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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-07-06 - Orange Coast Pilot7 1 ,,_ THE SONG HAS ENOED S.tchmo (190().1971) Golden Trumpet Stilled I .. New Paris Tallas Hope . DAILY PILOT Held Out ~ti Viet Cong· * * * 1oc * * * ~ount Jazz Idol Armstrong Dies at 71 NEW YORK (U PI) -Louis "Saleh· mo'' Armstrong, an orphaned waif from the :streel.'! and bordellos of New Orleans who became king of the jazz trumpet and won international acclaim, died Tuesday at his home only two days after his 71st birthday. Even though Armstrong bad been critically ill and hovered between life and death in Beth Israel Hospila! only a few months ago. his death in his sleep at ~:311 a.ro. was unexpected. He apparently had been making a slow recovery from setbacks caused by a kidney ailment and heart trouble,~~ wa.s strong enough in recent ~eeks to Jotn his long-li me friend, trombonist Tyree Glenn. in duet renditions o! such songs as "Sleepy Time Down .south:" . In a pre-birthday 1ntcr~1ew w1th. U~l. Armstrong's. only complaint was his dif- ficulty in we.I king. , .. "Work. that's my life, oh yeah . Armstrong said. "Bul ! wouldn 't want to go out on the stage with 3 v:alki.ng cane. Soon as my pins get back 1n shape. ole Saleh will be back . I'm one man that you just can't kill." I-le was an American baby , born on the Fourlh of July, ~.nd his horn be.came an instrument of international diplomacy that earned him lhe nickname of ''Ambassador Of Jazz" whether he was tilaying in Belgrade'. Moscow ~r to a gathering of Africans in Ghana, his trum- pet generated excitement. . . Among his fans was Pres1den~ Nixo.n ..,ho sent him a. telegram durmg his 1truggle for life at Beth Israel. . He had come a Jong way from sordid beginnings in New Orleans where he was born in 1900 of a union betwee11 a turpen· tine factory worker and a housemaid. He had an ear for mustc and at an ear- !See SA.TCHMO, Page Zl Coast ll'eaiher Warm weatller Is ei:pected to continue along the Orange Coast today and Wednesday with hlgh11 -predicted in the 70'1 Riong the beaches. reaching 79 Inland. Low1 in both areas around 60. INSIDE TODAY The fury of 6 So1&tlleo.st AM tuphoon Ms brortoht fighting virtual/II to n halt in Vietnam. Stt story, Poat 4. , .. ,"" n C•MN••I• 1t C:Mt•lllt u, , Clatllf... .... c .... 1c_, u c .. ..-. u DMlll l!Klk.11 II 01...,_ n ••1....i11 ..... ' a11Mrlllfl-I tt•tt ,.,, .. _ U.11 1<1..-..CIH II ...... \.MIOll•n. 11 -... "'""'' ...... . .. OI•-C-ft" II SH!'ft ».H U•d1 ,.,,...,, »U Tt '"ltlffl • ,.,....,,..... , .... W ... fhet I .,,_.,.., ...... , ,, ... W1"'4 ,_,.._.. l·J Ike'• Brother Edgar Eisenhou•er, . the. late president's brother, IS said to be in critical condition today following a stroke Saturday. The B2·year old Eisenhower had been progressing sati sfac- tori ly until Monday evening. Judge Declines Viet Defendant Dismissal Bid FT. MEADE, Md. (AP) -1. milit1.1y judge today denied a key defense motion &eeking dismissal of one af fOl,lr charge1 against Oran K. Henderson, the Army {'1)Jonel accused of participating in an alleged coverup ol the 1968 May Lai massacre in Vletnam. The judge, Cot PMer S. WondotoWsld, made no comment on why be re(u!led to dismiss a charge that Henderson violated a Vietnam command regulation requiring reporting of actual and suspected war crimes. WondolowskJ also rejected 11 de(ense motiO'l'I lo admit Into evidence the resulb ol two Army administered polygr~ph te3ts on Henderson. Henry Rothblatt. Henderson'• civilian tawyer, told the judge Henderson posed botll testa. On the motion le dismiss one charge, the defense had argued that the re1ula- tion is unco.rutituUonally vague and untn· force.able. A ruling was alsc expected todly ori a secoDd defense mcUon. Rotbblatt opened the h@arlng by .up lng that the results of the polygrspb e1· aminaUons last September •nd la1t P'ebraary should be admitted Jnto evidence: at Henderson's forthcomlnt court-marlial. - The h1wyer told the military ju<fce, COi. Peter S. Wondolowskl, that In Heu· derson's ca!M!,-*"" Army la not followir\C a )ong st.anding policy t1f not proeecuUni 1 1uapecU wbo pau lie detector tesll . ... an - President To Arrive For Visit In his first visit lhlt awnmer . .Ptflklent Nixon was expected to arrive alon1 the South Coast at 6 o'clock this eveninf to begin a tw1>week working vacation in San Clemente. Air Force One was ei:pected to arrive at the dinner hour at the MCAS in El Toro where the standard greeting by military personnel and dependants wUI take place. Alter a short hop by belicoptb' to La Casa Pacifica In San Clemente, the Chie( Executive will begin a vacaUon which is e1pected to include discussions on the budget and other economic matters. Earlier today the President -conducted one of his standard briefings for editor• in the communicaUons industry. Top-level executives from 13 Midwest slates were expected to confer for 11.n hour with the President durin1 a Kan.sat City, Mo .. stopover. Several Presidential aides preceded Mr. Nixon lothe city and conducted other briefings for the iuestJ earlier today . Topics of the scssioru; included welfare reform . revenue sharing and governmen· ta! reorganiution. Announcements about the Prestdent"1 11chedule while in San Clemente will pro- bably emerge Wednesda)t. One key member of the Presidential entourage. Domestic Security Adviser Dr. Henry Kiuinger, will not ac- cOmpany the Chltf e1ecutive. The frequent vi.sitor to San Clemente remained in Saigon today, engaged ln to~level talk! with South Vietnamese leaders. Secretary of Stale William l\ogtrl, however, was reported in San ClemenUI ln advance of the President. Laguna Agent Takes Plunge A Laguna Be-ach. narcotic.a of. ficer, alnlgglin1 to apprehend a lhouUng, klcklng Camp Pendleton MariDe, wu taken for a dip in OM ocean SUnday before finally 1etllna: handcuffs oo the suspect Sgt. Neil Purcell Aid the man, Edward L. Light, U , ran acrou tht Cleo Slreel Beach corrylllf !ho nan:otJcs officer Oft hll b9ck before 1tumblin1 i ... lilt Mf, ,,,. pair mlled arowd In th8 water for severil mtnules Wen Purctll'r parm«, --· helped subdue Ille upocl. Lll)11 WU -ed m .waull and narcoOca char1es foDow\nt: the 10- mlnutf! fracu with the poUce of. fice r. PolK:t claim 10 IOllY marl~ juw el11rette1 were f0tmd on h Martne aJttr he was mertt<I, . . -- VOi,. ... NO. Ut, I SKT90N .. • PMt• • a1n on ....,.oast 4th Toll Huge Holiday Weekend .'A Discuter' IY .VNITl!I> P.USS INTElllU110NAL The "di.tulroo5" July the '•'"?' ia~.:end ended Y<i~i!!J!q""'! ldllod 1a ·-IC<li\eoll lild·111i-. :1l!dted rr .. "~ """'' ilJdlred lodlf. .. "II wu a bid weOkond,",. NaUcnal s.ltty Coui><:U apoke&m,. aald. ldon· ~ nlabt. well befor.e tht flllaf count was ln. "It wu dJaastrous." Lut year, MO peraona dJdd Jn Independence Day lr1ftlc. Thl.r year, the oouncil estimated 520 to 620 peraons would die on the naUorl's roads. A UPI count at nooo EDT thowed 636 persoos killed in auto accident.a between f p.m. local Ume Friday and midnieht Monday. A breakdown of accidental 'deaths: Traffic 636 Drownings 190 Planes 19 Other 61 To~I 906 California ltd the holiday tr.me death toll with 80 deaths. Texaa bad !2. Indiana 31, Florida 30, Geora:ia 29 and New York 2.8. Al1.3ka, North and South Dakota and Vennont reported 110 trallic deatha durin1 the holiday period. Viet Cong Off er New Hope Fo1· Latest Peace Plan PARIS (UP1) -Madame Nguyen Thi Binh, !ore\gn minister of the South Viet· namese National Llbel'alion Front (Viet Cong), aaid today the Communist peace proposal submiU.ed here July 1 to the Unlttd Statai L.. not 1n inflexible take-it- M-leave-lt package. M1d;.me Binh, who heads the Viet Cong deleg1Uon In the Plrla peace lallu, aald in· a w~ran1lng interview with United Preu lntmitUonal that President Nizon ahould ut bJ1 ne1oUator1 Jn Paris to discuu the plan -or ~b she is th• chief author -with the Communlat delegates. She warned that if Nlxon ketps 1 residual force of American military ad- visers, technician•· and supply troopa in Vietnom after U.S. combat troops have dep1rted, that force will irreslat.lbly become Involved in the fightiJIC and this will in turn draw tbe United Stat.ea beck into a combat role. Madame Blnh, speaking at her well· guarded headquartera, a red-roofed villa at sub.Jrban VmJeret-Je-Buiuon, 11aid 1be w11 ready to meet chlef American n@1oUatur Dlvld K. E. Bruce, If need be, Services Slated For Restaurateur SAN P'l\ANCISCO (UPI) -A r<qultm mu1 w1ll be lltkl W-y for North B<ooch ... 1aurateur SllvlO Zonl, better known a1 Jot Vantlfl. llonl ownl!d •nd operated Vllleta1'1 rutalD'ant 1lnce It OJ'flned 35 nm a10. He died Saturd1y·lft.er I Iona: illness. He wli1 84. · A native of l~ly. 7..onl adopted the name Vannsl 1lter hil home town of V&Plet. . - t.o discuss the Vietnamese Communist proposals. " Up to now the Americans have been willing to meet privately with the North Vietnamese deleBates but, because of the objections of lhe Sai&on government that the Viet Cong has no of(icial standing, they have declined lo meet with Mddamt Billh'a deleeation In private. "We hope Preektent Nll:on 's answer wUI be positive," she said. "Our seven· point plan clearly 1howa our goodwill. "~ key t.o.._ptace liq in Mr. Nixon's haodl -it consiltl of I.he South Viet- nameM people '1 demand that he set a terminal date for th6 withdrawal of all U.S. trtios>• from South Vietnam this yea r In ei:change for a cease-fire and ex- change cf all war prisoners." Madame Blnb, aaid announcement or tbe dale of a military pullout abould preferably be made public. She' 1tdeatepptd questions whethe.r the terml111l date for a withdrawal could be communicated to the Communist aide through private channels and agreed upon also privately, rather than being a publk: announcement from Wuhlngton that mlabt ~ embarrassing !or lhe Nixon AdmlnlrtraUon. She lnslfted rtpeatedly that "It is In the lntere!l of the Nixon Admlniatration and the-Unll.fld Stales llRH to declare their readinea to witbdraw from South Viet- nam." Claiminc that Viet Cone forces bad the lnlUaUve on the batUeUeld, Madame ·Dinh al.id the U.S. plan to eventually keep re1ldu1I military forces in Vietnam would draw the Americans back lDto flared.up fiah t1n1 again. "The puppet ts.Jann> troops alone.,.. not resist our forces," Madame Blnh said. "lf any American forcu -re1idual forcei1 -ire kept in South VSetnam. they will inevitably be drawn lrito flgbUng again ," 1he said. "The very key to peace in Vietnam La 1 completa U.S. mllit1ry wlthdr1wal." • 3 Marines Arrested _In Beating Formal murder charges were loidg:ed today again!t thret Marlnta who allq:ed- ly beat a man to death followinJ bil wife's birthday celebration in a Seal Beach 1partmenl early Monday. Police alleged the three men killed Vernon E. Page, 36, of La Hlbra witb their lists and feet during a fight On tbl beachfront near Seal Walk and Neptune Avenue. No weapons were found at the ~·""· Page was pronounced dead oD mival at Los Alamitos Hospital at 4:22 a.m., nearly one hour after I.he alleged fracas. Arraigned on murder charge.s at Wed Orange County Judicial District Court this morning were Joseph G. Chavez, JOt Andres Pastrano Jr., 21, and Walter .A.. Baumgartner. 20. All are stationed at tht Seal Beach Naval Weapons Center: Police said the three men were golni up and down Seal Walk looking for a par ty and entered an apartment at 1300 Seal Way where Page's wife, Amella, w11 celebrating her birthday. Officers were alerted to the incident by some neighbors who called the police sta· lion. The three men were captured by of- ficers !ollowing a two block" chase dowa !he beach. Lt. Bob Garra, of the Seal Beach Polfce Department. said Page and the 1.lleged assailants were strangers. No in .. formation was offered about what might have sparked their argument. A coroner's iutopsy and loxlcotoa test.Ii were order~ to determine the Q . act cau.se or Page's death. Victims Removed From Air Crash HAKODATE, Japan <UPI! .-RoaaJ9 workers brooght down Uie bodies Monday of M passengers and four crew menibeil lrom the wr«k1ge of a Japanae Airlintt wtiich crashed on a 2,100.foot moun1-ln tn Norlliem Japan durina !OJ and llnrmJ weather Saturday night. · · , The bod! .. , Including lhlt ol tho American co-pilot who wa1 prewmtd by airline officials to have been ftytnl the two.engine YSll turboprop, hr& tlba to two templu were mtdkal authorlUee set up facilities for tdtntitlcallon. . The Toa teaal Alla) ~ AlrU... plane cruhed wblle -approocblns ll'e airport of W. pon dly 4CIO mllel norih of T~ on Hok):aldo, Japau•1 norlbemmoot b i.nd. O.vlllan air l\ILboriUes. who N:plCted a m•lfunct.lon in the plane's altlrrMWN, speculated the mowtlalo "• rnlltan,, 10< Ille · airport ti-boc.luae .i i... et.rument or hum1n error. II took· nearly 14 boura al lnlomhw .. aearchlng tn r91 and •'tormy wtather 'w mori thin l.000 ooldlen In l1Dd Ille J>1W wrec~agt near Ult peat fll Mt. Yokosuda"ke, all mllff northwe1l of tbi airport. . The co-pilot, Jack Spenct, 4t, ol-lf~ lain View, <:1111 .. wu Ille only Amarlcan ·~ the &lmafL • ' I I I Z.,___DAl_LY_Pl_L_OT ___ S Bargainers Hear Plea Nixo1l Asks 'Constructive' Steel Talks WASHINGTON (AP)-Presldtnt N!xon called on nqotiators in the steel industry today to reach a "constructive set· Uttnent " that will keeti the industry c:om- peltve In world markets and maintain the economic recovery. 1be P~!dent met with the union and management negotiators for about an hour on the eve of lheir conlract talk.\ and, a spokesman said, laid out the economic problems facing the industry. Nixon called for "hard bargaining'' jn the talks but refrained. IrOm setting a speciflc w~e settlement he 11o·ould like to see brought about. The contract expires in the industry July 31. George P. Shultz, director of the office of management and budget, suinmed up the President's attitude: "I know you are going into bargaining; I know how important it is lo yo u. I felt It necessary to tell you how Jn1t>ortant I think ii is." It was Nixon's first try al intervening in any way in a negotiating session before it actually got under way and reflected a * * * {( * * Docl{ Strikers Remember I 'Bloody Thursday' i11 '34 From the Wir e Service1 Picketing resumed today as 'longshoremen put a s i d e memories of "Bloody Thursday" 37 years ago lo con· centrate on their current strike against 24 West Coast ports. 1ntemational Longshoremen's an d Warehousemen's Union members today entered tht sixth day of their strike against 24 ports from Canada to Me:iico, the union's first coastwide sltike in 23 years. On ~1onday, ILW members paused in dock picketing to honor the men who died on '·Bloody Thursday,'' July 5, 1934, dur· ing the strike that fif'!'it ~·on recognition for their union. retroactive lo July t and bringing their minimum salary to $-4 an hour. The re- mainder of the 76 cent-.an·hOur raise will be spread over the length of the contract. e President Nixon entered the labor picture by calling in representatives of the steel indu.stry and union negotiators to the White House for a lecture on in· nation. It was the first time the Pres.ident has summoned both labor and management ror a joint meeting. though he has met separately with each side. The :i;teel negotiators resume bargaining \Ved· nesday to replace a contract which ex- pires July 31 and covers some 450 .000 workers. new Impetus by the White House of more direct involvement to hold down wag• and price increases. Ni:a:on emphasized the relatlon.shlp ol the atttl industry in the world market, told the negotlattlrs how productivity has failed to increase, how profits have i>een lagging and wages remaining stable in comparison to other industries. Shultz said Nixon appealed 10 th~ "sensitivity of their 01>.'n self·inlerest in beginning the contract talks ·· Shultz said a l'onstructive settlement means a contratt that would mai.Dt.ain steel's competitive world position and ha'w'e no depressing impact on the economic recovery. Nl:a:on emphasized that he: wanted an atmosphere that would help avoid a strike in the industry, Shull! said, but said the President would not intervene if there, was a walkout. "1l1e President did not try to say that they should settle for this or that,·· Shultz sald. As Nixon met with the negotiators, the White House released a report on the :steel industry prepared by his Cabinet Committee on Economic Policy detailing the troubles of the steel industry. The study showed profits have declined by 42 percent to the lowe&t Jeve! in ten years. the report said. In addition, the study s;\id, production has stabilized in receol years. output per man-hour has shown virtually no increase and, "1vith compensation incrt'ases ac· celerating. unit labor costs ha.ve in· creased sharply." The .study said steel face!!' great com· petilion from Japan and several Euro- pean countries that must be taken into consideration. About 300 u n ion members attended a traditional cere1nony ~1onday near San Francisco's Ferry Building. the area wher e two strikers were shot and killed and IO!l persons injured in a clash with police. Shippers had all-cmpcd to move cargo through picket lines when the 1934 battle erupted between 5,000 longshoremen and 6)mpathizers and 1.000 police. New Educational Fight Spwked by Fund Cuts The West Coast dock-ers \.\'On their first contract after a third man died in Seattle and a fourth in San Pedro labor struggles July 5 in an lLWU cootract holiday. There were no signs of renewed negotiations between ILW U and Pacific itaritime Association, representative of 12tl employers. Negotlaliooti broke off late last Wednesday. and 15,000 ILUW members walked out Thursday. The strike has cut off more than $500,000 daily in spending p o w er generated in Long Beach by the city's porl, officials say. The port or Loi! An1eles has no estimales but Los An1eles t ity officlalt say it. mu.st be losing more than Long Beach, including lost wages. lost business among companies catering to the ship- ping trade and firms they in turn sup- port. Lo6t fees for piloting and wharfage alone run more lhan $50,000 daily in Lhe two ports. Mean~·hile. many freighters are diverting their cargoes \.o Vancouver, B.C., in canada aod Ensenada, Mexico for unloading and truck.Ing to U.S. destinations. "It looks like it's going to be a long strike,'' said Robert Rohatch, president or lLWU local IO in San Francisco, - •·Rerouting ships to Canada and ~1exico has really solidified our membt-r5 " The IL\\-11 has demanded a nev• t\\"O- year contract with an 85 cent hourly in· crease the firsl yea r anrl i5 the second. Pr!:sent base is $~.29 ao hour. Also al issue is a $500 monthly pension a t age 62 for mf'n vdth 25 yea rs servlcr Meanwhile. in other t:.S. strike de1·eiopmeot.s e Detroit garbage men rat1f1ed a ne1.1•, lhree·year pact with the clly ~onday, calling for a 28.5-cent·an.hour raise OU.N•I CO.A.IT DAILY PILOT (l~AlilGI CO.UT ,UILl5H1MG COM,Nl'f l•Hrt H. w • ..i ,, .. -.., .... ,.,,,_...,... J•tli l . C11rlt 'I' Vb ,,.1111" '"' ~.1 """ ...... n ...... K .... a l t l*" l he111t' A. M11r,hl11• M•l\eflnl Sillltw C~•rl•• H. l ees 11,;,1.,,J P. N•ll Meb lolll/ AYMtlllo l!.iwt DAILY f'tt.OT. Wltlt ..tlldl .. ~'!he ..... ~--............. ••lit' •C9Pt ,_ •Y Ill ...,.,..,. .. Mini .... UW.• 1..0.. ........., ~ c:..tl ,..., """""'-""""" ,._..... Ytlllt', Miii ~f Cail*,,_ ..., '*IWI«. •It'll wllll -~ .. '""" ~ ~ ,..... la ...... .., ... l.C...1911MM. T .. 1pl111 CTI41 '42-4121 Cl•lf'M Al•••hk1 .... ,,,. S.C'a NAll11 ''""" , ........ 4t&.44Jt SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan has triggered an angry new fight with Califoml'a educator:i; by vetoing a 10 per· cent raise for university and college faculty members. The .$39 million cul came as part of a record $504 million the Republican governor vetoed from the state's new budget before signing It Saturday. The final budget figure is $6.i9 billion. The only way he could approve the. salary increases voted by the Democrat- controlled legislature was to propose a tax increm , Reagan said, and he refused to do thal. This is the second consecutive y~ that University C)f California a n d California State College faculty members have gorie without the usual fi ve percent toSt-Of·living raise. Legislators left rtiem out of the general state salary increase in 1g10 because of anger over the behavior or some faculty members in thr \.\•ake of the Cambodian invasion and t!Y.' Kent Slate shootings that ~pring. The legislature tried lO restore that by gh·1ng them a JO percent hike this year. But 1n vetoing Lhe item, Reagan ·argued th<it "salAries in the university remain in the top five pt'rcent of all uni\·ersi!1es in lhe country," Th?re was immediate. angry rt'action from re President Charles Hitch \\'ho said, ''The governor has diluled our resources and curbed our gro~·th. He has athiel'ed \\'ith the stroke or a pen \\'hat bo n'b threats, picker~. int1n11da11on and aggr('ss1on could not '' rtragan also trimmrd back the l"(' and college operating budgets to the leve l~ he nri~inally proposed in F'ebniarv JllS! ;ihout lhf' samf' ;is tas1 ycar · altt1ough rnorr studf'nts are ciqwcted ClLA Chancellor fhArlf':i; F.. Young challt'ngC'd Rr:igan·s statement ttiat other states are cuHing fa culty saliiries "Other universlt!e.~ are cutting ba<'k on spending lo other areas to be able to raise faculty salaries," Young ~aid. "'f know of no other major institution 1hat has failed to grant a faculty increast for t•No years.·• Sltphen Hom. president of California State College at Long Beach. said, ''"'e·re at least 20 percent behind our Tobacco Tepee Loses Profits PUYALLUP, Wa sh. (U PI) Two men carrying f\ash\ight.s Mon· day night robbed Mr. and Mrs, Corwin King of about $41.000 In receipts from the "Tobacco Tepee" where the Kings sell tax·fr~ cigarettes on an Indian Reservation on the outskirt.s or Tacoma. Tht! Kings told polire t1.1·0 men pulled the door oH their mobile home. lied I.hem up and demanded lo know ~·here their money w•.!l kept. King told them it was In a suitcase. The robbers picked up the suitcase and ~·alked away. The Tobacco Tepee did 3 1;.ndslide busine5'! during the July 4th weektt'K! because U wu sltua~ near R fireworks .11tand which the Indians 11lso operated on tht reservation "Many of tht flreworkJ sold by the Puyallupa "''ere lllreial under state law. Cigarffles al the Tobacco Tepee generally stll for 28 cents ' pa ck. They sell for from 45 to SS cenu a p<1ck off Indian land. .. "----'"'""" . . ~. --. --___ .... ~ competition in other states and l\'e ·re dropping fast." Reagan was asked if he feared the veto ·would trigger an exodus or professors. ··well, I'd have to ask where \\'Ould they go.'' he replied. Reagan said there are some states that follo~'ed a ··rree--spending policy" while he was trying lo economize that no\.\' are cutting enrollments and spending belo\v last year's level. "I would have to say I don't knO\v of anyplace. even including the great private ll'Y League universiti~, where they 're in any better situation.,11 Reagan said. "A number of those have actually a.sk~ their faculty to take an across-the. board cut." Reagan's item vetOt's can be oveniden in the legislaturl"" "·ith a two-!hirds vole of each house. \Vith Democrats holding narrow control in both the Sena~ Rnd Assembly, chances were slim that would be done on any major spending iten1:s. Jersey City Ma yor, Seven More Con victed NE\VARK. N.J . lAP ) -Jersey Ci!Y \layor Thomas J . \Vhelan siiys he ~·Ill be bn<'k <tl hts {'1ly hii\I rlesk 'l'hur~diil". ;il!liot1gh a ferleral Jllr.Y convu:trd 1ti'n1 ;ir1d se1·rn others of extorting kickbacks fron contract.ors. \\'he!!"in \.\'as smiling And rrlaxed ~Ion· dav alt1'r a federal court JUr.v of nine v:o1nen and lhrtt 1nen tound hint guilty or all 29 counts or extortion and con~ sp1racy 1o extort. The jury deliberated f(lr four hours 1n an extraordinary holi· day wttkend session The original indictinent last November charged each defendant with two count~ of conspiracy to exiort and 32 counts of E'Xlorling $182 ,000 rrom contractors. engineers and suppliers doing business with Jersey City and Hudson County. Five rounts were dismissed by U.S. Dist. Court .Judge Robert Shaw. dropping the sum of tile extortion to SIS5,000. Only with Jersey City Business Administrator Philipp KWlz was the repetition or "gu.ilty" finding~ by the jury broken. Kun7. was convicted on 17 counts and acquitted on I.he other 12. Convicted with Whelan and Kunz were Hudson County DemocrAtic Chairman Walter Wolfe. Jersey City CouciJ Presi- dent Thomas Flaherty. Hudson County Treasurer Joseph Stapleton, H u d son County Police Chief F red Kropke . .Jersey City Purchasing Agent Bernard Murphy, and Port of New York Authority Com· missioner William Sternkopf. Conviction on each count except one carries a max.imum ol 20 years im· prl!Onment and a fine of $10.000. The se- concl conspiracy counl carries ' max- imum of a tive-ye•r tenn and a SI0,000 flnr No <late for sentencing \\'as set. \Vhelan said he would h11ve the city cor- poration council determine the ap- plicabillly of 11 stall'! :i;latute that requires lhe resignation of public olfici11ls con- \•1cted of a crime. During the. trial. government witnesses testified Whelan and r·lahtrty had more than $1 2 million in unknown banks. Olher witnews, primarily conltacton. s<ild that to do business in Hudson Coonty or Je-rsey City they had lo psy klckbacka of up to 10 percent to "tht boya downtown ," Long!lme HudSC)n C-Ounty Democr8llC boss John V. Kenny, originally 11 defen- daot. •·as severed from the case bec.I UM o( poor health . .. ·•· - U,I Ttlt Pr..IM Hitting the Beach The long holiday weekend proved to !fl just a touch too much for this canine co.mpanion or a :Ventur~ surfer. Afler hitling the beach for thr_ce _straight days. the tired pooch assumed lhc relircd position, thus relieving the tensions of another day in the Ca.lifornia sun. Holiday Spelled Death, Jail for Two Countia11s Jlohday Lrips led lo de&h in Utah for an Anaheim man and jail for a Newport Beach molortst "·hose car police allege killed one boy and injured four others l'!leep1ng hes1de Highway IOI in San Luis Obispo Co unty. Joseph M. ParotU, 28, or 22.1 Grant St.. Ne11·port Beach, i! in San Lu.is Obispo Co\Ully Jail today awaiting arraignment on charges of felony manslaughter and felony drunken driving. Arrangements were under wav to 1·eturn the body of motorist Maik C. Metzler, 22. fron1 Green River. Utah, 1>.'here he 1>.'aS killed Sunday in a van ac- cident that injured two passengers. Utah lUghway Pa.trol officers said Ray· 111ond A. Cook, 22, and Janis Wilson, 19, also rrom Anaheim, "'ere admitted to a hospital in ~loab and listed in lair con- dition, Investigators said Hetzler l\'8S passing 11 truck on eastbound High\.\·ay 5()..6 at 10:30 a.rn . !'iundt>.y 1>.·hen his van went out of control at high speed. S\\·erving in a fishtail across both east and westbound lanes, it finally overturn- ed and rolled live limes before coming to res!. Parolli was arrested earlier Sunday at the scene of a freak acc1denl on a Highway IOI curve neer the Avila Beach turnoff . south of San Luis Obispo. California Highway Patrol investigators :;ald his car went out of control on ~ curvt' and ~truck a vehicle parked along5idP !he iligh\vay. Catapulted ahead by ihe Impact. the second car ran over five sleeping boys from U1e San Joaquin Valley town of Lemoore, visit.ing coastal beaches for the July Fourth \.\'eekend. Mesa Youth, 18, Seeks $50,589 Iii Flag Arrest A Shalimar Drive resident arre~ted and charged with desecration of Old Glory, then later released, has filed a $50,589 damage claim against. the city of Costa f\.1esa. Van A. Noelck, 18, of 779 Shalimar Drive, charges false arrest and im- prisonment in lhe pre-la"·suit claim filed hy the Pomona Jaw firm of Pie'! and Polakovic. The action says police officials Rudy ~talik and 01>.·en Krez.a arrested Noelck April S on charges he violated Section 611d or the fllilitarr :ind Vetrrans Code, governinl!' pro\)(!r display of The flag. Charge!' 11ere subst-quently dropped, but Noelck <'1:'lims he suffered im- pugnment of his reputatio n and meotal ,:t~Sl'l due 1o being led tlway in handcufs brlore his neighbclrs. Ills cl aim -For a total of $50 .000 in gcnr·ral damages and $589 1n VRrious. legal fees -also notes a ~torv of the ar- rest 1\a~ printed on the DAILY PlLOT"s frnrit page. Pa·ssword-. From Pqe I SATCHMO ..• ly ace-he was playing a guitar. The event that was eventually to change hi! lift w&I his meeting with Willie ··Bunk" JohfllOn, whO taught him to play the cornet 1vithout having lo read not.e-11 . His "formal" education began when Jo. ''King" Oliver gave him lessons. At the age or 12 Armstrong played In a quartet which performed for peMiea in Storyvillc in New Orleans' red-light district. Armstrong's only encounter 1>.'ilh thti law came on his 13th birlhda.y when he fired a pistol loaded witJ1 blanks durlng a Fourth of .July celebration. He was sent to a waif's home for a year. While ht: was 1n the orphanage, he played in a band .and it was said his notes could be heard aeross the Mississippi River. Armstrong played in Kid Ory's Band a!J a replac:tmenl for King Oliver, 11o·ho look his brand of jazz to Chicago. Over the years he played in bands Jed by Oliver and Fletcher }lenderson and during thi! period be switched from cornet lo trumpet, which gave him .a 1reater range. Armstrong mp,de hundreds I) f recordings in his prime Although sound rep,roduc!ion techniques were poor in the 1920s in ('Omparisoo with 1971 standards, Armstro11g's early recordings are col· lector's lle1ns \\'hie~ con1mand premiun1 pri<.:es, Those \\'ho knew Armstrong in his eiirly years said he was a natural for the horn -either cornet or trumpet. He had the perfect lip for the small silver mouthpiece. His teeth were strong, permitting him to push out the higl'I notes. They also embellished a brorll grin that led to his nicknames of first. ''Dip- permouth" and then "Satchelmouth. ·• The latter v.·as shortened to ·'Satchelmo'' and "Satchmo. '' Armstrong's virtuosity on the trumpet overshadowed another talent. his voice. It \\'as gravelly but infectious 11nd audience response \\'as so warm that Satchmo found himsel( in demand as a scat.type singer. Armstrong's voice did not come into promin1ence. ho1>.·ever. until the I~ \1·hen his retarding of "'M<1ck the Knife'' became a besl·seller. Jn the 1960s he repeated with •'Hello Dolly." Satchmo \.\'as married three limes -in 1919 to his childhood s weetheart, Daisy Parkin; i• 192 4 to Lillian Hardin and in 1942 to Lutille \Vilso n. ?.. daocer. Luci!lt helped promote hls career. She recently told a reporter: "'He promised to show me the world and be kept his promise." \Vhen Armstrong 11o·as discharged from lhe hospital in May. he said: "I guess rrn an old cat you can't Jose.'' A spokesman for the family said al· tempts were being made to hold funeral services in an armory large enough to hold the expected huge audience of Armstrong fans. The family asked that donations be made to the Kidney Foundation in lieu of flowers. Sorry, Wrong Na1ne On Gra duation Li st The June 30 editions of the DAJLY P ILOT cBrried a story erroneously iden- tifying a recent graduate of Cal State Lo! Angeles. tltaxie Selga, 2171 America11 Ave., Costa h1esa, the young man whose name mistakenly y,•as printed as ~1srle, The Daily Pilot regrets any em- barrassment to Selga the typographical error may have caused. P entagon Paper s Hit By i\fartha Mitchell \VASHINGTON fAP) -Martha f\.litchell. wife of the attorney general, has criticized ne1>.·s media for publishinit the secrel Pentagon papers. In a call lo the Sunday Su1r. she said news organizii1ion~ carrying stories based on the documents •·are interfering ~·it.h the negotiations 11·ith thf Viet Cong a!J 11·ell as releasing our secr~ts to the enemy." A GOOD WORD PA SSED AROUND ABOUT A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN BE UNFORTUNATE. • OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13 YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS" AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OU R CUSTOMERS. NO AMOUNT OF ADVERTISING CAN REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION. WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL BY GIVING OUR CUSTOMERS THE BEST SERVICE AND QUALITY POSSIBLE. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Ploc•ntla A,, •. 11 v .. ,.. lo CNt• M ... COSTA MESA 646-4838 • HOURS: Mon. Thrv Thura., 9 to 5:30-Fri.,. 9 to P-Sat .. 9:30 to 5 . ----~ -' __.;:;._, -. -- I I I: '1 7 I I I I: 7 ---. --· . -• • .. ttuntington Beaeh " -· • Fountain Valley N.Y. Steeb EDITION ------ VOL. 1>4, NO. 160, 2 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C.l!lilFORNl'.4 TEN CENTS City Obtains 2 Lots for Top of Pier The city of Huntington Beach has bought two parcels in the dnwntown district as the First step toward building a l+.acre parking lot in lhe business area . ~ks totaling $245,500 were handed over to the owners of the properties Fri· day by administrative assistant Floyd ''Bud " Belsito. One properly involves 100 feet of land along Coast Highway between Second and Third streets. Six owners -including Ef· fie Nation, Paul Maier, Helen Crawford. Cecilia Hoefer, Anna Castell and Laura Man Dies In Beating At Party Formal murder charge.5 v.·ere lodged today against three Marines wbo alleged· ly beat a man to death following hi.! wife's birthday celebration in a Seal Beach apartment early Monday. Police alleged the three men killed Vernon E. Page, 36, of La Habra with their fists and feet during a fight on the beachfront ne ar Seal Walk and Neptune Ave nue. No weapons were found at the scene. Page was pronounced dead on arrival l'lt Los Alamitos Hos pital at 4:22 a.m,1 nearly one hour after the alleged fra cas. Arraigned °" murder charges at West Orange County Judicial Distric t Court this morn ing were Joseph G. Chavez, 20; Andres Pastrano J r., 21, and Walter A. Baumgartner. 20. All are stationed al the 6eal Beach Naval Weapons Center. Police !aid the three men were going up and down Sea! Walk looking for a par ty aod entered an apartment at 1300 Seal Way where Page's \life, Amelia, wa1 celebrating her birthday. Officers were alerted to the incident by 11ome neighbors who called the police sla· lion. The three men we re captured by of- fice rs following a two block chase down the beach. Lt. Bob Garza. of the Seal Beach Police Department, said Page and the alleged assailants were strangers. No in- formation was offe red about what might have sparked their argument. A coroner 's autopsy end toxicology lest.<i were ordered to determine the ex. act cause of Page 's death . Burglars Take Heirloom Flag Each y'4ir to commemorate In- dependence Day, Founta in Valley resident Slirling L. Burnet, 58, of 184114 Birch St ,, hangs out his 48- star F'la,i:i The f!ag ls special for him be· cause 1l wa~ g1\'en to him at his father 's militarv runcrfll in 195fl. But Sundriy niR ht. someone took it off his garage door Burnel tnlrl Fountain Valley police he really isn'I interested In prosecuting the thief of the 150- flag. He jusl wants it returned In him because of its senlimental v11lue. F oµr Motorists Fall V icti1ns On Motorcycles Four persons were injured in separate motorcycle accidents in the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley area th I 1 weekend . Huntington Beach teen-ager Thomas Louis Jones is in satisfactory condition at Pacifica Hospital after he was injured in a hll and run accident Sunday afternoon. Fountain \-'alley police are seeking tht: driver of the auto that struck Jones as ht crossed the interseetion of Ellis Avenue and Magnolia Street. An Anaheim woman also suffered ttriou.s injuri~ Sunday when the molorcycle on which she w& 11 passenger left the road near the Intersection nf Colden West Street and Mansion Avenue. Polkt allege the driver of the motorcy· cle, Daniel S. Pawlowski, 21, of Weslmins ttr, had been purrued by I California Highway Patrol unit eastbound on Pacific Coast Highway 1t !peeds of JOO mph. Pawlowski tih-ned o n Io Golden West And wa~ doing 11bout 80 mph when he hi1 the curve and lost control o( hi~ machine He was treated ror minor cuLs and (Sr:e CYCLF.s, Pa&e Z) Mullens -shattd the purchase price of $110,ooq. The second properly was owned by the Talbert Estate with Tom V. Talbert, Gwen Talbert and Gordon Walktr as cc> trustees. Tbe property at t~e norlbeast CQrner of Pacific Coast Highway and Sixth Street was bought for $14-4,500. H includes 125 feet on lhe highway and 110 feet on S*th Street. Belsito said the properties were bought at the appraised value. A total value of $4.2 million has been placed on all the I 1· I I properties -five blocks from Sb:tb Street lo east of Lake Street -by the cily-bired appraiser. Another 47 parcels have yet to be bought. All of I.he properties are subject to a condemnation suit filed by the city for parking purposes. The staff began the land acquisition process following recent re.approval of the project, called expansion of the Parking Authority, by the city cooncil. The crea· lion of a l.878-space parking lot is the firs t step in the Top of the Pier program OAlL'I' PH.en PIWN.., ... ,,.c, 0'0.llMll ACTRESS DOROTHY LAMOUR LOVES A PARADE From Grind Mlrs~al, Kudos for Huntington Event Huntit1~n Sl1ow Proves 1.:/ People Do L8Ye a Pa1·ade By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 ti\• 0•111 P'llOI 51111 America lhe Beau tiful ~·as paraded through the streets of Huntington Beach Monday as the city observed Indepen- dence Day with its 67th annual parade.. Police estimated more than 100,000 pen-- pie lined the parade route lo watch the more t.han 200 entf.iies file past. The 67th sl<lging of the parade was led by grand marshal Dorothy Lamour. Miss Lamour made a brief appearance at the mayor's reception following the event during which she cited the parade as ''heartwarming evidence that the heart of America still heals in the way that built this country." Sponsored . by the Huntington Beach Jaycees, lhe parade was held separately from the aMual fireworks show which was held on the Fourth from the city pier, Jaycee officials said next year they will go back to the previoua method or holding both events on the same day. Winning float entries were the U.S. Marine Corps Recruiting Station, Tor· ranee, and the Orange Fireman's Benevolent Association which won the Sweepstakes and President's Lrophies. , The Marine Corps entry depicted caged American POWs in Vietnam. The parade was led by 13 un it! from local Shrine clubs and the Long Beach El Bekal Temple. Included in the followin1 entrants were the Banjo Pickers Square (See PARADE, Page Z) and planners hope lt will act •• the 1pur to private enterprise development Jn the aurrounding area. The latellt 11talf estimate on the cost of the parking lot, Including the land •c· qulsltlon and •n&tn«rlni coots i.. fl.3 mjllion. AJthougb the finlt purcha.sea have begun'.. the city 1laff Ii waiting f&r the council to raiae additional revenue to fund the rest of the development. A flv~ C1!nl a blrre1 oil tax. calculated to bring ln $650,000 1 year, I.II under consideration and will· be subject to • public beartna Aug. 2. Land held under optlon by the Downtown Property Owners Association may also complicate the purchase of pro- perties by the city. The association, through a class action filed in the name ol the la~ Mrs. E. Ittne Trery, is suing the city for S8 mi!Uon damages. charging "oppressive·• land use regulations prevented the owners from 1aining full value from their properties. Robert Terry, head o[ the auodatlon and son of Mrs. Terry, aaid the Superior Court •suit is in the srocess of bein& amended to hill name. "We ,have options to buy 62 percent ot I.he property in the area," he s&.ld. •·we have 10melhing on every block.· I .dqn 't see how the city can move far ahead cm this until our damage suit ii selUed." He reiterated that members of the a550CiaUon do not plan to seU to tbe dty wlthout a court fignL .Satchmo Dies Famed Jazz ,Trumpeter Dead at 71 NEW YORK (UPI) -Lolli! "Saleh· mo'• Anmt.rons, 1n or p h 1 n e d waif from the 1treeta and bordellos af New Orleana wbo became kinf of the jau trumpet and won international acclaim, died today at h1a home only two days aft.er his 71st birthday. · Even lhou&h Armstrong bad been critically ill and hovered between life and death in Beth Israel Hospita1 only 1 few months .ago, his death in bis aleep at 5:30 a.m. waa unezpected. He apparently had been making a slow recovery from setbacks caused by & kidney ailment and heart trouble, but was strong enough in recent weeks to join his long-tim• friend , trombonist Tyree Glenn, in duet renditions of such songs u "Sleepy Time Down South." In a pre-birthday interview with UPI, Armstrong's only complaint wu his dll· ficulty in walking. "Work, that's my life. oh yeah~" (See. SATCHMO, Page Z) President 'Bargains' Nixon Asks Steelmen, ·Union Fin~ Agreement · W,\SHJNG1.'Q!f ·(APl-l'i'tti4ent Ni1011 caJ!ed Oii nefilimort lll lllt IUel lhduatry todly to · retdi. -a "constructive aet- Uement" that will keel) the induatry com· peitve in world markets and malnt.aln the economic recovery, 'I'be President met with the union and management negotiators for about an hour on the eve or their contract tallul and, a spokesman .said, laid out the economJC problems facing the industry. Nixon called for "hard bargaining" in the talka hut refrained from setting a specific .wage settlement he would like to see brought about. The contract explrea In the industry July 31. George P. Shultz, director of tht office ef management and budget, aummed up the President'1 attitude: "I know you are going into bargaining : I know bow Important it ill to you. I ft:ll It necessary t.o tell you how import.ant t think it is." It was Nixon's first try al lnt.ervenlng tn any way in a negotiating session before it actually got under way and reflected a new impetus by the White House of more direct involvement to hold down wage and price increases. Nixon emphasized the re lationship of the steel indu.stry in the world market. told the negotiators how prod uctivity ha11 failed t.o increa$t!, how profits have l>een Jagging and wages remaining 11table in comparison to other industries. Shultz: 1a:id Nixon appealed to the "sensitivity of their own self-interesl in beginning the contract talb." Shultz r.ald a constructive settlement means a. contract that would maintain steel's competitive world J>Olitlon and have no depressing impact on the t CQnomic recovery. Nl1:on emphasized that he wanted •n atmosphere that would help avoid a 11trike in the indmlry, Shult.z uid, but aald the Prealdent would not intervene if tbere was a walkout. "The President did not try to 1ay that !ir·allould .. w, for thll or th~" pu1ta At Nixon met with I.he ntiotJakln, the White House released a rtpart (l{t the .tee:! Jndustry prepared by his Cablne& Comm.Jttee on Economk Polley detailing the troubles of the steel industry. The .study .showed profits have declined by 42 percent to the lowest level in ten years, the repart said. ,,, In addition, the .study said, production bas stabilized in receat years, output per man-hour has shown virtually no increase and. "with compensation lncreaus ac· celeraling, unit labor costs h&Ve in- creased aharply.'' The study said steel !aces great com· petJtian from Japan and 1everal Euro- pean countries that must be taken into consideration. Nixon Expected Tonight at 6 For Coast Stay In his firsl vi.9il this summer. President Nixon was expected to arrivf! along the South Coast al 6 o'clock this evening to begin a two.week working vacation in San Clemente. Air Force One Was expected to arrive at the dinner hour at the MCAS lo El Toro where the atandard greeting by military personnel and dependanta will lake place. Alter a abort hop by helicopter to La. Caaa Pacifica in San Clemen te. the Chief E1ecutlvt: will begin 1 vacation which Is expected to include discussions on the budget and other economk: matters. Earlier today the President condu~ ane of his atandard briefings for editor1 in lhe communicatlona industry. Ur'IT ......... THE SONG HAS ENDED S1tchmo (19CJ0.1971) Opposition Seen For Route 57 The alignment of the proposed Roote Si? (Orange) Freeway Urrough Fountain Valley will be oppo6ed by the Fountain Valley School District. Trustee• voted to take tbe aame .rep. !() oppose the proposed freewa y as they did in fighting the Route 39 (Huntlngtoo Beach) Freeway. District Superintendent Mike Brick told board members recently that the proposed alignment of the frff:way would wipe out Arevalos School and possibly Lamb School. Trustees said they would oppa1e the freeway's suggested route from the beach to Edinger Avenue. A11 proposed, the freeway would run along the city'• eastern boundary. The route is still ln preliminary stages of planning and lhe board's action was taken ao that staff membe:r11 who, appear at aJ ignmenl hearinga will be autMrized to voice the board's opposJtion. Trustee Harold Brown 8Ugiested the freeway could be: moved east into Coeta Mesa where "the:re la: Jots of open apact." 500,000 Squeeze the Sand ToJ>-level ezecutlves from 13 Midwed: st.Ilea were expected to confer for an hour wilh the President during a Kansas City, Mo., 11topover. Several Presidential aides preceded Mr. Nil.On tothe city and conducted other briefings ror the ruesta ear Iler today. Huntington Visitors Pack Beach, Sea, Highways An estimated 500,000 beachg0ers jam- med the strands in Huntington Beach over the three-da y holiday weekend, bul apart from a massive traffic tieup Sun- day evenln1, there were few aerlou.s 'in· cidenL!. The spectacular fireworks diSplay put on by tht J.ycee..1 from the city. pier at du!k Sunday Bl.tr.acted to ,cm people to the city beach al<>M. ''Tl was wall -to-wall people out thert," Lifeguard Sgt. Bill Richardson uld thl11 moming. "Then when il wa~ all over al ·about 9: 10 p.m. It looked like 111 cattle drive as they all lrled to get out of the parking lot together. "It was bumper to bumper in Ult park· Ing lot untU al lea.st 11 :3" p.m." Police Capt. Arland Us.sher reportt.d that all north-80llth arteries to the Sin Diego Freeway were blocked for at least two hours after I.he pyrotechnic di.!lplay. "Even the east.went routes were block· ed as people tried to find alternate roads to lhe freeways," he said. ''It wu the wot$t jam l have ever seen in HunUngton Beach." Motorlirt.11 going to lhe dl11Play from Costa Mesa and Newport Beach fou nd it took them two hours to get from the Arches fn Newport &:ach to the Hun- tington Beach pter. Firecrackers were thrown at !ome of the virtually Illa· tion&y car• from the crowds on the beach. Tht one serious Incident on the beach -.JI - «CUJ'red Saturday aU.trnoon wben lt persohll were arrest,:d alter 1n uprlling near Buch Boulevard. Pollcl uld the disturbance broke out when the:y al· tempted to arrea:t ·•youth who reportedly had 1.~k .a woman . AU told, Ille Huntington Buch Special El\forcemept _Detail CSED), a aqu.d of specially trained undercover olf~ert •. •f.· rtq1ted J79 peraon11 over the wtt.kenil. Atiout 110 penOru are" arruted on &n average weekend . "We were very !ltlfctive In our 1rrMts because of the l1r1e numberw on the beach," Capt . Ulllher 1aid~ About a Ullrd ol the arrest.I involved dru.J cluir&eJ· other charge• litcluded·th• IS.. JAMMED, Pa1e I) ' --~-.---.-... ,.,~---- Topica of the uukln.s lnclude:d welfare reform, revenue 1hartng and governmen- tal reorganii&tlon. Announcement! about the J>realdent'a schedul8 while in San Clemente. will f"°" bebly emerge Wedne!day. Ont: key member of the PruidenUal en~rige, Domeatlc Sec:µrlly Adv!Hr Dr. Henry Killinger, will. •not ac- co'mpany the Chief executive. General Deported SANTO DOMINGO, Dom In I ca n Republic: (AP ) -former Dominican army general ~Has Wesainy We.uln has been deported Lo Spaln. after ht: w11 ac-- custd by President Joaqu.ln Bal.,...tr of he.adlng • ri&hlU!t pk>t •la.inst the 10Vernment. j Weatlter Warm weather Is apected to continue alone the Orange Coast today and ~~y wllh-hi&hs predlct<d In the 70'• alO!ll the beachu. reaohbla '7'I Wand. Low1 tn both ..... mmic1 eo. INSWE TODAY 'l'h< fu'll of • Sout,,..,f.Alls t11Plooon "41 lwo11g11t fig~~..,. vfrt~nu to a ,Mlt. b'· VJe~ St~ &torv. Poot 4. . . . ... 11... " "• u..... ti . (111 .... lll le ,...... • .... CNUl111 u, 1 N.,...,. ..... w Clt.-11... ... ~-C-tr It c.ic. lt """" ....... C,..,_. » Sllelt ,,......,.. 1H1 DMlll "-II-II Tl ltvtMll 1' Ol\'lf'Ctl • 11 "'*'-.,, '"""•' .. _ ' ... ,,.., . llllWtt"'-t ~ W-'• .._, IJ.lt Ill.._ >V ~ .,.._ W -" - I I I '-DA!LY PILOT Jl From Page l SATCHMO ... Armstron, uld. "But I wouldn't want to go out on the sllgt with a walling cane. Soon u my pins a:ct back in shape, olc Sa1t.h wt.II lie back, I'm one man that you ~can't tw." He. was an American baby, born on the Fourth or July, and his horn became an instrument or international diplomacy that urned him the nickname of "Ambassador Of Jau." whell}er he was playing in 8clgr1de, Mo• or to a gathering of Africans in Ghana, his trum- pet generated e1cltemcat. Among his fans WU President Nil.on who aent him a telegram during h1s strugglt for life at Beth Israel. He had come a long way from sordid beglnnlngs in New Orleans where he was born in 1900 of a union betwee11 a turpen- tine factory worker and a housemaid. He had an ear for mu.sic and at an ear- ly ace be was playing a guitar. The event that was eventually to change his life was his meeting with Willie "Bunk" J ohnson, who taught him to play the cornet without having to read notes. His ··rormal" education ~gan when Joe "'King" Oliver gave him leasons. At the age of 12 Armstrong played in a quartet which performed for pennies in Storyville in New Orlear.A'I' red-light districL Armstrong's only encounter with the law came on his 13th birthdt.y when he fired a pistol lc.aded with blanks during a Fourth of July celebrati on. He waa sent to a waif's home for a year. While he was Jn th!: orphanage. he played in a band and it was said bis notes CQUJd be heard across lhf!: Mississippi River. Armstrong played in Kid Ory's Band as • replacement for King Oliver, who took his brand of jazz to Chicago. Over the years he played in bands led by Oliver and Fletcher Hend erson and during this period he S\\'itched from cornet to trumpet, which gave him a greater range. Armstrong made hundred! o f recordinga in bis prime. Although sound reproductlon technique! were poor in the 3920s in comparl.9on with 1971 standards, Armstrong's early recordings are col- Jector'1 items whict command premium prl~s. Those who knew Armstrong in his early years said he was a natural for the horn -either comet or trumpet. He had the perfect Up for the smalJ :silver mouthpiece. His teeth were strong, permitting him to push out the high nole!. They also embellished a broad grin that led to his nicknames of first, "Dlp- permouth" and then "Satchetmouth. '1 The latter was shortened to "Satchelmo'' and "Satchmo." Armstrong's virtuosity on the trumpet overshadowed another talent. his voice. lt was gravelly but infectious and audience response was so warm tbaL Satchmo found him5e.lf ln demand u a scat.type lilnger. l'rom Page l PARADE ... Dance Club float ·which came complete with its own caller, a contingent of Hun· tington Beach Senior Citizens in their electric carts and the Banda Noqai In- dian Dancers from Anaheim. There were military bands, drill teams end equestrian units of all shapes and s izes which passed before tht reviewing stand of Air F orce Brig. Gen. \V, C. ~fc{j\othlin. If success of a parade can be measured in the number of flags waved. balloons bought and popcorn and cotlon candy consumed, t.fonday's event v.·as a hit. Residents from all over Orange County lined the s idewalk.5 to view the parade. clapping their hands in time to the music a nd cheering the winning entries . Sharing the reviewing stand v.·ith Gen. ~1cGlothlin and ~fayor G e o r g e McCracken v.·ere the mavors o f neighboring communities, Assimb\yman Robert Burke (R-Hunlington Beach), Rep. Craig Hosmer (R-Long Beach I and Robert Battin, chairman of tbf!: Orange County Board o[ Supervisors. OlAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT OllANGl COAST PUl~ISl41NQ COMl'AH'I' ••h•rt H. w,., .......... , ..... l"WIWlll" Jtcli a., C11rf•'f Yk9 '"'*°"' ..... 0-.1 ~ n."''' 1e • ..sr ••'*". n .... ,, A. M.,,11111.- ~ ·•1., Al111 Dir.I• W.I OrMIO C-lr Editor Alb.rt W. lit•• AUOCl.slo l•I- .. -......... OMt. 1717i l111h le11!1v1,4 M1ill1tt AJ,,1111 P.O. 101. 7t0, t2•4a ...... _ ....,._ ••c111 m ,..,.., ..,_ Ceolt -•= llll w.r ••t "'""" N..,..., 1.-dl: ml "---' lou!w1rCI ... 0.-": -""""' •• G1111lrl9 11•1 No Wa11, Buddfl.. Attendant Foils 'BB' Bandit· Try A Huntington Beach service statJon at- tendant is credi!ed by police with foiling a robbery atlempt at his st<1t1on Saturday night. Dete<:ll\'e Hruce You ng said the suspect ~ a rnan in his early twenties of mediwn build ~ ca1ne into the sta tion al Beaeh BoulC'vard and Adams A1·enue and asked the ;illcndant, Kent Crove. for <·hange for <i dollar \Vhe n Grove opened the l'ash box, the 1nan pulled out a pistol and asked for !he 1nonry. Grove told investigators he rfCOgn ized the gun as a BB gun because he has an identical weapon. .. Nol with a BB gun. you're not getting thi~ n1onev ." ht> told the would-be robber 11 ho fled ihe st.at ion in a van Oon f . Bro\\'n, the attendant at the Arro station at 18972 Beach Boulevard 11 as not as fortunate Friday morning ha1e been taking plact over Lhe lal:il two weeks. Most of the targets of the holdup 1nen have been n1a rkets and banks. f'rom Page 1 JAMMED ... illegal discharge of lire.,..·orks and assault <1nd battery. Cro"·d sizes tolaled 480,000 over the three days. The city be;ieh drew 265.000 \ 1s1tors. including a rerord !25.000 Sun- day. "hi le H11nting!on BcaC'h St.ate Park ;ilt racted 1!5.000 over the lhrer days and Rolsa CluC'a State Beach 100.000 BANJO PICKERS WIN Bill GALLIENNE TROPHY IN FOURTH OF JULY PARADE Float Honored 115 Best Among Patriotic or Service Club Entries Police said a man <irmed with a pistol nibbed Brown of about $100 shortly after m1dnighl. Young said the d~.scriplions of the two suspects a re different. leading police to be lieve that there are tw o dif- ferent men involved in the gas station cases. ··Fortunately thi;> surf \l'as do11·n and \\'!! did not have to rnakt' so rnany rescues,'' Sgt. Bichardson added. In Seal Beach. police officers reported 11ne of th:-n1osl disturba11ce free holiday weekend!\ in the c11y 's history even though the daily beach a!lendan<:e ranged between 25,00CI lo 35,000. ,.~ ....•. ,..._ ... _ .. _ - ·-' ! •• • t I I SHERI FLOOD FOUND A PLACE TO WATCH PARADE Huntington Beach Girl Sat on Original Fire Department Bell Winners Filled Streets At H11ntington Parade folloY.ing are the w1nn1ng entru:~s in the 6ith annual Huntington Be a ch Independence Da~· Parade ~"''""''"' fflu•>I• •n Ron l"•"'D0'<1 l~u'"""" c~ or Qu~•<I • ~,,.., Co,.•I ho l4 Su~· <lo.,~•"· •econ<!. Eou ... Hi•n Tr1ll1 Mounlt<l P•l•ol1 1n"<1 El l'!OdM 1:11~,n~ (IUO. M~yn1•0 Po'•<• o< Po••.• '""' l• V••~e M~un'•d Po'.<• <econ<!. !a•r~nc• Moun••<! Po,,<• Jun•O• Moun"<! Grouo f,.,1. 6ree0••• -' F••<I•" 4 H Club. •rco<l<I, Do••" ll ldln~ (lul>. !Mira, Dl l•~ C 1oot" Pon• Anod •tlon MOl'Mfll Group 51'••• '"'' L ~no 6•••" Mounr.d Poh<•r ••<on<!, Al M•'•"•h ~,i,,.,, Mountoo P~ltOI Wei rern Me1,nt1d Grouo -tl,11 , Rou~n Ride" 01 11');~~;~.aH";P.~:~ _ ll"t, Ml rllt< 1na 1(11nv Led· l)taoro ••<ona, Sonni• S!1n<lll• ono L•n C.u•!l1l1n1 lnlrd, Allr.,, VllfnluOll •nd Jo,,, C1n<hOtl !noltn -fin•. D1•i<1 (oucn, \ltO'ld. LOI• Ounc1n1 tn,,o, O•OOle JOr"lilt 1on C"1rro -ll'lf, Jo•• ()(im•nour •; 1rcotld. lo.ii• V•·•n< &, Wom•n l'encv W••T•"• ,,,,1 ~n«l~v Arnold, 1•· cono. Dori• (lot~. 1n ro. l>•I""" M~nl•Y. Men wor~lng We11t•n -r.r1t, H1r11n l roylOr; 1 .. cona. 1!1nov F•..,m1n, in.ra, "t>l1n1m ~ellu1 wom1n worlllr.o wrstrrn -tl,.t, Jt c-lt Fiie; 11- '""~· Pnvllh l••YIOf. ~p1n,.n, 01>1n Or,:'n -!In•, Vlnle1 "•tn<!U o , .. '°Z,afn~•t::!:~M-l-~:1;;n l~r~i.:-:-."t::i'!.v";":~ont. M1n•1 Sl!v•• MouM,,.i -11n1. W1•d T"un•O" P1r1<1• Ho"• OPrn -!\Ill. JI ... ! T"om11, M'Cond, Lo"' 811n<"••d. 1n1ta. C A 8ru•h A•t l>.1n '"''· 1,.ot110n1 Whtr!on; •rcond, ()o<tn1 1"11f!lrv: 1n1rd, Glori• J 1gH . C1o:> .. n1 -11r11. El 8~11 snr!111 Clowni; """' 8POE E•~1 Clown1 ot Lone 811ch; lhl'11, KltUIC 1<,10 .. ~ Cluo ot ~outlMrn C1lo!O!"no1. S1>1c!111v -llrl!, Huntl<>li9n 8"cn Stier Cl!lltti" socona, Hurui1111•on '"'" P11>11.,; 11>1ra l'11n1or1111on Bract> VMCA Wln,..m11cc1 Ntllon !ndl1n Gulde\ ~w0~,i.~•• ~l1 Nv -Or•no. Coun!y hrl"• Club "(YUP•·" Nov•IPY -tlrll. Clvdt J11n• ana Su11n Ann Stint ,t.maM; UCon<I, C1tny w hlit r"lilj !Mrll. Ml•Y W•IQM. Co.,ume. unrouf -!lril. H ltY l •la.n: "'""°· Eou1 11 .. 1n lr1ll1 Cotr•I• thlto:I, 01nl•I Morrl1 Ant•Qut •ulo, lndlvldu•I -11r11, Tnom•• C. Artn•tiala; SKotld, Groro• w. Crou, TMrll. Tu•Hn F"• 0•111, Anl•QUe .-.utos, Grw11 -llr1t, N•WDO•t 8••<h An!I· ou• ,luto Club, oecona, Auoc,l!fi! Vi no of N•woorl lleacn, 1nir11, O•ltl 0Wn1., Club Oe<:orttea ,t.1110, Non Comm••ti•I -ll•tl. Hun. l l'lll!on V1 llt f Youn1 R10lJbllcan1. ••Con<!. U.$ Air Fo•C• Moltllro; 1n1ra, C1lltornT1 Camtta Cluo • Otter•!"" 11.ut~Clvl<. PIT.,Otlc o• Strv«t Cluh t ir11, womtn'1 Olvltlon, tlunMn,1on 8M<h C~t..,Mr o! CO"'"'''""' tf<C>r>d, I..• H•br~ Jtvct n, on.ra, Vol.,1n• 01 Foreit n W•n. Po•! 1301 '1ont Orawg Vthlc ln ·Non Commat<lll -!lt1 1 • p=:: t::~ ·~:n~l~1.C....,mt•Clll -11,.1. GIOrOoa 8 ttlv; 1..::-, F!v• Polnti "''""'"" Aoocl•llon S"'"ii»'-~"' Ftoe! fropl'ly -U.S. Mtrlna CO<"' ""~111"zr l\~~.i.~~~· Troonv -"'''' Or•._ cHv ~'"'"''' lrnt volenl Anocllllon; !"<ond._.Hun. 11.,.tor1 1 .. ci'I \;.$. Power Sci..-aron; '"ll"il . ..,..ldtn Wt•• Co!leot. Clvk. P1Ptlctlc or $9..,.1<• (lull Floe! -1111 G1r11rnn1 lropl'ly B•nlo '"''"'I 5Q1>••• O•n<t cluo. 1K:Ond (Olli Mtll JlytHI• \ly ol (Oita MH•: "'!•O. M""'11~1on 8e•cn i.o•ootoml" Cl\lb. Youltl Gf'Ol<P'I FIOll...J IYCHI lrillll\Y -Fl,,!. G•tft C~l!ll N .. -VMC4 I""''" G11fl•• ••<•...,. > ·">' l lJ\tllOft BfKl'I YMCA lndl•" Mt latnl; tnlrO, Miu Pto<'ll M-1-no "''''"'""V F o~~11~i~Vr:'i1,~:;'•c n~~~•"''o~0' lo..;',.:,"f.;:. -. • .'~· G~•O•n GlllYt Slrawl>trrv F"!•vl l. !horO. (oh O! [I M on!• 1 .~~~;~!1~~~:1 of ~~,1~, ~."":~~~. !~•:~;;!~!',: ~•,.,bu•O•rt, t~lro, Kno11·1 l1rry F••m-L btrtv ~tll ,.,,. '•••v ~lo•! -"'•'· US M1t "\ Co·~• "•n u·t!llQ S!•llon, T111"•1r.c:1: of'O;lll"ld. u . N•11v ll:•t•u;uno S••vl(• .. 51• Pow.• !or '••c1"'1 '~""· U ~. N1vy 51rvl<1 "U. S Lil" .._.,....,., ,. Sw~,,.l•kl'l 1111 M111 rc1I U"ll Torr in<" S•nlo• Ynut• 19•"°" ~·~or M•>o••!ln -11•1• ..... ..,, !••In• 'l°O•"" 81nd M•lorf!i.t' "cOlld, An1n1lm Senior M•· 10J~f:,' i:;.;:;,h~" l~"'l\~!;, Lin Lov.1111 .. ,o...,. ¢nt ht lll"' Junior ~•"\.o•••!lt1, !MrO, llu !'d• Junior ou•n lwlrl•" •"II So•r•I•'< Junior Mtfa,.!!•I -flt!!, Lin to:>v•nn i U{ond, l t"(I •"<CM """'""" Jun•O• Vilt!'" 19t'"i<I? ...,,,;,.,., !l•O'ld• f,,.T, lrd "'''In• Aor"U1 Wlna "'""· 1e(ono. nM Us i'•m• II'•""'· ' ' • .. --.... . .......... -· OAILV PILOT • ••• -. • • . , . , PARADE BANDS WERE NOISY Lillian Mahoney, 3 c!7i~11£18~':!.~r 5~:·.-,.•:· ,;:.,:1:"~rl;~~1°1;.~:.""1h.~;; Ut. llorn11 M~1<•111 Sl'IOw. Jun•or Orun• 10'ld &111111 CorP• -!1•11. Mon11rtv Ptrk 0 •11"' •nd 8111111 COrM. IKOr>O. Klr1111 l •f'<t fl 0•11m • ...., Buo .. (OfM. S.n•O• Orum t ncr I UOll (cr111 -l!rl!, V•lvtt Kn.~111• 0 •11m Incl B1111le (OrOI '°'"" Bt n<h -""'· C1ltOo~•1n Pir>1 8•n<I ~1nl0r Orlll l e1m1 -lirll, Ruftl• 5•n<cr Yo.JI~ e.,.,. D•ll! T1•m. oJ;:l~ •. 0;:~0.!i'7:;,ro• 'J'.!!.1,,1t8.,1T0T:.:.0~~ .. 'o~ l-IU"l•ntf9n B .. <~ M!nl 5ttDO.rl. Adul1 Otl!! Tram• -llrl! El 1"1! Motor ,,1,01; ··~;:'l,; °"~1f1"l1:.gr,n•_1'::;';; E:Ow1•0• ... 1. F0t<• lHH El!ol!lon r 1111 l••m. SKDn<I. US. "''' Fo•ct Mot~rrl (WAFS '"'"' "lo•ton A•r Fo•cp B••e I "'•tthlro un 1 Noft ¥,I"""•_ 11•"· El ll•t" 5•1••1 P1••ot. •tc-. 8ov1 Club or '"'""""''°" e .... c~. tn rd. T~UncltrD•rlh. \\•r<h,r~ u~ T M'llt••v Hr•1 l•d M• "' A<rn111 Wong 1 1eco"<"l U ~ N•vll l•alnln1 Ctr.•1•. 5•n 01'90F ,ni.a. Fc•t M•cA•!""' M,,,..,,,. Uni! Sw••O•I>'" Marcn•n~ Un I l <Oct\Y (1, "'"''' r.1 9,,.n~ P••-. Color Gu-"d S•nlor -11'1!, CO•I• Ml'!• "'o"•t• ~~~~· 11?uc"~~~ l~~~'"t: 1~~;:•w:~:..1~.';"'.','1~~;. t~10: Coto• Gu .. a Jur.lo• -1,n1, Vfl~fl KnlQM• ltcOM. "'"'' l •n<t •• Coto• Gul•d, '""O, Atlllll"ldo 81•'" Sat~~~"8u••d MlliltrY -!1'11. U ~ M1r1no Co•oo C"lor Gu~r<I. Cotti M"'' 1t<an<:, U S. "'" F""' Molnr•• 1w~F~ l•O"' Norfor. Ai• tore• !••~I. !~1111, Jrd M1•,n1 J\«v ffl w,!IQ (OIO• C.11••11 Parade Lad Hit By Pellet Gun Huntington Beach police are in- \"eS ligating the shoaling of an 8-year-old boy who was struck in the left arm by a pellet as he \\'ailed to join Monday·s parade. Edward Oliver Duval. 8172 \Voolburn Drive, lluntington Beach, 1s in satisfac- tory condition al Pacifica Hospital today afler undergoing surgery ?.-1onday af- ternoon. Detecti ve Sgt. ~1onty l'YlcKennon said tlie boy was standing in the parade stag· ing area near Loma Ave nue and 11ain Street when he v.·as hit. No suspects or apparent motive for the shooting bas been un covered by police. The gas station robbery and attempted robbery are lhe first of that· type during the rash of west County robberies that From Page 1 CYCLES • • • bruises at Pacifica Hospital "'here his passenger. Carol Anderson, 37, is 1n satisfactory condition today In a third accident on r.1onday, Mark Ala n Nichols, IS, of 21&12 Polynesian Lane, suffered minor injuries when the motorcycle he was riding struck a parked car on Kaneohe Lane. He was treated for cuts and bruises al Pacifica Hospital. •·\Ve confisca ted a couple o f firecrackers fro1n son1e kids but the rest of the \\"::!e kend v.·as jusl routine v.•ith c;ills onlv for loud parties and other niinor 1nc.idents," said Sgt. Sam D'Amico. Pcn ta~on Papers Hit \VASHINCTON rAPl f\12.r Ih a '.\hlchell. 1vife of the attorney general. has criticized news media for publishing the secret Pentagon papers In a call lo the Sunday Star. she zaid ne ws organ izations carrying stories based on the documents ''are interfe ring witlt lhe negotiations v.·ith the Viet Cong as v.·ell as releasing our secrets to the enemy.'' DAil 'i" PILOT 51111 P~oll l I HUNTINGTON BEACH FLOAT MOVES DOWN LINE OF MARCH OUR ING PARADE 67th Renewal of Independence Day Extravaganza Carried Off in Grand Tradition A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN BE UNFORTUNATE. OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13 YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS" AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS. NO AMOUNT OF ADVERTISING CAN REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION. WE ARE NOT INFALLIB4E. BUT WE ARE WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL BY GIVING OUR CUSTOMERS THE BEST SERVICE AND QUALITY POSSIBLE. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Aye. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS : Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30-Fri.1 9 to 9 -Sat .. 9:30 to 5 .. .... "; ;:I'~.;.~-:_=;~ ~ p --··--r _, ·-, .. " J EMPTY STAGE, BROKEN CHAIRS AT NEWPORT, R.I. Vener•ble J•rz Festival Broken Up by Gate Cr•shers Violence Souring Noles At U.S. Jazz Festivals By United Pres1 lnttrnalional The prest ig ious Newport Jazz Festival may never be agAin. At least this v•as the <:onsensus of festival producers and city officials today. Nev•port -like son1e other festivals and concerts across the country -was closed two days early Saturday. About 200 gate-crashers sinashed l h r o u g h security fences and pasl guards trying ll'I get in free. Producer George T. \Vein said youths •·freaktd oul " on drugs ··just too k over en masse. They had no concern for the Jazz, no concern for !he festival," he said. Around !hf' country, bad trips, arrests. and cancellations curtailed flt h e r festivals • East Haven. Con n . \1'3S quiet lollow- ing a night of disturbances that left 13 person.~ arrcs1ed, one car burned and the city \\"ith an ll p.m. to S a.m. curfew. A city spokesman bla med the dis1urbance on .voun,e: tecn<1gcrs, "mostly !3 and 14 yerir olds." e Near Briel Axe. Mich .. young people. looking for fun but fin ding nothing but trouble. packed !heir sleeping bags and bedrolls and Jett aner a night and da y of trouble "'tth police. "There we re abou t 1.000 gathered in the 1·illage an d they v.·ere throwing rocks and bottles at the police ."' said Deputy Sheriff Larry R1ngvelsk1. '·\\'e broke tbem up into !>eparate groups and ran them out of !ov.n ., The village has a normal popula- tion of 6:)j). e Al lea st 1!1 persons 11;ere arrested in the na11on 's capital Sunday when they 1'>11Rderrd aw<>y from lhr ir scheduled "smoke-in"' and ~plashed in thf' renrcting pool facing !hr L1nco!n 11.lrmoria!. Thty wr r!'t-hargrd 11·1th unau1hfJr11ed bathing Ahout :iJO per.<nns had ~alhered lnr a pro.mari1uana rally_ "l\'e"re tired of the government slopp ing marijuana from coming into the country when they let tons of herotn flo w into the country every day ... said one young inan. e A rnidnight tu 6 a.in. curfev,r rt - mained in erfect (or Hussel!s Point. Oh1e fol!ov. 1ng a night of disturbances In· vol\'1ng al>out 300 youths at 1he Russel!!! Point Amusement Park. Police said there ha\•e bet n disturbances for the past ll'l or ll years. but this year "was nothing like the past. All the kids were doing v.·as so"'ing a rrw wild eats. blowing err stearn.' •Venice and Los Angeles police joined ranks and arrested "numerous" persons over the v.·eekend on charges ranging from felony dru~ counts to misdeme11n9rs as a cro\1'd of 10,000 celebr3\ed llle Fourth of July v.·eekend. • A h\•o-dav roc k festi\'al in l:>ftro1! was marred bY ba d Lrlps and barbiturate overdoses. Morr lha n 200 per.~ons v.·ere treated at lhe fes1ival ho.~p1lal e Chilly wea ther for<'ed ab-Out 800 persons from the Snoc1uatrnle /\'ationa l Forest in No rth Bend. \\'ash .. where they had CQme for a lef!:allv banned "Buffalo Parly·· poli tical con11eiilio n. • The crowd at ~~arr:igut S1ate Park. Tdaho. v.·as "peacrful " according to policr. The Rev. Kirby l lPnsley of ~1 1). dt>slo. and foundrr the linlversal Lile Church. ~pon:-ored the cc!ebrat1on of hie '1.'hich dre\v about 10.000 • And in San r ra11cisco. after fl\'t years of rock concert s and three mi !linn fans, promo!er Bill Graham padlockrd Fill more Wrst. !he place where "lhe San Francisco sound '' was born. The "old 10.11·· \l'a~ gone, rock's nPw supersl.'lrs h.'1\'e ht-rome •·capitah~t ~' dt>mand1ng rxnrb11;in ! (wi;, ;ind "lhe ('Ommunit,\-rn lndPrtness nf 1he rock com· munity doesn"l ex1s1" anymore. Grahan1 Stile!. Colo11el Loses Court Bid • To Avoid 'Cove1·up' Trial FT t-.IEADI::. :-..1d. 1 AP) -A milita ry judge today denied a key defense motion seeking d1sm1ssal of one of four charges dgainst Oran K. Henderson. the Army colonel accused of participating in an alleged coverup of the 1968 .i\lay Lai massacre in Vietnam. The 1ud1<:e. Col. Peter S. Wl'lndolow5ki, made no cornrnent on why he refused to dismiss a chargr !hilt Henderson violated a \"ietnam comrnand regulation requiring reporl in g of actual and susp«:ted v.·ar crirnrs \Vondolowsk1 also rejected a defense n1()\1on lo admit int o ev idence the results of !11 1J Army administered polygraph lests on Henderson Henry Rothblatt. llenderson 'i; civilian lawyer. !old the judge Henderson passed both tests. On the motion to dis miss ene charce, the defense had argued that the re1uJa. tion is unconstitutionally vague and uneo- forcea ble. A ruling wa11 al5o exptcted today on a litcond defense motion . Ro!hblaH opened lhe hearing by argu· Ing thal the resultJ of the polygraph ti· ;1m1n1"1tion11 11191 September and 11111 r ehru ary ,c;hould ~ adm itted into f'Yi dencr I'l l Hende rso n·3 rorthcomin1 courl-mart1al. The lawyer told the m1 l1\:try judge. Col. Pr!rr S. \Yondolowski, Iha! in Hco- d('rson·s cast. the Army is ·net followini a long standing policy of not prosecuti ng suspects who pass lie detector tesl,~ The prosttution opposed admissi bili ty of the polygraph tests which Rothhlatt said dea lt with Lhe same 'T'l&terial cove r· ~ when Henderson earlier appeared 1* fore a Pentagon illquiry into the ?Tport- ing of the massacre. Hrndr.rsbn Is ac- custd of !wire lyi ng lo the inquiry. A ruling wa,c; e.pected today on two key motions. Victims Removed From Air Crash HAKODATE. Japan fU Pll -Rescue workers brought down the bodi~ Monday of 64 passengers and four crew members from the wreckage of a Japa~se airliner which crashed on a 2,lf».foot mountain In Northe:m Japan during fog and stormy weather Saturday night. The bOOies. includ ing lhdl of the America n co-pilot wbo was presumed by airline official~ to have ~n nying the two-engine YS !l turboprop, were take1 to tv.·(!: temples wrre medical authorities set up facililif'' for idtn!iflcation. The To.a (east Asia) Domestic Air lines plane cra.<Jhtd while approachina: ~ airport of thi~ port cily ~00 miles north or Tok~o -On II o k k 11 i d o , Japan'• northe rnmost island ' H DAILY f'ILOT ,;J New Viet Peace Hope Held Out Red Negotiator Says Newest Proposal Not Inflexible PARlS <UPJ ) -i\1adame Nguyen Thi Binh, foreign minister ef the South Viet· nameJe National Liberation Front (Viet Cong), said today the Communist peace proposal subm illed here July t to the United States is not an inflexiblt take-it· 1r·leave-it package. the Viet Cona: has no official 1tandinJ, they llave declined to meet wllh Mddame Binh's dtlecation in private. "We hope President Nlxoo 's answer will be positive," abe said. "Ou.r 1even- .. point plan clearly shows our 1oodwilJ. "The k.ey to peace lies In Mr. Nlxon.'s bandJ -it consists; of the South Viet- namese people 's demand that be set a terminal date for the withdrawal ., au U.S. troops from South Viettiam this year in exchanae for 1 ceaae-fire t.lld H · change of all war prisoner1." Madame Binb, said announcement ol the date of a military pullout ahoa1d preferably be made public. Madame Binb, v.·ho beads the Viet Cong delegation to the Paris peace talk!. said in a wide-ranging interview with United Press International tha t President Ni.ion i;hould ask his negetialors in Paris to discuss tht plan -of which she is the chie f author -y,•ith the Communis t delega tes. Jersey Mayor on the Joh She 1idestepped que1tioc1 whether the terminal date for a withdrawal could be communicated lo the Communist side through private cbacnels and agreed upon also privately, rather than. beinj: a public announcement from Wuhingt.on that might be emb&rra!lling for the NiJ:on Administration. After Fede1·al Conviction S~e warntd that if N11on keeps a r~s1dual fore~ of American military ad· visers, technicians and supply troops in Vie!nam aftt>r U.S. combat troops have departed,. that ~orce will irresistibly ~o~e involved tn the figbling and thii will in turn draw the United Sta tes back into a combat role . Madame Binh, speaking at her we\!- guarded headquarters, a red-roofed villa at suburban Verrieres-le-Buisson. said she v.·as ready to meet ch ief American negotiator David K. E. Bruer if need br to discuss the Vietnamese 'Commu nisi proposals. ,up to nolf the Americans have been w~lhng ht meet privately with thr North Vi~tna.mese dtlegates but. because of tht •bJecllons of the Saigen government tha t NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -·Jersey City ~layor Thomes J. Whelan says he will be back at his city hall dt5k Thursday. although a federal jury convicted him and seven oth~rs of extorting kickbacks fron contractors. Whelan wa.s smiling and rtlai:ed Mon· day after a fe<f"!ral court jury of nine women and three men found him 111ilty of .!ti! 29 count!! of extortion and con- sp iracy to extort. The Jury deliberated for four hours 1n an extraordinary ho!1- da:-i 1Yt>e kend session. The original indic tment last November charged each defendant wllh t~·o counls of conspiracy lo e,.tort and 32 counts of extorting $182,000 from contractor.;, engineers and suppliers doing bll!iin,ss with Jersey City and Hudson County. Five counts were dismissed by U.S. Dist. Court Judge Robert Shaw, dropping the sum of the extortion to $165,000. Only with Jersey City Business Administrator Philipp Kuni was the repetition of "gu ilty" find ings by the jury broken. Kunz was convicted on 17 coun~ and acquitted on the other 12. Convicted with Whelan and Kunz were Hudson Counlv Den1ocratlc. Chairman \Valter \Yolfe. ·Jerse)I City Coucil Presi- dent Thomas Flaherty. Hudson County Treasurer Joseph Stapleto11, Hud so n County Police Chief Fred Kropke. Jersey City Purchasing Agt'nl Bernard Murphy. and Po rt of New York Authorit}t Com- mission er William Sternkopf. She insisted repeatedly that "it is ill tbe Interest of the Nixon Administration and the United States itself to dtclare their readiness to withdraw from South Vie t- nam." Claiming that Viet Cong foret:s bad the ioitiative on tbe batUefield, Madame Binh said tbe U.S. plac to eventually keep residual military forces in Vietnam would draw tbe Americans back Into flared-up fighting .again. "The puppet (Saigon) troops alone can· not resist our forces,'' Madame Binh said. "If any American forces -residual fo rces -are kept ln South Vietnam. they will inevitably be drawn into flgbUcg again." she said. ''The very key to peace in Vietnam h: a complete U.S. military withdrawal." The Glendale Federal Savings ''Try us·· account. Gratifying. These ore trying times. High time you tried us. Comfortable from th e start. If you can't make it to one of our 27 neighborhood offices, just phone. We simply transfer your savings into o "Try Us" account ... and you try us. On your own terms.Try $10 or $10,000. How much a nd how long ore up"to you. The "Try Us" account, our new Umpteenth Way To Save, is an eosy introduction to the re- assuring security of over a bi llion d ollars in -------,,.,,...~ assets. A nice feeling enjoyed by over a quarter of a million people. Loter, when you want your investment, we give it bock with interest. But most people stay. And that 's gratifying. Why not see for yourself? Try us. Th en you con rela x and enjoy the other good things in life . Trust Glendale Federal Savings ... you can 't lose. '°' va. COHVIHIHC! out v omas WU .. or&I ON SANIDAY, MY 10, t.00 J..M..t.00 P.M.. ~· IMm HJU.S •CANOGA PAl.X• OV.TSWOITli •COSTA MESA• DONNrt· EAST LOS ANGll!S• Et MONTE• FUUPTOH·GIDIOAll (Main Offk»)• LONQ 1fAOt MONROYlA . MOtmOSE. NrNPO«T If.A~. rAonc PAUSAO!S · PMADENA ·SAN OfEGQ.OOY-/NTOW'N ·SAN Dl~EOANS ·SAN nDIO•SANTA l.AD.AIA. SHBMAN OAK$· STUt»O CTY • TOllANCl • VDmJlA ·VISTA· WDTWCXJO VIUACE • Wll.SHllf aN1U .... . -· •• ..,. • ' I t ' i ~ • " ' • DAILY PILOT Ul'I T1t.1tlM .. It's Official t Following certification of the 26th amendent giving 18-year-olds the right to vote by Robert Kunzig, chief of the General Services Administration (r~ght), President Nixon 1Signed as a witness to the cere- mony at the White Hou15e Monday. • • . •• ) l l· Nixon Advisor iii India ' • ~ ·• l • Kissi1iger Arrives A1nid Anti-U.S. Demonstrations ! a NEW DELffi (UPI ) -President Nil:- ; on's top security advisor. Dr. Henry Kl~ g inger. arrived in India from Bangkok lo- ~ day amid elaborate security precaulions " and demonstrations against American ~ military shipments to Pakistan. " Kissinger was schedu led to remain ~ here two days for talks with Prime i Minister Indira Gandhi and other lndian :7 leaders. some of whom have made blunt ;: statements al>out the government's ~ displeasure with the shipments. ~ On the entrance road to New Delhi's :'.-Palam Airport, a group of about Sil chant- ;; ing supporters of the Communist Party ;.'. carried signs reading. "Kissinger of if. Death"' and "Nixon Arming Yahya'i ~ Military Junta to K.ill Bangla De.sh,"' • ~ reference to the campaign by Pakistan' ~ • President Yahya Khan"s Army in East Pakistan's civil war. Shortly after Kissinger's arrival, Vice President Spiro 1'. Agnew was scheduled to make a 90-minute refuelling slop at the west coast port city of Bombay, where labor leaders also were planning an anti- American demonstration :!parked by the military shipments. Hundred$ of uniformed p o I i c e prevented the demonstrators in New Delhi from entering the airport. Security personnel spirited Kissinger and U.S. Ambassador Kenneth B. Keating' out another exit while Keating's official limousine, with a couple of low.ranking aides inside, joined the motorcade and drove past the demonslration. Both wlice •nd the organizers of the If Agnew Leaves Singapore s For Middle Eas~ Vi sits ~ -~: SINGAPORE (AP) -Vice President Persian gull kingdom of Kuwait, the .. Spiro T. Agnew left Singapore for the highest ranking American official ever t!'I • t,·. Middl' East I.Oday, seeking support from visit there. On Thursday he crosses the leaders in two of the less militant Arab Arabian peninsula to Jidda, on the we.st C· . ~ lila\es for President Nixon's efforts to ~ achieve an Arab-Israeli selUement. .. After an 81h-hour flight broken by a • i ~ refueling stop in Bomba.y . Agnew was to apend nearly two days in the oil·rich little ! ~ Pig111y lli ppopotamus ~ Fo~sil Discovered ~ ' ~ ~ ~ .· .. " PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The foss1hz- t d remains of a pigmy hippol:M"Jlamus art among 1,000 fossils presented to lhe Academy of Natural Science!'i here by two sc1cnt1sl.l! just returned from an f'X· pedition to the r.teditcrranean island of Cyprul'. The tiny hippo, now extinct. slood three feet tall, Dr. H. G. Richards and his assistant, Richard Whitt , reported. coast of Saudi Arabia. The vice president carritd to Kuwait and S<ludi Arabia. a message that the U.S. government seeks a balance of power that will assure the security of all na· lions. He told newsmen in Singapore ft1onday that in the r.tiddle Ea.st the Nixon ad- ministration has tried to counter the in· creased Soviet naval presence in the r.iediterrancui and ft·loscow's aid tn Egypt by keeping "the Israeli govern- ment supplied voith sufficient disinccnlive to anyone to attack them" ·while at lht!. aame lime ''attempting to maintain A non.hostile posture toward the Arab republics." The vice president will meel Kuwait's ruler, Amir Sabah As-Salem As-Sabah. on Wednesday, and then cruise on the Persian GuU aboard the yacht of the foreign minister, Sheik Sabah A.s-Ahmad As-Sabah. demonstration had predicted a larger turnout, but a heavy rain.shower dam· pened the protest. Kissinger is on a round-the-world fact· find ing tour for President Nixon that first took him to South Vietnam. He also will stop in West Pakistan to confer willt government kaders and in Paris to meet with Davis It. E. Bruce, chief American negotiator al the Vietnam peace talks. Agnew was on an unrelated tour that has taken him to South Korea and Singapore and will lake him lo other points in Africa and Europe. Kissinger made oo atatement At the airport. There have been no official in- dications of the thrust that his talks with Indian leaders will take. Informed diplomatic sources have in· dicated, however, the sesskln:s are certain to be domina~d by the anns iS!Ue and the Indian government's critical attitude toward U.S. handlint of it. American Nun Ge ts High Post VATICAN CITY tUPI) -An American nun has· been appointed to the iecond highest post ever held by a woman in the Vatican, officials announced Monday. The Vatican news bulletin said Sister Thaddeak Kelly, 54, of San Francisco, has been named a department head in the Sacred Congregation for R e I i g i o u s Orders. the Vatican "ministry" dealing with nuns, friars and monks. Sister Kell y will be in charge of an office dealing wilh lhe constitutions of women·s religious in· sututes. Sister Kelly was the rirst woman ever to become a department head in the Vatican. The only higher·ranking woman 1n the papal state is Miss Rosemary Goldie, an Australian laywoman who was appointed four years ago as a vice iiecretary of the Council for the Laity. Sister Kelly has been a member of the Sister~ of lhe Presentation of Mary since 1937 . She won a master"s degree at the Catholic Universit y or America in Washington, D.C., and served a.~ .1 French language teacher before working her way up to Assistant Geueral of he.r order. J I Arlene Moving Northward lleavy Thunderstorms Dot Nation's Midsection California iUll,I., •~let -· wt ll r-llMf\!M from -lou"'-"' t t h..,,,.le'• lloUCl•n !fl -__ ,. lft '"' '"""°"" ,..,., •• '-'"'' .. 11...,ld In "" .,_lmJ 70. •nd -11• wlnd1 ...,llM tc,.n lhf aM1lll ,...ion. fhe UIUl l c~ri.111 <II "''"I •nd ""''"" .... ,_ 1111 ... e,vt r -CNll•I ....... IAnd v•!I•">. lf M<l,.. "'""' U i• w"h 11.111 i. ~·'· ''' 1 .. 11.fktl ·~ -· ••lmV ,.,......., "'''""' w!!~ hi•~• ,..,, • (:OlltlN,JOd 111routl'IOut Lt• An· """ •nd vlclotlfy •nd "" .,...,,.,ft,,,.,. -...ctM _.,.. <II '""' lfml W""'fll .. 491, TM •....-ctlCI ovt•nl1M ICI* ,,.. 1119111 ........ Altlr_, wfndl 9UJltd .ftr"MI tllf 11oMdlfr11111 11 "" 1t1 IS mHt1 -"°"' w+tft (IOI.fr Ill.Ill b• ml<M•• """ 1 onodt!"t t•lt ~ wrf, TM w•ttr "''' .......... Ill IN ,_111oino IN •-•II tnlO••<l rio•r .tf'ld w•rm --wll" 11191'1• -· •. s ... _,.,, SP llMIT•O NaU IMT•i:lllATIOlll.t.l Tlwnlltrslor-K<-lllH bJ ..:· n '*'-'I Mii •M llf'NMf•r.. 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"4 '"'" '"' NIWlll l'Klllc c ... 11 lo ,,.. Norl'll•r" ll!Jln1 .,,,,.,, In Ito. Soutll-•I. •.-.. ""' WHlflor conll"'-'". T...,,,.4""" _ .... Ml .. .i1 •llO ... -'"'""'" "''"' 11'1 "'" _,, .... ,., """""'""· ll••nl•ll "''' -••llr lltM ever -· el ,.,. ... u .... !otl~ "'""""i"' ,_,,.,.,.,,., '~"'"" tr... )I J I C""'°'d• lrlH . 19 1:1 o: M-1'111, T-. Coastal l-4111 IUlltl'lllll l!:ldt1. l l•P!I YerlJblt wlnd1 llltM •lld rnw~I.,. looYrs lllccm- 1,,., -llrlY • 1t1 16 k"6h Ill t llll• ,,_, IOdt "Y t nd "'""'"'tdt•. Hlto~ , .. lllY 1! 19 t.1, (&111•1 l•m--•lur K ''"'' ll'Cl"I! .ii •• 1'11. ·~[ ..... ·-·111-,.._ ,,._ i l lo "· Sun, Moon, Tlder TUIE IOAY ~hlfll ., •• ,.,. ,, itlOQd -J.IO '·"'· l J W•ONl10.t.'I' '""· 111111 '"II lt>W ltcon~ 111,11 ~JCond I"'" '"" •h•• " ... '"· M-llllMt fO·j,m. IGXl•m. !7 J·J••m. ""'' t Oil • m • l '""'" 1 • 1111 I Cir•"'· Slit 2 li '·"'· -"' Temperature• Hl•ti l.fW ..... <. Albll<>u""t llt .. " "''""" .. •• ,., .t.ncP!Mate •• " lo1tol! ., ., l ull&IO " " .~ cn.r1ollt " .. ,• (hit;.totO .. " C.lnd,.na!I " • '" C.Jtv•l•ncl .. " " Dt llt• " " Otnvll ~ " 001 Mol11t1 " ., °''"'" .. ., •• l'1lrN11tu " " .......,," .. .. lndifMNll' " .. , .. Ju,,.ou .. " "'""'' (lty " .. '" LH V"'' "' " l..,l1v1111 .. .. '·" M...,,1>1111 ., " '" Mloml ., " Mll.,.ou': .. " .. 11111n11toi•lit ., " litw o'"'"' ~ " ·" Ntw Yerl .. .. Ol i•l'lomf c lly .. " Orn•ll• .. ., l"tlm i .... 1.,.., >M " lllllJtllfo!D~!t .. .. -·· "' " l"!ll1bu•t11 " .. ·" "ottt.tftd ., • ··~ " " "le~ " •• ""'"'tni. •• • St leoul1 .. •• Solt l •-• (l!Y ., ~ \an n 1"0 " " i t " l'•t ftCIHft .. n !l.11•11• ,. "· • V•ncovv.,. " " ... w11111119to11 ., .. Slows Operations Typhoon Shuts Down Viet War SAIGON (UPI) -Vietnam's first ma- jor typhoon of the ye.Kr headed ashore 11ear the Demilitarized Zone fDMZ) to- day, shutting down nearly all air and grourid combat in the north. Military weathermen said the unseasonal dren- ching might slow down ground combat operaLioos for sevtral days. The area south of the DMZ. the n<>- man's-land dividing North and South Vietnam, has been the scene of the heaviest fighting of the Indochina War in recent weeks. particularly Fire Base Fuller. Communists have been carrying out a number of rocket and mortar at- tacks on bases there. The U.S. air force grounded all cargo flights to the North and evacua~d its big * * * 2,200 More Gl s Leave Wa r Zone; 4 Units Packing SAIGON (UPI) -Another 2.200 Gl's went home last week to cut the U.S. military force in Vietnam to 239 ,500 men, t he lowest since !\1arch 31. 1966, the U.S. military command reported Monday, The command also iinnounced another four Army units with 305 troops got (lrders Monday to start packing up to leave the war zone. This will bring l() 6.400 the number of soldiers placed on l'itand down in the pas! five days as part of President Nixon 's program of witlxlrawals. During the week ending July I , Army atrength fell from 192.600 to 191 ,000. The number of Marines dropped by 400 men to a total force of 500. Military source! said the leatherneck force was now probably the lowest it would go for some time. Those remaining are attached to command headquarters or in adviser jobs with the Vietnamese Marine Corps and Naval Gunnery Teams. Strength of each service as of last Tuesday, was given as: Army 191 ,000 (down 1.600 from the previous week :. Navy 10.900 (unchanged), Marines 500 (d-Own 400 ). Air Force 36 ,000 (down 3001. Coast Guard 100 (unchanged). Aboul 18,200 Navy and Coast Guard personnel on ships off the Vietnam coast are no1 jnc!uded in the Vietnam Io r c e figures. C130 transports from the path of Typhoon Harriet, as it awept in across the South China Sea and the Gulf of Tonkin. U.S. Army aviators lashed their smaller planes and helicopters to the groun~_!o prevent damage from winds estimaied ~t up to 138 miles an hour that blasted 11Cl'b~ the coastal lowlands, all the way from Da Nang to the DMZ, 100 miles to the northwest. The typhoon brought with it six to nine Inches or rain. A U.S. spokesman said one American helicopter, an OH~. was shot down Mon- day in the vicinity of the Ho Bo Woods , A longtime Communist stronghold U.S. engineer units oare blowing up. The area Is about 25 miles northwest of Saigon. South Vietnamese troops said they kill· ed 45 guerrillas in actions scattered from the area south of Da Nang lo the Saigon vicinity. 1'he government troops reported 11 wounded. U.S. helicopter gWlships reported they ki!led five Communists in a brief fjght west of Quang Ngai city in the North. The severe weather conditions in the north grolDlded even the high-flying U.S . B52 strategic bombers, which are sup- posed to be able to operate regardless of the weather. After several consecutive days of as many as seven 1nissions a day, lhe 852 made only one sortie on Monday. Spokesmen reported no ground contacts in northernmost Quang Tri Monday and said they expected none today. The Com- nu1nists had opened their "summer of- fensive" in the province in J une. after the area dried out from the annual six- month-long monsoon rains, making roarls passable again for infiltration of men, munitions and supplies. ln neighboring Cambodia, a weekend lull in the fighting ended Monday night when Communist forces fired a mortar barrage into a Cambodian army post in the marshlands near the capital of Phnont Penh. The fight for the marsh· lands has been going on for weeks. Cambodian high command spokesman Lt. Col. Am Rong 3aid the North Viet- namese attack at Prey Bang. 15 miles from Phnorn Penh. caused no rlamage or casualties. It was the firsl attack in the area for three days. Am Rong noted that heavy monsoon rains had started and that th t marshlands were quickly becoming a huge lake. He said tht. C.Ommunists pro- bably curlailed the fighting to move sup- plies to higher fl"Ollnd. ..'i(t .. 'It's the manager. Our three year lease is up!' Braniff Hijack Couple Facing A;gentine Trial BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Bearded American Robert Lee Jackson and hi!'I Guatemalan ·girlfriend were turned over to a panel of five federal judges Monday for trial on a ir piracy charges in con· nection '.Yith the 7 ,500-mile weekend hi- jacking of a Braniff airliner from Texas to Argentina. The maximum penalty under Argentine law is 15 years for the crime. Judge Dr. Luis Guerrello said if convicted, the pair would have no recourse or appeal from the decision. It was the longest skyjacking in poin t of distance in lhe short history of such aerial hijackings. Jn a Monday court appearance ln nearby La Plata, Gucrrello ruled the pair should be 1ried under Argentine Federal Law. J-le added 1he law prohibited him from trying Jackson, 36, and Ligia Lucrecia Sanchez Arcilla, 23, by himself. The judge did not sa.y when the public trial would be held. Meanwhile, Jackson and the girl were held incommunicado at the Buenos Aires P rovince Security Prison in La Playa. A foreign ministry spokesman said the Argentine government had received nCJ requesi.s from 1he United States or Mex· ico for extradition. But authorities in Argentine con1inucd lo study the 191.h century extradition treaty with the United States to decide if it could sur· render the U.S. Navy veter an . Jackson and his girlfriend hijacked a Rraniff Boeing 71)7 F-'riday Qver San Antonio, Tex .. and gave themselves up early Sunday morning after a 20-hour test nf wills with Argentine offi cials as th• plane sat on the runway at Ezeiza Jnterhational Airport. Your chan ce to wi n an interest-free loan in United California Bank's Inter est-Free Personal Loan Sweepstakes ends July 31st. So if you've been thinking about applying for a loan for a car, boat, pool, you name it, don't wait any longer. Jf you're a California resident, 21 or over, come into any one of our 238 offices and fill out an entry bl ank today. (It's that simple-no purch ase required.) • \ If you apply for a personal loan for any am ~~t up to $10,000 and it's a pproved, you may win it interest· free. If you don't apply fo r a loan, you can still win: either a cash prize equivalent to t h e ~­ terest on an average UCB Personal Loan with a two-year m aturity or, on approval, an interest · free loan. There'll be a sweepstakes winner for every 50 Joans approved. One ofthemntlght· be'you. Come into United California Bank. Right away. UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK Our lnterest·Free Personal Loan Sv1eepstakes ends July 31. ----·-·-·· ·--·-· I .. ~. Newport Beaelt E.O.I T·I O·N Tbday's Flnal N.Y. Stoeb VOL. 64, NO. 160, 2 SECT IONS , '40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C'AtlFORNIA' TEN CENTS ... "G I , • \ ·-i....i... • Sumnier Dog Ra stus a springer spaniel owned by Bart Wood of Balboa' lsland. loves the water. After all, springer 6paniels are supposed to be water dogs. Rastus cbases sticks and an occasional bird and all that, but a guy has to rest once in a whf!e. Trustees Eye $42.2 Million •' School Budget J By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 t1M Dallr ~l\itt Sl•H NeWpori-Mesa Unified School ~strict trustees tonight will ceD$idu adoJtiOll of a $42.l million budget calling for a ZO- C"ent tax increase. The budget adoption is lncluded .in th• lfflgt.hy agenda set for the meeting 11.t 7 p.m. in the Lyceum of Costa Mesa High School , 2650 Fairview oRad, Cmta Mesa. The budget draft being ccnsid~red tcr night is the publica1ion budget wh1c~ may be amended further prior to a~option of the final budg et during the fir st week of AugusL . . . Adju stmenls in district income expec- ted during 1he !971-72 fisc al year were presented at a special meeting of tile board last week. They result in _a budget Increase of $.W.000 over an ea rlier budg· et total. bul will not ~ffect_ the proposed tax rate, fiscal pl<uirung director Walter Ad rian has said . . In a memorandum tn the ~ard in- c1urled in tonight's agenda, Adrian noted trustees may approve A one-cent per- missive override tax ti! pay for 1he Re- gional Occupation Tra1n1ng Program . The one-ce rit levy would pay the New- port-Mesa district's s~a.re of the three- district vocational training prol[ram ap- proved recently bv boiir~s or t_he Hu.nt- in,ltton Beach and Tustin Union High School Dislr icl!'l anrl the Newport-Mesa board. d The proposrd 1971-72 burll!et pro vi es SJO.S million to the ~rner;il , f~nd for op- erating P.Xpenses. sio.'4 m1!11011 to t~ district bu il dinR fund and another ll million to the cafetcria operations. ?"IY the general fund budget h~s _been adJu5t- td upwards since tile prc!1m1n.ary budget wa s presented ont month ;igo. While t~ bud1Ze1 adjustmenl.,: reflect milv a S31\.1.000 Increase o_ver the _e~rly budgt-t estimates. spending_ rev1s1?n1 charted by Adrian at the special meeting t~wttk totalled S859.000 They included a $303.937 expe~se _to provide a 2.2 percent rai!'le for dtstnct ~achers. evtn though neii:oliations I» tween the distrirt and the Newport.Mesa Education Associatio n have not .conclud- edContributirig to the budget increage ls 13&1,000 in new incomt projecte? on the "' basi! of an improved tax dehnquency factor. Adrian said. . . The rtmainder or the budget rev1s1ons eome from ll $600,000 tstimale of distr ict rt:fierves that was not committed in the early budget draft. All~ating the. exces1 reserves bring! the prOJtCled ending ~l­ an ce to the '4.7 perceflt or tot~l budget level es'tablished by the district as an "optional" restrve, Accordltig kl scl!ool "ficitls. No Reason to Strike, Postmaster Declares WASHINGTON (AP ) -PO!tmWr Gtner11I Winton M. Blount uys lttrt'a 00 need for A post.a.I strike and he doesn't think there will be one. Blount said postal unions were negollAling "in 11 very taugh way" in coo- t.ract talk~ with tht U.S. Postal Service, a atmi·privale corporation that took charge of mail operation!! Ja11t Thursd&y. He ad· ded , however: "There ls 'no n~ed _for a strike. no rationa le, and I don t tiunk lt will occur." Death Blaze Origin Under Investigation Cause of a house fi re that killed a school administrator's wife in .Ccsta Mesa Sunday night tiais been narrowed down lo two li kely poMibili!ies. but the blaze't orig.in may never be known terr certain. Investigators said today the fire 1.hat destroyed I.he $30 ,000 home of Mr. and Mra.' Walter Adrian , at 4CWI Walnut St., cou ld have been due to faul ty wiring or careless smoking, "All Uiat's left at ttie point of origin i!I the springs of a chair," said Fire lnspec· or Ed Lewis. Rescue efforts by witnesses And firemen fai led in the 11 p.m. blaze. and Mrs. Vera Adrian. 42. died of smoke in- halation, after becoming tra pped in a hallv•ay. Investigator.'! theorized she might have survived had she sought re fuge in the more protected bedroom o[ the dwelling. Adrian himself was dragged un- cooscioos from the bedroom after neighbors broke in and was admitted to Cos\.a ~1esa Memorial Hospital for medical care. Nursing staff spokesmen said ~ was released Ji.1onday afternoon . Funeral :services for Mrs. Adr ian were pending tod.ay a t Bell Broad wa y Mortuary in Costa Mesa. She w.i!: emplo~ 8.'l a manaa:ement analyst in the planning divls:ion ot: the supply dep.artment at El Toro Marine Co~ Air st.at.ion. . Her husband is fiscal p1anning·director for the Newport. Mesa Unifia:t ~ District. · Ex-Dominican Army Genera l Depor ted SANTO DOMINGO, D o m i n i c a n Republic ( AP l -Former Dominican army general Eli as Wessiny Wessin has been deported to Spain, afler ht was ac· cused by President Joaquin BaJaguer of heading a rightist plot aga inst the government. The '47-year-0ld anny man and political leader left Sunday night under a heavy security guard. Presidtnt Balaguer had denounced the plot on nationwide radio and television Th ursday with Wessin Al his side. He left Jt up to the military to decide W~in's fate. Wtssin has Ad- miUed the plot. DAILY .. !LOT"""' ~Jt ....... IC....,. FIREMEN MOP UP A~TER FATAL COSTA MESA BLAU lnvestig1tor1 Say Exact CauM ,,,...y Ntvtr le K".wn ·-·--' ... --------· ---._, __ ---- ---·-'-'="---==~·""'"'""'""=~·""·;,;;;;,.. ........ ;;:.,.·¢=a Satchmo Dies Famed Jazz ,Trumpeter Dead at 71 NEW YORK {UPI) -Uiuis "Sa.tcb- mo·• Annstrong, .an or pha n ed waif from the stree~ and bordellos of New Orltans who became king of th e jazz trumpet and won international acclaim , died today at his home only !WO days after hi!! 7lst birthday. Even though Armstrong had been critically ill and hovered between life and death In Beth Israel Hospital only a few months Ago. his death ln his sleep at 5:30 a.m. was unexpected. He apparently had ~n making A alow recovery from setbacks "aused by a kidney a1lmtnt and heart trouble. but wa!I strong enough in recent weelu to join his long.time friend, trombonist Tyree Gltnn, in duet renditi ons of such aong.oi as ''Sleepy Time Down South." ln a pre-birthday inltrview with UPI, Armstrong'.i; only complaint was his dif- ficulty in walking. "Work. that's my life. oh yeah!" !See SATCHMO, Page 2} President 'Bargains' Nixon Asl{s Steelmen, Union Find Agreement WASHINGTON (AP)-President Nixon called on negotiators in the steel industry today l.G teach a "constructive set- tltment" that will keep the. industry com- peitve in world markets and maintain the economic recovery. The President met with the union and management negotiators for about an hour on the eve of their contract talks and, a spokesman said, laid out the economic problems facing the industry. Nixon called for "hard bargaining" in the talks but refrained from :selling a Apteific wage stttlement he would like to see brought about. The contract eirpires ia the industry July 31. George P. Shultz, director or the office of mana1ement and budget, 1ummed up &ht Prtliiitm'1 attitude: "I know you are 1oing into bargaining: I kDow bow important it i!! to ycu. I felt it neoeaury to tell you how important r think it Is." It was Nixon's first try at intervening In any way in a negotiatin g session before it actually got under way and reflected a new Impetus by the White House of more direct involvement to hold down v.·age and prict! increases. Nixon emphasized the relationship of the steel lndu.stry in the world market, told the negotiators how productivity has failed to increase, how profits have ::ieen lagging and wages remaining stable in comparison to other industries. Shultz said Nixon appealed to the "sensitivity of their own self-interest in beginning the contract talks." Shultz said A constructive setllement means a contract that would maintain sleel's competitive world position and have no depressing impact on the economic recovery. Ni1on emphasized thal he wanted an atmosphtre that would help avoid a 11trike in the industry. Shultz: said, but !!aid the President would not intervene if there was a walkout. "The President did not try to say that they should set lie for this or that," Shultz: said. As Nixon me t with the negotiators, tile White House released a report on the i;teet industry prepared by his C2hinet Committee on Economic Policy detailing lhe trouble! or the steel industry. The study showed profiLo; have dee.lined by '42 percent to the lowest level in ten years, the report said. In addition, the study 11aid. production has stabilized in rtcent years. output per man-hour has sho wn virtually no increase and. "with compen sation increases AC- ct!leratlng, unit IAbor costs have in· Ne wport Guards Predict Heavy Surf, Riptides Rising surf and accomp.111~ying riptides were predicted off Newport Beach tOOay and Wednesday follow\nlt'. .an Indepen~ dence Day weekend with calm but un- usually warm aee watera. Newport Beach liftruards this morning ur4td caution fCJT awimmer slret.chin& their beachgoing holiday because of the danaerously strong u.adercurnnts they ar'e forecaAting. Whlle crowds At the clty'a beachet aver1ge<I more than 100,000 per day o\ltt the three-day holiday Wffkend, the rel· aUvely calm surf made it a lot ofer, with fifeg\lards logir'lg only 131 reseaes durlq: di entire per1od. They m1de nearly that many tach d1y of the Faurth ol July wertkend iast year when the !Jllt'f wa1 up. E,:t.remtlY' warm watu temeerature. a fracliOn under 68 degree!. helped atlNllct the mulllhxles. · Liftguards estimated Saturday's crowd 11 90,00>, Sunday's at JOO.GOO and Mtlnday'11 1t U$,OOO. Thi air tmnperature· held ll.eedy·each day 't 70·d•I'" .... creased sharply." The .study said steel faces iJ'eat com· petition from Japan and several Euro- pean countries that must be taken into consideration. {:r {:r {:r Nixon Expected Tonig ht at 6 For Coast Stay ln hi:s first visit this swnmer, President Nixon wa1 upected to arrive alon1 tbl South Cout at o o'cloclt WI _.,. 1!1 be'gin a two-week workin1 vacation in San Clemente. Air Force One was expected to arrive at the dinner hour at th• MCAS in El Toro where the standard creetin.C by military personnel and dependant.I wilJ take place. After a shorl hop by helicopt.er to La Casa Pacifica In San Clemente. the Chief Executive will begin a vacation which is expected to include discussions on the budget and other economic matters. Earlier today the President· conducted one of his standard briefings for tel.ii.ors Jn the communicatiorui indwtry. · Top-level executive!! from 13 Midwest states were expected to confer for an hour with the President during a Kans.as City, Mo .. stopover. Several Presidential Aides preceded Mr. Nixon tothe city and conducted other briefings for tbe guesll earlier toda y. Topics of the sessions Included welfare reform. revenue sha ring and governmen- tal reorganization. Announcements about· the President's .schedule while in San Clemenlt will pro- bably emerge Wednesday. One key member of the Presidential entourage. Domestic Security Adviser Dr. Henry Ki ssinger. will not ac· company the Chief executive. P lans La unched F or Ba lboa Bay Lobster Event The Balboa Bay Lioru; Club annual lobster bake and carnival , an 18-year tradition on the sands of the Corona del Mar St.ate Beach, is moving. JAmes Lte, Lions club president. AAid today the annual September evtnt will be staged this year at i;:ashion Island In Newport Center. Lte said the move from the sea to the ehopping complex will allow the club lo .accommodate more people. "We hope to hAve a bigger carnival and lo gerve more dinners," Lee said, and it will probably produ~ a bigger profit for the club lo u.5e in operaUna Jt.'J other varied community projecta. Number of Welfare Case Births Decline NEW YORK (·AP) -The namber of -women on welfare here Jiving birth to clilldren baa dropped sharply In a three. year pe.rlod. Human Resour c e 1 Administrator Jule M. Sugarman report!. Sugarman said Sund1y that while one woma111 in five OJl wtlfare Jn 1968 gave birth, only•one ln nine gave bit~ In 1970, H~ a4ributed. the reductM>n to the impact ol l1111Jly plonnln1 .... 1c ... Ul"I T11fff1111t THE SONG HAS ENDED Satchmo (1900-1971) Santa Ana Seeks Irvine Honor Pledge By TOM BA RLEY GI IN 0.llll .. 1 .. 1 Sl11f Lawyers for the city of Santa Ana ~ day W"ged Orange C-Ounty Superior Court Judge Raymond Thompson to order the Irvint Company to hooor an eight-year vld agreement that allegedly pledged the "promised land" l.G the city via an- nexation action. Attorney William Wenke fired the first shots for the city in what is expected to be a tw<>-day bearing before Judge Thompson by asking the jurist to rule that the Irvine Company was not a qualified signer in incorporation action lhat could put I.he 938 disputed acres ia the he.art of the propOsed city of Irvine, "\Ve'te well aware of the effect thia would have on plans for the city of Irvin e," Wenke said "But we ask thil" court to recognize that the Irvine Com- pany's prior commitment to the city of Santa Ana precluded-them from including 111e promised land in the incorporation movement."' Wenke's opening statement will be followed by pre-teslimony arguments by attorney Dean Dunlavey for the Irvine Com pany and Timothy L. Strader, co unsel for the intervening C.Ouncil of Communities of Irvine. The "promised land .. -an !,shaped strip that runs along much of the boun- daries of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility -produced the lawsuit that led to today 's hearing w~ Santa Ana claim-- td the annexation rights It states it wa1 granted by the Irvine Company in 196.l. Incorporalion action in which CCI plAyed a leading role led Santa Ana to prote st inclusion of the acreage in plans to create the 18.000..acre city of Irvine - the fore:runner of 11."super city" that Is projecttd for 01,000 per50na and 53,llOO acres. Orange l1'eatlaer Warm weather is expected to oontinue along the Orange Coast today and Wednesday with bighl predicted in , the 70'1 along the beaches .. reaching 71 inland, Lowt in bo(b. are~• .around &O. INSIDE TODAY TM turv of a Southfast.. AM typhoon Nu lwoll{lhl fighltng virtually to o halt i n Vt.mom. Stt storu, Page 4. 'f·--------·--.-¥ --. -.-·· ·-- • - _Z DAILY PILOT N Man Dies High Rise Debate Set In Beating \ Action Branded !llegal in Laguna Suit At Party By ILUUIAllA KllnBICB Of ... 0.llJ' l"tltt ll•ft Allt.eed illq:allty of the Aug. 3 initiative e}e(Uoo on an ordinance lo limit building hei&hiJ Ill Lquna B .. ch will be debated July 19 btfore Superior Court Judge Robert A. Banyard. Laguna Beach realtor Vern Tashner Traffic Plata has filed a taxpayer's action ltl Superior Court cbarcln& the pn>poo<d -IJ "an unlawful attempt lo clw!&'• zooln& laws , •• violales government codea , .. violates state hou.sln& laws" and "unlawlully depri\'el'! the city council of 11.s fun ction as lhe ruling agency in zoning matters." Citizen's Unit to Hear Transit District Talk A lalk by lhe Newport Beach repreaen- Uttve on the Orange County Transit Diatrict and an environmental film will be I.be top items on the: agenda for Ule Citizem Advbory Committee o n Transportation meeting tonight at 7;)) o'clock in City Hall. 'n)e committee, working with 11 con- sultant to prepare a city-wide traffic plan. may also elect a new chairman lo replace William Agee who must resign becauae of bls recent appointment to the planning commission. The traffic study Is still in the preliminary stages. The panel will meet again next week and expect! to complete the design phue, that aectlbn that will tipell out what the study will study. Upon completion of this initial section, the city council has the otion of can-- celling the study, or changing con- sultants, ii It wishes. There haa been no indication that either wW happen, however. Police Arrest Newport Driver lri Boy's Death Holiday trips led lo death in Utah for an Anaheim man 11nd jail for a Newport Beach motorist whose car police allege killed ooe boy and injured four others slttping beside Highway 101 in San Luis Ob ispo County. J oseph M. Paretti, 28, of 2'.3 Grant Sl.1 Newport Beach, is in San LuU Obi.spo County Jail today awaiting arraignment on cbarges of fel ony manslaughter and felony drunken driving. Arra.ngement.s were under way to return Ule body oJ motorlat Mark C. Hetzler, 22, from Green River, Utah, where he was kllled Sunday ln a van ac~ cident that injured two passengera. Utah Highway Patrol off icers said Ray· mond A. Cook, 22, and Janis Wilson, 19, also from Anaheim, were admitted to a -hospital in Moab .and li!ted in fair con· dilion. [nvesligators said Hetzler was passing a truck on eastbound Highway 50-6 at 10:30 a.m. Sunday when his van went out <1f control at high spee<l. Swerving in a fishtail across both east and westbound Janes, it finally overturn· ed and rolled five times before coming to r est. Parotti was arre!:ted earlier Sunday at lhe scene of a freak accident on a tlighy,•ay 101 curve near the Avila Beach turnoff. south of San Luis Obispo. Califfrn!a Highway Patrol investigators said his car went out of control on the curve and struck a vehicle parked Ctlongside the highway. Catapulted ahead by the impad. the 11econd car ran over five sleeping boys from the San Joaquin Valley town of Lemoore. visiting coastal beache.s for the July fourth weekend. OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT ISlNfoa COAST "-'•LllHINCJ COM,AHY ••fffi H. W1~ ' "r•lllfnl Ml ,,,,....,.., J11.k •· c•rt:.v lfkr ,,...,.,. .,_. O.W-1 ~ n-•' K•ni( 1•1• ""•"'•' A. ,..,,1ri1~• MIMI° ..... 1•1• L ,,,,, )(',;,, N...,..l a .. Cl'I Clly 1•11« ~ew,-t '"'" OHklt 3 JJJ N1wp1rt l oule••"' M'1lli11t A'''•11 : r.o. ••• 1111, t 14•J .,,... ....... C-lt ,,,,..., DI W.1 air ltrwt u.-... di: m l"or•t .t. ..... ..e ''""'1111•, a.-1>1 ,,.,.. ... (fl llMllrf'•"' .... <*'*lit: »S HllMll .I.I ~mini ll .. I At tonight's susion, Richard Lynn, a Newport Beach lawyer, will outline the responsibilities of the newly-creat.ed county transit panel. Robert L. Jaffe, Newport Beach traffic engineer, said Lynn will also talk about what he visualizes as the future for rapid transit in Orange County. Marlin J. Bouman, representing the consultant firm. Alan l\1. Voorhees anrt Associates , "'ill show a film entitled "Multiply and Subdue the Earth" that, according to J aHe, features an en· vironmental planner "with a reputation and a message. "The film," Jaffe said, "offers solu- tions with which we may not agree; but, it does point out the problem." From PGfle l SATCHMO ... Armstrong said. "But I wouldn't want to go out on the stage with a walking cane. Soon as my pins get back in &hape. ole Satch will be back. I'm one man that you just <-an't kill." He was an Ameri can baby, born on the Fourlh of J uly, Md his horn became an instrument of international diploma cy that earned him the nickname of "Ambassador of Jazz" whelher he was playing in Belgrade, Moscow or to a gathering of Africans in Ghana, his trum- pet generated excitement. Among hi! fans was President Nixon who sent him a telegram during his struggle for life at Beth Israel.' He had come a long way from sordid beginnings bl New Orleans where he wa s born in 1900 of a union betweeR a turpen- tine factory worker and a housemaid. H.t bad .an ear for music and at an ear4 ty age he was playing a guitar. The event that was eventually lo change his llfe was his meeting with Willie "Bunk" John son, who taught him to play the cornet without having to read notes. His "formal" education began when Joe 1'Klng" Oliver gave him lessons. At the age of 12 Armstrong playe<l in a quartet which performed for pennies in Storyvllle in New OrlearA' red-ligh t district. Armstrong's only encounter with the Jaw came on his 13th birthd&y when he fired a pistol loaded with blanks during a Fourth of July celebration. He was sent to a waif's home for a year. While he was in the orphanage. he pla yed in 1 band and It was sa.id his note! could be heard aero~ the Mississippi River. Armstrong played in Kid Ory's Band as a replacement for King Oli\·er, v;ho took hi~ brand of jazz to Chicago. Over the ye ars he played in bands led by Oliver and Fletcher Henderson and during this period he switched from corntt to trumpet, y,·hich gave him a greaier range. Armstrong made hundreds 0 r recordings in his prime. Allhough sound reproduction techniques y,·ere poor in 1he 1920s in comparison with 1971 standard~. Armstrong 's early recording~ are co!- leclor·5 items v"h1cr. con1mand premium prices. Those y,·ho knew Armstrong in hi5 early years sald he y,•as a natural for the horn -either come! or trumpet. He had the perfect lip for the small silver mouthpiece. His teeth "'ere strong, permilling him to push out the high notes. They also embellished a broad grin that Jed to his nicknames of first, "Dip. permouth" and then "Satchelmouth.'' The latter was shortened to "Salche\mo" and ''Satchmo." Armstrong's virtuosity on the trumpet overshadowed another talent, hill voice. It v.·as gravelly but lnfectlow and audience response was so v.·arm that Satchmo found hlmseU In demand as a scat·type 5inger. Tustin Trustees Welcoming New . Board Members Dickran Borania n and Robert C. Bartholomew will be sworn \h 1 s membtrs of the Tustin Union High School District board of education at the special meeting called for 7:30 o'clock tonight. Boranian, 43, of Santa Ana, Is 1 prin- cipal In the Garden Grove UnHled School 01s1rict. Ht ran on a moderate platform in the April 20 election for the sett vaceted by retiring: board membtr Howard Selleck. Incumbent Bartholomew, 49, also of Santi Ana, is a nurserym an 11 nd member of the John Birch Society. JU~ camp11 ign .-re{iected the viewpoint.'! of !ht con· aervatlva majority of the Tustin bo11rd, Including hardllne 1t1nct1 on Issue. iiu<:h aJ tht dress code and studenl drug abuse. nle petitioa for writ of mandate nan\QI City Cluk Dorothy MUJfelt and five prin· cfpal 1ponaor1 of the Village Laguna movement which initialed the building height ordinance. They are attorney rtalph W. Benson: beachfront property owner and longtime high opponent, Marjory Adams Darling: UC l r\'i~ en· \'ironmentalist Philip \\'. Rund t' I : engineer Merritt A. Trease. and \j,•riter Arnold Hano. The respondents \\'ill be asked l-0 ap- pear before Judge Banyard July 19 to show ('ause why the election should not bt called off. Taschner, who filed the suit 0111 an in- dividual, is a member of the board of directors <lf tlie Laguna Beach Taxpayers Association, known in thf! Art Colony as an oul8poken conservative. The court action was filed in his behalf by the 1..-0s Angeles Jaw firm of Lane, Mathews and Hoag and Newport Beach attorney E. Gene Crain. Leads Transpac I The Aug. 3 eleetion on the high rise ordinance, which would limit building height throughout the city lo 36 feet or three stories, was stt by the City Council after certification of initiativ e petitions <-arrying almost 4,000 signatures of registered voters. T~ petitions \\'ere circulated to head off pas!'age of a beachfront hotr! zone ordinance that would have per mitted SO. foot buildings ln some areas. Loi' Killam's 73-foot ketch Graybeard from ~e Royal Va ncouver Yacht Club is leading the 69-boat fleet in the 2,f.25·mile Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Honolulu. Sketchy report from the racing neet this morning indicated the leaders \11ere about 40Q. miles out. See story on today's boating page. The controversial ordinance is opposed by hotel-motel interests and by the board of direel-Ors of the Laguna Board of Realtors. Since slate law prohib its the use of the Initiative procedure in zoning matters, legality of the ordinance has been ques- tioned, but ils proponent.5 maintain it would constitute an amendment to the housing code and is not a zoning matter. Meet Slated Tonight Fund Trinuning Session Judge Banyard apparently \1rlll ~ asked to rule on this aspect of the debate. Educators Ired Set by Tustin T1·ustees Over Reagan's , Budget Slashes Tustin linion High School District trustees will explore v.·ays of trimming the districrs $9.9 million budget at a study session called for 7·JO o'clock tonight in the district office. llil Laguna Road, Tustin. SACRAf\.tENTO (AP) _ Gov. Reag an The i1npact of !I $181,000 Joss <1f has triggered an angry new fight with equalization aid v.·ill be assessed, Supt. California educators by vetoing a 10 per· William Zogg .said today. He \vill suggest cent raise for university and college t hat the board of education consider an faculty members. appeal to legislators to correct the "valid The $39 million cul <-ame as part of a but inequitable'' recent slate a i d record $504 million the Republican determination. govemor vetoed from the state's new Zogg explained that the d istrict receiv- budgel before signing it Saturday. The ed a state equalization aid overpayment final budget figure is $6.79 billion. du ring the 1970-71 school ye ar for some 37 The only V.'ay he could approve ttte .students "'ho did not attend district salary Increases voled by the Democrat-school~. controlled legislature was to propo se a During the 19i0-71 school year, Tustin tax increase. Reagan said, and he refused trustees expelled 78 pupils for violations to do that. of district policies on drug use. dress, and lion brings us lo the level where "'·e become a basic-aided district." The district had budgeted 1ls 1971-72 ex- penses "'ilh lhe£xpectation it \4'ould receive a total ol l,181,234 in both basic and equalization id. With the loss of ('qualizati on aid, only about $1 million in income from the state is expl"cled. business manager J11mes Farley has said. Thus. some $181.000 may have lo be trimmed from the budget tonight. This is the second consecutiv e year behavior. Nine were readmitted to the !hat Uni versity of California a n d district v.·ith the opening fl f summer Sh I California State College faculty members A • a imar Drive resident arrested and Mesa Y outli, 18 , See ks $50,589 In Flag Arrest school. last we('k . have gone without the usual five percent Zogg :oiald discussions wilh Stair charged with de secralion of Old Glory, cosl-of.Jiving raise. finance department officials indicaled then later released. has filed a $50,58.il Legislators left them out of the general .stale Jaw requires Slate aid damage claim against the city of Costa stale salary increase in 1970 because of ~iesa. overpayment5 to be deducted from Lht'! 1• anger over the behavior of some faculty 1 11 · 1 members ln the wake of the Cambodian o ow111g year's a location to an equaliza. Van A. Noclck, 18, o( 779 Shalimar !Jon-aided district. n,, ... , cha f l t d · invasion and the Kent State shootings • · rges a se arres an 1m· that spring. "In our case." Zogg noted, "!be deduc· prisonmcnt in lhe pre-lawsuit claim filed The legislature tried to restore that by by the Pomona law firm of Pie') and Polakovic. giving them a 10 percent hike this year. Fourtl1 of Ji-.' Y Bo1nll The action sa,·s police officials Rudy But in vetoing the item. Reagan argued U that "salaries in the university remain in t-.1alik and Ov:en Kreia arrested Noelck :~: ~~:~~ .• ~rcent of all universities in Blast K ill s Student :1~~1 0~ 1~~ ~~ifi~~~~. :~dv~~~:~~n;~~~~ There w·as immediate, angry reaction go\·erning proper display of The Flag. Formal murder charges wtre lod&ed teday against three ~·larines who a!lege<l- Jy beat a rnan ru death lollow1ng h~ ·wife's birthday et lebrat1on 1n a Seal Beach apartment early f.1ondav . ' PoliC'e allegt:d !hf' three rnrn killed Vtrnon F.. Pagt. 36. of La Habra with their fists and feet during a tight on the beachfront near Seal Walk and J\'eptunP Avenue. No wtapon5 wtre found at the licene. Page was proneunced dead on arrival at Los Alamitos Hospital at 4:2'l 1.m , nearly one hour after the alleged fracas. Arraigned Oii murder chargC$ a t Wtst Orange County .Judicial District Cour! Ibis morning were J oseph G. Chavez, 20: Andres Pastrano Jr .• 21, and Walter A Baumgartner, 20 . All are stationed at the· Seal Beach Naval Weapon:oi Center. Police said the three n1en \Vere goin~ up and do"'" Seal Wa lk looking for a par t)' and entered an apartment at 1300 Seal Way "·here Page's wife, Amelia, wa s celebrating her birt hday. Officers were alerted to the i11cident by some neighbors who called the police sta- tion. The three men wrre captured by of- ficers following a two block chase do¥ln the beach. Lt. Bob Garza, ef the Seal Beach Pclir.e Department, 11aid Page and the alleged assailants were :stranger!. Nt in· formation wa s effered about what might have sparked their argument. A coroner's autopsy and tot:icolegy tests were ordered to determine tht ex- act cause of Page.°s death. Harbor Board Will Swear In New Members One new face and !we fa miliar enes "'iii be sworn into 'ervice •n tbe Nev.·port-t-.1esa Unified School District Board of Educatien at ib organizational m~ting al 7 o'clock tonight in th11 Lyceum el Costa Mesa H.igh SchGOl. Costa Mesa attorney Donald Smallv.·ood elected last April 20 to the seal vacated by retiring board member James Peyton is the new face en the board. Another Costa h1esa attorney, Selim S. "Bud" Franklin and Ne"'port Beach housewife f.t rs. Marion C. Bergeson will be reseated on the seven-memDer board. Both were elected to second terms on the unified district board in lhe April elec· lion. The board al so will elect officers for the coming year including formal recognition of Dr. John W. Nicoll as secretary to the board. Dr. Nicoll is superintendent of the Newport·Mesa district replacing Dr. William Cun· ningham. Sorry, Wrong Name On Graduation List f'om LC Presidenl Charle" Hitch who lfENDERSQN, Tenn. (AP) -Tommy Cha rges "'ere subsequently dropped, Burkhead. 18, president of hi~ high school bu! Noelck claims he suffered im· The June 30 editions of the DAIL y :-aid, "'The governor ha~ diluted our science club. dit'd Sunda\' v.·hen a bomb pugnment of his reputation and mental PILOT carried a story erroneously idt.n- resources and curbed our growth. He has hr-had built for lhe foiirth o! Jul)' ex· t d t h · l d h d f 1;ry;,g a 'ec""t graduate of Cal Slate Lo, •chie\'ed \\'i!h tht ~troke of a pen whBl ~res~ ue o e1ng e away in an cu s ...,, plflcled brfore ht.~ nei~hhors Angele~. P..iaxie Selga, 2171 American bomb tttrrats. p1ckels, intimidatlon and Sheriff R.D. Sm11h said the youth had His claim -for a total of $511,000 In Ave .. Costa 111esa. the young man .,.,hose aggression could not ." n1anufactured a series of bombs by plac-general damages and S51l9 in various name mistakenly was printed 8$ Marie. Re~gan alro trimm('d hack !he I 'C and 1ng gunpowder into inch-long metal pipe~. legal fees -also notes a ~tory of the ar-The Daily Pilol regret~ any em- co\legf' opera11ng budget s to thP le\'els he !\'lost of theni had been fired Saturday rest \\'a~ printed on !he DAILY PILOT's b11rrassmenl to Selga the typographical originally proposer! in February -JU St night. front page Prror may have caused. about thr same as last year although -;~:::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. inore students are e:<pec11'd I UCLA Chancellor Charles E. Young 1·ha\lenged Reagan's statement that other :;tatf's are cutting faculty s;ilarles. "Other univcrsi1ies are cutting b11ck on spending in other areas to be able to raise faculty 11alaries." Young said. "I know of no other ma}or institution lhat has failed to grant a faculty increase for t.,.,·o years.'' Stephen Hom. prt!idenl of Ca.life~• Stale Col!egf' at Long Beach. said. "\\'e'rt at least 20 percent behind our compelition in other states and we·re dropping fast." Car Overturns On Bus y Street Near Peninsula Normal summer holiday traffic en the f\ewport.Bafboa Peninsul a was snarled even worse than usual Monday in • col· lision that overturned a Pasadena youth's car just seaward of The Arche s overp1ss. Paul F. Henk.els. 19, suffered mino r in· juries in tbe 10:~ s.m. accident at Newport Boulevard and :Mth Street, but declined a ride to the hospital. Polict said Henke\1 was southbound towJrd the beach when a northbound car driven by Gerald R. Smith. 19, of 13661 Winthrop St . Santa Ana . collided with ll while turning left onto 34th Street. "The. Impact was apparently just right and over il went." said Traffic Officer Stan Bressler. Firemen responded from the ne11rhy headquarlers station lo hose aw•Y gtisollne from the overturned 1955 1tdan. "'hich 'u~tainl'd moderate damage aloni .,.,·i1h Smith's car. -· A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOlJT A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN BE UNFORTUNATE. OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13 YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS " AND REFE~RALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS. NO AMOUNT OF ADVERTISING CAN REl'LACE A PERSON Al RECOMMENDATION. WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL BY GIVING OUR CUSTOMERS THE BEST SERVICE AND QUAun'. l'OSSIBLE. '.!.~1jjL~~1 ___! ., ~ ~ .. , •••• -::'.,~ ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave . COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: "'°"· Thru Thu .... , 9 to 5:30 -Fri. 9 to 9 -S•I • 9'30 lo 5 _,... " . • ---~ -•w--•-• • ---· --·--·-·. .. -... ·-·---------_.._ --~ -ft.. \" ,.. ._. .,,,,,,, :;;;::su !¥!.:Jt4l'4.:..~ a-~ IE-'tlET •• ~e • ~· ·--.. · -.. ___ ; _____ ., .. _.;.. ____ ~ 11?•...: ---••• ~ ___ _._ _____ ......;._~ ___ .._ __ -, I -. 7 I ; I I I I I i I I ' • Costa · Mesa ' N.Y. Steelp *~ VOL. M, NO. 160, 2 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ~NGE COUNfY,.C);llfFORNfA TEN CENTS ' ' ·--" . \ ' Summer Do!I DAILY P1LOT PMr-lllr L .. ·fllYM Rastus, 1 springer spaniel owned by Bart. Wood of Balboa Island, loves the water. After all , springer sPaniels are supposed to be water dogs~ Rastus chasel!i sticks and an occasional bu d and all that, but 1 guy has to rest once in·a while. Trustees Eye $42.2 Million School Budget By GEO RGE LEIDl.L Of fM D&ll'I "1'-1 U•H Newport-Mesa Unilled ·School District lrusteet tonight will conslder a®ption of 1 $42.J million budget c1!1Jng 'fdr-•' »- t:ent tax increase. The. budget adoption 11 included in the lengthy agenda set fo r the mee.tin( at r p.m. in the. Lyceum Of Costa Mesa High School, 26.50 Fairview oRad. Costa Mesa. The budget draft being consirl~ed to- night is the publication budget whlc~ may oe amended further prior to adoption <lf :he final budget during the first week ~f August. Adjustments in distr ic~ income txpec· ·eel during the 1971-72 fiscal year were ~resented al a special meeting of, the x:ia rd last week . They result in .~ budget ncrease of $383.000 over an earher budg- tt total. but will not affect the proposed ax rate. fisca l pla11ning director Walter ~drian has said. Tn 11 memorandum to the board in- :\uded in tonight's agenda, Adrian noted rustee~ ma y approve. a one-cent per- nissive override tax lo pay for the; Re· pona l Occupation Training Program. The Qfle-Ce!'lt levy would pay the !'Jew- Ytrt-Mesa district'11: share or the three- listrict vocatio nal training pro.1tram •Po ,roved retent!y h.v boarrl!l of !he Hu.nl· nii:ton Bea ch and Tustin Union High irhool Districts and the Newport-Mesa )(lard . .d The proposed 1971 -72 budget provi es m .8 million lo the ,lleneral fund for op· ~ating expenses, Slfl.4 millio• to the listrict building fund and a.nnther $1 nillion to the. cafeteria operations. 4:JnlY tie general fund budget h~s _been ad1ust- .ld upwards since the. p~hm1nary budget ~·11s presented one month ago. While the budget adjustments reOect mJv 11 SMJ .000 increa:\e c_ver the .e~rly )udget e!ltimates. ~pending. rev1s1?n! ~harteti by Adrian at the special meeting a~t week tntai!ed SSS!l.000. Thev inclurltd a $.103.937 expense In lrqvide a 2.2 J>ercenl raise !or. district :escher.~. even thou,11:h neaot1auons ~ :ween the district and the Newport -Mesa Education A11socialion h11ve. not c~nclud. MContitibuti11g to the bud~ l~rease I! l.183,000 in new income project~ on , the basis (lf an Improved tu delinquency /actor. Adria n s11/d. . . The re.mainrler of the bud,11:et rev1s1on! •ome. from a $600,000 estimate of district ~erve.'I that was not committed in the ~afly budget draft. All~atin~ the_ e1ceM rt.St:rve.~ brin,Q:s the pro1ected ending hal· t.nce to tM 1.1 percenl of !Ota!' budg@;t \eve.I esl11b1ished by the district h ~n "Ml'tional'' reserve, according to scbciol official!. No Reason lo Strike, Postm as ~er Decla re!! WASHTNGTON (AP) -Postm~ler Genf'T'11l Winton M. Blount 1ay1 there'• no need fnr • ?!'la.I strike and he doean't think there wfll be one. , Blount said postal un1on!f •'re negotiating "in a very tough way'.' in d:>n- tract t.tJlks with the U.S. Posltlll Service,.• semi-private co~aUon lh11t \onk cl\ll!ge ()f mail operations last ThursdftY. He ad- df:rl however: "There Is no ~d for I strike. no r1tlonalt, 11;nd I ~·t \hini It wlll occur." ' Death Blaze Origin V nder Investigation Cause . of a house fire that killtd a school administrator's wife in Costa Ptlesa Sunday night ha.! been narrowed d<iwn 1to two . Jikefy possibilities, but the blau.'1 •or-igln -may never bt known for cett.in. 1nVt5tigators iiaKI toda.v the fire that destroyed the $30.000 home of Mr. and Mn. Walter Adrian, at 40I Walnut St., could have been due to fauJly wiring or careleM smokii'i1. "All dial's left at the point of origin is the springs of a chair," said Fire lnspec· or Ed Lewis. Rescue efforts by willlesses and firemen failed in the 11 p.m. blaze, and Mrs. Vera Adrian. 42, died ol smoke in· halation, afler becoming tr8pped in a hallway. lnvestig11lors theorized she might have !lurvlved had she sought refuge in the more protected bedroom of the dwe lling. Adrian himself was dragged un· conscious from t}lf; btdroom after neighbors broke In and was 4dm.itled to Cosla Mesa Memorial HoRpital for medical care. Nursing st.a.ff spokesmen said he Vi'a.5 relea~ Monday afternoon . Funeral services for Mrs. Adrian were pending today at Bell B r o a d w a y ......... l ,~ Mortu'ary ln Cost.a Me&a. She was employed as a . management analyst in the planning· dlviaion ·of the su pply dej)artment a t El Toro Marine Corp1 AiI Slation. .,. . Her hu"iband i.! fisclil · planning dlrtdftr for the Newport • Mesa UaifJed . ~I Districl. Ex-Dominjcan Army Gener a l Deported SANTO DOMINGO. 0 o m _i n f c a n Republic (APl -Form~r Dominlcan army general Elias Wessiny \\'es.sin has been deportl'd lo Spain. after he was ac- cused by President Joaquin BaJaguer of heading a right ist plot against the government. The 47-year-0ld 1rmy man and political leader left Sunda y night under a, heavy securi!y1 guard. President Balaguer , h3d denounced the plot on nationwide radio and television Thursday with Wessin at his side. He left it up to the military to decide Wessin's fate. Wessin has ad· mitted the plot. DAii. Y 'II.OT ..... "1 •""'-' k •tw FIREMEN MOP UP AFTER FATAL COSTA MISA Bl.All lnv11ti9•tor1 S1 y ~xact C1uM ~ Ntver Be Known Satchmo Dies Famed Jazz Trumpeter Dead at 71 NEW YORK (UPI) -Louis "Satch- mo'' Armstrong, an orphan e. d waif from the street.a and bordell<ls ol New Orlean3 who became king of the jazz trumpet and won International acclaim, died today at his home only two days after his 71st birthday. Even though Armstrong had been critically W and hovered between life and death in Beth Israel Hospital only a few months ago: .his death in his sleep at 5:30 a.m.-was unei:peeted. He apparently had been making a slow reccivery from se!backs caused by 1 kidney ailment and heart trouble, but was strong enough in. recent weeks to join his long-time friend. trombonist Tyrtt Glenn, in duet renditions of such songs as "Sleepy Time Down South." In a pre-birthday interview with UPI, Armstrong's only complaint was hi! dif· ficulty in wa.lking. "Work. that's my life, oh yeah!" iSee SATCHMO, Pa11:e 1) President 'Bargains' Nixon Asli s Steelmen, Union Fi11d Agreement WASHINGTON (AP)-President Nixon caJIM on negotiators in the steel Industry today lo reach a "constructive sel• tlement" lhat will keep the industry ~m­ peitve i:i world markets and maintain the economic ree<1very. The President met with the union and management negotiators for about an hour on the eve of their contract talks and. a spokesman said, laid out the economic problems facing the industry. Ni xon called for "hard bargaining" in the tallu! but refrained from getting a .!ipecific wage setUement he would like lo l!iee brought about. The contract expires in the Industry July 3l. George P. Shultz, director of the office of management and budget. summed .up . the President'• attJtude: "l ••~are iotng Into bargainin,a:: I knoWhow important it is to you. I felt it neoeMary to tell you how important I think It ls ." lt, was Nixon's first try at intervening fll any way in a negotiating session before it actuajly got under way and reflected a new impetus by the. White House of more direct involvement to hold down wage and price increases. Nixon emphasized the relationship of the· steel industry in the world market, told t.he negotialors how productivity has failed to increase, how profits have l>een lagging •nd wages remaining stable in comparison to other industries. ~hultz said Nixon appea led lo the "sensitivity 'Jf their own self-interest in beginning the contract ta.lk.'l." Shultz said a constr.uc!ive selllement means a c0ntract th~& would maintain s!eel's competitive wdf'.ld position and have no depressing impact on the economic recovery. J\'ixon emphasized thal he.. wanted an atmosphere. that would help · avoid a strike in the industry, Shultt s;iid. but said the President would not intervene if thf"re was a wa]kl}u! "The President did no t try to say that Ne l~ Apartment Hearing Sla ted In Two Weeks A public hearing on a rezoning petition to transfonn 30 acres near Orange Coast College from industrial to residential land, setting the &I.age for 843 apartmenl! iii e1pecttd two weeks hence. ~ Costa Mesa City Council which convenes in re.l{Ular uss.ion al 6:30 o'clock tonight will set the hearing for Ju. ly Ill as now planned. Longtime land develflJltr Henry T. Segerstrom owns the property 11t the. northwest corner of Adams Avenue and Fairview Road . much ol H now vacant or built with warehouses. Planning commiSrSion members la!lt week considered the re:rone application for ' switch from Ml to R.4-CP and recommended approval 4 to 0 with OlairmM Charles Beck ebslalning. The proposed apartment development Is in line with Costa Mesa General Plan predictions for high density ln that area. Based on orientation to family type tie.nants rather than 11:ingle11 or couplea, the apartment dc.ve'°9fnent would have more lhan J,000 residents, planners predict. The Coul Commwiity College District reviewed blueprlnta and artist.' reo- derinp: two week! ago and 11.id the iegerstrom proJect teemed we.IJ'<leslp· ed . They did not, however. vote whether to endorse. It because trafric:: and other related •llKlle., were incoriiplete, ac· cording to board member tind ASllstant City AUorney Robert Humphreys. A hearing had tentatively be.en set btfort !he plannlng a>mmiuion for July !'l but WIU le.l ahead. they should settle for t.his or that," Shult:& said. As Nixon met with the neg<ltiators, the White House released a report on the steel industry prepared by his Cabinet Committee on Economic Policy detailing the troubles of the. steel industry. The study showed profits ha ve declined by 42 percent to the. lo\\·est level in ten years, lhe report said. In addition. the study said, prod uction has stabilized in recent years. output per man·hour has shown virtually no increase and, "with compensation increases ac· celerating. unit labor costs ha.ve in- creased sharply." The study said 1teel faces great C<lm- pe:tition from Japan and several 'Euro- pean countrlel that mu!t be taken into con1ider1tJOC1.. * * * Nixon Expected Tonight at 6 For Coast Sta y tn his first visit this summer. President Ni.ton was expected to arrive along the. South Coast at 6 o'clock this evening to begin a two.week working vacation in San Clemente. Air Force One was expected to arrive at the dinner hour at the MCAS in El Toro \\'here the standard gruting by mi!il.ary personnel and dependants will take place. After a short hop by heliC<lpter to La Casa P11clfica in San Clemente, the Chief Executive will begin a vacation which is expected to include discussion~ on the budp:el and other economic matters. Earlier today th~ President conducted nne of his standard briefings for editors in the communications industry. Top-level executives from 13 Midwest states were expected to confer for an hour with the President during a Kansas City, Mo .• stopover. Several Presidential aide:<1 preceded Mr . Nillon tothe city and conducted other briefings for the gues ts earlier today. Topics of the sessions included welfare reform. revenue sharing and goverOJnen· tal reorganization. Announoeme.nts about the President'• l!iChedule while In San Clemente will pro. bably emerge Wednesday. One key member or the Presidential entourage, Domestic Security Adviser Dr. Henry Kissinger, will not ac· company the Chief e.xectl tlve. Mesa Youth , 18, Seeks $50 ,589 l n Flag Arrest A Sha limar Drive resident arruted and charged with desecration of Old Glory, then later released, has filed 1 $50,589 damage claim against the city of c.osta Mesa. Van A. Noelck, 18, of 779 Shalimar Drive, charges false arrest Uld Im- prisonment in the pre.lawsuit claim filed by the Pomona law firm of Plc'I and Polatovlc. The action 11.11 police officialll Rudy Malik and OWan Kreu amsl.ed Noelck April a dn charra M 'Vfolated Sectian 8!1d of lhe Mllllary and Vet.r.., Code, 1ovemln1 proper dlsplay-ol The Flag. Cllarg., were IOMequenlif dropped. but Noe.lck clal'ms he IUffered Im- pugnment of his reputation and mental 11lres.t due to being led away in handcur1 before hl1 neighbors. His claim -for e tot.al Or $50.000 In gentraJ damages and M In various legal fee1 -alao no!ts a story of the ar- rest •11 printed on the DAILY P[L01"1 front pa(e.. \ ' '~ I . ! U,.IT•'"4Ml9 THE SONG HAS ENDED S1tchmo (190().1971) Hearing Set On Del Mar Widening Bid c Giving southsi.de Z.e1ide.ntl •Uected • frteh c~ance to ht heard, the Cdsta Mesa City Council looight takes up again the heated issue cf making a major highway out of tree-lined De! Mar Avenue. The first among lour public bearings scheduled dur ing the 6:30 p.m. meeting, the widening was considei:ed at the June 21 meeting and continued. Residents along the street and in the surrounding are.a were to be re-notified by. city <lfficials. with cards emphasizinc that more then one alignment for widen- ing is being considered. Three have been studled. The city 1taff rerommends a northside elignment-but it was felt resident,, along the south a.ide should be aware it could go there.. A thi rd al ternative based on a right-ot'- way e.1tending north and south from the centerline of pel Mar Avenue has been studied, but would literally ruin lhe re.sidenUaI nature end devalue both sides. Residents would retain their homes, bul lose their front yards and gain severe traffic safety problem!! posed by pu1lirt( Into and out of driveways. By lhe time it is completed in about t"'O years. De! i\far Avenue will be one segment of an 11-mile, crosscounty local thoroughfare spanning four freeways and carrying up to 44,000 cars daily. Residents turned out. en maslle at the June 2t hearing and an earlier one held tn February to declare basic opposition to the widening plan. City officials contend one alignment must be chol':en because they cannot leave a narrow bottleneck in what will be a major route to the UC lrvhw: campu and south county ur.ban centers. Running between Newport Boulevard and Santa Ana Avenue. the sector em .. broiled in controversy will link exiltJn& Fair Drive with 1n 80-foot widlh 'to other route portions. The lhree alignments were studied-and the northerly one recommemt.e:d two years ago, in cooperation with Newport . f~ DEL MAR, Pqe 1) Weatller Warm weather Is expected ·to continue along the Orange Coast today and Wedneodlly with bJglla predicted in the 70°1 ai..,, the beaches. reacl!ing '9 inJand. Lows in both &rua around flO. ' INSIDE TOP"' y The fuTy of 11 ·so1'fMOJt Ario 1 t11pMo• has brouoht fiohting viriually to a halt in VittMm. Stt. .story, Page 4. t Ml"'9 U c1111 ... ~11 1• CMC•I ... U• 1 ci.n111M .,. .. -· . c,.,,_., " OMltl Mtlf.H II Ol ... l'(ff 11 •• 1,.... •• ,.... • l:R:-'-f IW'f ll'IR._. N-tl' "-'-II • . ·- I IWLV PILOT c 1 Bir~ladaU Killing Three Marines I Santa Ana Ope11 s Fight Fo1· Pru·cel • Held Ill Formal murder charges were lodged today against three Marines who alleged- ly beat a man to death following hJ.s \\'ife 's birthday celebration in a Seal B<'ach apartment early Monday. Police alleged the three men kill ed Vernon E. Page, 36, or La Habra with Dope Testing Shows Fewer GI Addiction~ SAIGON (UPI) -Initial resul ts of new test.s dtvlsed to weed out and rehabilitate the heroin addicta among homeward- bound Gl's dOOou an addiction rate of only two pereent, military sourooi said Monday. Previous estimates of the number of heroin addict! in the U.S. expeditionary force ranged to 10 per ct:nt or even higher. However. some experts question the ef· fectiveness -Of the tests. 0 u ts Ide ~ers on the spot have reported that some GI addicts have slipped through the net despite the tests and others have passed them by "drying out" -breaking lheir drug habit -temporarily. Neverthele.M, military sources said that, based on the findings of urinalysis testing of about 5,000 servicemen since the new tests were put into effect June 18, drug usage is well below feared levels. Military officials said that Vietnam· wide crackdown,, on narcotics distribu- tion and an incre.asing number ot soldiers volunteering for military.run amnesty programs could be major factor!i in reducing the number of heroin users before they were tested at the end of their yeAr's tour of duty in Vietnam. The U.S. command has so far declined to issue official iigures on the new drug· detecting program in order to provide a more balanced picture over a longer tenn. Three specially-developed machines were flown to Vietnam last month for the start of a program to test every f;et"Viceman or woman leaving the war theater. A second, more pre<:ise test is given al'lY perSon with a positive ruding. Confirmed uaers of opiates -heroin, opium or morphine -are placed io quarantine in Vietnam for between five ans seven days and then flown to the United St.ates in medical evacuation aircraft for up to another si1 week's rehabilitation at military installations. Drug users are not punished and find- ings are not placed on a GI's service record, though a.re lilted on medical records. Pre5ident Nill'.on announced the medical tests for homeward bound GI's as part of a worldwide anti-drug c a m p a i g n . Congressional reports indicated more than JO per cent of U.S. troops might be uslng heroin in Vietnam, where the white powder is close to 100 per cent pure and is cheap and availab~ fnough to be wiUiin re.ach of any soldier. Military sources said the number of t.roope arrested by U.S. authorities in \1ietnam on heroin charges were a record 675 out of a total of 1.065 servicemen ap- prehended for drug violations in May. More than 1,500 soldiers \•oluntarily f'ntered the command's drug amnesty and rehabilitation scheme in June, r.ources saicl, Uie highest since the drive "'"as launched in January. tn the first six monlhs of this year, more than 8.200 servicemen ha 1•e sought help under the am~ty program. OlANGIE COAST DAILY PILOT OllAHGf COAST f'UeLtSHING. COMPANY llob••I N. Wetd f'rn .d"'I 1nd f'v•lltl'>tr J1,k It Cur!tv Vkt Ptuid1n1 .v.d ~1l M1N1;1r Thom11 K11~a Editor fho,..11 A. Murp).in1 M&l\lglng E<1110r C)..:.1111 H. loo• Rit).1•d P. Nill A,ul1t11>; MtMQin(/ E~llOr& CMte M.-a Offl•• • JJO W11t l•v St111t M1:li"'J Addr•n: P.O. Bo• I StiO, '2ti21i Ott.er Offk• H...,.perl flpcll: ~ H~'' l1..,:w1 .. l..lt""I •••ell: 7r. Fo<nl ... vt<'o;t toru1>1l"OI01 l!f1c": 17'1~-•••(~ Aouotv••d s..,.. Cltmmtt: 303 "'~"' El C•••h~C R.ttt ) Murder their fists and feet during s fight on the beachfront near Seal V.'alk and Neptune Avenue. No weapons \\'ere found at the scene. Page was pronounced dead on arrival at Los Alamitos Hospital al 4.22 am., nearly one hour after the alleged fracas. Arraigned on murder charges at \Vest Orange County Judicial District Court this morning were Joseph G. Chavez. 20; Andres Pastrano J r., 21 , and Walter A. Baumgartner. 2-0. All are stationed at the Seal Beach Naval \Veapons Center. Police said the three men were going lip and down Seal Walk looking for a par ty and entered an apartmenL at 1300 Seal Way where Page's wife, Ameii!'; was celebrating her birthday. Officers were alerted to the incident by some neighbors who cal!ed the police sta· lion. The three men were captured by of· ficf'r5 following a two block chase down the beach. LI. Bob Garza, cf the Seal Beach Pol ice Department, said Page and the alleged assailants were strangers. i\o in· formation was offered about \\"hat might have sparked their argument. A coroner's autopsy and toxicnlogy tests "':ere orderPd to determine the ex- act cause of Page's death. From Page 1 SATCHMO ... Armstrong said. "Butt v:ouldn'l want to go out on the st.age with a walking cane. Soon as my pins get back in shape, ole Satch wiU be back, I'm.one man that you just can't kill." He was an American baby, born on the Fourth of July, Md his horn became an instrument of international diplomacy that earned him the nickname of "Ambassador Of Jazz" whether he was playing in Belgrade, Moscow or to A gathering of Africans in Ghana, his trum· pet generated excitement. Among his fans \\'as President Nixon \\·ho sent him a telegram during his struggle for life at Beth Israel. He had come a long way from sordid beginnings in New Orleans where he was born•in 1900 of a union between a turpen- tine factory worker and a hou.semaid. He had an ear for music and at an ear- ly age he was playing a guitar. The event that was eventually !o change his life was his meeting with Willie "Bunk" Johnson, who taught him to play the cornet without having to read notes. His •'formal" education began when Joe ''King" Oliver gave him lessons. At the age of 12 Armstrong played in a quartet which performed for pennies in Storyville in New Orlear...s' red-light district. Armslrong·s only encounttr with the Jaw came on his 13th birthday \.\'hen he fired a pistol loaded with blanks during a f'ourth of July celebration. He was sent to a v:aif's home for a year. \Vhile he was in the orphanage, he played in a band and it was said his notes could be heard across the Mississippi River. Armstrong played in Kid Ory"s Band as a replacement for King Oliver, who took his brand of jazz to Chicago. Over the years he played in bands led by Oliver and Fletcher Henderson and during this period he switched from cornet 10 trumpet, "''hich gave him a grealer range. Armstrong made hundreds of recordings in his prime. Although sound reproduction techniques were poor in 1he 1920s in comparison with 1971 standards, Armstrong·s early recording~ are co\. lector's items whlct. command premiun1 prices. Leads Transpac Mesa Float Scores By TOl\1 BAl\LEY (It Ill• D•ll, f'j~I 51•11 Lawyers for the Lily of Santa Ana to- day urged Orange County Superior Court Judge Raymond Thompson to order the Irvine Company to honor an eight·yc11r old agreement that allegedly pledged lh01 '·prontised land"' to !he city via an· nexation action. Attorney \Vil!iam \\'enke fired the fir st shots for the city 1n \Vhat is expected lo ~ a two-day hearing before Judge 'l'hompson by asking the jurist lo rule that the Irvine Company was not a. qualified signer in incorporation action that could put the 938 disputed acres in tJ1e heart of the proposed city of Irvine. This entry by City o[ Costa 1'.1esa and «:=os~a Mesa Jaycees captured second place trophy in Its cate· gory during l-lunlington Beach's 67th annua! Inde· pendence Day Parade fl.1onday. Float \Vas JUdged among best o[ patriotic or service club entries. {\.n estimated 100,000 parade watchers saw 200 entries make the annual march. ··\ve·re we!J aware of the effect Llu s v;ould have on plans for the city ol Irvine," \Venke said "But we ask this court to recognize that the Irvine Con1- pany's prior commitment to the city o[ Santa Ana precluded them from including the promised land in the incorporation 1novement." 4th Toll Huge H oli<la y Weekend 'A Disaster' BY UNTTED PRESS ~'TERNATIONAL The "disastrous·• July the Fourth holiday \Veekend ended \Vilh 636 persons killed in auto accidents and 190 dro\\--nings, a final United Press International count showed today. "It was a bad v.'eekend," a National Safety Council spokesman said Mon- day night, well before the final count was in. '"It was disastrous.··. Last year, 540 persons died in Independence Day traffic. This year, the council estimated 520 to 620 persons would die on the nation's roads. A UPI count at noon EDT shov.·ed 636 persons killed in auto accident~ between 6 p.m. local time Friday and n1idnight !11onday. A breakdov.n of accident.al deaths; Traffic 636 Drown ings 190 Planes 19 Other 61 Total 906 Calilomia ltd Uie holiday traffic death toll with 60 deaths. Texas had 52, Indiana 31. Florida 30, Georgia 29 and New York 28. Alaska, North and South Dakola and Vermont reported no traffic death~ during lhe holiday period. New Educational Fight Sparked by Fund Cuts SACRAflIENTO I AP l -Go\', Reagan has triggered an angry new fight. with California educators by vetoing a JO pet· cenl raise for university and college faculty members. 'T'he $39 ntillion cul came as part of a record $504 million the Republican governor vetoed from the st.ate·s new budget before signing It Saturday. 'fhe final budget figure is $6.79 billion. The only way he could approve the SQl;;iry increases voted by lhe Democrat· controlled legislature Y.'as to proposf' a tax increase. Reagan said , and he refused to do !h<1!. This \s tl1e second consecut1re year that Cnivers1tv of California and 1 "alifomia Stale· College faculty members have ~nrie \\'lthout the usual five pcrcenl rosl-<1f-l1v1ng rais('. 1.cg1sla\ors left them oul or the grnera\ sl;:ilr s;i\:irv 1ncrca~e 111 J!l7ll because t•{ :ingtr over" the behavior of son1e. laeulty 1nP1nhers 1n the wake of the Cantbodian invasion and the Kent St.ate shootings that spring. The legislature tried to restore that by gll·ing them a JO percent hike this yea r. But in ,·etoing the item, Reagan argued that "salaries in the university remain in the lop r11·e percent of all uni\"ersit1es in the country."· TI1ere. was immediate. angry reaction from CC President Charles Hitch \.\"ho said. "'The governor has diluted our resources and curbed our growth. He has achieved with the stroke of a pen what OOmb threats. pickets. intimidation and aggression could not." Reagan also trim111erl back lhe LC and colleg:.-operatin.'( budi.;ets to the levels he originally proposed in February -JUSI a'oou t the san1e as last year although 1nnre studenl.<i are expected. CCLA Chancellor Charles E. "Young challenged Reagan's statement that other states are cutting faculty salaries. Mesa Housewife Leaves Ho spital, Dies Same Day Funeral services for Mrs. Palricia Ann C.allup, 26, of 1989 Charle Slreet, Costa Mesa. v.·ill be held at 11 a.m. Wednesda y in the Bell-Broadway Mortuary, 110 BroadwP.y. Costa ~fesa. Mrs. Gallup died at her home Saturday l'Vening follo'>':ing her release fr'lm a Brea hospital earlier the same day. Orange County Coroner's office is av.•aiting findings of toxicology study prior to determining the cause of dralh. A native or Long Be?.ch. Mrs. Gallup 11'<1~ a graduate of f'ullerlon Junior College and lived in Costa Mesa about si x months prior to her death. She is survived b~· hrr husband, \\"illiam \.\'alter Gnllup: her n1o!her . J\·lrs. llarrlett Price of Co.<ila Mesa: her father, Haymond Price of Garden Grove; three sisters, Nancy White of Costa Mesa, Mar- jorie Greathouse of Leucadia. Carol Call of Anaheim, and a brother, \Vayne Smith of Lakewood. Burial will follow the funeral service in Pacific View Memorial Park. Fro1n Page 1 DEL MAR ... Beach and Orange County Road Depart· ment engineers. .Statisticall.y. the proposed alignment options vary grea!ly by CQS! although any one would be suitable to match up with the route at opposite ends. Besides practical points. the hearing postponement imposed last February was done to allow reappraisal of property values which had risen susbtantially in two years. The northerly align1nenl favored by the rity 1vould eliminate 39 lots at a cost of .!il 29 million. The southerly alignment promoted by resident~ of the north side .,.·ould take on. ly 34 lots but cost Sl 54 million since n1<1n~ of th£' home-s ar£' newer. The centerhne demarcation rejected by planners as an impractical imposition upon both north and south side residenl.'i v.•ould coot only $790,000. but involve traf· hr safety and other considerations. Wenke"s opening statement will be follovted by pre·testimony arguments by attorney Dean Dunlavey for the Irvine Company and Timothy L. Strader, counsel for 1he intervening Council o~ Communities of Irvine. The "promised land" -an L-shaped strip lhal runs along n1uch of the boun- daries of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility -pr~uced the lav.·suit that led to tod.ay"s hearing when Santa Ana claim· ed the anne:ication rights it states it was granted by the Irvine Company in 1963 . Incorporation action in \vhich CCI played a Je<iding role led Santa Ana to protest inclusion of the acreage in plans 10 create the 18,000·acre city of Irvine - the forerunner of a"super city" that i.<; projected for 430.000 persons and 53 .000 acres. \\"enke·s bid lo have .ludge Thompson rule that the Irvine Co1npany is not a qualified :-igner or the incorporation pet1• !ion approved by the Loc<il Agency ~·ormatlon Commission (LAFC\ is seen by the opposition as a inn\ e to block the lrml'ine incorporation move n1 en l, regardless of the ··promised land" issue. CCI chairma1, John Burton has repeatedly stated that this is the true aim of the city"s legal action. Incorporation supporters also contend fhat the city has rejected o~ertures aim- ed at surrendering the "promlsed land'' in return for Santa Ana's acceptance of the lrvine incorporation proposai. Burton condemns the 1963 agreement as illegal and void and clain1s that when the legislature established the LAFC it gave the agency authority that overrules any pre-existing agreements on ter· ritories within its jurisdiction. Pat Cl1urchill Of Mesa Dies Costa l\1esa resident Pat Churchill, a key distributor for Nutrilite Products and at one time top Nutrilite saleswoman in all of the U.S .. died Saturday in Santa Ana. She was 70. 11-frs. Ch urchill. \.\'as a member or Costa Jl,lesa c.range 162 for the pas! 18 years. She is survi1·ed by her husband, Leland; daughter. Patricia McKibbon . Costa Mesa; and son, Gordon. who is over5eas: three grandchtldren and l\1•0 great· grandchildren. Funeral services v.·ere helrl today At Bell-Broadira.v Chapel, with interment at Harbor Re~t f\lemorial Park A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAD WORD CAN BE UNFORTUNATE. . OUR· GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13 YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS" AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS. NO AMOUNT OF ADVERTISING CAN REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION. WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE WORKIN G TOWARD S THAT GOAL BY GIVING OUR CUSTOMERS THE BEST SERVICE AND QUALITY POSSIBLE. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 P'lac•ntla Ave . COSTA MESA Loi' Killam's 73·foot 1'e lch Graybeard frn1n the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club is leading the 69·boat fleet in Lhe 2.225-mile Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Honolulu. Sketchy report from _the racing fleet this morning indicated the leaders \\ere about 400 m1Jes out. Sec story on today's boating page . 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30-Fri., 9 to 9 -S•t ., 9:30 to S .\ s E I;iii>ii;Zi -----·---.. ·-F" . . ... a'Cll ii™ · -'""" . . .... , I I ( I I • Saddlehaek EDITION VOL. 64, NO. 160, 2 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, :JULY 6, 1971 Nixon Expected to for Public By JOHN VALTERZA 01 !tit 0•111 l'llOI 11•!1 The legislator who has championed the opening of Marine Corps beaches to the pubfic has predicted that President Nixon -in San Clemente -will reiterate his strong stand that the properly be given t.o the public. Rel?. Alphonw Bell (R·Los Angeles) 11aid recently he is confident that despite the lack of crucial approval by the House Armed Services Committee, the Presi· dent will press his case calling for the re!ease of 2.5·miles of San Onofre beach and 3,400 acres of San Mateo Canyon. The plan was dealth a blow earlier this • year when the committee re.fused to agree with the President's position that both the beaches and uplands should go for public recreational use. Mr. Nixon Md predicted no Congressional opposition to the pl.an, but the fight took place nonetheless . Since then, Bell and State Parks of· ficials have bitterly assailed the forces which they say swayed the committee. The commillee recommended that lhe canyon remain in Marine Corps Mn.lb and that the beach -excluding the most crucial access areas and permanent buildings -be leased to the 1tate of California, not deeded. State officials complained that they were not informed of the pending hear· ings before the House panel, thus, could not state the case for the public. Bell accused members of the military and Rep. John G. Schmitz (R·Tuslin) c.l fighting the Presidential suggestion before the committee. Despite the recommendation, however, the ultimate decision on the future of the. land rests with the Department of' Defense. Bell has urged letter-writing campaigns and other comm.unications to public of· llclala to add fuel to the fight for the bflache1. The city also hlla asked the County of Orange to begin negotiations with San Diego County on a shift of boundaries, tbi.J allowing city annexation of some of I.be. affected territory. Of prime consideration is a road whicll flanks the boundary line on Camp Pen· dleton which cou.Jd serve as a critical ac. cess route to inland portions of San Cle. mente. Bet:ind·the-scenes ne&otiations between the city and the Marine Corps are con· tinuin~ on the road lS!ue. State officials last week said they still "'~e "waiting in the wings" for any news or the pending Defense Department de- cision. Deputy Director of Parks and Recre&· lion Robert Meyrr said no contact has yet been made to his office on the pr~ gress of the plans. The City of San Clemente ha11 sent a communication of its own to top.level of· ficials, stating the official city position that the canyon not fall into private hands, and that the lands be stud ied as a site for a national park. "We're ready and willing to supply any Information the Federal Government wants," he said, "and we will be grateful for any portions of the lands." Today's Fl•al TEN CENTS Beach Meyer's department lhia weekend opened up the 3.5 mUe11 of beach at Sin Onofre already leued to the state earilet this year for 25 yeArs. "'. If the Presidential direcUv~ is adopted, covering the entire area, then the n• isling public beach at San Onofre would be Jumped with the extra 2.5 milea ue- coast. The total open coastal area then 1WJU1d span six miles , st.l'etchlng from a buffer zone at the Western White ltOUle, .-;Jtrtb past t(ie Marine enlisted men'• beach club to the San Onofre nuclear generattng complex and beyond. _ou1s rmstron--. uc.cum s Reds Flexible? New Viet Peace Hopes Held Out PARIS (UPI) - Madame Nguyen Thi Binh , foreign minister of the South Viet- Gamese National Liberation Front (Viet :ong), said today the Communist peace proposal submitted here July I to the United State5' is not an inflexible take·it· tr·leave-it package. Madame Binh, who beads the Viet Cong telegaUon to the Paris peace talk!, said In a wlde·ranging interview with Unitrd Press International that President Nixon 'hould ask his neg ot.ialors in Paris to discuss the plan -of which she is the th ief author -with the Communist felcgates. She warned that if Nixon keeps a :esldual force of American military ad · Down the Mission Trail Joaquin Schools Open for Sununer SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Summer 1chool opened today in six schools throughout the San Joaquin Element ary School Oist ricl. The session will be 19 days and wll\ leature a variety of cou rses especially designed to meet the needs and interests of all children. Schools participating include Irvine School. grades one through eight; Tu rile Rock School , in Irvi ne. Aliso School in El Toro , O'Neill School in Mission Viejo and Valencia School in Laguna Hills, grades one through five : and La Pai lntennediate in Mission Viejo grades six, &even and eight. • Snllor Week LAKE FORF.ST -Chi ldren in the fiUm· mer arts and crafts progtam in Lake Forest will be foll owing a "''Sailor Week" theme until July 9. The group made sail boa\.$ today and ...-fn.race them in the Lagoon Wednesday. On Frlday, they'll be taking 11 train trip to San Diego's bay areas. visers, techniciaas and supply troops in Vietnam after U.S. combat troops have departed , that force will irresistibly become involved in the fighting and this will in turn draw the United States back into a combat role. Madame Binh, apealliq at her well· guarded headquarters, a red·roofed villa at suburban Verrlere&-1.e-BWsaon, said she was ready to meet chief American negotiator David K. E. Brue!:, if need be, lo discuss the Vietnamese Communist proposals. Up to now the Americans have been v•illing to meet privately with the North Vietnamese delegates but, because. of the objections of the Saigon government that the Viet Cong has no official standing, ttiey have declined to meet with Mddame Binh's delegation in private. •·we hope President Nixon 's answer will be positive." she said. '"Our seven· point plan clearly shows our goodwill. "The key to peace lies in Mr. Nixon·• hands .-it consislS of the South Viet,.. namese people 's demand that he set a term inal date for the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from South Vietnam this year in exchange for 11 ce.11se·fire and ex· change of all war prisoners." Madame Binh, said announcement of the date of a military pullout should pr.eferably be made public. Laguna Agent Takes Plunge A Laguna Beach narcotics of. fice r, struggl ing to apprehend a shouting, kicking Camp Pendleton Marine. was taken for a dip In the ocean Sunday before finally gelling handcuffs on the suspect Sgt. Neil Purcell said the man, Edward L. Light. 2:2, rM acf'06s the Cleo Street Beach carrying the narcotics officer on his' back before stum bling into the surf. The pair rolled around in the water for several minu~s before Purcell's par!Jler, Robert Roa mine., helped subdue the suspect. Light was booked on assault and narrotics charges following the 10- minute. fracas with the police of· fi cer. Police claim 10 soggy mari· juana cigarrltu: were fotmd on the Marine after be was arrt..sted. La Christianita OAU .. Y 1>1i.OT 1!1tl' ,llfi. Chamber Contribution This San Clemente Chamber of Commerce float was one of about 200 entries in the Huntington Beach Fourth of July parade Monday. Titled "Arnerica's Playground" the handsome-float was seen by a crowd estimated at 100.000 persons. The parade is a major event each year of the Hunting· t.on Beach Jaycees. Sa11 Clemente l\'Ii11isters Bacl( Police Fiscal Figl1t Support for raises and pensions for San Clemente's police officers came recently from seven of the city's prominent mlnlsters, it was learned thla week. Emory Ackennan , DonaJd Keohane, Cecil Burton, Jogeph Stephens. Daniel Jordan aud C. I. Lund. In their letter the ministers said tht".y The pastors all signed a letter to "seriously questioned whether we, as a members of lhe San Clemente city coun· community. have been as responsible to cil, Mayor Walter Evans and others at ci· these men and women as we should be." ty hall, supporting raises. The letter called for wages and benefits The message came during neaotiations ' 'comm e. n s u r ale with similar which led last week to the award of a departments In other parts of the coun· new , stat~rated pension system and a , ty." cost~f-living increase averaging five per. Salary surveys prepared during the cenL negotlatioru indicated that S a n The clerics who gave strong support to Clemente's pay scale for officers was the the police raises were Donald Inlay, J. county 's lowest. M urine F aci1ig Initial Hearing On Rape Charges A San Clemente Marine sergeant ar· r ested \asl week on charges of attempted rape of two young female hitchhikers faces a preliminary hearing July 14 In Oceanside l\.1unicipal Court. Eugene Lamoreaux, 29, al~ has been cleared of &uspicion in one of two other Incidents involving hitchhikers -the shooting of a Pico Rivera girl a yea r ago . The Marine Sergeant was arrested by San Clemente officers, then turned over to San Diego County Sheriff's in· vesligators for investigation in the two alleged rape attempts. Since then Lamoreaux assertedly has been cleared in one shooting incident. Investigation remains alive, however, In still another 21imiliar Incident which OC· curre in Newport Beach last January. For infonnatiOn on enrollment in the program call the Beach and Tennis Club al 837-6100. • E.r.,..rolon1 Set Fiesta Fervor Flaring Up Detectives in Newport are continuing their probe Into the shooting of Susan Spector of San Clemente as she fled. her assailant's car. Miu Spector suffered a hip wound and since has fully recovered. MISSION VIEJO -Two e.r::cursions are being planned this week fOI'" members of the three Mission Viejo Recreation Centers. A visit to the Japanese Deer Park and Movieland Wal Museum will take place nn Thursday. July I. 11\e eicursion will le.ave at 8:30 a.m. and retum about 3:30 p.m. Cost Is $.1, Adult.s will be invited to spend an even· Ing deep ~ea risliing on Friday, Jul~ 9 from $.30 to 9·30 p.m. The eKcu rs1on 1roup will bt leavi ng from San Clemente pier. For Information on eithe_r trip call the r.1ontanoso Center 837-4<Ml4. San Clemente's Fiesta La Chrlsli.anita fervor began swelling this week as more. than 100 downtown businelSeS displayed banner• and Spanish decorations for the th~e-day Cf:lebration July ti, 17, and 18. Heralded aa one of the most active fiesta seasons In yearS. the celebraUon will include a parade with an· esUmated 500-plus entries July 17, the crowning ol a fie sta queen at the annual kickoff dlnner and celebration next Saturday. July 10, plus camJvJ!)i, 1ame: booths and other ac- tivities. Movie and 1.tltvlslon actor Clu Gulacer will be the Grand MarthaJ of the 1971 ed(. Uon of the parade. Sooth Cout resideri.ts .are welcome to join In the kickoff dlnner a.net celebration whlch 'W\11 nm throughout the late af· ternoon and evening Saturday . Tickets art,on sale at S3 ap~ at San Clemente banks. 'lbe kkkolf activity at the San Clemente tlk'1 U>dge will Include af· ternoon entertainment fQll youngsten, plus Spani~h dancers, the queen·• PJS:eant, then dJnner ~nd dancing to a live band, This ·year marks the first year of a departure ln traditJOfla.l fiesta planning, with creater partJcipation by local com~ munlty and 1ervke groups. Planning was ahllted from San Clemente Chamber of Commerce staff to dtmns ot volunteers from other groups in tl>e city. The chamber rtmAiM the oUlcla.1 sponsor of the activity. however. Pf0clal1 have hoped that by next year's edlUon. 1 formal fiesl.A aS110Cl1tlon will ....... the plannln& tole. ,. Lamore.aux of 235 Monterty Lane, has entered ·a charge of Innocent to the twa C()Untll of attempted rape. Police allege that the aergeant was !ft. volved In picking up two juvenUe alrla near San Juan Capistrano Mlsslon, I.hen driving them to San Onofre, ln San Di* County. There, tl is alleged he attempted to force the two glrb to disrobe. They fled, however. Lamoreaux wu In cwitody under f(j,250 ball -• 1wn which will be reviewed Tuesday • Jazz Idol A1·mstrong Dies at 71 NEW YORK (UP!) -LoW.. "Satci> mo'' Armstrong, an orphan ed wall from the streets and bordeHos cf Nd Orleans who became king of the jau trumpet and 'W<ln international acclaim, died Tuesday at his home only lwa clay• after his 71st birthday. Even though Armstrong had been critically ill and hovered between life and death In Beth Jarael Hospital only t {evr months ago. his death 1n his sJeep at 5:30 a.m. was unexpected. He apparently had been making a slow recovery from setbacks caused by a k.idoey aliment and heart trouble, but was strong enough In recent weeks to join his Jong.time !riend. trombonist Tyree Glenn, in duet renditions of such songs as "Sleepy Time Down South." In a pre·birthday interview with UPI, Armstrong's only complaint was hia dil· ficulty in walking. •·work, that's my life. oh yeah!'' Annstrong said. "But I wouldn't want to go out on the 21tage with a waJking cane . Soon as my pins get back in shape, ole Saleh will be back, I'm one man that you just can't kill." He wa& an American baby. born on the Fo urth of July, and his horn became aa instrument of international diplomacy that earned him the nickname of "Am bassador Of Jazz" whether he wa s playing in Pelgrade. Mose.ow or to a gathering of Africans in Ghana, his trum- pet generated eicltement. Among his fans was Presldent Nixon who sent him a telegram during his struggle for life at Beth Israel. He had come a long way from sordid beginnings in New Orleans where he was born in 1900 of a unioo between a turpenu tine fa ctory worker and a housemaid. He had an ear for music and at an ear-- ly age he was playing a. guitar. The event that was eventually to change his life was his meeting witb Willie "BU.nk" Johnson, who taught him to pliy ~ cornet without having to read notes. His ''formal" education began when Joe "King" Oliver gave h.lm lesso1u1. At the age of 12 Armstrong played in a quartet which performed for pennies in Storyville in New Orie.au' red·ll&bt district. We•tlter Wann weather Is expected tG continue along tbe Orange Coast today and Wedneoday wllh hlghl predicted in the '10'1 along the beaches, reaching '1t in.land. Low1 to both areas ll"OWld eo. INSWE TODAY The fur11 oj a Southeaat A.do typhoon ht11 brought figbting virtually to a ho.U in Vittnom, Ste story, Page 4. ... 11... u C•IHtrllM 11 Clledclll9 u, 1 Claull... ... '-"• n CrM-C II D9tl!I JilttlWI II Dlftl"Ull IS 1411fel'MI I'... I ..... """""' .. ,, ·-..... ---,, l SC TUtlday, July 6, Hll OA.IL ~ ,llOT St•ll Phol• Money Men The fledgling South Coast United Fund swelled re· cently with a $1 ,000 donation from TRW Systems an d $2,000 from employes of San Diego Gas & Elec- tric Co. From left to right are Roy Garbarine, United Fund president and TR\V donor; Ted Bech- er campaign director; Vern Overbaugh. fu nd treas- urer; and Robe rt Orr. representative of SDG&E. Meet Slated Today Fund Trimming Session Set by Tustin Trustees Tustin Union High School District trustees '4'i!I explore ways of trimming the district's $9.9 million budget al a study .session called for 7:30 o'clock tonight in the district office, 1171 Laguna Road, Tustin. The jmpact of a $181,000 Joss of equalization aid will be assessed, Supt. William 7.ogg said today. He will suggest that the board of education consider an i:ippeal lo legislators to correct Lhe "valid but inequitable'' recent state aid determination. Zo&i erplalned that the dJ1ilrict receiv· 11· Redevelopment Hearing Slated For Capistrano A public hearing on the redevelopment of a section of downtown San Juan Capistrano--Will take place at tonight's 7 o'clock meeting of the city's planning commission in city hall. Plans for an area along Camino Capistrano one block from lhe Mission will be presented by B. S. Syfan of Laguna Beach. general contractor. The area lo be redevelopt"d into shops v.ith underground parking facilities lies on the v;est side of Camino Capistrano starting at Verdugo Street and including what is 00111 Capistrano Market. Burke"s Tavern and Charley's Bottle Shop. Lying -...ithin the city's architectural control district, the new building v.•ill be constructed using a Spanish, Mission. or early California theme. OIANll COAST DAILY PILOT QIV.NG;! (.CAST J'UIL.l~INll COMPANY leMri N. Wt tl ,.,..._,, ....., 1'11111~ Jt~\: •. c.,,1.., Vk1 l'raW...! '"" Gentral ~ n'"'"' K •• ,11 .ftllW Tiio,.,•1 A. M111p)ifft t 1r11 .... 1 ... £•·• CUrl1s H. loot l id•1•ol P. Non ,..,1111": Ml .... "'41 l!tl'°" L-t••• ...... Offk• ed a state equalizalion aid overpayment <luring tbe 1970-71 school year for some 37 students who did not attend district schools. During the 1970-71 school Year, Tustin trustees expelled 78 pupils for violations flf district policies on drug use. dress, and behavior. Nine were readmitted to the district with the epening of :summer school, last week. Z.Ogg said discussions with State finance department officials indicated state la.'!Y requires , State a i d overpaymenk to be deduc~ Crom the follow1ng year's allocaUon to an equallza- tion·alded district. "In our case," Zogg noted, "the deduc· lion brings us to the level where we become a basic·aided district." The district had budgeted its 1971·72 ex- pen&es with the expectation it would receive a total or $1,181,234 in both basic and equalization aid. With the loss of equallzatlon aid, only about $1 million in income from the stale is expected, business manager James Farley has said. Thus, some $181.000 may ha'1e to be trimmed from the budget tonigl).t'. Clemente Guards Clea11 Up Tr as h F ron1 Holidays J\1embers t1f San Clemente"s Junior Lifeguard brigade are probably c1ed1calrd lirr.woriks haters todi'J)', They have h;:id 1.(1 clean up the h!ilida~' accuinulal1f\n nf tra~h -1nnslly spent lire-...·orks carcasses -from the city be;.iches for the past two days . Hundreds of pounds of cardbo.ard fire-...·orks casings are left on the beach each year. and much of the debris. city spokesmen .said. is inaccessible to beach cleaning machines. "Thi junio r lifeguard kids have been out two days cleaning things up," a lifeguard spokesman said. A full day's work on Monday gucceeded in cleaning the lrash from the pier area. At least one more day will be ~quired lo clean other debris from the rocl::y areas near the railway tracks. DAILY PILOT s11n .... to TAKES TRUSTEE SEAT Oickran Borani1n Tustin Trustees W elcoming Ne'v Board Members Dickran Boranlan and Robert C. Bartholomew will be sworn in a s members of the Tustin l"nion High School District board of education at the special 1ncc!111g called for 7 30 o'clock lonlgh!. Boranian, 43, of Santa Ana, is a prin· < 1pal 1n the Garden Gro\'e l"nified S.:hool 1 J1~1r1ct. lie ran on a moderatr platforn1 1n lhl' April 20 t'lection for the seat \ :I C'\l!cd hy rrt1r1ng board n1cmber I low11rd Scllerk. lncurnhcnt Bar1hnlo1nc11', 49. :>l~n or S<int:1 Ana is a n11r.~er.1•n1an :ind men1hrr of lht> .hihn Birch Society. His l"an1p;iign rrllet'1Pd the vie-...·poin1s of the con· :-.rrv;il ire majority of I he Tustin bo11rd, incluii111g hardline stances on iss11es s11ch as thr. dress code and stutlrnt <!rug abuse. Pentagon Paper s Hi t \VASHINGTON (APl -f\.f art ha f\.l!tchell, v.·i!e of the attorney general, has criticized news media for publishing the secret Pentagon papers. In a caJI to the Sunday Star, she said news organizations carrying stories based on the documents "are interfering with the negotia!ions with the Viet Ct1ng a.s \1·ell as releasing our secrets to the enemy.·• 112 ,,, ••• "'""""' M~iliftf 1.lclr•u: !'.O. to11 •66, '1651 h• Cl-"9 Otfko 30S No11h El C•111lft1 lt11I, '167? OtMf Offk" Crowd s B1·ave Heavy Surf COlll AM..1; »II w .. t l•f SI'':"' .. fwpo•I lltf('tl; lli! f<!.-1 llOu ..... 1f'4 kllfttlllll9t'I •-"= 111111 a1K11 .....,lovor4 . ' To Jam Clem ente Sa11ds Thousands of holiday beachgoer.s brav- ed churning surf and billows of fireworks amoke at San Clemente's beaches over the three-day weekend, and the fun, for the mo.s t part, proved .safe and sane. Lifeguards reported about 130,000 persons on city and county beaches over the period with surf running up to fou r feet on two of lhe days. Rtscuei totaled about average, wlt.h no serious mishaps. Thousands of persons brought their own fireworks to the city beach Sunday even- ing, providing their own spectacle before volunteers from local veterans' groups !ouched off tht annual professional pyrotechnics pieces from the municipal pier. The rectnl t1penini:: of Dan11 Harbor boat slips providfM'.I a new custom this year as hundreds ol small craft anchored off the pier for a spectacular view of the fireworks show. On dry land careless use of the fireworks caused at least eight grass fires -two of them in thick brush al San Clemente State Park. The n1ost se,•ere blaze consumed two acres at the park Saturday momlng. Pranks ~is year were at a minimum, fire officials said, bu! children throwing sparklers and other burning pieces caus- ed enough blazes lo keep volunteer firefighters busy. Police reported very fc1v mishap~ In lhe he11vy weekend traffic. No serious traffic injuries were reported . ---,-~--------.. - Santa An a Opens Figl1t Fo1· Parcel By TOM BARLEY Of lllf D•llr P'llft Jl•ll Lawyers for the city of Santa Ana to- day urge<! Orange County Superior Court Judge Raymond Thompson to order the Jrvine Company lo honor an eight·year old agreement that allegedly pledged lhc "prorn1sed land" lo the city via an· nexation action. Attorney William Wenke fired the first shots for the city in what is expected lG be a two-day hearing before Judge Thompson by asking the jurist to rule that lhe Irvine Company was not a qualified signer in incorporation action that could put the 938 disputed acru in the heart of the (X'oposed city of lrvint. "We 're well aware t1f the effect this '\'ould have t1n plans for lhe. city of Irvine.'' Wenke said "But we ask this court lo recognize that the Irvine Com· pany·s prior con1mitmenl to the city of Santa Ana prrcluded lhf'tn fron1 including the prornised land in the incorporation n1ovemen1.·· Wenke's opening slaten1ent will be followed by pre-testimony arguments by attorney Dean DunJavey for the Jrvine Company and Timothy L. Strader, counsel for the intervening Council of Communities of Irvine. The "promised land'' -an L-shaped strip that runs along much of the boun- daries of the Santa Ana Marine Ccirps Air Facility -produced the lawsuit that led to today's hearing when Sant.a Ana claim- ed the annexation rights it sta~s it was granted by the Irvnne Company in 1963. Incorporation act ion in which CCl played a leading role led Santa Ana to protest Inclusion of the acreage in plans to create the 18,()()0.acre city of Irvine -:-- the forerunner of a"super city" that i~ projected for 430,000 persons and 53.000 acres. Wenke'a bid to have Judge Thompson rule that the Irvine Company i.s not a qualified signer of the incorporation peti- tion approved by the Local Agency F'onnation Commission (LAFC) la seen by tne opposition as a move to block the lrmvi ne incorporation rn o v em e n t, regardless of the "promised land" iMUe. CCI chairman John Burton has repeatedly stated that thls b the true aim of the city's legal action. Incorporation .supporters also .contend that the city has reject.ed overturea !l!loim· ed at .surrendering the ''promJsed l&nd'' in return for Santa Ana's acceptance of the Irvine incorporation proposal. Burton condemns the 1963 agreement as illegal and void and claims that when the legi.alature established the LAFC it gave the agency authority that overrules any pre-existing agreements on ter· rltories within its jurisdiction. The Irvine Company has filed a $1 milllon damage claim with the city and includes a demand for a further St milllon in damages in a subsequent lawsuit which disputes the city's argu- menl. \Venke, closely watched by Santa Ana City r-.tanager Carl Thornton today, argued that the LAFC should have recogni7.ed the validity t1f the Irvine Com- pany·Sant.<t Ana agreemeflt when the in· corporation issue came before the agency in a public hearing. But the LAF'C voted 3 to 2 for incorporation after examining petitions that carrird the signatures or 2,2f.9 residents -nearly 'ro percent of the elig1· ble !rv1nP community. Those petition.~ were later verified by Coun1v Clerk \V illiRm E. St John who is also 1;slcd ;is ;i defen<lant in the uTit of n1anrlatr 10 be ruled on by .Judge. Thomp~on. Laguna Council to Get · Re se arch Gra11t Req11 es t Hy BARBARA KREIBI Cll ot "'" 01t1• ,,ior SI•!! This 11eek the Laguna Beach ('11y Council \1111 bl' asked For a rnodesl grant to per1n1t a lit: trv1nr C'lll ironn1ental b1<ilog1st to rOrliplete research on a potential contam1nat1on hili.ard 1n the r11y 's olfshore Willers. News that the professor's initial studics had indicated the se-...·age outfall might not be functioning as prescribed was greeted last -...·eek -...·1th howls of dismay from some quarters in the community. . . . ' llow. they cried. could anyone thmk1ng of mention- ing as crass a subject as sewage with the tourist season just beginning? Let alone suggest that any t1f same mighl make its v.·ay trom the outfall back to the beaches! The suggestion wasn 't all th.11~tarUing to plenty or Lagunans -...·ho have been made painfully aware in recent years of olher deficiencies in the city sewer systenl. Any local plumher V.'ill leslify to the ever·increasing number of se-...·er line backups he's called in to correcL And at JeasL two 11·ellknown downlou·n businesses have been fa ced \\'ilh costly clean·up johs wht>n one of the. overloaded mains spew· ed lts unsavory eontent.~ into their cs111b!ishme11ts BACK IN' Dl'cernlJer. 19F.8. a \Ohuninoui; engineer1n~ report preparC'd for the city revealed the dangl'rous cond1 t1on of an antiquated sewage treatment plant built to serve half !he present·da.v population -<1nd 11 ithout today's multiplicity of garbage disposals, dishwashers .and sin11lar household amenities. At that Lime il -...•as 1nade very plain that the plant had to be updated or the ci ty y,·ould face serious problems with state and regional water quality control authorities. Attempts have been made to gel the plant up to par. but ifs rather tike using Band·aids where major surgery is indicatf'd. J>rcsumably .some of the familiar odor will subside \\'hen the ne1v ch.Jori· nators start functioning. And there's been Lalk of moving the v.·hole operalion lo a ne-...· site out in lht-Canyon or over on Irvine land to the north. complete with a new outfall. BUT NOW the gentleman from UC I says things don't appear to be as they should around the eicisting outfall and that sewage v:hich is supposed to remain discreetly submerged in the depths is floating lo the surface in a greasy, smellv slick al certain tirnes of the year. ·The possibility that thi~ meSs could be carried shoreward by surface currents is nol. appcli7.ing, but the scientist is interested in continuing his re- search in an efforl lo dclermine just how likely it niay Ile. llopefully he 'll find it's most unlikely, bu t it would be nice t.o kno11·. Bacterial counts made regularly off the s-...·imming beaches indicate there is no health hazard al this point, but if it should develop that the outfall is not as perfeel as ll'e've been led to believe. some rather immediate action \\'ou!d be in order. OUR SISTER city of San Clemente v.'ent ro far as to build a $2.3 million tertiary treatment plant that eliminates the need for an outfall. Anyone whose interest in the community is not limited to detenninina: how much money can be eictracted from it should welcome the efforu of the ucr profes~r, or anyone else who can contribute constructive. infonnation to help solve Laguna·s sewage dilemma. A head·in·sand attitude will not make the problem go a-...·ay, and until it is solved, planning bigger and bel~r tourist facilities would appear to be pu~ ting the cart before the horse. Nixon Expected for Two Weeks of Work, Piny • • • In his first visit this summer. President Ni xon was expected to arrive along the South Coast at 6 o'clock this evening to begin a two-week working vacation in San Top-level executives from 13 l\1id-...·est Clemente. i;:i Air F orce One was expected to arrive at the dinner hour at the f\.1 CAS in El Toro whtre the slandard greeting by military per:r.onnel and dependants will lake place. Arll!r a short hop by heliropter to La Casa Pacifica tn San Cleinente, the Chie f Eicecutire will begin a vac:ition which is expected lo include discussions on the budget and other economic 1natters. Earlirr today the Presidrnt conduc1td nne of his standard briefings for tditors in the communications industry. slates -...·ere eicpected to confer for an hour "·ith the President during a Kansas CHy. J\1o .. stopover. Several Presidential aides preceded Mr. Niicon lothe city and conducted other briefings for the guests earlier today. Topics of the sessions included y,•elrare reform. revenue sharing and govtrnmen- tal reorganization. Announcements about lht President's schedule ll'hile in San Clemente v.•ill pro- hably emerge Wednesday. One key member of !he Presidcnti;il entourage, Domestic Security Adviser Dr. Henry Kissinger, ¥:ill not ac· company lhe Chief executivt A GOOD WORD PASSED AROU ND ABOUT A BUSINESS IS INV ALU ABL E. A BAD WORD CAN BE UNFORTUNATE. • OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN TH E PAST 13 YEARS HAS BEEN DU E TO THE "GOOD WORDS" ANO REFERRA LS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS. NO AMOUNT OF ADVERTISING CAN REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION. WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE AR E WORKING TOWARD S THAT GOAL BY GIVIN G OUR CUSTOMERS THE BEST SERVICE ANO QUALITY POSSIBLE. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES • 1663 Plac•ntla Av•. COSTA MESA • 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -Sit ., 9:30 to 5 .. • ' JI':• --· -·-•. ·~·-------·.....,,-·----.. ...i-~ ------. -· ••ot · ... -... -. - \. j \ ! Lagu11a Beaeh EDITI ON • Today's Fl•eJ N.Y. StoelUI VOL. 64, NO. 160, 2 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALll'ORNIA -TUES!fA Y, ~UL Y ·~. ·197f TEN CENTS • r ote 1se 'King of Ju::' Louis Armstrong Succumbs at 71 NEW YORK (UPI) -Louis "Satch- mo'• Armstrong, an orphaned ""'aif from the streets and bordellos of New Orleans who became king of the jazz trumpet and v.·on international acclaim, died t.oclay at his home only t'olo·o days efter his 71st birthday, Even though Armstrong had been crilically ill and hovered betY:een life and death in Beth Israel Hospital only a few months ago. his death in his sleep at 5:30 a.m. was unexpected. He apparently had been making a s!ow recovery from setbacks raused by a ~idncy ailment and heart trouble, but was &trong enough in recent weeks to join his long-t ime friend, trombonist Tyree Glenn, ln duet renditions of such songs as "Sleepy Time Doy,·n South.'' Jn a pre-birthday interview with UPI , i\rmstrong's only compla int was his dif· ficulty in walking. "Work. that's my life, oh yeah !" Annstrong said. ''But I wouldn 't want to 10 out on the stage with a y,•alking cane. Soon as my pins get back in shape, ole latch w1J.J be back. rm one man that you lust can't kill." He was an American baby. born on the fourth ol July, and his horn became an Instrument of international diplomacy that earned him lhe nickname of ''Ambassado r of Jazz" whether he was playing in Belgrade, Moscow or lo a gathering of Africans in Ghana, his trum- pet generated excitement Among hi.~ fans was President Nixon who sent him a telegram during his 1truggle for life at Beth Israel. He had co me a long way from sordid beginnings in Nc\v Orleans where he was born in 1900 of a union bctweeJ1 a turpen- llnc factory worker and a housemaid . He had an ear for music and at an ear· ly Bge he y,•as playing a guitar. The event that y,·as eventually to change his life was his meel.Jng with Wi llie "Bunk'' Johnson, who taught him to play the cornet Y.'ithout h11ving to read notes. His "formal " education beJlan y,·hen Joe "King '' Oliver gave him lessons. Lagtma Police Probe W eckend Camera Th cf ts Police are investigating the weekend theft of more than $1.000 in camera equipment from ty,·o Laguna Beach ~idents. Au1horities said 11 locked van belonging to Tim Jones, of 934 Miramar St.. was broken into early !oday while the vehicle \\.•as parked 1n front of a restaurant at 696 S. Coast Highway. Jone.-; told police a camer11 , several lenses ;ind as..<;0rted photography equipment valued al Sl.180 wcre removed from the van. Late Friday afternoon. John Gleason, of 3033 Zell Drive, reported the theft of his $170 camera from a p2.rk bench at the foot of !\1ountain Road. Gleason told in- vestigators he had set the camera on the bench and walked down to the beach for 1 few minutes. When he returned, the camera was gone, police said, 'Heut Explosion' At lhe age of 12 Armstrong pl ayed in a quartet which performed tor penni.es in Storyville in New OrlearA' red·light district. Armstrong's only encounter with the law came on his 13th birthday when he fired a pistol loaded with blanks during a Fourth of July celebration. He was sent to a waif's home for a yea r. While he was in the orphanage. he played 1n a ba nd and it was said his nores could be heard across the Mississippi River. Armstrong played in Kid Ory 's Band as a replacement for King Oliver, who look his brand of jal.z to Chicago. Over the years he played in bands led by Oliver and Fletcher Henderson and during thi.! period he S\vitched from cornet to trumpet, which gave him a greater range. Record Throngs Crowd Beaches; Only 6 Rescues Record crowds jammed city and county beaches in the Laguna arN. over \he three-day weekend, but lifeauards logged tlnly six rescues for the period, none in· volving serious injury. Surf remained moderate to low, with wave.s from two to four feet high, and ' . temperatures were in the mid -70s throughout the holiday, with water a comfortable 68-69 degrees. The weekend invasion began modeslly on Saturday, with crowds or 16,000 on city beaches and 4,000 on adjacent county beaches guarded by the Lagun1 force. On both Sunday and Monday, the beach crov.·ds doubled lo an estimated 32,000 on city beaches and 8.000 on coun1y sands. Li fegu ards answered numerous minor first aid calls ove r the holid£, Including one involving a Pico Rivera an who suf- fered cuts when a car roll backwa;-ds and pinned his legs against he hood of a parked vehicle on which he was sitting. Laguna Agent Takes Plunge A Laguna Beach narcotics of- ficer. struggllng lo apprehend a shouting. kicking Camp Pendleton ~far1ne. wa s take n for a dip in the ocean Sunday before finally getting handcuffs on the suspect. Sgt. Neil Purcell said the man, Edward L. Light. 22, ran across the Cleo Street Beach carrying the narcotics officer on his back before stumbling into the surf. The pair rolled around in lhe water for several minutes before Pur~ll'a parlner. Robert Roamine , helped subdue the suspect Light was booked on a5.!!lault end narcotics charges following the JG-- mi nute fracas with the police of- ficer. Police claim 10 soggy marl· juana cigarettes were found on the Marine after he wall arrKted. DAILY l'ILCJT ll•ft !"llttll SAWDUST FESTIVAL TAKES SHAPE IN LAGUNA CANYON Exhibitor• Ar• Busy Preparing Thell" lngenk»us Booths Baisi.Qg -'oois . ' ... -f ' Saivd.ust Fest Booth,, on Way Up . ''Half the fun Is getting ready lo open•• quipped one artist at I.he Laguna Canyon gJte or the Sawdust Feslival, as he nailed wooden shingles to the side of his tw~ story booth. He speaks for many of lhe workers whi> are busily creating the most un- conventional booths to exhibit their wares during the fifth annual festival. Some are tall. some short. others wide,· some nar- row. But no two booths are the same. More l.han 160 utists will exhibit fJain- tings, clothing, jewelry, photographs and sculpture from JO a.m. to midnight July 16 through Aug _ 29. Admission to the Sawdust grounds is free. The seed for the Sawdusters came ln l91i6, when many artists \1ilo were juried out of the eFstival of Arts banded to- gether lo start their own show. They held their first show at the coml':r of dtenneyre Strett and Laguna Avenue.. then moved up In a vacant lot in "Gallery Row" on N. Coast Hlghway. Finally the group wound up on Laguna Canyon Road, just west of Woodland Drive. Sawdusttrs pride their show in being free, ha.ving no jurying system, and as few rule• as pollslble. They've popularized a term "organil.ed dlsorganization" to de!cribe the ir work building their community which will last only six weeks. Last year, the Sawdwt FesUval at- tracted tens of thousands who 11untered through the sawdust covered paths. Sales were good. Many sold their wares u fast as they created them. "This is the way a real art festi val should be," !Bid one booth building artist, referring lo the freestyle creation!. "It's a great natural aetling with the hills, rocks: and trees." VietCong Off e1· New Hop e For Latest Peace Plan PARIS (UPI) -Madame Nguyl!!n Thi Binh, foreign minister of the South Viel· namese National Liberation Front (Viet Cong), .sa id today the Communist peace proposal submitted here July I lo lhe United Slates is not an innexible take-It- or-leave-it package. Madame Hinh, v.·ho heads the Viet Cong delegation to the Paris peace talks, said ln a wide-ranging interview with United Press Internationa l that President Nixon should ask his negotiators in Paris to discuss the plan -of which !ht is the chief author -with the Communist delegates. She warned that if Nixon keeps a residual force of American military ad- visers, tec:hnlcians and .supply troops in Vietnam after U.S. combat troops have departed, that force wilt irresistibly become involved in the fighting and th.ii will in turn draw the United States back into a combat role. Madame Blnb, speaking at her well- 1uarded be8dquarter5, a red-roofed villa at suburban Verrieres-le-Buisson, said she was ready to meet chief American negotiator David K. E. Bruce, if need be, to discuss the Vietnamese Communis t proposals. Up to now the Americans bave been willing to meet privately with the North Vie.tnamest delegates but, because of the t1bjecUons of the Salgori government that the Viet Cong has no official standing, they bave declined to meet with Mddame Blnh'e delegation in private. Costly Laguna Fire Probed "We hope President N~n'• answer will be positive," she said. "Our seven- polnt plan cle1rly 1bow1 OW' &oodwill. "The key to peace Jiu 1n Mr. Nixon!s handl -11 COOl!llJ ol the South Vi<~ namese peoplt'a demanG that be set a terminal d1te for the withdrawal al 111 U.S:troopa from .South Vietnam this year In exchanae for a cu1t·fire and ex· change a( an war prisonen." lnvesti gation continued today inlo the cause of an intense fire and "heat ex- plosion " which destroyed a vacuum cleaner sales encl r~air shop in Laguna Bead! late Saturday evening. Finnmen said determination of the cause will be tough, due lo the large amount~ of melted plastic In the building all a re!ult of the blar.e al the Perry Vacuun1 Shop, 226 Ocean Ave. Damages totaled $2.'i,000. The shop i~ owne<I by Robert Van Dyk('. 3135 Mountain View Dr ive, Laguna BcAch. -.: lit""-.... ------- J>'itemen said t.he blsu started 1n the work.shop area at lhl!: rear of the buiJdlns around 5:JO. Several aerosol caru1 u:- plO<led. Due to the prwure created by tht: flames, the front plat~ glas1 window and roof skylight were blown out. ahowerln, glass throughout~ the area. No one wae Injured. Al the time the fire brokt out, Vin Dyke, who wa~ working In a rea r 1ar1ge, attempted to put oul the names with a garden hose. but wA~ unable to check the. blaze , firemen noted. -fe.~-------~··"11·-·~·--· ""'-'-·~- The Southern CalifornJa Edison office. located nn:t door to lha shop, sustained minor wattr damage and a broken win- dow. Firemen reported that their attempt.! to quell I.he bla.ze were hindered by a large crowd whlch gatheffil at the acene •nd heavy 11ummer traffic along city 111treetJ. lt na repOrted that it took mort thAn ttn minutes for an engine from the Agate Street station tn reach the wctne, 11llkough ut1lta from downtown reached the seen~ almost Jmmediatelr . Mada.me Blnb, 1ald lllDCllnt:emtnt of lhe dale ol a mllillry pullout abould pre:fer•bly be made.public. She sidestepped question! whether the terminal 'date fer 1 wlthdr1wal couJd be communicated · to the Communist alde through private cb1nnel1 and agreed; upon also privately, rather than-bein1 a public announcement frt1m Wu~n lhet might be embarrualng for the Nlmn AdmlntAtratJon. ro e Action Branded Illegal • Ill By BARBARA KREIBICH 01 1111 C1111r ,.ri.r S:1111 Alleged illegality of lhe Aug. 3 initiative election on an ordinance lo limit building height,, in Laguna Beach will be debated July 19 berore Superior Court Judge Robert A. ~nyard. Laguna Beach rea!tor Vern Tasbner has fUed a taxpayer'1 action in Superior Court charging the proposed election is "an unlawful attempt to chanie zoning laws .•• violates government codes ... violates state housing laws" and "unlawfully deprives the city council of Its function as the ruling agency in zoning matters." * * * Unit Reports Quake Faults Near Laguna A report on earthquake faults in and near Laguna Beach prepared by the Ye1 on Aug. 3 Committee, st.at.es that areas within the clly coolldtred for hlp mo ..ltl>&Y be amang the wont tet IQCb 'C(O> · llrllctlon" due to geoloeical conditions. "AlllMal aoU and sand dunes provide tht Jea.!t stable fou.Qdations in ap .arth- quake. while sranile bedrQCk pr<Mdet tho ftnneet aupport. Laguna "Bead! haa virtually no eranJte bedrock," the r9p0rt aald. · nie 111tudy Cln the effects o( earth- quakes. If high rise Is built, was made by Fred Pratley, a reaistered engineering geologist .and Merritt Trease, formerly a. so!I engineer in Honolulu, Hawaii. They conclude that .. the worst possible site for high rlse construction is in the downtown basin, particularly ln the Main Beach area.'' The earthquake rtl>O't, one of several to be prepared by tbe commlttee, is presented·as a "fact sheet" to voters who will vote on the proposed 3&-foot city wide building height limit In an initiative elec- tion Aug. 3. • ''There are a pproxl mate ly 32 recognizable feults within the Laguna Beach area,'' the report stated. "These fau lts are at least Important enough to be discemibl e from the air. Recent con· ~truction in the Park Avenue. Sleepy Hollow and Glenneyre 11reas expnsed fracturing and soil displacement, A frac- ture is aiiother word for a young active fault " The report noted that the "Newport Inglewood fault may lie within 9,000 feet of the (Laguna ) coastline. "fn the recent Sylmar (]\Jake, four st(lry huildings at a much great.er rl istance from the epicenter then 9,000 feet collafl5ed; people died." t h e engineen' repo rt said . The report also noted that cracks have bten found In the steel beams in the Atlantic Richfield Towers in Lo!t Angeles as "a direct rerult of the Feb. 9, 1971 earthquake." Tbe report also cited the conclusions or Dr. Bruce Bolt. direct.or of the UC Berkeley Seismology Stationa. who said "low wooden frame dwelllnge wllhatood the Feb. 9 earthquake better than did modern taller structures . "The experienct around the world," the report quoted Bolt 1s saying, ", • • Is such that the higher buildings ere the ones that suffer the most shaking and not the llttle structura." Security Agent Sleeps Through Robbery of Bar While the leC\.lrtty cuard slept aoundly In a corner, the door of a Laguna Beach bar wa1 kicked tn early Monday momln1, tht cash register was knocked to the noor and two botUet of Uquor were 1tolen. Pollet stld the bur1lary occurred at the Breaken Bar, 140 LaJuna Avt., at 4:JO a.m. Mtlnday. When police arr\ved at lhe scene, the 1uard was 1ttll sleeping. About tW(I houri 1fter the crime, of- ficers 1n'tt1t~ Randolph G•vau.o, 2.1. of HJghgrove, Calif., on IWl~M>r! of rett1Jv. Ing stolen property. G1vaizo was 11leged· ly fCllnd on Main Beach drlnkh1g from one Cit' the 1tolen llquor · bottlft. wtuch he clallned ~ atraqer had .l(lven him. Suit The petilion for writ of mandaU! names City Clerk Dorothy Musftlt and five prin· cipal sponsors of lhe Village Laguna movement wh ich initiated the building height ordinance. They are attorney Ralph W. Benson; beachfront property owner and longtime high oppaoent. Marjory Adams Darling : UC Irvine en. vironmentaJist 'Philip W. Runde I ;· enginetr MerriU A. Trea.se: and writ.er Arnold Hano. The respondents will be asked to ap- pear before Judge Banyard July 19 to show cause why the election should not be called off. Tasehner. wtio filed the suit as an in- dividual. ill a member of the board ol directors of the Laguna Bl':ach Taxpayers Association. known in lhe Art Colony all an outspoken conservative. The court action was Hied in bis be:halt by the L<ls Angeles Jaw firm of Lane, Mathews and Hoag and Newport Beach attorney E. Gene Crain. The Aug . 3 election on the high rise ord inance. which would limit building height throoghout the city to 36 feet or three stories, was set by !he City Council after certification of initiative petitionl carrying almost 4,0DO signatures of r&gjstered voters. The petitions were circulated to heed <>ft passage of a. beachfront hot.et 1ClM ordlnance that would have f!'rmitted ~ fOl)f. buildings ln 10me arf!a1. The controversial ordinance is oppo&ed. by bo1'1-mot.i ~ and by the -board <>f directors oC the Laiuna Boa.rd of Realtors. Since state law prohibill!: the u&e ot th• loltiatlve procedure In ionlng matters, • legality of ttie ordinance ha1 been ques- tioned, but its: proponents maintain it would constitute an amendment to the housing code end ia not a zoning matter. Judge Banyard apparently will be asked to rule on this aspect of the debate. Laguna Building Spurt Resumes Laguna building continued on the u~ awing in June, with issuance of SI building permits: for construction valued at $400.939. This compared with 50 permits and 1 valuation of $170,138 in June. 1970. The June figu re bmught the total va luation for the halt year to $2,318,381 . almost double the valuation for the firet 6ix months of 1970, which totaled $1 ,248.458. Boosting the June figures were iii: permits for new single.family dwellings, valued at $210.074 and two perrnit1 for new commercial buildings. including a bank and six shops. valued at $145.000. Fourth of July Bomb Blast Kills Student HENDERSON, Tenn. (AP) -Tommy Burkhead, 18, president of bis high .school gcitoce club. died Sunday when a bomb tt._h~ilt for the Fourth of July ex· plod sher ff R.D. Smith &aid the youth hid manufactured a !erie.s of bombs by plao- ing gunpowder into inch-long met.I pipes. Most of them had been fired Saturday night. Oruf e Cout Weatlaer Warm weather ls expected lo continue along tht Oran&e Coast today and Wedneaday with hlghl predicted ln the 70'1 alon1 the beaches. reaching 79 inland. Low1 1n both attaa around 60. INSIDE TODAY The fury of a. SoutMaat Asi4 typhoori has brought fighting virtuallV to a halt in Vi•tnam . See arorv. l'aQe 4. ... ,"" u (IRW!lll It CIMICll!tt U• 1 ( .. UllMll .... ...... » c"''*°'" u Diii\ NtlkM It 04-.;ft 11 lllll!Wlll .. _ ' l111WMlft-i ,..,. ,,..... ...,, -" """~ ,, --'""""" ...... . .. Or4.... '-tlfJ II . ...,.,. .. . l!Mi: Mll'll ...... ., TINYl11M • T1M11tir1 U.>t WHtlllf' I ._,, ,. ... 11·1t --... • ' I ' --I DAIL 'r l"ILOT 11•rf P'Jtthl Money Men The fled~ling South Coast United Fund swelled re- cently with a $1,000 donation from TRW Systems and $2,000 from employes of San Diego Gas & Elec- tric Co. From leit to right are Roy Garbarine, Vnited Fund president and TR\V donor; Ted Bech- er campaign director; Vern Overbaugh, fund treas· urer; and Robert Orr, representative of SDG&E. Meet Slated Today Fund Trimming Session Set by Tustin Trustees Tustin Union High School District truste~ will explore ways of trimming the dilltrict's $9.9 million budget at a :'!tudy 11ession called for 7:30 o·c/ock lonight in the district office, 1171 Laguna Road, Tustin. The impact of a $181,000 loss o( equalization aid will be assessed, Supt. William 1.ogg said today. He will suggest tbat the board of education consider an appeal to legi!'llalors to correct the "valid but iJlequitable" r~nt state ai d determination. Zogg erpJalned that tbe diltrict receiv- Redevelopment Hearing Slated For Capistrano A public hearing on the redevelopment of a section of dO"-'ntown San Juan Capistrano ·will take place al tonighl's 7 cfclock meeting of the city's planning commission in city hall. Plans for an area along Camino Capistrano one block from the Mission \\·ill be presented by B. S. Syfan of Laguria Beach, general contractor. The area to be redeveloped lnto shops with underground parking facilities lies ()TI Lhe west side ()f Camino Capistrano starting at Verdugo Street and including ·what is now Capistrano Market Burke"s Tavern and Charley·s Bottle Shop. Lying within the city's architectural control district. the new building v.·ill be constructed using a Spanish, Mission, or early California theme. OIANGI COA'T DAILY PILOT OU.NG;: COUT PUIL.llHINO COMP'ANY k•'o•rt N. w,,, .... ld .. t ..... l'\lalt.W Jatlc It. C11rl1v Viti '°"'16enr •NI Wnff•I MaMftr Tholfl•• 1Ce1¥il E•llw Th•"''' J... M11r,l.:110 ,,,...,.,11-. E••• Ch••'•' H. loci Jt;tl.•·' I'. Nan AU~Nnl Ml ... 11.., £fl"'• L..f••• lffc.111 Ofllc• ed a state equalization ald overpayment during the 1970--71 school year ror some 37 students who did not attend district schools. During the 197()..71 school year. 'J'ustin trustees expelled 78 pupils for violations flf district policies on drug use, dress, and behavior. Nine were readmitted to the district with the opening ef summer school, last week. Zogg said discussions with Stale finance department officials indicated state Jaw requires State aid overpayment!: to be 'deducted from the following year's allocation to an equaJlu- tion·aided district. ••Jn our case," ZOgg noled. "the deduc- tion bcing.s us to the level where we become a basic-aided district." The district bad budgeted it.s 1971·72 ex- penses wilh the e11:pectation it would receive a total of $1,181,234 in both basic <ind equaJizatioa aid. With the loss of equalization aid, only about $1 million in income from the stale is expected, business manager James Farley has said. Thus, some $181.000 may have to be trimmed from the budget tonight. Clemente Guards Clean Up Trasl1 Fron1 Holidays ~Iembers of San Clemente's Junior Lifeguard brigade are probably dedi cated firev.·orks haters today. They have had to clean up lhe holiday accumulation of trash -mostly spent fireworks carcasses -from the city beaches for the past two days. Hundreds of pounds of cardboard firev.·orks casings are left on the beach each year, and much of the debri!, city spokesmen said, is inaccessible to beach cleaning machines. "The junior lifeguard kids have been out tv;o days cleaning thing! up," a lifeguard,&pokesman said. A full day's work on ~1onday &ucceeded in cleaning the trash from the pier area. At least one more day will be required lo clean other debris from the roc!:y areas near the railway tracks. DAIL" PILOT SllH J'htl9 TAKES TRUSTEE SEAT Dickr1n Boranl1n Tustin Trustees / Welcoming New Board Members Dickran Boranian and Robert C. Bartho!on1e11· 1vill be sworn in as 1nembers or the Tustin Union Hip:h School District board of education al the sptcial mee!ing called for 7·30 o'clock tonight. Boranian, 43, .llf Santa Ana, is a prtn· <.1pal in !he Garden Grove L'nified School 111!.l ncl. He ran on a moderate plalfonn 10 the April 20 election for thP se:it 1ac-a ted by retiring board member Howard Selleck lncu1nbcnt R:ir1holomr1v, 49. al so of Santa Ana. 1.<: a nurseryn1an and membrr or 1he .lohn Birch Society. Jlis c1irnpa1gn rrrter!ed lhe 1·1ewpoinl<; of the COil· i::erva!i ~e majority of the Tustin board, in cluding hardline stances on issue!'> ~uc h a.~ the dress code and student drug abuse. P entagon Papers Hit WASHINGTON (AP) - M &r l h 1 Mitchell. 11·ife of the attorney general. has criticized nev.·s media for publishing the secret Pentagon papers. In a call to !he Sunday Star. she eaid neY.s organiiations carrying storie! based on the documents "are interfering with the negotiations y,·ith the Viet Cong as "·ell as releasini our secrets to the enemy." 111 for••* J..~•~u• .M•ili119 •tldrt so: ,..0. lo• lolo6. •2652 ''" Cl•-te Ottlco JOS Norlh El Ca111ino R.10 1, '2671 OtMr Offk" C1·owds Brave Heavy Surf Cetll Mb •· DI WM! l•V !!f'HI .............. , llNC~! »JJ Nt-1 ll<Kl:""t"" Jowo"il\ ... l'Oll l tKll; !'17J 1.-.;ll lloMi.~tid _, To Jam Clemente Sands Thousands or holiday beachgoel'l br1v- ~ churning surf and b!llO'i''S of fireworks smoke at San Clement.e'.s beaches over the lhrff..day weekend. and !ht fun, for the most part, proved safe and .sane. Ufeguards reported about 130,000 persons on city and county beache_, over the period with surf running up to four h!et on two of the days Rescues totaled about average, "'ith no 5erious mishap!. Thousands of persons hrought their own fireworks to the city beach Sunday even· Ing, providing their ()WTI spectarle before volunteers from local veterans groups touched (lff the 11nn u11I proft>ssion1 I py rotechnics pieces from the municipal piu. The rtctnl opening of Dana lh1rbor ' boat slips provided a new custom this year as hundreds of small craft anchored (If{ thf. pier for a spectacular view of the fireworks show. On dry land careless use or the fireworks caused at least eight gr1u fire~ -tv.·o of them in thick brush 1t San Clemente State Park. The most severe blaze con~umcd two acres at lht pa rk Saturday morning, Prank-' thi~ yf'ar were at J minimum . fire (lfficials 3aid, but children throwin« sparklers and olher burning pieces caus- ed enough blazes to keep volunteer firefighters busy. Police reported very few mishap!!" ln the heavy v.·eekend traffic. No i;erious traffic injuries ~'ere reporttd. Santa Ana Opens Fight For Parcel By TOM BARLEY 01 I'll• D•llJ f'llol 51tft Lawyrrs ror the city of Santa Ana to- day urged Orange County Superior Court .Judge Raymond Thompson to order the Irvine Company lo honor an eight-year old agreen1ent that allegedly pledged the •·promised land" lo the city via an· ne:tat1on action. Attorney \Villiam \Venke hred the f1rsl shots for the city in what is expected lo be a two-day hearing before Judge Thompson by asking the jurist to rule that the Jrvine Company was not a qualified signer In incorporation action that could put the 938 disputed acres in the heart of the proposed city of Irvine. ''We're well aware of the effect this would have on plans for the city of Irvine," Wenke said "But we ask this court to recognize that the Irvine Com- pany's prior commitment to the city of Santa Ana precluded them from including ·- the promised land in the incorporation movement."' Wenke's ()pf.ning statement v;ill be followed by pre-testimony arguments by attorney Dean Dunlavey for the Irvine Company and Timothy L. Strader. counsel for the intervening Council of Communities or Irvine. The "promised land" -an [..shaped strip that runs along much of the boun- daries or the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility -produced the lawsuit that led to today's hearing when Santa Ana claim- ed the annexation rights it states it was granted by the Irvnne Company in 196.1. Incorporation action in which CCI played a leading role led Santa Ana to protest inclusion of the acreage in plans to create the 18,000-acre city of Irvine - the forerunner of a"super city" that is projected for 430,000 persons and 53,000 acres. Wenke's bid to have Judge Thompson rule that the Irvine Company is not a qualified signer <>f the incorporation peti· t i<>n approved by the Local Agency F'onnalion Commission (LAFC) is seen by the opposition as a move lo block the Jrmvine incorporation move men l, regardless of the "promised land" issue. CCI chairman John Burton ha! repeatedly stated th11t Otis ls the true aim ()f the city"!'! legal action. Incorporation supporlers also contend that the city has rejected ovefturcs aim- ed 1111 surrendering the ••promlstd land·· in return for Santa Ana's acceptance of !he Irvine incorporation proposal. Burton condemns the 1963 agreement as illegal and void and claims that when the legislature established the LAFC it gave the agency authority that overrules any pre-existing agreements ()n ter· ritories within its jurisdiction. The Irvine Company has filed a $1 mUlion damage claim with the c.ity and includes a demand for a further $1 Laguna Council to Get Researcl1 Grant Request By HAl{RARA. KREIBl(;ll or •h• 0 011• ,.1i.1 Shit This \'>eek the Laguna Be<1eh fity Council 11111 ht" asked for 11 modest grant lo permit a UC lrv1nl' t'nv1ronmental biologi st to complete research on a potential rontaminat1on h;~zard in the cit y's oflshnrl' waters. Ne.,.,·s that the professor"s in11ial .studies had indicated the se1\•age uutfall might not be functioning as preS<'ribed 11as greeted last 11·etk 1\1th ho1\•ls of dismay from sorne quarters 1n the community. , ~ How, they cried, rould anyone think~ng of mention- ing as crass a subject as se1l'age \•1ith U1e touri6t season just beginning·~ Let alone suggest lhaL any of same might make it.5 way from the outfall back to the beaches! 'rhe suggestion 11·asn"t all that startling lo plenty of Lagunans who have been made painfully a\\·are 1n recent years of other deficiencies in the city sewer system. Any local plumber will testify to the ever-increasing ' number of se11'er li11e backups he's called in to correct. And at lt'asl two 11'ellknown do\vntown businesses have been faced \\lith costly cle;in-up jobs 1vhen one of the overloaded mains spe1v- ed its unsavory contents into their establishments. · BACK 11~ December, J9fi8, a voluminous engineering report prepared for the cily revealed the dangerous condition or an antiquated sewage treatment plant built to serve half lhe present-da.v popul<i1ion -anrl without loday's mulliplicity of garbngc disposals, dish1vashers and similar household amenities. At that time it v.·as made very plain Lhat the plant had lo be updated or the city ~·ould face serious problems \l'ilh state and regional water quality control authorities. Attempts have been made to get !he plant up to par, but ifs rather like usrng Band-aids where major surgery is indicated. Presumably some of the familiar odor will subside when the nev.· chlori- nators start functioning. And there's been talk of moving tht' whole operation to a new site out in the Canyon (Ir over on Irvine land t<> the north, complete: "'ith a new out fall. 'RUT NOW the gentleman from UC! says things don't appear to be as they should around the existing outfall and th::i.t sewage which is supposed to remain discreetly submerged in the depths is floating to the surface in a greasy, smelly slick at certain times of the year. • The possibility that Lhis mess could be carried shoreward by surface currents is not appetizing, bu1 the scientist is interested in continuing his re- search in an effort to determine just how likely ii may be. Hopefully he'll find il"s nlosl unlikely. bul il would be nice lo know. Bacterial counts made regularly off the swimming beaches indicate there is no health ha1.ard at this point, but if it should develop that the outfall is not as perfect as 1'>·e"ve been led lo believe. some rather immediate action 1vould be in order. OUR SISTER city of San Clemente went so far as to build a $2.3 million tertiary treatment plant that eliminates the need for an outfall. Anyone 11·hose interf'sl in !he community is not limited to determining how much money can be extracted from it should 11'eicome the efforts of the ucr professor, or anyone else who can contribute constructil·e information to help sol\'e Laguna's se"·age dilemma. A head-in-sand attitude will not make Lhe problem go away. and until it is solved, planning bigger and better tourist facilities would appear lo be put- ting the cart before the horse. Nixon Expected for Two Weeks of Work, Play million in damages in a substquent I h. r· t · · h. n is 1rs visit t 1s summer. President Top-level f.xecutives from 13 Midwest lawsuit which disputes the city's argu-ment. Nixon was e:tpected to arrive along the states were ei:pecled to confer for a n Wenke, closely watched by Santa Ana South Coast at S o'clock this evening to hour v.·1th the President rluring a Kansas City Manager Carl Thornton today, begin a lwo-v.•eek v.'orking vacation in San Ci ty, Mo , stopo\'er. Several Presidential argued that the LAFC should have Clemente. aides preceded Mr. Ni:ton tothe city and recogni~d the validity of the Irvine Com-A. F 0 h h . tr orce ne \Vas expected to arrive conducted other briefings for the guests pany-Santa Ana agreement w en l e in- corporation issue came before the agency at the dinner hour at the l\.1CAS in El earlier tOOay. in a public hearing. Toro v.•here the standard greeting by Topics of lhe sessions included welfare But the LAFC voted :l to 2 for 1nililary personnel and dependants \\•ill reform. re\·enue sharing and governmcn- inmrporation after examining petitions take place. tal reorganization. that carried the signatures of 2.259 After a short hop by helieop.ter to La residents -nearly 70 prrrent of the el1g1· Casa Pacifica In San ('lemf'nte. the Chier Announcements about the Presi dent's ble irvine comn1unit) ~.:xf'r utivc 11·111 hegin ;:i vacat ion which 15 schedult' 11·hile 1n San Clemente v.·ill pro- Those pelilinns 11·cre later verified by expeclect to include d1 scuss1ons on lhe ba bl v emerge \Vednesrl av County Clerk \Villiam F.. St John who is budp:el and other economic m:itters One kl'y nicmber of .the Presirlen!ial al~o listed 11 s ;:i defenrlant in the \ITil of E:irlier tod;:iy the Pre.siden1 conducteo rntourage. Domestic Security Adviser m;inrlatf' tn be rulrd on b)" Jud~e nnr of his st;indard briefings for editors Dr. Henry Ki.0.;inge r. 1•..-i!! not ac· ·rhompson in tflr co mmunic;ilions industr~'· cnrnpany the Chier rxecuti1l'. 1 ~=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::~-:::--:::--::.....;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;~ A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOUT A BUSINESS IS INV ALU ABLE. A BAD WORD CAN BE UNFORTUNATE. OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13 YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS" AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS. NO AMOUNT OF ADVERTISING PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION. CAN REPLACE A WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT W& ARE WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL BY GIVING OUR CUSTOMERS THE BEST SERYICE AND QUALITY POSSIBLE. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon . Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30-Fri., 9 to 9 -Sit • 9:30 to S •• -~... 1· ::i.-,, :,6: ..,.. ~ .. _ -· • -=--~-:....~--.$.__ .-:· ------::.--,.--- I I San Clemente Capistrano VOL. 64, NO. 160, 2 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. ' .. ' TUESDAY, JULY li, 197f Nixon Expected to for Public By JOHN VALTERZA Ot tlit Dolly ~llC>I Slllf The legislator who has championed the opening of Manne Corps beaches to the public has predicted that President Nixon -in San Clemente -will reiterate his atrong stand that the property be given lo I.he public. Rep. Alphonzo Bell CR-Los Angeles) said recently he is conridenl that despite the Jack of crucial approval by the House Armed Services Committee , the Presi- dent will press his case calling for !he release of 2 .~miles of San Onofre beach and 3,400 acres of San Mateo Canyon. The plan was dealth a blow earlier this • year when the committee refused to agree with the President's position that both the beaches and uplands should go for public recreational use. Mr. Nixon had predicted no Congressional opposition to the plan, but the fight took place nonetheless. Since then, Bell and State Parks ar- ficials have bitterly assailed the rorce:i: which they say swayed the committee. The committee recommended that the canyon reni.ain in Marine Corps hands and that the beach -excluding the most crucial access areas and permanent buildings -be leased to the gtate of California, not deeded. State officials complained that they were not informed of the pending hear- ings before the House panel, thus, could not stale the case for the public. Bell accused members of the military and Rep. John G. Schmitz (R-Tustin) of fighting the Presidential suggestion before the committee. Despite the recommendation, however, the ult..imate decision on the future o' the. land rests with the Department •or Defense. Bell has urged letter-writing campaigns and other communications to puhlic of- ficials to add fuel to the fight for the beaches. The city also has asked the County of Orange to begin negot iations with San Diego County on a shift of boundaries, this allowing city annexation of some of the affected territory. Of prime consideration la a road which flanks the boundary line oo Camp Pen- dleton which could serve u e critical ac- res,, route to inland portions of San Cle- mente. Behind-the-scenes negotiations between the city and the Marine Corps are con- tinuing on the road issue. Stale officials last week said they still were "waiting in the wings" for any news or the pending Defense Department de- cision. Deputy Director of Parks and Recrea- tion Robert Meyer said no contact has yet been made to his office on the pro- gress of lhe plans. The City of San Clemente h•s sent a communication of its own to top.level of- ficials, stating the official city position that the canyon not fall into privak hands, and that the lands be studied as a site for a national park. "We're ready and willing to supply any information the Federal Government wants," he said, "and we will be grateful for any portions of the lands." Today'l!l Fm.I ' N~. Stocb TEN CENTS Beach Meyer's department lhia weekend opened up the 3.5 miles of beach at Sa.ll Onofre already leased ~ the state earlier this year for 25 years. ll the Presidential directive is adopted. covering the entire area, then the ex· Isling public beach a"t San Onofre would be lumped with the extra 2.5 milet Ill!' coast. The total open coastal area then would span six miles, stretching from a buffer zone at the Western White House, south" past the Marine enli!!ted men's beach club to the San Onofre nuclear aeneutinC complex and beyond. _ou1s rmstron~ uccum s Reds Fl.exibl.e? New Viet Peace Hopes Held Out PARIS (UPI) -Madame Nguyen Thi Binh. foreign minister of the South Viet- namese National Liberation Front (Viet Cong), said today the Communist peace proposal submitted here July I to the Unitec1 Slates i.s not an inflexible lake-it- er-leave-it package. Madame Binh, who heads the Viet Cong delegation to the Parils peace talks, said in a wide-ranging interview with United Press International that President Nixon should ask his negotiators in Paris to discuss the plan -of which she is the chieJ author -with the Communist delegates. She warned that if Nixon keeps a re sidual force of American military ad· Down the Mission Trail Joaquin Schools Open for Summer SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Summer r;chool opened today in six schools lhroughout the San Joaquin EIE'mentary School Districl. The session will be 19 days and will realure a variety of courses especially designed to meet the needs anrl interests of all children. Schools participating include Irvine School. grades one through eight : Turtle Rock School. in lrvine, Aliso School In El Toro. O'Neill School in Mission Viejo and Valcr.cia Sc:hool in Laguna Hills, grades one through five : and La Par: [ntennediate in t-.1ission Viejo grades six, 1even and eight. • Sailor W"ek LAKE FOREST -Children in tM sum· mer arts and crafts program in 'Lake Foresl will be following a "Sailor Week" theme until July 9. The group made sail boats today and will race them in the Lagoon Wednesday. On Friday, they'll be ta.king a tra1n bip to San Diego's bay areas. visers, technicians and supply troops in Vietnam after U.S. combat troops have departed, that force will irresistibly become involved in the fighting and this will in turn draw the United Stat.es back: into a combat role, Mad"me Binh, 1peakin1 at her well- guarded headquarters, a red-roofed villa at suburban Verrieres-le-Buisson, said ahe was ready lo meet chief American negotiator David K. E. Bruce, jf need be, to discuss the Vietnamese Communist proposals. Up to now the Americans have been willing to meet privately with t.be North Vietnamese delegates but, because of the objection!! of the Saigon government that the Viet Cong ha:i; no official standing, they have declined lo meet with Mddar• Binh'!! delegation in private, - •·we hope President Nixon's answer will be positive," she said. "Our seven· point plan clearly shows our goodwill. "The key to peace lies in Mr. Nixon·s hands -it consists of the South Viet- namese people's demand that he set a terminal date for the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from South Vietnam this year in exchange for a cease-fire and ex· change of all war prisoners." 11adame Binh, said announcement nf the date of a military pullout should preferably be mad!'! public. Laguna Agent Takes Plunge A Laguna Beach narcotics of- ficer, slrugg\ing to apprehend a shouting. kicking Camp Pendleton Marine. was taken for a dip in the ocean Sunday before finally getting handcuffs on the .'!Uspect. Sgt. Neil Purcell said the man, Edward L. Light, 22, ran acrosa the Cleo Stree.t Beach carrying the narcotics officer on his back: before stum bling into the surf. The pair rolled around in the water for several minute!! before Purcell's partner, Robert Roa mine, helped subdue the suspect. Light was OOoked on .1ssault and narcotics charges following the 10. minute fraca!! with the police of. ficer. Police claim 10 soggy mari- juana cigarettes were found on the Marine after he WI!! arrested. La Claristianita Chamber Contrilnition This San Clemente Chamber o( Commerce float \vas one of about 200 entries in the Huntington Beach Fourth of July parade Monday. Titled ''America's Playground'' the handsome float was seen by a crowd estimated at 100,000 persons. The parade is a major event each year of the Hunting· ton Beach Jaycees. Sa11 Clemente Mi11isters Bacl\.: Police Fiscal Fight Support for raises and pensions for San Clemente's police officers came recently from seven of the city's prominent min isters, it was leamed this week . The pastors all' signed a letter to memhers of the San Clemente city coun- cil, Mayor Walter Evans and others at ci- ty hall , supporting raises. The message came during negotiations which led last week lo the award of a new, state-operated pension system and 1 cost-of-living increase averaging five per- cent. The. clerics who gave strong support to the police raises we.re Donald Inlay, J. ' Emory Ackerman . Donald Keohane. Cecil Burton, Joseph Stepherui, Daniel Jordan and C. I. Lund . In their letter the ministers said they "seriously questioned whether we, as a community, have been as responsible to these men and women as we should be." The Jetter cal!ed tor wage~ and benefits ••commensur a te with similar departme.nt.s in other parts of lhe coun- ty ." Salary surveys prepared during the negotiations indicated that San Clemente's pay scale for officers was lhe county'1 lowest. M uriite Facin g I nitiul Heuring On Rupe Churges A San Clemente Marine sergeant ar- rested last week on charge:11 of attempted rape of two young female hitchhikers faces a preliminary hearing July 14 in Oceanside ~1unicipel Court. Eugene Lamoreaux, 29, also has been cleared of suspicion in one o[ two other Incidents involving hitchhikers -the shooting of a Pico Rivera glrl a year ago. The Marine Sergeant was arrested by San Clemente officers, then turned over to San Diego County Sheriff's in- vestigators for investigalion In the two alleged rape attempt!!. Since then Lamoreaux assertedly has been cleared in one shooting incident. fnvestlgation remahu alive, however, tn still another aimiliar incident which OC· curre in Newport Beach la!!t January. Far informatiOft-on ,enrollment in the program call the Beach and Tennis Club It 837~100. e 0E.rrursio1U S"t MISSION VIEJO -Two excursioru are being p\sMed this week for member• of the three Mission Viejo RecreaUon Cf.rite.rs. Fiesta Fervor Flaring Up Det.ecllves in Newport are conUnulng their probe into the shooting of Susan Spector of San Clemente u ane fled her 1sullant'11 car. MW Spector suffered a !Up wound and 1/11£'1!: ~as fullf reoove.ml . A visit to the Japanese Deer P1rk 3nd Movleland Wa.:t Mu11eum will t.Ue place on Thursday. "July ll. The exc;ursion wilt leave at 8:30 a.m. and return about 3:30 p.m. Cost is $3. AdullS will ~ invi ltd to spend an even- lua deep sea fishing on Friday. July I Crom ~:30 to 9:30 p.nf . The ncu!'lllon kroup wlll be leaving from San Clemenk pier. . . . for informallon on either trip call tbt MontanCX!IO Center 8.17-408.f. San Clemente'I Fiesta La OlrltU8J'lita rer'V()r began 1weUing this week as mort than 100 downtown buslneMeS displayed bannera ind Spanlah decorations for the three-day tt:lebralk>n July 16. 17, and 18. Heralded 11 one of the most active flesla ~ in years. the ctlebr1tlon will tnclude a parade with an etUmaLed 500-plus entries July 17, lhe crowning of a fiesta queen 1t the aMUl.I kick()(f dinner and celebration next Saturday, July 10, Plus c:arn/va\11, 1arM boot.hi and other ac- liv\lieA. Movie. and telev\Jion actor CJu Gula5cr wUI be the Grand M1rMial of the 1971 ed.1- Uon of the parade. South Coast raident.s a.re welcome. to Join In tM kickoff di1*r and celebration which wiU run throu&hout the late af- temoon and tvenln( S.turday. Tickets 1re an l&le at $1 1piece 1l San Clemente banb. The kickoff activity at lht Sin Clemente Elk'! Lodge w111 Include af~ temoori l!lrtertAirunent for youna1t.er1, pha Span~h d•ncer•. the qutt.n•1 pageant , then dinner and dancing to 1 u .. band. Thi5 year marks the fl\'rl year ci a departure. Jn tradlUonal 'fiesta plantiini, with greater part.icipaUon by· local com- munity and service group!. Plann!ng was shirted from' San Clemente Chambtr ()( Commerce s!Jtf( to dottfl!I of volunteers from other croups ln lb< city. The chunber remains the of'fictal 1ponsor of the acUvlty however. Qtnclilt~ove hoped i/µ;1 by next yeor'1 edition. a formal Ueata aaociaJton Will aqume the plannlni role. l..amoreall% of 235 Montuey Lane, h1111 entered .a char1e .oi innocent to the two counll·of attempted· rape. Police allege that I.he serge1nt wu In· volved In plckin1 up two JuvenJle glr1' near San Juill1 Capistrano Minion, then driving them to San Onotre. in San Diego County. There, It is aUeatd he 1ttempltd to fora: the two girls to disrobe. They fle4, however, Lamoreaus: wu in clWody under $8,250 ball -a 1um which will be reviewed TUUday. . - Jazz Idol Armstrong • Dies at 71 NEW YORK (UPI) -Loui.o "Satc!>- mo" Armstroni, •n orphaned waif frQm the . streets and bordeUos of New Orleans who became. kin& of the jazz trUmpet and won inlernational acclaim, died Tuuday •t hit home <>nlY bro days after hia 71st birthday. Even though Artnstra'ftl had l>een critically ill and hovered between life and death in Beth Jsr1el Hospital only a few moaths ago, his death in hie sleep at 5:30 a.m. waa une1pected. He apparently had been making a 1low recovery from setbacks caused by a kidney ailment and heart trouble, but was strong enough Jn recent wee.ks to join his long-time friend. trombonist Tyree Glenn, in duet renditions of such songs •S "Sleepy Time. Down South." In a pre-birthday interview with UPI, Ar!Tl.'ltrong's only complaint w•s his dif· ficulty in wa..lking. ''Work. that's my life, oh yeah!" Annstrong !aid. "But J wouldn't want to go out on the stage with A walking c.11.ne. Soon as my pin!! get b&.ck in shape, ale Satch will be back. I'm one man that you just can't kill." He was an American baby, born on the Fourth of July, a11d his horn became an Instrument of international diplomacy that tamed him the nickname ol. "Ambassador Of Jau" whether he was playing in Belgrade, Mo.scow or to a gathering of Africans in Ghana, his trum- pet generated excitement. Among his fans was Pre!!ident Nis:on who sent him a. telegram during hia struggle for life at Beth Israel. He had come a long way from sordid beginnings in New Orleans where he waa born in 1900 of a union betweea a b.lrpen- tine factory worker and a housemaid. He had an ear for music and at an earp ly age he was p\Aylng 1 guitar. The event that was eventually to change his life was his meeting with Willie ''Bunk" Johnson, who taught him to play the eorn~t without having to read notes. Hi1 "formal'' education began when Joe "King" Oliver gave him le.s!!on&. At the age of 12 Armstrong playtd in a quartet which performed for pennies in Storyville ln Ne.w OrlearA' red-light district. Oru(e w,adaer Wann we1ther ls expected to ' contlnue aloot the Orana:e Cout !Oday and Wodnaday with highs predld"1 In the 'Ill'• alonf ;he beaches. l'ftching 19 Inland. Lows in bOth areas around 90. ... ,.... u C.l01ftl.. 1• CMdi ... u,. ' Cltltllle' ... ....... u c...-• DMlll ~ lt Of"9tta 11 •41111'fftll ..... 4 ·~""'~ .... 1111_.. »-ti' -" .... "'"*" .. --.. ., ........ .., ~ C:-tJ It s_,. •• SIMtl ~-... ,_ . ---....... . Wl"*l'I ..... 1P•1t WWICI .._ W ---·.-·--·--~ ---· __.. ---..... :::.-___::--· .. -!'>-.-J'"-.---·:· ' --------.----.=~ --·-_...,._ ·~ II 1 ~ -:~ -I -• • , ... ---~-' -~ ----,··w-"~ .. ···----·------.. --p---..._ .. ,. -""~:_....;:-~--... ·-.=:,_..~.,,,,.,= .... _.,,.._.._. _-_, ·----·--.. ----.. ----.------------·--. . --·---.. --.· .. '-9-. :::;s:: F-• -,.. -.=:-::.-...:-:-"' -• ... --~-. ·. ---· ' ~-· .. -. ·-. . . .. . 0.1.IL'I' PILOT 51111 P~Oll Money Men The fledgling South Coast United Fund swelled re- cently with a $1,000 donation from TRW Systems and $2,000 from employes of San Diego Gas & Elec- tric Co. From left to righ t are Roy Garbarine, United Fund president and TRW donor; Ted Bech· er campaign director; Vern Overbaugh, fund treas- urer; and Robert Orr, representative of SDG&E. Meet Slated Today Fu11d Trimming Session Set by Tustii1 Trustees Tustin Union High School Dh:trlct trustees will explore ways of trimming the district's $9.9 million budget at a study 1ession called for 7:30 o'clock tonight In the district office, 1171 Laguna Road, Tu1tin. The impact el a $181,000 loss (If equalization aid will be assessed, Supt. Wllllam Zogg said today. He will sugge1t that the board of education ·con!lder an appeal to legislators to correct the "villld but inequitable" rtcent slate 1 i d determination. Zogg eiplajaed that the dlstrlct -1y· Redevelopment Hearing Slated For Capistrano A public hearing on the redevelopment (lf a section of downtown San Juan Capistrano will Lake place 1t tonight's 1 o'clock !heeling o{ the city's plBMlng commission in city hall. Plan! for an area along Camino Capistrano one block from the Mission "d!I be presented by B. S. Syfan of Laguna Beach. general contractor. The area to be redeveloped into shop! v.·ith underground parking fac ilities lle1 on the west side of Camlno Capistrano :;tarti ng at Verdugo Street and including v.·hat is no"' Capistrano Market. Burke '1 Tavern and Charley's Bottle Shop. Lying .,.,·ithin the city's architectural control district. the new building will be constructtd using 1 Spani!h, Mission, or early California theme. OU.NII COAIT DAILY PILOT Cl.ANO:! c;oMT PUl~llNINQo (OMPAHV' l:t btrt N. w •• ~ Pnolltelol ..... "*-IWIW J1•k -.. c.,1.., Vlu ,~ •IW ~11 ,.._......, 1\•11\•• 11: ••• 11 ••Uw Tli1111•• A. ~11r11\i111 MIMfl ... l!fllOf Cll1,l11 M. L11s 1ti,~1rd P. N1R • A>>itol1n1 Mr...,1119 f.dllO,.. 1.a.t••• '"511 Offke 11! f1r11I Av1ftul Ji,l 1il;n9 1fJldr1u: P.O. l•r 6~6, '2652 Sa11 c1.-.te Offl•• )CS Na11h El C1111l~• A11I, ,2671 Otfft Offk• c o111 Mn•· JJO w .. 1 ••r 11~t t.l~t ll11c~: U1' N-.,,., ....... l"lf M!lllll'Wltn lfldl; 11111 INtll aD<l"••rd ed 1 state k/ualb:ation aid overpayment during the 1970-71 school year for some 37 studenlll who did not attend district school!, Durlng the 1970-71 achoo! year, Tustin trustee1 expelled 78 pupils for violations of dl.!trlct po\Jcies on drug use, dress, and behavior. Nine were readmitted to the district with the epenlng 1;1f summer ' edlooi Jut week. Zogg aald dlscusslon.!I with State finance department official! indlcated state l•w reqajres State a i d overpayments ·to bi"deducted lrcm the followlni year'• allocation to an equallz .. t.ien-aJdtd dJstrl ct. "In ow-case," Zogg noted, "the deduc- tion brtnp us to the level where we become a basic-aided district." The dlatrlct had budgeted it.s 1971-72 ex~ pensea _with the elJ)ectation It would ~ceive a total of •1.181,234 In both basic and equalization ald. With the loss of equaliutlon aid, only about •t million In lncome from the state is expected, buslneaa manager James Farley bsa said. Thus. some $181,000 may have to be trimmed frotn the bud1et tonight. Clemente Guards Clean Up Trash Fro1!1 Holidays l\1embers o! San Clemente"s Junior Lifeguard brigade are probably dedicated fire\1o rks haters today. They have had to clean up the hol iday accumulation of lrash -1110.itly spent fireworks carcas3e s -from the cilY' beaches for lhe past l\.\.'O day~. Hundreds of pounds of cardboard fireworks c13inas ire left on the beach rach y1ar, and much of the debri!, city spokesmen sald, l! ln1ccesaible to beach cleaning machines. "The junior lifeguard kid! have bttn out two days cleaning thlnga up," a lifeguard spokesman said. A full day 's work on Monday lucceeded in cleaning the tra!h from the pier area. At lea1t one more day will be required lo clean other debr!3 from the roc~y areas near the railway tracks. DAii, Y PILOT llllt ...... TAKES TRUSTEE SEAT Dlckran Boranian Tustin Trustees Welcoming New Board Members Dickran Boranian and Robert C. Bartholomew will be sworn in a !I members of the Tu stin linio n High School Dl!'i!rlct board or ed ucation at the special n1ecting callrd for 7.:10 o'clock tonight. Boranian, 43, of Santa Ana. is .lil pr1n- r1pal 1n the (iarden Gr<ive L'nified Schon! D1s1rict. !le ran on a rnodcrate platform in (hp April 20 elec tion for the seat \'o~{·aterl by retiring board member l 1011 ard SC'lleck. lncurnbcnl Bartholon1rw. 4!!. also of Snn1a Ana , is a nurseryman <ind men1bt'r 11f thr .John Birch Society. His can1pa1gn reflet l<'d the viewpoints of the con· se rvati ve majority of the 'fu.'itin hoard, 1nctud1ng hardl1nc sta nce s on issues such as the dress code and student drug abuse. Pentagon Papers Hit 'VASHINGTON (AP) -Marth a Mitchell, wile of the attorney cener.111, has criticized news media for publbhlng the secret Pentagon papers. In a call to the Sunday Star, she .said news organlzaUons carrying atorie! based on the documents "are lnterferinJ with the negol!alions with thl!I Viet Cong •• \\'ell as releasing our secre ts to the enemy.'' Crowds Brave Heavy Surf To Jam Cleme11te Sa11ds Thousands of holiday beachcoera brav. boat slips provided a new cu!tom th is """'L" ,.11..oT, wh• •to. i. C010111W1t1oe ed churning surf and billows of flrtworka year a5 hundreds of small craft anchored H_.,.. ... ~ Pl*llt'-11 ,.,.., nc•• ...,. •moke at San Clemente's bf:1che9 over off lhe pier for a s,.....ctncul11r view of the ft Ill -•!'ell .. 11 ... fllt UI""'' Bllt~• .. ~ " ..oi. c..• .,,..,, M""11""""' the three-day weekend, and the fun, for fireworks show . INtwpll'/ """°'Miii V.I..,,, I•~ c .. -"/ --"• ,,., 1N111t••dl. •IW'f w111o -the most part, proved safe ind aane. On dry land careless use or the c..~.,,11.._ •r1r1ei;.• ,.,,,,l!otl '""" 11 Lifeguards reported about 130,000 firework! cau!ed 1t least eight grass ~j',. w.t a.i ltl'llt. 0.19 -.. persons on city and county beaches over fires -two of them in thick brush 1t San t••••i• f7141 14J-4JJt · the period wllh surf runnln1 up to four Clemente State Park. O..IH&H • .__. .. 441"''11 feet on two of the day1. The mo.,t severe blaze consumed two M ~ ........ All ..,.,._.,.; T...,..• 4t~20 Rescues totaled about 1ver1ae, with no .acres at lhe park Saturday momlni. a... ........ All o., • .._.., serious mishaps. Pranks this year "'ere a.t a minimum, ,..., .... ,.,.,_,,.,, Thousands of per1ons brought their own fire off icials said. hut chllclren throwing etrrlll't. 1m, """ c.to•' "~1111ofrl1,.. . fireworks to the city be1ch Sunday even-sparkler! and other burnin;: pieces cau s· ~.,. ,.. -,.,,., 111"'1,..-· Ing, prll\'iding their oWn sn1ctacle before erl rnough blazes to keep volunteer .. '"'11' "'"!Ir "' .,~,, ..... ..... """' .. ,.,,,.,._, •1"'Wl &Mtlf1 ,,.. volunteers from local veteran•' group~ firefighters busy. """'"" • ....,.,.,., -:; ,,,...._, .. tdl touched off the annual µrores~Jona.I Police reported very few mishaps ln !:'"~~ ~~ r.,:_... wr1111i.o. pyrotechnics piece! from the municipal the he11vy "'rekend traffic. ttlfll P.21 _,,,.,,.; W "''11 u.n . "'' If' I . . Santa Ana Opens Fight For Parcel By TOM BARLEY 01 ,,,. (Mhy ,.lltl lt1tf Lawyers for the ('1!y of Santa Ana to- day urged Or ange County Superior Court Judge Ra ymond 'fhomp!on lo ordt r the Irvine Company to honor an eight-year ol d agree rnent that al legedly pledgrd the •·p romised land" lo thr city via a11· ne1ation action. Attorney William Wenke fired the first shot• for the city In what 11 expected to be a two.day hearing before Judge Thompson by asking the jurist to rule that the Irvine Company wa! not a ciualified signer in incorporation action that could put the 1138 disputed acres in the heart of the p-oposed city of Irvine. -·We're well aware of the effect thi! would have on plans for the city of Irvine," Wenke said "But we ask th is court lo recognize that the Irvine Com· pany's prior commitment to the city of Santa Ana precluded them fro1n including the promised land in the Incorporation 1novement. ·· \Venke 's opening stalenienl \\'ill be followed by pre-testimony ara:uments by attorney Dean Dunlavey for the Irvine Company and Timothy L. Strader, counsel for the Intervening Council of Communities of Irvine. The "promised land" -an L-shaped st.rip that runs along n1uch of the boun- daries of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility -produced the lawsuit that led to toclay '1 hearing when Santa Ana clai m· ed the anne1aUoo right3 it states it was granted by the Irvnne Company in 1963. Incorporation action in which CCI played a leadlni role led Santa Ana to protest inclusion of the acreage in plans to create the 18,000-acre city of Irvine - the forerunner of a"!uper city" that is projected for 430,000 per!on.s and 63,000 acres. Wenke '• bid to have Judge Thompson rule that the Irvine Company is not a qualified slgnu of the incorporation peti- tion approved by the Local Agency F'ormatlon Commission (LAFC) is 1een by the oppos!Uon as 1 move to block the Irmvine lncorporatlon move men t, regardJe33 of the "promised land" iS.!lue. CCI chairmar1 John Buri.on h111 repeatedly stated that this 11 the true aim of the city's legal acUon. Incorporation supporters also contend that the city has rejected ov•u tim- ed at surrendering the "protnlied lind" in retum for-Santa Ana'a acceptant-e of I.he Irvine incorporation propoaal, Burton condemns the 1963 agreement a! Illegal and void and claims that when the legislature eat.abli3hecl the LAFC it gave the agency authority that ovurules any pre-existing agreemtnts on ter· rltorles within IU jurisdlctfOn. The Irvine Company has filed a $1 million damage clalm with the city and includes a demand for a further $1 million in damages in a subsequent lawsult which disputes the city's argu- ment. \Venke, closely watched by Santa Ana City Manager Carl Thornton today, argued that the LAFC should have recognized the v•lidity of the Irvine Com- pany-Santa Ana agreement when the in- corporation is3ue came be.lore the agency in a public hearing. But the LAF'C voted 3 to 2 for incorporation after examining peUt io ns that carried the sig nature~ of 2.259 re~1dents -nearl~' 70 percent of the e!Jgi· ble Irvine community. Those petitions -...·ere la ter verified by Countv Clerk Wii iiam E. St. John who i~ ;tl~n listed as a defenrl<int in the v.Tit or nianrlate to be rulecl Cl!l by Judge Tho mp.son. Laguna Council to Get Researcl1 Grant Request By BARBARA KR EIBICH Ol rho O•H• ... iat SI•!! This week lht' Laguna Beach (;ily Council 1vill he asked for a 1nodesl grant to pennit a UC Irvine environm ental biologist to con1plete rf'search on a potential contamina tion hazard in the city's otlshore \Vaters. News that the professor's initial stu dies had indicated lhe sewagt outfall might not be Iunctloning a:s prescribed 1vas greeted last V.'eek v.·ilh howls oI dismay from some quarters in the commun ity. , • How, they cried, could anyone thinking of 1nention- r I ing as crass a !Ubject as sewage with the tourist sea30!1 ~ ju~t beginning? ' Let alone suggest lhat any of same might 1nake Its way from the outfall bB.ck to the beaches! The suggestion wasn't all that startling to plenty of Lagunan!I who have been made painfully aware in reeent years of other deficiencies in the city sewer system. Any local plumber v.•ill testify to the ever-increasin& number of sewer line backup s he's called in to correct. And at least two \\'el!known downtown bus lnesse3 have been faced with costly clean-up jobs v.•hen onf' of the ov erloaded mains spew· e<l i!s unsavory con1en ts into their establishm('Hl!i . BACK IN December, 19fi1L a voluminous engineering report prepa red for the city re vea led the dangerous condition of an antiquated sewage treat1nent plant bu ilt to serv~f !he presen t-day population ~ and \Vithout today 's multiplicity of garbage disposals. dishwashers and similar househol d amenities. At that time it was made very plain that the plant had to be upd ated or the city o;:,ould face serious problems with !late and regional water quality control au:qiorities. Attempts have been mad e to get the plant up to par, but H's rather like using Band-aids where ma jor surger.v is indicated. Presum ably some of !he familiar odor wii! subside when the new chlori· nators start fun ctioning, And there's been talk of moving the whole operation to a new site out in the Canyon or ove r on Irvine land to the north , complete with a new outfall. BUT NOW the gentleman from UC! says things don"t appear to be as they should around the existing outfall and that sewage which is supposed to remain discreetly submerged in the depths is floating to the surface in a greasy, smelly slick at certain times of the year. The possi bility that this mess could be carried shoreward by surface currents is not appetizing, but th e scientist is interested in continu ing hi s re- search in an effort to determine just how likely it may be. Hopeful!y he"I! find it's most un likely, but it would be nice to know. Bacterial counts made regularly off the swimming beaches indi cate there is no health hazard at this point. but if it should develop that the outfall is not as perfect as we've been led to believe. some rather immediate action would be in ordrr. OUR SISTER city of San Clemente went :o;o far B! to build a $2.3 million tertiary treatment plant that eliminates the need for an outfall. Anyone \\'hose interest in the community is not limited to determining how mu ch money can be extract.t!d from lt should welcome the efforts of the UCJ profes30r, or anyone else who can contribute constructive information to help .solve Laguna 's sewage dilemma . A head-in-sand attitude will not make the problem go away, and unUI It is solved, planning bigger .11nd better tourist fa cilities would appear to be put.- ting the cart before the horse. Nixon Expected for Two Weeks of Work, Play In his fir~t visit thi~ ~ummer. President Nixon was expected to arrive along the South Coasl al g o'clock this even ing to begin a twcrweek working vacation in San Clemente . Air Farce One was expected to arrive a1 the di nner hour at the r.tCAS In El Toro where the standa rd greeti ng by 1nililary personnel and depe ndants V.'ill take place. After El llhort hop by helicopter to La Ca~a Pacifica in San Clemente. the Chief F:x ecutive -...·ill begin a vaca tion which is expect ed to include discussion! on the budget and other econon11c malter~. E:arlier today the President conducted one or his standard briefi ngs for editors in the co mmun ications industry. Top-level executives from 13 Midwe st states were expected to confer for an hour vdth the President durina a Kansa! City. Mo-. sto pover. Several Presidential ai des preceded Mr. Ni xon tothe city and conducted other briefings for the a:ue3ls earlier 1oday. Topics of the sessions included \\'elfare re form. revenue sharing and governmen- ta l reorgan ization. Announce ments aboi;I. the President's schedul e while in San Clemente v.·iJI pro- bably emerge Wtdnesday . One key member of !he Presidential entourage. Do1nestic Secur ity Advise r Dr. Hen ry Kissingtr. wi11 not ac· company the Chief executil'e. A GOOD WORD PASSED AROUND ABOlJT A BUSINESS IS INVALUABLE. A BAO WORD CAN BE UNFORTUNA TI:. OUR GROWING SUCCESS IN THE PAST 13 YEARS HAS BEEN DUE TO THE "GOOD WORDS" AND REFERRALS SENT TO US BY OUR CUSTOMERS. NO AMOUNT OF ADVERTISING CAN REPLACE A PERSONAL RECOMMENDATION. WE ARE NOT INFALLIBLE, BUT WE ARE WORKING TOWARDS THAT GOAL BY GIVING OUR CUSTOMERS THE BEST SERVICE AND QUALITY POSSIBLE. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plocentla Avt. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 te 5:30-Fri., 9 to p -S•t .. 9:30 to 5 ::..,:,11 "'""•'1' , .. 11 ... 1:-. ».H -"'11. pier. • .• o ser1ou11 tra 1c nJ11r1r.s were The recent Opening of Dan11 ll.1rbor reported. _ ... _ -· ~.-·-·------,, ... ,,,,, __ ...,; __ J._'·•····~·-···-· ... -----· ..... , .... _ ..... ~-·-..:-:;..._....,:..··---~.~-:.:"!..-. ,,_ -~~--·---------·-.. -. ...,.,.,, ...._. ;:!',,.---'•CC---~ --.•____.::___ --,-,,-=:..=..:=:::;-..::::::..:~:...-co L ------0 ----------------·----· --·------·-· -·r ··~ -----~ -·----, -~I...=.- -'• I ,, I I I I 'T'utsda~. July 6, 1q11 CA!L V PILOT ;{t DICK TRACY ly Clieslet Gould LI'!: 1'BNER ly Al Capp ~ MEP. CIGAAt PsSr:'-AH'LL WREHIMOVT'- W)"'MA.e;>(t/if,'f :/ 7'<6~0F'1H6oJl/illSl.IMSf:l"61L~C>T>IELOOK "OS~ 6"IPO INOUGH 7t>/lfALL FOR ONE O /r >115 ClfOOKEP :SCHl!l«<S•f!S 100 "4UCH l'Olt CROOK£&> MILES- / TUMBLEWEEDS I WAS WAL>IJN' ALONG; MIN~IN' ME OWN llll, WHEN ~IS HE~E ~lfr ftJOCH JUMPS ME! '60T so FRISKY HAD T' COOL-HIM wrr A COU!'LA By Tom K. Ryan 5NOOKIE1 PEAR, DAT 15 NOT ~---.....::-::::===~ m POi;! ... 11111 IS A Pl!AI!! .•• J:.:;~~~ ONE O' !IA W?RL!l'S MOS' i, FEROCIOUS IJl!ASTS ! ! SALLY BANANAS KNUCKLE SAN'WICHES! ••• CAN I HEEP HIM? . " ....... _,_._,,_ __ _ Mun AND JEFF WELL, THERE IT IS ! TABLE AND BENC'l4ES ALL-!=INISHED ! ALL ~ADY FOR SOME OUTDOOR COUNTRY L.JVING ! FIGMENTS /ICJH., KEVIN'S AJ.YIN6 IN 1)\0'5 51.HANG BA6 AEAJN ! PLAIN JANE ACROSS 1 Inc.lined IOAdway .5 Mimicked 9 John-. ExplOt~r i" Can11da 14 Tributary o! \hr Elbt l S Line bound ing ~ plane l1g11rr l& lsola1ed 17 Kong ol r.erm~ny la C.11t 1n shOfl s lro~rs w<\11 r,i,1111~ 20 'l<e,~1·1 ~llow~nc~~ (2 M o~t 1orcc!11I 24 PJrnl1111v 21> Wad1n~ bird Z1 Bodies or sail waler 2'1 OomtS\IC carnivore 30 Young man Jl Gr<1ohic st he mt for~city's drvelol)'nent: 2 words 37 Republic of Alrica ~8 Narrow than• ntl of water )11 Erode •o Oeslluctl~1 Al Ois~rrange ~2.0e/cti0tale 4·\ Mcmt oa s1anl· ing position 4 S ~oam abo11l 4b loved one 47 Bake1y items 49 Ma in!a ius ccr• respondenc e 53 Dev1alinQ l1ooi lhe establlshed "~" 57 -John, New Brunswlt~ ~8 Pd' of ea11 11 ~'l lo!A occasion &2 5arnuel ----: Promotor nf tl1e t~lt9rJrol1 /,} Coogar ~q or 11 hmt ~cnod 65 Ch~ngt h6 E~pectoralcd &1 Be9i11 a voy~gt DOWN Yesterda y's Puzzle !>olved: ''E.l?l 8 Brll!tled 35 Glide q Is not able 3& Barrrl s!avr io Place in a row 37 Wedd1n11 ll Calc1r·~.JI c:rremonlrs ronnet 1ivr ~.'.I Perceive~ l•$SlJr of by th~ ear !he skeletzyi 4l StlC.lden swift J2 Ool!ar bills: movement lr1formaf 43 ---F1ancr: ]J Trial Part d loday'1 21 Form or Canada precipi!aliori '45 Newfoundland 13 Seaport fn airport Alger ia •7 Taut ZS Growl '48 - -and take 1 Oistll'b11nces 28 Highway notlcr: 2 words or the pttl lie secHOlls 50 Orn<1ment~l pt:~ce Ufider po!icr 2 Pref!~ U'!itd surve lltance: wllh n111t1 2 words l Mtast11ecf JO Molttn rock 1liythrn of 31 Big quant ity: verse 2 words • O!ssrnlrr 32 Gamblin11 .5 Beast of ifl'lp!t menl5 h111d tn )) Suspension GI' b -afl(f nttdles liqu id in a gas 1 ~lo11nl ---J4 Ont whl'.l i' CJvcll oppos rd crownllke htadpltcr 51 Chou-: Chlotsr leadtr 52. 81rn compartmenl 53 Frmi11l11e ri1me 5~ Mix!Pni!lty cold SS Short Sf. T orpD' liO 0<1yti~ lltl'itr11~ 11ncr: Abbr . PEANUTS ... ___ _ JUDGE PARKER TEll ME, HOW LOWG MISS PEACH -' KAMP . - )'.E1.t.Y C Aili;/:~ S!:KilNA~S -l'LM '14v~ ' fV1\1(1£ r-. J1ouJ I ' PERKINS ... By Dale !-tale MOON MULLINS e ., ... ,_.,..._,.._ ~ .... ,~ .. •.. !WT THEY SAY Tllltr SOMETIMES WE HAVE1l> FIGHTW l<oEP IT- 1' ~ II' (!t~7:> '\~ ~ " ~ .. , .... , .,-."'-"4'·' ~'~~ = By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS H"VE. YOU DeCIDED ON '°' CAltEEI< YET, A~? WA~ SI-IE A.~LE TO TA"E C."l?E OS: HE-Ii!· S=LS:? ~-=-=::-=-~ ...... "f"lllS TIME. ::tlM I THIS TIME,l'M cSOIN& 1'0DO11. ~l~To f'RPVE t..IO .• S'1E WAS IN e.r.D L HEALT\.-1'. Sl.<E l-IAD A YOCJtJ(, WOMAN LIVING 'f'l lTl-I HER', .. SOM E S.Oli!T OF A UUli!SE '. !> 'TO 'IHE WO!nD " THATOODOS CAM F~l,I I By Charles M. Schulz By Harold Le Doux ~lr---- YEo;..,.AS A MATTEr."" OF !='.AC.T. lo.!Eli! MAME WA'5 S:A'I WH EELER: SHE OPE/JED A SMALL C.HE("ING "((DUNT l·H:Cl?f AT THE BAMK WITH US! l (.AtJ GE.r HE!i: AWi:f~ \. u:. YOU 'D LIKE IT. f YES. I INTEl>JD TO FOLLOW 11\1 MV F="ATHE'll'1S PROFESSION . ,\l i t 'r..."" . : .~-. -., ., .0 (;,, Of!. WHAT DOES YOUR FATHEI': DO? By MeU l-IE'SAN ASSISTANT NOTA~ PUBLIC. '-\.I I l'."',•;1..-. . ~ . -.. , ., By John Miles ~ I 1 ..• •• l•lt •• • , .. • " '" , ' .. . ' , . By Gus A1Tialq .. ,,,. ~ACl<:­\\hl.~ : pf!fJ~:· : By Ferd :Johnsan ,• ~so 1•vs JNVENTE!> ill!;' PERF¥CT COMPROMISIO- .... . ' I ftffi· FLAP! -~.. ~~) AHl:Ml. l)()l•r BE MISWD B<.> '!HAl" Sll7r l/J Tile 1?1611!= HA~P ca:'!lEI<' ! -· 1flAT'5 Mr/ axJ51A), 1-wa::u:>, oo His WAR .fo WORK • ,, -jl ~: TMl .STIANGl WOtiD MR.MUM ..... ·r.. " .. :1s ' J. ,. i ·~ DENNIS THE MENACE ' I ~ ...... • l!8 OAll Y PILOT SC Wha t ~s Good Wor d ? • • White House Not Easing Confusion 'NEW YORK (APl -The atlmlnlstraUoo'.• aeries of negative 1tatementa regarding possible step.11 that might be tMen to atrengt.hen t h e economy Is causing a lot or perple.xlty in political and economic circles. It isn't so much th I! l!tonomic thinking that cawes the consternalion. A good many p r I v a t e economists Californians Leading As Top Beer Drinkers California became the na- Uon 's top beer drinking stale in 1970 as consumers purchas- ed 11.868,580 barrels to out- distance New York the peren- nial for mer leader, by 332,&37 barrels. According to f1gures releas- ed by Geo. W. Ososke. vice p(esident and western district director of the United States BP.ewers Assn ., Califomians increased the ir consumpllon of beer during 1970 by 6.5 percent while New Yorkers posted an increase of 1,3 percent. Throughout the nation. ~ales increased 4.5 percent over 1969. Per capita beer consumption throughout lhe United States in 1970, Ososke said, was 18.6 gall ons, up from 17.8 gallons tn In Califo rnia, per cap i I a consumption in 1970 wa~ 18.22 gallons, up from 17.8 gallons in 1969. Oso.ske noted that the na· lion's total beer sa les are ex- pected to be 150 million bar· rels by 1975, and t ha t California will continue to ac· count for about 9.6 percent of the total. He also noted that to tal direct and indirect taxes on beer sales in California dur ing 1970 -all pa id for by the con- sumer in the form of higher retail prices reached a record 5211 million, MX:S: ne .,, 'w ··i•••tt»'',,ff' 11 B !iiCJ#SfS 1st Black-run Busin ess • Now Lis ted on Exch ange NEW YORK (AP) -The first hlack controlled member firm in the 179-ycar hi story of the New York Stock Exchange was app roved for membership last week. •The firm is Daniels & Bell, Inc.. named for Its b!ack P.:t'esident and executive vice president. Located on Wall Street, it was officially formed M"ay 7 but has not been open !or business. It received formal approval for Big Board If .,.. _. Mt •I .. Ainwwfnq s.rwfu, To• .,. •ot ,.,.i,.. ell ef yo11r celk. • Tl!LEl'HONI .&.NSWlllNG IUIUU 835-7777 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE •r Companr •IN••!.,. Ch1ln 1111,tlOO fo llU.000 •II <1"4 I RKI. (714 ) ,42.os•o membership from I.he New York Stock Exchange 's Board of Governors. Speaking al a news con- ference after the formal an- nounce1nenl. Willie L. Daniels, J3, the firm 's president. hailed the move as a "major and significant breakthrough in ef· forts lo further b I 8 c k capitalism and to prov ide more blacks with opportunities to move lnto areas heretofore limited to them ." "Initially."' Daniels said. "the uniqueness of our organ- ization should serve as a door opener for at least a token Ja ry among institutions with amounl of business. particu- social consciousness. In the Jong rui . however, the success of Daniels & Bell v.•i!I depend 011 scr1·ice and performance. not the color of our skins.'' The firm specializes in hand ling transactions for in- slilutiona l investors. for ex- ample, mutual and pensions funds. banks and insurance companies. ·····················~ : The MAZDA CAIL • • \\'llh the Revolutionary • • ''Rotary Engine'' : • M1 nvf1<h1t1il b~ TOYO k:OGYO ol J1p1n • • 'rlc• App ro1. 70c p•r 1hor• • • tor 41wofotlon1 or o copy of 011r roport coll or writ• • Great Pacific Securities : a •• ;m;~;;·;;·;~;~~;~,~·~~; •• = NEWPORT SHELTER, LT D. A C 8li lorni1 Limiltd Ptrl"•"h'p I• ll1in9 Form~il To Pu•cl1 110 A Nt,,..porl ll1•t~ Ollit• ll uildin9. 'Oii 1.IMITID i"AllTNEllHl!I" Ul'l!TI 0~ 11.H!I IACM M1"1 mum Pu·~~•1• l Unih 9°;0 Cu mulative Preferred Rate of Rt turn S llEL.TER INUllSTRIF.S,INC. Taking off and often. Air Califor11ia to Oakland and San Jose. EXCT.USIVELY ON BOEING. msUNJETS. Call yoar trawl agrnt or Air Cal (cir f.1rcs and reservations. ' Complete-New York Stock Li st ''% ~"' I ~ 11 " ll 10 u"' )~ tt ' .. 100 \ ..... '' 3''4 . ~-n tt1· . ' .: 4t: Ill 11.,._, JO 1' . " J "'"' l? ., .... -0- 1101 1'll'o IU Ill 11 1Ho tll l•h J1 j)Oo . ·-l•• J I'> 41 ,, • I ll'" !M llh ,fl: =~'" 1•0 '° .. 11>4 I 117 . " 1J ,., -H-1- ' , . .. I I' I I. ) I I I I I ' ' "· \ l ' 2§_ D4lt Y PILOT Tlldday, July 6, 1'71 New FCC PrimeTimeRuling To Stunulate Local Shows GIA SCALA HAS SCARE HOLLYWOOD 11JPll - Actress Gia Scala 1penl 4~ minules pinned in the wreckage of her overturn· ed sports car Monday night after It swerved lnto an embankment in the Hollywood Hills. Jancaster Brllllant 'Knickerbocker Holiday' Pleasing. . By CY~HI A LOWRY NE W YO!lK (AP) -The 1de11 behind the F'edera! Com· ni u n ieations Comn1iss1on's order that the nelworks give up nne·h~lf hour or prirne \'Je\\'tog time each evening in nHIJOr 1narkct1n,li a re a s starting next season \\'as to stimulate loc.a! progranuning and production. Ir has caused conside rable production and even more sales acU vlty Recent su rveys of stations a Hi haled \\1th the t hr e e networ ks Indicate that. three months away from the start ol the new season, about a third of the slations in the SO la rger co mm uni tie s have not definitely set replacement show or, if they ha ve . they aren't telling. Some stations will expa nd local news programs into prime time, which officially starts at 7:30 p.m. Others are expected to plug the hole with reruns. The regulat io n has stl1nulated great a c t I v it y among independent producers, hitherto pretty dependent on net v.·ork sales. And some e n t e r t a in e rs Tommy Smothe rs, L a s s i e and Lawrence \\'elk among 1he m suddenly are interested in v.·hat was once a TV stepchild syndication. That is a program sold to ind ividual stations r8ther than to a network. David Frosl who already has a popular nigh tly talk show. will have a weekly half. TV DAILY LOG Juesday Evening JULY 6 1:00 1.1111 Ht111s Jerry Dunphy. ®ABC Hl'Q RelSOO&l'. Smith. 0 KJllBC He111s Tom Snyder. 0 A~fll B111b•!I Ctlil. Ana:1l1 vs. M1nne&o!1 Twins 1t Minne1poh1. U 511 O'Ctod Minott: (CJ (90) "300 Spfrt1ns" Conclu!.ion (advtn!u11) '62-Rid!ard E,;1n, Sir R1lph Rich· .11rdson, Oi1ne Ba~er, 81rry Coe. Olvid F1rr1r. The monumental lour111 tentury B.C. Batllt of l h1rmopyl1e was r1oonstructe d lrom 1ccounts left by the Greek histori an Herodotus. 0 I SpJ m 111• fllntJtone1 m Stir Trt~ EI1) A Time for John/Chuti1's Pad @ID Fisher f1111ity @?ii Mticl 1ro .U €C Death V1lley 01y1 al Ne1111 Jim H1wthorn1. l :lO (]) Ntn 8111 Huddy. @ Truth or tonsequ1nct1 (j) CBS News Wal!H Cronkite, @}NBC "'"" 01v1d Brinkley. m n.. n,;n1 /ltvn m Hvdaepod1• Lodrt fl!) 5decNd FU11/Mlllic.1h ffi Thi DIMft bport CJ!) l1 Ador1bl1 Prol • .lldto, al ABC Ntw1 1:00 IO CiS N1"1t1 Walter C!'onkite. 0 @D NBC Nnts D1~ld Bri nkley, @ To Tell tile T1ult1 9 Tl11 5tew1 Allen Sbow Gueits UI K1yt S!t'ltns, Gus Blvon1. Wino Manone, John Byner and Rod Ser· lin1. 0 !1)@ CE ABC '1e1t MOYi1 Ct1uits: {90) ~Portrait ol Jenni•~ (mm1nce} '49-Jen~iftf Jones. Jo· JtPh Cotten. Ethel B11rymore, Lil\i1n Gish, Cedl Kell1w1y, D1vid W1yne. A memor1blt tilm 1boul 111 1rtist's love for 1 myst1"1lus, be1utilul wooian. m David fl'Olt Sllow' Cunts 1r1 Jimmie Rodgen, Guri G11np r, Hl>'l!Ud Cosell, Boll'ie Kuhn ind V'ic· !Of Cotbtum. m""""' erJ F11h1r1y Ind flllll "'-!OIAI." @ID P1tttrn for Uvin1 m l• Con Juza•d• 8:55 f@ Cuertion dt Seaundos 9:00 0 ®.J m f irst Tuesday G1rrltk U!ley is host. TonlRhl's p102r1m in· eludes 1 portrait of Kina Hussein of Jordan. and 1 ttport on housin1 abandonment In l1r11e 01111.. ' (D felonJ Squid EI1) l>lnces ot CrHCI (R) EID Ch.tl•na• (;El Resa1 Plfl Vlftfllu 1:30 O ())Allie the f.,WIJ (R) William Windom pits 1s .1 we1lthy ~r· dt11tf lrisid et Ardtie. Hil 1rriY1I frlll'll Cltiloml• pro111pll • rtunion o/ their old Nmy ~lllldlu. 0 Buttf Waft "--m ffllllll'I fD DEIUT ArtlJb la Alnlriu ~pe\u Alel(ander.· Tr1n$11tin1 li1ht l ~to plastic folft'IS, Ale~1nder crt1 tn •rt from M W materials. hour ''David Frost Revue." Tommy Smothers wilt produce and host a half-hour variety series. La wrence Welk 's co m· pany claims it has already lln· ed up tnore tharr 150 stations for his syndicated series. NBC 's plan to rill local prime time or the five stations il operates includes reruns of the National G e o.gr.a ph ic seri~s: "Wild Kingdom," an NBC perennial now in syn· dication and "Lassie." cancel· ed by CBS al the end of this season. They also have picked "Primus," underwa ter ad· \'enture, and two privat~ye series, "Monty Nash" and "Dr. Simon Locke." NBC bas The 34-year-old actress, who was driving alone, .suffered mult!ple brulse11, a neck injury and the partial lo.ss of Ole li p or /)er righ~ ringer. The ·r i re deparlment pried open the door of thl!. wrecked ear and ex- tricated Miss Scala from the steering wheel : She re- mained overn ight a l Hollyv•ood R e c e i v i n g Hospital. outlets in New Yo r k , -------~--- Was h i n gton , Chicago, Cleveland and Los Angeles. CBS stat.ions New York, Loll Angeles, Chicago, St. Louis and Phllade~hia are booking programs Individuall y. Among them are a circus series !'!tar· r ing Berl Parks ; new short prog rams with the Gold· diggers .singing group : Johnny Mann's ''Stand Up and Cheer'' n1usica l series spun off a special this season; "Doctor in the House." a spoo f of medical shows. and "Jerry Visi ts-." with Los Angeles newscast~r Jerry Dunphy calling on some film or TV star each \\'eek. ABC's plans are still largely in fl ux . It has stations in New York, Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles and San Francisco. In two cities, there are plans to expand early local ne w 5 shows. a network spokesman said. At lea!'lt o!le station plans a. Joe.al show with a loc al TV personality. Ex-singer Voted Tops LONDON !AP) -Former rock singer Cliff Richard, now an evangelist, has been named the top singer of the yea r in Britai n by the Son gwri!ers' Guild, for his "services lo British music." Richard. v"ho took up the Bi- ble after meeting the Am erican evangelist B it I y C.raham, has had 50 record s in the Britis h top 10 otier a 13· year ca ref;'r. .. Show business is a marvelous platform for a representative of Christ -you reach a lot of people that way." the 30-year-old Richard !aid after his selection by the Gu ild Monday. By TOM BARLEY OI Ill• O.IW l"li.t tt•H '·Kn ickerbocker Holiday'' i.s be ing ha iled on all sides as a timely revtveJ of g!aywright Maxwell Anderson's glosSily dressed but cuttingly acid commentary on big govern- ment and a welcome reap· pearance of a J3.year-old treatise on bureaucratic tyranny th at isn 'l short uf targel!'I in toda)'.s graft-ha ppy political .structure. Carefully deli\'e red t'r:>.cks that clearly allude lo the Viet· na m war (yes, again 1, politica l grand larceny and grand thert on a grand scale and the evils inherent 1n any political system all the way down from its p r esiden t Mound in a script tha t was . we strongly suspect, carefully tailored by its Los Angeles Music Center producers to meet a present day con· lingency Or two. Even Burt Lancaster took on the air of ''Yes, I said it" and the l i m e · h o n o red monumental pause that is lo· day practised on ly by (',eorgc Burns to h;untncr hClmc his Ande rsonian analyst's to an aud ience tht11 s u i t "'h I v responded \\'ith sh o c k e d "oohs" and ecsta11c ";i;>hs'' to a series of nol·so-subtle in· nuendocs !hat became a bore long before th e end of the first act. lre11e 'Grantiy' Rya11 This happy and beautifully staged show it h a s weathered those J3 dreadful years extremely well -can get along very nicely without them , th8hk you . Kurt Weill 's music has, admittedly, dated in spot.s but it can still hold its own in this charming shov.· with the rubbi sh that preceded it in the same theatre. It h;is, in ' 'S e p l e. m be r Song", one of the most be autiful shnw tu nes ever wri1tcn ;;ind Lane.aster, the l<1 1 c~t in a long line or non· singers to b<' g1 vr.n a sin ging role f the Lord onl\' knows whv they persist ~ ith t h i's nonsense ) docs reasonably well with the nu rnbcr Veteran Actress Offers Scholarships in Acting· HOLtYWOOD IAP) - A blue-eyed mite of a mill ionaire has seL up a fou ndation to pro· vide scholarships for aspiri ng actors and plans to lea ve her fortune to ii . "Show busines!'I has been awf ully good lo me ." says Iren e Ryan , who p I aye d sq u e a k y ·voiced Granny Clampe tt o n tel evision's recently cance led Be v e r I y Hillbill ies . years financially on th e t>.iuc is made of 1hc !act Hillbill ies. My b u s i n es s ...... d __ ,.. . CG""" ma na ge r ma e some g, ...... , in· "1;G~0 Now Playin9 vestments. I have no relalives, ~ so I thought , why not.give it to f 1~d:~ .A busi ness that has been so good lo me?" ''FREE that L2ncaster wall personally a How the IMS of a leg to bar coached by FraD.k Sinatra for hlm from some fetching the vocal chores that go with choreog~!lphy. tho! role of peg-legged Peter Lancaster pul ls out all the Stuyvesant, the feisty Dutch stops in his depiction of the governor of the Hollanders• New Amsterdam colony. Suf· Dutch despot and he brings to fice it to be said that brill iant h1s stagi ng of Stuyvesant a Burt is no Sinatra in this role saving grace and concession or two that would ha ve been or any other role. Bri llia nt is however the very foreign lo lhe nature of a man prepared to hang a rival word for his depic tion of who intruded on his affaires Siuyvc.sant, \•:ho briogs hi!': d'amou r. silver leg and a fo ndness for the divine right concept of For all that, he is very near· gov('rnn1enl to a colony lh N ly upstaged by a brilliant had seen1ed 10 be doing very young man who brings a nicely on its fa re of ha rd graft splendid singing voice and a for the colonists and anoth er vC'ry obvious feel for the part much subt ler form of grart lo the role of au I ho r practiced by the town council. Was hington Irving. the su2.ve Stuyveiant makes it clear sage who transmits h i s that he isn 't alt that opposed to presence as newly arrived col· graft (the kind th at fills onist Brom Broeck to the New pockets) provid ing he's ~he Amste rdam of 1647 . main beneficiary of it and his David Holland strides his novel combin~tion of the rod w ay I h r o u g h t be of iron and the chink of gold is "Knickerbocker'' created by put across in superb fashion Anderson and Weill with an by a Lancaster who doesn't authority and elan that belie hill years and he ls by far Ile most effective. all-round &bow busi nes!'I persona.lily setn bJ this critic for Mime YWI. »• has two vital assets : the virile, adaptable demeanor AO vital to a male lead an d a fille 1lll&inl vnice that proved e qua· 11 y adaptable throug~ut th• delighlf11I We ill score. Both he and Lancaster owe a great deal to a strong !'IUp- porti ng cast. ably directed by Albert Marre. Anita Gillette is the charming Tina Tienhoven, who literally 5ilatches her Brom from the steps of the gallows and Jack Collins, 11 her unscrupulou.s father, COW\• cil president M y n he e t Tienhoven, turns in a !'loUd and convincing supporting role. Listen to lhs music, enjOy Howard Bay's superb sets ud Freddy Wittop's authenlie obii· tumes and forget th e political sc.ti re. In the light of this thoroughly happy mu1ical, who needs it~ ~~~--~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ NO\V EXCl USIVEl Y! I~ >1~11ril l!IOPPl ... r, ! ! "11 ~ A ~OBfRl WI~[ ""OllUCllON -~Nl>ROM:DA STRAIN A U Nl'Jll~:.Al P!CTIJR[ ·TECHNICOLOR. PA.NAVIStON' ~ ..:» 2nd HIT · Eroc 8reoden ,.., "COLOSSllS: THE FORBIN PROJECT" (GP) 2NDAT'VllJ0' I 2NDATCW .. 2 'WHEN DINOSAU•S "BUTCH CA,SIDY ltUlfD TME lARTM" & THE SUNDANCE IUD" MATINEES 'DAIL y ~ fUllllXl~l PICTOl!!SPtl.Sl -IS IN Tlil. W(::.l MIN!'il l,R C l:NTl!.OI' ~,. \ Al' M G lM .SS~ , .~·G~~~:~o~:;~;al \~~~. PLUS-DAVID NIVEN IN "THE IMPOSSIBLE YEARS" G ' 0 Whit's My Lint? (lg) Dick Vi n Oy~t mJ Muiic.1l1/P1rtor'1 Dest ~ l• Ci'LJZ dt M1riM Cruw "I had an awfull y good nine 1------ ' So she set up the Irene Ryan Foundation. Thirletn ann ual scholarships of $500 eac.h will go to winning pcrformer9 in as many regional competitions. Two $2,000 scholarships wi ll be FORM ID I love Lucy ID rIJ Dragnet tD Convers.tions With 1 Psychlt· lrist Or Edwald Sti1nbrook, ml Chri st \ht Uvln1 Word ~ ~naell\01 Ne1ro1 CE Movlt C1m1 7:30 EJ (]) hwtrly Hillbillies {R) Orys· d1l1 locks 111 his :s.ecrel11les In his ntlit1 1!ter 111ey demonst11t1 for betle1 work1n1 tond1t1ons. 0 i1QJ iD Bill CoibJ (R) i'hue Mull Be 1 Pony." Ch!! Ines lo oon v1nce 1 1ul 1!udent oot to be over co~11dl!!I! 1bout winn1n1 1 mtMt c.oMe~t. 0 3) l]J CE) The Mod Sq uid (R) " fl Is fer Annie" Jo Va n Flttl 1u~1ts as .i.on1e Crab1ret , 1n t it me n!i-y srhoot Teacher under 1tt 1ci !or ~er lioeral tlas!•oom IDproarh 10:00 I) Te R~1111 With lov1 (R) Miki Is the enly !ud11 cl 1 beauty C\ln~~t In which il.li.50!\ is 1 contestant, {Rt· ~hedulecll 0 N11111 KeY1n Slndtrs, 0 I])@ ffi M'lrtU I Wt!bJ, M.D. (RJ "Don't Kid I Kidder." Of, Welby helps 1 bli~d wom1n 11r1nge pl1s1ic 1u1gtry fer ~er homely, bi1·1lrtd son, KIJ MtdforrJ Ind Robert f'lltt i:uest. CII TVI R~ f) Mwlt: (90) "s.i&• 84 5idntJ Street" (dr1m1) '6G-Don1ld Sinden, Nicole Ber1t1. ID NtM Putn1m/Fishm1n. @ MHtrap .tJ Huntl host!. Harriwn l\)tSIS. ffi Tht Advattt11 tn s0~ ed ucation Ron Hayes pla y< 10·30 t1 'l) CBS N11111 Sp1ci1I GeorRe McKenna and Edmund Gil ' ~ . 0 bl • beit 1s seen a~ f!td Simpson 0 Mo~11: (C) (211!) ·1 ~1 1m '' . . . ,. . (dram1l-D~m~ [d1!h Ev1n1, Geor· 0 Million S MoV!e. (C) (Zhr) !:Id· i ni Ward ('.o11n R1d11•~• aet Cots H1w1il1n" (comedy) '61-1 • • James 01rren. Mtthael Callan, o,b lIJ Nll'll'I 6111 John1 ors~ Wall!,, Pt1n C1ss. On ~ac1!lon al El tlitrlo dt Un• S.nori\1 DI· willl her 1111Ktt1.. Cid1et finds 111n1 u nll or lads l')'in& 1or hei 1Uet1ions. m Truth w Co1191q11tnt11 Im tt T1k11 1 Thllf fD F1nf1r1 ".lohn Philip Sous.a: The March Kln1." m e1111111• JO ID'-"""' 1:15 0 Anrtl Wrtp·U, l :JO fJ Cl) MM MN (II) C11t1b 111 Jlrry L• Ltwl1 11141 f1111~ Hu1kJ. Wednesday DAYTIME MOVI ES t:OO 0 '1.0YI "'1 Nt!&f!INW" (C(lmtdy) '41)-Ji~k Benny, fre d .IJ!tn "HOr)f ft•lkf1" (com1dy) 'J2-T~e Min. Broth111. - 0 "SI• i\tr!INllt" (111eJllm) ·•s- £irot Flynn, Alu11 Smith. 10:00 (I) '"Mr. llhMtn S-1 II C.11111'" (comldy) '4f-.Glitt~ Webb, Shlrit-y T1mpl1. 1:oo m "TM klfl'I"" 11111m1) ·42 -At1~111 ff1111, ll1ri1 Wind.or, Z:OO 0 (CJ ''Wind l01lll tll1 £nr rl_,.... (dr•ma) '50-0ulsto~i Ptumm1r, 811f1 lvt1. l:OO Cl) "011 till hKll" J"trt I fdr11111l '5~r1rory Ptdc. A¥1 Q1rdnlf. t :JO U (t ) "Ath1n1'" (1om111tt) '54-•:JO 8 '"DM't f«pf ti'"" U.. tlMll l•~• f'Ol'l'ell, [dmund Purdom, Otb· Ott" (d1.,,.1) 's&-Sh1ph1n Yllllfl.I. m 'Tiii l•dJ Wanlt Ml~k~ (com tidy ) ·5i -Ru!ll HuSHy, DON RICKLES NOW thru July 8 Two Shows Per Nl11ht I p.m. i nd Midni1ht • COMJNG ROBERT GOULET July 9 lhru 16 Am1 ric1'1 li r11111! V1t1tlan Buy, For Reserve1ions r.1111 : ZEnlth 9-9924 " K•ngs Castle lake Tahoe/Nev1da (702)831·111 1 for lop perforiners among regional winne rs. I Competitio:-: will he in con· nee.lion with the American College Theater F e s t. i v a 1 . sponsored by Washington's John F'. Kennedy Center ror the PC"rform ing Arts and the Smithsonian Institution. The fourth annual festi val will be held in Washington next spring . Miss Ryan won't be among the judges awarding her schol arships II'' t*· ('-I . .., ... PERFORMANCES , 7,30 P.M. & 9,30 P.M. RATED IG) All Seats $2.50 .. ' - .. ... , ,.,,... "· • The scholarshi p idea OC· curred v.·hen she recenlly ll~==::=====:=:::ll made oul her will F'i\'e feet 2 and 98 pounds, pink-f;ircd with a hal{l or fluffy light-bro wn hi!ir. she won't tell her age hu! admit~ In fl~ yeari; in show bu~i ne.~:i; BALBOA 673-4048 Shr ne\ rr i:.ni hcyond !hr r1~h!h gr11dr B0rn lrrn(' NobletlP in £1 Paso. thr 1 daughter of an A r my ~erg'e;int. sl1e wa s re;ir,·d !n San Francisco. A neii::hbor hea:d he r chi ldish h;ickyard singing and entered her in an amateur contest in "'1hich i;he won the. $3 first prize . She made her professional debut in 1917 as a $2:0·a·week member of the chorus In a S11cramcnlo amusement pa rk !'!loc k company. Op•,, 6 :45 109 r. l1lboa a.ii... ''11in1•I• BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID PAUL NEWMAN2 tMIM~• CGIOI JY DllUll FAOM HEAM.AN .RAUCHfR'S NATIONAL 8!$1' 9E.L1R A Robert Mull igan/Richard A. Roth Production JENNIFER O'NEILL• GARY GRIMES • JERRY HOUSER • OLIVER CQ1ua1...t Wrll11n br iatoducH bf HERMAN RAUCHER RICHARD A. AOTI4 Dlrtct.dbp ROBERT MULUOAN M .... ., MICHELL2QllAM> Thtt complete i.ound lr•ck mu fie by Mlch1l ltt0r1nd IYlillbll on W1rn•• BtOI. 1'8Corde TlC"lllC:OlO~• Jat ~~_,...-1 z:i:.,~s.Mot PREMIER E~AGEMENT ·NOW AT All 3 THEATRES -....Gffolden GJtycin O'cNeal 2ND~!ra~~~~1:novers STEVE M<:QUEEN AND V!NC£NT PlllCE AND "'~ FAYE DUNAWAY IN JOSEPH CllTTON ll"!"J "The Thomas Crown Affair " "DDCTOR PHIBES " GP -=-:;-==-MGM ~ I •• • •• • '' " I ' __ • blLfll1nQJ.d1, Vic D1111one ... _ I.. 00 S.nM ,._10 AM llstlnL -~ ., --.. " OJ I !,,. ,.. .. '¥ .---~·~-.-" ______ -:._-:_-..._-..=.=:;;::;.;:~ ---~ --·;,,., .. ----~ -~jiff-·--~·~...::..: ---~--... -.... --:. -··· ~'-~--=·-· .. 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" ' 1 ..................... -r..~ .;: " Finance Briefs NEW YORK (l Pl ) -K,IJ!I! C.reenwa1 lndu s!r1P~ In(' ~11 1rt 1 expect~ to l~ke del1~ery ' ]~~ -next Wf'ek of !ht> first 15h1r- 1~. _ ment of Chinese hristle l(t ~~ -ent er the IJn1!rd S111le~ ;,1nce 1~~~.i • President Nixon l1Hed 1he 21 s,, .--., year emb11rgo on Chniese 1m ~!"' ' pqrls 1f! ~ ,: The bn9ll e used to make :•-+ halr bru~hes and paint 1v; ~ brushes will arnve in New 1:11 + York aboard the s s ,~:,; .,. Staghound fro m E n g I a n d ,..., -Greenw11y sairt 11 acqu1rM a ft + ~ quantity of the bnslle from n + I ~Jl.'o -Eng 1sh holders after the fam 1~1' _, ...... cu ping pong tp1sode spark ,r" -~ td reports or " possible lifting ,.~ -•! of the emb•rgo 11\'o ->t•-------=-------u ;... ,1 ~·-Syml>nb ·-• ..,._, \) I I l I I \) I I I I I. 1. - i~ . .__--,. EMPTY STAGE, BROKEN CHAIRS AT NEWPORT, R.I. V•nerabl• J.111. Fe1tiv1I Broken Up by G11te Crashers Soutl1la11d's Te1·ns Dying; Only 12 Nest Sites Left After the dodo bird, is it the ltm's turn? Conservaiionisls say the least tern. a 11eacoast bird the size (If a small dove, is threatened "''ilh extinction. Jrs found onl.v along the Southern California coast. and of 12 nesting sites Dope Te sting Shows Fewer GI Addictio11s SAlGO~ (CPI l -l11it1al results o! ne1v tc~ts devised lo wrt'd out and rehabilitate the heroin addict..s among homeward· bound Gl's d1!>C!ose an addirlion rate of only two per Ct'nl. military sources said i1ond3y. Previous rstim:itcs of the number of heroin addict s in the U.S. expeditionary for ce ranged 10 JO per cent (It even higher However some experts question the ef· frct1ve11ess of the tests. 0 u t s id e ob~Cr\'ers on th<' spot hal"e re1>0rled that .l-Om(' GI addll"I!-h:t\"t' slipped through I.he nf'I 1l"sp1lc the Te"'" and others have passed them b.v "r!0 ing oui·• -break.mg their drug h.1b11 -tcn1pora rily. :\r1·crthrl1·"'-"· mi11L1ry sources said !h<11. based on the f1nd1ngs of Uiina\ysis 1r~\1ng of abou1 a.0011 l'e rvicemen since 1he nrw t<'sts 11erc pul into effect June 111. dru g usagr 1~ 11rll below ftared J:-1 t'I~ ,\lil1t11rl' oli1ri:i!<: ~;.11<1 1h;il Vie tnani· v.1r!e < r•1{·~du1111" 1111 n:in,"11t1r·" d1~trib11· t1rm ;111d ,1n 1nc rr:i~1ng nu 111hrr (•f ~11ld1rrs \ol1u11rrnng for rn1!1L'l0'·run <inincsty pr11gra1ns {·ou lcl bl' 1n::iior fllt'tt1rs in reducing 1hr nun1hrr ol ht'roin u$ers l"M>fore thrv wrre tr.;1rd 11t 1he end of their 1c11r"S Uitir of dul y 1n V1etna1n. The. ll .S cornrnanct has so far declined lo i~sue nHict!ll f1gurci; on the new drug· detecting progran1 111 ordt>r 1o provide a rnorr balanced picture over a longe r lem1 Three sprcially-de\"elope.d machines v•cre f!O\l"n to Virln:im l::ist month for the ~tart of a program lo test every ser \ 1eem11n nr won1;in \eavinJll the -.i."ar theater. A !>Ccond. n1ore precii;r te.o;;t is gi;·en anv per~n -.i.·ith a positive rending. Coh£1rfned usrrs nf opiates -heroin, np1un1 or n1orph1nr -are placed . in quarantine 1n Vietnam For between five ans srven d;1ys :ind then flo-.i.·n 1o the t.:niled State s in medical evacuation aircrafl for up lo another six week's rehabilila1ion at military ins ta lla tions . t.>ni g users ;ire not punished and find- ings are nnt pla1:ed nn a Gl's servic e r~r<l . though <1rc listed on medical records. President ~ixon announced !he medical lests for homc.,.,·ard bound Gl's as part or a 11'orldwide ont1-<lrug c a m pa i g n . Congresslonril report.~ Indicated more than 10 per ('('nl of U.S. troops might be usin g heroin in Vietnam. where the white powder is close lo 100 per cent pure and Is cheap and available. enough to be vdth\11 reach of any soldier . 1;1i1ltary sources said the number ot troops arrested by C.S. authorities 1n Vietnam on heroin charges were a record 675 out of a total o{ 1,065 servicemen ap- prthended for rlruR vtolalion.s in May. Mort than l,596 .:ildiers voluntarily e.n\ere1! the command's drug amnf'~ty zind rehahilitotion ~chcn1e In June: rourcc!I said , the highl'.'SI si nce the rlrill'f! 1\';L~ launchrd in January. Jn thr hr~! six month!! or 1 hi~ ~t>11 r. 1nore than 8.200 se rvicemen have sought ~1p un(ttr the ;imoesty progr11m . .. remaini ng only three are capable of pri> ducing any significant number of chicks. The largest nesung site is located at the mouth of the Santa t>.1argari1 a River at Camp Pendleton , a recent survey of the California Fish and C.ame Depart· 1nent showed. An official at Camp Pendlelon said 325 n~sts Wf're recf'ntly localt:d alon~ \l'ilh 650 eggs. of \1·h1ch 24a have since hatched. A barricade has been put by the ~1a rines lo keep their tracked vehicles lrom cn15hing the tiny eggs. The least tern h1ys an average of {\1'0 Pggs per clutch in a depression scooped froni the sand. There is no nest like other birds build. The tern"s eggs are the si1.c of a one-inch gumball and their buff color' and blnck speckles blend 1111th the sa nd . \\'hen !he chicks hatrh. !hcy're fuzzy 'tt•hi!e balls with black spo!s. The nesting tern~. who apparently prefer puh!ic pro!}f'rty. also ton~regate in San Diego"s city-owned J\·li ssion Bay. There the American Cetacean Society, or whale-watchers. di vide their time with viewing a tern or two. "We keep someone al the sites during dayli ght hours." says i\l Pen!i~. president of the whale watchers. "Whf'n pe.ople with 111otor bi kes or dogs show up . we just tell them abou1 the birds." But, Pentis s:i1d ··we havr lo~I 8 or 10 rhickadees -l~re "·ere dog 1racks a!I around " Today there may be only 800 least terns left, said director Alan Longhurst of the t;.S. Fisheries Laboratory in La Jolla. He blames home-building in canyon s , campgrounds and crannies. ··t feel rather cynicRI And d1si!lusinned about !he \\'hole th111g. Or. L-Onghurst sair!. "\\"r are turning the world 1nln :;o1neth1ng like a JXlUl\ry f::irtn fl"lr human beings ·· Shotg un Blast Hurts Countia11 Dale "t\I. Swearinger of Santa Ana -.i.·a11 listed in fair condition today after he was hit in lhe chest by a shotgun blast early Sund ay morning attempting lo halt an armed robbery. Swearinger. 45, of 320 "'· 2nd St.. v,•as in the Blin king Owl Ba r. 213 N Hirch St, Siinla Ana . v•hen accord ing to the police acco unt another customer pulled a shotgun from beneath his coa t. The ban· dit demanded that the bartender empty his cash registe r. Pol ice said at that point, Swearlngtr rushed the robber and was hll in the chest and arm by a shotgun blast. The bandit then escaped from the bar ~·ith $350. 2 Die in County Traf fie Mishaps Two persons lost their lives In Orang!! County tr1ff ic over the holiday weekend. Gregory Mead, 34, or Ut Mlr1da. wa!I dead on arriva l at Beach Community Ho.!pitsl In Buena Park Sunday nl(ht after the small ca r he was dri\'lng crash- ed into a utility pole on Rosecran!I Avenue near Beach Boulevard 1n Fullerton. ~lark G. Sle.,.,·arl . 22. of Anaheim, \\':IS dead on arrival at Martin Luther Hos p11.al in An11heim Sa turday. Officers 1aid he wa!I killed when the motorcycle trailer he was towing was struck from behind after he pulled to the side ol the Riverside F'rttway, e.a!lt of Imperial Hll(h way to make an adiustmrnt. Driver or the other car was Mri . L1nd11. Jamerson, 22 . of Tustin. / s DAILY PJLOi' 3 Fun F ests Get Rough ViolenQe Curtails Many V.S. Music Gatherings By United Press loter11:1lloaal The prestigious Newport Jazz Festival 1nay never be again. At least this w11 s the consensus of restival producers and city officials today. Newport -like some olher fest ivals and concerts across lhe country -was closed t~·o days early Saturday. About 200 gate<rashers smashed t h r o u g n security fences and past guards trying ln get in free. Ringvelski. ··we brole them up into separate group.-s and ran them out of town." The village bas a normal popula· lion of 650. • At least 19 persons were arrested in !he nation's capilal Sunday wflen they wandered away from their scheduled •·smoke-in" and splashed in the reflecting pool racing the Lincoln Memorial Thty were charged with unauthorir.ed bathing. About 500 persons had gathered for a pro-mariju11na rally. ··We 're tired ot the govemment stopping marijuana from coming into the country when th ey let tons of heroin flow into the country every day,'' said onl! young man. e A midnight to 6 a.m. curfew re- mained in effect for Russells Point , Ohio follow ing a night of disturbances ln· volving about 300 youths at the Russells Point Amuse ment Park. Police uid there have betn disturbances for the past 10 or 11 years. but this year "was nothing like the p11st. All the kids v.·ere doing was aowing a few wild Oil.s, blowing ett steam." •Venice and Los Angele!! police joined ram and arrested "numerous" persona over tbe wttkend on charges ranging from felony <trug count.s to misdemeanors as a crowd of 10,000 celebl"1ted the Fourth of July weekend. • A two-<lay rock festivaJ ln Detroit was marred by blld trips and barbiturate overdoses. More than 200 persons were treated at the festival hospital. Producer George T. Wein said y&1Jth'.'i "freaked out" on drug.s •·ju.st took over en masse. Thty had no concern for the Jazz, no concern for the ftstival." be said. Around the country, bad trips, arrests, and cancellations curtailed ' the r festivals. Nun's 'Privilege' Denied e Chilly weather forced about 800 pe:rsons from the Snoqualmie National Forest in North Bend. Wash., where ~y had come for a legall y banned •·eutfllo Party" political convention. e The crowd at Farragut State Park. • East Haven. Conn., was quiet fol!O \l"· ing a night of disturbances that left lJ persons arrested, one car burned and the city l\'ilh an 11 p.m. to 5 a.ni. curfew. A ci ty spokesrnan blamed the disturbance on yo ung teenagers, ··mostly IJ and 14 year olds." •.Near Bad Axe, ~trch .. young pecple. looking fo r fun but finding nothing but !roub le. packed their sleeping bag5 and bed rolls a~d left after a night and day of trouble with police. "There were about l .000 gathered in the village and the y were fhro\11ing rock.<; and bo!tles at the police," said Deputy Sherifr Larry TRENlON, N.J. (APl -A state ap- pe als court ruled today that a Roman Catholic nun does not have the right to invoke "pr iests' privilege" and refuse to ;1nswer a grand jury's testimony about a mu rder. The Appellate Division of Superior Cnurl u!Ji1eld a lower rourt order direct.i ng Sister ~111rgaret Murtha, 32, of St. Boniface parish i11 Jersey Cily to tell a grand jury about a conversation she had last February with a 17-year-old boy who was questioned in the murder case. Sicjncy Goldmann, the presiding judge of the Appellate Di \'ision, rultd th11t the "priests' privilege·• to remain silent abou t information received in confession does not exttnd to nu ns such as Sister Margaret who are members of a leaching order. The judge also held that Sisler Margaret was not entitled lo remain silent on grounds of conscience. "This case calls for a balancing of in- tere'.'lts, that of the state in enforcing the 1>0wer of the grand jury to inquire into the commission of a crln1e and tbat of Sister Margaret who claims that she responds to a call of conscience," Goldmann said. ··111 Lhe particular circumstanct:s or this case the latter must £i Vt: v.•ay to the former." Idaho, was "peaceful" according to police. The Rev. Kirby Hensley of Mo- desto. and founder the Universal Life Church. sponsored the celebration of life ~·hich drew about 10,000. e And in San Francisco. after live years of rock concerts and three million fans. promoter Bill Graham padlocked F illmore West. the place where "the San Francisco sound" was born . The •·old joy" was gone, rock's new superstars have become "capitalists" demanding exorbitant fee15 , and "the community-mindedness of the rock com· munity doesn 't exist" anymore, Graham said. The ' Glendale Federal Savings ''Try, us·· account. _,.._.,.~~~ ....... ..._......, ...... ...,.,..,,..,';r!l'I G ratifying. These are trying times. High time you tried us. Comfortable from th e start. If you can't make it to one of our 27 neighborhood offices, just phone. We simply transfer your sovi ngs into a "Try Us" acco unt ... and you try us. On you r own terms. Try $10 o r $10,000. How much and haw long are up to you. 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SAN P'WIO· SANTA IADAlA SHERMAN OAQ • Sn.JDK) QTY• TOllAHCE• V?NTUlA • VlStA • WfSrWOCD VlUAGE • WU.\Hll! aMTtl --. ·---.. .__ ~-----.... • . .... --· --··-.. , ·------: __ J ·--~--i ••• ~ > ---...... -.... _ -. .,,,l'P-.--'. -. •... ......-.....·--.-· ··-· .. '>·--. .-•,.,.. ._. lit I .,...,.. -·-· . .., •• I , • ' ' ' ! t . . ~ • .. .. .. '• '· :: •• '· ,, '· •. ~ r. '" ~ ~ ' ~ • ,. • ,. .. ;. ~ ,. I It's Official Following certification of the 26th amendent giving 18-year-olds the right to vote by Robert Kunzig . chief of the General Services Administration (rightJ, President Nixon signed as a witness rnony at the White J-louse Monday. to the cere- India Nixon Advisor • Ill Kissinger Arrives Amid Anti-V.S. Dernonstrations ~ NE\Y DELHI !UPI) -President Nix· t~ on's top security advisor. Dr. Henry Kiss- ~ inger, arrived in India from Bangkok lo- ~ day amid elaborate security precautions I: and demonstrations against An1erican :-; military shipments lo Pakistan. •: Kissinger wets scheduled to remain :! here two days for talks with Prime ~ Minister Indira Gandhi and other Indian ' leaders, some of whom have made blunt ( statements about the government's President Yahya Kh an·s Army in East Pakistan·s civil war . Shor1Jy ;ifter Kissinger's arrival, Vice President :-;piro T. Agne w was schedulf'd to make a 90·minu!e refuelling slop at the \1·cst coast port city of Boni hay. where labor leaders also were planning an anti· American demonstration sparked by the military shipments. rlemonstration had predicted a larger !urnout. but a heavy rainshower dam· pcned the protest Kissi nger is on a round-the-world fact· fi nding tour for President Nixon that first took him to South Vietnam. He also will stop in West Pakistan to confer with government leaders and "in Paris to meet with Davis K. E. Bruce. chief American negotiator at the Vietnam peace talks. Hundreds of uniformed po 1 i c e I~ displeasure wjth the shipments. , On the entrance road to New Delhi 's Palam Airport, a group of about 50 chant· i:-ing supporters of the Con1mun1~t Party ~ carried signs reading. ..Kissinger of E Death .. and "Nixon Arming Yahya ·s i;: 1'.1ilitary Junia to Kill Bang\a Desh ,'' a ~ r eference to the campaign by Pakistan' prevented the demonstrators in New Delhi from entering !he airport. Sccuri1y personnel spirited Kissinger and U.S. Ambassador Kenneth B. Keating out another exit whlle Keating·s official limous1nc , with a cou ple of low·rankini;: aides inside, Joined the n1olorcade and drove. past the drmonstration. .o\gnew was on an unrelated tour that has taken him to South Korea and Singapore and will take him to other points in Africa and Eu rope. Both polic' and the orGanlzers of the Kissinger made no statement at the airport. There have been no official in· dications of the thrust that his lalk.5 with Indian leaders will take. ¢; • !· Informed diplomatic M1f1:eS have in· dicated, however, the seS&ions ere certain to be dominated by the .rirms issue a·nd the Indian government's critical attitude toward U.S. handling of it. ~-Agnew Leaves Singapore ! For Middle East Visits American Nun Gets High Post SINGAPORE (AP) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew left Singapore /or the Middle East toda y, seek..ing support from leaders in lwo of the less militant Arab Persian gulf kingdom o( Kuwai1, the highest ranking Anterlcan official ever to visit there. On Thursday he crosses the Arabian peninsula to Jidda. on the v.·e.st coast of Saudi Arabia. VATICAN CITY {UPI) -An American nun has been appointed to the second highest post ever held by a woman in the Vatican. officials announced Monday . The Vatican news bulletin said Sister Thaddeak Kelly, f>4, of San Francisco, has been named a department head in the Sacred Congregation for Re I i g i o u s Orders. the Vatican ''ministry'' dealing with nuns, friars and monks. Sister Kelly "''111 be in cha rge of an office dealing with the constitutions of women ·s religious in- stitutes. The vice presiden1 carried to1'fKuwait and Saudi Arabi?. a message !hat the U.S. government seeks a balance of power that will assure the security of all na· tions. Pig111 y llippopola111u s He told newsmen in Singapore ~londav that in the :0.1 tcklle East the Nixon ad· min1str<it1on has tried to counter the in· creased Soviet naval pr£'sence in the ~lerhlerranc::.:i 11nd ~·Iosco" 's aid to Egypt by keeping "lhe Israeli govern- 1ncnl supplied with suH1c1cn1 cl1s1nccnt1\'e to anYone to attack 1hcm" v.•hile at the samr tirne '"<1tt<'n1pl1ni.: 1n ni111nla1n a non-hostile posture to v.·ard Lhe Arab republics." Sister Kelly was the fi rst woman ever 10 become a department head in the Vatican . The only higher-ranking woman 1n the papal statr is ~11ss Rosemary r;oldie. an,.Australian lay.,..·om an who was appointed fou r yea rs ago as a vice secretary of the Council for the La ity. Fossil Di scove red PHlLAD!'.:LPl-llA IAPf -The foss1l1z- rd remains of a pigmy hippopotamus are among J.000 fossils presented to the Academy of Natural Sciences here hy two scientists jusl rrturnr.d frorn an ex· pedition to the Mediterranean island or Cyprus. The tiny hippo , now extinct, stood three feet tall. Dr. H. G. Richards and his assistant, Richard While , reported. The vice president will n1ecl l\uwail 's ruler. Amir Sabah As-Salem As-Sa bah. on Y.'ednesday. and th en l·r u1se on 1he Persian Gulf aboard the yacht of lhe forelgo minislcr. Sheik Sabah A~f.hmad · As-Sabah. Sisicr K'!ly has been a member of lhe ~1 ~t ers of the Presentation of Mary since 1937. She won a ma ster's degree al the Catholic University of America in Washington. O.C.. and served as a French language teacher before working her way up to Assistant General of her order. Arlene Moving Northward Heavy Thunderstorms Dot Nation's Midsection California 51111n~ •~!" w••• well flP••••nt~ lram ~ou•hern c 111tornl1'1 l>ft<"tl ·~ ""' IMH•l1 In .... 11t1rnoon IO<l•• •• lem"r1!ur1S lrll0.0 \n !tit N lmy 10• incl -~Y wlno1 1u1•t0 1cron '"' co11!1I rH lon. TM 11i.u11 cur!1!n OI nl1n1 incl mo•n· 1 .... lo. llrtld OVt r tho <N•l•I • ..., .... l•O'ld v1ri.v1: INYlnt 111nny •~I .. will! 11t M Jo rnod..-111 tYt lrrlt1!lon lrom ·-· l1lnw lllfl"'t'WI" w111n~r wl1n l!lvn1 1111' JO 001111......0 tl!rQOJll'loYI LO• ""· 11ln Incl wklnltY t rid tilt we1thvm1n ·~~ mor1 01 tr.e ..,...., WtO,..•· lllY, Tiit 1xH1:tt0 ov1,,.,11M 141., !Do tl!efll Wl l Ill. 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Slows Operations Typhoon Shuts Down Viet War SAIGON (UPI) -V1etnam·s first ma· jor typhoon of the year headed ashore near the Demilitarized Zone IDMZ) lt>- day, shu,lling down nearly all air and ground combat in the north_ Military weathermen said I.he unseasonal dren· ching might slow down ground combat operations, for several days. The area south of the DMZ, the rio- man's·land dividing North and South Vietnam, has been the scene of the heaviest fighting of the Indochina War in recent weeks, particularly Fire Base F'uller. Communists have been carrying out a number of rocket and mortar at· tacks on bases there. The U.S. air force grounded all cargo flights to the North and evacuated its big * {;:( * 2,200 More Gls Leave War Zone; 4 Units Packing SAIGON 1UPI) -Another 2.200 GJ's went home last week to cut the U.S. military force in Vielnam lo 239,500 men, the lowest since March 31 , 1966. the U.S. military command reported Monday. The command also announced another four Army unils with 305 troops got orders Monday to start packing up to leave the war zone. This will br ing to 6,400 the number of soldiers placed on stand down in the past live days as part of President Nixon's program of withdrawals. During the week ending July 1. Army strength fell from 192.600 to 191.000. 1'he number of Marines dropped by 400 men lo a total force of 500. Military sources said the leatherneck force was now probably lhc lowest it would go for some time . Those remaining are atlached to command headquarters or in adviser jobs with the Vietnamese Marine Corps and Naval Gunnery Teams. Strength of each service as of last Tuesday, was gi ve n as: Army 191.000 (down 1.600 from the previous week :. Na vy 10.900 (unchanged ), Marines 500 (down 400 ). Air force 36.000 (down 300). Coast Guard 100 !unchanged ). About 18.200 Navy and Coast Guard perso nnel ()n ships off the Vietnam coast are not included in the Vietnam f or c e figures. CIJO transparu from the path of Typhoon Harriet, u It swept in across th • South China Sea and the Gulf of Tonkin . U.S. Army avialors lashed their smaller planes and helicopters to the ground to prevent damage from winds estimated at up to 138 miles an hour that blasted across Ute coaslal lowlands, all • the way from Da Nang to the DMZ, 100 miles lo the ne>rthwesl. The typhoon brought with it si1 to nine inches of rain . A U.S. spokesman said one American helicopter, an OH~. was shot down Mon· <lay in the vicinity of the Ho Bo Woods, a longtime C:Ommunisl stronghold U.S. engineer units are blowing up. The area is about 25 miles northwest of Saigon . South Vietnamese troo~ said they kill· ed 45 guerrill as in actiona scattered from the area south of Da Nang to the Saigon vicinity. The government troops reported 11 wounded. U.S. helicopter gun ships reported they killed five Communists in a brief fight west of Quang Ngai cily in the North. The severe weather conditions in the north grounded even the high-flying U.S. B52 strat~,gic bombers, which are sup- posed to be able to operate regardless of the weather. After several consecutive <lays of as many as seven missions a day, l;he 852 made only one sortie on Monday. Spokesmen reported no ground contacts in northernmost Quang Tri Monday and said they expected none loday. The Com· munists had opened their "summer of· tensive" in the province In June, after the area dried out from the anhual six· month-long monsoon rains, making roads passable again for infiltration of men, munitions and supplies. In neighboring Cambodia. a weekend lull in the fighting ended Monday night when Communist forces fired a mortar barrage into a Cambodian army post in the marshlands near the capital of Phnon1 Penh, The fight for the marsh· lands has bee n going on for wee ks. Cambodian high command spokesman Lt. Col. Am Rong said the North Viet· namese attack at Prey Bang, 15 miles from Phnom Penh. caused no damage or casualties. It was the first attack in the area for three days. Am Rong noted lhal heavy monsoon rains had started and that th e marshlands were quickly becoming a huge lake. He said the Commun1sl.~ pro- bably curtailed the fighting to move sup- plies to higher ground. ..',<t; .. 'Ii'• the manager. Our three year lease i• up!' ., Braniff Hijack Couple Facing Argentine Trial BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Bearded American Robert Lee Jackson and his Guatemalan girlfriend were turned over to a panel of five federal judges Mondat for trial on air piracy charges in con· neclion with the 7 ,500-mile weekend hi· jacking of a Braniff airliner from Texas to Argentina. The maximum penalty under Argentine law is 15 years fo r the crime. Judge Dr. Luis Gucrrello said if convicted, the pair would have no recourse or appeal from the decision . It was the longest skyjacking in point ()f distance in the short history of sucn aerial hijackings. In a Monday court appearance In nearby La Plata, Guerrello ruled the pair should b~ tried under Argentine Feder.al Law. He added the law prohibi ted him from trying Jackson. 36, and Ligia Lucreela Sanchez Arcilla, 23, by himself. The judge did not sa.y when the public trial would be held. Meanwhile , Jackson and the girl were held incommunicado at the Buenos Aires Province Security Prison in La Playa. A foreign ministry spokesman said the Argentine government had received no requests from the United States ()r Mei· ico for extradition. But authorities in Argentine continued to study the 19th century extradition treaty with the United Slates to deeide if it could sur· render the U.S. Navy veteran. Jackson and his girlfriend hijacked a Braniff Boeing 7117 Friday over San Antonio, Tex., and gave themselves up early Sunday morning after a :ro-hour test of wills with Argentine ()fficials as the plane sat on the runway at Ezell.I lnterhational Airport. I Your chance t o win an i nter est-free loan in United California Bank's Interest-Free Personal Loan Sweepstakes ends July 31st. So i f you've been thinking about applying for a loan fo r a car, boat, pool, yo u name it, don't wait a ny longer. If you're a Califo rnia resident, 21 or over, come into any one of our 238 offi ces and fill out an entey blank tod ay. (It's that si mple -no purchase required.) - I f you apply fo r a personal loan for any api~unt •up to $10 ,00 0 and it's a pproved, you may win it interest-free. If you don't apply for a loan, you~ still win: eit her a cash prize equivalent to the in- te rest on a n average UCB Personal Loan with a two-year maturity or, on approval, an interest- free loan. m There'll be a sweepstakes winner for every 50 loans approved. One of them might be yo u. Co me into United [9 California Bank. Right away . UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK ~ Our Interest-Free Personal Loan Sweepstakes ends July 31. • ....... , . .., . u.> .. --.. 1 1~----·-r , .. o·•'~ ..... ._~-­...... wr ~ d r y n· ;. ' e r. ir m nt h In ir al m • ic " .. he no I• in , . • n p " -;-. ·- Red Peace Offer Nixon May Lose House Viet Support WASHIJ\'GTON (UPI) President Nixon risks lo.sing his most !!llalv.·art supporter of Vietnam policy -the House of Representatives -if he turns down the latest Communist ~ace offer, an informal survey ol well-p laced Congressmen showed today. Op~ilion to the war has grown so widespread in the Hou.se that ~1 apparent ma- jority now favors a complete and quick end to U.S. military involvement in Vietnam if ac- cepting the Viet Cong proposal will bring home all American prisoners of war. Last Thursday Viet Cong delegates to the Paris Peace talks offered to r e I ea s e American prisoners of wa r if the United States withdrc.»ws all its forces from Vietnam by the end of the year. Nixon Adminislration of- ricials have responded cautiously to the offer, saying it will have to be studied ca refull y. Interviews wilh a number of key lawmakers or both parties revealed that the House would be ready to join the Senate in voling for administration-op.. posed pullout I e g is lat ion into and out of. Plenty of parking. And the crowds haven'! found it yet. Your travel agent knows the way. should lt be determined that Nixon rejected lhe. o f f e r because he felt lhe Saigon government would not have a "reasonable" ch an c e to survive against the Com- munisl.5. The president repeatedly has defined the recovery or American PO\Vs as one of two condi!ions for a wit lldraweJ of U.S. n1il\tary forces. The other is what he calls S o u t h V1elnam ·s capability to defend itself. Several congressmen said Nixon would be ha rd-pressed to find a majority of House members willing to stick it cut in Vietnam if it became cer· lain the prisaner issue could be setUed by accepting the Communist requirement of a fixed withdrawal date. Rep. John A11dcrson, (R· Ill .. ) the influential ch?jrman cf the House GOP conference, is cne who emphatically re- jects the idea of staying in Vietnam simply to support the Saigon regime. "1 thin k the Vietnamization program has succeeded and our con1bal rol e has ended,'' Anderson says. Anderson has been a steady -if sometimes reluctant - backer of administration Indochina. policy. To date, the administration has not lost in the House on an issue of support for the: war. The margin of v ictory , hov.·ever, has been narrov.·ing. On Dec. 2, 1969, the House adop ted 333 to 55 a bipartisa n resolution g e n e r :!II J l y in· terpreted as an endorsement of Uie Nixon policy in Viel· nam . 39 Marines To Remain In Hospital PARRIS ISLAND, S. C . (UPI ) -Officials at this fo.1arine Lraining center said to- day 39 recruits hospitalized last week following too much exercise will probably remain in the hoopital for another week. Capt. M. R. Arnold, Public Affairs Officer, said all the men are listed in good con· dition but will remain in the hospital for observation. The men are suffering from a kidney ill ness which was ap· parenUy caused by heavy ex· erclse, much of wh ich con· sisted or pushups. An investigation is under way In an attempt to deter· mine how much exercise the men. Marines for less than a v.·eek, were given. Three drill instructors have bttn "reassigned " pending com- pletion o! the Investigation . Arnold has previously said that the transfer of the three instructors should not be con- ~idered as a discipli nary ac- tion. United States National Bank pays you a whopping big • on Savings Accounts At United States National Bank, we will pay you a solid, wonderful 4¥.io/o. Earn from the day of your first deposit. Computed dally. Compounded quar- te rly. No minimum deposit. Withdraw anytime."Each account Is insured to $20,000. Switch over to United States National Bank today! Want 5123 or more? We'll pay it. SY, o/o and 5:Y4'Yo. Deposit your money for one year and we'll pay you a guaranteed SY2%. A two year's deposit will pay you a guaranteed 5'!11 % • Start with $500. Add $100 whenever you want. Costa Mesa Office 1145 Newport Blvd. SoutM CCM1st Pl•i• 3333 Bristol Stl'fft -I ,.Jl;tt:"" -·-· _., v.----_.,,. . • a Jll" -------~ . --. -.. ,,..., .. ,. .. ·.-...-·----.............. --·--· _ .. ,,,_ T111M3.&y, J11lr t., 1971 DAIL V' Plll>J .§ Reduced J uries? J ustice Burger Cites Court Study WASHINGTON (UPI ) Chief Justice \\'arrtn E. Burget indicated M o n d a y nlBht that he believes use or juries of less than 12 persons may become more widespread in federal trials, and may be broadened to criminal as well as civil cases. in federal courts yet. although ll!J' many as 15 federal districts had adopted a six-member jury for civil cases. But he said experiences of state courts in use of smaller- than-12 juries In criminal cases were being carefully studied by the bar and that "the lawyers may conclude that It works just as well." have juries of six in criminal as v.·ell as civil cases "without doing injury to the law or to justice," the Supreme. Court Chief added : Burger, in an unusu al broad- cast interview taped at the Supreme Court, said, however, that "so far as l know, there is no consideration being given to reducing the criminal jury" In response to a questlon whether it might be possible to "We spend $It mtlUon a year in the federal system alone !or juries, and if we co uld cul it dawn to half, we could. of course, save a lot of money. No ooe really knows- until Lhe experience has bttn studied. 1 am inclined to think that may develop. • IS WORT • c EC IN • • NO MINIMUM bAlANCE REOUiREd Ve1, thars riglitl Free cl'lecklng -no minimum balance required. Anything that's free la wonh checking, and now 18 the right time to check.Into Anaheim Savings MW free services. We've Joined with a major national bank offering you complete Savings and loan plus banking services. Only at Anaheim Savings can you deposit $1000 and earn the highest Interest In the nation on Insured savings and receive the benefits of •• , Free cheeking, Pre- ferred Customer rates on auto and boat Joans, and Preferred Customer rates on personal lolllna. Leam about these at our Huntington Beach office. fREESAfE dE posiT boXES Free wllh eccount balance of $1,000 or more. Your personal safe deposit box at our Huntington Beacn office or anywhere Ni the wor1d you desire. (Slze: Up to 3~• x s• x 24'"'). AJI YoU need to do ls adv1se us ot' your preferred tocaUon and we wW take care of the details. 6% Two to l!wo year lorm certlflcale accounts with $5,000 minimum balance. 50 YEARS OF SECURITY Accounts era Insured to $20,000 and protected by Anaheim savings' 100% nicord of selely. ANAHEIM SAVINGS A ND LOAN ASSOCIAT ION MAIN OFFK:E: 187 w. uncoln Alllll. Anaheim, c.tHomf• 1'112-1"32 41 t Main sttett Hunllrigtoft Bed, Cdtomi• UHSt1 - • --.-....--...... ---~ -·- "' -. . , , I 8 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Clari£ ication Needed Last week brought two hi~toric opposites in the long struggle of a free people to protect their right to know their government's business through a free and uncensored press. First c:.11me th e Supre1ne Court decision upholding the First Amendment right of the New York 'ri1nes and \Vashington Post to publish the Pentagon st udy as his- tory, not as a threat to national security. Then came a ne\v challenge to First An1endment protection of the people's right lo kno\'I through a free press and free speech. 'fhis took the form of a vole by the House Commerce Committee to recommend a con· ten1pt of Congress citation against the Columbia Broad· casting System a'ld !-Tank Stanton. its president, for re- fusing to supply subpoenaed material involvi ng the TV documentary, ··The Selling of the Pentagon." 'r he demand for edited-out film is the equivalent of trying to force a newspaper reporter to produce the notes he took but didn't use in a story. It is a bold effo1-t to establish "governmental review" of news handling - son1ething common under communis1n but not in free America . lf the full House of Representatives accepts the rec- ommendation of its com merce committee, the contempt citation \vould go to the Department of Justice for prosecution. Such a test n1lght be just as \vcl l. First Amendment protection of press freedom, written long before there \vas electronic journa!is1n, has been foggy where govern· ment control of th e air\vaves is concerned. Television ne,vscasting and commentary have be· come a potent force in both stimulation and formulation oC thought on public a/fain. Clarification of TV's status under the First Amendment is urgently needed. Perhaps the CBS case will reach the Supreme Court and rernove existing doubb about the limits or broa d· casting freedom. Bicycle Tl1ef ts Growing Bicycle theft as a profitable crime at fir st so unds a bit silly, but Orange Coast lawmen view it as a serious and growing problem. Statistics back up lhal worry. Once it was part-lime duty for one investigator. Now the loss rate ha! climbed to thousands oC dollars an- nuaJly and almost a full day's work for one detective in most coastal police departments. \Vhy is there such a drastic increase? Some bikes cost $350, yet they are tough to trace and recover, But they are easy to steal and sell, often on a I arge-scale basis. Penalties risked, if caught, are generally lower. . J~oving bicycle rustlers are known to make fora ys in tean1s to other towns by truck sometimes, with whole- sale thefts at random. Some even steal bikes to order. A survey of area police agencjes last week showed th.e thef t rate is mushrooming now that summe r is here, \v1th more bikes in use and often parked in public. Sensible precautions by bike owners can defin itely help curb the criminals. . Stri~t s~curity ~ourld home, using two safety Jock devices 1n bike-parking away from home and licensing through local police departments are all esse ntial. TWllAl•IO>•-tll\ ,.,...._. ..... _ President l s Dear Brown Act Forces Public's Business to Be Condueted in P11blic Torn Between Two Views I, ' -.·-'lj'"f" '''""'"-' t.· 1 .i '-t~""' . t · If ·._. ~,' f 'r~,'~ ' · .. ·<;<, ,: '··l(:J !, , )a~APcl,~rsoni'" · . + ,, ~~J'"f ... , l.; --k16,~ ........... WASHINGTON -President Nixon is preparing .some New Year·s resolutions. ~ffecting the pocketbook of every American, for the new fiscal year that began"July L He is tom between bis political ad· visers v.·ho want to gel lhe economy booming again before the 1972 election, and his economic advisers who wam that loo much government s!imulus C<lUld rause skyrocketing inflation. Nixon vigorously denounced inflation 1nd a ltacked deficit 1pending during the 1 9 6 8 presidential campaign. Yet he \\•ound up the 1971 riscal year .June 30 \\ith a S21} billion deficit. ll 1 s own economists expect the dC!ric1t to re:ich another $20 billion in the 1972 fiscal year. 'fh1s will make a whopping t11.·o-year total of $40 billion, highest in peacetime history. NIXON ALSO drclared at his rirst presidential press conrer~nce that he 11.·ouldn"I srt g111dr.!if)CS for labor and management. r-.:ow the nation races a tiot summer or labor-man;1gement strife, Critical slr)kes arr expeelt'<I b\• !hr dock, caipper. telephone and steel union~ Tlv.!se could be fol\o\\ed hy a ti•fll ~t rike in Septl'mix'r. In dt'sprrn!lon thr Prf"Stdent has tried to set gu1dcl1nes. 11 hlch the unions arP ignoring Nixon told bu~1ness lraderi; 111 1969 thal ''tho~t> v•hu bet nn 1nf1:iOon \.\'ill lose ttie1r het.s ," called for 0 balanced budget in l11s Gloorny Gus In ans111er to G. A. C. (Gus, June 30), maybe if 1hc clly councils v.·ould budgcl enough money so the police could be properly staffed, there would be less problem with "this v.·ave of robberies and other crimes." -J. S. ft. Tn11 te•I"" <llllU• ••• ~ ... • Vll WI, ,.., n-.: ...... 1, li'>O•• ot lh• MWIPIPt~. 't!!d Your P91 P•IVI lD Glaomv Gu1, 0 1,i, ,llol, 1970 Stale of the t:nion address and repeatedly promised "full employment·• Yet he has failed to halt innation: he is pJunEiing the government deeper in debt; and unemployment is high. l\1ANY FACTORIES, meanwhile, are operating at only 75 percent of their capacity. and the dl'elinc in pro!its has reduced the govcrnmcnrs t:ix trike. The situation is so serious. in the opi- nion of his political advisers, lh11\ thry are urging draslic remedies. They arr. ·willing to risk more inflation if this is \Vh al it hikes to stimulate the econnmy. But White House economists. while ad· milting that the economy has been 1norr. sluggish lhan they had anticipated, ~cc hopeful signs T}IE GROSS NATIO NAL produc!, the sum total of the nation's economic ac- li\"i\y. Jumped $31 billion in the r1rst quartr.r and is expected to rise another $20 hi\lion in the second quarter. Conslruc11on is booming: retail sales are 11p, ('nnsumcr :;:r.ntimcnt ~un•eys are hOfr.'fUI And 1f unc1nplo~mcnt 1s hnld1ng ,it 6 perc~nt, Oil least employn1en1 ·~ up bl'.'r:iuse <11 an 1ncrP!lS(' 111 !.hr work fr1rc 4'. C11nclus1nn· 1ns1dt>rs s;tv the J'rcs1(lc11l i"-llst.ening more tlosely 1o h 1 s rronorn1sts and, thcrr.Jort'. h1~ Nrw "\'e;1r':; rcsolu11ons will be 1nodt'ra1r. Secret Meetings Don't Build Trust Too often people elected to public office adopl the imperious attitude that they have been elevated to their lofty position and anointed by 5ome mysterious pov.·er lo make decisions which are to be handed dov.·n on tablets of stone to the multitude belnw. 1'hey forget they are representatives of the people and instead assume the posture ol oliga rchs. The manifestations of this strange transformation include a penchant lo steal a11.'ay to smoke-filled rooms and make deals with special in-- lcresls and to keep the doors closed while di scussing proposed legislalion 10 their constituents won •t know what they said. AT THE LOCAL government level. California has gone a long way toward forcing the public's business lo be con- ducted in public. The Ralph M. Brown Act limits the subjects v.·hich can be discussed in private by public trustees to personnel items concerning the ap- pointment, en1p!oymcnt or clismissal or :in ()fficer or employe, or to hear com- plaints brought against any or these, and niatlers affecting the national securily. The list of exceptions has been enlarg- ed in recent years by permitting ~overn· ing bodies to rol'i't Jn private to deliberate on the wage and salary pro- posals of employes during contract negotiations. Further. the law prevents secret meetings out or the eye or the public by requiring that the press be notified in the event special ses3ions are scheduled. UNFORTUNATELY, the open meeting law does not apply to the Leg!Jlaturt. Ap. parently tbe lawmakers fn Sacramento were quite willing lo put officials in local government in the public spotlight but were reluctant to subject themselves to the same inspection. \Vhcn former Gov. Earl Warren signed the Brov.•n Act. he made this observation : .. There isn't any reason at all why we should have a law for local government and then refuse to have the same thing for slate government. t personally believe it would be a good thing to have a law for au branches of government, in· eluding the Lcgialature. Some of the worst things that have happened in government have :.teromcd from secrecy. Jt should be avoided." That statement \Vas \Vritten in 19~3 - 18 years ago! But. all attempts lo brinJ: the Legislature into compliance 11·ith the anti-secrecy law have failed. ANOTlll::R EF'FOllT \'las derailed this \\·eek \\'hen a state senate committee kill· ed a bill making the same rules that govern ('ity 11nd county gnvernmf'ntal bodies applicable to most meetings of the Legislature. 'one of the vandals al the switch was stale Sen. Jack Schrade, R-San Deigo, who tried to shift lhe blame for lost public confidence in legislators from their own follies lo the viciousness of the press. Said he: "I think thal the newspapers have destroyed the confidence of many legislators with their cons Ii tu en Is ~t~~~~=n~:· 1 ~~~;"ha~~= t~:~n~~~J;~;cur ate THIS IS THE OLD Irick Or finding a scapegoat. ~1r. Schr~de. of COW'se, has a peeve against the press. ll was only through the diligent v.•ork or a newspaper reporter -Robert Fairbanks of the Los Angeles Times -that a deal was ex· posed which Schrade would have pref- frrred to re1nain forever hidden from the public. 'fhal 111as his accrplance of a SS,000 campaign contribution from a loan company in 0dvance of a crucial vote on a bill that 1neant millions of dollars to the insurance business . So Mr. Schrt1dc now blames the press for reporting on his cthict1Hy questionable method of raising carnpaign mone~·· But is his image problem the fault or the press~ L1strn to \vhat some of Mr. Srhrade"s ft epubltc:in colleagues said about his $5.000 ''gift .. : SEN. GEORGE OEUK~1EIJIAN: ''I( Senator Schrade does not provide further explanations. or if his cxplanaliOfl re-- mains incomplete and unsatisfactory, then I feel he should resign as president pro tern." Sen. Clark Bradley: "It brsmirches the Senate and the Repub\ic11n party.'' Sen. J ohn f!arn1cr: Schradc showed "consummate poor judgmenr· in ac- cepting the $5,000 from a lobbyist. If the Schrade episode shO\Oo'S anything, it demonstrates beyond a doubt that there should be more press coverage of legislative activities. no! lc~s. The Daily Californian El CaJo• GOP Declares War on McCloskey \\'ASl~INGTON -Rep. ''Pe I e'' f\.1cCloskey. militant C a 11 r c r n i a Hepubhcan dove spearheading lhe "dump N1xo11" commotion. ii; getting a stinging do~e or his own medicine -right in his 011n bailiwick. A California Republican collca~<'. in rffccl is raisins a "dump f\.1cCloskey'' bnnncr. ' '• " ~ ' ~ Allen-Gola8mith ' , r ,, ; • party's call to battle against McCloskey·s hit-and-run in~11rgency, Laos. At this t.i.i11lrrence he made a number of charges v. htch he claimed sup- ported his suspicion that this country deliberately followed the practice of destroying villages. funds and in the inovt (n kill the entire budget by sending il h;ick io co1nm\Uec. Then he turned comp!rtel;-.o around. \\'hen those moves \\'Cre rcsound111gly defeated, and voled for the 111crcnsed &\> propriation. THUS. \\'ITll l:"' l1tllr n1nr» lh<ln one hour and \I i!hout ~:1\ i11g 11 \\'nrd, he n1·htrvrd thr ur11qut· lc;1I uf !icing on all .siclf'.~ of this pohlic:;.lo~dcd controversy Consequences of No Will Hep. Charles Gubser. 1~·hol'r district hnn1ediately adjoins t.1cCloskey's did 1hat in a blistering speech at a 1nr~ling of 1he directors of 1he inl\ucn11<1l Cal1rornia Republican Assembly in Burl· ingame, a GOP stronghold in r,.1cCloskey's district. SLICK OPERATOR -This is further strikingly demonstrated by Gubser':s harsh indictment of McCloskey. He de· nounces hin1 on a number or counts, foren10.st among U1em : The accuracy and re!iab11ily of McCloskey's widely publicized charges and claims regarding the l.ao.s offensive ; hl3 political motives and activist ties In pushing the "dump Nil:on" agitation: and his remarkable: voting record -notable for Lhe frequency with which he: sides with the Democrats and his dexterlly in recording himself on both sides of hot i:'\SUCS, "THESE AND ()TlltR allegations are: simply not !rue, and anyone 1\"ho makes thrn1 is ~rr111nR th r purposr of the radu.::i l New Left. \\'e kn<iw the New Left pro~­ rers when ii rlcslroys tl1e faith nf Americans in their leaders. ''Immunity fron1 cn1lcis1n i.~ 1101 UH~ right flf any publ1e uffu:.ial. but It 1s 1he nhligatron ur those who cnl1cize to be fair. factual and truthful. McCarthyism has now become r.1cCloskcyism. Neo- McCarthyism. now McCloskeyism, only serves the New Left.'' llis \'n!1nl!. record 1s reple1c wilh similar ,1·ilv 111~1:inct·s . Another ftl'publltan col\e)!Ul' 11ho v.·i\1 publicly tangle \\'tlh l\1cCloskcy 1s ll.ep. ,Jack Ken1p. Hamburg. N Y . selected by the administration espec10lly lflr this job. Ir a person chcs \1·11houl a \\"ill. his estate will be t11stnb11ted lo (.:Crlain relatives according to fixed rules. The husband or wife . chi ldren. parents, brothers an<l sisters are ~iven priority. If there are no close rc!ati\'e!'. any "'1eir" related by blood to the decedent is rn- titled to inherit. But a person by l11s v.·ill can make gills to any relali\•e, friend or charity he wishes. The amount of each gift can also vary unlike the dislributions made v.•he n • a person dies without a will. All relatives or lhe same class, such as children, or nephews a Dd nieces, share alike when there is no will. IF THERE ARE no heirs al all, the property goes to the slate. \Vith1n fi\"e yearti after death any tieir.s may come forward and claim the estate before the slate takes it pennancnUy. Court notices must be given to known potential heirs. ('.mera11y, ei:cept ror a husband or wife, only blood relatives have rights of tnberltance. Recently the stale legislalurc changed Quotes M. T. Owem. Jr., 1.1l Lt us~,c. 21 Paint• -"CeMonhtp Is lht arbitrary appUcation of force in violation of In· dlvidual rlghta and Is jusliried only in rnallcrs of national aecurity." Jchiro Hayakawa, \ll1ltJnJ1: fa lhtr of Or. S. I. Hayakawa, pre•. of S.f. Stale- "J'm r<!Ured, doing nothing (and) It takes R lat Of effort and lime dOUll: nothing.·· -... Law in Action the law to give relatives by niarriage ~reater ri~hts to inhcri! The la1v tnade effective in November 1969 has now been ruled lo have a retroactive effl'Ct. ac- corrling to a recent case of the Supren1e Court. IN THIS CASE, ~l rs. Brown. a \llidO\Y died in 1968 leaving no children. She and Mr .. Brown hact been married many years. Her estate was l:irgely cotnmunity property that she and her late husband had acquired. Mr. Brown had a large number or relatives, f\.1rs. Brown had none. She died without a will. Under the old law one-half her estate whlch had been community property would 10 lo f\lr . Bro"'n's heirs. Since f\.lrs. Brown bad no heirs. the other "·ould ''c:teheat," go lo the state. Rut the later 1969 law limited the right of the stale 10 take properly In this way. Now Mr. Brown's heirs gel all of the communJly property. If Mrs. Bro\Oo·n·s estate had consisted of "separate property," and not community property. Mr. Brown's heirs would not in- heril. They can share in such an estate only if she wrote a will naming them as ~ndlciaries. If there are Pio blood relatives to tak<' separate property, lhC' estate will go the stett. Nof,.: California lru1·11r l".~ o/jrr I/ii~ rn/111nll so JIO" tnnv k1101Li nbo11r n11r /ans. Gubser's unusual blast amounL'\ to a ll.epublican declaration of v.'ar against fl.l cC\oskey. That's the real significance of this ex· ccplional t'vent. \\'llAT IT MEANS IS that the GOP has decided to face up squarely to f\-1cCloskey·s challenge and tackle him head-0n. Gubser. a ~year congressio n a l vetrran and a ranking me..mber of the po"·erful Armed Services Committer. doesn't speak lightly or idly -especially \\"hen it comes to castigating a Republican collcgague. before im\"lOrtant party leaders. In taking_ thi!t ex· traor<linary step al a gathering of GOP leaders in a party bastion in McCloskey's own di strict. ii is clea rly evident Gubser is speaking for a lot more than himself. What he is doing is trumpeting the ,---B11 George Dear George: Since quitting smoking I have found I ;im nervous, and my wife keeps nagging me for little twitches I've picked up. Is she jusliflt'd in this? Shouldn't she be more sym- pathetic? NERVOUS De:ar Nervous: No v.·onder she's furious. And you !lhouldn'l refer lo them 1:111 twitches. either. or women's Jib "'ill get you. -l ll •OIL--- Says Gubser: Congressman McCloskey held a ne.,.,·s conference after a trip to A graphic in~lance of ~lcCloske~··s votin~ both "'ays was on the ap- propriation fur the Hou~ lnlernal Security Commitlee -long the target of leftists. ultra-liberals and other militants. ~lcCloskey sided \Vllh the latter in op- posing an increase ln the commillee·s 'W ell-roztnded' Per son Thooghl1 at Large: The "well·roWlded" penon can be useleS3 unless he also has a cutting edge. • • • When we calmly say, "Let the law take Its course," it Is alwayii: "'hen we feel assured that the law will decide in our fa vor. • • • As long as mosl patient,, ·will lt:a\'e a doctor \\'ho v.·on't give them antibiol· ics v.·hen they don't need them. to one who will. there Is little incentive ror the medical profes- 3ion to be candid or fo.-the phannaceut· ical compAnie:s to reduce their prlcet. • • • T~hnology hl'sn't done a lot for gardt>ning in the century 11ince Charle!'.: Dudley Warner ob.served thal "\Vhat a ---. ' rw. -- man n~eds In gardening is a ca.st-iron back, with a hinge in it." ., !laH the people suHer from nQt know· ing how to apply general principles lo special cases. and !he other half from not know ing 11.•hen lo exempt special cases from general princi ples. • • Every man, In the end, bit.es the hand that feeds him ; for every man secretly yearns lo be lhe feed er ralher thnn the red. • Pretend othr~"ise thoul:(h 1t may, the ml1i1ary Is always ~ ~C'p11rate n&tJon "'llhin thr nation, nnd its ulltma\c loy:ilty \!'; to itself. • ''• -. ....... ' )' ..... An Army veler<in <ind noled football star. Kc.mp is serving his first term in the House b11t already has establishC!d himself as a highly ellccti\·e campaigner. In political circlts. he is rated as a lop TV performer. both in appearance and agiltty in de.bait. Kemp, 36, playrd proress1onal football 13 years:. In 1965 he v.•as proclaimed the Player of U1e Year. t1nd tv.•1ce was named All·AfL quarterback. Ile is co-founder and president of 1he Ameririln Football League Pl:iyers Association.._ member of the NFL Players Associ:ition executive rommitlcc and Players Pension Fund. • By Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldsmith Tuesday, .July 6. 1971 Tl1e editorial pane o/ Ilic Dal/11 Pilot seeks to iu/orm and stim- ulate readers by prtse11fin" this newspaper's opinions anrl com- mentary 11n top1t:! of i11tertst and s1gn1/icanct, by providin" a forum /or the erpressio1i of our readers' opinions. and bt1 presenting the diuerst: view- points of informtcf observers a11ri spokesnirn an topic! of th• da11. Robert N. \Vecd. PubH~her CHECKING· •UP• Tufid1,, .My ft, 1'71 OAJLY PILOT 7 ~ Advertise111en t Bun • ID Jest~ Ba~kfires BALTIMORE, Md. (AP) -to lhe city," said Oietyl, U, tbeJr anonymity by decllnln& liat<d. The telephone at a rowbouH "they take all ldnclJ of precau-uae of their aurname1. "We &ol Iota of obscene ln Balllmote'1 lnnt.r city bu don.like havin& unliated Barbara, 1 22-year-old from calll."l&id.Pam,atz.yur-old been rlllC1nl 10 omch lately, pboota and not puttlng IWDN Rhode haoci who t1 also with acbool teacher from Rhode the all: unmarried y o u a a: on mall boxet. We ad· VISTA, placed the ad ln The Island. .. But we alto had ROme women who Uve Uleni could vertised." Paptt, 1 b!moothJy wbicb bad tunny ·ooea." Some callera were indignant when told lhe job had been filled oc that It was a Joke:. Others 21aked to be put on a walling Hat, or to act aa vaca- tion relief. One said be owned a large manufacturing con- cern and was a butSer u i1 bobby, Bob Korn , fe.a luni edltcr of I.be paper. aakl the Id. an twice., would be ~ by one sayl.llg : "Do not call thi! number any tnOl"e." use a butler. Cheryl. a naUve af Vermont just started a clusified aec--One appllcant wanted to About 500 of the ca11s during who came to Ball!fnore bi tioa and offered free space. It audition In a tuado, 1everal ,.-;;;;;;;;;;;,o.;";;\i"'oU.;;\iiCo~~Mmii°._;;;;;;;; Ille past month ha" b.,n February. Is one of three r,.d, ll!ed French <r Encllah ac-BECOME MORE EFFECTIVE from men applying for a jo b VISTA workers living wilh 11 "Wanted. Live-in butler for cents. and one call came long as their hve-in manservant. school teacher, a secretary _.ix girls. No pay, lots of fringe _d_;,_ta_n_c_•_•_t _<_•_.m_. ____ 11 INCREASE YOUR INCOME I A classified advertisement, and an unemployed soc ial benefit!. Only has lo answer Kids Like DALE CARNEGIE<ll COURSE placPd by one of lhe six room-worker. door three times a month, 111 .,,_,1.,. _,,_1c111e .... ••1t-cot10111..,. ... 111 ~11 .... R "1111-.. ... Mru1 at Age 100 Eate11 346 Hogs mates as a practical joke, led Despite their recent ex-Room and hoard. Call for ap-Ptton• Today -(714) 6ll-t191 ~w~th~e~de~J~"g~e~o~l~a~p~p~lic~ao~~~·~_Jpo~s~wc~•~w~th~e~m~as~ses~,~thE•~Y~•~ll'.._~po=m!tm~e~nt~be~t~w~ee~n~4-8~~p~.m~.~"~')'~:!!-~~~k~~.t\.~~ll~d~~~~~~~~~...,=~~~,,.~~='~~~~~~·=~~·~·-==~~~~~~ lS the fellow who ever saw an 1 _ "When mos t females come prefer lo retain what's left of A phone number also was 0 8 Y alligator's tongut. As sonn as By l . A-1. BOYD O,'J£ C 0 U R AGE 0 US RESEARCHER contends lhat man best able to hold his 11- quor at a cocktail parly 1s the cigar smoker, almost '¥1.'llhout exN!plion . , . • · NO R SHOULD YOU call vourself a Seasoaed CiliZt'n." · wntes a Mootana man, '"Jf you can't remember when the air was clean and sex was dirt~·.".,. DO YOU GET an allowance, young lady'.' Ho,,-.• much is it:' Princess Anne of England gets an allowance nf ab out $277 a week. JUST ABOUT 90 percent of the divorces are brought about by the disconsolate wives. So claims a literary girt who ,,..'Tites on matrimonial affairs for magazines. Women are always loo ha rsh wilh nne .another, aren't they'.' Probably no more than 85 perctnt of the divorces are engineered by the wives. says our Love and \Var man . BERES to Anna Taylor - clink~ -a m id d I e . a g e d schoolteacher of yesteryea r. She was the first. person to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel. Without injury, ton. They rlon't make middleaged school- teachers like that. anymore, or hardl y any ... THIS VEGETARIAN says his studies ind icate the average man wbo lives to be 100 y2ars old has eaten 346 hogs in his lifetime. \Vhat's noteworth y here , I think. is lhat a vegetarian wi ll admit a man who eats 346 hogs can live a. century. CUST0~1ER SERVICE: Q. "Does an alligator have a tongue'.'" A. ll does. But rare lhe alligator opens its n1outh . the tongue zips back out of sight to make a throat valve lhat closes off the waler, NEVER ~tA Y?NNAISED a horse personally, but at hand is a note from a gentleman resident of Corcoran, Calif .. v.·ho makes a practice of ii "Afler smearing mayonnaise all over the horse," wr ites th L"i wrangler. "I let hJn1 stand 1n the sun until he's an oily mess. Then I shampoo. Thoroughly. M 211 , withoul that shampoo. you've got the world's goopiest horse." He says this procedure does remarkable things to gussy up a horse's coat. RAPID REPL\' to a Michigan medical man : No, sir, I did not refer to you as a "psycho, the rapist." My ama- nuensis just can l punctuate too well in he r cor· respondence. What I called you was a '"psychotherapist." CONSIDER THIS, please It took 186 years before !he United Stales Government's annual budget passed $100 billion. That v.·as in 1962-Then it took only eight more years for said budget to pass S2tl0 billion ... Din \'OU KNOW ynu could pul a hve osier 1n your freezer. leave it there 10 months. tha\\' it out theo, and chances are il 111i!l sti ll be alive'.' Nol vigorous maybe. But alive . Y ou r qu.es tions nnd com- ments are 1nelcnmrd ond u;ilt be used in &CHECK· ING UP ioherever possible. Please address your let· ters to L. M. Boyd., P. 0 . Bo:r 1875, Ne wport Bea ch 92660. Heroin Flow Reduced 111 Europe, Mideast PARIS !AP / -The U.S. Narcotics Bureau 1s claiming major succeSSPS in cutting down the flow of heroin from Europe and the Middle East to the Uni1 ed S\;:ites. But the bureau's director for Europe. .Joho T Cusack. 21cknowledges that the French processing labs that turn morphine base into heroin are &.till untouched . And he says Turkisb opium growers con· linue high rrn d urtion. al\houl(h off1cit1ls there are trying to dr~' up the black market ;ind have agreed to sto p grol4'1ng nplum next ~ear. and the Middle East every year. The increased seizures are atl'ributed to grow ing concem with in Europe about narcotics and an expansion of U.S. operations on the Continent since last fall. But aH the seizures have been outside the laboratories 1n !he 1Ylarseille area y,•here processing is concentrated. An American close to the drug situation said: "No one knows better than '¥1.'I' dn I.hat we·re oot getting the labs. l!'s the French police. They"re making a \\'hole lot of pro. gress. but quite frank ly tl\P rapability of their ne w peop!r 1s not ju.st not up to 11 yet They're hitting the trafficke rs. v.•hich is fine and important, but wr 'rt still not intn the fin~] stage ·· Cusack based hi.~ cla im ()f success on narcol )cs seizures made by Europran pohre departments with the ass1st a1- ce of inlelligPnce, expert 1~r or money from the ti S . Narcotics Burea\l ,-;:-:-:-::-:-:-..:::::::::::::;! In !he f1r.o.t ~1x moolh i-of 1971. 1.353 kilos of heroin and morphine ba se were seize<l from Spain !n Turkey wi!h Ame ric :i assistancr This com· pared ~·i lh 305 kilo~ in a\1 of 1970. he said. In France alone 548 kilos of heroin basP ~·ere giz~ during the f1rsl half of year, compared lo last year's ti.month total of 449. A kllo is 2.2 pound6. The figures become mean· in1ful in terms of the 5,000 kilo.s of heroin-relintd from morphine base on a one to one raUo-that.,are gmuggled into the United States from Europe LET'S BE FRIENDLY Jt you ha ve ntw nc!ghbor5 or know of an yon e moving to our area, please IC'll us so that ""e may 4!X tl·nd 11 fril'ndly \1·elcome 3nd h"ln them to ~r:ome acquaint .. d In their nf'w surroundina:1. So. Coast Visitor 494-057' 4N-f:lil Harbor Visitor ~174 I See by Today's Want Ads e SOMETH!SG FOR NO- rnING~ ~ ~-; ~ ~~ Chleck the ~ FREE TO YOU i ds 111 today 's clas111Jed u ction. • NEED §("lmething to 11.Jk ahout "• Hf'rl!"g a convt:r- sa.ti on p1tc. Granddaurh· ltr an!HtUf' clock. lt'1 Ital- ian and 111 JOQli l"'!?ndlM.ln. • 3F.' r,unvf'rttd Trawl~r dll!.w.l po~ en.user. Take lt 011 • 4th o! July Cruise •nd Mv.-a bane or • time: Kids Li)ie to ·Ask Andy -.• -··-• ·---1 + 5%% bas a ring to it. The happy sound of high yield backed up by the security of the world's largest bank. Even the pros know sound money management starts with &avings. And when you save at Bank of Ainerica you make money the easy way. No commissions to pay. No loss of principal Nothing to watch over.. You can relax. May we suggest the following Personal Choice Sav- ings plans. Each is geared to a personal need. Wflll _____ < .. '"' .__;r..,..-... -· ,, ---_ .. -:--.-. • 5%% Investors Passbook. Leave your money with us for two years and it will earn 53A% annual interest. Computed daily, compounded or paid quarterly. $500 minimum deposit. And you can add to it any time in amounts of $100 or more. 5V2% Investors Passbook. If a one-year maturity is about right for you, we'll pay you 51ho/o interest. The same $500 minimum applies, as well :J as the privilege '" of adding to your investment in amounts of $100 or more. 5% Investors Passbook. This is our short term offer. 90-day maturity. And you earn 5% annual interest. Again, a $500 minimum opens an account. Add to it in amounts of $100 or more. Of course, our regular savings account pays 4% annual interest. Put your money in. Take it out. Any amount, anytime. Save with us. You know what to expect. Yield, liquidity, security. The three best friends money can have. Even if you only have a couple of dollars, you can open an account at Bank of America. You see, we, too, started out quite small. -.. ----~ -·-----· _.,,.-------·· .. . t " " " " ·' • ~ . . . " I -DAILY: I'll.OT .. ) ., ' ' ---· . . Tutsday, July h. 1~71 Sears • ' 3-Year Color Picture Tube Guaratltee · Plu5 l•Year Part's Guarantee, Plus 90-Day Free Service Free home service on any Sears Silvertone Color ·TV with 18-in. or larger screen size (in-store service on all smaller sc reen sizes) if any part or rube proves defective within 90 days·of sale. Free replacement tube fur- nished if piccure robe proves defective with- in three years; other tubes and i)ar1s -one year. In st al lation·extra after 90 da ys . !~-In. Black "n '\\;hite Portable TV ltegular!89.95 Fearures :solid state keyed autorn.1t ic gain control. Light diffuser :screen for no- glareviewing. Earphone and jack included. ' • ;,. ~ .. . ' .. •• , • • ! ' .. 23-lnch Diagonal Measure Picture Color TV Regular '539.95 ' .. . ·~ _,.. ~.1 v. • •"!;,. : • ... !_ ' ... ~, .. ,I I, • > ' ,, "' ' ' . ' ' . ' • . ... 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Fearu res clear re· leprion. automatic gain conr rol and big 5-i nch .\peakcr. #5103 Fisher ' ' The Fisher C0-1 Consort • > • I f ' " _s. . .:. ..... -'..L-..~.... ... • -~ -~--·-~ _,....... -:·_--.... • 1!111'. :-_ •• Regular $4-09. 9.> .. ' •AM/FM sre reo receiver section with all the mus ic power you need. •Brilliant clarity. STEREO-BEAM• auto- inaric mo no/stereo switching. • Baxandall tone contro ls, tape monitor switch, 4-way speaker selector • Headphone jack, 2-way acoustic.-sus· pension speaker system. ... -.;.· .,-..·--..... • • Sears AM/FM Radio with Two Speakers Rt'~ulor S69.95 ' • Lighted slide rule control makes tunin.gea.sier. • Speakers ca,n be free scand· ingorwall mounted. Solid sta(e chassis.. #2048 Sean AM/FM Stereo Components -\'fae Sl 99.95 Full •ized rurntable with diamond "ylus needle. 2 walnut grained speakers. Model 742 1 ·-··-·· --.,,. ...... • • " ,~---\r,·,._.,.,_ .. .. -,-.. --_,,. _, .. ..._. --::-,-,, .... ,. .... -. ·,. ......:;-· .,,. ·-~~-.--· .,· ...... --· ce ''" '" "" och s h 2 s. • • --· ,. . -. ' .. .-,. , ., ~-, . , •. • ,< 9 !\ • .-• "1 ~;·'··· ·~ ~lit••h Sc~·ing J\ln(·hine!I ,,, A'oil11bleNow Kenmore I-Speed Cruli!Sler \·acuu111 Rr11u!ar 539.IJj . , • 1"op n1 ounted anachn1ent '"-~1orat:e. combination ruf.!/ !l oor too!, crevice ronl, up- hol.,tery and dusting brush. • J ').fc. CO(d. 2 disposable bags. Choose Fron1 'f wo KENMORE Sewing Macl1in.es • ~-... YOUR CHOICE .. . . Ke nmore Cabinet Model •Sews Slraight sritches fo r- v.·ard and reverse. Hinged pressure foor sews ov.er,.. pins, seams. Wirh '\\'alnut- finished bard'>vood cabi- net. Mod~l ll04 /9100 Kenmore Portable, Base •Zig-Zag or straight srirch- ing lcrs you sew fashion clothing, makes button- holes, monograms and ap- pliques . Sears Care Senice protects the value of your Ken- more m--.chine. Sears h i,11hly- 1rained service rechnicians as- ~ure yon S('rvice satist~clion w11 h personalized, professional ,;ire ... We service whar "'e M'll "·hcre1·cr yo u live or ma)' move in the U.S.A. Vinr!_hosc. #.21 2'7 """"' ~ ~i· , r I r -~···::::::. ... --· ------- Kenmore Upright Vacuum • Sv.1eep up dirt With revolv. ing brush actiob, twin fa n Regufar$49.9.i motor; · } ' •I 8-ft. vi"nyl h>rdjvinds o n handy cord hooks. Vinyl bumper around base. #3050. '29.95 Shanipooer0 Pnli1her • " . Includes shampoo, scrubbing and polishing brushes , buff. ing pads. 18-foo t vinyl cord. 40-0z. dispenser tank. #8310 SAN11tNA.NDOl61 ·7121 • , ' ...... ' . Kenmore Washer, 30-Minute Soak Cycle · ll•gu lar $ l 99.'J.) • Pre-soak cy cle for new launJry aids, permanent press Jclicare and normal cycles •Regular and slow speeds for all fabrics • Hard·\\'Orkin1; lint fi lter traps dulling lint. #.20.300 Waoher and Dryer GUARANTEE DAILY PILOT 9 ,. ,. • -... \ Kenmore Washer with Pern1anent Press Cycle ' l; }' ,, , . ,.. ii /· Rcj(lllar -';·:-~ ~149.95 ~ •Special-cool down dries perman- ent press fabrics lo prevent wrin· kles. Regular temperature dries all fab ric. •"Air Only" fluffs blankets, dries rai nwear. #60210. A1k About Sear1 Convenient Credit Plaru. Sears Care 1 YEA ft Free repl..::ement 1nd in· •t•l lariori or any 1,.n1 .,hic lt prove defccrive ... uti1 ri IH \'tat ofsJ.le. 2 YEA RS Free refll1eemen1 ot 1ny raru -.·hich pr~e de- tec11ve -.·iihin 2 ~&rs of ,a.le, inJ11.1!11inri e.ir1 durinA 2nd year. Service Protects the value of your Kenn1ore Wash .. er and Dryer. We ser .. vice what we sell, any· wh1re in the U.S.A. / 5 .~ \"l::ARS Dt.:fect •"e ge1r<•5e par!i and Vari-Flex ll!;it-10t on 1orom1ric ""'"hers only rtplaced free ""irh1n \ yeu-1 ol wle. insU.Jl-tion nsra du6ng 2nd throujb ~1h ~·ear. frf'e "'plaeellltnl of defective per-ecJ..J,.. Rnf--ed p.,W ll'ilhin 30• .. lf'I of Mle. ... 'I"""' -v-:; - Slor• Hou" Shown Abov• Do Not Apply To Appllanc1 and Ca1alo9 Order Slor•t ' I UIN.l. PAllC 121-1100, .Sll·ISJO CANOGA PAllC Jl0·0661 COM,TON 616-lSl l, 6]1.,761 COVINA t66-061 I LONG tfACM ll.S·Ol 21 NOIWALI( 161·7161 OLYMPIC & SOTO 261-5211 O•.t.NGf 617-11 00 SANfA 1( Sl't!NGS t<f4 -I Ol 1 SANTA MONICA lt•-6111 SOUTH COAST Pl At A S•O-llJ) THOUSAND OAKS '4t7-4S66, ,22-11 )1 TOllANC( $12·1.S \1 Sc~trs All M•i•r Ap,1; .... , •• ...... 11 .. 111 ... 1 ADAJ1U I. •AGNOL•A t•7·1711 lo\H1'M•tA 111.t SSI A1(1'Dl1' ''S-4100 lllllAN~ f4J·11SJ CHIN0•1T.1)11 GlolOIN GIOvr IJt .•100 GIANA[)A HllLS JID·10J1 HA(llNOA HOTS. J.)0 • .1-1•1 HAW IHOINI 171.0611 Hl~lAND •Alll" 114.Jtll HU>O lNClTON llACH 111·1.511 l AGUNA Hllll 110.ssso l AKIW00 0 IJl·Tl'D , lllOHTtl flt() 111·1170 JlllONTIOH lfl Ult ON1At!O t ll ·l011 ••tOl YllDI~ J11-6t01 ,At.t.11110Ul4T $31 ·1100 'lACINlj,,t, JJl .OI 10 llOONOI) 11.t.(14 Jtt.S41'1 l fSIOA Ji,.~1 11 1AN •IDIO ~1-4'1SI Sl<l lMAH O.t.IU fll-JIOO \UNl AND JS1-UJI U•lAND •11.lt11 WIST COVINA ,LAZJi -.0.1 Mt WlU(lllUll •10.1070 Wl1TM1NSTlt ltJ·llll Wtll!Tlfl •tl-06U WIL.MIHGTON IJO.OOIJ il MONTI llJ.]tt 1 GlfNOA.li 21,.100.c. 214·'6 1 I MO LlYWOOO '6t.,t41 INGLIWOOO t 1t :2,21 __ .. -· -· ~ ... ___ .... ..• ,ASAOfNA 611 ·lll I, l'l-1111 '1(0 tll-1262 rOMONA •29.5 t ,, ----··· .. _., __ .. -•·· VALlE'f 76l·ll61, t14-J2 20 VllMONt 1S9·1 911 • L -····-·· .. .. _ ... -- S[l\"RS, J.OllUOW.NOCO. -.... _,..._. __ • S•an Catal•• Aruf A'p!iDflt•' Slo.-.1 . .............. _._.. ....... ----· -- CUlYfl ClfY ll1.ll61 CY,.ISS 116.lSJO DOWlllY t1J.t1'1 fUHlllON SlJ·l 1'1 lOI AHOI Jt1.J .. ) • IOWVJ.i~ HUGHTS t61·ll1 I . ,,. --~-·.,.-•• --· ·--·· --' ----·········-·· ... -..... ,. .• -~ ... 'J, - ' ----.-. "' -' I a DAIL v mo1 lut~ay, July b, 1971 $500,000 Bomb Blast Tax Office Rubble Probed SAN JOSE , Cllif. (AP) Internal Revenue S e r v I c e qenll Monday probed the wreckage of an IRS district off!Oll where 1 powerful e1· ploalon Sunday night cau.sed an estimated S!l()(LOOO dame.f!e. The t11i·o-story stucco building 11i·as unoc·cup1ccl 11i hl•r1 t he 10·48 pm. blai;t r1pprd a 25 by 40 foot hole thrr1ugh thP ailing of a first floor s1nre room and shattered all wln- do"'s and doors in I h e building. There v.•ere no in- juries. District F'ire Chief Tt'd Rohn said the IRS offices '"looked like a box of toothp1r ks turned ups ide do11i·n .. , Eugen!' Heyburn. I R S chstrict diroctor. said filPs I hat v.·ere destroyed ;ire duplicated elsev.hcre. Bohn said "I'm sure thrre is better than ;i half 1n1!hon doll2.rs dama~c. Thrrr 1 ~ nn \\·ay of knowing unt il lhry grt ;:i i;tnictural t'ng1nl'€r 111 Lhere." San .Jose Police LI Hobert Who Cores? :'.'\n o!hrr ,,,,"·spaflf'r in the 1\·nrlrl cRrt-s about your corn- munity likr your cnmmun1ty daily nf'v."S[)RPf'r dOf's. It"s thr [)AILY PILOT. a Allen 1aid the e1plos1ve device "appeared to be a bomb - and a large and loud one." hu rled up to 200 feet by the b]MI. "Every window and every door on the first aild second floors was completely blown oul." Bohn said. "In the IRS nf11ct'. r\'ery fixture was hlo w n off the wall and ceiling tiles Wt're down." The lRS' Alcohol. Tobacco & Firearms Division, in \ll'llose storeroom the blast occur red, took over the inve~tigatinn. f.hchacl ~lonzon. the division 's chief sp('tia( 1nvest1gator frorn ~an Frane15t0 !i<'Jd he hoptd l•l dt•!erm1ne the type of ex· plosive used. '"\\'e have started our in· \est1gation w1lh that in m1nri,'' ~1onzon said. ··but we"re w;i 11i ng for construction crews to m<1ke the bomb scene s<1fe f<ir our investigators " Free Press Struck By Part of Staff ~lt1nzon said the IRS had LOS ANGELES tU PI) - rere1vcd no threats prior to The Los Angeles Free Press, a !he bon1bing. stronghold of underground ,\J onzon·s division fi eld office news on the West Coast. was is hou.~ecl on the firs t rloor of struck today by a segment of thP hullding in a commercial its staff. d1s!rirl 0f east San Jose. It The Free Press Strike Com- .~hares the second floor with miHce contended the weekly's !he IRS tax office. 1'he new Publisher. Bary Bern· California Department of stein, refused to honor a con- Hu1nan Resources Develop-tract that employes h<1d with nirnl office on the first floor Art Kunkin, the former was undamaged. '" publisher and founder of what The blast shattered lhe glass is reported the nalion"s largest main entrance doors on Gish underground newsp11per. Road , and the door's heavy Sue Marshall, spokesman 1netal framework hung twisted for the strike committee. said over the sidewalk. Glass the main dispute was the fir· fragments littered the street ing of about a dozen staff and parking lol. Debris was members 1'~riday. • ··our position i:ii: Uuit we were. illegally terminated," Miss Marshall said, "and we are still in fact employts or the Free Press and slill on the payroll until the situation is arbitrated." Miss Marshall also said staff- ers feared ttiat the paper wa~ '"large segment." falling into the hands cl nrganii:ed pornographic in- terests in Southern C11ifornia. ,_1iss Marshall &aid she did not know exactly how many staffers would refuse lO report to work but said it wu a segment." The strike committee al90 sough! pay. There's a mcodem-day bandit who neorer steps oukide the low. And yet, he stilt carries off the kd .,,,_..,..._ This bondit is the aofty shopper. He knows that ii often pays to woit ond then to mow in fast on speciol bai ..... Right rraw, tM aofty 5hoppel' is btty1ng SylYarlia di.scontinved modell. These sets, which inust be sdd to man l'OOr9 Mr M'Wet ones;,.liore oU the quality fkat mokes Syfwmia the experts' choice. In fod, SytnJnia di3cont.inoed &Wed 1 Ir aP& ~ than~ other people's continued models. And yoo con make out like o bandit on to-. Syh"ania Qmt.Qmporary ~tylcd Cftldem:.a 'tereo console model SC371. Ha. 5"Jlid-6tat.e FM /MI plus FM 11.ereo radio, Garrard au tomatic record pl.ayer and air ~osion speaker '}stem. OUR LOWEST PRICE EYER $64995 Sylftnla ..nde °""""' <DMOlo- ielevi>ion model CL81\2P. Bol 21i• cfic. meas. sc reen. autnmat1c fine tuning. Our low, low price · Sy!nnluol.,. TV modol CX78 Tl!ll 19 IBdt (di.l.C. tneU.) IC?Mft-Has tbe lonf-lift IG1bralt.ar 8S""'I chassis and APC for a i-f.S. ly tu.ned picture at the t.oach of a batto&. OUR LOWEST PRICE IYllt $)7995 l11te9rlt11 a11d Pependalllllty rlntt 1947 • Radio Dbpotcfled TV a11d Appliance Service 548-3437 COSTA MESA EL TORO HUNTINGTON BEACH 411 E. Seventeenth St. L1gun1 Hills Pl11a Brookhur1t & G1rfi1ld Davis Case Scheduled To Resume SAN RAFAEL (UPl) - Superior Court Judie Rjchard Arnason tries 11ain today to move forward with the kidnap- murder conspiracy trial of Angela Davis and her ro- defendant. The co-defendant, Rue.hell Magee, 32, a San Quentin priaon convict, has Sf'Veral limes at.ailed proceedings by fill.rig for removal of the case from state to federal court This automatically takes away jurisdiction from the superior court. Last week Magee again smt a removal petition to the U.S. district CQurt In San FranciSC(l, but Judge Arnason ruled it was only 1'1odged with" the court, not ''filed .'' He ordered arguments to pro- ceed ()0 pre-trial motions still pending . Al this point Magee ad· dressed Miss Davis's at- torneys and said they were part of the "pig conspiracy" if they "drove ove1" his right.oi by continuing with the case while his ~tition was pending. Arter a c on is u 1 ta I io n, Howard Moore. Jr .. attorney for the former UCLA in- istructor, asked for a si1-day recess to dlscuu mutual defense problems with Magtt. This was granted. During the recess U.S. District Judae Samuel Conti declared Magee'is latest peti- tion "totally [rivolous." Cont! had earlier ordered the district court clerk not to file M;igee's petilions u n 1 es s cleared first with some federal judge. Judge Arnason al3o took ac- tion during the delay by agree- ing that P..tiss Davis and Ma gee could have at least three conferences wilh tlle ''Soledad Brothers." thr e e convicl3 accused of killing a prison guard. Attorney5 for both defen- dants said such meeting!! were "essential to the defense." .-- l.ocAL .. ANCI )'Olfll lOVE rrl You are act.i_ng in your own and YoUr communrty's best interests when you SiYe or borrow at your LOo.l.LY OWNED-LOCALLY LOANED IAGUNA FEDERAL BfST TIME TO SA VE AT l~here 100"/o BEST TIME TO BORROW AT LFS-where of the savings from our Orange County Orange County home owners 2n1 given ace.aunt holders is plCN1ed back for the first consideration. Now is the best time benefit of our Orange County friends and in more than two yt'ars to consul tour loan neighbors. At U:guna Federal YoU eam counselors about the new, low interest a high 5°/o on pasisbook accounts, with rates OQ home loan financing to help you higher rates still available on special guar• buy, build or refinance your home. anteed income saving certificates. AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Onng• County's Wgat. flm 111d Strongest Independent Fedenl 3 Monarch Biy Plua 260 Ocean Avenue W1 North El CJ.m li"'O blJ Ltgun.ii Niguel La guna Beach, Ulifomia ~n dement. -499-1540 • 496-1201 -494-7541 4'32·119S ' . r..r ,.~~.,.... ,r A,~ ~, , ~ '%";. ,,,;"f In case you haven't heard, Union "'' • ' · . · 'Federal Savings t. ,""' offers a great deal more than high interest rate savings accounts. Namely, twenty-one very special customer services that are just wclting to be taken advantage of. ' '•"l Including free money orders ... free parking ... free ·( transfer of funds ... Series E Bonds sold ... Series E Bonds Consumer on saving ollection Accounts.;. t , .. ' Interest Chec~A-Month ... and Fixed Amount redeemed ... free copy of Guide ... Loans 'Pl Check-A-Month ... lree postage when you save by mail ... free acco mm·odation cheques ... sales tax deposit .. insw:ance department·.·· home financing .•. travelers cheques •• ! free notary service ... deposits and ' withdrawals ', ' at any office .•. account balance ' certification, .,,' letters .•. free cop ing service.,. mobile home loans. Now do you se~ why it's to youZ . . advantage to visit Union Federal Savings soon? · • UNION FEDERAL SAVINGS J~ AND LOAN ASSOCIATION . ~ ~J,ll(!~· flll... f · f11•rt I• $o•·O~J 1 ... n .. L1cky Mkt.) !9"11 , ,.-. ~~1,1+! Dilly _9·9-.S!~'!!..9-'.-·--.. ·• s37;3930 D•ilv 10-6' Thur., Fri. 10·9 -·96}.1~210.U\'!?:.t S.t, 9.6 " ~-.....C~.l:io,.......,_-:, __ ;_ ____ ,... L 10.0.· ___ ,,_...;, __ .-;,;;.._; __ .,c- •. .. .. .. .. " . \ --· '• . ' :~ -- LA 4th For The R d Flaming, ecor <Crowded Dissolutions Of Marriage ~·~1J:~.M.;~"~n::,.~•\'" le V•n1 N•ncv M. •nd M•• fn H1rold Aottl, ~!lnl1y A. end E~ttvn W. l'•rr. lltYflrly Ann 11'1d Cel\OI Le Aw MIM\Ot, Jun1 L. Ind lhcm1s C. De, Soto. El HIH!h Je1n U\d Rlcl!t rd Lll'Clen Pr..iltv. Ju1nl11 M.. Ind G_.,., M. Joll!llOll, E!e•nor '"" Nor,..•n Jolln10fl PUllAL C>IClll•S ~ ..... ,.,,.. u O~O'. A1l1>1! w11111m Jr. •nd Don,.. Ct.I!•" W'-lt t, S1'>1ron 0 . 1nd Rllbert L. Mlffll r. Elllllbirtll ,. .. ,.,. 111d 1'1111 Jl mtl Vetine•. Martlyn £ . .,... v,,,_ Loon ThOl'f'IH•<>n. $111r(ln C. i nd Glenn A. Martin VII~ Gevk I nd [)enf'IY ltt M r&rfffl, Rcwn1 Louise 1nd G<ir1ld Artf\ur l°"' 0-p Mtrle Ind Robtr1 A,nll'lofl\I c,,u.,.hlr, Dlnnl• 01 !l.llt1 ind Tere,, OoM lloOHn. ~Ill' 1nd Tl!Omlt H. ~~ 'cii.~'J~I I~ 'G".ii;~~ H:· EP<>f, Tw!!la JMn i nd OwfgM Oou1lt > G16dl1. Robert Lvon '"" Ptlrlcl• ~~'.,1~. J2~~r~ 1~ I~'":~ GMlchelle '"" C0<:0. Mvrn1 Ivonne 11\d ,._,,,h.,.,.,, ,_ l!l•llOdc, Ectw1..S J. 1nd Ju1nll1 J. B•a-e. Tonl Al•t """' L1wr1nce WeOtr Kir-lal>d. Wi de Ctvdt t nd Gtneva Murda11<>~ Horrldt, Oetlra A. and llobttrt J ~~berl, Jall"•• O!Tt "'" Eltl~e Fr~nce• 5c~w~l;er, C~ervl Lff 11>11 J~r.-.i Jot Mrl'l•ll•!'(I. Janet Allee &f'ld Robert Rknord ~ea•""""• '"'""• ""~ J~·· """' INTERLOCUTO RY DECREES Enf1rlll Jwn1 '' l'!~ro!n, Jam~• Edward 1r>d L1nlt1 Mtt C•rrow, w~ner E. and R ut~ V. Rendolon. Wand• Mn•ln• and Carl H~M••. Mary Jo and Jerrv D. MC>l ln,., ~nor! S. •nd Rene A. J• Stevtn'IOn. Yvonne Carole and Rav· mon.:I P~ul Caca<e, Palrltla A. and Peter J. SortU, CnarlMn 1rd Howard 8 ullv, SlllrltY G. e rld Martin Ofonham, Ellzabel~ P.. and i(ennelh L. Per~in1. Muriel E. and Jame• Rllev Bock. Rita F. and Carl W. McClure, Shll1e. M. 11'<1 Jere P1rrick 8 uller, BeHY E. Ind WIUiam II. Death l\'olice5 LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Ci· ty and county f ireme n reported Monday they put out '81 brush, grass and stroc· lural flfes in the 24 hours July 4 period -319 of them at· tributed to careless use of fireworks. City fire officials said they responded to 252 blazes of which 147 were flreworU. relaled. County fireme n fought 229 blazes, 172 attributed to fireworks. ~1ost of the fires v.·ere small and limited to brush and grass areas. No serious injuries were reported. "ft has been illegal since 1942 in Los Angele3 to disct\arge fireworks. "a city spokesman said. "Obviously people are not obeying the law." Meanwhile, thousands of persons jammed Los Angel~ area. beaches Monday as the weekend drew to a close'.. \V eekend violence and illegal drug use resulted in more than 110 z.rrests. A special task force of Los Angeles J>oJice made 48 ar- rests at Venice, mostly for felony drug use and misde· meanors. Violators were boo!t- ed "in the field'' and then transported downtown in three busloads. Police said there were no serious incidents of violence. At Pismo Beach, three of· ,t.oRIAN ficers ,vere injured and 20 Vera Adrian. 3Clll W•lnu! St. Cosll M"'· _ _. f O••• 01 de1th. Ju1v ~. 1•11. s11,.,,1ved bv young /men arresh."\l a ter hu•t>•"d, W•lter "· Adriin. se,.,,lcet fighting broke out Sunday "'n<ll"9 •1 6'~H'1;~~~tt Mortu•rv. night dur ing an attempt by P•' J. ChurcM11. Age 10. o1 1120 Atter police to make an arrest "lace. Cos11 M~•. Dile al dta!h, J11ly h ll Fifi !, 101. Survived bv h11sband. Leland; outside a dance a . Y <1augn1er, P11r1ci• Mcl(ibbon. co1t1 M•sa; police and she ri£f's officers ""'· Gordon, In VietnAm. St rvk••· to<1av. f•'nally d•'spers"" the crowd of TuP'ld•v. 10 1.m, Bell Broodw•v Ch1ael. t;u ''""' Rev. Geor~e l(ourl oflltlatina. 1n· about 1,000 ·youths. le,ment. H••bor R!!:!T Memorial Par\1. l----------c..,.-ccc--- Bell Broodw"v Mortu"•· Oirl!<:lors. LEGAL NOTICE COOLEY 5•~1e i:. Coorcv . AP~ 'IO. of o9t9 K•11lf-l------·o=oc-------I men "ve , T•mpl• City, Or1nq e Coun!v F ICTI Tl:u:10:usiME5S t••ldent for S7 veert; memMr Of old NAMI!' STATEMENT l!un!lngMn Beech Relief Caras. Oa!e cl The !ollowing per•on• 11re d<>int r..e..Jh, Jul y •. 1911. Survlvf'd bv three bulln"' 150 sons. Clt ud•, Hor•(e 1nd Frink Cooley: C & R GLAZING, 7l5 Ounn WllY, brotnff, Co1Mr1 Connon; •i•1er. Lollie Placenlie, CalllMnlll. W••!tll; two 11r11ndchlldrpn' 1ix ore&t· (lvde L. SnooJ>n"11n, 1\6 Nortll Pll n· .i'•ndthlldren' 1hrtt qre1!·o•e~t.gr1nd· tetion, An•heim. C1litorn;1. Fred c nildren. 5ervk~s. Wedne1d1v, 11 •.m ., Gleason, •:IOI Hll1d1 W1y, NtwPorl Ch•i>tl of RePo•e, We11min1Ter Me,.,.,rl1I B•atn, C1 ll!orni1. P•r~. ln1f'rment, W~!mlnJ"r Memorial Cl•<I• L. S_,.,an Park. Smllh• Mor!u11rv. Olrpetors This b11slnen ls MlnG col'<lut!ed bv • G"LLU" p;,or.,.,~hlp P•1rlti• A.. Geltup. Age 76, o! 19e9 Charle This ''""ment Ill"" wllh lh• County ., , ,01 "'· Cosia M~JI Dale ol death, Clerk ot Oran!!• Counh on; Junt 21. ltll. ~ Bv 6ever!v J , M1dOOx DePUIY C1111nh Jul¥ J, 1?11. Survived bY hu~band. Wll-Cltt~. liam1 mo11>tr, Harri~ It Price. C:os•• WitlWl'Of"l!I, Seidel '"" Crail, M~••: l•lh•r, ll1vmond L Pricf'. Garden AllonieY' 11 Law Grove ; broTh,r, Antnon1 W Smith, Like-1617 weitclltf Orlvt , wood: lll•Pe tisters, Mrs. M1rlode G•eal· Ntw-1 aei ch, Caliio...11 tJut hot1•e, Leuc...i:a; Nancv Whitt , Co•1• Pub11"'1<!<1 O•a"lle Coos! Da ll' Pllol, Me•t : C•tDI (Ill!, Ananeim : me!e•"•1 Jl/nll 21. lt ·~July .. ll,_ltll 15M-11 or•ndmol,,,..., Mn. J(a1n,..n Hilbert. T11· l•re: pett •nal grandmother . Mrs. Viev• LEGAL NOTICE Mt;ll1. G•rd.., Grove. Servlc .. , Wednes· l------~=o------1 d•v, 11 •.m .. B...i1 6roadw1v Cll1i>er. with f'·'1tt ~ev. Oon•ld Brlnde-nburgh otficl•!ln9. P'ICTITIOUS 9USINESS l"'t rmenl. P1clflc View M•morl1I P•rk, NAME STATEMENT Bell 8 roadw1V Mo•tuery. Oireclor!. ll>t following peroon Is dolM! bushlett ~ESS s~ndr.o (Punkinl He ... A9e 1. ol J ll c~n,;110, C:oS11 M .. 1 01\t of de1111, Julv 4, 1011. Survived bv molnor, !':Ileen Hen , Co.!1 Me••: li ther, S•nlord Hui. Sin Oleoo; bro!her. Biiiy, al me home; grind· """'''!!'Coal. ~~d Mr s. F. G. Hts1, Pled· m <>r>t. Calif,; Mr. end M'1. Wiiiiam Tll· den, B~Ton; gr .. t-1r1ndmoln•r. Mrt. ,."<>m•• COOl'~v. B<,.Ton. Memorl1I ~trv· 1ce5, Wt<1nt1d1y, 1' Noo,., O\lr Lad~ Outen 01 Anqel• Catt.ollt Cllvrcn, lnle~­ rnenl. P1cl1k View M-111 Ptr1<. P•C•· toe View Mortuary. Olrtclort. in: RAINBOW, 1011 No. Co11! Hlw1y, Lagun• 6 eedl. SM'cirum Pr11Senletlon5, 1011 No, Coa11 Hlway, L111une 8e1ch. This bu1ine" Is blln11 conducl&d bY • corl>O!'•lion •1Me of Cali!ornla ROIJfr T"<>rson Tt>I• S1~1tmeo! Ille<! w ilh !ht CO!JnlY Cltrlt ot Ofeooe Coun11 on· June !1, 1'11. By Bev•rly J , Modd<I• Oepuly CO!Jn!Y Cler1'., Publ,.h•d Oranoe C(>ll•I Cally Pllol, Jur.e 22. 29 Ind Julv 6. IJ, U11 1S99-11 Vlralnl• M•rie :u~!~T Ate 1, of 19'1! ·---L_E_G_A_L_N_OTT __ C_E ___ _ Mtuna, )-lun!in9t0fl Be.och, O.te of de&lh, JulV ~. 1~1t. O.wn!er ol Ji»toll afld ~•11t Hulet. Mtmor1tl sorvkt1, WO<lnes-c.av. I p.m .• $mllh1 Chu11!, ln!Fmtnl, Pacltlc View Memorial P111<. Smllhs Mor!utrv, Olretl"'1. LlrONARO e o•i..r1 v. L"""••d Age 71. ot 11:1.11 "lme\o La,.e, Hun•int \oll BNCll. 0.tt OF de.olll, Jvl1 ?, 1tl1. Survived bv -""'· r nl\111> <It B1rro1: ana three artfld· r~ildren Prova!e •ervlce. wore l>iold ti Peel< F1m11v Cn~nl•I !'t1ner1I llome 1.0VEt:IDOE 1"11~ M Loverld9e 171 BroodW6V SI. <n•I• M"'•· 0•1• of deolh, Jul¥ 2, 1~11 s .... iv ed bY d11111~•~r, P•ullne Motol•~•· IJ_o,,,t lleatn v :sr,1rlon, Wl'd.n~sd•V. 1~ ~ m lo 9 1G I> ,., , Bell Brood,.•V (~•~el. !nurnl"\~~I, t:'or~•t L•wn Glt n· d•••. Bell P.ro•"'''"Y MOrTvtrv. Olri!<:IO<S RADER M•'v Rode•. '°'i~ 9•, ()( 1125 Bonnlt ('IMnt. N•w1>0r! Beach. O•te ot <1~••~, Jnl• •, J9/I Su•vlved bV •on, M•t~ l!•d•' Nowl>O"I 8e•(h: Two dougMer>. Iv'" 8tllV C1nlln, l<>• A.nvt"I M11. r v• ~V•Q•, ~II"'"'~" O•ks: ond rwo 1 rano;:lc~lld,en. Priv•le •ervlt"' wt•• ccn· Clu<ted •I 6111l CM!• N>e~• Mo~!u1•v. STRUVE P..Ulll CIRTIFlCATI 01' IUllNESS F ICTITIOUS NAME Tl>e undenlgned dr;in certlf'( ht Is conduciln9 a 1>u1lnes.s •t 1m N~P<l'1 Avitnut, Cost• Miia, C•lltornia, undt t tM !lctltlous firm nama of "CE FURNITUllE t nd lh•I ••id 11,m II compOHd Ill Int lollowlng person, -" nomt In NU ona p!act of rMIO.nc:• 11 •• 1111-.: Htr.-.i Lff Goodacr•, m1 .... n~lrn SI,, CMle ~ ... Oo1!!d June 11. 1'71 Htrrv Ltt Goodi er• Stalt of Ca llf()1'111t . Or•Mle Col/nil': On June 11. 1971, belort mt , I Not1rv Publk in •I'd '"' sold Sia~. 1>erK>n1llv acoetrtd Harrv Ltt Goodacrt l<nown lo mt IO be Ille per~n ""'""' ntmt 11 subscribed to ~ w1t111n lnt1ru.,,enl alld ac~-l<!<laed l>e ~x~!!d tr.e 11m1. (OFFICl"L SEAL) M•rv een. MOrlon Notary Pl/tlllc C11Uornl1 Prlnc1p1I Of/lea rn Oronoe Covnty Mv CommlHlon Exp!r11 Ac•ll t, itn Publlsh<!<I Oran111 (OISI 01Uy P•lo!, June I}. ·n, ?'I and Julv 6, 19)1 146--71 LEGAL NOTICE E ll>e! e Struve. Aoe 'IO. •t!l&n! ol Co•I• M••a. Dalt n! dta1h, Julv J, 1911. Sur-P-4110 v;vl!d bV neanew. Mr. Willll m L. RUHfll, CERTlf'ICATE OF I USINESS Lo• AMelei; eight or•nd·ntol'ltw1 arid fllCTITIOUS NAME flit te•. Service• wert held Mond1v. IO·:IO 1'P>t undt~l1nl!d dP&I cerllty lie ls can. Ben BrO!>'dWIV Cheael, wl1h Rev. ducting • bu!llneU II ?llf H••bor, COlll/l ::·p.,11ul'S or!lclollno. 1.,1..,.m..-1, Morrll Me••· C1 ll!0<ni1, u""""' '"' l!ctlllOI.• "''' '-,1e~. ldoho. 8t!I 8ratdw1Y !lrm n1m1 Of l'REO & SON AUlO RE-"" •• PAIR Ind ln&I .. Id firm Is cltfl'IPOM(I ;-=•=ru~•~N=·="="=K='='="=·::::::::::::::::::=; of Ille 1o11ow1,,11 per..,.., wno .. ...,,... I" lull and ol1ce of r"'IOtN:• 11 If tollows: l'REO T. HLU$Hl(0, 1"12 0"8nn P1Kt . Wn!mln•ler, Cllll, ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4.."7 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 14'"438S • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del l\1ar . 57J-t458 Costa Mesa ·~ 64&-%.ftf • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Co!ll.I Mesa LI 8-3433 • McCOR~UCK LAGUNA REACH MORTUARY 171$ Laguna Canyon Rd. 4tt-t415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEJ\10RlAL PARK Cemetery MorturJ Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport ~act, caJHomlll "4-%711 • PEEK FAMILY COUlNl.U. FUNERAL ROME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster Su.35!5 • S1\1ITR'S rtfORTUARV m rt1a ln St ~..w· lluntlngton Beac• Dered Junt 2•, 1971. l'ttd T. Hl"'111<o on June 1•. nn. before tnt •· Na!•rY Publ.c !n lf'ICI lor Sllld S11l1, -oonall v 10Ptarl'd FrP<I T. Hlulllkl> ~ 1'o me lo bt lltt J>e•...., -name 11 tubKrlbl!d 10 ""' within l"'rrument and ..:k-!ed9· tcr "" e~tcutftl "" 11m1. (OFFICIAL SEALJ Jow..ti E. Davi• Nolarv Put.lie -C1llPwnl1 Pr!nc:IPel Ol1ict In Ortl'lllf! CO!JnlY MY Comml11lo<I EKPlrn JUll'I 21. 1•14 Publl!l>ed Ori n .. COlrt Dl llY Piiot. June 7t arid July 6, 13. JO, 1'71 1.-.11 AdY1rtl""'*"' How To Hold FALSE TEETH Secu..iy Do fall• teeth embarTUI JOll by -.. -w ... '°" _, ....... °' t&llr.T A deow:r. adhmi .. CM! beli PASTEETB•(ivesdenUU'el 1 loac- •· lhmer. steadM!r bold. MU. ta\. b:111 mor. eoiop.ble. For rnon ~ a11d oomfort, u. FASTEETB Deti- t1Ue Adh.tn Powder. Deotun. Wt llt .,.. --tia] to -.IUr. .. J'llUr' detillt ~. -· KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT . rr-r -__: .. ·-· --· -~·--, ...... --•• .,._ .. "" -. T11t~d.ty, July b. 1Q7l DAI L 't PILOT 11 -- Values for ·the family in every department at all May Co. stores. pants and print tops from a California maker It's an 'entire collection from a fa- mous maker. Pull-on pants. Pretty print tops. O f course, all are easy- care. Don't miss these savings. 12.00·18.00 pant tops, polyester or cotton, short sleeves, long sleeves, colorful prints, 10-18 8.99-10.99 17.00 polyester pants, green, navy. lemon, purple. Sizes 10-18 11.99 Were $12-$18 8.99 lo 11.99 mdY co active sportswear 76 summer print dresses from a famous maker What fun' Summer dresses that are bright, cool and comfortable. In washable amel tri acetate. Choose from a wide variety of styles, colors, prints. We show just one of many. At savings like these, you're sure to want a few. Sizes 10-20. were 28.00·32.00 19.99 mJy f:O lown and travel 49 ...... ~ .,..., famous maker sum mer- cool polyester dress The j,olyester dress, just right for warm days. Slip it on. Move about live in it. It goes as good as it looks. In color combinations of red, white and blue. Sizes 10-18. You'll love it. was 40.00 27.99 may co cosmopolitan shop 9& fa mous Ca li fornia Koratron Q• pants, shorts, shirts, tops Yes._. It's those great lookinR Kora fron1!9 go ~ logethers on sale now. We show two looks from the group. Pant s. Shorts too. Loo king So summery topped in stripes. All washable Dae· ron@ polyester and cotton. Save now. a. 12.00 stri ped shirt, brown-white, navy·white, red-white, 10·18. 7.99 b. 12.00 pants, elaslici1ccl \VJist, wh 1te1 navy, brown, red, 10-18 7.99 c . 10.00 kn it top~; D.1 cron 01) polyester-nylon, brown-blue, navy-red, 3G-40. 6.99 d . 9.00 shorts, while, navy, 10· 1 B. 5.99 were 9.00-12.00 5. 9 9 and 7 • 9 9 may co skirts & coordinate~ 101 , / .• ,,,.. .. , .- .·. \ may co. 10,uth coatt pl•z:•, san dlego fwy. at brtstol, cost• mesa: 546.9321 shop monday thru fri day I 0 am to 9:30 pm, saturday 10 am to 6 pm; ;unday noon til 5 \ \ \ •. ' • IVIAVCO -:-:: .. ·--· ~ . ~--:1 .. v..,,..._. . :~ -·---O> ~ • . -; . ~ ----;.. ·-·· • ·~- .. . ··-. ·----·--. --·;----:... ... -_,.--.. • • • . II / ' I I . --_ .... ----.. ": ... " . • • Erotk'a 'Utacovered' Taboo Oassics ~ Now in Lib1·ru·y Hy GEOltGE LElf)AL 01 lflt o.nr "*4-t S••n FUl.LEHTON Any '4!r1ous :.ludcnt of erut1c literature 1n Orange County niay be surprised to di scover lhl' nnce-rorb1ddcn classics art 11(111' slockcd on optn sheh es tn coun!y libraries • great rnn ny lhings a research l1bary must have tha1 a public Jibary ~houldn ·L stock .• in· l'.luding erotic rlai;sic~ " Jlowl'vt'r. S1n1!.h notes !hi' UC! colle(·llon is not hrav1h1 ('Ont"entra!ed 1n lhf' area of obSl'enity "Evcrybod)'S drfin1l1on uf "'h<1t i.s obscene varies."' Snulh said ... \\'e don'l a!ternpt 10 1nake judgments as to v.·hat is pornograp1c.1 Educators Re-elect Pat Arnold Bad Air Warning Systems Urged By TERRY COVlLLE OI l!IO D..,., .. llet Sletf SANTA ANA -A dally air po llution warning system for residents of Orange, Los Angeles and Riverside coun- ties , has been urged by t.he Christmas Seals Association. "ND one does the job n<1w," says Terry \Vinckler, public relations director for thf' Orange Co u n t y Christmas Seals A.!IMCiation. Last week W i n ck It' r presented a five-page report on air pollu!lon health h11zards lo the Los An ge l e .« P.nvironmental Quality Control Committee. lie represented the Orange County Association Council Post 1'o Couutia u .and four other Christmas established Jl3 ppm (parts per suggested a thrtt-w&.y ww.rn-posed coold be lrnpltmented. Seals a.ssociaUons. known as million) of oxidants (ozont) is ing system last year. The firs! Since then, Wf: h av e the Southern Counties Plan· the level al which damage can warning w o u I d be a disco vered pverwhelrnin~ nlng Council. start for healthy persoru, nol respiratory disease alert when evidence to the contrary,' Winckler's report wa s to mention those with suscep-20 pp1n of oxidant ls in the air, \Vinekler reported. sharply critical of I.he Los tible ailments. Califomia has When 20 ppm of carbon li e said Lhe Rivertide APCO Angeles and !Uverside County listed the rate for ouine at .10 monoxide fi lled the air, a cor· talked with Chl'Ulmas Seab Air Pollution Control District ppm. onary disease alert would be spokesmen once, then refused officers. Carbon monoxide, a pol\u-disseminated through various to return any pilOm' calls "We ret.-eived no cooperation tan t which especially arfect'{ media . When the oxidant level thereafter. from these gentlemen in our heart patients, has been listed reached .35 ppm, a school \\linckler elded by challeng- researl'h on all' pollulion:· dangerous al 20 pp1n on an health warning would be ing the Los Angeles quality \Vinckler told the quality con· eight houl' average, says t he given. group to take the leadership in trol comrnittt.-e in Los Angeles. Christmas Seals report. "Ifs a system based on setting op the necessary daily 'rhe Christmas SeaJs report "In the South Coast Air health warnings, not death warni ng systems. emphasized the heahh hazard Basi n there is no air pollution wamings,'' W i n c k I er em-On its own, lhe Orange from air pollutants to normc;I health warning system which phasized. County Christmas S e a 1 t and especially those who suf-presently operates to infonn The problem w i l h im· Association i.s hiring a part· fer fron1 respitory ailments. susceptible publics or the p\ementing such systems came lime worker to coordinate air "Thal specific poll utants dangers flDaling in Uie air (rom I.he two air pollution pollution information thi s prevalent in our shared air are waves to their daily en-control officers. Winckler said. sum mer and to work wit h dangerous to the human vironment,'' \V inckler said. "The Los AngeJes APCD, for other agencies in selling up ~ Pe c i es . is indisputable:· \\'inckler said the. Orange instance, flatly denied that some type of warning or in· \.Vinckler said. County Medical Association any system of the sort pro-formation system. "The public has a right to 1--;ll~mmmmmmmr=====:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::====~ know when dangerous levels of I L1branHns v.1th the coun t} system. Cal Stale Fullcr1011 and UC ll'\'lnt• 11nan11no11sly agrc-e on one 1>01n1 abou t erot1C'a · Todav's obst'en1tv ts tornorro11•s cl3l>Sir. f.1ost ha1e given uµ 1 r~·1ng ta hide such 11·orks :is '"L<idv l'hatterl1 ·"' Lover'' ;111d " Trnp1t .n f Ca11cer " Thus, the UC I hbrary has no f1st1mate or how man y \olUJnes are stocked. sincr rnost are distributed among the bo()l;s ava1lablf' on open Sht'll't''i All t1branans intt::r\'ie\\'l'd s.11d there are some publica - Ju)ns, sueh as "Playboy" tl1nt a!'P lcx:ked up. howel'er. SANTA A.NA -The Orange County Board of F,ducfltio11 has re-elected A.E. "Pat'" Arnold µresident. Arrxild a businessman from SEAL BEACH -Hae E. Cy press. has bet.'n a n1ember Cargi!le. retired superintend· of the county school board ent of the Compton Union High since its founding in 1956. He School District and a resident has been president several of Seal Beach. has been ap- 1i1ncs. This is his third sue-pointed lo a new federal ad· c:r:>sl vc year as president. visory council on the U.S. pollution are in the air on a duity basis so they can take steps to reduce the amount of injested pollutants," Winckler expl ained. Enroll Now Fall Semester ALL·DAY CLASSES BAWTBOUE · CBRISTIAll SCHOOLS \Vint.>kler's repo rt said that the federal government h<U llildergartea thnl 8th Grade • T-il&lbe 4 R's witi pbnks •Door-to-Door Bus Smlt• \\'illu1rn f\1rkwond . d1r11r101· of <1d1nlrHSlra!11·e St'fl ICt'S for the Or<ingc C.:oun!v pub!1e lihrarv systcrn. 11n1c·~ th<Ll 111 f11'c Vears the 1·n1111tv ha~ 11·1tt1rtra11'n onh· 011e t1rl4: from Its collection ni1 1lll' J!l"OlHHI thl' honk 11·as obirf'11nn~1blr "Last E:..it to BrO('lkl1n·· w:is f('turn· ed to lhe publisher. K1r k11·uod .S<lld. "It's not a matter or pro- tecting tllP reader from !he book , it's a m.<1uer or pro- tecting the book fro1n 1hc reader," t.tiss Barb;ira 0[lvis. director of render service al C;1! Stale fuller1on scud Dr. Doris Araujo of Orang e. a rchives. STARS • Blfon ud After School c1r1· • R1ao1able Tattio1 ht f••lftcll• Y•ll•y 161J5 lrool•iir1t StrMt ,,J.Jl12 1vho is be.ginning the fou rth He \Vas named to the Region y~ar or hc>r first terin on the 9 Archives Council being S}·dnf'y Qnu11T i!!I on,. of board. \\•as re-elected \"ice established by the General l hf' 11·nrld".; grf'at as1rolo· president. This is the third Se rvices Ad ministration. This s"rs.. J I i~ l'olumn is onr of year 1n a !"Ow she has been region c ove r s California, thf' DAILY PILOTS great Sumnier Scllool starts July 6 .: .. , y•11r clillldr" hi t••d ...... llul an1ong lile !20 .000 11tle~ nflered by the county sys1em. lherr 1s an ;1rrnv of adult hteraturr includ1flg ··Seven .'li inutes"'. the ' · Se n ~ u o u s i\1an" and thr "Srn:r1unus \\'on1:in." Ki rk11·ood noted. Both Cal State and UC T libraries assign rare and ex- pensive volumes to a depart- , ment of special collections. \'Lee president. 1 ~H:aw~a~ii,~A~ri~w~n~a~a~n~d~N~e~va~d~•~-_!~'~"~';";'·'~';· =======:::!!...:::::====='.:=======================~ The board has srt its But. for the most parl. the county pubhc libraries "don·1 st()Ck lileralurr per se that \\'Ould ~classi fied as erotic." K1rk11•ood contends. Hr notes that in aln1os1 anv s11bject area, the county "''-~tt'rn does nol stock l'Ol11mes ri1nt 11•ould b(' nrl'drd by a serious researcher ··our cnllPctinn 1s primaril~· geared In providing general interest material." he says UC Jrvinc Librarian John Smith, notes. "We have a Anyone \1'ishJng to peruse the works housed in the locked quarters of the libary may do so. but materials cannot be removed or checked out. Periodicals or risque books are usually assigned lo the special collections department v.•hen it is established their presence on the open shelves leads to I.heft or d<1mage. ··\Ve have a lo! of !rouble keeping the centerfold 1n Playboy rnagazine ." Mi s !'i D:ivis said. Like UCI however. Ca l State stocks many litles that once were subject to controversy, on its open shelves. Denture Invention For People with ''Uppers'' ond "Lowers" Tlll" nearest lhin11, lo h.av1ni: yout ffilll}' b1tt hardrr, I'll(" .. l~tlrr eat """ lttlh 1• po!liiiblt 11uw with a ni<>rc naluralh plasuc. crcar11 d1~"0V"1"Y that ik"· f"1 ...:on~.NT may help you ~Pl:llk 1ual\y ho\d11 both .. up~·1~·· ;ind more dcarh·. hf nlUre al 1·;i°'" ~loweri:." a~ ncv(!r before po11S1b!C'. T he ,;pc(u1I penc1l-po1nl th~- lt"s 3 rtV(llutionary di!!eovnv JJefl!lef 1':1~ vou ~pol FDlOOt!/'<1" a iled Fr xOOF.NT"'. fOf d.iirly home .. 1lh precision ... "'hct"c ~! 11:.e. IU.S. P:Jt. f:J,OOJ.9811) \.\"1th ~ appl1cauon may la~l (Of FixOOl:'.NT many denture ~an"rl hours. Denturts that fl t ar1 now cat. spe11~. laujlh , with little c1sential to health. SH. your •Ol"TV of dentures 1·om1ni: l(){)';;C. dcnll~l TC'!:ul;irly . C.t t ca~y-t~ F1 xonENT form• an t-l"Nllt.: u~ F1XOO£NT Denture Adhl-$v1 m<'mbfanc lhal h1·lp<1 ab!lorb the Crtam al all drui count,rs. alirich nf h1hn.I( and chfowin,R. You meetings for the coming year on the first and th i r d Thursdays of each month, but v.'i il meet on the second and fourth Thursday in Aui:?\]st because of vacation schedules. Board OKs Flooll Bids SANTA AN A -Contrac:ts totalling mure than $800,000 to cunstruct portions of three flood control channels have been approved by the Orange County Board or Supervisors. A $492.729 contract. to con- :i;t ruct U1e Brea Creek channel between Gilbert Street and the Union Pacific Railroad right- of-way in Fullcrlon '"'a s awarded to J acoby a n d Garten. The cnnlr:.ict /or the Shan· non slorm 1.:hannel betv.·een Magnol ia Street and Chapman Avenue in Garden Grove 1vas awarded lo Be lczak-Basin for $294 ,fi02. A 1.100-foot section or the 'Trabuco Creek channel in O'Neill Park will be construct· ed by f.lodcrn Aloys Fabrica- tors under a $57,920 contract. '0 i 3 t) 11?1-.P-HA-RM_A_c.v__.I 2700 E. COAST HWY . At Fernleaf Co ron11 del M.i r SAVE $ $ COUPON SAVE $ $ ------ 5 000 lttRU Jl.ll 'f 10 BARNES-HINDS • WETTING • SOLUTION • ~ .. .,r. ""'"•~"• ,,.111110~ '" • •nU•t.n• con!1<I 11""'" • • Deluxe EFFERDENT SAVE $ $ COUPON SAVE $ $ GOOD l ttROUGtt JU~ Y 10 NATURAL VITAMIN "E" CAPSULES • • • • • • • JOHNSON'S BABY POWDER t111ot ttr cll llcl...,.. •"4 •dY!h . 1, .. ,11t11<: ,., .. SAVE $ $ COUPON SAYE $ S PREPARATION SUPPOSITORIES •• ,01 r.ck..--4 12 W.flllflt, tftecll•• •1110'!. r-o.., Ttt~U JUl'f •• ''H'• • • • • • • GILLETTE FOA·MY ~ .... , ~·--'" ti ••••• , •• ""' ........ "'" ... WE QUOTE PRESCRIPTION PRICES ON THE PHONE 644 7.szs AMPLE PARKING IN REAR HOURS-9:30-6:00 DAILY -.. "!\ . ~ _CL-OS~~UNPAYS A H!)!IJl"O -.~ Take our condiments with our compliments. [ ___ s ,___ Free Imperial Savings Herb Garden. Here's a g ift that will add a touch of spice to your life. lmperlel Savings Herb Garden. A living kitchen, yourn for the asking at any Imperial Savings office. It's a versatile store of seasoning at your fingertips year 'round. Fresh in your window box or garden. It comes with complete g rowing instruc tio ns and gourme t ide as for use. And, directions for drying and storing. Come in and pickup yours, now thru July 9th. One to a family, pl ease, while supply lasts. And, while you're here, s ta rt yo ur savings growing, too. Like our free Imperial S avings Herb Garden, your savings inter· est grows ye ar 'round, too. Complete instruct~ end09ed 5 "' per a nnum 5.25•;,, annum 5. 75~ aMum &.oo':t.per- Oft pemboat 80000.ll"llL ~ ...... I• CO!tlpovnded dalty. Actuat yl•ld ~13Y. Mitri lfvl"ll• ~ im.i.,t MXIUll!U\ale -,.. •. Cll'l ISOOO ..... ~ -... two,._,, or -. Ae1ll9I yield •.18"-wtllln ..,.,. ...... -~ ....... ,.... 1mPERIAL SAUlnGS Execunve Ofllce: 33G6 Via Lido. Newport Bi>ach, (71•1613-3130 Main Ottice : 61 South Lake Ave nue, Pasadena, (213) 795-8441 and Loan Association Newport Cente r Oll ice: 550 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, (71'4 ) &44-1~1 East Pasadena Olllce: 3870 Easl Foothlll Boulevard, Pasadena, (213) 795-0"47 Glendora Otfice : 134 North Glendora Avenue, Glendora. (213) 335-4043 Woodland Hitl!!I Office: 19900 Venlura Blvd., Woodland Hills, Ct1 llL, (21 3) 346-3920 A WHOLL y OWNED SUBSIDIARY OF 1.6 BILLION DOLLAR IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF AMERICA om . ""T--·-~· . ----• •-s;:::c:,::-----.~,,,,..~.~ .. :::::-:c-::~=-=--:..::..'IJiO~~=-="----===~-.~-o-~, .... """-:::---===;,;~~.~---=-.:.=:~.;,,_--"""'"'-"=_~_~ii'=:::-7-,---"'2 - • ' d ' . y y • ' ir ' p • • • - ·' ;. ' ' . . . I ' • • : . • • l • l ' • , ' • ' • CHUCK STEAK FIRST CUT EXCELLENT FOR B-B·Q fAO • 160Z ~ROQUEFORT ~ 0 DRESSING ~fA0 •!70Z.80X ~ / Cheese Pina ~I A0 •100Z&OX c ~PEP PERONI PIZZA l ~OZ. FAD COLE SLAW ~POPSICLES or ~ 'FUDGSICLES I DAILY Plll!T J :J iscounl OUR NAME MEANS DISCOUNTS EVERYDAY! WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES. • fitJ11"1JIJOHH PORK ROAST FRESH PICNIC STYLE vt 11s ~~.37c ~«J9. 65c ' . ROUND STEAK FULL CUT lb. ~' 49c fAJlMlll JOHN HAM FULLY COOKEO SHANK HALF c lb. STOIE HOUIS: DAil Y 10 a.111. tot p ... ., SAT. & SUN. 10 •·"'·to FARMER JOHN • B OZ. PACKAGE SKINLESS LINK SAUSAGE EXTRA LEAN FAD SLICED BACON FARMER JOHN e FAMILY PAK SLICED PORK LOIN CHOPS FARMER JOHN 10" WIENERS 57~ . 78~. 69~ eJ -· 10 Ol. JAt • ~E STQ,1'{5 C"4•11Gf I .S'I ICllO+JA Clilr'O!\olf • ~Jl'C!Olt e I COUfrfT -~!~ ~ . ~---... "~ " NOXZEMA SKIN CREAM 121 .S Ol. AUlOSOt • 5CENlt0 0 11: UNSCEt.'T'ED SOFT & DRY 97c (MEDIUM SIZE) c lb. FOR GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS SCHICK BLADES 11Ol.80tlt( •MOUH-IWA.5t-i COLGATE 100 GARDEN FRESH ·LITTUCE • RED LEAF •BUTTER •SALAD BOWL 124 83< IT'S SMART TO SHOP AND SAVE AT FAD . ----··- . . . . . . . . . . . . . -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I . --· . ~ ...... ---. ... r:....__ ___ .-. .. ... --.,.~ ....., '1 .:: ~.-·--· --• . ........... --.. ;. ....... ~ ---~1 .:_ .......... , ·~ . -,., -· .~ .,... . --·--. .......-. - -____ ,,,,. . _,_____ .... -....... ' ..._ ... --. ~ '"':...,,_....,..._ . ~--·---.. lt---1 ' . . . - ..... "":' . ~ J f OAIL Y PI LOT Tllf:Sdly, J11!16. 1~71 Just Like July 4 Automobiles and trucks create a t raffic jam on the German Autobahn :U~r· highv.·ay as vacation begins for some people in qermany. Seep.es like this y,•ere al so noted in An1cr ican on the July Fourth holiday. 12 Fro1n Coast Tal\:e Hono1·s Old Mystery Pops·U p Experts Debat,e Stonehenge Origin LONDON CAP) -Tht 1ilent is a clrrle of meneliths en the that cemparl11>ns of carbon atones ol Stonehqt, an VI· Salisbury plain, sa miles age tNta wJtb tb• immensely cient British riddle fit to baffle southwest of London . It con-accurate age rings of lbe Sherlock Holmes, once again tains 72 giant stones, weighing California brisllecone pine are the focus of scholarly con-up te 30 tom each, formed in a tret could establish the ac- troversy. clrcle 76 feet across. The curacy flf the carbon tests. ls the monument British? Is unknown builders dragged the Their research s howed it an import from Lhe Medller-huge stones for miles across discrepancies of up to seven ranean? the plain. centuries in dates before 1500 The latest theory le incite Until the early 1 VO Os , B, C. tbe mea who dalva into Slooehenae WU aaner&ll)' con-Accordin&ly, &JLirew 'i.Yi. pre.biltory ind the remain.a el nec:ted with the Druid• -a Stooebtna• l.!i 11veral ctn· past ptople Is that Stonehenge group of priestly m11gletans turles older than prevlowly is a local creation, owing known !or their satTiflcial believed -older, in fact , lhan ~ nothing to ancient Medlter-rlte1. the Mycenaean civilization. ranean culture. More recently, G. S . "We've got to rewrite the Archeologist Colin Renfrew Hawkins of Boston University ma in story line," he says. "All tecently adv anced lhis idea called Stonehenge a Neolithic our previoll! archeological fin- and scholars ston began "computer" (or predicting dings are still relevant, but choosing sides, fer and eclipsts and movements of the we'Ye got tn rearrange the against. sun and moon. In 1966, Fred pieces of the puzzle. It looks "It's being debated all Hoye, a Cambridge Universi· as though we had I.hem all oYer." acknowledges Stuart ty astonomer, agreed that wrong before.'' p;ggott. a University ef Edin· Stonehenge was a prehistoric Hawkin!! disagrees. observatory. "Radiocarbon testing can burgh archeologisl who first 1 · -• adYanced the idea t h al The n1ost accepted theory of on Y give us a range Ul · · · 1953 h figures." he says. "It's true Stonehenge was influenced by origin came 1n . w en Ed. b h' p · ti d t those figures have now been a Mediterranean culture. But Ln urg s 1ggo an w& · le · d t J l changed somewha t, but no p;ggott is noncommittal on the assoc1a s a cc 1 en a y l bl d · · th matter bow old you make new theory. s um e upon carvings in e stone. They took these to be of Stonehenge, I still think there Christopher Hawkes, Oxford the ancient Greek Mycenaean were overseas influences on it. University a rcheologist, zllll culture, w hi c h flourished "Renfrew says Stonehenge considers the Mediterranean around 1500 B.C. 0 l he r is too old to have been in-H • ft • • theory valid. scholars thought they detected flu enced by the Mycenaeans. (fll• fttSIRfl "Renfrew has presented a influences of the Minoan \Veil. they may not be h I M · fl b 1 Actress Ann Roderick is going to be \Vay "in" w en caricature ef the prob em," culture of Crete. vcenaean IA uence~. u H k "It' h the y certainly are Mediter· s he sported her ne\v hair-do J uly 4. It's not really aw es says. 5 muc Renfrew challenges the h · I " b t th th 1· mo., co mplex than that You ranean. \Ve've found things at er O\\'n "crO\\'n1ng gory, u ra er e crea ion ' · Mediterranean theories on the ] see there's still 50 much we other sites to back this up." o( a Ne\V York hair sty ist. basis of new carbon-dating.~========'=======================o, don't know." Ir techniques. Renfrew claims recent Am· erican rese ar ch shows ''\Ve ' v e been u n· Stonehenge ftt be several cen-derestimating the creativity of ttlries older than scientists us· those 'Vestern E u rt pea n ed to believe. This means. he barbarians." he says. "Our concl udes. that Stonehenge wh ole th:nking about the v.·as built independently of prehistoric era has to be 11edilerrancan culture. llis changed. We n1ust now look theory contradicts the epinion for explanations in Io ca I of many scholars that civiliza· l~rms -not in ternl.S of this ti on began in the J\:1ed iter· great flow of culture from the Mediterranean." ranean and spread 11ut from there. Renfrew cites research done HAMS " • . . So Good It Will Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" 0.rHI fen IOC!h -Plc•ict or Partin Our hom1 ore the lines! co•n·ftd low• POrlt•ri -Out 1lnw a"' curing mell>O(I, real Wltconsln hk kory •nd 10011..-i 1mo•lng ond JO.hour "''"" 1>okin11 honey •n 1p;c1 g1oze are 1mlQut •n oil th• world. So ae licoous ond •Ppt!ilirlll we lull woutan'r ~now how 10 Improve !hi• p•O<hKT w1've be•n mokl1>9 for lt r••t1. Splrol 111ctd 100, trom 10P to t>oT!om 10 lh•! itch d1lec1~1>lt un!lorm oll<e <An be remcvfd elfotll~•IY. Compl1ttly t>••td ~nd roody to ''"'' Or• dtr your Hon•Y Sa•ed Htm !Od•Y· 1n 1dv1nrur• In hlm·lo~ment ycu•u """'' tcrge!, The separa te interviews by ProL l-1. E. Suess (I( La v.•ith Renfrew and Hav.·kes J olla . Calif ., and Prof. C. W. ' . r lb u . •t r RETAIL STORES Point up the mystery cif the erguson o e n1vers1 y o 1 000 . . f St h Arizona in Tucson. 1700 t. Comt H ghwoy, C•r•na del Mar -'71·9 Rebekah lily Smith, 1012 origin ° one enge. 1221 S. lrMll:hun,, Anaheim •15-1461 Verano Place. , __ T~h'.'.;':_IP"."~h'.'.;s~t"'or"'k:_om~o"'n'"u".'.m"'e~"t'__'_""~_'t::w:'o_~"'.'.'"'''"'"':"'Y'-'f"'o"'"".".d',',,================================! Twelve Orange Co a 1 l From Colla Mesa : John S. residents have been awarded Goff. 2215-B Pomoha SL ; Toni hono rs in the b Io Io g i c a I Lynn Holland, 859 Wut 19th sciences at UC Irvine, in Sl.; Laurie Elaine I ten, 120 recognition of their participa· From Corona del Mar : David A. Bihler. 507 1h Carna· lion: Nahelte Marie llogan, 718 Jasmine St.: David G. Hadick, 42.8 Goldenrod Ave. lion in the special research Yorktown Lane. "go-for-honors" p r o g r a n1 . From Fountain Va 11 e y : They are: Claudia L.. Rowlett, 16714 from Balboa Jsland: R. Steven Ballback. 21211z Opal St.: Mark S. Han e.motu, 201 From Huntington Beach: Mount Baxter Circle. Geroge 11. Bradbury, 16592 From Irvine: Mark D. Tuburon Place Kor.ar, 1013 Verano Place: Emerald. ~~-~~~-~~~ oiiiiooii~~~~~~~ EARN 253 TO 503 MORE Most banks have now reduced savings passbook rates to a low 43 . At Pacific you still earn the same high rates as before .. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS 6.18°1o 6.00°lo 5,000!.!! TWO 5.92°1o 5.75°1o 1.000!.!! ONE 5.39°1o 5.25°1o 500!.!! Yi th 5.13°~ 5.00°lo 1!.!! ONE DAY --- Interest compounded daily and paid from date of deposit to date of withdrawal even if it's ju st one day Ask how you can obtain all these benefit• service charge FREE PREPARATION OF PERSONAL STATE and FEDERAL INCOME TAX RETURNS l ~ TRAVELE R'S CHECKS SAFE DEPOSIT 80X!S . . • ·. .,,,.,., FREE • ~~~ COLLECTION OF NOTES MANY OTHE~6 ' ' ~ ~1\' OPEN NIGHT~nd DAY Hou,.: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. SOUTH COAST PLAZA aau WllllTCM. STRUT • COITA lllllA. CAUfC>fUAA • '"°"' M~ N~arly Everyone Listens to Landers -~ ---" I [,r ,_, . - HOME Only Home Only Home proteclB you with assets over $3.7 BIIJJON pays interest at the rate of over $435,000 every day. * Still available at H~%. compounded daily, on accounts of $5,000 or more. The term is atill just 2 years, nnd you can still get y01Jl' money before the end of the term with the minimum interest penalty, just 90 days. * ''It's the best way yet to achieve a special goal without the expetll!0 of bo?rowing, with· out going into your regular savings." Thousands have found this is so true with Home's mciting "Pay Yourself First" accounts, which pay you thecummtannual 5%, compounded daily, day-in to day-out. SPECIAL AT HOME Your club or organization activities need publicity. Now yon can get FREE "prime time" radio commercials. See your Home Savings managur (at least 3 weeks in advance) for free time on "The Home Savings Comniunity Calendar," broadcast several times a day on KABC. ' . ...... ..... --~ . ,_, • »--------. ~ . . ~· -. ,,Jl· ..;.__..._ . ,.._ •• -- ' I I \ OVIENIE By Phil lntadandi I "Get th&t fathead sign pa.inter up here right awa.y!" 500 Volunteers In A rt F es ti val • DAILY PILOT JS Hotlines, Agencies 50 County Centers A vailahle for Youth Anyone 1iving in or staying p n1 , 633-6140. Free Cl inic of Orange Coun-YMCA , 14& N. Grand Ave , Melodyland Drug Prevention In Orsnge County and who h<is Teen Chal lenge, 78 Plat.I. ~·.-, 500 -AN. Anaheim Bh•d . Orange, referral for one-tCt-<lne Center, Anaht>in1. 778-1000 . 2.ol a problem can now find help Squar e. Orange. 6 3 3 _ 3 o u o . r\na.he1m , I p.m. to 5 p.m., 956-counseling with a college !ltu-hours. through one of nearly 50 agen-religious orientation. !900. dent, Pa re n I al permission Youth Problen1 Cen te r , cies. f\1elodyland Drug Prcvcnl ion SL James Episcopa l Church, necessary, 633-8848 . Costa Mesa, 642-0032, 24 hours. While many of the t'enters Center. 10 F'rcedinan Way, J?O!I Via Lido, Ne wport Beach, Entra nce Youth Center. 211 Action Lint', Santa Ana , ~3- Human Outreach. Sa n t a Ana , 83G-$101 and 826-3720, l4 hours. P r e g na n e y Counseling, Costa ~lesa. 642-4436. 8 a.m. to 5 p.n1 . are geared to drug oriented Anaheim . 778-1000, B ib J e "'"ckend pr o g r a nl for S. Broadway, Santa Ana, 10 232.1, 24 hours. problems, the majority of rela!cd. members, for membership In-a.m. to 10 p.m., 836-8405, Hotli ne, Garden Grove, 636-• ..,,.. .. ,.,,:::cnmm• .. • them arc sta ffed to respond to Calvury Chijpl'I of Costa formation, cal! 675·0210. spon so r e d by 11uman 2424. 24 hours. any problem. J\Icsa, Charles Sm ith. Paslf'r Tern Help, 18490 Euclid St , Outreach, lnr .. Friday r ap Helpline, Saddleback Valley, Alt hough a few of the Greenv ille a n d Sunnower, ;;'<iunta1n Valley, 5 5 7 -l 0 0 (l , sessions, 7:30 p.m. ~2522. noon to m idnight. centers are publically funded, Costa J\lr sa. 54~2121. Monday !o Friday 1 p.ni. lO 5 Tustin Rap Center, 285 E. Fish. Harbor area. 642-6060. the n1ajority are staffed and Orange County J\l ed i r a I P rn. and 7 p.m. to 10 P 111 ~1a in St.. Tustin, 338-fl350. ol 1en1purary e1nergency "'eirare supported by volunteers and Centrr, ~1ental Heahh Unit. lntercom1nun1ty Counselin~ p.m. lo 9:30 p.m. Tuesday service are open to prople of al! ages \OJ s. !-.l;tnchester A v e _, Center. sponsored by the through 1'hursd2.y. Newhope c 0 u 11 5 e 1 in g For The Record who n1ay be in lrouble. Orange. 633-9393. f'XI. 521. A1ner1can Foundation o f Prob 1 em Pregnancy St>rvice , Orange, 639-4673. 24 Here·s a list of the agencies Youth Problen1 Center. S1ute Hetigion and Psychology. 121 41 Counselin~ Service, 1818 W. hou rs. 17,_:=-cz::iaam=m•m•• Family Service Association 18. 333 E . 17th St . Costa ~l csa. Le wLs St.. 8th floor. Garden Cha pman Ave., Suite II , Hapline. Fullerton. 879-0526. or Orange County, 2166 E:. l\londay throui;th F'riday, 10 Gro\•e, 638-1122, 8 a.in. to 5 Orange, 639·7470/7471, 9 a 111. Sunday through Thursday, 7 Coast Highway, N e wp o r t a.n1 . to 2 p.m .. 642-£1377. p.n1. to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri-11.n1. 10 10 p.m. Beach, 67~6300 : 1 8~2 Beach North Orange County Chi!d Friendly Center, 424 N. dav and 9 a.m. to noon Satur-l!elpline, Huntington Beach. Dissolutions Of Marriage Blvd., Huntington Beach, 968-Guid11nce Center. 211 l'io. Cypress St .. Orange. 532·1819. daY. 894-4242, 24 hours. 5938: 17421 Irvine BI v d .. Pomona. F'ullerton, 871·9264 . l\1onday lo Friday, 9 am to 5 Planned Pa renthood, Inc., Teen Help, Fountain Valley, J'lttAL oic11:aEs Tustin, 838-7377 ·. 11412 St<in-Catholic Conunun1ty Agen-p.111. Friday rec reation night, 704 N. G\assell SI., Orange, ~~1 AJ51. 24 hou". IEn'""' Jw .. n "' ..., H•r-o•" Merv Lou •Ml ll ld1•rd I ford Ave .. (;ardcn Grove, i14-ties (C'athol1c \Ve ! r a re 7 p.1n. to 10 p.n1. and 538-9679. Hotline. San Clen1ente. 492-11""'•'"' P•1,,<I• •n~ J.,,, r.,.,., S I I "w'o" '"""" o. orl<I LH I! 6001, and 233 W. Amerigc Bureaus l no QUi'Slion as to 11!urdavs !I a.111 . o noon. Pregnancy Co u n s e l in g 8255, 24 hours. "••low J•, &, •• ,1. ,.. ... a w11111 J h I~ ! S f S S S M""•l•o,, Lvnao K•v• •r><I lrrol Ave., Fullerton. 871 -0075. religion. 1612 N. Spurgeo:! ~I . e\1 is · am1 Y ervicc o Service. 300 . ycamore. an· Teen Cha Henge, Orange. 633-Jom¥' d , I S 0 C I 11412 St fo tl d b I ll!o<e. Wo vne l-•n<1 l1n<I• 1"nn Orange County M e 1 c a anta Ana. 547-0003: 11412 range oun y. an r ta Ana. sponsorr y t 1e 3000. 24 hours. c,1mo CMa11!\!:" •<111 111<h•rd "· Center, Crisis Center. 24 Stanford Ave .• Garden Grove . Ave .• Garden r.rove , 53 4-5270, Chilrircn's Home Socicly, 542· Abortion Information Direc-i~1~~:·J:;~;Jd:v~1:,,;:i. ~::0d't.~o. v, hours, IOI J\1anchester Ave, 531).2980 . and 31 5 3rd SL. Suite J\ilonday to Friday, 8:30 a.m. 8334, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.111. torv.. Orange, 639-3023, 24 M•no&rlc•. 11•rb•r• J •n<I l!oa ~cnan, Jov Coro! .tnd Mlc~•tl 1"nthonY Orange, 633·9393, ext 60. G.. Huntington Beach, 536-lo 5 p.n1 ., no question as to JIO'flJNF.S hours. Hiii. N•ncv C•rol •nd IEdw•rd Hor•c. I' , Wlllrt>, Patr kl• J, ond Wlllltm C. Child Guidance Center of 6601. re 1g1on. Orange County Dru g Checrle Hello, Garde n K•llv, Jr .• J•<Q"'-llr~ Ann •n<I cn.11" Orange County. 171 E . 18th St .. L:iguna Beach CounselinR Garden Grovr Counseling Inforn1ation and Refe r r a I Grove, 530-2370, 10 a.m. to 3 M~1m. e°"n•• E. '"" Edw"d ,., Costa f\.1esa, Monday through Service, SL l\olary's Episcnp:>l Srrvice. 9621 Bixby Ave ., I.inc, Santa Ana. 834-5040, 8 p n1. ~~~~;:1: ~;~~1~.0 .. n~~~1~~~r~.'· Friday. 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.n1 . Church. 428 Park Ave .. Garden Grove. 636-1()60, 8 a.m. a .m. to 5 p.n1. J\.1onday F ree Clinic of Orange Coun-1 ·:~::· w .11i. ... HuMrt •n<I P•t•lcl• 64&-7733 a nd at SL Joseph's Laguna Beach. 497-1255, ~1 on-tu 5 p.in., J\1onday through through F rid:iy. ty, Anahei m. 956-1900, 6 p.m. N1c,,a1" 11ov E '"" P•ul•tt• (um<nlttw•, ~oblrl H•rol<I otMI 0 1••• Jlospi!al, 300 S. Batavia St , day <1n d \Vednesda ~·. 8.30 a.111. F' r i d a y , appoi ntments re· Crisis Center. Orange Coun· to 10 p.m. f\.1onday through E"n•r More than 500 volun teers from cities along the Orange Coast will take part in the 36th annual Laguna Beach Festival of Aris Pageant of the Masters -pr,sentations of art masterpieces re-created with living models posed and costumed exactly as in the original wo rks. Orange. 1'uesday, Thursday to 4 ~30 p.m .. all other hours quested. ty l\l edical Center, Orange, Thursday, Saturday, 2 p.m. to ~;~f.'."M~~~~f.:', ~· !~~ ~~~~1,!·L- Qu1xo1e •"<I S•nctta P1nu "1 Jell d F 'd 8 30 I 5 II S A 547 ~3 p ect A · ~ 633 9393 I 60 · w I M led<! Jo 1n<1 Do«ol T 0,1,,10 ... 0"" 0.,1•01~ """ ~•nctto a n r1 ay. · am. o c:a anta na . """'-'•. roJ rn1gos, v1ange · . ex . . 6 p.m. H~1r ... 1.a. J::,.. M .• ,,., H .. ~.1 ·,., P1 nu .. , Eo Au•tm. "Dor! Oul•o!~ ind ------'--------------------------.:_ ___ _::_ ___ _: ________________ _: ____________ _::::::.:::::_:_:::c.::::_:::_::::;=:__:_c__ Nearly 350 volunteers wilt make up the two rnsts of 175 persons each which alternate each week posing 111 the Pageant. It v.·ill ru n from July 16 through Au g. 29. The re1naining 150 volun- teers work on produclion, make·up, costumes and er- rands throu ghout the six week run of the Pai;ieant. wh ich an- llll~tlv draws 250,100 persons, Volunteers, by community. a re · Suw:tto P1n11"; Quinn Farn~. J<, "lttf D;911•ro"; Fr1rn:o-Du1cl'o Ova<l l; Qu;nn Farne" Sr , .. ltte o;aoer1" {Fr1nco-Oulctt Dvtd)I Grea Martin, "lhe Oi11aino Men" IFr1nco-0..1t11 Dy1<1J; GM<gt Kuk, "l n• Dogging Men" (Fr•nco-OUICh Oy•d ll Jaym• Qrj99_,1, "Ple<CKI l•OtY"; SuUtt We!lel, "Plerct<I IVOrY"; Mlk• Dov• . .. Pierced 1 .. nrv"; JOMt!n•n Hold••· "Don Qui•o1e •rod S&ncno Panza"; Cnor1e1 Scnllle<. "01nle 1 no Oe a!dc.,'1 Heidi Glldd•n, "O•nt• 1n<I Beatrice"; Pa!r\<1t 1<elnem•n. "O•nt• tncl ll•Mrlce"l Steonen Zelun•v, "E<>uP•tr.•n lro1<1 ', Tom M•rl•n, "Eque"''"" l •IMl"; Boll lnga ll" "V~nlc• Sell", GeorgP O•ll;'ton. "0•1tn of tlle Vlr9in"1 Frank "1!CMullen Il l, "Dealt\ o! m« Virgin" Le•t•r EnolMa ro!, "ReA dlno lh• ll!i!ual": ellnv 1no•ll1, "D•attt of lllo Virgin"; J•<~ K1no. "Deat tt o! 1111 Viraln"; Giibert Jonnson, "Deatl\ a! Ill• Vlraln"; Joe Hotter. "O..a!n o! !ht v:rgm•·, earl M<Huon, '•Oettll or In~ Virgin"; Jen Te•"leldt, "Wedgwood Plaau•"; OtbOran llenne11, "W..:19\11000 Pt•ove"; Sob Ga1e1. "W9dgwoo<l P1tou1"; Janice W•uoh, "S•rrv Pie~­''•"; Ptmel• Ott, "Dani• and B•al· rlc•"; Ed Hotoert, •·Dante and 11••1 rlre"; C•rol Barren, "Dant• 1nd Bu1-dce ';Jon Te n•lel<ll, "T~e ri rst SloP", Hpt!ner Motion, "(o,.~!l<I•" lT•lbui. IALIOA -J~<k Ktmb. "L•sl SUP· to ~"''""1 G!•ec•L Joan 1• .. rn~v. btr"1 J•1n 81rrP!t, "C••••1t<ll" "(MVITi<ll'' (Tr.bul • !o An <lont Tr.but• !~ 1"nt;ont G•tt<f. C1rolym G' ••'fl ; E I I' ab e tl'o Wetr•I, Kemn ... ll!•~alno 1~• 11:,1uil "Carvtlids"I Ttottut• to An c I en t CAJ'ISTRANO llE1"CH ll!ul h G•eeco l; Pott M•rlin. "C1rvalld•" 5w•n>0n, "Vorm .. er G•!l.,v"' GICtrla !lr;t1u1e lg 1"n<:l•n1 G•H<•); EllH" McL1v. "W•lk bV lttf Sta" C t«~ft, "Cl•Vll•<I•"! l rlttut• lo 1"n CORONA OEL MAI! -Jon (,1 11.r, dent Greoc•ll Har.,elle McMullen, "Frlslo to s,an,. Luc;, .. , sue l•"'~' "lleadino ttte ll!nual'. Ttte••1• "M•donnf Ind Cl\lld". CY""V Lim, T•n•le!dt, "ll:ead1"9 II!• ll>IUll"; M•r• "MtOon,,. and Cllll<l"J 1"rodr H S•-· Edi..,,., "11!01<1lng !he ll:O!ual"! Mauro "Y.rme•r G•llerY"; JI" Graur. Tin•lel<ll, "llo..:lln11 ,,,_ ll:!lu•l"J Judlltt "C0n<:1fl °" ft>e River"; l lnl Limb, l fnsfeld!, "ll e1dlnlf ti!• ll:ltual": G••• "Oe•ttt o! 11\t Vl•oln"; Dtbblt Wl1>0n, Kirll. "Rtfdlno th• ll:ilu1I"; Edn1 "Ctryalld•" Trlt>Jlt to Anclont Greece: Mc.Hugi\, ·•Re1d lng ttlf 11!Uu1I"~ Flor Cl'ldY We!ll. "Not•e o1me CaltiHit"I"; Do•ot11v 8f11>op, "ll!eadlno !tte ll!!lu1l"t llt!ty Gr••••• "ll!todin9 !llt Rltutl"I Oo•olhV Siol>OP, ''11!•1dng !tt• Rltuol". IC•• Duv•n. •·11:, .. a1n9 1tto llilua!"; C•rolyn Simi, "Tiie Roaaln11 1111 Nincv Gr1111m. "Trlbulo ID Antitnl ll!ll u•I"; KUttrvn Cn•mbet1, •·Juodlng Gr••c•"; ll••b•r• G•n•I "l 1tov1• 10 mr Ritua l"; Jvov llarlow, "ll!•a<11ng 1"ntlent Grttt•··, Leon Herlan, "No!re th• l!ltu•I"; snorrl H!l•rlo. "ill•Adlnt O•m• (alM•dMI", 1h1 11!1lu41'·.-Krl• Zel1rnev. "ll•odlna COSTA MISA -M .. rlln ~otP,.11. the Rl1u•I", Ka nnv H•llt•O, "ll:t~d1no "L•" Supp"'"; lot•Y BllnOhern, "lo•I lh• ll!llvol"; L•n•inv Rel<!, "R•fflno SuPbtr"; W1111&"1 Holdon, "L•" Sup• 1ne ll:l•v•I'; J•m M•nll. "ll!t•<llna Ill• p•r"; John Ad>••hMd. "fri>la lo ~onl• ll:.lv1l", Luclr '; MArllvn Penn, "Mo<!f>nno And ll!icl!•rd ll<Y$On, "ll!e1dlno lht C~ild": P•f Malon•Y· "Ad•m 1nd ll ilu&I", Wolll•m Suooa~v. "ll!t1dlng £vt"; 8111 Whitcomb, ''Four Doc!O""' !lie ll!itu•I"; W•vnr II • m 11 Ton, Oltk L•tlan< .. "Fo<ic OOC!O'l"i Aufo "ll~&01no lnr R•lu&I '; Jill D•"mon•, l lfltJ, "Fou• Doc torl"; LOY Leurin, "lh&diM me llllu•I"; J••nnr F•rtt.,,, ''Tht 01.,.1na Men·· 1Froncd Du1cn •·sn10•' F1aur•h•aos•-; l uOv Curcio, C•.tO\; Gigi Go•m•"· "Plertra Ivory'': •·stt10•' F.our~tte•<I'''; Su"'n Poley, L•tann • Hornrv "O•nt• •" d 'ShiPl' f;gurott•od!'; Mrl'Q•••I 11~1••· ll••lrlc o"; JDhn Horn•>. ''Eaun !•ion "Sn101' F Io"•• n e • d I''; Boll• l d•<I"; Maro•rot A•Mrn••d. ''O•a!n EnG•lllardt. ··~n l Ps ' F1ouren•1d1'·; ct Ill• Virgin"; Lucy Perou1, "Nolfe ll!cl'ot•d ~ml!n. "Ship~' Fiourenoad1 .. ; D•m• C11nt<1rll"; l(e rtn w~11 .. , H•ltn ~·mo. "Sl!lpJ' Fl1uroh••D•''; "lloa<1ln1 1n1 ll il~•I''; Jolln i.o111<•· ll!ickl• Wtlr, "SttlP•' Fl1tUrlflo1d•". •·rrlbult to Antotnl Gr•oce • Coclll• Bt1rd1I••· "l tibu1' lo Ancl•nt DA"IA POl"ll _ Cllerlt• rnom0..,.,, GtH <•"; K1nnt tn Ulbrl<tt. "V•nlc• "Le•t SuPa•r" ~J••u• '"'''"' J•!I B•ll". Arll!ur Hunt, · 11on1lu onct Cr.owlll, "ln• 0199•••" (Franco·DYl<tt St~IP!vre G1ll•rY": Fronct •kf fg o•11, D•.tCI!; ll!>tk Cr.,wtll E<iu•••ro~n "Trloul, to 1"nt••nt Gr"°"t"; M1vbtlle Trl,,d"; Mtl1nlt '"'"'""· "C1•V•hd•" HolCllJch. "'frlbut1 to Ancltn1 GrNct": tlro OUn• 10 .,"~"'" G•••t•l, ll!·<h••<I ll!on Pa lcht11. "frlbul• •o An<l•n• IL Crl1w•l1, "l:te•d•n9 lne ll:11ua GtNte"; ll<191r Len"""'" "f ,.Ou!o lo El lORO -1""'"' wavnff, La•I 1"nd•~• Gre•<•"' Gu rv li:1n>0m. Sup.,.r"'; David Hett1el<1, • ll•rr ~ ··rrittutt to Anclonl Grrtte t'·; l•w•h Plckpr\": M&rk W1lkor ·II •<,~ Ml""'' "lrlbute !O Ancltn! Greo<;•'; Plt~l'1"; (lay !1utl••. "Fr1••0 10 ~ant• 8111 Hot1"10tt. "T•ltUll 10 Anc oen! Lut•&''; C1rol Clos•on "Walk hv 1n, G•te<t"; Jann s1-uy. "lrlbul• to Si~"; Rll• M Or•o.,, ''M•donn• and Ancltn! GtH~•" (~11n•·, Mlcl!•I• O.ioor M•d~nn~ and lA GUNA tllllS -5~lY Dov11. Chlld"; M•!t Ktnntod• "(oncer! nn !II• "i!t<rY Plcktr1 ' Ill••"'; "'"'" K•nntd•. ·c~n<•rl on Ml~S10 "1 VllE JO -Scoll L•no. "Th• tn1 ll ·v•r"i M•ure•" l(ell• "Madonna >;"•"· To•••• k1nn•llY, "Plorcen 1nd Cn•ld" ll•rt• Ht!l1•ld. "8•"• l~nr~ J•v Avh•""' le'! S<tOD" J'lt ker• ; Donna H•""' (or!frrl nn tnarlM Jnn••· ''l'lrn•l•1ancr ~tulnlV'< 1n1 ll'i•1•"; Jenn'"' >!ullrr, ·(on<•n ('•llr<v' rind• W•l .. n•nn M~d"""• "" !ht 1!1ver"; llr>•n W•I'" "Tiit •"d (l\·ld' O•l>b1e f<I~. "l!••d•nO !11• Ko!r"; Rol>•f! Hoflmon, "'Th• D1q9mq l:tllV•' J•"''' /l\•llu•n, ll••d•"O !•>• M•n" !Fr1 nc0Du•ctt D••~I ; H•"V ll!••v•r'; C•!h>' L••1g, "lltadlno fllt Cr•o•r. "ltt• D•9D•"" IF••nrn·01Jt<ll l!llu•I" (nll••n Cl•·~ ''Sn1n 1' D••dl; Drttl>I• fl lttt, '0•"'' ""d r ,gurtllt•d\'; P•m Hu l Cl!ln lo.,, B••trk•"; P&! Kenn.,iv, "ll•AO•n9 ll>t "T•1bvt• fp AntltM c;,..,,., V•r• Rl!u•I" L•no . "l«bv•• ID /Indent G,.•<e". ll'UttllNGlON •EACH Trocv E•• l\'O()llWAtn, "l"bvtr To Ant"M M.ivln, "Frl•lo to Sen1e lutl• ·, 011n• C•et<•" 1"rm•!ron1, "Brrr v Pick•r>·', Ou•n• "IEWPORT •EACH -ll!ober! ~Tod· 1E mber...,, "Fou• Occiori"; S<oTI ••~. "l•" Supo«r'" M•'k St<><l<lara. Mtl•ln, "ltte jr(ltt", W•vn• GlblO,., "l••t Suooer"; l .., Al l•n, "L•ll SU~· "St Pt!er'1 ll•olllCA Quatt•n•on": ofr"· Douolll Palmlr, "Adam on<I llar~ar• 1"tmltron9, "St P•1'1'1 Eve", Cl>r,.IY ~Clllell•t. "Madonna ond 1111111c• Qu•t•tttion"; Poltlc~ GIOi.on, Clllld"I B••D•r• Engl1r. 'lltrrY "l!•HV Plc~trs", ~l<on ~ugdtn, Pi<•~'•"· Jon" Slow;•ew••I. "!!•"• "A•chl!KtU<e .. (ll!enl lnan<:o StulPlure P.c~tr.•i 11,.1..., J Cunn!nonam. "fD<Jr G1lltrvl; Dfonl•t Gob\OM, 'Pi•tC..:f Oocors'; Jvl!• Lewi., "Th• Kit•"; Sue '"''ry"; Fr•n~ Arm11rcwo1, "Eqyutrl1n Ptoo. "St Pe11r·1 !1•1lt.c• Ou1t••· Tr,.d''\ Jottn ll:""edi, "SI. Ptttr'• nlon"; 8,.n1rd Pl'llO• "M\n!1tor!1>9 •••Ille• Qu•t••n•OM"I A u •• 11 . 1"nOtl"I J•nl~~ 5mll'll, "C••Y•lkl•"; l mbtroon, "ll:r•dl.,1 tt>e llllu•I": Bott Trll)ut• to Anti•n• G•tt<•I: ltttlm• 1-l••t rl vt, "ll:todln11 11\f Rllu11•·1 Gl•ll>rd, "C•'1'•1•<1•" 4T•1bul• 10 DelO<t• M. Well•nd. "lleadlno 11\e Anclen! GroecrJ; D•n P•H ... ll:•1dlng ll:llu•I"; K1Y• M•I~•"· ''Sl\I DI ' '"' l:tll~•I"; Janel """lot, •·1t1.t<l!1>9 F!9urtne.oni": Lvn Mt"'""· "l rlttu!f lh• Rlluol'': Mlr~e•t $coll. "S~lnl' to G""'""; Arl'l!ur M•l•ln, "Trlb!J!e 111 Flour-Hit"/ Carol A<lftr, "$1'\o" GrffCf", .. Fla11r.,,•MI•"; Jlr<Y Mc c II I I 0 ( tt . IJ!VINli _ Robort l!owm•n. "Lo•t "l rlb<Jlt to An<it nl GrHc•"; Kay 511,.,,.r". 8frm1n, "l rlOUI• ID "'n'""' Greect '. UOUNA l l!ACH ii ob 0 r I Vlrtlnlo An9er, "Trlb<JI• lo A11eltnl 9t<'n <1,1, "l•\I Suol't•": IEdoor Greece"; El!ttn ilowlkowlkl. "Trltt111e Etmtr, vl •1! SUPM•"; Voctor 0.lbv. 10 An<:ltnt Gtt«<e" "Liii SuPMt"; llolM'r t Scttn•!l~r. "l •<I SAN CLEMENTI! -Linda O•v. SuoPtr'; T.,.,v Sirna. "l•ll SY•oot"I ·~~1•:.~Y Pitktr1"1 Rot>erl C1v, "ll!• cavlcr FID<Jfl>(IV. "l••! Suo•••"; SA"f JUAN CAJ'tltrtANO -Jenn Ch•rl•I Webtt. "l•1! Sup ... ,··' LH>nerd MIOdlllrl, "Ttlbul• IO "<I' l . n r O•v!1, "Las! Suoo<'r''; ltd "loatlr;, "l••I SupPf•''• Georg• cunnlnt<lem. C>tt.ct'._ "l tal S""otr": Tony Crowtll, "L•" Sup"r'': Jotott Nie"""' "lt11 SuoP<!r·•: Joe C•l•n!th, "l ••! Supp0•": Howt•d L1.,.11t. "Aden1 100 Ev1··, Ala" O'H1r1, "Adam •nd Eve"; (<l~rlt• Tt~lo.. "Adam on!I Evt"I HlllltY Colt, "Adtm fr><I IE vt"; llllt<ltrd Slroo. "Ad•m •n<I E"f"; Jarklt Hiog" "Frl•lo to Stnte Lutla"; Jelll't Otll• ,,,., "F•hlo to Stnl• l utl•"I T•rrv H•u.r.t, "Frl1lo to S•nll Luc:!•"; Stew. Haugh!, "F<lllO lo Stnlt l ut!l"I Arm•n T. (;11,..rlen. "Frl1lo to Soni• Ludo"! C11,...ll"• Oottl. "F•l1lo !O Stn!1 LIKl•••; Clartn<• 41KI l!••r, "Frl1lo ID S•nl• l utl•"I Mt •Y C••ol Felll1>9, ''Wtlk bY l'lle SH": JHn ... F•rM1. "MtOClflfl• 11\<1 C<ll!O"; Mlltt OW.tr, "lltffY l"ldlttt": Ptl•l<,',t TtittlelCfl, "("""'"'' on IM 11\"f' : C•lt>erl"9 ICtllH, "Cenc•rl on .,,. ll!lvlr"J Jo"""•r 1'\0lkOWlll, "CO<'l(Cft'I "" 11\1 Alwef", l(fllv IC1hn, "Conc:trt °"' ,.,_ lllYtr": f r•,. W1,.., "Fou• Doclort"I F•t~ McMulltn, Jr.. "Four Dor::lor1 I l;l(ttt rd 911holt. "F<111r Ooc l.,.1"; ll:lcMord 91-. Jr , "Tiit ic n1:;1 Marto Gorl<Htd. "VermHf Gt1tH~ i OooJ9 wenal. "lldtm •n!I Ev•": li'obll•I Mt•vln, "C0"'<.•'1 e.. llW' Riv••"; Olnt Vount. "C-tfl"" tM ll:lwer"l ll:•nd•I ,.,....,, ··c-•rl "" ,... ll!l•or": S"':~1 Otnltl•, "C-erl "" ltt• Riv•• .. ' •rid_,! Holl, "Conc;fff °"' !h•. 11'1••• · l" Mllltr. "Four Doclgn'; Pe!f1 W•lttl, "MNOl'n• 1n!I Child"; l•I• G••P•rl1n, "Maclo!lnt •"" Chlld': l tg 0 •• ,.,1.n. "TM KU•"• l(tm Mfflln, "SI. "'""' ,,.,He• OU1t•rn ltl<'l" 1 1~111 Man1I. "Oon Oul~olo" !Con Qvl•ll• •Ml Sindle J'an1•) $tu••I Wtllofr.•·Doro Lobbyist Fund OK'd SANTA ANA Orange County Supervi.ic>rs have voted to continue a contribution to the hiring of a lobbyist in Washington, D.C. to further the passage of a bill prohibit· ing offshore oil drilling in fed· era\ tidelands. The bil l. SB 1447 by Sen. Al11n Cranston (0.Califomia J would ban oil drllllng or ex· ploration in the federal lands bf'vond the three·mile limlt. TM supervlSC1rs voted a $.'i,000 conlrlbution. Newport Beach has previously ap- proved contributing an'other 12.000 _ ... _ ..... ----... --~------------·--·-----,,,\ • • tick-tock Just for opening your NEW PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT or for SECURING AN INSTALLMENT LOAN Either way, here is your opportunity to check the right time, the easy, courteous way with Newport National Bank. Receive your choice of a beautiful decorator clock ... Free of Charge .•. for opening your new personal che cking account for $150 or inore or for starting a new installment loa n of $1,000 or more. Qualifying installment loans are: Home Improvement, Automobile, Mobile Home, Boat, Airpl ane, or Personal Loans. Add to the decor of your living room, den, kitchen, bed room or o ffi ce w i th the se sp"cially designed electric Decorator Clocks. There is a slight additional charge for clocks B and C. PR ESENT DEPO SITORS may buy these fabu- lous clocks at a cost that's hard to believe! It's our way of sayi ng "lhank you" for being a depositor at Newport National Bank. One per fam ily. SlRVING ORANG£ COUNTY •• , 9 CONV£Nl£Nf OFFICES AIRPORT Orner ....... , •• , ........ ,,., +•,en 1t l•htArthur.,. .8JJ JI l t S(Al Bf/\CH OFFICE ........... l.ebvrt WOl'1d. Se•! B!Kh .... 596·2711 BAYSIOf QiflC[ ....... _ .. ,,... 1 •1•1de ~t Jamboree , 642·1141 SllNNV 111 1 1~0FflC[ ................ ., ... H11bor 1t B1e1 ... ,811·7290 COlt£G( PARM OFf!C( .......... N 11 I r.ommnn.,.c 1l1~ .•• 8711')()0 SU Pf I !"ti rlCE ...... , . .. .. . SuptrtOf ~ P1.ctnli1 .... &42-9!i l 1 LAGUNA HIU.S Offl Ct.,., ••••••• Le i~~ t 1, .11<1. LA11in1 fti lls .... 8JQ.J200 UN !~1 f' ,lfY 0FF1Cl . . . . [1,t Chapcnan al Siat• CoU1&e., •• 87!MMO WU ICUff ort ICE •••••••••••••••• '.' ••. We.slcldl •l Oovu ..•. fl.4 Z·J l ll ---' --1-------~-....--.,.-- I I -· . -' JI DAILV PILOT Tutsda;y, July 6, 1971 Can't Win' S. Viet Private Predicts .. Def eat DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) - Pvt. Nguyen Huu D i n h predicts defeat for the South Vietnamese army as he scavenges di :scar de d am- mu~ition at a U.S. Marine ia?fiage dump near Marble Mountain. .. When the Americans leave, the Communists will ta k e over," he n1ut!crs. "We can- not stop them. \Vhy are the Americans leavmg ?'' Brig. Gen. Vu Van Giai also has qualms as he surveys enemy infiltrat1on routes 111 the mist-shrouded A Shau Valley rrom a l":illlop called F'irebase Holcomb. "I need 1nore R52 strikes. more heli1.:opter support. rnore artillery. more 1>cvple." he c omp l ains . "Yet you Americans want to take your Gls horn e." Privates ;ind _generals alike f~cl uneasy in the !st Mii itary Region, the five northern provinces col- loquially known as E.ve-for 1he Roman I-Corps. No onl' lik es sitting on a prn~·der keg the size of Maryland. Accelerated U.S. tr~ op v.•ithd rawals. up co 111 1 n g government el~t 1ons. the end of the monsoon and 207 miles of common border v.·ith North Vietnam and enemy-controlled southern Laos rnake P.ye Corps the likrliest target of a dry season ofcns1\'e. At stake arc 10.000 squarr miles 0 f gu('rilla-infested jungle. rolling. open t11lls idc;il fnr rnrchan1zcd warl:1re and rice growing flatlands cnn- t;i1ning the counrry·s second largest city. Da Nang, and the old imperial capital of Mue . Ll. Ge n. Hoang Xuan Lam, the corps commander, feels the crunch \1•i!l con1e in Julv and August. His generals and their ll S. advisors al! agree o" what lo expect: -J\iajor battles involving thousands of troops in the mountainous border regions near Laos. with hravy rncmy pressure on the firsf line of defense. a string of Snu!h V1etnan1csc artillery ba ses guarding tr a d it ion a I in- fi ltration rou1es. -Steppcd·uppcd shcllings of cities and IO\\'llS in the coa.~tal Io w J a n rl s . "·I th sfl(lrad1c forays by t'ncn1~· units no larger th.in con1pany SJZe. -Continuatio" of rnckrt a!· tflcks nn D;i Nang, which has been hit eight times since April 26 -Shelling.~ and harassing at1acks ;ig;nns! Ii r c b <1 s es along the dernilitari1.rd zone . but no large incursions acros.~ the bufrrr strip d1 v1din!: Nor!h and South \lirlnan1 . -Increased terrorisrn and \'1c\ C"ong poh1 ical activity in 1he \·1llagrs to prr\·ent people from voung 1n the lo11·rr house elrc11on Au~. 29 and the prr!'irlrnt1al clrct1nn Oc'l '.I Larn ts ennvuict•d !lie Lao· 11:.in 1n\'as1nn \1h1rh he t·nm- m:indcd e;irhf'r th is 1<'ar kn11"n as 1.:1111 !-;11n 719 sol rl1 ~r11p1r!I r-.:11rlh \"H'lna1nC'~r l suppl1 lin('s th al !he ('nern\ \\ill br ;ih1r In cunrluct on ly big unll ;u·\1{'!ns 1n 1hr un· poptil<ilrrl bnrth•r rt'~i!lns. I His An1rr\c:1n tnil!lary ;id· 1·1.~crs g1'r1l·rally agrl'r J11t cll11!C"flCT' off1rrrs s 11 "I rnrn1y slrl'H1!1h in Eye Cnrps arras is ;it a pe;1 k of about '4~.000 C!)rnbat tninps. con -! s1sl1ng of 30.000 Nnr1 h \'1el-1 namc~e re~ul::irs a n rl about 15.000 in Viet Con~ uni!~ l..<1cal ~uerri!las ;1nd V1rl Cong poli!lral cadres add ano1hcr 20.000 to 35.000 to this total. Jn addition. !'a~·s Lam. Jlanoi has l\~·o to three resC'rvr divisions just across the DMZ . 11 fourth combat division in Laos. and a b o u I 30.000 "transporltilion troops'' along the Ho Chi Minh trail. To counter this, Eye Corps has about 290.000 allied troops- 50.000 South V i c t n a n1 e s e regulars, !'i.000 Sou!h Korean marines. 85.000 U.S. support troops and a home guard of 15.000 regional force. popular force and people's self-defense force irregulars. The brunt of any fighting will be borne by the South Vietname se regulars, with U.S. air and 11rtillery support. The enemy already has begun maneuvering and mus· c\c> flex ing. Flrebase Fuller. fflur miles south of the DMZ. has been the hardest-pressed. endurinl'( as many as 500 incoming mortar rounds a day,. coupled with periodic ground attacks. Ca mp Carroll , a reJ[imental headquarters six miles 500th of Fuller, :1130 ha11 bC'eri hi! by shelling ;ind atl:ick.i. and 11h;i rp ,i::round (1gh11ng ha s swirled :iround F 1 re bas t Sarge. 11 few m ile!'i southwest of Carrnll South Vietnamese troops are conilurl1n~ two major Opi'ra- !inns In Eye Co rps to rrllC\'C ,,..:.. .... --,.-, ... ·-· - some or the pressure on their firebases. The Isl Div ision 1.:laims killing more than 1.000 enemy in a followup to the Laot ian incursion, on this side of the border, while the 2nd Di1'ision claims to have captured 91 tons of rice and olher foodstuffs. More than 32.000 American troops ha\'e departed 1 Corps since the beg inn ing of this \'ear. including 24.000 U.S. Marines An1lther J0.000 "'111 leave ···•ithin W days. v.hen the Jllh Jnfantry Brigade of the America! Di\!ision pulls out and the Ist Brigade of the Slh Mechanized tnfantrv Divis ion turns over the last ·American- manned firebRses on the o:i.1z to the Sout h VieLnan1ese. Giai. at 37, one of !he voun~cst brigadiers in South Vietnam. accuses the Amenca11s of "pulling out too manv. loo soon." La·m is more dipl oina1ic : •·1 get my orders fron1 Saigon. \\'hen they tell mr an Ame rican unit is leaving. I find an ARVN unit lo plug !he gap. Naturally. as a field com· rn<indcr. I \vould hke to hal'e Ul~Grant 18th Pte&ldant cf the United S!atet.. His porlroit oppeors on tile S50 bill. ;:is many troops as possible at n1) d1spos:1L '• Lan1 adn11!s his units are plagued by a desrrtion rate of 2 lo 6 percent. Rcpl t1ccments allotted by Saigon fill the va- c;inl slots hut arc not enough to increase !::s s!r('nglh . He f"lain1s Ilic Suulh Viclnarncse sofdi(•r is just <i s gaOO a fighler <1s the Anu~rica11 GI 11nd "1noralc is \'Cry high" "The i\rnericans can lake out nil their inf<1ntry," sa.1·s Lain. "! will n1iss !hem, ves. but so1ncwhcre I v:ill find troops to rcplcicc 1 hem. A 11 I ask is that they do not take away lhc Navy and ;iir SU[l- p<irl Th;it I c<1nnot rcpl;icr." Nationalist China Has U.N. Seat Formula TAIPEI (U PI) Na· tionalist China thinks it has found a y,·ay to keep its seat in the United Nations despite thf': recent rise in thf': number of Western nations who have chosen to rCCflgnize t h e Chinese Comrnunist governn1ent : so1ne a s t u te parliamentary maneuve ring. Taipei officials said they were pinning their hopes on the use of a ''procedural ap- p roa r; h ' ' v.·hich would guarantee Nationalist China 's retalning a seat. And they believe that lhis woul d keep out Peking because the Red Chinese have said they would never agree to a tv.·o China pohcy. Taipei officials have been reviewing the question of Chinese representation in the United Jl;"alions si nce Peking Yi'On for the fir s! lime a plurality in a G en er a I Assen1b\y vnte la st yea r. Most agree that the time-tested tac- tic of "important question '' forn1ula may no longer \\'Ork this year. The vnte on 1he '"important queslion'' resolution requiring a two-third majority vote at the 25th Gencnil Assembly \'fas a su rprisingly close 66·54. In a su bsequent vote. Pek- ing's admission to the United J\'ations v.·as favored 51 to 49 with 16 abstentions. "The time has come for us to change our tactics to stay in the Unitf':d Na tioll!," an ol-taliori as an important ques-next Joor months," the 50Ul"te tionlist Otlnl, tht Republlt: &I ficial source said. i.ion in the f o rt h c • m Ing said, "We will have, at best. a China, l! used twice ln tht lie said Nationalist China General Assembly. 50-50 chance to have the pro-United Nations Cb1rter (arU. can keep Peking out of the f and arUcl United Nations or retain its Now with only 61 countries blem declared aa 811 Important cle 23, chapter ivt. I own seat in the w 0 r \d recogoniz1ng 1t, Nationah~t question." 110, chapter 19). orga nization by wh.al he term· China and its chief supporter. Another lalernallve open to Unless the charier I e ed a "procedural approach." the United States, are finding Nationalist China is to have revised, so Nationalist Chinese This taclic requires a third the m a r g in uncomfortably any proposal to seat Peking in officials argue, lhe United country to propose a resolu-narrov.·. its place declared a violation Nations simply cannot cive tion to protect the interests of "Unless something drasllc of the United NationJS charter. Nationalist Otlna.'.s seal to Nationalist China in the United happens in our favor in the The official title of Na-Peking. Nations. ,---------------------------'----~---- ''Once this resolu tion is ,- adopted , our seat is secure and the best deal Peking may J hope to gel is an ordinary membership," the source said. I As Peking i.s opposed to any two-China arrangement, it is I almost certain to give up its plan to join the United Nations ( as long as Nationalist China ( continues to keep its seat. The source said this resolu-I tion should be adopted before ' Albania or any other Com· I munisl state proposes to seat Peking in place of Nationalist I China in the United NatiDns. ( He said Nationalist China has ruled out the possibility of ( resorting to the old "im· porl<1nt quesllon" ta c ti c, J which has since 1962 worked in ( its favor. Taipei has long started a ( secret vote<ount1ng of its own to find out how many U.N. J mcn1bers are likely to support ------- I FREE I BOOK OF FAMILY FUN ! 130 pages of exciting and educational outings. Hundreds of places to go. Come in for your free book now. While you're in, why not open a Moneymaker savings accomt, too? NOW AVAILABLE AT ALL OFFIC!lS OF CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SA: and Lonn Association • Head Office: 5670 Wilshire Blvd., Loe Angeles a resolution to declare the pro-I blem of Chinese represen· --------------------- lnvestlOO U Grants at California Federal for two years. • Eam$309.16 a year. 6 °/o annual interest You can count on ii when you open a 2-yeor California Federal Moneymaker certificate accounl. A $5,000 min imum deposit wit h interest left in Ihe account two years eoms you $309.16 eoch yeor. (6.18% annual yield .) And you ca n wilhdraw prior lo maturity al any lime with some loss of interest. We also have other attractive Mon eymakers at California Federal. There's a 5.75% certificate wilh a 1-yeor term and a $1,000 minimum. And a regular passbook account that pays a 5% current amual rate on any amount of money for any length of fime. So invest your Ulysses Grants. Or your Grover Clevelands Andrew Jacbons, Benjamin Franklins or James Madisons. They're ali money and a Moneymaker ac"'?unt is !he bes! place for money. Califomia Federal Savi ond Loan/usoc.iction •Assets ooter $1.8 BUlion ngs Nation5 Lcagest Fedeial ~lnsurodupto$20,000byanagen<yaftl>oUnitedStatoo0-1 Head ()ff',.., 5671lWll.t.J,e Boolevanl, IA>IAng.i.. Int. • ALL SAVINGS OFFI CES WILL -IE Ol'IN SATURDAY, JULY 10, FROM 9 A.M. TO 1 r .M. Costa Mesa Office : 2100 Harbor Blvd.· 546-2300 Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euchd Ave .• n6-2222 Orange Office : 4050 Me1ropoli1on Dr .• 639-3033 -----~---· -__ ,... -----..--........, .... --...J.---·----·----......... .--...... ----··.J~ -·.~Ill lP .. --.- ,, .. • Reaching the Masses Sales Buttoned Up By 1\1ARIAN CHRISTY NEW YORK -Couture customers are 1 diminishing minority. No one know1 UUs better than the Paris designers themselves who have suf- lered the painful e<.'Onon11c pinch. How many privileged women can afford those 52,000-.and·up fashions on a steady basis~ Lanvin, one of Paris's n1nst aware nooses. plans to launch a sweater col- lection to retail under $50 in 300 American stores by spnng 1972. The dramatic turnabout -n1usic to lhe ears of millions who want couture's look but not tbe steep pr ices -also U; having 1 table.turning elfect in the design room of Lanvin-Paris. Her etofore it has been clearly un- :lerst.ood that designers who assisted Lanvin's main dcsignei:-Jules Crahay- were. t.o rema in .. ~nknowns ." They understood that their fale was anonymity and their place was in the background. New company policy. however, Is as democratic as the new fashion policy. Laavin's swcalt:rs are being designed by Bernard Devaux . a handsome 40-year· old Parisian who hails from a family of corporate lawyers. Devaux has been in fashion since he got out of ttie French Army -but nobody noticed except Pope Pius XII . The Pope assembled fashion's youngest de signers to Rome for a Papal blessing. Devaux was invit.ed. Cardin immediately hired Devaux to create chapeaus for his collections. Devaux was nt:vcr 111 cornpelition with Cardin who, in turn, entrusted him w1Lh the finn's most vital missions . One of his last assignments was to fl y to Teheran v.·1th the Cardin collection and flt the Empress Farah Diba in Cardin clothes within the confines of the royal palace. E\•entual!y Lanvin hired Devaux. One day he dreamed up a facsimile of a nun's wimple, executed it in crisp white organdy and had a group of mannequins in basic black dresses strut the runv .. ay Y.·1th faces actually circled with the ''hats.'' Worldwide publicity. But, still, Devaux wa s a name among the missing. Now Lanvin ha..~ told Devaux to co me oul in the open. Explore offbeal places in Paris and New York for inspirallon. Before S<'ltling upon the skinny ·nbbed sweaters in the upcoming Lanvi n col· lec!ion, De va llx made the rounds to absorb the route fashion was taking "in the streels." First stop: La Collpole, Pa r is restaurant where the unexpected happe11' BEA ANDERSON, Editor P191 11 regularly. When Devaux slopped, his first glance was of young girls in maxUength fur coats and nothing else . Nothing. Devaux says: "! picked up nothing hen: except the concept that today's woman wants to be unencumbered." Next sLop Le Club Prive on the Left Bank where everyone wears hot panl.5. And with the shorts the men wear ribbed sweaters and the women wear see- th roogh shirts. 1'he following Sunday Devaux went to Lipp where arislocrats go for brunch v.·hich starts 'Kith clams on the half-shell. DevatJx says : ''Everyone at Lipp was uptight and proper about clothes. You know, the right suit impeccably tailored and a string of pearls. 1 didn't feel this is what contemporary fashion wa s about." The designer had seen the two ex· tre~s -freak clothes and too.right clothes. He decided that what people wear on v.·eeker,\!s -namely sleek little sweaters with the right skirt or the right pants -shou ld be able lo go through a work week, "People want to be comforLab!e and casual," says Devaux . "The masses don 't wan t. to be part of the current fashion carnival. Yet they're tired of con· striclio~s and inhibitions . Sweater looks are n\iddle-<>f~the-road and a way out of the maze." They Fly Through the I l ' . ~ Stewardess uniforms of other years may have been in vo9ue et the time, but they seem to be cumbersome to work 1n . Showing uniforms of 1952, Sl •nd 58 •re (left to ri ght) Terri Roush, Debra Nelson and Yvonne Boker •I Or•nge Co••! Colleg e . ... . _ .. '. . . D1ily Pilot Photos By L" P1yne W ith on eye on th e moss morket, Lanvin will have sweoters in 300 U.S. stores by spring. Designs Air • Like +lie planes they work in, stewardesses find their uniforms also have bee n modernized. Modeling a 1958 ond a current uniform are (at right, left to right I Morg Moore and Vicki Haig, while showing hats from 58 , 57, 51 and 58 ore I below, left to right) Carol Skodi, Jeri Topp in g, J il l Ohlhauer and Sue Jones. are by Bern11 rd Devaux. Comfort, " Ease Jf D.lll V PILOT Lecture Topics Spread Two-way cornmunicat1on i!I being kept open by Orange Coast club members in July as they listen to lecturers and l•lk. to school childrt!n. Air Force Moms A former teacher and radio artist will describe Coordina- tion rl Sl>ff'Ch and Ct!lture \\hen F1ight 19 of thP U.S. Air Fort"r Mo~rs n1t ets at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, July II. in H~-de Part ~1ob1!e f.s!ates Rrcre.ation H111J . Santa Ana . Sec retaries Castro's Hand in t!1e U.S. Turmoil "''ill be the topic wh!'n Jooe Nornuin addresses the Bahia Chaptrr of rhe i\"nti onnl Secretaries As..wc·111!inn i n Irvine Coast Coontry Club at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 8. Norman, an English concert pianist. fled lo the United States y,·hen his Cuban ranch. property was confiscated by the Communist regime. Beta Sigma Phi Jl.1 rs. Mel C. Ha rtwell of Laguna Beach \\•ill preside "''hen lh.e Orange C o a s t California Council of Bria Sigma Phi meets for breakfast Oil 10 a.m. Saturday, July 10, in Los Coyotes Country Club, Buena Park. lutsday, J11l16, 1971 A Pa use That Refres hes Truth Breaks Hammerlock DEAR ANN LANDERS: This Jett.er is so biza1Te you might not btlh!Ve it. but every word i!I true. I am being blackmail- ed by my teenage daughter. ANN LANDERS Several 1nonths ago a friend came to the house to pll.'k up a jacket his wile had left at our place a few nigh!J be.fore. The children were at !IChOOI and my husband was at work. so I invited the guy to visit over a cup of t.'Offee. Well, one thing ltd to anoUier and what had been a platonic friendship for years ended up as an in- tense case of mutual physical attraction. My daughter walked in at exactly the wrong moment. Schoo! had been dismiss- ed early and there we were. P..ly friend l!!fl in a state of near col- lapse and my daughter and I had a long talk. She refused to believe this was the first time such a thing had happened. She kept repeating, "What a rotten thing lo do to Daddy!" I got her to promise not to say anything lo him about it. Now she is using "our little secret'' (as she calls ii) to blackmail me. Unless I give in to her every whim, she threatens to tell Daddy. I've thought of calling her bluff but I am scarl!d to death she v.iU make good her threat. I had no idea this child could be so ruthless. I need your ad- vice at once. -CONTRITE 'rt)() LATE DEAR C.T.L.: The only wa y you can break your daughter's hammerlock l' to tell your husband t~ whole slory. J urge you to do so lmmedlalely. You should then Inform your daughter that you Safety Suggstions finally decided to get this dretdful load off your COOICitDtt and DOW Daddy knows. I hope your husband has the capacity to forgive and forget. l fre- queoUy give this advice to women whoae: husbands have cheated. No w the shoe i• on lhe olher foot. DEAR AN N LANDERS: Maybe you'll tell me I'm a poor loser and to quit mak- ing excuses for myself, but I'll lake that chance in the hope thal you can give me an answer to my question. I am hooked on contesLs. I have en- lered approximate ly 300 contests in the last 15 yt>ars, spent a fortune on products l didn't need, and gone so far as lo enter th.e same contest six limes. under dif- ferent names. The only prize I ever won \.\'as a package of flower seeds. Please don't think I am bragging when I tell you I am a lot smarter than the average person. I am creative, im· aginative and meticulous when it comes to following directions. Most peoplt don't have my kind of patience for detail. \Vbo in the world win9 these contests, anyway? llow are Lhe winners selected? Do. the judges prefer big cil y people"! Am l out of luck becaJse I Ji11e in Pickford. Camper's Cupboards Crucial • Cruising Are you one of th ose Try le pack the refrigerator housev•ives y,•hose family has solid, llG the contents won't decided 1t would love lo take a bC'unce around when you go P..tich.? Please tell me. -Al.SO RAN DEAR ALSO: fl101t cont.est wtnnen ha\'e won other contests. They art. clever peciplt \\'ho have learned bow to attract lbe attention of the judges and have de11eloped a knack for preparing • wi11• ning entry. The 11lu of the town you Uve h1 Is nol a -· decisive fa ctor except that the judges t1sually 1o1·ant a geographic distribution of v.·tnners. Ir you enjoy preparing for contests do ii as a bobby with no tbougbt of l\'ittnlnc. One of these days you might be 1urpr\s. ed. If it's any consolation to yoo, honey, abou t :ro years ago I enlered a Planter'• Ptanut contest. bought a $40 dlcflonary, ·• 1o1·orked like a dog for tbrtt \\·eeks and didn't even 1o1·in a package of flower 11eeds. "The Bride's Guide," Ann Landers' booklet, ansv.·ers some or the most fre- quently asked questions about \\'edding!I. 'ro receive your copy of this com- prehen5i11e guide, write to Ann Landers, in care of the DAILY PILOT. enclosing a long. self-addressed, sta1nped envelope Bnd 35 cents in coin. JULY HEALTH FOOD SPECIALS! \\'cekend trip or vacation in B oveT bumps in the ro.ad. trailer or camper'? Dishes can be a problem, SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE 'TIL JU LY 31 ALL KI NDS Members of host <'hapter, Xi Iota Phi will dress as clo1vns and rin.l{masters to co rn- plement circus decorations at tse meeting. DAR A wards Seventy-three fifth gr;iders f rom 30 Ne\\'port Be a e h schools have receivtd medals for txcellence in American history and palriotism frorn t he Col. \\1illian1 C 11 be I I Chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution. A day of v.·ater sk iing, ~\vi rn n1ing , crui!l ing :ind picnic fa re is on the agenda of Ne\vport Chapter. National ('ha rily l..eil,l!UC de butantcs for Sunday. July 11 . The yo un g \\'o n1_en \l'il! be piped a board the Pa ul ('onnallys' Suzie \Vong at 9 a.m. for the outing. Ready to b011.rd are tl1e ho nu red de b utantes !left to right) the ]i·l isses Jamie Lou Styli. Anne Aileen La \\'r en ce and Carol Cha pman ConnaUy. If so. )'ou "ll wanl le know too. Store them in racks "''ith snn1c!h ing tlbnut pa c king a pil!0\1' or some sponge rubber t'lo!hcs, food and other !'SScn-bet-...'ecn the rack and the lla ls before }'Oll set out. It".~ cabinet overhead. Bolls of <l iffcrent fron1 taking care of paper towel ing also can be us- your O\.\'n house or apartment. ed to hold dishes in place. More and llll)re people are Use plastic er wood hangers laking lo the woods in recrea-_clothes fall off 1~ire hangers tional vehicles. Sumrner is the whE'n you travel. GRANOLA CEREALS 1 Jb.-Re!J. 75¢ l lbt.-R~. S2.10 65' $J.89 Mrs. · \Villiam \\'. Jones. historian, discussed the im- portance o f understanding American historical fi gures \\'hl!e presenting the awards al student a ssemblies and PTA meelings. Horoscope: A Bargain Seen for Sagittarians rnost popular lime, -Of course, Finally, be fore JI u b by but growing interest in skii ng pushes th.al starter button and other 1o1·inter sports has check te see tha l ne knives. f'reatrd a 1o1·inter use fo r lhPse dishes, loilet arliclE's <i nd vehicles. toe. · ·i · s1m1 ar items are lying aroun d Last year more than 400.000 loose. rt'crealional vehicles -m&sllyli"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""""I!\ traiten and campers -were built cQmpared with enly J~.000 five years earlier, The basic p&int you've got te remember when packing is to balance the vehicle, side te side and front to rear. Don't dump everything in one spot! DON'T MISS GRAND OPENING Chapter members won na- tiona l and state awards last month for fulfilling obligations and DAJ{ rn a g a z in e ad- vertising. Biographer To Speak An add re~ by famous a uthor Irving Stone Thursday, J uly 8, will highhght a '-''N"klong celebration of the !i-Oth a Miversary of t h e Orange County Pu b I i c Lihrary. The bes t-selling bio grnpher \I ill spea k al I p zn . 1n the l1brary·s Headquarters Facili- t.\ 1n Orange. ··Passions of 1he !\find ."' drscribin;: !he lifr of SiRmunrl F reud, is the Iat~t work of Ston e . per h ap s b est remembered for "Lust ror Lil~.·· the novel of Vincent Van Gogh . Fesli\·ities at !hr ht•acl- quarters also will h on o r branch chapter.s of I h P statewide Friends of the Library. citizens groups sup- porting local library services. WEDNESDAY, JULY 7 By SYDNEY O!\tARR \\1here money is concerned, Taurus and Cancer individuals often sho\v unique abili1 ies 10 accumulate funds. But when it comes lo spending, Leo can do it with a flou rish. Gemini can be nervous about budgets: Aries can be domineering -...tierr cash is rnnce.rnecl. Pisces ran exhibit an 1-don'l- care alt itude. lt i.~ d1ff1cult tn fathom \"irgo's \·ie11.· 10-...·arcl ~avings. Try1n i;! to figurr Aquarius in this arPa is <1k1 n to doing mental gymnastics. ARIES C\1iln:'h 21-April l!l!: Accent 1s 1n ambitions, b:i<;1i' jln11ls. You :i re ;-ihle 10 111.1kf' roorn f(lr you rself ;if liif' lop l)ne ~ ou <'ons1 dl'rrd ind 1frrrr111 shn11·s othef\1·ise_ c;1rt of ap- preciation is in ordrr. TAURUS (April 20-:-.·1ay 20\: t f{)od lunar aspect now coin- cicles \\'I th opporluni1v for higher cd11cat1on. S1X'ci;1;1 suin Iner study coursl' \\·ould be 111 orcl<'r. Look \l"ith in. Spin!ual 1n\"oh·en1en1 \\"llh Pisce~ in- dicated GE1\llllo1 ti•,.1 ay 21.June 20J. Conr!'rn with hidden or oc.-cu!t n1a!1ers cn1phasizrd. Study Taurus messagl'. Thcrr 1s ad- <lcd rcspon sibil1ly. but the re are :ilso greater rewards. flll'nlher or oppo;;ite sex is i11- \•ol\'ed. C:ANCEH (June 21-July 22 ): AreC'nl now is on pa rtnrrship, rcl<il io11sh1ps of pennancnt n;i \ure. Finish rathl::'r than be_'l in proJcCls. :-iprcad 1n- fluc nre. A d v f.' r'"t 1 s e and p11hl1c11e. (;ct on \\!lh matters at h;incl. You can do ii. 1.1:-;o <Jcly 2:1 i\u~. 22)· Po~l pon1 ng -...·h:il :t[l)X'3r.~ In tX' 11np!c;is;1nt task would be ;in r rrnr Srck fn,sh vir wpo111t. 1!1ghhgh! on.:111;11 n1e\hncl~. Scw1r1l :ilfa1r \~'1\h 1·0-workPr" 111;n hl' on ;1ge11rla. Br 111111ahlr r111c;u 'AuJ: 2:lSf'nt 221 A (f.11r~ nf l1l';l rl <!0 11 1111;111• Y1111ng pt>rson 1·ould lt•:HI 1h 1• 11·a.\' ll cn1rrnhrr r I' 1· r n 1 rl'snl1ll1nns. Acct·pt t'hangr~. If prn!(rl'SSI\'(', ~·011 II 111 sh1111• dcfini1r Jla in. Your hun<'h hits rnnrk. Lll!HA iS('pt 23 Ort. 22\ J)r•l1111 11· I hil !lj.((' I nd I{' tit{' d \1 hr rc <ton11•st1r sit11a1 ion is 1·nn('rr nt>d. Then• w1!1 he ~rr:iler dcj!rrt" of flexibility l1Hnh1nr Fort'rs l'.1th Cancer- horn 1nd1v1duaL Basic issue Is settted. Neighborhood Needs Surveyed by Juniors SCOl!PIO (Oct. 23-Nov . 21 ) \\"h ;it n1ight appe;r r a m<1ss of <'Onfuston -...·ill fall into phice. Know this <1nd exhibit ntli!ude of ronfidrnce. Closr rcla\i\"r leans on \·ou for reas.surAnce. Pu1.1lr v.·111 hr soh·ed. South Coast Junior \\'omen·s Club has started a thrte-fold ai;:ervice campaign toward aurveying the community's emergency medical 11eeds, protecting valuables a • d pubUciiing vacation safety measures. Mn. Robert Marlen, s afely chairman, said questions on ~ emergency med ic a l service survty are ba!Wd on what most experts a11ret art' minimum components of an adequa te system. The lisl is an aid to laymen who lol'ant a general idea of tht ltvel of community service av•il•ble. Club mtmbets will ~ aeek- ing zupporl from I o ca I hospitals. health, pollce and fire deparlment.s. ambulance services and !he medical society. Sou~h Coast Juniors and their neighbors also arP sha r- •ng an tngraving: machi nt> on a .. -_ _. SAGITIAH IUS !No1·. 22- wee kly basis to labe l their Tlr(" 21 \· Accent on paying. valua ble!! in order lo t'ornbal eol!1?cttn~ deb1s. R c v ie"' burglaries and 1nake recovery person;i l needs. Refuse lo be of stolen items more ex-possessecl by possessions. Be pedient. ready for chan i-ie. lravel , Participants engrave their variety. Genuine bargnin is drivers liccn~ or s oc i a I nvallable. security number on persona l property then p!a('(' an Qpe r<i-CAr RTCORN (DeC'. 22-J :in. tion ldentif1r:1t!on stirker on 191 · \Vhat you have bt-en the lronl and b;1<'k 1.1•11100-...·!!: nf "'ailing for now is In sigh!. !he home to dett·r ju1•cnilf' <1n1! \'fl\1 <'an 1>Ci! li.:h! at end of first-lime burgla rs. IUnllf'I Lun nr ryc!e is high, A vacation, \ol'ater. flff'l\'Ork~ <'irt·urni;IOnl't'S turn in your safel y checklist a n d 1n · favor. l.lhra individual plays formation sheet 1o1·ill b e kry role . d islrlbutt'd by club members to f ountain Va llev and Hun-AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. tington Beach reS1denl$ !his 18l: You r Jove of mystery becomes evident. You ell:press summer. Be de th I . I . . desire to break shackles of Sl 5 e lS.'11n- s(ru c('""S foe lea'·'"' 01, ,.,, . ._ t'Onfincmenl. ima~inary or "'' " " nt hf"r-...·isc. l'landr st1nf" ;1/f11 lr" lion , clri\"ing. gom,-to !hf' nppear lo dominale. Promise beach and us1nR fire1o1·orks Properly 'I ' M I I 1narlc in p;i.~t i.~ fulfilled. , . r ar en <l so pl.ans a swimming pool saf('ly PISCES IF<'b. 19-March 201 in.'lpec!ion. ·-Sqlid rc~pnn;;(' iur,..!s ynur cf loris. A friend plays quiet, but importanl role. Concentrate on hard llC\\'.~ ~ lea ve srn- tirnen!ality tn others. Libra Keep heavy ilen1s down low , nol in -Overhead cabinets. A heavy <1rticle in an upper cabinet can act like a hammer on a rough road, knocking the bo1tom out flf the camper's t•nhinets. s.. ... ,,. S.Ciety Tltltl'Moy and Ca pricorn presrn1. IF' TODA,, pr rso ns are IS YOUR Pack your clothes and gear into fiberboard cartons and then slip the cartons into the n\"erhead cabinets . That \\'ay,I ~~~~~~~ 1h111gs will stay in place while l_: BIRTllDA Y you often display interest in la1v and religion. You arc a natural teacher. You require ('reat11·e outlets. Those -...·ho don·t reall y knO\~· you often ni is 1 a k e in- trospect ion for l:ick o f kno1v!edge. In actuahly, you arf' progressire, a"·arr and lt';1rncd. you're rolling along. \Vhen storing food in your refrigerator, never let 11.1·0 glass bottles stand side by side wnhout a separating buffer of ~o me sort. One hint: you can use a man's \\'Om-out stretch soc k as a buffer, "''ra pping the bottles in it. Not beautiful, but vrry ulilill'l rian. KWS LOVE UNCLE LEN (To 11n11 ('!JI ... ...,,, Iv<~~ to< YOU j" rnn,...• ~na IOV•. 0""'' ~~<l,.•v Om~" • "°"" lol S•«•I '"''"'' •n• ll•o ~nll Wa"'P"," SPn<! b•rl~lltl< •"II I~ <<~h lo Omo" .._>lroFOQV ~ f < r f I > • I~~ OA,ILY n1u:•1 !I~· 'l•' '·'·'" ,,~, ••I 5!~hon, N•w l'a,~. N 'f. 10011 Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT ~Hl:OHo~a =;;:;~NC~ L~ES •• FO;EVE~ Full ~llH1tg CoQon •• 5X7 !J In r i PROFESSIONAL PORTRAIT only 88' complete -6 day1 only July 6th thru 11 th NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY EXPERI ENC ED PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRA PHE R ASSURE S NATUR AL LY EXP RESSIVE POSE S Natu,.ny thef-1 is no obligat ion to bvv ltdd1tiooal J>hotog-aphs; however, l>ttra prints 1re available in various si1es and styles at reasonable prices. Ag:! limit 3 weeks to 12 yHrs. limil one per child or two prr family. Groups at S 1.00 per 1ddi1 ional sub ject . FED MART WESTM INSTER Golden We st at McFadden Photo9r•ph•r'1 Houri Tuai.-Thurs .. i:,;. 11 -8 S•t. I 0-6 and Sun. 12 .'4 100 TAIS a1G. S4.91 XTRA-1, HIG-H POTEHCT B-COMPLEX You mun rrrod thlt formulo! SPECIAL $].,98 FAMILIA • SWISS CEREAL IJ OZ. llEG. 1'¢ SPECIAL 69' CONTINENTAL ACIDOPHILUS 16 oz. lEG-. J .l S QUARTS REG. 91t SPECIAL $Jo95 HAIN SAFFLOWER OIL SPECIAL 79' VITAMIN E OIL 2 01. bettl• r.e11hil1tt 7J00 1.U. of wat•r llii1p .. ,.,lblo Vlt. (. Co-with drop,..-. Eixh drop r.011tol111 10 l.U. Yitoml1t (. lllG. S4.IO QUARn llG. 91 t SPECIAL $J ,95 ------- DI SOUSA'S ORG-ANICALLT GllOWN GRAPE JUICE SPECIAL VIT AMINE E, D·ALPHA or MIXED 100 l.U. 100 CA.I'S llG. 12.41 $1 59 ) 200 t.U. 100 CA.I'S • 111c;. S4.71 $2.98 We Have A Lart• Supply of Foods and Supplements FeaturCn9 Name lrand__,lu1 Schiff-Hoffman, etc. W11 wlll _, •..-..,.,.rthe4 1,.c.J.I. -lrlillf 11 tlle -'""' n .. _, of ""Y ,..,.. eN •• wlll 1Rcrtcll ltl SERVICE IS OUR SPECIAL TY 2 STORES TO SERVE YOU COASTLINE HEAL TH FOODS TUSTl~'t 1094 Irvin•''· 1-1 ... 0.1 $44-7134 COSTA MESA 270 E. 17th St. HIRtrn 1111•- $41-9$37 TA KE 1'JI E NEWS QU IZ . Ev~.pr Saturday 7,. '"':F"r=:c=--:::- We Daro You I I!"~..:.~·.~-~-' -l!1'"-,1 -·· ~...,~ -~. ------=--.......,_, .. _ _,_ oJ • ..... ~ -- ··-·-------------·-------__ t ..., __ I '. I l ufsd.1y, July b, 1Q71 DAILY PILOT J fl Summer Wedding March Starts Into July MRS. FLORES dle of Ba.lboa and his bride the for mer Suzanne t.larie Leonis, 11.·bo ex.changed w e d d i n g pledgPs durln& a ceremony in Our Lady of 1\·lount Carmel C<itholic Church, Balboa. Q£. r1cant y,·as the Rev. FranclS Kelly. Parents of the couple are 11r. and 1\lrs. Richard Leonis Sr. of Norwalk and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard A. Beidle Jr. f Burbank. 11atron of honor was l\·lrs. Stephen B ei d le and brldesn1a1ds v.·ert the 11isses Alda GuUerrtz, Cathv Cutler and 1\larianne Leorli s, the bride"s sister. Flov.·er girl and ring bearer 'Vere Nant'v Seidle. sis1er of the brideg'roon1 and Jame.s Buxton Jr., his cousin. honeymoon, the newlyweds wlll rtside in Fountain Valley. BURNS-HOWARD The Huntington-Sheraton Hotel , Pa!adena was the set- ting for the dou ble ring rites linking in marriage :t-.-lelocly Diane HO\\'ard and Robert Neil Burns. Reading the ceremony for the daughter and son of r.1r . and .\lrs. Irving Howard of Newport Beach and Pasadena and Mr. and Mrs. John L. Burns of Tustin \1•as Judge Peter Kalsufrakis. f\·la1ron of honor and best man 1vere fl1rs . Richard Run- quist and Kim Pa la k Bridesmaids were the Mmes. Preston Caves. R obe r L Gouveia and Michael Morgan and Miss Pamela Rabin and Miss Laurie Howard, sister t1f the bride. MRS. R. N. BURNS gradu ate of Pasade na High School, Pa3adena City College and San Diego State College. Her husband is an alumnus of Santa Monica High School and attends UCL They will reside in Hun- tington Beach. MILLER-APALATEGUI St!i. Simon and J u de Catholic Church, Huntin gton Beach was the setting for the double ring ceremony linking Susa n Theresa Apala!egui and Chri~topher Robert Mi!Jer. The Rev. Raymond Devlin read the rites for the daughter (If t.1r. an d fo.lrs. John J. Apalategui and the son of t-.lr. and Mrs. Robe rt C. Miller, all of Huntington Beach. bridegroom's brottwr a n d Daniel T. t-.tartin. h!~ cousin. and nng bearers were John and Edward Creyberk, t\v1n rtPphews of tlltc' bride. The n e w 1 y w eds are graduates of H u n t i n gt o n Beach High School and al· tended Orange Coast College. He is serving in the Air Force at Kelly Air Poree Base . San Antonio. where they will make their horne. HODGES-TROTIA Frrnd;i!e \Verld1ng Chapel, Santa Ana \Vas the setting for the wedding cereinony linking PP~gy Ann Trotta and F'rerl U. l-lo<lges. The Rev .. Dr. Gerald Bash read the rites for the daughter flf Mr. and Mrs. Frank K. Trotta of Fountain Val ley and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jessie 0 . Hodges of Upland. Hagen was the best man and !\.like fair served as the usher. The ne~·tywedi; will reside 111 I luntington Beath. STONEMAN-HAWORTH r.1r. and Mrs. Richard r.t. Stoneman arc at home in Newport Beach aflcr their marriage in St, Andrew's Pre~byterian Church a n d honeyrnoon in n fl rt he r 11 California. The brtde, \he funner l:lob- bie Lynn Haworth. dHughter of Mrs. A. ti Carlson of Sant<i Paul<1. askeU l\1rs. Carol Harshbarger to be inalrun of honor. The f\1n1cs Huby .Schulz and Marsha Jimerson were bridesmaids. MRS. R. M. STONEMAN FLORES-DISCHE Stephen Sei dle was his brother's best man. a n d ushers v.·e re Bichard Leonis Jr .. brother of the bride. and Don, Ted and J ot Buxto n, cousins of the bridegroom. Ushers l\'ere Ron \Vikholnl . Flower girl was Liz \Veiks, The new t.1rs. Seidle attends Ron Carter, James Joyce. and ring bearer v.·as Keviu ~trs. Edward -,,,1. Greybeck "'as her siste r's mat ron of honor, and bridesmaids were t-.lrs. Ho"·ard Hampton an d Miss And rea Nurre. Attending the bride 1vere 1fiss Relda Taylor as maid of honor and' rvtiss Sh a r o n Rokasky. bridesmaid. r>.1ike R. A. Stoneman stood as best man and ushers 11·ere Robert Dudley, R o b e r t Carmichal. Richard Jin.1erson and Leigh 7.aramba. f\tr. and f\lrs. A. C. <"allege and University ol Southern California. His bride graduated from San Jose State Cflllege. r.tountain View will be home for William Vincent Flores and his bride. the former Carole Mary Dische. y,•ho ex- changed wedding p I e d g e s before the Rev . Richard Dunlap in the First Gnited l\lethodist Church. Cos L a !l'lesa. L'Cl and her husband attended Lindsey Bo\\'f'r and Ne i I Clark. Serving as best n1a n was Ho ward Hampton; us h ers were Charles D. Miller, the Stoneman of Newport Beach are pa,ren\s of lhe bridegroom who attended Pr in ci p i a Pif'rce and Orange Coast Howard. brother of th e bride. The ne\v rt1rs. Burns is a colleges ~-------------- WEIN SCHENK-TURNER 1ZJ 111~u111i:111: 11.1~u1111:111 if\71111ft(1111a11a11J Eu1111: 11jiJ.IW11J ~u1111: 111:1••lEu1111:11~if1z11 11 E«1111:1 The bride. daughter of f\1r. and Mrs. Frank Dlsche of Ne"'JX>rl Beach, was attended by her sister. Miss J'vlarllyn Disc he as 1naid of honor. Bridesmaids were M is s Christine Sparling and Miss Janis Avery. Celso De Casas attended the bridegroon1. son of f\·1r. and i'vlrs. William Flores of Len1on Grove. and ushers v.·ere Don Dische and Gary Flores, brothers of the couple. The ne1v !\\rs. Flores receiv- ed her BA degree from UCLA <tnd her elementary leaching credentia l fro ni California Stale College at Los Angeles. l-ler husband. an alumnus of UCLA. is a graduate student at Stanford University. BEI DLE-LEONIS Fountain Vsl !ev \\'ii! be home for Robert ~1ichael Bei- Plrsl Christian Chu r ch, fountain Vallev \\.'as the set- ting for the nuPtial rites link- ing Anna Louise Turner and Paul \Vay ne Weinschenk. Their parents are i\1r. and !llJrs. Dale Turner of Foun tain Valley and r.1r. and Mrs. Charles Weinschenk who came from Linde n, N.J. fo r the wed- ding. Attendants were Miss r>.1ary Patterson, maid of ho nor; Gerald Bernier, best man. and Joe. Ho\\·ard and Phillip Turner. ushers. TWOMBLEY-ROBERTS Marilyn Robe rts and Ken· nel h T wom b l e }' o f \Vestn1inster exchanged VO\.\'S and rings before !he Rev. Dr. Gerald Bash in the Ferndale \Vedding Chapel, Santa Ana . f\1atron of honor was 11rs. Pau l Fruehan an d best man ,vas George Twombley, the bridegroom·s brfllher. J ohn Sullivan was the usher. After a northern California Peering Around rms.www• 1 wa w 'll"'P""W~~m MRS. WARREN Bostick of achieved a straight A grade l\'ewport Beach joined 2.ilOO averet:e last semester. physicians' wives attending Miss Todd. a p h y sic a 1 the 48th annua l convention of education major, is I h e the \Voman's Auxiliary to the daughter of f\.1r. and 1\trs . ;\meritan i\1edical Association Charles Todd and gTadua ted in Atlantic Ci1y . fro1n Mission Viejo High The women heard from Dr. School. Mr. and r-.trs. Gene \\'alter Bornemeier. AM A Skawin are the parents of the president. 2.nd s a w a government major w h o m u 1 t i med i a presentation graduated from Estancia High d em onstrattng community School service projects of lo c a 11;=::=========00,I ch,pters. STARS UNIVERSITY of Redlands Sydn1;>y On1ar r is on" of officials announced that Mary l th" 1\01ld$ g1rat a~t rolo­ Todd of Jr\'ine and Mike gf'rs. Hi:> 1;>olumn i< on" of th,, DAILY PILOT'S great Skav,.in or Costa 1\1esa :ire1 featurf'". among the 100 students \\'h0 1 Ill!> Crowmng Glory b eauty salons SPECIAL COOL CUT Easy care, fuss free, longe<_,_.,.$2QQI look. Styled for comfort. Short or shag. J,,.l.p "'CM l"ot>ltf "lfl'9r $15 WONDER CU RL PERM '915 S20 MAG IC CURL PERM '12" BUDGET PERM . -· · -•1w•v• '516 (Normal He.it) FROSTING SPECIAL 1.,, ..... 1 ... ,,....$H.50 SHAMPOO -SET STYLE CUT .... 1-•..i U-•• •295 •J.46 t150 •200 Strnt pnc• dflrdtf ltl/Jflw SOUTH COAi T ,.U.IA-"h•111• 546°7116 THIS SPECIAL GO.OD ONLY THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1971 ROYAL APRICOTS c lb PLUS 10°/o THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY MONDAY, JULY 12, 1971 DICARLO BREAD 1 LB. LOAF c WHITE PLUS OR 10°/o WHEAT IN ltlCLOSEAILE IA~ THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1971 LAURA SCUDDER MAYONNAISE 'f"'SAvEI ~ c LIMIT 1 WITH courON- LIMIT 1 COUPON CLOSED ON ·SUNDAYS AND PLUS 10°/o WEDNESDAYS OPEN 1 D A.M. TO 1 P.M. THE OTHER FIVE DAYS ' ' THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1971 SPRINGFIELD SUGAR ~ c S-LB. BAG ADULTS ONLY LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON- llMIT l COUPON PLUS 10°/o THIS SPECIAL GOOD ONLY TUE5DAY, JUL't 1'3, 1,71 FARMER JOHN'S BACON rs;:vE1 ~ 1-LB. PKG. c ADULTS ONLY' LIM IT l WITH COUPON- LIMIT 1 COUPON PLUS 10°/o WAREHOUSE PRICES Plus 10% SHOP IN A WAREHOUSE OF FINE QUALITY FOODS IN COSTA MESA AT 19th AND HARBOR BOULEVARD IT DOESN'T TAKE A LOT OF NERVE TO BE THE ONLY STORE IN TOWN THAT DISCOUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS WHAT IT TAKES IS THOU SANDS OF LOWER PRICES How We Sell FOR LESS & SAVE You Up To 20°/o NO GAMES LOW RENT NO ST AMPS NO GIMM ICK S LOW OPERA TI NG COST CLOSED-SUNDA YS AND WEDNESDAYS WE ARE IN THE GROCERY BUSINESS NOT GAMES Everything is Morked WAREHOUSE PRICES Then The Checker Adds J ust I 0°/0 To Arrive At What Yo u Pa y. So 'If Yo u Wound Up With$ I 0.00 Worth , You'd Sim pl y Pay That, Pl us I 0°/0 Or $11 .00 THIS GOES FOR EVERYTHING EXCEPT THE FEW ITEMS LEGALLY CONTROLLED LIKE MILK AND LIQUOR -WE CHALLENGE ANY MARKET - TO MATCH THE TOT AL SAVINGS! THE "FIRST" COST PLUS SUPERMARKET IN CALIFORNIA we welcome -FOOD UllllJ STAMP SHOl'l'IRS STOii HOUIS 10 AM TQ 7 ,. S DAYS A Wiil CLOSED SUNDAYS AND WEDH!SDAYS ...----,--,• 8EING CLOSED TWO CAYS A WEEK SA\'ES YOU J. LOT 01' lo\CNE'I' ----,-- WE RESERVE' THE RIGHT TO CHANC t PRICES AS WHOL f SAL£ 'PRICES CHAN GE l.I W9' l.l~ll _ ~IJI N S11n . 0 ,e" l.Ytftl~fl '" '"~:~.~.?~~y.£.:·.:;:··"". EJ I 1~ ER1I~I: I I iJ 11 •1 EU111! a I! i~IZJ I 11 f R11Qli I Ill I •1 ~'!(1111: i I j :ti? I •l ~'!(111!: i-1 :II •lE'I(111ij ii~ ifl1ii I •l ~R1Jtl -=::! •. "":""'"--. -·~' ..,.__.., ....:~·-:--:::=---..::.=.-·-~..__::-~ ·-Y"< ' -··~ .. ---=--=-"""i ......... L!:_ ·.""."' ..... ~~.... ~ --... ----·· ---------· -·-:;· --"":::•.!. --~·~ ~----..,__.,... L •• -I<---·-----.----.. -· ... ----~ ... _ ...... ·i""------.... ---..---:·.w-----· ...... _ ...... __ . , ' ., '.. " ·. ,, .. ' ' ,- t • • • • • ' i f, r· ' ' f I • ! ; \ I l. H CAIL y PILOT TlltSdaJ, Jul~ 6, 1~71 Dodgers Climb to Within 3 1h of Giant·s SAN YRANCISCO (APJ -"The hounds are chasing WI -we're going to have to run a little harder." said San Franclsco ~fants' manager Charlie Foi: after a two- 1ame sweep by the Dodgers. The Gi&ra' 101k-game lead !n the Na~ liooal League West on May 31 has dwindled to a l ift.game edge over Los Angeles following lhe Dodgrrs' coo· vincing 7-.3 triumph Monday at Candle.stick Park. The Dodgers, playing .667 ball 122-11) since June \, overcame a 3-0 deficit and went ahead with a four-run firth-inning rally featuring Willie Davis' bases-loadrd triple. "You've got to be able lo bold a three4 nm Iced." said Foi:. "You can't expect our hitters to gel seven or eight runs every Ume. ''But one series doesn't make a dif· ference unless it's ~ last oot of the seMOn," he adds. "And then we'd slill Jl/IV • J"lv T Julv t Dodger Sl«te AM 0• ..... N 1(1'1 IMI! Docf9.tort llf. Clllc- OoOoer• 111. (ftl~•l>O UI °"6o•ro "'· (Ille••• have a 31/z-game lead." 1 's ,, "'· •·!! 1>.m. '·""m. The Dodgers return home and start young Bob O'Brien. 2-1. against Chicago's Ferguson Jenkins, J 1-8. ~ Giants host Houston. ''It does the club a lot of good to win up here," said Dodgen' skipper Walt Alston. ''Bul 1 don't know aboot a n y psy~ological lift -I'm no psychialrisl. "We 've had a good five or sil weeb,"' Alston said. "A Jot or dHferent guys are contributing and that's good. "You can't rely on one man, so it's good lo spread it around. This is typical of our team -the guys pick each ()(her up." The Gianls, meanwhile, continue t.o struggle after losing their early season momentwn. Onetime stopper Gaylord Perry has lost six in a row fo r a 6-8 record. He fed Davis a high, fat pitch for the tying triple and Rich Allen belted a sacrifiee fly for the lead in the fifth. .. Larry Jansen (pitching coach) and I haven't noticed anything wrong with Per- ry," says Fox. "He just got the pitch up DODGER CATCHER DUKE SIMS TAGS GIANTS' WILLIE MAYS OUT AT HOME. Placekicl{er L>ses Legs In Explosion CONCORD. Cali!. (AP) -Dale Allen Eidson. set to try out as a San Diego t harger placekicker next week. has lost both his legs in a July 4 explosion of firecrackers. Eidson was reported in critical con· ditioo after undergoing extensive surgery at Concord Comrnunity Hospital. 11e !ost both legs and part of his righl hand. doc- tors said Monday. Police said Eidson. 24. was in the line nf fire Sunday night "-"hen an un- determined number of firecrackers ex· plodrd in a fi\'C·gallon can. Cause of the blast "-'hich broke windov.·s in two homes was under in\·estigation, 0H1cers said Eidson·~ Football carerr began at ~1 1. D1ablo High School. where he graduated in 1965. After military scr\·1cc. he played el Diablo Valley College and San Fran- cisco St.ate C.Ollcge . where he holds fievcral kicking rectlrc!' "Dale v.·a.~ as mut'h nl a studenl as ~ football player." said his SF. Sta\~ fool4 ball coach Vic R1Jwan '"lie was a \'Cry dedicated football player "''ho worked harrl to get notice .. Eidson signed six months ago as a frrc agent with the Char&ers and v.·ould have reported to the Charger camp at the University of California at lrvint next week, Rowan said adding, .. He's as good a kicker as we·ve ever had.'" In 1963 and 1!169 for the Gators. t~idson a 5-fool·ll. Isa.pound kicking speciah~l. booted six Held goals lo set a school career r ecord. He also hold~ the S.F. stale record for the longest field goal, a 43-yarder in 1969. and most field goals in hoe sea!K>n. five in 1969. This past academic year Eidson at- tended clas6e! in industrial arts, while waiUng for his chance in pro football. Clifford Eidson. 11 4-year-old nephew who witnessed the accidenl at Eidson'• home, 1SUffered minor injuries. Eid90n'.s brother. Terry Lee, wait California '~ lightheavyweighl box In I champion in 1970. One of a Kind Brash, Cock y Trevino TakingP al1ner' s Place? SOUTHPORT, England (AP\ -The ti~ff came last week in the Canadian Open. Arnold Palmer -lhe King. pro golf's all·lime leading money ·winner, its rnost dynamic performer, the greatest drawing card lhe game has ever known -was 1naking the tum and was about to hil his tee shot on No. 10. An announcement was made on the ad- jacent first tee, first in French, 1hen English. "'Now on the lee. the U.S. Open cham· pion, Lee Trevi no " The vast gallery surrounding Palmer began to melt away. A do zen. a few score.<1. began 1o .-imhle away from Pahncr toward Trevino·s already huge gathertng. i\1ore fans joined thcrn, lhc walk became a trot -and then it was a futl- scale stampede. literally hundreds of peo- ple running pell·mell away frorn Palmer t.n ~·atch 1hc brash and cocky Trevino dn his thing. pl;iy the j:lan1e of golf as well as anv man alive 1oclay. .He n1ay n()1 )<'I be king. or even a<1p1re Ca}JO Race Driver Wins Gra11d Prix ~1ANSFll::LD, Ohto IUFI) -Sa m Posey or San Juan Capistrano settled for st'i:ond plare in the first heat bul won the SC('(lnd heat :ind a points battle lo take the nverall "-'in in lhe L&M Grand Prix rontinental scnes race at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course herP Monday. Posey started his Su rltts-Chev on lhe pole position in the first JO-lap heat and led until Uie 29th lap when David 1iobbs of Rugby. Eng .. passed him and held on letr the win in his McLaren-Chev. Hobbs started on tilt potr in lhr second heat due lo his first heat victnry, hut Posey pushed past the I-.:nglishn1an on the fourth lap and led the remainder of the second heat.Hobbs finished second. tn the purple. This fire--cngine red regalia of pay-day Sunday and' money-green are more his colors. ''If the money's there. I'll play on 11 gravel road," he once said. He's not Palmer. He's no Gary Player, the deadly-intense, dedicated liltle South African. He's no Billy Casper. a quiet and sober surgeon, delicately culling his way around the course. And he's not Jack Nicklaus, lhe Awesome blacksmith hammering out an iron coffin of defeat for his opponents. He's Trevino, Super Mc,:. One of ~ kind. A rags lo riches character who cap- tured thf' imagination of the public as he ,l!rabbed the staid old game by thf" throat, shook Jl, worried it, flaunted lradillon. He twice passed up invitation.~ to play tn the Maslers. one of Lhe world's four ma)Or championships and a basl1on of the game's Establishment. lns(t:ad of competing on lhe storied acres of the Augusta National course. the 1970 leading money winne r and Vardon Trophy champion played Jn someth1nR c;ill~d the Nrw i\1cic 1co Club prn ch::im- p1onship on a desert layout near the Mex- ican border. !l's actions such as those lhat have helped make lh1s Jl.ycar·o!d Mcxi can- American grandson of a Dallas gra11ed1g· R('r ooe of I.he most popular performers the game has seen. a pied-piper luring deserters from Arnie's Army, pulling the crowds in the gate with his ch:itter and quips and color ~ and a game that i! unorthodox, a product of his days as ~ golf hustler. nl the years scrambling for a buck in biting, sand·laden winds of the Soulhwest. It may be unorthodoi, this flat, peculiar swing of his. but he's no longer worrying about covering a $5 bet as hfl did Jess than six years ago as a $Jb 1 week assist.ant on an El Paso, Tex., driv- ing range. He's collecting prize money at 11 record clip. His victory in the Canadian Open Sun- day ::ind the $30.000 first prize pushed h.i.s earnings for the year lo $19S.869. O wners Not Fair--Players " I '·NEW YORK !AP) -The M111j()r Ltque Baseball Players Am>ciation, contend.Ing It need.s figura of it.a new televllion contr1ct with NBC to prepare neeotiatlON 00 • ntW pentiloo and in- IUr&OCC plan. haa filed 1n unfair labor practice mil aaaJDSl the 24 m1jor le1gue club&. TM acUon wu annouoced Mondly by Marvin Miltf!r, executive director of the &lllOciaUon. In • stinging statement, he accused the c.ltt. owners of ecting "ar- rogantly" and In a mannf'r "challenging and IMUllln8" the players. The dlarae wa' filed with the New York ~1ktn1I office nf tht National Labor Relations Bo8rd. Upon rece1vi nR the charge, John J . Gaherin. labor counsel for the club owners, !old !he board "it was without merit 11 nd should be dij mlssed." Dick Moss, couMC:I for the asscx:iallon, said ·I.be MLP A has made a formal re- quest Jor specifics of the new contract and had "been told ..• that Jt ts none of our business."' The association now seeks an NRl.:B order for !he clubs to supply sudt delails, The charge contencl.~ th11t the club owners' N!fusit.I to furnish the Assocl11tlon wtth 1 breakdown of the lcrms lncludr.d 1,.., the f]t,75 million. four.year ctlntr11c:t preparing for ils forthcoming ncgolia- t1on!!. "We've !i!Ol lo have tha't informa1jon 1n order to bargain," said Miller. Traditionally, contributions to lhe players for their benefit plan have been financed by a percentage of the radio and television revuue or a Oat sum based on such • percentage. Currently, the players are rectiving $5.45 million a year for their benefit plan in 1 three.yt.ar agrt.emenl that expire.1 March JI. 1972. The association claim!! the figure is based on 00 per cent of television revenue from the World Serie• 11ind 9S per ce~t from the All.Star game. and Davia ~red it." Davis, who cracked an ().for-& slump in tht. series with his Ion& drive to right- center, says he isn't surprised by the Dodgers' recent surge. ·•t felt we were in the race when we were ll Lh back.'' Davis declared. ··Tue team that can win with injuries will take it all. Both the Giants and Dodgers have been hurting. bl.It we came up with Al Downing ( l!l-4) when Singer got hurl." About the pitch he hit, Davis said, "I don't think he wanted to get the pitch so high. Tt was one of those pitches that you always look for but seldom get." Don Sutton, 9-6 worked the first six in- ning" and got the win, while Jim Brewer blanked the Giants lhe final three innings for his 11th save. LOS ANQILll SAN ,ltAlolC!SCO WolQ, u Cftwltlrd. II w 0t¥b, d II t.11..,, 30 W Ptf~t.r, 10 $1tnl, t Lt.ll'tlY••, 1b Buc:~ntr. rf S11r1U1, p 11,....,,,, II tll r~..i •llr~ti>! J 1 \ 0 $pt"'•· _, • I I 0 l1ll F...,,lt.1,ltl .oOlO J I 1 l M•v•, lb .< I I 0 J 011BoNh.rl JOTO J110Htndt.r'°"'llJOID ttlOletl,< JOJO lllllo••rk>.<I •1 1 1 • o O O L•nlt.r, lD • I l 0 J 1 l O Po.,y, p l 0 t I I O I I 1-itl!V. ,,,, l 0 I O McMtnon, 11 O o O O 11112 1 Li» AroQt.le1 Sen francoi.co Toi.I• l5 J !I 1 000 040 11(1 -/ 110 000 000 -) [ -II All•"· w O.~··· OP Lo• ... ro(lrl•• 1 St" Fr•n<h<o I L08 -lot AroQeltl /, 58" F0r8.-.<l"o II )II -Ltlt.b.rt JI -W 0.•1'. Mii -CrtWIO<d 1'1 SB -llo•t •tO. ~ -Ptrrv J, SF -II Allt11. Lt!lb.rt S11!I0<1 1w.t·•l Browtf Pttrv IL,j.11 M<Mtl>on " • . ' • ' H It £11 II SO • l 1 J s J • 0 0 J 11 I I I J 0 0 0 1 0 Stvt -l rt"Wrr. !-'Bl" -by $111!0<\ 1Spo,t•f. WP -S\lltO<I. PitrtV. Tome -l Ol. ,.,tttndt ,.<e - l't,ISI, Angels in ltf innesota Positive Thinking Helps Halo Ace The Angels have been struggling alt season , but m'anager Lefty Phillips basn'l lost the power of positive thinklng. He instilled some of it in youthrul right- hander Lloyd Allen Monday night and Allen went on lo save a 2-1 victory over the Oakland A ·s, giving the last.place Angels 1 split in their four·game series with the division leaders at Anaheim On TV Tonight Cl1a•111el 5 at 6 Stadium. After Dave LaRoche and Allen had pitched out of an eighlh·inning jam and Allen had slruck out Rick Monday and Mike Hegan to open· the ninth, CurL B!efary walked and Tommy Davis singn. ed him lo third. Up came A11gel Mangual and out hurried Phlllips to talk with Allen. "He tolcl me I was one of hi s best pitchers and to go get 'em," Allen said "That added a little something." He got Mangual to ground out. lhus preserving the first victory for Rudy ri.ia y, 4·5, since 1i-1ay 8. The Angels open a sit-day seven.gam• road trip in Minnesota tonight. sending A11dy Mess<'tsmilh , 7-8, against the Twins' Bert Blyleven, 7·11. '!'he A's. their American League West lead whittled to 10 games over Kansas City, winll up their current road stint with a three-game set at Chicago, with Joh11 "Blue Moon" Odom. 4·4. opposing the While Sox' Jin1 Magnuson, 1--0. Phillips wasn't eicaggeraling in his estimation -Of Allen. The 21-ycar-0ld reliever hasn't allowed a run in 18 11~ in· • nings, a span of 10 appearances stret- ching back to June 8. •·1 believe he can throw the ball as hard as· Vida Blue," !he manager said. Allen says it"s all a matter or an im· proverl curve. "f was gelling hurt v.·ith it before." he said. "1 was hanging too many of them. Now I think J can control it and throw it to spots." May held the A's lo six. h1ls bul left after Joe Rudi opened the t:1ghth inning with a double. With two left-handed hitters aiming up, Phillips went firsl to LaRoche, who retired both Reggie Jackson and Mike l::pstein, before summoning Allen to deal with Sal Bando. Bando grounded out. "We were damn lucky," May said, •·we. were lucky to get a split in this series considering we sc.-ored only seven runs in four games. J can't begin to tell you how tough it is to pitch without runs." The Angels managed only four hits off loser Jim (Catfish) Hun ter ( l 1-7 ) and Rollie Fingers. They scored w ithout A hit in the first when Sanely Alomar walked, stole second, went to third on a fl y to deep r ight by MJckey Rivers and scored Tony Gonzalez' sacrifice fly. They pushed over what proved to be the t,11inning run in the third when Gonzalez walked, John Stephenson singl- ed and Jim Spencer doubled. A looQUtg double by Gene Tenace and a single by Davis produced the Oakland run in lhe seventh. OAl(lANlt •b t 1<ni IM..._...,1. fl • I 1 0 ~u<ti,!! •DID ll:JICkSO<l, r1 '0 0 0 EIHltln. 1b l 6 0 0 ''"""'• lb l a t o Cunctn, c J o l O MoroCllY, pl! I 0 0 0 l Brown, n J 0 0 0 H~•~· pn 1 o o o DC.rren, :lb 1 0 0 D Ttnl<t. pti 1 l l 0 Fln9or•, P I 0 0 0 Blel•r>, p~ 0 0 0 0 Hunt ... ~ :iooo TO""" 1b 1 0 1 l l•gu .. 1, '" o o o C C,\ll,OltNtt. ... , ....... .lolomtr, 11> J l I O lt lven, er • o o e C.on1tlu, It 1 1 o l 11.,,n..,,on, c • o ! o ~pen<er. '" .J O I l McMullen, Jn J O O O T CO<llOl•••O, rl J 0 0 0 0'6,len, u 1 0 t 0 l•llocnt. ,, o O O O lAUen,n 00110 II: Mlv n l 0 0 0 10111• Jl I 1 1 lot•l1 11 1 • 1 Oo~l•r.d OOll 000 HIO -l ca1;rorn•• 100 100 60> -7 OP -c.1;10'",. 1 LOB -O•'l•r><I '· c .1 .. !nrnl• ~.I 16 -Oun<:tn, ~pence'. Tenace, llllC!o. SB -AIQm1r, 111.lvtri. SI= -Gonialel I, N ll f.ll II 'O H11nlr tL.nn ' J 1 1 J • FmQe<t 1 I o a o l llMty (W,••lt I I I l J 1 Ltlll:OC~* 11) 0 0 Cl 0 0 L"llt n 1·1fl 1 o 0 l l St •• -L. Allll'I. l o~ -1 lt . .O.UtllO•nct - 1.0 0. V,I Tt""hoM ANGELS' RUDY MAY BEATS A'S REGGIE JACKSON TO FIRST. Hilo Pitcher Recorded His First Victory Sine• M1y 8, 2-1. . . Emerson Zips Pas~ Net Rival CSTAAD, Switzerland -Third-seeded .Roy Emerson of Newport Be a c h eliminated Larry Collins of lhe United States, :I~. 6-4, 6-4 in opening round play of the Swiss Jnternalional tennis cham· pionships Monday. John Newcombe, the Wimbledon win- ner from Australia, drew a firsl·rounrf bye in the competition while Jeff Borowiak of Berkeley rallied to win his first round match over A r m 1 n d Armritray of lndia, 4-6, 9-7. 7·5. 1n other matches John Cooper, Australia, defeated fiflh·seeded R11y ~loore, South Africa. 6-2, 6-4: Ray Ruf. Fels, Australia, put out r~rancois Jauffret, France. 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 : Leif Johansson, Sweden , eliminated John Kuku, Japan, 6·2. 0-6, 7-6 and Ismael El Shafei. Egyp!, ...,·hipped Dimitri Str1.1dza, Switzl':!'land , 6·4 , 2-6, 6·3. e S1ttlo11 Offered p,,.,, SEATTLE -Eddie Sutton. basketball coach al Creighton University, has been offered lhe head coaCh'ing job al Washington Stale University, the Seattle Post.Intelligencer said in Tuesday edi· tions. Sutton was interviewed by WSU ()f· ficials over the weekend and was ex· peeled to accept or decline the offer within 48 hours, the newspaper said. Sut- ton's Bluejay teams have compiled a 29- 21 record over the past two seasons. e Rough Ride LONDON -Lamar Hunt, the Texas millionaire tennis promoter who has quarrelled with 'Vimbledon, got a rough ride froin leading British sports writers Monday. "You'll Jose this war. Hunt ," said a heacllincr over Frank Rostron's story itt Lhe Daily Express. Because Hunt's organization, World Championship Tennis, demanded 11 bigger share or the profits, its 32 stars face the threat of a ban at Wimbledon and other major tournaments next year. The Jnternational Lawn Tennis F'edcra· lion is expected to approve the ban at it! annual meeting at Stresa, Italy, Wed- nesday. The breach between the JL TF' ancl WCT, ending four exciting years or open tennis, cast shadows over the sunnv scene as the \Vimbledon championshii)is ended Saturday. e Rerord Payoff CHARLESTOWN, W. Va.. -Twe unidentified bettors collected $31 ,J\3 . each in a r ecord two-way Shenandoa Down~ "Big Exacta" payoff ~1onday. The .key to the four·horse parlay in th• fifth and sixth races was Sonacall, which won the fifth and paid $9t80 for a l2 ticket. e Harvard TrhnnpllS HENLEY-ON·TIIAMES, England Harvard University cre.,...s flave ended A five-year victory drought at the Henley Royal Regatta and are returning to the United States with two of the meet's most prestigious trophies. Harvard's American ch am p io n lightweight eight crew won lhe Thame~ Challenge Cup Saturday, holding off A fast closing Kingston Rowing Club o! England for a 1":J lenglh viclory in 6:48. And Harvard gained its scconrf lrophy. on the m il e and ~5(}.yard Thame:s River courS(', ·when iL took Lhe Wyfold Cballenge Cup for coxless fours. Veterans Sign Multiple-year Ra111 Contracts LOS ANGELES \AP\ -In a rnov1 guaranteed to make head coach Tommy Prothro feel more secure about his ne\¥ job, the Los Angeles Rams have signed si x of Uieir veterans to multiple-year con· tracts. They included three.fourths of I he defensive line David "Deacon" .Jone:-;, Merlin Olsen and Coy Bacon. The Ram.."' said Monday they received four-year pacts, as did defensive backs Kermit Alexander and Clancy Williams. Guard Joe Scibelli, the team's offensive captain, signed a three-year contracl. No terms were announced. "We feel that lf't.is indicates a f;ti!h in Prothro." said John R. Sanders, assistant general manager of the National Football League team and direclor of player personnel. He added he was negotiating possiblr. long·term pac,ts with fullback Lester Jo;ciephson, linetrl:an Charlie Cowan and others. A source close lo the Rams said lhe signings were in response to numerou!l recent cases in which stars have played out their one-year options and declared themselves fret agents while seeking 11ubstantial raises. · Earlier, the Rams announcecl that quarterbac); Roman Gabriel had signed a four.year contract. Jones. the massive i\11-Pro defensive end. eomnlcnlMl, "The long-ttnn con- tract. is the only way for a pro to &el \\ilal he 's worth theu da}". "'Ever since the merger with the A'PL. It's been getting tougher and tougher to negotiate a one-year contract. The club "'ants to make sure you're riot going lo play out your option end leave after one year." The Rams open preseeson drllls Thu. d~y at Cal St.ate I ruJ!erton l. -·~-· •. ----·---=--··~· --:'<---' ·---==-•!'" ·-:-~· ~--• .:::a-= ---:---··~. --,,..-t -· -.-..-. ...._... -----c---,-.-11""d:' • ----i-. • Says Mel11vk • • E,xpenses Plague Golf A ntateurs JACKSONVIL LE Fla 1AP \ ~ cxpl·nse~ to play a1nateur golf -Srna~hing .:1n1atcur golfer lhc past year huvl" been Stt'V(' Melnyk, 111nncr ~1f bulh $5,000." the U.S. an<I Brir1 ~h l'rn"n". is The 24·ye<ir-ol d bachelor apparl'ntly a ml'l'l' tar1·u1 tn11n 1iorks for (;ulf Life lnsuran("e turning pro. 111 Jaeksonvdle, 75 1ni!es soutlJ "Thl' VSCIA I ~ d r J v I II ~ o! h1 ~ lirunswi t•k, G a .. pl ayers out 11f ainateur gulf,'' hnn1ctown. t\.1 e In y k's un- c·la11ns lht• 228-pound J\h:lr11k dll'Stand1ng e1np!oyer l('t hun "Bui, I ;1dn111 J"ll bt-.... u1ry. Lu ()ff i1g:Ho this \\CCk to play the f('<1 vc and !urn , .. " Ur111sh Open al Southport. Steve paused. refusin g to E11gl<1nd adniit the $7 rndlion golf 1our .. It s n1y second trip to is possibly less than a 1nontl1 (;reat Britain 1n lv.o months,·· away. Uut 1t"s a ~a ll' bet he dra"•led ... I hope this one is J.1elnyk will play ••s ;1 pro 111 as successful. l 11·on the 111·0 week.~ 1f the $250.000 Bnu~h An1atcur last lime." Westchester Classic offer~ an Tht• strapping 6 -f o o 14 2 exemption. J\lt•lr1yk c.·aptured the U.S. •·r.1y econon1ic s1lua!ion i~ a A1na1 cur 11·hile playing col- fa clor."' he siild ··1 t::in 1 lrgi:Hc golf at the Unil'erstty around $12,000 a }ear -niy or Florida in 1%9. Tired Mays 111 Slu1n11 SA:-J FRANC ISCO !i\l'f - It's July, \\lillic Mays 1s t1rrd and his baiting average 1s going dO\\'n. lie needs rest. but 111sle:id 11·111 go play in hi s 22nd All- S!ar Game ne."<l 1vcck 1n Detroit 11·ith no compl:iint s_ '·The club scc1ns to pla.v bet- ter when I'm in there.·· the San Francisco Giants star said recently, explaining 11·hy hf' hasn't asked nlanager Charltt.' Fox for n1orc da ys off "An1:.1teur golfers v.· ho :irc11"t rea~onably wealthy are 1n !rouble,"' he said . "1'h<' t l nite d St<11e~ Coif Ass(l(.·1at1on . our am<iteur rulrr 111 Arneri ca. refuses to catch up with !be limes.·· ,\111a1eur golf be('ame more t·>:pi:nsi vt• for the long-hitting fl1 clnyk foJ1 011'1ng graduation ln 1111 college. "Tha\"s anoth{•r ea~l' of double standards by !he L:SGA, .. he said. "I 11·as allo11 ed to receive education. golf clubs. golf b:ilts. trousers. shirts r vl'rythings I needed -for lree at the Universi ty of .Florida." he said. "Since I'm out of school, to accept a free dozen golf ba!ls is il\('gal. '' Gal s' Best l s11't Good Enough BERK ELEY { A P ) \Yomen's track and field in the United States is literally put- llr.g its best feet forward, "but our best Lsn 't good enough yet," says Fred t.toore, who coached the U.S. team against Russia here. "This was it. These \j,'ere the best girls we have," said long jumµer \Yillye \\'hite in agree· ment after the 76-60 loss in the 1nterna1ional met!! I as l \1·cekend. The US. girls lost for the ninth llme in 10 USA-USSlt n1eels, while the American 1nen "·on 126-110 to take an 8-2 lead in the series . But r.1oore and assistant co;ich Brooks Johnson said there's hoµe for the future. "By 1973 it"s going lo be just hkc swbnming -a blitz or ch<impions," said Johnson. "They're all in our junior training t:an1ps no11•," he said of the i::irl prospects. Several of An1erica's top 1von1('11 stars now are veterans like J\.1iss \Yhitc, a 31-year-old Chicagoan n•ho is the only An1erican to co1npe\(' in all !hr U.S.·Russ i;i n1eets. She 11•on the long jump Saturda y \1•ith a le:'.p of 21 feet. 4 inches. Corona del l\1ar's Kim At· llesey finished fourtti . Doris Brov;n of Seattle, the best U.S. female distance run- ner. is 28. She lini11hed second tu Russians in the 800 and J,500-mcter races here. Iris Davis. a 21-year-old sprinter from Tennessee Stale, and hurdler Patty Johnson, 21. San Clemente were the only individual wi nners be s id es l\1iss \Yhile. • Former Corona del Mar Ace Deluged With Spike Feelers By PIUL ROSS Sixtl'.i-place !Lnlshers don 'l necessarily rate spec ial at- tention. But w!1en six th placers tm~rge from the annual Cali- fornia high school track and !ield finals, there's a chance that they turned in creditable perfor1nances in spite of not having scored any points in the big meet. And the result or s uch 8 performance t•an in1mediately transforn1 itself into a v.·1despread case of eye-o pen· 1ng gestures among collegiate recruiters. CMe tn point is Nick Ros~. \\'ho recently graduated frorn Corona de\ t.1ar High. An intelligent student \vhose bespectacled appearan c e doesn't be.lie the fact thal there's a conslderably talented br1:11n undt-r hi! horn-rims, !lose has received a numbtr of fet!le rs from various in- stitutes o( higher learning throughout the west. Pri1narily, the talent scouts fron1 a dozen odd colleges and universities v.·ho hal'e con· tacted Nick, are interested in hi :i; talent fur running. That talent thrust Rose all lhe way into the state prep finals at UCLA early 1n June and he concluded his high school career by taking a non- scoring sixth in the state 111 lhe 880 with a car('er best 1·:>2.7 clocking. In addition lo having shone in the half most of his prep l'areer. Rose was also one (lf the most valuable cross coun- try runners for Se<\ King coach Joh n Blair during the f nll. Losi11g W eel{e11d F 01· Legio11 Ni11es O range Coa s t area Am('rican Legion ba s e b a I l teams saw plenty of action ove r the holiday weekend - but produced litt le success. Fountain Valley·s only run in the RancherPacifica lilt camr on a single by ~like Hix, a sacrifice and a ground out. Against Koh ne, Steve J\ol1lchell and Steve Fritz. blasted sixth inning home runs. \Y l'slminst('r outhit Los Apparently in1pressed by hi.s abtilty and wi llingness lo d• hard work (he has trained by running as many as 20 miles a day J, tlile collegiate scouts are now hot on Rose's path. According lo the bright yoLJngstcr, "l've r eceive d tel.' le rs from Cal Poly t Sa n Lui s Obis1>01 , 0 reg on , Colorad11. Utah . Arizona State, l'C Irv ine , S1n1un Fraser L'nivers1ty in Br1t1~h Columbia and Four or five other smaller st:huols a1~':.tY frorn here. "The rnost serious right now are Cal Poly . S1n1on Fraser, l1tah , UCI and Colorado." Rn.s(' indicates that Cal Poly is offering all ii can give him on a full alhlellc subsidy bat that the S!'hool dO('sn't have rnuch 1n the v.·ay of funds lo dole our ul lhat respect. llP adds. "Simon Fraser i~ offering ;;!1 they can give for a11 out-of-the-country !Canada) schol11rship while A r i z o n a S!ate and Utah have offered lull rides with UCI and Colorado still working ()n Full cieals." \Y ith eventual hopes of bcconl1r.g an opthalmologist or urinologist. Rose would like lo matriculate al an institution which offers a better-than- average medical program. "I"m not sure I'll be able lo run all the tlme s i n c e 1nedicine 11·ill be taking up 5"' much or my time,'' he says. .. , don 't want to get on athle!IC' scholarship and lhcn quit track. But I'm nol about to 1nake il {track) No. I either. ..I JUSl havcn ·1 1.:ompleted deriding ye t." he :1dds . •·\Villic told n1e thal 11 hen hl' p1ays first base he's tl'Sllng. '' Fox said. LSGA leaders s I a pp e d i'\'1£'1r1yk with a llvo-rnonth ~u~pcn~1on for act('pting t1vo duzt n ba!l s that he nel'('r used. "Vinnie Giles and I both play 1'11lc1st balls." he said. "But a1 the Masters \Ve met some nice Dunlop people and they placed son1c golf balls in our ronrns. ·· \\'onlen track and lield ----------·--------------- athletes in the United States Although losing two of three games. Fountain Valley re- mained in contention for the Orange County N a I ion a l League title. Coach Gent t-.1 arinacci's te11m has an 11 -4 mark and are battling B.ancho- Pacifica and 1he Fullerton Dodgers for the loop title. Fountain Valley fell lo in- vading Rancho-Pacifica. 9-1. Saturday, bounced back lu down visiting Saddleback, 1-0. Sunday and thrn fell tn Anaheim Kohnc by an 8·3 margin Monday a1 La Pahna Park. Al;1n1itos. 8-7. bul could not co1ne up with the time!y hit lo produce runs. The I o n e Y.1esln1i11ster tal ly ca1nc in the seventh on a triple by t\.l1ke Dodd and an error. Although still not having ar· rived at his fina l decision yet, indications arc that Rose lean.;; toward UC I, Utah and Colorado, all with growing medical schools in the works. tlfa.vs. the Ci;ints' l'l'nlrr f1c!9er since 195L hns played lrcquently :it first lhis ~·ctir because or !he abscnr<' of in- jured \\'illie t.1cCovl'Y· Severa! other San Franrisco starters have been in :ind out or the hnc-up 11 ill1 injuries. r spcc1aHy in J une 11 hen the (;1 anls slrugglt.'d tn ;1 13-1 5 reeord and sail' their i\':11u111:1I League \\'est lc;id shr ink lrvrn JU''.! gan1es to 61'.! r.1ays turnt'd 40 on M<.1~ 6. 11hen hi s 368 ba11111g al'eragl' ,,·as one of the highest 1n baseball. He pushed il uµ to . 387 a £cw days later. liut by July 1, tl had sli pped to .340 ;i nd the supr rstar's averagt' fell bv 47 point:-> 1n June. 11hrn he batted .!!17. Allrr gning 1-for-4 ;igains l the Dodgers here r.1onda.1. t\.1ays s/1011•tcl Only thrct• hi!s in his las1 35 al b:!ls and 1vas dOll'll tn .285. llC' leads thl' c:iant ~ ill g;u11e-11·inn1ng h!ls lh1s se;1~11n , 11·ith 10. 0111• 1>f lhc clul t:h bl ows W<ts a 12th-inn1nµ hnrnc run 011 ,June fi a g a i 11 s ! Phdadel1>h1<1 lh;1! ~{I ll' S:111 Francisco a ~-3 11rthr1 and !'nd('d a 11-..e-g;lml' lo~1ng streak r.1 a ~s had onh f111' rur 1~ U;11 led ir; during .hinr Thf' .Jun1· ii homer ;111d 111:; onl.~ 11111 ()lhrr:; in the n1on1 h 11c-rt' 111th lhr b;is('S rmµll . r.lelnyk said he and Giles •·gave !he free golf balls to !rieuds. and the llSGA didn't even discover the n1aller until 1L was r('por!ed 111 a British i::ul f n1<1guzi ni.'. Then we 1l'ert' su~pcnded ." The husky Georgian has fought For changes within the L"SGA, bot finds the organiza- 1 r o n "unrelenting.•· He believes amateurs should be illluwed to a('cept expenses to !up tournaments if sponsors uffcr J11s! baek fr orn England. i'\'ll•lnyk founr! he 11·as "too tirrd and had too lltl!c time " 10 'try qualifyi ng for I.1st n1011th's U.S. Open at !\ler1011. P;1. The young man ·who Y.'a s hf•;i!Pn J-2 by !\1eln~1 k in the Brd ish An1alcur final turned our lo he the hol!esl non-pro i11 \Ii(' ()p ('ll_ ",/1111 Si mons played gre:i1 bul 11 tore mr up that I pass('d up the t' S Open ."' said :-l1phtly·balding 1\1 e r n y k . "S1111ons 1 s ei..cepl ionally :-lr:;1ght off thr tef' He has k·11 µ<·rr s -pro or arn:11eur -;is a shorl putter. J 11as n1·nud nr tum " Paii· of Golde1atails need 1norc <1o11d better com- µclition, more coaching and n1ore recognition, says Miss \Vhite. "rm the only woman in the cou nt ry 1l'ho can jump over 21 feet. \V hat coinpetition is !hat? There are maybe 20 11·01nen in Europe v.·ho can do it ," she said. ln Buss1a . she said. a 11 on1an athlete is rewarded with .. a better \l'ay of life, a bctler ap2.rtment. more .status. t-.1aybe because or this they're more highly motivated than v.·e are." Some of the women's races in the USA-LiSSH. meet here, especially the American vic- tories, \\'ere ainong the biggest crowd pleasers. North-East Gridclers \Vin Fortner \\lilson H i g h quarterback Rick 1 loloubck fired a pair of touchdown p::tsses and scored the n·inning .!>ix-pn1nler on a ont'-yard sne11 k to \cad !hr North-East all·sta rs tu :in 18-14 victory 01er the South-\\'est team in th(' Ootirn1st lioYd ~an1e Sun- da1 night al the Coliseum. The tilt 1natched ~raduati ng pre pslers 1n lhe Los Angeles C11y School D1stnct IJon Gifford nr ll unlln~tnn 1-h.'a('h . h ~rt a goocl lrip ~board the boat Jlolid_ay running nut nf !'t•illl l.(lnla Sportf1sh1ng_ l:ist \1 ~c k. p1 ck!n g up l wo ye!lo11·s _on I., . ·,1 1111 1, ft'\1 1111c t"t1i1co h11.~.~ \ cll(11vta1I action 1s fair a!ong the entire l\C ~q ~11 . . I . ·1 I "· '" lb 1 o<a !'l!inr. hi it 1 h~ ,111\'n111111 of 111111--t ;1n g fir~ is s111 ,. l1nti-"' a il <:orc '""' ---··----- Rustlers Win, 4-0; Pirates Upended, 5-0 J\1 ea n\\·hile. Y.1estminst('r Behind a sizzling three-hater one and a!lowffl t h r c (' had its problen1s also, l11s1ng a har1nl ess singles in go ing the l no or gan1es. by right -hander ,\1ark Barr, dlst ant'l'-\Ves!n1inslcr ivas l>l>a\('n Uv th(' Sen1k Hu~tl('rs 1f:ol den hos! Los Alan11to~ S11turday. 6-ln the Orange Coas1 tilt , lhe \Vest College} rna1nta1ned Pirates n·ere held 10 just l\i·o l, dropped a 7-:> dt>cision to 10- lhe1r lead in the MeLropol11an hu s by Dons left -hander Keith vad1ng Sonortl Sund11y and was baseball league Sunday 111ghl \Vynck. Hr struck out 11. Forced to forfeit its l\1onday Again s t Sonora. Westrninsler held a 5-J lead going into the ninth. but wildness helped the invaders to four runs and the 7-5 win. Al Degenhardt banged out three singles and drove in two runs in the Sonora setback. C.ary Bungo had t11·0 sacrifice 1hcs Hungo. the \Veslrninsti'r catcher, jamn1ed a thuinb 1n !See LEGION, Page Z21 Ile notes "lhe on!y one I've see n so far i on an escorted tour) is Cal Poly. While I en4 joyed the atmosphere there, l'rn a little leery of th<.' acad('m!c side. Gelling in a fin:1l com- pli1nent to the local school. Ruse fini sh('<;. "Irvine would ht well into my pl ans.'' Kce1) busy, Bo Hoberson. garne lo 1'1ission Viejo 11•hrn wilh a 4 -o victory over the The l1rsl Pirate hit ca111e in 00, o{ its nin' player~ was in- Paramount Poets I Whittil'r the SCC<lnd whton Ron Ruff led ju red . College) at Shaffer Park. off wilh a triple. But Wyrick Tht' £orle1\ virtory ·was went to v•ork and got the nl>x t ln other aciion, Warrl 's t-.11ss1on Viejo's only win 1n thre(' bJttcrs. . Pirates ~Orang(' Coast) fell to lhree 1veekend tries. Miss ion .Jim \Va!son collectl'd lhe · I f II I · I' lh' La F'onda Don.~. 5-0. al Vil'JO a so e o v 1 s • r n g Gauchos~ Foothill Tie; Diablos, Artists Forfeit other hi!. an f'ighlh-inning Anahei n1 Schutte. 12-0. Satur- fllemorial P2.rk in Santa Ana. single. day and was defc'a(t.'d b.i' ~addleback College 's frosh ·k h 5 2 I s d baseball !cam scored a run in Sent no\I' as a · -eagur so~!-""'11 ... 1•1 Plt1centia. 4)-2. un ay al record and returns to plav. " ' • ",' Valenci a High. lh(' top of the sixth inning lo 110G~•t. c1 ° e:irn " 4-4 !le "·ith Foothill in Wednesday hight at 6, facing woi}o~. .. o ~ ~ r.leanwhiJ('. San <Jen1cnlr " c"""" '1 1 , 1 also dropped two of thn:t• !ht> Sacldleliack College sum- Orange (Chapn1an College) ~~:~~. 1: ~ ~ ganl('S. The lone win was a 9.5 nicr instructional league Sun- at La Palma Park. ~~,:,·11;~, 111 ~ ~ decision over Newport on the da y. Ward's Pirates (3-2-2) arc ~1""''""· 1r 1 ° o 11 1nners' diamond Sunday. The game v.·as hailed after Em~rv. Jll ! 0 O 0 d (' I' 'I idle until Sunday. f<>cing host Pom"'•Jt•r•o•·. ~b 1 1 1 ' The loss('s were to Anaheini six innings ue to a une 1m1 · e~rr " J 0 ' G I\ t n 7 r al I a Palnr • In other till<;, l\lission Viejo Cypress al I. 10;.1, 11 9 ti 1 r. -· ~ · ' d Seo•• bv 1nnin11 Saturday and 2-0 lo Sant;i Anll ftlrfeited to San Clen1('nte an r.1ean11·hile. Parr go t \11(' on-• h • at ~lr.rnOriat Park i\1onda.v. Universi ty won a forfeit win 1)" run h(' needed in the second ~~:~n-n• ~;:! :, t ; ' The lop are<t pi t chi n g fron1 L<.i::un;i Beach bC"rt:usc inning 1rhe11 Bud Bulling rip-Wora'• perf ormance carne f r o rn of a 1,1ck of play('rS. ped a one'(}ut trip!!' and l\1ike P""':•b 10: h .~1 Fnun!<un Valle.1··.s Dave L\·nrh Saddleback ·.~ (;au rho~ Dodd fol!ov.·ed \\"ith ::. sing!('. "ul>"I•• t 0 0 0 who limited Saddlehack 10 JU:<l ~rored 1he1r fir!'\ l110 runs 111 The Rustlers collectrd P~imo, <1 o o o ~•mo'""· '" n o o lwo singles in the 1-0 \'ICtory. th!' third lo tie as Ru ben another tally in lhe sixth when P un . JD ~ ~ ~ L\nr h sl ruek nu t 111 ne ll nd Paranl<i walked . Ste\'{' Pat Curran sluRged a two-out ~·::~:;: ~~ o , o did . nut is~U(' a 11·alk in the Carpenter doubted and Craig double and Rla in C ,1 I d r r r~r·ao". " o n o Ar,<I•,<. on drove both runners h" · · I F ulnom. 11 o n o Sf'l"en 1n111ng j!an1e. ... ,, scored 1n1 11•1th a ~ing c. ..0,.,. u ~ o o Fountain Va!lf'y got i!..; onl y horn (' with a trtple The fin;it t11·u ru n .... 11'£•re e~on. n o n0 •0 '''" m lh" !h ire! wh('n P;it ('o;ich Dcun Fritz' Sad-1 I d · th O Fr,t1, o ~ n '-,., Pa e tn e Sl'ven 1 Qn a '"'"(~~••I nh 11 Q n r.l.irtry got 11 hf}ard rfn ;in l'r-dlcback tc:1n1 got one more in The tying run c;i1nc aero:->." on a fi elder's choice, ! ;ary McKnight's singf(' and a pair of walks. In ;1 horne run derb.v Sun- da y. Carpent('r blaslcd two over the Sacldleback fence t" 11·in it with C.~r('g Kessler get- ting one for second spo1. Thrl'e games are scheduled this Sunday with Uni meeting J\tis.sion Viejo at 10, S<.>.d- dleback facing Laguna at 12:30 and San Cl('mente and Foothill clashing at 3. '" "'""'"""· " Kf\Sle•. '' M,1e>, o> II Wr•on1 . ' M(ll:~lol". ID AN•r><ler. '' C••o>enl•• I< II• Tol•ll ' " ' • " • ' • • ~ rttl ' ' ' ' ' • • • ' • ' ' ' • • • • ' ' 11·a\k to Gary Simpson Md To1•l1 '~ " o '"''· '"•'·" sacrifir"d to ~econd !hf' fifth on a three-base blow R R Jr • h Sto•• D• lnnl"I' . '"'' c r h • oger omma angers ome '~ • hy Paul F:blrn :ind .~cored on hy Scott .Johannes and 5•110,.c.~· oo2 n 1 •-• 1 ~ run 10 left field . •• i nnd~ Cl""' 01ocw-11 oo0 •~o anolh"r nii~CU('. Jiaramo·s single. r c><>1h.11 100 • 1 o-• • n Barr slrurk out nine, walked' 1 __ ._'_"c'':._'_"c"c"c'_~""-"" __ .,._-__ '' -'----'------------------11r---------------...;j Cage Clinic Sched ulccl One of the area~ ou\st11nding bas ketball clinics for boys in- lerested in the sport from 11 - 14 years of age, will be st2.ged at the Tu stin Boys' eluh from July 19 through 23 . Seven outstanding area high school coaches ll'i ll conduct the clinic that runs from 6 to 9 for five days beginning J··ly 19 {nol June 19 :is e:irli('r reported ). Don Leavey of Yt'estinin.ster and Pat Roberts or Mission Viejo are among the seven coaches participating. Othe.rs include Paul Collier (Saddleback }!igh). Wiilard Foerester (LB Poly), Gary Larson and George 'l"rotter (Tustin) and C. W. Murrell (Saddleback). The class will be lin1i1ed to the first 60 boys returning registration blanks aloni,: with the $10 contribution lo lhe Boys' Club of Tustin. Ba.seball Standings l\~TEHfCAN LEAGUI'.: Rall1more Boston Detroit New York Cleveland \Vashington Oaklanrl K.:ans.:as City J\·linne.'\Ola Chicago t\.lilwauke(• Angel~ 1-.:asl Di\lislon \V L 49 :JO ~6 :J3 4J 37 37 45 31> 45 32 47 Wf'sl 01\•isioo 52 28 41 .17 .19 42 :i4 44 34 44 37 48 M-IY'• 11'1111!1\ B•lllmar, ti 0.trQI!, ,,1,. 8ol!on 1,, New Yo<lt 1 W••hlno!or> II, Cle1>.i•nd I K•~•~• CHY 6·1. CtiktVO 1--0 il"uol• 2, O&klfnd 1 M!lw•ukH '· Ml""""t' I T0<11v·1 O•"'H Pel. .620 .;Ml2 .'18 .451 .444 . 4-05 ~'otl 526 .481 .4.16 4~fi .~35 GB ' .. ' 13'2 " 17 10 1~·. 17 17 171'.i ""'"' !Men •rJmlth 1·t ) 01 MJnnesol1 (Bl• !'""" /-Ill. fllohl K•nt•• Cl!v (0••~ 1-l) 11 Mllw1uk<>e !P1n111 l·l l. nloM 01kl•nd (Odom '·'I 11 (hltlt<;rn !Mn9n11.on t·•I. "'""' ~·.., Vo<k (8•hn1en 1-11 •t Detroit 11.ollt~ 11 11. nlgM llOSIOft !~lel)f,f! 11 -0 •I Cleve•1nd !L•m• l·•!. niuM W•1Mntto~ {$holl•nbfCk ).I •nd Cotoltw'*! 0·01 •• ll~IUmarf (MCNlllY 11-• •nd JlrtO(I" 1-11. 1. lwo·nlfM NATIO\'AL lJ·:AG UE East IH\•ision \V L Pel. GB Pittsburi.:h 52 31 .627 j\('1v York 4B ;"\4 .575 41/1 Chicago 41 :l8 .519 9 St. Loui:r; 42 41 .506 10 Philadelphia 35 47 .427 16.,, itontreal JI 50 .J83 20 \\'tsl Di\•islon S:1n F'rancisco 52 32 l)odgrr~ 411 35 Houston 41 39 Atl anta 42 46 Cincinnntl :11 48 San J)icgn 29 5.'l Men••1'1 ltt!~lt• MGnl•••I 1-0, N•w York l•I f>hll•d•lphlt I, Atl•nl• ~ Pll!!l>IJ•oh I, (hl~tgO 1 ~•n 01.,go l, !!. 1.ovl• ' Hou•""" '· C!n<lnn•ll l Do<11u1 7, 5•n Fr1ntl1Co J ,..,.,., o ...... .619 .578 3\'J: .51 .1 9 .477 12 .435 15\~ .J45 23 M<>nlro•f ISIOnf mo" t•l l et ~ew Y1"1c IKOOt• m•" '"'l, n!•l'll (lflclnn•ll (MtGlo+ntln •·}l 11 Plthbv••ll {E.!111 •'·U. nlaM f>hll9d<llllll• tWl1• 1-11 I t A!lt nlo (ltone l·ll, n•oM (h lCltO (Jen-ln1 11<11 1! °'""'' (0 '8 rl•n ,.1), n•eM Hov1t°" 18Hll"9hlm J.11 1t Sin Frer><:IKo /l!rv1nl 1·ll , nl1hl OfllY v•~• JCMdul"'. The seven coaches involved 15TH ANNIVERSARY SALE!! BIGGEST&. BEST YETI ar' donating their services to 'r-----------------------------------aid the boys in improving their II .skills and koow1edge of lhe DEAN LEWIS ga;:;~·funds ceeci,.d fr om lh• clinic wHI 1>e u.soo oy the uoys' 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA club In aid in lhe CQn\inua tion of the year around progr2.fll . Mod•rn & Comp!et• S•rvic:• & Pert1 Dept . Vor fu rttifr information "r Modern Body Shop for All Cari 646-9303 540-946B DEAN LEWIS !T@Yl§ITIA! ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS '71 COROLLA SPECIAL $1777 ~ SEI THI ALL NIW TOYOTA CELICA sn-. cr1. IMMEDIATI DfllYllllY ~ VOLVO 1971 DEMO $2998 l ll ttd1n, r1dio, h11t1r, 1 11!0'"1tl1 '''"'· USID CA• Sl'ICIAL $1195 1'6' lllHAULT 110 an entry blank. cnntact thr 1 Orange County's Largest and Most ~1odern Toyota and Volvo Dealer BO\'S' Club ~1 8...18·fi 22.1 or y,•11te •• __________ ,.!o~·~·!"!'~·~·:!·!''~'!"!'~'~!''~·~C~l·~~ll~ST~S:.. __________ !::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~-· try P O. Box 781 , Tustin , 921\11[), l• '1~!110, ht.ior, ; •IM911, Nit•. !YKl;lllll;I) ___::_______ -·-""'----·t .::::~ -.. --~--~::-----=---· ---:=----·_.J;I .. _ -..---'L,,.,._ __ , ----·-· ·-4- -~--:-.-----r--"~---J r-~~-.... • .. ) 12 DAILV PILOT ·Alamitos Racing Entries '" '" "' '" ' " "' "' '" "' "' '" ' " '" '" "' "' "' l'll'TH ltACE. -110 vatd•. l •••t olds & uo. (l•lmlt>Q. Pu"• S11 DO. (1a•mln11 ~·•c• 11600. Ginoer S•m O(ani•! P•rkor Bv• O!ln11\cril Rule•ll 1 (llan~sl ..:~11 Coll...:1 (Ptrnerl Nc•1 Move (Sml1h) c1ia.11•• LH !lll1ev1 O..run• Bov !Cardoul little Miu eu~ (Ward! AIM 11191~1• Fin ! Fu!urltv? (B•nluJ ~.:: .• s·:~r. <,s:-::~.")> D111v QuesTI"" !Vau<1hnl '" '" ' " "' " ' "' "' '" "' "' "' "' SllCTH llACll -J50 VMdS. ) ve•r old1. Clllmfno. Purot sm . (!1imin<1 orlct $3SOO. Luc~v Si>ots (~ob.or!) Ol(ln'I We (A<leirl S1ucv'• SK"'' (Sml!~I Covtlts•n (W1rdl S!ormln Norm•n (Cro•O•) O'Olal Olllevl Tu•IV !!at (WrlQhH Mama's Mid Monev (Wat!on) 01:>11" S•nd• I (Pornerl LioMhear!ed ~i~"~1~~~J. \tallev Host CPre•ttl<IQ•I AIA,..lto• J•n 1 (C•rdo1nl Mint Cat,.!llJon 1 I Porned Trul1 A Boover (S1••uul "' "' "' " ' '" '" "' '" "' "' "" " ' '" '" 'EVENTH .... CE -lJ,0 v1<d~. ; v•or old• I. UD. Cl•TmlnQ, Puae $l•OO. Clalmlna ptlc• f))Q(). f;(I P;nl< /Vauohn) 111 Jot11r• (Wa~onl 111 O•nomo P•ttol fl!o~a,11 111 BH Mo JM !Ward) \19 Danclo B1v B•t (Hatdl~\ H' SilOl'>I Ground !(1rdo1•I 177 (O<m! (IOrln {Pornorl !11 EIGHTH ll.t.CE -lSQ Vlt:I!. 3 voar (!Ids & UD. PurY 1.3200. 1~, c., .. 1tQ1 Lrttl1 C.onlt111 !flirt) 111 Ml11 O«k1 S~ ((•Ml,.,\ •ll ~.-onlmo Mavor (H1rdlno! \ll 1Nl!t • C•lt I P~tn~r) 1 I I It.Md's Tonto IAlllson! lll "TOP Oetk Josie <Wahonl 111 He•l1'1'1 RO<;~•I !A.d~lr) 110 Swl~ Mon (WlhOt!l 110 GI\ A. Mllf !(lf<'Ol•l Ill Tinv flOO {Sml!hl • 11~ .llMI E!19lblt lll Ota'I Gold !Bank•! 111 JUNTH RA.CE -150 •atd• J v••r "'"'· (l&il'l'llr>Q. Pu'1• ~XIO. Cl•il'l'llng Pri<e $JSOO. R"'rt!• IPerM1') 111 Double A.a1in !Harn "' Sht!• Po!-:ev l llln•ldl1 111 "1o•AI Spur IC•r601" I 110 Win GC>O(I 8ov l(•Dl~V) llJ Go Mlrie IB•n~~l lll Hev•~u \11111~•1 11 1 Moon llvrnt lDrrv.,1 111 L•dY Lovlf l !A.d•!t Ill Tutsday, July b, l'J71 SllR.E CURE FOR PULLING +I. I 1binlc many people pull their $hots to the left y,rjthoul realizing they 2re doing so. This is ~u5e !he pull lo the left is often accompanied by a slicing action. The ball ilarts· left for a few ya rd s and ther1 curv~s to the right. The distinclion between a pull·slice •nd a pure slice i~ important. The clubhcad must be moving toward lhe left of large! (illustration ti) for a pull or pull- slici:, while its usually moving to the right on slices (illustration #2). The 1olfer who is pull-slicing merely acccatuatcs his problem if he attempts a cure t bat calls for his a.imiag or swio&io1 more to the left~ · If you arc pulling, ·or pull-iliclng, its because-your shoulders arc unwindin1 too soon in your downswing (illustration 12). Merely delay thls unwinding while swinging your arms a~d less back to the ball. This ~·ill force you to swing into the ball from inside, not outside, the target line (illustration #2). '®-0 1J?1 NAl'l.-$i0>.B!lll Score in spit• of traps, bunkers, rough •nd downhill lies-with th• help Arnold Palmer oll1rs you in his booklet, ··r roubl• Shots." A copy is yours for 20' •long with• •l•mpad, stlf· addr•sstd •nvt!ope Hnl to Arnold P•lmer, in care of this ntw•· p•per. , Top Fuel Dragsters Bid for U.S. Crown Top fuel dragsters, once lh(' kings of drag racing, will return to the spotlight in all thei r ear-splitting, ground- shaking magnificence in lht> fifth annual U.S. Professional Dragster Assn. Championship July 23-24 at Orange County International Raceway. <."Ommodatcd. In recent years funny car racing, replete with such showmanship tactics as fiery burnouts, have captured the interest of mosl drag racing {>nthusiasts. and funny cars have begu n to approach the elapsed times and speeds of Juel dragsters. But, according to Kruse, each year the PDA meet proves there is still a large segment of the drag racing rJUdience to whom fuel-burn- ing unlitnitcd dragsters appeal. The rail-like supercharged monsters of the macadam. \\•hich cover the quarter mile in little more than. six seconds from a standing start and hit speeds of 230 m,p.h., are 1hc traditional feature of the meet staged by PDA founder·presi- den! Doug Kruse . Also on the hvo-day pro- gram will be fuel -b urning fun- ny cars and a com b o eliminator field that v.·ill match 200 m.p.h. !op Ji:<lS <lragstcrs, j u n i o r fuel <lragsters and AA fuel altered cars against each other. The lwo-<lay show will offer qualifying runs on Friday, Ju- ly 23, and eliminations Satur- day at all of Orange Coun!~'I International Raceway's retail ticket outlets. priced at $7 and $8. A purse of $20,000 plus an equal amount of manufac- turers' prizes are at stake, 111 addition to the prestige of v.·in- ning the one-of-a-kind Pro Dragster Assn . championship. The n1eet. v.·hich was first held at Lions Drag Strip before that fa c i Ii t y 's at- tendance record-setting crov.·d or 17,001 in 1967 (lhe PDA meet there topped 18.000 the next year) h:is be.en sta~ed for two years a! Orange County lnl.ernatlonal Racewa y, where even larger crowds can be 11c- Anahei1n Dragster Nabs Title I ' Dave Beebe (Anahein1~ wnn 1 1 Los Alamitos Results his third straight funn y car ti- tle at Orange County Ha cew<iy Saturday night when h e defeated Stan Shiron1a (Los Angeles) in the final race of 1 he Ni tromethane Cham· p1onships. A 6.94 second - 217.91 n1ph clocking by Beebe dov.·ned a 7.02 -205 .91 effor! by Shiroma. M&nday, J~lv s, 1'/I t11or 6 Ffll Fl•ST •ACE -<fl!) vf•d• vet' OIO• & ~I> c• .. m •OQ """' 1)000 C·e"'"' Ho•I (.O.da"I P.O'V 'I Gr.ov E•9lo (W~rd) I ~tt.ione !IC•~"! l im• -10 I 10 •• "''o ll•n Y,omr• Jont <, "Ton !\•uc• 1f'<D D•~~v. J,\r AulfMt~. l~~· ~~ 6oM loo, 500• S•m 8•• (P1l10~ 1 S«al<"ttt -l O"o•oo. ~II +l·I« Deep Sea Fish Report old• L up. (l""'"t~O Pu"e SlXIO ..... 1., eo~ 1Smi1»1 1&0 110 Ji~ tli<!Qmbo (W•!l-0"1 •20 Jr>O GglO Lt• Mat~ IH8•di"QI S oQ l•mt -10 1110 Aho R•n -Fir" lo Go, H•'I A "" out••. Lal•do<'. lll•<k !•Q,., l~C~Y B•tl J ... L•M•'s M.ork . MO"• Ol&I. NO ~<t•!<""'· ~? NlgMlv ooublt. 9 Ge"i•I +-<nsl a. J ,, •• 1 .. !lob. ,,.,n U I •O TH lllD l!ACE R1G """''· ) y••• o•o• l.. uo. ''""'"•na p.,,,. i1100· '~''"'"'" 51nil< '~"'""11 •0 '{()JOO Local Q,,..n •A11,,0~1 1t10 100 C"•ro••• <"odY ll~oo~I\ < 1G lJm• -•6 1110 n1<0 R~n "••I O•r• v~,n r"'· 1.'il• Gold Par~•. lh•t< C•ll•· ~vtQt On ~•n ~p A•C"~ -.... ~•r's lniao~. O'~rCY i.:~v. llul•all. Cnn<o"' L•• FOu•TM RACE -)SO vtrd' ' Yt•• nl~' /\llowanc•• Pu<•• ~JlCO Mr. Mar' ear IWMK>nl I~?\) 6 60 f iC M• llo•n M•n IC•O>b•i J to l ?\\ ("olned R~Cktl (Ptrn••I '~ T IM'• -ll 71l0 Al•o llnn -l"m D•llGM"', .AtlClthr• r '" ~•• ll•t,.i'< Ov••n. P~no•'' Plln~. M<nn1r llot>el. L1mil' Sl1rqo. No '<••TC""· FIFTH ••c£ -HO Y•rd•. l •••• nld• Allowancr1. ruae ~:~c. Fannv F.or~le !(a•<'Ofal l 10 J.10 1 • .0 Je!'1 lady LU"tk IAlll<Qnl I ~ l ~ Rovol l ap 6•r 11111...,,\ 1,70 l im• -fl llol Al10 """ -BA!!IO Glo<V, P•rhuc• """""· O••w Pl3v. Ml•i TlnY W•!<h, l!ro~"•· H•n•« VAnQut•d. NO 11.,1,.1lnT NO 5(t AICl>fe>. ~IXTH a.lCE -JSO Yftdl· 1 ~I~· .t.llOW•'><•• Pur" 11<00. ~··•• n~ V•t [,\6a!•l 1 ~o J -o !"'~ ~'"''"' (C&•dO•ll I XI r~1<•••w s,,. !Sm1thl l ime -.U·?/10. •• to •O A.1'0 II•" -~o+ LI~ .. PH>OA llrnn/f Moo", AIKlllO R!•lm, fl im ~,, VI~• L• RovAI. IVY Rolo, Redd¥ Wlu S.C•ftthl!O -f'•rr!am•. Sl F.~•CIA, 8-SltvP Tho VOi I. 3 l"'t Hu•fllf, Peld u•.OCI. \!Vl!"ITM •A.CE -lSO ve'd> l vo1r 01~' .lllew•n<•l, Pu"" '?500, Mt• fl:c<:~.tl Po r !C••datn\ l.lO :'14 J Oii Funny Girl l O(I (l'«<n~•l 1.llQ 1.•C A.'IU•IJOUI' (A"•lr) l 60 Ti..,t -11 •·10 •110 ll•n -HIV """• 1110.ivlttt• ll•own. Ot••"' S•nd""""' WI•• y.o1111e, ~u•11ln'< "'"" M.•mnl! ~c••l!l>f"d -Ootn•eio. EIONTH 111,._(E -110 ~A•d~ } v•~• OI<'> ~ VD ... llDw•11<•1. Pvru t.lOOt. TPll lndtllt...,tn<• 0•• • '0 \..oo 1.#l '·'° ••• Ton 151'"'• (A.<"• rl (i,.,,..,. lll•d fWl!llOnl '" S<> ()Kkt (Wo1d) Time -d )1 1~ A.Itel llon -Klptv'o (IWO»t . llolO •~vt"tu•r. \nffdv L••k, G•I!•"'"""'" Ml)()nlil ()e~. Sf+••c""1:1 -l(~o!• ~!'~. Cood lnlt Mlo>IL Stfl.O 11.lvt• Win, Mollll• • " r••''• ,~~11 ... (n•1· • n•·~ •·· ~} . '._ .... , ---~-- James Warren (Bakersfield) defeated Rick Ramse.v I Playa Del Rey) 6.70 -222.22 to 6.80 -199 .55 in the top fut•I final. ~l1klo Yoshioka 1 Encino) v.·on the fuel altered portion of tht> triple-crown event \l'ilh "I 7.55 -192.71 stogle when fin::il • round opponent i)anny Collins (Rive rsirlel sheared 11 f11el purnµ drivr. The fastest off1c1al clock1ni.d rver recorded by a funny car.I 227 .27 rnph, was produced by Kelly Brov.·n of No r t h Holl vwoocL GCrry Glenn rPanor;in1a c1.I lyl set low elapsed li1ne £or the $27,000 evPnt 1,0,·ith :1 6.54 st>cond performance. \Varren, 'vho defeated (;IC'nn 1n the q'uarlerfinals, sci top speed for the dragster division at 226.70 mph. Three time national cham- pion Don Garlits or Tampa, Plorida was narncd the reci- pient of the Mike Sorokin Driver or the Year award. Don's wife Pat flew to Orange County Saturday to accept the award for her husband who \\'as committed to several eastern tracks for !he holiday weekend. 13,625 race fan.~ ll'itnessed the fourth running of the Nitromethane Championships, Cycle Park Set for County ___ , Summer LEGION BASEBALL BOXES • • • Baseball's Wrestling Resul ts WKll!ll~llotr ll°' 12':0 414) G.lclit• w .. 1 " -M4i1!oclu IW! ......, Of\ iortelt. ll)t -Hcrkuna1 1WJ J, Coor> \Gl i. lit -J. F••nUloul• ~W) won bv 1•11 ov.,-MllWO• tGJ. I" -MeC!•I,, !WI 1, M•nlno !G) ol. l:J'I -FtnlO" (WJ J, M•,.tnci (GI 6. I_., -M•mll•llla jW) I, Hammet•5 IG1 1. 1J9 -NDPl'I IWI 5, &town (Gl S. lff -M•rtlnez (WI Oii. M•t1li'ltl IGI. 11' -No mllth. Tit -H•n!•Y (WI 01nn..i bV JOfltl IG). 1., -HQ mal<h. M~I~~· tGJ. I , Fr•nl(hwM !W) ckf. Wnlll'llftoi.r ai..~ I'" !'HI Munliftl-0" -M•IK!le' (W •, Bl•olnci•me (HI !D9 -M•'1e'1 (Wl 1, ll:osen!ltld (Hl ' 1'9 -Elkin> !W) won b• tfll over A.nole (H ). 119 -A.tm••on (Wl O, Alv•••• (Hl 1 IH'l'J.-C. Ft•"~h<>u11 (Wf ~. P•l.,.r 119 -Flu•• IWI J, E•rlU (HI 5. llt -B•ktt !W) 1>lfln'<! bv KtllOllQ "' S 1'9 -Hook!f\$ {WI 0. Mtllu111v (M) 119 -H•nl•v 1W) pinn'<I bV Horotov (Hl. lit -ll:e•~n CW) 1>ln"'d bv M•llotk (fl). 19-9 -M•ck (WI J, Po!!«< IHI 1. H<iv. -8. Hanley (W) won bv 1011•11. l"Ol.ln!•lft V•lley 11•<1 U•) 11ti e1 .. 1>1 Ml M•r '9 -Vov11<1 (FJ pinned Sowa (CL 109 -Oovlg (Fl plnnod B•ktt \'" 119 -Hug~•• IF! won on fgr ti! 129 -H<illtd !Fl 1, Go•llt ((I I, 139 -Moron (Fl olnn.d bv Wide "' ut -Mo-hul•kl (F) 2, e1no11 ((! o. 119 -E~ (FJ O, Cll•k ((:)I, lM -Mt ll.11 (Fl lU. Olt11 I'" 17' -8udQen CF) 0, C••"" C) 11. 119 -Flnkla• (F l won an !•II ovot F•,.••o !C). 1'9 -Be•cher IF\ won on tall Q••• tlJc"l• !CL . Hvv. -Po~n 1F) lo" "" t•1! •o c; .... 11 ((). f".,,ni..ln Vllley llut IU) 01) '•tllica t9 -Sllrew•ll (Fl 2, Jo~n•an (P) 5. 1n -:. ~~~1~1 1'F1'~:!r !:;1 i~i1 1a OeA.Uf/'111\11 (P), Jtlt~cr-; r,.ur.hn (F'J won bY UI\ O~er 139 -H11kol! Cl') •• Harris (P) ~. 1~9 -Horl\llfld•Z (F) j, 8111•nv fPI "· !Jt -Absh!tr (Fl won bY !tll over Yt! (P l. • 16t -Rusi CF) w"" b~ f<ir!lll, 11' -PalllM (Fl "'"" bv 1•11 ov•r IJnl l• (P). lH -No m•ICh. (Contlnue4 Ytom Page ZI) the Mission Viejo tilt Monday and was forced to leave the game. And since Westminster only had nine players (five others were working), U1ey were forcM to forfe it. Mission Viejo was leading, S- O wht.n the incident occurred in the fiffh inning. Mission Viejo's big blow for the weekend was a solo home run by Steve Ashcraft against Placentia. Jn the San Clement!' victory <lVer Newport, triples by Glen Tsuma and Jack Kaleta paced the winners. Gary McKnight ban1'!ed out a twt>run single in the fifth. ,,._"" 01 .. ' ' ' • Cl•rk, JI> '"~" Du , Cl , ' ' ' • ' • ' • • ' ' ' • V I. lb S<n•vp ... ,1 Adamo, II 8auma. c Valentine, ?b Ottl•nev, rl.., Tot1ll " ' Sin C:ttmtnlt OJ IClng, Jb J. S<>rl<1tman, .. ''""''·" Ji,11 .... P·r! ~H(han, 1tt·o·d S!•Vt MIK.IO•, cl·lb Stoll' Mlklo1. t 8 . $pr!n11m.on, )b .. ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' • ' A.rc>r"· I! 1 McK.nla~I, rl II l(f/ofa. ll·<·tf • 1 O..uat1u, lb J o NltlU<I, 11> I II lottl• XI , i uitt Dy lnnlntl 11 rtl ' . ' . ' . • • • • • • ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' II tDI • • ' ' ' ' " . • • ' ' " ' • • . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • • ' ' ' . NewlKlrl D00 100 10l-S S .5.on Clllmlll11• 001 :l10 llx~f 7 Son Clemtnlt {I) .. ' l(,ng, ,, • o J Sprlnamon. 1b • O 8. 59fln11m.n. Jb 1 O Nlol1tn. tl·P J O Mcl(nl11~1, d J II s. ,.,,,,,,, I! J 0 A.lien. Ir G O Stev• Mlkln•. 11><! l II Suill Mlklo1. c 1 0 DouOllH, P.lb 1 0 Tol1ls 21 o ~ rDi ' . • • • • • • • • ' . • •• • • . ' • • ' ' . ' . s ... r.1 ....... 1. C10C ODO Cll0-0 I I ).,,,. ... ..• 000 (t'O 00•-J l , .. , tL•m1nl1 Cl) .~ n rbl ' ' ' I ' o "'1101ri.on, 1> R~.Ch•n. ltt·C Jvlld•llle•. 2tt A.lien, (I Wllll•~•r. r1 Mc~.nlQllt, lb 5!-M1klo•. 11 b . Sl>rln...,.n, 11 S.CoU Mi>.IOo. c 1(1101&, " Nl•ll·en, I> Dougl•>l. o TOl•l1 ' • • • • ' . ' . ' . ' . , . ' . ' . ' . " ' '~o•• by lnn1,.., ' ' ' . ' . ' . • • • • . ' ' ' . ' ' . . " . ' ' . ••• 001 000 !>CO-! l I 100 •II 00~-1 10 I Foun1•i" V•U•• U) .. . ' • ' , • ' ' • ' ' ' ' • • ' ' • S~om.oli. 1~ Mlltneu, lb VMn•v. '!) F,.h, P·ll HI](, U 0...oler•e, t E:blen. " Ee~lu. ti FO•. o lgl•I• " S<ott bf lnfll"'' ' ' ~ovnt•i" Vollev 000 001 010-J A""ne•m ltohM 100 1 ll 0!](-• F•unt•ln V•!l•V 01 Sh.moli. 1b M1rc~111. lb ll•rnev, Jn M.otlev, ct F•111, 1r (~rrol •f HI](," Col•m•n. nh Eckl•" <!·O Duolell•, , Fo•, o Eblen. d ·ll Jot•I> .. ' • " • • ' ' ' ' ' • • • ' • • • • • h rll ' " > I ' ' ' ' . ' ' " " . ' . • • • •• ' ' ,. . h rDi ' . • • ' ' • • . ' • • ' . • • ' " ' " " " ' . ' . ••• ""t lflC• 000 111 0•~~9 9 1 Founro.n V•ltev Olli 000 IXIO--I J Foun111n V1tl1y (11 .. • Shim~1i. lb Frlt1, I! Va•n••. lb Mltcn•ll. lb M••ltV, 'I Eblen, rl Eckl•t. rl Hl-.;. $5 Ouetortt. c Lvnc", p f QT.Ols ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " ' • • • • • • ' • • I n rbl • • . ' . ' ' ' • • . ' ' . • • • • ' ' ' . • S•Odlll,.,k 1)1)11 000 1)...0 ~(lllnlt1nVfllt• WI OOO ll-1 1 w111mln•••• 11 1 .. 8i•~•!•f, ·w Whlle)Y. 11 No.Jiu~ rl lb """"" E 11>•~1•. Cf 0...~"har,JI, fb l •~•I•. rt A;un!ll•, 11 lhY. ~b Br•Oley, ph I L~ncl11r•n. o l TO!dll }.I ' • • ' • ' • ' • • ' . ~· • • ' . • • ' ' • ' . " . • • • • " • • • • We1t"''"'1" GOO 000 Cl()-! • 1 Lo• A.loml•a• l l! 010 01~.-. W••lmonitor (l) .. Whitely, \I f•Q•nQ/;\, (! Nocll~nd, " o oooa. Ju t l$<1ol•. •·•' Oeqonhordl, II) ) Run~io, ~ J Bl•<•lev. " • l ondl>ren. II JU • ll•v, lb .l l>'odleY. P" Q To1ol> )' • • ' ' • " ' • • • • ' > Sonora We\tm•">lrr 000 0 11 OOol-1 000 001 JOO-.S M~•on. t ( TOIONI, 11 MIU!Ofl T, Brennon, P A.lh~'""' lb o 8renn•~• ln P«ce. t ! Gf!meo. c Stnworl<. Jb Rl(hM<l"°n• >> ro1a1, V1tlo Ill .. ' > • • • ' ' • • • • h tb• ' " ' . ' . • • • • ' , • • • • • ' " ' ' ' ' • • " ' , ~ rbl • " ' ' • ' ' ' , . " • ' M»!<On Viela f'la<C r>l<O ••• ooo om 00~1 IQl 010 00~-~ ' Top Ten fotA.TIONAL 1..1 ... oua Pl•~•• tluO Ci Ji,I • M ,cl, for<~ '!>• l W, Dov<>. LA flet 1':1r1 Ch• B•«• ~t L c ... Ji.ti P,...l!ono Chi Co•n """ Sltt~ll P\lfl M>il•n All .S\ l!I .)IJ4 » Ill .351 a '°" .l~J 711 )I 110 Pi!c!\in1 V••iO ttl •• h rbi t D<t<l1lon1 0 C~llor, IU111111Qtt, 11·1 .. 'l'JJ; 81u•, M••~n. II io111er1, lb·p F•~· (f A•htto!!, lb T, tlrfnn•n, r! o. 8"""""· .. k!lwatt1, .lb lle•nOld•, ~ Gille•pie. p 6&"()11, .. MO!fitt. I> lJl•I• ' ' " ' " • ' . > ' ' ' • • ' ' • • ,. ' StO•• b• lnnlnt• 1 0 Oakla"d, Jl.J, ,85CI; McNar1v, 8•1tl· 0 0 111ore, 12·• .. HO, ~1eber1. &5too, JJ-.t. D•I Canion, l(~n••~ CIJY. l·J, .nJ. ' "1c;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--.-.;;;;;;;o I 01•• ---- 0 ' . ' . ' • • . ' . " ' GOLFERS W!lh l.OW·H•nelltapo;, Pr•Clict A.I Th• ••• A.naheirn snune TIG Oil 7'0-12 n 1 Minion VlllQ 000 000 GOO-C • • NEWPORTER INN PAR 3 GOLF .COURSE $1 .00 with this ad wHk deys ITEDTI EONLY! BELTED TIRES Buy the first tire at regular price and get the second at half price. BFG'S1971 NEW CARTIRE SILVERTOWN BELTED SAVE $30.85 TO $51.60 A SET OF FOUR Size 678·14 C78-14 [78-14 F78·14 G78-14 H7B-14 F78-l5 G78-15 H78-15 J78-15 L78-15 federal E•ci1• T•i: Ptr Tirt $2.08 2.15 2.37 2.54 2.69 2.95 2.62 2.80 3.01 3.12 3.27 Above prk:es plus lrade·in. Whitewalls slighUy higher. .Rtgular Price Per Tir• $30.85 33.15 34.45 36.45 39.95 43.80 37.45 40.95 44.80 49.70 51,60 11z Price 2nd Tire $15 .42 16.57 17.22 18.22 19.97 21.90 18.72 20.47 22.40 24.85 25.80 ) 3 WAYS TO PAY>-(BUDGET TERMS) . ';",,\, .,. ..... -. -·--u MASTER CHARGEl SAL[ ENDS JULY 10, 1971 = BANKAMERICARD) Safe-Long Wearing- Top Quality Tires at $988 WHITE WALL only . ii~' All Sizes All Cars tl!!!!!i:r BRAKE SPECIAL (Ol1c b11~•• 11\Qhl!y ~iQh••l Tr1in1d BFG M1eh1nlcs will: • Install New lining• • Rep•ck. Front Wheel B••ring' •Inspect Entire Br•ke Sya11rn • COfrect Brtk• Fluid t..vel OUTER WHEEL BEARINGS REPACKED ~~YJ77¢ COSTA MESA: ORANGE: WESTMINSTER: TIRE ROTATION NOW ONLY 77 9 ~ ... ---... --..... _-,..... __ .. ·~····--· •'--...:..1.P-. _.. -..... __ _ .... ---·-~-·---· ·----·~--------------_ ___, _ ___..___ --~------~---·---·*-----'-------·-!lo--- LEEWARD END START -A number of yachts, in- cluding Ken De Meuse's Blackfin (No. 8910) chose the favored leeward end of the starting line \vhen the 69 yachts got away in the 2.225-mile Tran.spat race Sunday. Jerald Jensen 's Cal-39 Sangvind (8590) ducked across the line first. followed by Milt Smith's Cal-39 ~1amie (27701 ). The black-hulled Cal-40 Mont- gomery Street tried a port lack start and ran into a virtual wall of yachts. DAILY PILOT ~3 ' 161 Yachts Race h1 Ne wport Event One-hundred and sixty-on~ KJTE B (10) -II ) Griml.'y MORF (5)-(I) Cest la vie. BCYC; (3) High 11opes, Dean boats In 14 classes turned out Ill, Chr is Coffin. NHYC: (2 1 Don Dutiose, VYC: Hope, BYC:: (4) Wonderful H bo Y b No name, Da ve Wachtel. LIDA-1 4 A 110 -!1l l)itto, One, Scott Schock, NHYC. for Newport ar r ac t N NHYC, !3) Patak, ancy Bill McCord, BYC; (2J Lowly PHRF (13) _ t i) 'fwinkle, Club's Independence D a Y H BYC argraves. · Roman, Rolly Lohman, BYC. D·•v• & Fca nk White, BYC,· Regatta Saturday and Sunday. FLYING JR 181 Ill " ' · -LID0-14 B (21) -11) Phast. \2! Nikki ll, John Kinkel, Largest class was the Lido-1 4 Hustler. Ayres Bros., NHYC, Allin Olson, BYC; 121 Chicken HCYC : tJ) Celerity, James with 21 entries, 'The winner 12) Ralph flash. Rick Jen· Bye of the Sea II, G. Jeffrie. Rudy. BYC. was Ala n Olson of Balboa ncss. · 11~.::_~:.:..==========-~-:c:c:c=-=F====:____;=========-; Yacht Club. SOLING 110) -(I) Gold Digger, Roger Welsh, NHYC; Trophy winne rs in each class ~2) Teel, Pat Seaver_ NHYC. were: SH IELDS t9) ( I ) RllODES -33 (Sf -11 ) Prudence, Larry Baun1, BYC ; J\iislress, Bill Taylor. BYC ; en Patience, Paul Yost, (2) Fireny, John Kewell , BYC. NHYC. SABOT A!16)-t l)Hacing LUDERS (9) -11 1 Pre- Machine, ~1ark Ga u d I o • F:mpt. Le r o y Sutherland. NHYC; (2J Far Out. Ty NHYC ; i2l Haiku , Ri c k CENTINELA BANK (714) 642-1440 Ca ll Day or Night fo1 Fill! llt•porh & Doil-, Stondhu11 ef TRANSPAC RACE Beach, BYC ; (3) Boltna. Vicki ~r~:~ao~l~n~or~,_N::_::H~Y~C~. -'=====~~::::O::=:::C:=:O::=:::======:::==:o::====~ Call. Nll YC. lr -- SABOT B (11\ 11) Scooter. Sue Pothoff. LIY C: ~21 No Na n1e. Bill Rice . Nl·IYC; t3) No name, Lance Davis, LI YC. SABOT C 120) -I I ) Fidget Too, Mike Arrigo. NHYC: (2) The White Hope, Wally Gerrie, NHYC ; fJI No name, Nelson Smith. BYC. KITE A !11) -(I) Little Fugitive. Terrianne Parker. NHYC: (2) Freedom, Hugo Schn1id!. NHYC: !3) Odie, John t-.leClure. NHYC. Oil Bill Inked Intrude r Shot PLAY GOLF! PRIVATE LESSONS $6 EACH OR 6 LESSONS FOR $30, GROUP LESSONS $9 For Si11. Lessons Includes: Free u~e of Clubs And A G•me of Golf CLUB CLOSE OUTS REG. SALi F;,,1 Fliqht ........................ SJ25. 51~11 l homp>Oll •••••• , •••••• •, •••.• SJ2 5. B•n Hoq•n •.••••••• ,, •••••• , •.•.•• SJ2S. Sl95. • SJ:l5. 5150. SI 50. Top Yachts \l'idely , Dis11ersed sAcRAMENTo rnr11 _A BEGINNERS SPECIAL '"' '"'""'" $150 \; !"roe• Wt•kd1y1 WI!~ Ad fet 1 Ton y l e ma !Aluminum) ••···••••••• $2'15. Tommy Armour , •.•....•••••••••••• $2'15. Sp1!din9 lop Fliq ht ...••••••••.•••• $310. " SI 65, s11•. bill expe.nding the ban against W • d s T ' 'B • 6' o;I '°d g3' e>plocaHoo 1'"''-' NEWPORTER GOLF COURSE I COSTA MESA GOLF RANGE' in s· cutter 1•a1ispac s ig ~~stheb;:~tas~g';;eb:rabyCha3~~'. 1117 JAMIOll:l! RD. 644°9910 (1.717 NEWPOll:T ILYD. 545·f9tl By ALMON LOCKABEY aMlll•• Et llllr Light to moderate north\\"est winds in the early stages of the 2,225-m ile 1'ranspac yacht race are scattering th e sex - tette of potential first·tiFfinish yachts as v.•ell as confoun ding the shorside experts who had it all mapped out before the start. Biggest confounder of thcn1 all is Loi Killam's 73-foot ketch Graybeard from the Roya l Vancouver Yacht Club which Monday had carved out a 20-mi le boat-for boat lead on her nearest rivals. The big "plastic tube"' lug- Red 184 miles du ring the fir.~l 19 hours of the race to place hers elf 2{I miles ahead of Tom Clark's Buccaneer, Royal Nev,r .zeaJand Yacht Club, and Mark .Johnson's Windward Passage, "Lahaina Yacht Clu b. Buccaneer and WP \vere Aailing on the same longitude line, but Buccaneer·s latitude gave her a co uple of miles ad - vantage over WP. But whal of .the others in lhe vaunted sextette? Jim Kilroy's Klaloa II \v;is In fourth place, a bare three niilcs ahead of John Mc ln tire·s Baruna, a boal thill got Jillie pre.race mcntio~ because she had had three feet rhnppcd nff he r stern to 111ake her 69·fect instead of her t1rtginaJ 72. Jn sixth place, 1wo miles behind Baruna. y,•as Ken l)e~!euse"s Blackfin from St. }'rancis Yacht Club, the boat that backed into a first to rin ish and a ne\v elapsed tin1c record h\•o years ago after \Vindward Passage w a s penalized j\\'O hour.~ fo1· a .s1arting line foul. Blackf in \Vas only one 1nilt' ;;head of her prolol.v pe. Hu!'y Long "s Ond1ne lron1 Larch- 1nont. N.Y .. a yacht th.'.lt 1s well acc\Jslorned lo line honors ln long dist;.i ncc yacht racing . So mu ch for the big six -or seven, counting the bobtailed Baruna. In eighth place. only six miles astern of Ondine can1e Nalu JV. skippered by F'rank Rice of NHYC. Joe Pollock"s S9-fnol ya\\·I tl11n Sette. Rose City-.·YC. \\'as sailing in ninth place and Al Casscl"s 50-foot. cutter \V arrior \\'as 10th-only 134 miles from the s!art. BCYC's Alleri Takes Top Regatta Ho11ors "Paul Allen of B <l h i a Corinthian Yacht Club \Vas the 1.1·inner of the Bob Baker Perpetual Trophy fnr the Pacific Catamaran Class of Specta cular Setting Told At Cup Race The most spectacular and most glamorous setting for .'.ln offshore powerboat race ha.~ been promised for the start of the 7th annual Long Beach Jlennessy Cup race Aug. ii. Headquarters for the evenL "''ill be aboard the Qocen '.\1ary in Long Beach HNbor. The 185-mile battle among sportsmen from all over the country will be th e co m- petitive highlight of the 61~ an- nual California lnternat1on:i l Sea Festival at Long Beacil Aug. 7-22. Race official s, radio com- munications, the ne"'·s mefha and racing crew members "'·:n ~ii be headquartered on Ilic gun deck of the Queen Mary, along with visitors to the Queen, to wa tch Hennessy Cup l!tart from the fantail of the &hip. Models will be used to follow the progress of the . flcl't. ModeU! representing each hoiil will ht moved from checkpoint to checkpoint on a huge "war room style" plotting board as radio reports from the cou r.i:e are fed tttrough a publi c ad- dress system. . The entire Long Bcac.1 Jlarbor staging ar e • -th e. starting line off the Belm~nt ghore Pier. the first threC"-m1le Jcg of the ra ce along the beach. and then Lhe run post Pier J and out the break1.1·;i[<>r north to Palos Verdes \viii all Ut v.·lthin viewing range. .:if those aboard the Queen Marj' Alon11tos Bay Yachl Cl11b's Fourth of .July Rcgalta Sa ttu·- day and Sunday. Allen be<.Jl ou1 22 rivals in 1he i.:lass. Other peq>r.tual !rophy v.·111- ners in !he re ga tta v.erc Frank J\lay of ABY C. 1hc l!i ginan l 'rophy in the Snipe Class. .:ind llarr.v \Vonrl nf ABYC. 1hc Hanson Perprtual in the Lido-1 4 A Class. Th.-! rcgaHa drC\~ 220 entries in 14 classes. Final results: COHONAD0-15 !8) -\I) Cyclone, .Jeff .Jones. LSC; (2 ) Esquesi. Syd Corp, CBYC. NATIONAL ONE 17) -Il l Prowess. Rod Ogilby. ABYC; 12 ) Brigctta. Brad El!erinan, ABYC. SNI PE !!4 1 I l \ Underdog. Fr<lnk <; r a y , ABYC: r2) Bird , Jin1 Bo1dl, KH YC; (3) Alhena. Bob Nash. ABYC. P-Cat (23) -~I) Dead End Kid, Paul Allen. BCYC: (2) Sun De vil. Rick Ca rriker , Arizona YC: !3) Brokett, Joe Riddick, ABYC: 14) Who's Ex~ ciled, Jac k Belon. KHYC: (5) Hustler IL Ted M o s he r , KHYC. PHRF' A (5) -11) Lorelei, Steve J ohsh, CBYC: (2) Vaya. Pete Utecht, ABYC; (3) Tom Tom. S. B. Thomas. AB YC. PHRF B (6l -(1) Deluder. ri.1 ax Warner. CBYC; (2 ~ Oliver, Bill Raus, SI BYC; 1:t\ Sandpiper, Torn Mc Ronie, LSF. JNTER NATIONAL-14 ( 1 J ) -11) 1',ox. Tim Murison, VYC: (21 No nan1e. Al an La Sliu. Sequoia YC ; !3) Morgan Le F'ay, Bob Curry. ABYC. 5-0-5 ( 16) -(I) Shadow Fox-. Jeff Brauch. LAYC: (2) Hoot- er, Randy Foster. ABYC: !:t) Venlor, Robert Shenk , t-.1YC: (4) Dynamite Chick. Dick Deaver, LAYC. Ll00·14 A (15) -(1) Wood \Vind. ll11rry Wood. ABYF'; ~2 1 Viva. Gib i\1arshii ll , ABYC: I~) ~erendip ;.1 y , Don Robr>rtson. ARVC: (4} Zerok 11. Chuck Babcock. SJ BYC And ~o it \VCnl. in Class A The only thorn was Fred Sn1ales' Class B entry, the 49- foot yawl Guinivere, Waikiki YC, \Vhich slipped in between lhc two Columbia·57s, Aries and Dorothy 0 . Guinivere was holding down a comfortable handicap !cad in Class B and was seventh overall. With 14-Cal-40s enlcred in Class C, it \Vas no suprrisc that one. of them \\.'as leading the class. lt was William G. Durnin "s CJ1inook fro n1 Long Beach Yacht Club. Chinook was le<1d1n g the defending 1"h<1r11p1on . Jonn A n d r on ' s Argonaut by some 16 miles. Apparently the strength uf the winds depended on ho \1• far sooth the yacht.'J sailed ;.if\e.r rounding Catalina Island Sunday night. Mos t :ioutherly yachts wer(' re.porti ng north- northwest \1•inds of 18 to 20 knots. tl1o~t of the fl ee! \ras sailing in "'Jnds of 12-15 knots. while a few that had stubbornly held north "·ere beinoaning vertical a1rs -.. straight up the mast." Graybeard was sailing on a l:i!1tudc of 31 drgrec.~. 47 minutes. Buccaneer \Vets 21i miles lo the north and \Vindward Passagt• w a s an other seven miles north. (;1·aybeard and \VP \\'trc both reporting 20 knots v•hile Buc- <:anccr had 18. The c.scort vessrl Pakeh;i repor!ed gray. overcast .~kies over th e area \\'i!h only a mnder.'.lte sc;1 chop. Tl1e ol\ly vessel no t rc>pnrting i\-londa v y,·as Paul Lovcridgc·.s Ai'icc f rom f\"(>\\'Jlllft llarbor Yacht Club. !'ihe w;is nnl believed to be in ::inv diff1("ultv because of the hg.h! wc;.ithc.r conditions tha1 have prevailed .<:ince the start. Blackfin rcpor1ed that she \1•;1~ having ge nerator trouble and 11·ould probably not report regularly. Here :Jre the statisti cs nn 1he race after the first 19 hour!-!. <Rollcall is at noon dai- ly on lhe 8 a.m. positions.) BOAT t'O H B O AT LEADERS - (Distances fro m Los Angeles I f I ) Graybeard. !114 : i2l Buccaneer, 166: (31 \Vindward Passage, 164; (4) l\ialoa, II, 153 : 1:'1) Baruna, 1&0; 16) Blackfin. 148; (7) Ondine, 147; (8\ Nal u IV, 141 ; 191 Min Sett.e, 136; ( 10) War· rio r, 134; {Il l Ar ies, 131 : !12) \.uinivcre, 127; (131 Dorothy 0 . 126. OVERA LL llANDICAP - II) G~beard ; (21 Buc- caneer; :lf W i ndward Passag : !4) Nalu JV ; (5! Baruna (6) Kialoa JI; (7) Guinivere; (8) Dakar ; (9 ) Blackfin: f 10) Warrior. CLASS A -(J) Graybeard: (2) Buccaneer; (3) Windward Passage; (4) Nalu IV; iS) Baruna. CLASS 8 -fl \ c:uinivere : (2) Ya Turko, George Antarr, PMYC; 131 Xanthippe, Alan Simpkins. Santa Cruz YC; 14) Fickle Duck. George Schmidt. 'SMYC : (5) Flame, G.R. llamage .Jr., LBYC. CLASS C -(I) Chinook: (2) ~1oonday, G.A. W o 11 o r d . KHYC ; (3) Blue Slreak, Gary Myers, NflYC: (41 Ariana, George Thorson. LAYO: !5) Lynla. Jackson Scott. CYC. CLASS D -11) Dakar; (2) Sandpiper. OeWit t, Pauling & Louhe, Rich mond YC : 13) Yello w Jac ket. Terrell Green, CVC : (4) Intrepid IL Barry BC'rku~. l ,AYC: 151 Rluc Orphrus, TI1ch<1rd .Jnhnson, LRVC. ·----------~----.--U' .. ------ At 1lle Newporttr ln11 Al the Ora119• Cor.111ff Fair Gre111uls ~~:::::__~~~~~~~~~n~o~o:al~d~R".":''~g:a~o~·~~~~~'..::====================================================================~ Sears 'J'ire and Auto Ce nte r Made only from carefully inspected sound tire bod ies, a nd bonded IO new treods of long-l asting Dynaruf tread rubber. G uaranteed by Sears to wear for ' full 18 mo nths. B uy a fu ll scr now and save <)n these Jow, low prices. Prices Effective l DAY ONLY Tuesday, July 6th Only ALLSTATE P•s,,"e n1cr Tire Gnarantee ·r"'ed Life (;11• ... ntf':e 'f "'.d W-""°9;1 <;_ ........... ---1111 .... 1 • .i~,.... fm,. --• .....i -... _,,. ............... -.. ..i .,.. -..k ....... ~.p. , ..... 11 ... 1... ... ,.... .. ..,.. .. •h< o><•ao...r mod. •~ .. ~ .... win 0-1~ r" ·--..... dw btt, rept... , .. <hq>1'11: """ "" .. __.,;.,.,, ~ ·-.. 111 .. pri<c '"" ..... ..,,1 Ett>•T.., .... ~ ..... ~ . ...,... _, --- G•arantee '-••••••-4 ~-T~ ...... .,,,.. J" .. H-1-•n.~<1' -111-ofiH. •~u l'! ... ,... wnr O.• 11 ... ••-""'""""re.~e ... '~ .. .,.,. ""'•-.,. .. ,,. ""'e """,_,..E.....,~-­f ollo.., .. .U.-: ·--(;.,..,.,....,., !8 .. A Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plan• 6.00:ir.13 TubeJe.,. Blackwall Retread Srant R eln-a<l8 Wi1h Old Tirr. 6.50xl3 7.00xl3 6.95xl4 7.35xl4 5.60xl5 · 6 .00xl5 8.15x15 8.45xl5 'l'ul>c lf'!!I" lllac kwall 8.93 8.93 8.93 8.93 8.93 8.93 8.93 8.93 93 Plm29e F.E.T.and Old Tire Plus Federal ExciA~Tax 32c 34c 40c 4lc 35c 45c 51e 54c Whitewalls only $2 more per tire SHOP SUNDAf 12-NOON To S 00 pm • MONOAf thru fRIUAY 9 30 Q ,., to 9 00 p "'· • SATUROAYS 9.30 a n1 . to 6 ·00 p.n• • FRf( Pl\Rl<INC. ·-·-·----..... ___ -· ........... ·-...... ·~· ·-· .... -. ... -·-·M I O ........ _.,,, "" .. '"' u•..»" .......... .U.lwt . ..... ., ___ ~·-· """ ·-----· ...... -.... .......... -.... -. ... _ .. •~t-1$tl ...... ,,. ........ ........ I .. ..... , '"·'''' ·-------... _ ........ _, ............. ~ -----·------.. -... -· ------.. ... , . ' ~-~---------.---··-~·----"""""" _______________ ..._ ·-----~-' i1ll<: -• , LEG AL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL Nl1f1CE _, __ _ . ,..,,~ 4:t •Tt ,ICAt l Of' co•..O•ATIOll l'O• Tl•NSACflON O' I Uf lMSll UNDlll ' P:tCTlf!OUI M.Uoll '(tlE Ut.IOt:llllGNl!!O CO-P0!! .. 110"' _. '*'-cl't'fnv "''" n lo c-llf••M • N~M liK•tM o! 1(11, W IC•lell•. "' .... (all'°'"lf, '1'61, UMf'• lh« II< I•! I !l"n ...,_ OJ Ill P1·111 ... ,...,.1 In tll<U ,.rlnllM , (1) LOCll • >'ONf. •n<I 1ntt ul<I firm 11 0>m1>0W<I ol lh• !o<low lnli cot-•!I"". ,.,_,. P"""'.,.1 ol•<~ 01 D ... i .... u 1, o> !o'"'"'' 1AID 1'1.t.111(£TING, COI POll&t1Qt.1 , Jlil W Kollll• O••no• (•Ill , •)Ml E•T"IE'S '" h•nd 1M1 211• <I•• o• JO) ' lt/t I( IPPOll•TE ~E,.l l ,0.110 M .t.l>KEl•"'G COlll"OllATIO"I lo.i<> ( llo!on!1, Sor••ll'Y ~l lll!' O" CllLIFOllNO"- (QU ... TY OF 011.t.NGE \ "" On '"" H!h <l•v o! J•m•, A 0 r"I. ~to,. m• JO"P" E 0••" O Nnlor• p.,.m~ ln ""~ •or •~'" C<><mt• •nd 5i.•• r'!llld•nt '"•"'"· nu,. rommln><>""d orl<I ........ nf "onoll• '""""'"" Lou" ( ltt\O"" ~nown lo m• lo I,. '~' !•tr•T••Y nf •h• <n-ro••lrn" 1n., ••••u1•d th• '""''" '"'''U''""' II" b•fl•lf <>! If\• <0• r>Or•l•ll" Tfl•"•n nAmrd """ "''"""'1...,9 O'd •Jo m• lfl•1 •u<h '"'"°'•""" ••'<U'fil ••• ••m• "" wu.-.n wn .. ..,1 I "••• ""•""'" ~1• ""• "'"' •"" •'"••<! "'' """'"' '"" >ilit dl Y ... o Ytl' •n '"'' <'''"•Col• I"' -to~· ''"'"•" (l~ffl(IAl ~(11.ll Jn••on E 0••'' No•••Y Public C•ll•o•"•• p,.,,.10•1 0!!110 In O•t""' Count• MY CO''"""'''" E •11'"1 , Ju"• n. "" .l'ull•;\"'" O••"~ '""'' O••h• J -l'ot •"" July t. ll 10, 1'11 LEGAL NOTIC.:E ~ . r C,C.11 NO. P'_.11111 ' I All llU ••Ir>• . U> .. 11 t l llT,,'!(,C.Tf: 0 " P'A llTlllll\HIP' ?°!lt"llllt.CTINO I UllNll!SS UllDi!lt r A ,ICTITIOIJS NAMI Mio, •~• undHll9M<I. t t•!llv 1no1 "'" •'• "t ••clln11 bv$1""" •• • ••r>er~I P '"'""'o unaor •no !ocllll.,.,a n•m• nr •· · Tl!,.,,CK"". • <1t•lq""""" 1no1 d""' no1 ~ In• n•m•• of II•• ~roono inlornl•d ~t'. P••!n•" !huron; Th•! • u c n P,1n .. .r.i1>"1 orlnclP•I pl1co cl buJln•" '!:' lt5•1 "'li•n<• No t, lu•l!n. Oronvr C nlv, C1lllo<nl•; '"" th1! ll>ll n1mt1 In I or 111 m1m1Nr1 cl 1ucn Par!Plf""•O •'fl '""" Pl•c•1 ol reol<I•<><• 1r•· k. ST EVEN L lllLLEll .... l•S•J 11.lllon<f ,.o C. Tulll"· (1lllo•nl1 976'0 ~ llA.RllV It lllLLEll" lm'll Or1nv• jl-v•nur. CeJta Mru. C1lltorn11 971)1 .totl~ " SIMMONS /~JI Mc Or ••Id No llJ, Hun!ln••on ll•o<h. (•lllO•"'" .,,o CA.LVl"I "· LEWISTC'N, )1)1 ~Clon•ld No "· t<u .. 1ong10" IH•tn •C•llf.,,n<I t:>fl•I • W!lll"M C llJIKf'1. ••;\ f",t .... ~~.,u~. Sr1! !l•ICh C•i'I<"" o O(ll•O • JIMMY Wlt.t KER. 11• 0~1 """' "jl.noflf'lm. C1ll•o•n•1 Dllfil MOY '1. 1'11 • i•I STEVEN L 11 11.LEllll. • "' 1111..ll<fY II lllLLEll ... : "' JOHN "· SIMMO'<S f ,•/(It.I.YIN It. LEWISTON • "WILl lA.M C Bit.KEii : "' JtMM'f WILKER " It.TE 0~ (lt.Ll~OllN I" I UNTV 0~ OR ... NGE I fl. On Mav ?J, ltll, INIO!"o ""'• I"" "" ll<oro, "'""V II. lllll•r•. John I S•m o~•. C•'"'" It. Lowl•I.,... Wlll•om ( ~., •'111 Jlmmv Wol'er. ~nown to mo ., LEGAL NOTICE F 1110 FICTITIOUS BUSIN£\S NAME ~lATE"'l'NT LEGAL NO'i"ICE HJOUSTll\Al ( 0 '.\M£ II (I Al P>IOIOC:.11.&.Pl<!(S. ~ W "'" SI 1--------(g\ll M"•· •·IA?tt llo,.1IO L. ~'roub, •U W. lltn St. ~~R~~~IC:~~/O~F AID~~~~~=~~H~= i;;.!•b:;.,~~: .. I\ ti<•~I <ondu<••o b• •n FICTITIOUS ll"Ml '""'"'"""' lftE UtlOE.RSIGNEO <1g ht"b" <0tllt" ll~~•ld I ~1'oUb '"•' tflffHV~ Novrmhf1 I" ,~ •• lhlY T~i1 1'•tement file-:! wlth !he Caontv Cl••~ o! Or•r~• (nun•• rn· Jun• 11, \911 B• 8'••"• J. IAAO<lo,. o •• ., ... Coun!V Cit•• Publl•~•<I o •• ,,.,.. ro~'' ri .. 1, r dnt Jun• n. 1• •nd July~. ll. 1•11 110111 LEGAL NOT ICE ~, ... rr o>r<! IO <l<I bu"""" uro<lfr !111 hClll•OUI i .. m n1m• Of l"R(l ... .,. IND STEIN •• ro n•rtn•••nlo •• ll)oll Soutl> ~"'"" Strool Son!• lno. c .1,101,.10, wnlch bu1ln1u "'"' tn"''~''' omoo .. a ~· •h• 10110"''"' "'"""' w•o•• ""'"" In full 1n<1 pl1tH of ••l•~•nte ••• •• lollow•. lo-w•t· r.(RlllO 5TEIN. 1 ( .. ~, llo•d Well. llOll•nQ H II•. (•lllOrn•• ttll1' ~JllOMI ~TE•N l c .. ,1 Ro•<! w.,, lloll1ng 11111!. C•lifnrnl• tl'l"ll• f •'onro. Nol1r. Public ,.,.. I"• S•~'• o• 1,fornl•. o.,...,n10IY •M11t rl'd Sl•von l "" '"• ""l-0"' wM u n1m•1 1,, •u&· Tht "l>t<I to !h• for.o-olng ln•"um•n• '"" II: F ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 1011e.,,~g ""''o""' do,no 1>u•ln•" MARIE ~ .. R(tll'f •110 lo."o"'n "' M•d• E v<cnl1M !10"11,, 15()1 Cornw•ll l •n•. N•w1>0<I R••,11. COll•orf\1 • '' rloh<•<• lo• """~•<H"'1 of ~u1 ln"' >J~rbo• Ufidr< 'hr "'ll<>v• hCHl<OU1 l'l 'T>r , Afid ,11owlodg.., In m • lhol 1n1y ••f!Culf'd ltlllK JfWF"tf RS. ~-· ·r·Fl(!.&.L SE ii.\.\ •I !IAl'llllt..!ltA J !lllFUNINC.E ll Notary J>ubl1t C•hlo•,.To Pri,.clJ>•< 0 !!•<1 Jn O•onQ• (G<Jn!V M• Commln l"" E••''" D•c l~. 1'1• •A.GEL, 'E(i.11.N I. Dlt.VIDJON, INC. •rTO-NE'f, AT l•W •v · JOHN •. l(ING, J • 1111 Norlf> Mi i,. SI., l~llt llf l •nt• A.n•. C1Hf ... l!lt flltl Tel (II•) S.U·Htl "ut li<hed Or•"9• Co•!! O••lv "''"' !loul••"''rl < ~·i. Mo•• ("'"'"r"•• •!!•<>•v'! fil ""~llt••,no lh•roo•, •·• nn •<I• Kiii~ JFWELFllS Of COSTA "'ESll. ;n 111' o•!o(• ol '"' (e>unlV (1.co "' • (•lllDT"•A <.o•M•••1on, OAI\ ~•llo•oo• O••noe Cnuh•• unri•• In• Nnv"'""' n! ~oc tion l•~• nr th• (1v'I (NI• olv•nu• (~noo• P••' (1lo!n,n•• 1n,, ~""""" •> l>0 ,~9 <on~u<!•rl cO•cor1!ion •• ey • W 11 NE SS our ~•n<lo !~II 1s1n div or ~o ... 191' M!Ct1A~l D. (,OLDE. , • M•ch•r l o , Ge•d• l"" ,1 ..... ,..,, '"""' w "" ,~. (I"' ot Oron.,., f"""'tv on lu•,. av P•••·•~ J Mod<ln•. O•ou,. c ... ~ cn.,nT" I 101! Count> (.or• n Sl»n N•om< s1 .. n s;mo". \~odd•n. Murphy, lnornlon ,_ M..ivtn1. ottorn•v• •• l ow JJ) Fremonl 11.vonuo. l uolo Ill Lu ""'"'"' C1l•!O•n•• llDO I T lllll Ooll'f PUn! Pvb'"~~ O••nOt '""'' 0 1oty Ju"• '1. ?t """July •· IJ. lfll 1N I n J••n• !•. n 10 •nn Jul• 1 1•11 1'19 11 J\Jn• I!. 11. lf •n<I Jul• t, tt11 . ' ' ~ ' , • ' .... -.. 6 3 bui • • -- LEGAL NOTICE '"'""'"''"" HUNllNGTO!of l'I EA(H lllENTll.L COMPANY Chorl•• L Vovd•. Soc,,..,.. T •oo•u• "' TM! •l•t•m•nt 111..i w11n "" CO<>"'' Cl«~ nt Orong1 Cou""' of> Jont n . ltll lh ~ ....... J M•<l<ID•. O•Pulv County (l••lo. 9ll0 oc Pu111 .. n!'<I J,.ov •. 1J. 0,M,O• (o••I D•ol~ XI, 11. 1~11 '"' "'' LEGAL NOTICE F·•!16 F ICTITIOU! IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT follo"'i"g "f''o" I• ~nine Ool<>I I /ti II 11 I SANTA Ar.JI\. ll[NTALS. 110 Nnr!h l<••bn• !loul••~•d. S•n•o Ano. (•llln•n<o tllOJ ol I [~u•on>~nl ll•Ol•I•. Inc (lnro•o<l<•l"1 '" (•l•forn••I 11111 l\01cn Soul•v•r~. S•~"len. co•llo,ni• 1'0•90 '"'' '""'""" I> ""''"" condut!M by • <g•J>Olli'"" Ch••••• t Vowoo SeC'fl•(~·l ••~<U''' lM• •l•"m•nt f·l•d w'lh !kr Cnuni. (1.,0 nt Or1na,. (OU"IY on Jun• H 1911 !Iv l'loverl• J. M•doo~. D••utv Ci>U•lv c1 .. o f't•l>l"n..i o,~n•• Co••! IT ~ 1J, 70. 71. l9/l Oo IV Poln! Ju 119}1'11 LEGAL NOTICE •111 0( Pobhlhfd Julv 6, ll. O••"'l• Co••t O•il• "XI. ll, 1911 LEGAi. NOTICE Nf.W•Oll·M() ... UNl,lf.0 SCllOOl OISTll(T Notlc1 ln•llln1 l id• NOTICE IS Hl'lll'fl'f GIVEN l~•I !h• ~Q•rd of E<!utotlon of lht NowD!lrl M•"• Unltl'd \chool Ol•lri<I of 0••"~• (~unlV, C•lllnrnl1. w111 ••cof•• Hllf<I Old• un '" l l'IO PM , Julv 10, n11, 11 lh• nn1,. M ••Id S(hool o .. 1r1tl. ln<•t•d •! ,,.II Pl1c•ntl1 l ••nu•, Co1to M•••· (All!o<nl•, •I which !Im• ••Id bid• woll b• oublit•llv oo•n..:I i nd """to• llEW lt.CC0,01,C.lf l'Otl)tNG OOOllS & DiMOUNT,C.l lll ~lt.ltTIT!Tl0Ni •• UNIT "f " f.ASll l Uf f SCMOOL All b ;<I• "" '" l>o In •rto•<I•.,,-• wo<n Cnndllion•. '""'uc!I""'· I"" Sooc,t•co!•ono wn•ch "" """' e" td• '" 1n. o!!0<• nl •k• lt.tenl11C!. (o•mltho•I o.'.omo. 11.r ~~Ho<I•. JllD L<I' f fl" Pl1c•, Loo 11.noo•••· ("'•'•'"'" [1<k b>dd.r muol 1utm•• o b•d "''""" In !no lo•m of • ••rl<!lrd "' '"'"'"'"' LEGAL NO'l1CE ,. ... . " '" '" .S.IJ •• ·~ ... ·~ "' ... •.51 ••• !5 J.11 '"' .. , ••• • If\ • l•i LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'l1CS I--ltlOTl(f 01' U.l l D' .... , dllf'\ ·-· •• 001w ... 1nw ~~ ,,,. l'IAl ,llOlll!ltTY 11.f O"trkl .,. ""fl .. 11 1!1 ..-Jf'ICJ N I l lK • r!lt !VATI '"LI o! IK>llMU. 10 "'" l -...1c;R ltY "''"• HO •..... )<" ~u1l1 lg), lof~IW Nlmuot, (•~kltRl• ..... ktMrl"" ,.,..,, ol r ... ~lo!•"' Cfllt0<n<1 rf"Q<!lr l'd t v ~•Ulr>n 111l ol •~• \.•- lot tne Count> of 0 11,.,,NGf '"""· mo (Of'lr1<t01 !t whom tno c-ir rr.. Miit•• o1 tM l"llt ol LO<I"' l tiic:I r..•ofO<" I• 1w•r-...... "°'' • ~·t Wftltt . 0..01..., !t11rltol fl ••tit It* •Ito Nghc;e lo htnbr 11v1n '"" •~• un P•ovl<UM 11>•1 .,,.. •nd -Ill .,,,.., <1onl1ne<1 •Ill otll 1t •"••IO '"" "" "' !ho 111<! o••••ll•nt •llu ol ...... W.oll M on•• tr.. 1>ra <11• of Jul•, !tll. •! 1"" H IO f"' onv -•~•"II 11,,.. ""'" !hon ofll<• 01 ~l(PHE N ... KHNEIOEll. ol9"! l>oun <tud"' onY """ c•l•n<l•r dl1 9101 Wll•hl'" 1k>ulr•11<I, Su•!• dlO, ""'"" •u<h .. or> " t,..ulrM In CIHO of lov.,1y '""'· (•"'"'"" t(lllG. Cu~''''" ••lrooratn1rr ""•••••>1.l•> ,..,, .. bV '1re of Lo• 11.1194:01. S•••• o• (olll0tn••·. to fl-. .,, aontrr •o 1.t• or "'"""'tv •>\Cl 1~1 ~lth<l>I ond but D><l<lat. 011<1 '"DOKI """Dl1 loml on Su"llov ... !hf '""*II to conflHn•'""' bV •••<I ~-"O' Court. i•t •I ""'1111•••· to w•I. Now .,,,,., Oov, •" 111o •lllf>I, ""• 1...i tntore" of u l<I Mom0,.11 01•, Jul• on, Laba• P •v "'"'""'"" 11 1no u .. ,, o! d••'" ano •II \lf10 t1n1 D•• 1h1nkJt lvl"t Oov •l>d •hf rl•n!, h!lo 1,..i In"''" '"•' rno C"tL•lm•• D1" o'ovldl'd. furmor, !hot •"1!0 of ••Id aoc11ud "'' o•oul<o<I b• lht o•• to• 1Dre<n1n gl ••<h 01.,,1 noor ""*'"'""' ol lo,. Of olhf'•wl.,, olllof I~•" o o• >n1ll l>f '"'' ll>t '"'" lwo Dolio•• or In 0<1<1illon 10 t1>o1 o1 Wlid <100••10<1, (11 QO) morr mon 1ou•n•.,n•n Ill• IO• lht 11 1no IJme ol <lootn, I" on<I lo oli 1no uof1 gr worl<m•n ln•OlvO<I c0r111n ftll 0•000<1' ,.1u11o '" 1no (Irv 11 1n111 I>< m 1n<111or• u-. •nv Con• of Oron!I", (ounl• of o,0,.g0 • S•••• <>I lrl<lor to "'""'" I cgf\1'1<1 lo owatdo .. (elUotnl•. 01r!lculo<ty dflC'<Dfd "' to• •"" ur><>" •"• •utl<;ont<f <IOO' unaor ~Im t~ !ow•. l<>w<T ""' .,0, len tn•n '"' ••I<! 1oo<ltlo<1 ro11, !Lot Slo al 1"" No '<<, O••n'>~ •c a ll llb<""'· wo,_m1n •"" "'"""•nit• ""~ "'er•• No ), •• 1,., moo ,...,0,!!td 1mo10•0<1 ov 1nom •n rn r ••«u!IOn ot !ht In !loo~ 1'1. Pogr 41 ot "''"•ll•nfCM.>• co,.rr aC!. Ttl• or nolh IOf l1llu•,. lo <om• Mooo. rKo<Go ot u l<I Dr onet Cou"IY I p1• ""<"'llll II•• IOtclllfil •n SK tl"" 117. l ttm 1 cl u l• '"'" In lowlut mor>•• ct of lho Lot>nr Coc>o !h• Unlll'd 5tot•• .,,, '""'""''""n c• ••It. lfl• (<>ntr1<tor "'"'' P•• t<ovol •n;I gr 0111 cooh •"" O•I•"<• 0 .,0•"<fil ~· •uD•llltn<f povm•nl1 lo ••<" wo•Omon ""'' '"'url'd by "'"''••9• or Tru\I Ote<I n•~"" •o <•tculo Ille worlo, •• •ucll an •n• P•-•tY "' •old l •n o•«•nf of •••VII •"" 1ut""""'' "1•mt nh •r• 1moun1 b!d 1o IN d•,,.,•l•l'd "'''" D•<!. drhnod In •n• •ooll<1bl1 coll.ntve Bid• 00' oltffl lo b• In wt111no And "'"' b1<91on'"' fQrromonll lolod WI"' II•• IN <t CllYl'd ol the ofot.,•l<I othl• •! •n• OoP•'lm1nl <>f ln<>uUr,.1 11 ... 1-1 lot oc- l<mr •lie r "'' '''" oub•oe•tlan hfloof """ <Ot<!•nCt with $o<lk>n 111) t gl IM L•- Del0tt 0111 ol Wiit (Od• Ollfil JulY t. !'11. """'!Ion k d l<tclfd lg"'" ••oY.,lono I" DUii.NE N Wl<f1(. ff 5o<tlOl'1• 1111 i on<l 1111.• "4 II,, L- (1!!Culor ot '"" COd• '""'""'"9 th• omo1ovm...,1 ol .,... £t1ot1 o• u l<I docf'do"t ~'•"lie•• DY !lie (ontr•CI<>< O< onv IU ... STll'NfN It.. l(NNllDlll tO"''"""' un<lor nlm •1•1 W!lt hlro '"''·· Sult• •If Sot!•"" 1111 !, •• 1m•n<IHI. rfQuir•• 1t11 l evotly Hlll1, C1111..,.nlo f111!1 C""!rf Clor or •ubcon1r1c!.,,. omoil>Ylf\O .&.tlor"'' tor l••C~lor !rade•m•n In •ny ooo,.ntlcroblo O< Pubn,n.a O•l <'Oo (<>11t 01'1• "•lot, <uo•l"'n lo •Ol'IY lo lh• 101,.1 ""' July 6, 1, IJ. !Ill II'< 11 oronll<<>111p <0tnmlt1t• n•.,•.>I tM •l!o ol --------------------tho o"bllt wg<~I O'Oltcl •Ml whlcl'I K mi"-•!erJ th• ooo,.n•lcru.lo orotir•m 111 LE;GAL NOTICE '"" tr•d• !gr • l ortlflt•1• of ..... rov•I --------Int ~rtlltocolo wlll olJo ti• ltlr r•llo ,,, ~DQ<onl•l,. to lourn••m•" lh•I wl01 IN UI •d '" lh• .,..,!n<m•n"• <1f '"" '""'••cl lM rollo or •PO'fnlit•• 1o lourn•vm•n In w<n '""' "1•11 no1 M "" 11>1n .,.... '• llv• ••ceo>I: r .1110. Cl!ltTll'ICATE 0, I USlllESS f'ICltTIOUI NAMI" rnr vnao,.lant<I doe• ct r!•IY he 11 c9o~uctlno • bu•ln•'' ot ll• W lltn 51. Coor• Mou. Colofornl•. untlor lne fitli"ou1 llfm n"mo ol l11'-'EN0€11"S WORM llANCH 1nd lh•I •old firm 11 cnmooar<I n! !hr lollo..,1nt o•"on. "'M" n••n• In lull ""' OIKt OI r1>i<l1nC• 1, •• follow' l•nd"' J L•••"O" Pn 0 P<no,. 11J Ogl• 51. Costo M"•· C••llorn11 O•lo<I J.,n• 11. 1911 "'· Wh•n un•mblovm•nl In tnr oroo o ~•v.,•gt b• th• !01nt •ooron!lc1•~lo commo!I•• ""' ••<••O•d an OV.,19• o! 11~. In lno oo 01v• prlot !o !ti• r1ou•1 !er <•fl••oell•, .,, B, Wl>•n "'" n<Jmt>or ol •oor•nll<o• In ""'"'"" '" In• •••• ••<••d• 1 r1Ho of 0<>0 10 l1••. O• '.OI St•I• oll(~~~l~r~••·lo::~~~r Countv: 50oj °"Jun. II, 1'11. b•IO'• -•• No•••v ( Wh•n tn• "•~• <•n •ho"'1 1n1t \I ii l'Pt•cono OI l<O>I l JO g! '" m •m M"MP m•ou9n •oor.,1h<•.,,I• l r•lnln• <>" "" onf\Ua• blH> l !Olfwo<ll O<" lot.Ill~ • • IU ~ubl•t In •n<! lor 110<1 Stair. ~•ro<>n•llv • 'IOl •l>Pf l'l'd L•"O•n J l ov•n<!~• longw" In O Wn•n '"' C"""•clor nrgvld•' •"'O•rn:• "'"! n• rmolov•• "Olllrr ... """'"nl><<• on •II ol hl1 conl<•<I• on Ill ""nuol •vrt•Gt ol not lt1' tn1n <>nt I., "'"H•<e lo ••anr lournt •mtn. • Ill m• IO ... '"" D,,..,n "'"""' n1m• " '!•S >ub!trlbo<I to !hr ''"'"'n ;,.olrll"'t nl ond l fl! •<•,.,wlrd••d "' ••ccutfil !ho ••m•. LEGAL NOTICE l'·US' ,l(llTIOUJ •UUNlll N-1' $1.&.l l'MINT ,. . " ... '" In co"· of !hr Polo! 1.:0 II T~o foll .... ln• 1••or•on1 •ro <!Oln• lwtlnt u ••: SMVI M, llOSTON I. Plt.VllT, S!O Nowoorl C•n!•r Ori•• Su•!t I JS. Nowoorl ll••th. (ohfornlA 016<10 G•o•o~ F. Sm•t~. 5)!1 (~atlton "v•nu•. Lo• "nQ1I.,. (olo!o•nlo Ol)(ls.! e111wgrl~ 11. ll:o1ton. 6'01 sne<b<>urn• D<lvr, lo• "'"••I••· (1lllorni• 90050 Willl•m H. P1vif1. Jr .• fCl'I Encn1n1f(I W••· Pocl!Lc P•li••d••· C1ll!or.,1a 90"/ll C~o<I" H. S•hwl r!7. I Si• Hollvwood lloul•••<<I, ln' 11..noolH , Ca llfn<"'" t00.11 1•11 H Sfoormuna. 111i• M•rou., lOffA<f. Poclli~ P1ll1l dtl. C1iltornlo 001)] Go,don L P•t .. oon, 11\l Stl••<!Of "'"'n''"· Si n Cl•m•nlf. (ollfornl1 9161? r~., bu•in•ll " con<lu(!r<! ov • oont•ol oorln•,.~IJ> Geo••• F Sm•th, P••lfin Thi• ••.iemonl "'"' titf'CI ""''" •ht Cour· Iv n •"· of O,.no• Coun,. on JUn• n . 1'11 SMYTM. !ltOllOll & P'AVITT A!lorno>• •t Ll w •hl w11,nir1 l lvd • su111 J1t T·IHll Pub""'"' o ...... C••U Ooll~ Lo• lt.•toto1, (•lil.,..ni• '°'1' Ju,,. J9 """Jul" 6, ll. 10. 1•n •• "•'el. 1111 11 IOFFICl"L 5EAL l MlrY l'lrl" Mori"" Not1<Y Public. Cahfor"I• Pton(•OO! 0 fhce '" O••nte County M• Cnmm;.,;on E•";,., Aorll t, lfl! Publl\fled Oronor Coo•I 0 1ily PolOt • Jvno IJ, 1). If. •n<I Jui• 6. lt/! ld•·ll '"' Ll'.:GAL NOTICE , 1011' l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS NA.ME Sl ... TEMENT !ollgwl.,g oe'lon ;, OOln1 !I>• '"""""or I• """'"'" to m1k1 con1,,buh<>n• to tunds •111bll"11'd '"' mo "amin'"'"""" <>t •J>orrnh<•1nlo Or<>Or•m 1f "" emo>I<>•• ro11i'1frfil 1<>1>rt"I!<•• or iourn••m•" 1r 1ny 1ocrr"!l{t•blt lr o<ll "" •u<n conlr•<" 1"" ,f orhor ConfrfUo" on t•• ou1>lic wo•~• •II• ••• m1kln1 tu<h ton,.•butooo• l~e C""lrfc!or 1n<I f nY \ubconl•o<'"f un<l•• f\om •O•I! com~lv with !he " ouor•mtnl1 nt ~•<II""• 1111 J •n<I 1111 • 111 mo •mo>ln•m•"' o• ""o'"""'"'· 1nlo•m1hon "'"'''' 10 """"""<••~111 •••nO•,O•. W••• l<ho<lul••· •n<I olnr r •e nwromrnl\ m•• bt nbl1ln"" lrom mt Ol'otlO< ol lndu1'•l1I ~el.,lon1. •• 0111<'6 oa· !h• Admonlirrol"' ol A.porontice1hoo, 5•n MR. JIFFY'S. 7900 N•woorl l'llvd. F•An<,><o. C.il10,no1. or t•om <ht N•woo•I !lr•cn, Col flll>I) O•vT>ion ot AJ>o,,nliCe>nlo lt•"""'"' oncl Lewlo J , P 1ro11 I, ~I l • L<ndo A.vo., 011 b'"ncn (lfli<•• ~ounloln '"'""'" C11 tlllll NOT ICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN lh•! •h• T~" bu\ln•u II bt lno condutt1d by on ll'oulloo N•ouel Woltr Ol11rlc1 will <1ct ov1 tn<ll••Ou•I •••lld 1>1d• 01 mo <>rti<• o• aovlt Lowl1 J Pl•oul Enoinof<ino, "l ~ou1h Lvon ~tro•t. i 1nt1 lnl1 1l•ttm•nT fllrd wlt1> Int Cnun!y """· (&lllo<nla uo tg lh• hour of !O:Oll (l••k ot Orono• Counly on· Julv I, ltll. A.Mon 5•o1ombu 1. 1•11, 11 wh1tn •lm• II• !le•ulY J. M1ddo•. Otou!Y (O<Jntv and 0111<• rn•v w<ll bP oubllcl• oo•n•d i nd (!Ork '<•d. Sood ••••f<I bl<l1 •h•ll IN for !ht Publl•ho<I Or•.,o• Co••l 0111¥ P •lot, Ju. <1n1no ot lhe 1>ubl1( work ~ ... 1nbr far1 •• 6. IJ. )(), "· Ir/I lll:l-11 ...... -""" gralfl'd In lnl llld , ....... LEGAL NOT ICE MOULTON-lllGUEl WATEI DISTRICT NOTICI: INVITlllG 5 Elt.lED BIDS FOR THI CONST!ltUCllON 0" OSO-TllA.IUCO Cl!EEI( INlfRCl'P'TO!lt SEWE't CONT!ltlt.CT 110. JA-16 hon Eo<h bid or orooou\ 1ha ll bl m•d•"" """ •ullm•to•O on • lo•m 10 bt cb!•lntd • 1~• oil''' ot !lov1< Eng ine•""•· •11 $ouln I \on S••eer. Son11 An1. Coll!orn•I Eo{~ D•O o• Or<•i>C••• mu1! I>< •ccomo•n•ed by • '""''"'"' cnoco. or <htt~ <•rto+ll'd tv • '''""""blo b~n' or 1 b•Oa•r"• bond '"' on omoun! no! "" '""" 10.., gt t~• •m&Jnl of rho bi<I .,. gf •"• 10111 omounl lor T"• B""'" ot D"•t10•1 ol I"' Moulon· "'"'<h Tn•v wlll •<c•nt • conl••tt i nd N••V•I W•l•r Olllrl<I of Orone• Counh, m•o• <>•>•b•e 10 If\•"'""' .,. In !ht f•....,,. ( 111!""""· ht1•ln"ll"' on '""'" ln!l•r><•> of !ne Mou+ton·'<lou•I Wo!er Olllrlcl ~~:;.~:.:::~1~'. ;~·:~~:~i~~r~:~~~~~ ~:~f.~:"01n~~.~f~~~~1h:n~:~1~,.":~1~ l<ab~to ('fflt lnt"''""t"' s.,i...r. (On· ""''O'• 1n1 hmo In lftl1 Poh<t orovl<lr d ''"" No l" 10, tooflhor wl1n 1~ 10put. Tno •bo•• m•ntlon•d '"""k M IW!n .. i.n•nt """'~ 1n.,o!o. "' •h<>wn '" <lr•••I •holl b• olv•n A> V""'""'"" lhAI !no bod-An<I du crll)f(f I., •ht plan•. prgf,I•" d•r will •nl•• lnlo • <O"lf•t! 11 ow1r<l•d <!f •wlnt •. ,.ctoon1 ond ioec•t•<l!•on• on In* wor~ 1na Will b< cl1lmlt<I '' llQvo<1110<1 HI• in !he otrlc• of Bo•lt Enoinooring, dom ogr1 II lkr •u(c•n•ul bl<ldtr rtlut•I •11 Soul~ L~on $1'tol, ~onlo A""· Ci li· to on!., Into lh• conlr11t !. !otnio, wnltn <IOC umenl• 0,. llv !!'"' r~t· Tne •u<••.,tul bl<ldu will br t •Qulr ... "'""'' lncort'<lrl•<d hfrton For lu•lkOt 10 •urnoon I lllbor ond m"triol bond In •n P•rhcul•••· "'""""'' ;, ho••b• m•d<> 10 •mounl rou111 •o 100"" of •n• cortrocl ••I<! ~IAn•. 11rot.1~1• "'•Wing" o"<!lon• "'"" 1nd • f1 llntul """nrma"(• l>tlnd ln •nd •P•<•h(11ion• lor lho •Dovo <!!ltrobf'<I "" •mounl •QUiii lo IOI)';\. nl tn• Con!rod lnlllfD•om•"t •nTIT1•d "Con•'•<I Oocu· ""'" Hi<I bond• 10 br ••cv•td from • m•"I' ~<>tl Con,.ru<:toon ~vMi!"•lion• •uro•v come•"• u ll•lo(tory lo •~• •nd (onJ!ru(!1<>n Pion• fnr Th• '""'""'!l~n Moullnn-Ni~u•I W•l•r Ol•l,,cl o! D•o Tf1bu(O (•••~ ln1rrc•n•o• S•w•• AU lffm• """ rondlfiOM (On••l""1 ln Con•<•tl N~. J"' I~. S•1d ol"'"' •n~ th• '"'0"''•1100 !nr b•<ld"'· """'""" It '"""l«•T;Onl mov bo """""""O "' ,.,. """ • 01'1 nl 10• b>d fnrm •~•II 9ovf•n ~' ol!oc• ol Bo•I• Er1t•ner<•no fer 11000 ""' tno"o" lull• d•ledb•d "'"in ""~ >h•ll ,., C~ui.. mu1t b• m1a r o•Y•blo 10 •'•" oecnm• "1>"'1 o! 1n1 contr•c!. th• l..\oullon-NIQutl Wol•• Diot"CI 10• 'v1<11JllOO Ni9u•I w.ior Ol•trocf Pu,.uont to t"• Lobo• (Od• ol •ne Sia!• '""'~•• !h• 11gn• •o "i•IT onv •nd 111 <1! C•lifo•nlo, tor Moul!on-N<~u•I W•lu b•O• nr 1>0•t•nn• nl •nv •"G •I! b•<!I "' ,. OI "•>el h•• ""'"•lned !h• nre•;o•hno .,.,. o• ""' "'""' """9!• ol !n• loc:ati!Y i" "'"''" lnh wor-1' to ~· "•rlorm•<I •o b• "' t1•tai!H1 ;., 1n, $ou•~•'" Cellfn•nl• ........ , l •bot "';••f'ff'~n! 111•<1 1., ,~. "' !•Cf nt '"• 11.<U>ti"'•d G•""AI CQ"''"""" "' A""•dt• Sou!k••n C•lilO<'~•• c,..,.,,, '"'"" ol 1n• 1ent••I Ptfv••lino '"" of w•••• ""' 1~•n•mo11i. on • blO not •I I•""" bv l•w M0ULTQN.r.Jl(,Li£L WA.lEll OISTl!!CT II• ••••onoer !low" s .. ,,., .. v "ubl;,,,,o O•~OO• r,..,, Jun• ll •nO Jul•• "'I OA•lv ~·•nt. 151•·11 savings fast -. The Big M-Mutual Savings offers th e nal ion'a highest ri te on insured aavlngs wit h a choice ol 4 insured guaranteed-to-grow savings plans, including 6% ($5,000 rnlnlmum, 2 to 5 yeara); 5%% {$1 ,000 minimum, 110 5 ye1t1) . Equally Important, The Big M cares enough to give you very personal H rvlce. I FREE SAFE DEPOSIT IOX wtth eccountt of $2,500 or rnor9. J Mutual Savings c ....... ••I ... , ..... , m1 E11•C:O.•• HIQ,,,...,,,1wo10 l f'ld LOI " A11oe1111on Other offices in Co..,in 11, West Ar cadia, Pasadena and Glendale '-'• _, -·-------·~-... ___ ....,._....,. ... ·---~:--·--.. ···~------.. ~----····-·-·-- • • • • ......... "'II~--.. ~ .. DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS I WAS WAL\\/N' ALONG; MINPIN' ME OWN ~JZ, WllfN Dl5 Hf'l\t ~16' ftJOCH JUMPS MEl '601 so FRISKY HAD T' COOL. HIM wrr A COOf'LA KNUCKLE SAN'WICHES!. •• CAN I KE:EPHIM? Mun AND JEFF ALL READY FOR SQ(o.A.E .OUTDOOR COUNTRY L IVING ! FIGMENTS 111:111. KMl's fU<1N6 IN D\D'S aEEflN6BA6 ""'AIN ! - PLAIN JANE AC ROS~ l loclined roadway 5 Mimkked 9 John--. Explorer +n c~nada 14 Tribul~ry of ll:e Elbe l5 Line bouoding 11 pl~11e logure 16 h ola1ed l7Konqof Gerrna11 '1' 13 Cnt 1n }l1or1 slrokes .,.,.,p, shr~,.., 11'/ [1pos' ~"il \,,~nl ~ 20 w~1g h1 ~li owarn:es 22 Most lorcc!11l 24 Pa111f11lly Jb 'Nad111g bud 27 Bod1tS of sal\ l'fMe1 Z9 OorneS\•C. cam ivoie JO Young min )3 Gr~phic schernl' for~ clt{s de~elopment : 2 word~ )7 Republ ic of Africa )8 N11rr ow than• nel of w1ler 3~ Erode .tO Destruction 41 Disarrange 4Z Deterioratt 44 Mow to! sla«rt.· i11g position 45 Roam abot1l 4b Loved one 47 Bakery items •9 Ma intain~ cor• 1espondence 5J Dev iatin11 frOlll th!' established oocm 57 --Jolin, New Brunsw 1c k SS Pile of e~rth 59 lot ~ bl festive occasion b2 Samuel -··-: Piomotor of 111e telegraol1 /,)Cougar b~ Of a limr periocf ~S Changr 1,0 Ex roectorattd 67 Begin J voyage DOWN Yestrniay's Puzzle )olved: 7/6171 8 Se l1ttlecl 35 Glide 'l I~ not able Jb Barrel sl<l\I~ Jo P lac~ in 1 ro., 37 Wedding 11 C~lcil1e(! cNemonie~ connecl•ve 1,ssue ol the skelr!ort 12 Dollar bills : loform1 I 13 Tiial llformof precipitation 23 Seaport il'I Algerl;1i 25 G1owl AO PerceivP> by the tar •Z S1idden swi rl movement ~J --Fraoce : Pa rt or today's Canada •5 Newfoundland Jirport •7 Taut •8 --·and ta~e 1 Olst1Kb1rxe1 28 Highw11y notice: 2 words of tile public sttllons 50 Ornamt11\al prac e nfld'er police c1own!ike 2 Prefit tJ~ed surveillance: ht~dpiec~ with naut 2 words ~1 Chou·-: 3 Mrasured JO MollPn roe.le Chine!r leader rhylhm ol JI Big quaotHy: S2 Barn verse 2 words camp•rl~l • Dlssen!rr J2 Gamblino 53 Feminine name S Btast of il!ll)lement'f 5C Mcder1lt'ly cold bi.nlen 33 SuSIX'n5IOll or 55 Short b --and l'lttdle' liquid w. a gas 56 Torpor 7 Moo11t -34 One who 11 60 Daytimt IJl!ffa-m- Cavtll opposed ance ; Abbr. ·----... --.,u.:;:...~~ ... ·-""-;,._.-r J# ·- By Al Smith By Dale Hale By Frank Baginski PEANUTS Tutsd1y, J~fy 6, lC/71 DAILY PILOT U U'l: AINER ·PsSr.'-AH'LL li...IRE HIJ.,/ Ol.11'- YO'-J{lllf :! / / "'.V-.-Y/ SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS t,;t~~/ 'f .. ~ ....... -, .... ·······~·--- ANIMAL CRACKERS •• BUT'Tf!EY SAY"!llAT SOME TIMES WE AAVE.10 AGHTTo rce•P 1r - '~&1~ ~ .. ..,,_ , ~··· ) 11'::'::="::::-:-:=-:;o;-;-....., 'f~IS TIME.l:'M I 'TMIS TIMl;.IIM GOINS 10 DO IT. 601N6TO PRoV£ 1> 10 'THE WOAD " THAT DODOS • c~ 'FLU I ! ' i • ' $ By Charles M. Schulz llPfEmY 1 Block - .. I. • .. By Charles Barsatti " l'v(~~~ ~.O'~. " . " ' . By Gus A11'iola .... By Ferd Johnson •. so I'VE! INVA'ITEI:> "fllf; P!iRFf;CT COMPROMISE- =- ,, By Roger Bollen_ MR.MUM AHeML.llQ,\'T8e - MISJ.EAC> SQ THA'!" S'OT'llJ'!lle RIGHI= tlA~D ~llEI? ! -· 'THAT'S Mii COOSW. HAROl-Or OIJ HIS WM/ TO ~I<:· · • 11 ., '. JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Doux MISS PEACH { ·-• l ' !<AMP \'-E l-t:Y CAfl.~EJ2. Sfhll~ARS: • PERKINS • 'I ' HAVE '>IJl.l C>e'Cl?EP ON A CAll:EEl't 'YET, ~? WAS ~E Af!LE TO TAKE (At'E o~ HER· SELi=? t.10 .. SHE WAS lt..I BAD ) HEALTH! ~E HAD~ - )()l,IM6 WOMAN llVIN6 WITH 1-<ER ••• SOME ~T OI== A MUIZSE: YES. vou WOULOtJ'T !<MOW THE MAM E. WOOLO VOl.J ? OH. :r NTEl-ID W F'OU.OW IN MV F'A Tl-IE'~S PROFESSION. WHAT DOES )OUR FATHE.lt ~? .. ' VES .• ~S ~ ll~TTEI? ~ FKT. HER W~E tl/~S ~AV 'IVHEELE~: SI-IE OPaJED A SMf>.Ll C.HECKJ M(:, ~(C.OUMT H E~E AT Tl-IE BAMK Wt TH us~ I (AA w MEil lDPtE5S ~ 'YOU 'D Ul(E IT ••• By Mell HeSAN ASSISTANT NOTAA'f PU!lUC. ,, , , ( '."""\ . : /,,.. "I. • ~ ' -.. · ....... By John Miles ·~ DENNIS THE MENACE ... ---._,...~.-......._ ... "·-----... -. ~ . ' ,, -·---~ ·-·--~ ... ---------~·-· .. ·-----4---..---"'-'l .. _ :·-:.-:---__._ ~· ---==:.·------~------.. ~· -.... __;_ .... -.----·~..:.-----·· .. -.-. . ' ---· ~ ... _.. --· ... -·-----::.4·-· ---· --•....:. =r---.. ·-·-=,.,,,-~~ ... ...-.....='- t• DAIL V PILOT s What~s Good Word~ Wliite H ouse No t Easi1ig Co n f usi on • NEW YORK 1API -The 4dministralion ·s series o f ~gativr statements regarding possible steps tha1 might be tJJten lo 1>trengtilen th e economy is causing a lot Of perplexity in poJitical and economic circle&. It isn't so much I h e economic lhinklng !bat causes the consternation. A good many pr Iv a t e economists Californians L eading As Top B ee r Drinkers California became the n3· tton·s top beer drinking state 1il 1970 ;is consumers purchas- ed ! 1,863.~ barrels lo out- distance New York the percn- rlial former lPader. by 332.537 h8rrels. '.According to figures re leas· et! by Geo. \.1i . Ososke. vice President and western distnc:l director of the United Stales Brewers Assn .. Californians increased their consumpuon of beer during 1970 by 6.5 percent wh ile New Yorkers posted an iocrease of 1.3 percent . Throughout the nation, sales iocreased 4.5 percent over 11169. :Per capila beer consumption . throughout the Uni ted Stoles 1n 1970. Ososke said, was 18.6 gallons. up from 17.8 gallons in 10 rahlornia. P<'T cap 1 I a consumption 1n 1970 "~1as 18 22 gallons. up from 17 8 gallons 10 1969. Ososke noted thal the na- l1on's !otal beer sales are ex- pe cted to be 150 million bar- rels by 1975, and t ha t Lahfornia "''lll continue to ac- count for abou~ 9.6 percent of the total. He also noled lhat total direct and indirect taxes on beer sales in California during 1970 -all paid for by the con- sumer in the form of higher retail prices -reached a record $211 million . •t -!:! ;J :r t ...... :...;.;;c 1('1 ~ ~:::::;s:5'.l;:tt!P2S • . :Ist Black-run Business ;Now Listed on Excha11ge :NE\\! YORK 4 AP \ -The f~sl black controlled member frtm in the 179-year htstory or tie New York Stock Exchan~e W,as approved for membership Uisl week. 'The firm is Daniels & Bell. Jiic.. na1ned for its b!ack pFesident and executive vice pfesident. Located on \Va ll street. it was officially formed May 7 but has nol been open for business. It receivl'd formal approval for Big Board lf;yoe .. llOt 11Si119 A.111w.neq $erric9, Yee are "' ,,.ttl11t e ll et, .. , ulk. TELIPHOHI AHSWlll.NG IURU.U 335.7777 membership from the New York Stock Exchange's Board of Governors. Speaking at a ne\\-'S con· rcrence a!Ler the formal an· nouncen1cnt. Willie L. Daniels. 3.1. the firm 's president, hailed the move as a "major and SJI(niFicant breakthrough in ef- fort s In further b 1 a c k capitalism and to provide more blacks wilh opportunities to move into areas heretofore limited to them." "lniti;illy." Oa(lirls said, '"Lhe uniqueness of our organ· i?.atinn should serve as a door openCf" for al least a tokf'n lary among insti lutions with amount of business, particu· social consciousness. In the long mi. hov.·evcr, the success of Daniels & Bell will depend on service and performance, 1 Q0/0 NNN not the CG\or of our skins."' The, firm specializes in CARE FREE handling transactions for in· LPNG TERM LEASE stitulional investors, for ex- '' compa...., _,.,.,, Chflft ample, mutual and pensions 171.-lflllJJ-•llc••h r d b k d . : lltKR. C714l ,42•05,0 un s. an s an insurance ~"""'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'~-'':'".'.'mpanies. ·····················~ =: The MAZDA CAR • • · \vith the Revolutionary • : ''Rotary Engine'' : • M•ftyf.ctu••d bv TOYO kOGYO of J •p•n • '•k• Appro•. 70c P•• Mor. • • for q<1oratlon1 or a topy of 011r r•porl tell er writ• • Great Pacific Securities : ; .. ;-;~;;·;;·;~;~~;~'~;~·;·~. ~ NEWPORT SHELTER, LTD. A C ~l1 lor";ft l ,,.,,1.d P&dfter.!•1• I. Bt1n9 Fcumed T., Pyrc~o•• A Nt'"P"'' Bo.ch Oll1 c~ B~·ld in9, .0. L!Mll(O l'•ll:T'-1(~11-<IP UNITS 01" '1.DOe !ACM Monomum Pyre~••• l Un:h 9°/. Cumulativ• Preferred Rat• of Return iiiil9 -•S•l•lf•:t·.T-,·.·,·,·.,,·,-,·,·,·,·,·,·. l•S•'I·;.----- 71Ml Wol!clltl Of!YI , S~l!t lll. NIWp&rl •••en, t)'60 114, ••s·i•io Ti'lll advlf111•"'•M 1' n101~ .. •n Dl'•r '" ••" "'!• • ll'llcl•ttl~n ftf 1n <>II•• ,. W-, .,. Hll Uni!>. lucl'I ollor •• m•Gt ont, by lht OH1rlnt c1..,y11r. IRYttrm...i llmltool lfl Ct li+ .. n,. •U•G•nh W•lh •"ftl>ll Ill<•-In •~cu• If ,,o,aot 1...r • ,.,+ -•th "' ••ctn "" '"·ooo agree with the adminislraUon that the ingredient! for a recovery could indeed be there , even !f not clearly visi· ble as y!l. The concern is perhaps more with the manner. These are the Presidenl'1 decisions, as relayed by Tre<.sury Secretary .John 8. Connally : "He is not going lo institute 11 wage and price review board. He is not going to in- stitute mandatory wage and price controls. lie is not going lo sctk tax Teductions. Ile is not going to increase fiscal spending.·· Place those statcmenls in this context : More Americans are jobless than at any time in a decade. There are well over 5 million of them. and perhaps 25 million are directly affected by wage~arncrs' idleness. fl1illions more such idle wage· earners' co..worker!'i a n d New Car Bra neighbors are frightened that Among the nev.' items hitt ing the market in time tbe same could happen to !or the summer season is 1he new ''Car Bra" rrom them. Vilem B. Haan, Inc. Although it is obviously a little Seldom in recent years have oversized fo r Cori Carnot, \vho peeks through a part p~p!e been more reluctant lo B · · of Car ra, it will fit the front of Dad's new sports buy "'hen they had the capaci-car snugly and protect the fini!ih from flying stones, ly lo buy. the main reason bclng the ir fear of the im· bugs, road tar. and the like. Unemployment, interest rates ----------------------- mediate future. Unemploy. ment. interest rate~ and price.s are rising . It is widely believed by economists that if consumr.r confidence w!'re strengthened, the economy w o u I d im· mediately start moving ahead again, although not without problems. As it is, retail sales are far behind purchasing power. Why, then. the ad- ministration·s emphasis on the negative, especially when it is a tenel of polllics that a wise administrator or candidate refrains from saying what he won't do, H only lo avoid being tagged a do-nolhing. Among those most perpl!'X· ed by the statements is Albtrt Sindlinger. whose constantly updated su rveys of consumer attitudes make him sensitive to the fears and hopes of ordinary Americans rich and poor. coast lo coast. "It is quile clear that whotver is running that show in Washington doesn 't un- derstand the consumer:• he said ... Tht!'i is going to knock. dov.·n the consumer confidence index 10 points:· ll has been shown Lhat Lhe lower the confidence the less therc i!'i a lendency for Jlf'Ople and businesses to make plans, Once it W&"i thought that if you put money into the hands of the consumer he would !'ipend H. This belief ls now known lo be false . fl.1ade insecure by war, in· flat ion , recession. discord, Joblessness and whal not, he may bank his money or simply i;!uff ii inlo a shoebox instead or purchasing appliances and lurni!tJrP. Sindhnger maintain.~ 1hat lhr most recent stalements. \1 h1!r tllr most damag1ng to conf1rlence, merely follow a stnes of earlier pro- nouncements that have served only to make Americans n1ore insecure. AskPd lo explain, hP com· mcntcd that every lime the admin1strallon att,mpts to assure 1he public that lhin,1?.s 11re getting betler il only spreads susp1c1on Sindlinger 1naintains that almost every public l\ssurance from Wa shi ngton is followed by s renewal or ins1>cur:ty for tv.·o or three weeks. The public reasons, he says, that con- ditions must indeed be. ever rose if the administration has to shout so loud. Your :itlo11ey's Worth Have Pet Peeves? Columnist Has a Few By SYLVIA PORTER ln jhe past few weeks. have personally thrown away : -An aerosol can of hair spray for which I paid $1.29 buL which fizzled oul half way through its contents. Thus. I paid the equivalent or $2.53 for the total contents. A full can of sardines with a key so insecur!'ly altachC'd 1ha1 it fell off somewhere between the supermarket 11nd home. The C'an v.·as rirnless and all I achieved with rn.v manual opener wa!'-mutilation of lhe can and its conlenl:->. -Brand new panty ho.sr which sprang a big hole before I got them over my hips for the first v.·earing. "LITTLE COMPLAINTS"' such as these involve only lit- Ile sums of mone y. But the losses add up to ten!'! or rnillion.~ of dollars -on top nf the splitting headaches they causl" consumers the nation over. The complaints cover a never·ending and. in fart, ever·lengthening range: the ttnanswcred IC'!!er I\ b nu t u n de livered merchandisr: repeated billings for I(OO<ls you nt>v'r rcc.c1ved: ehar~es for r!'pa ir calls which do not desul ! i nrepair s. nl the University or Michigan recon1mends is more con- sun1er polling to rind our real ~ripes and real opinions of consumer products. Another suggested by .John Ciardner. head of the Common Cause citizens' lobby, is an ''nn1budsman" in every large corporation or other institution dealing with consumers. It "ould be 1his person's job to Sf'r that ynu got satisfaction v.'hf'n ~'OU complained. The nrnbudsman would work for YOU and uphold YOUR in- terests. The ombudsman could pile th<1! fall w h 1 I e new -alt -not just in customer good will. bu~ in the balance sheet as well. The National Bureau of Standard .~' Lewis M. Branscomb conf"urs · "IL is hard to estimate t h e magnitude (lf disappointment 1n the marketplace -of frauds, wrong repairs, ex. cess1ve interest paid, wrong product~ delivered, products that fail while new -a I l things thar rnighl nnt h;ivr nc· <"urrC'd 1f consu rners \\'l're ;ilways in a position lo niake a wrl[.i nlormed cho1ct> arnong f)ffered products and .services." They inc.-lude drippv n)('al -· "'"'"" , ~""".~ p;:ickages : bacon parkagcs '· "·hich hide how le;:in or lat rhe w JI St t ~aeon is .. "push hrre" OpPn· a r~ee 1ngs which brPak you r fi ngl"mails and do nn1 o~n . \\'hat's your fa vorile adri111on~ This smattering of little con- sumer romplaints rt>presenl~ Chatter a ronsumPr prohlrm <"a lr~orv L -l all. by itself. an? it too !~as tn-""Th~P is litllt> lo suggest a spire~ moves 10 .washinf;'tOn sharp acreleration in the rale and tn state ~eg1sla1ures In nf 1nfla!ion nvt>r the near- protr-cl ~nu aga1n s1. 1hl'nl lrrn1 , · Argu~ Rcsrarch Cnrp AS ()NI:: TLLU~TRATI0:'-1, says. The cnmp:1 ny predicts a s1gn1ftcant fall.off 1n bond of· rerings cfuring the summer, and Ilia! thr Federal Reserve will "'()rk 10 slow monev· !'-l•>rk growth -but n~t enough tn Jt>Opardize the economic recovery, "'Thus the OOds ror a bond rally look rt'asonably good.'' A r g us says off and often. now before Congress 1s a bill sponsored hy Sen. l!arr1snn Williams (0-N .J l, whir h \\'Ould clamp do\\•n nn dfp<+rl - mr.nt stores and crPd1t rard plans •which permir customrrs to pay for goods they have bought within a given period nf time. say 25 days. without ser\•ice charges -BUT "·hose statrmcnts are postmarked five lo 10 days after the dale of the statement. leavin~ the customer nol with lhret>·pht~ "·eek~ but less than two \\'eeks to pay. Although T ha\'l" no !'nl1d proof, 1 would nevtrtheless gues.~ little complafnls art' soaring -ju s I becau~l" nf these forces : Thr la1rst market down- ~v .. ing appears lo have been a successful lesl or lhe l\tav.~ lo"'!;. aC('Clrding 10 TPO Inc· a growing number of technical indic11tors no"· point lo 11 developing int('rmediaie ad - vance, which could last well into lhe su mm('r. TPO says. Air California to Oakland and San Jose. 737 SUNJETS. • EXCLUSNELY ON BOEING. .all ;·our lrd\.'el agent or .i\ir Cal for fares and re~cn1ations. · --·--~·-~·-• .,, ln many cases. f;:ictory workers producin" consumer product!'i art bf'con1ing less experienced and less motivated lG maintain quality standards: lN f\fANY CASES. sales clerks are inadequa!ely train· l!d and customer complaint dep11rlments are relatively apatht>tic; Consumer demand~ con\\nuc to put pressure on manuf11c· turer~ lri produrt. evrn al reduced qualily contrnl .~111n­ dards: The U.S. consumer has become increasingly consciou~ of ufety and quality con· sideration~ and thus is disap· pointerl "'hen his purcha~cs cln not live up to his rxJ)f'ct;ilions \VHAT ARE .POSSIBLE ~OLU1'1 0NS? One that Dr. George Katona Despite I he "1ncv1table psyhcohlogical but temporary" correclions, F' I Dupont, Glore Forgan 11nd Co. maintains a "'bullish slance on the stock market." The comp<i.ny ad· vises investors to "stop work- ing 11bout. .. txcess demand"' and urges lhcm to look for sustained ricrnand ba cked by P1o:pansion policies ··ror !he next two yel\rs or more." "l\1ay 's short term cor· rt'Clion C'llmf' right along on schedule.'" lhe indicator digest beheve!i. As lo time and the extent of the drop. the ncwsleller says the '"decline has a t r f' a d y encompassed much of what was expected nf 11 .. Al!IO the rorreclion h1oi; ser\•fd lo ":dcn!lfy !hose ~tock!i which 11re likel y to be the n111rket leaders ln the next pha.~t of the 11dvance." the 11nal}'sl believes. 'People' Really In To Shares By JOHN CUfl.'NIFF Al' l ...ift•H Aftll~•I NEW YORK t AP) Directly and indirectly, there are now about 138 million ahareowners in America 's cor· pora.tions. or about 67 percent ef the population. The figurt has grown swiftly in the psst de<:adf':: a continuation is ex- pected. As propaganda for ··peop\l":'s capitalism," a r a I her shopworn not ion that everyone should own a share i n American industry, the figures tend lo do their job. As J. renection of the (lwnerskfp profile of business. they are misleading. The fact is that individual owner!'i have !been selling much of their holri1ngs 10 in· 1 stitutions the insurers. banks, pension <ind mutual funds and trusts. The marketl is being institutionalized. The key to understanding the transition hidden in the figures is the wo rd "indirect," which means that if you belong to a pension fund or1 hold a policy with an Insurer who owns stock you are an in· direct shareowner . True. But what can be nbscured by :iiuch categorizing is the fact an individual's in· direct inv estment necessarily must be made through an in- stitution's direct ownership. Well. so what! Who cares ~·hether America ' !'i cor- porations are owned directly by the people or indirectly through mammoth inslitutions? WhG care!§? A mllllon Americans from corporate president.'! to small investor!'i. but they seen unable to counter the trend. on the big business of small Big commissions are made Jnvestors. Brokers, be i n I human, don't like sma]J com. mission!'i. They tur111 them down. As a result , many small In· vestors continue to f i n d themselves ignored when thev attempt lo purchase stock. It is difficult on legal or moral jl;rounds lo find any defense for such refusals. bot !UCh con· siderations somehow can be ignored. You will rind na printed In · structions ta ignore the !lmall guy. lnstead. the re~istered representative or salesman. is told that ~ must maintain an average mo n t h I y com· mission at a certain level. perhaps $50 lo $S(L He can. you niav think , ar·1 cept even the smallest order if he gets enough institutional orders lo maintain h i s average. Bu! it seldom works that way. Most salesmen ne\"er get a taste of in· sli'uliona! business. Rather than turn down the small investor flatly, howe:ver. some salesmen Irv In talk him into buyin,i;: m1itu11l run d r.hares , mainlv becau.~ the funds can arrOrd to pay 1h11r big commission. Sort nr hke bait and switch. The ntt effect of ~urh a practice is to enlarge the in· stitul.Jonal role in th' market ~nd reducr the power {If in- dividu11ls. It shuti; off the C'n·1 tryway for new lnve,'il<Jr'i_ l1 mrans a midrlle man between bt1vt'r and S•'ller It means mOre expen se.~ for the in· di1•1<lu a1. It also n1Pa11s !h~I. ~houlri the trenrl continue. the ''li· 11uidi1 y" of the markc! cnuld be endangtred. Ont> ind1v(lu al r.eeking to sell 50 shares always has a buyer. but doe~ one institu tion trying lo sell 10.000 shares? There may also bf' a more subtle danger hidden in this trend. Tl is thi~: Should Ind i v Id u a I 5 be Tesponhble for their nwn d~isions, nr must th,.v take a rtar seat and pay a third par- ty to make decisions for them ? This. essentially. is what ln· slitutional ization intans And a not certain but !ik,ly con. sequence of such beh11vior is that the small individual will fail lo obtain his share in America ·11 growth becau~ he must help a professional ~ record or the pr0i.1 is not that good . Often they f11d! to attend !he busine11~ but they never fail to take their fee~. Many advertise "expertise," wtien the truth is that they purth•se thtir decisions from still art()ther party, Tht situation is commonly rlismissed by the profes~lonals , and lheir spokesmtn -they) speak with one voice whilf': the individuals spe11k randomely -but it is there and it won't disapptar and it n1ust ~dealt with. One indication of the con. cern was revealtd recently when the New York Stock Ex. change it~elf decided to di.,. patch .11n tide to visit brokers for !he express purpose or re- builri1ng Ult. small 9rder bu.t1i· ness. --·· ~·~-,--~ Who Listens To Landers? ~-. .,... ... ,. • ·, I SINCE SHE'S ONE ',. OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA • • • • • • Just About Everyone Does That's Mo You Can 'Listen ' to Ann Landers Da ily 1n The I DAILY PILOT l • . ~ -- AMONG THE GREAT ONES · Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world, is an old friend. The DAILY PILOT looks os much at home on this international newspaper rack as it does at the front door of thousands of 0 range Coast area homes where it is dropped daily. That should tell you something. It should tell you that a "home- town newspaper" can be sophisticated and still not lose touch with what's hap- pening at city hall. Whether it's news from around the world or down the block, the DAILY PILOT packages it best for you. And the simple fact is that, because the DAILY PILOT emphasizes local coverage, you'll find a lot of stories in it you can't find in any other newspaper in the world. On this international news rack, it 's among the great ones of the world. But at home, it 's the great- est one in the world (for local news). • • · ~l[E ORSERVF.R ' DAILY PILOT ., 1 ., -. •' . ' " .. . . ' . - •-• ,,... ..... ·~ -:J'" ~,-:..__, ,-!-• "''""" ------•• -••" -"'-~· -··-··--·' ,_,_ -... ---.. • ..... 4• --\.-'~-.. --OP• -~" ~--~ -~--··r-''-''\'•• ~ ..... -~·---~~-v--~·--\-~~r--,,...-=t!__.S::::#_ ,,..,...~ ...... --:~.~·-_':..;..__· .;>,,.._ -=·---•""" -.·----·":.-~ ------::--·-..···•" _, ____ -~-~-r::·l'....--.--.~ -.:-'""1-"1'"'.'..-_,._._... -'"~~ -·- Zf DAil v 'ILOT Tundly, July 6, 1971 New FCC Prime Time Ritling To Stimulate Local Shows GiA SCALA H AS SCARE HOLL )'WOOD I UPI) -A~.Gla .Scala 1pent 4$ .mmuk.a pll;med. 'in the wreckage of ber n°verfurn· ed sporta car Monday night after It swer ved Into an embankment in the Hollywood HiUs. Lancaster nr1n1ant 'Knickerbocker Holiday' Pleasing By C\'STHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (APl -The idea bthind the Federal Com· mun ications Commission's ()n:ler that the networks give up one-half hour of prime viewing time each evening in major marketing are as &:tarting next season was to 11timulate local programming and production. ll has caused considerable production and even more sales activity. Recent surveys of stations affiliated with the th re e networks indicate that. three months away from the start of the nr;w season, about a third of the stations in the 50 larger co m m u nit i es have not definitely s e I replacement show or. if I.hey have, they aren't telling. Some stations will expa.nd local news programs into prime time, which officially starts at 7:30 p.m. Others are expected to plug the hole with reruns. ·rne reg ula.tion has stimWated great a ct i v i l y among independent producers, hitherto pretty dependent on network sales. And some entertainers Tommy Smothers. L a s s i e and Lawrence Welk among UM!m suddenly are interested in what was once a TV stepchi ld syndication. That is a program sold lo individual stations rather than to a network. David Frost who already has a popular nightly talk show, will have .a weekly half. TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening JULY ' 1:00 II l lt ,._. J1rry Dunphy. (I) ABC /iftwt Ru10nrir, Smith. 0 IOllC HIWl Tom Snyd•r. 8 Anttl hMblll Calif, Angels l'I. Mmnesot1Twin!11 Minne1polis. 0 Si1 O'Cloct Mori1: (C) (90) "300 $pirl1111" Conclusion (adventurtl '62-Richud [j:1n, Sir lhlph Rich· 11di.on, Diane Baker, Barry CM, Da~ld F11r11. The monument1i lourth century 8.C. Battlt of The<mopylat w15 reet1n:rtnitt1d from 1c:tounts l1H by th1 Greek hlstori1n HerodotuJ, Q I S1t1 m 1\t F11nut-m Star Trtk EJ A Th111 let Jollft/Cltlrllt's hd m Fi.ti• f1111i1J (t) Nolid1r1 J4 m O.ttr V1llty Dirys '1) Hews Jim H1wthom1. 1:10 (]) Nt111 BUI Huddy. {]) Tn1tb tr C.M11111t11CM (])CBS Nlft W1llM Cronkitt. 9 lflC NWI O.vld 8f1nkl1y. m Tiii Flyinl "UR EEi HMllPOdst i..ct11 @ii Seltcttd fl111 /Mllliutr m T\t Dlwt ltrp«t G) [I A6of1blt ~. AldH. (DAit Ntwt 1:00 e cas""" w.n .. Cronkitt. 0 m "IC N1wt Dtvid 8rin~J1y, (1) Tt Till tN T111t11 (i) WUl'1 Illy U111? 9 Did: Y11 DJ\1 m I lo\11 llc:y 0 Tiii sa.. AllM 5""11' Gu11b 1r1 Ki)'I Stev1nt, G1J11 Blvon1. Wino M1nont, .lohn ByMr Ind Rod Ser· lin1. 0 I]) IIJ Ill lll: '"" -a1..ica: {90) •f'lr\otft " .1tnnl1" (rom1nee) '49-Jennifer »nn, Jo· uph Cotten, £th1f 8.urymare, Lillian Gish, C1cit Kell1w1y, David W1yne. A. m1mor1blt film 1bout an 1rt!:rt'1 love IOI t mysteriou!, b11utiful woman. m D1vld Frett Sl!n Gu1sts 1r1 Jimmie Rodgers, Gerri Gran1u. HQWard Cot&ll. Botlie l'ivhn and '.'k· !or Gotb1um. m Dr•a111t m flthtrtf 1114 Atlll '"M111n1.~ m Pdlnt '"' LMft1 el L1 C.U J111141 1:55 mi c..ti911 ;. Stfll"dM 1:00 0 (8il @ri) rint TllUd.y G11rk.k Ullty ta host. Tonlt:ht'1 proir1rn in· tluclts 1 porh1it of Kint Hu&.Mln ol Jo1d1n, 1Pld 1 rtPOfl 1111 hou1in1 1llandonm111t in !lrp cities. CDFtloilf 54•111 fID Dnc.. If lrlKI (R) El CM"-rltt GI!) "-t Pua ¥ftftie1 1;)01J(f)Mi11UN f111Uy(lf) WH1i1m Windom 1llftts 11 1 we1!thi tar· Ot1l1r friend M Arttlit. His 1rriv1I from Clli101ni1 prompts 1 rtuni°" of thti1 old Army buddiu. B luttir Wtnl ,,_ ll)Tr-1 G'I DllUT Artllb: ii Alltriu "Peltt A11111.111der,-Tr111$11ti111 lilfit Into p!qtic fonM, A111111der cre1I• 11t trom -ll'Nll1rill1. ID C[J Dnlptt 10:00 II T• ._. M Lllft (II) Mrk1. r. m Conftl'Sllioftl wttll • Piydll•· lh• only itldlt d • bt•uty t.onllSI: trlst Dr. £dw11d St•inbrook. i" wlllth Aliaon Is 1 co"'ut1nt. (R .. @ID thriA !hi U"t'in1 WOfd scheduled) ml An1eli1os Neiroi 0 Nlft Ktvin S.ndeu. 0 (I}@ CD M1rtu1 Wilby, M.D. (RJ "Don't Kid • l'ildder." 01. Wilby h1lp' 1 ~l!~d wcm1n 1rr1nae ~lastic •uraery for hu homely. bi1·1u1d JOO_ K•Y Med!Ofd aiid Roblll f'ratt cunl. (B Movit C11111 7:30 e ({) B1w1rly H1t!billin (R) Drys· dale locks 111 hi1 1etret111e' in ho~ of1i" after they demonst11t1 !or'i l>et1er wor~in1 COlld!l!oN, D ®Jmem CabJ (R) 'lhtr• Must Be 1 f'o~y." Chet tue~ to c:o~·1 v•rice ii 1:1rl sludelll 11ot to be over· ton!1de11t &bout w1nn1n11 1 rnov•t U1ntes1. I O ffi@ Ql TM Me>d Squi d (RJ "'A' Is lor A.nn1e,'" Jo V111 fltt!I l U!Sts I! Mn•• Cr1btree, 1n r le. men11r1 sthool te.r;hu u11du 1t11t~ C!J TV I lt,.,t:I 0 Me.ii: (90) "Seip "' Sidlltf Strwt" (dram•) '60-0onald Sinden. Nicol18er1er. m "'" f'ulqm/f1$1\man. ID llh11tr11> Al thmtl llosll. H1tri-'°~ 1uuts. IOI hri l1ber1I cl11sroom 1pproichl ml flltivtl M1ria111 lo su ed ui:atio11. Ron H11e.i pl1n1 '"" Geora• Mcl'iennl i nd [dmund Gil IO:lO I) {.I) CIS N..,., Sj)echl brrt 11 sern ilJ f1ed S•m1aon 0 Mo'li1: (C) (2br) '1111 '•n.bltr" D Million $ Mwit: (Cl (2hr) ''Cid. 1 (dr1m1)-D1m1 Ed•th fv1ns, Cietif· 111 Gou tlnnii1n" (comedy) '61 -r•nf Ward. Conn Redf1'vt. JtmeJ D1Hr n, Mith~el Gillin. Dtb Q) NfWI Bill jnhn1 ~rah Wtllry. Pr1gy C11s On v1t11tcn tfl D Ditrie ff U111 S111efita fN· with h~ p1renh. G1d1:et finds 1 a•ni ttnlt ot l1d1 vyin1: tor lier 1/fect•ons. I . mr111tti 1r Co!1$tq11tnett 1 11 .00 f)CIJ II!Nns (D llT1ku 1 Thitl O ~m /if"" fil) ftnl1r1 ''Johll Philip Sou~a-Thi 00 DMth V1ll1y hFt Muell Kin(.. 0 (]) (D MtM tm Ci1111111 30 OJ Mwl1: 1111 Strl~lfl"• H•M" l!I [.Jptcbarl• (m)'S!ery) '55-lf't'IOf Howard, Alidt Villi. 7:55 EID C.ll6ol! d• s.tvndos QJ tut ttit ~ L'(ll) IJ Crffl Aa• ( R) Lisa d11cov11~ fE) ll11Ml!n {R) lht womt11'1 hbt11tion mO'lrment l a!) SI Nt '""'' T1 i nd d1drle1 lo llkt 0\'11 lh1 m1l1• tllores on tht !1rm 1M lorce Olo~er l ll :lO IJ I]) M11Y lrtrri11 l"to !hi rtile ol t\oUSl·~Ulbln<I I Q ~ m hlllll!f c.r..,. Q @] m Diii lnotts (R) Cut!!~ 0 @@ Q) Did C.veft •re Slt'll .\lien, Dory f'rtvin. Louil ID Mnli: '111d6t1Mo.iddi• ('"YI· N,1, Tom J>ostom 111d Thi Ut1bt!,h· tuy) .5~riffith .... " •-··. 1111nl JUlllS. •1• """ 1111~!. Cl) Al lllUI m T1 Till tfll Tnrtlrl II!) Fl&ll l..,.t llllnlUMtll Ill las """"' dt .... ,,11 .. tr;)"'"' 1:15 l!I Alllfl Wr.p·U' 1:30 I) CIJ Kii HI• (It) Gutsll 111 Nry LN Lewie 11111 FtfllR Hu1kJ. ------------ W ednesday a ""' w...11• (west•r111 ·•s- trr111 Flynn, Al•l1 Smltll. 10:00 Cl) "Mr. lthildwt 1111 ti w.• DAYTIME M0Vt£S leomtctyi '4t-ellfton Wt"" ShlrlfJ l t tnpl•. '"'It "'" n(-<-) I:OO IJ""" 1o1,.-I'""') '42 -'40-Jtd l111rry, FM Niia. '"""-MM!f '11nt, Mtrit Wllldtllf. rM1:Pt1ra" (COll!ldJ) '3Z-n.t. MM 1:00 CJ (C) "WIN ao. .. blf. l rott1u1. ,.,,,..,-(dr1m1) '50--Cllriatoplitf m "Tllf ltfJ W1rltt 11111*• ~COlll· "'umrnet, Burl lYtl •dyJ '52 -Rvlh Hus.1ty, l ;OO Cl) ''(lit Ill ktdi" l'irt I <•111111) 1:30 0 (C) •Mlllftt " (romtnct) '!14-- 11111 Powtlt, Cdmund Pu1dom, Dtb· b11 ll1ynold1, Vk D11110n1, I '59-GrelOfY f'~. M-1 Gtnlner. 4:30 IJ "Dh'I Fw,.t .. wt,. t1Mi lllMI Ott'' (d,.mt) '61-Sle;ht• Youn1, ()) S.Mt" ID A'f lldin1. hour "David Frost Revue." Tommy Smothers will produce a~ lml a half-hour var iety senes. Lawrence Welk'.11 com· pany claims it has already lin· ed up more than 150 stations for his syndicated series, NBC'1 Plan le fill local prime Ume tif the five stations it operates includes reruns of the NatioruiJ G.e o gr a p b i1c series; "Wild Kingdom," an NBC perennial now in syn• dicatlon and "Lassie." cancel· ed by CBS at the end of this season. They also have picked "Primus," underwater ad· venture, and two private-eye series, "Monty Na sh" and "Dr. Simon Locke." NBC hAs The 34-year~ld actress, who was driving alone, suffered mu!Uple bruluii, a neck injury and the partial Joss of lhe tip of her right finger. The f I r e department pried open the door of the wrecked car and ex· tricaled Miss Scala from the steering wheel. She re· mained overnight at Hollywood Receiving Hospital. outlets in New Vo r k, ------------ Washington, Chicaga, Cleveland and Los Angeles. CBS stations New York, Los Angeles. Chicago, St. Louis and Philadelphia are booking programs individually. Among them are a circus series star· ring Bei-t Parks; new short pro'grams with the Cr0ld· diggers singing group; Johnny Mann's "Stand Up and Cheer'' musical series spun off a special thi.s season; "Doctor in lhe House," a spoof of medlcal shows, and "J erry Visits-," with Los Angeles newscaster J erry Dunphy calling on some film or TV star each week. . ABC's plans are still largely 1n flux . It has slations in New York. Chicago, Detroit , Los Angeles and San Francisco. In two cities, there are plans to expand early local news shows, a -network spokesman said. At least one station plans a local show with a local TV personality. Ex-singer Voted Tops LONDON (AP) -F'ormer rock si nger Cliff Richard, now an evangelist, has been named the top singer of the year in Britain by the Songwriters' Guild, for hii; "services to British music." Richard, who took up the Bi· ble after meeting I he American evangelist Bi I 1 y Graham, has had 50 records in the British top 10 over a 13· year career .. "Show business is a marvelous pl:itform for .a representative of Christ -you reach a lot of people ihal way," the 30-year-<lld Richard said after his selection by the Guild Monday, Irene "Granny' Ryati Veteran Actress Offers Scholarships in Acting NOW EXC LUSIVELY! Ito. lt~llOll SHOPPING CtNTEI 111 llAfll()fl SHOf'Plll~ Cflllffl hls years end he-ls by far the most effective, all·rOulld show busincJ>s personality $e'en by il11s crit1e for som~years . Ke has two vital as.sew. lht Vi.rile, adaptable den1eanor so vital to a male lead and a fine 3inging voice that proved: e q u a 11 y adaptable throughout the df!ightful Weill sOOre. Both he and Lancaster owe a. great deal to a strong sup- porting cast. ably directed by Albert Marre. Anita Gillette. is the charming Tina Tienhoven, \\'ho literally snatches her Brom from the steps of the gallows and Jack Collins, 1s her unscrupulous father, conn· ciJ president My n he tr Tlenhoven, turns in a solid and convincing supporting role. Listen lo tbe music. enjoy Howard Bay's superb sets and Freddy Wittop"s authentic COS· tumes and forget the political s2.tire. Jn the light of this thoroughly happy musical, who needs it? ' ROBlRl WISt PRODUCHON !!!ANDROM:DA STRAIN A UNMRSAL PICTVRf ·TECHNICOLOR. PANAVISIQN· ~a. 2nd HIT · Eric Breoden in H(OLOSSUS : THE FORBIN PROJECT" (GP) HOLLYWOOD !AP) -A blue.eyed mite of a millionaire has set up a foundation to pro- vide scholarships for aspiring actors and plans to leave her fortune to it. "Show busines."l has been awfully good to me." sa~ Irene Ryan, who pl "ye d sq LI ea ky ·voiced Granny Clampett on television's recently canceled B e. v e r I y Hil lbillies. years financially on t he Hillbillies. My bus i n es s manager made some good in· vestments. I have no relatives. so IJhought, why nol give it to a business that ha."l been so good lo me?" Now Play.,-:inm19if---================~~ "I had an awfully good nine DON RICKLES NOW th1u July g Two Sllcws f'er Night 8 p.m, tnd M id~i1ht • COMING ROBERT GOULET July! thru 16 A1111ricl'1 Sr11111t V1e1tien Buy, For Re1ervat1o ns call : ZEnilh 9·9924 " Kings Castle Like Tahoe/Na~ada (702)831·1111 So sh e set up the Irene Ryan Foundation. Thirteen annual scholarships of $500 each will go !o winning performers in as many regional competitions. Two 12,000 scholarships will be for top perfonners among regional winners. Competitio:-: will be in con· neclion v.·ith the American I College Theater Fe s l iv a 1 ·I sponsored by \Vashington's John F Kennedy Center for! the Performing Arts and the Smithsonia n Institution. ' The fourth annual festival will be held In Washington next spring. Miss Ryan v.·on'l be among the Judges awarding her scholarships. i\®ti"~:A'TJ ''FREE FORM . • II'' "' .. PER FORMANCES , 7,30 P.M. & 9,30 P.M. RATED I G I All Seatl S2.SO The scholarship idea oc· curred when shl" recentll'll~=======~~iiiiil madt out her v.•ill. five feet i - - and 98 poun<ls, pink-faced with A haln nf fluffv li~ht·brnwn hair. she ~·nn'I tfll her agr bul admi ti; to 54 years in show business She never ~nt heynncl the l"ighth grade. Bnrn Ircne l Nnhlrlte ln El Pa~n. the daughter of an A rm v sergea~t, s~c wa~ rearc<l in I San f i:<l!!Cli>cn. A nrie;hbor hea ·d hl':F'°"rtildish backyard I sin~ing :ind entered her In an 11marrur con1esl in v.·hich she v.·on tht s:i first prize She madt' her professional debut in ·1917 as a ~2tT·a·v.'eek member or the chorus in a Sacrame:ntn amusement park stock company. ,REMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT " }'! " ;' . ·.11 . ' . FROM HERMA.N RAUCHER'S NATIONAL A Robert Mu!ligan/Richard A. Roth Production BEST SELLER JENNIFER O'NEILL• GARY GRIMES• JERRY HOUSER• OLIVER CO Wrlttt" by Procfuo9d by NAHT HERMAN RAUCHER RICHARD A. ROTH ROBE~;-::L byLIGA" Ml M11t6e by , " CHEL LEGRAND The .:omolete 90Ulld l•Jek l'l'tllsic by Michel L'9f..,d 1W.ll1bl1J 0" W1rllt'l'8ro..111CQrd9 TfC~OlOfl e /R!-..::.~=--J lrom w.,.... Bros. AKrnlllJYLe•S1He ~ PREMIER ENGAGEMENT · NOW AT All 3 THEATRES - -.Ii:-__ : . . --.. -:.--;-----,. .. --~~~,..---.. ····-··.:,._._-....... -..-.,~--\ --l-G.<--· -,_, -• Jo., " '· -·- .. • Tutsd;iy, Jlll.Y ~. 1971 , .. DAIL V P)Li:IT· Q Violence Rages on - -and on By RICK OU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) 'l'hett art ctrtain .things J ez. peel to go thniugh life without ever knowing about. One of them ia Gloria De Haven's telephone number. A(lother is televilloll vK>lent>e. Beyond knowir.g that there is indeed mayhem on the U.S .. Tops Survey home 3creen, and that it un- doubtedly affects 90me Pf'Ople one way · and some other ~ pie another, I really don'l e1- pect to leam anything definitive about it. There are periodic reports, arnt periodic aWdies . and periodic statt,Ues -and pro.. bably everyorle agrees that too .. tnuch violence in children's shows is not desirable -but lnevitabjy aU this comes down llmes wbeii it can be en-- tertaining a.imply for itJ pro- fe ssional excellence a1 a film endeavor (note "The Untouchables"). But mediQCri• ty is unsufferable under any conditions . Lack of Youth Shows Cited to individual interprelat.ion, and just horse sense in many cases. I was at the home of some friends on a recent Saturday morning, and I wondered whether their little son got more upset from the violent video cartoor. he was watchinC or from hearing the nasty bickering of his parents acrOlls the breakfast table. I don't kno1•1'. It was just a thought. Havi1ig n Boll By JERRY BUCK NEW YORK I AP) TiiomM P. F. Hoving say!! lhat an international survey of television shows the United States is the only major coun- try in the free world that does not carry weekday afternoon progran1s for children. Hoving, al a news con- fe rence at the Hotel Biltmore. said a survey showed that this country alone confines its children's shows to Saturday morning. He is nat ion al chairman of the National Citizens Committee for Broad- casting, which conducted the study. director of the Metropolitan Museum (If Art. He said the ·Study found more commercials and less in- fo rmational co n ten t in American programs f or children than in programs in Western Europe, Australia, Cafiada and Japan. The contents of the survey will be turned nver to the F e d e r a I Communications Commission, along with a peti- tion supporting the pe tition ef Act.ion for Chil d ren's Television. ~1argie Ca te (center) leads a group of inmates in revelry in a scene from "The Curious Savage" at the Long Beach C ommunily Playhouse. Participants (from left) are An n FUian , Anthony Castle, Diana Cameron, Robert Bailey and Pris- cilla Furjanick. The comedy runs Fridays and Sa turdays through July. ,;The United States devotes the least 'ime to children 's television -a stunning and shocking thing t(I have to say," said Hoving. who also is The ACT petition asks the FCC to require stations to broadcast 14 hours o f children's pro.ii:rams a week and to eliminate all com· merc1als in children 's shows. Hoving said H wai> the first survey ever undertaken to , ~ -••·-A f<OW•Ott>W.~OCH ••od,,.1 ...... _, l'fAllU "1.AITllAU •TM ~£!l$1MOH "'IJ'. ·-l:ruu $111Tl'I ¥llllll }UIAllA 111 SJAPUlllll \ARRll pAMl' _....,,,,.._,.. >tl.IJ~ .._, '*l l"'O'l '-•• "°"""'°W l\OC;H •-• -._, -~ ·~ ·-~ .. -..... ft 2ND-AT NEWPORT. 2ND AT eui'NA-PARK Water atthau Jack Lemmon " Elaine Mav A_new Lear:. ~ "" 01 01 r.10, ~~r,B ,G -If you thought "SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SHERIF F" was funny "GUNFIGHTER" will kill you! I O(l:J.[( tmioll ~ JIMllS SUZllll QIUD / l'LllBWHi "svnaBT !CUI LOW @U!fif8&iHl~I· • -HARRY IOIGAH ~ Blii.IIU · Jllt lltHHtR HE~ .IJll[S MAii[ l\1HOSllll ft JICK llJM -.Y!ILUIM flj)(GIH ,...,...,JAl.IES EOWAAD &RAH! _.,BURl KENMEOY Cll.DI • _. IG[ ~·,,::::.:•-? Un111il •l'f1111 ALSO P'lAYING lrl1111 W..lth 1111d Ooril .D11y "WITH SIX YOU GET EGGROLL" ~I I fllus-"P~EnY r "AIDS ALL IN A ROW" ~ if.!.!-- ..... -:.---. -- i=:~~~~~~~~il1~~-.N~Al-Tn1-0o~N~A~L:-GGEENNEERRAALL~TnHiiEEiAl-TnRttE~S:-~~ lftdo "llW,OU 11.&Cll •• ., t~t ••"•- •• !oO.lo•• l"• lolo •• Ol. )·•l lO At fl.t"t111ar Prle•• fl!'IW(Ufl l'(MIS lt{~MIO Ali Mac6raw • Ryan O'Neil & Ray Milland L JOE COCKER "MAO DOGS ANO ENGLISHMEN" IN FULL STEREOPHONIC SOUND plu1 "PRETTY MAIDS All IN A ROW" ) Also · ''WHEN Dinosaurs RULED THE EARTH" (G). ~uoi. ltyn fri. :Ape~;' 12:15 , 3:45, 7:15, H}4() '01!\0 2,00. 5:30, 9:00 ......... ....... .... c .. ..,._ 111•1•••·eOIL S<i1. Only ~Ape'" 3:30, 7:00, 10:30 "Otl'IO" 1:45, 5:15. 8:45 222~.i Exclusive Engogemen!·Showing Now !! ~•not .. •D•..S '""•'• '"'''· -I•• >1>i" --.. -~ .. -···~-............ - strip we ran here in the DAILY PILOT on ,. Mey 10. We can't tell who th• winner is until '•1-'. wt read all the letters that came in from all ~ 1 over the United States. There were literally thousands of them. :'\' ..... ·') ~·,,,,.. Just keep watching the DAILY PILOT • --·~==-·~-·· ------"--, Like politics. &ex 11 n d rehgion, television violence compare children's television seems destined to be an he.re with that shown in unsolvable matter in the sense foreign countries. that it is many things to many The survey revealed that the people. United States is the only non· It is also a very boring sub- Communist country, besides ject. really, once the obvious Finland. that doe s not have fact is stated that television afternoon shows for children. would be better off with the The U.S . networks also permit least possible amount of un- 16 minutes of commercials per necessary violence. hour. which is twice the max-There are other vide.o mat- imum permitted to any ether ters probably more worth country surveyed. being concerned about. For The deadline for submission instance. the si mple fact of its of supporting documents to the generally mediocrity as an ACT petition is Friday. There e n.te rt a i l\lTlent medium. 1va~ no indication from the Violence can be creative and F'CC when a ruling would be have a point (note "Bonnie forthcoming . and Clyde"), and there are ~~~~~~~~~ My 6-year-old daughter is allowed to watch virtually anything she wants on television. Like everyone else, J"d like better programs, but l don't figure it's video 1 1 responsibility to rai5e her anyway. I may criticize the boys at t:he networks for a lot of things, but I don't think it is written anywhere that they are to be held responsible for bringing up children. It seems to me that task lies elsewhere, a little closer to home. ORGlll8 Q \2) .. .... , ...... _,,, ......... ,.. ....... _......; ......... ., ... -.,<"" .... " ..... ,.,,. ;, . ., ...... _ ........... ~.,, •. ., .. jo,_..,., ... .1 ' __ .,_, __ , .. _,.,_,_..,, ....................... ~~·· ......... , .. ,,, ow-. ............ ' ••• -.. ~ryoo..o• ............ ~ .. ..,, •• -=='~. CINIDOMI 20 A1.o LINCOlN DRIVllN _.,,. P•ul ,.._,,,,,, 111 "alllt:Wl'l'l!ll McCLOU!l"" "(1001,. HAH!) LUICI" ORA.NGI Bo• Office Ope~ 5 lC 08,1,, BUENA. P'ARK Optn 11u lh-a •t ~ 5Jt.)Jll 5]7.Jll) Joseph E. LeVlne presents a Mike Nichols Film .s1arnn-J Jack N1chol3.oii ·Candice Bergen~ 'o' ~ ' 0 u 'E ~ u !" c " i5 ~ c m Mike Nichols the producer and dirtttor of ''Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolff?" "The Graduate " "Catch 22" NOW! Gives You 1 leuon in l ife (}t's Funny -Funny . Funny!) from College D1ys to Now! witlf "E1sy Rider" and·"Fiv& E1sy Pieces" st:r Jack Nicholson Candice Bergen Arthur Garfunkel Ann -Margret "' " "-c 0 r !!. > 0 i' ;:: " '° fil 5" <i " 3 !!?. "' i ~ Q. "' .. , ~. ;; :0 ~ i;7 ;:: ~ ~ 0 1 l 0 l Jules Feiffer ~ ~~~ ~ ~-CR 0 ""-·==-.., ii:. ~---eu!A91 3 i.tdasor Ja:>nPOJd aAf\n::ia·,3, 1a1pa;:1 sa1nr Aq_uaJJ~M. uiQ1As PJP~~!I::! Jeu51~ g . . . EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT · STARTS WEDNESDAY JULY 7 • l I I I " . .· 30 OAILY PI LOT Mond.t:f, July S, 11)71 OAIL Y PILOT f3 Everyone Hos Something Th et Someone Else W onls DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell II, I Find It, Trade It With e Wont Ad ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results ~[ ___ ....... ~J~~1--....... -~1~;;;e :;.;;;;[ -~'""";;;l;;;;;~;1 1111! ;;;;;;;"""";;;;'";;;;;;;;"'" ;;.;;l~;;;;l;;;-;;;';;;" ... ;;;;I;;;;~ I _,,,... 1~1.;;I ;;; __ ,,. ... ~l~;;,:l;;;-;;;"';;; ... ~l~~e I _....... I~ Generel Gen•rol ; General Gtint:ral General General Gtintr1I General General liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir I 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;o;=:;;;;;;;;;;;:.1 LYo~~.EDEN MATT LA BORDE, Rea tor DELUXE //"4tUe-Slltid !'~.~~~~~~~,:;,~:.,~ ll.111 E1tolo. 415.4000. 1441 E. Co11I Hiqhw1y Coro~• d1 I M11, C1tifo•n j• BA CK JN BUS INESS Remember when UNIQUE was "sold out" of listings? Well, no mo rel This highly s.uccessful firm is back in business and marketing these very un ique properties (bu t it won't be long h.- fore they're 1old tool BLUFFS BAR GAIN Jmma('utatP. l hrlr, Z11 bath, FOUR PLEX '"'' "''""'-"'~''" lam!ly PRIVATE SWIMMING HOLE modol. fmm<d . occupancy. f"l'Ylm \\ 11h c:harmtng use-rt Gleaming BLUE H.>\ VEN HEATED Af\TD Fii.,. A.•.-•• 1 Aakinc .•• hnl'll !trl'place, fonnal rltn· 1..nc:ated on CORIANDER '?"""'.,,,.,,.,... U•.IJ<IOWtm $22 ,950 in& rmm. r.i an l r u red TE RED POOL \\ith complete privacy and ST. _ lge carnPr lot v.•/ Janrl~r;i ptng ,,..11r, .sprinkler loads of decking. 2300 Sq. Ft. beautiful MESA park.like a rmosphere. ln- !ystl"ni Loea!Pd 111 hnPs! DEL ?\1AR FOU R BDRM .. Th ree Bath home come $700 rno. Hunl ll'l gton BE' a ch \1rith large Den, Formal Din. Rm .. Bkfst. Rm. IDEAL TAX SHELTER neighhormod. cloSP to an d immaculate Elect. Kit. with lots of cal>-t Oo/o DOWN IJ('afh. i;rhoo!!> &: !>hoppmg. inets. Close to 1'ewi nkle Pa rk, C."\'fl~OLIC $69,950 Pncf' S41,900. Phone CHURCH. public and parochial schools and ;,..i6.-2Jl3 for appointment to O.C.C. Owner moving East and will sacrifice f>E'" his home $5,000 under comparable homes. HOME MU ST BE SOLO l I Its nearly new & sho"'5 like a model iloml". ldeaJ loca· oon • tlE'ar schools & ,;h<>p· ping Perteet !or nr"'' or gro1•·1ng family. "'1th J BR. 8,, 2 Ba All lenced f<:ir pri- vacy. Don 't hesiratE'. it's only $39.900. ......... Coldwell.Banker FULL PRICE ONLY S41 ,950·Can be seen any time. CHARM PERSONIFIED Harmonious color scheme throughout. If you're tired of looking, let us sho'v you this immaculate Four Bdrm .. Fam. Rm .. Two Bath home \vith gleaming carpeted electric kitchen . Double garage. breeze \vay. well landscaped including planters. Top MES.A. VE RDE location at a price you can not pass up-only $42,950 , with l Oo/c down . Newport •I F•irview 646·881 l (anytime) WHY WAIT for WESTCLIFF \'ou Cllll have it no"'· lor only 563.900. ChE'ck m~~ tea- 1ures: •2500 i;q 11. on on~ floor •~ bedrooiru, 1.amlly room, dining room, snJ.dy, :Z~ baths t:Se1~·1ng room e Scpara1e 111.undry REALTORS 644-7270 SWIM YOU SWIMMERS In your own heated. filtered POOL you'U want to drop anchor in this sharp family designed 3 BR. 2 Ba home with its lovely fpl, family rm. bujl lin ki t'th. The price isn't fi!hy. A good buy al $33,950. BUZZ-BUZZ-BUZZ Corona del Mar Home & Apt Thrtt to choose from. Lr&: 4 b1 tri-level horn" + 1 bf apt. 10% down. $63,500 I 2 I 4-Plexes f\fesa del Mar units in beauti- ful conn. $1ill<a monthly in- c:om,. 15,.,o down, Call tor appt. to~. $105,000 642-1771 Anytime Recreation Room !Pool Table Size) Formerly $38.500, now $34,950. And it's sup· er! Sunny 3 bedroom Condominium first steps to the pool "'ith plenty of greenbelt and all on one floor. New shag in spacious liv!ng roo m. Hard-to-find bargain in hard to fmd location. Open Saturd ay 1 to Sat 2005 Barran· ca . It's only S34,950. lif you can find il 1 ) .......... I 1833-0700 644-2430 UPPER BAY CONDOMINIUM Roomy Three Bdrm., Two Bath, Din. Rm ., Elect. Kit. and private patio. Enjoy the SWTM MlNG POOLS . badminton courts, put· ting greens and beautifully maintained lanrl- scaping for only $47 a month. Priced below com parable condominiums -let us sho\v you this one. e Lo1 63xll0xl03xll4 v.'irh accesi; for boat e G11s tog. TV antenna, re- main~ Even if you're bu sy as a bee, you should buzz over to see these very desirable 8 units. locat· ed south of the highway in CdM . You can't get stung at $127,000. Look 111 !hi11 one & you'll be compelled lo agree with us that H's abou1 the i;h.arpest & most tas1elully decorated home around. 4 hdr, 37' barh. formal rt 1n1ng room. fa mily mr.im. & .. firepl1. The 4Lh hrlr with a large recrea· tion rnom !pool table i;uel 111 stg.aralE'd from the ma.in living quarters & has its Oll'n h111h. Profc~i;1onally CAMEO CL EAN Thi s hand is so clean it's sterile! Almost antiseptic! Nice big lot. huge brick fireplace thal covers one wall of the living room. del P iso tile entry and lots of storage. Pop in this one -it just might light your fire. Open Saturday 1 to 5 at 4600 Cortland. CdM . HE IGHT'S HOUSE Brand nP.v.• construction. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 3 car garage and 127' lot Cute shingle and shutlers on the front and big old tree in the ba ck . Don't miss th is one. it's something unique -if you are'. Open Sat. & Sun. 1 to 5 at 51 1 Tustin Ave .. Newport Heigh ts. * HAPPY BIRTHDAY USA * R11t E,,1111. 675·6000. 2441 E. Coe•+ Hi9hw1y, Core>n ~ del Mir, C11!fornio 9J625 General General The Olson family has a lovely 4 br home they must leave due to \vork transfer. Your family could be the luc ky ones lo own 1t next Let us show you 3093 1iiade1ra; spacious rooms & a beaut backyard w/privacy. assumable 5\fi,...,.. loan. $34.500 . "rnes-cf\~r6c:Rca(~ 2850 Me•• Verde Dr. • Cost• Mesa • Phone 546-5990 General I General 1~~~~~~~~,~ Macnab-Irvine Realty C.Ompany Spectacular -New I van Wells Model Visll this outstanrltng 11r1v Ivan \Velis :O.ll'ldl"J Hrimr, Breathtaking view, beau!l- fU! flOO'l . 5 BR's. 5 baths, luxurious FR w/"'et bar, formal DR. OPE~ DAILY - 2006 Gala..>;;.-. Do\·er Shore~. Macnab-Irvine 642-823S 67S.3210 --T-RE E-LI NED BEAU TY !fl co~l;i :i.1e~3. 3 bel'hYYln1 1 us ramlly Room. "HA RD· \VOOD" floors that sparkle. J luxurioui; bath~. Pa.rk-!1ke yard JUS! ~at for Cal1for- ni.a l1v1ng. Appra1sE'rl and ready tri r. e I J a! S2~.9.)ll VETS /\'o Down and mini. murr dov.•n 1n ntA. A:-.x. IOUS~ Walker & Lee :2790 H;irhor Blvd at Adams -,,.1:r:H~l 0rlf'n '111 9 P~f $24,000 4 Bdrm & Den HOME AND HOBBY Newly decorated and carpeted Three Bdrm .. Two Bath home with double garage plus all purpose worksho p-hobby room_ addition. See il and you'll believe. A bargaJn at $25.950, v.1lh FHA, VA terms. • REDUCED $2,000 EASTSIDE COSTA MESA , Three Bdrm .. Two Bath. Fireplace, Alley Access. THE F ~1.ITL Y R00~1-You will just have to see to bel1eve- Not to mention the elevated, COVERED PA· TIO. CaJJ for an appointm ent no1\1• Priced right at only $29.950. MESA VERDE FUN AND FORMAL Eleganl Li ving Room . Dining Ar.ea. each "'ith its own fireplace, accents fun time. P~neled Fam. Rm . with connecting covered patio !fol' your pool table.) Corner lot. ea~y care yard, top ne ighborhood. Do you require many ex· tras and move in condition? Then call no\\'- reduced to sell at only $34.950. !SALESMEN NEEDED l e A riE'l 1ght '" see and OY.'fl •Call S.16-2313 Macnab-Irvine Realty Company UNIVERSITY PARK 'S BEST BUY ~!1ghtlul 2.sror.v cath!'dra.I l·e1J1ng LR. 4 en·~ -rn - DR. "'allonc dts1anc" 10 ~hop~. p n n I, greenhi>Jr, srhrx:il. frrp11'ay & g o ! f rQUr~r. Drivr pas! l~O.i2 No r!Qll, /r1·1nP. Ca.JI Sn-.3210 !or ;ipp1. Ov.•nrri; say "sell now'·. $.17 .~. Macnab-Irvine 642·8235 67S.3210 INCOME - COMMERCIAL LOTS 73'll.360' • Harbor Blvd. Com- 646•0555 I mmi•I. Str<e! " "'"of pm!}t'rty also. A Bargain ar $7:1.000 220 E. Seventeenth St. 21' i Arri>s. Oceanside_ re- ( E. 17th St. Shopping Ctr.) s1r1r1ed rei;1rl~nrial arijarenr -1: ,,.. "68 COSTA MESA rn EL CAMINO COUNTRY MU.,.£4 .-CLUB. $109.500, Ol"'ntr Y.'ill EVEN INGS CALL 645-0 133 OR 646-1579 ca,,,,. G I G.n.'.I Family Rm & 3 ba ths 1::.•:;".::":.:'.:•:....--------------::0::-: O"·nrr !ransferrPrl' Entry hall , d1n1ng rm. f1rPplarP nf na tural bnck, .1 'riath lacd· ily. h111lt-1ns, ('lp<'n Id 9 P;ll :-..10.17~'1 TARBELL 1720 Har bo r Need a Dormitory? Thi~ unu!uall.~· sh11rp, !rrshly pa1nr"ri homP l!as thrP" loi\'f'lv 1'1-rlrnom" ()np nf \\'hLC'h l~ hll:O:f' a.p. pro:\1tnil!PI,\ :.'fl ' 2.~'. ~f'" hn1• rh 1~ rnnm "a~ arl;iplo>rl tn ;io'rn111rnl'Yl1tr lnllr ~\~ ThP IYimP ·~ 11\Rny !<•,11urr~ a!~n inrtnd" ~ r111i::~1nnf' pa11n .t1nrl h,1ilt -111 h:irhPr\J" Plt.'l ~P rail ·.,.11>-2~r: fnr an 11ppn1nln1f'11I Sl,,!J()O * * * * * TAYLOR CO. DOVER SHORES -s•s.ooo T\e'\' offering'. Beautiful custom built home hy one of the finest builders in the area. Spa- ciou!i' 4 berlrml'i. fami ly rm w/sunken wet bar & for1nal din i n~ rm. l·leavy sh<1 kr roof. in· tcre,..11ng LR r{'1\Jng & :l-c<ir j:ar Sn1arL de- cor & panoramic \'U . 2 \'e;:irs ne\\', "Ou r 26th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 $an Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTE R 644-491 0 General EX ECUT IVE HOME HARBOR VIEW HOMES SWEEPING VIEW from all the many bay \vindows · 5,000 sq ft of custom features, 5 bedrm. 5 deluxe pull- man baths. gracious forma l din. rm., gourmet kitchen. fam . rm. 4 car gar -owner says seU: Call for appointment and terms. $1.69,000 . MR. EXECUTIVE ON YOUR WAY UP? Then move up to better living in th is grand l and spacious 12400 sq ft) 4 bedrm .. fam . rm home. \vith its 21f2 Ba, beaut firepl. great family k1tch. xt ras galore. Park-like ldscpg. IA. f!l'J\\'er lover's dream ). Priced to sell $62.000. HELP-HELP Q\\'ner mu.sl sell 5 bedrm. 2 story, 21h Ba, family home. enjoy formal din. rm . 2 fpl's., just a "9-iroa" from country club. Vacant, im· med occlipancy. Lease-option. Low do"'n Call before this home is gone. $49,950.00. 644-n7o //"4tue-SHdd ~I ... •-•m/REALTORS 8 General (Form•rly Oel•nc y Real Est1 te) 2828 EAST COAST HWY . CORONA DEL MAR , CAL IF. ------------Ganer al LINDA ISLE BA YFRONT Spectacular contemporary home facing Har- bor ls!and "''ith pier & slip for large yacht. 3 Bedrnomi::. 3 baths, formal dining room: bay- s1de fa1n1ly room opens onto .spacious terrace. Excellent location on exclusive Linda Isle. $225,000. IRVINE TERRACE -VIEW l.11vclv Ba \'arlere Terrace home v.•ith fabu- lou!'. ·pannfam1r vie11·. 4 Bedrooms. 4 baths: fan1i!y rnnm \\'Ith prof es~ bar. Formal dining ron1n 11·11h candle.!1ght vicv.· Nicely land- sca ped yard. SIS0,000 . HARBOR VIEW HILLS r·~n von v1ev.1 Lu sk bu il t home with spacious, encl'osrd yard 3 Bedrooms, 21ri baths; fami· ly room & firepla ce: sunny kitchen \\'ith breakfast room $57 .300. MEDICAL SUITE RENTAL 111nd~c1tll('rl I.:. <leMrated.. _ Newpor1 Btach fPe land In · • r!('gant ni>w 1:1rP11.. Priai • · $61.900. Cal! s.16-2313. 1-o·THEREAL \'."'\._ ESTATERS ' '"' ' '""' . "' CdM LUSK 3 BDRM. HOME O\l·ner IE'aving r.ountry & thGI darling homt mus! SPIL Sun· ny k11rh. &· f;imlly rm., "''llh i:!'E'i'll patio & ganiPn .. 1 Car gar. 20% Do\1•n. S6:2.9SO ...... 833-0700 644-2430 CLIFFHAVEN JUST LISTED 3 Bed rms. in gre11t area. for young family -and youn&: budgrt $29,~. Pate Barrett Realty 642-SlOO CAMEO HI GH LA NDS Wnh v1r w all Around. 3 BR, .l Bf'arht.c: with kry a~s. 8f'aUt , b~rzy t.· clean 115 11 ll'h1~tlf'' S!fi.~.10 Home Show Realtors ''A!'mrh~•I' ll n1 r<rhun11n.:'' 3J3j r:. Co;i<I llw_1 , crt,\f 67S.7225 L YONS'~D=E=N~ AVAI LABLE ! Th" Lyon~ ha1·" mn\trl fl) Ch1ra'l'n anrl yn•1 (';in own !h P lf hf'illJl!fU) "Rint1t·r11nrlf'rl rlrn "'l!h rharm111g usrd hr1rk l1rrplnrP. plus ·i h<>d1.,.,,,ni~, :2'; h111h.• <1nrl lorn111! r11111ni: t'f'r\rn Thi~ n<ime 1~ P~-• ·· trrmPly cJi>11n ;i nrt sharp :: lhroni:hou l, ~11l1a!C'lf i n rhnicr !or11t1on, prrsflgt Of'1~hhorhoort. Pnrr rrrtured That's Whero It's At! PRIVAT E , General SWIMMIN G HOLE Gle.tmlnr BLUE HA VEN' HEATED AND FILTERED POOL v.nh romple<e pr1v- 11.ry and loads of decking. 2300 Sq. Fr. ~.;iurifUJ MESA DEL MAR FOUR BDR.\l, ThN'e 811th home .... ;th la.!'ie I De:n. f''ormal Din, Rm .. Bkl!.1 Rm. t111d 1mmacu· I la1e Elect. i.;lf, .... ·1rh Jou of cabinets. Clo~ to T~\V1nkle P.trk. CATifOLICCHURCH, public and paroch1:tl sthools 11.nd 0 C.C. o .... ·~r mov1nr Ea~t ;11nd W1ll u rrifict> his horn~ ~.CXXI under compar- able homes. FULL PRICE ONLY $41.950 ~ Cl.n be seen anytlmf'. · MOV ING EAST :i.1u~1 ~I! beau11f1J) 4 hrirm in prt'slit;e ar~a or ~~"·port 1 8('arh. Ult 141-...:122. Drapes &. rarptls hkf' nP"'· buUt·ln v;ir1u1m 11n1t. 1mprr~~il't r nn·~. r lf'r1rw c;iral!f' rlnnr, 4 h1J;:r hrdn"V>nls .. 1 ~lf'f'· down h11Th~. A:-:n rhr nl\'nrr \~ an>;1n11.c:. f'111! now anrl makf' :ynur otfrr. A ~i;11nf1(', pri\'i'LIP h;irk yarrl 1~ rh .. nut<l11nri1n1:; ff'11IU[" nf !ht< hrllul\lul hnmP Lor11rr,.; nn a f!tll"I rul.,lf'-~ar ~tr,,,.1 \llth 11 p1'nfr,~1nn 11ll y l~11rl>C11prrl trnnl .1~rrl rh1.: h11n1e prr."Wn!s a n 1111- prl'S&l\'P 1m11gP 3 bi>r\t'f\001~. :Z h11lh~. !11 mlly mom. rl in1ng room. 11:ourmel kllrhC'n 11·11 h s"tl-<lcan1n1?, rJ\'Pn. cnm· mun11y p;1rk and swim cluh- \\'hsl mnre roulrl ynu 11~k !or $42,800: Call 673-8530. 900 Sq . ft., includes 3 examining rms .. busi· ness office. reception rm. & la b. Plenty of parking. $360 per month. to $41 ,!IOO. for rapid salt- PhonP ~6-231 3 for art- On the baytront W'lth a vt~''' th.at "·on t qwt and a l>harly bf'ach to puU your r;;maJI boot up on or bask in the sun your5elf. 3 bedrooms. 31, barhr. bea ut1 f ully redtt0r11!ed -hvini room. formal dining r on n1 . hreaJda1ot room k sunny ki!ch~n a.II on the bay \\'atch the passing hoats in the .)f!lfy a.nd My. All lh1~ ooup!E'tl "''l!b 11 pro~r ~tudy "''1th "'el bar and f1rep l11.re Private patio $164,CXXI. Call 673-8550. 'O THE REAL ''"\.. ESTATERS $24,950 5 Bclrms 1 O•n & F•mlly Rm 220 E.17t~ Charmin1 ho~. Prime lo-ca ti.on IJ'I flne r@&1denti.tl Ev~nincs c.an 646--079 section. Hua:e family rm. DJVORCE fortt• reduction built-in n.na:e & own, Iott· ot S2.75(1 In price, executiw- co... air heatin& unit, natura.J I iw11hbornood. 3 queen-1iz.ed wood . 1blneu. flttplace. ~rooms. IM!eluded patio Ir brk. optn bl 9 PM. 54(1.Jn'J yard plu~ 111 fpnng, VA No TARBELL 2955 Ha rbor down, S?JJXXl tora.J. Broker ......... 2 BR 11'2 ha. mndo wfl~ petlO & tlbl a;ar 11.; F-11 . to BACK BAY-NEwPORT ~an. Hunt Bch. EZ down fCharrrtil'\l J BR, 2 Be home: p;.:;;;::;;;:;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;:;;;::;;;:=;11.t. POOi .. In f{\p toc..i r1on 1n B<tyrrr~T . T1p-tnp niovf'·1n rnnrt11111n Fnrm;il rl1n1ng rm. -11 ~ R;iths. $92,j()() . rORISI E OlSO~ "' RE A lTOR S OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Walker & Lee I ACRE RANCH COLON IAL '2l'M:t \\·e str11fl Dn\''! l l l ·OlOO 644-24l0 646-1711 Open 'ti! 9 P.\I 4 + DEN T 4 BA l :""...,':""""'""'""'"""'-IC'!l 642-567' Now! "HORSES" --!General Gen•ral Unhelievable~ Qultt trtt 1 Uned St. lo thts gor&e· OU!! "Old '-''OT]d C.h&rm· er." 4 mai;sivf' bedrooma: + hu&" pan~lf!d family room! 25 picture ""in- dow In ltving ronm ""ith unique firepla~. Wge 250 Ml· ft dream kitch- e n. \l/a)I of glaas OPf'nS \o e lcv11.led patio '-''llh ll~{'tacular view. Zoned tor hors~a. Truly 11. show-1 p\11,._. Grr111t 11.ren fnr chlldrl!'n. ?..1ust sell quick. 0 I AL 64>4303 I llRISI l OL\O\ " R f /f l 1 0 ~~ CAN'T FIND A HOME? TIRED Of LOOKING? Let us shov1 you the easy "''ay to buy your ne\v home v.'1th closed circuit TV. (~~; .~ ... ·-· HO~IE SHOW REALTORS 3535 E.t c...t Higbw•y Corona dd Mar whert• honlt.' h11 yint1 t~ .1 ple.i..,~nr payt In li11"'%. FHA loan . I l)n Q'Ul"t cul-"f'-~11(' Gooc1 2299 H11 rbor. Cmta Me.c:11. ~767 own/q:t. ltrms O"•nf'r MS-94n . I!_"--!!!!-"'"-"-"-,..._""'""""' ------------------ phOllt' 675-7225 • • BRICK and SHAKE l.aVl!'ih u.'e <:ii bnck. 11nd " 1wttp1ng ~hake mot "'1ll rharm 1111that11>tt it. 4 BR. 2 BA. la.rge ("()\'eft"d p11110 n ·er lln'!pll, and !O!l.d!'i I.: I0<11ds of cu11tom featurn ~ C<'lll now to Me !his ucep. tion11l S3t!¥.Jo v11lue. Call ~.'i-8'12·1 (Opt'n ("\/~). G•naral HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS "SINCE 19~" 673-4400 Gen•ral Build•rs Attention I,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;.;;;.;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;~ I 1 dihonal inronnati'ln, CHARMING DOLL HOUSE on a QU lf'! trl't'linM cu!-de- Mr, on a hluH ovf'rloolong thf' OC:f'an. Beautifully 111.nd- IK'llPt'd, rhl1 3 Bdm1, plus f~m. mom. 2 Ba Home is dpror1uor rlttat!Nl 11 n rt rt':llrly In mnve 1ntn, M11,ny txtras includ. hrevy ir.take roof & cuslom &gN"ga'.e pa. no. NegtJ'-'<J amnng m.uiy eJC;M!nl.iv~ cu51om horn~ th~ is M!llllOnAbly prictd at $30.500. lo'.. 1 Blk. lo ocean, ('.ood / OPEN FOR VI EW ING I R-2 N'"''POrt Beach rumer of; J ~ 1 N"ntal are,11. S2!1.000. inda .1 11 Sat, Sun. ~ton 11-6 Cal1 : 673-3663 64-1-2639 Eves JJ6() Glrnea11:le5 Trrral'I!' 5 Bed,oom1 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES c.o, .. ·"'" ""''6·17 RI~. View nr lmy I ro m Uppt'r I •MESA VERDE. story: bltn~.: :211 i),'lth~. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT I A ;'I BR _ 7 B11ith home !or Be1tutltully !urn. $6.'.9;., 53 L ' d I I O I onlv S:Jl.(IOO. E,-ll••f --•. Ca.JI : 673-366.l fi1>MS6 Evp5. in a s e r ve rl!Ti~l"I and loc111~t1"j .. , ... ,w;; associated l!!IROKEA S-AEiAl TORS Z02S W lolboa 67J·l66] "\VEE'D 11 k ~afl" .. cltan Home on lagoon. 5 BR ., 4'h: ba., w/4 frpl cs.. .. .,.. Z' I b h. d n II d' bll)Ck rrom the llbtAry. Call Jacuz 1 u . 11w • rs .. sep. v. rm.. lJl. ....~ ~· f •-b kf t ,,. ...... ._113 for I.hf. !&CIA, rm.. a1n rm. '-"' r s . rm. . . . . $175.000 For complete inform1tlon on all hom•• & lots, pl•••• c•ll: \OTHE REAL '"\.. ESTATERS • '.. • ' ''f out the trea~u~s & trash -BIL L GRUND Y, REALTOR The. ll1tf's1 drA"" In the West · . • Dll ily Pilot Ciusifled Ad. &U-5678 him into c~Jh thru 11 D11 ilv 833 Dov•r Dr. Su ite 3 N 8 PUot Cla1slliM '"1. 642-56~ ' ' · ' - 642·4620 . -. .... _, ----' .... -.~~-·---4..._... ... __. ....... _. ........ L..--~-...... --· -""·· ..... <..~---..._,.-.... ---¥>---• '-• • I ~All V PILOT DAILV "LOT 31 ]~ l ~I !~1 [~--·-·-__,J~ .1 _,.... l ~ I. -. ........ l ~ r -··-l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ l ~I l~I --- Generi1I GeMr•I Gener•I 1--==~=======i~=-====-/-fl I () /} OLD WESTERN * * * * * * ol.,inda J:J{e DAYS PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES n""''" '" '1' '~'1 "'" "'-" 11.1th th11; hr&ulllul t':arly 72 Linda Isl• Drive 1'rad il1onal 6 BR .. 51fi ba. home on lagoon. \v/dock. l'"'urnished. decorated & lndscpd. 2 n1aster bdrn1 .. su iles. $200.000 For complete lnt orm1tion on 111 home~ & lot1, ple11e c;all: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dover Dr,, Suite 3, N. 8 . J Gener AI 642..4620 A111rr1rt1r1 llomP. 3 HUGI:: BEDROOMS 11nd balha in "(!flM' to Si'hool lil>!·a11'1n" 111 Mrsa Vrrdr. Lor~ ol rli·h \\!>Oii parif'll !nJ: anrl 11allpitper, all "''rapprd up in ou1su1ndtoi;: land$cap1n11: anrl a nra1 spl11 rail lrnrr SJl.950 TAYLOR CO. _ EXPANSION HOME -$57,500 This 4 bdrm., 3 ha., DR home on huge ~ite ASKS for enlargiog. Inviting 18 x 36 pool. Patio overlooks tropicaJ rear yard. "Our 26th Y ei1r" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hilla Roi1d NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 Coron. ct.I Mir Coat• Me ... Huntington &.ch HIDDEN Aw A y 1. BY OWNER...! '" ' "'· VETS! 16x3l poo4, 350 1<1 ft c11blina In a fornl -llkr tt"llin1i:. .,..llh .,.·/wet b&r, n>trla: ii 11 ba, Huntln;ton hi1ch BUYER'S MKT. !all lrl'tl> aod ll'llll o! I NO OOWNI lo 1 ti I •hare crpts, cuitom drp~, • \\'t arr 1n the rn!dst of • 11 ~nery ~" aM vr Y ;ip "~· new t"Ojiper pluinbir.a It buyet '11 markl!l, Nnw 11 the 80 un~,sua • ~ u cudfo ' m1n y mort cu 11tom NO COSJI. liml' tn f1nrl tha t horn< yfH.l .... molll f'Xp!"t'I lo ~ J I S40(0J 546-17~0 AOme "w'1'rolk" or a "rairy I ra urrs. ' · · you'vf' hrt"n thlnklnw; of. l.f't rln1 " 1111 you alanee nut of t;QVE'RNMEN1' R£PO FHA $1750 toto1I down u11 show you how t-a.11Jy you the window. Don't nils~ an I ln ~a.ut 11.rea . Stuu:p l BR, 1 $24.::ilXI, .l btodrooma , 2 baih, ( can gt>1 11! (lpporl unity In ~"'" this ha, ~ .R .• En<'J p&llo on hui;:e charrnf'r wi:h g!eamtng 1 893·8.").\1 uniqu,. rlup!rx 3 \x-droom pool-SJ 101 w/boat rate. Lo h11rrlwood ftoori; throughout, pl us Jr:UeBt arnl a 1 bedrwm down on VA !nan, s:n ,4.5!1. Block fcnc:ing 1n rear yarrl. 1 Real Estate unit ror $84 .roo. 1173-8:560. Wills Rtalty, ~7739· Cp!!I., drapt'S. l.11ndscapini;: By \0 THE REA!, \"'-ESTATERS Nf.:AR f~verythina:. 3 BR, :J + n11tny n1nre l'Xtra~. Call BA. Lg rel'" rm " kitchen. R42-445a. Optn '1il 9 Pf..!. Mc Vey Cvrd J"llio. Drp.~. cpts, w I k & L WALK TO """" ""'" '"·""· "'' a er ee ocEAN Chty~nnl". Orw'n II o u se Sa.t-Sun 64&-70.i6 11t1 5. \ Realtors J BR + 2 BA 7682 Edingrr I ~ co,,ATS Gener•I \ G•ner•I --::------1-------. W WALLACE . Sweeping DOG K ENNELS REALTORS Room at the Top \_u_R_G_E_T_O_M_E_R_G_E_? I * DRIVE BY * Golf Club View HORSES -546-4141-(475 S Ft) Rl'~ponsible Nt>wport Re11lior OccanB1de of H"'Y· dellgh1lul AIG llALf ACRE -130 Fool (Open E venings) , q. • f'>:Pfl,nding bu~ines!I:. Will 2 bdrn1. wlspac. family COZY COTIAGE I '"" .. ,_..;,; .. 540-><40 522,950 Fro1n 1h{' g1anl ma.~trr btlr fronra~r .,11 pnvar{' road 1n ..,.,..,.....,!!!!''!!!'"!!!!!!!'"!!!...,,..\(harming 2 -.~tor y , :t buy est1:1blished olht·r In rm.: lot'I o/ pr1 v;1i1:.-y. Sl'ciud· ~u1lf'. Thts l>l'aut 1l11J llarbnr San1a ,\11<1. !!rights. Gonr1 1~ hr1Jroc11n~. l<1mily room and ( NP.,.•pon Costa Mesa Hun: f'd pauo "'/BBQ. 4;.i f<'t , lnL 2 BR. Jpl. enct patlO. dbl gar, N""" paint 1n & out, nf'W w/ amst"J illudio fl r work 11hnp, Spiral Staircase I w C8.rpc'l!t thruour. VACANT. 1-·n.111 lret>s, grape arbor.\ 2 Story CathcdraJ ('ntry 5 Bl!ln R IO. ni~ly ld9Cpd + Rkr. &-12--1816 he-clroo~ 3 Bath 3000 '~q l'OV'rl pauo. F'ull price ASTS,byowrtl"r.l hr,11.iha. 11, .1 l11; ~ar, htd t.· tl trd j sn.9.)() Submit.CaJIR-17-J~l \'1PI\' hnn1e ov('rlook ... h1i: T"o &lrm ft~cr upper '"i:h MESA VERDE -'.? M•hs _llUJ;!I' 19-:2:. MJm~us I Beach 0~ Tustin. w;11 pa; Loe. 111 231 Larkspur. call ,·1111yon C(lun!ry Cluh Tht1'k large Jam1ly room . fl('W $27,500 ro11111 -..uh 1'0~h plun1b1ng fl!ir prier _.. pm!crliori on for app·t. to Sf'{'. S:i7.soo. ~hag carpE'tS f'Vrryv.hC'rt' 1n. rouf. f<'nur hot°!>t.' corrals, inst11.llrrl for 11_rld1t1onal ha!h "'"~''"" b,,.,-... &· .......... ~,,,. MORGAN REAL TY I • II ' ~1 •1 !low many hon1r s rlCI you '--L II lh "' ".. a'""~~ ,.. ,,<. I r U•itng <1 ,, '" r & ~'~I 1.:ick morn a11d ~malt hay or wrt ...... r. ,-.scr rn1 nnr age, if Juslifil1d. lrlt>al rnr ,_673-6642 _____ 675-6459 frpl, w/w cpl!t, r/n, patio, pool, i;ep fonnaJ din rm w SEYMOUR REAL T h;iths. A s\lJlll.f'n ll\'111£ r1Y1n1 b;irn. This prnprrry 15 011r suppose thrrc af1' in f..teM Cnsla r..tcsa location. Pri!'f' "11h h11i.:~ l1rrplar r and uf lhr vr•"" fe1<' Jetr. And \lerrlf' unrlrr S~.500· \Vr $34.~. For 11rlr!1tional in-Realtor wishinf.: phll5r 11110 A BUILDER IS ..... dbl g1tr. $21.500. OPf>n blr1n china cabult'ts upgrarl-17 •ll Bra!'h Rlvrl ., lltgn Bch ', C'fiUrl1 3 11r1rl thr nier~1 of thr srnl! • tt"llrrmenr. Sl'nrl al! . 1u~lt'11n rlrapr~. Thr g1an1 .,.,hi1r a p1'1te!: Only $24 ,950 3 by far l!t thlll linlr lormallOJI call a-16-2.l\3. rl•'lails, in l'{)mplrir l'flnfl-IA rlrl'&mrr <>r . '.mposs1hle lamily roorn 1s Just nff a -&<' tins, rl .~ ..... '" ""' '"''''<<m"''' , dtrAm~ whn f'nv1:c;1on:c; bl'au- v•t"t'kt'nrlJ. 2220 Maple SL rd !hermo rlec1 btiin range 0p<'n 'Ill 9 PM :JRR. 11tiBA . CptJ. drp;:-& rlbl OVf'n, \Valk 111 panTry, hit-ins. t·rplr . Pool. rec. b1.i;: ra111 rn\ "'lhugr wall tn TRANSFERRED & ANXIOUS ' k' I ' ~ h sh<1!"pir .1 Brrtrooms. 2 _.,,,, " " ,. . , i:::iiurmf' 1 cirn ,. •••t h111hs, formal r11nlni;, pu .. I ronsu1iant. \Vr11e Class1f\rd ' ry + height. 'et~ Bulldt"r room. Assun111hle loan. By wall u~rd brick tlrrp!, 2 n1·rrlook A h r 11 u ! 1 f 11 11 y Ad •"<. 0 ,,,, p·,lo•, P.O. " .', p1·ac11ral m_an who ts I I • 1 k I I s1zrr! .vA.rf! anrl 10'. Down. ~ an< scap('" ia<' ·.vnrr "-11 l a For drtails -67l415,j(}. Bo" ljtj(), Costa f.1('S,l, Ca!1l. , qu1c ,lo rccognl"tr •.n op-ownrr. 54.9-0674.. Mastrr lx'd rn1s sunken Ro· 1n11n 1ub, 400 sQ It aundrt'k. Ass11m" existing 6'~ VA loa n ol $35.SOO. See today~ ' One yr11r nr"' tr1.lPvcl horn•, n1slo111 pat1'1 t.. lrils t'lf R ealtor1 -Associate1 9w26. portun11y and valuf' 111 thr prh·at·y. Call lor ;1r1 RP· New Licensees land <lf lhew h10 lots. Ir * ... * • 2 and ~ brd. huuse« 3.1.1 t.:11st in hr11utdul llunt1ng!nn Brllrh af'l"a "-"11h dt""ep sh11g r;irfl('r, \\"If{' sav<'r k1rchPn plus 1hrer car i;:-ar11ge, a~­ SUO\{' a $37.000 V,\ loan. Calt 00"'! 842.25,lJ. 1 po1ntn1cnt In 1•is11 a WOl'lrl rif Need ~evrral nrw niemhcr~ The Most -thi11 desrription ht~ you- l'Ornlorr . $.i:.!.900. CA l I on i;ta/f. Grcitt 1nr('n t1ve For The Least Call u~ las! while nur stllt.:r 21.111 St. Costa Mrsa l' I :146-21'1.J. program. Call for a pp't. . ,, . i~ n1oliva1rrl. $64 .500 . A Ha 41h To All 1Cnn:;u1rr lht:<i., A big t:.1400.~q. 673_8.'>fiO Ei·{'1 1:1F"'A' MC•1 0 1 'u'""s. 379 -1"'l_,· -PPY l 11. ~ 4 hrdroon1, <'Onve rt1bl'" · · CUTE 3 BR, 2 B:Ac.~,-.,-. -,-.,-.c. nice palin. assume $189. mo payls a t $24,!XXI. 64&-81.19. 1llJge ReJI EstJte "2-4471 ( r.r..) 546°1103 THE VIEW IS EXOTIC And thr prier 1~ right . llazf'J Dr .. overlooking L1 !- 1Je Corona Beach & !hr Ca -! n1ous "Arc-11 Rni·k", 2 Bdrms., 2 ha·~. l,\()U 011n the !artd\, rr11. \\"'Ilk 10 tllr hrarh. Pr11·e J11.~1 rrdut:erl to $69 .. "'ilO. 675-3000 Call for "Hnn1r~ Vn r l.1v1ng " M11gazu1r 4Nat1onnlly rl1s tr1bu1 N11 Dover Shore1 c-: HOPE GERRIE 1f r!{'n anrl la1nily runm hon1r R EPUBLIC"' FIXER UPPER REAL TY '"'" 3 """' '"" •h;og< "k" 11 rr~la11on shurrlr bo11rd IN County -VI NC. 1trr11, I $19,950 JS-THE PRICE \o ·THEREAL \"'-ESTATERS .. - \o 'THEREAL ~E~TATERS ha:c; 3 hN!ronn1s 2 bat hs .,., ...,1 * DUPLEX * c .r..t. No cnimmy lt>a1rhold room, 2 ha1h hnmt'. The Ye Who Enterta"in Choi<'r lni·a tion: Cornrr lo'l1 on [~ HA RBOR !!JGllLA:"DS 6'"-4400 6,15.3320 A I rourt, g:as har-~ut',1 hugt' for lh1g vrry !Ol't !y 3 bP1 . R qu1C't str!'t't. Luxunous 5 • . · • wrll t'o11stn.1ctrd play hous" -you n~·n. Appt<ox 26,IXXI liq. hrrlrooni. .l balh, laniily reatffi and f1!1crffi pool. &3J DQ\'cr Dr., NB ~ and a l!llwn thlll look5 hke Cus1nm bll. 2 bdrm. home fl . or apt. Zonf'd n.4 l1lnd . lo11n is hii;:h enough Jo l"'u clN·trir garagP rionr 01wn plu~ oldf'r 7 bdrm ff'llfal {'Rn 11ssum(' with paymenr!t rnon1, scparatP dining an-a, · 2-310RY 5IP11I, fantastic lhl" grttn~ 11t Pebble Beach. · · · Ot't.:an vit'w nn b I u r f. of II""_, nmnth, ~·hich in. Rnd a i::ourn1et i.:11, hrn_ I..01 er. ,,.-f'ar all Sl'hQol~ and 0111 • bargain of only $27 ,500 1n-$?$.JOO. Only 107.• Down. f..1any f'i'Ctra leaturt-s. 4a rt. t.1ndern 12 yr. ho1nt', r. P l., tlU,.... ha:c; room for you r boal anrl jor 1<hopp1ni:-Nrrd<: P\..~:N-l'l udf'~ ~huge bt.:rJrl'IOms, Call 673-8550. \o' .• Qu ick possess. Ollered gar. $29.995_ Sl9!15 dn, eludes all. Modrm built.in~. lra1lrr and pnnl Fanra~r 1c 1·y of work hut pr11·rd Oa•~ J',b,J .'• fa~tly rootn. 2 b111h~. loMc OS4RK,G150A.N REALTY 642-2991. dt'f'p h"p1l~ d i•11rrwt~.Do11~~0 landsc11J}l'rl ground~. II ynu ("flrrtingl_v al th<' LO\V, L \ ,·arrw1s & drapes thrnuoul QUINTARD R [ALTY ma!r ing rapP~. u " Thi ~ is 1h" borne lor you. Huge t"am1ly Living Room, anrl k1tchPn romple:i1. Plus ;i lov{'ly home with 4 hf!d· 1iJ0n• arn1 2'1 bia!hs, Onwn- 1uwn Hunll11>:-ton Be11.ch. Ronin l•'r h.-iar or 1r111ier. h;1vr II ta r;::e family !his J1gi1rr o! S2'l9.j0, Rr11;.r ti~ Pl.L'S (ll'f'r 2000 sq , IL No &73-6642 67S-64S9 IH:!-2991. w~aragplklO hoot. &Cal[ L hnnlj' I~ ~rl'al for thr k1rls. qui~k on lhl~ unr ~ ... a nll~lakr or n11spnnl, Brokrr CHOICE DUPLEX --.-PcR=10VcAcC=y~c.~-1 a er ee 0"1' •·"""'°· c.n 54"-23"· "'•-COlE""" -·~&ca -'"-"'''-"'_".__,""'"---1 EXECUTIVES'.'· I I •~'"' I 2 -2 Btdrno1n houSPs ln onr Cnntracror's lar1:r. ihnw 2700 !I bo Bl d • -'~~LT.9ff.,,s,,,,,,,, * BAYFRONJ * Onr nf th!' most popul.'lr! !IOuth-<1f-thl'-highw11.y lora-hon1 I', 11;11rrounrlrd hy ext!'n-1 ~">-0~· ~ vrl:.~\: r~:s Easily n1au1ta11\E'ft yard, G )'('11.l':<i olrl alld looks-L i k e nr"·· S411.JXJ. R42-Zi:5 . I Q ui c kPosse-,-,-io_n_ -•• I lion~. l<:xrrl!tnl incomr , 11nrl ~ivt' l11nrl Excrp1 ionaJ lJN-· · )., P"11 .il • -IT'S-A--SSUM_A_ B-LE. NEWPORT BEACH ~~u~~;1~~1t~'.n~.ivi;:; dilr~~~P~ r11n bt> srrn a1mos1 anytime. 1 CJR!'iTRUC'ri::n Vl ~:w. M11ny I 70A VA --.. .................. .., 1 Old er 7 bdrni w;pier & slip, hu1:r t11nu!y rm w1fpl & $4:i.950. Cal! 673-&:l50. ~x1 ra~. $169,:100. 5411-72~9 I O Lll rRI" 3 BR hon1r 11• rlf"l ~~r • An.vonec1:1.n1ake ovrr 6'• GI Sl '.!j,OOO .... ,.1 ha r, 4 Lrg BR! BrAu !. *Sy Owner 3 Bn~Drn & A~~u m11hlr loan$'l2,6.lll. Pa.v· 011 ron1rr ]QI, lam rn1, /pl, Assume VA Loan lf)an. Total 111!n1lh1y r11.vmls. Rich Irwin Realtor ld~i'pd ! Xlnt l01:! $~6.~:00. 1"11.m rm 2 hllih Blulf Vit>w ahlt> $210 rrr mo. 1nrl. 1ax-hr11u1 ld.~(·ri~. top Inc. $.11.:io<I BAY & BEACJ.I REALTY "" N11wpbrt Shares It's Where It's At! 1 3 RC'drooni 2 bath.~. crpf:c;, drps. fa ht., firrpJ, dish- 1• ~hr, bl1ns. lmmf'fl. occu- p:in('y. $2!1:,000 ..... $25.000 Gf 101111 s.18\ ui~·ludr-s 11\~f's F.: 111~. * 67S-6060 * Call M.'i-842.4 (open eve.~. 1 '2400 sq. It. O/l-f 2()42 G111axy. c~ &· 111~ . .1 Bedro01n. 2 ha1h, your lt'l'ms. brtler hurry! ~ ull pner 011 /hi s lar.i:r 3 __ ___ __ _ __ E t Bluff 2'~ yrs new, ga11; bl tin R/0, I a.i-().1)8 1193 8jJJ hrdrnnm .~· ran1il.v 1~ only STEPS TO BEACH CAMEO SHORES •1 plrn1y nl euphoard~. dsti-=>-• - ~11.~,oo j\IJ r'l1r110: 1nr1ur11ni.: ':l S1y. A-framt'. 1mmac.-. N"w ~ br, !> ba. 2 ~·t't ban, Custom Home ',,', .. ~~·11,1 ~00,.:-01,•,1.1d00,m',k1!.r,,",· Real Eit a te ~hakr rMI, h111l11n~ F.: l1N'-!'01111 Arrr.<1s In pools. lf'n-h.t·F ponl. $~ 500. 673-60:l1. "' .... " " pla1·r. ~"11!" srhnol~ 011 11111rt 11•~. ;\ BR. 2 balh:c;. $.1.1,'.IOO -C t M 1111rmr!t in rlu1111g rn1 ,, 11p- I! :vnu ha\'rn'1 ''1 ~1 tr!! 3 Bdrm. Home sirrr1. J111rry--C111J '."'1 0.)J:11 CA YWOOD REALTY -----' 01 • eia THE BLUFFS gradt'rl 1·rp1.!'. block 1-1•1dl, "'""fl('ll'I Shorr<; _v<IU hair 11 ((lpf'n f'\°('~ 1 6~116 v.•. r 11ast lh•·y., ~.B. CUTE AS -----------1 hi itar. lrg rn11.~11>r hrdrm by McVay ----------- OCEAN treat 1n s!nrr -1·h1<1 rh11rn1-1 1 ~ Bath. covrrrd p11nn, c-;i r-r;jjiijilji;~~~~ 548-1'290 A Bui;(~ f'ar! l.01.' nl !l'l't'!t t.: $16,800 V.A. 1\Hh big \'lOstt11. \\'1111< to 111.i;: 4 h<'rl -.1 balh hon1r ha.; pr1,, rlr;ipr~. quiet sli>eet. •!Ji!' BTAGl, -BAYFRONT A-PT-S-. -1 lush lnrlscpg. 2 E~tra bldgs. Anyone quahl1rs ~ubj!'r\ lo ~<·hools & shop11111g. had ··Tt.(··· l!ugr l1\u1i.:t $'l.i.500 1'rnns .... _ .. M lnAT1 & 1111 in xlnt {'Onrl, O"'nf'r VA Lo11n with G~,., 11nnu11I A ''.S pPClal On1t>r'' J Bdrm. l' fmn111KlnJ:111zrd lnl , J RR VIEW fn(lm fnr t n1rrta1111n11; "11h R oy McCa rdl@ Realtor 1 .:;;;;:;:::;;;;;;;;::;:;;:~ \'i!tla Drl l.irlo. Pi<"r I Shp " rarrv ]51 T.D. SeH1ng P"rcenlllKP rale. Total PA Y· I< dt'n, J Ni., nm i llt', rnr· 2 RA. Onl y S26,j()(J, Any p11t1rn; Cor ~Rrrl:c; .• !u~! rein\ 1810 Nr"'porr Rlvd., C.'.'11. I! ;:nail. Yrom s.3J,50o. Sell or pnr " o~ly $77,500. 1TI{'n! $148 ~r nw11th. Sh&rp f'Vt>r upPf'r ba,\· vlt>w: Split-ft"rn1s. l 'l:l>l.' fPVl'i c"-rn1. Cov'rl . palio, 1 t•Z-4471 ( ::::J 544-1103 5-15-0458 ;~n~hL: ':a~~~ ':~rorp:::n~hr~ I _..~~~5~4~g.~7~72~·"".~":""""'I DR. SAYS: ''SELL'' < Ge.orge Williamson CORBIN-:.1:::~RmD\~~~ ~!~~'i: I "'"! hfir, nthrr rlt>corarnr "'"'""""!!!!'..,!!!!'"""""'""'\ Real Estate $39,500. 6'1&-71 7!. EASTSIDE C.M . (11 llul!'" S('paratf' fari11ly Realtor RT N l lui'Cunou~ baths. modern leo11.'11rt'~. Ollf'red unrlrr l'f'· Reduced $2750 g93_gj,JJ 2 HOMES ON LOT ('..!1 ~1:.e '.'11r~11 VC'r<ir {'(Ir· 673-4350 645-1564 eves MA I hu11!.1 n k!lche·1. Re11dy !o pl&l"f'm{'n1 valu~ at $51 ,000. J bf'rlroom. shak!" roor. A By Mc Va y 3 Rrlrn1. 11'1 Bath, plus 2 1 O{'cupy immf'clia:rly. GI ,._ i<1r11! at S?.l .. lOO, or n111ke I * A STE-AL * B I l B b T ... nrr 4 BDRM. -V.A. REALTORS 64.7"2 h"Y< "•l-m• CALL• !'-. I C'c 1•n1, ar , op <'011111-1 2 ' ... .,.,, u rs ., ... v · · o frr, spac1ou.c. !hro(lghnui. ONLY 1 •• 1.~ •.. ' BR•. p'''"'. {. ! 4 hf'drooms. itp • E\rr11t1on11I 4 & fa n1ily i11 ----w lk & L [;.s -J!i!1f' ~. ''"" " " 11nn. Good lll\'rS!mrnt, only r!nll'll f.tr~;i 0<'1 t-.1;ir "-'l!h r n!1;d. Less Than Rent a er ee ·t ~.~ /)IH rollrgp eharmrr. Pride lrg yard! fruit frcrs• VA / $.1:1,000. Lot 62i"x:ill<l '. (41 :!.100 frr 1 nl CQrnforl11hlr ran1 .. rin., 1: .. x16 !ICl'f'rnr<l Coll11ge Park Area 9" o· owner.,hip thmul{hour , f 'llA trrnis: .. J1v111" I 27!"' M11.-'-c Blvrl. 1tt Arl11m~ · really \\Iii! ~"11 VA, ~-llA or low HAFFDAL REALTY .. patio -11rw 1nlrr1or pa1nl. ..,., • ,,.,. t'.'l\ "l lull h;i1h~. nnr 11 1111 Nrarlv JS:il ~q. fr , No dnwn J111n111(·ulal1" .1 Brdrooin.' 2 ;,,1~-D465 Open 'Iii 9 PM . ra~h down 111 5~,-;~ lrian. 1'142·14[}~ Ev<'~: ;',·11 -24<1ti 4 BEDROOMS Lachenmyer Realtor It's a h('aul. Vrry spac1n11s 4 l>E'droonl w11 h r>;panrtf'd 1 family room, rnrlosrd <'OV· 1 rrt"<l pllt ln, c11rpr1 ~. dr11prs. Call 646-3921! Evrs. 6·16-%49 shake roof. Usr your (;J GREAT TNVESI':'-ll'.:NT - aC('l'~S rn y.irrl 1n \·~1s, fl/A 1rrms O.K. hath 11om~. Boat ,, lr111.lt'r BUILDERS Z.ll·I V1~1 11 Drl Oro wo """ 1''k1I 'I P~l.& L ---APPL EP _l_E __ _ Iii• ~·11rn1aJ l11n111g t'fll)!l1 $.~Z.9:-.0. a('f'f'K~. \'r t.• all('IUt $WI! a er ee I t71 Oosr 10 schools &-shori· lj(l(J Ad11.nis Avr, C.\1 S4fi.~IA80 pay.~ l'l!l only $ 2 4 . !1 50 . \l.'Pll-bult1 2-2 Brrlroom nu-Nt>wpor! Rcarh CONDITION fl\A-VA trrm~. C all n!rx on li.1't':.: 290· !01, Al-&44 -JJ.1.1 S44-~26 !';vr~. ~AR, 2 Ra , Sf'P lflln rm+ r11nc " Rf"l'IHnrs 1S1 $41,i.-.ri ·~-~ HWlERITuA,,GnE :>4&..231.1. !ty ~C'('f'l\11 . Room fo r 4 mor .. THROW IT AWAY 76112 Erlini rr pntil .~iz .. IQt. Ownrr trans-lo11n or lnw rlown Fili\ trrms. Sri" 1h1 ~ ou1.~111n<t1nc \'11]Ut"-!USI 11~1rd ;,1 $:~2.:!llQ. Coll! ~1fl-11'11 IOJ)f'U r1 r~ I ~··b!erranran $.11.:.00. 10:-.1 Unll rlt1. l.mss $200.000 .16 ·n1 1 ,..._ -unit.~. $.11.500. Stan now + ferrf'd, Ask1ni;: $211.600. Call '~ -:..., · · DoP~ your "'ill" i"'f'jjl ynu on ••'•'•"•'•"' .. '.-44 .. "' .. "•'•" .. ''•'•"•'-e 847·8531 e -~-SWEET ·N-LOVEL Y 1~ 1 h1~ ~ hl"dmnm 1 1 ~ bath li••mr Jni•A trrl 111 a11r;.,•'l111• ,\e"·pu11 il>'u::h1~. 1 1n~r •n p1·<'ry1l11ni::. 111.,\r 111 ' .. nt!t· 11rin, rl ouhlr i::,1racr nff ~I·! l•'.I' 11()(•11\ (nr !10111 nr 111111 f'r. Pr1f•rd ln11 111 i:;n 1\ 1T111.'t srp ror only $1ll,:iOO, C;ill ']Ultk' fi7:~49.)[I •cru.~&00.1 ~ .ugi """l"·IUf lniln 111 II'; l!l}Jt:-;~; RA.'ICJI, l·r rn 21 hnrseJ, nr 60~ lfll.' $;"16.mt} Cash. Vinco Realty • \-0' THE REAL \'"'\.. ESTATERS -O• Ill '" 1•1 • f•, • • • • • Perfect Setting ~flZI !larhor, t".\I 6-lfi-llf).1.1 Gloriou, 1rrr~ ~urrounrl thi~ .... ~·r appc•11!111J: 1 h<'droYl!ll ') h11Th hPlllf', °'f'r ll1r lr<'r h1111,r tno' (;!>ho'I j\1'1\fl'\rt Hr:i"h ln•'.1!1011 mn\·rn1rnl 10 \t,1r1nr r~ Schni•I I:.· \\,,,1. OWNERS LOSS. YOUR GAIN! l'.dr1 n1n ltnnir !ll !iarl1t.r \"Ii'" lllll~. 2 .l<'i'lr~ nr11 1i .... 11·d •111 a li1\1l,v 1"•1111•·1 1111. 1vo11 011n lhr 11111•!1. ·rh~ ( J1rr ~t1.111111ni::. (Jnl\ $'11) ~l Arnold & Freud 1111111'1 ~ l1'1dl,1 11r11I ';ill. :',N}t ~-\ii11 SI (' \1 "'BACK BAY"' A r11 ntas11c family hnn1f' 1 ..... ·>i r.'d in. hl'11u11ful 11p1i.rr B;u Ii ~\ 1 'u l di'·~~,· s1rr••I rlo~r 1n Y\IC-A, Bnvs Cl11h. ... h1k1ni: 1r111I,~. 1 hrdrnnms, I 2'~ h.ith.,, !ari.:r l1tm1ly rn.~rn. 2::~4n Anth.nny pnnl "'1th J a1·u111 + pnol ""'rrri. \111n\. 11111111 "1h!"r ~!)("'1a! lra!lH"'"S r'lf';i(r> r-1111 !or 1n- i.1wrl1or1 $-li,2.'JO. 54fi-2:11~ 1-0 THE REAL \'"'\.. ESTA'l'ERS . ,,,,. . p ,\ Y <lnly Slil prr mn. 1ota1 for lh1~ qU ll'l 4 bf'rlronm , 1 hat h rh.11rn1rr l'111drr1 1>.llh gOO!llf'S. All lrrn1~ Anti i\o f)n,...n VII S'Jfi.:.00 rn1al . Hmk•'r ll4:!-44:i:i '1r Wl-~1110. Balboi1 l1land R. E. L IC ENSEES Tr·.\ 11~ f,.r 1111ri.:1"ll) II yn11 , lr;i1'r "" 11"n I ~11'11 1 .\'!ll)f i<'l l!l)o(. f'nll\llll,~l<>ll~ l';ii•f 11111r or f11ll 111l'l ... Contrflcl \RTHEREAL '{_ ~.~T~J.E~p '•Ill In 1111·1.:r'~rl111i;.r.~:11 1;r1 q ~-.; l>!fii7~,,; ,11n1plrn11 rrq11t•I 11rl 1t:l\1f11!11 l;.,11d~<"11!"'" CAP E COO _ Ql!JNTAl!D HI.TY. Stm!·11•11• 4 Rrl. P111111~ lltn BAYCREST -REPOSSESSIONS College Park ____ _ .. ~~mil.1 t•YITTl 1\ 1 •'I'' ['ll/\11.,\J P l·:llSfl Nlf'l~:n -,-.;pflrkl1n i::-rlran hon1cs. soml" 1-----------~f>l',·1111 hnmr fnr l'f'f\ 1·h1~ ·I hf'rlf'l"lllrn. •11111111{ nf'.,.,ly palntrd f.t. rA.fP£'l<'r1. 2 3 flH. 2 HA Extt11!'>. Pool. 21~ <1wr111) po,,plr C-'111 lnr a11 <:A · b IV•k •·"''"' R 1 S'2 ~ r(l(lnl )lnmr is 11 f'l'rfrrr ~f'I· 3, ~ &· ~' hdrm:c;. ""'n1r Wit r ,.., ., '· ·> ,....,., ll"""ll~tmrnt 111\h ('harm ·11 V 0'"""' ••• .,,. i--~ • * * • • • ,.,~. t1ni:: tor ,your l'M11!nt'1a! lur-pfl')l.~. ~ A-A ronv. lerms, y'" · .n ,,...,, .,,, ""' "· Surprise Package 6'11i-!Jll. n1st11n~. Rll'ln1 Jnr pool. Jmn1 S'l0.001 to s.40.000 Coron• del Mar $'71.~ COJ~Ll/\'S S.: WATIS INC. c·all 646-7171. \0 THE Rl.,!\L \'"'\.. ESTATCF<S , , ' . . '. Out1ti1nding Loc•tion ~ hr, 1 hit. I~ k11 rlwn/din'11: a1·r11, Jrplr. hrir k p11tin, 1rrf'( •·nr11rr h'l\1~ v.•ls1dr ,va rd' ror hnat ... r trail rr. 2 m1n•ll f'11; In 111 ajor shop'g <"f'nlrr, lrf'f'W8Y~. 11rhool~. ;-.!) 11crr p 11 r k. S.l\.500. " Saturday morning with 11 Th• Real E1tate Mi1 rt long "honry -rln .. 1\11? Sht' 3 + GUEST \\•nn'I nl"trl it 11nymort' wht n I HOUSE + POOL Horses! Horses! vou n1ove into lhi.~ lht,.<' • Hnw al:Jnur a housr in thP hrdroom homr on I ht'' $28,500 n11drl!r of lluntini;:ron Rrarh Alull~. WI'~,. fnunrl JUSI 1111· Cu.•loni hflnir hrd"d l'lr-. 11h<'rr yn11 ran krrp a horsr. )OU. 81"11u11ru1 "-l"ll k,.rit I ri·pr.~ k rlqJ< 2 BA Bii i~ :w1l ~q . 11 hnu«· nn ont' ground~ a nrl II mmmun!!Y H 0 . lull iirirr $2.11.,'>00 arr<" 1)1 land. 8-12-2:l.1~1. pool All ynurs for $43,;,QO ~-!IA VA tr nns. c a JI io ·THEREAL \""\, ESTATF:RS 67;l.-R:l..'l0. S47·1Zll \o ·THEREAL '"'\.. l.STATr.RS SEY MOUR REAL TY 171~1 8P11rh Blvd., Hign Bch Of'W'n '!!I 9 Pl\! "-' j! I '< ', r 1 I I•.,• * * 5 BEDR00~1S * * ',.Jfi .. lfliffi ' " " .. ' ' ---~l -2 Story, 2'• BA, lir lnl . Nrrd 11 u I 1· k .~air_ All !r1n~, )l J7.R?1(l7 9fill-4377 :168-117~ "MONTICELLO'S" e EXCLUSIVE AGF.NTS e FINEST SAL[S . LEAS~S ~;XTflA CL ~:A~ anrl .~hArp .l hNlroom. 2 hath, Migh loar1 /\nx1r111K OWlll"f. Ask In II: $2'1.:1'111 Larwin Re•lty, Inc. 21562 Bmokhunl, Hnt gn Bch 544--5411 i1nytime BUILDER'S ATTENTION ... ... {"'- &st i .Y .LY.ulf' (: .. rc11J1 y ~14 V1~1 11 O,.l 01'1'1 Nl"wport Bf.1rh G44-l 13l NEED 4 BEDROOMS?? Thi~ ha.~ In hr !hr hl"~t huy 111 1nwn ·1 f\rl'irn.)11'1~ 'l halh~. \\I I \'( rrpt~. rl~. 2 c·11r gar. !!>l!Ualrrl nn ovrrsi1,1'rl lol. $1~ n1n pays all. HURRY . . Will not 111111: • r.o·Jf.LY 2-st,1·. Irvine arra, 4 hr . .1 ha hnmf'. N('w arr11 Nr lut11rr 11chonl ~\ti' . on Easts1dr cu!-fir-~ar 4 Pet e Barrett Realty Rll·l3 Adilm.~ Avr. 962-5523 RY OWNER, $48,'500 Be-droorn~. 2 hath~, '1r"f'· 642•5200 "WiED-!I & rea~c1ean 427 lri1, Open 10-5 R -2, 66' x JOO'. ideal lor 12 El Taro 1>l1tl', rlanrly 17f)ll ~fl It LOO I G -FO--oul the treasure« & trash_ 2 sf'paratP, {'XC!'I. lurn hnmr~ 11n ir~. Aaki11g $311,00). Mike l' K:\8-2622. O"'flf'r sf'll11Jl; lnw f'qu ity. ---,-----:-----:=---1 tU-4471 <:::: J 54i·l10J Walk to the Ocean home. Will'" -plrasrr k1rrh---BACK BA y K N R hJm into ca8h thru I\ Daily OI' lot f'nn\r locHtlOn, IOUlh oflcr. rn. and ~ha! a J..>T&nd lot. A GOOD BUY? Trader'B Paradise rolumn 1-' of hwy. Vrry soon walk •n Li1rwin Ri1i1lty, Inc. rnmily pa1n1N1 !n~irlr k BEAUTY lnr you! 5 Llnes, s Dayg for heh "' ~hopping r.1us1 ~,t', 21562 BrookhUrJl, Hnt1n Bch nut hranrl rtf'W carprt1ni;: 2916 IRVINE, N.B. NPrrl 4 hf'rlf(Wlm' -fllmily J od 642--S67R r fi75-1540 nr !i75-451i1 ~~11 •nytime 0 I. ,.2 ~ ' I mnm -.~irp dn"·n livini;: 1 ::'·1~-~C~':;;:1 0';;;:;'~Y0-0·~·;;;:;::::;:;;:~· ;:..:.:;:;;;:;::::;:;;::;;:::;::;;:;;;:;::;::;;:::;;...;;:;;:::;;::;::;;:;;;:;:;;::;;:;;;:;:;;:;::::' n Y ._, ·"""· S!np \n. s0mrlh1nfiii: r11ffr r{'111 I• A Id & F d rMm, hu1:r yard lnr lhr mo reu tn !"ff'' S..autifUI pnol "'Ith k1rls -rlOSI:' tn Sf"hools + 3AA f:. 171h St. Cos111 f>.lr,;i Int.< of rlcckinsz plus ];irJ.:e hraf'h. For $47,9:-.07 C111J RF:ALTORS fi46-77.'f• palto. Grral plaC'I" for rntrr-64&-7171. t~1n111g. :t llugr hf'rtron1s. 2 h;ilh~. hvin.i;: plu.~ fatnlly rnnn1, firl"pl11r<'. h11 ilt1n~. Owner in Canada IO THEREAI, \'"'\.. ESTATERS " ' '. ---..-.- doub!r i;:aragr, shakr roof. Lachenmyer Realtor \0 ' THE RF.AL ~ESTATERS • "' ' I • C-~ > ' New Model Home 5 BR. S Ba, JllSf compltlrrl. virw o/ Bay & Hills. Formal din, brrakfaic.t rm, him rm w/wet har. pool. Al.""l vit'w lo!~ av11il -1vill hullrt to • Draw 111.sl when you pl11cr lln1J~t' fl1111tlni:;? WA1('h th!:! 11n 11cl In ttle OAll.Y PILOT OPt:N J~OUSf; rolum11. S@~~}A.-lt~~s8 The Punle with fh @ PJ:INT NUM8ERfO 1Cn£RS 1N 1HfSf sou.a. fS fj UNSC l!~MSLE LfTTEJ:S I '01! >t><SWl l! . t I 11 11111 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 -.-.... ~---·-.-· ..........--'· -... -· -•1- -----~ .7'- ' ATIRACTTVE 3 BR, rlt>rl, :J Bafh, trplr, crpt'd, dghwhr, block wi ll, J A n d 1 c pd , 1""11!-<lt'-UC 11;\f~'t, 1~ mi. 1-·rv.·y-2 11hnppin2 crnt""· \\'9lk 10 rlt>n1. srhool. 011 J::I Toro Rofld. $26,!IOO. Appl nn- ly. C11n 11.li~6. ~---Fount•in V•ll•v WHEELER DEALERS : LOOKll ~la.rt your ll>rtune lo th!~ dandy ~ bcdn:lOm, :J bath. •JI family • 1iud :;peclal. 2000 J Q" rr at remarkable $33.500~ ! f"Mt po,.~sion. flt' down GI. Setler m1y hrlp with huyt>r1 cotla, Set' a nd m11~ orl~r. Li1rwln Re•lty, Inc. 2 :.62 Brookkur111, Hntrn Bch ~S411 •nytlme Huntington Bei1ch • MOVE UP • IO qu11lty, apaclou1 living ar.d pttttl1e l<IC. 4 Lee BR, fam rm, ~llC' p1-.tio w/bar. pro! lndscp1. SJ9,QXI. AU t,.rm!I, 393.r;;i..J.1 Reol Est•t• • by McVay -'· * * 5 BEDROOMS • * 2 Story, 2•,, BA, lge lot. Nttrl q u 1 c k 11alr. All rrrms. '"'-85071'68 .. 3771968·1"' I m;t&11t.'I SELLIN~ YOUR HOME? Th1.c. 1nvi!1ni' house h11s t"vrry!hing: r rl t' ~I 11un- tin1:1on Brach lnt'1111on. ~ k1ng1111.e lx>dn10ms, lormal rlinin1: ronm. cu 5 r o m draperies, 11parkllng clr1tn. All !rrms-$.ll,950. Broker 842-r .... r i. \0 '!'HF. REAL '('\. ESTATf'.RS F'r«t' appr111~al -W'" huy 14 BR, 2~ home w/custom e-quitie~. Per!l(lnal atlent1on. tllt'rl kit. nr h<>ach. S.11,950. 2.i yrs. ('lt~ric11cc. l Nf'rrltii palnt1nit:. 962-8939. ~!JLLINS I. WATTS oTS(RIMINATING 96.·.:J.123 Eves. 642·!>427 BUYER PRICED TO SELL lt11rn11{'. 3 BR, 2 Ba. rorncr! Beaut. home w/family r m & Lovely l'ICrttned, eov"d P8- huge mv'd patin. A prt:Stijt" lit>' All !f'rms: nt\fhborhood. Qv..·nn tr11 ns. HAFFDAL REALTY Mu~t ttll, ,1\.l:Z-110.i F:v<"s 54J -24•1fi Call Diane Bkn-AKT I --------Ml-25.1.'> diys ' ·962-8013 t"I'(' R~· 0\VNER. I n11lf' to C •• W.C., lg. rul-fit.:·.~C' Int. 4 VA RepoHsesion l Bedroom 2 hillh, •11 hllln applla~. rA hi f\,i c ,. nelchborhoOd, dbl ri.r, lcne- f<I, pr!C('d right Al $24,00), Se~ lod.,y -won'1 last: I' "2-4471 ( :t::) 541-11 DJ ... -·---·-· hrlnn, 1-% ha, IJ. ram. rm .• ~hait l""rpl., f"USt. rlrj'111., bit-In kit., M"r. porch, rrpl, 16'r'J) r/patln, prof. liuwl~aped, rx!ras, $29,:.00, 347-.l.':&. -... ~ ..... -----~ /'----!=.:.._ • ~2 DAILY 'llOf Mond•t, July 5, 19?1 DAJLV PILOT ~.'i a -fa'-·1 ~ l.._·_-___,J ~ I l~I .e [ J~ I I~ -fa'-......... --- Hunli.,ton llNch L•gune Nlgutl Wutcllff 8usines1 Moner to lo•n !40 Hovtet Unfvm. 305 HousotUnfum. 4 Brf2 ba-Glen Mllr; bltns, dw!ihr, pantry. fr p I c, panln"1, cvrd pa.no. $28,!:Alll OWNER: 962.-6825 lrviM 5 BEDROOMS Al; oo I-floor. This one is onl.y .t niDli. NEW, 'fTan&. owner Ji> ot1eri~ this spec- ious liome at below i~ act· ual (_'IJ!lf for quick sa.le ~ ttiii; ooe today' c-r 11111 ·1 'i·11i1 . ---l ll'u llu r MUST Stll lhb wf'!'kt'nd! Beaut. 1-:Aecutivr 2 Bd1·1n . shag l'.Al"Pf'I, cu~tom drape~. t\)111.frlunity pool, b e ach nwrnheN;hlp. t"~tw>tic view o! 1nounta1ns lt lulls. Opt>n llOuM" S&!. & Su n. 23291 'ftllair ~Cro11·n Va I I e y Hig h land• 1 495--0823 $29.~/My Jos~-Your Gain. ON THE FAIRWAY El Niguel Gol! Course is the Jront lawn of lh1s S BR, fam. rin., 3 ba. hon1e Pro· fe&s. c!ecoratffi. $78.000 L•guna Niguel Realty 1»-.SOSO 06-5791 Lido Isle --::-:=::-:::::=:;::-;-•I • .::O:!p-!:po::'.rfv.::::Cn::,:lty!...-...!:200:'. I ;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= G•in•r•I woNDERFUL Cash Fast '· WESTCUFF * DNIESTERDIEBDUT*ORS ht & 2nd Trust DMds FOR RENT Dri\~ slowly by ll.11 s~x FREE _.DOD ... "' •• .,. * 2 BR Houae $80 Lane Tiw!n c&ll. fol' an ap-l.Jnuted nu1nberot DISTRIB-.nJO-..-~ 1 1~. ,,, G U'JOJt!ilUP' \Jab! Cost• M.n lnvutment inpou ".ote ""' INf'! •ar_ po1n1ment to see the llllt>nor s now av& e s.u..ntl * l BR Home $ISO ol this channtr. I t • s In YQUr area, New MULTI-·~~!!!!~~··n!!!!yt•l~m!!!!•~ .. I KidM welcome. AV! now! S!)at.-iow>, tunctiona.J, a truly MU..WON DOLLAR adver-* 2 BR Id tJel!ghUul home. R•ted ..&i.sed "PUDDING & IBUIT LOANS! LOANS! LOANS! • K 1/pets $100 Value Plus Jtuny! 646-Tin. CUPS", llOld ~ugh. AUTO-We give the nlOst. Private, Will 1'Cdec l--3 mo. Save S. M.ATIC MERCHANDISERS. di.gnltled. Buy, trade, sell. * 1 BR Tnhae. $125 JI qualified. you will be pro-Away from downtown area. Bltns, nu cpt, W/D. PoJI. \-0 THE REAL '"'-ESTATERS vided with ail equipment 2426 Newport Blvd. Cons J>el, am 10eat:ion:s, and be train-Coa..'1'! Pawnbroker 00:-8402 * 3 BR. 4 Kid1 $115 --'========1 -" · all h h' F'ned yd, dbl gar. Pet oil. Westmlnst•,. .,... in P ase<s of this 1gh-B Jy lucrative business, (NO * l R. E·Sicle $165 --=::-::-::-c:'.""°-::--1 SELLING). Yo>u must ~ re· ttoi.es fotflent II ~ J Av! now. Child Ii pet ok. FIRECRACKER liable, have a good car, and . SPECIAL!! 4 hours a week spare time, BEACON Rentals Huntlng!Gn Be•di 4 BR, J BA, tormaJ dlnllll" % ACRE Stttuded Htllrl of nn, in p1'16lige area $350. N.B. J bn, 3 bas, lrx l1v rm nio. mct ldscp It ni.arnt fee:. w/view ol hill! le Fash.ion C1tll J,J. Unique rental liomc * PA TII WALKE.R 1425 ~ oo ""· "'"' req'd. 645-4486 aft 6PM. 1Tl71 Beach m11d., H.B. 142-1411 * BLOCK TO BEACH =~~~"'-~~--~I E.XECUTIVE 2 + Fam rm, 2 JMMAC, 3 br, 2 ba, covered ba trplc, tilt' sun deck, pi!.· pal i o , bltns, c pt s • d I ~-.~ .. 1 V t llo. crp:.S, t"P£, re rig. 111'""6'""' , acan now. $290 Leese. 548-lrJ.12 $245 mo. Call Shirlf)' Com- * SUNNY * * ACRES * * Mot•l-Apts. * Stud~ Jt I Bedrooms ~\\! RATE!: S~'.-1 \Veek·SIOO Mo. Daily Rai.e~ Avail , .,. Color TV, A1r-Cond e Pool, Pool Table e Sounds 2376 Newport Bl11d. 548-97:,J NE\V OWNER-under NE\V MANAGl£..,1ENT mons, J-lome Find e r ~ UN IQUE 2 br, 2 ba, pool. Realty, 892-447"1 or 846--0136 beach. frplc. No. 14 4 eves. Bayside Village. Adults, nol-C-A_S_A __ d_e_O~R~O~-• pets. Yrly only. $260 (213) BIGGEsr -4 br, bst are.a. 7S8-1161 or see mgr. CASUAL Calif. Living 1n A AvaU 7/15/TI. S335 mo, ,1~ In 6 &1iroom. 3 balh, large nd •· ~ k · * 64.S..Olll * a uc auie to ma e an lffi· Houses Furnished 300 "SJNCE 1946'. PRIME r •. nHly honi~. \\!ould you be-1nt-d11t!e 1nv(>gtment of i ~~~'!'! ... "'!' ....... !!!!~'I BA YVIEW-Norlhbluff 4 BR, warn11 cul!erranean a 10 .. $100 seeurity dep. Call 2' ~ BA townhouse. fam mr, phere SpacioU! color co- !st "lestimJ Bank Bldg. I STREET TO STREET lleve SJ::t.CXM>~ No down GI $800.00 lo S7100.00. lsecur. GeMrel w Shirley Commons, Jlonie ordin8t!d apts • desigood k e HAT a Darting! 2 Br, F inden; Really, 892-ol4T7. 1~P~'·~1-"~"-'c"'°~·-Ol4--011~~-'·~-I Uruversny Park &aunfully dl.'COrated or 1>ubn11t: ~ llOT! ! Nil. Send name, address, \ 0;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Days 83J-0101 Nights 4 Bedroom Home Larwin Realty, Inc. and phone number, lo: Ne,,., .• 11 H 1-::::::=:: I • 21:.62 Brookh=t. llrngn &h "°" 1"'''"'"""'1 o;,,,;bo1-*LEASE-RE TALS * Iii Stei>s 10 pnvate beach 1 ~S4ll •nytime WANTED $71 ,500 ing C.O, DEPT • 211A, 3700 l A nC'iv family 10 lov~. t.1y I Call: Perry Gil 67;).:!713 Newp:irt Blvd., Newp.:irt 1 B'y.nt W'.e•I R•alto< c _______ ~l /AJJ l -Bea~7c7h7, cCcaJc;-t,=9'.!660--·---3 &!d1'n1, :.! Barh • 2 s:ory, O""ut·r and tus fan11ly ha1·c Aeal E1111e, ·~ · ·00 N o-h large bonus room, gardener. ri...r11 1ranslC'rN'(I. My "alls ,,..,_,;1 Via Li • e wporl .u..·,.c Gttlef•I • f'A'IOUS BRAND NA'1E -" • " Vacant. lmrned. occ, $JZi.OO s!l ll ,..rho 1111· ..-hi'('r/ul * LI00'58E5 T * CANDY SUPPLr laugh!l'r a11d harrp1nr~s thal ~ BH. ;; ha. 60x90 $79,:.00 OISTRlBVTOli~HIP 11i •c.·h1ldr!.'n lound !1rrf', Nu"' 3 BR. J'r. ba. 45.\88 S!H.;:oo Acreage for sale 150 iPAHT OR FULL TIME' J'n1 u1i for adop!Lon .. \ly J 4 BR. 4 "-. 90"8i >l v .• ,000 --N I bl · Q ""' ,. .... FRENCH GULCH -uw ava1 a e in ran.gc J BC'<lrm. 3 Ba1h . Z story, 'i fireplaces. Vacan!. 1n1n1cd OCt'. S395.00. bcdroo1ns and 2 tm1hs ptu,; LIDO REALTY INC. Approx. 600 go<g!WU!i: acres Cou11ty and su?'°und1ng bonui; roon1 n1ak(' n1r lhe .1'177 Via L ido, NB "~e · AU l"~"'' 3 B-"-II ' 011 th1'y. '299. Accon1n1oda1e:s ""' a:s.. ~ions are rwm, <! balhs, So. or wy, pel'f<.>cl hf1111c lur yo11r a111· * 67•7JDD * · I f I c I "" ~ lO~i !railer sites + 3 hon1es, cou11nerc1a or a c or Y ( M. s,,;;.,.oo. ily. $41,J(](), * * * * * 2 (-ot1age"-. 2 cabins 1 Mile lurnished by us. Qualilied SUMMER RENTALS '1 .... :· red hill :.~R-mD,~Rt~'."..l' .. "3~.,'.,,,.:, .. ,'..m. d···n 2 . ,"m'.· ~·l~~~~·h~:~::ilo=~ ~ro~:~ ~~-~~~~~~1~E?e{~i~17:: B;:~~;~4~~\~~e~rzu:: $lOO. • ~ ,, .• agr: 2 m.i. on beau1. •. clear ~I Uk Duds etc.J 2 Bedrm, It~ Barh, English REALTY 4.'i f't . lot . S79.500 creek. UnL 111. Good financ. 1 NO ·SELLING s!yle. S200 \Vk. $700. mo-Aug. Un iv. Park Cen1er. 1~1nc WALKER REAL TY 1ng. Asking $.\j(),CXKJ. fllany . . . Ba.1 Shores. 6 Bedrm. Pri- Call Anyt1n1e 833--0820 * 675-5200 * 01her land opportunities. V~~ ~~~t ;:~~~ =t~n~~.· vale beach, ~7500. mo .• Aug, I •u~ Austin-Smith Gorman BY transferred owner, open 1 HOPE GERRIE per 11·rek spare 1.ime (days and Asiociate Realtori OWNER TR.ANS. I Sun & l\lon 1-.J, 203 Via :'.llcn· REAL TY· or evesJ.1 644-7270 EAST I lone_. 3 br;, 2 b_a , 40' lo!. 1 $1775 CASH REQUIRED & IS rager 10 ha ve his lam· Sf-.6.500 213 .,Tl-12:l3. 645-4400 6-1s..3.1'l0 for more information write: i """""~L~O~S~A'!"'L~T~O'::':S""""'" d.• JOin h1n1 . Con1p. lndscp. REDUCED--3 br, 2 b a . , Ki.J. Dov-Dr NB ·• DISTRlBlITOR DfVJSION p 'd I O h " • N ·n " p a Bo 17"9 r1 e o wners ip l.rss 1han J yr. old 4 BR. 2 sund<'Ck, lgto lot. Sell, leaSt' o. :.... · · x -". bltns, CI D, patio, poot Ii I~'°"==""°"""~"°"_,--:::' furnished !or style & corn-only $15(). N.B, ELEGANT. lge 2 br nr 2 BR, den, 2 Ba, t~lC,AP'd '1io. furt e Hea!r.d pool e Kitch• ALA Rent•l1 e 64.>3900 beach. Bltns, dshwshr, din nr heh. Pool pr1vu. u ts f',1 w/ indirect ligtiting • rm, encl patio, beaut clc290_.cR_cl_'_""'~-·-"'cZ-J08 __ 2_· __ 1Dcluxc R/0, Adults. No pets.. e SHARP Bungalow 2 Br, COY patio + yrd, gar, Sfl£"JS ok. Quiet area. n 10 ALA Rentals e 64.>3900 e \VOW? Ranch type livin, very lrg 2 Br, new cpts, frpl, lg fncd be.ck yd, !rg front yrd. Compl re<:lec. Kids & pets ok. JUst $225. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 e YOU just can't beat this I Br stv/ref, i>creened porch, ~ fned yd. Kids ok. $135. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 LRG estate type home, nrw· ly decor. Lrg L/R, 1"/R, DIR, ;, Br, 3 Ba, hug!'! closels, fnt'tl yd, Avail 7/15. Lse $350. 548-1544. Corona del Mar OCEAN BLVD. '!Jard-t re es. S24D mo. S•n Ju•n Capistrano 1 BR.-S175 furn. 962-2194. lITTLITJt:S INCLUDED FOR LEAS~: 5 br, din"g rm, NE\Y 4 br, ca r Pet in g · ~,.;.,. \V. \Vi Ison &12-1971 w/w drpi;. Avail J uly 15th, built-ins. S275. mq, 493-30oll HOLIDAY PLAZA OI' 493-1936. $375. Shown by appt only. ~--~-------IDELUXE Spac-ious 1 BR 968-7298. Houses Furn. or !urn .'tl1t 113:1 I/rated poof. LUXURIOUS 3 Br, nr ocean, Unfurn. 310 An1p\e parking_ Adul1s . no' $:lOO mo lse, 21641 Zamora ·F-.-.-0·,-.·in_V_a_l.le_y ____ , pet~. l!IGJ Poinona, CM. Ln. 962-0046. * R~DEC. Ltg I ER. CC'll- LARGE 2 Br. J-lou!;C, f111lc, t 'OR le11.sc -3 BR + fam lral Inc, riool. carporl, fenced yard, pets welcome. r ni. $310 turn; $275 unfurn. ad!ls/no !)('I.~. S1 35/n10, 56() $200fmo. 536-3470. Nl'\vly decorated. \Vatr.r \V. llarntlton. 6 4 6 -416 O, soltncr. \Yater paid. J4j..-01GCJ. Irvine 832-0494 or 839-1273. 1----------·1 ";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I (:O,;d,mifrlfUim:-----1DF.LUXE Bachelor & 1 BR. • Condominiums Apbo-15 1nin. lrom beach.' * SUMf.IBR RENTA.LS * 2 BR. 2 Ba. tnhse, 2 mos $325 3 BR. 2 Ba. tnhse, 3 mos $375 * nJRTLE ROCK * 3 BR. 2 Ba ............. UiO Unfurn. 320 $35 \\'eekly & up. Mo rates.' -0-.c.".",".c1""-·----'C-'· I Tt>rms avail. 998 El Caminil.- 54~~1. ONE BIR Condo. Builtins LOVELY ~ BR Apls, Heateri plus \\'as.her & d r Ye r Pool. (.'lose to shops. Front N/carpt'ts, \Valk to shop-& rear ofl-str prk'g. AduJi.,, ping. $135. Near Brookhursl no pets. $160. & Adams, 8-5. 646-8959 l!J.11 Pomona Ave .• C.M.. EASTBLUFF Condominium. * $170 * Ba., family rm .. din. rrn.. or tr..id~·. 67'.i-il8j . 1 • ~1 AC. 1£230. F/P. Terms. Covina. Calif. 91722 Hom• atr111n1. Jn Broadn1oor. Tur-Mesa d;i-M-.-,----Adj. to Nari For<>st/Conv. Include phone nun1ber. family with l<'enagrrs ok. ·I !le Rock. UNDE R S40,000. !O Big Bear Lake. FRANCHISE -4 Bedroom 2 bath, built ins, BEAUTY bf'drooins, 3 baths, panor- ami<' view. truly an out- ~tanding home, luxury ap. pointl'd. $750 per n1onth 01. yearly lease, Call l\tr. Rogers for appt. 673-8'"..i50. 4 BR. 2 Ba .•.••••••••.• $375 * UNIVERSJTY PARK * 3 BR. 2~i ba, tnhse •••• $375 4 BR, 21,S ba. tn~ ••. • SlJO l BR. 2 Ba. turn ...... $400 J BJL 2~~ ba ••.• •• • .. • • • S350 3 BR. 2 Ba. house ...... S32J New 4 BR. Tennis, Pool. 3 Br l '' Ba patio b\tJJ..; $3115. &1-1-4834 erp1 ~. d;ps. Ask at>Ou: o~~ c-LJ o Ii"! 1r11 ii, ---'l l enhor ··SINCE 19-16" lsl \\ieslf'rn Bank Bldg. Univrrs1ty Park Days 833-0101 Nights AG tan REAL ESTATE 11!1(1 Clcnnl')I"" SI t~J.!Jl7.', ,,,~.1):;16 E-.:rlush r ;.:ua rdf'(! 11 r •' ~ Braut1ful. Slk1l'IOU~ h,•n\!\ 1r,1pr1•r:ih!y n1.11nt;11n1•ol. Bil, Z 1;,\, r•1'tll"""1"1111ll} BEAUTIF'UL 4 br, 2 ba. new e 20 AC. $1100 per ac. all or carpeting, drapes, lf'ase $28.i per!, high,,.,•ay frontag<': All VIVIANE WOODARD J)f'r mo. Phone Long Beach shag crplg ,(. many cujtom fea h1rt·~. \J:::.~ El Can1ino Dr. C.i\l. ~>·Ui-IJ2.J. Newport Beach util, x111t terms. Co11v, ro COSMETICS 21 l • '129-~jJ. Silvcrv.·ood Lake. Bk r , A SUBSIDIARY OF' GENER-j tJ.14-4670. AL FOODS. No frdnchisc l Acre fully in111rovcd un- derground util, nr Phoenix. By owner, $3j(l(). 642-9Qjl Susines1 Property 154 fl'<': $GOO minimum inven- tory. Con1plete training & continual guidance at no cost. For your personal in- terview in Orange County = • RENTAL FINDERS ,..,,,,. In J.nndlr1rd~ 645-0111 -43$ W. 1,,., C0Sl4 MESA ca 11 COLLECT; ESSIE ~ (;QLDRESS 1713) 782-3310, I ~.-"1~N~E~X~P~E~N7.SC.f~V~E~&~,-.,-,,­ FAMOUS NEY. SALOON Jcvely 2 BR new decor, formerly occupied by own. "r. fn('d yd. $16:0. ALA Rental' e 64>3900 3 Bit, 2 Ba, all bltns, inclds (reeier I rcfrig I dshwhr. l"rpt'd, drp'd. Ocean i\ide ol hwy, $325 mo. Yearly. 675-5::.59, 496-235:). 2 BR. 11; Ba Duplex, S!v/rcf. ne1v cpts, drp~. S750/n10 yrly. 675-614J or 646-2290. Cost• Mesa (ired hill Condo. Furn, or discount plan. 88o Centtr Unfurn. 325 St., c~1. 6-12-83-10 General NE\VLY painted I Br furn ·~·ith new w/w crp1 s & drp,_ REALTY 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, patio, Ne111 fllrn. very f!Ulf'L f ll'i-. Univ. Park CC'nter, Irvine pool, near Harbor & San mo. :)23 Bernard SI'. C~ Call Anytime 833·0820 Diego l'reew11y, $220 pr 616--072S. :s 1nonth. 675-4930, ask forl'sc.u~sc.r"N"EcScS~m-,-n-,-,-p-c-c"i-,-11 J BR. 2 ba. bonu6 nn .• $375 Dick. \vkly Tates now otlt red to 3 BR. 2 ba·,;, Alrium •• $325 Townhouse Unfurn. 335 everyone. l.01v as $36 wk. 3 BR. 2 \·~ ba, fam, rm. $.12.i Seal.ark !llotcl, 7301 Npt Huntington Beach Blvd. &16-7.\-\j. 3 BR. 2 ba. Atrium ••.• $300 ·I BR , 21 ~ baths. famUy rm I * 3 BR. 1'~ BATH Pool & $25 Per Week & Up t'ro1n S325 to $330 I Rf'c Brookhurst & Adams BACllE:LOR t.. 1 BR. 4 BR 2 '~ ha , family roo1n, $210/nio. Uti! pd. 6~J.-O:xiJ. TV & maid serv avail. -----------I st'p hon1es !ron1S33.:i 10 $36:1 D I U f ·1:1() Victoria, C.:'.11. 3 BR 2 BA $215. \\'E HAVE OTHERS up exe5 n urn. 350 F URN. 1 Br ap!. · AdJJU t'irepl, dbl gar. lenced 1..-or Costa Mesa v.·oman only. No smokinF:. 'llob'-1 \,1111, lor ror boa!, trlr etc. . • . . d rinking or prts. l 918 OPTION 'fQ BUY S7:i.!l:JG DUP LEX, 1022 V1ctor111, 2 t'ut!rr1on Av,., C i\1, 5'8-lQ.16 BKR: 646-9666, ~2-2221 br, bllns, <'rp ts. drp!, patio, 1 BP. rr 1 be . 3 BR & Den, 2 ba dbl gar. frnC<'d, disposal, elec door opener. 2394 College Or. S.300/IM. l.se. 833-8648 aft 6 ---'ll1·ull ur "SINCE 19-16" Jst \Vestcrn Bank Bldg UnivPrsity Park Days 833-0101 Nights iar. $170. 5.\5-6889. •· P c, ams, pabo, l I o'7.~~-~-----I Adu!!. Utll pd. Sl.5.3 / mo. 'l BR. clran, !gt rms, '.'l:tra Yt'nrly. Operi House, 187 E . lg<> sni:I ~ar. No pets. Adlts 21.sl f't. &42-8520. onl y. S14:i mo. 548-6355. SHARP 2 BR-$160 Newport Beach FURN. Ilia Pool. Ad!Ui/ho BEAUTIFUL ~ Bt". 2 h p.;>ts 2272 Maple St. til' beach dplx, b!tns, lrplr, +a1~'-107·c'c·i270_. ~~~-~-~I rKtras. $37:5 I mo yrly. * 2 RR, I·). A. Lrg rlol>Pf:(. 644-7214 . Nr shop.~. Pool. Adll s. Util pd. 1884 J\1 onrov1a. :'14&-£1.1'.lii, n:"dec, x!r111 f'Ol)l, J)allO, S9:-i Adults. li'-"'"""'~'f"r•~...:&..~ ' . ,-··--· -~-~ll:Q<--;a ~·<DC!!h • -· ·"yr'-=»,-· .... ___ ~,...,,, :-:s:::i~... '· ~--=~-.:-~~\-·'-·· .., _____ '""!""" ~ _._::. ....... ~ ·~. "":11.S..-~ ,- -· ,.t,. --.... .. _.l.\r1'-..·-·-)\·•----•-·-----·--•• ,,,.___ --"'"'---~--, .. ---·-,_ )'" ·~ -_,,..~ .. -. -... J ..._ __ - DAILY PILOT Monday, July 5, 1971 KS Apto., furn, or Un.furn. • FABULOUS 2 •IY. llv rm.,_s._n_,_._ .... _______ s_._n1_._ .... _____ _ JOO LEASE-La 1mmac DELUXE w/iplra! 1tn, trpl, 1 Bdrm, 1• BR, av11il AUi', 111{lmt1n or APARTMENTS 1~ &. SUS trapica.I J>OOI. ('(>UPI" ,:,m mo. fi7:1-Jl~l. NOW AVAILABLE 145 E . 18th SL &12-4603. Nftport Beach Arr COnd • Frp1c·1 • 3 Sw!m-1 •ro=w=N=H=a~u=s=E'"-.-,""'B"R,=,-ba-. -------1 m111g Pools • Health Spa -Cpll &: drps, bltn~. l .!wUn'1 OCEANf'RONT '.!Br, 2 Ba, 1 1""nnls Cn.! • Gam, & Bil-pools, rhildren OK.$~ mo. yr lM", $325-SJi.i Good k:dti hard Rooni. 546--3710. k pt>! ok. 2214 W. Ckcan-J Ar: 2 BEDROOM tronr. 675.6060. 675-1-410. 1''ROM $130, 2 BR, l'Yi BA, I.harp, crpt1, --''EDITERRANEAN d'P• 1'IJO "'· fl. Available l BR. yrly. 1lnale adult. IXIOI. M lJQIV, $165 mo. 973 Valencia. blk to ocean. sm. 67~7225 VILLAGE Apt. No. I. ~7·7768. or 644--06.17 f'ves. 2 BR lamlJy unl\1. $155. 0 2100 Harbor Blvd., C.M. OCfo:ANFR NT up~r 3 BR. {714) 557:8020 Rtdec. double 1an1e C.Onv, 2 RA, }r!y lse or SUmmer. RENTAL OF'F'ICE location. Villa Mesa Apll, ,!!kr0'fl-4816 ~--_ OPEN ID !\.\! TO 7 PM 719 W. \Vilson. 64&-1 251. '.?BR, yrly. rww furu 1 hlk to e st:AUfJt'ULGROlrNDS tx-h. suri ctr:k. adults, no !'ipc1ru;'lh Decor. Gas & wa ter ~t~. $200. 67:>-2124 . pd G11.r, pool, rel' hall. e \\'INTER Rl::NTAL.'i e lndry e 2 Br dwnstrs Rent NOW for &>p l.' '4./pa!io. $100/mo. e 2 BR ;\BBE:Y rtt:ALTY &12-311~>0 Newport Heights CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Arl11!ts, no pe!s. Lg kir. Sl:F.>-lJ;iO. :!t !J ~:. 161h St, NA . &16·1ll01 upslrs., lrJ:' front ap!, romp! rNlcor, $17~1. • I BR upstrs $13:1 • 2 BR upstrs Sl::.5, 160 \V, \V1lson, c;...1. Ser r.1anager Apt 1. *** LIKE LIVING IN Royal Suites Motel YOUR OWN HOME ..• s~:. P~.'R 1\'I\. UP 2 Br. 1'.'1 B;, unlurn. Cpts, Complelr k11rtirn. lin{'n~. ph. dips, encl. patio. East Bluff NEWPORT BEACH Villa Granada Apts. Four bedrooms with bl.Icon. ie, above &: :Wlow. Gracioul Jiving & quiet IMlTOUndlni: lot family with ehildnon. Neu O>rona dtl Mar Hl,gh School. Firep~ wet bu • bwJt.tn kitchen a°ppliances. 835 AMIGOS WAY 644-2991 Co.lei.well, Banku • Co. Manai1nz A,en1 541-5271 Garden Grove ~ (,"'"" ' flh< l;fJ, /",_..,,.,..... - .. o.dd)' ..,., """'-_,.,,,.,.. ,,, __ -rw. Wflt' ... rw., .._ -thWt' ,,.,.,,.. .. -'165::.. ---__ .,. . ..., ...... --·-·---·-~ 1 .... 1....,•l-·---·si... ........ t.- ---·---~- • ----:::ittK ....~-""rv, hid pool: TV & maid WILSON GARDENS ~l't'V npt. Aptl ~TUDIO l.: t BR . Ph. &12-6811 att 1 pm. I ._ .. _ ... __ ..., .. ~···---·----··~ 2 Bdrm •tudio, dishwasher, w ~ d • Pa t ! o. n i r. e ~A-p~t-. ~U~nf~.-,-n-.---~365=-I A~p7t1-.-. ------- neighborhood. Jnquin-Apt -'----------Furn. or Unfurn. 370 No. L 13.10l Vertlt, 636-0J.'14. Newport Beach 1h n1ile~ 10 Np! 13ch, J n11lrs lo:::~~~~~~~~:::::; to Di~ncyl;.ind I I' .,~ "'";:;1,'~, ,\ * Spanish Elegance Sunset Beach Quiet Adult Living I BI::DROO~I furn apt. 1 · hlk Shag cpt • drps • bltns lrom t)Ctan. Phone ~213J Beauri!uJ Pool • AU Util Pd Huntington a.•ch___ , I Huntington Beacfl SEACLIFF Manor Apts. Parkhlie lkaeh L1v1ni:: for Adults Casa Del Sol LOVELY hor'M. Balboa T3. I 11 bUr. to Bay, 2 br, 2 ba, I lurn. Mo or yr Jtl.k. 49'1·1829. _, CLEAN Bach. apts or 1Jp1ng TmL Step& bch. $75/\.\'k & up. 315 E. Balboa Slvd. 673-9945. TRADE usr. of 3 BR A-frame Lake Tahoe, com- pletely Jurnished, I o r similar accommodations 11.l l.aiUn& Be R c h , 213: 789-399.3. BEACH Con11.1:e, So. La1un;i., I Br. Vtllage CentPr, SS5 \.\'k t'urn. 499--16-1.'t. Rentals to Share 430 I ~--------1 f\t AL.E:: desuvs 21-2.l 10 shr lrg home overlook1n1: UCI 1n exrhani;:e-Jor typing & ~11rdf'n1ng. Usl' ol pool. Should Ix good athclete &. like ~11ng. College student 11ccrp1ablf'. \\'rite compl 1 b.<ic:ks,:rounr! intef!'~ls, go&ls. P.O. Box 4211 . Irvine. 92664. 1''&\T, rrsponsible roon1· mate wanted to~lha.re amall collage. 1S4---5259 ever;. Kttp trying. WORKING girl desires same lo sh&re 2 br a pL $85 mo. C.M. &15-T.'146 11ft s~.t. \\'k.-1 nd~; !'>19-1 1~5 clays. CHR ISTIAN n1an 23, looking for san1e lo ltnrl & ~hare apt 1n I! B. or C.1'.!. area. ~~l:f.I. 592-5341. 2 BR, $170 Adults only-no pt!.! LARGE, 3 br, 2 ba. BR. & Bachelor apt. Crpt~. Secluded, porch, qtnet dead drpll, hltns, Jiarb disposal. end sl. children, pet s con-Jlii Ba. Pvt patio. 1525 aidered. $185. 7731 1-:111s. 1 Placentia A\•t . Ask abou t ~o l • 2 BR f / f n. R00~1t.1ATE lo share 2 br blk to 5 points. Owner. our d1scounL 548--.. 002. "' -urn un. r•'I pa· \pt. Unfurl'\. 365 Ul Avocado Sr. 646-0979 I I I , BR I I Jurn ant $77.~ mo-Alt S, 673-3293 or 847--0932. e NOW OPEN e 10, rp c in . e eva OM;, 1• Just for Single Adults SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS COUPLES or ROOM-1'.1ATES * FRESH AIR ~'32 s 1 A A Spac-dshwshrs, crpts, drps. Pets 2000 Apl 4 !\1aplr. Ct-.f. ,,.... • an a na ve. 1 •• " $I I-f Rf' I ho ious 2 BR. 2 BA w/frplc, a~ep ""· r rom '.1. S \1\ , n1y water ron! me P · 1· Lo d I d-·i~ .1661 Brookhurst St, llB. 11/dtll:k. !\!11n, ,'!J.}-f,() years. r1 . pa 10. a s o ""~ ·'· Braut, big 2 BR apts, .,.,,/w Hid pool. {Arro:.s from S.A. fr 17141 962.f.6.i l * Sl:iQ/n1n. 673--4331. \Valk 3 blks to Beach! Newport Beach SSO Irvine Avr /Irvine ~nd 161h ) (714) 645-0SSO New I Ul>t'r 2 BR, 2 Balh, frplc. we! bar, beamed ce1J- 1ngi;, panrll1ng, pr 1 v at e pallo, all rrc. rac1L Adults. Nn pr!~. ,\tarried couple $200 . 1 roon1ma1rs $2'23. rrpts, d~ps, bltris t xcep1 re-Country Club\. $190. 5.'>7-021" I * KIDS WELCOME * Garages for R.-.-n~t-~4~3~5 frig. $Jj(). No '1ngles, no NE"'POJfr :\1f'rlirerranran .. \lo1'e 1n 'J'oday. A11ra1•!lvr I pets. ;iJ&.1711 2 & ~ BR 1 sic'J 11,, 1--:--::-:-::.,,.-c=c:----. -!ri;: 2 1' :i hr. <!Plu~r 4-plrx · · ap .~. :i · · • 12x:\O GAR1\G~:. S2(l/n10.) --- Corona del Mar * • &16-0073 * * Park-Lilt• Surrounding QUIET • lJELUXE BEACHBLUFF APTS. ;ipt~. From SlliJ. Ni" Ho"~ Al.1 .!'=x~r11~. POOL. per.~ nk. 2171i Plar·rnt1a, r i\T. IRf'ar~ 2 & J BR, 2 BA, pool. p11l10, Hosp, Adul!s, no JX'!~. 17.162 heelson l.anr, Apt A. ('11.ll ti1 11 n 1 ,., ~ pm .• dw. Nr shopp1na. 842+8'177 or 642-1.1117. i;l42-62.1;) or ~-7510. fi?.6-4!'.ltl l\47+3957.' Newport Shores • OCEAN VT EW-FRO,\f l;-ARAGJo:\vANTE'D in Cr!M • LOVELY, clean l hr. $135. 1 Br. furn or un furn. for ~Tor11.ge only. P.O. Box 1-2 k. 3 BR A?'TS Crpts, drps -slOVf', 1 adult. LARGE, unfurn, 2 br. 2 b& CASA PLAYA, 14lh I< :16:>. CdM. Prv palio1 * Htd Pool! Nr sbop'1 * Adul t& only $125. &12-838:1. apt. Yrs lease, N w pt Walnut. C&ll 536-8367. ~Ol=fl~c-e~R-o-n7to~l.----,44"'0 I 2 BR. Clean & Altrac. Cp!s, Sllo1'f's. B!k 10 bch. View. Newport a.ach ON TEN ACRES • 2 BR. '""'"· • un1um. Martinique Apts. P"lreplaces / priv. patio:.., 1777 Sa.nta Ana Ave., CM drps, bll-ins, air-cond ; nr. 49"1·9502. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I i;chool.~. shop';: k park. Kids1 s~.-n-,~.-A-.-n-.-----­ Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bldsl. 1'.-1gr. Apt 113 &Mi-5542 900 Sea Lane. Cd!o.f 644-26U -LARGE-2 BR. 2 BA. (MacArthur nr Co?.st Hy,,·y) APT. UP~'TAIRS ClllLDRF:N \\1 ELC0~1f_: ok. No pets. 8~1 :;.\S. 2 BB . No f'hildren or \Vater paid. Sl:iO. 962-8:li4. :: S R, .l ha. bllins: 3 Yr old. All rlecrnc Gold Mtrlalllon 2 BrsJJO/mo. ~E"-Mll'r: Ap! 1700 ft lo\.\rr rh1plr.\ unir kllrh 1-1801 Slater, HB 0..•nf'r. Wa lk 10_ hl:-ai•h, ~hopping, 2466 Santa An• Ave. ;,~20~111. ichool. l>as. '111 trr. garr1rn-642·1131 Afternoon --.-2 Br $lli/mo CAN'T BE BEAT South Sra 1\lmosphere 2 RR. -2 BATI~ (Rl'J)('!s 8t rlrp"l J\lr Condltionrrt in&:. Cpls/drps 1111'1. Yr. ------· --_ Le<1~. $300/nio. 50!1 Ac-acia. e REGENCY e 18Jl Slatf'r. HB Priva!P Pali(li; 67;}-4?..'i6. Adulls prr['d. I M~fAC. 2 BR, l Bo\. Shag O"•ne::.__529-2(U HEATED f'OOL ,. II I I L B h Plrnty or lall'n -*-COROLIDO-APTS* rrp .':, sr cean. gas oven. 1guna e1c <lshwhr, encl gar pauo. J77 Carport & Storagf' ! BR Slud1~ & s1rPet lrvc!s. \\-' WiJ.<;on LUXURY ocean front l br. l !!DOE:"l' VILLAGE: S18a & UP. Dshwshr. Frplr. ' Cal.I 5'l8-J6()5 New carpels, t!lcvator 10 2'JXJ South Sa.ha VISTA OEL MESA Apartments l & 2 BR. f'um. & Uni. Dish· y,,·a~her . Stovf' a nd Rtlri.c, . Sh11g rrpt'g-Lri;:: Rel' 1•rnttr. RENT !'il!H"IS $15:1 Tustin & M1sa Driv1 * 545-4855 * --.-N-ICE-.-- T11r 1Yiusl he11ut1ful \'\PW nf 1hr hay & ncr11 n 111 thr Ha!xlr a1'fa. 2 RR. 2 81\ 11p1~ for ll'a~r. fi.12-7'102 . . Sant• Ana Obi carport L1\HGI:: Pool. beach & pool. S350 mo. lr.11se Santa Ana e 546-JJZ:'i Lall 673-3;ni!. HARBOR GREENS or opllon ro buy. RcCerencc! VILLA MARSEILLES PARK you r c;ir & walk; ur GARDEN & srtJDIO A.PJ'S 4~2688. ··' ..,,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,... BRANO NEW oce11 n. nr :;hop'.c,. Nr'v 11pts. B<ich. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from $110. * ON thr golf roursc; lux· 3 llealt'd pools SPACIOUS OFFICE SPACE MARINER'S MILE .ilit· Prr sq. fl. ,All Ulllillf's p1Lld 1\mpl<' Parkit\\; Up 10 2.DOO 51\. IL :0.1annc on<'nlJl tPd husiness RE1\LTORS SINCE: 11)44 673-4400 MOOERN OFFICES * COSTA MESA * 2 Br. 2 Ba. bcan1 cc1J. ,\1any 2700 Petenon Way, C.M. · ,, BR ., 8 La rge Clubhouse etc. BBQ l & 2 Bd A .. " ;-.. · 5160370 unous n<'.w -·. • a: Oiild Care Cenll'r rm. pts. S7.l. i· SllO per nio .. So. Calif. x ras. ,,;;"'A ''lRrguerllt. · Brach pi'l\'11., 1rnn1~; $.~25 Great new 1 2 & 3 Rrlrms Adult Living t 1rs1 N<1!1ona1 Bank Blrlg,, 675-·1S7.~or 548-7!1.ll:\. 2 BR/Jl:J. ha studio, frplr, ~r~~~4~4gg...22~-·--SOUTH COAST Furn. & Unfurn. 2.30 !::. 17111 SI., C.l\-1. 6-12-148.J • NE\V 2 hr. l ha -S2:.0 n10. t-rpts. rlrps. 'love. refri.c, .. NEAR BEACH-New 1 br. 11 3 VILLAS Oi~hwasher. color coordinat-Dt:SK i<pace ava1J11bte S5(l util inrl. Ctpls, r!rps. ran.c,r . pvr patio, encl gar w/11.dd1t ha. pool. Adulls. No pel,. 1101 l\lacArlhur Blvd. ed app!i1'!nces . plush shag mo. \Ylll provide furniture relrig. (;;i.J! aft 7 p111 . parking. \V ili allow 2 L.st. 2175 S. Coast Hwy 546-8823 CAI'Jltt -choice of 2 color I at S5 mo. Ani<1.1•cr1ng service li73-1~:'i2. <' h Id r n -N o Pe"li<. 634 494--4181 or :ilS-6743 1----. -------achemes • 2 balil.!t • s tall ava~lablc. 22'2 rarest Ave. l"OR lrasc-l)(>luxe nrw 11\1 l!;imlltnn ~call :;48-9~'l. OCEANFRONT villa. Spec· Westminster showers • mirrored Ward· Laguna Beach. 494-9466 f'lec 2 HR , l BA . * THE GABLES * iacular view, priv. b!'ach 2 2 BR. I ha upper-crpu, drps, :Obe doors • indirect hgh1-I DESK space 11vatlable S50 I t:nobstrur!rd ''ll'IA' nf bay & 2 Rr, 111 Ba v.•/ gar. Sl:>.l. Br $3Z.i f\lo. 494-46.i.l h!tn slov ... lgr. closets. t lltl 1ng Jn k11chen -breakfast mo. \Viii provi<!e furniture ncean. Adlt.~ nn ly 673--6992. Arllls. Cpt~. drps, bltns. Ind ~LOVJ::LY-2 Br. !urn. coo-r arare. Qtiict ;i.n-a. Nr Htg bar · hug, priv11re fenced al $5 mo. Ans1.1·cring service 2 BR , 1-BG -rpl .•:-d.rps, )d 1• f patio. \I/tr pd 2~39 do. Pool. f\latuN' 11.dulu on-Shop's: Cen1er. Ad u I l ~. patto . plush Jandscapln,i;c . 11-va1!<1ble. J7S7j Beach Blvd. hlln~. up~!ll lr<. S210lnin. Orangr Avr . E. 636-4120. ly. Sl7;, on 1.~r . 714: 499-2238. ~-JJ91') or R9.l·74·1.'>. brick Bar-B-Q's -Jargt heat. llunt1ngton Beach. &12-4321 ;103 l\l;ingnlc! h7:...n.1:~1. Bt:AUT!fUL 2 Br, !>,.. Ba A t ed j 11 &: Jana~. PHO FESSJO:-.:AL Bldg. 43c: .SPA CIOL:S 4 Br. 2,1 R;:i . 1111 Sturl10. nr11 crp1s k pa1n1. ·Mesa Verde PF:·;n. or Unfurn. 370 1 1,J ~1 So. Bristol St. ~ri f!. Air-<:<;nd, crpt~. <lrp~. hit-ins. ('rpt~ f.· rlrp~ Encl l>rp~. hh ns, rarport, DLX 2 k 3 BR. 2 Ba. l"ncll .,,..--c,.,-------(1111'.h.N.of So.CoastPlaza) i;:d parluni.: Xlnt l'>t' :i:'IJ E: ,ara.c,t. lrnnill r-fr14-~7~~. ~HiOf1nn . ,'\o f'M'ls:_l rh~ld 1;;ir, Sl30 f.t up Rr ntil Ole: Coste Mesa Senti Ana !i'lh SI. (.\! P~~TE BAR· ---nk. ~~J.11 1:.J Camino. 546-04."Jl. :;o~:, ;\lacr Av"" j46..JO:W. I PHONE: 557-8200 Hr:·rr RLTY 6-12-13j.1 Costa Mesa \\ 1-:sT--S1dP 2 br, 1 ba ~I DF:SK ~pace available $j0 Newport Beach -------- FAIRWAY y,, /pal t(l, <'rpl~. rlrp~. bltn~. mo. \V1ll prov1dr ftJrn1ture t 11rror1 IV11tcr prud, t lt:1 i.· *Steps to Be•ch * 1 1 Re"ti ls ][,,s] 111 $:i mo, A"~werin~ servil't :-,-·our work; "'iii negotialr 2 BR. 2 b.1 .. bltn! Ocean w.,, .. .,BJIU ZI -. 11vailahlc. .~fl:i No. EI VJLLA APTS. fulurt rent. 642-2920. I V'"""'· Arlult~ only. No JlCf S, '-'OU Can11no R r11!, San s1;,9,;io ATTRAC. 2 BR .• 1 Yrly $275, Av1ul. .July l!t. Nrw 80.:au!1ful Garden Apar1 -1 Clcn1cn1c. ~92-•M20 2 & J BR's BA., crp1s, drps, btt1.m cell· I * * * * * menrs. Pr1v11te P.a tios. Pool. Rooms 400 I * NEIVPOP~T BEACH * ;.oriva te p~!Ju pool • lndiv. tnafi. patlO entry. Adlls only-3 BR. '2 ba., bltnx. Childrrn Spa, G11ra1:r. Luxuriou5 fo'URN /b;i Arro~.!i frnrn C1v1c Cen!('r. tau.ndry fac: 00 pets. Re!'s. 23.°14 Santa welcome. $300 Yearly. Av1il· ldscpg ~·urnishf:'d Un fllrn-rooni 111 th, y,,·alk-in A•r-Crp1·11;-Prk 'g. 3'Xl In hi , "·d · ' i·losrr. patio, pv1 entrance. 1000 11 '" Near Orani:e Co. Airport I< An11 Avf'. 67:\-{l.'f.f.i. .a e now. 18'"'' • Ofl.strert park g. Q 11 1 , r I sq. · •"""· UCI. Adults only. ~. p,\C 2 B· ap~Sl4-0. H!d Call: 673-3663 642-22il Evts. 2 BR -Sl7J. N ff DeeDee 1r fi73-~>l!h2 ' .1 BR _ Sl~:l Adu!'", no ,.,..1s area. r !11; ~hop'g Centtr. C". , 20122 Santa Ana Ave. Ponl. Play yd. Cp1s. drps, ...., ,..~ .!l!~l·l.-i~ or S9J-7'4·lj. 1670 SANTA ,\NA AVE. ,., ~. ~!rs. Joachim, Apt 3-A Bltns. p111 io. kids ok. 1:11 E. 2151. C.f\I. 642-l9tri CORONAdrJ Mar-.Smolc >m. from :\00 ~/ft. 3X '<f. ft ;:,.16-{;2·l-5~=--l 1998 ~1aplt No. l ~S.7660 AMAZING Adull J, J v i n i "' 67;}-2464 or 541-5032 , I-~-~~ _-bath. pvt entrance for July, ' ORLEANS APJS. 2214 Collc~e No. 6 646-2287 Be11u1. I l.c 2 BR rurn or unf Aug ~.. Srpt. $70 mo. • XLNT orrrCE SPAC~ 2 Bit Very clean. Nt w crpt. Apt~. Self cte11n. ovens, 6i.)..l943 eves. rl'lw ava il L1rln Rl rlg. 33.\'i , k., 0 ". 1145 MARINER SQUARE o;w On 2 Brl d1spl5, ~hilg I ., L d .. B 673-4501 ADULTS ONLY 1 s "'•no pets. mo, >"URNISHED Room fo---1. 18 1 o .. ,,. . . r. ,_ <1tt I APARTMENTS cp~. drps, jacuzzi & sauna •• ~ .. 1 A· ) BR. Av1il. Private ... _ no Sh.IL una.r, .,._..., "" • 1 $18 wk & "P· "o ,1 .. ,,.... Business Rental 445 "" Pl'lf 2 Ir 3 BR Units now available tNl!h~. Huge pool. .. " .. ""' llo. pool -indiv. 1 .. undcy lac.1..:'~~-=~~=~=-lor 11dulta des.iring 10 live Merrimac Woods 998 1:.1 Camino. 54&-0451. I;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;. (~i Orangr. Co. Airport; Tug. SHARP 2 IR·$145 1, BLOCK ,.RO". BAY • 111dmidst bnuty by !ht •ta 42a 1'.terr1n1ac \\lay, c .,\1. ... rin a • 171h St: nr. Wesrcl il!). UN F. Par in, bH n1. pool. -in the pru1i1iou1 Wel'ldiH CLEAN, r conomlcal-:-close lo Xlnt area. $100 wk, $300 mo. Adlt!t /no pets, 149 E . Bay area. l hoP""· I BR. $125 inclr!"' fi73-7185 or 642-9520. "" "' Prime Location 1741 Tu.'f\1n, ~111. M,.ga i\f1r. f\lrs. ThompM>n 642-ffi'I FROM $230 ulil. Adlts. no pets. ;,.m.-062J, 420 * BEA UTIFUL 1 Ir 2 BR. t-.lr. Buckley, l\fana.atr 543-4157. 532 Cenrtr SL Mrr ·--------1 Conttmporary Garden Apt:i, 1244 Irvine Avt, N.B. Ap1 J::. ON THE beach, CdM. Lrg. REDEC TOWNHSE, 2 Big br Patio~. fr p I c 1 , pool. C•ll 64" ~• .~~~-~----~I •plit lvl, J BR. 2'., SA. 4 Co!'la t.1eu.. StoN> or Offl~. I 26x40. Ample parking. Sl~/ ""'~ 2 BR-fo'rtl!!hly redec. tx--aut + rirn. bl1n~. pool, dbl rar. SlS0-.$165. Call ~163. PARK NEWPORT ""'It! in Au2 avail. Call S2:ei/mo. 545-7474. 1-'-C.C."=~=====-rartltns k pool. Nas.,au 67J..~"75 (day• or eve• Jo• I JUST REMODELED APARTMENTS Palm~. 122 E. 22nd St. ""' ' **·STUNNING G•rdr n apl , l Br-houiie-$110, crpta.r.ana~· D-h I I , ···-.. ~ ~~A" appl). Dll-C tor. or Da!n.u m:i, -"""'·'· MOBLUE BEACON I * 64s.01aJ * I l Sr. nnn]-N'creation room. wa!f'r ""· 548 &!rna.rd St. T hou I '~~~~--;c--,--2 BR o lh •"" ••, -I ·-·-""' and own .e1. Spa, poo:1,1:Huntln•lon •-och . n r. 1 '""·" w,.....r S140. 6454~'.0. "A". 636-1120. tenni.!I. From $115. Acrou'I ;;;;;;;;;~':;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;; Beacb. $.300/wk. Can be [ •""""""""""""""""""" ~ Br. unfurn $140. New crpts. 3 BR, lam aile apt, b\1111, from Fashion Itland at Jam-I •ttn, 111 4901 Scaihore Dr. NOW'S THE 71~ Sh11!1mar, "Pl 1 C.M. drp&, w/w ('pl, r ar. nr bortt * San J oaquin IWls ON BEACH!, or call 642-3229 or f7141 1 $93-4487. shop'a: Ir. 1chl8 . 962-4180. ROAdll. (714 ) &44-1900. 629-z.46. I * l BR. uppPr. hllns. cp!11. LGE 3 bl', 2 ba, avail July A New W•y To Live NEW 2 BR. APTS ON channel. J br apt. sltt.ps TIME FOR tfrpg, no pro1s. SLl:1 mo. ;ifi3 10. Ar:lulti;. Bltns. crpts. in Newport Be•ch From $230 6. Boat usqe Incl. Pillo, • 1v Wil50n. :ri;...-0760. Collci;:r Pk. Sl95. 646-49'.!9. OAKWOOD GARDEN J'Urnlture Availabl. compl turn. $100 w k . S17!i. NF.\V 2-RR-A~-. -SPAClhr--:-nr5 t.ops. pool. APARTMENTS ~11.dras~s·chsbwuhtt 67:>-1143. Lil E. 2JST. ~. Adl t1, no Jlf'lll. Util pd. L884 Ori 161.h Strf!fil btwn heated pool.saurw-teQl'lit + BALBOA e G4&-"6fi6 e r.tonmvia. 54f!.-OJJ6. !Jvirw: and Dover Dr. ttC room~ean vitw1 HOTEL.. /\pl&-Room1. Ry 1i'-.-R-.,-,-dio~p1~rp11, crpl5, l BR duplex -crp-,-,.-,-fl'-5. (714) '42.,170 pa~mpte P&rkin& Dayt"'ttk or Month. 1 J)l'IOI, u!il pd. Nt1 pet1. stovt &: relrir. St4S. util 1 -*.,-~B~R~A=N~D~N=E~W~-*~ Security JUarda. h7!'>--l61J. 1f4..1m dayi;: Goll-2149. J)ll !d. 642.-7891. 2-42 Flower. Sl5:J. I BR. fo'rpl c, indoor/out HUNTINGTON * LIGUNA B~AO I * • DEWXJ.: 1 s-;.;JlJ.), Nr UNJ'URN l hr duplf!x-PvT kllchen, healf'(I pool. (Acrou PACIFIC from SlOO W!!!k, up i;hc)p',;, Adult11 only. Gar. No y11rd. 1 child ok. S150 mo. trom S.A. Country O ubl. PLACE REALT\' 4!M-9704 N-11. 1:;n E. :lli;r fi46..f,nl6 :'r'l9-3filifi aft 6. ~a! 20132 .S.nta Ana Avt. ru ~~~~H.B. NEAR BEAOl -1 br. l ~~ ba, DY.LUXE 28i=:-1~R.l, cpti n=F.$1'=-.-... -.--~M~..,,.,..m-~,~h=r. (If ca.II S67~2lL Oft optn 10 am-6 pm DI.lb pool. Adl!JI. ll75 s . COftllt rlrPfl. !lilovr, tl~hwhr. it:ar. hltns, patk'I. crpl1 It drps. *** l RJt, 11,i, Ba Tnti.e, WILLwt WALTERS OJ. llwy, Lq. 494-4481, ~2&-«743 '("hilrlnon nk. l l:.o. :"m-g7'.ll. S150. Ml-0'261. prv ratioa, "-fr\i. bltna. I'!' ... '""..,""""''!"~~~ LAGUNA Beach-V1r1.11• nr t .tOOt1 .,.,.ant art-11 1 rood Ji'Jo~t rtKtil!s 8re Ju'! a plwlne pM1. IW>llt 1u•11. $ 2 0 n . W•'ll h~lp you "'JI! 1Wl-'!i671 heh. :'! br ilp! ll : 1 hr ~1p11 4 ll\~tl mPnf c;ill l'I WJly • 642-3678 :;,I~ 7i",:'. f'nr,.hf,51 rt':~Ult!'. ti4.2-5678 4~1749 Qf 2J3/2,1-63M ·- QUICK CASH : THROUGH A: I DAILY PILOT [ • WANT AD 642-5678 DAILY PILOT $.S NOW! NEW! PILOT PENNY PINCHER 'ClASSIFIED :lDS WITH A NEW-LOW-RATE 3 LINES 2 TIMES ANY ITEM $ OR LESS· e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e ~~~~~~~~~~~~- • Combin.d Tot•I of Items Not To Exceed $50 e • No Copy Ch1n1e1 e No Abbrevi1tion1 • • No Comm9rc11I Firms • CALL 642-5678 ASK FOR YOUR ·DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR AND YOU MAY CHARGE IT! ·-., ____ --0!1 ----.~ ~7~·-t---~ '\;... -:: ·"--·-7 ....... .;._ .• -:'l-~ -~-_..ii:-·~-... . ~ ·---... -..... • ---1~-M• .... ~·· " ------··· --··--·-·---• I ! ' ' • ' I • ' I ll<!U' i.r. """e19 3'» !'o:-~ -:s:rl\enitt.-t .. err•:-·~e ehooe•lA~• .. tt (•ll~l:r oio..i) • .,,.. 1--.r-•till •ll-""" t• i t• <>rt~U.l •be:r!o:IM, on• btitt.q "'!!Olt•t•~ 9 h<ll• p!!ZU.l>l• ~lt oeu,..., (re'f\IU.t!"'I "1:-.J, 1 talli• .q.Wh 1~1-iJ, -s ' n1111 CNJ ~ (l-1 -" t:lloodlto ~t ~ 111'1• Oltf dt-· J -·· 1t9i; ~ ... t .,. Cll• ..... ., . ' MiM•lt•MM.1• 1!1'1nto4 121 USED GA.RBENSTANGEL Must hive ria:ht-hand~ zoensutt with pawer dip. JK>leck. Wt1Uld.accept ear• 1y model with battery .op- fl! r & t e d piddlebotk.Jm. Write: Cll..!lsifi.fit ad No. 174, DAJLY PILOT. P.O. Box 1560, Cost& l\tesa. CA Thlt ni,....ine .. (entl a ceu,te ef •lmila r en•• whic:h eppeerM In Dlf'MoA·Lhl" inti Tr1tler'1 '•rt•liN -111 in the DAILY ,ILOT Cits. iflMI Atfyertl1ifttl Sectlen) iust m1y have 1.t1rted eN .t the !l.i9111t 1rttl 11fti.t ';silty ... ..., .. ev1n,t1 ef this tum mer er any -.ther 1umm1r ,.,. 0rl"'9 Cent llrea rni4ent1.·Y•u cln·t:ff ffrne .•f the r~ts •n thlt ,_ ... L•ttln h1y1 Men peurin1 In. I"' the DAILY PILO 1 'T'n't w11tt te ... , there. lll11tl en • • . · · \ I '· - ~ . --~,~ ... -~ ... ... :;;._ . .....,.::::-· ..... , ...... r.J•••ifi .. :lot ve. l 7f "D'oi ly r ilot ' 7Nt O!f;o:ot ,.,.~ 151~ ·--···· coot• x .. ._, C&lil.,~nl• 'i•~' lllr •: only looeoll•• :r h ov• 41<><1• .,,. "li•vint t.ol' t;l\• ?'Ott" ~~ ?••r• tl••t I J>O••••••d Ut• l••t t.hr•• r'"""'"'"' Carti.not~olo i ll tho "orld ff l au~miio t.ho f o.U-1n,- .,~fcr Jn tro6o• <:>no l'loth..:01pl•" "''""' .:..i:.ry 1idg"" •nf ~•t•cilolll• looknubela (Circa 11••~11. •i•nio io, et sour••. th• Vychonnoo 11<><101 !it ho• lo .. n .,..,,.,U<I t;o ounli!ht -)/ •nt•ncittont.l:t and.•"-no trau.o .t :nit.lliti••lo ,.., t.ho Jl'I•••" in yo<>r orli c• •ni r i n'f • ~•rlninolvi~oJ , o•rhop1 ho ohould know tlu t oll G1:-D•not 1n1ol1 "ore opring-loo.d..i Wltll llchnit .. l .,.,. <>Ut "'ith tho ~uch ,.1li1n14 1'ut ~igllly •!t•et:•v• b •tt•ry-opu•t&d ~dd.l•­ l>ott.,.. OO""-ntl.in~ "I'"" th• i nt•M•<I ,.. •• (i•• •m • •tot.i:c-!T.,, a ..rt•ce u in fr•• fli1ht). ti. JO.ight ecinoid~r A •~.nd&r( ·aybiunat ef .U.<11,1.t 31 inch••· 'tl•••• eonv•y you.r r••J><I"•• .. ., thi• C>f!o,. ot t11e •-•rUut ,....,.11t •• l .uut ~al• -.11 110.:e•••t"i ••••nq.,,•nt• fo.: r.&e.ti"' .... " """Y4r•t!o,. prior to tt"'•portzz· Garben•t...,l•• ___ .. ____ ·'~'f'~J cw NOW Is The Time To Stop Writing Letters And Start Building ., • ~rbenstangels Yes, the re1pome te all this 11rben1t1ngel gobblHl91ook h11 bMn M much fun, the DAILY 'ILOT h11 decided to He just how far r11der1 w1nt t• cerry the .... Offlcl1l1 ef South Coaat Pl•11 hive promilld t• mike the 1hepplnt centKt entire mill •v•lltble for • gigantic BUILD A llTTIR GARllNITANGEL CONTUT AND INTERNATIONAL lltALLYI. Dates have Hen Mt. You have until July 26 te build (or find anll rec:ondltloft) • garbenrtan9el 1uitable for dlapl•y and comJMtltiln. Sorn. netienally known 1arben1tangeliit1 will judge 1ntri11. Just te lit DAILY 'ILOT inti South Coast l'la1• m1n1111m1nt lcnow they c•n ceunt en ,11nty If tuppart (and ptirticlpenta) fer this worthy cause, fill in the c:eupon k lew, fer the lov1 ef 1•rben1t1ngel1, and m1il it tM1y. ~ . . -. . . . . . . . . -. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Yes, I will "11;!~ I &ar~en1t1n9el -or l11,1nch 1 search for'"• I can 1 put inte 1h1pe for •xh a:iition at the llta lly e. l'leas• tell ma mare. 1 I Name ... ....................................................................................... I I I I City .................................................................... Zip ............................. 1 I Adclr11 t .............................................................. l'hona ......................... 1 M1il te Prern1ti1n Manager, DAILY PILOT, ~.O. 101 1560 .... Co1t1 Me11, C.. •2626 .... I I '-. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -' START BUILDING YOUR GARBENSTANGEL TODA YI • '·· ' ~-~----·~~~.,,~ ~ ...... __. ----. .:.:... ~ -·--·;-·~·.. -~ -_ ... -.;::-· -• ---~-v. .. -....--. I' "" ,.... ---,----,. ------ ·'· DAIL V PILOT Mortday, J11ly 5, l<J7 1 D41l V PILOT :17 RenlM \'.'ROO!'.I I&. &· of~ <'t". Close t ~ U.vurltl JO.:~ J T6 $350 i f . 49-\-l6jj, '1dustrial Rwital 450 t-:HCJ.1\SS ;~ ?-1r!!r~ & h\Ul'~t'I'~ '!)'~t'O!i!e, 26(X) 11 & vri. Xhlt + h11.211.rd spnnklel's. 1!93-357;.. EWfNDUSTRIAL BLDG.$. COSTA MESA* • 1.\16 & 11~ sq ft Wll"S, i>Hle oltices, Ji.l!!nty of p ·k ing. 11c•-.u-SD r r!!c'w..1y, ~ NA'rl'Jl£SS REALTOft 1'\f 'fA t.lf-::iA &u..113:"i I ft'liltN 41'5 lit-hou~r in \'~pt llch, w~r of Coasl l!j!y. Vr h·11.~r. Hcspo11~1lolr 1,i)1L l-5.JS...2367 I ,1Jl:liiu-;;11.-,,-Ni"1:-1,1iti.:I 11 tnlf1t·•·, l.(:t• 1·l';1r doo1· 171'17 \lf11t111"r S!, (' "1 D")~ 1.fi-~10:1:i: Evt•s 1;.J(Ml(j,~l -1 I\, !\'TLD: Unfurn \\' t' s I 11·por1 !MJU~p II' I cp1 & •s. YP;irly lcasr. &lj..;.!)27. Announce1nents 500 I f.'(VE OJ>ell1ug for Oil<' !1011· .11tJbulalo1)·, n1 en! ;i l I y 1··1ardell t·h1lrl, 1nfan1 In 1 '?°'· in s111a!J nu1·~rry. Loi· 11 c;1rl·; On!cu·1u ;in.•<1, SJOO 11 11) 9~7-2fJ6.J 11. ·o -Dlt°A\VN!Y>rtraits. S. to 5~.00. L1nr uri nu11 : 1h1.~ I ;, \1111 ru n nn l y '£. rachcally H no rcs1~ •11"<' II ar11st 11'111 sr"k l · c: r t• ... n (' r '· r i ('JU s . A~ 1n1osphrn• &1:.-47:~1. -1 l'-+--P•_'"_"'''_ I ~. I I 53~ I :•'fl'Jll ned JI tndu · d111cl' 011 ;ill 1nallers. ve. 7l·l<11·1·1ag1•, Bu~irit'sS 1•;1d1n1-:s 1;111c11 7 days a ;rrk, 1(! ;1.n1. (0 HI p tn, 12 N LI Can1t/\rt f{l<il, I; • ,, Real Estate School PREPARE FOR STATE IN 4 WEEKS EXAM :l~ic~nsing Pr~paration 'for: • lteal ~state ~esmen & Brokers ' • Building Contractors • r.nsurance • Day & Evening Classes California Department of Education Approved-1\.laster Charge and -BaRkAmericard Accepted. You May Start At Anytime For lnformation-Brochur._ FREE GUEST LECTURE Phone 646-3229 ANTHONY SCHOOLS OF NEWPORT BEACH 325 North N~\11port Blvd. Ne,vport Beach • 64.6-3229 Edmond F. Jackson AIRLINE AND TRAVEL CAREERS --~OR .. MEN-.AND _Yl'OMEN e Tra vel Agent e Ticket S,ales e Communications • e Reservations e Air Freight Cargo e Operations Agent "DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES" S11n f'k•n11'11IP ·1~2-'ll'.J6. ·l~l:l-00~0 -±~-\\" L Jll'Uple \\'hO pll'kf'd up ,L. _________________ J rec" 111a!c Ch1hulHL<t" .. I 1di!;isr 1·0111:11·! nir r o r pf irrs for 1ho·n1. :ind rallies t· ·t1 fil'atl•s. "Utlnd1t, Cl11ro, C · rl ie. •·tc" 1!169 Dorset Lf.n~. C:\f. !'lfX;N:\NT=., ~,\~,~,,-,-,,-,-.-,-. "f r1io11 , 1 a <;f' l' r o n1 y 1· nsrl111g f.· information. Airline Schools Pacific r, --4136. 610 East i7th St., Santa Ana 714-543-6596 • 1 l osl ~nd roond [9J REWARD Carpet Service l ~;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;1 \'•>ar Old :\lair SralJXlinl 11 ~1.1n1~r. 517 Orchid Av". F nd I free ads) SSO ('d\1. \\'!!llt]lig.10 on ~llar. JOll:'\'S Carpr't k Uphol~tory b .t:;ED i.:rry &· iihiti• ni:d!' ~1-'-~:0.-2:_t~u_:-;_.___ Clranrrs. Detra Dri \.v 1 Ill'· 11 Sl•ampoo Jref'· Srotch"1111rcl , .rt. full l!tn,rn. \' i r llE\\'.\ ~ll " fl'\(I{ f' . .<;inall ., ' 11 I I \I 11 \\"" \' 4 So 1 I It c I a rd a u I .!O ) . 'i .-i·ktn"n & i'1L1·,u1u. Ill)! ''·"•'·•I•. ··. ' 11 , u· . r·· v ... grcas('rs & all col nr 1;oii1 __ f1G~_:i•_"'I __ '.".i rar n at 1 7 ,_n , vl\1 L -1 tiri,ghtcn('rs & 10 minute S~\. lh,:h1 hr 111;11!• d":.; C•iuld b•'>-f,O~I. fil l-__ 1 _·'·----blrarh tor 11·hile C!l.lllf'I~. 11 p1 nun Croll!I' !. T 1•1Twl'. :-,11,1\Y T1•1 r1('1· rn:-..h-. J ~T. I Save your monty by savins:: \' Y~·1k1011 11 S. J'1l1•.,nn hlk .~ t:in nr llartxir \'1rw lllf' e:-;tr,1 !rips. \V1u <Jr.in •4--;nr1. ll11inf,_ 'Tigi•r". Rl'iiat d !11·1 11~ r rn d1n111g r111 ·& hall \I 1.1; J>, .ii.:I(· 11 1·hql,.·· li!l -l~Oi. _____ ~--Sl.1. ,\n.11 rrn $750. rourh •·l 1n .~ !h';i ,,,11.1r 'I« l'1\l:T-:-h1•r. ,\· 1)<1111'rn1an. .~IU, r-h111r S.'i. JJ yr~. c:-.p, j5 I 1'111w ,\ •. \d.1111· 1· \l I 111;il1• l,11._1 \\1!11"1'< 1ra1·t, v.!1.11 t'Uunlc;, 110; mtthod. I i, :,/71 :~l.!-'1710 ~ 1\. 1'.lk \1/1:111 n111rk1ngs. d .. 11·ork n1ysclf. ('1()0(J ref. \11 L l·~HIP k1lh'll fp\Jnd Ill :d~7~~;. ------l-'.i_J_l._Ul_O_L ______ _ :-. 1r)l1r1 !'h11r,,~. r •. 1~-s:t~1 11u :--;t-:rtsh"r. 1.,..·s1 rru·nrt, STEAM EXTRACTION \JcfTLY -hlk Rrai.:\" llll'(:\ lo~t 1_n Prn1n. Hr11·arr!. Call 11 ' ·I-1,,,1 ,,,. fil2-1.,~2 :1n1;-l1C' no 19329. 111(JS. O ! 11 ii' I , · _ _ _ __ _ _ c&-1;; l\\r~;i '.i!tt-7::0-:. ' • .... / . '' ' ---Wh~t is this child doing . that disturbsus( Nothing. And that's disturbing. It's a small world for this small guy. Too young for public school. hfs world isn't much bigger thari his yard.· · . So ·hrt ru ns out of things to do quickly. Which m·eans he leams·ebout things ·Slowly. Pity, . Be cause he could be attendiQg,ono of Iha finest pre-schools in the co\lntry. Sunflower Early Achievement Conter. Where he would discover the world of science, math, reading and creaUve arts. (Not by force-fed information. But through discussions, acting, and other interesting learning experiences.) Ch ances are:, he wou ld even discover the greatest thing of all. Himself. Our school is open ell year lang. So children aged 2 to 6 can be enrolled anyti~. So drop by ••• if your child Isn't doing anything. Sunflower Early Acl'lievement Center 2515 West Sunflower Avenue San ta Ana, California 92704 . 714/540-4750 ,,.,-..... "' "' ~ .... ' ......... _- A member of the U. S. Financlar Group • SEW~NITS Anna's Pr.e • School -2nd Grade ANNOUNCES A Fun Program For Summ•r e SWIMMING SPECIALIZIN~ IN STRETCH·.·&· KNIT FABRICS \ and LINGERIE All Brands Stretch Patterns Vogue ,. Butterick Patterns Originah Kn it Fabric Stote· In Tl;e llar bor Area \V ith Finesl SelecliOn Of Kn it Fabrits Qh Orange Coast.: 2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD • RO _LLER SKATING COSTA MESA 540-3268 e READING Many More Fun Filled Activities 2110 Thurin Ave., Costa Me•• Ph: 646-1444 Pro1·pn n1ost !'ffrcti11r to [.('! us clean, hr1gh1rn & deodor- i:..C your carpel. Guaranteed • Frei• Est1111atc. ';\{;'. ':)'.'.';;;,~' '"t-°:c''.;:h [ 10.1rnouoo n~1 STEAM KING r.;;!ii ;Q & ~ C\A ~ d !-~~~J1~~1'~-,~"~'°;-;-' --C,~, on~>l;"~••U1'~·h;[ ~--------~--1 ____ 64_5_-_3_1 _8_9 ___ I <dtJJJJU . ~&b' 10' ~ ~ ~ STRETCH SEWING CLASSES Morni'nir-Afternoon ' and Evening f nd 111 \l1,,1on \"ie)O, Schools & DRIFOA'.\1 CARPET CLEAN ;;~~;;~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~ k • nlify. S::i-6J!JS. instructions 575 Reasonable Rall'l!. y ·~G Q~o\1!1 J: , white r>Rt:-.~boul' ·slfim · 'le~is, Tomlin Svc.* .557.9669 C huahua .[ovqd on Talbcrl SCAA for :itl· sc~on!/,, Re:::-Cl!l'rpenter & "arfi1·J9 . 8fl-4Sl!t "'' .. r J!.::. :\lo~.-~l. 'Ran~o , ___ C_A_Jl_P_E_N_T_._R_Y __ t-,. air Si:u1,,_~· IBhlC po1ru 1 Capistraoo. ~l Can11no : J(fINQR REPAffi.S. NO Job '''·•••••••••• v Cc;! 1111•y. H.U. fll'll 1-ol-CapL~IOOJ'IO, ~(. stan .July .,, ' . . ' . II . Gardening Ga r~ening Hauling I. ~).16.7j77 ~1-lfi "192·7.'87 ' •OO Small. Cabi.ncl 1'! gar-Cement, Concrete · · • · ages 'Kt ot her cabinets.' YARD. garage, ~~t{"01 ~l;u:S('s nn Bol.!O:\ ~--~--s.t:i.S175 ll "10 an~r leave R;:SID. Concre!e Specialists. AL'S Le.nciSC11ping. Tr.e~ AL'S GARDENING Remove tree1, r Mira Bra1·h, Thurs. ?Jlh. P iano LMsons msg. al f14G.2JT.l.-ll o. f"at/u>r & Son Te am. f'f'moval. Yard · ~modeling: fot 1&rden~ I •ma 11 s k Ip Io ad er cleanups. dirt, ivy, backhoe, <.:Ji l !'IG--'lb.13. Btj:: S'ludents to .l<"Brh'\.h(> ba-.Anderson. , ~,.19-94:£ anyli1ne. Trash hauling, Jot•cleanup. "la,nd5C8p'ing:' secvlces, call 847-_2666. -; T -. . . l'i~. tl1rory,':111~111 reading, l.:'.~~'.:'.'.'.:_ ______ 1,;::.:;=.;;c~~~-c~-R -'-· 1.1-. 6''1l'6 54" 5198 •Serving Ne""'"rl l =o7',,,-~~--~--fDpND-.Mal.c 1<111· S~n,C<.;f' rll'. 'C!IH Bnicl!'7(UCJ music A.NY sz job, ~id., Comm'\, •· • CONCH.ETE. i--ioors, rp .... sprin~~·· ;;-· " · ~ ~..., ' IBASH & Garage clean-up, ref. vie Cn rl1l'ld /'.· P!l!l-hard, hackJ,:nurwl). M&--447R , .Jndll8.,. Apts, AH . , types patios, dri11!!11, sidewalk!!, * i..Aw~ SEftVICE * · CdM .. Q>sta .iesa, Dover 7 days. ~O 11. load. }"ree est. Hlt 96K--122J. ------\\nrk. Reas. F'rre · <!SI. !\lab!\. R!!ilS. Don 642.-8514. Front yard VO. per.ffiopth , Shores. Westchtt. Anytime. ~18-5031 . - l09!nllfy_,''""""____'.'.'_:"J ServkesandRepalrs EXPER. r e mod<!lilig, sma , n!asona e. rec · t f ll 'IUWJ ,,_,,,.. -b" · · E U II Slull•"•k • ., 0015 COMPl.ETE '-wo, gnr .... n-bo, rs. Pft!lOS, enc~. wa s. 1'"n!e ...... !mates. 64>-I~. SUMM~~ WORKSHOP A CHANCE TO BE GOOO TO YOURSELF Jn a Fe'v Delightful Weeks· You Can Ex-- perience - • MORE ENERGY e MORE· WILL POWER e RELAXATION OF BODY l MIND . J;?o You Have The Potential For A Dyna· niic, _Fullilling Life? Most Likely. e FREE DEMONSTRATION • This Thursday & Next Tuesd•y At 9:15 AM. e Morning Classes St•rt Tu•sd•ys, Thur ... d•ys & Saturdays. • If Nights Ar• Better, Ask About Our Night Classes. . --. YOGA CENTER 445 .E. 17th St., Cost• Mes• 646-8281 _GET THE BENEFITS NOW! f' I I I I I 1---.-1 I I I I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • COSTA MESA PRE-SCHOOL 1797 Monrovia Avenue (Ccrrner of 18th Street & Monrovia) Costa Mesa 642-4050 or 838-5237 SPECIAL SUMMER PROGRAM Full 4 Half Day Sessions Ages 2 to 6 Years ttHot Lunches & Snacks **c,...ative Activities ttMusic, Stories .. I l_l_l_l~I I I l_l _L•_I • I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • f ServlcH and Repairs )~ [ S...<naodR• .... ,~ ----Painting & Paperhanging Painting & Paperhanging VINYL paperhanging specialist, work guaranteed, PROF, painting, Exter 1 .free est, Dan Schwartz story, low as $225 w/rd !>17-5846 or_ 846--2182. paint. Avg rm f18. Airless p A 1 NT I NG: H 0 n e ~ t spraying accous. celllnp, 2 ii:ua.mntr:ed \\'orK. Lic'd: I ~""'~'~'-'-1'--~"~'~'-' ~"-'~-'~""-·~-• Local l"el'&. Call 675-5740 all Plaster, Patch, Re;>alr S. PLASTER-Patch-Rm Adds. No \Vas l i11~ Acrous. ceilings, stu cco *WALLPAPER* n!fin. Free estimates , \Vhen you call "l\lac" 835--3931, 56-4588 att 5. :ilR.l·l+I &16-17Jl l -.-~P~A~TC!=l~P~LA~sr=E~Rl~N-G-l PAINTING, profcssi'11Jal. All tyjX'!I. Free estimate1 Ali \\'ork g;uarn, Color Call 540-6825 s pl c l a 11 st, 9&2'-6143, I ,P~lu-m--=b~;-n-9------1 547~14~1. PR 0 1'' J.: SS I 0 NA L Pain-LF.\V Takas &. Sons Plum· tinl'.:-in1rr/rx1er. H n n e !It hin~ r['f)fl ir, rcplpe, remodel \\'Ork. Lie. & Ins. !HS-2ia9, 11e1\' consl, Free e 1 t _ &G-5350. 64fi--8J40. ACCOUS. Ceilings, Avg . I -~P~L~U7M~B~17N~Gc--cRE==p7A~lR~-I homr $70. Also, int("t paint-No job too small lr1.1t "frE"e c~1. 847-4l28. • ·G4'2-n28 • EXOIANGE painting for U5-COLE PLUMBING ed furn, a pp I i a n t e s, 24 hr &ervice, 64>1161 any1hin~ of valne. 64&-3507. I R:--ool-.,,l~ng---'-----1 * LESCO PAINTING T. Guy Roofing, Deal Direct. ·Rrs/ Ap!s. 645-2399 J do my own wark. 645-27!K>,- Pilot Classllled ad. 642--56i8 548--9:i90. * * * * Trader's Paradise lines times dollars * r·ol 1d ·POO<llr f\fcsa North I~ 962-1001 . CEMENT \VORK, no job too back yard aJ~ .• Weedlnc., * LANDSCAPING * MOVIN G, g~age clean. up -'! . c.A<' ~.1,. [ 11 bl F yard cleanup. )ltl;v.:ilr12. • New Ja11•ns, sprinklers, ar-& 1,-1, '-··"''•· R•·---blo \\' LET founrf at Chi/la <'8 Lrt('ls, t['pa1rr;, ma1nt. No s m. · '" · ""o-<>U · --"' "" Llc;'d rontr. Mastrr Charge, ""' !JV~ c 't'. trlcnti°f.Y. G1:-;.W1s." 1 · . ,;u'.J• ·100 ·~man. Reas. Contractor ing service. '13 _, loc ex-p. ~S.1225 G~tr>ENlNG, hauling & l'-------------------..-11 ••• '2""' J im :.484t05 e1• -'-' E · SS "''°"" ""· ----------..,.,anup. xpcr. Coll. atu· t Babysitting l\.1Y \\'ay. quality home Ex""r. Jap11.ncsc Gardener, GARDENING /dent. Frtt est. 534-1846 28' unlflli\o SIS FI G rrul~-EXCH G CABINETS ,r,, room ad-,,.. mo.,.,·ing. e<lgt>.. haul;t"' _ AN E PRIME COM· f'I\ ,t. bro1vr1. 1111.,t .. b:t> COSTA MESA dition.~. rrmcxl('ling. rrpair. Wall.~. ceiling, floors Com ple!e yd service. Ncat dnmping. Collrgc Stude . Housecleaning er. Value $8,000. Trade · MERCfAL LAND FOR ale-dog. l..o~t 7/1. v1r PRE.SCHOOL :r1g...1220. 64f>-j219 ('!c. No job loo ~inall. & Relia. ~CHI. 642-4~ for cam!K'r or traOer. L'fCOME PROPERTY. 616-!'6'78 or 673-7j21 ' 1~1de. <'.l\.1 548--437:1. ~pcci~I Summrr Progran1 C 1 C • 547..()006, 21 hr arn1. i;erv. JAPA.i'lESE e•nPrt gardener. Mesa Cleaning Service Ca.II Owner: -------emen • oner•.• ..,.-'P~IENcc-o "' '-I w 1-•-F"'-547 un.. (673-1901 ) ••• o oht Jr~~h Srl1cr n1alc Hit! l -.\1onrovia, 1.~ day + ) LIC'D CoM!r. Remodeling ('mpl yd &ervice w/ pwr EX r.n ~ r. ,..,-apane!'e ....,rpe 8, ,....,wg, ...... r etc. -u•r.a eves. JJD-1651 \'I\' dni,·n1oii·n 11.B rull day Sf'SSions. Planned PATIOS, \\'Alks. rfriv['. in~tall AddHlons, Plans, Layout. equip. t'ree cs!. 64~1796. G11.rdrlJ('r Mo inlence & Rcsid, &: Commc'l. 5'8-4.Ul Ba.yfronl le dock 3 br, 3 ba, Have l966 Okls -4-dr 0y. l'fll-rl . ~111-!Y.fll progran1, hO! lunches. Ages new la1\•ns. !la"'. hn!&k. Karl t:. Kendall, 642-3811. J APANESE tjAROENER. clcan up. Bay &. Beach Janllorlal 5%.00J va lue f'OR 1'ru1t namlc. Will tll.ke oondo- 1-"-1 !('-m ~ r r 2-6, hrs 6:30 A~f -6 P~l. l)!n1ovr. 548-8668 !or ('S\. Adt1ilions * Rrmod('lln" any kind of earden )'.wk.1 ___ *_*~''7'--l\8-'--1'-*_• __ Crpl!i, window8, flooni etc. Derda or trade for ? No, mlnlum or land or sub- ·k· l~;1 In \\·e~tci\l1f ~rcn $18 v.·~-CO:\ll'ARE! &12-4050 I QUALITY Ccmrnl \\'ork. Let (;r":ick k Son, Lii' 836-1214, CLEAN,.& Spec I a I Is t Rts. &. C.omm'l. 646--l«JI. l Balboe. Coves, Owner 1i21. • VA-CAT I 0 N Mo I her . J George. do · It. L Le 'd . 673-filll * 5'19-211'0 I -=-'-~J-apa-"-~-.,~G~ord~•~rIPT-~ hauUftg odd jobs, new Jrnce Ironing , ~-331 . La -,.. n., .• ,,,.. Ln ~bl~·hitr klltl'n. Rr11[>0nsil)lc .• \\·oman ~ill bond"d. &l:J--169:i. Electrical Exp'd. Yard Work &;h-iiair. Reag. 54s,.ro;i3, __ ..;. _______ 38" PACEJ\IAKER Dush 11.; ?.Ill!~-' Nr\l'llOrt ili'urh CHrc !or your c~iltlreO tn PATIO S(l('ciallsts. A 11 d ----------1 ae11n-up, Planting 646-0619 I ~"--'--ii ~5~-;-. ----'--lll.ONING • Newport· Costa deck; f'OR Newport or ,. vour homr dunng vnur ,. · ,_ L!C'D Electncian, maint. Genera erv1ces l\l_csa are11.. You deliver & C>1 a-· ·--- ---v11ral1rin, C)y.•n f'ar. Local \\llh A custom patio design· .serv. Also, resid. inc.lustrlal. ___, ' ~ 1rkup . Ex~llenl . ~rk; s,1 Call llf\ 6 pm, mil. • 494-7260 ~\bat do you haw to lradef Llrt It here -ln Qrana:e County's largHt read tnid- ina: J>O$L &l2-M'18 Rt Rn:I ·.1:,...2!1!1. · "" l'llnct .... n to you r hnm(' EXPI<.'"R. Jt11.wa\l11.n Gardent>r ,,_., •vi~·•e1 HU TEST' mark(''OIM't' ln rcft-rt'n(."{'f!. IH~74, Ni Cll""l'~ll "'f " bo &12-1•174; Complete• G11.,.,en1ng ,.... fl!'&.. f;i~:i..1. eleZ~, r '1\ofP'. • ... J.19-0418 tr r.. The OAlL\ PILOT ''~ "' Y or ,oor me. ~ vice, Kamalanl, 646-461\ ~ · ~ <'lt.~sifled ~el'llon. Sa vf' RA0ViirTTINU. lhe oldts! or Qull1!tf1 · Ex pet: l e-n c e. E L 1-..:dfR1CtAN. liceneed. ,. . pl fe~f!~ file · lnstln , ' ·~ TS" * * * * * * "f Y· time b rflort by 10. Vtryl 1·~1ier. X: rrlia Sa.lil~\C'tinn . Easnn ,(. Sons bt:m1~. ~m111l Jobs, rn11i,,nt. GAR·DEN~R EXPf1'. °'r ~ • ', p8lnt et f ! ~I ··~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!ll ,, rhnlt f';1rh1 61f, 1727 ·, ('qn<'fn1rllr1n ~l~--076'1. f, rrp~MI. 54s-52oJ. li75",952 St.'i.-08~. c !!! • ... -.. .. ... .. ......... _, ' .. . - ·-. -·--~-·~-~-_, --.... ~. -_,,.,. __ _ \ . ··--...:..--~-----· • .~ ------ I ' ' I I j 1 ,. 11 I , ' D I • I . • ' ' ·' ' ' • U DAILY PILOT -· JuJr 5, 1971 Tue~ay, July 6 1971 DA.ll V PILOf :JG --J[Il) [ ._, .... J[Il]I llf4l'0)11111111 J[Il)I ~ _~ .... _ ...... ~J[Il)I ...___ _ ..... _ ... -_J[Il],1'-1 _ ....... _,_,_1 [11 L-[ _-·_ ...... _J l§l 810 I Help ·Wenred, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 110 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Want.d, M & F 710 Help Went.cl, M & F 710 Help W•nted; M la F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Furniture 1---~~~~-i1-~~~~-::-cc:-- EUROPEAN Dressmaking. Auton.uli\'e H I M d Payroll Clerk to$500 SECTY. R .E. SERVICE-CASllIEn l1lt'11lG R!1.NOAUl;11 r1·:r~ Expe~~)' eu,,s10,~,.!itttd, Ac-A NEW G.M. app·1 y arr·1e Xln't co. kx:ated near Mi&-Seocretarial po.dtion 111 al'llVt' location. Lots or 11ublil' ret11-C'UX.'t\-A1111tjUl' Ir d I+ ;in cur. ""'as. .,.... .,...;i, sl.:ln Viejo, BeaurilUI. 5\ll'· Re'attor's olliL't'. BeautLlul llOn.t. U you like 1c tut.11dle ('IOl..•k. l 11I,.rc >-1 111 ~ i·uu- Alteretions _ 64°2~-~514=5~ DEALER roundlno. lovely ofcs. Call nt'w otliCE'il 111 Newport Crn· 1nor11•y this 1s tsr p11~i1Lo11. \'l'1"!<.1t.v11 1•11·1'c <1' \<«ll "·~ ;i N'at, accurate. 20 ye-an; e11:p. needs an expe.rienced D~rv t.fits Rosea.niw:, ~7-617'1, Ab-ter. Co11ge11111I stalf of ma • .S!arl 1175, 111•·1 1~11111 l1J1·1 P 1 r er-. Tile ('lerk. Must have top local SMILE A LOT--PERSONABLE !gait Abbo! Personnel Ag,n-tl.ltt penonnel. A tront of-Call Jetu1 Brown, ~.J5 1''tn1 shcd in hnliqu•· )l'llu11 experience. S day -40 hr. • LIKE TO MEET PEOPLE cy, 230 W. Warner Suite t.lce positlon requirn~ good COASTAL AGE..~C\' 6:\1;" Ill SHiS 10 DJ{A\\!·.J: CER,\l\llC li!e nc\.\' &. ren1odcl. f'n-e es!. Small johs w~Jrome. ~2426. Tr•• Servlc• GENERAL Trer Serv. Yard Clean-up. Sprinkler repair5. Reas. 646-5848. Television Repeir wt>ek. Salary r11n1;r $600 \(l Zl1, S.A. ' telephone l'Ol<."e, SI! & JBi\1 :mto llarbor Bl al A1Jan1s CJll-,ST-11 •1!1"11~lyh•1·111·~1. $6.j(), Reply 10 Ciass1fiec! ad M E11:et'. abilirie~. Rl'al estute --------Br·11111 l1n 111 unHq!lf' whiti• •200. Daily Pilol, P.O."°' GREAT TRAINING PROGRA PRODUCTION SE:!tVICl'.: Stll. Allt•udant find t'lluo•hcd "/J" !11 117' CLERK exprricn~ not essential, but Graveyard shift Apply Ai c<'i 6°, 1 ·''""" Jj6(), Costa 1\lrsa, Ca!lf. (no e x .... rience necessory) 0 J<lpl"I p -er ""ll ~ .. -. 1'N 92626 _ r-et:an View School Dlstrlct · 1 ·Pr J-ng m<U"-Srallon, 3636 E. Cua~t ll\\y ' ____ _ 2 0 3 N• h A W k S2.42 Per Hr r ied, local 1't'llld~nt. For in. Cdr.1. UNUSUAL J\l\1·i.J11. 1 .. 11 nd BEAUTY OPERATORS t ICJ ts ee Operate ail bindery eq"i"-terview call ,\!rs. Duhl ntill'lil;-d1111ni; 111!11•· 11/ li I I W ·1 T · ' p " ,. W I ' SLRV ICE Sia. Nil<'SJt\<10, nttded w/!0Ho1\·1ng in C.M. App y or our a1 ress ra1n1ng rogrem ment, Itek plate maker, Xer-es ey N. Tayior Co. 644--1910 • fK'th·~1;1I ~111vl'I 1 h ,, • 1·" • A I. · • 9 5 d II 1~-~---~------p/l1ml', eves & \\knds, ex· lfighest comni. 830-1010. pp 1cet1ons given -p .m . o y 011: 7400, etc_ t-.lay as.~ist in Sec'y Sales $600 iier. r-;r;it in <tPJK'ar. Apiily P1·rlcl't l'Ond. u1·1i::tn.1I l11'l • BLUE DOLPHIN. (except Sunday•) OptNHion orou set press, Hi Lov~ly l"ll'W fashion Island 259'.I 1\cy,port Blvd, C.M. IJ\'('I' s::ioo.' f\!1'.~11 ,:->·~! tJLi~ WAITRESSES E school grad or equivalent oles. Rapid advanl·1·n1en1. -----\\eL•kL•ml, S:.W ijL-~.f,.!. COi.OR TV & Solid State Lunch Shift, 5 Days, DON THE B ACHCOMBER Some printing dept exper. Top h<>nel11s. Call 1'.hss SOILS TECHNICIAN l)~;sJ>iH,.\TE lonl'd ro ,('jj, repairs. Alt nlOClrls. 25 yn;. rut\ Time Shi fl. per1'd. Applications must be Laura, ~7-612'2, Abigail Ab-fill iunlro! .. soils •'llJ.:illL't'r-n1y u1·ar 11\'IV r v r 11. e.~prr. $4.50 &>n·ice Call. 3355 Via Lido, N.B. 3901 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar filed Pen;onlll'I Commission bof Per,;onnei Ai;:Pn<:y 230 ing, gnu.hng HTSJlf'f'111.0~ or lnt'lU1l1ng liv':.; rn1, lll'tl'Ulun !146-7599~. fi;;;':~~::--:::-:~--1 1-•!11111!!!!!!!!!~!11!1!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!~..;IJ!!~.;.;.,~IJ!!IJ!!!!!!llllllllllll!!!! Ofc, 7972 Warner A\•e, Hunt. \\', \\'arner, Suit1• 211, 5.A. roncci·t;-inspcc1ron. L.d•,.,ra-di•n !urll, :-;11<1ni~h 0 ,1k .Bookkeeper Bch. By July 7th . ----ior1es 1n \\ oodl;ind 11111~. 1 A NEW GM *SEC'Y EXEC. Thousand U1i.kS Irvin.. lti1-iabl\'.'i, g-.i.111r 1111,li· ... '.·uvr I II ill . . Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 H elp Wante d , M & F 710 PROFESSIONAL p h 0 n e s1r. I ' A • 3 TV, lan1ps t•lr. fil.l-!WJ,,(j, £,-ln1rr•lt DEALER •• ,,.Mio• Dana Po' I Sa \I l X'J1 :-;1one & SSVL'., 21 I ( • -,,, - . -1-1 . ...,.... . DREAM JOB HEAD CASHIER "" .... • • tn, k n · arina<le!lt' aN"a.Oppor. l-lb-1>56.1. F1G1.11': uottou1 \\<•l<'r )1 '1 needs a bookkttper. !\lust MANAGEMENT Clemente, Capistrano area. of tireurnc. TI1c "\\'cl!e~ley" ---King :,JI•' 111lh ~:d1'ly lllH'I' Job Wanted, Male 100 ,_ . p I t l f d Needed age 26-34. Pcrn1an-V.'ork in )'Our 011,n horne T C II L R I , T El. t-: P II 0 NI:: pub I 1 r '!O G SW -ix.-···~J nave experience i\illh n1ost ,~,-~ .. 1 0 gm' ,0 0 ' 1'0°n1~,.,','°,'. net•ae"~ en! position. Apply 1n per. X-:-.tJL ITARY Qf"f'ICERS · YJI<'. a iz Clll{ rr s rela!lons 1vork h'U111 our· ...:.~~·r ' ,) · ·1·" · ·-----------journals. Salary range $ li5 .. ~ " • ... ~" Best deal in area. Phone P"t"SOnnel Agency, 5-16-21 \8, n f 1 k E son. BET\.\'EEN AGES 25-30. 835-1465 betwren 9:00 a.m. Nr111iorl ore-. Hrly 11ai.:" + l\l~(;:)JZI-. bi.Inn ~1 ·t-ri~11 1:1 SCRAM -LETS to $5(X), 5 (lay -40 hr. \\eek. pro cssiona nia rup. ~arn-SILVERWOODS JF YOU HAVE RF..CE/l.'T-4:xJO Carnpus Dr., Ncii·port honu~. 64:J-.30.:~. ~I j .~s 1"0Jlei·t1on 11/bkca.-;(' hrlbnt Reply lo Classi[ied ad # ing range~ $600 10 $900 a #~j f'asluon island LY RETURNED ~·R0 1M "aoodiiiiiionooiiiiiino.iiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l oi""ii:;"~';ih •. iiiiiiiiii..,iiio'"'oiiiiiiiii•ICan1pheH. JG.1-..16:5!. 200. Daily Pilo! P.O. Bo.'( n1onrh. E.xt'cuti1•c positron.~ --_ __ ANSWER·S 1::.00, Custa r.l~sa. CaliL al!>O available. l'"or yat1r Lil· HELP \VANTED LADIES, VIETNAM \VE llAVE A REAL ESTATE Sel''y:Bkkpr, ll I::, S6J} TEMPORARY G arage Sale 92G26. H't11ew in Orange Counly, \\'IV~S-1110THERS, AVG JOB THAT YOUR LEAD-LOAN PROCESSOR F:st•ro<v Officer S6j() l'A!'>'T,\S'l'IC Locale_ Flood _ facet _ BOYS-IO:l4 t: 1l l l COLLECT: ESSIE $2.47 PER llH. P/Tli\-lE. ~~H~;GJ~~AL.~~y \VILL ASSISTANT. • • Sei.:'y Cn11~1r SK!O WORK N ow 812 G'''ll "d _OLD GOAT GOLDRESS .•. (2131182-3310 SF.T O\\'N SCHEDULE. . l 0 . YOU Some Exper. Pref'rl Lei:a,J &r'y S!l50 D.:-.1.v. Girl: 1!1•re 1;; lhc '" 10 deliver papers in the San CUSTOM CR s ERV 1 CE. WJLL AC"'f AS A RECRUIT- * DRIVERS * ~~ Salrs !'rr'y S:i2'"1 chance 10 earn n1oney for ~ Jl1bac:h1 , }'11•ldl'l"'I h111l"ls, Englisl! ll<lll!' !'l l )l.~ & :.1•t11·crs, 1nilk glu~'. 1hn1w pil1011:-. & rll.':~. fJl\'hlr<'S & pl;,H]lll''>, :-.!;1l'k la!Jh·~. (!1rrc- lor.; t·h;i1r,, l11 i;:i;;1,g r, r11alic11p n111Tur. lu1•111h1rc & n1r1•·h 111u1·h 111orr, JO,\ \1-l/>~1. Sun. /I; fllvn. 216 Age-old story: Youngsters Oemente, San Juan Capis-PHONE. J.tl--1932. ER FOR A LARGE LAND _UNITED _ EJ1ec Src'y S600 1vks ror 1h11t v111·a11u11 ~ou don't ~eem To realize that it trano and Capistrano Beach N E • INVESTl>1ENT ('O. INTER-· • is jusi a mailer ol time until area. 0 Xper1enc:e HOU!'ECLEANING y,oman VIEW PEOPLE WHO RE-CALIFORNIA BANK File Supv_ Sj()() havr ll{'f'n planning_ t.ocLd every young kid wlnds up as DAILY PILOT Necessary! 1van1ed 1 day/wk, Thurs SPOND TO OUR A.OS. 2712 \\'.Coast H11y Acc1ng. Clerk .$.)()() co. No Fee. $1.j(l. an OLD GOAT_ .J92-4~2n pivf, for sn1 Ilse on Lido, CAN'T BE Af'RAJD TO Ne1vport Beach DentHI Asst. S11 2 Othl'r J'e(' Jobs A1ail l iiiiiiiii•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii""""'iiiiiiiiiiii• r.tust have clean Cal1r. drlv. E 'd o 1 ,~ 36'7 646-2431 Gal Friday/In.· Or ~n Call J ean Brown, 540-60jj -_'P __ wn rans. •J--filEl:.J OBJECTION''. ' - YOUNG man 11/navig. skill iyngEreL<LoOnlW. NCoJAuBodoc'o".· JIOt:SJ::K!'.:EPF.R _ c 0 0 k . ., NEWPORT COASTAL. AGE:\CY k xlnt 1"Cls lor v.ork on pvt E I o E p I A 2790 Harbor Bl al Adan1s BUFFUM'S Under 40. Filll' Bayside •Salary + Bonus Plan qua ppor, mp!oyer ersonne gency Coll in~ Av1•. Ba J h u a yachr. \\'ork hard, free lo 186 E. 16th St., C.111. . 833 Dove• D• N B T-\.PISI' Loc l~J-1 T travt'L 675-1717. -NEWPORT-loca11on .r,,. liv1ni::: qua rters. •Plush Orfil'es • '·• • • · · ·a eo, us sr Jslan<l. DR!Vf':RS, male or lcn1alc, $300 nio. 673-8356. e Fringe Benefits RECEPTIONIST. Top ar!'a. ' 642-3870 Rigsl Job 111 a ~ood. :.olirl --~=~=~~-- Job Wanted, Femele 702 N · t · . age 7;>.-6;,, for lram scrvi1.:e ""==~~~--~-e Start Immediately Fine modern bldg. An1iable I•----"!!!!!"!!!!"'-"!!!!• business. Nice ufr. Happy * AUCTION * 'ow Lnervicivrng during Laguna Festival of llSKPRS Eniplyr pays fer. ro-11'(lrkers. AttracHl'e gal SECRETARY $600. atmosph('h'. S!art S37:.. l\1ATURE babysit \\'OOtan and do housework S4&-45TI. Will I i g h I car. A~IBITIOUS girl, 20, needs work. Exp. \Va1tress, hoS!('SS, sales, 1 y p l 11 g . &1:.--2l°>2. AIDI-;s for Conv11.Jescencc, elderly care or family care. llomcn1akcrs, 547-66111. Help Wanted, M & F 710 Accounting Clk. $500. 1-2 yrs. exp. ;.oung co. Call Loraine, lrF:STCLIFF PEP.- SQ,'1.'NEL AGJo:NCY, 2043 \\"rs1cl1 ff D ·., i\'.B. 6-1:)-2770 ACCOUNTING CLERK HAIRSTYLIST If )OU have a good fol101ving & havC' been accustomed 10 11orking w/thc finest chcn- telf', yvu w!JI enjoy the xln'! oppor. & co. hencfits offered by 1h1s posiuon. Apply In Prn:on Bct\\"n 2 & 4 P'.\1 NO. l , FASHION IS.LAi\1D NE\VPORT BEACH CASHIER, part tlme, 10:30 an1 ~o 12:30 pn1, 111on-Fr·i only_ Call 5-16-803() eiq 39'5 hef\\·cen 2-l pin only. CASHIF.R/C!erk "· pcriencrd, NCR. ~Io st I y e1•es. Call 673-940:i, lllrs. frankr. Arts July 16 ltu'\J Aug. 79. Grorge Allen Byland Agcn-CALL NOW to n1ect, greet, ans. phones. Ex('('Jlen1 skllls, I01..·al. Call Call i'-1.iry Lee, ;)~0.-60:.J ,{· 1\pph.inrt·.~ Clean dnving t'Ct'(lrd. A fun cy ]Oli-B I:;. \G!h, s.,\. Lile typing. Start $32:J. Loraine, \\'cstclilf P('rson-COASfAL .AGENCY Auerions Fndu), 7 oo p.m. joh'. \\rite R.1'~. Curtis. :i.1i--OJ9i 547·6771 Call i\1ary Lee, 5'1{)..f,(]S5 nc·I Ao0en"'.', 20-!3 \\'e·.··1,,1,·rr 21W ll;1rbor Bl al Ad;ims W d ... .. .. in y's Auction Barn Gen. r.tgr., VC"nice Tram llOUSEKEEPER/Si!lrr for COASTAL. AGENCY Dr N R 6-1" 77-0 Co., 9 \\'avet•rcs! 1\\"C .• 1eaeher in C.i\1. 7am-3pm_ Ask for 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams ., '·-·-~-~':._ ___ I TYPISTS 2C7J 1_ ~r11 r~1rt, C~I 6!6·Sti54J V _291 II .,1.. ~· I I · d -16 72.1 M K Ad SEAr>ISTRESS. Power n1ach. No t"ecs. n:; w.p.1n. T('n1por-B•·hind Tuny·'." Rlr!r• i\fi!l'I e111cr "" , or c<i -... : 1~Pc£ ('( 1n1n1" .. }--·' r ent ems S A LE. s \\' o ''A,, , "',··p'il, Good I • " __ ____ ___ • '" pay (hry r alel. aL·y. ---- :l96-1!ll0. 111t('rv1ews 111 Lag rrosrr·r \L d 1 ,,,.~"-m••<l<d. 1 •• ,.0 ,, '''" ANTIQ"J·,· "'>"•·· 1•,_,. .. ,_ llll'. · • , war sct·r('ary, ""' ·• u • Ste11dy \\ork for neut exp. AMERICAN GIRL " •v• lkh July 7. r'""r. only, n1a1ur('. ~ulh i\lANAG!:;R-Retail. Position assistant 1nanager ol fine 1 67. 70-•• 21·2 D D S<'! fllln!('ll! dc~k sofa 1·h11.1r.~ !:1b[{'S t:<1ll!' b\'ll('l1 bf'd~ ,.. opera or. .>-. .>.. · I" upo111 rl\'(' En:;. Sales EA RN 120,000 YOUR F IRST YEAR Co a<; I Con111i. !lo.~p. 1s now available for au 111-ladic~· c!orh1ng r: h n in . ---S-ECRETARY 1Ncar 011lngc Co. A1rpurl) 199 1''11 Ex1 :r.G d1v1c!unl 11•11h exp 1n ~niall PleaM' apply 1n ""rson, 9 .,,. · '\ ., 1,,1 rl'tr•i.:. :-.1·ut1;1 ''rt u 1 p , .. -.•. , .. ~·~· ---,. $514-$625 . :.,., 111 . ;.:() . --.-: bu.~1ness n1g111t, to diL'f.'rt !he Backstreet. No. '..!5 Fashion ----- ---SL!L"f0011nl '.J"6" flfll)i t• /'ur!. HORS~\\'O.\IAN, Y0\1111;, ex-J•la·". ••.B. f' rOUNTAI N VALLEY VIETNAM VETERAN TV add. n1a1h1nt tHl-87~1'.I. pC"r .. to \l'Ol"k on rent ~1rinc. operation of lhc retail oullet ~ "" " SCHOOL. DISTRICT• 0 1·r 1'1"1,,--1 Slablcs •. '-0'-"6 in Cost11 r..1es<1. i\lusr havel =s=A=1.=J:"So1=,-,=h1=.-.-,-,---,-1-,,-,,=,·1-y--nc·" in a Ll'11n1{• opp<n_-. IO ,F,\~lll-:-\'-tllo1·1ng-lron1 L l-: • ·' ""' ,, I ,,~ star! 011 n1c:n11 C<ll'l'..'<'r 1n a J' 1 ,. 0 ff 0 · Lai::una Canyon Rd .. Wguna abi ily 10 lead stiboi'dlnatcs Siar\ a career w/Beellne R .1• °" ' 1 .11crv1 11r.;; •Of"~. pc n Beach. S.: eflectivrly opera1c 1n F'ashions,l3eyour o11nboss. l?QU IJ'('lll"llt~: ypin.e: ·"' O<"HI }r'd.n<:hofol1L'011.'1'un-Hnusi· lhru Jul;i l~lh. 111 Ir YOU DES IRI: A JOB 1 _::c:.:::.:::________ area or handl ing public. Ac-l\',p.n1. Sh 70 w.p.m. Apply Ines big I.'Ompan1cs .• ~Ian-Via H;<VL'll11a. iNll 1;-,3_.,.,., e HOUSE\\'OHl\91ol'1an1. Comm + \i·ardrobe. i· "''rson at the corner ol 11rd 1r.11n111« pl'O"l'<1111 lf'Ts --____ ~-· \\'!Tl! J!!GH EARNINGS, eoun1ing bkgrnd helplv!. 71'1/fl93-2~1-,.. ,., " ~ PRESTIGt:, & YOU'RL Lido !~le. S1 hr, Rrrs. F:.xcr! ~rai·ting salary & _ "..!.: _ __ TaJbt•rt & N{'wJand SlrC"ct~. )Oii l•·arrt 11·hlJr yuu e;.ini. .10Vll'•G-Furn1h11·r. hooks. NOT ,\~"RA!D TO \\'ORK 673-132.~ bi·nrfil prog:i-a rn. Apply In Sales t~oun1,.1n Vallry, Calif. No f1n1• li1•ne11ts pk<:, (';ir. 1•:-:-rugs, dCl'OI' 1!c111s, lxi}~. !!.\HD \\'E CAN PUT YOU I•----------Pf'l'~on i\lr~. o t 1111 ,. r. lairr than July 9. 1971 p<'ll:.l'.~ paid. S!llr1 SJ.100. niu<:h more 10un1-i11(n. 67:1 J:>:TO 1\ \'EHY RE\\'/\HD-_ Roadw<1y Inn. 1400 Secrete-;ie-;---Ca.11llrlrn1111,1\'s. ;,.io-!iOj;, __:i~vrrnor, C:\I~ ::o 'Ill "' 2 Years clrrical acl'ounhn11:, I ,._. . ._ _____ iiiiiiiiiiiii !:'>lG & P.!Cll fliTl'RE. -p fl I j <;;id r 'i Rd. c.~J START A :-:o Fr('.-. Top 1tra11rr fl11S1· COAST/IL. ,,(;i-;:-;cy ~IAPLE brd~, f e 11 l' I-,-, Tn('~-Fri, 9 am -4 pin. CAREER lion 111 advf·l!i.~ini.:. ('lecrron-'..!190 llarbor Bl a! ,\drtius :.ailboa1. 1111n1h1k1', i:1nl.1r, AP or P.e<·1•1vablc or JOb L-ost. Type-::.0 11·.p.111 . cll'"l'- * Clerical • • J111n1cd1a!r L1n11l1.'1l Opt>n•ni:: -Mature Hostess;$ IN SALES ll'S .~· !<111. Short .~· long \\'ANTLO exp1.•r. Cash1rr 1(; ainp, 1111.•c ill"rns. IH:l-IO!i7. TO INTE:RVJt;\\' Trnn. Ten1porary fYIS111011s rorf('(' ~hOJI. R;i11que1 Machinery 816 U>e DUPLICATIONS CLERK e Caditla« C;ir Pl<in NE\V RESIDENTS a1"111lah!e now. Husboy. Steady yr. aroundl~:oc:::-:::::-"-o:-:----- -Part Tinic--1\IE\I \\O.\IE\I AMERICAN GIRL en1pl. AllJ>ly 111 pt>rson Hotel ROCKFOHlJ 18" l"n,1;. la!hc, for Apf)01n!n1cnt Call J1ulus1rial R"lat1ons (714) 494-9401 • rnccn11ve Plan For H awaiian Vaca1ion CAR &-TYPE\\'RITEH NEC. ?l'/2 Dupont Drive I .aguna, 42J So, Coast ll\\·y, S32:i or '? Cell 547.3095 OUR ,\PPROACll I~ JUST (:--/rar Orange Co. A1rportl Uti;:una Beach. 4!13--1076 $-18.i + top benefits. Al !cast 1 )T varied eXJ!E'r. 1n use or duplu:atin)i equipment. Fl!e. applica!ion 1n districl office hy 4:30, 1/1111. e L1b('ra! F'r1ng1• 8(·nPl11s IRVINE PERSONNEL SER.VICES "AGENCY 1\ LIITLE lJlfrLRI:::-;T, ~1 ·.'IO 'trl ::::io P,.,1 Mis cellan eous 818 TELONIC Industries Inc:. Laguna Beach Equal opportunity employer Acctng Supv Payroll Supv Sec'y /Hoste ss Sec'y/Girl Fri. Ins. Sec'y Mktng Sec'y Sec'y to V .P . Sales Sec'y Keypunch Opr. A/ Receivable $1000 $700 $MIO $600 $600 $575 to $550 to $550 1460 $400 EXECUTIVE Personnel Agency .i10 \\", Coas1 li11y, ;-.;1~ 5Ult(' II 6~3-2716 HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT Call 536-93l1 COff''LE Shop \\'aitress, 111! shifts avail. ApPl .v In p<'rson. r.1esa Lanes, 1703 Superior Sr., c.r.1. COi\!P,\NIOf' for elderly lady. f'rt.'e roon1, OOard & ~nH1ll "Rl11ry li!Pal !or larly on social serurily, L1!e rook'g-&. hsck('ep1ng. Ref. ~i-4S09. CO:-OIPA/\'"ION "·an!rd for 'YOU/: C07'<1PE:-:S:\TION ,\f1\L BE ~20.flOQ -Slfl0.000 PER YF.AR AS AN ASSOf'l- ATi'. Of FINANCIAL ·ry. COON, COl'>t r.IUNJTY LEADER, PROFESSIONAL S.".Lf.S~l AN DAVID R. LOOKINGLAND. FAMnus ('1\Llf'ORN IA R. E. BROK- ER. PLEASE CALL 547-6771 Ask for Mr. Albert t::'\ ~.c· .'tC.HET ,\fl Y Go lo 'lurk w/a sm1l1•. <irn111111: {'t\. 11 /1:!11 1H'llf'hls & rhnn('f' ror ;idv11ncrn1e11r. :-;r:ir.·1 s;>[).J Ca!1 Ji•a11 R1~111 n. ~~10 1;ir,~1 . l'Oi\STAL. AG~.:'\i Y F.:-.1'(' .. ~·\··.1 rt ,t,. D 10 Sti90 .<:.('l''y ln~ur<1r11·" 10 $600 At:l~1un1Jni:: Supv 10 $700 F /C BookkCl"f)('r !I• $1100 A l l' Payroll Clrrk 10 $:JOO AtTtng. Clcrkl:"llachlnrs to $~j,) Sales Ord. Coord 1n;r.101· to SG.'10 :-.rr. ... 1 .r.1rsr 10 s1:io !:c<'"JIL {_;. Oil' A11<1hr11n lo S·l2j s3:i0 f"rcc & Frr P1J~l!1011.~ l~S £ 17111 j;i1 ln•1nrf ('\f 642-1470 ... 1ATtiHE 11onir1n fnr i\Cl\('l"al offu'r 111•rli. Cash1t>r111i.: <')>p Pl'('f('rrcd. Son1r l1tr t; f'lng ,'(, lilini::. Apply in JH'rso11 c-11ly, J\i!('~ft Lanrs. 1i03 !'uprr1nr SL, C.r.1 . J\1AR1Nli: r.1~ehan1r:, t'.~pl'!r. Only. S·1.i; per hr 10 s!n 1·1. Anchor i\lar1nC' R l' pa i r, 6·H-4J.15. $35 PER DAY wnm:1n 1n rarly :JO'~-Lile 27!10 ll;i1•hu1 Bl RI i\•h1111c; e JOB OP£~1:\GS e t'l"l.L Tl~lE, c,p·11. :\"u1·,pry ~.ilr-~111.111. f'.\l:I" TJ\JL 11kml~. ~lll"<"l'Y :;-,1l1"•111n11. Appl.v 111 pt>ro.On, ti~k f·•t' l;f,\nt Sh,)\ I 1, '.\lrn. \\01111'n Ai 1·h1ldIT11 for x1ra & hll par!s fo r docu- 111rn111ry 1213) ·161-33~9. Medical-R;c;pt-. -$500 l1111nt:'d. u]')C'n111.: Lil Cosia ;\ICsi1 oh·s of 1; P. Plras.1nt lr1{'1xlly ok'. l'all ,\llss lto<.e- ,1n11<'. :~ij'"6J22. Ah1~a1I Ahhnr l'r1'<innnrl .\gC"ncy. 7::0 \\. ~I unl~~tlllr ~'--.S .. \. ;\ll·:i\' S ··lolh1ng stnr" nerrls .~Alrsn1an-tr1t111re lvr n11u111g••111rnt po s It 1o11. I Rrn»l1Ts S.· salary. Apply 1n I p~·r~on Adn1 $a.l('S hsr11·ork L1vl.'·tn. Re f s L·,., ... 1,,.-i:. '" .. ~ St" 11.•tary r 11 r LLOYD'S NURSERY NO COLLEGE NE CESSARY AS A TRi\l.'JEE IN OUR plt·a~c. Phone 61~73-12 art i , ~n rrn tl:~il;.· or 11 knds. CQf\"TLSSA Han' Fa~hi<1n~ Of'f'r.itor for bu~y salon. SP11 llOl"I R('11rll , i;7;i...,~~R:i. co.sr.1i-.·r1cs Di~trihulnr.; \I anl('rl lo atlrn(! F:'\l·.Clil'IVI:; SALES DEPT. YOU \Vil.I. Ll;:A!l.\I 110\V an Orani:-t' Co. <1c11rten1y in July. Viv1a11r \\' o o d a rd TO REPRESE:>.'T 0 ll R CO:-OlJ>Ai'\Y, \\'JI/CH \\'ILL Cosn1eli<:s Div. Grn'l foods. (;JVt; YOU TllF. START r-;o char,::e. Con~ultant P061· or ,\ SJ·:CIJRE, RE\\"AHI). 1-•_io_ .. _._,_.,_,_ .. _,,_4-_,_ ... _. __ _ JKG F't.rTLlHE. COOK \\anled -Ci day \\"k. ~ Imnlt'd1a1e L.im1tffl Opt>ning11 e Plush Ollit'('S e full fr1ni:c BenE'fits e fre1> Day,:>:1!(' Tr.1lnins;: Apply 1n prrson only to chef, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, 1601 Bayside Or, Cd1'.t COOK-EXP ER. '.\lu~t ht' o\'er 71. Apply In pc'r!'On, Surf & Sirloin, ~30 \V. Coast H\\y , NB. . <pcor1~11-.•:u· rn:11111l,i1 1111<'1' '..!0'.~~ '.\'.«11 l"rt Blvd (' :\1 Sall J11;in C1p1~!t'alll'l. lllt1~t _ _ _ 1ort·~cnt !-:"><l ,q11•·:i1,,n•'•, JR. SECRETARY have 1":-;crllt•r1I ~1ior11\11nil Pr ... .r1un J\all 111 P('l':'-•lnnr\ a ru! typ1n~ skilb l'hnnr f111lt"ILQn o( ;idn11111~1r:1111·r i\lis~ 1!1ll111l'n at 1:1:t-1:.~2 11ff1t·1•s. Ciood 1,1p1ni.: .~ .S!I -File Clerk $350 J:"lf <I. :'rrily Cn ... ·k~r Bllr\k. . . 1 ·"1111" •Lill, 1\1r•J t 111;111c1:d :\In 1 ~1ar1 1n~ P1•~1ll(>ll 1n 111a l ' t• 1 I I ,·111, r a~ 11on s .. 11<1 J"r f1r111 1\•l~.1rlt.:tn1enl ()p-V j O E' I ror. Top. hi'ttf'fllS. Cllil :-.11~~ -.qtl" PJlOt. ~~P_?;,~ Conn11" .. \'i-61'27, Ah1,1:a!l Ah-I KEYPUNCH OPR. hnt ~rsonnel Ai::rnry, 2?.0 1\!1ernoo11 Sh1f1 1-.xprr, l'rr- \\', \Va r!'lf'r, S1111" ~ll. '!'.A. I ~onnrl Ol"pr. 1!0;1g ll<'l~p11.1I, -Nr11·port Bl'll~h. Gen'I Ofc. to $400 LOOKING~l~0<::.::m~o-~~lh-,-,cjo-,-, I Recept. S32S a notllt'r jnh? Hl"lp oltwrs 10 l\1n~.~ rrir tll•'1l '.?~Oil !lnrlJOr Bl\'d., C.i\f. ;\,\Tli),'-.1\~'0 i\f-r-;\N Y l\~:EL)S H1•p1"('~('nlat1ves 1'1 :o.('r111 e n1~11· l"H1~· rr111;i1 "<iu1r1n1rn1 in ~upcr ma1 k1•11<. PCL'nlHnC'n! salary + honus + cn111pnny \•rh1clr. Suf)('r1or h•1n1<:r b€'11rh1s. Equal 011por !11n1t~· En1rlo)rr Srnd b r 1 <·I rcsun1c to: \\'rite. Clas~!fied ad No, 201. Daily Pilot, P.O. Rox l;.60 Cosla fitcs.1. Cahf. !'12616. l•b Tech, $800 up cnhancc lhcir pf'rsonat Teller, Trn• $400 OC>:iuty 1n "b(oau11ru1 ideas" I NccAcT=i"ocNccAclc.-10N~S=u~RoA~N"c=.:' I Sec'y (SH 80) S390 Div. of G€'n'l Foods. Nu exp. CO;\IPAN\' has Ol)f'n1ngs for Sec'y Racept. to $498 nN:. No rloor to door. EXt'C. p<'r~n:ihlc sales «'pr('S('n- M any Other pos. avail. 842-1:;&4. r11t1\·1·s ro srll, !\luru11I of Positions Avail. i\IALE &-rcmRIC Cus1on1rr On1aha Ins u ran cl'. 11t \\OltK JN PLliSJI OF· t ICt.:~. A:\"D BY AP!'Oli'\T· i\IL:\"T ONLY. GR I:: AT Jl00:-.1 t'OR G/lO\\"/'H TO to SECURJ:: & RE\\',\RO· JNG FUTURE. /!<" .\l..\N- AGE:\11'.:NT IS YOUR DE- SIRE, OUR POLICY IS TO PHO:'>IOTF. FRO.\! \\'ITil- IN Tiil:: CO:"l!P,\i\'Y. ,\:; /IN 1\SWCIATE Of I"' AV E LOOl-\1:\t:Li\ND, Jjl;\'l'~ST-'lENT A:'\',\LYST, R t:. BHOl-\l::R. YOU'LL CONST,\NTLY BE LE1\RN- J~G Tiii-: .\l(lf'T :\!ODER.\ TECHNIQUES Ot· J.'\VEST· i\lE:>:T. Hf.PRES~ '.\'.T OUP. Prt~~.<:;Tfl.f: C 0 \! P ,\ :-,· y \\!Tl! l.\'CE'.\'.TJ\"l·'.S Lll\F C0\!1'1\.-.:Y rAn. t:xr1·:~s1·: fi('('()fl:>:T. TOP cn\1PF."· S. TIO:-OS TO Hf:,\('l! f'I:"· 1\SCIAL l.'.;OE!~~,,\t!['.\'CE. CALL NOW 547-6771 Ask for M r . Cotton Sa les SALESMEN WANTED FIRST YEAR $50,000 + \\'£ ARF. LOOKl:\"G FOR S1\L.ES:-.1,\N FRO:'-! ,\ N Y ~'IELD. \\1-10 ARE Rt:AOY TO PUT 111 EIR TALENT!\ IN THF. DIRt:CTION' or BIG .\10:\"EY. \IF. 11:\\'"E Tiit: f ,\('IL- ITIE". T1 1E: PRODUCT, & 'YOUR CO'.\IPENSATION i\!AY RE S'.!OtXIO -Slll'.l.O"(I PER YEAR AS AN ASSOCI- ATE O~~ C0,\1i\1UN1TY LEADEH. Pl101'"F:S.SIONAL SALES,\1AN. 0 AV I 0 B. LOOKINGLA~n. FA:-OIOUS R. E_ BROKER. DENTAL. ASSISfA1'T-:\lust hke people. l girl office. Prevent i ve dentistry S111'SSf'd. 962.-00!l-l. RUTH RYAN AGENCY ·""rv1rr Posilion.; 0011 r1pt•n Ornngr County Airport to 17<:"13 NC11"por1, C~I 616-.JSj\ r<>rn1111U!"f' indil'i(lu;il innur 111r l lnl" fl ll SSeng l'r S I 111t; KNO\V _HQ\\'. NQ\V 179.11 Beach l!B S.17-9bl7 roin-np, .~rlf.~f'rvice ~lfl110t1 CCARAT\'TEKD N\1.AR\'. ALL \\'E Nf.:1-.D IS \'OU. in Co~1a !\lrsa. (; oo d + COtlli\USSION Equnl np· 1 CALL NOW DENTAL a ssistant, chnirside & prevrn!i'-"l': control nurst'. Chair ('Xp. nee. People orie.nlcd praclic('. 962-7436. Gen'I Ofc. $433.33 prrsonalily & nral ap-portun11v r rnploycr. Call 1 • F.'ip<·n~" Account Mission Viejo ll.l't'a. lnlr.~:it-pt>11 ranCf' 11 n1us1. Sal('~ 540-7407 lor app!. e Con1pany Prt'!l1g(' Cir Ing variely IX>!\~lion in ~moll lmcki:;rourirf Dr ca~hlrr ex-------fCad1Hac1 fii cnrlly olc. Call r.1 1~8 tile-perlrnre ht'lplu!. Ex1·rllrn! NOTE TELLER •Top Con1pensaUons 547-6771 Ask for M r . Ingram A /Poy•ble $l00 Ad,'9.nCl"rntnt pos111on 1n IOWly N"111X'rt Be.11.ch olc~. COll(."CniaJ co-11·ork~'n. Top MMfils. <All l\.1l,,;g Laura, 5;17-617'1, Ablga11 ;\bbo1 Per- aonnel Aaency, 230 \V. Y.'ar· Mr, Suite 211, S.A. DENTAL RECEPT. De&k only. D<>ntal expcr. necr-ss. Some Sats. Salary oper .. fringe benefits. H.B. area. 8A~T-6Pi\I, 846-J.:M. Ja111r, 5.17·6122. ,\hlgail ,\h-~lnrring ~11li11y. Apply in h<>t Pe rso11nrl """111.·y. 230 prrson, i>lrs:. 0 ! 1 m ,. r, \\'.\V11 rner.Sui1rZll,S.A. n0R.dWR.Y Inn , 1400 f':r.!IAA<!PS Rd (' -,\I ' GIRL rr1d11y 11'/ bkkpg-e..;ri Turs~t'ri, !) arn-4 pn1. ror CATV llrm. Loc11l Nwpt -------------DISHWASHER resident prelrr1Y'd \\I cable :\lust br cll'.'an t: nt'at. over backs;:rouncL 617-.1"69. 21 .\ppl)' In pel'Yln. Surf f,, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiio _____ ,.. ... S1rloll'I, 5930 \\1• Coast H\\'Y, HANDYMAN NU. I Bldg :\lain~. Jack ol all tnut- PISTRIBtITORS wanted, sell es. ~la1T1ed. 11·11l 1~g 11ork. Basie. H _ Protein _ ~1. I n-frr early rr!IN'd mll- Vitamln. 64~. nary or lndlvr.du&J w stabl~ ® ~~ ARCHITECTUR~-A-L - DRAFTSMAN 1 ·0-RA-P_E_n_r-.-.-,-k-... -~-P-ow-re Dper. nettll. In Type V. mat.hilM' Opr /,, Tt1blrrs. 723 employment ~cord. i\1t1s1 have id local ref"~. Xln't C'O. Exct"p\. bf'ncfus. To S6j(J, l::mployer fm.)'5 ltt. EXECUTIVE Personnel Agency 410 \\'. CoMt ilwy, NB Xln't worklnc mnds. Good ~ \\'. 191h. 66-5350. oppor. nn, po.itlon. f.liJ. 1--"---''------ ary oPCn. r.an"d N. Smtih AJA, Nl'wport Bea r.h. 642-.71!'6 for lhat Hem uor:!Pr _try lM Penny Plnc~r Sa W )'OU" C..'V • !f' I Ml far! J ust ttai::h fOf' your phone • can 011tly r 1lot C&sslfled 642-..'i871 CM.rae your ad -lodAy! Also Ftt P0!>1liont1 Irvine Personllf"I Sen·i!'f's &-A°kt'IW'y 0.2-1470 Su1!1' H &1::..7716 rr·s Reach ho11~ time, Bit · $:'.t.";! .";elcrllon ever! See the DAJLY Pl~T Clusllied ~rrt ion llO\vl -UNITED - CALIFORNIA BANK 2QJ Al'Cnlda Ori ~lar San acmt'nle 492-.5123 Equal Oppor. Employer OPI::NJNG i\lanagcr . 83.\.-3595. ror Food Service Call for appt. NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THR'OUGH A WANT AD DAILY PILOT IF rou FEF.L YOU ARE QIJALIFl~:O TO SELL & llAVF: BEEN LOOKING t'OR Tiit: L""HANCE, COi\IL IN t.: TALK \\01111 US. U AV E LOOKINGl..AND, IX\'ESTifENT ANAL. '\'ST, Tl. E. BROKER. CQ;\l:"lflr.'j. Irr l.F.,\DER. DID • NO\V ll~~·s AClllEVING f ljl;A.'IC- IAL. SECURITY, CALL NOW 547-6771 A1k for Mr. Neeron SALESMAN Young co. ltOOCI salary, call ,\fMI, Schniidr, \1lf'~!r:liff Pt-r- :cnnr1('r Agency, 211-13 \\'csl- clirl nr N.B. 6-1:1-ZlitJ Secretaries AUCTION HOUSE • Atlantic Research Appliances 802 Has temporary & per·1,-.n"'rc-·r-D_A_l_l_E ___ 1---A11,·t1n11.'i 1'\'('I)' Fri night. m.n.nt O~n,·ng• I { ru ly aulo -•1n1· ti' tt' ,--or • pn1 . ., ,1 , arnPr St., !'iA I. d \\'"sher & dryer. like 11••\\', queli ut secretaries. lf111/oll' .~(':1 1\'ll l1~hll Ac""''ate sk<.lls of 6(). n1·1g $17'.:. b•)lh S21Xl: \\'h1rl-11, 1 1 . .... t! l!l_I'. ~t· I ,r,, L'On.~1gn, pool l't'fr11; w, ~l;i111l('ss sTrr( 10 WP m On tyna • :H!l-tin .•li-77~.1 e • • • I"'-· i!OOJ', .-ilnt <'()nd. $-lj. ~loving, " w r iter & 8G-90 w .p .m . n1ui., st:'!!. 71-1 IHZ-1096 ruE1·;z1.;1~1;;-Lif;;·1!!li~ Shorthand. ~'HIC!D,\ll°f~~1,, iinslr('r, rlt'fnJ~t1n;:: li:i> fllrt111 r'()lf!'r l:illl•', I '1 •JI itl!"!;J I 11 )U\{' tlhl .JOO. fng1dau·c t·lff d1)·1•r. Please Apply In Person 3333 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa ATLANTIC RESEARCH s-1:,. ·r11rquo1.-;('. Thi!h 111 \lnl d!"('~~t'!', "dr;r.\\{'I' 1"111'~1 f.· 2- lOlld. Guar & dcl11r1'('d tlr:111PI" n111· ,t,1nd; ,,lt't'('<• .i Hh~!ii2. Sli~,!l 1. 11 /r·u111r11111·111--Ai\l/ri\l f.· __ __ ·r.,1:w· ~·r7•1 t .. 1un1hu1•·. ~ v H ~: t" n I G. Si~. ~·111·~1 'I II' ni \la1:11 .. 1in & Hr1J I • 111•)1'.i!nr !~It S.t• l'w>lll ~' . -- - I I l ti •l<'~k <ll'a111•r, r'"t1'I r11 111onlh~ u ti U f\crle ,\· ., .,. ' , ' ,\lrn·111 S\O\C' li1r,; ~ L•. ::11 II'. 1 ui.1, ~~' IG \ 1 • "'1111 "Jmi,: \\'il""l Nu. 1 ('.\I ·tl"ir. r11i.;. lil1Jl'/•1L11('_ L1k,. Ill'\\. t fl"I.' ,11,1111 $.;.JI, 11 ~l<'ul G 1-' r\11!n 11";1•he1. ~-•I 1.,.1·11 ,, Sll HI ! l"lu -r ,.t +lr.,11 , 1-,. lll••11· 11u10 l'i1~h•·r. ~)(I f~ulh ~I 1 , 0 s, ••I:~ ,11, nr 111.,11 _.r· ~••M f !'(ond. (:11.1r ,\,; ~20 1,1 1 ~111•1 · df'h11·1~'d .·1+h~!i72 .. ~r;·-~1 1. ,, . . , 11 .\Hll H·p;1,I' !'><1111 111• r ~ l\h1rlpool It !1·1r.:1'1';it1•1j ;111· ,'.;p1 •1·1,d' \I.~! I I• ,ill. :id!ll~1 <"•ll1d1[1on•··r~. :->••11t$ r l"o.: J•!h•h, ~1,ilJd,d'l l llln\i 'lllf'lll~ ~i .. vr. l!~e(! 1J 11\o. r.1;,...;~~1;;t, .. 111) Lo;1~1 ['1111 n _l·'.rit111I OpJ"'.ir J·:n1ril.1yr•r ---. 1_,n•al 8uv .---.l+·\,,!1,, 2L'li :..1'11 11o r 1!..· Sf'.ClltTAnY. for " st1a1·p Hu1lt-rr1 •i•cn f.. ra.nt:o• td:l-;.,111:.i ' 1l.1n;irnrr l";.,1·c. 1\ho ll('C'fls .~$.ill. bl:-1~02 (,f·,-11.1.,11·,-,-l\•ork ill~ll ;ippl'('tiatr.~ rour ch11n11 fl.· IVHIRLl~ooL "'""t1it 11111"11 $+i.1 11r t1•.-t .irf•·r ~kill~. 111 n('1v 111rll!rrn ,1ifr \\'.~sher/Ot)·rr. :i•O('.allo, St,,r .. n n•n1·o hr pln1"r Sf~I told~. 81,i;:: ('0. l)('t1{'f 1t~. S!f11·1 SI.ii J)Rlf. h!l·l.>.~G. or lit·,1 .. r11 I .>IX-•.~·!,1 1lf" SOOJ ---:1:'.1-Zt1.1 C:il! llrlrn Hayr.~. :rHl--lilf).) t "IUtiJD,\R!F: J)f:l.l.\~; _ _ l'OA:"T/11. AGENCY 11;r.sh<•r & ril")r·r t: ~ .. 11,1-l11'r ,{ rt1·.1o'r. :! yrs 2i90 ll11rho1• Bl a1 1\da111~ Slj{J. p;;1r liJ~._:.;,29 "ltl, l !ll(1; "1.il •h111•!1" M'I -,-------.---F' It I G 1L}AJl{~1 .... rn~ "''1 ('Ii.tit'' .t· h•al Sill; :\ Sf~CRJ:.J1\RY -Olf1cc ('l('rk. , g p n1Rlch111i.: ··nrl 1ahl1·, SI!! 1il r.1ust br ahle 10 lake lre('icr, 11h11c l tr>otl con-. 1 . ,. . _ · · "1· .,-,~~ o~n7 . )rod rv $10 ,1.07-li0.~~-shor1hand. lype, lilt'. do lite "1 1on .... a ,,.....,,.., c.1cs. bookk£'C'ping & ans 1v,. r Cameras & ::-B.OR)~<f'l~la~~ top phone. Salttry open. Apply Equipment 808 rl1111ng n11,'elSll~T1.ZHrfz"' 211:1 canyon nr. (" i\1. 11 ice llLiL C'I' 1.1 .1~-.ai;. ·EcRE~ARY . • 1::NW\RGErt -Omrg3 B-4. !'('\\ lllJl\'11 !n ··.L11111cl $6.): s ~· ' part IUTIP 9·.I • I .:n k llll.,l'('ll : ·2.z;i;11 :\ 1 . !\l \V d Th . · •.1mu1 C"lls, .., or llll\ r nl-. ra_.,s-. on. f'. • UIS. fn1· Oih"' d11rkroon1 ~"11· -J.(JRlll'-I ----'! I ~ _,, I I ( k ' ' ~" · ',\ l.1 lie /:. I l'hilll"I ,, us "'" i;:1~.1u yp1!1 " t11 r ii . , I •·7 6"7 shorlhAnd. Fk'1 &1:,...1200 bC'! r l('S <lllll . J-1 -LU ---1 $70: l'!iili·u I llT .\IOI"(',~ ll\'. 10 -17 noon. f>!IHANDA Sl'n~rcx f.1.1'. (',1~ S!:i. h1d1.'-4t-lll'fl Slj _____ _..., _ _,iiiiiiii l Nrvcr u"crf. Pcrfrl'l. Sl:iO fiTi-1119 SERVICE CENTER AGENCY l=-===~---1 firn1 . 4~2669. 1:0· SCOTS.\IAN" Tr a 1 Irr. Furnitur• 8 f0 Chr11111·:1I Por!:i l'ol, J2 hnll 1"------,----1 ;ind )10 liJ,:hT<. Sll:l(I ror br~I C0~1 PL liv rn1, din rn1. girls or!C"r. :,1.~s~:, r•r ."1:\J-2!!il. *Sec'y Legel SSSO brlrnl & corner 1r:roup, FIJGGl1':-i;.ouo~l"ut<'r hell :\-~ Yrs Calli. law ~t('l't'O ron., pullo. ;inip~. l\in ·o f l R $'SO painting.~, ll'shr & dryr g s1ic "' i ~a rl_y ll~'r * ecept. " \I _, 19;q 20 )'rAr (;u:1r $20. ~ts-~~1.110 I ' ·1 'II ( I I \, ll..Y1!1J,:!. """-I.. - - -• c '' . rn o r. _ " • l.ll!:tl th CLARK * Recept. $390 SOJ.11> 1napll' BIR set S7•!1 FOIU\l.li'I Sl 2:JlJ, E\1)('r. PBX" «ird hOllNI. J11tll .!it'll S"P-' )faple d('Sk Pl ,-~ "01· I-· c. bl ,, ,... ll)ll(' 1 . .-u .. l * Sec'y to $600 1.1. 111rioov1t-19 c.~ \\" ('a nl'r ----.-_ _ ('aprstrllno i\f'f'f!., tvp:; $4.), & $ji 646-ll3i0 !l\ I! Or1rn111I r..111! * Bkk I . . .----$1111 1z, Ac1t1<', lia l. 1.~1;i1~r pr. p time CONTE:\fPORi\R'i . <IO\\• n ('i.11 t>i: .. 1fil:l $3.2S hr. hllrrl 10· .~orA. ht f1ual1t .\, -, -. -_ ,\nah('11n Ar;-a. ~II $nl. 1100 \~'h itr Snil~ .\10VJN(, -n1u~1 ~"II Sllkl * Sec'y Medical $500 \\'a,}', Cd:'-1. brlt 11hr;1111r. S If\. f"°"'I lyplst, know 1ncdical 2:1"' CONSOLE: TV, $250 4· ,'.;\1-ti•ll __ _ lt'rms. li1l'rt'() 1l·/por1 i-n. S.100. Oin D I A ~I Cl N n • \ I\ ~ r 11 L mt ~t S200. 647-3"1:'..t F:m1•r11lrl <Ill, 11hr f:'lld ~I· FN't'&Frrf'o.oi1rons ll AND -CARVED 9;'(~· t1n".S:.i00.fi~i-O)(('JX. Helen Scheffer SPANISH T,\BLE, 1173. l.11.JHES ': (11 n1t . ..:,,.,1u;;~ • __ .,..-.,__9 0 8 0 1 ____ 1_::&1:>-1~2. 1l1:in1ond. p:i1d S:ll() A~kin~ l:\00 Ph '.~·WI l:t:o ClllJ todA,y -Sell IOnJOTTOW! IT'S BcRch houioe Ume. Bii:- F11sl re~ul bJ wl!h R Dll il y ~cs! M"lec!IC1n ever! Srt' th<' lO SPD. BOYS BIKE f'llnl {.1a.~~ir!e.(l Ari .DIAi OAl l.Y PILOT Cla.ssifil'!'l -$In '11~-l!~~-l dif't'CI f.1 2-5"7!! • NOW~ ~l'l'OO!l 11'.JW! r11tl l>-12-;:.'7~ N•1w ' --------" .. _,,....., . ·-·---· ; ·-~ -........ -· ~· 1 1 11o~--.-..L -- . -o...;:-· .,_.....,..~,,.. ..t. . ._._._. --1 11~­ • r ··-·--~-------,_. --· .. O_M ___ ----------···-... ·----------- 31 DAILY PILOT Tue1da1, Ji;fy 6, 1971 Monday, July 5, iq71 DAILY PILDT l)9 ' [ -· ]~1 1 --I~~' -"""""""'-' __,l~l"---·-to-Yoo~[l I -""U'-It.! I ---lliJ I r.--ui .. l•M~;,;c;•;•;la;n;e;o;u;,;;;;;;l;l;I I Musical Instruments 822 lliJ 1-=' ~ ..... = ....... ~J§J~= ..... ~"'-~]§l:-1 935 I Autos, Imported 970 Autot, Imported ..,,~ 3 LI-, 2 Ti--. $2.00 Bo.ts, Power SUMMER'S COMING relax ... A1'-v:l'ER you get your ne\v carpet in, We 've Got It All. Blankinship Floors -..~-~--~~~-1UX>KING for rd home Yr ~~~~~~~~~~-J·~~~~-:;::--~~~ CUSTOM Gibson Guitar , • WOULD YOU old prt Collie w/5hots. JM '28 SIS Unillite }~/G cruiser .;a.se &, amplifier. xlnt eond. 642-ll39 Tenor Sax Xlnt Cond. .. 548-3322 • Office Furniture/ Equip. 824 BELIEVE 15lh St, No. 2, NB. eYef")'thin,: JM tilhlna: and E ORGAN LESSONS FREE to good homes _ 4 family fun. Must 1ee. Too as long as you hke! No reg-lovable P'l ~r puppir:s + much £quip, to list $1950. istr!ll.JOn .• flJo obligsUon. JU!1 2 adult females. 96S-7360. 547-6001 (673-1901 eves). Come. !\.1ondays 7:30 pm I==~-------33' OWENS BRIGANTINE COAST MUSIC f'REE to aood home -Stan- dard -I 1 .. l 1965-Elec ialley 2.s K.W., 642-2851 PS, ma ' 0 F XI fe male. 641H>487. NAN, SIS, CB AD .• nt 2 Adding n1achincs, metal <s;po;;;;rl;;l;ng;;,G~ood;;;;;~.;---113~0>1-KITT".'."~EN~~S~,~w~k,~.-<a-1-,ro--& 1 ~:, ~~.8 71 -3440 i tiC'Sk & chair, Jihng cab. •I " 3 • LAD1<·s '"''· boot• & orange tiger, box trained. ur11wcrs, pc sectional. "' 2 MUST M!li! 25' Owens Exp "" • ,. ,....,le!, S65. 546-134. .nv--5S .1. .-~ I-==,.-,=====~ Cruise r, good cond. •p~·an~~o;g.;;;;1-su l :~-=~C~.i~l~SJ&.~~7080. fo'REE: CUTE KITTENS Bargain! OUer. eve a. r 1anos/ rgans 826 WEANED .t. TRAINED 642-8062. -:::-:-:c::c:--::"------1 TV, Radio, HiFi, * 548-tSIS * """'""""""""'c:::::;:::::-1.;:: YWCamper Rental$ $75 a week-Sc: • m1Te Mac HowaRb AUTO l TRUC~ LEASING 124 No. Harbor at Bois.a Santa Ana-531-0607 PIANOS-ORG.'\NS-SALE Stereo 836 i~~~~-~~---38' CONVERTED Trawler - S29l & up. !11odrl '1300 ----------1MALE11Jky white.Cock·a-poo diesel pow.red. Classic & '59 Dodge 1f2 Ton PU \Vurlt!.ter organ $995. Coru1 STEREO, 1971 unclam1ed approx -4 yn old, frre to re-comlortable. 673-11.58 ~ ton, 81Ai ft. overh..'!ad camp- uri;an. 25 pedal $ 5 4 5. lay • away. Gar r a rd tJred couple. 543.9475 e :ll' SKIP JACK• er, sleeps -t_ \ll/rani::e. ice Lo11.•1'£'y organ & Lcs!te, like turntab!e, AJ\1/!-~i\! .ite~, AFF'ECI'IONATE manx kit-Xlnt cond. Loaded. Call TeC box, oven, ~r'e'd, etc., \'e1; new $995. New console radio & tape player. Air tens need homes befo~ Rogers, 673-S:l52 · clean. Cali 557-9792. CONTEMPO UCUNA HILLS 21301 RIDGE ROlJrE DR. (Corner ol Moulton Pkwy) Prestige adult con1muni1y, adjacent lo Le l11ure World. Beautiful surrouo<l- ings, all luxury appoint. menu. Therapeutic pool, Saunas, E.-.;crcise gym, 4 bilha.rd tables, n1uch, much n10rt"~ See h<'aut. furn 1nodcls In p;lrk-hke setting. CALL 830-3900 or 830-79)0 CONTEMPO. LAGUNA HILLS piano. 11alnut. .$595. REN-speakers "''/cross-over pound, box 1r 8 in e d .1 38~. '!°CP~A~C~E~'M':":A~K~E~R-,-~F7l,-,c,lic~y~c~l~e;•-, IB~l~k~e;,-, --'---~301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. 2931 Bristol, I TAL.S>'l~.'Lo·s· PIANO CD. "'1•"",1. ~~1119 '',and ney,·, 54&-2413. -'--k. Jo •-. Ow-·.· Call ScOQfers 925 (Comer of i\1oullon Pkwy) ~ so or .., w warranty.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil I u=: 1u::i '""' Prestige adult con1r 1unity ad -Costa Mesa 1833 Ne11•port Blvd. Pay oU balance of $12{1 orll aft rpm Y.'\-0418. jaernt to Leisure World. ROY CARVER, Inc. Al Vista P;i iuls 1Cos!;1 Mesa 714/64j...325(1 sn1all payments. Credit 1 11~1 77' DRAKE-Craft Exp. THJHI Braunful surroundings, all 8 l\1uhtle Home llITS & rinl),, HA~l\1Q-.o stein ..... a y d<'PI. 893--0501. Pita Md~ Cruiser. 275 hp, Chrys. HONDA Juxury appointments, Ther-7-1~ 5 -10 ply. UsC'r! less .. ' ·. · · , . ' h 100 ii . 5.1• T'I! I ~.11naha. Ne\.\-& used SANSUI T-lln!A, UO wall llemi-fa.st. $2,995. 673-6S45. a pcullc pool Saunas, exer- 1 an m es. ' a-..• · pianos of niost makc-s. Best amp., 1umtablf', tape deck, 21 . CRSTLNR. fbrgls, CB, S. cis.: gym, 4 billiard tables, AUTHORIZED ROLLS-ROYCE BMW INTERNATIONAL TRUCK DEALER Miscellaneous buys in So, Calif. al Schmidt 2 spciikers included. Pets, General 150 CR, 1.-IEP l/O, bit pm, dpt "''fRl!Cl\I 'NDER., much much more? Wanted 820 I ,\'!usic Co., 1007 t>i. !\lain, $300/olfrr. h~2-5.':l91 fdr. CLEAN. 64&-9072. I.Ill.A Sec beaut. furn models in WE WILL BE CLOSED JULY 4th, INOEPENOENCE DAY. OPEN MONOAY, JULY STH. San1a Ana. ?.I" COLOR TV -~1us1 YOUNG COCKATEEL 1.,. lbal .....,. "'' park-like setting. Decons llf'nch. hutch. spoon I '66 Tolly 32' T.S. F .B. Im-537-6824 e 893-7566 CALL 830·3900 or 830·7900 rack. lacldrrbark cha i i·, PIANO, Wurl it zer. in-~acrif1ce, S95: 19'' portable Sl7 *** f>IS-7011 Sac ·r M t bookshell'l'S, fl<';isonablc & 1<'rlockcn, console. Cherry \v/biln radio S3:i; 21" R&\V Dogs 854 ~~5o9S ri ice. u.s see. 1918 Triumph Tiger 100 J ONLY $750 rln. Balance like ", ,0,, 16_ $550. 714/49b-4-t73. --17'8" MANTfl tri-hull. ~HP 90'/o Restored. Must Sec. extra.~. [11 fan11ly pttrk. good cond. pl<1tc rack. I wood, traditional. 2 yrs old. table 111odr l $20. 6·12-5621 · rebuilt SOOcc eng & trans. nnt for 1970 2 Rr. 20x4:\ 11.ll ,,.,o-,, S YR.. old quar1 er-horse type BEAUT. St. Berna.rd male, 2 O/B. Lo hrs. tish or 1ki. $800 642-5591 159331. \Vestern M.1"1. Ph. "UYING silver dollars, BALDWIN Orgasonic n111rc. Xlnl for beginners. yrs, 5 mos, Ch blood lines, •2175 ,_ -·7 50 0 W ~ • ,..........,,, · '70 YAMAHA 175, lo ml's, 839-63~ · silvrr ,.0111s, ~old, paying electric organ, includ-S3::.0. 673-310.'i. ondertul pet or excel stud. l---~~~---- 2925 Harbo1· Costa Mesa Boulevard 5464444 h $650 C II l\1o · t u 1175 ... Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 exp. chamber, nu paint, set Call 642-5678 Now! lop <lollar. 67.'l-76.)8. es benc , • a Al\1PEX. llOO ITel ro reel ving, mus se • •v 675 5947 good home w/love & c are. -for dirr. All stret-t access. I d 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 DAILY PILOT for action! Call 6-12-5678 & Save ! • · stere<>, l73 Cal 25 -"-Catlo"na 27 included. 1450. 64" "931. :A:;".:;10:':;.•.::.;.m::po;:;.'1;:0;.:,._,.;,.;~.;,;..;,;...;__;.... ________ -'------49. -.• ,076 531-3933 or 549-2730 , """" Call 642-5678 Now! ,,..., G ••· 1 f GERMAN Shepherd male, 8 uarantee...., owest rates n 1970 YAr>1AHA T\VIN 200 " ·- nio old, AKC reg, champ So. Co.Ill_ "Cat.Jina cruis-Xlnt cond. All <'!cc llcfJ) line $125: AKC Beagle pups, ing club"'. Location Newport $475. 642-4804 . $50-$55; AKC Beagle male Harbor. TI4/96&-4840 tor info. 650 B.5A sem1-chopper, 1967, ';;;;;;;;;;;~~~! ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 & female, 2 yrs, $30 ea. Also B LU EW A TE R YAOIT Xlnt eond $900. • free kitten. 645-3862. CHARTERS * Aft 6pm: 546-2531 Cruise or fish boats to 40' 925 OBEDIENCE CLASS to"St&rt i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Wed, 'July 71h a t 7:30 in the day/week res/call 646-9<XX> 200cc VILLIERS PANTHER $:nl. Gd Cond. CONQUER BOREDOM .. ___: ~ Newport Beach-Irvine area. Open lo all dogs over 5 mos old. Call 546-4928. BEAUT I FUL German Shepherd pups. Gentle, good w/children. S25 each . 546-0696. Boats, Sail 909 * 673-8894 * CAL 25-Complete racing & * MINI Bike -31,~ HP. cruising, 8 bags sails, 9~2 .Foremost. HP, raaio, n1any extra&. $50 * 54&-1975 Side tie avail. EV e I e Good Cbnd. e r.1ust Sell e 646-2259. 1970 YAMAHA 90 ENDORA SLOOP, 1970 t i berg I a 1 s, S275. after 5. 642-2422 MJDWAY KENNELS -sleeps 4, 17 ft., sails, out-* TERRif'"!C * German Shepherds. Pct & board, trailer, sink, head, * Mini Bike * show stock. Board a 11 pulpit, lile line. $1995. * $75. 642-4802 breed.s. 893-5519. Nord!i, 842-1444 or 962--0497.1--------------=====-~~--t BONANZA mini bike shocks -.-u~s-T-R~A-L~f -A_N __ G~,-nn-an-1 ENTERPRISE sailboat 5 H.A. good rond. $60. Shepherd, 11 mo. Call l\tahogany wood. dacron 539 Fullcr!on Ave. N.B. . :~~8~n k after 3 pm. :;~-~7~'.r & 3 hp O/B. $650. 1968 TRIUl\fP!"f TR6 650 cc, ""°====-=-.,.,c;-1 new eng, $77;i. ADORABLE kittens variety of colori: need good home 5'1&-0813 836-4<!93. FREE Kittens, 1hort hair. 2 l\to's, C1Jte-playf\Jl. 847-7536 AKC COLLIE PUPPIES Tri, Eables, whites. $51J-1.125. 642-4469. GERMAN Shepherd puppies, 7 wks, 3 female1,, AKC. 546-1928. e SNO\'/BIRD No. 4 6 7. * 545-1709 * SaiHin blue. Good cond. $195 * * * 642-2931 ~==,-:~oo-~-c___.-01New cond. All Access LUDERS 16, 26 ft, 1Jaop; 2 *54!J...1386* sets dac. sails & spinnakers,t~~~~~----= aux. S2500. 729-6527 Eve Mobile Homes 93S fil.1W R60 -1967 25"' TRIMARAN. enel c&.bin CRPrS, drps, appliances. trampalines. Brit Seagull l2xEiO new F.O.B. Riverside, motor. $1100/otr. 64>-1496. $5,695. Western ?.1. H. HOBIE CAT 14 w/trlr. Nr. 839-6J50. new or trade on 16. 673-7375,l·F~,-,-l-re-'"1""'t.,-.,....,.~i"~'71~a-p~ho="" 542-358.~. ciill away · 642-5678 T 0 y 0 T A TOYOTA "An Open Letter To The Servicing Public" Santa Ana(Sat.) ••. it is r ealized that g etting SERVICE after one has purchased an automobile is something that is ofte n talked abouc by the salcman hue not ''ery often carried out by the SE il VICE dept. Complai nts of poor SERVICE arc u~ua ll y discussed \\"he- nc\·cr cars a re the topic of conversation. We at SANTA AN A TOYOTA realize this a nd are proving that SERVICE after the sale is a thing that happens ••• SO if you have ever had problems w ith SERVICE come in and have the prob lem so lved . WE NOT ONLY LISTEN BETTER .. ,,. WE SERV ICE BETTER ...... . Sincerely SANTA ANA TOYOTA 4 17 W, Warner Santa Ana. Calif. (714) 540-2512 SERVICE DEPT. OPEN MONDAYS TIL 8 P.M. TOYOTA Tncre arc only !4 biles bu~~ to take on i hg c o1..:nlry -J ame:; LTD. ha.; ihem all. The Har bor Ar ea 's only au- i hori1ed Su zu~j dealer. GREAT Dan~black 1 '.-2 years, trimmed ears, LAPWORTJ-£ "Gladiator" 24' Au_;;to:.:•;.•.;i:.:m.;po:.:;.rl;_ad:.:;.. __ 9..;7_0.;,;..;...A;;u_to;_•~·.;.l;;m.;p;,;o..;';.tod;.... __ 9_7_0,.;A..;u_t_o,.;":.:..lm..;...po_,_,_.., ___ 9_7D_A_u_to_•,;.•_l_m_,po_r_tod ___ 9_7_o.1 :o;loop. Sleepg 4. Beaut cond. ... JAMES LTD. 1584 N'WPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA 642-0040. Lovable pet. 89~52. JRIS!l setter pups A.K.C. Reg. Champ. Background, 962-7821. YORKSHJRE TERRIER - Musi sell! 548-4,"63. * M S1' 1ell! 25' Shock fiberg s.s saill;IOat. 2 Yrs old. .../ Boats, Sail 909 female, 3 mo old. AKC COLUMBIA 36, SSOCO % in- c hampion heritage'. 675-1665 !crest. f\.tooring N.B. Diesel, GERMAN Sh orthair raci nggcar.646-4370. pups-AKC, field champion 26' Endeavor sloop. 6 saila + line. Ready to go. 962-3826. eng + 40 '.'ltras. $3400, GERMAN Shorthair Pointer 67:>--0198 puppies, AKC, ch ii m P. 14• 1'"\ying Jr, g: ta 1 s stock. 646-2158 """/trailer. like new, all * AKC * P.AP.E It: LOYAL equip. $900. 67Hj 78 Skyr Terrier pups champ.17L..:IG~f~IT=N=IN=G~=,.=.-w=/-~-"7..lc-,-.1 Sire rnnstant 549-2147. Needs work, $950. Call GEID.1AN SHORTHAIR 645-5015. Pointer, fcmalr, l yr, AKC 1-'c-'A:..:CL:.;.c2=g_=L-o_a_d7ad~-R=a-c-•-,-i * :;..18-8188 * $83JO, NB r;!ip avail. 494-0451 Ni';WFOUNDLAND, 7 nio's male "pup", gentle pf'!. Boats, Slips/Docks 910 Swet.>I d1spos . $125. 6-12-5473. BOAT ~hp avail, .July Isl, for SCHNAUZER PUPS 60'-70'. \\11rlr i;;l ip. Grooming, stud st r vic e . 673-6606 Terms. 84G-083.9. 1 s=·L=l~P~S...,.!o-,--,.,=. -&,.-~50~·-00=,7,,c,I AT STUD Nice. 1aciht1c!. AKC Samoyed. 892-2970 Npt Bay 6'r."">-8990 -H-o-,_-.-.------85~6"1 SLIP SPACE AVAIL 25·-30· SAILBOATS APPALOOSA gelding, 5 yn * 673-6606 * old. BRED TO SHOW. IW-A-NTE~~D~TO"--k~E=N~T=,=M~oo-,-.1 $1500. *. * 830-1397 ing, Catalina, wknd or July 8 yr old quarter-horse type J6-17. Call 644-"Za!J mare. Xlnt for beginfl<'rs, Boats, Speed & Ski 911 $350. 673-31(),5. 900 Diesel lishing boat w/!lying bridge-good cond. 35.000 lo 40,000. Will trade vacant land in business area of Huntington Beac h. of equal v a I u e. • Write: Box 648 Kula, Maui, :Hawaii 9675,1. I b FT. BR ISTOL SKI BOAT 283 Corvette engine. Excel- lent condition, Hali brand V.<JrivC, Large wheel gal- vanittd trailer. New paint e nd upholstery, S139S.OO, 638. 7689 CRUISALONG, irboard mtr. 224 Via Lido Nord, Lido Isle; 21.1:270-4547/93-4-0920. 131,.s• Ri.:!'IB.baut, eng just oveihaulcd, 11.1ns perfect w/trlr. $600. 548-8232 '28' Monterey C 1 a 1 1 i c 16" CARIBBEAN Berkley OrigirJfL! Hieb KY-2. 1 cyl Jet, Call 96&-7614; ottice. eng. 642-2025 days/646-6625 54&-2000. eves. ~~~~~~~~~~' Boah/M•dne 11•1 Equip. 904 TniftlPOl'tltlon . 1 CYLINDER eng. ga1 er kerosen, reblt Marine head & 25' Piver Tri. 842-3798. Bo.ts, Power Campers, Sale/Rent 920 • Dat.un Camper Shella • Fbrais. alum wlndew1. Sum· 16' GLASSPAR, excel cond. mer sale $175 I& up. 1965. open bay. Ideal for ~7310. fishing. skin diving, skiing. B' TRAVEL ~·JEEN-Jacklt, Gd I.railer. 50 hp Mere". hold-downs, butane refria:. $1 ,0fiO. Also 4 hp Mere out· board, $135. 64-4-2119 or1_1000_,·=54""'&-~lOOJ=,===--I 673-75.18 36" CAMPER Shl!ll for 8' bed. Llke newt The faa!e~t dr11w In the We11t e 5'm-416tS e .• a Daily Pilot Oasslfied Ad. 641-5678· Sell idle Items now! If .,. ... ' . . ..... _ -•r::t; ._.._,._-... ,, --' ""' .,. __ _,.... ___ •1 1 r,'-~ .. --.,-...z.-'-----·-·---~--·l._ __ 1 •·---.. 'A-' -"' . ---. -·-• ' • I t j I I '" •• • ' OAJLY PILOT MG!ldiy, Jw/y 5, 1971 T11t~11y, July 6, 1971 DAJLY'PILOT 38 Transportatlm Auto• lor $.II• ]§]1 L_I _.,,,._,w"•-]§]11 ______ , 910 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported l~T·--"-m;;;;)~~; ~' ,_ ........ _ ..... _]~ :~1 1_ .. N'""_'"""_I~ I [ Mobile Hom.1 915 Mobil• Homes 935 Motor Hom•• 940 Auto Service, Pa rts 949 Trucks 962 Autos, Imported I§ I ~' ;;;."';;;' '" ";;;" ;;.;;I§];; I Imported 970 1§11 !~I ,\utoi for Sal• 970 Autos, ADULT PARK . C~t . '69 MOBILE homt". ~)', co·--N-D_O_R __ 4 Big tires & whttJs, 1-----.----DATSUN ... Lancer, 211KS2, 2 br, 2 ba, pt>rmaru>ntly loca1.-il i n 9 30-1 6.5 F l re11one HI. FIAT LOTUS -1 MG ________ , I !96Q LOTUS £111.n +116~1 n11 Y!'llow "/blk Jntf'r 101 $1250 li7~i64!. MG AUTJIORIZED S..\U::s & SERVICE: tinted w'lndo"·s, 11•lr !ifnr. .'\lammurh La I.. t> ~ l l in-trani;port. w/mll"tal valvll" DOT DATSUN I · 7 ,--c " 1 lhr yarhr th:i.rs not a ho.it. 1969 Fiat 8..)() Spydll"r lo rn1 "o :i,,; ........ ge 5nl'u S. <'ne-1rrr~t a1a1l to rigt;r party stems ftts lnternauonal or ~ yd, lndscp &.15-{l;S3 JI !"l.:r."l"s!ed c:rl! 61 !-:ti~ A!LL COR\\'IN FORD f" "p U 6 ,.,..,., .; IOO RECREATJQ•• CENTER OPEN DAIL y Xlnt t'<lnd. f.1u~I Sell Tod<i}' I 11· .. n;;t LUun1.1· ~ t:ondor Dis-Olu · • ,vuv mis. I'&. '~ AND Lt1 io Pnce. ~8-0019 U.\1i0 NEW $8.9'J5 .f.O.B. alt ipni TrJhU!or, :l:ID S. !\lain St., r.?.",'_!.,~_2-83.JJ. eves/v.•kzlds ROY CARVER, Inc. SUNDAYS -MERCEDES BENZ Rll'f'rsidt'. Cho1c.i-ol l'Olors. '1 NL"\\' ~JX '•2 2 BR, 2 ha, O "I h .., ""~ '69 FIAT 8::.0 Sp1d!'r, lo n11·~. Cr d ~ " i·ani.;•' ' n.c;e 10 1 ree nia-2925 Harbor Blvd. 18835 Beach Blvd. .un/rrn radio. xln't cond. -:;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ----NEWPORT IMPORTS pis, rps, apphan('('s. 1 Ready to mo\'e 1n . Sll.!l.~. J<l" fn'f'wa)s. 639-185() Or VW 40 HP ENGINE • Br. & Den. \\esl1T11 t.1 H. TPrni~. Greenl eaf Park. K, 7-t»4l 5.10-6940 Costa P.lrsa 546-4444 Huntington Beach S1·100 8·16-6257. 8.19.-6350. J l7!l() \Vh1t11e.r, C,.\l. 5-IS--1698 -~=-------I =-,,=~-~------c \VILLY's Panel J~p. Ford 1 842-7781 or ~O-OKl HONDA 1 \\'f Ha ve A Fine &-lt·l'lhHI \IOTOR !!01ne c:onver!erl 2 NE\V ures & rims. 40,000 67 D NE\\' 12\~6. c-rpt~. drp~. 11p-1111 'tpn1. equipped, 4 speed. \\'Iii AJSUN 4 DOOR I o' PreOwned '.\lf'rrPdl':. Srhl'lnl Bu.s. >.ln't roncl. mile Golden Falco". '"0. •n •k• a good ""•I. "'4--1. ' o pl1anet's l or ~ BR. F.O B. I Motor Homes 940 Sl."iOO/o!fer. ,:,.ig....5.178. " .,., "' •~• "'""' ·,,.; II NOA sport roadster Bt-nr. ~lotor Cars 11wJud1ng Riverside. $3,6!>0. \\'rs1ern ,--=, L="77~·=654~1 7. -~~-___ 1952 Ford Panel J\los1 parts i023 ABCi SJ()() or Of!f'r. I :\00 SL CCLL\\'l:"\G 3100 IV. Coast illl'Y· Newpor l Be<ii·t. 1\1.H. &J9..4)lJO BEAUT Foi'rl "C'n.isaiff'" Trailers, T rav el 94~ 2 NE\V IJ""s & nms, 40.000 replacl"d or IThll. Bell oiler B<1IWJCk lmporl::; 998 So ____ 1_9:>-4()_· _76 ____ 11!10 :-iL H.OADSTEI~ DELUXE n<'w unn. 20>.~.~ :J I \'an -l~.000 m1. ron1p! s<>ll .G' SCOT.S ~IA.-..: Tr a 1 le r . mile Golden Falcon, S40. acceptPd ~&-Int. Coa.st Hwy., La~na Bl"acb: JAGUAR l9C SL llARDTCIP ~ ~THINK Br C'rp1s. rlri>s. 11pph;tnet>~. I C'Onl"d, air ,..,..nrJ. hyrl t .. p Ch··n11.•,1I Por1a Poi. 12 Volt _'1_7_.,._-_i_. -Autos Wa nted 968 ~~051 or 49-1-9771 2~ S C'J.ASSJC :-OJODEL F'.O.B. P.1vf'rsidP $.S.630 Cm.1 over .S.6800 -A~king and 1111 h~ht.~. S650 or best * 1970 DATS.cU~N-.--1 '67 Ja XKE 2+2 :nu S SEDAN ,\1r Au1., :'1~11 \\l"~l<'rn t'-1 Jl . 839-63.iO. S5200. 6J.1.-0621 I of[er. :..ir.~95 or 5.11-21&1. ]§] WE PAY TOP 9 I t..'O Dtl-::-:1-.L •:!.I() S GAS Auco~lorSile ,-;:... 1600 Pickup Radio 011\p g-1't'f>n 11·. ran 1n!,..nor. 2:-x:I C t..'OUr~; For bes! results! 642-5':!18_ CaU 642-5678 & ch.11~ it I Sclildle iten1s now! ~ CASH Ton neau Cover 493-0089 J!Jirl 10. Jlratrr. automauc :'\Jani nior<' ~L'<l<in.;; & ~llVI t~ Autos, Imported 970 , Autos, Imported 970 1 Autos, Imported 970 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ FERRARI Iran~. Po11rr !'IN"ru1g, Air I nwdrb 10 •·hoosr f1'ir11 "FRIEDLANDER" 1)1)t lt:4CH CHWT, J'PI "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij I ..-ondllJOnin~. Chrome \.\ lI'e HOUSE or IMPORTS ~ Antiques/Classics 953 tor used can&: trucks, Jusl FERRARI 11.heeh •. 29,000 niil~. 893-;:.GG • 5.17-6824 61 :'11•; \[JLl<";E'I 1111 ~lOW. l·.~11 11.ln:J We're Hot When Your Hot Your Hot When Your Not Your Not! . . . JUNE WAS OUR BEST MONTH JULY WILL BE OUR BIGGEST MONTH EVER WE'RE OUT TO SET NEW SALES RECORDS BY OFFERING THE FINEST SERVICE AND SELECTION ANYWHERE. 18711 OYER 150 ~EW & USED IN STOCK Bugs, Busses, Porsches, Campers, Square Ba cks. Fastbacks & The New Type 4 's. I OPEN SAT., SUN, & MON. I ~ HARBOUR VOLKSWAGEN Harbor Arra's Only Al1thorized Volk~v.a.:"n Dr•alf"r BEACH BLVD, 842·4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH 1935 F'ORD pick-up. '46 ;\ferc flathead. 70'j., restored . !'olust see to appreciate. ,,....,,,_ C111l us !or free estimales. AUTIIORIZED ~ $3495 6868 Manchester Buena Park all fl GROTH CHEVROLET SALES & SERVICE , -NEWP"ORT . , IMPORTS OPEL Ask !or Sales Jlilanager l!WI Ford P.U. V..S fJathead, 182ll Beach Blvd. good engine. Nel'ds v.·ork. Huntington Beach $300 or best otrer. 836-.'JGi2. 847-6087 Kl 9-333l Dune Buggies 95/ ANNIVERSARY #50 '7() illEYERS TO\V'D -'6l V\V p11T. S9~. 540-5990 days; 5-10-9251 eves & 1vknds. Pl.\JTO IV/AUTO. fOR SALE Tran~. S.l day. X mile, V\V Ra.ll Sand Buggy "'1th THEODORE !railer. &1~033. S600-ROBINS FORD 'iO :\1EYERS TO\\'!:I S!. legal ~ J-lARBOR BLVD. hi po V\V eng. roll cage COST,._ !l.IESA 6-12-0010 sacr1f1re ;,.i-l-8034 \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR Trucks STREET legal Dune buggy, FOR TOP USED CARS clean $&:1(1. if your car is e:(tra clean. 962-2287. see us firs!. SAUER BUICK 962 23-1 E. 17t h St. ---------' 64 INTERNAT. SCOUT c:~~;~~RsARv"'!";~" 1 sfl('cd radio heater (WBJ. AUTOS WANTED ~·19J Bar;vick lmpo~ts 998 Tori do'.lar Jor <'lean used • . • cars, SC'P Andy Brown. :-..-.. Coast H11·y., Laguna THEODORE "'"'· """' 0 " 0 ' 494 - 9771 · ROBINS FORD !~Ho ford P.U. \'-8 flathe<1d, I good engine. Need.~ work. 2060 HARBOR BLVD. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coa~t Hwy. Newport Beach FIAT flDfiJD TEST DRIVE THE All NEW 128 SEDAN :uOo IV. Coa~t l\11y. Newport Beach 642-9405 '67 Jag420 Sedon Radio, He.itl'r, Automatic I Tra11s, Po1\'er SiePr1ng, Air Condir.loning, Chron1e wire \1"heels, ~.000 miles. $3495 l Beach Bh·r1 <'\ll on lh(' Sant11 Ana rr.\') 1 I II 523-7250 1966 Opel !-:<idl't fj~Jb<1cl.-A11· I L'Ond, 1<'r.1 ,Jran . l;ood 1·.,no! ~71WI lii:l-Xll l. "''"''"''"'!!!!!'"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ '69 Oi'l•J. (, !'-:-ih11rr~Bhir. 01.1n9e County's Largest Selection New & Used Mercedes Be nz Jim Slemons Imps. W,1rner & Main St. Santa Ana 546-4114 rrt!l} .'Tl'lf)I'• 1111 4 -,pr! 1 S20!JJ/oll1·'.:,__ 1-:lt>--l lti.> PORSCHE NEWPORT IMPORTS I l96.1 :\lerc('(Jes-1-1.000 m1. ~ew 1ires. A IC, Pi s, P/b. $2j{l(). Call 833-3487 1-;,1;" Chro n\l' 11hl~. 11/n1ounlr1I l'nl'llr ll P\6j tires. lubes, l1ul1('i1Ps. Froni ·;o !111-T. s1-,,l. ~lti~<l7fi(} ali 7 pin. ·==~~~~ e PORSCHt:: 912 0 r i c · "I IXXI 67-~?1- 1 ov;ner. ,, . mi. .>-lw.,1 or &l+--06J7 MG ------Front Wlieel Drive 3100 \V. Coast H11y. e '69 1\IGB GT_ \Vire i\·hee\:;_ '62 PORSCHE Rrlstr XJnr You 01\e It tc yourself lo Ne\1·port Beach I t'ac!ory au-'cond. Anii Fni ~11/hlk Rarf'.'. onl.I' 100 ~.x- r .. sr drive the new '71 Fiat 642·9405 rad io. lminaculate cond• isling 67:\.-737:> .. 'l-12-3;,.ill. a1 B.J. Sportscar Center ht:-l ----J..:.E~N'-'-S~E~N---e '69 :o.tGC GT 1\·uh onl.11 '6:> Por,(·h·· c Coupt> \V/R fore you huy any car. 17.00o or11{1na1 miles. Over. int. !'oc11 ~:ni::. Pcr~IHs tun- A ll Models Immediate JENSEN dr1vr & leather. I I'd l'xhaust imrnae.193-0089 Delivery Priced From .'\UTl-IORCZED HOUSE OF IMPORTS Gfiragr clut!f'~erl.' Sc-II vour $1 495 00 SALES • SERVICE !S. nta Ana Fnl). B<'a~h "f.Jl'plrnnts" la~f .. call .Dai· ' • Blvd l'\ll I Burna J'.11'k I ly P1lol Clas!1!ied no1v! Bill Jones' 111 :-i2J-i:l:xJ 6-l2-J678 B. J. SPORTSCAR CTR. Aufo•, Used 990 Aut-.,-. ~U-se~d -~990 NEWPORT IMPORTS S.~00. or best offer. 836-5672. COSTA l-1ESA 64l-0CiJO CflF:VY Carnpi'r Custnrn hit 1.VI PORTS \\'ANTED 2933 Harbor . ...:o•ta ~IC'sa I 3100 W. CoastJiwy. I fni• can1p1ng 4 nf'w tires & Orange Counl 1l's 540-4491 Newport B~ach SOMETIMES WE GET hall. S139j. 548-8232 TOP ~ BUYER F t ul . ho BILL ,\JAXEY TOYOTA flJDSJfl KARMANN GHIA as r es ts are Jl.'st a P fl{' 18881 Beach Blvrl • _ .!!.!!.!!.!!!ll_!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!~!!-.!!!L!!!!~lf!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l"!~l!!l'.!!.!!!!!!1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!~.!!-I call away • 64Z--5673 _ H. Beach. Ph. 8~7-Si')S 17 0 Karmann Ghia 1 _A_u_••_•_._N_•w _____ 9_s_o_A_u_•_•_•_._N_•_w _____ 9_s_o_A_u_F_•_•,_N_e_w ____ 9_s_o ___ A_u_•_••_._N_•_w ____ 9_80 • \\"A;\'Tf:D: l/\V BUG • coniplcte siock of j Red & Black inicrior: 10,000 CARRIED AWAY! . •• • ...... tt''"- NEW 1971 FIREBIRD 5200 579 19 "DOWN" '68 Wildcat W••~ Au!om•Hc r,,., ... ..,,,,.on, lltlwer >tte,.ng, l>OWfr P•~••• 1~·1orv "" 100~ ••on.n~ f>Dw•r wonoc"• ~na IODl>"!l W·ln • v1n11 •OOI, 1lCA 1n1 $1997 '69 Fial I ~pred COIWfr! I .oOtC .. , $1388 '69 Cougar Autom11;c l••n1ml11•0". l>C-' •lft•l"'ll. "'"vi rOC>f, l•<l<>•v •1• condlo llOning. iXYZ lit) $2598 "MONTHLY" '67 Malibu W~OI "' P•r••o• """"' "'"'""0 •v•r~~ 1•r I'"""'''"~"' ,.,,1 rriof "~•O h~•'" (1 {lj 6JI) $1588 '69 Firebird l,.1Po«I. MHO<V d°' '~" llltoonln;. l'O"'•' •'~~' Ing, PoW•• b•~~ .... V•"vl l'<IOI Licon>• llXX: 3)91 $2388 '69 Grand Prix Wllfl V•r>Y! fl:IO •"" t" <""'"'ll!O"•Ml, Do W f r •l••'•"Q •nd o o "''' br•~ ... l>C-r W>r<IO""' (YWT O}ll $2999 -·-·-· '· .t 21l871lb00189 t:"~ 1~1~1 oown o•vn-•"! •~d \1' 1• '"'"' moMnlV l><'Y"'""' ,n. c ,,.,.~~ '"" "<""'~ "" !>"•"<• <~•rg"' on Otl• •01>•<>v•I o• Voti• ll''J-0 , • ..., •• £3 ""'"'"I To1.i C••n P"'" t:1'194 oO ..... ,,.,, PIV- .,,.~. r"<e ontll,>C'•"1 !•• '"""I• •n<I •II <•.,v•"7 ch••gH l'llGI I~ ANNUAL P EllCENTACE S!ATE 1J ..... '68 Chrysler Newport Cullom l~-• '" ·~""' r"""or! ~.,., r' ·•"' '"o.>u •no, ~MA•' •~ti " (LllC.· llCl'J~l~I Don ! '!'•Ii '"" ""' On•, $2 089 '66 Mustang $989 '11 PINTO Leu Tlla11 ~.ooo Mlle1 ' ~D•"' """'"''1"0", r~~"' I h••ltt. o •l"I Cl"'I Or>ly $2188 ' _, __ .. '69 GALAXIE '" 1 0.-0,. Vie•' Top """ ,., ~ ! , , Tro"'"''"c n" ~•t•o•1 A" (~na·•1~" .~Q "'•d·~ ~"''"' 5•·~­•"9· t. >l•••r• LnW Mii EAC.E ,·/~V 7)ll On•i S2199 '69 Ford CUSTOM • oonr •O<S•n VI. •u''. l>O"'"' >lffrinq. !l&! 8£L I $1299 '70 Hornet $1789 .... -- • • ·-----~--...... ----•JJ r.------!l9 ... --...... •. ,.., ___ ----·-- TRANSAXLF:. ~am& m•io•. $19"5 I Call :>-1~131! • 7 -~cl A utos, Importe d 970 .\uthor11rd Dfoalrr AUSTIN HEALEY THE ALL NEW 128 SEDAN !n1·r )1'11 huy :iny ··~r All Models Immediate Delivery Priced F rom $1,495.00 Bill Jones' B. l. SPORTSCAR CTR. 2933 Harbor. Co~ra ~le~ 540·4491 1970 Audi 4 Door. low n1i!r.11gf', Dark I Bluf'.' wil1ght grt"y intC'rior, Radio, l-lf'a!er, 4 Speed. j s2a95 I 'NEWPORT IMPORTS · 3100 IV. Co11s1 llwy. Newpon Beach 64 2·9405 BMW Aulomotive E:tc:t!Uence &, ROY CARVER, Inc. ~925 !·!arbor Blvd cn~1 11 ~1 .. s11. !'i4fi-4·144 f'nr ht><t rr~ulls! 642-..'16~ I -• ")II' . ' '·' Tltlnk SN "FRIEDLANDER" UANO Nrw 7 1 COMET NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coast !l~·y. .Ne1\'P()rt Brach 642-9405 LOTUS LOTUS AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS MANO NIW ·n l:l'Jifc" We pul 1u<0h low p,;t • f~9• on Oti• <~fl tliai if1 <J01n9 lo b• lot19h lo .... ~. • p1ol1t ... but ii on••n• bi9 ••Y•"9' lo you• l •ke • •p•n in "'"• of tlie1e line Bu<c ~. or Op.11 lodey ••• you'll terry ew~y • n•<• b~ndle of ~·"'"9' ·$' .i.11u••1 •' RUN FOR YOUR WIFE!! AND YOUR PINK SLIP TOOi THE CArs OUT OF THE IAG! WE'RE CLOSING OUT OUR 1971 STOCK m l lA/'10 NfW ''1 •2295 MAIQUIS SAVI •1100 LINCOLI SAVE •1soo 1UllT 'ACTOIT IOUwtO ·i..-..... -• s~~;so '67 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL Ot. F1<1. •I" full "°"'"'. 'ld<O, ~11t1r, w l/W llft .. Vi"VI r!, !In! gl111, """' cov, Lfft~or. F~<!, Wl rr. lfM\1 1)~) IC 11i;Jli"".., ,_~•I<• $2<30 '6t MllCUllY MO"ITElllV l Or. H&rdloo. V.f, IU!O, lr1n1. f•tl. 1lt. pw• l!Hr & d ll t b•~I , SltrlJO rodl6. ~Hlor, W/l/w !ht•, \Ol~yl l"f . t1M 01111. Wfll (OY . I Y'· w1rr. IYPZ 3911 1Ctll1y llu1 I N-Ptkt $1730 '61 LINCOLN CONTl"llNTAL Courie ~•<I. 1!r, full l)wr w '1/w tlrn, \Ol~yl •DOI, II~! 1111n, .,..,,!, cov. ,..,la, ~ .. ,,,, lellhtr on!, flt!, WU· r•My IUHl f(,O) 1(•11~. I -Prot• $JJ80 '6t MAIK Ill F•<I l lr. rull t1wr . AMIFM )l•reo. W/\/W II•"· vinyl ftl<ll. Ifni t ltn. wnl. cov., 1111 """'•'· •Pffd cont(1)J IYl'E SUl kfl~tH ·-,.,~. $bl 15 '67 IUIC k LE S41 11E H1r<1too. V e. -ul1!. 1r1~1 , MC! l <r, tiwr, •'••rong & br&~tl. ••· 010. ~Hit/, w/1/w "'''· "'"Y' 100<, !•nl o•au, W~I. CCV, <UOM 'UI IC 11itYif;,, , .. _ .... ,, s1 qoo SAVE AT THE SIGN OF THE "COOL CAT" ----- GARDEN GROVE LINCOLN-MERCURY "The !\lost Unique .l\ulomobile 1\gency" GordB~d~rove 636 2980 lllOOkHUIST - -.-··-..__ ..... ---.· • • -_ ...... " . -..... _ ~-,,...--- ' - :79 DAILY PILOT TutsdaJ', July 6, 1971 Monday, Jufy 5, 19n DAil v mor 31 [ ......... l§l [ ......... ]§]11 ~...... l§J [ ·~,...... l§J [ ~,..... l§J I ·~...... l§J I ~,..... l§J [ .,.,.,.,,.,, l§J I .,.......... l§J Autos, Used 990 Auto1, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported BRING YOUR Roller Skates PORSCHE WE BUY USED Porsches DON BURNS PRESTIGE PORSCHE, AUDI PORSCHE PORSCHE !actory specialist, 911-912-l:i6 service/repair, Pt>nonal alt Edgar ;.3&-5803 l'.lG!'.o Porst'hC', reblt eng & 1rnns. new IJrl's. Xlnt rond. Call afl fj pn1, or .,..knds, ll:\0-1179~. ROYER TOYOTA YOLJ<SWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN TOYOTA NEW '71 ' '68 vw BUG NO DOWN 1 r.agrtJ,Jfj , eoo.-. Loa'"'· "'· Ex, PAYMENT .. j ooodltioo in ~ out. Tak; I TEST DRIVE =t"~w:t·;I:~"~~:. $69.01 MONTH* THE ALL NEW Ta4) Call 540-3100 or 494-7506 ~24~1-~ :;er~.Jhay P ~~~~ 128 SEDAN alt JO a~1~61 VW 363 II bo Bl d G G • 1969 La d n-88 "I $2003.s.5. Incl. Tax &i U c ! I 2 Dr Sedan, 4 oyl , stick &h1" W "I) T k A th'n l. l ·ar r v .. ·. · n 1w\'er "'~' A.P.R. 14.54'1~. Serial No. Front Whee Drive IQTI'J6 "' 1 a e ny 1 9 IJ""J S. ol G.(,". f·-,,·y.) d N d t •0 • $2°~n I { ) ... ., • t'On · ee !I i. ... ,. """'1 134.141, You owe it to yoursell to From Wrist Watches 636-2333 flrrn . Aft :>pni, 6-!&-4903 •on approved credi! tf"SI drive the new '11 fuit $299 , To Refrigerators "1-A--·-'="=·~u_·,_•d ____ 990 __ A_u_t•_•_. _u_sed 990 Bill Maxey Toyota ~or~~.~~~:~:~Yc;:;~r be· HIG~.~~~r~~!.ORS 1 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 All Models Immediate Costa Mesa 645--5404 As Part Down On I HUNTINGTON BEACH Delivery Priced F rom Any Automob;le LOOK! WHAT Anniversary Sale $149500 '69 VW BUG r:t\ta '•4 l ·llRD CONY. I F-ull Pow••· ~ORKJS4J $617 '65 T·llRD HT. R.d F-i11i1h. Full Pow er, Air Cond. (0Kl7071 $802 ••• RAMllfl CLUI CPE. Auto., b cyl., R•dio, H••I· ''· lXUNJ48) $845 '67 F-ORD FlSO PU l/4 Toit Sh1rp, R1dio, H•.tl•r, V·8. !QJ9912l S1995 '68 FORD 1/J TON A~to .. Sh.rp. 8' Bed , 3b0 V-!. \24 108AI $1995 '65 MUSTANG GT 289 V-8, 4 Spd .. Green, R~d<o, H e ~ler, Sh•rp. (NQU4741 $975 '68 VW BUG 4 Spd. R~dio. Cle~n. R•d fini1h, 504 1 $1295 '4'4 T-llRD HT Full Pow••· Wllile fini1h, A•r Co~d. ! FMH971 l $638 '67 RAMBLER l' Or., Auto .. V.8, Pe..,er, Air Cond, !OSZ'94· JSI $695 '66 RA.MILER WAGON v .e, Full Pow•r, Air Cond. ( SJRI 91 l $895 'SB FORD f'U 'h Ton, Auto., C~rom• w~e•/1. tl!l02bl $695 "61 MUSTANG V-1. eulo .. r.dio, .,..,oo" e~!tricr. $895 '65 MUST.ANG CONV. v.1, A~lo .. R .. d;o ( SJCt 81 I $707 "•S MUSTANG 189 V-8, Air, A .. to. R~­ dio, He.ter. !l84CONJ R,d Finish. $995 '56 T·llRD L111d1u lop. Auto., Cl111ic. !MSUl8b! $2195 '61 CA.Dill.AC l•OUGH. 4 O•., F1111 Pow•f, Air Ccnd.. D•luxt Ccmlo<I. (TVPJBO J $2795 '64 T•IUMPH RDST•. R1dio, H•1i1r. 4 Sp11d. !TOZ2b5 l $995 Marcus Motors 645-0466 2100 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 1971 TOYOTA $17n ' • w/mag wheel~. dlr. CYXU-WE HAVE FOR YOU 1"mo # 5991 Bill Jonn' 787) 11395 lull P""· c.Ji " m Lewi& I B. I. SPORTSCAR CTR. v~~-::~,,.., 50,000 mi '" 1 SO USED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM '68 RAMBLER REBEL '.2 Dr. VS. sutvn1nli<'. fa•'lorr au·. An OK car in every \\'By. (XS\10871 '67 CHEY. BEL AIR 4 Dr. V8. auto., factory air, pO\l"l'f strcrinc.. A ,1.:ood value in e1'('ry \\·ay. (389AUK~ '69 OPEL WAGON Automa!i('. A gl)()d economy \1Rgon. \\'RV833t '70 CHEVY IMPALA $2999 4 Dr/ ll.T. V8, auto .. fa ctorv a ir, [l<J\\'f'I' slccring-. An outStand- ini;: I0\1' mlleage car. (OOClADMJ YOU LL Lll(f fH, t/AY YOUllC T~(l,ftD GROTH~ 18211 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach OPEN 'TIL 10 P.M. Hwy. 39 So. of S<1n Diego Fwy. 545·BB63 B47-6839 TOYOTA 2933 Harbor Costa !11esa body 5,000 reblt eng, new 540~4491 ~~s$soo8est oiler 8:17--4507 TifE TRIUMPH VS STAG NOW ON OISPLAY Come in for a !est drive! FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 7lO E. 1st St ., S.A. 541-0764 Open daily 9-9: closed Sunday YOLJ<SWAGEN Dmfi '69 V\V, Xtra clean, lo mi's, A $1300. 675-lj74 • 6TJ..2937 '64 VW BUG ee 1969 V\V CON- VERTIBLE, red. Private Party. Call 675-3808. 4 speed, radto, healer. Unbe---.66 V\V Bug -$69;i hevabte, under 40.000 actual Orig O\\"tlCr, radio. Lt green, m iles. Cherry! Bar1•,.ick Im-&14--45-11. por1s, 998 So. Coast H1g~1-lc1966=~v~w-. 71,-,-,~ir.-,-"-w~u,.,~--., way, La.e:una Beach. 546-40:31 . d XI t -• $750 Ph or 49~·9711 ~~479. n conu. ' · '63 V\V Bug. Air cond. New VIV ,66 1 r ,. - t. & XI , -• $675 , , sunroo , a 10, '6j V\V Ne1r scat CO\'ers. In ire.~ .,ng, • n I co'"'· f I & · \ d be f f !162-2436 II't'S, c ean in exce con . very gd l'Ond. or s 0 r. · Private pty. $850 8Jl....ll59. -$800~~-=--"-,_.~23_2 '61 V\V bug. ~· take over MUST sell l96T squarehack, '70 V\V bug. Xlnt rond. i.0 .,.,. pyn1ts. No credit necessary. be' V\V 1 r on 6.12-67,9 1gc s a ion v.·ag . m ilPa.e:e. $1700 or best orfcr. ,, · Going to Europe. 644-4959. 49+-5881. '6~ V\V Sup:, v.•hite. Good .64 V\V l600S Pors eng. '62 Vt-\' -C----,-,-rond Nev.' brks, murner & . an1J.l('r, comp!.' e. b · llillltl ,,16_5405 mags, new J>!l.lnl, very fast. Good cond. Nrw painL $950. al1ery, _. "' a Xlnt rond. Bst orr. 833-8539. Pvt pty. {714) R9J..-3891!. '65 VW • 'S6 vw. r.lake offer * &12-0097 We'U help you seU! 642-5678 AutOS,-NeW 980 S."i:i<J. 544-3411 '69 VW Bus Xlnt Cond. $2000 Firm Cali 546-3356 980 VOLVO ~ THUii ~ 'Yl2'0i "FRIEDLANDER" SPECIALIZING IN QUALITY 1S1Jll ••ACllL IHWY. Jtt 893-7566 • 531.Q!'lC Anniversary Sale 1971 VOLVO $2991 ..IJeu LP.Iii& W VOLVO 1946 Jlarbor, C.i.t:. 646-9303 8 '69 VOLVO 144 S Sedan, auto, lol't' mileage. HOW'S THIS FOR A TRAVEL AND i:-.lf~'S VACATION SALE 1·-"1-"-'I L .~4......i FULLY EQUIPPE D TRAVEL TRAILER WITH STOVE-ICf BOX- :S IN!<-CLOSET-ALL CONVENIENC[ EXTRAS. BRAND NEW '71 OPEL WAGON IJ9.9J'll78S l WITH BRAND NEW ERIBA PUCK UST PRICE $4359.89 SALE PRICE s3775 EXCELLENT SELECTION, BUT HURRY, THEY WON'T LAST LONG! WE SELL ONLY THE FINEST USED CARS AT SENSIBLE PRICES!! '70 LE SABRE ......... $3687 Thi1 betuliful cu1lom coup• ~'' full pew•• •q\lip- "''"' 111d f1clory t ir conditionin9 •lld th e popu!•• vinyl roof. An imm1cul1le 1ulomobil1. (b92ADYI '69 ELECTRA .......... $3593 Cu1lom ~ door h1rdlop with full pow•r f1clo1y ,;,, cru01t co11lrol. AM-F-M 1l1r1c multipl••, ne"' prem· ium 1;rt1, you won't fi11d t ny cl•1ne1. !YCL259) '69 WILDCAT ......... $2797 Htrl i1 lh1 buy ol lh• w1•t A ~ doo• h1rdtp wH~ ftclory t i•, t ulo..,1lic, powr 11••""9 & brt~•I. ¥invl roof, 11dio '"d h11ler. You'll iu•I h•v• io driv1 thi1 o"•· (YZC7b9 l '69 LE SABRE ......... $2732 Cu1!om 2 Dcor h1rdlop. Thi1 o"t'1 ~1rd lo bttl. T~i1 pre1ti91 • •r i1 fully 1q\lipp1d wit h leclory eir, "'"yl roof, 111lomtlic. pow•r 1l•••i119 i nd bre~e1 , r•· dio t 11d h•eltr 111d ;, i11 mini condition, ~YR02f 1 ) '69 LE SABRE ......... $2773 Eqw ipp•d wil~ ve, 1ule.,.••ic .•• dio, he~ler, PO"''' •'••rin q 3' br•kt1, f1 clorv •ir condilioninq. A mu1I 1tt •••· !ZSV5l~) '68 SKYLARK ......... $1899 Cu.tom con .. •rlibl•. Thi1 on• 11 fer you. A cnt 0"'"'' 1ulomebile -.ith ftclo•y 10r. bucl•I 1•t lt, power 1t11rinq I br•~•I, 1ulomtlic, ••die •nd h11I••, whil• w1ll1. !WXG55 r I BUICK in COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA I 548-7765 • "66 JZ2 S Serl11n, atr. Take your 1rade. Good f1naneinjt'. HOUSE OF IMPORTS (Santa Ana Fn••y-Bcach BJ\'d exil) Buf'na Park. (ll 523·7T.:IO Autos, Used 990 CADILLAC llBIJJIJ TEST DRIVE THE ALL NEW 128 SEDAN Front Wheel Drive )'ou owr it 1o :yourselr to lt•s1 rlril'e the new '71 F'ial a t B.J. Sportscar C('nter be· lvre )OU huy any car. All Models Immediate Delivery Priced From Sl,495.00 Bill Jones' B. J. SPORTSCAR CTR., 2033 H11rhor Cos1a J\lcsa 540:4491 Largest Selection-- OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS in Orange County 1963 thru 1970'1 -~ 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA 540·9100 Open SUnda,y '70 CADILLAC BROUGHAM ONLY 9.350 ~11LES Chaulfrur drivt'n /, 11h!iolute. ly 1rnpcccablc. Padded lop, lull lcathtr interior & m011t cVf'ry deluxe Cadillac extra made lncl. fa ctory air con- dH ionlng. CP091464) NABERS CADILLAC :a;,oo Harbor Blvd. 541}.9]00 71COUP=E =oE~VILLE- Loadl'd, only 40.000 miles. Corporation prtsldenl~' 'A'ift'!'' private car. Like new ln lit.Vf'ry l"t'Speci. Call Kent Allen 842~1') for demon- Ktralion appointment. '66 Ca d f'let'twood Brou~hman, r.tll~I ~ee tn ap. pre. $1750. Robinron 300) \'I. Co11.~I NR F.42-?~ --1 '56 C'11rl1ll11r, R&H, 111r, fl\\T S&·R r.:xcellent <:ond. $12~1. M U 3'12. 990A.utos, N•w 980 Autos, N•w 980 OVER DEALER INVOICE {That's What We Pay For Them Folks) ON ANY OF OUR BRAND NEW 1971 MERCURY MONTE GOS Coupes, sedans, hardtops -all brand and priced to sell! Take invoice add only 3°/o! Get a year end- now on any one of our brand new and deal new Montegos. THAT'S RIGHT FOLKS ONLY 3%0VER DEALER INVOICE ON ANY OF OUR BRAND NEW MERCURY MONTEGOS WE ARE OVER STOCKED!. ' YEAR END SAVINGS NOW!!! -----DAILY PIL(ff fof action!_ 1~• iiiii _,__ ~ ...,__ __ --~ • . Pl' •" ' ,. .. , • • • I ' I• ' I \ I ~· ". OAILY PILOT Monday, Joly 5, 1,n Tuesday, July 6, ]q71 OAllY PILOT 40 ~~~~~11~~=1 I -i ~~~~~~~~~~I .......... I~ I ·~,. ... -l§J I ....... .:. 1§1 1 ~1 _ ..... _ ..... ;;;l;:.,;§1 I ........... l§J I ...... ,.... 1§1 I .......... l§J 1;;;! ~-;;;;--~l§J91 F" .. ;."_ .... ..;.._No_w __ ::~:~9IO~~~A~u~tos~~· ~N~-~~~===980=-'l:"~"'°'~~·~UHd;'.::_ __ ....:_990::: Autos, UMcl 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990 Xutos, bsect 960 --- CALL US NOWll PHONI 557·9220 INSTANT CREDIT YOUNHDANDSTill SAVIYDU-R 1.lf you ort new in California 3. tf you art new on YfJ4X ;ob 2.. tf you owe money on 'f04Jf 4. If you havt little or no .:or · credit LIT Ml TIY TO 11UMll TMI CllDIT AMD TUMS YOI 1111 SO TllA T TOU &I Y Dn..e Mon1t Todoy in it. CJJr ot yoi.-dloictll $AVE DEMO SALE 25 to choose from '71 LUX. MONACO 4 Dr. Sed. $ '"'"'"""ao ~ 1134 FROM FACT. SUG. RETAIL foo. oir, 11Vto; lr~ns~ ~83 R CE v.a, power wmdowi,, v1ny! TOTAL P I oNAUf.DH41uo21624r DISCOUNTS NEW CARS MAKE OFFER! LOW MILEAGE '71 COLT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $1974 FULL PRIC! URGES! INVENTORY OF COllS IN ORANGE COUNTY BRAND '71 DEMON SPORTS NEW COUPE IMMEDIATE DlUVEIY ~2~l98~ FUUPRICE Ser. II LL29BIE 120175 '70 BARRACUDA 1 19900WN~ 146 MONTH A For 36 Months $1498°0 ' "'· ~d>o & '""· W'W FULL !Ir~. vl"YI roof, tH.Kt•• se.111,, PRICE 01c1e111 -+ rn1><11. "'""~ ....,,1, 'I~~" >o>al 4• •I"'"' U & ,, 1otol ro•>."""',l"'I. ""I''°'""' oll<t''l••f '"'V'"'--"'""'°""»""' -"""' P~, .. 11a11""' "" ' ,.,.,. •1111UAl ,lt<lllf,,I IAtt 11.JG.,. '69 DODGE 'JO IMPALA HARDTO P. V-8, ,..,,~, P/S, mu~h more. (76•Bt ~) s1699~?. Aulo. l•o~• .. •nil o. h.,oter. whit.-0111, '01,l(•e1 1eo11-lk . "0008 s 599~. ,11<:1 '61 PONT. V.ft, DU!O. !•on•-pow et lle<>r• •ng, •odlo, ~ .. o•e•, wl>i:.,wall1. 8H23F9B!123~9 $1198(1() 'JO FORD (,AlAXlf j QO Hl V 8. ou•o. tron1., h;1ctory "" r~~d .. •o- d;o. ''°'" S 188600 •06AKL fUll ,lit! '69 TOYOTA CORONA 2 011:. HT. ' "l)eed, rodio. heorer, butk•1 ~eoa. """ 11188~0 • .. 2 Dll. Ht. v.1, o uto. tton1., rodit, heotor. W'f:.W't. , 24J1n 1 31903 S988DD "" , •• u 'JO FORD MAVERICK '· ~,_. " .. CADILLAC CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CORVETI'E FORD MUSTANG PLYMOUTH '65 El Camino, 327, pwr 5/b, --------------------' '6:1 VALIANT 2 dr, &ood '69 Cadillac '69 Chevrolet r&h, $900. '67 CORYEm 19 66 Galaxi• soo M,·•,1, M::.:i:.A,,'.:c •. 2 ~~ GTVS. \ll'"lrklll~ rond. 2nd Owner. 546-9614 2 Dr Hardtop, V-8, au1oma-'""'..., "' '""" Cpe DeVille Caprice CHRYSLER r:t~~F~~~ !IC, pow"r 1ilttr1n.g, p!)\1-'er 11Utomat.il', pol'o't'T ~tcerin!-: & , _ ..... _~"~'·==~=-- Full Pov.-er, Fan Alr, door Top of the line Hardtop Musi sell ,67 VtU, brakes, radio, heater, .. ~:tute-disc brekts, factory Jape PONTIAC ·1ocks, Landau 'Top, Ahf/FM coupe with 350 V-8, Turbo "42'7" $l99S, Call Sharp I \\'al\ ures, \\'heel coven;. i;yslcn1. low mileage. Candy Radio, etc. 29,000 mile car llydrn, Po .... 'er sieering, '68 Chrysler New Yorker Steve tSUD77'9J apple red. Mu11t see to ap-----------,,- with fact warranty. Sale Broker, Fact Air, Landau :l-rlr vinyl HT. t'o1etaJ!ic gold. -'--'~~·~------$799 pre1:1a le, Afte r SP!\! '68 GTO, air, lanrlau, radi.J6, Pnced at Tllp, etc, Alr, Pih, new tire&, top DODGE HIGHLAND MOTORS ~I0-4D95. clc. Vrry clean. Y.'ill accept d '~ h to•<> c''"'4 I c~~------~ best offer. Prl ply, Irvine, $4595 $2295 con · W<N cas • ""'o-v~« · 21-l:i Harbor Blvr!, '69 Mustang, power clise Cal. 8:n-10:i7 COMET Costa Mei;a G45-S404 brakes, 11.1r conri. deluxe in· MacHoward MacHoward '6-1 Dodge Dart (;T 1"1 t;ng. trrior, vinyl 10.,, Perfe('! '67 PUNT Lemans, c'OnV, clurch/T $495. 2192 '''"'' 2 '71 FORDS: Ga ! ax i es, ,. t •62 coM-2 de -m "'"' " ,-,,d. s219;1 or l:lf'st offer. \l -111r, p\\T steering, au o, 0~ -• "' 531-0008 839-9600 OR 531-0608 .._' · -.v · " BLKS wst ol Harbo" oll :\1ustan~s. &: Tor1nos. Hertz .v -~ look•"" ,,.,,, ,,.,, o•w >350 ' • 171•11 5-17-9191 or 673-3US. slvr/blk, l\1us1 i:;eJI hy 7/10. CorO!r Jst & 11arbor Corner Jst &: Harbor . ..., · Victoria, Costa Mesa. _c~o~c~p~. ~(7~l~4l'...'_77~'-"::":''~52,,. ---l=~~~~C-:,..,--:c'"-cc-; Bst ofr over $8~i0. 644-2944. Santa Ana Santa Ana or Bargain 642-9427. I "· Sq . 9 '67 MUSTANG, 6 cyl, stick '64 Dodge Dart $450 or o!fer. ·~ FORD u..ountry UIJ'C, I CONTINENTAL Ex rl B shill. $650. ~I Vista Plai.a RAMBLER 1964 CPE. DE VILLE 1964 lmpa a Wagon Cal! Mt;.73fi0, Ext. 81 aft pass. tr11s, pc ect. Y I '.,.,,...... ~·"""""' Dr, Lag Niguel 4!6-1727. ONLY 31,250 )11LES 9 Pass. V.S, Automallc, 1a~-1 5 Pl\1 call &12-8792. owner. ~J!N • .,.,.,....,.,,.,,,, FAC1'0l1:Y tory al!' condllioning, flOW-CONTINENTAL '69 * 1969 DODGE Super-Bee ':.II Ford Gala.'tie 2 Dr. hdtp, 'fiS Mustang. V-8, JlO\\'cr, AIR C'ONDITIONING er steering, power brdkes, ~ MARK 111 I ~ 4 Spd. Factory Sterro: V.,11, xlnt sf'C"Ond car. $200, R.&H, air, good L'Ond. $1400. FULL LEATH.l'.:R INT.l'.:RIOR radio, heater, ...,,hJte~·all F al'IOTy Air Cond111on1n~ C.ill &1;>-1086 a1ter 7 _:67~;.~1~3:1.i~·-------1 -963--:;;1>34;c0:;;. ;-;;o,:;;oca,,.;-- 1964 Rambler Sta. Wag Amcncan. 6 cyl, auromatic, radio, hcatrr. 10QU6il) Paddr 1 top, lilt ~·heel, full trres, llnted glass, whee! Beautiful Bolf'ro Red f1n1sh p.m. OLDSMOBILE po~·er incl. door locks, 1runk 1 l'VVf'rs. vinyl 1nrer11)r, Lug. w/while padded lop & plush '66 Dodge Coronet 500, good JEEPS $499 HIGHLAND MOTORS opener, A~1/Fl\1 radio. A gage rack. {f?l\1R77J) red leather in(erior, lull I co~. S750. Pvt p ty. ---------- locally driven geni lhll! , $899 power, ult & 1elescoptc ,'~'-,...,o"-~'~· -------'&1 JE"EP \Vagonerr. 4 1vheC'I '69 Oldsmobile 21-15 llarbor Blvd, Cosra r.1esa &15-5404 '62 Ramhler Ambassador V-8 S2:xl. or best offl'r mulit he s~n. (0P0707i HIGHLAND MOTORS steering, slcreo, door locks, '67 DODGE Van, auto, V-A, drive. ClPan, good cond. NABERS CADILLAC 21~:>HarborBlvd. 1n1nk opener, most every very clean. $1500. Cal! Just reblt eng. n2-3838 98 Holiday 2600 Harbor Bh·d. 1 Cosl.l l\1esa 6-i5-5404 dlx. option. Low, local mllcs. 675--2973. Costa Mesa 5-10-9100 V t" Ti (Ser. •SS99l). ..c,~8"-'DO"-'D~G-E_C_o_ro_o_o_t_R_T_R ac:a ron rme NABERS CADILLAC rrack. mags, 440 4 spd.' Io CAMARO '69 Chevrolet Sport Van 2600 Harbor Blvd. mi's. $1600/trade. &12--6931. V-ll, Turho }lydro, 1v1nclows, Cosra J\iles11 ;~IQ-9100 '69 V-28 Can111ro. xln'1 cond. can e1;r.1493 CHEVROLET '63 Clievy Nova Wagon 6 Cyl, auto1natic, radio, heat· er . 10KG:J301 $199 HIGHLAND MOTORS Zl45 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 645.54()4 s('ats, etc, looks & drives Must Settle Estate like new. 1970 ,\1ark ill, Blue & while. $2595 1966 Cont'l eonv1, !:;very MacHoward "'"· ""·"" CORVAIR 839-9600 or 531-0608 Comer 1st & Harbor Santa Ana MUST seU s~Jooking 1969 h1alibu. Landau top, Pis, air cond.. Xlnl rond. $1895. '61 Cnrvair Monza 4 spd, goocl tires, no leaks. Gd run- ning car. $145. 833-1840. CORVETIE '&1 CHEVELLE Malibu, VS, _~_ll--0 __ 1os _______ _ PIS. Lo mi's. Crig owner, Turn unused items into quick '68 CORVETTE • h1ust sell, below blue hook. Best olfer. 5-18-2537. cash. call 642-5678 Call 968-5931 '68 DODGE Ch<U'gcr-Pwr, air, auto, vinyl top. l O\\·ner. S.2l50. 557-4971. FALCON * * FALCON '00 2-dr, auto. clean. $175 * 675-0115 FORD 1966 F'ORD Fairlane 500. Original o\\•ncr. $950. Call 5-15-4552 all 4 pm. LINCOLN Coupe, Full Power. t·act Air, xtra nice, lo"' nules and factory \Varranfy. only $3395 '71 Lincoln Continental POfllllar Coupe \Vith all lht' MacHoward extras, nf'w l\·l1chcl111 X 839_9600 or 53!-0608 11res, a\l'fll.! nice. Now only Corner !st & Harbor $6295 Sanla Ana MacHoward oLDs. '6s v1sT,.- cRu1sER S39·9COO or 5.11-0608 Corner 1st &. Harbor Santa Ana MUSTANG '67 l\1ustang GTA-Many xtr.is. $ll'i0 lill11 . Call Dan 830-7874 or 830--76:J6. 48,000 LOCAL !vlILES Del~e family statlon wag- on, factory air cond., p/ steer, p/brakes, au10. trans., R&tl, \\'SW. CFEC658) NABERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa t.1esa 540-9100 * &l&-1280 .. T0 BIRD '&I T-BIRD, air. p/b, pl~ goor! eond. l o .... •ncr. $675. s:t1--011-1. WILLYS \\lJLLY'S Sin \Vgn 1958, 283 eng, auto, 2 wlil drive 9,000 mi, S650. 536-2933 QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642°5678 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 New 1971 Chevrolet Nova Caupe 6 No.-a Cou,-. Seft.lcsy Tinted Glau, Door Edge Guards, 178•14 WhlN Stripe Tlrn, Full Wheel Co•en, AM h$ll- butto11 Radio, llack Cloth fnte1lor, 49-49 A11tiq11t Gr .. 11. C49 ::J627 OVER DEALER INVOICE New 1971 Chevrolet Impala hnpolo Custom Coupe. Sok -Roy Tlnttd Glou, 4·Stoson Air Co11d ltlo11i119. 170.HP, Twrbo·Flrt 350, Turbo Hydro-Molle., Power Sreerhu;, G78115 ltlled Whitt Shipe Tlr", AM P11sh- bu1to11 Rodlo. :3724 OVER DEALER INVOICE New 1970 Chevrolet El Camino l El Co111lno, Soft-Rey l i11ttd Glass, AM P11shb11tro11 Rodlo, D11ty R11dlotor, lloc• \li11yl lllft<lor. ::45]9 OVER DEALER INVOICE New 1971 Chevrolet Pickup lllffttliM l'lckup, AM p11shb11tto11 rod lo, O"'"''r.r-oll-temp. ¥111yl trim, full hKtory equipped. J:J,77 OVER DEALER INVOICE ALSO HUGE DISCOUNTS ON co1vm1s & CAMPllS BUT DOWN PAYMENT IS HIGHER OVER DEALER INVOl·CE TRADE INS! prtMllt cor I" trtrd• ""'*' Mi opprti!MOd high .,.ough to 111ak• yo11 act at •PK•!!! t'l••nd n•w )Oii 1 COOt ll'<l•n 10 t•- tl!lng <OIDti Ftonl d,,, ~ ••• .,. 1'100 CC en91n,. bur~e! •••ti. ,.n. noor ~u~rn "<!""'" •••I b~'I•. ~M"""· rlc •t•vlic i•t~uer ••· le•tOr Choose From 4 Vega Models $150 DOWN $59,43 P" mooth ftrio"ll"'"' °"''"-OOJ!O•N<rol•t ''""'~'''""'"'' t/J.0111 .. t '"' 1 1~""'' Doi..,N I<''" ptCt lllQ) I• d l I~ .... ,,..,.,,A......il..,., .... -.,,.11 "' STATION WAGONS ! STATION WAGONS! DISCOUNTS! DISCOUNTS! DISCOUNTS! HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! BUY NOW WHEN THE SALE IS ON AND THE SELECTION IS GOOD! New 1971 Chevrolet Caprice \'I Coprlct Coupe. Sott-Roy Tlntitd Glou, 4·S.no11 Air Condition, T11rbo Hydro·Motlc., P'owtr Stnrinq, 07811 S ltlt• ltd Whitt Side Wolls, AM Pushbutton Rodlo. C4S :J6f7 OVER DEALER INVOICE New 1971 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Mont• Corio Coupe. Custom Del1111:e 8eltl, Soft·Rav Tinted Glasl, 4-St oson Air Condition, Turbo Hydro-Motic. Power St"rlng, G78x1S lehed Whitt Stripe Tl••s, AM l'ushburton Rodlo, Sandalwood Cloth lntcnlor. :4359 OVER DEALER INVOICE \II M0 Ub11 Spt. Co11pt. Sok·l11y Th1ted Glou, Stroto-l11c.••t Fro•t S..n, Door ldq. G11orlh, Power DIK /Dr11111 lro•n, 245.HP T11rlto-Flrt lSO, Tu,lto Hydro·Ma!lc, Power Stwrh19, E7tr14 ltlt9d Whitt Stripe Tlrt•, Fwlt Whul Co•trs, AM P11shb11tto• Rod lo, Fro11t l lMr l11mptr Guordt, l lock Vinyl l11ttri0f. :.:3754 $19·9 OVER DEALER INVOICE New 1971 Chevrolet Camaro YI Colftoro Spt. Coupe. Soh·Roy Tlntff Ghm. Ctnttr Comole, Pow- '' lroktt. T11rbo Hydr11-Motlc, Power St.erltHJ, G78114 ltlr.d Whitt Stripe Tlrn, Full Wheel Co.,.rs, AM Pllfhb11tro11 Rlldlo, Style Trlfll Group, llock \'!nyl l11ttrlor. #4041 OVER DEALER INVOICE t ~.~~ DELIVERS ! ! ALlO HUGE D1$COUNTI ON (OltVITTIS & tAMPlltS, IUT DOWN PAYMENT IS ll!ONllt. -----• HUGE SELECTION OF DEMONSTRATORS AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS WIST'S LARGIST SIRYICI DIPT. Open Sat., I AM -Noon MON. 7 A.M. lo 9 P.M. TUES. lhru FRI. 7 A.M. TO 5 P .M. ---... ·-