''"''"91oll B!t<h ·' "A"J I be. exhibited throughout star1 (1111 "'llh l! '" 1n hrd • •••u11 ~1 1"• u1• ,,..,,,,, P1c.1 ( o.ieo M1v u. 1"1 lh~ month in the M1rlners cha1t.s. rhetr. 11 11001 ,,,; IL'•M1"' "''"tuiiu••1 C:o•-•110tt w 11 T"om•1 J. Kit"' Lib -..... ,m. boul'l(f '" .... I"• atlll• ,,. ""lli!t!t o! (tlllar"!•. 0'1nlt cev~to! rary, Ntwporl Beach. and Ktmt rli.~hrs~ G!!I """n'"~' .. "'"'"'"· Yum• '''"'' com· o" M•• 11. 1•n. 1ior1.,. ,..., 1 ~IJ'I • .., Mrs Coleman will dl·spl 1••m "t 10 ~ -•"•· ,c ... v. 1" •un . •u&•oc 1~ •"" '" ttl<t St•11. "'•trr•llf ! , ay 1..:: ... IO""'' ,u u Anv U"l!tld crtdltor fll Yumt (llrvt l~Dtl•HI Tr>em11 J . Kll"9 ~-te ... heads. figures, still life and t1on and f')(' only a rtw Comoin• "''' 111""'1' ~11 <111m •o Poc:111c110 bl 1~1 t11•ion w11M.,n1mt 1, tllkr:rlt• ls·••cR~S 1·n 01·1 "'h1·1, Mr,. 1111 LltM1,.. "''''tunur•I Ce•llC•tll'l'> '' ''" •d to lht w11111~ 1,..1rum•111 lllO 11\I I'~ " • tCl<l"ll 1101.,;l tl'IOW 1<0-ltdtN fll t•l(u!W 11\t MIO\I, Lllng . will offtr r I 0 r a I 1 ' • T&k" rtff for th• .,,,,.... I '""''"loft "' . tOF,ICb\L SEALI < !I C J LA'°!O, •ulP!Ot'ffN llltoroi•M11t~~ Jl!AN L JOIST seasc:tpts. bo11 t and w11ttir pie-In tti1s beautiful t!l;o ~-•1c1••c Ll,~Hn• .t.1r1cuuur• C<rrllO'tlltft No11rv Pu1111c • C••1f11<ftlt •·-s · ·1 B lh rt! h ffO wr11 l ithlt'I Sl•tft ••111t1111 OUlc• •~ ''-''"' Jn Ol . O I SIS ave 1ptod f ittbird. and ret I L~, •~,11.,. C•ll•crl'll• '!1!'111 °''"'~ Cflll""' , V.'On 3"'lrdS in nwnemu11 tfart fa~!, ll' 0 B""' Sl7'0 Ttrmln11 AAno •, N v C""'m•ntllft E11lrl!f J I'd ho I lM Aft9tlt.!o 'DOltl M•M:h t. !ti'J ur s w5, . ., __________________________ J 1111111~.11 o"'"'' C6111 0111v ••lo•. ,11,.11111" o'tno• c111_. 0,11y "'1'11 Mt• 10. u. u11 !Jt~.n M•r u, lt. Jl •ncl Junt '· 1"1 115'-n· 1 I ' ' DICK TRACY ly Cliester Gould " Ll'L: ABNER A S 'O..! l(i..(1oN, Ll?Z,Tl-I ERE ARE NO \,.!MIMPORTANT 'THINGS IN POLICE \MJRK. TUMBLEWEEDS iELL Ml:, · SNOOK 1£1 D&AR, . HAS \00 ~IN GOIN' T SCHOO!.? AllA~Y! HllllN' DA 000!\S HAl'.D1 !'~? MUTI AND JEFF I'M PDLISl-llNG MY SOCKS ! JUDGE PARKER PLAIN JANE I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••. by ' A. POWER I A.C.P.OSS l 'lll:'aktn\ gradual!/ ~ Garrr-•nt CJ S1>"t1f1td qua11\1ty or 11.,.,t lJ Btco"'r r,~,11 !S Roman !):Jlf 111 Miss 1 trry 11 Re91"'1 IB Uttrred 1·1 IT'llS•cal lOllPS 19 M u~rc ~I ZO Shot lhll CO~I(') c lo~r 1 NOrdS i2 Fils' p;ul,.rr ~3 ~•ciody 25 ls !~nd 1•1 )CJ Atllon of· Su!ltx 40 Pondered 41 C.l~ans11ll] 43 C••l.l•ll bast .. b.1 1! ~C!Ye~ lo/Of"'~I 4~ Anglo-Saton s la "' J) li1c.1~dtSt1:'11\ l~·~p 4b "C~~sc '" 2 word~ 4q Br1glil 111eleor !13 Mc1111 ~ l 0 ~ ~l A CC •TO IUOO ll t •~C" t;(ll~[T 0 1;1 C ~Ill[ G ~~\H •CTU ~ 0 EHOlO ~(All ~ Card gamt ~ Evc1te m1•t1i 5 26 71 31 legal papers 33 Rebu~t 7 Songer lily-· 31. Trotk t 1ur' l B Unit of work 37 Doll 51.Jhl} ! 5) Ct1 1rlcs l.1 n•b 9 Having a )Cf Helps Sb Est u.1r1 septun 40 5"1all sl'1n 57 Ob1et1 of 10 Supple growth Y.tJl'\h1p JI 'Nrngli<e 4Z Pungt11t ;.a Ot qrc~1 !en9th 12 Penny cood1llll'll~ 59 Tracts of l l Boy's "a"'e •3 C.iash 1• oPtn !a"d :l Unable lo s~a:.: 45 tl American l ·~· ...... _ , .. ,......~·- °™EY'RE ALL WORN ANO 'Tl-1E ~ DON'T MW UP A HUMI( OF CITY PARK ~~~. By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith By Harald Le Doux M.V NAME'S JOMMIN Kol.NE~ I PIPM'T YOU C.-'LLE.D EARLIEIZ A.BOUT 6 ETill.IG l-IEA.R FR'OM A. lri'.ESS.'.GE TO A. M155 r:::f.,.V l-IER', MR. KANE: Wl-I EELE!l Wt-Io's OM " &US WE r:.or "' MES A~R1Vl NG MEIZE AT G.:10 S,&.GE TO TI-IE r:::ROM KAMSAS CITY... ORll/ER: OF THA.T &US TI-IREE l-IOURS ,1..GO'. By Frank Baginski 7··. PERKINS MISS PEACH H'LLO, f U'l'{)!<f THERE, HI, WALT E~, LESTER! SA L.!OS" OLD SPO!l.T f N\,ANAGEe i A or C'· M<Jl.ICA . . ' l·dorm~I 3~ Se ol on~ ~1.1d -:; T AS( ;~ Smr;i!t M EE T ..,,,., hO \h , S;irazcn 22 Gus~ su:ldcnly man-.ma! bl Robert E a11!1 24 Ex!l(ess ~!. l tvtl111Q sl11 p r ~=~~~~=='.._ ___ jt:_ ____ _! f:ranc•s cootempl 47 IOOi;in of ~ L1ghl1oot 2) Grtat m1"'bcrs. New Mexico 1----"<1 35 Rush~ of' ;Ii In oa turl m~oncr 37 Bt lool1shly ""' 30 Urul of t~p<tt11y 1 1 l " " 10 . ··~"' j,j, " ,. l7 " " JI " .. " •• " " ,, " • " ,, .. lnform~I 48 Capital of OOA'IJ 21. HoYSt' built of 1te l Bord 27 "mph1theall'f 2 River cf spate Vorksl1uc 28 Chases a"NJY 3 E11trta1y zq Unbound ~ Fright ened 30 PenGIJJtt ' • 7 · 1 · . " " rz 16 " ., " " • 2l ' . " .. :t " ll " • i " ' ,, '3 ., .. • " 17 .. r• " 37 Nar"ay 4'l Lost br 19l1tness SO F1btr SOtll't! SI Gabl• SZ F~lls brliind ~4 Greed1 ~SOil " " " ~ " "' " ,. " " . "' ,, " " " " STEVE ROPER PEANUTS ' 1 WOME~ M;\VE Ai-I All· PUli!POSE iOOl YOU MEN DIDN'T INVE\li, ~11i<E .' , .. THE HAIRPIN.',C.~il ~ALLY BANANAS MOON MULLINS Nor ANoTMER LOUD CARTOON SMOW, K).YO?? ANIMAL CRACKERS fi· .- DON1T YOU SAY l-IELLO ALSO, IRA? ' ' ~ .. By John Miles WH'Y BOTHER? I GET A SPEK.CENT OVE!t·ltlDE ON UIS HELLOS. . " By Mell Bv Saunders and Overaard PEGGY/ THERE 'S A REAL BUNDLE lt..I HERE ! ... AN' NO SIGN WHO IT BELONGS i O/ MAYBE iHIS GOOFY EYE1.J1,,;· />. li.J'T Go'Wtr.IA TUJ("4 OVT T BE A TOTAL. LOSS AFTER ·'>,_, .. ALL.' By Charles M. Schulz ACTl/AU.~, WE \--Cl JOE COOl.S AR< '5CAAED TO Dt\111 OF CMICK> 'IO'KIN HA\/EAl.L T'OTH£" <ALS 1NTI4'WORL..D- 5ME'6 MINE • .'!' . • . : • . I r ., .f • J • . :· . • • By Ferd Johnson LOW. 'I\ UltERFEREllC&'t /'MC·· F!lOM f EVEl'YB01>Y.. ·-···-J ,,,,, ..... .-.. -~ . . By Roger Bollen .soil OF A GUN ! · OllE Of ff \ll.L~ES MOST BE STUCK! DENNIS THE MENACE ~ .. .. .. • • ~ . . . . • . . :· •• .. ·:~ . ;: JI OAILV PILOT By DEKE HOULGATE ., ,.. Ctllr .. lllt SI•" JNOIANAPOLJS -The Yl'Orld's richtst auto rice looms bigger in Costa P.1esa reaident Dan Gurney·s career now lhan It ever did wben hf was a race driver. "Jrs incredible how blg this thing is." Gurney said as he awaited the $1 million Indianapolis 500, in ¥i·hich he has Bobby Unser and Jim P.la lloy entered in twe Eagle turb<>-Offenhausers. •·We've got all our business ntt.ks stuck ClUI so far it's unbelievablt. You only get to try one day ea ch year, and after that it's O\'~. The suspense here is in· C"tdiblf'. It really gets lo you ." FrlC111. MAY 28, 1'171 Tells Gumey !lie car ov,,ner underlined the suiousness or bis financial burden -• by-product C1f the current bu!lness recwion -as he paused to hel&le with a U.S. Auto Club official over 1 $100 fee being collected from the All-American Racers team from Santa Ana . "I've been overseeing things very carefully," Gurney said after the official "'ent away ... We believe we are in a good position because we have one more year of experience. And frankly, y,·e're hungry.'' Business aspects of racing. during a season "'hen the huge budgets are no longer available, even to respected Leams New I l(ind of Indy like Gurney's, ha\'e made an astute observer of American life out of the man. "'In Japan." he said, "they're standin& on the gas and going plaus. People in this country stand around and compl1ln and worry about welfate. They talk a lot about government money. There is no aovernment money -it's taxpayers' money. "I want tG ao with people who are hustling." There Is a hustling aUilude, a seriousness without the typical franUc pace, that sets the Gurney Indianapolis 500 effort apart from the previous years here when he was both driver and car owner. "We art worki.n.r a nanna11J-bour da7 tt\1.1 year, and we've been lucky so far,'' Gurney 11ld. In other Umes Gurney crewmen burned a lot of midniaht oil. "We've bten ln &ood lhape: became we have alrtady had the problems that 1t1me et the other people are still bein& pla&ued with." What he didn't aay was th1t the P.fcLaren te1m of Pete Revlon, I.he pole s!tter, and former world champion De· nis Hulme have betn plaiutd by miner but important mechanical failures all month. So has the McLaren driven by tilark Alcindor Weds; All-stars Set Pro Showdown HOUSTON CAP) -The National Basketball Association headed for its fir1l on-lhe-court showdown with the riv1l American Basketball Association tonl&ht with player of the year Lew Alcindor holding lhe balance of power over the younger lea1ue. But what if Lew doesn't play in lbt 1ame? 'That po5$ibilily arose Thursday On TV Tonight Channe l 5 a t 5:30 night on the evt of the 5:30 p.m. PDT na· tionally televised clash Yi'htn it was an- nounced In Washinaton, D.C. that Alcin- dor would be married today. Alcindor, the architect of Milwaukee'• (NBA) championshlp, did not arrive here Thursday with other NBA 1tara but was acheduled to be on hand today for a workout before toni&ht's &•me. Plana now call for Alclndor to cat~ a fi!ghl from Wuhln&ton following the wedding in time to honeymoon in the &trodome toniaht -providing he make.a fiighl connections. The NBA would remain the fa vori te even v.·lthout Alclndor because of its ex· perlence. but ll would 1ive the prestlge- hungry ADA a clO!er match. Jn another move affecting the !\"BA lineup, the Baltimore Bullets announced th ey did not \\'ant Earl t.!onr~ to play in the aU-star contest. A club tpokesman sajd if i1onroe played the Bulle ts .. could take "'hatever measures are spelled out in hi• contract -which includes suspension or fine." Donellue. flnt man In tho hlsl«l' ti this ract to hit 110 mph for ene lap, Durlnc c•rburetlon runs Wednesday, Revaon had • near failure ln the distributor bolted onto h11 turbo-Offy which was tr1ceable to 1 auspecttd deslan naw. Gurney, ebviously, bas conctm ef hll own. "We worry about not flrlishinc,•• he said, "bec1use somethinc conks out. You need a lot of luck but judging by 111 lbe aigns, we're lookin« tough," As to Revson and Donohue, who are in- side of Bobby Unser on the front row to st.art the race, "l knn they have te break a bunch of rte«da to stay &be.cf of ua," Gurney said. "We're eoinl te run ptttty hard, and wt're set up to tlnllh." Bobby Unser "l1 1oin& to keep prtllUTI on tboat iuys," Curney eonUnued. "W• know they're faster in a aprlnt, because they qualified better. Let's tet what they can do for 500 mllet." Malloy, who look" ever the other Ollonite-Ea1le after Lee Roy Y arbrougb cr11hed, bu impressed Gurney. "He's very personable. relatlvtly quiet. and lhe crew guys like him vtry much. Ht doesn't panic. and ht is well developed in his seat. He has a good b1ckground for communlc1t1n1 what i• goinc on in tbe car. lie bas made an U • ceplionllly 1treng lmprtttion ori us." Houlgate's 500 Handicap 1'111111111111 ""'· Orlutr. ~" I Mert ~. Mtdl1, 1'1. 2 Alu ...... A19u,....u•••..,. J Jl11f 11.tVMll, 11:-l'ld• leNll ~ .-.. J, l'oyl, Hou11tn J Oe1111 HUll'rlf, C•l11llr.ok. t: ... ltl'lt 6 Mtrlo A.MNlt1, N111rt lh, l"t. ' Jo. ltont rd, S111 Joo1 • Bobtw U11-, A.ibuf!Ufr<!UI t Gtrv 81t1e11hlulff'I. Tl11ltu Jltrt, Ill. lo Llfv• 11.uby, Wldlllt 1'1111, To. 11 1 111 vuttvlcll. ,._ 11 G•rffll J ... l'll'tcl<.. Ml l"INll"'' Midi, 11 01uld 1-tffbr.. ltutllv. , ..... "" 1• Dl<ll'll• A.Ill-. Mueytowft, Alt . 11 Gto,.I l111ftr, ....... fl•l• 16 ll:Ntr MtCluslttV, '~~ 17 Mike Meolttu. .... "'""''· ...... It Cttt VarMreutll. Tlmon-vlft1, S.C. It II.Id< Mlll"'r. I.Hu ... 81kl't 2t ltn!lev Wtrrlfl. Wtl! GICIUCtt!tt. MtH. ll JOM llu""'lot ... , F1. Wortll 12 Wtlly Ot llttlbldl Ettl l tVfttWlt-. H.J. 12 au1 TlntelttH, S'HtlW•v. •M. '' Jim Mt lltv, t:n1l.....acl. c.i.. 2J Sl'tut Krl1111'11, Jl1nl,p111y, N.J. 2, I.•'"" OlckllOn, M1r!etl1, 0. )1 Stm 5111iol\1, N1~ulllt. Mit h, 11 Olck SIP'l>fft, Stll Ltk• City 1' A.rt l"t lltul, M"ffrf , Ort. • G-1• l"tlll'rltr. A.rc.tOlt ,, o ... nv 11mmt•M111, Gl11ton..,rv, C.-. J2 Mtl Ke11y111, L~Mll, .... JI &olo Htt-1v, l11ll1n111<1ll• .,, Su .... MtltNl'I ,. Jf/11111~ l.lt hl11l"9 " Mcl1r1111 TO Ti'lflylPMll ITT TF Mtltrtll TO J •Mten!!e TF Ol1tn!ff IENlt TO T~ttmt-1(1111 lO G-Wftlte Flf'fl\-TF . , .. ., ., .. , • ' • • • • ' 16-1 lJ ,., Su11n.,. l"ru111 Tel lb-I ' " Jltt111!.1 HJ.Jl1 rt. ITT T.....,~..,11 Tl" U·I )0 G. C. Mu,,IW TO l!·I fl S.rllt! TF G. C. MurMv TF G-Wllh<! !"Ifft!-Tl' 11-1 n IJ..I 1f 2J..I 11 .-.rt•11wi .-.vleli.., tJ..I 11 " Cl111lc Wtll TO :U.1 1$ "•lrlck J11!roli'llm l~I 14 ,. S.'111 TO ,,, " •u••rlpt ~f'V ... 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Chl<1CH ol fll'llthlnt Ille •••• ••t f>O! ·-- DETRO IT TIGERS' IKE BROWN SL IDE S UNDER YANKE ES' DANNY CAT ER. DETRO IT WON, 4-3. But Monroe said he was packing for }Joust.on. "It's a matter of principle that I play. 1"11 ~ there." Sutton Gets Ext1·a IGck Boyer's Spat With Braves Nears Clin1ax ATLANTA (AP) -"We don·t have the team. pitching or morale to u·in a pen· nant here,·• Cle le Boyer said Thursday night as he arrived from !\1ontrea\ u·ith hopes ol gaining today his release from the Atlanta Bra\•es. "You can't pla y baseball every day under pressure like it is here," said Boyer. who added that his discontent with the Braves organization had been building for four years. "Nobody has any enthusiasm , it's just all a lot of individual play." he said. "I've just had all 1 can take.·• Boyer rt.quested his release from the Bra\"e:i; earlier this "'eek "'hen he and Paul Richards, the club's vice president, lrad~ verbal blasts publ icly. Richard!i l!Ummoned the slick·rielding third baseman by telegram Thursday in ·which ht .said if Boyer failed to go by the Bra\•es office by noon today "you will be 1uspended vdthout pay indefinitely." "1 hope to hell I v.·ake up ln time so 1 tloo't get caught up in traffic." Boyer 11aid. "I plan to be there at 11 ;\9. t want lrmt him :· The spat erupted Tuesday when The Neu· York Post quoted Boyer as saying there shouldn't be any place in baseball for a man like Rich ards. Richards replied, "For such a lousy pl ayer, &yer does a lot of talking." Richards said Thursday that any al· l.nnpt at reconciliation \\IOI.lid be "up to his attilude. Hell, 1 have no personal fttl· jng about this. lt"ll be .stri ctly pro- fessional as far a.r rm concerned." Asked if he. thought the 1u·o could reach accord, Ri chards said. "'frankly, I doubt IL" Boytr left no doubl . Asked if thert ""'re any conditions under which he would agrtt W remain with the club. Boyer said, "Yes, one. if he'd lt't me take over the ball club and nm It. I thlnk I could. I think I know ba.seball." Boyer 11ak1 JUchard11 had agrted lo rtlea~ him If Boye-r would forfeit his 60 tla)'ll severance pay -an 11rttmt!'lt \lndtr \\'hich each would swap checks !!lnct baseball law requires the club to make the payment. Boyer 11aid the. 1rno1111t w111 1bout SI0.000. He said he Cia:ntd thil )lear for f15,000. Bill Russell, the former Boston Celtic player-roach, y,·ill coach the !\"BA stars. Sports In Brief Golf Lead to Ziegler; The ABA. hoping to achieve aome re- cognition against the older league, is led by Rick Barry, "-'ho has st.lrrtd in both leagues. rook ie sensation Charlie Scott of Virginia. Zelmo Beaty of the Utah Stars, and Indiana's Mel Daniels. Out of Beating Giants Richey iii Net Triumph MEMPHIS, Tenn. -11 looks like Larry Ziegler is going to miss the Indianapolis 500 for the first time in five years. '"I've never finished more than 27 holes here before, and I was sl\\·ays in In· dianapolis by Saturday," Ziegler said Thursday after cutting out a remarkable 62 for the first round lead In the $17~.000 Danny Thomas P.1emphis Golf Classic. ··rve played here four times before," the sometime stock boy for the St. Louis Blues hockey team said, "and I al\\·ays had to pull out -bad knees , bad elbou·s, bad head." Ziegler's eight-under-par fflort. his career ~st, matched the IO\\' 18-hole round on the pro tour this year and gave him a l\\'O-Slroke lead over a]y,·ays- dangerous Frank Beard going into today's second round. e A11aerlcar1s A d vn11 ce PARIS -Ten Americans ha\'e reac~ed the third round cif the French lnlerna· tional Open Tennis Tournament. Cliff Richey, of San Angelo, Tei .. the r\o. 1-ranked player in the United States, advanced Thursday, defeating Australian Terry Addison, 6-1. 6-2, 6-0. Also advancing in men"s singles were Tom Gorman of SeatUe and Bob Lutz of Los Angeles. Gorman defeated Jean-Paul P.ieye1· of France. 1~12, 6-2, 6-2, 6-l. Lut1 el iminated Britain's-Gerald Battrick +6, 6-1 , 1-6, 6-2, 6-2. e Sta siuk Fir e d PHT(AOELPHIA - Vic Stasiuk his discovered that your players do have to like you as well as play for you. Stasiuk u·as fired as head coach of the Philadelphia Flyers of the N1tional Hockey League Friday. apparently the victim of criticism by his players. "It was 11omethlng 1 hated to do," said Flyers' general manager Keith Allen. "But it "'as for the good of the team.·• Allen . of course. u·ouldn't admit that Stasluk'.s unpopularity \\ith his pl1yers \\'IS the reason for the dismissal. • B r illa/a 1''111 Cup ST. ANDREWS, Scotland -There were no alibis from the United States golfers today over losing the V.'alker Cup tn Great Br itain for the fir.st time in 33 years, 13-11. "We have no txcuses," said John Winters, the non-playing captain of the Americans. "It v.•as a greal tournament. \\'e enjoyed every minute of it and the best players won." ~ game w1s the idea of the NBA and ADA players 111sociations and does nftt have the blesslnl of the club O\\'llers. The pla~·ers have been threatened v.·ith fines and suspensions for playing in the garM, y,·hich v.·ill benefit the Whitney Young Foundation and the players associations. Larry Fl.eisher. counsel for the "!\'BA players, said the team members \\'ere not playing the game to spite league ouners but to show the O\\'Tlers that the tv.·o leagues could meet in an all -star .came without an "Illegal" meraer. A blending of the rules of both leagues finally \\"8!1 ironed out Thursday. Under the setup . the first half v.·ill be played U!· inq lhe NBA's 24-seoond clock and NBA official ball. The second hall it will be the ABA"s 30-second clock, rtd·white-and- bl ue ball and 3-polnt basket. Regardless of the rule1, Russell says the NBA will wiln. '"The only differenre in the. second half is th1t \\>t'll be ahootinr more. from the threc-poinl ran1e. These guy1 art pros. They'll bf takin1 the longer shots. It's going to be a game of dettrminalion. V.'e'll try to make them play our game." NeUh~r Russell nor LarTy Brown. coac h of the ABA stars. would name a starling lineup following Thur1day·1 workouts. "You don't have to be a 1enius lo coach this team. but 1 am. so I .,,;II," Russell quipped. •·rn flip a coin." Al cindor and Beaty .,,·ere not in to1''n for Thur1day'1 workouts. but were d.ue ln for drills toUy prior to the aame. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Since the Loa Angeles Dod&er1' Don Sutton has only two victories lhis season, he's not too choosy who he beats. But he admits lhert.'1 a Uttle aomeUring eitra about knocking off ~ rival San Francisco Giants. "ll.!1 great to beat anyone but to beat the Giants -especi11\y lf you 're wuring a Dodier uniform -ia a real abot in the arm," admitted Sulton after he cooltd the siizllng Giants ~1 Thursday nltht \\'ith a four-hitter. Jt was only the second time in sir game1 th1t the Dodgers have beaten the Giants. Los Angeles. back to within two sames of the .500 plateau, continues the home. stand with a weekend series •l•insl Philadelphia. Al Downing, 3·2, 1 t a r t s tonletrt's game a(ain.st the Phillie•' Quis Short, 3-6. Sutton 1truck out eight lncludin& Willie Mays three times. The first time Sutton \\'hiffed Mays "·as in the first innln1, Sul· ton's 1,000!.h career strikeout. "Ko. I wasn 't thinking about striking him out a fourth lime in the ninth in- ning." Sutton said. "I was hopinl he 'd hit the first pitch. I didn't care if it went to the fence as lone as aomeone was the,.. to catch It." The Los Angeles manager. Walt'r Alston, said Sutton's contro l was the fineat he"s seen. "His fast ball ha1 been belttr ," Alston 1aid, .. but not his control. lt wu rl&ht O'Brien Fills Infield Gap for Halos By ROGER CARUlON OI "'" OtllY l"lltl llltt "J\'EW YbnK ~ For a guy who bitted .245 a.s a atnfor in high achoo!. It hardly seelllll he should be 1 candid111te for aolv· Ing the ill1 lhal ha,·e plagued the California Angels. Further exploration into his lift reveals serv1ct on 10 professional baseball teams in a space of eight i;easons -Y.1th a one- ye1r stay the maximum time spent on any one club. Bui with .Jim Frego5i. the sl•·Ume Amtrlcan Leaf:tUt. All-Star, nursing an ailing root that dotsn·t seem to be responding to tre•t~nt. 1!'1 beglnnin1 lo •ppear that a mejor share o t mponaibility for £ttlln1 the Hilo. in the groove rests on I.he shoulders of Syd O'Brien. The tx-Millik.an Hlgh infielder has bttn ustd at short and second •i~ Frtgosl'a Mt¥ '9 MtV 1' Mtw. MtY 11 A11gel Slate AH OtlNI •• ICMl'C: cn11 .1.,,_t11 11 N..,. Von. A,..fll fl Ntw Vor~ ,t.nftlt fl N•w V••lt A,,_tlt ti W11111.,. .... t:JJ "·"'· I~ S! • "'· IO" t "'• lt.H • ""· misfortune . Ht'll bt. In the lineup 1t the lauer post again tonight when the Anf'lr ~end Andy ~tesRrsmith 14·5 l to the mound in an attempt lo baa back·lo-b1rk tr lun1phs -a feat not accomplished since !\iay a. Hls current role 1s a backup man for lhe Ken 1'tc1'1ullen·Frtgo.sl.Sandy Alom1r Infield combination isn't 5omethin& new. He has 1 tustory et being 1n the ahadows. "When I •as ift hifh school 1 balttd over .400 1s a topMmore and jWlior butt w1s always under Long kach Wlbon '1 Bob Bailey (now with Montreal)," aays the Compton native. "No~· I just hope l'\'f: found a home in C111lfornia, I've been around a lot. I knou·. but ll hasn'l bffn be.caUJe I made any orgsnltaUon mad or w1.m"t doln1 the job. "Ifs been just a case ol trying to im· prO\'IP! thelr club," d id the llkeahle O'Brien. o·Brltn has hit tht haD 11i"ell. but not t l\\'ays in the rlahl places. Jn the patt 111tart.1 hf•• mtnaatd t1ftly a .1(X) 1ve.rqe, but in 40 offlcial 1l ball ht'• 1tn1ck out onl7 twice. And his defensive p~ay has 1parkltd. with. outstandin& tffortl in both 1ame1 at Oakland , "'I've felt comfort1hle at lht plate - but I'm normally 1 1lrt1k httter. One of 1hese days I knov.• I'll brtU. looae," 11y1 the Cy11reu resident. As for tht rontlanJ, su•tlthin& 61 poai· tlon1 he •dmJLs he prefers shortstop, althou&h the last time he played the posl· lion r.,Warly was u 1 prtp. "I jual wi1h one year I could 10 ti) 11prlng training •nd know J hall one posl· lion to play,·• ht 1dded. With the current pU1ht of Frttn1l or>er1Un1 on conalder•bly leu thari eight (')'1inder1. however, u·. apparent that O'&-Jen has his ch1t1c:e to 1how what he un do at leClOftd baH. there the whole game. He'1 l'lf.\•er had better control.'' Sutton walked none and picked up his third complete g1me. Richie Allen providtd Sutton with a U ad vantage In the first innln1 when ht: singled :1ome !\iaury Wills and Willit: D1vl1. Davis later ran his ballin.J streak to lt straight 1ames. SAN l'll:AHCISC:O l.05 ANellt:I •t•lil•" 1«W1, rl • I t o Wllll. ,, SPtlt t, IS t t f I ,,.ttf , 't L•~ltt, 11 l t I t 11.,,,.u, rl H .. lf, "' l 0 I I W Ot•l1. d M•Yl, d t 0 t W'•rter, It Mt:.c-.y, 111 • I 1 t lt.Allffl, 11 Oltlt, t l I 1 1 ll'ft D•rt, 1'11 1'!Hl'llR, 'ltl l D 0 I J\llltklt,1 G1111911er. JO l o 1 o v11 ... u11l, .tll l"Mltr, " 1 • 1 1 s.wntr1, , l ry111r. P 1 I I I F,Je/111•0<1, 1)11 I D I D Cymllftlf""· ' 0 D ~ 0 Rooerlo."'1 IODt "'"°'''''' p 0 0 ' 0 t i rltfM 2 I I I ! I I I ! I t I 4 I I t I t I t .I I I t • I 1 I • 1 I I ' I J I 2 I I t Tfltll 31 1 • I Teltl• :JO s ' .. Jtn Frt nclico OllO Qltl 190 -l L• A.11901u no 111 tDx -J E -Fu"''"· MtCovtv. 0' -Stft l"f'f~•IS1!9 I. LOI -Stn Fr111(IJCO l, LH .1. ... fltt t . ~· - 5udtkff tl), Olm !)). 18 -w. 01vl1, V•lm!I- $ -Suno11. SF -w1111. " • • .. e ry1n1 ll.S.!) • ' ' Cu,...t1rl1"" ' ' ' ·-... , • • • -(W,!-J1 ' ' ' ' Tl<nt -2:1t. Antn01~tt -2'-m. Martin UCl's Top Athlete .. • • ' • ' ' • ' • • 1.like Martin ~·•11 selected for the third straight ytar as the out.stsndl.n& 1thleta •t UC Irvine and •·1s the recipient of t1- Dr. Wayne Crawford tifemorial TrGphy tward, highlight of the 1nnual Bir I booste r club annual meeting Thursday night at the Balboa Bay Club. rwtartin , 1 winner of 16 gold medals In awlmming competition at the NCAA col- Jegt division meet over a four year period 1s well as one in v.·attr polo, wu the lop honoree at the event. He was also selected 11 an AIJ.. American In both aport.s by virtue of hi1 \-ict.ories and the team NCAA crown won by Ed Ne'il'l1nd'1 water polo conllngent_ FoUowing is a compltle list of the" honortd at lhe baoquel Thursday nilht: M'rr;i~.W1y,,_ Cr1w•1 AO....,lf1 ,1..,.,.rtt -Ml•• Wt ttr f'flO -,,,.., Mtulml"" ,,.,."1" 0.11 •1~~. l r\ICI llf(-. fftrv Kiel~. ' wl"'"'lll'IQ -M1111n, 11.101 Itllll. JI,,. (lfo.r Melt Htll .... Mite C:l•llfl'll~. JIM l'ffl\11 W1ii6 ,,,,.. .. Jt <ll. Olckl'rlt...... ' .. ,,.w -~hll McAu!fy, l~ltr u•••llV t.1,111n1 Miii• ''!:r."'' ¥1•tll~ Cl "lift, ¥llu,D!;:' Gt tY ',,.., t llll iltOll Ch.1mMrllft, o-mMt l"r .. llm.tri ••1~11 ... IJ -HtWIMI Ml ..... 1111 (11'!11~ &ukj!Otll -1>1 11 lriw111. m'' •NII (~c11111~1 "i"-•r C1t1•, tt-Cl11Jllfl •-•''.!.b•"' ,-,..1ttc•1 C••it . <•c••I•!~ t flll lt1t Ai\. ... ··~ 'I. y ''"''· ~klltllfl, lt1111l1 -or .. Jt111..,.kl '"° Ch.UC-Ht ,h•l'lll 1f7' .1.11.Ji"'l•l<t l!t l{llf NC:A.1. 111\!Dlf\ t~el"'JIOfltj iltllf C'IN I 1•1'1•111; h • C"'-.... U, 111111 ¥f lutDol .. Stll I'll -0.¥t HOlll111, BRUCE GIRASOLE, ESTANCIA ACE Gal Swi1 1i11ie,.s Sliine 111 CIF Fi11al Meet BEVERLY HILLS -Six s""·immers from the Orange Coast area and a lone relay team earned places r o r themselves in lhe C I F Southern Section girls' swi1n- ming and d i v i n g cham- pionships Thursday night at Bev erl y Hi lls H igh ?\'atatorium. Jiighe!t varsity p I a c c Compton Coacl1 Out Bill Armstrong, one of the most successful high school basketball coaches ever in Southern California. has bern relieve d of duty as coach of the Compton High School Tarbabe quintet next season. ii ~·as lea rned exclusively by the DAILY PILOT today from a reliable source. Armstrong's Compton teams won fi ve CIF major division championships during h is reign at the helm in 1958. 1961, 196.1. 1968 and 1969. 'T'he Tarb11bes also put together the longest winnin~ streak in CIF annals. ex· tending rrom the 1968 season and four games into tt1e l9i0 campaign before Marina High knocked lhem orr. The team y,•as 32-0 in 1968 and 2()-0 in '69. No reason has been gi ven for Armstrong 's release from dul y as head basketball men· tor al Compton J1igh. finisher from this area was '-1ission Viejo's Tori Reilharl, \\ho finished fourth in the 100 backstroke ltimes "'ere given rro1n first to U1ird places en· Jy). l\1ary Beckvdth of Corona de! '-lat \\'as the only eth er area varsity point-scorer as she ended up sixth in the back.~troke. Huntington Reach 's Ramona Renne brought to p honors back co the area with a 34. I victory in the frosh-soph breaststroke aner h a vi n g earlier placed fifth in the 100 indi\lidual medley. ~fary Beck"'ith'!i! younger sister Toni {also from Corona) copped a fourth spot in the frosh·soph 50 free and sixlh in the breaststroke. Fiflh in lhe frosh·soph breaststroke \\'as Mission Vie· jo 's Kin1 Philpott \\•hile Carla Atterberry of Huntington was fi fth in the 50 fl y. Huntington took fourlh in the frosh·soph 200 medley rel ay. Capturing the va rsi!y team title \VSS Sunny Hills with 54 points. Santa Barbara \\'SS \lic- torious in the lrosh-soph team scoring race \\'ilh 42 markers. <.:I F Baseball '' (ll1meien1hlD No•!~~!ew 8, •ntrlel ... VI II .... ' (10 1,,n1ng\) A Clllmplelft\ftl• No!rt o ...... !'l.IVt'l•d•) '· ....... Nooltf ~ MAY SERVICE SPECIALS 11 .. wohitiono•v n<'• •lPIJ'•Oti1u1ol mt>thodt mo-t111 Oronq(' Co11nty '1 No 1 Lincoln '-l r •tury drolor now offc11 loctorv outhorlted UH• v1c~ 01 fHic,.1 comporoblo: to tho1e ehorq<,>d by ll'••icr •tolion1 011d ofhrr 11on·•pr<i011i•rd 1rpolt ccntt"" W•witt" by appoint. mi:n• "'Wt"', you l11•fht'• ""'" ond lftOft•·• Reg. $2.10 .SMOG SYSTEM SPEC IAL T11I, cl1t11 ind 1•tvic1 crtnk· c 111 ,,..,;u;on 1y1I•"'• $120 YOU SAVE Sl.60 R09. $14.50 COOLING SYSTEM SERVICE SPECIAL F-l~1i. J ttpl1ct ceel1nl, pr••· 11ir1 ltd, i~1peet t ll i.e111 I btlh. 510~0 YOU SAV! $4.50 SANTA ANA LI NCO LN MERCURY 1301 NO. TUSTIN AVE., SANTA ANA 547·010 "WI APPUCIATI YOUR IUSINESS" ., , F"rid.AY, M.11 28, 1971 DAILY PflOT 17 4 Spil{ers Seel{ State Meet Berths By PHIL ROSS Of llt9 O.Uy P'lllt Slllt NOR\VALK -Four in· dlviduals from the Orange Coast area will be trying t.o e•rn themselves berU:1 for next Friday and Saturday's state mee t at UCLA \\'hen the Clfo' Southern Section track and field finals take place tonight at Cerritos College. First field events (varsity and Bee. pole vaults) begin at 5: 30 with the varsity 120 high hurdles slated to be the initial running event at 7: 45. The lop li\•e finishers in each \larsity event will qualify fer the state preliminaries and a po.ssible p/actment in the * * * * * * ClF Dope Sheet 100-1. Jacobs (Channel lslands) 2. Peppars lComplOn) 3. Jackson <Centennial) 4. Ruffin \Elsenho\\'er) 5. Beyers (Loara ). Predicted time : 9. 7. 220-1. Jacobs (Channel Isla nds ). 2. Pl'ppars jCompton) 3. Beyers {Loara) 4. Krzyzosiak \Garden Gro ve ) 5. Jackson (Centennial ). Predicted lime: 21.5. 440--1. Harrell (Santa Ana) 2. J ohnson <Blair ) 3. Krzy zos· ialt (Garden Grove) 4. Eva ns (Cajon) Grasha (Savanna ). Predicted lime: 47.4. 800-1. Keeling fl\1orningsidel !. Rose (Corona del ~1ar) 3. Venney (Centennial) 4. Hein zen (Glendora) 5. Kovacich (Buena Park). Predicted time: 1:52.2. ?-.1ile-1. La"'SOO (Redlands\ 2. ?o.larshall (Redondo) 3. CUm· mings (Righetti) 4. Schilling \Garden Grove) 5. Barry (Palos Verdes). Predicted time: 4:12.8. Two mile-I. Genet tSanla Ana) 2. Schweitzer <Burbank) 3. Innes (Upland ) 4. Krause (Lynwood ) 5. Davis (Pasadena). Predicted time : 9:03.9. 120 Hlf-1. Jackson (Lompoc) 2. ~lcQueen (Anaheim) 3. Gordinier (Glendora) 4. Cheadle (Dos Pueblos) s. Whigham (Palmdale ). Predicted time: 14.0. 180 LH-1. Jackson (Lompoc) 2. McQueen (Anaheim) 3. Cheadle <Dos Pueblosl 4. Freeman {Garey) 5. Gordinier (Glendora ). Predicted tinte: 18.9. 440 relay-1. Dominguez 2. Long Beach Poly 3. Blair 4. Centennial 5. Garvey. Predicted time: 41.9. Mile relay-I. Dominguez 2. Complon 3. Sar.ta Ana 4. Long Beach Poly 5. ~1omingside. Predicted lime 3: 19.6. HJ-1. Stones (Glendale ! 2. Heitchew !Alhambra l 3. Fulk· erson ISanla Fe) 4. Miles (LB Poly) 5. Kollnek (LB ?o.111likan). Predicted height : 6-10. W-L Brown (LB Poly) 2. Krzyzosiak !Garden Gro\le) 3. Jackscn !Lompoc) 4. Baxter (Lcara) 5. "1atters (Crescenta Valley). Predicted distance: 24-8. PV-1. \'ates (Inglewood ) 2. ~'looers (Valencia) 3. \\'hite (Dominguez)" 4. Curran (Crespi) 5. Lierly (Dos Pueblos). Pre- dicled height: 1s.1 11. SP-I. Stevens lr\e\\·portl 2. Albritton (Ne\\'POrt) 3. Cross Crespi) 4. ?o.!cCall \Ce ntennial) 5. Giroux (Mira Costa) Pre- dicted distance : 64-9\~. Predicted team scores: Compton, Dominguez and Santa Ana 15 each. Long Beach Poly 14. Centennial, Channel Islands and Lo1npoc 12 each. Newporl Harbor and Garden Grove 10 each. Anaheim 3, Blair and J\lomingside 7 each. Dos Pueblos, Glendal e. Glendora, Inglewood, Loara and Redlands 6 each, Crespi 5.Corona de! ~1ar, Alhambra. Burbank. Redondo and Valmcia 4 each, Garey, Righetti. Santa Fe and Upland 3 each, Cajon. Eisenho\\·er and Lynwood 2 each, Buena Park. Crescent.a Valley, LB Millikan, fo.1ira C.Osta. Palmdale. Palos Verdes, Pasadena and Savanna 1 each. Defense Again Big Key For Vil{e Football Team state meet, the climar er 1111y season for the sp\ktrs who aet that far. Unless something drastic happens, Newport Harbor is almost assured of 10 poinb in lhe vanity race with sbot- putters :r.11rk Stevens (6$-11) and Terr)' Albritton (62·8) likely choices to finish 1·2 in the event. Corona del t.1ar halfmiler Nick Rose (1:5t6fis expected to lower his lifetime besl by pushing Mornlngslde's Percell Keeling (1:!2.8), third ia the Clipper Poloists Fall, 8-5 W e st Germany'• national water polo team zipped away from a 3-3 halfHme lie to defeat the Costa Mesa Coast Clippers, U, Thursday nlght in the Or1n.ie Coast College pool. "They just had too much ex- perience for WI,'' said Clippers coadl Jack Fullerton. "But I thought we did very \\'ell with only three days of prepara· tion." The victory was the \Yest Ger1nans' third straight in lhree night s. hav ing defe ated Downey (15-41) and Long Beach tS.5) before the Clip- pers match. The \'is.itors wtre led by 19·year-cld Hans Her m an Gudd. a 6-4, 2-4Q-.pound tower or strength. Cudd scored three goals, in· eluding the first two of the se· cond half to give his club the lead for good. The \Vest Ge-rmans jumped tc a 2-0 lead in the first quarter en goals by Gudd ;:ind Herman llaverkamp. But lhe Clippers battled back. scoring en a penalty shot by Mark Faulkner with 15 seconds left in the first quarter. The C lippers' Tom \Varneck~ then added a pa ir of goals in the .second period, sandwiched around one by J-la\•erkamp to set up Cudd's heroics early in the th ird five minutes. Phillips 66 G\V tGolden state and lourth in the section last year as a Junior. High. hurdler Garth Wise or lluntlngton Beach is the area·• enly other varsity entrant. The be.spectacled Eaale sopb alsc anchors a 44.S 440 rtlay quartet in addition to having turned in one of the best Cee tong jump marks with a 21· 11"'4 Jeep in last week's semifinals at Ctrrltos. Jo's Ed Radermacbe.r and Edison's Ron Collln1 s are hop- ing to bl'l.ng home so me hardwar~. On the lightweight levels, Estancla's Eagles appear to be lhe favorl~s for the Cee team champk>nship w h i I e Alarlna is looking to run up big points in lhe Bees. Estancia is counting heavily on jet.quick scphomore Brue,e Gir•sole, whose 9.9 (100) and 17.4 (180) best.s make him the cla1s ef the .sprint field. Marina boasts potentially· big Bee p>ints in hurdler Gene Taylor (1 4.9, 12.7). sprinter John Afallby {10.0) and il.s 880 relay combo which has fl ashed to a 1:31.5 best. Radermacher tou red tbe 1320 in 3:08.l , the fastest semis time, while Collings is dangerous Jn the long jump with a 22~ topper . Santa Ana will be hard· pressed to defend Hs varsll)' team crown as Compton, Dominguez, Long Beach Poly1 Centennial, Chan~! Islands, Garden Grove and Uimpoc all Post let:llimate cballen1es. Although they're the lone finalists frGm their sc hools in lbe Bee division, Mission Vie· Saddleback Baseball Coach Tries to Upgrade Program When a junior co!Jege ba!eball team can only win four cf 29 games it's lime to re· valuate the program. That's the situation at Saddleback College -but with cne twist. The ltl!lll evaluating is one Doug Fritz -the Gaucho bateball cca.ch. '"J'\·e got to do something:• said Fritz a couple of weeks aao, "this losing bit is no fun." ... Frilz has already corraled some top talent ---~--~ CRAIG SHEE'F in the Saddlebac k area for next year's club -but more importantly he's set up 1 sum- mer baseball league that should upgrade the program over tht years. The league presenlly in\lolves live of the high l!iChools in the district, plus a team made up of incoming Saddleback ireshmen. And it all gels under way this Sunday wiih games at IO, 12:30 and 3. First round tilt! in the IG-weelt schedule match University again st Laguna Beach, San Clemente vs. ?o.1is- sion Viejo and Saddleback against Foolhlll. All of the games "'ill be played at Saddle- back. This Sunday's tilts have been shifted lO f"oolhill due to wet grcunds at Sadd!eback. ··Although we're going to play a Jot or baseball each Sunday, \\•e'rt going to em· phasize instruction," says Fritz. The Gaucho coach has also installed some si)ttd·up rules so the speclator will not be yawning his way through each contest · A lree substitution rule will be used, along with a rule limiting teams to 60 .seconds be- tween innings. Plnchrunners will be used for pitchers and a two.hour time limit Y.'111 be Imposed. "We hope to gel a hustling almoaphere with these rules." says Fritz. Sch~uled to play for Frll.lr:'s club this sum- mer are Cra ig Ander.son. Scott Johannes, Gary ?o.icKnight. Tim \Vright, !o.tike Kleman and Ruben Paramo from San Clemente, Greg Kessler from Laguna Beach, Mission Viejo's Steve Ashcraft, Foothill's Rocky Schacht and Steve Carpenter and Tustin '1 St.an Lak. Je.rr Denny, Rich Hormuth and Bill Holdridge. * * * Orange Cuast Cnlles:e bas named lt1 el.1t:hl· team basketball tournament after It• first CoaC!b. J\llle1 Eaton. Eaton coached the Plrale11 from 1143-55. He Is currently a ptofe1sor of ttonomlcs at OCC and chairman of lbe Social Science Di· vision. He Is cne of the original fac:u.lly mem· btr1 1llll on lbe 0CC 1la[J. * * * Bob \Vare or Cuyahoga Community College (Cleveland, Ohio) became the fifth man to share the national JC 100.yard dash record nf 9.3 \\'hen he won the open century durin& the Quantico Relays in Virgina l>.lay 1. \\'ind \\'8.!L reportedly under the allo"'·able limit so \Vare should get official credit for the mark. joining Travis Williams, Fred Kul· ler, Mel Gray and \Varrcn Edmonson. Laguna, MV, Tars Honor Baseball ' \\'est) and CINA C water polo Baseball players fr o m hustle award : Tom Murphine. learns adva~ into the. Pan· Lagu na Beach. l\lission Viejo Junior Varsity -AtVP: American trials with top and Newport Harber received Danny Collen; mo 11 t im- performances in a pre-tcumey their plaudits Wednesday proved : Eric Heard ; co.cap. at Cypress College Thursday. night at awards banquets for ta.ins : Steve Rodrigue; and Baseball Varsity MVP : Bob Bolh area clubs we r e the Lhree schools while La1una Tom Crawford. scheduled to play this morning also honored it.s tennis and Tennis in the PanAm meet. golf participants. Var 11 j t y -MVP : Brad Phillips ootlasted CINA C. Copping m()(ll v a I u ab 1 e Steer; most improved : Tim Tilton: most improved: Steve Ashcraft. Junior varsity -J\fust Im- proved : Pat Wilkinson; A-1VP: Brad Harris. Frollh-soph -Mos l improved : J l m Reynolds; 1'-1VP: Richard Rommel. T\\'O or three names made the big headlines last season as the l\1arina Vikings posted their first-ever winning record under new coa c h Leon \\'heeler. 10.9, on Don Lippoldt's goal varsity awards at Laguna Taylor; ~aptalns : Dawson The linebacldng C'()tpS is not with 1:30 remaining to gain were Greg Kessler (baseball). Davis and Clayton Berrylii!I. \\'t!lkened by Kerns' C1:lm· the PanAm trials. CINA ad· Brad Steer j tennis) and f\.1ark Junior varsity-MVP: Mark Newport Harbor Bateball Jfowever, perhaps the big· gest reason why the Vikings \\'ere finall y a valid threat to the Sunset League powers· that·be in 1970 was Marina's sterli ng defense. \Vith the possible exception of a 48·8 Joss to Anaheim and a 35-22 setback at the hands of \\'est.minster \both under ex· t en u a ting circumstances 1. defense carried the load for the Vikings. Against Anaheim , ..-.·hich was rol ling toward the loop's ea. championship and a CIF AAAA playoff berth, Marina ente red the N ntesl with a rash of absentees and flu- weakened perfcnners. 'Then in the season fina le , the Vikings ra n into a re· juvenated Westm inster jug· gernaut which rolled to it s fourth eonseculive victory by a big score after ha ving drop- ped its first five: of the cam- pa ign. Othi>r'l''ise, lt'tt> defense "'as there for Marina with a prur of shutouts fP.atured among the unit'~ better ac· complisnmenl". Wheeler isn 'l shy . when he admits . "I'm really a defense orient ed roRr·h. "Dt>fense •'· \\'hot , ... i;;!' games fr:ir ,\'t'.iU " \\1heeler tf ;,11ts three ::;. (!ividuals whl'I figure lo fr·rm the defet,,:•·t !IUClcus f,.r .tne sq uad lhi.s fall . Linebacker Bryan Kerns, an 3J1.Jeague middle guard last fall. has added 10 pound! 10 his frame 11od now chec k11 in at a so1ld 175. I' plement ;,l the other backing vanced on number er goals Hoeg (golf ). Jay: mocst improved : John ~pot -Bob Merritt. scored. Bob Tilto n \v:is chosen most 'Tensreldt ; captain: o avid Varsity -MVP : Steve Hed rick; most improved : Lar. ry Halderman; captain : Alvin \\'hite ; outstanding hustler: ~territt was the l•am's th ird El Segundo and Phillips LR valuable baseball playe r in lhe Peden. best rusher al a }::i.!£back scot also reached the trials. J\1 isslon Viejo banquet with GoU last season and has been tno'1• Lippoldt and Larry Bender Steve Hedrick gelling similar Varsity _ J\fVP: M a r k ed to fullback offensively fo.. each had thrtt goals in the accoh1rles at lhe Newport ban· "°"g: rnost improve<!· Steve ·1 1 but he is a diamond-in-the-victnfy over CINA while Har-quet al Irvine Coast Country \VOO<I; captain : p. oh in Phil Metzger ; most con· sis!ent: ~.1lke Easterling. rough at iincbaf'~l'r. ry No.ah, Howie Johnson . Paul Club. At'ldrt!w~. Muvu!?, in a•. KerM' middle Rcssi and lAu1ne Put nam ta.iuna A'vard Win ners Junior VaN1ity -\tVP: guard v~ancy it 17G-ponnd scored once. Raseball Erle S<·h warli: mo~t irn· Junior Varsity -MVP: Nell Burt: mcst imoroved: Curt Hcrberls ; captain : Gr e I Foster. Da\•e Ri!l·ng, son of a c<ire~r Eric Carson It'd CINA with Varsity MVP : Greg proved: Francois DuBau; co. Na vy officer wiin aspiratior.s four goals while Jimmy Smitn KusM:r; most improved : Bob captains: Kelly Akins and Frosh·soph -MVP: Larrv Duke!: mcst improved: Tiril Brown: ro.captains: ?o.1organ Abbott <i nd f'a t Robertson. of goin~ on ti" the Nav~I and goalie Ed \Vhite were also Fet; co-captains : Greg Francois DuBau. Acadcinr after graduating laudtd for their play. Kessler and RDn J\1cElhany: ~tlsslon \'fPjo Award Winners frcm Marina. 1------:=-----=:-----:::-::--=------... -------~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; · -Wheele1· due:;n't have "the B b ll s d three q"'1;,,. ki d• lik• w• ,,d U' "e a tan i"ngs last year (ends Bob Wi tt and ,t:J Jeff L<:sner and Quarterhack· safetyinan SI ve Mooahan} but we have p1:inty of depth. "So, our rlefcnfie will be mu ch stroflger tl'tan our of· rense.'' Also ligurl!mg hea vily in \\'heel er'~ 11cfensivc b!uepri~t s are tackles Rod Hr.rris. John P..1eunier and 01'\'t>r Grant 11nd ends Nick Voror.r. .and D;;11 Wells. Granl and \Veils are the two biggest yc<;ple on the rosier vdth both weighing in at 10 while prospect.Jve j u n i o r !I Wells and Vorono will be :he only underclassmen in !he starling defenJ1;ive alignmenl. \Vheeler is a finn believer in never dressing oul any mcre- players than he think~ he'll need to U5e in a game. In keeping \\'fth th is. ht never suited up more than 38 people ~ conh:St Jett 1easo11 an<I doesn't figure to dress out more than 40 per tilt In the forthcoming campaign. As the 50-1'ear.ald mentor pulA It, "we need them for our specially teams in those type ot situations." NA110NAf, LEAGUE £111 DIYIJk>n w L Pel. GB Sl. UIUJ!I 28 17 .622 New York 26 " .610 Pittsburgh 26 18 .591 J llr: A1onlreal ta " .486 • Chicago 2\1 24 .... 711 Philadelphia J6 26 .311 JOI\ West OIYltlort Sa n Francisco " 14 .696 Houston 23 22 .511 8'• Atlanta 22 24 ,478 JO Dodgers 22 24 .478 tO Cincinnati 18 'f1 .400 13\lr: San Diego 13 " .289 2a ~~ 'T1'111'HI Y'a lltM111 Plllil>l>rtl\ J. (lnclflfllll 2 .a.111r.11 ~. Monlrt•I I St. LOUlt 10, (!\k llO 0 Oe111tn J, kit ,,,,.,,1.c1 1 Onlr timn tc~edijlff. 'T ... , ....... ,, (hit-!"'""' .J.ll 11 P'lt11butt~ !Wi lk•• l.J), .. 1,111 HevUe11 IWll•n •·tl 11 Clnc!"""I (G11l!t lt l ·tl. flll M A.111nt1 llttH J.fj tt $1 LWll !C!t vt llfld ~.,,, ~''"' N-Yri , ••• Vf-, J.t) •I ,.,, ore.e 41..1111 !.t). nloht P'nn111e1~l1 t"'°" a.•1 el Delttn IOcHln1"" J·21. nlt ht MO<llrMI lltl ..... O .. l l 11 SI" Frtl'(IO(.o <S19M J•1J, nlthl AMERICAN LEAGUE Ea11 Division w I, Pct. GB &slnn 28 t5 .651 Baltimore " 11 .585 ' Detroit 24 2\1 .545 '4 11 Cleveland 18 24 .429 91-1 New York 18 24 .42!1 9\; \V1shington 17 28 .318 12 M'e~l Division Oakland l l 16 .680 ?o.finn escta " 22 .511 7 Angels 22 24 .478 8'1 Kansas City 20 22 .476 811 ?o.1il\\'aukee 17 23 .425 10 \; Chicago " 2.1 .410 II 'T!\11.Wlt'• lh111Jh Ro11on '· W11Mt1tlefl t Mlh"'•"~ .. J. Mlf!,,..M!I J Cl•vt !I"" 10. f11111mort J Ot tr&ll ~. Nt• Yo•~ J Only t1m11 O(.~f<l~lHI. 1 .... ,., Gt"'l l 01~l•nd ft lw It.II •• flo•ton 131t be•I •·OI. nl1M ICI,,\•~ (111 (Wrl1hl 0.71 t i W•lhlfto!Ofl 4Mt lllft .. 11 , nl1M Afl.11!1 lM• .. Prtmflh .. Sl ti Ntw Y&f-(IC!lnf ~11, lllt M (ftV•llnd IMcDeweH J•JI •I (h<ClfO lJ~~fll&ll 4-)), n!1M 0.1roll ((11ft 1.0) •I Mllwtuilt r !"••IGf\• J.41. ~l1M ••t!!rnort 4MtN•llY .. ,, "' Ml,,nuo1• 4f'tftY l·Jl, nl1M tlTH ANNIVERSARY SALE ll BIGGEST & BIST YETI DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA Service ind P1rt1 for All lmPorted Cari Modern lkdy Shop for All C•n 646-9303 Oranie County's Larg .. t and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer OYIUIAS DnJYllT snCIA\.ISTS DEAN LEWIS ITIOJYIQ!TIAJ ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS COROLLA 1971 $1777 VOLVO 1971 DEMO $2999 141 t•de11, r1d:e, he1t11, t 11fe111t fit h •nt. USID CAI ll'ICl~l $1495 1969 TOlOTA COIOHA .. ., .. , ... ltetle, "'"'""'· 4 ~ '" t...O. IXt.t. l~l. )8 DAILY PILOT rridiy, May 28, l 1f71 Dana Marina Opening Next Week DAILY PILOT Pi..t. I" AllMll lK-1Nr Yachters Take Up Residence Official opening of the Dana Point l\tarina has been M!t for June 3,. according to Robert Dahlberg, president of t.1arine Capital. lnc., partners in the de\•elopment of the marina portion of Dana Harbor. /.leanwhile, seVeral boats have already taken up residence at the new harbor, cruising yachts are making ~·ukend trips to the area and hundreds of persons have been viewing the d~ve\opment from land.side. AERIAL VIEW OF DANA POINT HARBOR SHOWS SLIPS BEING READIED FOR BOATS The first boat lo arrive for permanent bertring al the harbor was the 37-fool Amethy!:it , owned by Paul lfemmers. Hemmers. his wife Anna, six year old son John and tv,ro cats arr ived al the harbor two weeks ago, an- choring there while awaiting completion of dock side water, electrical and telephone con- nections. They plan to make Me1noriaJ Day Regatt:i Announced Balboa Yacht CI u b' s ~·Jemorial Day Regalia will be held Saturday and Sunday. t\o races arc scheduled on Mon- day. Races \Viii be sailed on both inside and o u ls id c courses. Outside classes will sail two races Saturday ~tarting al noon off the Balboa Pier. and one on Sunda~· p.m. C!assf's starling at I carded I or nutsidc start." are ln1 erna- lional·!4. Ocran Racing. P- Cat. Rhodc~-33. PC. Sohng. ·Luders-16. Thistle. PI! R F , f\IORF. Mercury and Snipr. Inside races \\'ill start oH the BYC con11n1ttce to11e1 wilh three races Sn1urda~·. the first starling at noon. and lwo on Sunday starting <'It I p.n1. lnside classes inc\uc!e Snipe. Finn. ?.1etcalf. Lido-I~ A and B. Kite A antl 8. Flying Jr .. and Sabol A. B and C. Other cla~ses ma~· be established with fh e or mor<' &tarters. Whitfords Win Regatta Bob and Eil1 \Vhitford or Sea ~: ... plorer Ship 71 1 \1·ere !he \1•1nners in !he Regioo 12 tSoulhern Area 1 sailing regat- ta held l<lsl weekend from the Sea S('()ut Base in Newport Beach. Crrv:s \1·rre on hand fro1n as far sou\h as San Diego and north 10 San Fernando. Second place \l'ent to 1hr San Fernando ship and third 1\a.S the te:im of Scott Stevens ancl Tim \\1est of Ship <\l~. Hunt ington llarbour. The winners ...,·ill race in the regional regaHa next month . If thev win there they "·ill represent Orange Couiity ln the llnals in Chicago. their home aboard the boat. Claiming lo be the first lo s~il into a slip "'as Bob Saxby of Dana Point who brought his Columbia-22 from Oce.anside. Sliuniaker Survives H igli Speed Tu1nble Over 300 slips have been constructed at tbe west end of Shumaker said. ''He had an the east basin and will be oc-~ilAt\11 \AP) -Sleeping peacefullly in the l\1ercy Hospital bed with his wife quietly watching over him , Billy Sh umaker didn't look like a man "·ho had just been toss- ed out of a bo<ll travelh ng at 150 miles an hour. "The doctors say he doesn't appear to be seriously hurt.'' Cindy Shuinaker sa id. "They think he just strained some nerves in his shoulders and neck and back. lie should be out of the hospi!al in a coup\!' of days. and v.•c'll go visit some friends 11; Ta1npa for a resl.'' t.1iss Burl"·eiscr. driven b1· national champion D t• a n Chenoweth of Seattle. took th" glory and the $10.000 lir~l prizt Sund;i~' b.v "'tnnine: thl' Chan1pion Spark plug Unlimited Jlydrcplane Hegat- ta. But the 28-~·ear -old Shumaker, <lnother Seattle resident, Rave the crowd ils biggest thrill "'hen h i .s rhunder.boat. Prick• ol .ray 'N Pak. spun 360 degrees in front of !h? granclst<lnd and sent Shumaker sailing high aero<~ lhe lagoon llke a clo"'n JUn1prr in a wa.ter ski show. "That was his first real ae- cidenl in an unli1nitcd,'' 1\lr:.. cupied by June 1, Dahlberg accident on one of the smaller said. Slips for vessels up to 60 boats aboul 15 years ago. but I feel in length are being con- don'l think he's been hurt strucled at the other side of slnce ." the marina. Chenoweth averaged !:17.543 The marina is composed flf Dana Cove 1'1arina on the land m.p.h for the final six-lap side of the harbor, and Dana heat around the 2.5-mile oval Island l'\farina, a man-made lagoon•and-bay course. island "'ithin the harbor. When Jiin ~·I c CI j n to c k of the slips are completed -by ~1arch , 1972 -there will be Owensboro, Ky., finshed se-facili ties for 1.426 boats in the cond in the championship heat east basin. ·while 1'1iss Timex, driven by \Vhlle the slips are being oc- rookie Too Shee.hy of ~liami, c.'Upied, developers of adjoining \\'as third. properties are making plans for construction of the 1.1arina llallmark l\01nes drh•en by Inn, a ne\v concept in marina Leif BnrJersen of Seattle won a<.."COmodations: a convenient both or her preliminary heats shopping are;j .11nd I \v o and Jcoked like sh~ \V<\S going r e st a u r a n ts . Complete landscaping or the area is lo provide son1e tough com-scheduled lo proceed shortly. petition for ~liss Budwei~r in Official dedication of Dana the final round. Point Harbor has been set for But 8 or J er s en and Saturday, July 31 at 2 p.m. It i\·icCormick were dueling for "'ill be sponsored b.v the Dana second place on the fifth lap Point Chamber of Commerce. "·hen Hallmark Homes' engine a.ccording to Art Humburg. died. leaving Borjersen drif-chamber president. ting for longly· while ~1iss1 ~;::::=:::-=-===-=-~ -=-~-=-=-=-=~-::...., ~l atlison pulled av.·ay and ?lliss ~EW YEAR 'ROUND Timex zipped by £or third. In earlier heats, !\Ii !I s SWIM Bud.,.:eiser whipped 1\1 is s '~--o1 PROGRAM Tin1ex arter Shumaker's spin then came back lo defeat 1\1iss '': !"':!: ·rimex a~ain v.•ith Notre Dllme ~ • •• 17 placing third. "Newport l11ch lqu1tics" Boati11g A~~ide11ts D1·op Y uchLs un I ncreuse But Mishapll Cut Hallmark llom~s v.·on her ts_ .. ,..,.,,, first heat with Notre. Dame. se-,,,. .. ,..,, ••-• ••...--lf¥'.J . 0 •. 1, ,,.,.1., s. .. 1 ••• t·cnd. :\liss ~ladison third and • s."' Mffl• •·•~Ar•• c. ......... All's "an L•"nes I fourt h. ..~ '•••1·;~~·· '" ...... u -·· ~ • 5,,.,.' Lo,.. C.o<>• i,.:.:a1 In the next preliminar y. it • l••n r<OW-15/"'-••·~ '" "'as Hallmark Homes, ~liss '• '•"=11~:!:'~:;11' .. '•" .\ladison and Atlas Van Lines , .. , w ..... tf .... " •• ,.., _... According to tigures ju.~t released b\ thr United Stales coast Gua'rd. lhe nu1nber of boating accidents in the U.S. continues to fall . The stalislies show 3.803 ac- cidents in 1970 cornp:lred lo 4Jl67 in 1969 <'Ind 4.350 in l!lf>li The diflerenl stales racked up varying records. Ne\\' York cut i1 s accident rate from ~43 In 1969 to 293 last ye<lr-th1s \1'hile lhe number · of boat registrations in the slate rose In the lew states where <'IC- c1dents increased it usuall~ reflected a sizeable increase in 1he number of boat registn1- lions. Over hair the 11 e s s r l s reported to have been in ac- t·idents were involved in col- lisions -usuallv caused b~· a failure to mainl.Ain a forward lookout. These collis1011s at'- Aquil Cats Slate Race Initial 1971 regalta for the Aqua Cat Class v.·itl be held Salurday, Sunday and ~ionda)' al Santa Clara Point. ~1ission Bay. according to Reg Jones, ne"·ly elected nert captain The summer seri,s, to be sailed during lhe months or June. July and Aug'ust \viii ·~tart June. ~ at Ne.wporl Beach. Racts v.·ill be held every nthtr wfekend . alternsting betv.een Kewport Beach and Ahtm itos Bay. counted for 1na11y or thf' 780 1nJurie~-which were "'1 s o dn"·n from the 1969 figure of J.OOt ~I . I th I f c.111. •1-• "~' 1 a1n reason or e os~ •i i -''-~---------_:_i===========' life. according to the Co~~I Guard. is the vessel'i; cap.;iz- ing-and this is n1osl oll·!n caused by some fau!l in 1he oi>eration or the v es s e ! . ltnproper loading and ignoring \veather \\'a r n i n g s :i re lort'tnost an1ong ei.:amples or bad manage1nenl. The greatest a1nount of pro- perly dDma ge 1\'<'IS accounted lnr bv the Coast Guard lo fire:> and explosions caused by in1- proper installation or m11in- lcnance of engine a n d equipment. disobediencr of thel.-----------•I s;1fe fueling pr<lctices and lack 1 of oper<lting experience. + In a re1·ie\1' of the number of! GOLF TIPS Wllll L.-w·H•ncHctJt "••<llct Al Tiii accident s \1·hich caused NEWPORTER INN fat<llit1e s, the reporl found: I PAR 3 GOLF COURSE .. After making allowances for the variations in the various1~:':':-':':•:'~'':':':":':'~·~"::':':""~il state bont registration pro-i.- ccdures, 1t appears that the recreational boating fatality rate has no1 inc reased over the last lil'e years-In lacl, has decreased " T<lbulated figures. howe vrr,1 show a rise in fatal accidenri1 1 trom 1.058 n 1969 10 1,132 la st ~'CRr .and in <'IC\Ual deaths f~Onl 1.350 to 1.418. TAKE TlIE NEWS QUIZ We Dare You ... Every Saturday fOI THI GllA TIST GOLF IAIGAIN IVll OFFlllD 1n September !ht Aqua CaU will bt C{)mpeting in the California S t a I e Cham· ptonshlps 111 Huntington L8ke near f'resno. Final race ol the season ~·ill be held In Enstnada ~I. 9-10 0>1!flllu11td llr Ti't• Alh•d Hr rt co ... rirnr • 10 "'o.' · 100'-' G'"" r<tuT••l l pHiH -~~~FISHING -,; SEASON ·IS HERE!~ Pric11 Good Thru Mon., Moy 31 M3lched spin or spin ca~l sets ~1th 2 pc. rod. 1eel, line, ~nok~ and lures. Ju~t the thing for b~­ glfiners. OUR REG. PRICE 7.97 Per!ect setup for b;;f.s arid troul.1297 Rod, re~I. line and lure; reiil qudl- it~ package at a sens~t1onal Ir···' 1 pri<e. SPECIALLY PRICEO ., • SAVE35% RODDY FISHING RODS #106l 6W Spi• iod, Oorle1. l.ll ... 3.97 #B06l iYi Spi1 Roi. Our R11.1.9l ••• 4.97 NIOlD 1' Spin Roi, Oor Re1. J.!l ••••• 4.97 #IOBO B' Fly Rod. Ob< R11. l.ll., .... C,97 1 #3065 61/z' Spi• Rod, Our Rec. 1D.9J •• 7.97 i'll!Dl'Steelludld,O" Re1.11.!ll 2.97 #3010 J' Spio Roi, Our Re1. lO.!l .... 7.97 '1133!0 I' Spin Roi, Our Re1. ll.9l .•• , 8.97 ;01l06l 6W Spio Rod.Our Ret.15.97., 9.97 #5010 l' Spi1 Rod, Our Re1. ll.91, ••• 9.97 #5510 I' Spin Rod, Oar Re c. 11.91 ••. 13.9 7 #lll5 l l'i Steellud Rod , Ref.16.9712.97 ,i~_;t .. , • ,. . . ' ! ..... ~ MollOli\itlf,eO\ I•~!: ' lo 40 lh. !fol sac TACKLE BOX BERKLEY SPINNING ROD i .. 1 '·~"' 66" Cf r !(~-. IJ•aJI~ lil;f,t I : ~ 'C•:•~ ''di' .~! ''~I .,-.·, !JUI I(~. DtSCGUNT rl!C[ 11 .91 897 Garcia-Mitchell '320' RER I!'~ l•u'-C...ilir f1!,. !.h/ ;;.j .. «-~ C ':, ·~ 1 i... • <01 • .·:t:·. r.•.;1, .. ~. r. f o;rrl CPI~ o Qo 'ir'!·"~ DI.II REG. &ISCllUNI P~ICE lD 91 897 DAIWA FRESH WATER REEL 11.-1,;~ ;r''•n1 ~.,;h ;1~ • r~I• t .. • t,\ ~ . • : rt4illli t;..!: .1.on : .0 1a ~.c;a.· 1~·-138 IU• IIC. tlStOUIH "!ICE I.SJ DAIWA '7250 RL' REEL Ultra-li ght tre:..h 1'.ill~r so1~oing rc~I. "J97 DUR REG. PRICE 11.41 , - 1 ~~ >iJm1~~,. 1'1111'.t, r ,;:,-tr.;;. 011• tI;. Ut 3ac OMr.~ ~I ~Ute·l·•c l1cl- 111altrb1~ I 4Lis1 • ~SNRLED FISHHOOKS ~I ~"S. 144 :S1 COSTA MESA 3038 lrlstol Ave. • .1.,11 off Newport Ave. IETWllN SAN DllGO FIHWAY AND IAKER STREIT \ \ I What· Fund .Is Best? Mutuals Survey Shoivs It's Risky to Try to Fi~ure LOS ANGELES (8W) Picking lhe top perfonnanct funcl.5 in tht mutual fund growth ptrlormance ,racts i~ no\ on ly difficult for the a vcrage inycstor but probably not even 11 good Idea l.Q at- tempt, says a survey by fundsrope Magazine. The Fundseope su rvey says lhal ptrhaps the wisC!sl over· all course for those investor11 ~·ho have some Interest in cur- Colony Kitchens Expanding Colony Kitchen s, I n c • i\'ewport Beach based chain oE company-owned and operated restaurants in California and Arizona, reported sales or SS.!'!85,560 for the nine months ended March 31. 1971, com- pared with $4 ,623,000 for lhe same period in 1970, a 21 per· cent increase. Net earnings after stale and federal taxes were $1 53,635 against $117.776, a gain of 30 percent. Earnings per share v.·ere 25 cents on 624 .684 com· mon shares outstanding com- pared with 19 cents on 624 ,682 !ihares last year, or 31 percent higher. Bruce E. DeMers. presidenl, said future gross sates y.•ill be substantially higher because they will reflect acquisition by Colony Kitchens of n i n e Phoenix-based Hobo J o e 'll restaurants in Arizona, and opening. of additional Colony Kitchens units in California. Hobo Joe"s sales last year were $3. 7 million. Colony Kitchens will also make its firsl vC!nlure into and beyond Lhe Rocky Mountains with the opening or· two new uniL'I named Mr. Up In Denver in June and Omaha in July. Mr. Up is a new concept featuring restaurant over a service station al R key freeway location. A Mr. Up Y.'ill also open at Diamond Bar, Calif. in July. A pilot unit has been in operation over a year at Tustin. CASH H AS NO SEX CORONADO I 8\Vl ''Money has no sex:," accnrd- ing to lamed psychologist Dr. Joyce Brolhers. Speaking lo the 30th annual convenlion of lhe California Bankers Assn ., Or. Brnlhc.rll ~aid money responsibility is a matter of training rather lhan innate ability. ··our cultural training has designated thal men not \\'omen arc n1ore suited lo banking and financial matters, but this social conditioning is not entirely ft1 clual, and women are just as capable in regard to monetary re.<;ponsibilities. '' Dr. Brothers Is the first woman to be Invited lo ad· dress the associal io11. rent yield, who are disturbed. by short-term J'!'IBrket dl~. and who'. are interested 'In achieving •g:~ without CX· cessive...-rl•k' .. is to generally avnid those funds making the larsest gain Jn a rising market, as I hey generally also suffer the largest losses in a declining market" Fundsco,te asks: Can lhe 1verage conservative investor reduce rl.sk and sllll reap satisfying rewards'! It sug. gests lhat in\·estors may lf they inve5l 1n a package or fund.!! whose past record~ in- dicate these Junds 11void up 'and down extremes and tend to prod u c e "middle-of-the- road'' results. The~e are the fu.nds which are neither top gainers'nor big losers. Fundscope studied month "bear markeL a 44- round Look at Head Phon y $10 Bills A round I! you have a $10 bill in your pocket. pull it out and gaze ioto-Alexander Hamilton's eyes. lie may be an imposter. On the genuine greenback, the head stands out sharp- ly frOm the background. Eyes appear lifelike. And the background is a fine screen or regular. unbroken lines. On a counterfeit bill, the portrait ma y merge with I.he background. The eyes and other facial features may be dull or smudgy, while the face may seem unn aturally white. The background may be dark, with some Irregular and broken lines. According to the U.S. Secret Service, $6,5 mllllon in counterfeit money has been confiscated in the greater Loll Angeles area since December. "The most common denominalions being foisted on Soulhlanders are $10 and $20 bllls," I.he service reports. "Summer is a prime time for counterfeiters lo dish out bogus money, with so much tourist spending going on." Senior Citizens Property Tax Aid Forms Now in Mails Claim forms for 1971 Senior Citizens PrClperty Tax Assistance have been mailed according to Martin Huff, ex· ecutive officer of the Fran- chise Tax Board, The fonns were mailed lo the 62,000 persons who filed claims and received a reim - bursement last year, as we!! as to individuals who have already requesled forms, Huff !fo111ehuil<lcrs Re"enue Rises Presley Developn1ent Com- pany, Newport Beach -based homebuilding firm. reported revenues of $12,702,822 and aHer-tax earnings of $53.'i,855 frn-the firsl qua rter ended April 30, 1971. Revenues and earnings for the similiflr J)triod a year ago were $4.176,!74 <'Ind '133.757, respectively. Eaming!'l per sharr for the quarter were 61 cent.11 !S6 cen~ fully diluled ), compared lo IS cents t 14 cents fully diluted for the first quarter of last year. said. Other persons w h 11 believe they may qualify should wr ite nr contact the nearest office of the F'ranchise Tax Board. Almost nine million dollars in assistance was paid to claimants last year, Huff said, and the payments averaged $137 each. The number of claims received lasl year ~·as lo.,..·er than expected which in- dicates that many qualified persons did not apply for 1he assistance due them. he said. To receive ass is t a n c e , claimant.! must be 65 years old flt older; must'"ov"n and oc- cupy their home; must have paid the property ta:s:es on the home~ and must have a tolal household inCTJme of Jess than $.1,350. Qualified individuals can receive both the Senior Citizens Property TaX'. As-sistance Md the Homeown·ers Prn~rty· Tax Exemption . Claims and reQues1s for claim ror'ms should be directed to Senior Citizens Proper l y Tax Assistance, PO. Box \.WI, Sac:ramenlo, California 95807. Claims for assistance mu.~l be filed before October IS, 1971 . Major Coast Boat Firm Tal{en Over by Radlon LOS ANGELES -IBW) Radlon Jnc. will strengthen its Jc.isure time group by ac- quisition or Harrison"s Boal Center, Santa Ana, retailer of power pleasure boats and related equipment. it was an- nounced by Roland J. ~1ayot­ te, Radlon pre sident. The agreement in principle calls for Radlon lo prchase the privately owned company Jor an undisclosed amount of cash. Harrison's boat center has exclusive Orange Co u n t y dealerships in Sea R a y , Caravel\e and Della In board and Outboard boats . The com· lease the new look of leadership {!;) "71 Chevrolet Vega Coupe County-held Sets Record Visit Nabers.' "Authorlted11 Cadillae Leis· lng Department forouttlanding excellence In fleet leasing or individual leaslng. A la rge ao1ectlon Is now availab le to choose from. We will purchase your present car lor lop prleo. S.Nk:e la ow lllC4\ import· ant product. BETTER TO I-EASE FROM MacHowa~b AUTO A TRUCK• LEASING 1evenly-on11 at ~~L~ 1600 HAAIO" ULVO. f CO$TA M!SA t71~) 640-1100 124 Harbor 81vd. at First, Santa Ana l•l•phone 531-0607 Frie'"'· May 28. 1471 LEGIL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE DAILY PILOT Jfil -LEGAL NOTICE '·IOI ,KT!TIOUS SUtlN•tt Nl.""I ITliTIMllllT ·• ,. 1v1 ..... 1r, "' .... 11 o.1 ... bu1,,,.11 \ 0•1"' ll'lloolo "71 lh•11 Z0 D.\IL \I PILOT s LEGAL NOTICE NOT+(• 0' l1tui1&•'1 1ru- '" 11-11 Friday May 28. l(f1l LEGAL NOTICE ,. h ll 'c1 TIOVi 1uuwe11 NAMI STATIMIENT o ow nl p1rM1n1 1 t llo nt OVER THE COUNTER 1 11 !tUNFt.0WEll CEN TCll • )l S F1 • PW llNll Cot t M~of • .,..._ltl \'ti Ml ...... lfl -ftllt!ot II IP'"'tlmal.., f AM ·-,;.uD Ct °'" t f'• <n .. ll9t ilW: ..... tel• I w mt«<w-. Mli•ll.llt-er ~"''" .. i. .. O..J11,.. I t7 I tOC A M (ooU'• l:!ot'llW (e .,, •111 •-n.cl ~ub• u • 1flls tt' llMe< '"" &II lll~fl G Ottocl ol ""'~' llt 9CI ¢(-IQN I t11) t.•Kll t4 b• ""-cit. 11'1;.o< ,._,rt •IWI V• • t A "°"'' • ""'~"" .... w ,, •I'll (fl: .. 11~ OcteM l• • t • n ""' .:at.,_ n ... t4o1J NW ~11 ol ()It< t ltKOf'lll n "'' oll Ct OI Ill• (OUM• lto<orO. OI Ol°tnM Cou11 y (• ~ n t W Lt. 'Et.t. AT PUil ( "V(T 0111 TO MICMEiT II DDl!!lt l'()lt C::A'H ~••V•O• • '"'' f ,91e n ....... M(lll•Y ol l>f Un ed I I•• • .,,. ,.,, .. n '"' •n<• of II• c ~ ,.,_lllofo tl\I Ill"' Co< no (I l .. Mf ... IY 6 Wt lllUTI )0 "°" II II o•olw•v Si n 1 ArLe Ct orn • , 9f\ ~ """' n • • (l!O'IYtV9CI O •"" n6w I>• 11 OV 11"111 \t <I 0.-111 ol l 1111 n Ill• DrOH v • 11• ed n -C ly OI ,,...,....,... lelOI n ''II (DUii • '"" S•e 11eK•-• H.l.ROt.O "t 'EGE•STltOM 116 NASO L t f Th .J u. 27 1971 11;1~ ... t.•""' S1n11 ...... c . totnl& niw/ta.,..,. .. .., .. ..,.,..,_::0"""""=='•",;9,•,.•.'-•"•'•w-•0Y_-,.Y ...... • •• .., .......... ~ Vl!llON C• f' 5EGElt511t0M flt It vo ~·/If !ttntt A"' (1 o<n I '111» NEt.L ! ltUlH iEGEll5JllOM ' II 1"t• ffllllHl'IOOtlll e1•ll"" tll~ Cf •" "'"' II~ ti\(! DO w••n 1111' ~no ComP•"• • co PO t on t'>ll lnt l ulh ~ m HI Pf ftOl/11> 11 ' o Cit ff ,..,.ombf t !'tt ind eto CIO<I NovemH >O ·~· n e-1111 l>AI• I .. 0Hk 1 llfCOf'OI o! 0 '"" '""" V Cl fO n 1 •lie! ''" h•• "" W•n o~ • ''' "'"' b• mo "' • 1 '""''n ~ t>I I O>U 0 I G 1n ( 0.n oon •ncl E "" • Otn1"" h.,.11>•"" • ..., .., f a on l•n~n M~ d•~ 1"11 l • t n f\ot!" 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D• rv " 01 lt1 II LEGAL NOTICE .. "' A 0 !'IC A TS nc 1"11M (JI •tit-' 11\d Atuon!'I P 1"dMI -·· w 1"CY RO• NOf CE TO CltlDITOllS 1" • S r c~, '" •01ucc1 ,. '"" Abuk 1n1• 11bol.I ot><m1a• AIMf Ht 'Tiit "'"'"' •M bu> MU •OCI flH• 91 A IMI h "' .... \tOf'• A ~K N"'m1n J l Odt stl E E<ltew• t r ! ~::: ~a ti• bo1 c.. o n • Ako lfld ,,,, •m• onll b111 nou •11<1 1u11 ol ,. T•t" 01lrtt•• ••I•• ll>Omn M G tf\Oll Je • M ,. a E<1u Gle••"" stl E Ea1•Wt f 1"Yt 1" Y<'I 8' e1bot Ct torn1 A 91' Cm ,. o 110 bv• n • ntmf'I '"a -tn•• A "11""' '""'DY llf l<'l>tf wtt>n "'H Vt•&""" Gtoe •• ""' •o • •• ~"°""" to 11~ Am l!lu•P' lft•eHttNOM ,.,..E~• lll• oct on •"" 9f'flf • ant o on ti !'F n" (.1 llo oa.,. • ol>e .,.,, tCl t f ,.,,. Fun S&eo " •"• ,,.,. .. ..,.,,.,.,.., 1"m G tel •n<I 9ood w 11f • <• • n "lmbll 10 A M.o<llCO • '"" IM.ol nttH ""°""" • Tllo G• •• 1"m Te•• ~1 E f Off""t I .I. o llt tbol Am Wt G C.• orn • ""'at Tiit p oct incl II• dt , t n or t t "'"""" I Wll ell llt IM,o • lrlfll H t b< Cfll'> !"~;"' nl; ...,fl'lm1 Ill • o 1" d M1t I• n ""' Ocot>e ''° 11 n ood "° • D o• """ •O•M>Ct• I .,,. 11nof "• h ''" o •• o Ottd o T 11• t•• "h• t•• 11>11 ,.,..,, e• ti ht T 111leo tnll ,.i ll'>f I u1 •c •••d b• w!d Dttd 04 1 ~• Tl1• l>ffltll< • ' yn(li' t;(I °""" .. J UI DY <ti-ol I II "'°' 01 al!'l•u n ''" ob t•lon• "'°'"•a ~ • •b• M t o!o t t•t"Ulld trill II• ~· ..a 0 lflt '""''" oruod • w "" o~" e '' o" o Clt+111 •nll O.mt n<I lor S1 t •"" w en ""'<•o bt•cn11100l•KOl'I 0<•11 • !M unlltl 91'ei:l OM! ••OD-Y 0 M'l 1 v 11Ld <>1> 9t ono •n<I !'It t• • on Ftlw"UA,.., 1• 01 "' 11nOo > gno<I •uUd ••<11 ..0 Co*O tl••,n•nl!O ··•oti Ob• flKO dfil " boc._ •JJ7 Otlt ti 0 I• d O<I CPI' • • Juno I •I t 11•"" • ,....,MtP Amt let Nll.SA hu VII l lla .. ,; .. .., .... DDOl ............ "'"'"'"'"'"''"'"'""•o• ................ :11 1 N•w119lllt Kh Ct an 1 01 tC1 Mt• 71 ti Ofllc • ltt o 111 01 1 Mtv 11 t ( OCl4• E.c ew Ce •• u 11 1 u> oe fly(HWl!ll'> llt•f'tolltn f'ub l~M Nt,.tO Mt 1>0 New• P Ill r.omb ntd w n DI P' o NtwPO llttCll Ct 0 n t Mt• 'H • ..., Jun• I ,., 10t' -LEGA.L ~OTICE ---1 ~ .. NOJl<l 01' !lrllENT JO MAKE &Ut.IC TllAlrlSFllt .t."41 C Ult A \K""11J l"'tfll I Nolet 1M.O•I ... " ""'"•" oSK •i>" t o1 ""Un mm C""'""''' (-<If"'''•°''''°"' 111 11r 11""' sf9ned wl>O» """' nts• n•""• ,..., M t n<I Wl>OM bou)nrl• 1US ()'!In~ 11 S "" U1ft N11v1 •I tt1 •n<I wllO.,. t1111 ""''' • ••w•fl nena~ • to•n t O Ill ... DI Am• 'I';~· •nlf S•Y "'' A .act on ......... !WI ft•H tllO Ill & O Yt n l\f o n WOW t& ""nl~ffl , .. ,., """'' nc• fl\ ptOl>I v o' wlllcll o 91"f f OtK P km h ••lo-• A" 1,...,H, tun ,,,n1 •Jld _,p --cf\ D -Y \J l<K• •O • JU CGtf H .,,wl• N•Wl>ll I ll'•<fl (t e ft • ln<I II& 11 II an t ,. b• c11n111mn • tel • NO~MAN J t. ODELL ''"''or THOMAi M GlEE50"' JFIT1" M GleESOH l t n& ..,. .... Pvt! -01~N M•Y U " ... •• ~' -------LEGAL NOTICE f'-1115' ClllTIF CATI 01' •UUNllll I' (TIT OU' NAMI Th• una. 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II "' 1 Cl• wooam•fl b 1nc11 cl ,.,..,,, tt • 11100 R • •a, O •• • L'GA' NOTICE Slit mtn Otk• C• ""' • on .,.-t e ht'----"-~ __ "_ •11'1 Otl cl Juno.. ti 1· So ••••lt"9W"D"'•nl<'..,n~ P..fUH Iino 1 o I\~ no """ '" b11l "fl Clll l'l(ATE 01' •UUPIE'I "<"'M e tOll •11 o fl• "'" lh• •l>O P ( f T OUS HA Ml <llJilftt tnt lh ft Yl 4 & ·~ 111• 1 <ff Tno 11n<1 t<1-d <~ ~ ne aME lllK flt • b111"" t 1U htt• s tr i • i!ljr,PllC 01' AME ii CA N@WJIO'I ,ll•tCll Cl to"•' ·.~,·'Ille C ' Ht Ion• 1 11• ind 51v Mii r IOll• m nt mt v N,. V NG IY 1">00C t on l(JIVP•1 PUlll CAT ON$ •nll n• ••lcl DON llR1" Pl I m > Co<n90lt<I 01 lhf fO low nt ,.. '°"' Ml"IOf T '"'''' "IUNGllY t GE i N JAMES MATHEWSON J ..... at •I.NW. 01' AMEii Cll ti1t1i....• Trv1I ""' $tvll\U 41-I -ti ..,.,..,t W-""" I 11>1:~ tl1'1t 11¥••" 0 •• ,,,_,,...~ 01-1 C•I It nft t 40l f'ul>l ll•fd 0 tnH Coo• 0• Iv P lo Ni•r1t.•I J in LEGAi NOTICE .. tr!' Cll 01' "Ult.It HEA.11 NG JO •I )'illO IV Tl4E ORANGE COUNTY ~U.NNIPIG tOM1'1 IS 01'1 ON PRO POtlO AMIEN01'111!"NJ 10 T N I MASllflt f't.AN 0, A It T 111 t a t. .. GHW&Yl 1 tD r 01 nlot c an 11~ W "-• • '"" "'" "~ 0 "' lnd~f'Ct• a flr o • o• tou " '"" n~ Camm on •ub -Oo»Qr ~"" 01 Y Pie M•, 11 ti 11'' I EGAI ~OTICE KID~ ' LIKE UNCLE LEN Wlla • n~m•1 11 11 '""' l•U•t•• ol tod•nce ttl> o GWO P'• Mo O 1'(;11 y 0 NtWl>OI' fl••tll (• !Ot"ft • Koy llttn AICltntl U<lo '7l II o I II•~• t.:rw-1 eroc~ Co o<n • DI eel MIY It 0 f'o Mt lo IC•y VM ,l,l!;lo"b U(~ ~ 11t o Ct CPI'~• O t no• Counv On MtY II fl b•a • mo• No o r Pull C n tncl '"" ll lf ~t t DI Mlf\I ¥ •P<>N Ill Pi Me Iott onll ICtv V ... A dt n ""1K~ '"""'~ 0 -0 &o ............ . ..-hOlt n1mr• • o Wbl< D"" O lf\O W II n "' umenl •"d • kn-'dee<! noy t • f'Cll Ml "" ...... , OFF C A SEAll M1 vlle~MDOft PIO l~P'ub((IOft O l'n<o1 0Cf ~ O 1na• Co..n v MY (Oll'm •on E•• t ... 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'•. :i ~ t ~ l't I t• to n 1 J , :'~ ... n i, 111) "~ fl~ "~ n ~0 ~~r . ?I • 0 • • • 0 1 II• I I Finance Briefs r1rrsBURG~ IUPJ) PrtW°luC'I ~ Inc hA~ introduced ha.~ ohla1ntd 11 $21 II m 11/1on ad<lh1on lo Navv contr1eti'I h> bulld nuclear resctor enm ponenl., for ship propulsion 1ystem!I' ROCHESTER N Y i UPI) Eastman C he m 1 r. at a new lien or high Ptrformanc@! new line or high ptrrormance- thermoplast1c~ 10 replace ca~t me1a1, and eng1neer1ng lype plasr1cs The new therrt1oplas11c' are made from polythereph!halale' Thty are extremelv r e s 1 .s I a n t tn abra~1on and ha\ e high impact res1st allC'e Thev are expected lo bt u'ed 1n lhe aulf)mn11v"' applrance machinery l'I n d h11rdw1re 1ndustrre~ PAI 0 Al TO fUPJ ) Hewletr P11ckard C., Is d1~rrlbu1t n.r S2 :'I~ m11Jlnn to emplO)t' th\~ wttk under HJ profit ~haring plan The r.nm panv make.o; 'uch a dl~tnhu lion '"•ct vearly MANCHF:STER NH IUPI} Sweethe>irt P I a '1 1r1 D!v1~1on of M1rylan rl Cup Ct'I opened a new plari1 here ltt mike 1n1ect1l'ln molded ('l)rio la1ntrs for the dairy 11nd fond pa ck11glng 1ndu,trie' 'iymhfJI< 11! tlh JI • 1h o I t I ' I o t ti ljo I 10 -'l •I~• ••~• tlv~•nd c-L11Vd1 1n• d•! • ' l o • 11'!4 d O.c 1od o ••d n 1111 '"'' '' I *~ ~· l~ ~._.•act ••~•nd ""d '" ,.01 1_ Cl ,:i: Jt I -\t "l fd l<I 9 Mt I " nt 1111 "tlm1 td C1•1! •1 It ,o lt\t lt • ~01•0 "' Ill "'Iv dffl<f ., t•..r J Oiirr.11 " 1't • !*"" ?? 1 •o • ,_o..,. • •d • ,,1" "' ,,, ~ • :: n': it,,~: :. : _ 1 \,. 'oar 11-0ICll NI tf 11 d •I••~ 1 OC~ U , 0 4 _ "' I •IOond " •• I wt ~-DOit tffd • oo d ' IJ 13 o 1~ 1 • "''' Yt• an t tru"'" t •• ,...,. .. ti. Gii 10• ·~· "•I ···-·In I,., r1N1w ""' -~'"',,'~.~·~,t, • ••d h • '''' d v "°"'d ""'ltd ~ .. ''• '" ,. "1 \9 t «I 0 llt I C OJI tl.•!1 I! OU d •~•nd ''• "' ,.. m11 '"' • OH!I •d t r •• ' " llJO • I ·1 ·~~ 'W. ~·~ '-< t Kl I V llnck ... I n ott<-•u• ~11 • t: ~ a "" n u ...... '"" ... ~ " IW'-fl~d 11 1~ I .. 1h .,••fl1 t .... IOIOll1t ,, 1 lo.-1 1-11 00 1 ..... , ' 'I: n' tt~ • " ,.,_c," •-•• "~'•-•-•· ""' r,1 ..,. -. d1ndtnl ••Oo fll~1•-l•-lr <1ir .. i t '" ,lo -o O..U•~ ••-lw r1~h •-W•~t "'"" ~ U ~ ll 1 1• h on t '*'"'-Wit~..,., i nh w-W~tfl 0 ., 11 !11 \: [o = •o tr tr.llH. Wl-.W,_,, 11111111&. M-Ntxt 411 ! ?l.~ "" t -• '•ll•o f I lffi 'f I • \• •I-" 111n~ ualn Of tlf v1toh,. "' ) 1!:: I • I '• II ~tlftt fD llntM VftOf,-1111 11111 Utft ~ , •• ; I) ' .. ,. " U C•• IH •Uum ... ,., II/di t- • u . 0 , \t ltnlt1 Jll-f• Int• UI "-C:H•lll(I ... M 1'1 1 l.o ol-S 11'\t tll tlal t ft I 11 ·-• •I ,: :.: f... : ' • i h!\<lt, -! I ll ,.,. m11 " &I ..... II< y 1 .., .., u • ~ llf-N••t ••• .i111 WffY •W...h ... , r•nrt I P l 1'6 114. •ut ll•!Jen !It , 22 041LV PILOT OAKBURNE BRIQUETS by Kingsford 10 LBS. Get a bag. sel up the barbecue. gel the family together. and take a moment lo · really think about how lucky we a re lo live in America. Sure. gripe. but we can be lair lo our country. can't we? 51 HOT & COLD CUPS A funny deal here. It's !hat extra cup that makes our fellow tradesmen gnash the teeth, "How do they do it. Chozz?" We don't know, we just put the extra cup in for the Jun of it. ·. · .. · ... . . ' uc..,.,. They •ay this is better. Burns ..... -"'IJ • nice. no big flare-up. (You ... • --• -·- know, no matter who! I ask them. they always say it's better.) PICNIC JUG PJai;tic thing, easy to wash out, no rust. no shattering. Nice Jor comping or pop to take to work. {Watch what he puls in it. Mom.) 87c y, GAL. 6-FOOT STEEL WALL POOL II I t t 5a7 Six foot diameter. Kids can have a lot ol fun with this. Pop, you can cool ol! too. Vinyl liner. INFLATABLE AIR MATTRESS 93c Stull it under your sleeping bag and rest easy. Use it around the p ool !or a !un !]oat. AUTO COOLANT SYSTEM G ood boilover prolection. recovers the lluid. Jn a freeway jam. you 'll !ind it worth its weight in gold. 197 • KING o: LAWN 18" ROTARY MOWER The big beast wiih the 4 cycle engine and the reliability we have come to expKt from this firm (and lf it ever disappears. out they go). Recoil starter, staggered wheel1 for close cutting. 49a7 WITH GRASS CATCHER ' BEDDIRG PLAHTS 111 named all the kinda we hO"N y.cu'd only.Saort qnd say f wfls Stretching it o bit, so come and see the selection for yourself. 29~RAY KING O' LAWN EDGER Another reliable dude. Full adjustment for any angle of trim or edge. four cycle eniiine (can't you see it pulled by four kids on their bikes?) 5487 N0.206 • 4x8 FOOT PARTICLE BOARD First olf, the stuff is 3fl6ths thick, which is good for bench tops. shelf and cabinet work. and other s tull. Saw it. drill it. glue it, just like wood, but no grain warp or split. (Must be something w rong somewhere. Margaret). • • I " • • . ' • .I ...... '. .. ·,~~ ~ DEALS GOOD THURSDAY THRU MONDAY ONLY, (May 27th thru May 3 lst). OPEN MEMORIAL DAY 9 to 6 PM SUMMER SCHEDULE Gather ,,·1ith us every WEDNESDAY EVENING at lhe lodge hall al our LA MIRADA STORE at 7:30 PM whilst 1he wonders of doing it yoursell and pocketing the labor costs unfold. The genius will teach you all. Be there. CAST ALUMINUM COOKER Ke\lle top opens smoothly while acting as a win dbreak. Convenient towel bar handle and stainless steel burner. Sunburst grill drains g rease inlo removable cup. 97 Double carr iers for boards. luggage, skis, or anything else you want to rack up there . (Maybe you'd like to buy o little lumber to test it with). 3s7 FREE CLASSES June 2 "Lawn and Gorden Care" by Harvey Wallbanger of Bandini June 9 "How to Insulate Properly" by Quiet Sam of Modern Materials UMBRELLA RECOVER Nice multi-color deal with the fringe. II th• pole is good, why buy a new umbrella. Fix ii. you thrifty guy. aa7 150 FT. RE-WEBBING Same g oes !or lawn chairs and chaise. Got a choice of colors and you can reweb easier than digging .into the pockel !or new furniture, 44 QT. COOLER CHEST Terrific cooler !or tho&• hot days lo come (They keep promiaing). Just leave room !or lhe ice. O.K.? Hi impac1 plastic with lock-top. 9a7 I 8 IRCli ' FAN II ii ain'I hot enough for you now. it will be. Save now D.fore the light of greed comes on in the bosses' eyes. 447 PANTYHOSE So you paid over two bucks a pair and still . , . "Look O.ear. another pair shot." This way you won't cry so much. PR. NEW MOD CONVERTIBLE SWAG LITE Listen, it comes in Lipstick Orange. Grass Green. and Mellow Yellow. These colors you've got to see. even if if was a yo-yo, 697 . " NATIONAL INTERIOR EXTERIOR VINYL 2 87 1 --C-18&•• ~:> GAL. ----- Pretty good paint so don't let the price ta lk you out of it. Colors too. (How many? Don't ask). REDWOOD STAIN Doing a fence? Boy. will -it slurp il up. so this may be the best gaving in the ad for you. CONCRETE MIX Add water. stir. and ca ll your mother-in~ low out for a test cost. (Only kidding Mom. we love ya!) 49c so LB. 4x8 FOOT EXTERIOR SHOP ·PLYWOOD Today. we find guys who couldn't drive a nail building lhe who le darn roo m . II you need to get a bargain. this is for you. 2 67 * INCH .·:.··.: -.. -!----~-· --··;. RUSTIC XKE PANELING Here's your chance to add 1ome warmth to !he livingroom, J>.droom or den. There ore a few slight lmperfections which make this bargain price po11ible. but we dely your lrit1 nds to find them after you've decorated, (If they do they're looking too hard.) • DAILY PJLOf j~ /! .. ER A Complete Guitle •• • Where to go • •• What to tlo • •• ) ! . :j ·~ -I > -. I ·1 ' ·! • I STAN KENTON WILL PERFORM ON TOMORROWLAND STAGE 'COOGIE' AND CHARO ' TAKE OVER GOLDEN HORSESHOE BILLY ECKSTINE JOINS CARTER ON THE TERRACE Disneyland Agai11 Slates Great Bands Stan Kenton, Xavier Cugat, Bil11 E:cksline; Ray f\.1cKinley and Benny :-:artcr will bring their dislinctive musical talents to Disneyland (!Ver the ~1emorial Day "·cekend for "tbe tenth annual Big Band Festival. 'Traditionally a shoY;case for the great ~ands in American music, thi~ year's spectacular is set for Saturday and Sun. day [ron\ 9 p.m. until l a.m. Adding a new dimension to the popular Big Band series, each orchestra will be featured in concert with a top-name ~ocalisL Kenton and June Christy will be reunited while Cugat and his wife Charo pertorm together on another Park band· 'land. Songstress Ella ~tae ?o.1orris will team with McKinley's world famous organiza- Uon, and Eckstine and Carter \\'ill com· ~ine vocal and instrumental talents. All Big Band Festival entertainment i!I inc luded in the regular ·main gale ad- mission price. Kenton's name has been synony mous 11.•il h great jazz for nearly three decades. Mis creative fire and piano artistry has oioncered several innovations in music, inc ludi ng the birth of progressive jazz. June Christy enjoyed her grealest sue· cess \vhen teamed with !he Kenton ensrrnb!e. They produced several. musical milestones. including "Tampico." "How High the ~1oon." and "\VHlow. \Veep for ~1c." ··coogie·s·• dynamic personality and Latin-fire rrusic has made him a percn. n1al favorite with music buffs around lhe ...,·orld. His v.'ife Charo adds her unique talents to their rapid-fire acl. Eckstine has been a pace-setting stylist ever since his rend ition of "Everything [ l-l avc is Yours'' skyrocketed to the top of most national reC1Jrd charts. Carter. a distinguished conductor and jazz arranger. is recognized as one of the ~lid,,·esrs mos t popular bandleaders. Rounding out this ~te\lar lineup, ?-.1cKin\ey's big personality and even bigger talent has <'arned him ex- c<'ptionnlly \\'ide appeal among music listeners. ''Cow Cow Boggie" is just one or the many songs elevated to the hit 61 alu~ throu~h the Ella Mae Morris style. ~1any of the top marching bands in the \Vcstcrn Uni1cd States have been invited to participate in the park's color-rich f\lemorial Dnv par:ide. !\1onday. ~1ay 3t ..., lien more than 700 musicians \Viii step orf do...,·n Main Street al 2 and 6 p.m. as p11rt or the spectacle. Here is where you·n find 'em: Stan Kenton .... ·ill perform on the Tomor· rowland Singe, with June Christy, ,·ocalist : Cugat and his y;\re Charo will be in the Golden Horseshoe ; Benny Carter \\'Jlh Billy Eckstine on the Tomorrowland JUNE CHRISTY IS AGAIN REUNITED WITH STAN KENTON Karen Can l\.eep Secrets 'Portnoy's Co1nplaint': Sexy But No Nude Sce nes By VERNON SCOTT Ul"I tt.llYW .... C1rr11•W1•tM HOLLYWOOD -How do you make a movie out or ''Portnoy's Complaint,'' 1 novel based almosl v.·holly on eJplicit 1ex? Karen Black, who will play ''Tht Mon key" in the picture opposite R·ichard Benjamin, began rehearsals last week. She knows how the film wlll circumvent the clinical aspects of the story. but Karen -who was nominated for a best supporting actress Oscar this year in "Five Easy Pieces'' -won't tell . "'l'he script has been written in good taste," Karen said in a voice that sound- ed dutiful. Ernest Lehman will direct the novel, •·hich perched atop the best seller list for months. "Actually the movie i:r1 sor1 of 1nysterious at this !ilBge and I'm not allowed to talk about the script." Karen said. "Mr. Lehman asked us all lo keep it to ourselves." Asked if the picture would be an at. tempt at !Opbisticated pornography, Karen was shocked. Then sbe said something that only a young actress could manage with a straight face '. 0'There isn't • single nude scene in the picture, but there's plenty of sex." \Vhat did she mean by that~ "f'm not allowed to say," !!he replied. 'For reasons not immediately perceivable, Lehman and others con- nected wilh the film project have chosen to play it like Garbo, although aome freedom has been given the cast. Alas, Miss Black is not the best repository of information. •;Mr. Lehman told me three things I can say about the script, but I forget what they are," she said. giggling. Karen was dressed in hot pants and a loose blouse, ber lot1g tresses fell below her shoulders, frequently dipping into her cup of tea and tossed green salad, She was b!issfu1Jy unaware that she was wear· Museum to Stage Children's Show By Mesa Actors The Bowers Memorial !\lmeum Fouir. daUon is presenting the Children's P..1agic 1beater on Saturday, Junt; 12 at 1:30 p.m. In Ult Santa Ana City Hall Annex, 500 W. 6th st., Santa Ana. ing as much of her lunch a,5 she wa~ eating. At one point she 11al upright and sang a c:lear note that could have been a cry for help. Immediately a dislressed wailer ap- peared and asked if ht could be of assistance. ··or course not ." said Karen. •·1 just feel good." lntern1lsslon She though! a mon1cnl and said. "I think I'm light-headed but that doesn't mean I'm oul or it. you know what I mean ? The better I feel the less I miss. On the other hand, 1he worse r fee l the more I'm out nf JI. Know what ( mran'.'" Yeah, well. l\.1amie Van Doren onrt ~;iid iilomething 1imilar In !ha!. Critic Playing '/Jimself' In Irvine 'A rsenic' Play By TO~I TITUS 01 II!• D1lll' l'J,.r J/l ff One of the mort exciting aspects or <.'Ommunily theater is the opportunily for an actor to lake on a character and a personality tolally remo\'ed from his own -and one of the cruelest cuts he can receive 1~ to be told that he's merely "playing himself.'' Now, for virtually .every walk of life, there is a character in a play ; and com· munily lheater performers run similar gan1ut of occupations. Occasionally they overlap, and you find . tor example, &lb Engman playing a dentist in "Cactu~ Flower.'' It's usually referred to as "an inspired bit of easting." There are even good parts written ror drama critics, and this one has coveted two for several years -the role of Parker Ballantine in "Critic's Choice '' and thal of Mortimer Brewster in "Arsenic and Old Lace." The second of those wishes comes true tomorrow nighl when the Irvine Community Thealer open:ri its nvival or "Arsenic'' at the old Studio Theater on the UC Irvine campus. Not that Mortimer Brewster has all that mucb in common with yours lnliy- the play is a bit of a farce to begin with, and will be even more so in the Irvine version. But put yourself in this writer·~ position and try some of these lines on for 1ite: "So you th ink people in plays act in- lelligenlly. do you? You should sit through some of the ones r have to iiit through ... when art playwrights going to starttusing some imagination? .. and they say the crltit:s. are killing the theater ; it's the playwrights who are kill - ing the theater .. are these plays fair to me?" Machiz is an authority on the works of. \Vi!Jiams and has directed several of his plays on Broadway-among them, "The ~!ilk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore.'' "Garden Dist rict" I comprised o t \Vi/Hams' "Suddenly Lasl Summer" and ';Something Unspoken"!, and a revival of "A Streetcar Named Desire " with Tallulah Bankhead. l\'fachiz. who has slagcd threo previOlL'I plays a~ UC!, returned from New York lwhere he conceived and directed '"Gertrude Stein's First Reader") to find the drama department moved out of tJ:ie old Studio Theater and into the neW . . massive Fine ArlS Village. "It's quite i. big change ," he remarked. : BACKSTAGE -Nothing succeeds l&e success. the Laguna Moulton PlayhOuSe believes, whi ch is one reason it's preseri- ling "The Man ~Vho Came ' lo Dinntl-~· just a few weeks after another productio'ft in Cosla Mesa ... now lhe playhouse·L• <:opying its own success. preparing fqf II .summer production of "The Odd C-Ouple, '' which was done three summers ago at the old playhouse ... "'EEK.ENDER INS IDE FEATURES Friday, May 28, 1971 ff you're going to Europe and ."'ant to know about buying or rent- ing a car, check Stan Delaplane's travel column today on Page 24. Travel Page '4 \\lyelh Rtproductions Page U In lbe GaUeries Page 2"4 Bullfigbt Page %4 ~oscai~at Greek Page %4 Academy El«ls Page Z4 Bur1on i11 'Villain' 'Page: !4 Ont 'N' Abftul Page~ 25-Zi t 1---1-errace, and Ray .McKinley pl3,l'ing for danring at the Plaza Gardens with Ella 1'1ae ~1orse lending her singing talents at the same spot. Geared for children bety,·een the ages of four and 12, seven actors lrom South Coast Repertory-in <mt.a Mesa will sLage- a performance in which the prjnceM cries diamonds, the furniture comes alive and a group of children discoverthat listeiling to their parents is a wist tfting to dO. The lofaglc Theater is an improvls· ed journey through magic forests. Poetry, pure poetry: ranking right up there with Ballantine's devaslaling reYiew of hi!! wife's play In "Crltic·s Choice." And !Omeday, some the1ter may decide to do that one again ... Ttle\'Jskln. Log _ .l!age>Zl--•---+• Gulck to Mo .. 1e·1 .. __ ge Z7 OUlfr bands \\'hich will ~ playtng in varinus spots throughout the park include the New Dixie Rebellion. Kaul . Pono's Polynesians and the Banjo Kings. P;irk hours are ~tay 29, 30, 8 a.m. -t 11 m.: ~Iay 31. 9 a.m. ·IO p.m.; June 1-4, 10 1'.m .. 7 p.m.: Jut1e S. 8 111 .m. ·I a.m.; June fi, 8 a.m. • 10 p.m. I • • BENNY CARTER ON TOMORROWLAND TERRAtE WITH MR. a Tickets, 50 cenl.!1 by donatk>n, must be picked up at Bowers ~lus!um, 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. No llckets will be available at the theater at the time of the presentation. ELSEWHERE ON TilE UC lrvine campug thll! week, there is a fond reunion between director and playwright ao; fferbert Machiz stages another Tennessee Williams play. This one is ''Camino Real" and plays through tomorrow night fwith a 2:30 SatW'day matinee) at the Village Theater. ·New Lear rage t7 Guldt to 1''un Page ti Ch1plin Classic!' Page: U Live Tlle•ltr Paa:e U Sammy Davl5 Cfncert Page zt SI. t.1mo's Villace Page %t Laguna Art Srhool rage h Pally AndreM1 Page %9 Easter Seal Concert Pa.ge !t . • _.z~ OAll.V PILOT LA Foru1n Will Air Bullfight U l$ Angr1es Forum will ha ve lhe exclusive area Ahow· ing of the first llve clo~ed­ circuit color telecast of a bullfight from Spain on Sun- day, June 13 al J p.m. It will !)e the only l .fl.S Angeles llho.,.,·ing or the ~pec­ tacular even! tlJ bt' 1ransmh- ted via sa1etll!e from .!aen, Spain, starring the high~llt paid athlete in the world, E:I Cordobes . ;\nnouncemcnl ~·as 1nadr by Travel Save on Cars Overseas 8y STAN DELAPLANE "It It b•tt•r to r•nt • cir whil1 w• 1r1 ov1r&tlt or buy one? How much would w1 1avt?" The bigger the car you buy, the more you save. Not a h uge saving: Say VVV fastback, $200; a plus h Mercedes. $800. I mean that's ho\v much less ll ~osts yo u after paying sh ipping 1.:harges home. rl uty, insurance, cleanup charges. licensing. You'll be surprised how niany charges arc tacked on. . The bi~ saving is in using the tar in Europe ~·1thout paying rent. /\, renl car is going to nudge you at least $45 a \\'eek. Ho\v Jong \\'ill 1·ou use a car? · 'l'he differcnc:e in buying price is impossible to figure ex actly. Depends on \\•hat vour local deaJer '"ill do for you. Better trade-in? \\'ill he knock off a few hundred because he wants to unload fa sl'.' Belter deal. on options? Anyway, you \von 't LOSE money buying abroad. ~omebody to stream to. IYour local dealer will do tt for you. Pan American Airways IA In the cir !elling busines~ So is the AAA. Auto Europe -orfices in 111ost big r1tles -is big in aale1, rentals, lea!ea.) * \\'hoever sells to you should arr;in,gc the ~hip· ping home. 1"he paper,,·ork for ~'nn \1·011!d hi' fr1,l:!hl· ful. They should arrange your "green l'arcl" 1nsur· ancc. ll's your car's passport, Can't cro.~s a borrler \Vithout it. They should get you their export inodcl. '!'heir hrune n1odels don't have many things on lhcm that are required in the St~te.~. I've bought t\vo car.!i in t:urorc -doing it 1hi:; '''ay. \Vorked out fine for me . And I THINK I saved money. * ENLARGED' REPRODUCTION 0 F ANDREW WYETH P'AINTING 'Chri1tln1'1 World' p1int•d in 1948 is ont on Oispl•y 1t Center E. \\'illiam Henry, president or Managemenl Television Systen1s, Inc.. the company which is presenling the event lo 1nore than fifty citie.o1 throughout the Un11ed Sales. Tickets for the June 13 El Cordobes bullright at The Forum are on sale now. Phone (213) 673-1300. * Buy the car here for delivery overseas. Doesn't "Can we exct-.ang1 our home for the 1umm1r with 1omebody in Europe? How do you 90 about it?"' 1·ry Pan Ameritan. The y,·orld's tnost experienc- ed airline is getting son1e ne1•" experience in house exchanges. I have an idea they rna~· be very good because they ha\'e offices all over Europe. Wyeth Exhibit' Set Appearing with l::l Cordobell, billed as the g re a I es l bullfighter of the pa.~t decadr, will be top-ranked matador11 El Viti and Jose Fuentes. Each man "'i ll face the two bulls in what is being termed Jn Spain The •·corrida de) siglo" -the bullfight of lhe century. cost anymore. If something goe! \\Tong, you have Puccini's 'Tosca' One that's been in busine~s 11 long: lime (but I never used them so I don't kno\\'I: \:acation Ex- change C'lub, 550 f"ifth .'\venue. l\'c11• )'ork ('ily. You pay so much !not n1uchl for .a classified ad listing your home. 1'hen you get the list and shop "'hat other people are offering. Mall to Present 24 R eproclnctions At Greel{ Tl1eater Reprnductions or selected work11 by Andrew Wyeth, one flf the most popular of living American painters, will be presented for four y.·eeks by Pr-ople '5 Gallery in fashion 1sh1nd mall beginning May 29. Twenty.four of Wy e I h ' r; works have been selected. in· eluding early ~'alercnlors 11nd la!rr drawings and paintings v.·hich represent !he artist's many-faceted talents. One of America's foremost art critics has i;aid of Wyc1h Iha! "he paints entirely to please himseH . yet comes a5 close as any painter today to l•a tl1e Galleries Chilclren's Worl{s Sl1ow11 at Bowers UCt GALLER\' -The Fine Ar\11 Villag e Gallery nn UCI campu.!1 is open 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Thurs., Fri., Sun.; 9 a.m · 4:;JO p.m. Tues .. \\'ed. Closed ~'lond;i,1•s ::ind Saturdays. On t xhibil, underitraduale juried show, lhrough June 7. (IOLllEN U'J::ST GALI.E RV -1574~ Golden \\fest St .. ll11nl- inJ;!ton Beach. On exhibit in lhe library. during regular bours. a juried student arl show through June 11. NB CIVIC CENTER GALLERY -3300 Newport Blvd., Nt'W· port Beach. Currently on exhibit in t•ily hall during regulRr business hours, paintings from juried Art festival, through ~l;:i y, SHt:R~IA N FOUNDATION GALLER \' -2625 f.. Coast llii;:h- "'ay, Corona del Alar. tFormerly Coffee Garden Gallery .I Hnurs: II a.m. lo 3:30 p.m. P.ion.-Sat. The Junior League of NP~·port Harbor Pxhibit features ,·erlical scrolls. black Ink paintings end v.·ood blocks prints by Sueo Serisawa, and noral art by Hiho Tanaka. through June 3. BOU'ERS P.fUSEU~f -2002 N. Main SL, Santa Ana. !lours: JO a.m. to 4:30 p.n1. Tuf's .-Sat.: I to 5 p.m. Sun,, and 7 to I p.m. \Ved and 'fhurs. No chari::e. On cxh1b1! Torana P;iLrnns Show and "'inner., of 1971 regional children's \.\'orks, lhrough ~lay. OCC GALLERY -2701 Fairview Road, Costa 1fcsa. llnurs: V a.m. to 4 p.m. l\fon .·Fri.; 6 to 9 p.m. \Verl. No ar!n1is);ion ch;irge. On exhibit thrciugh l\·111.v, \1'nrk of Bruce Piner, OCC associate of art. in libr;iry on lif>{'Ond floor . Student art in Gallery through \l;i.v 211. E\'ening College arl exhibit, through June 10, on th ird floor. MARlNERS SAVINGS -1~1~ \\fcstcliff DrivC', Newport Beach. On exhibit regular business hours photography by Rick Malmin through ~1ay. " . X:f:WPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, Nrw-Jitrt Beach. On exhibit during re,~ular business ho urs, -d?rough June, Y.aterC(}fors by Elsie Ltt Ritter. Mf'~A \'f:RDE l.IBRARY -2969 l\1esa Verde Dr1"e East. ~~ta Mesa. Curently on exhibit through ~lay, ;iris and ~r;ift.s by Donna rriebertshauser. A¥Co SAVING -3310 Bristol, Costa Mesa. On exhibit dur- i~ regular business hours. "'atercolors. oil paintings Rnd i~k washes by l\1argaret Neal, through..;ilt1y. 1.:AC.Ur\A ART ASSOC IATION-:lOi Cliff Drive, Laguna ~ach. Hour~; noon to 5 p.n1. dail.v. Docrnl tour~. 2 p.m. Son. On ex hibit through l\la.1". •·Eight Art ilil~ E:xpo~rrl." \ll'Qrk or Jrrrv Anderson. ,John de Heras. Jav ~1addnx. :IDarle Roddy.· \Villiarn \\'e~inan ;ind \Villiam Mahan . Ad- "rhission. nori-111cm1Jers, $1. studenl.s 50 tt'nls. ' ;ckOCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., C11~ta ~lla. On t'xh1bit during regular business hours through Ma,\', oil paln1ings by ,Joanne Bone. stCURrr'' PACIFIC RA:\'K -19fi E. 17th St. Cosla ~lro;a. -On exhibit duri ng reRular busint>ss hours, oil painting~ by $1urlty l~~rer. through i\111~ -0;9 R01"A lll!:L l\IAR LIBRAK\'---420 P.larigold A\'f' .• Cornn11 dtl fllar. Currt"ntty on exhibit dur1n,E l1br:iry hourll, exhibil ~ Corona tlet !\tar High School sludent!I. through l\la~. 00\\'r\E\' SA \'INGS -360 E. lilh St. Cfl~la ~lesa. On rx- htii~ during regular busfnes!I hours. oil pain1ings hy Bernice }-(o'iiser and Pal ln~ran1. 1hrough fll<1y. TRANS A!\1£UI CAN TITLE -170 E. J;th St .. Costa ~1esa . on exh ibit duri11g rrgular business hours. oil paintings by lktly Brookll. through ~lay. r;t1\'PORT HAKBUll AHT !'l<fUSEL':\1-400 :O.l;:ilr1 SL, Balb\1:1, .iours: 1-ri p.m -~un.: 6-9 p.m. l\i!on. Clostd ~Ion .. ;inrt Turli. hi da vlimt hours. Adm ission free. Curren!lv nn exhibit , ''New P~iniing in Loll Angele.~." an ill'an! gu.frde expression of :!11\l. \\'ork t)r J11n1f's Bradley . .Jarnes r.anier, Thorn.=ts Sr1dcl. A'jlan ~lcCullon1. Thom;is \\'udl. Jim Frazin. \·le Henrlf>r8')n, 1..e<>nard Korin and Terry Schoonho\en ma y bt ~een throui;:h June 20. SAN FRANCISCO pleasing everyone " \\fyet h says of himse lf th;it it Is not just ;i scene of a beautiful 1·oun1rys1de with a rainbow er- fPCI , or ;i slorn1 corning up. that 1nlerests hi111 -1t is the symbohsm thel he "'ants to realize. Portraying the arllst's use nf symbolism 1n lhe current exhib1l. one s e I e c I ion , Chr1sl1na's '\'orld. 19 ~ 8. £'n1ph;is1zt's tht' cnn1ptl11n g \'l.'lion of \Vyeth's very privat e 1,1orld. 1"he p1l·ture i::rt'"' out of !he simple sight of the crip- pled Ctir1stina, whon1 \\'yeth con~ id e rl' d a retnarkable y,•ornan -01nd a llC'tghbor. y,•ho was picking berries near the f;:im ily buryin,lil ground. looking back across the firld toward hrr house. As 1hc title says, lh1.'I 1.o1 her world. She and the people anr l the locations in and around Ch:.idd's Ford, Pt1 . "'hrre \\'yrlh wa.~ born ;incl ra i~ed. 1~ 1he artist's wor ld. Arnong the rep roductions be ing shO\\'n \Vhic h have bl'en f'n!argrd ti> show the superb 1ie1a1 I 1n \\'~clh '~ ll'ork arc: "The Counlr)"' J9Gj. throuRh !he l'OOperallon of lhe Virginia ~1usrurn uf Finl' A rt s : "Cro.,.,s .. 1!144 . y,1!h thr ht·Jp or L.\ m;in AJl.1 n ~\US('Um, i'\cw London, Coonectiru1 : a n d "Day of lhe Fair" 1963. courtesy nf (.'ity Art l\1useum Of St. Louis. \\'~elh was trained as a .l'oung OOy by his fa1her, N: C'. \Vycth, the well kno.,.,·n ii· lus!r;ilor. Andrew 's s o n, .t;in1r~. 1.~ carrying en the \\'.vcth lrad1!1on as a slit· eessful p;i1nltr P1•ople's (;;illcr~· is a new l'UnC'l'pl in o u I ·/\f -h •l me i;:raph il'S s po n !\ o re d by J\1etron1cd ia , Jnr. whrrrin nol flnly lhe works 11f famous fine artis1s ;ire brought "10" the 1x-nple. hut al~o u nu 5 ll al ~rnphics '11 ;i 1~opular nalure ;irr prrsrnlrd 111 ~hopping crnter malls d1.~pla.1·Ni on a sprr1;:illy drsiNJed l\lructure called a "trlnsk " Maxi, l\'I idi, Mini Sh(nv Set for l\.HJ Barnaby Conrad. C'elebraled au1hor and bullfighting ari- cionado. wlll narr;ite and pro- \'!dt> color commentary direct from the plaza de toros, Jaen, Sp1un. An eslimaled one million people 1n the United St111es are expected to w1tnes.~ I he bu llfight as v.·Pll as fifty million people through'1ul lhe "·orld 1·Ja regular broadcast te levision. 7 Elected New Film Governors Seven nrw 111cmbers have been elected !o the Bo;ird of C.overnors of the Academy of !\follon Picture Ar!ll and Sl'1t>nces. They "''II Join sPven incun1bt'nt ml'n1bcrs \.\'ho were re·elected and ten who y,•ere clec1ed a year ago to two-year 1crn1s. Five of !hf' seven arc new tn lhe Board; the other two have served on it in earlier years. ~e'o\· members serving for the first tin1e are Hicardo !\1ont:ilb;in t ac!or,11 branch 1, Henry Bumstead •art di rec· tors branch ). Sol Halprin 1cincmatographers branch 1. Ted Ashley 1 e x e cu t 1 v es branch' and T. Hee I short subjects branch). Heturning 10 lhe Board are .John Green t 1nusic branchJ and John E:. Fhnn 1 public r e l at i o n s branch 1. lncurnbenls rt>-clecLed 10 the Bnard arr Ch11r\es G. Clarke 1 l·inematogr11phcrs br11neh I. Robert E. \\'i.~e {directors hranch), Ch;:irle~ Borrn 1ex- ccull\'f'S branch1, \\11Jl1am H. Heynolds thlm I'd 1 tors branl·h J, How;ird \V. l\och tproduccrs branchl. Arthur ll. Pi;:intadosi 45ouod branch \ and ~lichacl Blankfort l \.\'Tit ers branch l. Each tlr thr Ar::idrmv 's hr;:inehes 1~ rcprrsen!ert fin ihe Aoard h\· 1wo Governor~. Thn:-;p Cll:Ctrd Ja5! ypar to !ern1s cxp1rin~ 1n l\1ay. 1!172. are Gregory Prtk I arr ors branC'h l, \\111l1rr 1\L Scon tart 'fhf' 19th season of the Greek Theater will open Salurday, June 26, with lhe firl!I of three performances o f Puccini's dramatiC' opera, ··rosca" star· ring three major Metropolitan Opera Company s i n g er s , Dorothy Kir3len, Barry ~iorell and Anselmo Colz.ani. The opera v.•ill be produced by James A. Doolittle. directed and slaged by Do r othy Kirsten. It will be exaetly twenty yearll in October since Miss Kirsten made her debut as To11ca wit h the San Francisco Opera, and .since lhen she had ;ippeared in the role mort than 100 limr.o1. This past season she has celebratf'd the 251h anniversary of be r engagcmen(s with the Met and S a n Francisco companies. This i,11 a record unequalled bv any other American leading soprano. Dorothy Kirsten sang Tosca for lhe Greek Theat re in the 196~ production, and last St'ason .o1taged and sa ng the ti· lie rolt in ··Madame But- lerfl y." Barry Morell. tenor. v.·as v.armfy rrcelved last summer as Pinkerton in Madame But- terfly and returns thi.'1 year to sing the role of Cavaradossi. Scarpla will be ~ung by An~e1mo Colza ni marking !he b;irilone's debut in the Griffilh Park amphitheatre. The Glendale Sy mphon y Orch~tra will be conducttd b.v Joseph Le\'ine ror the three pcrrormances June 26, 29 and July 1. Conductor, singers a n d 11rchestra , and mos t im- portantly. lhe (;reek Thea tre patron~ will benefit from a 11('w sound system ~·hich "'ill be installed in lime !or the sc;ison's altrartions. f'·o r .o1ome time. James A. T'loohllle. (ieneral Director of lhf' Greek Theatre. h a s Burton Has Role Title 111 'ViJJai11' directors branch 1, (;en r g e B1chard Bur!on is st11 rring l\'111'1 Harrison ho:-;ls l hl~ Cuknr 1director~ branch 1. 1n !hf' !1!le role of the MGll-1 ~rec1al on nne nl !hr grea1rst \\11Jlian1 \V. llornlwC'k 1 film release "Villain'' in an ex- Cflnlrover511'S in f 11sh1 o o editors br1111ch1. f':liner Hern· elusive eng11gemPnt at the I hislnr\. the confu sion nver the stein 1 mu~1r branch f, Hal fl. \'ogue Theatre in Hollywood. !hrct> · drn111atiC'11llv d1fferenl \\'allis iprodui·rrs hrant•h1, He portrays a criminal ,; ~kin lrnglhs. the. ~11n1. the fl·laurice Seg;il 1public rel;i. mastermind ~·ho plans and ex· ~ DOROTHY KIRSTEN In "Tosca" at the Gr11k hoped to utilize lhe exceptional la lenl.!1 of the Glendale Sym- phony. The (:lendale orchestra. along with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the San Francisco Symphony, is one of only lhree symphony orchestras in Ca Ii Co r n 1a Pmploying proressional must· cians exclusively. Glend11le Symphony m u s i c i a n 11 reprtsent the finest qu11titv amnn,1t the studio per.~onnCr performing for motion pie· ture11, radio. tele1·ision and the recording studios. Apologies to Artist Glick * "What about the dollar exc:liang1 problem w1'v1 IM1n reading about ... ? J ju.~t bought S50 \\'Orth nf S\\'tss francs as an emergency fund. But I'm carrying dollar travelers checks for my main money. * )'nu ought to carry a fe\v ~l and SS bills in a foxy pocket. Last minute at the airrort. you'\·e cashed in your local money \'ou 're in lhe rleparture lounge. \'our plane is delayed No1\· you \.\'ant a d rink or some coffee. You don't \\ant to ca!iih a travelers check. That's \\-'hen the $1 bill comes out. * ,.~ree catalogue: i1cLeod's Travel Aids, 100 ~'1c· I.cod Bldg .. Fremont. Ohio. 43420. Lots of travel gadgel.<i. I liked particularly the Jight\11eight Braun I-lair Dryer. I bought one of these locally for !I pres· ent last Christmas -and I paid $5 more than the ~l c Leod price. It \\'orks \1·ell. About S20 plus 1\·ith shipping. * They also sell a one plug adapter for foreign ouUets. \'ou change it from place to place by dialing. A great idea . * " ... what camera to use on our trip?" Even my small c.·hildrcn can u~C' n1y .J.:ipancse Canon in the QL serie.~ -I ~ot it for $46 in the free port in Fiji. 'i'nu ran do 11.ll the co111plicated l'iettings '"ith this cainera. RL'T ~ you ran al~o set it on a point that says "Au tom ~1lc." '\'ou point it and pull the trig~e.r -it sets its o" n light. 1i1y eight-year-old gets rihotos likr a ··Life" photo~rarih· er. 1tf there's not enough light. the camera simrily won't go. You push the hull.on. nothing happens.) * "I may want to deposit some money O\l •r1eas and have 1ome sent there .. ," I put m.v mnnrv in1n R;ink nf 1\n,crica In Lnn· flon . Branche~ in all F.urope·!"i h1R cities. You can keep it in a dollar or Jnc;il 1noncv ;:i1'('n11nt. ~Take transfers. Buy travel checks in ;1n~1 kind of currency. \Veil organized and helpful penpl('. Thr "'eckcnder of May 21 ••. _______ ,_ ___________ ..;;;;.,;"ii"ii"ii'i m11de an error in ident ifyi n,R a11 pholograph of a ynuni;: man showing a ne~'SPaJH'r and cn l· )age pitce or art. lt should have been credited In Doug Glick of Corona del fllar, a OAIL'i' PILOT carrier bo1· The Weekender rc~rf!ts lhe ef· 1 ror and hopes ~lark Oanka~I who~e namt ran under thf' pho1n didn't mind too much. ··-- THE V!LLAGE WEST FINE ARTS AND CRAFTS CENTER. UNIQU E GIFTS-FOR FATHERS DAY GRADUATIONS-WEDDINGS-ANNIVERSARY SHOPl'ING Will 8E FUN ! -"' OPfN All DAY MEJil.ORl.t.l DAY il,idl, and tht' l\1.axi. on Sun-lions branch\, Gordon E. rcules a major robbery in C'On· 11 da~'. \1a y 30, 6.00 p.m. on S;iv.·~rr 1sound branch 1. tr1nporary London in the film u l Ch;inncl 9 William T Hurti i~hort .•uh-productd by Alan Ladd, J r. F 11 sh Ion in flus I r y Ject~ branch! and nanirl and J ay !\Anter. 1 prrsnnalt11('• -dtslRn('rs A11l T;iradash l \\'rilt"r.~ hranthi. llirk Cleml'nl and Ian La 11· Blll!'!i. Donald Brooks, llud1 president of the Acadrniy. Fre.na1~ ~Tott the .o1creenplay 1 Cernre1eh and Georg10 di based on the novel by James S;inr Ani;:elo : stort exreutive HI k Ra rlo>A-, •'The Rurden of J~nc~lark1JfLord&-Ta}lor. Cl "C l)il'('ClS Proof.'' Michael Tuchnt r and Junr \Vf'lr, publi~hrr and rettf'd ror eJeculive produ- fa~h1on 1'd1h1r nf \Vnmen's llOLl.Y\\'000 fl:Pl l rrr Elliott Kastner. \\'f'i!r D<lily are ;i1n1u1i: those Rl:1kr Ell11;ird~ will d1rrrt hin ~1cSh11 ne 11nd Nigel 1 interv1e1\'('d hy 1 larrison. ' ' Th f' (; r r r n ~I ;i n, · ' !)' t t t · lh .~ In 1·nntra~\ to the cnmn1ent.~ supernatur;il terrnr story. fil;ivcnpor 8 .'lo 5 ar in e 'l rn;ide !Jy tht~e promin('n! 1-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiil-jiiiiijjfii~m-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii 1 ~ f11~hion lr;iders, H11rri ~on nf·I , lerl'i r11n d1d con1 menls from \ " !he ma11 find wonl!\11 tJn the H u N y.r R rs "~','",," """'I",""" ,., ,h, c B 0 0 KS ~hn'.1'. lht \'1rwrr 1~ 111\'1trd 10 1 \ n1<"C hi~ ()pinion and \'Otf' h~ 1nall for hill nr hrr f11vnnll' look , the ~l ini , th~ ~l1d1 , f'lr thr \ ~l i'l\:I, • -I THE WEST'~ ~!NEST IOOKSTORIS FOR 120 YEAPS-SINCI 1151 Located At ' j '''f ... POTTED PLANTS, SPRA YS, ARRANGEMENTS, CORSAGES , l MANY, MANY MORE, COME SE E, COME SAVE! FREE DEL IVER Y! Specials Gooll M•morlal Doy Too! Colifornlo Produce 11 Her•. Look At Ttu~ Savln91! I • • • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • At Thtlr lt~t N•w • CAllF. NOW • i llTllA FANC'f' • • NO. 1 CAll,, • VINE 111~( • ICEBERG • • STRAWBERRIES • TOMATOES • LETIUCE • • 6 For $1 OO • 10C LB. • • • • • 1 OC EA • • LIMIT-6 • LIMIT-I LIS. • llMIT-6 • • WllH THIS COUl'CN • WITH THIS COUl't)N • WITH THIS COUl'ON • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••• • COUPONS EXPIRE JUNE 2 _ART FIRE SALE FASHION SQUARE IN-SANT A _ANA __ Tht1• r•1+t ur t nt1 demend th. fin11t for their cu1tomer1. That'\ why !hey ft•· tur e Newport Produce! P1tronite them! White Horse Inn, Newport : Gordon'1, Leg u11 a Niquel, l1rh1hlr1'1 "On the lay", N"wporl; Anc l ~nt Mariner, Tu1ti11; Thi Archet, Newport : a11cl 011er 200 oth•rs, How a bout your (tlli119 u1? DAV ID ROSEN GALLERY Pa in tings Colleges Sculpture Graphics THURSDAY lhru MONDAY 11 .s ,30 P,M, 81 2 S. COAST HWY,-LAGUNA SiACH Phone 1714) 543.9343 66.500 looks I Poptrbatks lZ,000 Un111.-.I Gr••tJt Cerlls 1fU.t.INI IJ6LOUI Ql•E.'I f;''Ei'll1'1GS 'TIL 9 P .M. • '1 _··0~°21gr Co11 n111Jl'a&1FifCro1ring Prorlur-;. fl 1HI f ln1rrr nrnn11i~ntinn" 1~1 ~ N~!~Q~!.k ~~,~~~.CE -::E::: fj 671 ·62t1 ' 161' N•wport loul•v•rd •n tht P1nln1ula I "JS Y1nr1 of Product . "\\'lltrt qunll/JJ 1.1 th11 Know How" Ord~r of tht Ho!l&e" 11::.-C::=:=--l:;; I t f'rldaY. May 28, lq71 OAIL V PILOT t5 ' I N AB 0 UT B11 NOR~J ST.4 NLEY OUT WEEKENDER ORANGE COUNTY 'S RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE ' Jazz at Pavilion Say "'hat you <will about living in the "Age of Rock" -music, that is -today's mod beat hasn't pushed other musical forms out of the picture al · together. 1'1ost of the sounds of earlier times are still on the scene and showing healthy signs of continued longevity. One or the strongest cases in point can be made for jazz . Far from being passe sta~ked .against the music of Creedence Clearwater Revival, 1t has a fashionable hold on a legion of fans embracing ev- ery age group. JAZZ BUFFS Aside from many clubs where the music flourishes with rap~ and devo~ed audi~nces. the pre· vaillng vogue is 'evidenced in the sizable crowds drawn to Jazz concerts. And Orange County buffs turned out in record number for one held the latter part of April at the Balboa Pavilion. , Now coming up agai n on Sunday, June 6, is the latest in this extraordinary series of jazz con- certs presented under the auspices of percussionist Frank Flynn. Like the first such concert, it will be an afternoon affair fron1 2 to 5 p.m. LONG MONIKER The group of performers taking part. as \veil as most members or the audience, refer to them· selves as "The Society for the Preservation of Jazz You Can Llnderstand." 'fhat's rather a lengthy moni· ker, "'e'd say, but very fitting ""·ithal. , The four returning veterans of the April con· <:ert are George Van Eps, seven·string Gretsch guitar; Bob Bain. f'ender bass; Jerry \Villlams, drums; Frank Rly nn, an1plified marimba. All are COMING JUNE 7-8·9 BILL MEDLEY NOW APPEARINC> WE THREE BOON 3333 W . Coast Hwy DOCKS Newport Beach 642-4298 TEMPLE GARDENS Q-JlNtS:SRest~uro11t LUNCHEON & DINNER DAILY Visit Our RICKS HA COCKTAIL IUFFET LUNCH 11 :30-l :JO Mond1y thru Frld1y OPEN . ~lollyY.1ood studio 111usicians, ranked amonc the 1nost proficient artists in the mu sic busine ss. EDDIE MILLER. GUEST STAR f'or the up·coming concert. this all-star group Is Importing a guest headliner fron1 Pete Fountain 's band in New Orleans. He is Eddie /\1illcr, famed tenor sax player, Eddie. having \vorked and recorded v.·i th many of the country's top aggregations. is held in special cstcen1 by jazz lovers. Notable among his past af- filiations was Bob Crosby's "Bob-Cats," generally regarded as one or the greatest jazz groups C\'Cr as'Sembled. The concert \\•ill be :.taged on lhe second noor or the Pavilion. located at 400 t.1ain St. on the Bal · boa Peninsula. Beverages \rill be available and ad· 1nission is $2.50 per person. '!'here's another activity out 'n' about crs might like to entertain in connection \\'ilh the evenl. 'J'his 1s the prospect of enjoying lunch or brunch prior to the concert. or dinner follo\11ing. at the excellent 1·a1e of the \Vhale restaurant overlooking the \\'<lier· front on the Pavilion's first floor. Sorce Joins Vi ll age Inn • Talk of food and football mixed !J.•ith surpri~· jng case during a pleasant lunch hour one afternoon last \Veek. The selting \Vas Balboa Island's Village Inn. and the gridiron dialogue was unavoidable con· sidering the gentleman "'ho lunched !J.•ith us. ~ Th is formidable fello,v, both size and convcrsa· L1on·\\•ise. \Vas Art Sorce. former A!l ·American at the University of Denver in Colorado. IL !J.•as our ini tial meeting but his loquacious nature lert little unsaid by the time lunch was over. Art has onl y very recently arrived on the local restaurant scene. Our friendly discussion eovcred everything froin his ne\v association \Vith the \1il· lage Inn to highlights of bygone days on the playing fields. Real Cantonese F~od eat here or take ho me. STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3·9560 Opett Y-l rou1111I Dolly ll·IZ -f rf, onll Sor. 'tll J o.m. •~olic SO\llh s1.,• ••oa a nd arrnool)her1t NOW A PARTNER He joined the ranks of South Coast restaura· leurs by entering into a partnership \vith Mrs. l)orothy Uscdon1. \Vho up to the point of Art's af· filiation -had been the Inn's operator since the death of her husband several years back. 1'he Use· don1s joinUy opened the restaurant 14 years ago this suinmer. .i\rt. \\·e learned, is a nallve New \'orker viho ntoved to Cal ifornia with his family when he was l ;,. It wa s \l'hile he \~·as attending So uth Pasadena San !Harino High that his (ootball lalents came lo lhc forefront and resulted in his being named All· CIF. Next came Pasadena City College and further sports hon ors by placement on the Little All·America tca1n . llere he was also voted the most valuable play· er in the Junior Rose Bowl game that sa\V Pasa· dena pound out a thrilling 28·26 Y.'in over Tyler, Texas. ALL·AMERICAN Transferring to the University of Denver. the college football years were climaxed by the crown· ing achievement of making All-.'\merican . FollO'\" ing graduation, his degree in business admin1stra· lio n and finance firmly in hand, Art "'as drafted by the New York Giants. TO JAPAN FOR GOVERNMENT ri1arriage and an irresistible job offer from the U.S. Dept. of J)efense cu t short his pro football career. \Vhat turned inlo 11 years of government i;ervice got under \\'ay \Vith a five year assignment in .Japan. FREE DELIVERY-DELICIOUS DINNERS Shrimp Scampi-Sauc• V•lout._Ric• M•dley lltOCCOLI WITH HOLLAHOAIS' SAUCI s3 45 SALAD • GAltllC CHfESf lllfAD . t BONED CHICK EN MU\HltOOMS IN WJHE SAUCE · lllCE Mf0l£Y SALAO · IUCUITS AHO HONEY s1 !15 THUltSDAY THllOUGH M0H0Al'-I to 11 PM, ·-SPEC1•L MENUS AVA!LAILt .lo ll Wlfll' OH ltf:OUESJ-e YOUR PLEASURE MONSIEUR 49SM62 ® ffilYflKO • Lunc;b100 Dinner Cockt1!11 011en '1 c/fl}'• • . During off duty hours Art continued his f!duca-.. · tion and earned a master 's degree from 1'o kyo's So phia University. tlls profess ional work in nav11l . inlelligence and as an efficiency expert carried him ; during the nexl six-years to posts in Germany,~-: Spain, Portugal and England. ~: Leaving the Defense Dept. about lwo years agoi::; Art came back lo this country and became an exe-"':: ~utive vice president for Samuel Rugg & Associ ates : In Columbus, Ohio. Last December he returned to: c:aiifornia to undertake a series of personal bu s1--· ness ventures -the Village Inn representing the latest of these. BROTHER CHARLIE, MANAGER Art's brolher. Charlie Sorce, is another nC\V fa ce at the restaurant in the official capacity of man· ager. All or his past 'vorking life has been spent in the wholesale food business. ttJ At lunch the Village Inn offers a wide variety or salads. sand"=iches and hot entrees together with several daily specials. All sandwiches are served \vith Kosher pickles and a choice of cote slaw. potato salad or French fries. 1-fighly recommended on the basis of our flavor- ful selections are the hot prime rib saiidwich, $1.95, and the steak sa nd,vich. a juslly·1>0pular item with Inn regulars priced at S2.95 . Order it and you'll re- ceive a choice Ne'v York steak served on rye toast \.l.•ilh fried onion rings and potatoes. And sn1all woniler that there seems to be a run on martinis and Irish corfee here. Both are excel· lent. the latter right up there ,~·ith that at its birth· place, the famous Buena Vi~ta in San Francisco. T..ocated at the corner or Balboa Island's prin- cipal Intersection, Park and h-1arine, the Village Inn i.c; open for lunch and d inner seven days a week. f'acilities are available for private parties and ban· quets. a new C'ate ring service has been in stituted. and the cocktail lounge is open nightly lo 2 a.m. Continued on Page 2'l MORT'S BAL-PORT LOUNGE ENTERTAINMENT FRI. "ANO SAT .-9 P.M. to 2 A.M. EARLY TIMES HIGHBALLS 65~ Dinners-Tue. thru Sat. 12 DZ. USDA 1CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Complete Oi""er . ... ... . ... $3.85 SUNDAY BRUNCH-9 A.M. TO 4 P.M . 4507 W. COAST HIC>HWAY NEWPORT BEACH 675·4200 ~~~~~,~~ f <'aluring Exotic Tropical Drinks ll::IO 1.m .• 11 '·'"· h'"· 1~ .. T~u,._ l\;Jt 1.m, • 2 1,m. Prl. 11111 Sil. 1500 AC'AMS (at Harbor} COSTA MESA S40-1937 S40-1923 ~ .. "~~ 139 So. Los 'Roble~. Po5Arif'nll • 7!1r1·7005 331'nwn" r.ountry, Or~nRI: • ri~l ·J:nl the FLING-I~~~~~~ ENTERTAINMENT • 1 Nle>HTs A wEEK Th• Dry Dock ~~i~!~~. 673·4633 ' Fh1e Jtollon Cuisine Cncl<tnll• 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673·8267 leM"oflo111 o,.~11 Dolly -S I'·"'· to l •·"'· CLOSID MONOAY OBERHANSLl'S OF LONDON E1~6LISU ME . .\T PIES Stear -. St•ak •nd Kidney ~,!,: Stea k ancl Mu1hroom1 e Pork -· Ve al and Ham e Corn i1h P•1ties • Sau1a9a Rolls -. 162711 P1t lllt Co,ut Hw)'. Ht1ntlngtO(I flt«" C/reese Coke •tie hfol<e Fr••sl1 fJt f>1•r 01a·11 Hitcl1e11 DANCING * HAP HALL DUO Wil~ 01! Hit~ f" llU . MON.-TUES.·WED.~ * Larry L1k• Sin~cr Gui1Ari~l Thur. thr• S••· ~ For Early Risers and Late Players Open Da ll y From 6 A.M. ta 2 A.M. Rear·Mesa Theat1r MESA sou•i:ie 145 I. 1''" Sr. J••t •ff Newport llvd, SEAFOOD CONVERSATION Everyon• ii talking about our cleliciout itaamecl cl amt and giant ! 16·20 oz.I Auitrian l obster Tails. SUNDAY BRUNCH Served from 10 A.M. • 2 P.M. f11le rt•i11mt"I I OA11ti119 HAPPY HOUI Mo11. • Fri. 5 I• 7 p.r11, with Hor' d'""'"'" IANQUET FACILITIES l17 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNTIHCiTON IUCH OPfH 1 DAYI ~f R111rv•lion1 Aceepftd ~?ri);':;f,.;.~~~~~'.O.fis, ~II~=;"~"~"~"·~· -~'f"~-;"~:::;~~=~~~~d:I ~ VOLCANTONG TO VIS'1<NG THE ISL~ ~Ii-.,.., ... ~ l-IOUSE MOKl'S ~©i)<~-DON JOSE' ~ . • ••• SHOP • !'.{I NO•t' APPEARIN6 ~A COFFEE ~·'f' ' -~5:: ~~;:'~:.,:' Feefuring GI ~J \ ! .. :. -" Prt11•rtot '-' fy; I r --.Al!lllS1rvM1 ,/ L '9' tn Tllf Howtlltn Mt""'' MOKl'S FAMOUS •l'.~ I LUNCH • DINNER IURG~RS & SHAKES ~I\ I ?l LATE DINNERS Breakfa1t <.~ f,,. TIKI LOUNGE Lunch 4'c.:_-{ ~~ Songs Of Cavin Dinner 4.'V ~ 1400 PALISADES ROAD · COSTA MESA ~'l\. >ti !Neu to tti. ~•d•woy la11I S57°14•• Jil Vic Garcia Ltd. Featuring ARLENE SKILES Ench111d1 and Taco ................. $1 .35 Chili Relleno -Enchil1do1 ..•......•... $1.50 ~;:J·· , A TREAT FOR Rll LOVERS I ~I, -. Tllf: 'VOLCANO llOUSE EXTENDS A 'Pfr TAL ~ tMl'OllTID l~ITISH GoOOOS e ALL FOOD TO GO OJ"~'EH ON ITS t'AMOUS JIAWAJIAN JtlBS .. S•"H with llce, '"""' Tostodlt•• 9114 Soito .,,,_,,, c, .. ,,, !cu Ceck1,a PA'"''· •''· ,_,( SUNDAY d MONDAY HITES ,., ~ an FINEST MIXICA N fOOD AT llASONAILI l'lllCIS HOIJ!tS1 10 •·"'· · • P·"'·• Mo".· Sa+, e C!o1ed Su11cl•v jtf' COMPLlTI HAWAII AN Rll jp: 270 E. 17th Street ~ • DINNE~ FO~ ONLY. $3.75 ·i·-e COCKTAILS e Ca1t1 Mt1a 645-2252 ~ ~ ·-9093 E, Ad•m1 (at Mo19noli1) Hunt. 8•1ch 962-7911 '-'------------'I J+.r'"{J...~~~~~ , __________ _ PRESENTS RENE CHANDLER Dir(:('! 1'',.om La!\ VP!!8JI FRI. & SAT. JOHN CLAUDER SUN. & MON. COMINC> JIMMY SMITH June 13-14·15 Hout• Specielty Armenian Lamb·Kabob EARLY BIRO SPECIAL 5 to 7 P.M. DAILY DINE AT ONE HALF PRICE \· IW/lh Purc:llow Of 0111 At RetJulor Pritel SAT. & SUN. BRUNCH FINE FOOD • ENTERTAINMENT DANCING • COCKTAILS BUFFET LUNCH DAILY $1.95 HAWA II WEEK FJNA LE Me, 21·30 -Nl9htly Sfot1 Shows fo.,11,lft, REC>AL TAHITIANS Aicl Fr1dcf'i• 111cf Robt•fa, of ~ovro• SUNDAY, MAY 30 AUTHENTIC HAWAIIAN LUAU Ma~• Rt\atvtllo111 Now C1t"'in9 Allt•tlion• -M•\• ll•111••t:c1111 E•rly TWO BIG NIGHTS COUNT BASIE -JUNE 9th 1nd 10th LIONEL HAMPTON -JUNE 22 2121 Eatt Coast Hl9hway Coro110 def Mar 675·0505 - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. ; ........ • f§ DAIL Y PILOT Frld•y, M•y 28, 1971 iO===;;;;;;;;;;=========--r'l""""'~----=,,.,,... ........ =a-......,,.,~~-·»~t "~-C•~· ............ =---........ ----'"""""'""""""""'"""~..,..,,,.~ s:~~~~D / ll'EEKENDER 0 LJ T \ N A B 0 LJ T AND OYSTER BAR IN THE SOUTHLAND 630 LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT IEACH 675-0100 NOTHING ON OUR MENU IS OVER $3. 99 • STEAK & LOBSTER II C HOICE T-Bone STEAK e NEW YOllK STRIP ...... -. .. Nothing highet on the menu. N1tur1lly-1ged U.S.D.A. Choice beef only. No tenderiter1. Steak dinners sl1rt at $1 .65 and include 11l1d, toast & potatoes. Biked potato•s from 11 A.M. 'Iii 9 P.M. I ''Well· done" steaks cooked with tender loving care, too I SP£CIAL CHILDREN 'S MENU ALSO : A pewee pl•+• for the l ittle T of, -29c OPEN DAILY 11 A.M .. 9 P.M. 2267 FAIRVIEW I.AT WtLSONJ COSTA MESA 548·0368 Nearly Everyone Li stens to Landers NOW PRESENTS Continued from P•g• '25 Success Story As more than casual observers of the country's restaurant and food business. \\'e try to stay abreast o( the changing developments in its mal')y fa scinat· ing fields . One fa ct stands cl ear at th!? moment: I '170 was a year of reckon ing for the $6 billion dol· Jar fa st food industry. Some companies folded , \a\\•suil s lhrealened others and there \\'ere even hints of sca ndal. At year's end, almost all the 60 or more fa st-food stocks \\·ere \\ell below their 1969 hig hs. ANNUAL REPOR T One notable exceptio n, ho"·eve r. came to our attention tbe other day. This arrived in the form of McDonald's Restaurants annual rep ort. li1 cDonald's ha ve just co mputed the sale of their seven billionth hamburger served since the first restaurant opened in 1955. \Vith ove r 1,500 outlets in all 50 slates sellin g over 4.000.000 ham· burgers a da y, ~tc Donald 's is 110\v ri valed only by the U.S. government in nu1nber of people served. PITFALLS Obviously· th ere are some pitfalls that ~1c Don· a!d 's has managed to sides tep. One of these. it seems la us. is that man y fast food opera tio ns diversifi ed qu ickly into chicken . roast beef and other items to boost sales \\'ithout studying \\'hether there \vas a S01 10111 ST. Rl5l"RVATIONS NIW,ORT l(ACH •75·0100 1t'e Scr1:e 11.S. 1•1·f111c F.r1sft-1·11 Corn·ferl Beef E.Tt•l11sh•ely. l'er•o11nll11 Selected Anti Aged •••. fl11r ,,,, .•• c·,,,,,er· A Tlirce Ccncrolion r an1ily Tradi!ion -f.'s t. 1921 EVERY SUNDAY FROM 11 A.M. TO J P.M. 'GORK~N G1~VER THE MEDITERRANEAN ROOM BRUNCHEON A ~RUIT CAllROU5lL! "" E"!"t ly New Co nt o ~t ~a~lu•in9 ' Mulloy of At· 1or••d C hill•d, s,1 ,~1 Fru•h 'n Thi"9" c ... i,,,J with 1 Mound of Cotl•9t Cht111. o ,., W ifl !t St rvt cl Pt • T t · hl P. 10/,MO R.A.INBOW TIOUT .. , . , , , . J.75 ''P>h Wt tt• l•oul. e.o""'· 51uTefd •• 1 Tu<~. E•<O"~lt Wdh F'"'" Et••· 5crt,.,Dlfl 1'">11 • C.P"f<OU! MOU"ll of L1vonnel1t l'oTatou OMILITil CHANTICL EER ......... , 2.tS lo. D"'OM•u1 "'"'u•~ cl Ctt >c•e" ~u, •~d Mus~· •Del''" .~ "P•vv Crrtm. Svnlry Se•c.., Intl ro:n~ •n•o • ,lu"v Golnen Omr•t Hr TH I A.111,0R.TIR. .................. 4.50 A l'~r1onol C•t•'"'" A °'t.c111 Cu! o• r 11t1 ""'""'"· 5•u!lrd Te YIK,lr 0 11<,.minOl•"'I l t ••t """ Arcom1"'nftc! Dv • 1'01c•tc1 EO'l .&Joo t Mu!l tn •<'Cl (Ovt•f'd w<1~ O"r Goklt n l"-IOlll <'Clt lot fR.llA.TA MIDITERRANIA ...... , ... J.tS ''"'' • '"''' ''~"' l ••" G•"""" S•rle•" wi•n r ... ,, 0"'°"' G•~tn (~llllO!d Soonfc". ••n • To"'~ Cf C.ll••f, "'I 10110<! ll9Mly """ ~""""" '"'" • ''11lly O"'olt•'t "" 1 S•«• of Cr111ly C••t•t ll rt•ll llOA.ST ,llMI ~t i , 011 J111 ••• , ..•. 5.SO A Lu<Pv. C"o•<• Cul, C11rv•d frllm 011r G•t•• ~"M•"O I!>~ •1•1Tt, Ill• l~f ><~tlly M"'·doy """ Lev" A IOUNTEOUS I.A.SKIT el Blu•bt"v M.,l/i"'· M: ... t•lurt Oo,.l1h R.011 1 ""d Fl.Iv c ......... 11. IGGS lfNIDtCT ... , .............. J.50 '"' E!tr"t' 'IW!•"t Thi• (l•!l•C O•t " Will Pt 50fvfd W•'" Pa1cntd '"'" llt"<" E1g1. o" •" E"or .. n Mum" w11n c'"""''" e,1,1,. ,,,., 5•ut• ><~llM•<UI,. (ollttt F''" •"11 t G~rO\I· !Uft of Tom••o11 Woll EO\hlO\Ct Tftl• l'llft VIAL SWEETIRIADS VOL·AU -\l[NT J.25 Othct t1 "'""' !-•IDr11a1. llf,Mly S1u•1ea "'''" Sn•lle to. Mt1>h•OO!'r"\ '"" Slmmtrtd '" • Shtrtv W1n1 S•ucr St '"rd In t Peny Sh•ll woon Frt>ll s .. 1..,01.., 111 .. cn Et9t t 'ld Cot1101 Fd n llOYAL Sl'A.NISH OMILITII . , ...... 2.tS t>. "ut Om•'•t" lov••'I Oth9ll•l !>. ~olcy <>111. l!l"'uttl 111 Tom0111. Grtt" (lolllt •. Mu•"'OCl''"' '"""'" """ Cn•r ... All O.llf Mlully 1 11"dod •"I St,•e!I ,lulfy '"Ill CRl,IS VIRONIQUE , , ..•......... 1.25 ,,..,,n '•11c1~n. C••~"'~ cnoe>•" 11"11 w~~'• Mu•tet G••PIJ, ""''" I l!icn "'"'"•'( S•<><•· ()1111..i •11 l'or11cnM, Wiii (om~·•1t T~' c; .. ~ A <>t,.G"'1l '••orott , llllt 01111 WHI Otllght tt\f M11t Ol.c•lmln1t.~9 A GLASS OF CHAM,A.GNl S(RVED WITM YOUR IRUNCH - AN Y COCKTAIL OF YOUll CHOlCl-$1 11700 MACARTHUR ILVD. NEWPORT IEACH Fer R111r111tion1 C1tl 133-2770 Oppo1it1 Or1nge County Airport • French Fr ie • • French Frie d O nion Rin g• 2 STEAK DINNERS FOR • Toued Sa lad • Ro ll and Butter s,;n q • fri•ncH l •ke •dv •nt•9• of th ia d•lit.iou1 4.in.._ ner for 2, •t e ju at right pr ice. 1/i lb. fend•r choice ateak, 'ut to Bredford House speeil ic•tion1, Be 9ood to • fri end, or meybe +h• f•mify7 Th i1 me•I i' • f•vori te with •II ... yo u'll be • winn er! ' • Op•n Dilly Mon. thru Sit. t :lO •.m. tot ,.m. Sundly r/IO;'/'fJ;j KNOWN FOR VALUES GRANT PLAZA -BROOK HURST & ADAMS -HU'ITl~'G'TorJ'~EACH ll t-: I·: F k JI Cl II-,,•: b•"'le" 11 :JO om·l prn betf 6 :00 pm· 11 prn boo•t 11 :00 am·l orn 428 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 64S-S4 I 0 RO .. ST LONG ISLAND DUCKLING Sll11!'" Ri::11 1·11 dr \rdrl llu" AMONG 20 StLfCT DINNlll f:NTll llS MIKE JORDAN ouo ALLEY WllT PRESENTS The Sen1•fion1I TONY FLORES Gult•rist I Vocalist Folk, Cl•sslc:al, Spanish TUE. THRU SAT. GINO LANZI Mond1y Night• FEATURING DINNERS ltt 11!1 S ·~ Frnnei1ee M1""'' RACJC OF LAMI STEAKS • SEAFOOD ~ TO I! NIGHTlY IUSINESSMAN'S LUNCH 11 ,00 TO 5 SATURDAY-11 to S LUNCH OR BRUNCH SUNDAY-BRUNCH Ol'l:N EVERY DA.Y OH fMI OC:l&N &OJ&CIMT fO NIWl'OlllT al&CH l'tllll 2106 W. OCIAN FRONT NEWPOU BUCH bro1d en ough appeal for these items lo mer it the expense. Although McDonald 's is no"' testing chicken, they have, been. if an yth ing. overly conservative in slicking to a li1n ited, but meticulously served menu. \%? Above all . the company has put the full \\•eight of corporate services in support of its fran chisees, "'ho O\\'n approximately 80 percent of the stores. Further. the y stress romn1unity involve lflent as the secret of good business. HAMBURGER Tn another perhaps sign ificant poli cy, all own· ers and managers are required to graduate from their Hamburger University in surburban Chicago, a half·million dollar training school. This probably accounts. in large measure. for the almost unani· mous loy alty a'nd rem~rkable esprit de corps one fi nd s among the proprietors of lhe golden arches establishments. ~ Nor ABROAD The chal!enge now fac ing l\1c0nnald's is to 111ove beyond its success in the state.s. Fred L. Turner. the corporation's dynamic president, an· nounced last week that McOona!d 's is extending to Japan in the i;econd of a series of overseas moves. '!'he joint venture \Vith t1vo major Japanese firm!i fo llo1vs an earlier entry into the Netherlands as l\1cDonald's first move into Europe. Jn movies 1ve too like a "L.ove Story," but there's someth ing that beguiles us even more about a ''Success Story." McDonald 'f is certainly starring the latter these da ys. PRlnCE lthAles RESTAURANT SEAFOOD_. ITEAllCI T~•·• Wtd., Tllwr. 01'tn 4 '"' l'tl,, Sit., Sun. o,.,. 11 1m !Clou" M.,..:•JO sunday BRunch 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. JFUW~ 3801 EAST COAST H lCbWAT CoitosA on. 1!AJ, (AL1ro~s14 rllO:<l : (;"J4) 675-1J7~ µH1A Aiu· 1~1n 1t11w •~ an 1110 I !l )lo!.l M. ti l dJ nftr) --....-....... - FOR our OF THIS WORLP Pf:l.1VE==R~Y~-·-~'-{ -~- SE1'.~1ci • !n N1wport Btach 'Cai!• Mtu C•ll 646·713' J" Hunnn1ton 8taeh 847·1214 FAMILY PIZZA PAR LORS PIPING f.10f PIZZAS (Yll TH PIZZ.AZ~) OtllV(R[O TO VOUR DOOR tN MINUTE.S, IN ME·N·EOS SPACE AG£ MOBILE OV£NS, RONALD McDONALD A.ND GARY OWENS Playmates with Free McDonaldl1nd Happy Cup1 FOR ADVERTISING RIVIERA I l'!EST.AUMNT Continental Cuisine Cocktails Serving Lunch.ion and Din.ntr ltfondat1 through Saturda~ . Closed Sundays We •re loc•t•cl ntxt fe 1 the M•y Co. in South 1 Coa1t Pl•z•. JJJJ s .• ,.,, •• 540·)140 IN in the WEEKENDER OUT 'N' ABOUT SECTION Pho ne NORM STANL EY 6<42 .~321 ~ ORANGE COUNTY ~ HAMBURGERr HAMLET ~ : ....... ' Known For Simply Marvelous Food And Ale ~~ ~· COCl<TAIL HOUR IN THE TAP ROOM Monday thru Fridey -4:00 to 6:00 p.m. W•ll Orinks--65c Hors D'oeuvre• OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 1 &46 ADAMS '" .... ,., COSTA MESA &4&-7392 THE BERLINER German Fa111il y R e&tau ran.t Femou1 For SAUERBRATEN with POTATO DUMPLINGS Enjoy A Wunderb1r Time At Our MAY FEST SATURDAY, MAY 29th Be ginning •f 8:00 p.m. Mu1 ic •nd Da ncing With The EDELWEISS TRIO ~rom l•v1ri• For Reierv•fions C,11 Now .QtnJ).J1.ily-Eo.t...O.innu:_ CHILORIN'S MINU IANlj>UIT FACILITIU From S P.M. CLOS!O-MONDAY A l111 'llt:t OlR ll-llNfll OELICATE5S£N Fi~• l11•op11n Fee'• 1m11o•+t'4 B1tr1 I Win11 11582 HACH ILYO. T••n & Country C•"ter HUNTINCUON IEACH tU-5800 • ,/' g ,~ .... ccu~rrv '"lll!rl.lt .. ! " . ". Frld1y, M1)' 28, 1971 Dill V PILDT 21 Your Gtilde to Movies 'Shelter' Rock Festival Horror I J Editor 's Note: This movie guide U pr1portd by the fihm committee of Harbor Council PT A. Mrs. Nigel Bailey is preaident and Mrs. Bruce Nordland TV DAILY LOG Fri day Evening MAV 28 Saturday Morning MAV 29 1:00 Q Ila Ntw1 Jerry DunphJ. 6:00 (I) TY I Cll Sll'Mll (])AIC N1w1 RtlSOlllf, Smith. 5:)(1 EJ SUIW"'lf S.mnter 0 llNIC N1w11nlc1 Tom Snyd1r. 0 C.1111p111 Profitt 0 AIA·flllA All-Stu l11kt1Nll 7:00 IJ New Words, Nrw W111 C11111 (confd from 5·30 PM) O @ mTem!toltf}SHw 0 Sit O'Clott Mo'll1: fC) (90) 0 Mhit Cl1WM11 "MwKlt ltlth P1rty'' (tltn) '64--m ltt'I Rip Frank11 A~•lon. Annette Funicello. fD S1bm1 Sir"! #~7 1 ·275. m Thi Flintstonts 7:30 1J Dusty'1 Trtlhousc (D Slit Trtk 0 m Hed;lt l Jtcklt fD A Tim• lot lohn/Ch1rll1'1 P1d 00 OitCOMry tll) Fltlltr FamUJ 0 l l1ct ElPfritnct is committee chairman. It is intended a.s a r•fer~nc• in determini'ng suitable f i Im s for certain age groups a n d will appear weekly. Your Views are solicited. Mail them to Mo- uie Guide, car e of the DAILY PILOT. * ADULTS Diary Of A rit ad House wUe ( R l : Story of the dlsin- leir&lion of a New York at- torney's marriage. Richard Bt1:nJam in portrays the pom- pc:>us husband. C a r r I e Sfiodgrcss plays the bored wife who finds an affair with ml Nolicluo 3• ®) Untie Ruu r--··-··--~-....... ---···· ... m D11th Valley Days m Tl\.un,ttblrdl CI:)L1 Hori Ftm!tltr cen CGnsuelo l :ODi)IJas Bunn1/Ro1d Run11tr Hou1 m News Jim Hawthome. 0 m Weody W6odpetter 1:30 (fl News B•ll Huddy. 0 (})@ ltnctlot Unk @ Truth or ConMquences (]) Clltster tht Jts1er i Cl) CIS Ntwri W1U~r Cronk1!t. fJ MeY!t: "The ttypnotlt E11• (hor- ~ NBC N"" Oav1d !lrlnklty. ror) '60-Jacques B1ra1r1e. m Tht flJi111 Nun m Tilts Ill Weill f1 rao f!l HDdl[epoda:• Lodz• 1:30 D @I m Tlle lva•lot• @:ID Sel1clt<I nt111s m els.ct Kid m The OeMrt Rtplrt ID liu111llJ l CI:) TBA 1:45 0 Ptl)'Sid1n'1 lihrtllll fffi Ntwt 9:00 0 (I) Slb1l111 l tflt li!Oftlt f 1:00 6 CBS NtWI ';°11111 C1onkitt. lioolles . 0 i?i) NBC Ntw1 D1~1d 81lnkt1y. 0 @1 m Dr. Dtlittlt Ci) To TrH 1111 Trllth 0 Mtvie: "A Mtdtt ftr lt1111y'" ! , I ' O Wh1f s Mr U111? (comedy) '4S -Art11,. dr Cerd11¥1. ; ®} Ditt 'la~ o,t1 0 (])@ ltoT lfWh Sltow r ) m I l1vr Lucy m A.M. Mo"tiu: "lilltrl Dlwr'" (•d· l ., j @ ([) Dt11Mt ~enlu1e) 'S7 -J1m1s Cr1i1, Aud11r • ED Thirty Ml1111ln Witll •• , Totter. "Stl1eco1dl t• Fur}" (•dwn- £?!) Ch1is11111 Uvt~a Wtrd turr) '56 -Foriest Tutkei, aJ A111eli!o1 Nqr~ ID Tru Ho11st CE Si Ne Futr11 Tu €IJ Cutrda11 li11ltlrr11 fffi I IPl(1ll I Ttlt·Auction A be~e· (I!) P1 Mr11111 lttino fit for Ike Unit ed Jewis!i Appe ll. 9:30 D @I m Tiii Pl11k l'antlMr ,. sr•N 'fNTON 7:30 O Tht Interns (RJ 0 (IJ@Tllt Ooubltdacktrl II ft i CIJ Miwit: (CJ "love 11 1 Mtnr 0 Movl1: "lWo Cun1111d 1 l1d1t" ~ ... ~1• ...... b. .... I j Sp!endored Thin(' (dram•) '55 -(western) '5(-W1yne Morris. r JOHE CHRISTY '. William Holden. Jennifer Jon11.. fD Movit: ''Th• Ctp:tlvt H111t" •; L ' i =~re ~~:;n::~:':' /:/ ~·~~111·4;N:::••I Redtnvt. ~. 'I J~ Dl\I lll'V\Yl c_,,l. ·ii l ()) Movie: TBA 10:00 £) ()] Jotit l ltit Puuyealt 1\1 \ mu~\ftlL Q Milion $ Movi1: (2111) "Klis of o ~m,.ac Cllild11n·1 Tlluti• ~~··u''"lilC't1nntC .1'1 De1th•' (mysrtry) '47-Brian Don· (I) R11t E.11111 Refttll1 mlL mUfttJ\. levy, Victo1 Mature. 0 lJ) Hot Wherls . ' m Truth or Conwci urn<11 ! Luella lib1r ''f , m 11 T1k1s 1 Thit! 10:30 Cl) H1rlt111 1ilobltrottrr1 ._ M•...cilll ._ j t]) R1ppln1 Up !ht Wetk Lu Crane Miwit: "lnlem1tio n1I L1cly"' (Id· .IN 11 l lfil. j hosts cl11cus.1lon 11tlie1 cov1lin1 maj venture) '44 -llon1 M1u11. M ..,...._ "' · or MWJ tvtnts. 0 rn Sky H1wll1 .. llf::::::. ,. i €E) Cln11111 30 11 :00 6 @ Archi1'1 funhowM h 1 m Estrell1s Music.Its 0 [@) @D M1 jer le1111e l 11ebaft CI:) TIA Oa~lind ~,., vs 8Mt11n Red 5<11. 7:55 CI:) C11nlion dt Sq11ndos (j) Movir: "Sill'!r Quttn .. (1dv1n· 1:00 0 Thr Allen Show Guests are Jne lure) '42 -Pnsc1ll1 Lani . H111rin1. Milton Berle. P1mel1 Mas 0 @ Motor Moust on. R1th1rd 01wson, Or. R1ch1rd 0 Movit: "Son of ltlte S'lt rr" G11dn11. (western) '53 -Keith L1rson. 0 CIJ "•nnJ I tht Proleucu 6) Miwit: "Rise i ncl Sllint .. (co rn· (D To TtH tt11 Tnllll tdy) '41 -Milton Berlt. EI:) llvtna IDG-CE fiesta Me1ic1n1 @II Sylvlt 1 Enrl.111 11:30 0 Cl) Tiit HardJ loJI aJ A1n11on F11lu11 "Mir1clt ol Sur-m MtllCI t Mino R1ndltr1 viv1I" documen ts !ht slru11l1s ol Jews from 1900 to tli1 pr111M time Afternoon l :OS ail Luch1 Ubrt 1:30 £) ([) CIS Friday Movi1: {C) 12:00 IJ Sc.oobJ Doo an uninhibited writer as a temporary antidote. Gimme Shelter I R ) : Documentary account of 1\oll- inf Stones rock festival near San Francisco where four died. Study of mob psycholoa:y culminating in actual photos of Black man stabbed by Hell's Angel. ' I \Valk Tbe Unt iGP): Gregory Peck is a rural Ten- nessee law officer trying to e1CaPt an unhappy marriage. Tuesday Weld costars in this drama. !\1•A"S*H (R I: Irreverent comedy about th!: Mobile Army Surgical Hospital dur· ing the Kort:an war. Spoof on nurse-doctor relationships and th e "Last SuJ>9er." Stars Elliott Gould And Donald Sutherland. Tbt Owl And Tbt PUIS)'Cll I RI : Barbra Streisand and George Segal star in film version of Broadway comedy \11ith •·prostitute-with-a-ht!:art- of-gold" theme. Pretty Maids All In A Row IR): Rock H u d s t1n portrays guidance . counsellor ha ving affairs with his pretty students. while Enili!h teach- er Angie Dickinso n seduce5 shy studenlo;. Plot concerns the strangul ation of three of the girls. Rosemary's Baby I X ) : Newlyweds move next dflOr lo devil cultists. Mia Farrow dreams she succumbs to ad- vances of devil-like cre.11ture. During painful pregnancy she becomes suspicious or • diabo lic1l bargain betwee n hu sband and the neighbors. Wb11'1 New Pussycat IR.): Peter Sellers portrays 1 Paris psychiatrist who engal(es in extra-marital affairs with his beautiful clients. While he is busy chasing Capucine, she is havin 11: an affair with Peter O'Toole. Where's Poppa '!' IR): Black drama in which George Segal pla ys a man torn between love for his mother and a desire tG kill her. From her television centered world. she manages his life. love and career. MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS Andromeda Strain ( G ) ~ Suspenseful story of race against tim11:. Sci11:ntists In unde rground deltrt Jab try to Isola t e rar 11: dis11:1 se transported to earth from another -plan11:t. The Bird WUb The Crystal Plum age fGP ): All Rome is terrorized bv a Jack The RiD- per style killer. Tony Mus1nle and Suzy Kendall star in this murder mystery filmed in Italy. (lLfr hl} "Ult With Falhtr" (r..omtdJ) 0 CD m Amtrlctn ltlld.Und '47-W1lli1m l'owtll, Irene Dunne m(J) ~;~~~Ct.AT 1 0 9 m N11111 of !ht li t nt (R) tnft 1 0 @ Tht P1 rtrlcltt F1111lly (Ill EEJ Hlah School P!eblt111 Escape From The Planet Of Tb11: Apes !GP): Third In the science fi cticn series dealing with ,premis11: tha t a planet ex· l •~~~~~~~~~~~~l~s~ls~w~h~ere apes rul11: and cap- m D1vtd FrOll SMw Tiit Beith El) Teatrt Fanllslitt c:I:) Drtml de II S.1111111 811ys IUtl!. 12"10 £J ([} Tht Mo U.S aJ l>r•1n•t • 0 Movie: "Rt;t tor Uft" (1dven· t'tl !vs! Jta {R) [rrall (J1rne1, lure) '55 -Richard Conte. I p11n1st·compo.e1, 1uestt. @ Mobllt Home Show @I!) Patttrn f• Ll'llna , 9:00 0 (i) lllrt lilrl (R) '1hit Str'!Drl· C:J Mo'llt; • 'Wtlk tt11 Dirt Strltt" .• . (mystery) 56 -Chutt !Annon. II .. An11 M1r~1 learns !ht comedic l:OO E Dlsllldly & MuttltJ Mu1t1n she IS lo pity In I s.ketch (}) Ctmpus Profile Is olle1a1ve to M!J1ttn-Am1nc1ns Ci) Mnit: "Sh tdow Mtn" (myshry) 1 Alel1ndro R1y 1uest). ·s3--Ce.sar Romero, Slmon1 Silvi. ~ ~1:1~1 Squid ~ Movil: "Rio lir1nd•" l•d~e~1u11) EI:) 30 Mlnules 50 -John W1yn1. M1 ur11n 0 H111. 1 _ l C '" 11 C 1 d 00 TV I lool1 t1 Lurnlna Uil 1 f 1 In f 1 1 (D Wte-lfld NtWI ml El Ptudo d4I Solla €1J Le P1ohlblclo l :lO 0 NYPD fffi PtUPGrt lo Trml 0 (}J CIJ Tht Ddd Cou,11 (R) 1:)0 0 The Jlbons "The Jury Story." ftUx. ovu 01c1r"1 (}) Yolu of Aarlcullure objections, tell! thtlr d1!11 how l]) lnlfl"nttlon1I Hour they m1! wh1!1 on Jury duty. @) Hl1h Speed ll'llna C:J I ifitlll I WOl'!d of Two Whttls 6) Movie: "Rtbtl 111 Town .. {wtll· A v11i1ty or molorcyclrnE events art ern) '56--John P1yn1. Ruth Rom1n. JOHN WAYNE SPECIAL COLOR FILM FEATURE . "NO SUBSTITUTE FOR VICTORY" The True Story of Vietnam Wednesday, June 2, 1971 ·8:00 P.M. IRYINE COAST COUNTRY CLUB 1600 E. Coest H11hw•y, Newport Be•ch Sponsored hy presented. m Aarkulturt RtflOll m Qutsl for Adventure 2:00 B Dusl(s TrMhoust EI:) Mulllctlt/ P11t.or'1 Des-(I) Acrop tht Ftnct €D l1 Cr.uz dt M1rls1 C1ucn 0 Doublt F1111111 Mll'ri1s: "l lu · m Sp1n1lll ,uture fllm Ina: S1ndH (1dven1u1t1 '4&-0111111 The Newport Harbor Area TRAIN Committee Donation : Adults $2.50 Stwdents : $1.00 10:00Q 1Ql m Str1n11 R1POrt {R) lavl. "Decoy" (dram1) '46 -Jt1n "S~elel11n -let Sleep1n1 Hrrot! Gillies. f dw11d Norris. l ie." 01sr.overy ol 1 World W11 II D One Nilhl Sllnd skeleton 1t•ds to a tr1 i! ol treason O Rollt1 Dtrby O Ntw1 S1ndtrs/Morn1 Q_Ol llnow You1 8iblt O CV@ l ove, Americtll St)le m Movt1: "T• l'I•• I lid(' O ltrltf Ward News (rom111te) '50 -Cl11k G1bl1. m News Putn1m/f1shrn1n. u;"! Sports Wl)fld m M1nt11p CE Yaritd1des Musi<1fn fI) Amt1it1n nrm l11rlitut1 Thnlfl CD Hot Whte!J IO:JO 0 Mo'll1: (CJ (90) "Tl'flllllCln" {1d 2·]0 i) Tht Cient lenden Sh~ yenturt) '40 -OorctllJ Lamour (SJ liltw1lch Robt/I l'reslon. / 0 T111 l 1rry ll1nr Show ll) 1111 Johns Ntwt @ Forum lo1l111 !El Cldtn1 dt Anzurti11 (IJ Stllltday ShoWICIM JI :Oii fJ (() ml Ntw1 ®J SPOrts Cll1lltn&1 0 !!al m Ntws m 0011111 a. s.11• @ D11lh VtlllJ DtJt ~ Sky H1wt;s 0 (IJ Q) Newr1 l :OO fJ lntlt111/0ulsidtr 0 Mo\111: "Tltt s1 .. 1 TllPM (mys (JJ S~.tdlboot tery) '52-Joieph Collen. 0 Movt1: "Thi lirMn Ht!nuf' m Mo'llt : '1wt fl11s Wesl" (wes1 (drama) '61 -Bill Trtvtrs. trri) 'SO-Jdf C~lftdltr. 0 M.ovit : (C) ''Sfttln1 ~ull'" (weit· Ql lul the Clotk 1rn) 54 -0111 Robtrt91111. fEl Rttlltitt (R) "This t1nd 1., ~ @) Mll'ri1: '1'111lc 111 tlt1 T111 lire" 11:15 Kl Cintlll 34 (ICi·fl) '62 -~., M1U1nd. (D Mtvl1: "Tiit F1bule111 Wtfl4 If 11;)(1 IJ ((}Mm Criffl~ Ju1u 'ltlnt" (Kl-11) '61-lou T0¢t. Q lT§l m Jehnftf ClrMfl el Mullu lt /Dml l lifgt1k tJ (}}(ilta) Okl Clvilt G) Rntltt Muilcll (D Movl1: (C) iifluckpohri" (ld¥1n· Et) Thi Ill l'lct•re fYft ) '51--Anthony StN:J. Cli) Tltht dtl $t!Jldt 11:00 D Mf'l'lr. ''li1111¥1mM (rom1nt1) Q) MM« Mfil M ·~11 lltndtll. Ke"n1lh Mere 3:)0 11 Our Anttrita~ Mnit1I Herllll" Cl Cl~Ylf'ltlllnt Wllll 1 ''1dll•· (}) Mll'rit: "'Soll ff i.1bl11 """ bltt (1d¥1ntvre) '59 -D1vtd Htdl1011. 12:45 8 Mort 101 Yt•r Mt1111 0 J1111 Tit111111 OwtiHort 1:00 ••Of'!•: "TIM lg' I" (tomtdy) (JJ M0¥11: "Ht•! W1111" (myittry) '47 -fred M1cMu1111. '45-Altr Nichol. \.l!lluv 1roo;;1, Cl} GJ IJ (()GI H1w1 II!) Chlldr1n'1 Cle'flll Ho• Q All·Hl&ht Sltew: "All ttit r11.1n1 Gl na MtR," "T~e Mr111Ulctnt AmbttllOftl~ a;, Tni1 AdVttlt1111 11\d "Olllt1rl el the ltlt ndJ. ~ tif) Htrdy IOJI I I lured astronauts are uad for scientific vivisection. I n "Escar" the 1p11:s wa1e. war on Washington D.C. Llttle Big ri1an (GPI : Dustin Hoffman stars as a 121-yflar· old gunlight11:r Jn this better~ wt\lte-ttian·Red story of the American West culmi nating in Custer's last stand. LoYe Story (G P): A Ii t.1cGraw and Ryan O'Ntal star in romantic. bi ttflrsweet fable of today's college youth and tht generation g1p. Told in their langua1e. A Ne" Leaf (GP): Wa lter t.1althau portrays a luxury hunJ:(ry bachelor who is down lo his last quarter·million. Elaine May plays the rich love r in this slapstick comedy, Paint Your Wagon (GP): Gold rush days musical tellh1g the tale of two men who share one wife. Stars Lee Marvin, Clint Eastwood and Jean Se berg. P1tton : Salute To A Rebel (GP ): Film portrait of !he World War II ,;eneral known as ''Old Blood and Guts" showing him capable of in- tense pro fanity and also as a brilliant war st r a leg i st . George C. Scott portrays Pat· ton and Karl t.talden is General ilJmar Bradley. Tlte Profe11ional1 IGPI : Millionare hires four ex-pert gunmen to retrieve h i s allegtdly kidna-pped Mexican wife. A western drama of allegedly kidnapcd ,.1~xican desert starring Lee Marvin and Burt Lancaster. "New Leaf' Ry1011 Daughter ( GP ) : Robert Mitchum and Sarah Miles star in a love story set \Valter ~lalthau and Elaine ?>.lay star in ''A New Leaf" currently showing in Orange County motion picture houses. Jt is a slapstick comedy rated GP. in sctnic Ireland of 1916. Restless. beautiful wife of -- middle.aged school teacher has affair with English major. Tragedy for all results. Trog (GP); Hu ma no id n1on ster discovered in English cave becomes threat to com- munity. His caretaker. an- thropologist .Joan Crawford , and fellow scientists alltst to his research val ue. "Tro1" runs wild and kidnaps and kills child. Twelve C hair s (G): Humorous tale of greed set in 1927 Russia. A ch a r m in g \'Bgrant. the son-in-law and loca l pri11:st smell money in lhe old Cam ily mansion and race each other lo find the pre- revoluliona ry jewt ls hidden In one of the twelve gold chairs. FRIDAY ONLY SCHEDULE ''Trv• C.rlt" 11111 Show11 To11!9hr "LOVE STOJl:Y" Von Rlcblofen and Brown fGP): \Yori~ War J i! the 1~======= scene of action as th11: Re:d -----:~-:~---:~-:--:------------------, Baron of Germany and the playboy, Brown, of the English R.A.F. b,11ttle it oul over French skies. FAMILY Airport IG!: During violent storm . a disabled plane with a li me bomb aboard Is unable to land because a giant jet ls stuck in snow bank on runway. Against this background the lives of passengers and flight personnel un fold . Mr~. Polllfa:r -Spy fG): Bored wi1h her humdrum life. little old l\-1rs. Polllfax applies lo thr CIA for a "spy" career . Rosalind Russell portrays the wido1v in her miaadventures as " government aaent for tht USA. Rio Lohn fG): Humcrow western that stars Jo hn Wayne in the title role as a MJldier at lhe clos11: of the CIYil WRr. Son nf f'lubber IGI : Walt Disney's sequal to ' 'T he Abse nt Minded Profl'!ssor" about a crazv subatance that makes men fl v. * The letter immediately after the title indicates the ratino given the picture by the Motion Picture Code. Th e Cod• And Rating pro· oram may be found. on one of the motion picture pages. 2nd Wa ll Disney Hil Al All 3 Cinemas HOLIDAY MATINEES ONSATURDAY·SUNDAY AND MONDAY • NOW AT All 3 EDWARDS CINEMAS • c0attefHatth; by MOVIELA~ f ~! ----.ll:0"1·-· "...... .E41an1ne 11Leav,. ,~ .411(1_ :.,,. ·2~dToP ATTRAC'TiON'' ew a 0 ..:§ . ~ !orbro S1rei1ond •Jock Nico!1on ;,, "ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SlE FOIEVIR" ' • 2ND GREAT HIT • John Wayne · Kim Darby In "TRUE GRIT" (G) STARTS WED .JUNE 2l Now Playing "THE-GltlSSOM GANG " Wltlt scon WILSON 2ND Fii.TURi "A MAN CALLED SLEDGE" ... -• . • ...... • ~.: • • • ' ' • • • • • . ' 28 DAJL V PILOT f'riday, M.,y 28, 1971 Your Guide to Fun Stan Kenton Concert Set MAY 18 SURFER JR. DANCES -The \Veslmlnster Surfer Jr. Teen Cl ub will bold 1 dance on the second and fourth Friday of the month for 7th and 8th graders. The 7:30 to 9:30 dance will be in the Community Cent!!r, 8200 Westmins~r Ave. Admission 50 cent.s. ft1AY t8 ·SI STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL -The Garden Grove Straw· berry Festival will be held Jn Garden Grove Park (Magno- lia and \\'estmlnster Ave.), through May 31. Hours are: Fri.· Sat. and ~fon. 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.; Sun . noon to II p.m. Therti wil lbe live entertainment. the world's largest straw· berry shortcake, carnh•al rides, a rodeo, a celebri ty break· fast and a parade \\-"hich is set for Sat. Admission to festival grounds ls free . Phone 638-7950 for other information . MAY 38 UCI CONCERTS -The J\fusic Department or UCI will pri!-- sent free conctrls in the Village Cooctrt Hall on campu! A-iay 30 at 1:30 p.m. rttA Y 31 SAt\f~IY DAVIS JR. -Sammy Davis Jr. will perform in concert at one show only. ~iay 30 at 8 p.m. in the Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Katella Ave .. Anaheim. Appear· Ing on the show with him are the Friends of Distinction. For ticket information phone 6J5..5CXKl. MAY 30 SUNDAY CONCERT -The !i.fusic Dept or UCI i! sponsor· ing a concert at 1:30 p.m .. !i.1ay 30 in lhe Village Concert Hall on campus. No admission charge. lt1AY 30 CRAFTS SHOW -The Laguna Craft Guild will hold a craft show and sale May 30 from 10 a.m. to dusk on Forest Ave., Laguna Beach. No charge for browsing. ftfAY 30 • 31 ART JN PARK -The Huntington Beach Art League is holding an "Art in the Park" celebration May 30 and 31, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m .. in Lake Park. between !Ith and 12th Sta., just off lttain Sl There will be an art exhibit plus a clothes- line sale and many demonstrations of techniques. JUNEt-5 Sil.ENT AUCTION -The Laguna Beach Art Association is holding a silent auction daily, June I • 5 from noon to 5 p.m. at the gallery, 307 Cliff Drive. Written sealed bids may be entered for paintings by noted artists. No admission charge. On June 5 gallery open from 7 to 9 p.m. Final bidding on silent auction will close at 9 p.m. JUNE 2 ST AN KENTON CONCERT -Stan Kenton and his IS.piece orchestra will be heard in concert in the Orange Coast Col· lege Auditorium on June 2 at 8 p.m. This concert's proceeds will be used to finance a Kenton music clinic for studenl3 of Newport-Mesa Unified School District earlier the same ·day. Tickets. $3 for adults ; $2.50 for students, are available al Orange Coast College ; Coast Music Store; Newport and Costa Mesa High and Intermediate Schools and the Newport Cyclery on I.he Balboa Peninsula. JUNE % • 11 TRIP TO NORTH POLE -Tessmann Planetarium at Santa Chaplin Classics Now Featured Worldwide Charles Chaplin, in Cannes today for the pr"esentation of "City Lights" at the Film Festival. annour.ced that the Roy Export Company, which controls the rights to his films, has entered into an ar- rangement with Black. Inc. A.G. for all the Chaplin feature films on a worldwide basis for all media , including theat rical. television and video cassette showings. Prominent stockolders of Black. lnc. are ?tto Rothman, Bert Sch neider and a Swiss financial grou AQUA PET -SPECIALS - e R1sbor1 T1!r1 •••• 5/51.00 e Glow Line • , , • , . 5/51 .00 e B11,k Ski1I •••••• S/Sl .00 e N1ons ••••••• , , • 5/Sl.00 e Guppi11, I p1 i• •••• SJ.99 5901 WQrn1r, H111ttln9to11 hoch ClrMt SIH1llfOIN Ind W1rntr HUNTINGTON lt:ACH 14•·lll2 M<MEMTINOS FOR PARENTS AND Nine films are involved in- cluding "Gold R u s h , ' ' "~1odern Ti mes,'' "Lime. light," "The G r e 1 t Dic- tator" and "City Lights" among others. Chaplin stated, "I am very pleased to know that my pictures will be shown again under t h e auspices v.•hich Mo Rothman h a s organized. I have known and respected him since our first meeting in Europe when "Limelight" was shown there in 19~." This re presents the first time that Chaplin has entered into such an extensive ar· rangement on a wordwide basis for his classics since he he lped found United Arti sts. Rothman was formerly with Columbia pictures where he held the title of vice president in charge of worldwide distribution until 1969 at which time he resigned, moved to Lond on to enter the in· dependent distribution field. Schneider is the president of BBS Productions which has brought to the screen "Easy Rider.' "Five Easy Pieces" and the forthcoming "Drive, He Said." YDUNO PEOPl.E 11-~--------_,-j--!,..-,,.-... ' f .... MIKI'" o1 ,,._ """" ii ro Ol't-_...,. ~ , ... ..,.,,_,"' _.,_,..,,,......, .... ,_~. All A'!S &OllllTIID lif11tr1I AW111'tH ""' -------------------- ............................ .... zi;~-!llJ ·· ........ .. .... _..., ... .... ... -........ -.... " ......... _ DUSHN tlOfHoWiil "UTRf 816 M4N" PwMQle:;1•1K:l1itdo'• !all- ..... _."" ..... '- ,.0..,._(~~UWIS,...,,., __ .,,... M1t • ..u ...... /IWMA/f'H•!UN• ~co.otn!•. r--TIMES ''LINI" 4':00 & 10:25 "MAN" 1:00 OHLT "The Funniest Shotv in Totv11!" IRVINE COMMUNITY THEATRE pre,ent, Ana Colle&e, lSSO W. 17th St., Santa Ana, Is having a series of public shows each Wed. at 7: 15 p.m. and Fri. at 7 p.m. The film, "Shadows in Space," will be shown through June 11. Tbe performances are free but reservations are request· ed. Phone M7-9561 . JUNE 3 OKLAHOMA CHOIR -The Oklahoma Choir will perform in the Forum I at Golden West College, 15744 Golden West St., Huntington Beach at II a.m. June 3. No charge for admis- sion. JUNE 3 • 24 STORY HOUR - A story hour for pre-school children will be: held in the ,.farine r's Library, 2005 Dover Drive, New- port Beach, each Thursday at 10 a.m. The Corona del Mar Library, 420 Marigold A\'e., Corona de! !i.1ar will hold a story hour for pre-schoolers e\'ery second and fourth Thurs· day or the month at 10 a.m. JUNE 4 .5 CONCERT -The University Orchestra and Chorus, under the baton or Maurice Allard, will perform "8 minor Mass" by Bach in the Fine Arts Village Theater at 8:00 p.m .. June 4 and 5. No admission charge. JUNES EASTER SEAL CONCERT -A benefit concert for the East· er Seal Society of Orange County will be held in Crawford Hall on the UCI campus at 7:30 p.m. June 5, sponsored by the Los Flores de! Mar League of Newport Beach. Featured will be the 70.piece Doctors Symphony with Dr. Arthur G. Howard <;ooducting. Guest soloist, guitarist Christopher Parkening, and the Orange County Choraleers and Phil· harmonia Chorale from Fullerton will also be heard. Tickets are $7.50. For reservation phone 633·7400 or 642·6330. . JUNES ARTISTS' HO~fE TOUR -The Affiliates or the Laguna Beach Art Association are holding a tour of artists' homes or studios from noon to 5 p.m. June 5. Homes and studios to be: visited include those of Virginia Nixon, Romeo Reyna , James and Maryella Warren . Bennett Bradbury and the Laguna Beach Art Gallery where tea will be served after 2 p.m. Docent tours of gallery at 3 to 4 p.m. Tickets, $2.50 for adults, $1 for children may be oblained by calling 494·6531. JUNES BAU.ET -The Los Angeles "JR " Ballet will be presented in the campus theater of Fullerton College. 321 E . Chapman Ave., Fullerton, performing "The Ugly Duckling." "Two Preludes" and "Paquita,'' at 8: 15 on June 5. All seals are $3. For information phone 871·642Q. JUNE 1% CHILDREN'S THEATER -Bowers t1useum Foundation will present the Children's Magic Theater, performed by ac· tors from South Coast Repertory. at !he Santa Ana City Hall Annex, 500 W. 6th St .. Santa Ana. at 1:30 p.m. June 12. Ticket!, by donation of 50 cents, must be picked up at the Bowers Museum . 2002 N. fflain St .. Santa Ana . JUNE 13 JAZZ SESSION -Jazz Incorporated \\'ill hold its Sunday meeling, June 13 at the Huntington Beach Moose Hall, 7409 Lorge Circle (Gothard and Edinger) at 2 p.m. Trombon ist Bob Havens will be featured guest with six other top mu si· cians. Members and musicians free ; guests, $2. NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES '2ND Comedy Hit "THI TWl'.VI CHAIRS" (G) ---lfi. ... _,~1oc& i.o, .... ~(IOliln~l.lOo.I, s.1. a s. •. ~-... ~ '1 lO 1 0 11111 ' 10.00 "ti..iri.~1.ao.l lS.1 JO Rt:SEaVt:D SU.T ENGAGEMENT TORA TORA TORA Dr. Plu°bes is curiously terrifying! "Arsenic And 01 lac_e._"_, \1--1- Diretfed by Rith1trd Dow May 29·30; June 5, 6, 11, 12, 13, 18, 19, 20. HUMANITIES HA LL PLAYHOUSE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IRVINE $2.50 G•n•r•I Adm ission -$1 .SO Students Resetvatlon1: 133-1024 1111-.. COLOR by ~lob An AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL·~1e .. NOW rLAYING 2ND CHILL ER 2NO SUSPINSEFIATURE ••Ol.000 AND l_,;\Ct; .... WHATE\'ER HAPPENED Oiitni 7 ~.M. TO AUNT ALICE?~ stot"orDu\11 2nd Wtt~doyi61•.5So1.&s..i. 1,1s BIG EEK Live Theater "Camino Real" A Tennessee Williams drama on stage in the Fine Arts Village Theater on the UCI campus, presented by School of Fine Arts, at 8:30 p.m. Fri. • Sl!t., through May 29. Reservations -833-6617. "Arsenic and Old Lace" Comedy on stage in Human· Hies Hall on the UCI campus, staged by the Irvine Commun· ity Theater, 8:30 p.m. Sat. • Sun., Jl..1ay 29 June 6; June 14 • 16 and 18 • 20. Reser va. lion -833.0793, . -. Sammy Davis J1·. Set for Anal1eim ... Sammy Davis Jr. stays Davis' ah~·ays-crowded agenda perpetually busy, that 's one ls the task of pulling fin al reason why his fans in toucheoi on "The Trackers," Hollywood and the rest of an ABC-TV "'Movie of the Southern California don 't get Week(' in which he starred as: to see him often. But they will well as co-produced with get a chance to enjoy a live Aaron Spelling. concert performance by Sam-Spelling revealed last week my when he appears Su nday , he has tapped Davis tt> star in ti.lay 30 al 8 p.m. in the and make his directorial debu t Anahe im Convention Center, on some segments of "~1od 800 W. Katella Ave., Anaheini. Squad'' for the upcoming Sharing the bill with him will be lhe Friends of Distinc· television season .. So Sammy lion . will be spending much more SAMMY DAVIS JR. In Anaheim May 30 This Mem orial Day engage. time "at home " behind the my Davis Jr. ''doing his ment gives Davis an op-cameras than be has for thing" Jive at A n a he i m portunily lo take care of years. U:i nvention Cente r on ~lay 30. "The Ginger ft.1an " business on the home front. !i.1eanwbile, the gene r a 1 For ticket infor mal ion phone British comedy on stage at __ A_m~orn;g;;;;t~he;;;;o;l;h;er;;;;l;h;in~g;s;;;;on;;;;;p;u;b;l';·c;c;a;n;s;;!;';';";d;e;n)O~· ~y;S;a;m;-;;;;;6.1;0-;5000;;,;;-;;.;;;;;;;;;;;-;..;;;;;;;_;;j So uth Coast• Repertory , 18271 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Thurs.-Sun. at 8:30, through June 19. Reservations 646-I3G3. "~1 an Who Came to Dinner" A comedy of the "Thirties" on stage at the Laguna Jl..foul- ton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, at 8:30 p.m.. Tues. • Sat., through June 12. Reservations -494.0743. SEEIT To Believe It: NEVIi ORANGE TWIN DRIVE·INS: ORANGE#1 ALLNEW1 ALL EXCITING! AKI> ORANGE #2 ALWAYS HOME OF GREAT MOVllSI Sant• An11 Fr•-•Y Chapman Oii-Ramp on Stale College Bl'ld. (714)547·6011 All Color Shaw '"AlllPO.T" 4GI') plu' S<;ltnce Fiction Or1m.1 "(OLOSjl)S -THE flOlt81N l'llOJECT., Driv.-1" Stlowing! Two E~cl!l119 Fet111rn "Olmftll S~tll•r'' {G"l plu• "Wh•I'• N•W Pw11yc1t" All t:.lo~ fJll'I•'"" V,.,.,.1~ l ..... ·,•1! "VOP4 ll:ICHTO,l!N & 8110WN" f01'J Plvs • 5tuarl WMlm.1n "THE LAST ESCAPE" (GI ·--·--w .. to<•-· ~11 111l "~ ''WHl'l.l''S l'Oillil'A" The psychotic killer. the young heiress ... (r~~""~th e kidnapping that becomes a love story. •· &IV.0" 00 IUU•• •I• LI'~ .... ,, ,.I ·-O •'-lll f "•ll•••DU">0<1·~ ""IO'..Ol.O• .. -ffl~l1o09t•T 'lOOl(.K el'···~.. . ........ -........... ,. ~· .. ._,.,. ....... , ... , __ . ,. ........... . ail • • •itA&H •LVO. "' ~LLIS • • •tr 'OAST H-. • .... Do•GO '"'V llA7·l&OI ; t<UNTINGTDN 9l•CH ~ ~-:·:·::.-;;--• PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT • EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENTS NOW PLAYING ' (· . '·. You are looking at the face of a Villain. Richard Burton "Villain" By the time he0s ready to kill you, it's an act of mercy. NAT COHEN PRESENTS AN ANGLO·E.MI F!LM •A l<ASTNEA LADD KANTlfl PROOUC110~~ AICl-iAFID BUR,ON . 1~'-' •• ,cStfANE . N1G~L DAVENPORT In. VILLAIN' ·Sc•ee,.,p1ay /Jy DICI( CLEMENT al'ld IAN LA ~RENA!S • E~ecut,~e P1oduce1 Ell!OTT l<A::ilNER • PrQdut'ld b~ ALAN LADO JR and JAY l<ANTER· D·1ec1rd by VICHAEL TUCHNER· lf_CHNICOLOR°·P,4NAV1SIQfo/' Otstuou!ed by METAO-GOLDWf'N.MAV£R IRJ--·---. -·----o ) l.IGM G • PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • 2ND AT BOTH TH TRE SI EEK Art Workshop Set In Laguna Beach Guitari st Scheduled At Irvine ... The Laguna Beach School oI Art , 630 Laguna Canyon Road . has assembled some of the country's finest artists to conduct workshops during the 11ehool's summe r quarter. This gives students an exceptlonal opportunity to work with their ravorite arlist·lnstructor and still havf' time to plan sununr vacations. BRANDON CRUZ ANO ROZZELL SYKES STROLL Tour of St. Elmo's Village With CoFounder The summer wurkshops will begin June 21 and run to September 3. \\'ith in th is perlod, Bennett Bradb ury, na- tionally recognized marine painter will hold two separate workshops consisting or two weeks each of concentrated study or seascape painting . Bradbury has established his position as a leader in the lradi!io n of American ex· cellencc in pa inting \.igorous studies of the sea . He loo ks al rhl' ocl'an as a neve r ending sC1urcc of com1X1sitional in· sfiratinn and with his 26·yea rs l'xpenence ":ith brush and pilll'ttc knife he endow s his sludents with lhe ability tn portray on c1:1nvRS the ma- jest y, IXlwer and dignity or the ocean . 'St. El1no's Village' In terviews on KCET Arno ld Schifrin, born in New 'fork City, ha s c 1 a i med California as his home s~nce leaving C()llegl'. Articulate and outgoing. his enthusiasms arc boundless and contagious. A frequent exhibitor since 1946, Schifr in has held 14 one-man sho"·s at major galleries and participated in numerous im· portant museum group shows. His 11nrk sho "'S sludents there is tr uly nothing new undrr the sun. Only the v.·ay in which it is presented is new. He is a strong believer in adult educa- tion and has taught at U.C.L A. For many years, Schifrim has inaugurated an· nual v.·orkshops in Mexico and abroad. Following his two- week pa inti n~ workshop. July 5 through July 16 at the school, he will take a group to Florence. Jtaly for study. ''SI. Elmo's V11Jagr ," newly spruced-up enclave of artists in the La Brea-Venice Blvd. area. is paid a visil by Art Seidenbaum of K C ET ' s Clly watchPrs sericS this f\ion- day al 7.30 p.m. on Channel 28. The v i 1 I a g e ' s residents. some of "'hon1 givf' free art lcsson11 tone i g h ho r ho o d children. are att emptin~ to ra ise $1 5.000 to \;:ike ov er ~e '"!. l1tHa .. , ... ''"l"1ul1 NOW THltU TUESDAY Pl1111 "**** HIGHEST RATING A COMEDY GEM!" -N-ro1• D1il1 N•MIJ mortgage on !he cottages thty occupy. \\'hich are currently up for salt'. The 01,1·nl'r says that if lhe residents cannot raise I.he necessary $15.000 he will sell the \'illage to the person "'ho does ha\"e the money. Scidcnbaum i n I er\' 1 c w ~ arllst Rozzell Sykes, 1nsligalor of the predominantly bl11ck area's clean-up, dress-up with sidewAlk dra"•ings and ou tdoor statua ry camNign, his ,tiephc\Y an,d aide .Roderick and ""ifl'. "'hn talk about ef- forts underl¥:eh to rllilse the money to btly, the villag~. The resident$ reportedly h a v e already raised some .$1,5()0 to be used toward the purchase of the village . }![!)]olo]:f! MEWt'OltT 8£AC1t • Ol.J.83!.lr lve. Shew Stortt 1 P'.M. Contln11ou• Show Sundoy Ftern 2 P'.M, NOW THROUGH TUESDAY The'Rolling~Stones ,. GIMME SHELTER ALSO P'lAYINti 2nd BIG ATTRACTION JOAN BAEZ IN Edward Reep returns to Laguna Beach this summer from East Carolina University where he is professor of art and artist-In-residence. He is a graduate. of Los Angl'les Art Cenler School and w a a chairman or the painting department of Chouinard ArL School 14 years. Reep's two- v.·ee k v.·ork.shop, J uly 19 to Ju- ly 30, wiU offer a course in painti ng with emphasis upon new concepl.S and content• message. Subject matter fam iliar to all will be used al! a point or departure in the search for new form · and meaning . His purpose is lo 1f· ror the artat liberation and full expression -an expansion, not an inhlbilion or the artist'• personality . In the intl'rim between the Laguna Beach School of Art workshop 11nd the opening O( fail c la!!SCS al East Carolina , Edward Reep will go to Germany to painl his impressions of the Berlin Wall for the United Stales War Department. Other workshops (or the summer program will include experimental painting with Douglas Bond and figure dr"wing with David Schnabel. In add itio n to the work!hops, nine·week courses are offered in dra"·ing and com1X1sition. design and color, painting landscape. life draw· jewelrymaking. printmaking. ceramics, basic a n d in- lermediae painting. In order to preserve the t rad it ion a I i n dlvidual philoso phy of the school. cla!'isCs are lim ited kl ~n1a ll grou ps. Now in its tenth year. the school is a non·profit com·· munit y corporation approved by the California Superin- tendent of Public Instruction and Veteran's Administration. A free brochure listing all "·orkshop!i and courses may be obtained by phoning 1714 1 494·1520 or by writing to the Laguna Beach School of Art. 630 Laguna Canyon Road , Laguna Be.ach, Ca. 92651. Color Slow COPENHAGEN (UPI ) Color television is making !!low progress in Denmark. Lell!! than 30,000 color tele vision license,; had been issued by the end of 1970. Citlz.ern holding black and w h i t e licenses numbered 1.3 million . TROPICAL FISH SOUTH SEAS Now Two loc1tlo"1 To S1ryo You 111 WIST WILSON COSTA MISA ''A Compl~l,. Tr.,picaJ f'"i!h St.ore" ttu ATLANTA 11 MAGNOLIA H UNTINCJT~N l lACH fU-41U PATTY ANDREWS In 'Victory Canteen' Cl a ssical 1u i tarlsl Christopher Parkenlng will be the. !eaturfJd guest IOlol!t at a belltfit copcert for the Easter Seal Society or Ortni• COunty , to be held In UCl'1 Crowford Hall, Junes at 7:30 p.m. A former • ,;tudent 1 n d brilUant prote1e of Andres Segovia, Parkening has won many plaudlb from mmtclans and music-lovers be.re and abroad . Preceding Parkening on the program will be the 70-picce Doctors Symphony, co nducted by Dr. Arthur G. Howard. The group will present Brahms' "Festiv al Ove:rture," Mozart's ''Clarinet Olnctrto In A Ma· jor" and "The L a s l Movement" from Shostak~ vlch'a '"Fifth Symphony." Founded In 1967 by lb cur· rent president Dr. John Kregzde of Los Alam itos, the Doctors Symphony is com· prbed or doc:torii, dentlals, and other profession1l men and women from Oran.11:e. County and the greater Long Beach area. Tht group has played perlorman~s throu1hout the Southland and it& members aceept no payment fGr their services. Concludinr the eve ninc of music will be. the comblntd 120-Vflices of the Oran1e Coun· ' I ' CHRISTOPHER PARKINiNG TO PERFORM JUNE s Concert Wiii Benefit Ea1ter" SNI Society'• C1nt1r per80rls frol'il th ro u g bout Orange County withou t regard to race:, creed, a1e, or the ability to pay. Tickets and additional in- forma tion for the' benefit con- ce.rl. wbJch is bein( sponsored by the Las FIOres del Mar • LeatUt of Newport Beach, are availtble at the Easler Seal ~ti!Jita.Uon C.enter, 1800 E. La 1 'iit1, Orange 9 2 5 ti S ; teifpbone (714) 633--7400: or from program cha irman Marie !ytcbison (714) 642- 63.10. Biery Edits 'The Gang' And1:ews Sis Stops Show In Film City ty Chor alee rs lJ'ld t h t Film editor Edward Biery 'Ibt·~ film .Ura J e r r y FuUerton Philharmonia i n wlll edit "The Gang That Orbaeb; Lei1b Taylor·YOWlg, "Song of Democracy" by Couldn 't Sho ot S~aigbt, '' Jo Vu· Fl@et, Lionel Stander Hanson. The Otoral~rs. directed by James Goldskl~ and ~t OeNlro, and is Pattv Andrews. star or under !he direction of Ed and produced by I r w 1 n basedupon Jimmy Breslin'.s "Victo"ry Canteen,"' the happy Brahams of Ne"·port Beach, Winkler and Robert Chartaff naval of the ume name, a11 new musical comedy based on "'ere founded in 1956. They for ~IG~1 release. antic: romp about an ineptly 1he franlic fortirs. now in the have appeared on the concert Biery has worked w"ilh dittc· managed g a Di war in fourlh month al the !var stage. radio 11nd television, I.or Goldstone on four previous Brooklyn. Theatre in Hnllwyood , stops and also have recorded a num· features, "Winn ing," "Brother Adapted for the screen by lhe show nightly wilh her r('n· ber of 3\bums. John," "Jigsaw"' and the nt1t· Wa ldo Salt, the film is being rlition of "' new &ong ... Happy The Philharmonla Olorale Is yelrreleast!d "Red Sky in tM filmed entirely on locaUon Tomorro"·s:· under the direction of Kenneth Morning ." throughout New York City. Recently added to the Helvey of Fullerton. This adult p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; spr ightly score by composer!i group from Fullertnn Junior 11 Richard and Bob Sherma11 . the College has performed ex- .song exemplifies all the hope lensively in I.he Southern and fR ith that was s 0 California area for 15 years . prevalen t on the. homefronl in Proceeds from the concert \\'orld \Var JI and is in the will go to help support the style of the '40s that made the work of the Easler SeaJ Soche· Andrews Slstrr&' sinRing one ty for Crippled Children and of America 's secret we;apons. Adults or Orange C.Ounty, which operates the Easter One of the very few original Seal Rehabilitation Center in musicals pr n d u ced in Hollywood , "Victory Canteen" the city of Orange. The: Center p r o v i d e s comprehensive The eternal triangle's back ••• •.. and it's never been funnier! "~C•'1 P'Odvc!lot> ... ce,..ts uo • winner." -LA Tlll\11 •• •. on1 Cl lh• llnl'I! t11J•mtlH I"" In l!\lnr .._.lh1.'' -VAltllTY OP'liNS FRIDAY THE GINGER MAN ~y J, P. hoJM.y Murray Schl191l'1 LUY ....... Pllyllol \0111/1 (i>asl I(< Jcr/1111 is setting box-office records rehabilitation services to and plans are now under way d IOX OP';ICI: '4 .. 1l6J Ol ALL A61NCllS In lak e the show to Broadway . _l'_Ph~y~s~ic~•l".IY"._'h'.:a~n."d_'_i."c~•'..'P'.!P~•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Performances are at 3:30 p.m. nightly, except Mnndays, with two shows on Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale at lhe theatre box-of . lice and all agencies. Special group r11tes are available and Information may be obtained hy calling the box· office at 1213) 4&4-71 21. Fl"! l:llft J""~ l'~rn• L•w "'VOH ltlCHTHOl'IH & lltOWN" Dlui "Ml:S. llDLLl•.i.I( lllV" w(lll 1to .. 1I"" ltuulll -ANDREW fRINE VAST SELECTION OF Tl:OP1CAL I 1 ~~ "CARRY IT ON" 5N<l•I IClll1 Mlll<>e• Sit. '·XI P M. BRENDA SCOTT .-Ralil:PNIJll · ...... llM.D•---_---·-----, ____ __ ==---=:---=-=-==--=·1 ~!!!!11!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! _____ _ "THE ANDROMEDA PORT THEATRE ,,,.,... EXTRA-MAJOR STUDIO No Re$erved S•oll Dtllr II l :JQ I. 10 Mttln•11 Sii. I. IUft. 1l·2:ll .. s Winni• 1 .i.c•d Aw•rll• "RYAN'S DAUGHTlJ." ••• O!llf.• o"" n Hoen • t P.M. Dtolr Sl>owUmt• Min thru Thur1. • I P M. Pr! . Sar .. l :lO l".M Malon•t1 Sil • '""· 1 P.M. ltlHrYtd lllh PREVIEW SATURDAY-8:30 P.M. On Aprll 21 , 1918, the Red Baron of Germany and the llack Sheep of the R.A.F. met 1n the skl.s of Fraece. For tlte last time! I ....... / "Ll ~-on• 0 ~fchthoten and Brown" I !!mo lllll!~O<"'' 111111111-.- Wlth JOHN 'HllllP LAW-DON ITROU D -----.ALSO 'LAYING----- "lHE llRD WITH THE CRYSTAL ~LUM.\~I" Ce11llnuous lll•w 5111 .. Su11., Mo11. From 2 P'.M. BARGAIN MATINll !VERY WED. 1 PM Meet Henry Be Henrietta ... the love couple of the seventies ... and the laugh riot of the year. "AfteCIJ Leaf" ~ttatthau Elablelta9 Jiik (l.1esllll ""'"'"1~-1!£ CUllT #ARVIN EASlWOOD JFAN SEBERG · . TWHTYOURWAGOH !A~ FRIE PRIZES ·~ . SATURDAY AFTERNOON TO THE HOLDER OF iL!;;::::;::::TH;;E:;;LUCKY NUMBERS! --...... ..._ 0:-_.:S: ME11tOC«M l lCLWa 1we .......... , PLAYi ND I • • • t ' • • • . - :JO DAILY PILOT Frldq, Mat 21\ 1971 .. ~-ra.~s QHRYSLfR I RJ,.¥MOVTH/ IMPERIAL . • I . PRICE SLASHING IS THE ORDER OF THE DAY AT ATLAS CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH. NO REA· SONABLE OFFER REFUSED DURING TH 1 S BIG BANNER SAVIN• SALE. Did yo,u know that right now we can deliver a Chrysler New Yorker for 1,ss t~an you would expect to pay for a sO-caUed low priced car? Come in and ret US · prove that Atlas volume sales mean v~lume savings to you. A fabu· lous :selection from which to choose. '64 PLY,..OTH ... FURY 4 DQOR va, eutom•t·i:,. r•clio, \ he•t•r, po..-r/'1~••· ing , ,.;, co.Jltii..Ong. , IOXWJ061 4 dr. H.T. VI, auto. mtlic, p-•• 1!11rin9 -b1a~ei -•..,1nt,win- dow1, AM-FM, cruise ci>ntrol. M u 1 t •••· USfJ>~ CAR :: . ' ' /.. . N·EW 1'971· DU'ST;ER ..... \!·"' • •• . ' :· ···~ -• . SER •• .NO.-VL2981E12J920 ' ~ • + . ' ' • NEW 1971 CRl:CKET $ A Tl.AS SIRVICI DIP.Al7M1NT Wefcornes and ho • nors all Chrysl C veh1cf4!5 req.,iring ·serv· er orporation I ,. ice, warranty .... ess of where car w•s . ho . wo,R, regard. -pure sed w h ter Charge, BankA . . ·. · · · e on.qr Mas. . ~er1card, Ca~ 81 • , erican Exf>'"S·and:'o·· · , ~ 1 anche, Arn. •ner .Cluo .. : ' . . . . CATALINA WAGON va, •uto"'•lic, r•dio, he•l•r, pow•r •ltitr· ing •11d br•lc•1. (06)· BZVJ •, • ,• I • ;I IUG 4 'peed tr•n1m;11ion, ••d•o, 1'11•1•1. !TEK· 698 f •595 ljASJ95 SALES DEPA.RTMENT OPE·N ALL DAY MONDAY, 31 MAY !:,·: • •.; 'j . ~ .'11 ·~ "5 ·,.~5 '67 CHEVROLET IR AIR ~DAN va, •o.Jo,..,tic, , .. dio, ...... ,.,, p 0 w ••• •'•••· ing l br t~U. .<lit CO!to ditionin9. IUKW452 1 '1095 , '68 PLYMOUTH IARRACUOA 6 cyt. •ulo.m1tic, po••,. tr 1'tt<in9, •ir cond., vinyl lop, r<1dio, ht•I· er, whil1w•lt tire1. ''if295 '69 OPEL UDfnt Full y f11clorv equip. ped. lllK70J l ~295 '67 PLYMOUTH YIP Vt, •vlom 1tic, pow•r 1lt1rin9 • bro1~•1 ·win· dow1 • 1•1h, •ir con. clitio11i119 Yinvl n>of. !VIJ401 I $1195 '68 TOYOTA CORONA "'utom1tic, r • d i c:i, h•tl•r, white w .. I! ti1••· IXO M9791. ' . ' . ' . ' ' • • '67 BUICK '67 OIDSMOSILE . ;&a CHRY$L .R · . '68 -CHRYSLER'. '6!1 F!IRD . CUTLASS SUPREME S,ECIAL ' JOO 2.000R.,H.T. va. •1.otofll•lic, r•dio. ~e•lotr, powotr 1'1erin9 & br1kt1, 1ir, Y•1tvl top. IX0 ... 7521 $1995 NEWt,OR.T V8, At.ilomtfic, l•dic:i, """'"'· power 1!te•· ing, ,.;, ,cor>ditic:i11in9, vi11vl fop. (WGP326 ) FAIRLANE 500 2 dr.~ ~.T.;'"VI, •u+o• • ma•ic, -r•'dio, h••ler, power •reerin9, wh!11 wall1. vinyl top, eif candilionin9. (XYG- 61 1 l '1895. · ·•5 i • ' " I ·i I :/ I ., ! ;I :1 ·I :I I ' • .. I ,, . ' I ·i Friday, M~y 28, 1971 DAIL V PILOT :J l . . ··DICK WILSON SAYS· WE'LL BE OPEN THE ENTIRE MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND ••• • FRIDAYeS;A.T.URDAY• SUNDAY•MONDAY'TIL 10 P.M. , .. ~~. .. "' BRAND FORD f·250 3/4 TON TRUCK NEW & 1971 ELDORADO CAMPER Complete camper package equipt. with stove, sink, icebox, etc. No. 105467. Ser. No. F25BRL00036. $. ' $250~~~~ $116 58 PAYMENT MO . $2SO il lt.e lolol dn. P1'"' 1111<1 '116.~$ i• lat~ ""' pym!. inc!. la~. '71 I <ff'llt & oll fi . ....ct ,..,..,., "" tllJ!ll". <redit too J~ mos. Ot !erred ~1m!. pr.:;t \446 88 n><I. oll finor><t tlw9e$. lo~••· '11 httnl•,,. rf I""' profer lo poy co\11, lOTGI ca1h pr.:;t 11 13761,40 1r1tl. ~IH lo<. '1110"'"'· ANM..IAl Pl~CENIAGE RAn !2% ,:··:1971· F-O R D:~VANS · I ' . J . • , ._, , •JI ' ' BRA~'D ·•~.DORA,0 c1~1 ':J07f;f NlW . ll ~·AZIECMA~po~< ~~B OVER 1' • -• ~·· "~ ··-v.:~'·l Self. contain ed' un it with sid.e.door-~nt;once...ud"~n1.!;~~1·~el 1inlc-:.1~;~9e: q~~?,~hood, gos/ele~ .. refng., hot & cold water, thower, oquomatl~-lo~e;t,>W~l~ut ponel1ng,.thrwi:!.~lenty of electric ou !lt#t1, complete hbme o~Oy from ho,rne. #Q0~'~7.,,,,. '. . '. .. f~ SPECIAL $ SALE ·PRICE . · . . . ,,. l ~ . ,. . WAS $2695'·:·· ... · + ·., ' •• SHOWCASE.DEALERS SPECIAL THIS WEEKEND DNL Y . . ~:~No 1971 ELDORADO '~!~~:: BRAND NEW 1971 $ ONTEMPO CAMP ERS Vocoiion equip!. wi!h ictbo.1, s!ovt, 1rn k, Outen 1i1td bed. full 1 ytor guorontee . I 113897. FULL PRICE EASY TERMS AVAILABLE GOOD SELECTION T AT -1 ' . -' . . . 1911 GALA XIE 500 : '71 BRAND NEW LANDAU $ WIT H BROUGHAM IRD SAYE FASTBACK. V-8 , fa ctory a ir, CI Ull!I., $ power 1teering, ra d io, heot~r. w hitewalls . {995CEK) FULL PRICE '64 ~2~~~ .. ~ ,, ... $ Stetri"'' Rad io, heater, (OVC-39 1) ~,~R~,T~~~"' a i•. $ <iulo., power $lee1in g, ro- dio, heote r, w hi tewalls. (690.CBW) FULL PRICE lmpa a Cust. . 88 '68 ........ ,, ......... $14 88 tor, •1r, ••le, p•wtr 1tt erin11 Lo11do11 t o,. {WIA-97 7}, . ·a-·;a· '6' 7T~ SilUIRt :ic'.14' 88 $6 ~ · ·: , ~a9on. VI , ,focro,.,'~ • ,. •. . '. a ir,. auto.,. I!.$-~ todl"!• · . . lleotrr. ITX0.f5J1 1 INTERIOR fully ~ipjitd wilh foctory oir, uui,eomo!ic !fans., powtr s1ttrir19/brokt s/windows & 6-woy MOIS AM/fM S!tfto wilh power Cll'lltnl'IO, wnitt· wolls & rruc:h mort. (Stfiol I l.lfl4H I06331) Immediate Delivery FROM FACTORY LIST ,69 f.9,~P..~i~~. $2288 '68F01tp im· $1388 factory oir, 'r&h, ' ID •. "f • lb'UJ'i:. Y·I, wester" n!irrors, h.11, ffle. tNu., ·fllth'1' •Ir tire1 & whet ls PIS, P/W•l•rl re•f, LI· 6 JOD <•N JU ACf Dodge RJTWgR. f. · ,69 D DGE SuperB$l · I V-1, 11u1to.,. pewer i V-1, •st.. hw•I., ,..., 1 68 '"'"'•·'"'"'"" $1688 .-.... ...... ....... 488 (VIUltS5) \ I Lie.Hu Yll-415 . ' ~ ~~~· ~BUG • 67 DI>. VB. ""omaoio, $1088 '68 ""·"'"""'""'·"·$9' 88 '6·9=:~~T:PVl f 't $2188 rodlo, h1tat•r. IYJZ· C11111 I DT-Jtl. I · .. ' IC •1 ' f ....... ., .... r1. & ' 596l 1----:~~~ · tt.xt,.. 1tt. (YIU·1S7) • '66 ~~~~: '!!l~· •.... $788 '67 ~~~~~~~.!.0"$128 8 '69B~~~.~£ ... ,q~·$2388 '69!P~~.~!.~;.~$1688 heater. W(WS67. (Vt2S4l) h.d. tires & wJierh. 1t11rl .. , n4le, Mlittf. (XOG·260) llcH1161t0APS. '69 f,q,~D,£~, ~~. $13 ,ower s tetting, AM/FM rodi•. ZYIC1S l 8 '68 ~~'!'~~!.~·.~: ... $138' 8 co1111l1.{WIJ701). -· . · ' --· ; <-" , · , • Coil ar -· '66 VWBUG 1 . $ '88' '68 · :•f..t~:!,, ... , .. $168 8 IHi•, t.••t•r. (Zllfl Jt). 111.str., ,. llrk1., •ter•• . quire 10 ,011tn9er with V-1, l•c- t orr •ir, r1llio, heater, •11t o., l1111•tt rock • •• t• •with r1di•. (WIG774} '69 !?~~. !!~.~: ... er.129lt-DDX) ro utor folrlont Seri11 r.-:-..,,_;;..;;;;.....;;;...;:;. '69 ~A,!~U~,r.I~~-~!.. $1588 '70 f:~:~!~~i~.~:,~~~ ... a$u2188· whlre wall1. (XYL990l ~··~~••t1r.S1rl•f ••· \ '6·' 9M•~.s.~.~~~.~~~?,d$e1 6. ·8 a· '69'· ~.~.~.~ .~.~;~. n~ 1· "9a· 8 wllittw1l11 witlri wirt· f.,, l••ll•, llMtw, 1.,. 4't wlri••I co••r1. IJ47·CDMI , .. , NCk. .... I• :-:"'::""----' 67!~~.~~.'?.J.~~''·a$u 1388 '70 ;. .~ .... ·~,,,~AU..3488 & M•11y 1tll•r •11111 llf, t nti11• .. t1c, ••W•r=> · ,1,,.1 SllN1 •••ts I. wl••••1,-etll•r , . • • lltl•1111tN1.(11t·A~~) • , • • • ' Dll'l V PILOT Ever yo ne Ho s So mething Th ot Some one Else Wonts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Wont Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on th&-Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results General \ienerat -"'"'"' I~ I -"'"5'1' I~ I -.. ,,. ... I~ I _,,, .. I~ I -.. -l~I _ .... I~ i _,,, ... I~ CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCHURE OF CURRENT LISTINGS OFFI CE OPEN SAT. & SUN. 51;,•/o ASSUMABLE LOAN Cus tom 4 BR. 21 2 ba. home in \Vestcliff. IJarge family room. covered patio. refle~t. pool. rai sed su ndeck. Large lot on a quiet street. $65,000. llt.C. Buie OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2006 NAUTILUS L.6-NE. Baycrest. Charming 4 BR., 2Jv.i bath cus tom home. Great family hon1c · 40 foot htd . pool -scp .. l2e. family rm. _: ne\V shag \\'I\\' cp ts. S79,500. (Trade· \\·i nd to Holiday) . .'\rt Gordon REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE Q\\ ner \\'ants to ~ail a\1·ay fro1n thi s drama· lie Baycrest pool home. I-luge Jot. bi g .3 b~d· rQom plus formal dining room. You \\'Ill like the privacy of this yard'. $67,500. Bill Co mstock WATERFRONT-BOAT DOCK 40' Boat dock belo"' spacious. landsca ped terrace. l..01·elv 3 Bdrm. home \\1/formal din. rm. & fam . rffi.: 2 frplcs. & "·et bar -best buy'. $98.750. ~1ary Harvey BA YSHORES BA YFRONT \\'atch the boat action from your 60' 1cr- race -perfect home fo r larg~ family ,,., 6 bdrms. & !am. rnl. & den. Private area & beaches. $168.500. ~l ay lease for surn 1ner months. LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS Large 3 BR .. 2 • 2 ha , v1~\1: home _on fee lan d. Family rm . & forn1a! d1n1ng. EnJoy carefree living. -bike to bea ch & schools. $69,950. Harriett Da vies BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM 4 Bedrooms, 01·er!ooking greenbelt; just steps a\\·ay frorn pnol. 'You v.·i\I enjoy the C'arefree livi ng & the price. S36.500. 11arry Frederick OWNER MUST SELL NOW!! ~take an offer on this neat 3 bdrm. & den CAMEO SJ-IORES home on a corner lot \\'ilh a VIE\V & access to 3 private beaches . Don't delay -th is '''on't last at a low $67 .500. Bud Austi n CHEERFUL, COZY, CLEAN Describes thi s 3 bedroom . 1 ~2 bath, 18 x 34' pool home. J7xl2 Lanai. Beautiful landscap· ing & trees. Room to expand . Only 544,500. 1i-1ary Lou 1\1arion DOVER SHORES 5 BR. 5 BATHS l...et us show vou th is dramatic execu tive home. 143 fl. "o n the \\'3tcrfronl. 11•1pier & sli p. lge. pool: gourn1et kitchen. Sl99.800. :\I Fink IRVINE COVE SUNSETS Beautiful sunsets over \\"hite \\'ater vie\\'S from four rooms. Step<; lo your private beach . Five bedrooms. 3 1,2 baths:. This is lux· ury plus'. George Grupe HARBOR VIEW HILLS Beautif ul view -\l'alk to beach, shops. sc hool. Ne"· sha g carpeting in "·ell arranged 3 bedroom. 2 bath horne. Large lot '''/many trees. O\\·ncrs 1noving to Texas. $46.995. Eileen ll udso n OCEANFRONT-EMERALD BAY Breathtaking vie\1 of bay & ocean. /\ spaci· ou s home 111 perfect enn d11ton -4 bedroom~. n1a1d 's roorn & guesl ~t11te--61,'2 baths. Q11·ners 1nnvi n~ !fl Pau111;1 \'aUey, have re· d uced price S70 ,000 · $325 .000. Carol 'I'atum WATERFRONT DUPLEX I~i ve in one. rrnt the other. 3 BR. 2 .hath up: 2 BR. 2 bath do\\'ll. Larizc boat slir. 2 Patios. Excellent fina ncing. $89,500 . La\ era Burns A "MUST-BUY" PRICE! On th ic; L'n1l'er i;.11y Park "Tulane" park hon1c -3 'BR .. large family ro om -and yo ur own prt\' pnn! & jacuzzi -.xln l. \oc . Owners had 10 leave the !->late -call to ~ce •.. $43,950. "Chuc k'' l~e\\'IS PRIVATE BEACH Tnps in 4'1'Cty respect is th is custom builL 4 bdrm . 4 bath & fant. dining rm . \Vil h ~amed ceilings It expresses dignity & !or· mality. $115,000. Kathryn Raul ston. 833.()700 644-1430 Coldwell, Banker General ALL PURPOSE RECREATION ROOM l·:AST:'IOI:: COSTA \IE:5A Jo. CAtlOn . Al'IJ\(' fan11ly 11dd1- f10n. You 'll ('n.)(ly 1)w Ji'°'22· high bt"'an1 <'1.'ihn;: ran1, Rn1. \1 irh tnd1n.'CI l1,1:1l11ng, bu1l1 in .;;('" 1111? C"t'tllt'r wid Gener at General MACNAB -IRVINE Fl NE R HOMES man,· niht'r ,..,,rll11 Arlrl to YOUR OWN INDOOR HEALTH ROOM & SUN~ this R ihrc "" Bdrm. ·1 ... Bath ROOM. 'fhe ultimate in luxury. The health no™' 11 r1N'place •nd rlc-benefi ts of you r O\l'n therapy room -beau- tachffl Ubl. garagl" "' allry tiJul ne 1v custom home \V/marble halJs - ac..'t"Ss. Ct"oLraHy locatt'd for1nal DR -5 BR's -4ir.i baths -the very ki!chro • ser.icc port'h. Call finest in e x c I u s i v e Dover Sbores Area. this e\·rn1ng lor appi. io see. $225,000 DRAMATIC ELEGANCE 5500 sq. ft. home on 3 lots. Luxurious step do\vn LR. C."athcdraJ celling -Large library/ den -FR -For1nal DR -5 BR's -6 baths. A very excep!ional buy -$215,000. Open Sun. 1·5 p.in. 900 \1la Zurich Circle, Lido Isle . E\en 1n;.~ C11ll :~~-3265 ALL YACHTSMEN, SAI L OR POWER '-~-I TRIPLEX Prin1e BAY property. Ne1v listing. Pier & float for large boat. Sandy Beach. AestheticaJ. ly appointed 4 BR, 41h baths. Paneled F'R , \vet-bar. BBQ . Sauna. $145,000. CaJI Bert .'<<'11 1l0rt lle1:;:h1s. Loca tt>d on Fehren for appt. 675-3210. a 1rf'c.Jlt11'I! ~1rt>et 1n a qulPI VIEW HOME iirca close 10 be11rhf'~. boar• . ins:: .;;c·hnoJ & shoppin., 3 Sepa rate beautiful 30x22 custom guest or fam· '"~ ~roon1 un115 & rnd~. ily activity room over garage w/FP, wet bar, £'d £aracrs on a fre simple bathroo1n -overlooking fenced pool. l\1ain lari;:r ln1. Nr~\V COPPER house has a F'R, 4 BR's lovely office-den w/· 1~ 1.1· \IR T ~ G. Rrt"l'ntly sky-light. DR. breakfast area. $112,500 lease· J)!U nll'd 1n !.· nu1. Generously hold or S126,300 fee simple. prhrd Ill nn)Y $.-,\.~~(). Rl'I· 1rr ht> <1L11ck.° l'all :-1'0\V !or BAY CR EST 11pp01ntmrnt 10 inspccl • 4 BR, FR. per f e Ct family & entertaining 67:l-1930. hon1e. Completely redecorated. ll-·lany ne\v 001 applia nces. On beautiful tree-lined Cand le· , .COl£~& stick Lane. $74. 750. .... , M.Jal ,.,. .. lll·•lll -HILLSIDE HOME 4 Bedrooms & Sp.a!·kJing pool -vie.iv of Catalin~ -beaf!led P I ceiling. Ne\\' cpts. 1 ru!y charming spacious 00 2 BR home. Call !or app't. $54,750. \'rrv lo\'C'ly llflnle in \lf's.1 I i!i~hlani1~. 1..<fl1nple1c>Jy c11r-OWNER TRAN_SFERRED ~ prrf'd & dnq·•C'i1 tnr )Ou1' ,\Ju st leave this almost ne\v 4 BR -FR home. rtt'11surr. Y"u·11 /11lrl -I lari::<' l lea1·y shag cpt. Sprinkler system -pro- hedroom~ plu.~ faro1Jy roon1. fe ssional landscaping -a wonderful neigh· l1'<'hgh1lul t;1vimming pool borhood for you & your family. $52,950 \\lll make v ou r Summer complete. Just SJ.l.~l()(J. MAGNIFICENT SIGHT! COATS & ' WALLACE REALTORS -146-4141- (0pen Evenings ) * Eastside 3 Bedrm + Guest House ,Just 11~11'11; co~y F:;ists1rlr 3 Shining in the sunlig ht or t\\•inkling by night -Ba)~, Ocean and Island s VIE\V, Lu xurious community apt. 2 BR. 2 bath, electric kit· chen. Ne\\' cpts. & drps. 11eated pool. Open I-louse Sunday J-5 p.m. Ap t. 5t\ 3121 \Vest Coast 11igh\\1ay, 'Ne\vport Beach. $52,000. MEREDITH GARDENS Truly ~org-cous 3 BR decorator's home. Large FR. formal DR. On quiet cul-de-sac. It will he love at first sight! P lease caJI 675-3210. $43.950 8f'drm h.irnr. Qu;i!11y hu 1lt UNIVERSITY PARK 11,rh shakr roof. hard1~·ooct Perfect for gro111!ng· family. 3 BR's, conver· floor~. hr11·k l1rt'f!I , i.:rand tible den. DR, l:;-R. Owner says "sell 80\V", puul() s17C' l1\·i11g rn1. d('~;irh· Asking S37 .500. Please call 675-3210. ,..rj r1bl J::;'lr. RC'aUt1fuJ llJ' lo! "·11h rn11.nv 1!'f'"s & rin !or BUBBLE & SMILE hoa1 or 1;·111lrr. Sf'p. s::urs1 Jn the ('OZy \1·arn1th o! this Early An1erican hou~r 11,11h ru11 b111h. Prict'd 3 BR. pool hcirn e. Fa1nily living the easy in· only ~27,9~. AIJ 1Prm~ 11Y<tll. expensl\·e ,\·a,v _ .!\ssume V.A. Joa n. $30,250. Ca\l .146-58RO topt'n eif"~.J Q\\"ner is anxious'! --SPACIOUS 3 Ard., 21., ha. Lusk homt" l_.11m1ly r1n. opens 10 1.ivrly i:11rrl,..n. Big lrplc, in living MACNAB -IRVINE 675-3210 642-8235 Drive 901 Dover Drive Newport Beach rni., 1()(1. Formal rl1n1ni;:. General S11uny hrkf~t. arf'-'\: i;iourmr! k \!rh. Cu~!. d ra pcs. ra I'· 1 ;;;;:;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~~~::::::;;;;;~~~~:':;;;;;;;;;;:;;;::;;;: 11,.r~, n1any extras. Asking CORONA DEL MAR Sl~.j()()_ L I ( NC \\" li sti ng . Sou th of lf\vy .. on l 1r.i o s. HO E GE 1f l'losc to beach ,v.., shopping. 3 Bedrooms. 2 I p RRIE bat,hs. 1-'orn1al dining. Nice yard "'ilh fruit REALTY tree~. 161:i.1100 615-:1:120 A WON 'T LAST AT $47,800 SJ:i non·•· De., Na = SPECTACULAR BA YFRONT Y OUR-WELC OM E HOME HARBOR VIEW HIL LS i\l'11r 111•11 •I nn '! BH, 1:r11- r1nus 111·. nil. w fin-pl , f11m- ilv nn, ttuung 11rP;i, mir-,,~tV'CI rJn..,.I d<lfJ!S, 3 (·ar c-ar ~0\IE \'IE\\' Lachenmyer Realtor 1~60 Nr1•por1 Blvd., C.L\l. Ciill 6'16-::';lb< 1-:1 r~. ti7l.7Ji5 KJNG O'-THEH IU "1lh 1'11'11 all 11t1)1111d. 3 Btl· r111, .~ Hrl'l1·hf'.• v.· k"Y 11ct·~. Rf'11111 , bN'<'iy ,t r!(';,n As 11. 11•h1fl'tl1•! $41l,9j0. ()pt"n I louse S;it I .i. 723 C11n1ro lilgh- lllncls f)r., Cil:\1. 1 Hom• Show Realtors ''Arn1c•hM1r JlouM>hun11ni;:'' l;3j r,., CNUll H\\'y., Cd~t 67S-722S On the jelly '' ith pier & slip. Nothing ca.n (n1nparf' \\'Ith ihc quality & luxury of this classic ltaltan \Illa. 5 Bedrooms. separate office. servant's quarlers. F:nclosed patio & large bayside <\eek $225,000 LINDA ISLE Large hayfrnn t Int. room for pit!r & slip. OpC'n ,,·atC'r in front $7S ,OOO HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS "SINCE 1944" 11 1 , '"10'-u"s"E'""ll untlnrr; ''.-"'•o-,.-:-":;:h-,th;;::, 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~I orES l!OUSE column. -Gene ral General General 5SO NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. 673-4400 G•n•r•I Realtor Week 8 • General IYAN WELLS -OFFERS - \'our npportun11y to have a new, view home home in Dover Shores . Custom built to your particular needs. We have the .largest selPC· lion of Kin~ size, choice homt'siles "1!h outstanding VleWs in Ne1.1.·port Beach, arid fhey can now be ac· quired in f'ee as v.•elJ as LeaMhold. At the pre.sen! time vie have 3 new home~ under construction "'"hich \\•ill be ready for occupA.ncy in June ln ca~e you v.ish lo f movf" soon. Cnn1e to 1033 Mar1ntr!'i Dr. for a preview ur our cxc11ing ne11i· 4 & 5 bedroom homes complete v.·ith sp'arkltng pools. Ivan Wells & Sons CUST0~1 BUJLDE~ SINCE l97'l !Oll ~1ar1ners Drive 646-1550 The end to mowing, edging, painting, clipping, trimming, f\jl iling, hammering, weed· ing, pounding, sawing. dig- ,l!'ing. planting, plasterinR. r11kin>; ... AND THE LIV· ING BEGINNING, whrn you purchase 1h1,s Tht'ff' Bdrm. T\l'o Bath condominium lo- caiefl in !he urper bay. En · Jny a planned co1r1munily 11·11h t v.· o pool~. putting grl"ens and badminron rourls. CaN'frre living at only $35,7::.0 Y.'ith lt>rms. 1::1l!n1ng;; Ci!ll 641-;003 DO YOU HAVE- S members in your famil)•?'? If so, Y.'e can sell you this grea t 4 bedroom home on the "NE\V t '.H.A. Program" lnr just $100.00 as down payment, This hon1e is re ady to occupy. Carpel.•, 1lrape11, 2 JU.'l:UTJOUS ba1h11. Full price 1~ ~23.900. Call us no11• . we'li show you the house and expl111n the pro- gram. Walker & Lee 2790 Harber Blvd. at Adams ,;.i,;..M6,; Open 'Ill 9 PY\' Mesa Verde Sacrifice $2500 ®"'n • owner v.·ilt c'°r· rv halance in small Sf'COnd ." J ™'droon1 2 bath • ht"al· ed & liher<'ri pool, bu1l!-1n • ~rea1 location • lake O\'Pr ]ow inTPresl VA loan • nn quahlyint: O\'CC'~Sal')'. hurry on 1h1s on('! 540-8640. J-'at· ro"' Rra!tors. FALLBROOK ;"foung Avocado Grov• 6.9.1 Acrt's, 9().1 2 year old trC'('S, I.and idopes n1N>ly a nri h11.~ wond erful homr~11r. Prop!'r1y has 11m1111 huild· ing f'!t'l'!IPrl!ly usl'(! hy QY.'r'o{'r fn1· •1rC"krnd rnjnymrn1. \\'e ref'ommcnd !his _e m\·t'. <iood 1crms and prir"f'(j a1 $.'>.l~. BERG· MacKAY R~:AL'TOHS !7141 7:isl-Olfi2 H 1~h11ay ;h, f:onsall, Ci1.li l, * Ba lboa P•ninsula * B<"aeh unit , 3 incom('s !or !lummrr '-' lntrr rcn1al ~. Br~t 1or , ocar OCf'an & llay. 7..otlerl R·:t. S&:'l.000. 6i3-:l66~ 673-80ll6 E1·e5_ associated BROKER5-REALTORS 20l5 W Bolboa 67J•J66) PENDING FORECLOSURE Idr~( fixe r • up(X'r, l story, 2 Bednn & family plt15 lrR hnnt1s rn1. Terrific a1'1'11.. Try $30.:-.00. Call Ray Gault, llJ.:RJTAGf: REAL ESTATE 540-11.ll. 3 BR, 2 BA. Ex. cond. Frp!C', y,·11.tt>rf&.ll. floodlights, 1nd- 9':pd. ,\tany Xtras, Tu~1 1n­ S.A. hmirs. Jn1. rll'COr. Open Sun. $26.~. ;i.iJ.6901 General Gener el ****** * TAYLOR CO. * WATERFRONT SPECIAL! $135,000* EXCLUSIVE BAY ISLAND The charm of yesteryear Is captured in th is older but livable bayfront home on an ex- clusive private, island with park &. tennis ct. P ie r & slip. (•This price is land vaJue. good for one week onl y, then $160,000 .) BAYCREST -$79,000 Be tter hurry for this beautiful 5 bedroom home on lge corner site in quiet area. Fam- ily rm, 4 baths & 40 ft. pool with "no main· tenance'' patio. Immediate po ssession. 1636 AN ITA LA NE OPEN Sun. 1·5:30 LINOA ISLE '\'ou will really love this lower priced elegant home on exclusive Linda Isle ! 4 Bedrooms, study (or 5th BR), family rm&: formal din· ing area. Plumbed for pool. Pier & slip. Lux· urious decor. . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... $145,000 107 L INDA lSLE OPEN Sun. 1·5 :30 LINDA ISLE -$250,000 Enjoy the r omantic sunsets Crom this magni- ficent custom English style home. Fine in· terior design rich with marble, decorator carpeting. draperies &: wallpapers. 5 BR, !am rm & formal DR. Air-cond. P ier/slip. THE BLUFFS -TAKE YOUR CHOICE TWO LOVELY CONDOMINIUMS 3 Bedrooms & fami ly rm "E" plan with many extras and on green belt ............. $51 ,500 3 Bedroom & DR popular "Linda" model w/ beam ceilings. $43,500 - Call us for appt . CAMEO SHOR ES -$175,000 Luxurious custom built home with the finest appointments. 4 BR, den. formal DR. Lge pool with rare plantings & Janai. DOVER SHORES -VIEW -$99,SOO Beautiful & dignified yet designed fo r happy living. 4 Bdrms, den, formal DR & 3'h: baths. 1606 ANTI GUA OPEN Sat-Sun 1-5 :30 DOVER SHORES -$105,000 Fresh & bri~ht ! And no wonder .:_ this home is NEW! 4 BR, study. garden rm &: !ormal DR . See today & buy while int . rate 1s low~ 410 MORNING STAR OPEN Sun. 1-5:30 COVER SHORES -$17S,OOO Gracious home for the executive who enjoys entertaining. Pier & slip. Enormous terrace surrounds pool. 4 Bedrooms & md's rm. CORONA DEL MAR -$17,SOO /\ truly fine custom buil t home in popuJar area of Little Corona beach. Ocean vu, spac· ious :J bdrm & DR. Large master su ite. 216 POPPY OPEN Sun. 1-5 :30 WHITE WATER VIEW! $17S,OOO No rth Laguna ocean frt. 5 BR , 4 ba. New England farm house. Custom quality &: top condition . Your private steps to beach. CH OIC E LOTS -PRIME LOCATIONS 90' Front , level, fee ............. , .. $ 27,500 94' View site on Galaxy, lease . , .... $ 38,500 57' \Vaterfront, pier/slip, lease ...... $ 49,500 56' Linda Isle -lease ... , .......... $ 69,500 45' Linda Isle -lease .............. $ 73,000 45' Li nda Isle -lease .....•. , ...... S 75.000 !OR' Linda Isl e -lease ............. $125,000 Vu China Cove, bay & ocean. fee .... $ 65.000 ''Our 26th Y•ar" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 21I1 ~an Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER _.910 * * * * * 'There Are No Strangers In Paradise' Aloha·Newport Land Co, THE BLACKBURN co. L I JONES, associate 1823 WHlcllff Dr, N•wport 8e1ch to Pauahl St. Hilo, Hawaii 646-0231 General General * General ONE OF A KIND Baycre11t livlnr: quartf't'li in College Park 11rPa. This hu ifOt·fO-be the very bf>1t. 2200 sq. 11. of cu11om crall V.'OZ'k by owntr, Call now tor & real trf'at. $39,910 N-rl at. Faln"iew 646-1111 (1nytimel $30,500 FHA/VA Owner Nevada • bound J une l{lth. Largl" 3 bedroom hon1e massive fireplaces, lamll). rm .• all bltin1, lrg boat & trallt>r yard, tree 5hadt-d covered patio At quiet cul-de-sac. Ali;o. &11ume 5,_. '% Joan. Sl7:l mo inchtd· e1 IAXl"I. Call :':>ra-8424 (o~ eves.) \ou_th (. OdSt l STORY STEAL This fantastic bargain ol only $26,95() includes 4 huge bed· rooms JS x 20 family room. formai dini ng room, 3 baths. carpel5 & drapes thruout PLUS ovf'r 2000 sq. ft. No mistalte or misprint. ACT NOW. Trade yours. Walker & Lee Rt' al tors 7682 Eding('r 17141 842-4455 or 540·5140 3 BEST BUYS * Westcliff J BR., lamily rm., H/}" pool. Low main!. lndscpg, JUST $47,7aQ. * Mesa Verde J BIG bdrms., lam ily rm. lmmac. cond. Top loc. ONLY $31.500. * Harbor View Homes 5 BR .. family nn., 3 car 1ar- a1e. Luxuriously decorated. Proles~. tndscpd. N 0 W r:<l.500. SEMPLE Real E1tate 67S.2101 25Jj E. Coast Hv.·y., Cdl\1 CLEANER-UPPER Hr1'1''s a. bargain for yo ! Needa a liM lf' paint & elf' ing up; nice 3 BR., 2 Ba , bl1n11 .• trp1c., J:pac. corn lnr w/room for hoat &. tr . Dnvl" 1310 WatMln, C.M. k If'! Ill ~hc'l\V It. TRIPLEX J-2 BR .• good renlal a. Long-ume te:nants, tt:ady to deal! Ask. ,500. MORGAN REAL/TY '73-6642 67~64S9 LOOKS NEW l l/1 y r l'.lld -4 BR & family, 1parkling patil'.I kll. all bll· in!. f'ull crpts & drp1, huge 1350 aq ft, pario. Asking f'!nly S..10.%0. All 1erm1 incl FHA/VA. owner le11ving ai·ea. Call 540-Jljl (Open l"Vt'~.) 2 DELUXE 4-PLEXES Spac. 3 BR &. 2 Ba in cholr11 N.B. area. OwnPr wa nt.~ quick "ale. PriCf'd below mkt . NEW M>'ie loan. 7147.. Hurry, !he:~ "''on•t last. $72,SOO. EACH PERRON REALTY CO. 642-lnt ANYrIME REPOSSESSIONS Sparkling clean hnml't, tome newly painted &: carpeted. 2 3,4 &. 5 bdrms. Some-with pools. FHA-VA ~nv. turrur, from $20.000 to $40,000, Collio5 & Wa tts Inc. 8843 Adams Ave, 962-5523 STEPS TO BEACH 2-Sty. A-frame. 3 BR.. + famtfy rm. Come.r lot. Only $32.900 • 1erm1 CAYWOOD REAL TY &Xl6 W. Co11.at Hwy ., N.B. SU.1290 House Hun!JnR'? Walch the OPEN' HOUSE column. General I. ST m. .. ,_ 01 •• ly. II· ,. ,, cl ,, ' f s " " w • ' .th " 2J + DAIL 'f PILOT ;J,"', NO ONE OFFERS MOREi THE REAL ESTATBRS No. 1 No. 1 No. 1 I" Serylc.-l•f•r• al'ld 1ft•r the 1al1, 60 trained ... 1 •• , .. ,1. lft I eHlce1 to fellow thru- 111 Atlwertl1ln,....C:omplete cov1r•1• of th1 Har. Mr Ar11 every t1 1y. . CHOICE HARBOR VIEW HOME 'rhtll dt'<.1n1blr Pal<'rrnn 1nnd f'I 111lh n111ny up· i<rarird l'<.;l ra-. 1~ lhr nn~\\l'f In Ju,..11rinus ll \'ln1' ll! fl n1<1drrn1r l'l'll'C. Spal·1~1i~ lan11l,1 rnnrn 11·11h fil'rplarc anri 11 rt har F1ci10111 ('Rl'[lf'trd dr,.nn1 k i tr h1>n Or;:1n1;:1 t if' rnl r1 . J .1'1 1'1'.:". sl'rlurtrd n1a~­ rer hi'-cl1"fll•n1 i;u1 tP pl u~· :\ arlrh11on111 ™'drnon1~. Lu.-.:u r 1•1us 1·11~1nn1 cilql"l1n;:: throuchoul -many othrr u1~1cfully ~r ll't'tf'rl '""rr11s -you 011n the land. Call today to sre. 6116-7171. I I l • • Thr hay. Lid" & orran frnn1 1h1.~ :1 llf'drnonl, d111· ino: rnon1, i11r1:c 2hx2fi l1v1n;: rllOm Nf'.'wport Hf'ithl~ hnmr. ()11·n !hr l11nd for S.)4 .~50~ lt'li o n 11 I11r~" lflt 11·1!h r(lf)lll fnr 11 pnnl plu~. !\r1" C'R!'· pr!!., draJl('s & pamt. The O\l'llf'r 1s anxious! Call 646-717]. HONEYMOON conAGE SOUTH-OF-THE-HIGHWAY Hn11· 11 hout l hi!I 1n Cnnu11t. drl :'1111.r~ A ~hllrp 2 hf'drnr1111. 'J. hath hnmr nnl.v <I ~hnrl 11·alk In rhr h"ar h. A !llU'firls1 n;: \'11hH· 111 nnl.v $4.1.900. for an a ppoint1nt'Hl In srr call 673-85:>0 loday. • NEAR THE BEACH IJAndY 3 !¥d1 nntn. 2 halh. Nr11• lnnc: i::1·rrn ~hiu;: ca.rpr.1<, f>Rrt blnrk 1111.ll frnrrr!. nu1~t;o111di11i val~e in Hunungton Bcar h. $18,930. 842-253:> FANTASTIC FIVE BEDROOM (111l~IAnd 1n~ fa1111l,V )Vllll<' \n i;:rrRI llf'lt:hhnrhnnrl. J·hlC" f,1111i h rronm, ~•1nny k1trhrn. fnrm11) d1 nl11i;: rnnm. ,.,..lrl'I )l'lrcr hv1no: r°"m "'1th stone flre- placr. S10.~l00. 616· 7171 . I < ! .. DUTCH HAVEN MARINA 4 BDR .IU!IT rlarNi on markrt. this 4 bdr·2 bath home is rrady to n<•rupy. ;\rat. trim lhrnu.;:houl. frrshly 1.ain11>d. ful ly 1·11t·1"lf'lrd. 1•nr111>r pal in, h!0<•k \l'l\lls. 1 hdr 1>11n<'!rd.& i:.hrlvrd, idral fnr drn or tiludy. Brttrr hurry in S"" 1h1s~ Phonr R-42-2535 or :>'16·2313 for in format ion. full pnc:e $30.900. WALK TO THE BEACH In srhot'll, In thr lihrl'lry from 1hi~ imml'lculll ll' :\ brdr04'lm 2 hnth hnmr 11·ith ht-11.utiful c:arP"tini ;inti vinyl flonrs p!u~ q ualily custom d rapes. nr:tn'I •1·ail, r;tJI nn1.<' 10 Sl'e this ch11.rm~r priced $32.900. Call 842-2535. . PLAY IN THE BAY and S\Vi m in your 01,•n Tahitian Pool~ A 3 bdr home on!V 3 blocks fron1 the bav. New paint k carpets. Only S39,SOO. Call for the facts 546-23 13 . , FAMILY FUN in this spacious 5 bdr Republir home. Room for boat. camper as "'ell as a pool. Mesa Verde area. $44,SOO. Call for details 546- 2313 . BEAUTIFUL CLIFF DRIVE Quality custom construction. Slresi;ed fo r 2nd story \Vith plans available! Better than ne1v condition. Truly minimurn care ya rd. Newport Heights 3 large bedrooms. 2 full baths. hu~c family roon1 . All a l just $47,600. t,et us sho w you this very special home to- day. Call 646-7171 . BACK BAY BEAUTY Architect designed and cuSto m built con· temporary home :J bedrooms. 3 baths. large atriun1 and 2 fircrlaccs. Complete buil t in electric kitchen .. i\mple room for pool. ten· nis court.<;, etc. Price only SS3,000. Call 646·7171. BOATS· BOATS· BOATS At ;vnur door step. plus a gor~eous view of alt the hay. All th is for $49,SOO in a To"'Cr.'\ Apt. J_iving for less than 360 tmo. Phone 613·8SSO for appoin tment. THE BEST KIND OF YARD . . . I.~ the one son1eone else maintains. The best kind of pool is ... the same kind. If this is your philosophy we have your home rear1y for y ou. 3 bedroom .~. 21h bathi> in the bluffs \\'ilh a park for a t.ack yard. Lib- eration for man. \1•ornan & child for onl y S44,SOO. For details call 673-SSSO. 5 UNIT MONEYMAKER WESTSIDE COSTA MESA $39,500 -$10,000 DOWN Probably one of our best offerings or the vcar. Room for more unit~. 63 x 300 · J\.11 ; Lot. LO""' rent income S5.J60. Excellent yield and tax shelter. -Phone 646-7171 PLAY GOLF and "live" a cross the street from the ~1eadowlark Golf Course in ~lunti ngton Beach. 3 4 bdr home that sparkles~ Cathe· dral ce iling.~. professionally landscaped and I vcar ne\\''. $38,000. Call for detail11. 142- 2535. . ' SUBURBIA PARK SPANISH Loralrd in one or 1hr most popular lt ™"ll n;igh- Mrhond_~ in Hunlinf::lnn Bf'ach. (Just •~k a ny ()t 111,. rrsldrnt::1.1 Thi~ home fral1U'Ps 4 bdr, family i'Mnl fnnnal dininio: rnnm, 1-\1 Ni1h~. Siluatcd nn \Pry lai·i:,. Int '"ith f'Xtra privary. Prir,.d In ~rll quitkl.1· al S40.'.l00. Phone 546-2313 or 842·2~ JC)r additional information. "' ...... < .,.. .. _.,..,. . 1 . 2 ON A LOT t.:x1·r11 111u111lly 'har11 -nnly ~ yra rs nld -"" lar i;:e 60x l35 lnl -Bt1ill·in,, ~hak" rnnf. Si-.pa- rar" garag,.,. J u't 11 step to all ah oppin&. 107. Dov.'n. $34.900. 646-7171 PN BALBOA ISLAND Remodeled and expand ed 3 Bedroom -3 bath -10 steps to sandy beach. Ash panel· ed -new kitch en and baths and storage space galore -2 car garage. $12,S~ -Call 673-8550. TENDER LOVE & CARE Have made this 3 bdr. 2 balh home the very cleane.'il you can find. If you enjoy a. well kept lawn. a back yard full of flowers, s parkling clean flpors & cheerful w·all pa· per then this is the home for you. Don 't hesitate to call 646-7171 . NEWPORT HEIGHTS freshly painted lwo story on cul-de-sac. Ne\v drapes. Lovely brick fireglace. 3-car garage. Just reduced to $40,95 . Call ~6- 7171. MESA VERDE BEAUTY Charming 2 story home in Costa Mesa'g mosl desirable c_•ommunity. 4 bedrooms. den, din· ing room. 21n baths. 2100 sq. ft. shake roof. shag carpets. Jots of exlras. If you see this one you'll buy it. $39,950. Call 546-2313. RARE 51/•0/o ASSUMABLE LOAN If you're looking for a very specia l home in Costa ~lesa \Vith 3 bdr. 2 baths, family room. very clean & neat throughout, fresh- ly painted. shag cpl. large lot, nic ely land- scaped. room for additional constructio n & pool -1-boat/trailer/camper, and a 5114 'Zt) assumable VA loan -you just found it! Price $31 ,500. Phone 546-2313 for addition· a! informatio n. UNBEATABLE AT $24,950 Super cottage beautifully decorated. Ready· to-move in! Corner lot 3 bdr home lvittl paneled double garage. Convenient to schools & shopping. Call now 646-7171. SALESMEN NEEDED EARN MORE! LEARN MOUi !..Pl 111 ,;how you h(lw • \'nu rAn 1'11.rn up lo 80% • Profit Sha rlnR Pl1n • p,.r~on11 li7.l'd Tr11.lnin.r Prngr1.rn • Mori' Sales Htl~Ntw Tr1ininr Proiram 1n Progres1 Call Rondy McCercflt 144-ZJl 6 for ,.,.,,.1 •• I 1 ', l Look al \hi~ one A. you'll be rompl"llPd lo arrtt 11·ith u~ 1h11t ii'• 1bou! lhf' 1ha rpe111 A. rnos l ta~lf'• f ulv drN•l'lllPd homr 11rou nd. 4 bdr, .'l·t,l, bath, fo1=1nal d inin£ room. f11mlly room. k f lr<'pil . Th" 4.lh bdr 11·i1h 11 l1r~i-rf'crpatinn room 1pocil Ut.blr ~izl'I i• •epar11erl frnm lh,. main li1•inR qu11.r1,.r1 k hill~ ii~ n1.<·n h111h. Prnfl'1!innally h1.ndsc11pl'd ,\; dl"cnra ted. N~wport Ri-.ach fte land In rlc1ant new a rea. Call ~6·2313. CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX 7 -'t Brdronm hnt.J~P~ ln 0111' of n11r hl'sl llOU1 h- (lf·lhr ·hlgh""•ay lnca1inn~. F.xi:elt,.nl lncnme, 11.nd c.11n br aern almost an_rtitnr. $45.950. Call 673-M5Q. RIGHT ON THE BAY Beautifull y redecorated. 3 large bedrooms, 31/:J baths, livi ng room. formal dining room. breakfast room & a large sunny kitchen on the ba y. pl us a proper study with fi replace & wetbar. All this <:oupled with off ~treet guest pa rking. space for t swimming pool and 1 large private patio. make this the most exciting offering of the year for only $1 ~.000. Call 673-1.550 for details. VIEW HOME IN HARBOR VIEW HOMES Dramatic entrance. spacious family room \vit h fireplace and wet bar. Secluded master bedroom suite plus 3 additional bedrooms. Tastefully decorated & loaded lvith extra.~. )1ou nwn the I a n d. Call t o d a y to see. 646-7171. $55,000. NEWPORT HEIGHTS VIEW Spacious home. view of Newport, bay & ocean. Large living. room \vith built-i n shelves & storage, formal d ining & break· fas t a rea; huge upstairs family room & bar -ALL with VIE\\1• One-of·a·kind custom home. $72,500. Sho"'n by appoi ntment 646- 7171. FOR THE FUN-LOVING NEW PORT SHORES ON THE CANAL Lovely & large. A former model home. 4 BR. den tor office). 3 ba ths plus 1 neat ho· nus room for ging pong and pool. Onl y $49,500 673·155 • CUFF DR. BEAUTY Better t han ne\Y cond itio n • quality con- struction -stressed for 2nd story with pl1nl'i av1il1ble. Very min imum care yard! 3 lar~e bdr. 2 full baths. huge family room. Offer- ed at just $47,600. I.et us show you this vrey special home today. Call 646-7171 . NEWLYWEDS· TAKE NOTICE! This cul.e 3 bdr. green !hag carpet, 20 x 40 patio. fenc;ed yard. corner lot. lYith room for boat or trailer. Only $25,.500 • hurry • owner anxious. Call 646-7171. ' LOTSI LOTS! LOTS! NOW'S THE TIME TO BUILD! 50 x 125 lol -Rl -1.lley • ju•l 112,500 JMag· nol ia ). 84 x 104 lot -Rl ·good area · $24,9.50 (Gra- nada. 90 x 125-RI ·Upper Bay 121 ,500 ·!22nd). 66 x 300 · R4 -6 unit' $20,000 fCanyon). l'Ylesa Verde · Rl $21 ,9.50 ·(Suva). 107 x 101.5° • Cl • Baker Sl. -121,'50 (will exchange). In Salu In tho Harltor At'1a-l'roof po•ltlv- Thlt It wh•r• "Tho Action It.'' • • TWO-STORY NEAR BEACH I 81'aulifut, :\ BrdroomJ -2~ Bllth -vrry iht.-;i hnm• 1hrn11chn11L t'ratur,.~ forma l rlinln1' 1r~11i h1t'R" f11 mlly room 11ith hrirk ri1·rpl11r,., up1:1·11dr~ rAf\ll'l ini;:. lllfRI' Int. E'(f'l'llPnl lf"lt'alinn IWAr a' ~rhonb. 1hopping And bf'ach. Price S36,7:>0. Ca~ 546-2J13. I ' MESA VERDE -$28,500 Tlov.• many hnnH•J dn yn11 supfM1~,. th,.re arr Mi-~11. Vr1·d,. 11nrlrr $1R.~00? \V,. rount :I i nd t~ nli'l'Jt nf !hi' .1 by far l!. this tilt I" ~hArfli". :\ B"t room~ 'l bll h~ formal dininc, pool iizrd yard 11r 10% 'Down. t'or df'lai\1 -673·8~.'>0. FAMILY LIVING ('.,111·rnir11! rasl ~lrlr 1rwA1ion. Pool .\ fl.'llin f· "lllrrtainin~. 8Pp111·Atr mao;trr hrr!rflQm A. blll \\'nnd,.rful !11n11Jy room &, kitchrn. \\ll't b: 11111i!11bl,.. Bn11t nr 1·11mrll'r ~tor11gt ArP.a. A mu tte at $37.950. Call 646·7171, · ' MOVE UP TO WESTCLIFF No1v i.o: lhP timr. Tr11n~f<'1T•'d 011'nl'r t.\ nf(rrtr 1t1i.' riu11lil y homr. ln11drd v.i1h '"~ln1 fra111rrs 1 11 prirl' lh11t v.'ill Pru1hfr yoll 1<1 prnvidP ynur fAn 11.v 11'ilh 1111' he~t in lllTnm1nnrlatinn~. ln1·alio ronv,.nirn1·1> 11 nd i;alis fitc lion. <I hl'drnnm~. 2 h11th.o:. d inini;: rnom. r"c·rf'alinn room, itudy. Let &o ser it~ Sfi:l.900. Call 546-2313. ' MESA VERDE GOLF COURSE A 1np ll"nlf 1•nur~e l~·11tinn '"Hh a hrralhlak in ,,i,.11. :S hl>rlrnom.• nr 4 tw-rtrnnrn.o: &. drn .. 1 1'1Ath1 formal d ining 11nd brrakfa~r rnnm. Ir is 11 lsn th• mn.~t inexl)l'n.o:h·" golf rn11r.l" home in l\les; \irrde by far 1t S48.~. Call 64.6-7171. THE REAL ESTATBRS NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd . 646 -71 71 • COSTA MESA 2790 Harbor Blvd . 546·2313 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17931 Beach Blvd. 842·2535 CORONA DEL MAR 332 Marguerite 673 ·8550 INVESTMENTS 278'4 Harbor Blvd ., Suite 20 I Costa Me11 5'46 -231 ~ ., .. \'I'. - • 3.f bAll V PILOT F'rlday, M~ 20, 197 1 HOU1M for Salt l~I Gentral Hoult1 tor Sil• !~I I HcMH fOf Stle I~ HoultS for hit General · .Gtntral l~ I HolaH fot Sate !~I l~l tbMtfors.lt Gtn•r•I Gentrel 0 BAYCREST Open Sund1y 1 ·5 1805 Glenwood Ln. (S antiago at .<\shford, left to Glcn\voodl Qual1tv aod l·n111fort \I ere built in tn this fine. !\',\~·\\"ELLS 4 bl'droonl. :l tiath de· llght!ul PO\\'d('r rnozH h(!t~tf'.'..._:rh.c fo_rrnal din· In~ roon1. 1>anelt'd fan1ily roon1 & xlra l:i.r~e living roo1n \l'ith it's hand~ome bouquet (:in· )'Oil rork fircplac·e arc 1ust some of lhe 111· door features \'OU ""il l rnjoy. 1---[t.!J, ____ a_A_._.~_._~._~_~_"'-~-~,_!_,~-~-" -'h-~-~-~-·~_.:'_A_:._.'_.n_c_. - ror outctOor activities & ('ntcrtaini11g, the 1ruly large pool \\ith Jaru7.zi .JPt~_ 1s sur- rounc1ed by spacious aggregate patios _ fnr sunbathing by day and rozy gatht>rings around the built-in fire pit on cool E'\'en1ngs. Prired for quirk ~ale. O\\•ner ha~ bought another home. Call today for pre·v1e\1 . ROY J . WARD CO., Realtors • .INTRODUCING A NEW, EXCLUSIVE BAY & BEACH SERVICE YES- WE &AW Ht~ YDU 1ur. 5l1l, OR TRADE A HOM! Alf'//'LACE JN lHl NATION. ---~-- ')tlcstf\ Fr6c 'J?ca(ty.., PHONE 546-5990 e BRAND NEW LISTING e Pacesetter 4 Bedroom in prime central Mesa Verde location . Clean condition, deep shag carpels & master bedroom su ite, separate from childrens bedrooms. Double pullman sink for kids. Open Sat. & Sun. -1-5 1718 Gt,,tr•l .£nda !J!J£ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT --5 l:.incfa 111• Drlvt Just completed 4 BR .. S'h ba. home w l fam . rm . & stud y. Magnificent 39 ft. waterfront Jiv . rm. W/frpl. & \vet bar .. , ..... , $155,000 12 Linda l•I• Drivt Elegant ne w 5 BR. 4'h ba. home w/formal din. rm .• fam. rm., \\1et bar. Impressive en- try court w/16 ft. mahog. doors. $179,500. 53 Lind• Isle Orivt Home o n lagoon. 5 BR., 41h ba .. w/4 frplcs ., Jacuzzi tub, hd\\•d. firs ., sep. !iv. rm .. din. rm., Cam. rm. & brkfst. rm ....... $175,000 1033 M•riners Orive, N.B. 646-1550 WE CAN HELP YOU Dover Sliores Office Wat•rfront Lots ~·Iinarcu ' e TOWN AND COUNTRY e I=~..,_..;.;,,,;,..;~,;.,;,,.'.""" ...... """"""'' BUY, SELL,, OR TRADE A H 0 ME Gener1I General 4 Bedroom on. quiet s treet near the golf course. has been sold. bul just fell out of escrow. A chance to assume Slf.1% loan with cash down payment. Home in good condition S34 .500. t-.10. 44 : 108 Ft. on Y11ater ........ , . $125.000 No. 76: 3 Car garage. Reduced to ... $77,000 Ope11 Houses THIS WEEKEND llM,-t•l1 k11dy dlrK~•rv wiHi v•u thl1 ••~•••Ii cr1 r•111 •• heu1•·hu11tl11f. All th• lec:atle111 li11rd btlow •r• dtscribeli 111 •••eter dettll by crd,•rti1ln9 t l54'· wllere 111 ted11y'1 DAllT rlLOT WANT ADS. rotro111 1howl119 optll hou1e1 f11r 111111 or tt r•llt or• u•••d t• 1111 1uch h1ft1111otlo11 111 thi1 c:oluiM eoc~ Frld11y. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 BR: & Family or Oen ) K . .&.nctiorage \\"a y, l\e,rpon Beach 6i5-1748, S27.500 1Sat1Sun ~Ion) (3 Bedroom) 664 Surf Street, Costa !\'iesa 546-1185 (Open Uaily) 243 llill Pl;ice. ('n~tJ .\lcsa !>48-7505. S2!l,950 ISat •Sun f\lon 12-5) 801 K ings Road , f\e\1·port Beach 642-8235 . (Sat.& ,Sun) 21fi Popp_v. <_·oro11a del i\lar 644-4!llO . gsi.500 rsun 1-5:30) 320 Prnspect. Ne\1·port Beach 646-ilil I Sat 2-6) (3 BR & Family) lilll 1 Rnckrnse \\"ay, Ir,·ine 833·102!l. 828.500 IOprn Sun.) 2030 ('on,rnnrlnre Rd. 1 Baycre~t f J\"13 , 642-458!l. !52.500 (Open l>a1I)) 189\fi Santa Clara c·r ., }'ountain ·Va lley 9fi2·5031 iSat & Sun 1·5) 130 Shorc<.:liff 1'r., ('orona, de! '.\lar 642-5200 1 Da il,· 2-5 1 2504 C'!1f! Dri\'C, :\e\\'port Beach · 646-il?I jSun 1·5) **3.10 1 Bounty c·r .. Hunt in~lon Beach 646-il71 {Sun l-5 1 2591 Tus f"kl Ave,, Costa ~lesa fi46-717l !Sun 1-51 1717 Terr<1 p in. Ne\\·port Beach 64f}.i l71 (Sun :!·5) Geach * 122:'1 ~ottinghan1 .. 'ie11 port 646-71 i I (Sun J.jl (4 Bedroom) 10052 Sprit { 'ircle. Hun! in gt on Beach 968-1616 . S3:1,g50 rsun 1-5) (4 BR & F amily oi: Oen ) *l'.1.)8 }~.Oceanfront. Balboa 67J..6i49. S96 500 501 E. San .Juan. San (_'Je1nent e 4~2-0i26. S4'.! .. i00 1124 Sanliagn. ~·e\rPQrt Be;ich 642·5200 604 AJl,·ic1\. N. L<rguna Beach 1Sun 1-6) !Sun 1-5\ fi4 2-5200 (Sat 1-5) 9161 lra\1·fnrd (·ircle. Huntington Be<ich 962-3i48, ~2!l .i50 fSa t & Sun) 284!l 13oa \'i~ta l)r. j .\lesa \lerdel ('~I R4i-R501. S.17.900 ISat & Sun 11 -i) *200fi J\"aulllus Ln . ~Haye-rest) NB 833-0700 : fi4·4-2·130 I Sunday) lilill ll<ist1n~s ,<\\·e. l('ulverdale) fr\·. R.1:1-0iOO. S3i.950 1Sun 1-5) **505 .\lnrning Strtr ([Jo,·er Shnres) NFJ fi42-R21f1 (Sat & Sun) lfiOll :\11! it:uH I I Jn1 er ~hnre-<:) NB 114.; • .in10. ~9!1,500 !Sat & St1 n 1-5::!0) 410 \lnrning Star l lJo\·er Shores) !\B fi·14-49lft. ~JO.'i.000 ISt1t 1-5 :30.! 20:ifi Pnrt \\'ey bridgr. ;\C\\'port Be;ich 64\:t-ilil tSun t-5) (S BR & Fam ily or Oen ) *in~ ~I .James Pl. tC'liffhav en ) f\'13 FH'.!·5'.?M fSun J.a) *1031 ?.lar111 ers l)r. J !}Over Shore.c;l N ii 64f>. ! .i50 t Open IJail:-i) 1847 Port .-\bbey Pl. 111. V. l·lo1nes) Cd:\! fliS-'.!101 tSun 1-Si 26:)2 Bt1c;~1\onrl i l':t1stbluff) l\'B 5i8-ii29, $48 .950 /Sat & Sun 1·51 180fi Port Rt1r1nnuth Pl. rlfrbr \lu J-lnn1e!'! :\"R . 644-2127. $49.HOO 1Si;1t 12·5, Sun l-7 l **210 r;ven ing Star tDo ver Shl'rc ~l J\1 1~ 642·R215 ( Sunrlay) 900 \'in Zurich c·r. (Lido T ~le) !'\B f,i5-3210 t Sunday) lOi 1.inr:ia l!>le Dr I Linda l ~lel Nil fii~r!ICJ. ~145.000 (Sun 1·5:30J 16113 ,.\n11a L:inc 1 BayrrestJ NR 644-4!110 ~79,500 tSun 1-5 .301 TRIPLEXES FOR SALE 13·2·1 Bedroom) 4701 l~i''Pr , .N e\\port Beach 54r,;111 1Sat & Sun 1·51 APARTMENTS FOR -SAl.E 12 Bedroom) **3121 11' roast Hwy (Apt. ;..~I N'pl Beach , 6iS.3210 (Sundey) BA YFRONT LOTS FOR SALE **Bayside Dr. bet. Marine A" & CrlM 64 2-82.15 · t Sat & Sun I • ,. •• 1 * * \ll(•terfre11t * • * P••I •1111 W•,.rftt11t ANYWHERE IN THE NATION NO MATTER WHERE YOU PLAN TO MOVE WITH OUR FRANCHISE IN "NATIONAL MULTl·LIST SERVICE" 2850 Meta Verde Or. • Coste Mesa • Plione 546-5990 For complete Information on 111 hori1tl & lots, ple1s1 c•ll: BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 133 Dover Dr., Suitt 3, N.B. Gent rel Gtner1I 60·•620 STEAL IT -BEACH BEACON BAY Wt offer V'"' 1 coM ril•t• ,,..,~•li nq 1t ••;c• cov1•in9 not t1 nlv +~, Newrio•I H1rbo1 •••• ( '' "'' h••• b11n doin9 /.,, well ""'' 10 y11•1 ! b~t ihe ,.,+ir• n1 lio.,; end lhi1 i1 ~n t•d•,.i•t B1y l B~1(h ••••ic t. W1 "'' fht only 09llitt ;~ II•~ N1wriorl·C••'• M111 l o1rd ol R11l+ott ~~~ ONLY $16,950 OffPrl'rl hy ownf'r lhi~ wkrnf. h1vl"9 tht NATIONAL MULfl LIST SERVIC E fr111c~i1t. General General 2 rloor~ from Bay & sandy . c;;;;,;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;; I ~ach. 3 Br, 21,, hA, 2 1101y 1 HOMES FOR LIVING MAGAZINE Salisbury Realty Included in this new service is a Jnonthly pictorial magazine. "l1omes !or CLIFFHAVEN Li\·i~g." that. you m11_y receive FREE upo n request. Packed \\'ilh ph<?los .;.10 KINGS Rd. Nice 2 Bdrm .. and _1nforff1a ~1on ·on homes currently ~vai labl e th.roug h _o~r local Multiple df'n hou~: ownr.r said "sell, ! Listing Service (of \Veil over 200 offices). But 1n add1lton, we now add .~{'u ffll" rlrh·e by c111l specific areas and cities across t he nation ••• \Vith details and descrip-1o · s<'e! · :RF:oucEo ' r o tions \\' hi c h \\•ill $39,9:-0. 1help the relocating · • BALBOA ISLANO !a1nily quickly se~ Nt>ar 11f'w J RR. home nr. llecl a hon1e of their Nort h B<i). Srr .. ~st>d !or 11rl· choice an\'\\·hcre, rl t'l. 4 BP,'~. F.xch11ns:e tor ac:ros~ the st'reet or Int, O.)\'l'r Shor""· S75,000. 1 across the nation. ' Salisbury Rc~lly • Ju~t l1slPrl! Cle-an 11~ 11 p\n. Jiv. rm., v.• lrJ loft br e~I • COLLEGE PARK r-.1ode-rl'! cha.rm. Hugi" room~. aar(IPn rm. t1vl'rlook1n~ aun-· All plec. buiJ1.jn kitchf'n. ny riled p11tt0. C"rrt rm. 11•/: AREA D1ni n~ are~. Slirlina gla.~s trplc, Coolrl f'~sily ~ du·: --10 patlO. Huae grounds. 2· plf'x. f inancinc 1. v 1. 11. · c11r izaragl! v.•i th bo1.t rionr. $72,000. 67.1-:tjft(). j $26,950 \VA ik '0 5Chools & ~hop•. •Capistrano Btach I Lo\·11 ly ('(lflW"r Joi homl!. with ,J.,a ,., ~ach. E-Z tl!rm•. ~tier hurry. Call t714J ! J bl'rlronma + 2 baths + 962.i"JRi BY OWNER, 2 btlrm homl!, ! hus:11 rumpu~ rm. Ali this + "" 11.Ju1um~bl.-£""'~ ll"la.n nl $111,650. P11.y11.ble $174_ mo. 1nclurll's laxe1 elc. Hurry on lhlg Ont. Newport •• f1lrview FOR~SI E Ol.,O\ " NF ~i TOP S l 9lll Brookhur~I Ave. --~"~"~"'~inirton Rt11ch $2lODO oc-#.11.n vi"w. 1 m i. lo nf'"'' Da na Po1n1 harhor Co m· I plo-tely fe,nct'd, mu;\ 1 e '·I <'PIJ. rlrps, d11hw1r, bltns, I trplr. ~any xtr11, l yr new. I 4!l6-6.~7!J. Colltge Park J OPEN HOUSE 1\\"e c.:an help vou le\·ery step of 'the \\"a\' l>ecause !~av & 1 i~e;ch a11 d our ·rel· lo\\· i'J.!\l.L.S. n1em- 1Jer can handle both tends n( the transac- :.11.b .\11\Rl;\:.E 1\VE." '673-6!XJo ! 646-8811 (1nytime} 2 Story Home 3 BR. P00111nrl larR:I! cover-; . ' ,.d p11.1io. ~ .. w 1h~z CIU'J)f!I tht•unu1, R!1.1n~. Cflrf"ll'r lot ! wuh room for t)ti11t t1r r11mp- f'r. \\'aJk 10 ~f'hnnl~ anrl ~hop­ p1n11. 10'• rln11·n. Conv"n·t tinn11 I fin"ncint: S.\l ,9:Jl. ~9-05.lll. ~ GrH:nbriar. off PrlncPton. ttian. J~ay & Keach Realty (establi~h ed 1!l49) is \\·ell experienced in sol\1ing !your re;il eslale prnblen1s in this area and now can offe r equally effici ent ser\·ice throughout the nation. HAI.BOA JSl...AND , DOVER SHORES Waterfront I . 1('all no'v (67$-30001 for· you r free cop ies <l f "Hornes for Li\•ing" booklels CllAR~1 r~G :t RR, 2 RA r . r . I l 11· . hnm,. Drn. \\<'( hnr", .'<!Pllm or more 1n ormat1on or or a persona counse 1ng appointment. room. fitb:lflll lni. r i.-r ,.., shp ''\Ve kno'v the Harbor Area -and the liarbor 1\re a kno,vs us ." for .1() ft. ho;i1. Xlnt \ 1e1\". $117,,.ill, Xlnt fine. 11.1·1111. Owl'!l'r. Tr11<1.-11cl'f'PlAble. 548-1936 oi· 6~-46Sol, aH ~l'llflOl.•. /'i<'par11te QhilrlrPns play .1·~nr 11•ilh rl1mbins: trre. Goo.-l siie room s nd hii.r hrl8"ht kiU:hcn $33,900. C11ll 646-7171. \:RTHEREAL ~ ~§:!'~!~.~ 2407 E.isl Coast Highway, Corona del Mar ~~--~Gen-e(e~l -----I ____ .......,.l ~S~,950 i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil I Gener 01 4 B d r + Den * REDUCED $1 ODD * """"'"' ""m" '""' "'"· 1 \;iri1:P ronn1~ 1hniu2h<"lut, 4 BORM. +FAM. RM. ====~====~ 1 On quirr 1re-e Jin"d 11lrl'l'I. _C_O_U_N-TRY SIZE-Shcirt 11·alk io a. bl'11 ur1 lul p11rk. F.n fry hall . r!lnint: -KITCHEN-rmm, rlrP1m kitehl!n with hu 1J1.i n t'llnge-+ ovPn + d i.~hv.a~her, hugl! fam ily room. bkr. open til 9 pm. 5-ID-l i20. an<t 1'0Untry s1lPd lot. S..aul 4 RH, 2 ~lory cu.•1nm hnml! v.'l rh all xtra.~ trK'\ 3c i;:Ar. 01111Pr traosf"d ro Frall(·f'. mus t lPa\'e lmmed. Pnf'P<l for quick ~Ale at an unhf". ile\'ii.bll' S·ll.~IOO. Call 5'1~8424 LofK'n e\·rsJ \ol!_th _ (-oast HOME WITH POOL TARBELL 2955 Harbor -DOVER-SHORES- Viev.· home. 1148 Santiago Dr. BP.~t huy • 5P/IC. 5 BR . .f. b". Adaplnble floor pla.o ft1r roup!p or lgl'. l11m ity. NPwly rlf'c.'OrRo!'d. By 11pp"t. $91,000 Bill Grundy, R••llor R.13 Dover Dr., N.R. 642-4fi20 LI DO rf'~irlPnce • ~ b<l rm. 2 ha, hy n11'nl!r. Call 673-i;:W or fi7:l--0412 l 8Pdrn1~, 2 811th~. hrdwr! I c:.:...::::.:.:...:.:... ____ _ Balboa lslend Corona dtl M• r 2 ON A LOT i 7 • 2 Bl'droom houMis in oM o! our ~sr sou1h-"'·the-h1¥h· 1 w11y loc•liolU. EJCC'rilent ln- ("()m l!. anrl ~•n n.. !lPl!n al-1 mo.t t oynmo-, $45.950, Call 673-855o for appoil'ltment. \-0 TH£ REAL " ESTATI;RS I'•,'' I floor.~. f ;\ h1. {'fpll', drp~. l..111").?P ki tc h. hugp ~l!p. f,11m . ily rm. Nor1h1!1111 Cos!B :'lfrs11. S2'J.~. CAMEO SHORES Brautlful Ocean Vie'N Ju1t Jl~tl!d! 4 BR. It lam. rm. .,...,4 b1. It pool. .f.6.19 Gorham Dr. S!J:t.000. Ry "PP't. * SMILE * Biii G•undy, Rultor YOU CA~ R.1.1 Do\',.r Dr., NR 642-4620 4 BEDROOM 2 BATH 111\VE A HOU . ..:E I 8ROAD:".IOOR-Hllrhnr Vi eii Laro:" 2 .ic1nrr Imm" llhnk,. ON BALBOA ISLAND ll il l11. Uniq u ., hnm" "..-.r. f1rrpl, crp111. dr11roe, !.· Duplex•& 11/~n1a~h1ni Pnlrant:P, 1nn"r m11ny. m11ny Xh'a11. S42.j()L'), I or sing I• r•sid•nces C'OUCtyANI .... ~po.1:Prl hf:1m.(. R:oy McCardle Realtor R:•lph V. Hinger Arlj in arnbl'l1 . Comm pbnl. 1@10 l\e11·port Rl vd., C .. \I. l:O:LAND REAL TY -4 hr, l11m rm, 21:1i h~. 5"48-7719 I 67~1200 675-5401 S?4..'ffl. l>-«-O~i.1. Barrell JJ•·e:Jenl:J --------------BY OWNER:--1 DRA~TCALl.Y r 'r!uce d . • • • • * * L1!llP ldanrl. Cuitnml?.t'rl , 1111 H1rbor View Hill.1: home. 1 UNMATCHED PIP<' 2 BR 2 RA 2 iror~: .,1._ YrJ.. ""11'. Arl ult occupieil. • HUR:R:Y ON THIS! h111l1 -1 n r11n~P + t1ven + 5 BEDROOMS VACANT. <h~hlll\. .... <'I", r1rrpJ1lCP, f'ipPn to! !I poi. :•-10-17!0 TARBELL 2955 Harbor ' ---lrlr11I fflr r:ln<-1nr~. lnl"r;<ton, BR. 21, R11 . \11P11·. By app't. r rlookl nt ga.tf'!'" v.•1 J11 ral': 64Hi9.\ All . ~ Pl\1 *· 130 Shorecliffs Drive CORONA OEL MAR (OPEN DAILY 2 TO l l * View -Pool -5 Bdrms. * One of our n1o sl ind ividualized cus1n 1n homes. /\ lrul.v drt1mRtic impact awaits ~'our ·~ue ~ti; from the niotncnt 1hcy enter the gate to you r a\l-red\\"OOd hn1n{'. f:nhanc{'d by many trees. * 7D8 St. James Place CL!FFHAVEN, NEWPORT BEACH (OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO l ) * Variety of Bayfronts * 1\ fine se!Cl'lion or :l lo 6 bcdroo1n homes 111th pier~. rronl Sli7.0()(l to ~:,00.000: al ~o PRT ~·1F. B.\,. l~ST.o\TF. LOTS. l\~vfront rent ;i\s nvatl- able. Cont.act i\lr. or ~lrs.: Bcnls. 6i3·0149. Offic• Open Satur~ays & Sundays PETE BARRETT REALTY 1605 We1tcliff Dr., N .8 . 642-5200 A .... Turn unU!Cd llrm"' Into quick o-tr. 2 B"drm.~. 2 Q 11 th'· c11!'h. call "42-jtiilt Nf'rd,,. \\'t1rk 1n~1rle A· t1ut. p1111t1 hPlov.•. Alt 111ppl111ncPs 1r.f'l11rl1n£ 1Aunrlry IA.f'llilil'~. HARBOR Vil!w Hi11 Ji· Lu!k General GOOD !J)Qh'.JNG FIXER ~an~· ;<pP.Cial f1!11.l utts! Mm e, 4 Br, 211 h11, :'I car fi7.1.i"f"lfill. RAT., ncP11 n \'il!w. S69.~. Harbor View Homes UPPE:R s ncl \\"HAT A LO· Pvt pty. !IAM-:'IPM. 83.).7119, ~ p,\1.9 P:'ll, 644-1080 Rf'ilUt1ful rc~1df'1u·r with ""I hi•!", ln1rly l"llf"l-"'"l lr•.t:, ,:rl[. ('lc11n ing t)l('ll.c;. Q111f'k ro~· IJ('SS lll!l. 0111u•r 1111\1011.•! \"O\V 0;\:l.Y J:~.:i!K! INCLlJ[)JN1; THI·; 1.A~D CORBIN- MARTIN REAL TORS 644-7661 -SAY-"HELLO"- TO GOOO BUY \,,\Ullo' 1"11 ll!!<'lt"~t Col\"l't ll- l!U.'tll lu.1n a11tl p11~ uul) Sl~l l"'r ln••nlh f,.r f'1f'ry1h 111::. .l quren.~11rd hf'droom.•, <llrr"t~ .t· h•'• ol c"""\""· ~rp~rn!t r111n1ly l'/)(\nl, ~hail: \' r\ fl!' F'll ·\ lerms nlM>. $21.q .o T'1T1\l.! Walker & Lee Rf'r1l1or.11 "if:~1 F.clint~r 17111 ~1:?-n;~ nr 510-.'i14 fl --_1 BEST COAST Vt EW ' \'rr.\ l111"~f' J BR .... \ 1~·11•. I l'lrr S: 'l1••11 t Pllic 1'"11 11 tn 1>1111.1\I111'llury \i11 nn11 ,\fll~ FOREST [ OLSON '" RFAl.roR S OPEN 7 DAYS A \VEEK Would You lelleve LESS THAN $75.DO A Month 1111 <'.~tn(s .~l"'''i-'1 1. T11k<' 11\·<'r :11. 11nnu;1I ~:. ralf' t·!IA loan ~<'At !'Ind rl,.11.n 3 h.-drOQnl hnmr. (';in tw ) our~ for lf'ss 1h11n $75 A 1l!Olllh. RRrf' fi nd nr~!ll'd on huszl' 11·C'll l;o-p l !11!. For thr 11;1.rliru]Rr hnn1<' huyrr "r th" di~c<'rn1nr;: in1·r.11. lor. IW>n't ';iil tn invr.11- tic11t" th is un\JS\J B) np· pnrtunit~. \\'on"t last so hurrl' <'All 64S·Ol0l BACHELOR "B EAllll'.'. BARGAIN flf1<"!1 Hfltl"'1 t'n ~111 S.. !'11111 I lf sandy br!l1•hr.11 ~ntt 1 ; 1~,Pl o ...... 11 P.h·rl \f'l~l 1hc fnRr ()f !hf' ~urf Home Show Realior s 1111·n .1·nu nn, th1~ i~ 11. ··,\rn1flu11r ttottMhunaf\lt"' SUJ\Hl"l('r·!un ttillll~"· ~!'ll<'ll"lUI li\'ing rrtnm, :r .. 1.'I F:. (',111,1 1h1~ .. C<l.\I bri,i:hl ~hi ny kitchrn. --~ 675-7125 lnr.:r h('{fr<>f\tn~. 1:-,:. BA-V)HORE~S~. ,--l nt·nf.S h\ ins: ronm ~ 1m1nrr11 11.nd rcJr1t:rn1 · J~·.,111.· l'lll'l llQ)TW -• r. O\\'n"r liq11id11t1ni:: h"nlf'; ~ ••r b~rm8 11 for fA~l saJo-. Oon"I l'll\8 li:;t. pooJ: ,,11 ~11.1111. f ttlf'llT UJ"I th11.t brl11k·mflrn1nl! Irina 11·1of'r \'1r11• of ma in run on lhP SAnd. Jlurt) ··h,.!1r1rl. $1"'1:1,7."'1 "' llJlJl"! -11·on't 111~1 n 111t Bil l Grundy, R:eAHo r 645•0lOl CALE!~' Arnold & Freud :\,~ E. lilh .>;1, C.M. ~~6-71.'i~ rla.~~ nin.j.>38 ('\'" I * MESA VERDE * l.O\'l'l.1• irnmA<'. hom ... RP11111. i;:rriund .... ((I\". p11t10. ~ RR . 1,, f11m . rm. 2 B11ths. s:~.!(JQ. Georg• Wllli1mson REALTOR CHANCE TO-SAVE-$ ,\h!;rntre 1111 nrr 11 .•<'II :'-lr•11 2 BR h~r. 1 hr 11 p1 + R"llf'~1 rm .i;. h11th. 115 Pl!arl. $6!1.:.00. Ownpr 67:;...1209 ----Balboa Peninsule Costa Mesa ~---~-~~.~ * Reduced $1 ,000 * ------------I J'TIA, VA, Ct1nven1.. or y()u flCEANFRONT hnm P 2 'I)'• n"ml! ir! J BR. + lam. rm. 011 40' ln1. Oris:. 01\·rwr. ()c-. 2 Ba. SU.71l!l. <'UpiPrl 2 y~. :t,mo .l'l It. All (';i ll ; f'a! \\'l'IOfl f'lrc. HU.t:P ma~i.-r RR.frplc + J lt" RR. Rnrli,.nr hP11ot. ~f'l'nif' Propl'T t1rc f;i,';..;,;zs 411 RA. rlrp.c; & rrp1s. J.t~ ~C-O_L_L-EG=F.~P~A~R~K~-~A~RCEC..:.A:: E. Orr11 nfront, Balhotl. By !'ihArp, ~ lae. RR . hom• 011·nrr S!lfi.7"00. 6 7 3 -6 7 4 9, F11 mily rm .. 7 lrplcs .. 1h11g Oprn Sun \"4i. <'Pl!. $31,950. 2313 \11snr Pl. I \'Prrlt> nom,. 11..• 1s. l<5;r. RR'•. 7 h11 . 2 lpl. Co\• pKtltl. '"\\'EF:D It "" T'l!lp" .. clean r orrin Ct1. R,.111ror.\ 1'42-:.000 out !hr tre,B!Un>.\ ,\ tni~h - ~:':I 7RO !,4~~ i97 ME!;A ~I Mu 3 BR, 3 8.4.. ~lao.Y extras. 8)' Owntr. M&-1701 I I fllrn into c11.sh th ru a DAily I For hfost T'l!'ult'! 642-5678 Pi!n! Cl11~~ifil!'d 11d. 642-~11 o·-tenon of ... kiur 1C10iribled words be-. low to fOl'M foor 91~ words I MOYBElt I _ I I' I I I . ~· !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1 .~::..~ f\11\ r r r ir • ~ fl ti 11. l•.20 ~:-~1rlf' c '' •nr l.-.;. 2 RR "~ r11. lt1f'rl ;.11rrl'. 111r 511·1 mn,1 $~.~ nr 1r11l1r uri 1n ~lltllf ~1,,.~. 11;. '"'" 111 r 61'J.:,\11 ! • PlllNT NUM&Et~D lffJE•$ I 1 PILOT CLASSIFIED ORANGE COAST'S BEST SALESMAN •• fORl\T [ Ol.\ON "' R£A l. rORl f"a•t rl'sult~ ArP Jl'(f • phone !-)!) }!11.rbrrr, Co.•tll ~'"'" <'All ~11·a.~ • li·12-~iS li"'~!!!!!!!!;;.;;,;;;;.;,;,;;.,,..1 l~S lHfSE SOU.Ai l!fS ~ ~i';'~~!\', mms ro l I l j I I j f SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 s to I t:. I • knri ., ndy. tor~· 1 rrm.l ! •un- w/. 'du-~ at J., L I mP ,i • ... m.1 e e. I ~! • vet: i I lot I mp- hnp. ven·I ,950. ia.r, '"' iih-1 .... fll· 1 Ca.LI • le" m• "" m,. . I. ... 1t-d . •. ! d • p'L .... "' .500. 19. 31)(, :;i:?fj A m• ,., .. , j797 BA. ne r. -. ~~-------DRIVE BY ll98 BolH Way, C.M. 1N. Of" BAKJ::R/ E. OF' rAIRVIE\\') VACt\/\'T -SPlC & SPAN • BARGAIN ' ReducC'd for last s<.1Je lo $211.9.',0, !\101·p 1n ffl5t. rent ro t·tn.~(' Of rsrrnl\'. Larw in Re•lty, Inc . 2Jj(;:.! 131·1>0!.:fnu·l<i, llutgn Bch 546-5411• •nytime Frld11, M&t. 28, 1'71 * DA!lY •ILOT S!i I~ I ·-~ .. I~ I -~ .. I~ l.___~-·~··~l~IL--_ ... ...i.i___,I~ I -·-I~ I -·-I~ Huntington BNch Lido lslo --------LL Y $ Primo lido Nord GREEN YA E l9;SOO. 5 BR. • ha. w/elev.1<1r. S2 Spanish tile rooted 4 BR, 3 3 Bf'droom; Carpets, drape1, Jot. p • .,&_ • .,., BA condo. Tip..top •hape, tlec1. kllch. 1><1.tio, Corner ft. Ti' i:f Li;t.1:-i:·ooo. fo!·mat din m1, llv rm with lot. Adult oceupled, Low dn, Beaut, 4 Blt.. 5 Ba. home 2 Spanish tirepl. Compl bltin B.J'l~/9G8...UTil96S·U7I trplcs. 56 tt. v.•ater trontaae. kltch with ma Lras. Fan. m '-''if' Room fOt larre boat al.lpa. ta~uc covert'd pa1 • re-t~·~-~~\~,...,.,~r~ ... ~:~l~•s·!~ 1 Price $300,00). • free livlng. 2 Pools. i r • ,!; ,. _ _J ""· "·-·· Bill Grundy, Rltr. halls. w J w crpt11, dl'P~-· ••• saa Dover ·Dr., NB 6'2-4620 1,1•ashable cloth wallpaper, panelling. Prll-e J't'duCt'd CUSTOM HOME $29.900. ON big C'OUntry aiu lot, de- Newport a..1ch $15,IOO V.A. Anyonr q11alinea 11ubjttt to filA Loan With 6~4 &MUti.I pereenla,ge rate. T()lal pay. ment $148 per month. Sharp 3 bedroom home a:listening with HAROWOQD .FLOORS. 2 luxu1i<>uii baths. modern built·in. klt~n~ :H~~dy ~ immediatt' o<.'OOJ)ancy. GI buytra welcome. CALL! Walker & i.ee Ccindomlnlums Buaine11 for Hie 160 Oppot1vnlty 200 t'OUNTRY Club Vlllt.1 -by __ N_E_E_D_E_D __ _ t1wner. Beaut Spanlth 3 br, WORKING PAR~ OR 2~~ H, frplc, pvt i-tltl. Ad- jacent to pool area, walk tt1 PVT lNVESTOR. SUbetant· Meaa Verde CounlTY Club. ial return on money tnve1t• Tl4/lWO-O'l62. ed. atc::urtd w/oollateral. MONTICELLO townhouM> _ FOi' motw intt1 write P.O. 110 Lexington Ln, C.t\t 4 br, &x l&19, Santa Ana. rood rond, Shown -b'un t1r by COIN Operated LaundroD\at t.ppt. 54'-'36U tin Beach Blvd. Priced to Income Property lU ::~i~:ict:per=:°~~ H~':. • COSTA ~·rESA tingtt1n Bch att111. Call 305 HouMt Unfurn. ----------'ovnt•1R V.1Uty General 305 RENT OR LEASE e J HOt.tES IN cosrA MESA . S22S per mo. J BR, new crpt. 2 Ba. • • • ALSO $325. Irg .borne, ?oteaa Vf::rde w/ """™ <!.m. ""· •• _Al.SQ .• ~. 3 BR home. 546-'521 or 54M631 SPANJSJI 3 BR I 2 ba <.'On00: Walle:d pa.tlo1, t' '" d, bit-Ins, 1ar, ttc tac. $~. 963-2647. . Huntington Baach 4 Sr, 2 ha, like new <.'Ond . Near acean. Beat atta. S2;iO a mo·.-1nc1oorn; camener·, CoJllM & Watt!, 962-5023. Eve~. 642--0421. COOL OFF I 1hii; summer in lhi~ I0\1ely 40 11. s\\'l1luning pool, Own- er trans. & has purchastd a ntw home in nnother area. SQ 111ake an ol!er t1n lhis 3 BR. 2 ha. M('sa Del !\far hon1c. Just !'E'duced $2,000 to S:.U.950. I' 11lage Real f state lHChed rarage and room 10 roam. 3 Bdtm/2 ha., aU the details at ReaJ Estate by ~fcVay 545·0458, 893·8533. l BR .. 3~J ba.: 4;; X 8& $93,500 4 BR., 3 ba.; 60 X !IO •• S'l9,500 4 BR., .f ha.: 90 X 88.$142,~ Lido Realty Inc. 3377 Via Lida 67~7300 2700 Harbor Blvd. al Adams 12-2 Br Garden Ht1ue~3 a.II 962-8996 ~ Open 'Iii g Pl.I "'/att. gara.gl's l: patios. Onl'B~E~:A-CH=~st-.-00~_~,,~ ... ~-,-,-.-0. Hichola Real Estate $150-At Beach. 2 Br. Sep. du- plex. Stove, child .l pet t1k. NEW 3 Br. 2 ba, crpls/drps, 2 car a:nr., ahake rt, (.'On• crete drive. $250 a mo. Child/pers OK. Avail mld Jun.. 847-3324. tU-4471 ( ::::J 546-1103 NO Yard work. Luscioo1 3 Br. tov.'Tlhouse. Profession. ·~· . vlluab~ ~72x204. t .blk Bank Ben-, plUJ rentals. }"'ast 6 4 BR. BAY CREST or Am nca.. 2 mi. acean, mt1nth t1pt>ration 67;)...2650 0\1•ner going EaJt must •ell Income Sl.945/m6. S169.500. · Laguna 3 Br, 2 Ba, E"rplc, dbl gar, tncd yard, sns. 3 BR. Cond. 1 ~I Ba_ pools, clubhouse, palfu, far . ~·111.torage ~776 aJt ·s ally dttor. inside &-out. 2 LIDO I!le lot · -S7'x88', LAndscapE'd patios, VE'cy pvt Iarae1t avail t1n the Ulland. nice Bayctt"tt are&. 4 bdrms, Good terms. Gail Page Money te LHn 240 family rm, dinlnr rm, 2 ~~ 545 Se.rn•rd St, CM 1st TD loan baths. 2 frph_~, tile entry. BLUE BEACON * 64$-0111 * DeLancy Real E state 64'l-7Z70 \\'/plf'asant view & pool .l'!'"!":'""'"!'~"!'""'""'"'!'e. VJa Lorca, $52,500. By $l7,500. J ohn ln,·in & Assoc. 4 Bdn.n, 2 ~· fam rm, .trpl, O\vner 213/44g..2998 636-4470 spaClOUs kit v.·/pantry At '•s-;cm=-oo=~WN=~bu-y-,~.,-,-,-u-do~• Lot 80' \\•ide, Priced low al GT Oppartunity -Costa $:!9.900. t.fesa. 4-plvc. Lge roomic, 2 6" %TINTERED lsr e SPACIOUS! 2 Br, bl1n.s, CI D, ldds A: Ptli. $150, $195. i\lt1. Roomy, 2 bednn., tittplace, fenCl\d yard. 2- r.ar rar. 842-5541-Bkr. fOH. Sa IP hy 01vner-Custom ht11J1 1101ne, Xln1 cond. On eul-de·sac. 3 BR"!, 2 Ba 's, fqllc, bl!~s. lilrd ki1chen n('w erp1~. rn1'1'l'~d patio, !t"ncrd. Al'ea f\lr boat or 1r11.il"'r -$29.9~0 . f!l t\/VA/Conv. 5-18--7Zl1Xl. bltns, lrg garden patit1, lt1 3 BR, 1%. BA, bltins, lge maint yd, cul de AC, 2 blka value. 45' lt1t, cozy 3 BR. family rm w/bar, Lge patit1 to schl I:. shpg. $29,'150. $49,500 Prin. 67>26-13. CALL ·e · '''·14 14 ~r~r:~96~~t1rClap. nd oan A~""'-., 1 '1""nc1~.-.--tr~1.°"1'"p"-",.."-pe-rt-y~l'8~I Terms "'"d oo "l)llly. • Budaet boo1nerl 2 Br, encl gar, kld11 & pet~. Sl3(J, ALA Rentals • 645-ltOO Irvine & ne\\·Jy I and• caped . 962-3748 Meta dtl Mar Assum11blr. loan S ~~ '% ·l===-=--~-"°"-=-962-5031 SUPER Sharp 4-plex, H.B. 4 Br, 2 ba, many custt1m •SALE or IE'11.se. Loi.,. down. $10,900 down. John Irwin I features. $31.;500. A!Sume 3 br, fam rm, 2 ba. Near Assoc. 636-4470 5~'-rnA. Prin. o n I y, 71£.\LTY • -----'--'--·1'42*2171 -'J.U..0611 Ntlir.Ntwp•rl P••f Offft • HAYE Serving Harbor area 2l yn. l BR., 2 Balhs •••••••• $325 1 BR. A family rm. homt-, Oncl. g!U'der>P.'I') • • • • S345 3 BR. 2 Ba. Choic. grttn- belt l<>eiltiol\ • "". " •. $325 4 BR .. ~'A Ba. & tam. nn. CH~G MESA VERDE \rooO ,'\, u~cd brick ext. Prof. lndsr·p yd ~·/alrhlm in ent. 4 BR. h11n nn, Ip. 2 BA. l hlk to golf 11k, schl. Open 11k('nd~. s::7.900. 28.t9 Boa V1i;.1a Dr. 1117--8:.0l. ocean. 962-4982 BEST Buy ln Huntingtt1n 546-5027 Huntington Beach Harbour. $49,700. John MUgf' 1ell -O\\•ner leaving ---"-------I Irvine: &: Assoc. 636-4-470 state, a bdrm ()J' den, lrg 2-STORY G. IANT h .. , •• •'· ''"'" .. ,. ''''· Irvine likf' ne·N, S41,500. 540-3864 4 fR TURTLE ROCK Me•• Verd• + + All the extras are here in NEW Spanish Duplex, 3 BR, ORMAL DIN this 3 bdrm. 2 hath home. 2 BA, 2 BR. 2 BA, Corner f . Lge. family 'rm. w/vaulted lt1t. Private. Cpts, drpl!. PRIVATE ROAD lmn1ac, 3 BR, 6en, din. rm. 3 bath borne on lge. fenced lt1t. Light airy room11, ma.ni- curt'd la\\'nl & beaut. rar- drns; dbl. @'!I.rage le sh<>p. Assoc. pooJ I<. pultifli' gnen. Best buy in area. $6f.500. Call 6424Ga) for app•t. Bill Grundy, Re•ltor F'OR saJ(' by t1v.•nf'r: -1 bdrm hornt' nr schools &. shp'g. $28,000. As~un1itb!e FHA Joan a1 :,r;•;. llR5 Dorset Lane. L'iliL PhOne 5-15-2421 BY Q,1·neJ', in1macu!ale 4 Ja1i;c Brs, 3 Ba, 24' liv. rn1. hplr. din., hHn ('\ec kltch . lu.xury carµe!ing. n1any (',-.;1ras, 2 patios, ex· trn,<;i\'(' lllnr!scaping, 5~(}..8376 $28,500 t:eil .. beautilully draped Ii Ft'nced yard. 1 blk to 3 BR + den, l~f. ba. Jndscpd. & yt1u o\\'n the 1tore1. Principa.ls tin I Y. Rf'modE'I. Kitchen w/bltn land! $42,500. o._•ner bat S49.9j0, ~2781 be.fort 9:30 b-b-q, dsh11·sr, R/0. Hrd'A•d been transterred. ~t or alter 9 Pi\t noors, crprd + drp11. Jn And only 211' Yrs. 4'Jld, U1ti· i . ed h 11 4 BR + Family, 3 BA. Harbor lfighlands, $33,500. mate in modern decor. Lu.~h I:] • CU t d lhrUo t 2 By onr, 642-2506. :-.PE'l~~n::i~~N f~~\~:1 ·-; r 1: ~~~n~c :~fi~!r~~~.':: EASTBLUFF Lusk home, 5 d. · M · I ·1 br, 3 ba , lam rm, 264XI sq. 1n1ng rm. assive ami Y Univ. Park Center, Irvine Owner. 540-6627 f t. 2 frplc's. $60.000. Open rm. FirC"place. 212 Baths. call Anytime 833-0820 GOLF: ~uced $2000. Adj Sun J -~. '?230 Aralia St. $22,500 Garden kitchen that spark-1,,~~~'"'~""'""'""'"'"-6.f4--ll02. Jes. Min. to the beach. Lush l2-STORY c::ondt1 ht1m e , ft1 1-f.V.C.C., Jikf new 4 3 h1·, J ha + converted lam r111. N\ce Fr<'edom Park home. FHA or VA oil: t1r as- sume ;i1, GI In, Sl2G mo PIT!. Call \\'~1C. 539-9;i81. 3 BR, 2 BA. in College Park arf'a. A111hony pool, lovely yard \1·/hrick patio. 51i •,II assun1able G.l. Io an. $.10,000. 642-2382 _,, y , .__ br/3 ba, all xtra~. 1% '10 Int BEACH cabin, steps from grou11us. OU U ue Mll1'Y Ground to roof tlazing. 2 tin nl'inc. ~3513. •--yoo didn't look • Hurry le patios + atrium, 4 br, 2~• r·-· bt'ach, wcated in Bayshott call {TI4) 962-5585. ba, lge lam nn, liv"g rm, Ml11ion Viti• Trailer Park. 1 BR tully turn. S30C(l I be.'tt o 11 er. formal din'g rm. $40,T:iO. PERFECT 1st home: l br/3 548-9890 bel"'H!n 6-lOP~f 833-U37 ba LaPaz home, beaut kit, HARBOR tuGHLANDS roR~SI E Ill.SO\ " TURTLE Rock 2 11tt1ry, 4 Br, cvrd patit1, f/bckyrd. Take 4 br, 3 ba, S1.£ FHA 3 Ba !an1 rm. Lge lot, lovely tlvt 6% Loan, S31,000. 539,950 Ch\'ner 646-20&3 RE.At TORS ''iew. ?.1any t'Xtras. $47,500. 13()...4398 ev~s/wknds. 19131 Brookhurst Ave. Owner 833-2057 Newport Beach Newport Heights L•guna Bt•ch S TH OW BY O\VNER, 2 hr R.--2 lt1t, A STONE' R alley, tr11.de for larger home ni::r osESSJO;"\S J-luntinglon Beach * POOL. VIE\V * l'O THE BACK BAY Gov'! & 01hers. Ar1yone can buy. loll' dQ11·n. ~22'.\1 to 4 Spac. bdrms., 2~1 ba"s. Lre. S·Wm. \\"ills P.lty. ~&-78{).i Fantastic 2 yr. t1ld farmer \i v., family l din. r~ .• MODEL HOME samt' atta. 64&-5593. $24,,50 PRICE Senta Ane 3 bf-droon\s, separate hu:;e I,.----------- Family Room, 2 beautiful 3 Br &. Family Room, baths. Pt1lished hard~·ood covend patio. Take C>Ver fl.oors. TCN.·ering shade 5% 'o/,. GI, Pa,yments S153 'tn!H, surround thls 150 ft. per IM. Best s. A. l<>eation. !arm-sized lt1t. Gav'( a~ John Irv.in z, A a 1 o c , praised and approv~d. No! 636-4470 modf'l home. 2100 J(I fl. t1f chttTy kitch. \\'/load! t1f COLLEGE Park -Best Buy. quali ty living tor the big storage; completely lndscpd. Rl'duced to S29.9:.0. New e-z family, 4 Gigantic bdrms, 3 v.•/1ge. trees. Enclosed yard n1aintel'\an~·c Inds c P' g · BA, garden kit, waler 110ft-with )5 X 30 hid.&: filt. pool. Custom ·1nlf'rior. 3 Br, 2 Ba, _ _, 3 f'rlf'r, air couu, . car gar. Nice deck A palio areas. In lam nn. Ownrr ;..46--0902. S~J,000. Submit your terms. good neighborhood, clase to O \V N !:~ R -B arga1n~ JSR, CO'TS school~. S49,500. 1'~81\. CO\'l"rrrl pa1 io_ '.'l'i1•r • ~ fcncf'd back yard. $22,500. &. * HARD TO FIND * tine thin dime for v~·s. TAKE t1ver GI 6'/C,. $23,500 Don't drar your feet. CALL f/price. 3 Br, l~ ba, oorl"lf!r Walker & lee Jo• Frplc. bl"" • ... carpet. J t1hn lru:in Ir Ai.soc. $1500 dn, 6&1 Suri, CM WALLACI 2-Sty, 5 bclrms., ,,~ ba's. :M&-:1185 REALTORS Lgt', kitcti. w/brkfst. area. formal din, rm, Lg~ liv, EAST SIDE Open Evenings nn. w/frplc, On cul d~ aac 2790 Harbor Blvd. a l. Adarns I 'BR 2 BA, t·vd palio. e 962--4454 e !tr'l!et in good neighborhOod. , --54-=;.=D465=~°",-'c~n~·=';=1 ~·~p~'-'-'Cair~'ting, drapes, buil t Ins 1 -•;'"'"'""· '""""· s"" =~~~~=-1 $.19.;oo. DOVER SHORES • LARGE * toan. 64"6-'-.ic.llc.1;_. ~~-~ POOLSIDE F'Ai\IJLY H0i\1E IT.Aft olr! 3 hr Spanish style. PARADISE In e>eeanrront neirhborhood. VIEW HOME Cq1!~. drps, par t i a 11 Y Surrounds this 15'x32' pool Has 5 bdrmi .. 3 bathi. Huge lndscpd. As 11 um e GI. ~·ith 10111 of decking + 4 !iv. rm. w/'-I. Ft1rmaI din-For Sale By Own•r ·.,1~ '207 BR • B ho 11· I ~, .r-1 • ... a. me ""' U'ep · ing area. Lge. we)J equip-Dovt-r sno~ view. 4 bed· Ct.:!'iTO\I bu1!1 E-Sirlf', 2 Br. crpts, drps, bl tins, ne~· ped kitch. Centrally located room 3 bath Dome + fam· 2 B11.. crpt~. bll nll, lrplr., cul· paint inside. Close 10 shops rec .. room. Over 3,000 •Q. ily room .,,ilh sunk~n ,.,'el dc-sar. dhl garage. By & beach. $27,900. All terms. f1. on one level: 11~rrounded bar. l fireplaces, lt1rma1 011nr r. :llS·2ll93 Call 847-1221 by nice garden &: patio dininr rt1om, separate 3 BR on E'Statf' size ocean SEYMOUR REAL TY areas. A very functional, breakfast room. Valentine \"if'IV Jol, $24.950. 011'ner. 17141 Beach Blvd., 1-ltgn Bch WE'il plsnned home. Asking built, 2 years old. 3200 sq, Jo.lo Linden Pl, C'.\t. 642-1122 Open 'til 9 PM $87,500. ft. 3 ca r ea.rage. S89,500. -::::===:::l==~ii:I 548-1-455 ,\·!E~A Verde by ownf'r 3 BR,' ii -~ lani rm. 2 BA. patio. Open l EXECUTIVE HOME ~--Tk"-' BAYFRONT Mme, $27,500. 2 daily 529.950 :i.l;)...2075 fn xJnt area. 4 BR, big fam· ~""'~ Br, dt'n, 2 BA. frplc, bltn1, Da na Point ily rrn w/refrlgerated wet SOU'SHLAOU114,C-. heJ!.Ul. yard ,.,·/garden rm bar. beam ceilini:, firepl, ........ -._...~ for outdoor d i n i ni . e CO;\l E: SEE • \\'/w crpti & drpg, formal k 499-2800 • Unbelit'vablt' v i e''' ol I • · o p '"I ,,,,,,·, J-larbor \\'/boa! 11Ji p avAil. .. rrPsa a.nll 01.. "' • din area •. cul-de.·sa~ 6l:reef OCEANFRONT h Tl ·,.,,~c All thi~ in a fl'l()S! unu11u1.l nr t'l"<'!'YT 1nit. lE' nr ... ~~ plus a unique KEY shaped hllle 2 BDR.\1 r.u!!e for j'Out 20·x40' ......... 1. $3'1.000. No dn PrivatE' steps to sandy beach. irruJl()bll• mt1bUe home in "~ ~ 1 1 · Lido Park on Udt1 Penin. bC'UC'h hon\(' or cozy ye11r· GI. Lo dn FHA . Cal! 847-1221 ....... mp ete Y private corner 0 Y ~ 000 ho d-• b h' h Open holJM! this wkend-K round Jivinc. NL S.w. . SEYMOUR REALTY mt', surroun ~. y 1g ll I • I Anchor111e \\'ay, Ne""'Ptlrt Qll'nrr ill & in hurry lo liE'-• 17141 8f'ach Blvd., Hlgn Bch ence • o~·enng treP.S. Beach, ;.,,'\/NE L INDBERG, Realtor Open 'til 9 Pi\-1 Lushly la.nd!eaped entry 2.')9 Del :-tar. SC. 492-434.~ I :=::;~~~~Z::::~~=~I court with fish pond. Wood e ONLY ONE e OPEN Sn i & Su n. 3 Br, 2 B11, Ii exterior. l Bedrooms, l OF A KlNO VU HO~tE 011 view loJ. near Dana Point RETIRED baths & family room. 2 5000 11q tt: Dover Shores Manna ~xcelll"nt rondi-Sei' this lt1veiy l B.R. doll .Fireplaces. $139,500, Call · Contemp. Old Wt1rld desi1n •32 900 houtt. ~ii in the shade t1f 4 BR + maid's, 4i,.;. bath 1!•111, )OI\' dO'll'!l, ,, , ., ..AO t!J,~-l~ll'I or 49;i .. 1t'.'.6. sprav.•ling tree1; a nd relax O 'a.· #'I Spacious eourmet kitchen for a ff'1\1 moments, only l-l '16" 10' anriq, doors • Fountain Dover Shores S15.900. Real Estate by Mr.-REAL ESTATE atrium. 4-car aar., Tenn!. VI EW FROM Va; 893-8533 or 54j..{}458. S169,300 •?r 548-7249 636-4470 SHARP 3 Br. bltn!, frpl~. crpt!l/drp~. Assun1e lo\v fi* GI. $183 a mo. John Irwin & Assoc. 636-4470 San C lemente --Whltehoua•Ocean Vu from every roon1, 2·atory 4 'bdrm hom~. Minutes from Municipal Gall C t1 u r a e. Ne"''ly-Oeoorate<J. 't.I a r b I e rile entry, complimented by lush 1 h a g cptg. Tahil- ian·styled yard \\·/t1pen pt BBQ & aenuine tilt' patio. OwMT transrerred. Below cost a t $42,SOO. 492-072G DREAM OCEAN VIEW at Shtli"ecl!fts, walking dis tn store~ "-your own pvl bPach. ' br, 2 ba. bltl n!!, 11·/w carpet !brand ne1Yl, Irple . .le drps. 2 car gar, bt'au yd. Loe at 2725 Via Visto1a (vacant). Low dn pymt. Call t1wner beft1re 9 A~i or after 4 Pl\ol, 492.-4187 University Park TO\\'NHOUSE 3 BR, 21;1 BA, fam nn. Poolit 4 lennis crts. $28.500 Owner. 333-1029 Acrea1e for eale 150 ERY ROO M • 1190 Gl•'"'YT< St. BALBOA COVES 3.00oE.~ fi. or gracious Ii\'· •. ~94-9413 a.is.on6 WATERfRONT IRVINE COVE ANSWER TO n-IE S CRISIS 1ng in this rlt>~antly appoint· Transf6I'ed -Must sell! BR B ... _ ·11 Prime loo. 3 BR. 2 .. _. •nglt Real Estate! And the hot· I'd 4 • 3. a '"'me, 11 '1 1 1 """""'""'"""'""'""~""'""'I Lovely ocean view from a ..,. •• te1t retl ~state i5. recrea-braui fan11ly r n1 & forn1al REDUCED •1500 delightfut l bdrm. home story. Newly dece>r. Fenced l I. 1. ~ r " ..... -... boat 1. "'..,.,,, tlt1nl.I! 5, 10, 20 •c. oonv. to din, rni . · u·rp i:, " ca BeJo1\1 f'HA appnd. for quick Oge. mstr. mite "''/garden ~ ... >N 11• • ip . .,, ·-Silverwood lake. S797.00 pe:r 1iir. $S!':.:1()('1. tale. 3 BR 4th BR/den, 2 bathl: family • dininr rm.. Bill Grundy, Re•ltor •c. Lo dn. Pr1ct it way JEAN SMITH, RL TR. BA . fl'.m rm. Nr beach It 2\t bath~. Spacit1ut patitl l33 Dover Dr .• N.B. 642-463) under market. Bkr. 644-4670 400 1::. li!h ~r.. C .. \l. 64&.32~i5 school. Bar, panelled gar,, "'ith twimming po o I -CORONADO home, l BR, Bluff ~I •139 ~ FamUy nn, Pl"oh -•og GOV'T land -S5 ac. Write E ast patio, Prof. dE'cora1ed ...... 1 • • "'"" .. .,, • .... p •·-1185 de-sac lmmac. in It. out. Turfter A11ociate1 carpet thl'Oua'hout. Lob ()f Ulluu ac~ae. Ar· tither ~. I mm e d 1't1whead Ave , S a n Good terms $.1~.950. Open 1105 N. Caa.u H1,1•y .. Laguna Bernardino, Ca S"n. °'''"'-968-1616. 494-1 In •-ytlm• poe!!ession. S32.500. 837-9500 1 ~-==~--~--"' '""' #VI or 830-2808 e 3 ACRES Doyle, C&llt. 40 Cheaper Than EMERALD BAY LOT TOWNHOUSE. """" lJv. ml north ot R•no. 11600. Rent! ing Park Lido. No1-="""-'-"~'·------ Bay $39,950 WOW! o I $ 950 Finest A larieet Ylew lat kaathold, 3 BR, 2 bl, 3 Cemetery 180 Orgrf'c ~11·rtpin,:: v1.~1a. n Y 22, · U27 Emerald Bay garages, xtrat pool, Lot1/Crypte 156 Hui:e n1s1r, iou1t(' plus 2nd Cozy 3 brorm! Large ynrd~ 8111 G rundy, Rltr. $31,500. Owner 644-2250. bdrni. & hath . rormkl <!In· t'n1lt tttes! 833 Dover Dr .. N'pt Beach JlARBOR VIEW HOME, s 2 ADJ. loll, Pacific View in,1r r1n •• llf'amert CE'll, liv. HAFFDAL R 5 EAL TY 642""4620 Br. 3 ha, kar 11.r., Memor~·sfo:~· rm open~ 01110 40. 11. \•lew 842"'40 e MONARCH BAY i Spac\001 tam rm, \\'et bar, ierrBcr, Jn the c:ho1tt' Blu l(s 1 Eve1: 5-11-2446 Lar,, nr.w 3 l den <. ~i. 2 frt>lc"a, Ft1rmal din'r nn. Condominiums _.,...... ~uced to •M,900. 6"-2127 for salo 1•• !1rsl 111111. 1 BY OWNER Owner/builder. $39.930. ..." -- f I P11~ific Sands 3 br, 2 bll. 497·1M"1, f99.2974 X'I'IU let. ~•n view, 4 BR. ''TIBURON" crpts. drps, gar .,,./bo1.t BY OwMr: 4 BR. lam nn. 4 ba, bar, trplc, lOOO sq n + t ~' rioor. Co""'. r lot. WtJI Ind· lg• patio, .~ ... cpl. Cood 800 bonui, $52,500. i41 La RESALE -• d tJ ._ ,,.... Jolla. 6'fl..1672, ~ 1~1N~ C'OV Pll 3, #'.<:.ou. 1erma. $31,500. 49f.--0336. ::-:===--=c--,--,c-:,,,-I fey rrcrn ·~ carpelin& IJ Ba.rga ln '23.9ll. Evu A 3 BR, 3 BA. • BAYCR.Esr Bf.aut;)'1 J BR., thruout th is lmmaculat1: 2 wknds 536-Tu50 ' ocn rnyn vu, 2~ BA., family mt F ~ « -Stdnn, 2 Ba, dining rm, ,-,=,,,-"""'__,~· --:---;;,c:I bltlna, cp~. S49,j()(t, T-erm1. al I ft~-lor -• 241'4 Visra. Del Oro 4 BDRJ.1 , 2 ba. home tn Glen Owner. OR IM w LH/op. In(> e. """""' .,....,. alngle s!ory In qulet adult Ne\\'JlOI1 Beach &1--1-113.1 r.1a.r. I" u 11 y luidscaped. lion. $350 mo. 494-2339. ~,500. MM319 w ~. •tta. Larae family nn, pri. Fou ntain V•lley ~11~e : ~~~ ;.~ .. c~ L-.un• HUit B~~co:t>°~~5l»Brt; ::~~~~:'.dbl. 1ar. Set to BY o1,1'n('r. Chitin, \1·el\. 962--2237. 3 OR, 3 BA, 2 atory, Ip lot, owner: &U-1983. L•r win Realty, Inc. l'lccor11tt'd 3 BR I<. r"mily rm BY owner ~ BR hie, 1u!t11.bl' fully lndlCPd, Ire paU011. \VESTCLIF'F~ J br, 2 21562 BrnokhuM. lfnlgn Bch homr, J>,I,\, :,1 , a.s~umahle, !or l'l'!tittd cpl or cpl wn Ahumablt GI loan. l~c. ba, cuatom Jl(l.00, Ip yard. 546-5411 anytime ov.·n,.r \\'Ill hold 2nd, a11.king child. Nr beac-h, school• It '36.900. 646--3114 Mun Kil $f4,900. 6U-2049 ''WEED It 4 "ap" .. cl'an S28.500. 962-4982. ctrurchf's. 5.'>6-6644. DIAL dl.rttt ~-a.,.. EXQ.lJSJVE l Br, l Ba out the tnuurea A trash - Turn unused Items Into quick DAILY PlLOT for action! your ad, then s:ft kek and -~· Unda tale. Prlv. turn lnto cull thru a D'-ilY e.i.!lh. cRll G42·S6'1S Cs.JI S4.2-56i1 & Savi! Usten to the phone rvC! dock. $147.!!00. 6'13-f£6.1 Piiat Ciaaaltled ad. £42-~7! Sattler Morf'I• .. Co. 336 E. 17fb St,eel FREEll L1ndlord1·0wMr1 \\re \\ill refer tenants to you FREE t1r cllarge, .. 1\iany desirable lenants t1n t1 u r ~·aiting list. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 Sl'?~3 Br, lam home. rar. HU&;t yard tor family. SUO-Cule l Br. e:t>ttage, E/ S~A~C~R~l~F~IC;:E;:-:uJ::;:,-. 7.":°':,:,~1 7.,0:,·.I ~WH~O~~N~eed""!~,""'~M~o~.,~,~,'"'~s I aidl', nice yard. garage. \VW 1ake 12 units, 300· trom a\'allable t1n all typea at BLUE BEACON beach in San CIPmente, Rt'al Estate-paid tor t1r not * '45-0111 * $32,000 .• terms. 496-3841 9 tt1 9 pm, daily, TRUST' -LA7R~G~E-l~7h<d~roo-m~. -j"-,-, ** NEWPORT R-2 lot, ror-DEED CENTER. Inc. Bkr. p•lntt'd, C&J'ilt'I! & dn.pe:I, ner, blk tt1 ~an. $27,000. 1323 N. Broadway, I.A. fenced yard, family n>0m, Owner. 613-80&8 543-8381 children and pets OK, at5 • J~ + Actt, view Joi e Corona de! J'\lar Mortgages, Trust De.di 260 -~-•07-6"..:•'-~'°=lO=O--,_ ___ ,NO ONE cs.n top t1ur prlce1- Me1a Verde Fairw•y CASH in U hrs. for your lot. Onr. 531-7301, 642-4364 True! Deeds. TRUST DEED l:&r t1n Me~a Verde goJ:r CENTER, Inc. 1323 N. Broadway, S.A. 543-3381 COUl'llt', \'ie1\.'!!! La~! t1f 2 lot!. Ch\'ner all 5, 644-859:> anytime. MESA VERDE F AIR\VA Y LOT. By 011·ner. 531-3601 t1r I t'Vf:3 642-436.J . Mountain, Desert, Resort p.m. \Va.Iker & Lee , Reahors, I -4 2 -4 4 $ & t11· 540-5140 3 BDRM, + lamily nn., full dinirc nn .• bui.lt-tna., br~ $390 a month. NO l'EE, Newport, ~1120. 3 BDR.lif., Famlly nn., park like yard, Costa Mna. Kids OK, brk., $200 a munth, NO FEE. ~1720. lalbo• Peninsula OCEANFRONT-Just built 2 •ly-Janf;atic ba,y .: C1Ct:an view. 3 Br, 2 Ba. tam rm, patit1, sundeck, d 1 h w h r , bltM, drps, crpts. Adult~. tml p e t. $450 I mo. l!t!. 57;,...5034 • 3 ADJACENT hillside lake view lot1, Lake Elsinore. $2500. 536-2449. RENTAL FINDERS FrH Te Lencllerds 1--------- Costa Mesa • Xlnt E-side: loc. 2 Br, fncd 70 Ac. Ro11\\'f'll , N.~t.. justl~~'::;=::....=~-~--1 )'d, •ncl gar. Kids/pet•. $150 no, of !own, Lo d\vn pymn1, $110.1 Br. Mobile home, 645.0111 4lJW.1M,C .. t• M .. Out of St1te Prop. 171 Jong IPrm financing, Clear, Small yrd, C.Ompl fum. Hur-e t•amily \l'llllfi!! · 3 Br, 2 Jots of h'''Y frontag,., By ry. Ra, bllns, 2 car pr, k1dl!. owntr. \Viii tradf' tor inc Sl70 . prop or TD. $73,000. 644-789~1 $13.'1-Redecor l Br. w/pool, ALA Rent.111 e '4S.Jf00 3.1 acres in Entiat, Wash. Infant or sngl!I oka.v. 3 BR, 2 BA, new crpt z, Orchard It pasture l1nd. 2 BLUE BEACON paint. Dbl rar &: fen yd, Nr houses, be11.u1 river vie1\', * 645-0111 * Elltancia Hi. $235. mo. or Sell t1r trade for houl'ie or e <.'ozy I Br-Jlandy lo beach will Jae w/optlt1n (() buy. duplex. l\fust geJl . a45-72.ll It •hot>ll! Pet tlk. $9j. Sm! down. Call att 4 pm • HA \VAIT AN Property -20 &42-5076 ac at S1500 ~r ac ~·/ 1/3 e Steps ttl IM!ach! Child &. OUR home for ttnt ft1 dn. Call Ch1·ner aft 6 pm. pet ok. Util pd . $lo.i. reHable family. 3 br, w/'A' 543-4069. ALA Rentals e '45-3900 crpts, lge tncd yard. Nr Rancfte1, Farms, SUM~IER le yrly. ttnta1s; \Vestclifl 1hop'g It .chis. Groves 1IO flnt-r home!! In beach an11. Clean. Avail Jun. .lst S225 e·u G d Rllr 64" ... .,., ma. lat &: lut. 548-Ba37. 20 ACRES producing Orange 1 run y · _..,,..., HOUSE 1 yr ~ase, lrg fam Gro1·e in Riverside at Van B Ibo I I nd rm w/frplc, 3 Br, 2 Ba, Buren I,. Cleveland Good • a 1 a Crpt'd, drpg, block lenced site. !or trailer ~k or 1ub-WINTER renta.I 3 Br, trplc, rtar yard. Neat. ht, last + dlv1s1on. On main hwy lo pvt patio $2% per mo. {213) dep. $260. 646-7594 March fleld. Writ~ Chas. 792-X.73.' I -""""=co-==~==~ Martin, 87fl No, Main St. C d I M COLLEGE PARK Riverside , 92501 orona • ar Comp! rec\ec. 3 Br, 2 ba, Irr Raal E1tata SUMMER t1r Yt·ly. lea~e. ram rm, trplc, crpts, drpii, Exchang• 112 Cameo Shares, t1n ~ ~·.an-bltns, diih"'thr, b)()Ck \11.tll. yon. Ct1ntemp., turn. 3 Leas. $240 mo. 54!-5301 . TRADE S28.500 Ch a t le I BR., rlen + Jge. rumpus 2 BR house t1n quiet tt. Very mortgage !t1r <iwn. pay. on roo1n. Pool. Keys to 3 priv. clean, crpts &: drps. Yard bch. house tlr bch prop. beache~. Yearly $880 per maintained, no gara~. $160. prefe.ITed. Pay~ S350 mo • month or 1ummer $1500 per Eves & wkends 646-0688 1972 S60t'1 mo. F' u 11 }' mt1. r u a rant I\ d pvl. pty. Bay It Beach Rlty 67~ MESA VERDE hame: with 3 213 869 7413 BR, Irr fenced yd, Mar -"v~. BEACH rental by wr.ek or 1chool1. SYaO per mo. Call Real Estate Wanted 114 mt1. 2 br hie, $175/wk. Agent : 546-41 41 CONDOMINIUM -EXPERTS- Goldt'nrod St., CdM 3 Bd 2 ~1c. uni °''38!6 rms, .,.. '"'• um. v..w-· Stt1ve &: frig. included, Near Fovnt1in Vall1y 11Cl'DOlll Ii. •hop-pine area. \\'E Sp EC J A L I z E lN SUMMER rental avail June Sn5 mt1. 545-5.239 S-E-L-L-1-N·G CONDO'S. 18. 4 br. $300 mo. Children & 2 Br. elec lrpl, gar, lncd in Buyers v.·aiting M \V. Our pel~ ??! 962-35.33 patio, w1hr/dry rm, nr Turf.e Rc>ck, nrly new.$350 2 BR. 2 .&ti.Ills ........ $275 ""I 1 I 'I 1 1111 1'\lil. ---'l \1,1il\11[" "Sl~CE IMS" tJl \\'t'.!lem Bank Blda llniveniily Park Deya llJ.0101 Nights NE\V l Br, 2 Ba, crpt1. drp, bllna, Culverdale tract, $17:i per mo. Cal Mr. Ba.mes, l-ollect 1213) 374-1883. * VIEW H0i\1E * Deluxe: 2 Br, 2 ba. North end loc., 1'1nt <>eean view. All bltn ltltch. Frpl. Open b8m ceil'1. $.175 mt1. a.tISS ION REAL 1'Y • 494-(1731 * Lagun• Hiiis LSE new home-3 br, 2 ba, ait cond, crpt1, d1hw1h r. Lndacp maint'd. Adj to club pool. $285 nl(). Mr. Freeman 8~319 Laguna Nigu.I LOVELY 3 BR. 2 BA, lanchicpd, fenced y a rd , cp1t/drp11. bltins, frpj. tl65 !st-. Avail Jul 1. 494-8964. Newport Beach BEAUT. mOO, ftlwnhouse. 3 BR., 2n BA, trplc,, patitl. Pool. 2 Car rar. All blma. nu c11.rp, drapes, LAe S~i mo, (IJ !123-4110 or 146-5991 eves/wknds. \VATERFRONT 3 BR . .f Ba. homt', newly ttdet., on tan· dy bt'ach. $1,000 Mt1. Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 CLIFFHAVEN homP., cpl, bltn, r/o, Jg yd ft1r baby. $225. 213 889-2020, eve11. ,Univeralty Park 2 BR. 2 ba. aummer •• $325. 3 BR., aummer ........ $37j, 4 BR. 2~• batttt •• , ... $350. 4 BR, with family l'OOm Turtle Rock ........ $375, .1 BR. 2 batha ••...••.• S325. 3 BR, 2 baths: lurnished avail. Aug. ls( ........ J40l) ired hill REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime 133-01120 HouM1 Furn. or Unfurn. Newport Beach 310 1911 W. Bal Penin. Doll hM 4':0rtage. am, Lu only. 2 br, no far. 642--585L Condominlumt Unfurn. 320 11ale11men are bonded, Ut· ahop'g, $185/mtl ttl mo or most pro1ectit1n for you L•IUN .Beach $175 lse. ~961 M ~1246 Gener1I When aelllng your home or OCEAN view, walk lt1 Mach, 2 Br hse-Carport, frplc. 3 br, 2% be, 1m f~d )'d, income propert)'. 2 BR, beamed ceUing, Stove A: ttfrl& turn, $150 e:ncl r ar, pool. S225. C..11 Larwin Raelty, Inc. f i re p I ac e . S275 year mo. 141 Virginia Pl. Ava.ii <.'OIJect (2131 547~ or Il;,&2 B1·ooklun's1. Hn1gn Sch le4U'. 494·3834, &71-9777 j/30. 548-3761 t1r 548-5674. f2131 549--0780 • ~5411 anytime Hou1e1 Unfurn. 305 OPEN Hou~ 2 Br, w/w, Costa M.•• CASH BUYER * patio, 1ara1e attach, 1 Small * General <hlld. 1118. yearly. 383 w. ••POOL TIME ** 1-----------1 o c M 642-8520 4 BR. r.tonticello, nr 00:: Don"t lift your homr., $135-Neat 2 Br, •net rar, nice ay, · · .S240 mo. incl club hse, pool .o;e:U it to w. yrd tor kids It pet1, UIJPLEX-Deluxe 2 b r , ~ main!. em:>t5'16-4780 Save: time. tave: money. --reflii, elec rana:e, p,1.tlo. Huntinnfon S.ach imim<l. rirm otftr. Brok~r $150 Ne"'ly decor 2 Br 11·/car, Yrly. S~. Adults, no pets. I '.:°"-c-·-··------ • CAPIT4\. IOI £, Pt t ok. 673-4989 FOR lea1« 2 BR Condo. $2Xi. INVE~TMENTS e BLUE BEACON 3BR, 2 Ba, 1 blk from per mt1. liit A laat + "00 842•1577 • 540*5336 * '4S.0111 * beach. $325/rno t1n yr'a IM, dep. <n 4J529-631S. L A au N A Be h h 1 e • fine location! srv/ret, ~~d, or Pf18. Rettlna I 'T'"•::w'=nhoutc""-'•"U~nfuT-m-.-m= w/pe.noramic ocean view. CID, kids le pe1s. f145. 1-=-.-=,-.,-,--,,..,-.,-~ Arch Stach Jlgte M slml\ar • 2 BR duplex. Quiet, close Newport leach •-• ••• b•. d•n'. 2 h•. Lge e Tmmac! 2 Br. cpfa, drp~. In. E·aide. Drp!I, crpt'r. 3 BR • '" .,..... rallg(!:, pr. $150. Oouple t1n-• .6~ bA, fam rm. rtns euenllal. S 4 5, 0 0 0 · lnC() yd, kidi1. $160. ly. S49--l532 ev" tll' wknds Espana -ni,, Blutfs. 406 $.i0,000. CaJI 213/34G-2783 ALA Rantal1 • '45-ltOO Viata Suerta, lot 44. S360. 1•~o~yt~i~""'~· ~P~ri~0<~1~pa~l~o ~o~ol~y~:I S250-3 Br, Lrg tam rm, pool, FRESHLY painted E-iide 2 Opt!n h11t Sat I SUn, ll-4. ~ dbl 1ar, Jncd tor kkh/peta;. :~ :f·':;f;_~.' No daga, E. Newman I(•) -;',.;;Ro,G<;E~l',bdi.::nn='"toc-.. =-•=-·,.-.·I Dupl•xu Unfurn. UO filllncW $l30-Vtlt pd, Priv. baeh, w/ ""'§'-.. , .......... ~;;;;;;;;·;;;; 1tov~ & ~trl,t Tt1t ok. cpl!!, dp11, 1ara1e. patio. General BLUE BE 'CON Sl60 mo. can 34°'"'334. ~ 3 BR 1 b t bl d ' BR 2" BA. 2 c:a.r pr. 8uJJnt1_1 __ _ * 64.S..0111 * • a, crp '· m3. bl Clean! SITO. 6M Darrell St. 111.rage,--fncd yard,--.Avail CM, &IUT8r Oppertunlty 200 • Walk to Beacht Spa.c 1 Br ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;:;:;;;;;;:~ \ "''· • .,,.. cl>lld. 1110. TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS e . BIKE lo a.,,bt R,.l!Y HOLLAND IUS. SALIS nice 2 Br, kldii A Pft"ta olt. ''Tut Broker wltll Empathy" lL~ Rent•l1 • '4J.JtOG lTJ& Orange Awi., C.M. 615-4110; 5f0·0608 anytime 3 . Bedroom, 2 balh, huge \Ve nttd salt'& people kitchen. Som• ca.rpeta A !'!!"!!!!'•'!"•"!'•••I drapa. Q8rap •nd •nclM· BARBER 11hop fur rtnt. ed yard. ltt.nt at $193 Pitt C.l\t, location, All equip-mo. or option. Call Broker, rnent. c..11 Art ~j..4170. 5'~~ June 15, $173. ~. COMPLETE Prlvacy-$140. Ceren• d•I Mar Le• 2 Br tu!11 In court. Patit1, 1c .,_,O_R_O_N_A_Hlihl_'_ancl_o-_2_Br-.1 1a:r. '48-1'713 or MT-3S88. l~i &. atv/nl, CptJ, drpr. Dena Pemt ~•n Vu. 449 Momln1 Ca nyon Rd. $775. lff.2290, DUPLEX, 2 BR, 1 ~ BA, 67~14j prlv11t-1ara1e 4 ~uo. l ·c=-0-',-1,~Me~.-,-----1 $200. 33938 A lcaaar. 4~~19. RE~10DEL. I BR, w/w. ANY Day fl tti. 8ESI' dl¥ to bl~. bric fa! frpl. beams run &ll •di Don· t patio. l adlt-no peta. tiX · dti.ay • .c.11 today, to-S611 Yearly. M2-8S20 • ".I, ' ,,. 'I• , ., ' .~3i~6~D~~~l~Y~P~ll~O~T~~~~~~~~~F~•i~d·~·~,M~~~218.;l~q~71~~~~~~~ I Apts., Apts., Apt1,. ..,..,.;,..,.. J\ie J I.,.,,,.,..,,.,,"' ll•J l ""'""""'"' .. Jl9J I ''"'-""'"'"" ]19 ] '""-""'"''"' l~J l --"'-119) --=~~-:-~~i~-:-~-u-"-1~:-:-:-~~h-3-7-0--H-F-;-;-~-~-:-' .. _u_n~~-:-'.-nm~·-3-70-~H·,:-n-"1~~-."-9°-,~-n-u~:~:-~-~~·-·-3-7-0- .·; •• j;o~u;;;p;;;l;;;ex;;;•;•;U;n;f;u;rn;.;.;;l;so Apts. Furn. ™1 1 Apt. Unfurn. 365'1•A~pt;;;.;;U;;;n;;;fu;r;n;. ;;;;;;;3'S~Ap~r.;;;U;;;n;;;fumm;;;.--~~S6~5~1;A;p;ts;.,;;;;;;;;;.;;; Furn. or Unfum. 370 : ' Cost• Mes• -Costa. Mesa Newport Beach Newport Beech General ,. DUPLEX 7 Rr fl'nced y11rd, G11r. Quir t. 51R·2120. unfurn pnv rnv"d pa!lo. l\o do~s. HOLIDAY PLAZA DEl.VX~: SparJous 1 BR furn apt $133. H1•a1ed pool. VEN DOME An1p!e parking, ,\dull~ • no I~Th1ACVLATE APTS! l>t'l~. 19ti.J Pomona, C~I. ADULT and NOW YOU CAN AFFORD NEWPORT BEACH Enjoy $750,000 health club & spa; 7 pools, 7 DUPLEX 2 Hll, 1 DA, t'(Hlipl. l~A~t!LY SKtlon tennis courts. Bachelor, 1 or 2 Br's. A.lso 2- Cost• Mesi NEW NEW VILLA CORDOVA rtdee. Crp1~. drps. n:fr1~. Close to shoppln", Park l h / 2 3 BR' El k 'l • Ap.ul~lfnts 1°' Ren~_ _ i<. •--.·-E~-'--.·' ~n,._ GiHMl•c-• story 0\\'0 ouses w or s. ec. 1 Cu· QUIET-S AFE ' ""r c·~·, • •-·gpacious ! Bfl's, 2 ba en s, private balcony or patjo. From $175. COOL . FRESH! '••••""••-r iurc 1. oUpl'. oo pets. '*'Swim pool. put/g~n k' I 'd · ,, Sl~iJ. A tot. t;,i2.0:,96. / •1 Subterranean par 1ng, e ev, ma1 service. j Nf'1u· Bal·k Ba,y)' 360 · • Frpl, Indlv Ind!)' tac 1 Full-line food market, dry cleaner, beauty 40 Unit Adult Apts. Furn. SPF:CIAL -Lo R111es lrom 1845 Anaheim Ava. · · J 7 b t d I t A t t C 1 "1 =--~--------s2;; \\k, Kit avail, in 1110 COSTA ?\tESA 6-12-2$24 Sell on \YJthm comp ex. eau . mo e ap s. par men omp ax General scr,·, TV & ph. Sea l..ark' .,...,,....,,..,..,..,...... !.J am to 6 pm daily, other times by appt. 1 & 2 BEDROOMS ~ni neautlful f1u-nllute ~to1eJ. 2301 Npt Blvd., cr.1. B81_bo_•_P_on_·-,n-s-ula Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rds. N. of Eniel'!aining wUJ be a pleas. for 81 unie as 616-74~:'.i Fashion Island. 714 : 644-1900 !or leasing info. UN>. Decorating this lovely, 0 1 ---------~ BRA;'IJD nrv.· [)(>lu.~t :1 Br. 2 spacious apt \\'ill be a joy. NE MONTH • f1JRN. INCL U 1 ;i. & ''"· l600 blO<k E. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS •Spec~! c•bi~I 'P'0' . I ~~~.U~ \\~e~Jo; :p.: :-.t~ Balboa Blvd: closr 10 ocean • Lock garages ,11/ lg stor complete w0 1t h rail's. Terms Avail. 998 El or bay. I ~r leaM". l nl'l•1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~'!!!!!~!!111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"-~I · Bm cell • Lndry • P11.tios Your loo " DI\\'. d11>~. fr]Jl ,'fi Cl'PL I' 365 e D\V/disp! e Hug< gas stxc 1° Camino. ~:ii. A U f 365 A I U I p h O · 0~61;1~4~16~1~d-'~'~··_· ~"-"°'~"_··-"~··~·l-P-'_·_n __ •_r_n_. _____ 1 P • n urn, •Special soundproofing urc ase ption $25 per week & up !or app1. • Deep 2 color shag Jnd, ltt:1n sele1·11t1n. BACHELOR & 1 BR. 24 Hour Dely. . 1 2 BDB.f\1, Jrpl , balcony. JI~ -cost• Mes• Huntington Baach carpets, d raJ)('s CUSTOM TV .t: maid serv. av1u · E. Ba)', S22J rno. Le11.se GAS & \YATER PAID -150 Victoria, C.'.\I. ~early. Jnqu1l'f' al a pt. C. RI:-:G BROS. Announces ./ CHEZ ORO APTS Mo, to Mo. From $140. $12.) ?.10 Delu11:e mobile 6i3-1Zi21 or 5-lS.-7771. Apl•. '''"•· A"''''''" 2 232'J Ell.Jen Ave , CL\f ..::::..:=:..:::..:.::.:cc;::__~I u v u • f!2JI Atlanta. 1· .3 Bdrms. home, Corn pl furn, hraterl DELtJXF: duplr11:, 'jrn r ly MEDITERRANEAN l'ool. Pri\·a!e gara~e . See '.\1gr. Ted \\'oodhead pool . arluHs, no pf'IS. 4 lease. All i:1ppl111nce~. \\lkdys VILLAGE Wshr/dryer. $36-0336, 646-0032 Furniture Rental Sl7 \\'. 19th, C.:\1. 5-IS-3-181 Anaheim TI-1-2~ LaHnbra GM-3708 ~11slln11 ~lobile Es!atP, 2359 aft 6 pm & 11 knds. 8.18-49-1!1 2..JOO Jlai·bol" HlvU :130-2727 Balboa Island N<"11port Blvd. f.,41\.-6332. Costa '.\lesa 1 Br unf $125. I Br. Iurn S\40. FURN" BACHELOR OR 1 Bn. Corona dal Mar 4 ;1I1 :i.17-8010 2 Br, clean & •.11tracL Crpts, No pets. 820 Center St., * WATERFRONT * Ni cr!y df'coratt'd $ll5-Sl40. drps, blcn~. ~1r -cond, .~r. c.r-.f. 642-5S48 2 BR ., over gara.i::l'. 1st 2 l' ! Ad I! 642_2181 2 BR. f"R0.\1 $\j5 11chools. 11hop g & park. K1dsq~==~~~---~ "'eeks or July Sl2j "e~k; oo · u 11• ~-~ COi\1PLt..~rEL "\. RE o f: C, ok. No pets 8:ill-Ia-18 CLEAN, freshly painted 1 br. Ja.~t 2 "·eeks Aug. & Jsf 2 2 BR, 2 ha, sunken,liv rm., ft C.. Cl.Ei\N ,t; COZY f'A:\1JL.\' 3 BR 1 "I . 1 d & Crpts, drps, bl Lns. $l;iG.$140. ~1 o" •=~ .,. · resn Y f»l ln t' • No ""!S. 540-9722 V.'ttkK ol Seo•. Sl""' \\'eek. I fq.ilt•, b .... cony, s.1 ..... ,, m._0 ,U.JJ -· UNl"l"S. CONY. LOCATJO..... I bl• ' d0 '---'·~--------,. ...., 2 o _....,. r tan, ns, crp s, .p:;,,_ '" Bay & Beach Rlty Inc. B:ikrr St, C'.\1 .. ,.10-:ii · VILLA ~!ESA APTS 1riilc & air cor..;. Nr ~chis Huntington Beach 67S-3000 1 & 2 HR L:til pd. ON TE..'l ACRES TI9 \\'. \\'Uson GIG-1251 ~hop'!;: & park11. Kids OK, no * No ""IS. ti!' 1 & 2 BR. Flll'n I; Un1urn •. 1----------_,, Ph '"l0-1~18 2 BR. apt. \\'in1Pr n-n111I. Charn1ing. $195 per mo. 12131 792.2::.i::. Balboa Peninsula 2 BR. turn. Lg upstairs apt, :<lUWlcC'k. Yrly Iv. S200/n10. '.• 1120 V.'. Bal!Joa Blvd. No. 1. 67:,...1070 t'\"eS e !tares by \\"f'ek-On 0r<"an :.:_ Lo"ely Bachelors, I -BR . ":\laid Sf'r\·ice. Pool. U!i!. • 67:'>-1'1i40 • 2 BR. urill!y included $21;, mo, t1gcn1 61.>-IG-12 1c'~.-,-.n-.~d~erM~.-,--- :?1:.0 Nev.'p.il'I 'B11·d. c.:-.f Fireplaces I Pnv. patios. HARBOR GREENS c•=-:..· =·:.•:::..:=~~- Pools Tennis Conlnt'I Bldst GARDEN t: STUDIO API'S NE\VLY rle('()r1lffl 2 BR, 2 NICE J br dpl.\. Quiel. ~P 900 Sea Lane, CdM &14-26ll Bech. l 2 3 BR's from n lO. BA studio. Qcear. viev.•, by ,i,:arag{-s. I adult over 30, I MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) 2100 Peierson Way, C.M. bltins, relrig, private patio. no pt.•1s. 548-1021 Tr11dl'!w1nds Really it4i-8511 546-0370 ON BEACH! NE\V 2 BR. APTS From $230 Furniture Availabl~ Carpets-drapes-dishv.•asher heatffl pool-saU1111.S-tennis rec room«ean l'ie ws patios-ample parkifl& Security guards, HUNTINGTON PACIFIC '" ""c!IELon ''''· "' big La Qu1·n1a Hermosa t'n1-.nu Sil() & Sl:H / mu Yrl~. 1 A"dll. no pets. &12-8.)20 Spani"h Country Esrate Liv· !'i!CL apt _ pnv balcony 1ng & Spacious Apls. Ter- ,. 11 /har bor & OITa11, , u.•v.. raced pool; sunken .s:as BBQ ln1·I L:t1l Slij/mo. 2:..00 1 Unbelil'\'able Living -Only Sein 1f'11 I Br unf $150-furn $175 LRG I llr 2 blks h1i:: Coroo11. 2 Br unf $1 75 furn $210 1 Furn. $\.j.j. Yt>:1rly. I 11.dlt, AU. UTIL IXCLUDED no pel.~. 6-12-8520 2 BR. nr h1g Corona. :Slgj/mo Yearly. AdluTs, no pi•ls. &12-8.'>20 e IJGE ~!udio a111 • $110 n1n, )rly, U!il paid, 673--10.W ;ifi.•.-:i or \1k11ds. Costa Mesa *SUNNY* *ACRES* Special 3onus; a silver-2 & l BR's I -• dl uff i ind' DJ..X 2 & 3 Br, 2 Ba, t>ncl 2 Bath.~. ~'>'•.) t.Jo .. Y""' pat= can e sn er 11 Private patlo. pool • 1v. ...,.. U b . th' d J BR Suitable 1 or 2 ladies. JtfLr, $145 & up. Rental Ole: BURR WHITE yours you r111g 11 a laundry fac. • 6-"" · · -• I 156 22nd St.. C.~1. 309;) A-lace Avt!., 54 lv.n whrn you v1s1t our muue !I. Nr:ir OrRilge Co. Airport &: Newport Beech Raaltor .f 675·4630 4 blks S. of San Diego Fn,·y UCI. Adults only. ;>l.~·9661 2!!01 Ne'l·pon Bl\"d ., N.B. on Beach, l blk \V. on Holt 2QI22 Santa Ana Ave. CLF:AN 2 BP. lower . Crpts, EASTBLUFF TIRED of that old furniture? to 16211 Parkside Lant!, ~fi;r. r.lrs. J o11chim, Apt 3-A r!rps, bltns, no pe ts. SJ~O. (71 I) 8'7.J.1-11 ;>ICHi21j ~-14i'i 1-B<lrm. unr., ups!u!J"!I 1\"llh Jt'1 really not tha.t hard I,..,..,....,.,....,.!!!!!!!!!!!!'"' I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_,,...1---------frplc. rarpctcd k draped, to replace. Ju~-t v.·atch lhe ---DL.\: 2 13r, 111 Ba, cp!~. drps, bllns." & l'efrig, $18j. fw·niturt k m\scf'llaneo:is $13:1 . )JQDEll.N, lge. I-Br. *· Spanish Elegance stove. dsh1\·hr, gar. Chlldren ('()!umns In the Classilied d1.~p , E'I C, :110 Chicago ;: :; 11 A,pta., ~pts., Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. Costa Mesa Costa Mesa Costa Mau Amazing Adult Living UNLIKE ANY OTHER APARTMENTS Featured in PROFESSIONAL BUILDER'S MAGAZINE "SHANGRI LA" as Liveable luxury with all the conveniences: Clubhouse -Social Life-Indoor & Outdoor Sports-Walk to stores, banks, movie and college. 1 & 2 BEDROOM Apartments with Terraces FROM $140 to $295 MODELS OPEN DAILY Merrimac Woods 425 Merrimac Way, Costa Mtsa (Between H1rbor and F1irviawl ---------- 370 ---------- * Motel-Aph. * Studio &-I Brdnxnns LO\\' R1\TES nrar beaC'b. Cpts, drape'!!, ok. SJ5(). fi-12-79.~'( . % : 675-6050 ~,","=d--'-lon_. ______ _ 8·1i-.'il69 Quiet Adult Living jit LRG 2 Br l-.·lcsa Ve rde W M&••MIJO A.,INt. Apts., Apts., Apts., Apts., I-BR., sv.·ininuni:; pool. 2 Sting cpt • drf)S • blrns 11111:.5 111',."Nl oc ke~~.~~~· ~~~=~~-~~~I Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or l.1nfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Br11ulift1l Pool e All Util Pd ,,~ • · o pt'ls. JJl-<l't\N ~ _____ _:_~·~------------------------_:---------------Blk~ 10 bt'ach. Adults. No SEACLIFF Maoor Ap1 s. 2 .. Santo Ana Soni• An• ' I $2:i \\'N'k-$100 L\lo Oaily Ra1es 1\va1I. prt~ Slll lll"r mo. l RR. Sl:i0-2 BR. $110 'l BR 11•/ gar nc1v painl , lncd Br. Also 1 Br. 11vail .July 1. Santa Ana Tr:ido·v.if'lfls Realty ~~7·1Gl1 1\dul1.~ only-no pets yd v.·/ pat. \\ltr pd. 636-417Xl Crpts, drp~. hllns, pool, pr!\' • Color TV, A1r-Cot1d • Pool. Pool Table • Sound~ 2:li6 ;\'rv.·port lllrd. :,1~-9i:'.i.l KF.\\' O\\''.\'.F.R-under l'E\V '.\IA:'llAGJ-;:'11~:;-.."T *" $1.30 UP * GIANT l & 2 BEDROO~I! Gor1:eous, park·like z>C'ttin)!. Clo~ed i;:nrages for 1nax- 11num sl'!cur1ty . Quiet street A1lults no pets. 2020 Fullerion A'·e !Ha!'bor 10 Btly, then So. until 2 btks So. ol r-.cwporl Bl,·d. 6-12· "" Unbelievably Baautlful V,\L D' ISERt: Garden Apt~. Adults • no pe!~. Flo~·ers t'1 rry11he1'e. Strt'Hm & \\·a!e!"!atl, 45' pool Rec. Rm. Saun11, Si;:\s 1·2 Bdnn, Furn. t:nlurn. from $135. SF.E IT: 211 A11K-;1do Sr. 64f>-0979 2176 Placf'1Hi11 Ave-D $1'.lll pt11io, studio t)'J)(', 112 Ba. rnt:r: w111. furn 1 BR api Nr 11702 B 2 B 5 1. 1 lnranl ok. j..Jg....2f~2. 1::.2.; heaeh, f)Oul. $130 up. Call v-r, a 1Uf lO ap . * Sl30 UP * c I d•p• 1· Ad ' Pl•-•nlia Alie. Ask 11bou1 j:R).Jiii, ;.:U>-i:ll\2. ;,Jli-13ti6. , , P ~. • ·• pa IO, _gar . J "" Glll.'IT 1 & 2 BF.DROO~f. 10 shp'g. 28.'"l Oglf'. 548-S301 our discount. Rr:oECOP. -Ln:. I Br. $1-10 Gorxeous, pa.rk-like !etlnig.IC.:..C"-"-=-"'c::.:::::...:.= x1ra c1tos('1~. r ool. Patio. Closed garages for max· 2 BR. "·/pool, stove, cpts, SUBLEASE-E11:ec. 3 Br Pa1·k Adi!~. no J>f'I~. 536-liili . imum security. Quiet street drps. ('llCl. garage. Agenl Nev.•port Town ho us<' Adults ro pf't~. 2020 &l&-392S. fi.JG-2290."----l-.lagnlficient bay \"ir1\·. $600 Laguna Beach F ullerion A\'e (Harbor lo OPEN SR.t & Sun. J BR. 2 per mo. Unfurn. No Jll'I S. No children undrr li ;-,.1£.4;01 Q u J E: T gar d t n a pt Bay, the n Su. unlit 2 blks R,\, ;i01 \\'est ~unrto1,·rr. before J. :139--068·I \i·knrls. rto11·n1011 n. 1 BR, derorator So. of f'e11-port Blvd .) :1-f.,..2321 turn1 ~hed, oct>an vie"'• 1 blk I c•~l~2-S.:::690::.._~--~~-'L_n_G __ 2-B-,.-.-,-.. -,,-,-.,-,,,-1, LOVELY BAY FRONT To heal'h, llt'W C'pts, rlrps, Par~-L ike Surrounding Crpls. drps, r11 ngr. i·1<rport, 2 Br. From $365. pa1nl . ~lature. adlt~. Ye11;r QUIET • 1.JELUXE no Jlf'ls. $130. 673--11 7ll. Furn/Unf. lease. S200 n10. 49-l-40~day, 1-2 & 3 BR APTS NEWPORT TOWERS 494-3.'139 eve & 11-kends GARDEN Ap! -2 Rt". $140 Also rurn. Bachelor Bltns. garage. Ad ults. 160-G * 642-2202 * Newport Beach Ptv patios * lltU Pools E. 21s! St. :)-IS.2121. RLUF'FS db: To11·nhOUSI' • 2 * LHG 2 Br. rurn np1. 9:1;, Nr shop'g * Adults only 2 BDRL\1, freshly painlr'~ Br, 2\i Ba, bl!n~. frplc, \\'. &!boa Blv!l. 3165/!no, Martinique Apts. C'pl. 2 C'hildren OK. s1:r1 1110), p31 10, 1'11('1 gar. Qu1t'1, l\lr. • 612 5064 Jones 64-1-1133; aft a pm. Y•·n i·I) No nien. Ph before 1777 Sanla Ana Ave .. Cl\( ' ., 5,14--09-llJ. !I an1. s:~?$ :\lgr, Apt 113 646-5542 3 BDR:Ot unfurn ap1. ~rw 1-::;...::.,.:c.-~--~~ ==~==""'~~I 1 ''3 "81 111 WESTCLlFF 2 Br, J 1i M . • \\"INTER RENTALS e carpe · · · -... or Sh Ii a N 1 c \I hvn-hSf'. Adlls only, no 1>4"!.~. RC'nt NO\V for Sept! * BRAND NEW * 8 m r, · o. ' .. · 172f! Bedford Ln. $210. -~l-'•_,~_n~!.__&12-8670 1\RBE\'. REALTY 6-12-~;,o Lt\ COST,\ APTS, l t;:? BR. East Bluff a.!&-.75.U. GARDEN LIVING e CX:E1\Nf'RONT LC.E 31 Bhng gw1mming pool & gar.I------------2 Rr. 2 Ra, fFJ>I <", dshv.·hr. Quirl, 1111nu· .. ph•;isl!.nt . Uhl ~~Q~TBAf;~~r. OCEAN - 1 age.' AH util pd. S150 to $110 NEWPORT BEACH patio. $2j()/mo. Yr h~asr pan H"a1f"<l llO'•I __ ._ · • · mo. Aduh~. nn pets, Villa Granada Apts. ?CH :tird St 612·2020 or l Br 5145 • l Sr $170 • 2 Br upslrs \\'/~undk, ];")I A,·ocar!o, C:'-1. 6l2-9708 four bedrooms Witb bal('()n. :)4~1341 Adulb. :-;r:Hlll Pt'! vk I h:1ni,:ini:. frpt. I'~-~h. S250 --le, above & !»rlow G krus 'J BR, 2 BA. crpts. dr-ps. 'ilO \\", J~lh ~1 . C .\I. ~r br :-O:n pt'l~ .. 1'!1--..'\IOO UNFUHN 2 BR, $ 13~ • ' rac hll 1ns. Couplr. no pr1~. $165 --_ . i BR lurn. apls. Pool. No Dramatic :?-qy. \iv. rm. ~i\'ingf "·1qulet su-rounding 1no. Nr. lloag H n s p . \l'/fn iJ., QvPrlookini;.:: or am1y '\\·ith ehUdnon. '.\'.~\V LHG U~Lli:\l'. i\l'T' rh1lrlo1n or ""IS. 240j1, 16th '' Near Con""' d I •t HI h 641-'l3S7 ,.. tror11c11l 1ndsepd ~"1m1ning e "ar g .~====~~-1 Bach-furn .. -... SI 39.SO S1. NB. 61&-166-1 punt .~ 1111 tio, 145 E. 181h St., Scb :'."", _I. Fkil,..hplaCf>, w·:: bar&: * TOWNHOUSES * 1 BR-furn ..••. , S149.50 , I hr. den, 2 Ha, dt•lu>:e rl2-H'·o(r Uu .Jn le en appliances. 2 BR. 2 RR. 1-carport .. $225 2 BR.furn . . $179.50 rluiilf"( nr "-nch. Rf'ls req'd ~ '' 835 AMIGOS \\'AY &14-2001 ~BR 2 B 3 s-· ~ El ' ·' . R. ·C'llrpoN •• £•;, U;>.,'rlillX Ar ,\11 .• ABLE 1\d1i11~ S"l!O/mu. fi.12-30ll2 ./ :O:J',\CJOl 'S • N ~ \' I ,t. Colri\l'ell. Banker & C.O. Rf>:AL TOR ;,.18-6966 AIJULTS OXLY, l'\O PET:O:. \\"ATF:lll"RONT I BR 11.pt. Br. Lu11: Apts. Pool, Of\\', f.tanaging Agent 5il·5t.n Sant• Ano 1760 Pomona 642-2015 frplc, 11haR thn1out. Adult. ~11n1~111u~"·19~~J°u~r~c~mco,~ • NEW DELUXE .------------- CHA°TEAU -LAPOINTE \'rl.1, 407 Cluhh~r. 77~-9-108. h:gi• .~ h'l\'):11, Allults, no 3 BR, 2 BA Apr for lease. 1ncl LARGF: 2 hdn11, upst11.Lrs, LOVEl.Y 2 Ult ;ipts. t·un1 & ,-, -RH. 11,.11 1v furn . Park pPTS. &12-l·IJO. spar:. master i;Ul!t! din rn1 <'ll rprts, rlrRpes, ~love & L'nfiini Shn;: rrii1·g. hid K••iirvw!, N~ leaSI' req'd. --& dbl gar11ge, aUto door rerrll!, lrru•rrt yarrt, child ,.. SPACIOUS I Br. apls. Crpls. opener avall. Pool & R-. OK, rra~. 5.'ll-73i7 pooL Carport\. Aduhl!., no ~.1s.:l(l~:, nfi 5 pn1. ctqis, d~h\1 r, all bltns, I ~ .. pel.1:. F'rom Sl40. Ne wporl Heights t"htlcl ok . ~Jj(l per mn. All arta. San Clemente l~l PomonR Air, C'.'lt. util iocJ'd. &15--0984. 301 • S2G5 • "l ROll'.\1 "Pl. !or lf'asr. l!r~r BA YCLIFF MOTEL I (.'LEA:\ 1 or 2 Br: A?l!s, nn A\'(1('11dn. :\1, Apt 9 865 Amigos \V11y, NB v.erk 1n Jun,_ Next 10 pet~. 4: k\1 :S13.1-S\5(), 2421 i\fanAged by lK•Rrh. 492-44:?.i. * LO\V \VF,E:f;L\' RATES .-r. 161h St. :O:B. &-i&-1801 Sll'>--$\6:>. 2 Br unlls, friit, WlU.IAf-ol WALTERS CO -------. ..,.,. ,_ crpl5, 1ll'p~. llt'an1 1'f'illr1w;. ' Wostcllff K~:r:.':i ~~f· m111ri llt'l'\'u."', QUICK CASH pnlio. Adul1~ only-no JWI$. Huntington Be•ch ------------1 616-:::ltr. flpf'~. 2.1.tt Santa An;\ A\'l'. LARGE 3 RR. 2 RA QUIF:,T .• SPA~~ous -N,:,"' h' 1~~~~-----THROUGH A 11·,-~j Sl'cludl'!d, ?'lrth. qu iet. Dead Ar. a g11n1en apt. u~ *Studio Apt. S 110 Nl:\r-2 Br. 1 All. &12..4:11H3 all enJ ict. Ch1ldrrn, P'-'l <'On· 201" crpt~. drps, bltn,, P'1 *_, Bedroom St 30 Ii pn1. 11·\iilR)'J. \\IUI 111\ov.· r;;idl'rrd. $17~ z er. al50. ~Ito, C'hlln<IPl!l'!r 1,n ma!ll•r I NOW'S THE l n k nd N $100. i7:!1 t;llis. I blk to j hath. Lots of on-&!!' park'g :\1APLE ST . l\f>:,\Jt Hfnl )h•niona It) \\M' "(' ' I 0 p I -+ ('()\ 'd ~ar. All Aj::I 11tory. 645-03-49 chdd1't•n, no pels. o n1.,. O~'llf'r 673-3293 or \Valk to C:uco·s I: \\'ettcliff 1·*-~W~l"N°'T"ER_R_A~T~E~S-.-TIME FOR Ni-~\\';'"""""2-Blt b<'an1 reihnizs, 817 ..{19 32 I Pl112n. Adul!s. SI&:>. 642-0239 "'O'ld 11a11rlini;. All tt1,,c Seascape Apts Apts., *-. ALL. SU~l\tER• • • I 1 SI'" A 11111 Qu!pt • 1\t!r11c Studio, t.· I DAILY PILOT ;~1'.1~il no:'.&is.-~73~· LOVELY nl'!w l-2·3 BR. l Furn. or Unfurn. 370 BR'•· SJ HI up, Adl1~. no :\.111 \\'. Gav St. blk f111m ocean, Crpt1>, dtP'. f'l't~. 11,1, Elrlrn, i\T1r Ap1 6. WANT AD ---"---'---'';.,-'-'-~~1 parlo. d1<hv.'hr 11unrleck ti·pl 1 Coste Mes• ~f',\C 2 Br npts frt•tll S140 20j 15th Sr s'17-39,j7 ' . ------------1 J Br. lum 11rit, sll u111 P1 lftd ~11 !'lay \d. f't-pt,r;.ln,,,,,,,.;,:o,.=~·_:::c,:::::, ___ Qt:IET 1 Br, pr1v, J1Gt10, Pool. Garlll;f', A1luh~. oo 642_5678 I rlrps, blln~. pntio. Newly BUSJ'l::SI' marketplace In hl'a1n clp;, bll\n,, v.·J·~:. nr pr11. Sl.'JO, :-.1gr No. !I, 383 \V, d.-('(Jratrll. Klrb ok. 10\\'n ... Th• DAILY PILOT E. 17th St. !'ihopp1ng. 214 \\'11,on, r.~1 199S ~!~pit ,..,.,., 1 i 47-634.f Clau1f1cd !«tlon. Oi::lt S!, C:-01. 64~120 -------- • So don '1 leave your youngsters Ochlnd whe:n you OOJne over to insp«t Orange County's glittering, new apartment commun.ity -soum COAST 'ILUS. For "'hi le you're admiring tl1e sumptuous private Clubhouse and luxuriantly landscaped gro1111ch, we have a few goodies that'll delight their little hearts too. Like our $500,000 Child Care Center and playland. SOIJTR COAST Vil.LU is where both adults and children have the best of cvnything. Oe«1r1fot" styled 1, 2 & 3·&.droom •p1t1maM-home1 • Cenlr1/ Q•t r.frigtr•IMI 1ir-condilionfng • B1/1nced l'ower Kilch.ttt • Color-h1rmortiJI.J 1ppli1ncu, iM.luclin11 clishw1tli•r • l'ri-1•1• lerr1,es •Wilk-in ware/robes• 4000-sq.11. C/ubhou• wilb enferf1ining & dining IKililies, s•un•t, billiercli, c1rdroom1 • C•b1n1Js, b1rbecu.1 hlldrninlon, Utvfflebo.rd • 3 lta.tft/ poolr ind J1e11ui •Child C•r. C•nltt & p/1yl•nd. All this family luxury living from $145 a month 5" tl'll Mpntly lumltllld modtl 1pet11Mnh Ind NtnYllOfl cen!w-OJlln d1il)' 10 1.m. to 7 p.m. , DAIL V l'ILOT :J7 1~1 ;;;1 ;;;-~I~~,-I IM1•-Jal l ---l~l ---1~1 ~1 ;;;;;-;;;;; ..... ;;;. ~l[ll]~J I iiiil _ ....... _ ..... _J~IJ 400 OHie• Rental 440 found (frM ads) 550 Carpenter Painting &. Help Wanted, M & F 71 0 Help Wanted, M & F 710 - Apt1., Furn. or Unfurn. Apts., l70 Furn. Room• or Unfurn. l70 I:-:----,,.-.,----...,,,---.,,.-.,----· I QUIF.T-Con1lort.bl~ l~ahly Newport Beach Newport Beech drcor nn. Kit. prlvl. prk'r. 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;q lOOA Unde.n Pl., C i\t. MS-8201. FROM $135* Olympic 1i1e pocl-Billi•rcli-Seun•'-T tnnis pro shop-Color TV loung.-Heelth Clubs- lncloor qolf clri .. in9 rtnge-Perty Roo~Full timt Activifit1 Director. BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: Single.<, I & 2 Bedrooms, furnished or unfurnished. REASONABLE RENT': Singles !rom $135.' J Bedrooms rrom $145. 2 Bedroom.9-from $200. Low move in charges. No lease req'd. Modtl1 Open Daily 10 am to I pm SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN Apartmrntt ' (just for sintle people} trv1ne k 16th 114, 64s.osso· Apartments <resort li\'lng for 1int;le & married adultal 16th bl\.\'n lr"\.<ine .I Dover 714 : 642.a170 •Rent subjttt to location Apt1., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Sant• Ana ---·-·------ Rent•ls I~ NICE room . iood loc, ron- gPnial home, kit. privi.I. SM. !J.48-~11911. • ROOi\t And I or iraragp !or rrnt, Co1ia Me.u.. Call 646-8137 ROOr.1 lor M!nl in my beaut. hoine. Colle1e 1tudent pref'd Call Oa\'e, 838-0038 SLPG rm tor 1te•dy work'g older ma.n. no cookg. By mo only. $40. 1543 Oran1e, Ot. 1.AGUNA furn. room for rent <A'ilh k l t c h l" n priv. f!IC:. wk/mo. 49'-4658 ROOL\1 !or rent S40 mo. Gentleman only. 1:» Monte Vista, Co11a J\.le8a Room & Board \I.' A!\'TED -fr male college student for liUmmer. r.m/ board 1n e~c:han1e lor 4 hN tiaby!ilting, Mon-fl'1, 1-.; pm. Ptiv1tf.' rm wl de~k. l y prwr i lf'r k lf!\ephonr. \\'ill pay for ad· dition11l du1 ies, ii de&iM!d. 644-2005 all. S pm or 646-4424. VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS Rooms 400 Summer Rentals 420 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn. & Unfurn. \VILL rent lo,•ely turn. ideep- ing room 1>,./pr1v f'ntr, l:. priv ba. lo elderly employ~ gentleman only S.50/mo. ~1023 pd. Ideal for per mo. Com· Frmale only. SUMi\IER RENTALS On Hlll'bor Island, Lido Bayfront Laguna oceanfront & Lido Isle. S ome 11/pnvate beach, pier and t;hp. ltlacMb-lrvine Rtalty "'-"" O XI.NT OFFICE Spaee now avail LlDO BLDG, 33M Via Lldo, N .8. 673-4.501 * NEWPORT BEACH * 300 lo 100 aq. IL DffOff. 61~2 Business Rental SHO\VROOM, mft'. • oUi~ 1pacr. Parking. Close-In Laguna. S&W39i M o. 49'-46j3. USED Car Lot-Llght~ oUiee -complete $400 mo. 2036 tlarbor, C.\I Industrial Rental 75(kJ SQ. IT •• a 11 poWer. hf!al, lights, partitions l floors finished. 153.l Mon~ via, N .B. Call &1xino. EAST 17th ST,. C .M. Shop .l ottlce, 220 Power 630 Sq, ft. 67">6700 Brokrr INDUSTRIAL bldg for le11se -2300 llq ft. Call 6'1~9l'.l; e\'1'5~1 Rtntals Wanttd Found in CdM Friendly red- dlth brown puppy w/Oaa collar. Dr. Stocltton 673-1~ YOUNG brov.•n I 'l\'hlta lemale terrlrr ~ beqle mix doc, South J.A.(una. 499-l86.1 f'OUND male cat, ft'!Y I "''h1te 1trlpe1 I on & ha I r w/c:ollar. 54M1J.' LARGE male t.brador ha1 choke chain, .fl'Je1a Verde l.l'tt. 546-7308. 2-3 mo. old Siamese kitten \'ic. Continental Townhouse call 9fi8.-$82. S?.fALL m.l'lll! doi found In Vic. Ma.gnotia I: Warner in FV. 84T--89!kl. CARPENTRY MINOR REPAlRS. No Job·l---,,-.----- Too Small. Cabinet in iar-Ne Waao.na: aaea • o 1 b • r cablnell. + WALLPAPER * 545-tllS U no ana~t leav' -"When )'OU e&1I "Mac:" mag •. at &fi.2312. H. o. 541-1444 ~1711 Andl!non. LESCO PAINTING A'NY u. job. Retld., Comm'!, Re1ld & Apt1. Spra.ylng ac:- lnclua .. Apu. Reas. Free est. c:oui;, ctillnaK. Int / Ext. 962-1961. L1c'd/Jns. ~2399. Ciattrlng BINKS Paint Spray Booth. _....,. ________ 1 s x6' c:om p!ttc. Also, prol. UNIQUE c11te.red meabi tor color n111.:h. & rlec:, a:al. that June "''t'<\ding or ban· 1haker. S6:.0. 842-lj24. qufl'\. Exc:eplional variety PA I NT I N G : H on , 11 and quality, Your plea1ure, JUAl'!l1llef'd \\,,rk. Llc:'d: Monsieur! 49>4462 Loc:al ref's. Call 67S-.~740 a.It Cement, Coner•'.• " ~-=~------1 ""''""'"'"0----....,--1PAINTING, professional. All Sl.UtESE kitten appro>.. 3 QUALITY ttment Wt'>rll, let work i u a r n Co Io r mo1. o.ld. Vic. Mesa Verde, GN>rte do It. Llc:'d, Bonded. 1 p e c i a I i st. 9 6 2 ~143, cr-.1. M&-1~ 66-16!f.I. 541-1-1.11. S;>.1AU. l-l mo old y,•hllr kit-CEMENT \VORK, no job too X-Palnter, now 1 ch oo I tf!n. Vic:. O.C.C. 6~..-!J&:J i;mall, rf!a10nable. free teacher. Exter I lnter.. AC:· FOUN~Aboc! -90 lbs ot Enim. H. Srufiic:k, s.tB-11615. roui.. ttilings, airle11 equi p. silver. Describe I: c:la.im. PATIOS walks drive· in-\Vork guam. Rl'u. 646-4;,19 Write P. O. Box 6..'19, C05la u ' t ' b' tile11. &ta new a.wn5, ia~', reak, YOU Sup11ly Th f! Paint. rtmO\'e. S4~ tor eal. Roomll peintf!d SID ea. Call PIT err ier-P/Poodle or e e CONCRETE. ·n oon, 540-1046 Cock-A-Poo, whit~ •·/It · · 1~~~==--~-~ HOUSE to leatt, 4 BR, den, brwn f'arll. Vic Swan Dr, patio!, drives, side~·alk1;, p A 1 N TING/papering. 18 LR. DR. -Palos Verde1, !\1esa Vrrde, Ci\f. 557-.1892 11lab~. Reali. Don 642·8al~ Yrs. in H11rbor area. Lie Ii Hunt. Bch, Laxuna, Corona. Contractor bonded. Ref'11 furn. 642-23[!6, drl l'otar -near rood schls. LOVABLE short haired grey J\10 l family. V.'rite PO Box altered male cat w/fiea r.1v Way. quality hon ie ~R c:lean & nea! paintlnii:, 4369, \\'ic:hita Falls, Tex collar. Had lor over mo. l'fpair. \Valls, ctilinc, noors 1n1tr10r & ell:tf'nor. ~eu. 76310. vie. C.M. &t&-5184 rte. No job loo snlall. r11.tf's. C•11 Dlc:k, 968-40fiJ. LAGUNA Bch mlni1ter needs F'OlJN~grntle, ••ell man-5'17-@36, :A hr ans. serv. PAl!\'TING/papenng. 18 yr~ unf 1tudio apt in Lag Bch nered male D ti berm a n . AdditioM * Remodeling In Harbor , &lea. Lk _& ACCr e~~ w/Orange Co. adv IJtenc:y. Work In ra.dio, Unl1n11tf'd earrilnas 6~ DENTAL Pedodontlc a.ut. Mu1t ~ e•per. in lab ' chain lde pnx:edun1, NOii 1mok~r. 644--0611 ARTIST. 1.a)'OUl &. paste-up. DE."NTAl. AUl1tant -pt.rt On UW" jOb f'xp. or "·ill train time. Experlencf! nec:euary. ~·/b111ic bat'kgroun<l skills. 1 ="'=11~"'=1."9=&~5~, _,,.._,._1>0--.,-I 4 day& inel Sal. Call lor in-OlSTRJBUTORS "' a n I ,, d , tcrvlr11•, P en ny 1 aver, new produc:r. Xlnt tt.m• &ius11 miszion. 846-637:'> APT llou~r ~tgrs. Couplt tor DOG GROOMER 30/40 unlt11. Painting l Exper. 982-4Xl6 <\"''""· + Apl ""'"" * DRIVERS * 1213) 393-!;)89 OABYSIITER, live-in. .tor achool-1111:r 1·hildrcn, Laguna. 494-i280, 84i-J26.q Bo.bytl•ter -Permanrnt part t1mto. Tuf'il, l\'f'd &. Fri, 8: JO to :J•JO. Cd~I 673-3241. ! BEAUTlCIAN full 1 i me gUllrantee +. Ei(l'.;,, I wk. paid vat'ation 64?-2060 ; &12-11122 C~t . BKKPER & Gen'l Ole >1·ork. SJJO \\'k, Scrvitol1 , :i06 :ast St, N.B. BOAT Ca.rpenter or Cabinet Maker, exper_ Perm. job. Frlni.;r benl"fi11;1 LakP Ar- l'f.lwhrad }.farina, I 7 l 4 ) 337-2:..01 BOYS lG-14 Na Experience Nece11ary! MUii h&Ve dean Ca.Ht driv. Ing .rrcord. Not undtr 25.. YELLOW CAB CO. 18S E. 16th SI., C.?i-f. EXEC. SEC. $600. fee Pd young co., e.x~llf'nt skill1, Can Loraine, Westclitf Pert0nM1 A g e n c: y. 2043 Wes1d\ll Dr., N.B. 643-7170 EARN FOR A SUMMER. VACATION, A CAR, CA..'dP OR COLLEGE FOR YOUR CHILDREN. Be 11n AVON Rc~sentative I. ell.l'n extra nionf'y. \\'ln pri:te!. Mui peopl~. I-lave tun. It's eL'y lo RPl slarled. Jut.t call: to deliver p11.pe1'J ln thr-San 546-5341, :i-io-7041 Clemenrr, San Juan C1 p1s.1 --~'°"====--·I rtallO and Cap1~trtHIO Beach f.LECTRONIC ASSEr-.1BLERS Immediate ()pf!ninlfll 1oreA. DAILY PILOT Good Pay! Ca.ti NO\Y! 9AM-9P~I. Slll! 9AM-6PM area for lor.g 1enn ll'a!f!. Vic. N.B. Call before ? pm Gerwick & Son, Llc. bonded. Rel 1 furn. 642..23j(j Pvt, quiet I 0 t . The Rev. Ir"""::.':-'-"-· -----;i'i'il';,7-;.l-<04.:c;-:,1 _,,....*--.:.54::"..:":.'~ol Plaster, Patch, Repiair CLERK TYPIST Brad Kattli111, 494-~2. lnt .S.SJ Eltctrlcal Good flgurr-aptitude & IYJI· Orange Coa~t Employment Agency 1869 Ne~,,ort Blvd, CM'. 6-15-3111 &r'a-lll2 ~Jill GARAGE ""'llllled, pre.fer flt•o MISSING Enali1h maJe bull UC'D Electrician, maint. PLASTEft-.Patch-Rm Adda. int. Xln't ben.>fita. Fee Paid c:ar, IUitable 1or building 14 do&'. While 'A'/bro~:n 1po1s. aerv. Alto, rt5id. indu11rial. Acrou1. ceilings. atueco By Employer. Dishwasher -to.Jor cootdil'lat-F URN. UtU ed appJlance-s . plush shaa: studenl, W carpet • choice o1 2 color munily ba. tebemes -l balhs • 1tall G42-8:J20 showers • mirrored ward- robe donrs • lndir?ct Jight-LIVE on Balboa Island this in~ in k.i!chen • bre&Jdast summrr SlOO a mo. \\'omen bar • huge private fen«d only. J\1ake ~~erv11tions patio • p:ush landscaping •I ,,,00="'---"'~·~•~'-"-·-'~»~· _36_l_J_ brick Bar-B.Q's. larae beat-ONE • two gent le men: Ask for Elaine Svt'dMn 3 BR, 2 ba hoTlll", l blk ocean, pool. July $200 "'k, Sept $250 •·k. 5105 BruCf' Cregeen!, Udo S 1 n d 8 833-394.i tt. ti~asa boat. Will &42-44i·1. • re!in. Frre e .st I n1 • t e 1 . Also r ee Job!! leave no mess. Call M&-4665 Vil". San Juan, Lar1r l!Jj,...1591. 545-4588 11ft ~ 1 ?-lary Ba.ughman I ESCROW ASST. after 4 .l wkencb: re>1•ard. 493-40il n'l'S or Giardtning .., PA......._, Pl.ASTERING Executive . Bi9-Q85.S t.'Ollec1, ...... I p A ,,, __ \\'ANTED unturn N w p I PROFESSIONAL J\t A I 1' T, All type1 F'rtt f'~timate1 erionnel gency 1 UNITED CALIFORNIA Shores house v./c:pts I: GER:\!. Shrp. pup1, male tree "'ork. prunin,, Call ~j 410 \V, Ola.al H•y, NB drps. Yearly lease or ''P&rtMr" .l t e m a I r Suite H 645-2716 -BANK- 10" •• '-Alt.' • • wlmd• ''M•ua " S • 4 -· y,·, ipray\n(, di.wue " wePd Plumbfnn """'!!'!""!"!''!"'~"!'~!"'"'I 3141 E. Coa1\ H""'· ed pools I: lanai. master bdrm, relrig, beaut. BEAIJTIFUL I bdrm lurn <.'Ondo. w/lrg patio k. pl. D1tes flex. Mature adull1. a """ • "''"" " control, Spmkler N!pa.ir . ._ ___ _;•------1~ ' 646--5661 Alabama J. Ch ic a so, Clea.n up Jobs. Ceorge,1i.Ew TakA.1 l Son'• Plum· CLERK TYPIST C0!'1)na dr! Mar 3101 So. Bristol St. home vie: P .C.H. "-Beach (~~ !'.Ii. N . ot So. Cou1 Pitz.a) 1 ~B~l-•d_._"6-8.>~~-1~8~---- RE\\' ARD. ~9810. &16--58g3 bing Repair Rep 1 p e 60+ typing local, tee pd. 613·9'140 * $50 Rl!WARD * AL'S GARDENING Remodel Frer Estimates Call Loral~. \\1estc:lill Per· Equal Opponunily Emp.IO)'t"r Sant1 An1 SW to relined lady in my PHONE: 557-8200 lovely qu1e r home in C. !\f. l\11chrn Pf'ivil. No smoking, -3 Br, 2 ba, lge fam MTI. of· fl<'". yard \\'/patio It. littpie, S.lOO mo. ~8-2712 An~ll I~ SELLING )."our 003.t? "List" wilh U!! .. sell it fa5I , Daily Pilot ClassiJjed. 642-5678 References. 540-7195 HOUSE Hunting? Wa!c:h OPEN HOUSE column. Announc1mant1 ON oc:ean front, \\'. 1''rwport. the Week or mo. Call Joyce r.1eyer. 968-88:'>2 CANCER 500 Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Apts., Furn. or Unfurn, Huntington Beach Huntington Beach I~~~~ 370 Wri1er would like to jnt'1"• BALBOA lllal'ld, July 3rd to Sept 11th. lrg sunny apt. view people who halve had sips 4. By 1\·)I or mo. 67fl.29J6 CanCf"r. Phone or penonal 645-1161 . • LIDO 11\e-Deliehtful 5 br, I ~~~~~~~~~~ 3 ba, lam nn. Nr c:lubh5e. I for c:amel c:olor coel mining tor rardening "-1 ma 11 64&-8340 eonnel Af(ency, 20-13 V.'e!ft· trom Ne\\-por( Hleh Mwin1 landscaping services, call LEW Tllka1 & Son '1 Plumh. c:lltr Dr., N.B. 64j.2'170 fal~o rm, No que11Lion.,, 673-334:J 54G-5193. Serving Newport, ing Repair Repipe Remo--'~"';;_,;"~'~'~'=~===- SMALL Pair Red Ch!hu&hua1 CdM, Cblta ?t1esa. Dover dP.I. Fr"~ "~t. 6'16-s34o CLERK TYPIST "Poncho • Sam.'' Vic:. 16th Shores, Westclltt. COLE PLUMBING AL'S L.a.nd1capina;. Tree Pl, C.ltl, Reward! Call 642-8593. LOST-Sm black mutt w/big •an. Aru: lo "Sippy", Re•·ard, undyifl( rral:itude. m.-2869. removal. Yard remodeline. 24 hr. Service * M>lHil * Traah hauling, lot cteanup.1 _~--=~=~=-Rrpair 1prinklers. 673-1166. PLUMBING REPAIR JAPANESE Garden i ng No job loo &mall Service. Neat ~'Ork. Cle11nup • 642-31 28 • yd. maint. 968-2303 Roofing 60+ typing, local, fee Pd .. \\'estcllrr PeNIOnnt\ Agency, 2°'13 \Yeslcliff Dr.. N.B. 64;;.mo fill~ fee jobs). CDCKTAil. WAITRESSES !or exciting ne\v nighlc:luh. Al!IO COOK -Xlnt hour~. De.Ii rxp iJ pouible. male or EQUIPMENT MECHANIC Ill $687 lo $817 per mo. Min. req. 3 ~Tll exp flt journey- man lf'1't'l, h.a. rrad. f1le apphtation by Wed .• JUTll'J 16, ~ p.m., Pert0nnel Dept., Rm 511 CITY Of" COSTA M.E.U 77 Fair Drh•r, C.M. 9~ 114/834-5J.jo Brand Spanking New In Beautiful BACK BAY \\'kly or monthly. 673-7617. 11-1 BEAUT 4 br hsf walk to lit-. tie Con:ina. Aur. 11200. 675--0731. S:\I (feY Cllirn Tem«r, lema.le. Lido lslt. ~1\·am. 646--0203 day•; '7 l -111 J eve~. CLEAN Up Specialill, haul·1,---.---.,.---,--_ ing odd jobs, new fenc:. & LEE Roollng C.O. Root1112 ol repa.ir. Rta!I. S48-G955 all l)'Pf'I. Rf'covl'r, repaiH, ther-nio rool coatlr1i1t, v.•h1te & color. Lk/bonded 11nc:e ·41. 642-7m lemale. See r-.1r Baker EXPER. SECRETARY anytime after 11 am, The Typing 50 w.p.m. SH s:; VelV'f!l Gypsy, 15.50 Supenor, w.p.m. LOST-2 dos'•. I pan Afxhan, Exp. JapaneH" Garde~r cream; 1 part Pointer, Complete Yurl Service brown 1pott'11, vi l" Mesa F'rtt .,stitnalt ~k).~ ~R'-.-n-'-1."'1~.~,-.-S~h-.-,-.--4'°3~0 Ptrsonals 530 F R E E C.M. I UNITED CALIFORNIA -BANK- 1 and 2 Bedrooms Furnished and Unfurnished Adult Living * Dishwasher * Stove and R•frigerator * Shag Carpeting (4 exciting colors) * Sciund Proofed * Billiard Tables *Pool * Large Recreation Center RENT STARTS $155 BACHELOR to shatt l bdrm; comp!. furn w/ c:olor TV. trpl. On aand. Call John Fullerton 551·1000 or '"""'' AMERICAN & German lemalr.~ wan! lo share new tum home !n H.B. "'/3rd jlirl, 2:, -30. Nr bch . $100 irn::I ut!I 968-5797. SHARE my waterfront homf! iv/dock. fl.l1tn, 30-60 year1. $150/mo. 67>4331 WOMAN 50 hu apt lo .share y,•/.samf' in Tustin, $9a1mo, 836-1392. Verde. R .. ward. ~1 e JAPANESE GARD£NLR.e T. Guy Roofint:. Deal D1rttl. Baine boa.tinr COUJ'IJit 0r. LOST, brown 6 white 1mall r.taintenance. cleanup I do my own v."Ork. 64~7780, feted to the pubtie frtt dog w/ ttd J'lea collar. A~. J-ra FV CM area * 342-8442 S48-9590 ot charge by the Balboa to Sluher.1964-A Afeyu PI, IJ '~o~H,;N;;SO:;.:N~-s,!'.~G~A~R'..,D~EN~!N~G~l;s;;.;;w;il;;ng;;//,Alili<te;;r;;e;!lli;;o;;;n;,-- Power Squadron. Sail as C.M. ~~·•rd. YORKSH'JRt; Terril'T, Vic: Yard earf', c:leall-Up!, plan-• Ore•sma.king--Al\rralions well as pawer boating Eulbl"fl •--•-R•w•~. ting, 1prinklen. 962-2035. Specilll On J-iem~ i11ught. New c:lasse1 1tart "' '" c 11 J "' 64j,...16ll or n4-744J EXPER. Jlawlliian Gardener 11 o * ""''·6446 at 7 p.m., ltfay JL Ewry c 1 G hlonday nlght tor J.l LOST female boxer, I mo Se0 fr!P ~le 1 a~d~;,~ EUROPEAN Dressmakinir. weeki:. At Ne"''port Har· old. Colle1e Park area. rvice. ama ani, Expertly Cu11tom l l lted, bor Yacht Club. 720 w, M6-7677 Japanese Gardener Accur. Rea~. 67l-11W9 Bay, Newport lk11c:h. LOsr Min. brown poodle, E•p'd. Yard Work Tiie Bring notebook &: penc:il female, 4 mos old. Vic. 44th Clca~up, Planting 646-001!1 first night, Rl'Jislrr at SI.. N.B. 673-7574 afler 6 F'H.EE e1I. Comp! or pr.rtial CERAMIC lite "'"' &: 1hat lime. Cont11.ct fl.1r& lawn malnt. & c:leRnup. ~emodrl, free .r•I. Sm11ll F'AMILl' heartbroken-I.Ml, L. r-.f. GArdeninrr, 6-12•091~ JOb~ "''cloomc, 53&-2426. C ' OC0 .-1 BUSBOYS Ill Or Ovtr i\111$1 ~'Ork eve11 & v.'knds Apply In Per1<>n 2:30 Pi\1 'Lil .l P'.i-1 lSSS W. Adami Costa Mesa 201 Avenlda Del Mar San Clementi'! (714) 49'l-5l2J t:quaJ OpportunHy Em~ EX PER. fl.1ac:hine 0 pr, Lathe, drill pre1~ " mlll. Apply In per110n.. 151 Pmduct10n Pl, N.8. F:XPERIENCED Salealad)' /or jewelry Kk'll'f', ft 548-340.1 • EXPERIENCED d i nn e r <·ook, 5 nites v.·eelc. Cont.ae1 ,Jf!rry IX'lv.•,.en 9 & S pm. Mr. J\1fke'1 209 Palm St., Bathoe 6r;,..5n( • Vista Del Mesa ' Apartments tit Tustin & Mesa Drive @ WILL !hart apartment with girl. 1 child OK. Preler Christian. 645-4.17<1 BAOtELOR ~·ill 1har11 home "'/same. lube/ Pease 673·18a:J. While Wirehaired Terrier. I ,..'.::;.;.:";;~~·~!:..:;::::::::::=-..1'f~;--.::;;;;;::--"---* F1JLLY LICENSED+ 646-1171 J ud}'. LA\\'N Maint. Jl11 uling, nrw Tre• Service Reno..,,~d Hindu Spirituali.sl I 'c~O~LD"'EN"'°-R~..,,.:-=-c-,.,~,-. -.,~-,-.-o""'r 14"'m, clean-up, pruning. GENERAL tree 11erv yard Advice on all mailers. Cuila Capistrano, 2 yn, no f'ree es!. Call 546-7379 clt'anup. All aroun;; han· COFl'~EE 1hop waltreM • All I 'E"°'X~P"°"E~R~-m""'o~\~o~r-,-,-,-1~,·I 1hitts avllil. Apply in pl'f"M)n YleRm11n in 11clive •1ency. &t ?-!Ha Lanes, l 703 1680 Newport Blvd. C.f\f. ~ 545-4855 LovP, ~larri1.ge, Bu1ine1s lie:, boy'i pet, 493-4340. General Service• dymnn. Reas. 646-5848 Superior St, C.1'1. B::ib. Readinp given 7 days • t'IX up your home /or Upholst•ry v.·eek, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. 11 •----------312 N. El Camino Real, 1 -I~ ~ing, No job too l ml\ ,l 'v w \d i r ... lnttrucUen f'S Carpentry, paint1nt, ~:all lNYL et n11:-...ut1, ..... rn&, * * ------ * * * can 646-6245 Office Rental * DELUXE PROF'. SUITES 4~~J.le~=T6 1 ;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;~~1;~; paper, drywall t ic. r ree le~rs.) c~;._~fyt:ng b~i'I: 17612 Beach Bl\'d., H.B. est. 546-5319. ~;7 mo 1 c -------------------,1 P l•nlif"\ pkog, A/C, 1-,,, WE guar11nltt our 1hlmpoo 1 ' S h I & Hu1band Busy'! Cal Moose mu.sic, new carpet& I paint/ \11ill slop h11ir 1011 & in IT!Otll C "I 545-082) aftPr ft.Repn lr LIC. furn. Uph. Reed & COUPLE, r~tired, lo manage 12 uni! !ux. apl11. in N'pt. Bc:h. Call: Mr. Robin Boyd, 11nyl1me, ror intr rv iew Ref!. ~q'd. 61>5930. . C0i\1PETENT Jfi-ac:hl grad for c:lerical ~·ork. Strady· mu5t br ambitious It willing to learn, H.B. area. Call Li~a. 962-11;11. drp~. 325 10 900 1q, fL Suite ca~11 will grow hair ht.ck. ln1truction1 575 Build·Serv ?.1011 Thina;!! l'l nf' work. An!hony'11 Uph . 8. Ph. 841.2521 Comp l t t e I Y guaranteed. · _ Srrv1cc, N.B. 642-51127. (081& only $2.75. You ~ 1he * lJ.DOR UNLIMITED * I~~~~~~~~ BEAUTIFUL 3 room ortice judge! Sir Walter' a, 20".ll Al RLINE HANDYr-.!AN I~ Trader's Paradise Latr model Chry1ler. ("(In• \'C rtlb!c. like new ronchllon, Z-1.000 mile~. still und~r >1•a.rranty, tradr-/or older car or '! &l.l-139.; Ha"e KimbAJl 5pine1 p1&no. Dwc m11n'11 ch11 1r & otlon111.n, pr of L!lnc:tor i7 spkr1. V.'1!1 rxt:h11n:;;e lor sm c:a.r or ~ 675-Jj9j, Tra.de r <l·plcx in C05ta i\le.sa !or $10,000 equity in J;1n;:l~ 111.mlly hom,. or ~?. !lmRll 211<1 Ok11y. Gd area, 54:,..1496 11 rr ;1. , '61 Chev. Jmpalit, 2~ a11to-po1~rr-R&-1-l-f111r ruh. b4"r·for P/U 1.nil"k or ut\l- 11y rrlr 1n g<l rond. pink for pink, 64j.2J42 ~fr 6, v.·kd.1~. CHOICE 101, \\'h11e ~11ni1!1 Beach 1-:s1111e~ at l-:111111& Kona, ll•11all. \\'1ll IJ'd SOOOO "q for auto or d11\mond rinit? of equal value. 6T~4:i3 AJTOWhea.d mod. 2 1ty rr· trear. V11J SltSOO. eq. $i200. Tr111de ror ltnd ""iir "f \fihr O a1si !ied ad • 1.11. Dally Pilot, P.O. Bo,..: l:i60, C:">.1. C11 \\'JlJll srurdy 5iO 10 60 II Ill ii· boar. H.avf" lal'ld. 1mprO\'l'd prop. 110 It, boat &: otht'r (>(tl.lltki;, ~l.adge DA\ Ill Rt>altor 642·i000 Y.'hat do you have to ttlde! List It hert: -tn Or11np:e Cnunl;)•'s 1 1trr~1 rf!ld trad. tn1 po1t.6~Z...;&iB lines times . dollars suite w/kilchflnette. Ideal Ne\.\•porl Blvd, C.M. SCHOOLS \Velding -Carpentry 673-1922 1 tor 11.rchllel"t. 1n1urancf' SINGLE? WIDOWED? PACIFIC Hauling c. __ , _ _. ___ ~ agrn1. real!or, etc. On D1y A Night Clumes - fllonrovia St. in N . B . *Dlvorc.d Over 21* M3·6596 YARD, prage, cleanup1,I•••••••••• $350/$300 per mo. &J:>-0770 Oldest & large1t. For a 1ell 610 E. 11th St., Santa Ana Remove trees. dirt, Ivy, Job Wanted Male 700 DESK space available S50 e.~planatory mesM(e 24 hn 1klplo1der, back ho e . • mo. Will provide furniture a day, 541-9991 S\VIM LESSONS* Qualified 962-874;, SCRAM-LETS Huntington Beach. &tl-4321 br11. Call Oa"'·n, 494--1001, rlua $10. CAii JOOn 830-0811 Anytime. 543--5031 11t $5 mo. Answering aervltt IN CREASE YOUR BUST 2" in11tnlc:tor. Begin Inter, Adv. TRASH & G&t'llfe clea~up, ava.ilable.17875BeachBlvd, O" mcrr w/fabulowi new 2 ~•k session, max. -fi per 7day1.JJOaload. F'reeesl. ANSWERS \VANT VAN f\Vlnf WALK· DESK spaee available $50 P:oc r. 60l MOVING, Garage cle11n--4.1p AROUN D ENGJNEl TRD: mo. Will provide furniture "w=v~O~N~Eo-o-;n~t~,,.--,'1~"'.,-,i~o-,7..,-:-.I 1---1~ I: lite hauling. ReMOnitble. Embryo -!\1ai1.e -Rearm ·57 O)RTINA SEDAN. at $5 mo. Ans"·erlng service ing expense ol LoA Angele• Free e1;1:imates. 64j,...160'l. -Upheld -PL~1BER * 536-1131 * llVILll&ble. 305 No. EI phOne line to SE portione: or Houseclaanlng ('hem11;t: ''Sc:ienc:e haa nt"V-c a m i no Re a 1 , San Orange Co! 494-5696 _____ ..;;. ____ 1er round out tiow to turn lead lla\·r ·10' !lip in Santa Bar· Clementi'!. 492-4420 HOUSE OF CLEAN into gold." ba.ra to ell:c:han,, f-.ll' or GOLF -Irvine Cot.rt C, C. Babyslttlnt C ·1 • R .• Cl . "Y , C II vo Del.uxe Ofllce 525 sq ft. ' membenhip for sale-lf!t1nl, omm • f!!ln. canina: ou no wrons;:. a a l111"'cr shp in Nc"'1JOrt an.. C D p \ W \I COSTA ulS ~,, ''· 1_ * 642-682.4 * PLUJ\1BER, llr '---1•-••-., " arptl· rape~· ane a 1 642.2511/eves :;48-9722. ,..., A r 1 '"M "" "'" prux I mo 1n summer. Ne"''port .l Bay Center PRE-SCt'tOOL ~8~,-,-.~&~•-<h~J~..,~ilo-n7-,~I-cret." ?13 981-0161. ...... ~ .... ,~~ Bl"d, CM PREGNANT! Ado p Ii on, C ·-• "----,,===~==--=-°'"'' I ""',y. "~ ,..,.,.. ~ b t · 1 Special Swnmt:r Proirram l'J)IB, w1rouow1, uuurs e!c:, \\'ESTCLlf"r LOT FOR !Alm V. off avail) 64S.J253 a or1.10"·,,_v •.1 1" otlomy 11th il Monrovia,~ day+ Res. & Comm'!. 646-lotOl EQUITY IN NEWPORT DE.Sh: apace available $50 ~~~n1 • in orma n. full day .euion,, Planned Mesa Cleaning Service PRAC. Nu~•. Compa.nfont, BEACH l·TO~f F:. JTll'l, Wiii provide lumitutt Pl'Olfatn, hot lunthe1. Aa:es Carpets, \\'indow1, Floor ,.1c:. Jltkpr!I. Uve In tir out, C.o\LL at $.'i mo. An1werlng 1ervice S i"tlts D•nce Class l -6, hra 1:30 AM-I PM. Resid. &: Commc'I, 548-4lll Monllily ralc11. t :mplr pny1 6l6-s.;b.i available. 222 Foreit Ave, Elf!gant atmosphere. $13 wk-COMPARE! 11!.i• •1'CI!. fee. Health & F11mlly Cart. ---------I ••• ........., -..-.w11 HOUSFCLEANING • 180' N B d • b' B 8 IH La••una Beach. 494-9466 J.>'t•.u61 0, ""5~7. ,.gency, ·• . roa way, :i CB In!!; ig e11r Oney -"""·=-""'---""'=-·I ......... "'1 Will do an t pe ho I s Bear Lodge• on Moonrida;t NEW Watf!rfrnnt Oflic:es ALCOHOLICS Anonymou1. I 'B~A7B~v=sr~rr=1N~c=-.~.-m-,~ .. -rn-,·. I y )' UIHIC .. an-.. A. a4l-fi681. A,.,., '' mi from new ski lift . S77.i To $4J:t Month Phone S42-72l7 or v.rrlte Clos" lo Sonora r.chool. Ing. Exp. &: Reaa. 546-08:11 PERSONAL 1 f' l" r, tar y , \V11111 largtr unit5, TD'a. Aho\'f' The Jslander P.O. Box 1211 Costa Meaa. Prefer girl 6-lO. WU! con-DEDICATED CL~JNG cultural background, exp. Submu·:~ Agt 613-3101. 341 B11)'llid« Dr. N'pt. Beach Social Clubs 53S alder other•. !J.t!)..~24. We do .. wrythtng. Free driver ac:c:u11omed to Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 e~tlmllle. Call 673-4072 1T11 vf!I' flexible J a c a t In n ll'i0.000 l'Qty in over the PROf'ESSlONAL Blda. 45c BALLROOM dance: lf'wis WlLL baby1lt by the wttk. Ironing Rl!rr~nee1 e x c h• n I" d : C"Oun1<'r :<1tork. Tr1dr r o r Pvt &: clau initruetlon. Lovln1 care. So. Coat& 640-.87~7 3-11 11m Job W•nttd, Female 702 COOK f'~xper, F'/llme 1\PPLY IN PERSON THE RIGGER NO. 16 F'ASHION' ISLAND NE\VPORT BEACH CUSTODIAi~ maint. man. ~!in, a.ge 21 w/2 yn exp. In knowledge or methods, ma- rerials &. equipment used in maint, work, Salary $;;()Q mo. Call 8J7-<IM4 !or appt. DAY DISHWASHER Apply In Person Ancient Mariner Resfiiurant 2607 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach DECKJ IAND • Yl'Ar 11round. 86' boa1. Ex-pe r neccs11ary. Cono1ct Eric: Gttland, DAY~ 213/49S-2:Jl2: t:Ves 6'13-"616 r11.neh. land, aparUT'ltnls, : Mp~r~~~g. ~~~tc~~·l~~'. Buiint'u men appta avail. f\le11. 66-4!'174 Ironln11: &. Al1 .. ratloni WANTED: day work, e:<- or ;: i71h St. C i\I. PETE BAR-Everyone l';'elc:ome. Eleg&nl Carpet Servlt:• At ~:1!-,!-~o,me per i en i:ed ind have DELI Girl~ "-ork in 11alh1n + s.iG-.7.184 * RETT RLTY. 642-Ua.l atmospMre, ~2221 . on.,-.,.. r..ferf'nct!S. Sl8 & day. Deli, Costa !\1esa . Apply in 2 Jot~. Pa.lm Sprlnp, flTe MI f\ AC LE AN Carp e, 1----:-•""1"'R'°'O"'N"'JN"'G"""•--·I 5-42--0781 ptl'!l()n, bf't~·n 2 & 4 PM, 3i9 ' I ,,. . TD' DESK space avail in .... Service. Fut d"' shampoo, ., ,_ 1, my homo E. 17lh St, C.i\t. · cear. nan1 uniu. 1, al ., #•" AIDES FOR co·• ''"" i--·---•i. 5,~ .. 1 eculiw ottrc:e bld1, northern I I tree aoll retardant l color 84" =n ... D~'-AL A 1, f 1 · • ""'' .. v~ vul!l. part of Htr Bc:h, Be11ctr ~&.Mt--4..foll'lll ............... Al ESCENCE.,_e.l d t.tly_ ""'~' is ron ff1<Y Nlinc:y J , i\foore Reall)I. . brts'ltntn tndtJd!od 0 n Masonry can! or famlly c are . -vn:vmtlvr--nune. ~ ltul'f Gn-ll01. ~l'!f!r1 nr Hlg Ctnttr. ~V-•I')' ~~·U An ~vrk suam. Homf'maker~ .>47..u81 v.,,man, enjoy pMpl"'. lXpt"r ""-uvu ru:U . ...e for trf!t e1t. MASONERY WORK All~· , • \• ~· prel'd bul lntelllgenee .1 l"'O Atre1 C3na.cfa + other 1670 Sk'\'TA ANA AVE, 0 1 found. (fr" ada) 550 66-4949 F'l'l'e tit. ThoroUChl)' expd, }o:XPERlt:NCED AIUES f!nthu11ia.sm may Milke dll· t'<fUlllt'.s up 10 S30,000. \\>'an! F'rom 300 1q/ll, J.Jc: aq fl. Diamond Catpft Cltanlng &12-l9"3 "''I nt c:11re of elderly. lerrnc:t". H.B. 962-2·136 units, Costa i\lesa. Nf!wport 61~2'164 or 541-5032 DOG hil on Su Peri or, A•c '''' -m p ji;;i;;tt;;;;&------l~~~·~·~·~""~'':_I~..,~~·;•~·:.,,~ I CM IN 8 Id r. ·-p • ti & DENTAL u.s'L c:h&iraidr or area. PO 8 .i • , , yr o .....,rman Rl!pai.iRn It Installation~ ••n ng H I W d L\taOge Da vi~ Rlrr &f2.7coo JiOO NF;\\r RT BLVD, N Shepherd. Male, blk 6 Ian wu• Pa,,.rhan"Jout e p ante 1 M & F 710 fmt ofliCf'. LldO. Write, *ON THE RAY * fact. Is at ''et'• for medlc11J free Ell. 64>-lll7 • ··• Cla111illed ad No. 134, Daily \\'11n1 '68 or hller Clld 4 dr, 61;,.-2464 or ~l~fiOll CARPET •· I d PROF . u· 0 _1 l A'M'ENDANT 111 I rllp, for P'I p O n-1.-Co aHention: Newport Center ., .. mpoo na:. ry • pain nr. """er ........ Si ,. • It I ot. .. 1;>11X """'· Ill h't: ~. "le. 1-lllVl' 3.40 llCl't: e NE\VPORT Bt1c:h Oflu;o;e Animal Hospital, 644-M60. fo.m, Reaid, c.'Omm'I, win-1\ory, low u $225 W/fcf ""'"·vron a ioTn . erl.t MeMa, C11.Jlt 9262' Ptlrttb: jS450Q eq ~a) r~. View offl«s. Air-mnd. Priv. Bl.ACK feml~ Cockapoo dof.·~ I: noon me e1t. p1dn1, A\•g nn $18. Alrle•~ Rl!nt .... -Car In L • & u n ", • lll.lld nr Reddiro.a Sh11.11fa Ba. 241» w, C011.1t Hwy, "''/J'fd.hrev.'n spat" found ~-==7'~=====~ i prayini ac:eoua. Cl'llinp, l Coll~gl! 1tuden1 over l&. No Lk. i\leyer ~IS.58S0/.;.!9·l.166 lNDl\'lDUAL OfflCES vie H&rbor A Vletoria, CM, Dft.IFOAM CARP LT Ct.EAN -'°--.'_1•_1_!~_,· 7Ro-iy,_._84_l7-"'8...,._,·,---I ~~~mhear!ri, ::;:n11~~l~~~n~ * * * *, * * NT•w 11rvtne 111<tta~ .. ~!f1Plex. 1:1J06 30., .,ft:.,'Jll1,J.aJI ~: T '" "'ii urs hom,*or .o;i71',~., A~~u1tlc ,s~~71!1!!t Aeh!.1 Sal11ry A comm , •••••••••••llii••••••• op oc. &33-MOI ._...,. .1me a. I ; -""""· om n vc :1:1 • .,. I''"' wor • .,. --.1 ... ., V.'/ra 1e1. 49'j00l DENTAL a~'I, fl'X)'lf'r, mA• !Utt. over 24. Nt1U & 1ntt'r· ftltf:d, Good be.l'lelltt/1Al 1cy, )"QUJll den1i11. Cal\ f.15-1060 aft 6 ar v.'ttkeDd11. EXPER. Cleaning for comm'I htdir . ni!ely. 67l-/1219. w ..... .. , .... t"ASJIJON Stylist -Beeline Fasluon8. \\'ill lnlin. No tn- vestmenL Ge n e, Flo Armstref!t . 494-0737, 496-2072, 494-1003, ~ FIBERGLASS molders. Ap- plic11Uona now bein1 taktn. Clipper Marine Corp, 1131 S. Ritr.hey, Santa Ana. Fortman to $710 Exper, in fibt'filau, lamin- a11ng, 1001 makinc & ID!Xd- ing. NEWPORT Per1onnel Agency Ill Dover Dr., N.B. 642-3170 FRONT desk rt(:tptioni~t. Orthotlonlic ofe, X1nt opty, C111t 644-1408 for 11ppt. GENERAL CLERK Opening In our H.B. olc, l! you can &ec:ur. type SO+ \Vords Pt'r rnin & art: Inter· e!ted ln \YQrking tor a IP'O"'• 1ng ln11. co, w/xln't cond11 & heneti~. Cail Prrsonnel, 842-1751 . Unlgard lnstlrllflC'fl Group GENERAL OfliN'. 1 Woman ore need.• a&sist11.nl. SH Ir typing e11ential, he Ip \\ /bklcpng. Perm. p/tlme. 2:> hni wk. 61j,...SJ.'\J GIRL F'RJDAY. Le 111 dln1 a.d\'ertl11ni 111gency, lot11 Of publi(' oontllct & lt'lephone8. St11rt S400. Cell Jran Brown, S4().(i05$ COASTAi~ AGENCY 2790 ll11rhtir RI•' Ac'liuntr GUARDS e e e Immediate f .T, A P,T, po.i. ilOns avait., San Ju11n C..p. i111r111no 11re11., Uniform,, .\ t'qUlp fUrnbhtd . >'rinn btn- l'fll1. Trltphone & tran~ lalion req'd. Appl,y at 13912 Pondffl>u Sult, F'. Santa AN. Equal Opportunity Em- ploytr. Jl,\JMRESSERS \Vanted: llead Hunle.r Beauty Stlot11.. w.M112 or 6~701 HAIRSTYUST, e11per. fCJr buay 111lon In Newport. C.11 ~t:Wl daytime, £\oft c: eolltt.t 12131 ~. " DUPl.E> ~. ff'ncW Gtlr, < a.1 1710, ( Api1ln Apts. F G•n•r•I Rent :E 1~ ONE con Y' Pure l nd. 24 I ( Furn 517 ''" 1! ;. Anahe!n1 ' La.Habra " a .lboa *WA" 2 BR \11eeks < IMI 2 y, " Y.'ttkil of 1,1 Boy & 2 BR, s Ch11rn1in 1113) 79'. Balboa ~ 2 BR. fw ~Urll!C(k, :~ J\20 "'· I 67:>-1070 • Bales ;: Lo\•rly f. i'olaid sr1 • CLEA~ b ro beach ,, Balbc•a A ---... l BH. tJI ;""f'Y.pC>l'l 6i5-16l2. 2 BR. UT mo. agei LRG I nr Furn. SI no peli. 18~ $185/mo pf'IS. 61 2· r e LGE ,;i ) rly. u *' *• * M, :ilUd10 Lr $T,j " lJ.ul~ • Color ' e Pool, 1 • Sounrl11 23i!i f\''t:\\' 1"£\V •' * GIAAI l Gorgoous, Closed i: lmum 5€'1 Adulu, Fullerlon Bay, lh ... So. of !\ 8600 Unbeliev VAL D' JS Adults - l'\'<'J'Y'>'he \Vaterfall Sauna, .s~ Unlun1. J 2000 Pan GARJ ,. Q1J11'1, JI! • I • '• p1ut1. "" 1 Br. $1 Aflull 7•IO \V NE\V LI\ B ach-fu1 1 B R·fu 1 2 B R-fu1 UNFUI AOUL TS 1760 Por C HATE~ LOV~:LY Unrum. JIOO\. Crt pet.~. :r ri UHi Pt BAYC • LO\V \\ Kilt'ht'n, • J1rattJ l *Stvc * 1-1, '.\.11\PLE *WIN ". 1\L Qu!t"! • ' Rll't. S Pt'I' 21.l I Br. f11 Pool. Ci ptll, S1! \\'11"''"· 38 DAIL V PILOT , ~·--·-~l[ll]!I L._ -·--·-____ J[ll] I ·--][ll] I ... ~.... ][§) I ... ~. • J[§JI L._ _ ... ~_-___,][§)I --J[§) ( ·~ "v.. Ill [ '"' "Y•J )[I --------' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1~--;:m;;;;;;:m~ J Lin .. , 2 l imos, $2.00 l LlnH , 2 l imes, $1.00 H•lp Wanted, M & F 710 1 Help Wa nte d, M • F 710 I Help _Wanted, M & P: 710 Anti11ues Mt F u rn iture 111 Garage Sa._ 112 M lsc•ll•.....u• "-.II · ~ ·BEAlIT 'A•u 1tra1 1 an PRETl'Jt.:S'f er the litter -SAl.ESLAOY. ~per. <.'Ur· ANDREA'S O\VN'ER "actifl~e M~Her· FURNITURE, clot .h " 1 , WORN once In weddin&:! $iu Shepherd . pupe _ •l~ter & rutt black • white kitten. HAIRDRESSER, f"IJ <•m·, la1iu & dr1~rie1. UdoU'1 teto""""-u .. ruJ m i.• •--· p I , ·" b Jh > • Lo··, •• ,, •• • • •···,.brnk•n -r M t ANTIQUES ranean rurnltu~. C'\tltom I ' ,...,., ... '"''""; 16 ti It .. ..._, D• b '' ro er, m... • '~ '""' ' """· oltlt'r , , p, r I, n 1."' ana9emen llornf' f'urnis.h ln1111, S Coa11t Sat Ii Sun. May 29 Ir 30 32'' ll hl · h hild --·• ~ hom• or N••d• aood '"A-• w/lota o! 0" .,10• p-I .. , .. 11,,.r•m. Pla111, C.f\1. Just Received Vt"ctra iota ,&,; love&ea.I, · lormaL Ye ow/w lf: v.11 c ttn, 1~ ,......... '""'" • • •"<" ,,... Melody . cnalr•, 1' black Montana Ave, C.r-.1. daisy dfl1l1n on ·lonr sleeve. homes, leno«I Yar d · IDve & affrcllon. ~S-.16.10 alt l.11~un11 Re&ch ~.9-t-!i6'i7. SA LES -SA LESMAN NEW SHIPME NT naugah·..ie aofa 1t 2 m .. 1. GARAGE salt ~ furnlturr, floor lrn11h , w /E mp l re 892-.'lreOor 397.7;,.;1 ~JI. 5. ~/28 MANAG EME NT AUSTRAUA,'-i, i':NGUSli ~u HSKPRS Empl)•r pays ff'I', Jnvl'1tml'n111. c • l I r..lf'll. chlnr c h• Ir 1 occuional h&rhol.d l'>Od•, m iac itema, v.·a..lst. Size 1 dy~·lo-m&tch LOVABLE m"'• b-wn Do"· TO rood h.:ui'lt with ff'n~d $50 000 $100 000 p It. FRENCH PJEC~S ' """ .... •v " J Grnrge Allen Bylll nd Ai::,.n· ' • • Si:hmld! Wf'lltrllH r 1·1ot1· <'hflts, CQtftt a. cmnmode ...... i; 36th St, NB shol!1 and long .ilp includ· ie mi.x . )'r old, hsrbrkn. gd y.rd. Engll'h bu l do r , cy 1()6..8 E. 16th, S.A. \!EN MILIT R \' \\'O:"l!fN nf'l Ag,'n(•y, 2043 \VHtclIU .2380 Nt'wporl Bl., C.M. l11ble1, quallty &-pc ki111 REFRIG, frrezer. 10 me ed. Pd over $40, wUJ .ell IOI' watchdot. Shots. Needs lov· lrmalr, putt br~, • Yni nkj , ;,,1i--03!1.i. · 1 ' A • •1 Dr .. N.B, 64f>.2770 64~4870 bdrm 14!1 v.·/armoi.r, S..pc furniture, many misc ittnu. $20. S.7-7187, Sunday thru ·•nc hom• 1,,.,. yard Cert. 101 pedtfrt.l'. Call l===~------1 1 Daily .10.5 * Sun, noon-5 dbl bd d' • · '-·J ' •v 1124 S/28 HOUSEKEEPER l k queen rm ael, 1nellt, J)lO N. '-w•'•· •·nta Ans, 1''11d.ay atltrnoon. ..,.,, • ..., ;:-~1. """orr ,.m . .....,. ~. • ,tp hs Pf:', IF YO\' llAVt: ·rttf': o•:· SALES help wanled. Must -P-R E-INVE.N'TORY-lamP1, plaque1: 19'' TV, ...., ....., BCO ,..,.,.. ..., ,,....,. NEED I I ho • I·-• Ironing. /\1on. \\1ed & t'ri. l Slltt: ·ro li\iPROVE YOUR I hav• t xp. Apply In ptrMln Tonk• toys, boys 2 0 ,, SAT. POTTERY, RUG S, WE R. HIFilSttreo, Ht.I ANGORA kitttns, aome are ov n1 me « e • ..,~ Hr1 11 day. Mrs. Carr1ngron I Cl\REFR Al ONG \.\'IT/I IN· Jarkie's f'l!.~hion Center, 15 SALE I Slinrray bike, ml!K-l!em11, BOOKS. ETC, 1136 ~·. to Jttl, l)'l\Cro Ir a ck tortolse sht.11 al!JO some short yd lat btau. blk/wh female 67:,.309() I cRt:A-.r.;iNt. )·ouR t'INANC-Hunhn&ron Ctn1er, H.B. G I r ~~ I~ l ~.1.~~' ~11L RY 268 JMnn St, CM btwn Oc:eanltt>nt. N.B. recordtr, J!!O; 3 pi~ btut hairs. All colors sandbox pup. 3~, ~os. Samoyed. H$KPR !or v.-orking mo1hPr, JAL POSITION \\'F. \\'OUl.D e SALESLADIES Full 1 Also Gliss China It lurn Harbor I . f'airview, 1 blk Heu1eheld Goecls 114 ~=·ta luua1e, S 20' trained.' 548-2-462 ~Jt Cot:ker T•mer. Med. Bl'ffd 3 lf'hool •grtl rh1lrlrf'n. 0'oln J.JKE ~ C'HAf'Nf.:I, YOU~R 11mf', IH.'i. Ch i Id r I' n ' 1 f ri. 9.5, Sat. )2·4 itjoted north or \Vjlaon. • Livf:ly killen.s, box trained i itt, SJ&.3'726. 51211 J <'a1· 6~4....()66.l 11!1 ~m_. __ TALr-NfS & ABJL!Tlf-~ &lor,, So. Cea~! Pla2a, CM. J un, t /. ?J BACK DOOR OF.CORATOR'S Fumitur'1 _ Everythlnt Must Gol BRUNSWICK Pool table, ~ 2 ma.le Fitz Ir Chillo -l FREE to fd adll home beaut1 '* • HOUSEKEEPER TO\\ ARD A RICH RE Apply 6:i0 .. D" S1. Tu&lin. IMPORTS JR96 H•rilor Kn,: siu vrlvet hfllldbrd Ir 397.9022 complelt 11>-ith a.cceu:>r ieg; tern, Ms.irir .ft SUIC!, I 1vks. ttd tabby t:at, wtll trained ! k l..AUNDR.t::SS 'ru''ARR£n .. ING & SECURE r u. SARAH Covrntrv nttd• n. or C.i\t. e ·of A. ~t1u:t•r Chr.' mat. spread, "f!'ll'. Fine ... .,_c·h~-116 almo1t new; cost SJ,49, ma.lie 4!11-7&10. 5/31 housr pe1. 3 l•Js . ·~ me ~ry offer. Call •v eni n11 , S4!)..ll20 S/31 1 Call 6il&-ii61 pt time he!p No in lurn. fl'Om movi,. 1~11'• FREE ll•tty kittens. 2·• ~~'=~·=~-~--"-" ---· · BO\VJ,front china closet. l 0 ~9004 L *HO U SEK E E PERS* \'Pstmrnr \\'ill tn.1n, min orig &ht:lvf's, SJOO: Currier homt -kni u bed, t:hnr SH P 1tem1, ahelvin1. li1h11, ' golden. l Ca.lico & I blk A-B~AUTIF11L tree klttera. 1 """'Pn 21 or lll er. ~92.327.\ J\'O EXPERIE~CF. OR 11ge•20. ;).10..{)614 & l\'f'& h 1 n rl . c 0 10 r 1 d OfC. chn It lbl &, aola, "°iat. pa.Hetti miscell steel. CAMPER 1hell, ].ft. over wht. Afale ' Fem. 644-22:;1 , b1k .l wh. male, ' wk1 old.; Of.GREE NECESSARY It' S EC . creden:r.•. 1•m• ttblt It. • 543-4326 ' t:llb, }'ita any 3-lt, truck. :i/29 Ca.JI U4-0681, 2921 Carob St .. 1• ' •at· \l".•N,··r TO ST•RT A RETARY·Morn1ng1, thhogri!iph, .. A Clearing," H btt truck nl " ,. .. ·1 B Id chrs, pool 11bt, -many Ml II Ill &1 n on o y 11 1•-. old Blk • Wh.,,, k•'t· N.B. 5/28, PRO"•·-. "!ONA(. c·•REER .. a1 y. ur 1ng oonzra<'tor, $18;), ;)48-1369 d . Coll r Ke 81199"1 once. Llk• Mw. r"'S. Call ""' ~ -~ ... , "'' Cnnsn·uction ofllr:f' ex-1'. ecor1.tor it tms. or · ..,, te"•. 2 m~•. 1 femalr . r REE 3 pl··"'·) multi·!· 1:-1 TH p,. l!>.'VE.'ITMENT ,... PIANO, unusual c 1 r v • d 1 . 1.ppt. 673-9011, &7l-0616 or JOHN'S I E !ils.-4756. alter S. 1''ullerton '"' ~· .. . \OUR E RNJNGS df'Jir11blf'. RI' ply 1 I a 1 I nf .11ma!I Bilby Grand. <.'OI· 67~1,.71. . I K S Weaned Ir trained. 6.W-5358. colortd lritt,nr Med 10ml'-t ll·:J.D. · A a,i:f'. f.11m dy ll!atu~ & 1'.'0i'k .,-NEW LI DO Joi Jm, l ll bl ei , f.129 one tn lovt them. Llk,.; ~IAY BE S.10.000. 1100.000 r'fprr. ln dl'!ail. \\'rit,., ltctor'& ii',m, mu11 remove, DIVORCED_ MIJ!ll M!ll. Pvt --F"rl1 ldatrc., ttl. $100. patio 7187 51291 PEP. YEAR· I~ C0:\1i\11S. Cl11-~ilil'fl 11d No. ~5. Daily Bros' Rlty, 613-301~ pt)'. Med lr . st)'le king aizt COLUMBIA loo. 67>3036. I FREE puppiri; Lab & &is. . I !'IONS & SERVICE FEES. Piiot, P. 0. Box 1560, C~!;i ANTIQUE I-land c I' an le SlreirEi box ipri~ le mal· PREMIUM & STEYlll Ml•c•llanHUI I German Shepherd m i x , {REE, CUTE BL.ACK AND · • . • s1:.i1·1 lmmPdi111elv IRVI NE PERSONNEL ' • c'""" c" rta~ SE0 VICES •AGENCY • Pl"'h 0 "'"" (\lt 8a, CRl il. p hono 1 raph .Rf'cord tJ?s&, Gel.-.co headboard &-3 .SPEED • :>SPEED Wanted 120 Av•il. J une 2nd. 962-3916. WHITE KITTENS. POTTY '. storage, (.'Olli $80; srll $40, nlle st 11 nd, 7' dre lt l'r 10 ~PEED S/~ TRAINED. In•> M0-6993~ I SECRETARY/Girl F'ri. !or "''"" 497-IOM. w/mirror. ni t, lite. 5 mo USE TRAILER awntn1 or pilio BLK pt Siamesl' kittens, ,µ~~ .\ounr m . In rounta1n ld p ld ,,400 • .,,,,, -D -fbr t " c · · 1· d I \'11.llt'y. Call 5-10-4043 PC>RTUGUESE inl&)' tables, o · II , •AC ~· cover or g 5 roounf. e· some With ·d&)' 1ght, nfl'I' Kl1TENS . • , Al •• , l 61~i64 •It 5. ~ SPEED * lO SPEED ml'nl. " boya p a n t.. rood homes. 1 3 , _ •• 9 '.I; .,...., ,.176 ""''· !/M . SF:RVICE t. Slllei lllfPnd. '' r. ry ...., rm, pea, Good 1tock ot usell bikes ,,..vv ' "" A.'= A:-1 ASSOCJAT Jo; OF : Opening ror 11 ll:r t 11 i ,v , '>''llln~t. :i-19-01'10 TRANSFERRED, musl 1ell, ....... 548-68-4~. 548..(1813. 5129 , I'\. • Hawaiian \1Rc·:.i1111n ~58 E. l7!h 1111 lr1'lne1 C.:\1 . 642·1470 J . W . ROBINSON'S Has 1mmed1dte optn1ni;: for SHOE SALESMAN Ex,,,r. f" 11m,. Xln·1 Co. 8c111'l ll! 1\ppl~1 in Pt'l'£011 \().5 p.m. • : f''11s!11on 1,1., l\'.R, Eq :1aJ oppor1un11y rn1pl oy<'r [)AVF: LOOKJ NGLAND, IN· I pPr.<.QnRblP I. har~ 'll'Ol'klnJt I Appl1anc••, t02 black nau1&h)'df! aofR &. ' ~ ~AIRS-WANTED: ~12 per s I . n FREE to exceptional home. r ~l l'f"'T'"ENT A:'\Al.YST P. I m11n. GrPal r11.1•n1 n.ir pntrn. i(lvf'~eat. beaut. 1am' tbl A 2~·NEWPORT BLVD. Orienta.I NJ, also smaller H¥f Aby kit1en1 .l Siamese ht1and$tlpplitt I~ II ,;:, ·" ~ · · , .. C II I •A•I 16.8 Coppe1·tone S1111·1 thl'.!, coffee It ,nd tbl~. Cj)ST• ME••. 1ize1, In l'OOd e o11d , femaJ, • '"""'· 536-047& '. "ROKER \\'"'LI 1\1 rial. a or 11ppl. . . . ~ ~ '~~~~==·::.:.,.::~i!l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:~~ ·· n • r, ~ · · GP\I G , , p h ~f · 1 tSpacemasl,rl fro~• f.i·pr ].fed. aola I.· lovriritr, 2 OP 494·9352, 494.i382, 5/28 ' \1f;DIATELY (;/VE YO~ V ~· e~~~ lJ a~ a m'.: .t!'a rell'igPrator. Xlnt "on d . hi-bitck vrlvf'I r h • i r s · EN •lO WK DYS. * • WANTED • BOY'S 10 ( THF. CHA;\'CJo: TO Dr.I VE: I ;,.·"· -~~, e er\ 1 ( t ' .n50. 8.13-2948 afi lP~ I F.ve1ything 11'1.l thin l m6 SAT. & SUN. M SPEED BIKE. FREE Poodl!'-Terrier Pups Pet1 General ISO '. k 0 \\1)\' A NE\\' Hl71 CAOI L· : H ·•· ~. flld. 5.i7-4183 c.~t. 645-4720 -l mos. l-1ale It Femat• -. I 1 ( •c " OUR CO\IPAN" SF.P.\llCF. StH At1rnd. f'X· 1 91 0 FR I GI DA IR F. -Will la.It' ·rrade-1"' -* M6-67!M * Cult playmate•. Dog Hnuse j ..... " · ·"I ,. "I, ·• 1-:.n CHINESE h a ndc a rv ~d ,. Jnd··-'-" "'"'uw. ~"'NATION widf' Co ha.s o,.n ' \\'!Lt. p y FOR IT Jl"r.App!y990 F..Coa!1Hwy, reezer, .-.n l'O•K•. ·"' • _ . WILL BE OPEN ..-TRVL 1railtr ulf cont uuni . ....., • ......,.,. "''.:.~ · .·, ·' · f ,-.;eiipoi·i Rf'arh. I mo<ie!. S210. 1-t&.J 7)$, ~r~·~en $ri": Teak va~ty good cond. rea&. 67j...44Sl7; , . ina: ror doi ~mine 1t 1 1--1 s~S-5i8? S130; Teak ~rf'\·pr b1r J150: MEMORIAL DAY 56-809:1. YORKSHIRF; I Poodlr mi."<. nurrition con1ultant1. We si::r.VICE Station n,. e d 1 •• • TPak form11l rtin'a rm set , t A.M •• 6 P .M . c_utr, sm&ll, had shots. • rra in. Call Tues. 492-9036. : t~p'd man lor tiay~. Union KE:\~IORE wastll'r • ~,..,.. \,\'/~ rhslri $1.500 y · Mu1ical ln1trument1 a2 mo'• ()Jd 9391 Nanlucket, =>'=----~~~~ 01! \fl~ F.. 17rh St., C~f . !>th~. hose~. '1f'. S 11 ~ · · 51S-2974 · irm. * .AUCTION * Hunt, Beath. ~1·,.ningJ .. \/28 FINE .)'OUnf peath-laefil· -fiil-:t241, 403 Columbu~ Cir,! ·· · · FENDER Dua.I Showman · Lovebirrl wlth CJle $2J. f SE\\' ma£·h. o~r11lor. DIM I 3 ,DRA \.\'ER lite ~abinet, •Finr·Furniture unp with vibrato. Excel 7-Cuddly puppies Jrtt, Shep/ * ~!W-9340 • F.xp onl). rlothea d'""''· nearly "'''· k Appliaf'I«) --' 1~ «•i=-Collie mother. father! ! ~l"'=-,,.,.-~c"-~~-~ e REBLT V.'lhrs·a:a11 dryrs ·1 A · r....::.i 7 00 CO•"'· "'"'• ,,...... ......, or P h. ~,, .. 168 •Jt 4 pm 51..., f'OR Sale • Pet Rabbit with • ~1: .. 1~2 • m-1all l'lld v.·uhf.r . Antiq UctlOl'lll r•!UA,)', : p.m. 64~4. "" . ~ H•>•h. "'· 'OVER ;;o Ir willing IO le&rn'! <TY . s:.o Guar·De!\•, Mslt Chg. f . ·~ v · w· d ' A ,. B • ~ I !f ~ou ha\'! 8 oac~und flf •. LTST for wig chain Exp. l\t 11 y 1 I l' r , Pa ir man . urn. I-, misc, ........, ia 1n y s uc ion arn BUFFET TENOR SAX Kittrn!·F'ret to good homes 53l-7294 ~uc(·es~ &. an inrerPit ln in· onll·· B,.au1 y ~upply exp 714:J.11·8637. Opoi·to. N.B. 2075'ti Nf'1vport, CM G4&-86R6 Good condition $300 '73·5684 Corest cat1 in toll'n! l•c -o7ts-------15=z. 1 P~hne11: ~ale~. plWlf:<' J\1 f'. hel pful. F'ull tlm~. Apply \VESTINGHOUSE 14 cu JI ! CUSTOM. buiU bar w/ nfrir I Bf.hlnd"Tony's Bldl" Mat'I. 5-14-3359 qr 821-9433 aJt .'k:IO ="'°"~~-~~-_:::"~":i;;:o;:;:::::;:-;-,,.,--,,,,.,-- Ask for Mr. Little CALL NOW 547-6771 1-:ru.~e & Co., Int'. mP.mbt'r I ~~mpr{;~ Wir, l.2'&82 Chap-fros1-rre" reft•iit/h'etztr, '' " 6 chair ittioli. Never us-HOl\!E' 90Jd, must 1• I I Office furniture/ 11VO d!rling kille.n!I - 1 SJA.MESE kinens, 21'1 nmj P111•ific Co11i;: S1ocK E."<· nuin, •· '· mo old. 673-872.l. ( efl. 4 turnishlngs..E than Allen 2 Equip. 124 .OJ•angr tiger, l all blk -10 old I 8'alpl. TTI •I e. l J our ne ym•n Plumber r•h;ingP, 2100 No. \l.oi rl', S.A. I TENNIS CI u b, F'ull k JRONRITE manR:"lr J2j Kl'n· i • ti 41618 tabi,s, Se-rvel, Banett mir· • , . \\'il:S old .. M.6-5184. Sl2R hlurpnt mill', 2 Ru~!ianj1 _.,_,_d•_l'.f _: \P11 '"or k. ;11,,.'iAA.'l j 17F 59 • I . ~'.\prr nol pJlin1t position1 11 va.il for mOl'f ,.1,.c lirwing ni~('hine 9• Herculon 1 of1 . but-ror tl&" x 45"1 ; Whirl~I OF F ICE rurn, de~ka .. chl1r&, g \\IK old crey kittf'n5 • blue, I 1 m I a. exce~tiona.l KEYPUNC H--nPrP<~Rr)', 11 ill !1.,~i n. I '"'a.Hr~.;~~•. ba r1,. nrll' r1 '"lf'abint t $25. ll40-4J ;-,.i ton-tutted, never used SlitO. Wll.llher, ro&5!tr~W!n. bric l!rhll, tables, m1scell. v.·eal'\td &: box lr&illf'd. hc>me·no im~!I children .. Op"RATO R huJbfly.• "-ma lnlrnance, M"B.tchinc l~e,e1t S l (I 0 . brack, 1por•~ t.quip, pain· MS-4326. 642-165.\. 5/28 M4--0IJ~. .1 i;: OltANGE Counry ' \'olun1,. snark bllr 11.llPnd~. Pleal'f: COPPF:RTON rtfriJ . .3 yrs j To w1·1•:.: ln IB •I "--•. ·. Req· '"od d I I'' . th , 5..l5-J~j~ uni: i. print1, "'omens P lonos/Or90M 126 IFREE ki"•n• -v•-fl··~·. SIAMESE killens, sealpt, ..,... r r Pll <'I' 11 1 · r<11'1 rP appl)'. 2601 E1~tbluff Or, ol.d, likt n,.11· • .12 f'U ft. Top l h " ., _, MS i::1 ~n. 1 ) r f'\fl 1n l1kr iop r~JibEor peoplf' for <In un· N R. f,.14-()().;o freezer, $1~1'1. 642-4086 REAUTJFUL ·s-p.ni1h oak c othe& .l m u c morr. lovabl~, · ·trained. 536-1881 chooola!•·PI. rentle. ~1ul, 1 rY.1•111rn or ~r·;i n I I ........ , ' All ro110 l1.ble1. a.\/Of'.ado ve!Vtt aofa s.t!l-011i0 WOULD YOU . ,.,,. box train .. pUl'!bnJ s.u ea,, ~.ft-, ... '.,.,.-h ~thnnl.,. ~ l·•:.<p 1 irn!!'.", 11 u~, in · · · --T WO-GIRLS 'SEARS dl'IUXI' 17 C'll fl &: Jov~ S"'llt. rostom ti1fted. 9x12 COLEJMAJN o.,,., t•nl. BELIEVE 1i:Ei:kitt;;;;-:;;J;;;i;;;:;i;;;;l ~"'"~2~127~·~~~----,.. 1 1\ .. :-At.k s 1'.t1rn 11·t11!P 1 1 •• /UlCK FREE kit'-All coloMi long call I.or ! n If' r I I I'\\' ll!J}. ~fHj ll';i :·n: JI ,IOU Rrt 1n ll l airl F1"id1y and I ltlt'phone L~~ ~!8""" c:~~~~~\1~ . . All nfl.r nt"\\·'. 6i3-6926 ~ twice; 2 bunk ooJ.s; "i FREE ORGAN Ll:SSON.!i ha~. 6 ~~~· 347-1867 Hunt. LOVABLE Sealpoinl Siame~e : t"llo:!lll "'·I, 492-11.J:!. ill!" ! r.11 •l!' h;ii·,. lo•q y<iur p.i~i· 21rl. Good pay. Con111 ct.Mr. TWIN bed, uM'd 4 monthll. ~al · butane t1U1k, ('ll.pac1ty u !or.it •• you lik'~ No re1· B@ach .5/l8 femalt , Gmd homt. Sli-j ~0·1l11.lt1. f llnu 10 rh, Af'rm:pacp indull-Jam"!I bt!'Nflen 10 It l. 1489 KENJl.10RE 111•asbf'r, lri. ex· V.oi.n \'ors! mat h'~. S65. gauge k li!JUl&1<>r; \"W 1ir i:'tr&tion. No obligation. Just · Eves & "'kndi ~7%0. LA B T .. ::nn11·ii·.n ft'r prri1atne t r~. \Ip otlrr An unu~u11l 11p. k:. \\'Arnf'~, S.A. l"l'll,nt: AIM> waih'r " ll.~l!JM 1fr•r 5:30 (If 111·ttk· oond: VW hus trlr >:itch. Com ... i'otondays 7:30 'Pnl BED iprlnr ••llers. S.•lpoint Siamese ~l'"llr. pu·t :imP. &16-(fl'43, por1un1rv t1Hh 11n <irgao11li· 1 .¥t0·6616 Dryrr IW'!. 540-l09.'i day1, V.\V bu11H.t. .l3&-2441l COAST MUSIC 546-2Jn 5128 Ki!!tni Slt * 543.z.u ; _\_Ir_,_,_,_,_,.,_.,_·~~~--11ontha;hi1~i>Pf\'f'd0rl!.ni;:, TYPIST/RECEPT. DELUXE Lad;t K'nmorl! HI back velvet ch a ir •, HA MMOND Or1•n . S-l:Z..2851. n-IU I :..1l'llf'S & Sru<IPfl1" l <>11nry undPr lhp !lllm~ own-Sha1p airl for bu11y office11. w111hf'r. AV01·ado ,$1j . .Apt. ltlrfho,txd . " r • r r i • T . * PIANOS -ORGANS * 13 Female k:int~, I tlutry -.._I E'l:p11nit ing &?t"" d"r' "11 n1~ f'l''-h!p tor 50 ytaN. Apply r.ood opportunity. Call bf. si:r.t 1tovt. S"D. ~7fl20 "asifl'rt, $65. v'IVf't couch turnitur, lamps bookp; lot1 Lo.,..-. Hotid ·~= grey l 1httr1 h111r 2 months:IG·~E~R-M_AN ______ h-~---. -S47.~'. Lik• ntw. $49-3991 r · ood. . • ·~J • ~ u.ve _, 646-4021 5121 ~•""P e1u puppies.· !>' ll m, \1111!1e~ A· sruOPn!!I. in pf'r~n onlv. t'>''n 9 Ali-I & 12 PM. STOVE with ltf'iddlt, 0 .m~k,. of(~r I ll!l. \~uThl21'!' Stucho u.v' Cl85 I wkJJ, Sire from champitln• lnl'tlf'rl p:::o.f''m"nt. ~·nr 1n. THEODORE ROBINS Dl!REI~ ADVF.RTISJNG Cltan S50 STEEL SECRETARIAL ~.:i74:i: ~ Kawa_i 5'9" s.t~• $Ui(I DARLING mMllY coclcrr line, $75. Stud Hrvice ava.il.; rrr1 il'W call ~1r!. 011m11.nn~ FORD 2171 Dupont Ort\'' 645-5692 or 64:i.5308 DF.sJ< S40 MOVING -must sell custom F r1•ndly ltlephone inlo puppies. BUc A b u If · Ml:·71-01 , j.\1-l!'l:l2. ~ llarbor Bl~·d. ·""P1\•por1 Rf'ach A33-16i0 Furnitur • Ill • ~50 * desi1n'4:!, I •trand, • pil!ce .t•IELD'S PiANO CO. R33-226:i. S/29 GREAT D.oi ! LF.l.AL ~F.CRF..:TAR\'. pRrl COllla M"'IPI UNU.<;UAL Opporrunily for -P\11' pl)', I ' bllc: n11u1ahyi3r rattan 'ect10111l & 2 11001!. 13.l~ Nf'V.'Jl()rt Blvd. FREE to good homt. • mo ftm l f 11fl ~· Jfmp 9-12. Co~111 ,\lr!a arf'a. OUTBOARD Jl.!Pchan\r f'X· R,.ciPRHon Vl'hic.le g111,8. 1 ORANGE cru~hM "''l\'f't sola, nevrr used $100. 2n: 675--0075. Cost• Mffll n41&t;,..32S0 olrl Collie, Hsbrkn. '4~l484. iloc:.' ;:;;:, pu:~ a I 1 t~~L 5-lfl..(1950. ni.oin wirh provPn rteorrl ol llOla &. chair, $88. l-5 PC 925-:1522 RUBBER 1tamps by phoM -HAMMOND, S l•inway, 5/29 962-46l3. ! IJ('r. .Perm. job. t'rinit"' C Spanish bdrm i;t>I, in.an1iqu1 N H h C T bl l , 1· II dd'ti. J 1· y ·• N • ·• I A SS ISTANT MANAGERS $25,000 +. ~lEN 11111.ITARY \VO;\IEN IX'nf'hts. l...11.kt Arrowhead 111lflJ 11utc~~s in 3mp1"r1, •W etc •••,. • e1 I tne • a 1 ona 1ne1 am&na. ew • Ut.<:"U F"REE Gtr•niums Voysi• AJ.'GHAN . I, h avocaltv fin is h, lik, """" • · C 1 -t c Jl 1·• ., ,,·,-I .~, -•· ..... ' pup1 -Champ• ~1arinll, f1 14 ! :U7-7?i01 . moror hon1P1<. you lll'f' I e 54J-1574, 20402 Acac1..a, 1'> "" r"fln ' ea. • una,... '""" 0 tr106 m .... e1. '°"'st r rass &. Cape Honeysuf'kl,. 11rtt1 "KC pi &. ho P"rson wl''rl' looking for you Sl'.1:9. 1·:'1 Pf'. Sppni~~. riRr).: Twin led, Complete 536-3364. buys ln So. Calif. •t Schm~t Plf'AR Call lll-1096. 5/29 qullllfy. 7 Wk "$JM ; wj will hand!, ALL RECRE.<\. 1 bdrm 'e1, )ik, nP'>'', S91l. G.E. r•frir. """ <l•ar. ex-I Music Co., 1907 N. Ma.tr!, . .,,. :II! 1 ' . "P·; UFF", 1118.~ H111rl>0r Dlv.:1, S:t.l. 1'46-8104 • .. "" Santi Ana MALE pup, Dalmatian-Lab., .............. for N.8 . advt>rri!IOg •gen· TION VEHICLF: SA LE~ on c \I ~8 94·-("()nd. Sl?_.:i; :!ft ran~·· . "q'hite, gra.y/b!k. •pot!. g;IAT.'"L~LE"R""c7.y~,-.-" .. -.-.~.1-.-' l'~·. P/1i mc basi~. 11.11 1xt"lu~i\',. hasi~. Apply .. · · -:i.. G•r•1• S•I• 112 !"lean: 14 :angr: refrir, ALLEN ORGANS eXcluslvely wks. 646·1547. S/tl!I l'ifl AKC AfJh hou~I: DURt:L ADVF:RTI SING in Pf'r!IOn 1111 1~· GOL.D & Ji:reen ell.I~~ j JOO. 211 4 Connnenll1,J, C.~t. AlJJio CONN i: WURUTZEft; a.n " 2111 Dupont Dr, N.B. THEODORE ROBINS ,·rh·t1 l"h1 lr1. S2.l f'ti·h. :i i MOVING SALE Gould M ·Co . mt 2 WELL behavM adoniblr Blond l~m•le. 646 -2 $7 3: PASTE UP GIR L FORD onlv. -high ba ck blii:ck vinyl Sat & S"n • Di•hY.;1<hl'r: MOVING. must !It'll Ken· ..,, •• N MUii~ rA' 1~~7· ~o Jcillen8 I weeks ~130 anylimj'. Sll-1670 morr tl~t. dryer. Lgr gold ....,.... · · a1n ~ · ... ....,.,..1 · · · loo.,,,~.,:..~-----. A~ 1~1~1E:nlAIT. PRO· I 2060 l-1.oirh.ir Rlvrl. rh~iT~. Hkt nP11, s:~9 e11rh. '.I fecorrl• • '.\.' 11::. old f'IPl!'"tf' brocadr 1ectional '-' misc. MOV ING Sat! y • mah a 5/19 GER. M A N Sh t p h '~d: F'ES~JONAL S A L ES CA. PLASTICS raclory rritir~t. Co.cll11 ~1,s11, """' •lurlin coucht'~. hOISl f'l'~ 78 a!burn~; IO:<HI rcnr f't)~· ~>46-1974 or 998-1~2!1 Piam, priced riJt!l, per! POODLE Terriu m•le 6 r" g 1 51 e red show hne: REER IS l\O"t A\'A IL· 1 H12h school ~ad, Mili1ary UPffOLSTERER or Trim· ': ffi\''1'1"._'te•. S7!f 1'11t A. iiltlt; hook~ i:alnrl'; m•~c J-4-,;-0--.-E-T f •69 cond, termll avail to right v.11'11. old -plAytul nd~ good pups. J25, Black Ii: ail ver.J ABLF: IN OUR t'A~"T ~;x . flh lo1:a1ton i-ompll'lf'(t, 5'10" 1.iFF', 18A.l HarboT Blvd, rlf'm1 a.r 19512 Aralf'lr, Cll'. _ S . o . , P''lY '42-3325 homf:. 6-16-4042. 5129 Evf's. 846·4352 : PANDJNG I NVEST~1ENT or 01·Pr-. me(·han1c11I 11h1liry ingp henl'fil~. Lak, Ar· ,.. · hook~ .... ·/bookca~r. Exe. Sporti"t GM4• l30 \\'HT G. shep 14 mo. wrll MALA111UTE NeWfoundland, m•r f'Xpfr Perm jnb, rr· c.~I :.4S-94:'i;' I Ht<> Bch COl"rlf!r W!ll'd • 1 Encycloped1•S &. chddr?n I . . . • F'IF.l.n \\'J'nl A \'ER\' hPlplul. $1.4:0 hr, Mort ii ex· T'OIVhf'llrl ~lllrina, 1 71 ()I PVT Pill'IY wanlll •o ~J!ll 1 Yoi klown, l'Of'ld. SZ'lfl or (lfftr 64&-1376. bf!l1-av'4:1 _.l lovtb Mal,, 6 ."'"'ks. $20. ' lem&Je, 1; G RO\\' TII ORIENTED pPr. ;..;s.-:i12.i. 1~7-2.101 complr1e hou.'W! .or beautiful 1 1:.00 Keel Dr, Harbor Vtf'"' I CARPET.Il'•G _ . I bl C0'.\1PLETE mrn'1 JOU nul · 968-715'1 S-31 . mal,., 548-45.12. ! C0:"11PAN\". PR£ssERS-k OVERLOCK V-lf A-l\! l N manuf•rhiTI'l' I near ""~" l\led1t furn,_ In· Hiils·Lu11k. Cdi'-1. S11r 9::.0-• , nylon s~r. Ra::t: u"~~ lit for tale. Clubs, «rt, b&.1 FREE kittens Blk ihon WIRE Fox Territn, A.KC . ()pt'.'r:.ilors \\'an1."~ ntf'd.11 t'!Pf'r l ll b If' I , r JI , rluclfl'll 8 btk na ur sol~. & rn1. r.)1n Dandy awing 111, i S2.:io )'d. O/'ape.r1ts -It ln.J\.11. ~&-3031 . hairrd. 10 wka 16662 Krrtler papf'ra. 1 r,maJe A 21 Nn f-:XPF:RIF.NCE NEC'· f-,xpl'r n_n!y 646-0.~08 1 i·oder~ &. 1 r 1111 uli1tor 1 . lo\·f'.<¥<1!, 111'\"er 11~'~ $l:i0· 1 po1·r T\·, book11. lamp 1h11d· vii·lou~ J1i7.t'S le N>lors. Store, Re1teurent, La.nf', H.B. 847-9J24 ~128 m;ile!. 842-4~22 j J:.:SSARY. TF Ynu·nr. CRf-:. p R 0" E SSIONAL '''"' :;,;,.,,,. •.unk bl'tl..11, E11'1.IU11 ·"Pill ~l.~h ..... R!'OY.n~ unilorm, mu1(' 644-744"• •••·•· Bor 132 SPR . r k bd le FEMALE kittens frrt to INGER. Spanit l Pup,i;,1 AT!Vt;, SUCCF.S.'i ~lOTt. l(ll\titor • Dana Point, g,. --W-AITRESS n:g.~i rm K l more rhi ld1·@n~ !!ki p.qu1p, 11:•me1 ... AKC Ch · k 7l • \. 211 Q=36·~ I AUTO "''ilter 5oftt11er S):i(t; ICED 1,, d 1 Jl;ood homr, ' wks (l!d · ampion 1loc . S J.' ATED I.· 11·1LLH\G 1Yl Rf'; C!enif'ntt, Capistrano Arl'a. · ........ ~... I. IOY!, odd,; I.· f'rw:i~. t~nser 9r "'''""'" •29 833-3.J.«. 1 TRA(N"" \IA"AG J"\I"''".,. 1 , Qv,r 21 . t•o1' 9f'fVilll ~f,.xi-Plec l1t \l'nmo1,·t r & 'datr no•••••••nl . N' ••••n< 1 ..... ·"""' ,.,. r.i•. · ·' '·· r."' \ork in your own home. LEAVTN<.; 5t;it, •111• -fi GARAGE SALEI S35 ' ew . .,_. ' IS VERY REALl~IC 11'> &~I dell! ln area. Phone ran lood. F.1 M11t11dor, 1168 rl • h . 160 1_, ' · Sfl'a;·JI "'a!h'r k .11:85 afte r 6Pl\1. KITTENS -PaTI Sia.mesr. t • SJLKY PUPS AKC • I A •. llORT P~. 100 Of' r.;p11•poi·r Rlvrl .. c .,\I, in I rm c· air~ ; J:O u S!o\·r, rf"fri11:,.ra•or 11\'0l'l!.do rll')'f'r $71 '62-5&.U ·TV R d" H IFI . 1 roi1l h!k. Wf'•nl'd Ir Tl'llined . Champ b11.(kgrnund, -~ r.1~ 8li.1•16:; between 9:00 a.m. lrR1hrr bar S~: an Id lt'l'f'l'n S:2\)() Pr. \\'h.l1f' reh·iir· • 1• Tl:"<l'F.. Rnrl noon. \\'ELDER. htliarc, Exp'd. 11._,, ~•· J e G. OLF CLUBS -:\ y,·ond1. s 'torN ' ' t•i i ~48-461 :'1. !t/29 * Mfi-7335 * e C11d1!1ac l11r r111n () L!bforal ~'rl nRe BPfl('fi1s e Plullh Offu•f>!I • Sta.r1 Jmmed1111P!y <:<1rJ)t'!1n1t . ,..,; •croi.,1on f'l'llror16.';.Slfl'P~r11nfa,gold 9 f'd Sl:IO e " E PROOF I'" ad" r . f::... [ Light mP1RI: ' S50: kln1t All-" bf'-d I. riresstr SloO. 11 0(! much more. J717 iron5, w gr , . : •K -FLUFrY tortoi'f' "o l n r NGLISH Bull Doc. M111t. 7' JM'nrnrPrl, pRrt riml" lllr • 64.-..~;,2 *' SAO: ~r .... ·1n2 mal."h S70; rof· 1 \\', Balbi:wi. NR. S~; Rttl lawnmower $50. 1972 Zenith• •re hen! Leas f'm11.l1 ki!len, 6 7 J -3,J.) ~ 11·uk1. AKC. B ta ut l f u I ! : rnn1po~i ni;c rl<'PI. NPatnr~~ J, \\'IG Styh~t w/nlt~ 'xper. 1.., 1ab1, $40 12.l Via J.ido ~2-l«?. than di5COUnt prices t1n '71 "'Vt'.•, 5.31 Musi be 1un J~. 546--0304 [ 11c•rurary nf'tf'~s~r). CRll !or Appl,v in perM>o, 263 E. llth t\ord NB ' DIVORCE Salf': Sat May RALB?A B11y Club M'm· color, B&\V, ~tereo11, Hurry BEAUTJFUL fluffy kirtiell. DOBERMAN PUPS, T wk.a;; lnll'r\'if'w, penn y " 11 \'t r st, r.M. 3 ON~Y-~udent desk~. $l !I 29th. G·r'i'a t buy1 on !urn.. be!"llh1p tor 1ale, ;'-'usl Kil , !or lull Jll'!lechon. ABC Color Hsbrn _ Tiger_ 2 Black & Both milt; 1 N'd-l blrck. I fi~2--0!!1 1 . \\'nm•' De!k, rir11t.~r. I• h I,•, mlkf' nfft'r. 644-•4.178. :!:,'!·~~,,Mn All11nla, H.B. \\'hill'. 642-6493 ).....ll . $~. Ph: !>48-3792! , f'arh. 2 onl)•-r-he~I~ ol t'h•ir11, sl!rPO "'" It. brick·•· NORWEGIAN hi ;,ocr-,.,, • f. ·nl'r? C'O~iPF.~S,,T!O:"' R F: CF. PTIONIST-TYPIST. 1 \\'H~:RE ARE THE .lORS~ draw'l"l',, Sl!I •ach. 2 only-.; brick. 4676 SitlT& Trtt, . UI' lox stolf', . 2 LEFT. fluffy lonr haired ADORABLE PART P00·" IAY HE S2:i.OOO+ VOUR NPw off1rf' &-lurni~htni;:~. Allph11~1'~0!1t11 !1po~ition~ pr. rlillt'tll' J:l'I.~. S20 f'ach. lrl'illl'. !Univ . Pkl Lik' MW. _S1 25, 0tbtrsl969 MOTOR'lLA 7~·· grey kirttn~. 7 il'ksv.·ra nP.d OLE P U P PIE~ $10.1 FIR~ Yt:AR I:\ C0~1 ,\11S-Hr" ~;3(1.~ Call Mra. \\'hllt l'lfP 11~nin.1t llll\\', RP<IUI)' u •·r . lRS:i H:.irbor Blvd, Liem~. !;48-26.f.1. Col\.l!Olf' Color TV: ]US! It. box l.raintd. 644-.j,38~ 5.Jl 642-4818 rl1ys, S..'W-3885 t ves. SIONS It ~F:RVICE t'Bf'.S R.t WGN) rrl111eri h,ld·PXl'tllf'nl op. I C.M. ~8-!U:;i. INDOOR aarA(l! •tle-mov· JRVtNE COAST COUNTRY spent S96 on ntw tubf1. Qist RE U . THROlllili THt: SLIPPOP.·r I , nd--' I inr, must ... 11. rrfrir SIO: CLU ""w SS20 Sell $175 M&-6972 YOUNG mix@d dog, mit!I'. .A Tlf1JL T·cUp k nnyl k 1.UIOi\.""Ct: OF ffNA~('. * Real Estat• pnr uni ty or carrer m1 ni 3 ONL,.-3' llOf& -dlitir St't1, tabl, " ch11ir~ Sl o:.dbl bed, B* i1~~B75ERSH• IP ,,... •S7-10S. , Nteds good home. Capo lny pood!I' puppi,.s, Tiny toyl 'll OmPn ."'ho nM"rl i;:oo<I I in rood Cl'lnd, SG.q ll't . .1-3' tram, i box 1pr1ng "'' • ~~ . PANASONIC •• -.-k ,...,. .Beacil •9tj...2585. &!U ri ~crviCf'. 8'9J-9il9 IAI. l~\l l::~n·:-.1E;-tr A!>.· Sales * pa~ 1ni;: .](lh~. ln1rr\'1r .... ·lni;: I ~nish sofa · J(lvP IM'al . like PIA.NO •i= ZI ,. • --1 .=;;::=:.,.:=::·:;:::::.~--~ loo,.rv-:=':ioc:;::;::::::::I •( 1•c•;r R ,. BRO'"f"R '' -th 29 f va(uum t'.lt'aflf'r S10: misc.· . • "".· g-za~ lt\\1 nr ,,,.._ 2 Frmal• wtl•n• t Jong and l 2 BLACK 1mall mi,niatun ,.. '" .. "· · U 'HY,... .ru or .llf'w npv.·S199.S,.ni~hloveata t, maeh1ne•= I '---' '"" w/fanast1n ic "' rnorE~-.10;\'AL SAL&."· 1 nuJu1I opportunity in nrsni;c, c 011nty locaiiol\!I. . .. , n 1 $2' U"" 1_,. SUN MAY :io. '4>5508. 110 .,,_,.~· ~!·away """' 1,.. akrn 6 11 ta,. 1,..,. •ho rt h a Ir, H 1 b r k . poodlt&, I ~e,k1. Must find ~!Al". DAVID B. LOQK rNG· Jmall, very 1uccessful. li42-·t'lq~ r..... ora ' ·· r ~. ""'1 • U<NA<;ase $5. 557-9964 · ' s, ....,, 54fi....0082 !!12'1 homt S25. 546-1809. !..AND. well estab li1hed office . \\'O:\~A~ rompanion !or Harbor Blvd, C.~f. f.48-S4~i. ~ *A~:~~Ek~c!:~' ~~ soUfH ~m,rica_n emerald,, 'ti.Call ;,J6. 7667 0r M?-4itQ F'REE kittr,ng r.u1 e •nri-fl~i. GREAT DaM pup, AKC, 16, On• of the hottest loc•· 1 t'lritrl;· I d l1 . REDROO:\f -sinRll bfod, nrw htlard~ + many miK. \!/holeul1 to r1nir mRkers .. t.DVJNG, n1ust sell ne11,• I 2 t I I I . wk•. ~hfl11• qu11lity. I CALL NOW t ions in Or1n9• County. l1v,.-1n. ~~·~1. '"ho11 r~imf'.. Simtnon~ bo."< •prin11:,. m'atl, ilem,. Sal Ir Sun or bv. •ppl. F~81 qull.lit)•. 67:h'i0~!1 Sylv1nl• l'Olor T~. r,.mo t, l~~!nrrl mli~ i~I\ •• "..~..!,~ ..,,'~!;' * .i57"639fl * · rlt'f!~ d k I r rontrol & antenna incl. S29(t I · 1 ~. "" "" ·' ·' "' j 547.6771 We have a captive m •r· 11;ala1 '.\'. Ci!ll ror !ntprv\,.w, .~r. "~ '· m r ro • 110.l N. Bityh'Onl, Balboli A.IR CONDITIONER, • aprl, ·is-.-16• •FREE 2 •. •] ki ~TOY Fox Tl!rrier Puppiu k "l8 -· I lab\,., ch&\rs, Appl, onl)'. ldand, 673-74fi6 or fi7:...o628. 2100 BTU SI:,O· So . I .~ l ·' ' -11onn111•1 " llrn-.... · · c ~t~ ~~: ';~nl ~;k;O:*d _;vP~:.14, fl111y11;. 348--677,, 613-2977. GAJtAdE Sl!.Je.Old tlinlna: rm n,oordtr, S.is. ~~r . a,Of" SONY 560 TSEC sltrtto l11p, I ~~~;:;1. ,\;AO n1orher :at. ~~:~~e!u.~1':~~· .$50. 2 SOf'A hMi 150 fl11, ap1 11i'1.r TWIN bl!<I I . • centrr. N•w cond, S3JO. Call .. · ' .i/28 . mo ney. Draws a vail to 1 \\'O~fEN earo aood mon"'Y + refrig $:20; chitir S.'iO. 606~~ ul, rouch, cha ir, · rhlld" "" ... "· ~p f'tf', .. ~en· 536-1661 fl r 847-4539 HCT:.SE rPrfilit!'r 2 0 ~ 1 1 AUST. Shep. mix, 7 wk!, qualifi•d m an. DI CK 11 nrw 11·11rclmbg 1howln1 r lolhea, to)'• 1m tab1es, m, 'PO•• ffWlllJ mitcnlflt'; --C-;,· pr, 81 . , 1hots. Blut m'rlf', $10 to 1\1GR. Tra1nrr. lnttr\''>'' 11 BE RG 962•2421 / Ev•l. ~-"hrlf' F.oi.•hio~~-Car nee. h1arigokl, C<IM . misc. 4().')· llh , St, HD '2 rlN'SM'fS. ~212. SJ~VEr.TONF. ~!t1~. ('.()sf R!i hi ~anrit Ana llood home. 67>-00R7. J\t'ntucky J."ril'd Chlrken, I IJ.':0-01142 or ;,i~·io4l'l NU Qul'tn-.~1 b@d 1 t t : 5.1&-IRGS BOX S 00. ~200 or npa~1t otftr It s. 5-3110.,...==--~=~~1 1!129 F.. Cna.\t H11y. Cd\f 8C 7-6076. • . . rlN'!l~e-r, lablr, b1adbrd, box SPRINGS &: ~IAT· ;,1,;..:A:.!I . PET duck about 6 mo SAi tOYED pup1,'AKC, 1how NE,.. CAR-SA LESMA-N flf;Al. E~tat~. Lil•,. Wlrp '1 .11prin1 & m•tt. All Se11N CTARAGE lllllt -Dl'coi .. tor TR~&5.~~"&.7~77rsc.. 61f>.3223 . r.-31 : qoall!!~ SI~. " I ~ ltf\ml, turnfture, 10' blark A .,...,.... " Jf' Color Portabl,. TV ."1(>"'9211 II .f Or11nizf County !llJW'f'lalry Brokf'~ in!f't'l',1rri in form-~. In.. be~I. 540-3631 Whll' 10fa;bl'd8, bookA, pot-C HAR TER MembP.n;hip. urn .. VHF SJ25 3 KITTENS 6 '"V.'k& lboy1 l . a pm rlt"'it lf'r. Som, rrcreat!u1111l inti: 11 .R. 1'1~"'11· Srnd litlf'r, I . . V OR(';A.N, Baldy,·in modPI 11 · fj'f'Y1 dothln11:. 1'ri, Sat A e ~ e Klrl. ~93'2 5-31 . YORKJr; PUPPIES. \'f'hlcit' r~prnt-nri> dl'~u·rri. 1110 ~o. 102l D111l_y Pllot. P.O. L, like ntw SR.iO. Al~ Elhan Sun, •t2 Dahliit,,Cdl\f. Nfl'wpor1 Bellch Tenni• Cub. PRETTY al' Mile • lf'malr, AKC, SlM "-c R 1 R .,_, J"'" c--•• -,.,, c·,11r I 11•1• mopl• -k•• i•o. S:l;JO. 67H900 .c lt'O cal bfo11uty • ~~1 •7-• "-'•)' ll l'\l'r ol •· 01·~. no ·'°"· "~ ",. · · · ...... • "' FARULOUS col1eet1on •n-R"-Y klt!en 642-1897 ~31 .17===~··"°"~~"~~=-1 R.~I u·, 1111 , r n 111 1 i"~1 1 !11626. Antiq ues IOO 646-2.;16. TAKE OVER 21 1t:res, N011 II I 1 , , ' ·AFGHAN PUPPIES-!US ~ tiquf'l1 -P \•111), t l.c. Sat on. 00 r ' 'r old d ,_ Tru<"kll, Mr. l>111'rdi<0n , RF.GISTF.RF.D nul'!i' -P"' PRIVAT>". XL.VT F"r. n-vinci•I ciin'r 4'" "'· _. "d CdM WN $29 mo, Nl!ar 11• '"te y., • spaye C&I uee to Up. AKC Champion linr. '"" I r pi.rty ju,;t in-,.,., '" ...... aw11u " • ' 11.kr. 968-0047 aood ho!nf'. 6'2-G62S 5128 T~nnj; • 1-626-9875 .ro<>-41·t l. ll1flf' (l r riot"lor·~ 11ff1rf'. hrrilt'ri ctt'pt1'Sli 1n p:I•-"' old l•bll', fi 1·1uilh I. bolltt $~30. 573-1.S.. NURSER\' ciPlivf'ry _ llpplv I ~nrl l'f'.tumr nl 1r1i111nl' ,\ pop houl''· Olhrr 'col· 6'73-Ml~. MAfli"Y mlM: Items _ lrom FOR. . 1alf' Nttwport Beach J L!n.1, 2 Times, $2.00 A.OORABLE, fiutf)' lci1t,.n1. POODLE PUPS: I Wk:&, l- ln ·prnon. l.Jov~f• Nuru-.r) ""'?1'1''"11('" 10 Cl11!t"1hPCl Ari IPclabl"'· 646-4102. e_B..UNK BEDS. may .be...us-. antiQ1.1t....ta.moclem.1umlnltt.. Tiann11 CW) i\ferJtbenhtp, SJ?,.2835 5/28 Ma.It.; ?·Fem. 70JA Ne~;nort 8h·d, C.1\t. 'f K" 1~ · ,•/o D11ily Ptfol, 1 ;,ANISfl '"OD"RN ,. · f'd 8!1 •1nrlf'~ Also l1ridl'r. Alto a1-'0f1f'd d\j;hf! .. SQ W. -UCU:-l!M=3971'--p. ~malt 1 yr, nd1 1X>VEtYlffiier -Pm'lil lo '*' 345=4:m-T liiiiiOiiO ... iiiiiO .... iiO .. -._. P.O IJQ"< l,'60, C \I. 92626 u . i" r. ' 1n1n1 d II hom '"'"' n..7 --_ __ _ 1 ~f'I , 1id• bolrrl. ('()UCh, 6i7>-2521. Crnlflr SI, C.M. NlCE roll-top de,k. S250: tncd. yd. S• 1 -011 ~: 1. u e . .....,..,,. 6 !il2'1 8AS."ET Hound puppiei NURSES AID ES R.f:TIRF:O m"n or "'"m111n lo 111111... rhf'~t~. 1"·11 bfd8, t.IOVING, :\lust Mii lt2 COLLINS. &I Is. Sat. \Vurlllw 1pinet piano, S250. 33&-4•93 . 5/28 ClJ1l: flllffy kltten11. Rf'1,I beau~a. Oiampk>n Jo:x(>f'r. 7A~l-31'\I 1h1 f1, OPflra!I' "n"ll u·r rr,.11m l11r11p.~. Gi.\.-0731. 10' Rf'd Ji10ft1 • sn Sun a ~fon. ltock, pltnl, LI J.-4553 BtAUTIFUL nutty rrey I: 846-6815 $11~ Ii~. S1~ & up.·~ H I• -'on B o•h ~!r11t in ~lhfla , stiori hr•, --""7~' d 1 r ~ SJGNS '>''hi kitt I J I k F1 un '"•· • ... ,t. f'ltt\' "'ork .~ wk I ANTIQUES by Wanda ltuU· " ...,.,.... _, • r Iv.....,., arranrrP.ment.a; · : Srott fronts I win· '"1 t'm& ti. w s. • u{Jy I "'k old kl1ten1 to SCJINAUZER 'PUPS, Mila Conv•lescent Ho.sp. fi42_Q()()ti •fl,r ~ pm man 31~1 Bolu., t.lidw.ay LOUNGE cha.ir, bm\\'n/&olrl , pholo~. do"'!, bol!.ot11o. tr\1cb. t'or ,.~L G7:J..68M Bal l:Hr . SJ~ cood homts. S57-~ 512S at tfud. Granm. 11111 Florida Ave. City 192-3622. Spec. in d!!p eJ1eel1tnl ('l')ntl. 15(), 64.~ GAR.Ar.r. Salt:. O\nlnJ' 5f'I , CAii 962-3887 or 541-6.ilS. .-REE 1o lood home • k11-4 D._ck & '>''hilt&: calico kit· 846-03.lA H.B. M7-l.S15 n."·s P 1lmt i P~t.llP~I hilt. 1rl11111 or 642-5.108, F"N>nch provincial hf\d, TV I' BLACK n•usahyde tiolll ltn1, 2 ft'&y I Tabby .l I teni. ~7.0 5/28 HorHI &5' 2 fl11y-1\·N>kl~. 1'NTTQUE .lflrh C c, n l u r y T\VIN-.;(s~. oompl,.tf'. ln *"'· tic. 2923 S..kl'r St. CM . S.."10; dhM'tlfl' SJ~; strreo S20; butt colored. $13.~ 5/28 ir~R~E~[;":_";ip:;.,~,;; .. ~,:>;b;;l,;,k;;-ikl;,;:,.1 ::::::.::_::_ ____ .....::::1 N U RSES AIDES Huntington Beach ll!'lrphonr , ll'/b1111rry bnx. xln1 1'nnrl. $40. G r , a 1 l\10VTNG Salf' • Cad\lla<' •J1t11ker SlJ. 54~27112. Kl1iEN$ dtsperattly nttd ltNJ. 54.f.l192. 5129 r-.tUST SELL. NOW! Exprr, n·rny. a4B·;'l0fil Convaltsctnt Hosp. P"rfrrL Appr11ist'd $17~, tell h.oirr,dn: ~7-44i6. Householrl, mi.'lc, Sat. lTotl WATI:R pump 1c .'lO' of ho&t; aooct nome ~ 5'0-5199. ~/28 5 black "mini" kilteni . Rc1lstf'red Nnnlnc OPERATORS • 11porl&'>''f'Ar 1U11 Florida Ave. SIOO. •91-llOR• LJh.'E l'lf'>''-Avoc::11do Vf'lvf't Herbert t.n, HB, t•• ~'Coded exttn11Mln lRdd!!r. 3 kHlt n11 2 tictr l blk 6 wJc:l. 4!).4..3100. .-,131 Qu11.rttr Hora... ll.l ... on! -~ c•·•I ••• -·s Cbt1tn111 m•n-. Hed tr•tn. IUI' expt"r. y. vtll.lll p11y. H.B. M7·3SIS f0ATLY PILOT tor t.erion! .ol• l. Jovi>se11, S91nlsh 011k ... 11 Dllily Pilol C1a&rltied _ ... ''""""""" · 6.f6...&M S/28 Sell the old sP\tff $te1dy. Ml-3472 N.8 . • ........................ ' Call 6'2:$1' .. Saw.! IAbll's. 673-69:2'6. .. Ad. Soli-51178 ,Sell kile itel!ll nowt FREE xf~na. 5G--2T21 i--3!. ntW' •tutr BllY the lnr. ';:";;,1·~~~"'r. . ~ As k for Mr, Milham pp1es ,1 rnpiM• V&il ' • ·1 ' AKC,• e~d : lin!. ilver.; ... 21 i .__ AKC A 2' Pu ... • $75.! ia tutt l find c, 16, pi@s. ISO. wt., 0 "' 1how. '" • liM, 987! ... ' . pion al• , .. I DAILY PILOT :JI) J~[;;'";;'""';;';;"""'~]aJ;!-IL •..!:°I:~, J ~J I._ _T'""_""_'"-'"_,j[iJ1(._ _r"_""""'-'"'_,jli] f'• ....,,....,.~ 856 Boats, Power 906 Campers,''Siil•/R irit 920 Mobil• Hom•• I§] I :;I ;;Auto;;• "';;Solo ~l~;; .. ;'1~ .__I ;;·-";;;;" "'-;;;;'"·~l§l~Q I [ 968 1 Autos, Imported Auto1 lor S. Hors•• 93S Trucks 962 Tlucks 1 "'"""·s-=-2 r""'oR""'D-Vz-==T:':':CoN~ 962 Autos Wanted J§]l ~I _.,, .. _ .... _. ~l~~I 910 Autos; lmportld , __ H_O_R_S_ES __ BO_A_R_D_E_D_ 2'6' CHRIS '511. TS, ss. or. $31) mo ** BACK BAY I Slip a1a1L S3250. T.!4 20th M0-1877 * * $46-574;1 SL. N B 613-7257 Liv•stock 8S8 I 2l Chris Cab Cru1str hilly t'pt.franvas 1rlr. Sl900. BANTAM Chick!! SJ, oahy 67:J-7t71 Btal/645-2734. duck! S2.50, bab.v g('t'Sf' 12 ~'T, boa1, fihi·pgla!~; Iii~ $3.~. ~12 So. E. :0.1esa Dr. \'\\' hus. $200 Or ol!f'r. Good Corid. 6·16-1821. l!YDRAULJC Camprr Re1no\•erlst1111d ~11vy rh1ty all n1 f' I a I 1..'0ru;lrucuon, handles up to 12 II. camper~ INSTANT HOUSING WHY WAIT? easllyoprraterl and 11·,. \'f'ry The all ntw ·Village House 111111': !(') USf'. O~~inally ~I by I evlft /.lobile Systems S300 • will ~arr1fl~Jor· Sl50. with sloping shake roof can ~~nr n1ore inlormatlon call: be ·yours aow! Models on :'>4~2008 display at. .• CAJl.tPER sl'lt'll~ ·I-ft. over BAY· HARBOR ...__._ cati. t'it11 any 8-f~. truck. MOBILE HOMES CRUlSE TO ALASKA! Has bf'en on truck only 142.i Saker St., Cosra l.lesa Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 A l'OuplP \\llntrd In sharf' ex· ".""'". Likr oew. s275. Call JU!lt S. ot S.D. Fv.-y at Harbor 900 I Pf'n~, .. ~. NPii 70, riif'!lf'l ~:47:,S .1.l1rr 5 .. Fullerion. .n4/.)4(1.,94711 General l -------~--rruiSPr ~lust be boai pl'(). Cycles, Bikes; NEW M bil H 20x52 2 PICKUP & CAMPER 6 t'yl., 4 Speed. Hrall'r, Po11· er Stl'!l"rin~. Cle'\11 & Nice • Tv.·o Sltl'!per Ciose1.s, S1ep Bunipt-r, \V~rcr Co111ainl"f, !!tC. etc. t63fmA1 $898 Mike McCarthy BUICK F R E E p!r . ~lan to Ix-lamiliar Scoote(s '15 ° e ome ' 11 /<'nl?. •m. 6 proplo oo ----------1 BR, 2 ba. $12.'SOO. Sf't up' &r !Zr.Xi Bt"llch BIVrf, a ! S.D. fwy ~ lndtcpd in Costa ~1esa's on1 3341 / '''\ "''" hoa1. 2 l'rr11. O"-'rw>r &: u.1ift' THINK ""'. .,. . ....,,,., l , GREENLEAF PARK. ~750 ~ Basic boar ng murse nf. + ans !o thi~ 11.d. RE:'!. furn. · \\'bittier Ave. '69 CHEVROLET fl'rt'd to f~ public fl't'e \\'rue Ill Class1 ,1ed Ad to:I'/ HONDA 548-1698 * 645-2510 C0 30 ' TON ol !!harge by the Balhoa t:i9. c/n the Daily Pilot, l-_,.::.;:._:::~.c-..:::c::.:::_ __ Jc11b & Chasst~ Shor! \Vhf'p! Power Squadron. Sad as P.O Box Jj60, Costa :O.lc>sa IM 1966 l2x53 2 BR, lgP_ awni~s. Ba~ llO V8, Po""'C'r Steer· 0 11 "--1 !12626. •'FRIEDi 'HOER~ storage shtd. Nice C.M. I'..-u pcl\Oot'r '""' lnt: LA Adult Park." $4995 or affer in~. Po11·er Brakes, 4 Speed 1augh1. Ne iv class ... ~ s1art E S T A BL I S H E D yachl ,.,. •llACM ,._.,, •I 1ES#JJ&i 1 Amrrican :0.!obile Trans. Ideal lor camper (Ir 11.t 1 p.m., :..ray 3l. Every ch111·1er agf'nr\,' nttds ~harp .,7 6824 M•7..,,,, .BU61nes1, Lo mill'!ag,, Su-"'f • • 11:1.)-,,.,., Home $ii.It's, ;)4."l-!UI ,V1ond11.y night for 13 hoat~. powl'.'r & AA il, ro 100'. per. \l.oet!ks. At NP10o'por1 Har. t:rnit '.\!1n11('y 54S--ll!ll lHE BIKE SHACK :0.10Bl'LE Homf' 10 X 50. ''ALL F'INA.'ICU•IG bor Yachl Cluh, 7~"" \\I, NEW BICYCLES Partly furn. Mf'1al a10o·ninJ.!:, AV.AILABLE" .., Boats, Sail 909 -Bay, Ne10o'por!. Brach. PARTS e ACCESSORIES Cemt>rit steps. Sroragp shNI Bring 001ebook & pen. \'ENTCRA 21 w I moorin~. Expen R(·pairs. Ali MAkes S3000. Adult Park. "642·0131 M·acH.oward cil first nigh!. Register A-1 11nfhnrage oH Via OJX'n 12-!IP1\l-S11t-Sun J(}..'i SHAST.'\ 8x2.'i "'/nicP cabana 11.t that t!ine. Cont11 r t Cnrdova .. S,\I.', of Lido !sir. 1093 C BAKER, CM Jiv'g rm, Rrot $4j mn. Arlult &39·960o or 531.(]6()& .\fr5. Isabel Pe a s e l,1 kr 11r w, 6V "'"l h11ll<'t')". Near .f"a1r1•1r"' 546-4130 park. C.l\.1., $1195. &16-3931, Corhl'r 1st & H11.rbor 673-18.')5. ntll.~!('J" !llP Sl\ltt'h, hi-art. 3 ·10 UYGIE 2:i"', 531 IUhf' fi7."~lo:910 f'l"CS. S11nt11 An11 BILL BARRY PONTIAC-liMC-F'IAT NEW '71 GMC V. T. P ickup I. I Ft. Camper full l'Qulp~ ZU~t53, T101. WE PAY TOP CASH ALPINE t:rl giaS5. Ht:avy duty F&R fOR !18.le -'61 Au~~in Healey 11pnngs, brake boostPr, 3.7 AJ;k fOf' Sales lifana.cer '.\000. Excel. eonrj. Ne1v tires rtar axll'!, 3 spefii alitom11.1ir 18211 Beach Blvd. & ba11ery, 11·ire \\•heels. top, !rans .. 11. pusb.button ra?,lo. Hunlin&:ton Beach & 'l"nne-'lu. $1 !00. 968-12'18 Plumb1n2 throughout. ~ 1ve !47-608'7 KI g..3331 I "C~'a~l~I ·~'~'·~•~3:..:;pm"'°'~--­ gallon but!l~ Lank C'Omplele •-~-------~ e 1956 CLASSIC Austin insulation. TorqUe ~1indows. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR HP11IP.Y Street Le~lan1. T"•elve vol! lighting S)'St('m. FOR TOP USED CARS Aluminum OOdy, f: n g I n e rourtt'en gallon plastic wa-lf your ~·r Is extra clean, blown. Su1t-'lble Jor V8. Will lf't' tank, fifty pound 1nsulal· Re Us first. haggle at $j()(l, 673-3210, ~ lee box, w.-o pi.tf'. burner, BAUER BUICK sroragf', hand tallort"d rlr11p-23" E. 17th St. BMW f'ries Sleeps !iIX w/op11onal Cost11. lt1eu 54i-7765 ----------1 larg~ iable CJU~n Elle bf'd l.MPORTS \\'ANTED AutomoU&vl'! Excellence a.rratlj:emeni. PartitK>ned Oranaa Countlea dra""l"l's, litany othe:r lea-TOP S BUYER ~ures. Bll.l. MAXEY TOYOTA SALE $3987 18881 Beach Blvd. tt. "'"•· Ph. &11.s.;.;s 1 ROY CARVER, Inc. 2926 11a.rbor 81\"d. CMta :0.le!'ia 546·4444. $499 DN. NOW'S THE DATSUN $98.31 rno. TIME FOR $499 is tht: !oT!ll down-pay. mtnt $9~.31 ls fhe 101111 QUICK CASH monihly paymPnl 1n('luding '67 DATSUN PICKUP 970 DATSUN $2 195 1969 Dtlsun P ickup Radio, Heater. 4 Speed, Cab over Camper a.lups six, Sharp, 17.0X163 ) ~e.rut Le.wiA QP VOLVO 1006 Harbor, C.:'ol &1&3303 DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AJID SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. Hunti.netGn Buch 342.ns1 or ~0-06G '65 DATSUN PICKUP 4 ~P'I. d!r: J-"am1ly work b:lrst: Fu'f' e nainr red, l owner, re- t1ml r1rrman. Sacrifice . (P1v51.1 1 \ViH takt: trade er fin11 i1f" pvl. piy, ".'all 510~11!-0 or 49'1-7506 11..h 10 A .. \~1-------~1 71 DATSUN WAGON 111' Runabout, 7.l hp Johnsnn hp O/B, ll'lr, t'llStomliC'd in-framf', C11mpanol11 equrp. ilx3fi NICE. rompletc!.v furn. $13.95 h•rior. 5:1100. 4~1-1!1.J.1. · s· 2 BR lb h C "' · "1otor. Good for skiing nr w/Un1uan1or 11rat, 111n1111e II' al , e na 1n 1967 Datsun Pickup l1shing. $1fi5. Sa£'rif1cr: COLU!\IB!A Tl'. rigged for sf>v.' up .nn1.s, U'Pimann Jlllrk , \\"fPQOI. Rearly to lax, hCf'nse and linllJl<'l' THROlJGH A Runs hke new. (UVT 8~1\. char~eti on approved ct'Mit BRrwick Imports, 9!18 So. 4 ~p~rrl. rt1d1~. lieate r. t ult for ~~ oionths. Tht> £'&Sh DA'IL Y PILOT Coast H"'Y .. Lagul'\a Beach. pnrf' $1999. !O~XAXl. Bar. f. • ...... 642 7 R11d10, Heatrr, 4 Sprl'rl, Air 842-11211 I racP. (;('0011.. spin,naker, ('Ir. hr;ikrus . \O. Sp!"'f'c!, 1n~rr11p n1ovp 1n. $l:r.1.1. -II~ price including tax '& Hbtonse W j Jfi.-IO;)l or 4lJ.J.9i71. wick Intporrs, ~ So. Coo st 1!1 $4274.3.i. Df'ff'rred prit'i' ANT AD H...-,.. I. 11 i:: II I\ L. Beach. · Cond. & · Camper Shell. l'.'ANTEO. bay boa1 . lll lo 20 Hrari. running ,f,, t•ab ht!'~. con1rol 1<1:e11.r~. 3 sr"' i1p t1r<'.S 24:>.."17 MOBILE Clean ocean t\IDV.i7.11 ft., Lyman South Coast or ba11r1-r 1 ,, 00 <·ha'..J:r 9 ... _ ni uc h incl. $Z?J. firm. 67.'i-~9/o: 11fr ai~, rriany xti-~s. similar. &1i.j9!JCI . mnn>. ·~· ~ ·1•1•1 6 * 714/:i.10-4017 • \\'ANT 10 liVt' on the bayfront ( 12' Prngu1n _Like ne", Top BULTACO· Matador 196!1, Costa l\tesa _ Fronller for only S21,.iO(l? See ·Class/ qua h1y r~c1ng han:l~:are. ! 250cc. S1rert or Dirt. 1700 jlxJ.'i _ Sprent S'18. lOO, Newport Sch. T,ra1ler. $6jl). 968-1228 11fter miles. Just tuned. A Srr11l 11t R .l-3140 it* G.13-2961 pm $150 rash. Orig. C05l f!G;). M t H 940 Boats, .Maint./ 1 ALBATROSS 23-fool sloop . .)49--0.'i.10 O or ome5 . SerVIC• 902 ,\lain, jih, and gpnm11. sn il!'. DIRT b\kt>, f'iONDA 3071. BEAUT. SPI/ con ri · r or r1 C0~1PLETE BOAT Coekp1t rovrr. lrt ~dr slip. Good cond. Custom p1pe5 & Cru1S1""·111r. liken r "'· 12.000 SERVICE $7.iO. or IK>!'t offer. 67~7360 .M"at J-:nobby tirt'S. Q11·nrr mi·flyd. iop. AU'-COFlfl + ~lnn!hly undf'ru.·alf'r boltom rla~·.s, 117~2777 e1·pnings. movjni;:. must ull $300. e'·"ry extra. 7 Be11.ron Bay dt:11.ning -Zinr &. prop 1/1' "A"' elai;s Catamaran. 96S-1228 i~"='"""~~1-·~~~-~--I i'l'place.menfs -Bollom in-Trlli!r r, Fasier Chan Hobil'. 6.'iOcc TAJUMPH: 1!160 196!! 21 ' Dodg# Pare-Arro"' SJ)'Ction -Grk"011\ rrrair -2 n10. mooring $ 7 5 0. Triumph TR6 mii~, hike l'dotor Hom!': Dys; 642-3373, AiDe.rut Le.wiA VI VOLVO · 1·•1188 ,. '""'" tax•• The laslPst drnw in !lie \\lt'.~t lg .v · nc "" I · ."H~--1():1\ nr 4!H-9i71. lic-ense & tiniinre ch&.rge . 642·5678 . , . l\ Daily Pilot Classi\11'd Annual perct:ntagt: rat r..1 ~-,-"°"'----~= Ari. 612~5678 \\"r 'll hc.>lp you sell• 641-567g 11.40•-:. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New --980 O\'er 13.> NPw & Usea Carsl ;:;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;i:;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;i;::;;;;;;;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~I To Oioose fmm 1966 HArtior. C.~I &16·9303 Open 'Til 10 P .M . ~9 CHEVROLET 20QO E. l!t 51 ., Sl!nta Ana 314 TON 'tlst St. 111 S.A. frwy.I 5.ifi-1000 811 ft. PiC',k Ufl, VR, Au1omll· I ----.::C~~=~=-ll 11c, Po"·"r Srt'f'r1ng. Lo11· '68 GMC SUBURBAN M\lP~. Good Cood. Carry all. V.11, 2 Seats, Clean '"FlNANClNG. TRADES &. Ready tn go. AVAJLABLE" $199S Brighi 1.~:ork Roltnm 1146-2:i47. rstm & chron1rrf, r.tolly EvPs: 548-3681 pa inlini: -Rigg-Int:" repa ir & • KITE Sailboat S 7 00 p;iint job $800 or bsl ofr. T .1 T I 945 MacHoward "ALL t"INANCl1'G AVAfLABLE'' tunlng -Li1f' salvagr -642-711!1"' rai ers, r•v• H rd H1gh10o'ay ll"3llf'r, dark blut:. 839·9600 Or 531-0608 Mac owa 1-fotonJ. Key,;, \\larrhrs, Elc, 673-1860 Balboa '69 V\V , 2·1~, perfect cond. 16' Sha.sta. Sro\'C', ovrn. l c I'! CornPr 1!11 & Harbor YACJfTS ROYALi!: JKC. e 32, P.C. racin~ sloop. Xlnl AU t:xtras & , , r v Ire bo~. 271 gal . "'a!er 111.nk. -=~,;,'°;:;;"'~'~'";::;:"~==-I 839·9600 OR S31·0608 , 2912 W. Coast Hw~·. N"R cond. l\lust sacrllice SWj(). f!'C'Orrl~. Dr. Scott 5-14-5262 Slepp11 6. Eltctric br11ke!I. VAN Cornt:r 1~1 & Harbnr 92660 7141&1.~g10 or 4!l.'>-<ll4it Vr!'Y <;:teai:i "a,n~· in exCl!!lent '69 FORD E -100 Santa Anii '"'• -1·-' ~ ('"' ' \ I ~ ' •' -;) B t /M · S46--2 j 77· , , . _. C!lrn!lllon. ~ x l.2 cii.rivas zip-VS." RAdio Heali-r, etr. o• 1 •rine 904 e 26' EXCALIBUR -hatP €iS KAWASAl\L._F'i S1di:\\md· prr room S70fl."%2-76S9 "ALL f:INANCING '60 1 ton, g X 10 !lake bl'!rl. Eq\lip. fiDcrgias~ hull only, Br11nd er. Street It di11 equ1j)pf'd. . ',, AVAILABLE '' Good cond. New n1bber. BIM INI !Op for PD"Pr hoal In new. $1100 or offrr 646-2:1~ Strom:: r unning. $4 75 . Trailers, Utility 947 J!l% Pomon11, C.M. 548-4204 35· to 40' cla~~-3 ho\\~, 132' COLU?-IBIA s AB RE ' 5:16-1965, 220 Delroil SL \\'ANTED-Utility tr a I If' r MacHoward ·71 Dodi;:t' Tradt'sman 100. 11'idth ilt', 5' hit:"h 11ht'n Sleeps 4. H.B. 4'x4" or 4"x6", 14" wheel11, TakP Qver paymenl!, with B closed, S40. R.arlar mll !iil lor J $~950 * 714/R46-.1445 YAMl\llAS: M, t...,,·o 125'!'; rrltffinahlr. in Jd. rol'\d. 839-9600 OR 531 -0608 ol A. ;,.io-s2.i1 • onrl ~ Cort\pr l!il & Harbor I ~::._:::._:c::.::c--~~=c ll Dtcca 101. All alum. 6" LIDO 14 Clran. excel cond. Bultaco 100: run ':. · :i.:p 64~2142 11ft fi. s .. ntll Ana '6.l·'i Ton Chev, 4 ,.pd.10..16.;. Get set for • super summer witli one of these great Mercury 5ta- tion Wa9ons, these Mercury Station Wagons are still wear iiig pre· summe r price t119s. Don 't wa it too long, before summe r tirrives! high, be-~~ l'.>"".'<24". Rarla.~ S'\."i(J nr bl>~I offer. Tr11.ill'r cham'?"r. Al~ \\illy,; .5ta'I Ai';;u~to;,S~a~•~vT.;c~e~,ip~a;dhs~94ii9i l.---~~~~---rirps k whls. Saddle tanki1:, mouftt 1:> d iam. 01as1 41 1 ! int'"I. 67~10.i ) ;,·~·~··~>~l~f'-<4~0t;.....,.~c;-'CCC:-I:;;;--;:::::::'.'"':::::--:=:;:-:-: • HD 1.prin~!'i S7JO, Jlj,lJ l!it riiam. A!I mn~1rur11nn 71fft:' ~·· c · 1 1 "" .1 GIRL'S 26"' 11 10ot 3-spd hikr, ~ Che\•y pngu1t'. complf'te. IH. ". f. " •. , ·m••• .. ·' Good 1 h 1 h ... ~ ion ~ass s oop-..,., sai ~ • . k ••n. .... ,., ...,..,._ .. iuum. or yac I or is 116 . 6 __ 81VVl hlk w/i1•hl rrim. rmpor1rrl NPerl!' 10o·or ""'· Chevy ho&! S12j. 49:l-OOJ6. \ k J::ear,. ,:lO(l. IJ· '"'" from Aus1r.11.ia . R1ddtn 10 Po"·eri;:l1dt: b'ans. $ 2 5 . '66 Ford pick-up, radio, Avrn. B r. · 130 &if 561l:t Rl6-;i6~2 RECREATION CENTER htater. VS. 4 spd tr11.ns, gd PA.IR 413 Chry!h•r·~. I : !1111 llmll.li. • · .)-'· ' · mnd. Sl,000 or bf'.st olfl'!r. gears. lo hours S~10, $1475. ~ BALBOA ro, exlr8.s, ask· '70 Jitlnrla 175 :O.-tnro-Crns .... "Iii G'.\TC. V.fi 401 Cl romp, ROY CARVER, Inc. * ;;."l&-3912 * I ing S3200 i · Xlht ror dtn f,, i i. $4;,(l or eng1rlf'. Xlnt rond. Nt:w 646-ilfl.l * 673-26.'!fi * 2925 Harbor Blvd. U a~EVY WNG VAN Fae SAILBOAT compass E:>.-olr. Mui;t Aell. 2131592-2422; hf'itd.'I" k !tarter. Aft l pm Co,;ta 1'1Psa 546-4444 Plorer Modf"I No. s.i:; '"·I 21 1 Victory . Loaded! 71417129-~967. :i.'l7-700:.'~·===~~ v~. Munclf: 4 5pd, pa.Jl.l'll'!d, 7 R-12 1847/R46 ·237 ·_'.! -'69 Ford S250 R II n Jl: l' r "'lOP nval~. \'ent windo\.\'S. 64~5692 or 642-~. Sl3 .l,' • •.J rvN!. 6.'iO Triumph Bonn r v 111 t' VW ENGINE 40 HP Camper· SP"c; all x1r11.~. Jm. 517.i.;_-1 nr Tr1lriP ·1!17-1084. e \VATER m11n ifolrl for .l4~1 CAL. la.Loaded Racer Clioppt"r.· Extr11. clt11n. Xlnt * 530·6940 "* 1nac, wMr $29-18. ·1;9 0111111 !I' · 'M PIV. nu paint, tires, gen, or 409 Chevy. Edelbrock $.iO. 1 $83.iO:.'NB slip iw11i!. 49-1-0451 ronrl. Karl ;i4i;.~n<1. NEW en,eincs." ford v.4. for rninJ")('r. 1111 xtra~. 1nrl· itrl V-S en~. must ~ell tbla 894-1628. J Boats, Slips/Docks "9JO ·10 TRJU)\'1PH -D11yton11 SOO boar nr bu,e. $59.i, Comp!~~-rrlri~. Jmmac. Sl695. El'f'S; "'k. Trd ok. 6 -ts-4983, UNIVERSAL a ! om i c -4 cc. 1700 milr!'i. Xlnt cond. 51J!-432fi 49)-7081 llT.r-Ol4~ ~ngine 35 amp alternator, BOAtslip av11.il, J uly Isl, Jor $9j(J. 494-1224 l'F'°l~V~E-7~,---,po~k,-,-. .,,~,-w~h-,~,1-5, 'j() rorrl 12 ton r .u. v.11 ,48 lnternat1on11.I p u ., ;nod S40. 67546.1!1. 60"-70". \Vide slip. BRIOGESTONF.: .'fJ!.JIM)cc. "'idP r ims. ' llt11lhPad . Ne~ inrr;ior. Ex-nd $..100 or be!it ofr. Ca!! Boats, Power 906 673-6005 Xl.nt mec'hiioii;al cond, $175. -* 962:-8983 rves * tra mo I or SJ()() ()r hP sT , en t 2 . 5.57~ a&k Jor ~p SPACE AVATL 646.0037 H.T ~" f{'llMlflahle-offer. 'fil Fo1-rl bt" pm . .. j7 Chevv .,..,} 4 spd E--1,--, o•-"• """" m-'-' ,J~o~h~0 ·c__--=~---'""'°" 23' INTERNATIONAL. 160 l'i"-Jt'l' SAILBOATS . "' ., . . ~"'"' '" ,,-,, "~" "., -10-spd f.n~tish l>ikP. Bn1ke~. Hi-Ri~e &r Holly, All or $300 or he!1 rf'a!l(lnahlt: offf'r 1!170 Rancher1l 500-Qnly 5.000 Mfl.r<'. Cruiser. Tan rl t: n1 !railer, radio, R.D.F'., drpfh M>Under, bait tank, hf'ild. 1,~! than 50 hrs. Sl0.000 in- \"l'Sled. l i500 firm. 54/l-31f•3 • 1173-fiQJ6 • h,cllt& w/g-rn,rn1nr, waler p;irt. 54.11-7672 R31i-.ifi72. m i. LJkt' Ml'"'· Loti of ex- Boatt, s .. ecf & Ski 911 juJ,!'.~. S7~. 842-.11117 !~~~~~~~~~~ rr11~. 13000 49-1-6.103 I, 1940 FORD rv. v-.11 1967 .JOHNSON 1/0, iri hull . '6!1 HONDA CB-350. Beautiful .• ______ _,I [ '1 J FI at h,." d r Pc , n 11 Y Auto leasing Lo mi. Srorrd. $.\XI. Autot lorS.S. h I-" N d ,.,, 1:1.l 1'9. L1kl" ne"· "'fr ill trlr . .o\fC'r 11.u '"'· ' f"C s P 1 • LEAS[ \l -A 1-I ' &IZ..:ml:i · borty work $.\iCI. or be!l ol· • •JS' OWEN \Oo'/Jlt"w '"'in l'nt:. . nn.v f':i>:oras s .-a a 12900 "14 7895 '70 Yam11.hll MX. 1550, Xlnl rrr 836-'1672. 964 • Bf'gt na.v1g111ional equ1p. I ~~·=·~·~-~~· ---~ Like ll('W cond. v 11 1 u f' CENTURY 111' grii;v mariflf' t\Jnntni: ~d {, very last. General 950 "66 f"ORD Van. rt:bl1 mo1or. '6.<I Cad El Dorado ·· S169 mo SJ.'i.000: will ~ell for Sli.soo.1 rno:. !'IHI 1rlr. Xlni rond. . • 673.--7436 * E:'ll~!om /)ll lnl JOb. $1500 nr '70 Ford 500 Gakxit: 67~1. :\1u~t J<rll. $109.l. 673-66..1.l 'Ill BSA ·51lcr ELECTRIC car, 2 dr, slnt lrarlP. 6t'i-43!M) nr 64.'i-5.i20, 4-dr .............. 179 1.10 ·, ·. 1, Mnrl $j(l(), or bt'sl offer. a~k fnr Chiincr . '69 Qll!vy Caprice' >968 23· formul11. 01\.'IC 210. . SOOO l1rm Xln 1 t~M. 642-8845 l,;{I houN. 91111 r11ok. radio, [iJ !>19-4318 f'l"f'S 11'! 4P':\1. l!l6!l DODGE Cusrom 1()(1 I.) 2-rlr ••••••• ., ...... Si!l mo outrii;:gt:r. ~untop, d,. p 1 h Trauportition rh H 0 N 0 A·: 3"0;. , s 1 r,. e 1 Antiques/Classics 953 T Pick Up. :\1f'tal k gl11i;~ '69 ford LTD 2-dr •• S79 mo !inder, h"lr. many t:xtra!i. 1 .:I Sc\-amhlrr. l,,l)(lks & runs l9-l0 fORD P.U. V-R fhit hf'arl covtr, f; ryl ~t1rk ~hif1 . Like All Cari w11h Air $6.100. 213/~7-466.11 •••!••••••• ,goOO. $.12.i. 547>-4207 rrr.enlfy o~·rrhaulf'd . NPrd.• Nrw only ~ mi. $1700. SOUTH COAST fi7.'r2~·t2 CAR LEASING e 26' ('tl~tom '61 1n HP ! C S I /R t 920 e 1970 HONDA •3:;(). SL, LQ paint • hnflv. Wllrk. $3.'>Q or .:C.:...::.,.C---~~~~ Ch..v, !I vs. Sl"s 4. gRllrv,' amp rs, a. en mr, likf' nf'\\". s:17.'i. Call hP~I offrr 1136-5672, ·57 rono I, lon-Stir.k, i; (')'], :i.oo· \V, Coagl Hwy. ~.R . ,. ,If bC'd 37 000 on.It" mi Jn fi4.l-2182 f:vc>~: fi7.1-82ro he1td, gf~. l'l" Rft rlrrk. "7fl 1fiori Datsun truck with 5'"1S-.)ll21 N<'wporl Hgl~. Sports, Race, Rods 959 · ' · Ptrm slip. 1\1us1 ~P!l~ $2500. c11n1Pf'f s~:i. Manyextras. e l!J70 YAMAHA 25 0 . ~plf'm1 irl conrl , S-~9~ tl\~h llr ''WEED It&: re!'lp" •. clean 6-,3--028.'. I , · RUPT n. -g ,-k rt f trarll" rnr rRr ()r VW. Pvt out '"' -,,11 ... , .. 5 It trai;h -·' 492-624111 I ·•· F.NDURO. C1P11n. LQ miles. ,,,,.ci,, ... a , ramc u ... u "'" 17 f'T. Jnhnard, frailer; !!170 C~tJ HIGH C;imper Cn!I aft ;( $.'lS-4911. only, mag \\'hl11. xlnt cond, p!)" 71."16-6646· II 64 3- 5678 turn 111!0 c.11.~h thru a Daily license, la.x p11.iri. Coa~t Shell. J:hll cond. $150. TAC 0 .\1.t n i _ b ! k P, .l $200. 673-~2 art !'j:pm. We 'll help you st ! Pilot Clusl!led ad, 642--5673 Guard Appr"\"d . Port. livt: i 9GS-{).lRO * horsrpou.'Pt, Brig1::~ &. Strat. Aiuitioi''iilmiipoii"iodiiiii9i7iOiiAiiuiliosi,ilimiipoiri!i•idiiii9i7i0iiAiuitoiiti, ilimipoiirilodiiiii9i7~0 bail rank. Reatf.v to go ~ '6.~ P!CJ-:.UP A-rilm""r, half ~"~"-· ~'·"'--~"~·;1_·~~0-== Aller 5 Pt'\;1 21~: 1136-37."lli ,. -:-ron Ch 'y 1111.~· can over. 1971 Sporl~lrr XLfl "'/CH '?9' Cilliforni11.n "fi9 V-~. 50 $1 00fl. :i. 12AA aft 71 pm. tank. !"!"' Exl. f,, eobr11 seal. hrs. r11rl. Tr11n~m rloor, NE\\' !b:l . family lt>n!. Userl 27JOO mi. S2KIO. 54~2074. ~~·im 11!Pp, rrltiE. $87;,ct. only J r. Pairl ovC'r SIOO, DUCAT! r;JQ Endl.lro, x!nt Newmark~. 1714 ) 6'1~2700 wili SPIJ r $15. &lG-6621 aft cond .. S250. e '68 20" BERTRA?-1 ~1op-4pm. l •.. &l2-ll.)11 pie. 160 hp fl1ercrui.iier SJ500, T\\10 40' [CfR Chris"l'i, Xlnt Call 6"5-'2982 eonrl. I ll. One at $20,500, \\1ANTED 13" Bo~ton Whalrr, Avro Bk 714/774-7208 wfl,O hp en)!:lnt'. :i-1~74i0 'fi9 \\"hr-el Campl'r, hardly u~efl. sip. ~. Very 2d pnrl'. 223!1 Repuilic, CM, -642-2802. Mobil• Homes 935 BUY ... ~F.:l,L-LIST Nl'"' • "In P11rk" • Resalf'• 64~3140 ... li13-ZY>l Sell idle Items now! BIG 15TH USED CAR SPECIALS 1t6t ,1111 I SO Rodl't••· R1dio, H11 l1•," Sot1d, 21 .000 mil•1 . !2VC21ll ' '''' VW Sti••r .. Mlr w.,.,.. H1•l1r, 4 s,,,,d. !"wJN70"l $995 $995 1,61 Sprite Rod•t•r. R1dio, H11 t11, " lt61 T•y•to .C1ro110 IM•I!· R111io. H11I· Sp11cl ._ ..., .t.u+t1 ... 11ic. !T RU0 17 \ $1395 $1695 1 t67 MGI l•tbt_.. l 1cl io. H11t1r, "1 J t6f T-:f9tl Mir II C:,.. H11l1•, '4 Sp11~cl • s, .. <, W;,, ~·;·;·~~V~SIO I , 1 '°''IN" $1495 1 •61 Trlo""h lf6,.Cp1., Jl1clio. M11P1"" lf6f ,,,,,. C•r••• H.T, Jl1dio. H11l1r, s.,.,,.i .. Wir1 "wh11!o , !WQWl7$) • 511{•'· F1ct1ry ,t,;, Co11d. C~SSS4"l $1495 --$1695;~- ~-----------· $1695 lfll YW. R1d lo, M1tl1t, 4 S,1111..i. ! N;I . tf70 Toyote C.r.11• $pri11t1r, Cpe. R1dlo, 025! ·1 H1111r, '4 Sp11d, M.111 Wh11l1. 1765A.$11 TOYO°{ A DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor Blvd., 'C:osto Mesa VOLVO '-"·9303 PRE VACATION SPECIAL 1971 COLONY PARK STATION WAGON I Croll toll""' rlh ,.cir ... Po,..1• ,id1 wi11dt,..t, 429-~Y va: Twin co.,,forl 1&11"9• 111h, No11 1~h1 1nt 1"'i11io11 1y1I•"'• Co•n1rin9 l•"'P'• WSW H-11• LS l1lt1d Tir11, Tilt •••t•• i119 wl.11!, A1,110,.,1tic 1p11d co11+.ol, 6- w1y PWk 1111 d•iv1• 1id1, R1c lini1111 p1u1n.e< •t l l, C111i1• f1c i119 "'If 111h, • l i"l1d 'it ltu • co,.,pl1t1. Lu9· flt• <••"'' · w/1ir d1fl .. Cerpel1d lo1d floe•. Sl1l1011 w19on, "~dd1d/ lec•1bl4 1id1 1!0 •~91 co,.,p••h•1en+. Pow1r door Ice~ •• A1,1+0,.,1lit '""'P•••· !11•1 "'"''''· AM ••dio w/••~<to l1tp1 iv1 .. !11i11~11 wit1dihi1ld wip1ri, OLX 111! I FRT. 1~oulol1r b1llt .... pp1t1t•· 111~1 p1ol1ctio11 11 ro~p, ll.1,.,al1 CTL 1111 he11d "'irror. I! SIS61 I -DISCOUNT $1077 NEW 1971 COUGAR Automatic Tr•nsmission, White sidewal.ls, Power Steerin9, Pow· $ l 4 er Disc Brakes, AM Redio, Tint· od G~"• DeluH Whoo! cover>•~--. . IF91H5l7702 . ' ' . - -Du"i7 r. fenc G11.r, • ~g.,: iiii '.G ·-Aph 01 r i' F '. 517 . :· Anal '.. LaH ' 8a ll * 2 F w~ ,.,. .. w .. !,1 Ba• 2 f Cru 121 • Bal .. .. " 2 B '· J<U" : .. 11; I 67: : . " Lo\ '• '.\I. CLJ " "' • I I N• 6T ' i m Co CZJ c. y, "' t NI· .. \\' ' ' " s ~· L1 I ' r ' c • • • ( ·' • ' ' I I ) ' ' I 'I I . • 40 DAil Y PILOT Friday, May 28. 1'7~ Au!oe, New 980Autos, New 980 Auto1, New 980 Au tot, New 9IO Autos, lmport9<1 970 Autos, Imported BAUER BUICI( IN COSTA MESA HUGE INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE! ON OVER 100 NEW CARS IN STOCK! . '71 BUICK SKYLARK 4 DOOR S,E,DAN V8, •utomatic., pow•r _sl•erin9, r•dio, healer, WSW, •ir cond., t int. windsh ield, dlx. wheel cov- •rs, dlx. steering wheel, custom c.•rpeting, a ll G.M. safety fe•- tures ar• standerd. (4336,IZI. 08008 1 DELIVERY TODAY DATSUN "69 DATSUN PICKUP * EXTRA SHARP *" \Vhole1aler 673-2271 FERRARI FERRARI AUTHORIZED SALES &. SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W, Coast Hwy, Newport Beach FIAT F1mtd race drivtr Nvccil) Bt r· 1one styled 1h1 lean agile lints of this sports tar. fi1t packs ii wllh ex!ras like elecl1onrc da 1h lachomettr, fro111 disc br1k11, r1diel lires, •·speed slick d1ih •"d bucket seats. Set ill · Fiat 850 Spyder •238760 IMMIDIAfl OlllVllY CMOl(l 0' COLOl l F I A T Bill BARRY FIAT 'ontioc-OMC frurk.1 2000 E. 1st St., S1nt1 An1 Phone 551· 1000 LOTUS . LOTUS AUTHORIZED SALES &. SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W, Coaat Hwy. Newport &ach '68 l>1ercedes 2'";,(l SE. like new, low mileage, $4,950. Air & leather, new Michelin tii'-s. 493-3'129 . MG MG AUTHORIZED SALES &. SERVIC E NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. Newport Beact. ~ THIHK ... ~ .. ''FRIEDLANDER" 137Jt •IACH IHWY. In 893-7566 • 537-6824 i\tG-magnetti classic, new clutch, rblt. eng., pr!., bely., \\"c.L, trm., ltl., trns., \vorks. e Complete Stock of '71 lie., any offer. 968-32ZI. Dmfl -P-Rl_C_E....c.t<>=,.="-JJ_-··_7_'_'_Gj • MIDGET. Good cond. Call 548-8414 Karl "FRIEDLANDER" MGB '66 1-IGB Roadster, good con- 11750 IUCH ILYD. dition, 23,000 m i., Sl.000 or fHwy. lfl best ofier, Call J\f a I t, 893-l;Jf.6 • 537.&24 536-7274 WE HAVE 'EM OPEL 1900 ·SPORT CPES. 11---G=-=-M~C~--'65 l\.fGB, exceptional buy, • • • S800. R&H. Good cond. Ton- 2 DOOl • SPORT COUPE BRAND NEW 1971 OPEL MODEL 31 Pick yours out today 51799 USED CAR SPECIALS '69 OPEL GT s2295 '69 BUICK 9 PASS. s2995 4 •P••d hffll., r1dio, he1h Spo<t Wl'JOfl. V!, •uto., 11, r•llv• 'JOld/bl1ck inl•r. R&H, full pow••, {1,lorv R1ili1I tir••· !XX F421 l •''· 1 '"'•¥!iii 11111•, roof rick. IYASJJO ) '61 PONTIAC GTO s1795 '71 OPEL RALLYE s2275 2 Or. H.T. VI. 1ut11 .. RIH, H1":I lo fihd modtl h1• P-11••·'"9 l br1k11. fie• o~ly 1,,00 mile1. ~ed..,; tery eir. lm"'''ul,11. bl1ck int, R&H, 4 •P••d. !WPSl,71 I StlrlO!Vl UICK. IN COSTA MESA B V I CK·OPEL·JA6 VA R 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 548-7765 • JAGUAR ~au & l\.1itttn. Pri. pty. 536--0017. 220 Alabama, H.B. JAGUAR, '67 XKE 2+2 w, wits, etc, beaut. cone! .• lo mi. J\fust sell. S2.950. firm. 644-6120 or 67~5127 '69 i\1GB-GT, red, U,000 mi, AM/fl\.1, luggage r a c k , ~fichelln -X. hke n e ~" 54!>-7529 OPEL e '69 JAGUAR XKE coupe. A..'11FM. yellow ~·/black. $3600. 64-f-5730. '69 Ope!. radials, etc. r.tusl Sell! Bargain S995/otter_ '65 JAGUAR 3.8 :aedan-Auto, Priv. Pty :>48-6996 orig, xlnt mech. $)J()(l. CaU ==~~~---1 67~177 \~'HITE '6j Ope! Kadetlt>, 4-spd, Good cone!, must sell, JENSEN m•k• offec. 962-1688 JENSEN AUTIIORIZED SALES t. SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach PORSCHE '65 PORSCHE C Wh ite v.·ith red interior. Ex- cellent condition. CTZP 808) Full price S249j or take trade. Call 494-7744. '66 PONICht 912·1 0\1.'flt.r, Xlnt cond. R e d \\' I blk in!. A,\f/Fr-1 rad, 5-spd. S3150. &16-?>718 bf'f 7 pm: 842-8632 af1 7 ~------[ 1965 Por..,chf' SC coupe.-Likt. new. 2021 Al1ura Dr, Irvine Only 116:i miles Automatic. Terr, Cd:'-.f 673--0161 radio, healer. 1°2'7.lDDZI 1 '·~66~P,-,-"7h,~91~1-~R~,d~w-/~bl'k1 KARMANN GHIA '71 KARMANN GHIA $2599 int. $3300/bf!ost ofr, must sell. . Harbour V.W. 18711 BEACH BL. s.12.4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH • 1970 Ghi&·l0.000 mi. auto. t.1int cond. S199j, Pvt ply. 011.ys: 642-6.iOO: E v es: 673-i489 House Hunllng? Watch the OPEN HOUSE column. Autos, Imported 970 67;;..5738 alt 4 or ""knds. '70 911 T, :>-spd, 20.000 mi. orange, tmmac. Desperalf', must sell. 67j...200j "69 PORSCHE 9ll·S ljK mi, A~l/F"~f. >..1nt cond. S5700. Call 543-105-1 . Fo. RESULTS you can De- pend on, Call the Super- :5 ale s man .. Daily Pilot Classilied 642-5678 -place Yo'<1J' ad Ir charge It! Autos, Imported 970 "The Best Small Sedan We Have Ever Driven." ThefJ 'he IMW I ~00 •h•I Cer •nd Driver ;, t1lkin9 •bo~I. To find out wh•I ..,.\,, it •nd other IMW'1 10 good, e1~ u1 fo r th, free bookl et, "ll Ree1on1 Why !MW i1 !elt•r."' I Or 11• lo. lht ••v· You'll t•I tl!e ..,en19e. IAVAAIANJ1IO'IOILWOllKS __ ROY CARVER, INC. /\UTHORIZED S.M.W, DEALER 2925 Harbor Blvd. Cos la ]\'I esa 546 -4444 . . • 980> ~~ . ~ ON BRAND NEW '71 CHALLENGERS, ~ CHARGERS, DEMON$, DARTS, ....._ POLARAS AND MONACOS! .•• ~ NO ADD ONS! NO EXTRAS! ~ ..... NO DEALER PRE.~ARA TION CHARGE! ~ ...... JUST INVOICE PLUS 5%! ~ P::: c ••• ;, ........ '" ... '"'"" ....... , ..... ,., ;,.,,,. ~ notorlred by Collfornla Notary Public Altlolutely No Othtr Ch11r9" l:rcept State To• & '71 Lie. J '' ••\.\,. All NEW DODGE COLT No olher import offers all , these $ fearures as standa rd equip- ment: Adiustable sleerlng co. lvmn, flow thru venlitar ion, fronl disc bra kes, 100 h.p. en- gine, reclining bucket seats, hidden antenna plus up to 30 mpg. Ord~r Yours Today On ly 70 FORD CUSTOM 500 v.1, auto. fl"'· •Teet./bt<1k•" fo<t. ,;, rond., ..,,;o, lieoru, wf\;1ewoll1. lO.. 150·•01 $1688 '70 DODGE CORONET 4 o-. v.1. po•er 11.,,;.g. fully la<lO'l' •ciuipp•d, Oocl. '1988 '68 COUGAR '68 CHARGER '67 MUSTANG FASTBACK VB '70 FORD MAVERICK W• invito you to cl•;ve th;, <D•. I! it lo<I. •qp1. will! l~o <011· •Oll;Oft<• !~o! "'Olet dtiYiOi II plo111vro. lie. 713ACH s999 '71 SUBARU t~;, io I~• ' •P••d. hotdtop w i!~ lront w~e•I drivo, boouli· fully •~pf. including w~ilo· woll1. beouty, cornfo•t o•d ocono my loo Ii~• JS 1"ilu to !h• gallon,,, 702122. Sole ,,;,.11 $1688 $888 '67 DOD&E Van Conversion (o1"ple1• w/oulo.,eic !•o"'""'"""• oi• condilion>•;. 0;nt, ;~o;:· o~:d;o~·b:r::.c;::.:d (~J~Qo'd'~ s 17 8 8 '66 VW CAMPER ...1 .. 91 52,607. ~(. :;!~flit '66 VVI COUPE OPEN DAt.Y 'Fil 10 P.M. IHCIUDING SUHIAY & MEMORIAi DAYI •II <O•• 1.ilt <t ''pr;., Mlt . ~,:<11•11••1"' I'll t.J 11 ) BRAN~ NEW 1971 DODGE VAN CONVIRSION u .. 1 comol•t• ..,,1~ lu!I ''" $ to.d ·~.i l!'llf! '"'• ""''''· "''" 1upol~ "''" ou"'o· "'" bo" ~·••I r; & •m"''' oe, ''"'Hoo<. cuf111n<. 11or1~• ub••111. '1S '"" '" t/gl•'• t•d du1I jl. wtl! <0111 '"''' '*"'" ORDER 988 NOW! • ' 97 I ~~~~~~~~! Autos, lmporttcl 970 Auto1, Imported 1 .,,,.,,. .. ,. 11~.1 ' 1 .,,,.,,. .. ,, 1r~: 1 .,,,.,,. .. ,. JIAJ /~;;;;;;;~ ~-_, 100°/o GUARANTEE! Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 PORSCHE TOYOTA TRIUMPH PORSCllE 1970 9 l 4 I 6 , ,l'f'lll)~·. 1mmac. c n n d TOYOTA NEW '71 lhruout. PnvAh! P a r ty . 644-6;111~. RENAULT NO DOWN PAYMENT SJ TRJU)1PJI TR4 Roadstrr. I \\'Ir" 11hrr1~. 011'rr!r 1\e, ne11 hrakrF. Good condition S79;i .11'l-O.'l.10. l\'lighl tradr for (lldrr \'1111, 1 '61 TR-3. Rl'bl! rni: &-tn1n~. Thl1 Clll "'' 11a.-.• fh• YW I 6•pel11t Mlfetv e11f perferlll· ~"'"' tell. It 1, fwlty chec.••d 111• '"•r1119hly rec111dhl•11ff, W1 t11or111tH 100~ Illar we'll r1p1lr or r1ploc1 111 1111• lor mecllorilc:1I port1' for JO d1ys or 1000 "'""· •lllch· •Yot C:Ol'll•5 flfll . EXCl::L LENT trans car. ·i:;~ $69.01 MONTH* ITR-1 t>ni.:1. F:x1ra1. )lusl l Rrnaul1. Gor>rl gag mllra~P 36 0 1 _. ~rll ~lifl:i. Si:\--0640 Sl:.0 :,1~2319 I mris. e · pay P••C'!'· S2484J6 or cash pr Jc a 1~7f) GT 6+ hlu r, s;:onfl enn- • ENGINE e TRANSMISS ION e F-RONl AXtE e REAR AXLE ASSEMIL!ES e BltAJ('E SYSTE M e ELECTIUCA.l SYSTE M SUNBEAM I $200'.j.55 inrJ. T;i,x &. Lie d111on, IP11 n11lf'11s;:r. &>~1 o{- A.P.n. 14.:>i';f.. Serial No. ~r~._49~1~0. '69 VW SEDAN '66 Ti•"· '"· I v, h"dlP, ""'"· VOLKSWAGEN I pc>M, OP\\ brk~. rire~ & h;i,~1, • •on approved credit 1-------- 2 !OP~. nu !n!f'r .• 11(1.8J1fi. 8111 Maxey Toyota .f:6 \'\\'-Lei s_ th11n :Kl.000 1111 t ll&H IYNW241 I llUtL Pll lCI $1400 TOYOTA 11<AA\ BEACH BL. ,1:47.11;,,;;; lmrnat. _(,onri ~~r·e1. l --1 HUNTINGTON BEACH niinrr. SlO.iO. 67:\-Ji1'8 1969 TOYOTA ------'62 V\\' 8u5-Rr hui!t rn"•· 'i O Toynta Co r on&. NO MONIY DOWN I 101 lb mo"+h1. C11h or;t• !OA.C ) ;~tlud;R9 +•~ & lie. St.47). s55'4 l1tol 01f,,.,d PIY'"''"' 11•i t 1 Coron;i. 4 Dr. R;irl10, Heater, I A .\l / f )] -E>.cellPnt con· trans. SS;j(I or o!frr. M•. PlllRI, $1003.0A. A.P.R. l l.2S 'I'., ------~· - t.lc. Extra \!r~n. di11nn. • 64"-·"fi_l_l _•,----1 $1495 e liU-:;111 '67 \'\\', rnany l'~lra.11. "Yl~A:>:CL.,.ri. TRADES '6'l COR()\'A· XI "O"d. $1000. AVAILAB LE" ' ' nt ' " • 616-.111.l l • r\1'11· r11tl1al". lo mi. ~lu~I ~=~'-"''-"--=­~"ll. n.'i,\: !lfi2-!ll:M ·s~ VI\' Rull. 7 P"'"'· A'.\1/1')1 MacHoward 'f,jl, \()Rl)NA TO~'f"!.'I -;.; .. \\ r11rho \\ /ramP"I' kit. $ZWO. 83~ "'-" k I ·':::'1"::..1 .:.'":::"0c_::":::2..w.IJ '68 CAMPER I '65 vw BUS W1il1li 1, Pep . lop. Fully t PASSENGER E~uipp1d . f WIRAtil l #11 1072 ~".''""" Ot' :1~1·0608 1 1rr~. hr;i f'!-. I"' inrrl $ll!,j0. -.~-- Corner l~t & Ha1·bor \'p r.v £•l0r! 1-n1vl. ;i,'ll-9076 ·i;.; \l\r .ss~ ---- '70 SQUAREBACK I '69 CAMPER .<ii;inta i\na TRIUMPH U11.1!-.: .\~ll-11!5 [1·ps · fi7.'l-.)6.l~ Air cend., R l H, 4 Spd .. W11f1 t:1 Peo . Top. l ug9a<;1 R5tl. !J4•0FV! E~uipptd. #079!69 Anniversary Sale 1971 TOYOTA 51777 ...DUJt LwM W1 TOYOTA JOHN CONNELL "No Gi..,..,;tk1, No Giv11w•y1, Ju1t 21 Yr1. Hon,11 Stllin~ WE'RE LOADED WITH THE ALL NEW 1971 CHEVROLET WAGONS! • OPEN SUNDAY L1oslrit & Colly lleflt•I Avollohlo BILL YATES The rear windaw 9oes vp and disappears inta the raof. The tail 9ate 9oes down and disappears into the flaor. ALL MODELS· EQUIPMENT AND COLORS AVAILABLE! OVER 50 VEGAS TO _..._CHOOSE FROM N•med C•r of the Ye•r 1971 MOTOR TRIND Best Handling Car in Amer ic a Regardless of Price ROAO & TRACK F-ullv Fine•t Out Of Comp•rison T e•h of the Six Sm•ll Cers CAR lo DRIYllt BRAND NEW 1971 VEGA 2 DOOR SEDAN • WE'RE LOADED WITH BRAND NEW 1971 VANS! 0101• TOO.AT IN YOUR CHOICI Of " COLOllS CAMPER VANS-SPORT VANS HUGE DISCOUNTS TRUCKS-TRUCKS-TRUCKS LOTS OF 4 WHEEL DRIVES Pickups-Carryalls-Blazers. Immediate Delivery BRAND NEW 1971 CHEVY 1 /2 TON 8' BOX PICKU P 161 9678 1 CONNElt-CHEVROLEf ----------·----···- 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-1200 . , Friday Autt11 for S•le l~ll Aulol lor S.le ]§][ Autos, New 980Autos, New '70 CHALLENGER BAL. 5 YR. OR 50,000 MILE WARR.~. ~559DOWN -559 MONTH V-B. A~tn .. li:&H. P/5. lo,,dnu lDJl, FACT. Allt. JH2JIOl2J2f56 flt" IOfol., """'' o.-1 H•",.... .... ,,... .,.1 114 '11 lcwo oflll ell ~· <l'orttl .. -""'" .... v. .... n.1 .. , .. ,,_., ,.,., .. ll11JOO «I o'i ,_., ll<ln/••. '""'· ''1 $ k .... &' ~ , ... ., .............. "" ,.,~ ~·~· .. ••'11•11 ' •\,.,,,,,.,,,,'Iii[· 1789 U••• AllM~Al r ll(lllfAll IA ll '·''"' s:::0 '71 DODGE CHARGER 585DOWN 585MONTH WM23Clf1-'1'79 ·170 FORD 2 Dr. Cpe. Foc""''"'~" "'' $119800 radlO. l\eo'ter. f~ll 1tx:10- •Y eouipped. Su No. FULL OK9 1T138870 PRICE '69 BUICK G. SPORT 2or.H.r. v.1, power ''t'""9· rod10, t-eo11r. Ser tlo. 198-i19 $14989uR PRICE '65 KARMAN GHIA • ~rttd, 1!111 o. hra1e1, but~· el lfOlt. Beout1tul Orong1. lie. RUH799 $688°0 fUll PRICE '66 MUST H.T. .Aulo. troni .• rad io. ~eo1er. whi!lwa!I tir11. lr.ltkt! 11011r. lit. SR0008 " M•~ 28, 1971 Autos IOI S.lt l§J I 8100 FULLY FACT EQUIPPED $2689 I DAILY PILOT .Auto1 lor Siie ]§] ORDEll YOURS TODAY V·!, ·~lory ,;, <Md;. $1 09 900 !ioninu, powe r 11e1r- •nq, rcd10, heater. FULL YfBJB4 PRICE '68 Dodge Dart V-6, o~to. 11 on~. P~"'er 1 1ec.1~ij. $68 8 power id1 lt) broke 1, rodio, ~.co.J 1 r. XOBllS FUll PRICE '69 CHEVROLET "· ~" ""'" """'· ... $9 8 8 on cl10 & heoter, fl.illy lot!. tQU•I'· fUU' YH(701 PRICE '70 PLY. ROADRUNNIR '2 O~. HT, V·8, ou1o .• power S!tfr;..g, radio & $198 600 heour, b~c~el s1ou, """''· WIW & •• ,, FUlL rnor1. lJOAf'f. P ICE • 41 -" Dl •, .. G S4 • [ -1 0 !5l ,,, L< 11. .. ~ 2 .. ,, 2 ( I a. -~ 1 I ' , J ' ' -: . " L< .. ' ' Cl ,, E '• I " ,. 2 " ( y • t NJ • • I s LI '- ' ' s ' f • ., ' c I I I ( I \ • • .fZ• 04.ILY PILOT Friday May 28 1971 ~~~~' ~iiilJ!llllllli!~~~~~,~~~1 ,...!~~~~I I~ L_I _,,_,,.,_ .... _ .. _,J§J ' I '""'"'·'· l§J I '""''""'' J~ . ._I _.,_ ... ~_ ... _,. _,J§J1 1 ,:;;;;;;;;;;;.:;~1 ___ _ 7 A I t 970 Autos, Imported I • 1§1:1 l§J I ]§] Auto1 fot Sile Aitr:o, for ~I• A!.110$ for S•lt Autos, Imported 910 Auto1, Imported 910 Autos, Used 990 - ~-·-'_"_·'°'_"_'·-~II ~ I 910 Au tos, Used · 990 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported Autos, Imported 9 O 1 utos, mpor ed 1-VO_LK_S_W_A_G_E_N_' VOLKSWAGEN 1-----1 '64 vw ~""V\~;re~~gbt.:k;!0 &"1;:\~~: Custom Pa1r11. J:oori 1r11ns-f VOLKSWAGEN '70 VW SEDAN VOLKSWAGEN '69 VW BUG VOLKSWAGEN ' 8 VW S UA EBACK i ,,., I VOLKSWAGEN I '67 vw FASTBACK I 6 Q R VOLVO $3295 \'nh•o l&I N>rl . n • FLEET SALE • '!ii Cail CP<' dt> \'1llr Sl07j '!Xi Old~ l)('lta Joi$1 ~f'dlln I! ... lull JXJl\rr. lo n11"s, Sl27J CHEVROLET '70 CHEVROLET IMPALA CUST. Fbri:ls frn<lrrs, f'!C, Asking pnrt, 1~l'G.i4.~1 Th1~ r11r $1300. 549-323.l aft 3 h11!i pas~!'rl !he \'\r !6-po1111 ~ ,;ah•t\' find f'l<'rlnrn1anrr '64 Bus, Rt-bl! !300 ~ng1nr. trst. '1t is fully l'hf'ck('d anrl !~pass, JS9j. !horou<>hly rC'C(lndJtionrd. .. !"J.18--0l!kl .. ... ---\\'e ~uarantrr 100';. 111111 • ·;o V\\' .-""'ll rrpa1r or rPplacl' aJJ Sh;irri conn • Xlnt ttrrs niajor ll\f'chan1ral flt1rrs • f•>r SJ.':.60 • • 67J-2T.1 I •rwrd, 1-,1rt1n, ll1•111rr. (,~()!; .\P.J I $1699 Harbour V.W. Bl<11•k bC'au1y 1111h pin strlp- 1111-: . .J sprcd, rar110, hcal('r. \.J:111• miJrai;r . C330 BQl\1. BarwJrk ln1porl!, 99A :.:n C~~t Hwy .. l..ai:una Beach. {\Ui-10.il 'lr .f;l~-!li71 --,6Tv=w~B=us~ 2 Dr Prrv 1ou~ fl1111rr ><!i11r' rrtiu1h n1n1or. Clei111 ,t-J'\1rr. ~\l'KHIOI• $898 Mil1e McCarthy BUICK ----.vi rfa~~ or 1ro1 n11r~. 1~;11 fib.1\CJI BL. fi.11·11:1.J 'fili V\\' JliOO l'ng1nl' '"hirhrvrr (.,..llll"S l1r~r. HL::'\T!'\l;TO:'\' R~:AC1 1 Radin, Hr<'!lrr. fOTR8&1J I IJll Rr11c·h Rh'r1 a1 S.D. r·wy Goori cond 5900 ·E~inr a Transm1,,,;1nn a -;-$ 1299 .1191-.1.~1 1 :,:Jl-~l'>O cat! 1111 6 P~I. ~~l2"7 I fronr A.xlf'. RC'rlr .\xlr ,\~-I 65 vw BUG 1!169 V\\' hlUf' 111th whur 1!1· J969 V\\' Squarrback, a 1 r. ""mbhcs e Rrakr Sys!rn1 .~/lflll mi!r~ nn rw11· 1600c·(' rn-trnnr. 'h11rp' ]•1 riul,,~. ra.din. hHteup /;, nl'v.· tires. • Electrl('li] ~~slem. ~lllf'. Ho!IC'1 'I. hhJ. Por~chc Prl\·a1r p11.rty onf' ov.nrr \lusr !<{'Jl. >t9.)-.ilj2 $895 1t1,r. .t· '"11. lllllt: \\hff'I~. 616-10.~2 • ·~ \'\\'-Au!O rr11ns. ~nod t"U•[i)ffi p;ainr l'\lh•USI and 1S711 BEt\Ctl BL .li-12-'1\:lJ ';'"hilAui:-. -x-, .. -,-,-.,,-,,,-,,-.-... ~ tape ""1nr1. S1rrl'O, hratrr. $1·100. ~ \L\;\Y. '!.\:'\\', t:XTRAS. HU:'\TIKGTO.\ RE1\0l I 11rrk. 1'!lro n1ar~ '.'llc>l'Lng, s1r.n :)-i~ . .,~ifl I f;7:l--IM I nt· .'>41 -.i12l ~ __ ----lfl67 SQL:AR-ERACK. G r1 mu~I sell: 61'1-IO~,ll '6S VW S7SO ft 69 \'If Ru~ S1:00 11 trhlt 111rr~. h;i!t f.: rlutrh. Eni:: =t;:;-V\\':l.111:-rrhlr, nr" I • :'tl:i-011:, + ~l., s0 I rni: 11 16000 rnr nr 6 mo •iar·-nf'('dS love & 1ah·(' JOh. I hrak"~ ,t, cluleh, T 0 hl'ar- • ·57 V\\' e ,~e~~~o;. ~~~~: ~~rl-!~~111<1 ::1·~·1 n~~~~ S!."'ll. ,1179.9900: 9-:i int:. R.tlL Vi:.O 117~<1!:1 • S7:J()/or &>st OHrr ' p iik<I.\.<, ;ui~umr Sal,_, Sun. 1971l \'\\', au1n ~!irk 1'h1f1 '70 V\\' Bui:. 4·~[)<1. Vrr)' •~.)-7~4 • 11f1 6pm • R;1dtn, 'I.In'! ron<I. I fl\\'nrr. C'll'llll. Girl"~ t·ar. S!:1.jl'l. '!i7 V\V B\15, mint eond --,64-VW-VAN , Sl!l.iO. ~.'.:!J.-!'.IOlL --*Call %2:fiS!i l *-- •.,10.'"31 E,., 66 n• fi7 .'~\f>-7::li ----V ,_ l"'R V"' ' hi /hi '· X,tra!. Sl6~: .·? "" , • 'f.6 \\'.\.,.,.., r11g. "" "' uui;, ur \\ l'lf"I\ fii .r.iO.~ J~iO H.\RBOP. RL\"D. '69 BUG w/air ~700nr hl'~tnffrr. 1n1rrior, i\:<1/F\1. i;:C1or1 \Ve'll help you wll! 642-5671J COSTA '.'llESA R II. 13,,~1 nlfl'r. ~i2-i:'.2:oi: Call Cri11g fi.J:,..1;,19 1·011<1. $1 200 .. Vl:r3:il7 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Auto$, New · 980 'Autos, New 980 Auto$, New 980 4 ~P<'cd, i:1d1ri, ht·a1cr. 1:>JllASQ1 $1499 , Harbour V.W. 187!1 AE . .\CH Bl. ,ll.12·!1.1j llL''.l/Tl:'\GTO~ RE1\l\I '62 BUG, $550 ,. R3J.:n;,s • '6'i V\\', xln't L'flnrl. Rt1d1n. nrw nre~. $800. C 11. I t ~2-'J..)IJ.l VOLVO '71 Volvo Spt. Cpe. 1800 E. Model Autom;a11r, Ya rtory A Jr ~1a11nn 11i.:n 11 air S1 0iJ Cntjjll.-'. ;:;J() \'/l, T11rhn lty<i10. Cond ~h<irp, Yl\'R'.!1~ DEAN LEWIS ~ l'n1111a~-;.;a[ari Station 1n111i.·, Pn11f'r.<.::trrnni,:, Po11 . \\'aeon. ,\1r $187j rr Arakr•. !';a1·1ory Au·. I~·lPORT:i SO UTH COAST t .. 1ndau T,..,.,_ rl•'. 616·93o3 CAR LEASING S299S 1fH6 H;irhnr !'"!vd., :\00 II'. Co;ist H11·~ :'\.R. ",\LI. r'l"-1\.\'.rJNG Cos1a '.'11r~a · · ---------161:i.~1.il:! i':l'r.~: 6i3·~2fi9 i .\\'A JLAALE"' THINl fi.; ACTO. 6 "''· low '"'''·' M H d YOLYOI Clf'tll\, Cal! 9.ro ;,, jj!).{J?.:i ac owar w '1' '" ,-,;.m, 1839-9600 OR lJl-0608 1J7 2+2 \'lt. P S., riir·1 1t1r. C.irnrr 1~1 .t· !11trhor "FRIEDLANDER" ""' ''°""· 11;00. 83&-ll'4"' """ A"' lllM l iAC'k CHWV. HJ 6~2..Q.l33. ~9-CHEVROLET ,,,_,,.. • "'""" BUICK CAPRICE COUPE Anniversary Sale 1-------- 1971 VOLVO $2998 '70 SKYLARK CUSTOM ..Derut Lewi.I \'II VOLVO · Coupr A (;or~NU>< Lov. \11Jr. a.i:f' AUtc> v.1!h Po11rr Slf'f'r-1 1111:, Hrakl'.•. \·10~ I Top and fat. AJr. 1,-,1:1AF:RJ \'it. P ~.. PB , fact, ,\1r, Lilndtr.u Tn1•. $239S '"ALL t·l~A'.\'ll:'\G AVAILABLE' MacHoward 531-0608 $3298 .1 11rrk~ nld. t·uuy rcruippf'd. P . " I --iOO 19 1~ 11.:.rtior, C.~1. ti16-!l."l01 n p1,1 , r an111~111· ""a . $.1. ' 839-9600 OR c·,.r.nr11: fl1\'nl'r nf'rds quu•k ''\\'II IT E t::l.E:PJIANTS" 11alr' S·! liJ, j.18-1936 or 1· fl\"l.'rrunnini.: )'Our hOUllP? fi-14· lfi.!!·1 "Ca~h" .. !<I'll Th,.n1 thn1 · naily Pilot Cl11 J<s1rirrl Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Mike McCarthy BUICK 1.l\l Rr~l"h Rh·d. 111 :-.; n. }\1~· .11~1-1.:::1 11 :,::1.21:~1 '69B0fi:K-LIMITED '69 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD t:~1a1r. !I rass \\'ai;:on. \"11, llyrlronit111(·, P.~.. P.B., t"a<'I. Air, l'lmr Llll'k. Ex· tr;i f'lran, L"s.~ Th~u 26.000 :'11ilr~. r at·r. \\'ar-r;i111y. "}"J;\",\\"Cl:'\G, TRADES A\'All..\!iL~;·· Luxury >I cl,....,r, full Pov.rr. f :H·tnt·y .\ir. M-·lrl t'iYJnl ;.;,,at . ~:.xrr;a Clrfln, Lo11 .Yl1l- I'< racuin. \\'arranl1', · SJ69s · MacHoward . ALL f[\'A:'\CI:'\G I ,\\'Al LAB LE • 839·9fi!O <>r :L11-0608 Cornrr !~1 & Harbor MacHow~rd; 1 SAL~,,~,~ ~~AoE 839·!lfilC XI 1 or.( H ·~-Oij()g 1:!61 Chrv. -i 1lr Jn1pala 2113 ornf'r ~I · ar r rng Auto • Po"er • R.t·H • Sanra Ana f"a1r0 ruh. _ ~I'\\' hau. $'200. 'fi7 Aul(·k La.Silhre 2 Dr. or tr;a<lr rnr P 'U rrutk. pink hrdtp. pl~. p/h, 11'knr1~, for pink. &i:i-'?142 art 6 P.\1 , A1r/ron<l Riii. xlnl 1'flnr1. \VEEh'. DAYS O~L\'. :<lu~r Srll. Sl 100. ,11.\7-.iO:?I --CADILLAC- l argest Selection OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS in Orange County 1963 tliru 1970's GNabeij, ..._~CADILLAC AUTKOf\IZtO OEALLI\ 2600 HARBOR BL.., COSTA l\IESA ~Q.9100 Open Sunday --,69 CADILLAC- Srdan. [quipl, Cru1.•r r ontrol, l1;:ht !>;rn!tnrt. A.\1 F'.'I!, l.;ind::iu Tnp. Elf". E\t1a Clf'a11, l.A""' ,\'!1lc.•, t·ar1 \\",.1-rii.n1)'. $469S "ALL r·1N.\.\"Cl;\'G AVAILABLE·· ~Chf'vy ln1p11la ST:ilion wi:.n, fiPhl! r11i:1nr S,. hrakr~. goorl r11n·1: 1·onrl ,t· lonk~ ;.:!>!lfi! :s2: .. n. :'t1s-:i613 11fl 5:3-0 s .. 1\knd•. "Car.v". 'Ill Chevy s1 a11nn wai:::nn, Rt· bU hn1kl'! & l'l1).:lf1P. (.rod runnini: cnnrl , REST OFF· ER. 5~.li-."1613 Airer 5:30 i: 'f;~ l"lli':VY W;i~on. rkh. r1:;.. air, 4 ''"" i1rr~. ti.1Pch . perfrrl. $·11.'i. Brst offer. fii:r.:i!41' -~~-~~-1 19611 Chr1". Nomad Sra11on \\"i:. P/li. Pl~. Riii, 26.000 mil"ll. Ori.i: flV.'flf'r, Nl'll' l1rr~ S!liOO ~4i-:-.02 L ]'lfil t 'hr1rnlrt, lrJ<~ th;io Yl(l 1111. on Pn.i:. la!' arr. 111<1 sh1f1. \\'ant In !radr lor lge n1nlnrr~ r!f'. 4!12-71'Jil '6:1 <."hf'l'.V Impala SS.-P.,/Ph. 11ir, !11::1rlrd. f nJ: n1115 J<nnrl . ln1mat11l:1lf' lhrunul. t>.lakr nflrr. t;;:~~67. MacHoward '''ch""· v-,-. -,,-,"-. 71"'°~,-,' 1raflr lor pic k up. (;ill 8lJ-!lMll or ;,:11 .oti(J8 , ;,:;ti4;3flll Corn('r 1~1 & ll;irhor 11!'!6'.I '.'11Ac7L~IB~U7'.~l,-oc<lc,-,-c,o-p·.1 S;nlla Ana 11u10 lrlul.<, air. P/S. CAD '6J lri1n1:1(', $.i!l:1, Srr1a11 .,.ii:rt-01(1~• <IP Vrll~. \'111,11. 111!1 po11r1", 'Iii ('!!EVY, ~!anr11t-,c,l-"-,-,,,-.1 nr11 hrk~ ,r. t1rr~ li l6-~lln fi 1·.11. :\i,000 m1·~. $."1.iO. :-fi.1_c_r12-nr.-c;;r-ri;-v 111~ AIC ,11.000 011. Cl r 1 i.:. n1,nrr Pn pl)-. ~lij. till-•1!1:.1:. .~----1 1!'.f>!l CHEV lllal1on \'.agnn - rlr;in, i.:oor1 nl(llllr, Pis. S22.\ &16-aRO!l. ~=~~-1 EL r>ORAOO l!lfill. r:.:rr. rar OR1\tlf:O! "61 Ch,, 1 ~ slrrro 1apr, Xlnl C"nflll. rn, 1 1n1pala rnn1r-fri'lori l"<>nr1 ptf. ~l:Jt)(). :\rt. tli:!.\lXIO \lahr nffrr .. ;!.R-10:>7 --CHEVR0LET-j:-li3-Chr1-l;ra1·-,-0G~<.-",c'I ;.;ha["'. harua1n al SJi.'1 "Ii i B l'('~\·nr Ii C\l auton1.1 fii.".-.',)lo'}~. r h. /~un~ £""'1. <..inrio n anS· 1-:-6lf'hr1-.-,-,,-,,,.~,,-,c.S~p/-,-. 7Vc·•'' pnriat1(ul_ $~00. ·l~H·6.~~ :1u1n lr;in~, 11 rl .o:hrn·k.o:. Lil{E Tn trar1C~0°7r .'.i .SOO m1·.• .. r1·fl ~·11)..()(121. Trar1rr's P11rar11~c ('fllumn 1~ '67 81~r;i~·nr 2-rlr Air, V.li. for ynu~ 5 Lines, 5 D.'.ly~ for 1111tn. rrrlrrl l"llnrl. Pl'! ply. SS. Cal. today ... 612-567ll. .~ir.n Ill !-11!1.1 Cai~78-Now! __ I ~r 1)1;1fcsu11S"!642-!"J678 ~ Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 A Sports Car You Can Afford While You're Still Young Enough to Enjoy It Tll! F1A! 8SO Srid•r i1 tll• low •1 t p•ic .,I ooon • c•r o'I lllt tn A•kf!. Tht rtei IO"t en ih e1191n• " •!I i h• '"'"V Ull •I b,SOO •Pm. It ~'' di1: br•I•• '" Ire"! And indt · pend111I •u•ppn1;r;n All round. A~d. fo r "'a"v people, '' 1 th, bt••-loe~in q •p<'lrlJ cl• un d•r S IOOOO. 850 SPYDER 1'171 RE GISTErt NEW Fa ctory Wa ttan rv. R•dio, 1-le•T•r. Only blSO Mi, $1995 :: OS~bbl • ADA~! IYI ! • aasa • • • 2480 HARBOR BLVD. At FAIR DR ~ j1 ~ • • COST A MESA .,. ~~'JT~°i~ • = 546-8017 ~ 5~~:·;;;7 ~ • SALES DEPT' HOURS r:.~I~:~' ~~ ~~:r 11/a Miles South of Sin Diego Freeway II '·····················-~·········~' r • REGISTEPIEO NEW E.XECUTIYl---i 124 SPORT COUPE I '"'••• W"""'$2'79s"· '-• Mor,.,., ii 11'1•'1• ~---- LOWFST !'RICES, HIGHfST TRADIS Alt ttew compltte 011romotl•• 1e••lc.e dep•t'"''"'' - 16 1toll1 -t1~1 t 1toff of lll'fMY l1tl11ed ftltC.lle11lq. Cemplelt body l c.1utom pohtt du1p teej BILL JONES B. J. Sportscar Center t ' ~ . ·- F'r!day, M11y 28, 1971 DAILY P!lOY 43 ,, 1 __ A_"_'_"_"_'_"_l•-~l·~·l I Auto5forS1l1 lltt ] f Autosf~rS1le ll·~·I [_ -Auto1forS1l• , ______ ,~;;;;;;;;;1 ;;;;;~~ l~I l§J I Autos for Sii• Auto1, Unc:I 990 Autos, U~ 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 1--------1 CHRYSLER FORD $2695 '69 CHRYSLER 300 Jae. air. A.'\1:-ff.1. Xlnt tires. Good cond. $2495. 64-t-4689. 1969 Ford Van Club '68 CHRYSLER New Yorker-W ag on Air. loaded Pvt 0 w n er. v~. Radio, Heater. Aurorna· $2395. 644-~. Ile. Air Cond., & E.xtra COMET '61 COMET-Good C(lnd. New brakes & trans. Run i; perfect. $235 or best orr. 546-0714 Seats, (YPS844) AiDerut Lewi.! 9 VOLVO 1966 Harbor, c.r-.1. FORD FORD Country Sedan 1966. Alr, good cond. PrL party, SI 100. Art, 673-9330 '71 LTD, 429, bt1f't\1ndy v.·/black \Plnyl top, $4 ,000. Phone 67j-J54·1 JEEPS '69 TOYOTA La11d Cruiser. Like ne1v. \\'arn. hubs. roll bars. 8,000 miles. $2,6JO. &12-1586 all 5 pm. CONTINENTAL. ,69 FORD l TO JEEPSTER Convs. 19'18 & '67 MERCURY COLONY PARK l Srat Station \Vagon, Full Po1ve.', Fact, Air, Exira Good Cond. "ALL ~-INANCING .-\VAIL.ABLE'' MacHoward 839-9600 OR 531-0608 Cotner 1st & HartX'lr Santa An11 990 Autos, Used 990 OLDSMOBILE '65 Fastback, rebuilt cng, stick new tires & mags, Jar· <lean headt>rs, Ansen trac- 11on bars, tape deck. $1100 6-l-l-0154 '67 rt'1U5lang Fastback. 390 Cobra jet eng. +-barn'l earb. Auto. RIH. Best OJ· fer. ~341 alt 7. ~1UST sell 19fili 1'Iustang, \'Ci)' good c<incl. P hont 642-9172 alter 6 PI-I. 167 DELTA '88' Full power. Air Conditloninc. dlr. TRF0$7. t.tust sell. \\11ll take trade or finance. Call 494-Tl44. '67 F-85, Ne"' valves, \\•ater pump, al!ernator. I 1 t' es, paint. Sac $695. 833-2144, PLYMOUTH c.66~,71,-,-,.-,-.-4-,,-,-,-ood--ro-od-. I 1968 ROADRUNNER 383, 4 nc11+ ;>airi!ltires. Lo mi. speed, good rond, $1650. l~I Autos for Sile Auto1, Used 990 Auto1, Used -------PONTIAC PONTIAC ·~WEMANS BILL BARRY PONTIAC-GMC-FlAT RAMBLER '62 RAMBLER Sta. \Vag. Factory Air. P/S -P/B. Towing hitch. 642-8582. '61 RA.iVIBLER STN WGN 6 cyl, stick, • ·~ Coupe, F1nls hcd in Vtrdun Green, Auto. Power Steer- ing, Brakc-s, Factory Alr A popular rt1odeJ, Sale Pri~. (\VPD192) NEW '71 VENTURA II s:oo '46-3062 .. $1798 Mike McCarthy Fully Factory Equipped i\V2264051 SALE $2288 '61 Rambler Convt-Auto, good eng, new titts &: bat· ttry, alr cood. $245. 536"691 T·BIRD BUICK $299 DN. • 18"1 T-Bil'<I Lond8", ,... 1555 Beach Blvd, at s.D. Fwy $63.80 Mo. cent valve job & brake job. 1970 MARK Ill 50,000 mi, 5 yr warranty Elegant blue, \l'hile Broug. ham t6p, b!ue leather inlrr- ior. Every deluxe c:.:tro, incl 15tereo radio & !ape dttk, Michelin steel-belted COUNTRY SQUIRE 1949 Sharp! $575 & $650. 106 9th St. Balboa 675-4508. 10 Pass Sta \Vagon 390 V8, 1 ---'cc-o-'"'"'~~,_,, __ Autrimafic Trans, f-'act. Alr, LINCOLN 1968 rt1ERCURY Colony Park 9-pa.ss station wgn. Loaded iv/deluxe int & all r1~·r OP· lions. f"ac a.ir. Grecian gold \\•/b!k vinyl 1op. 11.D. suspension, sterro h i. f i radio, lugg rack. Orig 011·ner. $2550. &16-602:1 e\·r~. S!)9a. 67:Hi775 * 540--0812 * OLDSMOBILE '65 PLYMOUTH convertible l'-iake offer 894-3341 I 531-2450 $299 is the total do\vn pay. Reblt lraru. new tires. $450. ment. $63.80 is the rotal 1 _c_,_u_54s.<;-=•78=l.=""'..---·I PONTIAC GP monthly payment including FOR SALE 5-15-0109 Xtra Clean. looks. & drives tax. license and finance T·BIRD "65 $700 P .S., P.8., Six.,•oay Seat, Top Rack, E~tra Ni ce. ''ALL FINANCING AVAILABLE'' CONTINENTAL MARK 11 $1200 like new. Yull Po1ver AM/ ~~~1. Fact. Afr. LandaU Top. charges on approved credit =~='°"531:..;_·7'94.c,.. ___ ~1 ; '69 OLDSMOBILE 98 $3395 f.or 36 months. The cash '65 T-Blrd. Needs small PONTIAC * 49·1-5692 * MERCURY Holiday Coupe, Full Powt"r, price including tax & license amount ol v.'Ork. Foe 0 t Alr, LaLooo'M"ITop,FEx· 196~ Pontiac GTO Con-"FIN~~~:~BZER_-:\DES is S2·l47,.JO. Deferred price is * 673-2289 + tra ean, II' 1 es, act. vertible, aln1ost new top, $2995.80, including tax, Ile-1964 Red T·Bird convt, Full \\'arranty and ready 1" go. 389 engine, 4 spd. trans. MacHoward rnse & finance charge. An-pwr, air, Vogue tires, wire ::;~u:or sale by owner. MacHoward MUSTANG 839-9600 or 5.11-0608 '63 '.'.1eITUQ', lull p11'r, a ir, • '66 r-.tUSTANG-VS. auto. $3495 • S32:1. &16-2977 nuaJ precenla~e rate 9.31 7'•. vihls. $700., 673-8203 ews Corner 1st & Harbor '"'\1• ,.,, ... ,. br•ke•. ''"· "ALL ~'INANCfNG 1-----------l 8J0 -531 0608 0 135 Ne & U ed '~=~~'°='°='"='='--"'-·I 1----------·I "' ' " 0 • ' r/h, lo1v miles. $785, '62 Pon1iac: ps, pb, air, .,............., or • Yer W I 1• ,59 T-BIRD '64 MONZA 2 door, R&H, Santa Ana clean, original throughout. &16-4428 ht"'" !l-.l. AVAJLABLE" ehromc \vhls. Very Clean. Corner 1st & Harbor Cari 37 S l--=cc::o"'R~VA71-=R--1 auto.·Clean, runs good $32;-i. $ r-.1usl see to apprt"ciatC'.1 .~6,~. ~,~,u~s=T~A~N7G~C~o-,-,.,-,-t.-,-,~,, M H d $300. 548-7672 San!a 1\na To Choose f'r<'lrn r.take Offer. -t94• 3 96S-ll03. 1295 5'\0. Coll day, ;is-;m aC OWar l""=~~~-~--1 ---=~=---O 'T'l 10 p M 1957 T-BfRD 1965 F d t.ton-Frl cond. all power, good cond, '69 GTO Judge, 4 speed, very '70 GTO pen I • • '63 Corvair Spyder ·good -or Ranchero =~===,_,.,....,..,~_..,11 o"·ner. SS50. 644-8691. 839-9600 OR 531-0608 good condition. $2200 or best Ram Air. 4·speed, Firestone 2000 E. 1st St., San1a Ana Erst offer-Puadtn& -nd•'U'on. 4 •pd. '· '"•l •"il'. VB .. Radio, Heater, Automa-'6:'.I MERCURY r-.1ontclair, 4 If "" "OlS ('·t SI < 5 A F"-' I Call 213/TM-3687 ._.... · " ... e '66 GT-4 s,.,..cd 28!'1. Good Corner 1st & Harbor 0 er. """"" \l"idc ovals, sharp-all black! ...., · ' · · • "J· Eves. 642-6832 !Jc, P.S .. &. _Cabover Camp. dr bzwy, Juli power. air, ,... 5..iS 1000 VALIANT 1--~-----~~·I er. Sleeps Six, IP.353·10) Ar-.1/F!-i radio. S65ll. Orig. rond. Lo1s of r x tr 11. s ' l ===~'~'"-'7•_A_,_•~~--l'68 FIREBIRD 350 CID. HO Sacrifice! $2695/best oHer. - '62 Corv.tir Monz.t $25. O\l'ner. 965--7589 11.ft 7 pm or 67f>-2-127 e\·Cs '66 OLDS Cutia.~~ • .,inyl top, opt, 4 spd, nc\v brakes. Xlnt 646-"665 after 5 & weekends. 1964 LE Mans Pontiac. 64,000 54$.5489. 13.)5 Logan, cr-.1 " l • wkncls '67 Mustang convertible, air, low mllC!. 1 o"·ner. Mint l -'"'~""=·7$=1~750cc.. ~"-'"'='~"~·~~ '69 PONTIAC 2 Dr hdtp, full orig. miles, autom., p/s, 1 CORVEnE Wt WIL\ pl•. auto, ta"" deck, elec cond. $1100 644-4175 e Musr 1ell 1968 Pontiac: powE"r, $2395. '6:l Pontiac <I owner. 49;H945. '70 l\-1ERC Cyclone GT, 351 r-l =~~~~~---YOLYO VS, Air cond, Xtras. List 1op. 494-6171 '70 Vista Cruiser-Yellow. GTO. 4-s-pd trans, xlnt cond, dr; air, radio, E"lc. $395. for 1958 Pontiac Ch iefton, auto, '68 CORVEllE Convet"tiblt. $4600, sacr i fice S2700. Sell l;1e old slulf Buy the Air, Ps/Pb, radio, lo mi. Sl650· 812-5024· appt: 645-0420. good cond. $125 or best of· 327 hp. 4 spd, AM/FM. Best 19661-larbor, C.1\-f. 49i-1~9-leave message. new sh1U $3900. 494-9781 or 4!15--0473 \Je'll help yl'u sell! 642-5678 DAILY PI.LOT for 11ctlon! fer. Call 962-2761or63s.86SI oUer in excess of $2·300· Autos Used Autos1 Used 990 990 Autos, Used 990 644-496-1 . ' '68 Corwt!e Fstbk. Hi perl 327. Pwr windo"'S & str'g. Xlnt cond. S2700. 673-9004 or 673-6440 1960 VALIANT; Runs ad or best offer. Call: 675-CL'\84 For that Item under try the Penny Pincher Autos, Used • • COUGAR BIG DEALERS HAVE BIG STOCKS BETTER SELECTION GREATER BARGAINS .. 1969 COUGAR LT. Rust bro"·n. !I.latching 1nter1or, low mileage, Pis, P/b, R/h, air, auto. $ 21 9 5 , 675-1157 aft 7 p.m. DODGE 165 DODGE DART 6 cylinder. stick. (RUl'1.lj) $699 Harbour V.W. 1sn1 BEACH BL. 8424435 HUNTINGTON BEACH THE Performer '69 Dodge Swinger, 340 Vil, hi performance, ne"' wide ovals. Xlnt cond, &15-1615. Best offer. DODGE 440, 1968, red 2 dr hdtp, black vinyl roof, ex- ce.11 rond. Private pty. 5.~7R08. '69 D6DGE Dart GT-V8, auto, air. Red "'/\\•h! \·inyl top S2230. Pv! pty. 673-2127. 1962 Dodgt Dart, factory air, p.s .. p.h. S39:1. • 548-1591 • FALCON '61 Falcon, clean. Good mech . cnnd I.real transpor!atlon $275. 673-8117 aft 3. FIREBIRD 1970 FJRERIRD Formula 400. 4 speed. $2995. 5-15-1852 or 548-4086. FORD '69 FORD MUSTANG "6" For l::CTir10n1y, Radio & l-lea1er, Sharr & Clean. {YRX~l ) $1698 Mike McCarthy BUICK 1553 Beach Blvd. 111 S.D. Fwy 894-3.341 I 5,11.24:)(1 '6!1 FORD Brnnro, 4-\1·h! drive, sport packa.!:'P. V8. r&h, bucket sea.ts, limited slip. Xlnt cond. S 2 7 0 0 . 673--0783 FORD '69 R11.nch \Vag, P/S. Air. Sttrro, 19.000 mi's .. !n1- mac, Pvt pty, $2395. 54~1459 1964 GALAXlE 500 2 dr. Spt., Cpe, 289 V8, Std. trans., vf'ry rlept>nd11ble S 4 2 5 , !142-2497. '66 FORD WAGON Polar \Vh1tP ~·inish, A Dandy St>cond Car, "'llh fu!J cquipt. CSVN320l $898 Mike McCarthy BUICK 1555 Stach Blvd. 111 S.0 , F"''Y fl94..3341 I 5-11-2·l:ilt 196.1 COUNTRY SQUIRE-Air cond. new tires k paint. $495 or mAke offer. Pvt pty. 962-:iJ16 '61f"OROl.TI:rrnr.-Vil!YI - top, tmm11r. All Acee.&~. 1 ov.·nrr. Sl~;J. E\'e 494-7081 '65 Country Squ1rr. air. pwr strg/fl\\T brk.o;. CLEAN. SiOO. . 494-4918 '67 Bmnco Pickup, Good cond, $1500. * 673-0021 * 1968 fl'.lrd \Yagon, ~lichelin tires, new brakes, f11.c. war· rAnty. $1.495. 5'16-9089 F11.sr results are ju!I a phone cllll away· 642-56711 1970 IMPALA ....................... .. .... $2999 2 Doot H•rdtoi:i Ci:ie. P.S., Aulo., Radio, Vinyl Roof, Air -R•m•ining 50,000 mi. w•rranly. (l70ACGJ 1970 MALIBU ...... ................. $3299 2 Doot H,,dtoi:i. Vinvl Roof, Radio, P.S., Auto., Ai•. Nie• _y,, Sir feclorv w•trentv. (ll4BMWl 1970 MALIBU ....... .... ......... .. ............ $2899 2 Door H1rdto13. P.S., Auto .. R1dio, I 0.000 rnil• Cer - fSTK974l 1970 MALIBU .... ......... . . .. $3199 4 Door Herdtoi:i. R"dio, P,S., Auto., Air Ccnd. low Mil11 -D•1d Sh1113. f377 BMW l 1970 CAPRICE ...... . .............. $3599 2 Door H11rdtop Cp•. R1dio, P.S., Auto., A<r, Til t Whe,1, AM /FM Sl•••O T ep1, Vinvl Roof, torg1ou1, blu• with wh it• iop. 1970 NOYA ........ ......... . ............. $2399 • Door s.d.11. R1dio, Auto .. 6 cvl.. w1rrentv 2 WIVI h •••• ( l50ASQI 1970 MONTE CARLO .............. . $3899 2 Do or H .. rdtop. R1dio, P.S .. Auto., Air, AM /FM Stereo, Tilt Wheel, Vinv! Roof, Buc~et S11h with con1ol1-Sur1 the <ight on•. !BblBNIU lf69 IMPALA ......... .. .............. $2399 <I Or. Hotrdloi:i. Redio, P.S., Auto., Air Cond. -Sure I Buv -!XYl717) 1969 MALIBU .. . ............................... $2399 2 Or. H.rdfop. R1d io, P.S .. Air, Vinyl Ro of. -81 Firs! - P2JS9 1969 MALIBU ......... ... .... .. ............ $1799 1 Or. Hardtop. Aulo., R1dio, P.S., -low Low Pric1. !YCM066l 1969 IMPALA .... .. ...... $2199 4 Ooo:>r S.d1n. R1dio:>, P.S .. Air Cond. Buv • lot ef Ca• he••. \YOSS41l 1969 NOYA . . $2099 4 Or. Sedan -Economv 6 Cv!. Redio, P.S., Auto. l<1n1 . -Sure Herd to f;nd • nic• one like 'hi1. 1969 CAMARO .. .. $2499 Coupe. l'.S., Redio, Ai• Cond. -Dted Sharp. IZSR2t0l 1969 CAPRICE ........ .. ... $2599 4 Door Hot rdtop. Auto., P.S .. ,A ;r, P.B., Vinvl Roof, E:lac Window•. Slia1p, Sherp, Shtrp. 1968 IMPALA ... $2199 Super Sport, 2 Door Hotrdtop. P.S .. A•d ~ .. R1dio, A;r, Vinvl Roef, go•gt cu1 green c t r. R:9ht Mtle•. IVC C4J6) 1968 NOYA .. $1499 4 Door S•dtn, V8 , Auto .. P.S .. R1dio, Nice. !VSRS66) 1968 IMPALA ......... . .. $2199 Cu11om Co:>up•. R1d ie, P.S .. Aulo., Air, Vinvl Roof - Sh1rpi• -Stop looking. !XMllSI l l 1968 CAMARO .................................. $1799 Ceup•. Rtdio, P.S .. Auto. -6 (yl, th1 right ont. (WJE- )521 1968 CAMARO ................................ $1699 Coup•. VI, 4 Spied, Red ie -low Mil••· Sli1•p Ctr. (ZNC70l 1 1968 MALIBU ....................................... $1899 4 Ooo• Herdfcp, Rtdio, P.S .. Auto .. Air -Winn tf - iVTP<IJSl 1968 BEL AIR ............................... ~---· ... -$1499 4 Door -Nie• Cer -Auto., P.S., Redio, Air, -I Own• er Ctr. (WVR809l 1968 MALIBU .... ................... $2099 1 Door Ha•dfop. Redio, P.S., Auto., Air -25,UOO Mile c,, Wht11. (VIV779l 1967 MALIBU .......................................... $1500 1 Door Coup1. 6 cv!., Rtdic, Slick. Vinvl Roof. (V)(l<l56 ), Buy thi1 nice one for 1967 MALIBU ................ . ...... $1499 1 Or. H1rdtop. VI, Rtdio, Auto, !UV0171l 1966 IMPALA ..... ............. $1399 2 Or. Coupe. Aule., Rtdio, P.S, I own•r C t r, ITX~34) 1966 NOYA ......................................... $1499 Suptr Sport, 2 Or. Herdlop. Cl111 H111. ( RUJ09 I) 1966 IMPALA ........................................ $1399 Supt! Sport, Coup•. G•ttn Ct r, H11 loh of c l111, R1dio, P.S., Aulo., Air. ( SVZS 14) 1965 BEL AIR .......................................... $799 <I Door. Auto., P.S .. Air, Redio, (JOY 261 l 1963 CORYAIR . .... . .............................. $499 2 Door, ,Auto., Rad io. Rel Good Tr1n1pertefion. !UOJ- 791) 1970 MAVERICK ........ .. ............. $1999 Coupe. Stick S~ift, R1dio, V8 -Sh1rpi1 -Hi Color. CYYJ490l 1966 MUSTANG . .......................... $1199 Co~pe. VS, Auto., Rad io, P.S. ! RZN544l 196S LTD .. . .. ...................................... $1199 4 Deer H,,rdtcp. V8, Auto., P.S .. Air, Rtdio, Otad Sh1rp -Nict, I RX562l 1967 MERCURY .............. $1699 Brougham, <I Door S1d,,n. R1d:o, P.S., Auto., Air, Pcw1r Window -B11ulifut. IUPZl61 f 1967 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL .......... $2599 1 Doer H1rdlop P.S., P.6., Aulo., Elect. Window1, Elie!. Seah, Vinvl Roof, Fine Ctr, Le Mil••· P?-350 1969 JAVELIN ............... . . .......... $1999 1 Dr. Cgup1. Auto., P.S .. Rad io, 11.000 I Own1r t.i i!11. f <149BBJ ! 1966 LE MANS ... ... $1399 Coupe. P.S., R1dlo, Auto., Ai1, Vinyl Roof, Shictly Clan . !SZJ2 l 2 ) 1966 BUICK ELECTRA .. $1899 255 Cu1lom <I Ooo•. Redio, P.S .. P.B .. Elec. Seth, Win· dow1, Vinyl Pool. !RPR616l 1966 LE SABRE ........................................ $1499 4 Door Sedtn. Auto., P.S., Reclio, Air, l ow MH11-Str~n9, !SBR776f 1970 DODGE CHALLENGER ................ $2999 1 Door Herdtop. Bteulfful l ime G r11n, l ow low Mi111, I Own•• Ce•, Redic, P.S., P,8., Auto., A;r, Showroom r11fi, !<190APT! 1966 TOYOTA $899 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA WAGONS-WAGONS-WAGONS '70 BEL AIR WAGON 9 pass. Air, P.S., P.8., auto .. radio. IP2396J entry. scd. Auto., r .s., air, $3799 '68 FORD 6 PAS$. $1799 radio. t81795AJ ~~~~~~~~~~~ '70 MALIBU 9 PASS. Radio, P.S .. auto. Nict'. (I60ACG) $2999 ~!,~~.~ l~.~~:~, $1499 . radio. {P2343l --------------'70 KINGSWOOD 6 PASS, Radio, P.S., nut.o., air. Sure nice. 1714BCFl r11dio. air, cheap, cheap. $ 3599 ~!,~~~~'E'~"9 :~s!~to., $1799 ----------------01\mVmf.E-·3·3-21._ ___________ ...... '69 BEL AIR 6 PASS. Radio, P.S., auto .. alr. Bf'autiful. I P2363 • $2799 "70 DATSUN WAGON $1999 . 4 speed, radio, 1 careful owner. (827ASIJ ~~~~~~~~~~~ "69 GREENBRIER 9 pass. Radio, P.S .. au1o., air. Careful O\\_.ncr. (X.XC466) Skylark, Rack, radio, P.S., auto., $2699 '66 BUICK WAGON $1499 air. Cheap. (292CQTI -------------~ '70 FORD LTD 10 PAS$. Radio, r.S., auto., air. Dead sharp. (134AGE) $3699 ~~,:L:.~· ,::.J.l~i~ITE $1999 (VSA311) ' I ~~~~~~~~~~~ Z~oF!!~~n s!~~~ "'"'. rs. $3899 7!~L !.~.'. '~~~u,~:!N $3299 air. hM warranty. {989AVBI air, has warranty. PICKUPS-VANS-WAGONS '69 GMC 'I• TON .................................. -$2699 R.edio. P.S .. eufo. (9002 9 ~) '69 CHEVY 'I• TON ............................. , $2599 '64 FORD F600 ....... -........ _ ... _.-....... _ ..... $799 VI, du•l 2 1pd. re•r ·~le, 14 ff."'" body, hyd. reer teil ,,. lift . •~·,;';;;";;' ';;·.;';;;°';;'";;;·,;';;;';omo;';;".;';;1~· .;I ;."•';;";;;0.,1,_ ______ , I '61 CH EVY 12' YAN ................................. _ $ 799 • Slip"""· Stic•, 6. !P74151 '69 CHEVY I/• TON ................................ $2S99 St1p1id1. VI, P.S ...... iP2171\ '68 CHEVY 'I• TON ..... .. ........................ $2399 Redio, P.S .. 1uto., ei•. fP2161) '68 CHEVY ¥• TON .................................. $2599 Redio, 1ulo .. VI. 1767602) "69 CHEVY ¥• TON . . .................... $2799 Radio, P.S .. P.B .. auto., 1ir. !2<14SIEI '67 CHEVY 'I• TON ................................. $2199 VS, R&H, H.O. 1qui p. fUS8250l "67 CHEVY 1;, TON .............................. $1899 V8 , 1tick. fP2!7<1l' '64 FORD 'I• TON . .. ... <I 1p1ed, VI , ••dio. IG27S99l .............. $1599 "65 FORD •;,TON ................................... $1199 .-.uto .. radio, VI. IR34221l '57 IHC •;, TON ........................................ $599 Stiek 1hift. Good cond. fJl 7SS6 1 '64 CHEVY I TON ................................... $1099 Ou1I •11r 148" ceb 1-che11i1. IP2l88AJ VANS -VANS "70 FORD ECON.O .................................. $3199 1/r ton, R1dio, 111!0., 1ir. 19174<1} '69 CHEVY 90" WB ................................. $2199 'Ii ton "'"· 6, 1tlc:k. ( P7406) '69 DODGE •;, TON ................................ $2499 90" WB """·Auto., redio, Va. !P241 6 l "68 CHEVY 'I• TON ................................. $1999 Van. 6. 11itk. 11'24171 "69 FORD ECONO ................................... $2299 'lo fcnvotn.6,1t;ck. (P24 11) CAMPER VANS "69 CHEVY •;, TON ............................... $3699 Vi n. VB, 1ulc .. r1dto, h11 9grg1ou1 new Sun Oi1I c1mp1r converiion, Coo~. 1!eep, femilv ''' con"•"i1 nc1, IP2l751 EL CAMINOS '67 EL CAMINO ....................... -............. $1699 V8, beeut. new color, vinyl 1oof, 1ulo., t1dio, N•1tv l'li(I • !08140 1) "69 EL CAMINO ...................................... $2599 VI, 111!0., r•dio, vi nyl roof, dirk 9re•n n1w (lot. ! 164· Otfl "69 EL CAMINO ...................................... $2299 VI, 1ufo., P.S .. r1dio, new color, Yinyl roof. f65150Dl '69 BRONCO 4 wh11f d,;.,,, Excell1nt c:ond radio, 1ulo1111tic trtnh !ZKF9 1 I) ' ; ' , ' .: ·: ' • I ·- .. • f 5l :-"' ~ I; .. -' a, ' -.) 1 .~ 2 ' ' ' ,, ' •' -. ' ( . ' ; B " - t ' 1' ' ) J ' . -:• '• Lo :--' . ;· Cl . ' ' J • I . ' ' '! '• . ' ' i (, -" ' l ' ! F . ' • • I : ~ I' L: J. ' I : I t i ) . ' . c . -. 1 • . . • • • • ( 1-1 I '' ' i " • , ' " • • . t I ) . ? • • • ' • TIME r:J • Time M.,alne Quellty Quiff Aw--1 f., 1f71 THIODOlll:E ROllNI Jlt. INJOY CA.lllflll SUMMlll DltlYING! C''ft ,. ..J ...... . .Ji\ • I....... t II , Gives your cir over 130 vit1I tests for reli1bility, performance and safety, In just 30 minutes. Full written report is included for only ..... .. FULL PJllCI . " .... ·- NOT JUST A FEW PRICE LEADERS BUT ON A LARGE VARIETY OF CARS & TRUCKS. CHECK FOR YOURSELF, KNOW THE FACTS!! PRE·SEASON -ONLY- BRAND NEW • HARDTOPs-!'A~TIAC:KS-CONVHTllUS 40 ST:;iC:K TO CHOOSE FROM OVER FACTORY INVOICE plu1 t•x i lic1n11 NO GIMMICKS-NO. ADD-ONS-NO ORDERS EVERY NEW 1970 CAMPER IN STOCK SLASHED TO , BIG SELECTION-NO ADDEO DEALER CHARGES We Are The Or1np County Show Case D11ler For El Dorado Cilmpers Reserve Today for Assured Oates ~:~ FORD ~:~ TORINO BRANO NEW NEW LTD 4 Dr. Brough. H.T. 429 VS, vinyl roof, cruiso., WSW, vis. grp., P.S., dlx., '\!'· whl., P·strs., P-dr. lock5, air, auto temp. control. AM-FM, P.W. etc. (128708). #45.S NEW G.T • 351 4V, A1.1-F1'1', P.S., P.B., tint. glass, cruiso., Argent whls., (134-412) (377) W-Stkr. $6041 Our l'rlu $4941 W-ltkr. $4514.25 Our Price $37t5.53 OVER FACTORY INVOICE STATION WAGONS -LTO's GALAXIES • TORINOS • MUSTANGS RANCH ERO All AT • I • ~:~ RANCHERO NEW LTD SQUIRE 6 pass. wagon. 429 VS, Cruiso., WS\V, vis. Jl!:rp., P.S., dlx. rack, air cond., AM-f1.f, H.D. susp., dlx. whl covers. (14234). •862 W-st!i<. $5785 Our Price $4684 NEW LTD 4 DR. HDTP • Vinyl RF, AIT, pwr. steer, brakes, 11.nd windows, a.Jr, elec. defrost, AM-FM, Vis. grp. W IW, Tint &lass, whl. cvrs. (100017). #660 W-stkr. $SZ67 Our Price $42'5 NEW GALAXIE 500 2 Dr. Hd. Tp. 400 V-8, Vinyl rr .. A/T, Pwr. Sir. and brakes. air, radio, whl. cVTS., tint. rtass, elec. defogger. (00015). #661 W-llkr. $4'22 Ow Price $39H N-~~ BRONCO New 2 Dr. Hdtp. Brough. 351 VS, A-T., bll. tires, vis. grp., P-S, P- discs, a.Jr, rad., whl cvrs., etc. (124356) •236 W-Stkr~ $442:1.25 Our Price $3741 .73 NEW 4 DR. SEDAN VS. crul~ .• P.S., P.B .. White waJls, AM radio, tinted glass. {173585) (760) W-Stkr. $3431 Ovr Price $29:11 NEW 4 DR. SEDAN VS. cruiso., P.S., P.R., 11!r cond .. \VS\\-", AM radio, tint. glass, whL coven. ( 175- 547) (835) W·Stkr. 54152 Our Price $3495 ~rr' Fl 00 PICKUP 2 ~~~~~'E1i~~iio·~s:ic~~Ls. NO GIMMICKS • NO AD ONS NO ORDERS BRAND NEW 11777401 ~~:-' F250 PICKUP ' &niision control iyitem, E7 x 14 tires, AM rect!o. 1119131) 11441 VS, sport pkg., conv. grcup, H.D. redietor, aux. fuel llok. 1700121 10764) Custom. Va, r•nger pkg., •mp I oil 9euge1, tool box, cruisom•tic, opt. vecuum booster, AM-FM Stereo, power steerin9, G78 x IS tires. 106511 Pi c.li:up. lbO VS , tu tone green & white, geuges, hoclr side mouldings, H.O. redietor, 8 ply tires. 10714 I 19<! W-Stkr. $3396.82 Our Price $2742.,4-W-Stkr. $4SZ2.44 Our Price $1851 .21 W•Stkr. $4150.20 Otir Price $lH6.ll W-Stkr. $1668.99 Our Price $2911.00 I • 10 to choose from. '65 thru '71 models. Coupes, h.11rdtops, convertible end 2 + 2 F1stb1ck1. Some with 4 spe1d1, also air conditioning and automatic models with power steering • EXAMPLE: 1966 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI, 1utam1lic, fad ia, h11t1r, 9aod mit11. !SVF724 ), '69 CHEY. MALIBU 2 dr. H.T. r.&H. auto., air. P.S., V8. vinyl roof. Good miles. \Varr. avail. (\'Wl'5351 '68 V.W. FASTIAC:K 4 speed. r:&H. ~ood: miles. 1V\VS4271 '66 C:AD DE VILLE 2 dr. H.T. Full po\vrr. fact. air, vinyl roor. good miles. IRYS.2711 .. " SALES DEPT. HOURS '66 DODGE DART 270 H.T. Radio. ht>ater, stand11rd, good mile1. (Tl-IU485l '69 COUGAR Auto .. R&H. pcl\\'f'T S\t'f'r- inll.", l!lir cond., good miles. fXUR196) '66 CHEV. NOVA 2 Dr. H.T. 6 cyl., auto., R&H, .:ood miles. (RZX477) 8 AM TO ' PM MON-FRI I AM TO 6 PM SAT 10 AM TO 6 PM SUN I I --rRANsPoi'TATI~ ----------......-..,,, ~~~~~--;---- &ood miles. lNOG876) with camper shf'll. VS, I 63 CHEY! 'fl TON PICKUP gld. shirt. (L25728J Hardtop, automatic, P.S., I 69 PONTIAC: LE MANS radio, heater. ( YPS354) I 64 FORD STATION WAGON V8. Rill-I. auto. P.S. Good miles. CQUP923) 6 cylinder, radio and heater. I 64 FALCON Z DR. COSV613) 1111 P'rk• ..., ..,. n lfMrs. ca" Mlact ,. P'rllf' 11i.. ' M1ny to choose from! '65 thru '70 Mod els, Sport Roofs»armels, 2 door and 4 door H1rdtop1 and Sedans. Full power, 1ir condi· tioning. Warranties av1il1bl1. EXAMPLE: 1969 FORD LTD 2 dr. H.T. \II, 1ulom1tic, R&H. pow1r al11ri"9 l br1k11, f1cl. 1i1, ,,.;11yl roof.(XSRlt7l: '67 PONTIAC G.T.O. '69 FAIRLANE 500 -"' Cnnvrrl.iblr. 4 spc>ed, radio, 2 dr. H.T. VB. auto .. H&l I, hcatrr. good miles. P.S., fact. air, lo mill's. '~ (l33297J \Varr. avail. (ZVE0051 . ' '6-4 CHEV. WAGON '70 MAVERICK ) Bel Air. VB. 11.uto .• R&H. 2 door. l O\\·ner. Radio, b kJ P.S., air. good miles. heater, economy plus. CilN155) {YRE716J ~ '70 PONTIAC: G.T.O. '69 V.W. S91AC:K 0 Hardtop. Automatic, P.S., F'ul!y rquippcd, P.B., air cond., vinyl roof. ~ood miles. ·' (321ACG> <YWS8331 •' Ill/a acres of the most moderri Ford sales and service·tacilities on the West Coast -~,, .... ( PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUE·FRI I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS • • I ) I .