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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-07-09 - Orange Coast Pilot--.....__ , . •• I r..~ ................................................................................................................................. i'llilil .................................................. • Newport Man Ainong .Six Arrestet;I . . In 5250~900 P-9t ·s1nuggli:n ·g S~he.1ne • 11 Cities Devastated . • ... ;, .. DAILY -PILOT Thousands Bid Farewell ' ·-· ... . .;; * * * 1oc * * * . . . < < FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 9, 1971 To Satchnio Arnistrong 7 VO L. '4. HO. UJ. 4 ll!CTIOHt, 4' l'A•IS He1Jrt Attack? Acid Rock Star Morrison Dead PARIS !UPI) -American rock star Jim Morrison. 27 , lead singer of "The Doors." v.'hose raw sexual on-st.age style made him an international slar -and a defendant in an obscenity trial -died of a heart .atta ck lri.st Saturday and was buried secretly in a Paris cemetery, police reportfd today. Police said MorTi.snn was di~vcred 11nconscious in the bathroom of his chic aparlmetit by Pamr!A Courson, za. of Lois Angeles, his cnmpan1on for the past fi ve vi>.:irs and regarded as his common law Wi1e. "!\fiss Courson said when Morrison 8'>''oke la.o:;t Saturday. he was not feeling w<'lL '' a police spokesman said. "He ask· ed her In get a bath ready and tben entered the. halhroom. "Not hearinJ: anv noise, Mi ss Courson later opened the doo r to find Morrison lying unconscious in 1he hath ." The office r at 1he precin<'t for the fourlh Arrondisse n1cnt, a fashionable disl r;ct of Paris. said Morrison was dead 1\·hen a police ambulance arrived at his apartment He said a ~I.or later 1s1ued R certifica te attributing death lo a heart anack. Th2 prilire nff1cer said Morrison v.·as huri ed \Vedncsd11y in the historic Pere Lachaise cen1rtcrv, one of the olr!ec;t 1n Pan!', 1n pr1\'a1e' ser1·1crs ;irrani:cd hv \11~~ Cnurscln Thr s~r\ices 1\·cre at• 1l'nrled bv on ll" a fev: clnse friends A recn~rl 1ni!uc;1ry spokesman sa1d ,'-.tnr· r1snn was 1n Pan.~ writinJ? 11 book Rill Siddon ~. ;'l-1(J rr1 son's manager, sa1 rl In Los Angelrs lh11! the initial news of the s1n~er's de;ilh was kept sec ret "In 11void 11'.e notoriel >·and circus.li ke ;itmo~phere I.hat surrounded lhe deaths of su<'h other rock persona11 t1cs as Janis Jophn and Jim Hendrix " Siddons said he arnved in Los Angele! from Paris Thursday night. Although ~1orr1son and "Tbe Doors'' Rchi~ved v.·idcspread acclaim in rock 1nusic circles through the ir hard.hitting gound. Morrison wai; in the headlines several Limes becuuse of his stage antics u.•hich caused the groop lo be banned in several U.S. cities. He was arrested ll few years ago in ~1 iami for usin~ obscene la nguage and exP,OSing himself during a co~erl. He ll.'as convicted last October. fined $500 and sentenced to six months in jail He wai; free on $50.000 hail pending an ap- peal at the tim!' of his death. Prisoner II as Real Problem Newport Beach pq Ucl! go to all rea90nb8le length!! to protect the health and welfa re of I he I r priJoner!< but rn>thlng coold hf> donf! for one Thursday. Detective Todd Wilkinson's lt- year~ld 11rrestte wa! asked about any ailment!! or med ical problems by jalter!I. before being booked en a burgle.ry charge and admitted to 11 cell. He saill he !!ulfer& fr nm clawtrophob1a. the fear of beina confined 1n • limited space. • Morrison's Miami appearance sparked teenagers there to !'ounter with a "rally fnr decency" which th organiiers felt "·ould show that the majority of young people do not subscribe to Morrison's at- titudes. A native of Melbourne , F la ., the ~n of Rea r Adm. George S. Morrison, J im form· ed "The Door!" in 1965 in Los Angeles. The group went to lht top of the charts wilh "Break on Through" a nd followed shortly after with the song that ma de them one nf the top rock acts in the na· {S~ MORRISON, Page ZJ Police Hold Newport Man On Drug Rap By ARTH UR R. VfNSEL Lawmen staked out at a crud! airstrip in rural Riverside County as 11 plMeload nf Mi>x ican marijuana \l.'Orth 1250.tXlO l::inded Thursday captured six sm uggling suspec ts, one from Newport Beach. Spearheaded by the U.S. Bureau of Customs. authorities allege the year.Jong probe may have sm.?.Shed one organ1ied nng. Barrie E. ldom, 25. Df 112 W. Coast Hig hway. Newport Beach, ""'as amon~ lhe six scheduled for arraignment before a U.S. Commissione r today, on charges of conspiracy to smuggle marijuana. Three were captured at the remote ai rfield, where officers claim a ~-pound shipment of pot was seized, while the olher three werl! arrested in nearby Coron.a. The long investigation involved six police agencies including Orange Coast lawmen, but I.My referred 11\l questiom lo customs agents based at Terminal Island . Steve Cummings, agent in ehri.rge o( the case, was In a meeting and unavail- able for any additional comment. Booked into Riverside Coun ty Jail Along with Jdom were Fred D. Nebon, 28, David G. Reynold11, 21. Victor Marillo, 23, Donald R. Payseu r, 23, and Fox D. May Jr ., 21 all of Riversidl!. Riversi dl! County I! a major distribu- tion point for Mexican marijuana smug- gled inlo the U.S .. due lO ill: proximity lo the border and many areas !uitable for aircraft landings. Sheriff's deputiu said they !eized an additional MO pounds of pot In PerTill 'Thursday, but the incident was ap- parently unrelat.ed to the federal opera- tion. lnvestigatof'1 recovl!red the marijuana haul from a car abandoned foUowing a high·!pttd chase by a driver who manag. i!'d to eteape pursuer• en root . Newport Beach police acknowledged they have been lnvestlgpJ.lng [dom. who ' formerly llved at 3TI VlclOrla St, Costa ~ie~a. but releasi!d no additional in· fnrmalion. Deltttive Sgt. Leo Knnki!I !aid It w11~ agretd among all 1ix law 11gl!ncies that U.S. Customs woukf re\eue information . Contender Ka ren HoUerman, 17, will rep· resen t Fountain Valley Sunday in the Orange County Fair Quee n Pageant at the fair· grounds in Costa ti.1esa. The 8 p.m. pageant is open to the public without charge. Winner will reign over six-day fair, ,July 13 to 18. Chile Shudders Under Impact Of Huge Quake SANTIAGO {UP1) -Chile 's worst earthquake since 1965, a 1114-minute tremor that reached JO on the Mercal\i scale' or 12, killed scores of persons Fri· day and caused wide!lpread destruction. At least S6 pe rsons were killed and more lhfll 300 injured in the pre-midnight Thursday !hock whic h was followed by at least 14 aftershocks that kept the country in suspense until dawn Fri day. Casualties were estimated by the inte rio r ministry. All of the casualtie.!1 were in 11 cities along the northern end of.the fertile cen· tral v.11lley ne!ltled between the Andes and the coast in thi!I quake-prone IMd on the lower west coa!lt of South America . In the por t of Valparaiso, 25 were dead, Includ ing 8 in the beach resort to wn of Vina Del Mar, There were II reported dead in Santiago and 5 in San Felipe. Some were ldlled in accidents caused by panic. others by falling walls and debri!. Three died in lllapel, lhe epicenter of th l! quake. There the .quake reached an lntensit)' .:if 10. It w.11s recorded at 6 lri 'Santla&D. the capital. Pruident Salvador Allende d~Ja rl!d the nortM:emral rwne • disaster arta. placed troops on alert and ordered oul extr1..strength police detachml!nts to dl.9ccura1e looting. Allende took a helicopter early Friday to Valparaiso and Jllape.1, whlCh wa! i!!Olal.ed by landslides on I.he Pan Amerlca11 Highway. The quake was felt from Arica. on the Peruvian border. kl Temu co, 1.400 mile.a to the 50Uth.' ll was th e country's strongest quake stnce March 28. 1965, ! See CRUE. Pa1e I) . • .,. .... --.. -----'--... _._;;_ ___ _ l '5...._ ___ .r.:,.., a.--:i:t..-.~------~-------- McClosl(ey In Race California Dove to Enter Primary LOS ANG ELES !AP) -Rep. Paul N. McClookey Jr., the most outspoken Republ ican critic of Presid ent Nixon'! Vietnam war policies. announced today he will enter the 1972 California presiden- tial primary election "pledged lo ending the war conditioned only upon return of the prl.!loners of war." "This will not. be a f.ingle issue cam- paign," thl! San Mateo, Calif.. con· gre!sman said in a statement issued in advance of a news conference. "We seek in addition to ending the war lo restore truth in government. to achieve a return to historic Republican moral com· milmeiit on social issues_rather than tbe PfJ!SC nl-'Southern Sb-a tegy' and a. re.sl.oration .of jusiicial excellence and in~ dependence." · , McCloskey. 43, thua formally·nndertook a campaign he said he would launch only If Nixon failed lo change his Indochina policy and if no other prominent Republican entered the race as a peace candidate. MoCloskey, who bis assailed ~ President's policies in ~ecbes {Gr months, advocating quick with~awa\i~ U.S. war forces, .made no mention In formal !llat.ement of entering c primaries, auch u tbe ftrat-in-tbe-na · one in New Hamp.shire. The. C.liforlda primary is. June fl , 1972. McCloekty 10! he would form and head his own sllt.e. ;; Nixon has nnt !18id. whl!lher be · Will ISee MeCLOSKEY, Pa1e Z) Thousands Bid Train Troubles Last Farewell To Satchn10 Beach Frees Wayward Railroader NEW YORK (UP!) - They !aid good- hyl! to Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong today wilh a service lhat senl the jaiz rythm.~ 01 tht New Orleans funeral song. "When the Saints Go Marching In ," halfway around the world. Only .;oo people could attend the funer2.I service for lhe great. jazz trumpeter in th!' simple red brick Corona Congrega. llonal Church in a quiet Queens ne ighborhood. . But more than 1,000 of Armstrong 's neighbors stood outside and hundreds of !housands 1,1.·atched on television as Tc lstar beamed the service to !6 Euro- pe;in counlrie.s . Peggy Lee Ile'>'' in from 1he \Vest C.oasl !o si ng "The Lord's Pr:tyer " for Armstrong 's 1,1,•ife nf 29 yea ri. Lucille, they sang "Just a CloSer Walk Wilh Thee '' An Anaheim engineer with an iron horse and what police claim was an iron y.•ill was booked briefly in Huntington Beach City Jail Thursday night. Police said Felix John Koniem, 57, was lht engineer of a threl!-ca r frei ght train which was involved in a collision with a car near Adams Avenue and La ke Streel. Konzem spenl two hours going through lhe booking process and. y,r.as rele~sed '>''ilhout bail when he signed a prom ise tn ;:ippear in \Vest Orange County Judicial District Court. ~1eanwhile , ho"·ever. his tra in stayed nght where he left it -bloc king traffic on Adams. Pol ice identified the driver of the car ;:is William Henry Burgess, 51, of 18394 Basswood St., Foun tain Valley, who ap- pa rently suffered only minor injurie.'! in the crash. Nonemof his three passengoers were reported injured. But when officeN arrived on lhe sctne lo investigate the crash, -they allege San Francisco He had come 1,500 mi les from his n;.irive New Orleans lo win his greatest fame but like all those othf.r jazzmen in the city where Dixieland wa.'! born, they played "When the Saints (io Marching In " for Armstrong, who died in his sleep Tuesday of a heart attack al lhe e«e of 71Armstrong's ' wi re 1 and ... a !Ornier -;.ife.'·' ExploSi:Oft '' KUZB ' jazz pianist Lillian }!ardin, had said their private goodbyes ~artier al a w • . H neighhor hood funeral home. M ". oman Ul ouse Armstrong, in bit.Ck dress an d shawl, cried quietly as she !!lood nea r hi.s grey steel coffin. Mourner! began arriving at !ate mom· Ing el the church wh ich is cooled only by f;:iru;, A!I temperatures rose to the high 80s, ushers handed out small paper fan.'!, some bearing a pic ture of the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Outside. neigh bors remembered how Arm&trong alwa11 WM ready to play at local charllahle even ts. "He would never fo r11•l ii_~• ,p>~,t><l~.lh. Goodwi~~ bai~ador' .: ... trraf ·rnr~ him \ferY.' well. Mrs. Thelma Daviir said. The list.of honorary pallbearers, was in it• own way • .a trlbUt.e tc tbe m'an who thriUed crowds in Belgrade, Accra, Bangkok and Moscow with hls musicll geniwi and infectious grin. The list included l e 1 e-v l 1 I o n personal itie.s Johnny Carson and David r roal, Mayor!! ,John Linds.11y of New York and ~1oon Landrleu of New Orleans, musicians C'.cne Krupa. Guy 1.Ambardo, Lio nel flampton and Benny Goodman, colUJMi!lls E3rl Wilson and Leonard tSee SATCHMO, Pa1e Z) SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) -An ex- plo8iOll in a dry<leaning e!ltablishment in the Bayview District early today cauSMI a three-alarm fire which ldlled one person. The victim wa!I identified a11 Mr1. Lillian Ellis, $9, resident of one of four wood frame buUdllla:s damaged in t h e hlaze. The blast oa.'UJTed at S:30 a.m. on lhe ground noor of a tw~story building at llil! .. ~~ ,s-.: .R-. .. JDv-~· s!!a i(·was cah.ted by' a 1a. htater m the plnnt. Flames quickly . spread th(o4&h the wooden • frame buUdlna_. tt_!pP.lng ' • woman. Whc -dkd on OW: aecOnd l'loor. Three acljaceol buUdlnga wen allo damaged. but the occupant.a ucaped uninjured. Firemen 11id the bl11t blew a 20-foot hole In the hulldlng and wltnesM!I at !lral thought an 1utomohile had crashed lh rough It, Thlrty.three pieces cf fire equipment ind 115 fire.men fought the flfe. whlcb resul~ 1n an estim1ttd IMl,000 d&mq.e. • ....... .___ ,.._ ' • ' . ... ... . -·~;.·~ . ,..,...... --+ --.,._ Q ... engineer Konzl!m refused lo ldi!nllfy bim.self. So officers arrested the engineer en suspicion of obstructing a peace office r in the discharge of his duty -a misdtr meanor complaint. A pollce spokesman explained th.Ill locomotive engineers are not · required te carry a license as car drivers . So whtt1 he aJ!egedly refused to identify bim~tf, he was .charged will! ob.'!tructiQn. An automob ile driVer in a .similar 11iiJa. lio n would probably be cited under fie vehicle code section which requir111 dri\•ers lo carry a license. t.be spokesmac noted. 3,000 Aniinals Die r.tE XJCO CITY !UPI) -The gove.rn- menl said today 3,000 ilorses. mule.s led donkey$. have died j n a sleeping slcW. epidemic sweeping sections of northeaa& Mexico. Dr. CUstavo ·Rella · P~tterson. · fedet.8.1 an.im al ?ealth ~itec~r, .Sl;li4 mobile health bngades tiad'i'rilula'ged'· to curtail the disease In the 1tate.!I of Veracruz and · Tam8W_.. •. w~i,th· ~ Taa.!I~ ' Oraage Coat The weatberl?}•n predlcta 'to'!'~ clouds and fog today and Saturdiy, ' clearing by noon with temperll- turea along the roast around 7S and 90 inl.11nd. Laws of as decrees in both areu. · .... 1,. • • LEAVING PRISON QUIETLY ParolH Billi• Sol lst1s Billie Sol Gets Ou't of Texa s Prison Monday EL PASO, Tex. !UPI) -Billie Sol Esl':s, a legend11.ry figure among Texas swindlers, leaves federal prison on parole Monday and the warden as well as Estes' wire s.ays it will be a silent departure. Mn. Estes said in Abilene, Tex., where sh1.now lives, 1 condition of Elles' parole is that he stay out of "promotional ac~ tiviliet." She said the family takes lhis to mean ''ktepiJ18 hi.s mouth .shut .. " Therefore, &he said, Estes will ndt give reporters any interviews. "He has told us he does not want to participate in any publicity," La Tuna Federal Reformatory \\'arden William Zachem said. "We will do everything in CJur power lo assist him ln that en· deavor." Zachem said one way or helping Estes lo avoid publicity will be lo not tell anybody outside the prison what time he will be released Monday. Estes, sentenced to IS years for fraud, has served six years and four months in U.S. prisons in Leavenworth. Kans.; Sandstone, ~{inn.; and finally in La Tuna, near El Paso. Estes for three or four years ran a i;windle ln We.st Texas that involved get- ting fanners to sign chattel mortgage• for aAhydrous ammonia fertilizer tanks they did not need and Estes really never intended to manufacture. Esth ta\le them 10 percent of the mortgage to sign and promised lo send lhem the money monthly to make the mortga1e paymenl.5. He then discounted the mortg~es to big finance companies. \\'hat h~ got from the finance com- panies he Invested In grain elevators and in fertiliter businesses. From the rlevator and fertilizer bu1lness profits he lntended to 11end the farmers money to pay off the mortgages. At one time, he had a paper empire of S\50 million but could never quite work out his scheme es far as paying the farmers was concerned. At one time there were 20 counts of lraud and conspiracy against Estes, in 1ddition to a state conviction. He was 1entenced to IS years for fraud and the ~ther charges were dropped. Rolls Prices Boosted LONOON tAP) -t-.totorlst.s ln the IS. month queue for new Rolls-Royce cars 11-·111 have to dig deeper In their pockets for the new model. On the British markel the price tag is 1oing up S2.880, topping $24 ,000 for the 'ir!t time. Export price increases are to bf' announced la1er. Increased production cosl.5 is given as the reason. OlAM61 COAST DAILY PILOT H .... , ....... -·-... ci •••• ,. 0"-"'IG• CO>.JT 'VILIS .. lltG C.OM,.AHY l•\.e1t N, W••' ''•!"-' ..... ~..,.. J•i~ It. Cvrl•v VIOi ,,_.,..,. •"" ~11 »,-.w Th•"'•• IC••wil f.fltw Tti .... 1~ A. M'll'll'lii•• Mtt111""9 M lllf' Ch•rf•• H. l•o1 11;;,1..,.r '· Nt ll ....... ,.,,, ~ f.fll.n a..1L'I" ,II.OT, wlflit .... lcll i. ~ 1" ..... ,..... ...... ..,. filly ..... -- ...,. Ill ~"' tllttfN .... ~· htdl. •.....-t ..,__ OllM ""'-• ..... fMftM ~ ,._...... v11...,. iMI c.._,.,. C.ll>il.,_ 111111 ... ~. •It-le ..... ..... .....,._.. ..... ........, ,,...,.. ....... " •I at Witt N1 ..,_:,, C.19 M-. Tel,.,, ln41 '4Joo4Jl1 au.,... ""'*""-. M1.1•11 s. a 1 ., Al,., ,,,...,. , •••••• 4fa.+ut c:.tWWit. ''"" °'"' c..t "llMlfl'lllrll -r"· ... ... , ...... , llMlnl,....... ..... ,,...,... .. M,.-t\--11 """""' ""' .. , ....... ....,,.. ...... ,... ..... " _,,.llM -· ....... dMit. ,... .... ,.v .. ,,."""*"" a..oo eN C.N .V.., C.Htlnll9. a•alll'f-.,. _.,.. ~ -,,::c .. "' -11 •.11 ~I llllff...,., M • it.ti -4fltf. -· Etidei J"'1 •: 1911 Demand ltlOdilied U.S. Pondering New Talks Shift WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. omclals say the Nixon administration is ponder- ing the significance of a l!urprise new shift in the latest peace offensive launch, ed by Vietnamese Communist leaders. The shift is in the form of a demand for tilt: ouster ef only President Nguyen Van Thieu from any future South Vietna mese government ready le negotiate an end of the war. Previously North Vietnamese and Vitt Cong leaders had lnsimd th.at not enly Thieu, but Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky and Prime Minister Tran Thien Khiem, a s well, would be unacceptable in a post· '"'ar government. "For years Cllmmunist delegates at lhe Paris peace talks have been calling for removal of the "l'hieu-Ky-Khiem clique,'" one diplomatic informant said. "They practically pronounced 'Thieu-Ky. Khiem' as one word. Now they've begun 1peaking only f:il Thieu," The shift In the CommunL!t pOsltlon emerged after Madame Nguyen Thi Binh presented the Viet Cong's latest peace package at the Paris cenference July I, The proposal was for release of all prisoners held by the Communists In the North and South by the yearend, con- current with withdrawal of all U.S. troops. Her preeise words: "The U.S. government must really respect the South Vietnam people's rights lo self-Oett!rmination, put an end to its in· terference in the Jnternal affairs of South Vietnam, cease backing tbe bellicose group headed by Nguyen Van Thieu at present in office in Saigon, and stop all maneuvers, includin& tricks on elections, aimed at malntalhlng the puppet Nguyen Van Thieu." Five days later Le Due Tho, senior North Vietnamese representative in Paris, endorsed Madame Binh'a proposal and in an interview with the New York Times hammered a"'ay al Thieu -and Thieu only. He said In part: "Although !t Beach Pollution, Strikes Facing Heated Italians ROME (U PI) -ltalians seeking relief from a heat wave had trouble getting to the sea today. Some beaches were polluted, others ·.rere atrikebound. Lifeguards and other employes at city· owned beaches near Rome. ~'here temperatures hit 90 degrees Thursday, went on strike to proleal constant delays in the payment of their 8a)aries. The city blamed an accounting backloa: and said it could do nothing about it. Excursioni!lts arriving in steaming hot cars at Castelporzlano -the only fully equipped free beach in the Rome area - found iates locked. At other beache.'\. 1he public tore down fen re.'\ to get to !he sea but found beaches dirty and dressing rooms locked. Elsewhere in Italy. authorities placed a number of beaches oul of bounds because or pollution. The Naples port authority baMed bathing and even sunbathing on several miles of coastline on and around lhe panoramlc Posilllpo PromonlOry. Health officials al!IO continued an uphill battle against the sale of mussels gro;•;n in polluted waters. More lh11n 100 Neapolitans have been charged \.l.'[lh sell- ing un sanitary mussels and IS ha \'e bttn convicted and fin ed Si8 to $64 each. From Page 1 l\'lcCLOSl(Y ... t'Oltr primarie~, lt has bttn widtly assumed in W.'lshington that he \.l.'ould not. A presidential 11ide indicated before i icClo skey ·s ne'"'s conference that the _President doubtless "\.l.·ill not abdicate .. ii faced with a primary challenge. McC10&key announced the st11rt of a "vigorow drive lo register new vote.rs in the Republican party and to realstet those Democrats "·ho may choose to do " ... "Under the present policies of the Prcsf. dtnl, vice president and attorney general, the Republican party is dying," he !'laid. ''It is clear that 19i2 could "'ell be a disaster If new voters are glvtn no in- ctnlive to register as Republicans.·· Saying that thttt times m o r e Democrats than Republicans are being regL,tered among under·21 voters in Ca\Uornla, 1.-fcCloskey added "if this trend continues It spells the death of lhe Republican party." "Jn my judgment tht two-party system Is one of the ba~ic strengths of our pollUcal system, but only when both parties are vigorous and healthy. No in· slltutlon can lone survive unless It can attract the ide111i~m. enthusiasm and enero of the finest young people In the nation." "We will &ttk lo end CIA involvement In the Internal affairs of other nations a nd to Um.it that agency's operation to the field ot intelligence gatherln1. "We will sttk 1 more responsi\'e and effective tCOnomic policy and a neW stt of prloritJea in the tn!!as of rural 11nd urban revitalization and the environment. Above all, we will hope to try to r.:store the filth cf the peoople in c ovemment and lo atlmulate thtlr participation In the eltttoral proctss-." ~fcCloskey quil a J11y,· practlct In 19S7 lo seek hla congres.~lon11I seat and won renown In doln1 so by defe11tlng 1.fr1 . &hlr1ey TemJ'lle Bh1ck, the for~r ac· tre~s. ' is not admitted ... the wliole world knows that Thieu has been put in powe r by the U.S. administration. And the United State..s wiJI have the decisive voice in the forthcoming ele<'t1ons. ··Therefore iI 1.-tr. Nixon is really disposed to settle tht whole problem of the wa r .. , the question of change of the ruling group now in office in Saigon - headed by 'Jb.ieu -is in the power of the United States , . , The forthcoming ele6- tion in South Vietnam is an t1pportunity for Mr. Nixon to change Thieu." Authorities In the State Department have no doubt this subtle Communist move has significance. But just bow much significance will be known cnly Yi'hen some frank face-to-face talking begins between neaotiat.ors for lhe two side~. But meantime, several interpretations have been o!fered by administration e-x- pert! as to motlves ef the Vietnamese Communisl.5 in changing their po!itioo: -An effort to isolate the in flexible Thieu who, in the 1967 election, won 33 percent of the votes. -A bid to deepen the already con- siderable split between Thieu and Vice President Ky who, in the past, has boas:led ol his Northern origins. -An attempt to advance the prospects of neutralist Gen. Duong Van "Big" f..1inh \\'ho led the 1963 coup that ousted Presi· dent Ngo Dinh Diem. Ky and Minh ara tlpposing Thieu in the October elections. -A signal to President Nixon that if only he would arrange for Thieu's elec- toral defeat there would be a ba!is for an acceptable negotiated settlement. Tn this context Le Due Tho was explicit in a~serting his belief Nixon could if he chooses, do just that. Diplomats from Uiose counUres with troops in South Vietnam, speaking privately. seemed agreed on one thing : that for Hanoi as well a! for Washington Vie OcL 3 South Vietnamese presidenti::tl election already has emerged as a local point in !he long search for a Vietnam peace. Berkeley Police Can Now Grow Hair, Beards BERKELEY <AP) -A short hairfut and a clean sha\'e no longer "'ill be re- quired for policemen in this university lown where Jong hair and beards are common. Because the City Council Wlanimously U1rew out a ban on long hair and beards !his week, officers Y.'i!I be hired and pro- n1otrd "on merit alone "'ithout regard lo length of hair or fa cial hair." said Loni Hancock. one of three new council ~embers elected on a radiceJ ticket in "Pril and sponsor of the policy ch11.nge. Until now, Berkeley police have been permitted sideburns no longer than three inches. Hair styles had to be medium length. Chief Bruce Bak_!r last year relaxed an old prohibition against mustaches, as long as they "not extend below the core ners of the mouth:· 11-irs. Hancock se.ys long.haired and bearded police candidates ha\·e com- plained lo her they v.·ere told lo get a trim before thev could be consirlered Baker conf1rfned that "'as lht c11se, and !ll ld shagg y applicants n(l longer will be_ rebuHt d following the eight,mLmber council's action Tue!day night. The city of 116.000 surrounds the L<nivf'rsity or California. campus. "In Berkeley you need a different kind of policemah, perhaps someone less militaristic," t-.1rs. Hancock said. From Page 1 CHILE ... v.·hen 300 ptrsons '"'ere killed by a tremor al!!O centered in the northern end of the central valley. Allende went on national radio to urge calm "the government of your comrade- president is here .... to help .... r ask you, citiztns, I demand, stay calm." It was five mlnulea past 11 p.m . ln San· tiago when the quake hit. lt began gently but built up quickly. There was a hor- Tendous, subterranean grinding noise and the lights "'-'ent out. Panic set In . Santiago shook for l l/, minutes but farther north in the v11\ey fhe quake lasted a mlntue, 5!1 Geconds. Panicky citir.ens, many in pajamas. ra.n Into the streel3, Flying glass. falling flllcades and cornices and panicky car drivers 11ccounted for the. ftrst c1rualt!es. ~1any were injured Calling down darkened 5talrw1ys . In V11.lparaiso. part or the roof of the Imperial Cinema fell In, cruahlng a 11~ t1uor to death Md touchln1 off a. 11L11mpede to exits in which an additional 30 pertons were injured, The Cathedral of V1lpa.r1lso. da.maged In the 198.S quake. dumped Its dome down Into the pe.ws. An estlmalf:d 8\1 percent of structures ln lll11pcl were damagtd and in & score of town1 more th11n 30 per cent of b11Jldln1!I affttltd to some defTte, police said . Tndustrh1I and structural daml!'ie 11~ pearti(j cerlaln kl reach Into the millions of dollars. -- Secmad Fiddle Cats lon g have been ackno\vledgcd champs or nighl \•ision. bul tabby no\V t akes second place lo th is tv.10,in ch d ist· developed by 'f ube Divis· ion of Varian Associates, Palo 1\l to. ll contains hundreds of n1icro, scopic image inle!lsifiers capable of niaking an lmage 10,000 times brighter. It can he used 1n s pec:iaJ equipment, allowing observer to see a person hundreds of yards 3\\'ay in the dark. Ex-addict, 15, _Relates Easy Access to Heroin \\'ASHINCTON (UPJ) In he r neighborhood, "It's much easier to get heroin than to get liquor," preUy 15-year- ol d Lynne Bongiorno of Queens, !\. Y ., told a Senate subcommittee Thursda}·. Her dark brown hair held back by a pink barrette, the teen,ager told of drug use since age 11 , shooting heroin untiJ she joined a rehabilitation program nine n1011ths ago. "I knew "'hat had happened to others "·ho Wok dope but 1 didn't think it would happen to n1e," she said. Another New Yorker. Lou is Rivera. 15. of the South Bronx, "'as a heroin addic t for a year and a half before undergoing treatment seven months ago. "I started smoking pol and drinking beer 11nd \\•hisky;• the youth told Sen. Abr.ahan1 A. Ribi coff ( D ·C on n . I, Chairman of lhe Senate Government Operations Subcommittee "It was available to us everywhere."' Lynne said. "st parties. in school. on lhe street. I even kne\\' a polit'.eman \.\'ho \\'as selling drugs.·· Another witness, Vietnam veteran Poison Spilled Out NE\V ORLEANS IAP I -A shipping container loaded with 69 barrels of a highly toxic chemical broke v.·hile being loaded on to a freighter Thursday night, some of !he barrels split and shipping on rhe ~fississippi River \\'BS stopped for a time. The signal to resume. river shipping was given after a team of chemists said no danger \1<1s involved. 1\lbe rt B. Linder, 25, recalled. "It \1·as 1nuch easier lo gel a good bag of dope than <i t lean gla~s of waler ·• Now 11 ork1ng !(l help drug addicts in llarlcn1, Linder hrC'an1c ,1 heroin addict while 1n V1ctna n1 . \\'ht•n he1 returned lo !he sti:ltes. "/ had lo str;d and l h<1d !o ~tf':1t bi g tu kel'p rny habit," he testified. Tht' coun1ry w:is ''heading hack to a 1in1e l1kr· the Roaring Twenties," Linder said. "Guys whu hilvC been durkll1g IJLllle ts 1n rit e· p;iddies !11ink nothing or rnbbing H h;ink lo feed their habit." Thi· 11i ree witnesses 1verr brought befo re the subcnmm1ttee by Grahan1 S. Vinncy. ~umn1iss1oner of New York City 's Add lr!lun Services Agcnr.\. \Vt11lr "applaudi n~r· 1l1p Ad1ninistra- 11on·s ;1nl1drug abuse proposals, Finney said they had been 1ru:tde too late and 11·ere inadcquatl'ly financed. Ne"' York City and thr entire st ale during this fiscal year "'ill be spending n1ore than the SIS5 inillion being sough! by ihe Administra- tion. he :-<i id Addiction. Pinney sa id, mu st be con. s1dered in the same realm as cancer. heart disea~e and mental illness. lie also 11111.inlained that "!oo l1ltle attention has Ileen paid to the scarcity and de1nand for !rained personnel in the drug !reatment and prrvenlion fields" He said he wa s surprised to learn lh<1f many 1ne dicrd students g r :id u a t e "withoul knoll'in.t? how 10 handle an ov.:-rdnse of drugs." In <ins\1'er In a question from Sen. Ed, rnund S. i\1l1sk1e 1 D·i\1a1nl'l. L:i·nne said she turr1etl lo drugs •·t>t>cau~c I wa nted to be accep1ed b.Y niy friends. It was the rhinJ! ro do." ~~~~~~~~~~~- l From P .. • J SATCHMO .•. Lyons and composer Harold Arlen. But Thursday for the moct part. wu the day when the unkoowns •ho bouah& Armstrong rec<lrdinga by lhe , m.illle111 pa.id their re!lpect.s to the dynamic 11nJ:et aod musician. By the thousands they filed p3s~ his coffin in a National Guard armory here -many ,,.·eeplng, some genufitcting and crossing then1selves, ArDUJtrong 'a body was clad in a black silk suit and pink .shirt. Under his right hand was his tradenuirk, a white handkerchief he had ah\'ays used W "mop his chops," placed there hy hi~ wife, The mourners "·ere black, white, the young and 1ged of all "'alk," of life. One midd1e·age black "·oman blew a kiss. A man placed a single rrurt on the t:askel. Tht battered old cornet with "'h1t h Satchmo launched his rareer waf: put atop the coffin by Arlie Siefert "a friend and admirer'' of Armstrong. "He was the fin est that I knew of. His death is a great loss. His personality was very pleasant, I think everybody loved hint. I loved everything about him.'• aaid Mrs. Gloria ~larker, a small gray-haired lady. 1'1rs. Sadie Hendrick.!f of the Bronx, dabbed at her eyes with a handkercblef and said: "They'll never find another Satchn10. HI! was an original." Ernest Broglio said he had been "rai.s- ed with Satchmo" in a boys' home In New Orleans. "I knew him when he first started out. A'!'. a mu~ician he was a great one. He was a perfect entertainer. The world lov- ed him. There will never be another like him," said Broglin sadly. W arniing Trend To Heat Up Coast Bea.clies A five-degree '"'arming trend ls ex, peeled to heat up ~ Orange Coast tonight and Saturday bringing tnland highs to 90 degrees and a balmy 75 degret?s at the beach. The morning low clouds and log routine Is lessening, the National Weather Service has observed. improving the \.\'eekend 11·eather outlook. r..1orning winds near 20 knots over !he otfshore channel "'ill bet'Ome westerly in the afternoon at from eight to 18 knoll. Tonight's low will ~ 65 in both inland and coastal communities. Sunny skies will smile on Orange Coun-- ty throughout the "'eekend, though the tenure of the "'ar ming trend is uncertain for Sunday. Humidity ranging rrom 4-0 to 7S percent today in Los Angeles is expected to con- tinue through the weekend. Frona Page J MORRISON. • • lion, "Light My Fire." Their latest single was "Riders on Ute Storm ." Siddons said Morrison had been In Paris with his wlfe Pamela since itarch. He ~aid tht singer "had sten a doctor in Paris about a rtspiratory problem And had complained of this problem on Satur· day. the day of his death." He said Morrison was buritd "in a simple ceremony '"'ith only a few friends present." SALE CONTINUES - CHINA R99. S879.00 A"•il•Dr. lri Y•llow er.,Gr1•n SALE 169900 SALE FEATUR ES OTHER SELECT GROUPS FROM HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE -UPHOLSTERY. SHERRILL -MARGE CAR. SON -HENREDON LAMPS, PICTURES & ACCESSORIES ALSO RE· DU CED. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEt:-HERITAGE NIWl'ORT STORI OPIN PRIDAf 'TIL t 'led .11/l!Jllef/. ~ NEWPORT BEACH 'Prof1sslon•l Interior LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast HIJhway Phone: 494-6$ 1 1727 Wa1tcllff Dr ., 642·2050 Desl9nert Available -AID OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 I N TE R I 0 RS ·-~~~-::::::~~:::.··~-::~:..::~::.:~:·:·~::.::::.:-:...:~::: --· ------~'"·---------.. ,· ..... ,.~--~-~--·~ •1 --~ -··L-·-·--, l 'l ·r '' I I I I ' I I ~nntington Beaeh Fountain Valley EDITION VOL. 64, NO. 163 , ~ SECTIONS, ~6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ¢ALIFORN1~ " - • Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks TEN 'CENTS Attend Services for 'Satchmo' I , NEW YORK !UPI) -They said good- bye to Louis "Satchmo" Armslrong today witJi a service that sent the jazz rythms or the New Orleans funeral song, .. When the Saints Go Marching In," halfway around the world. Only 500 pl'oplc could attend the funcr&I service £or the great jazz Lrumpeter in the simple red brick Corona Congrega- tional Church in a quiet Queens neighborhood. But more than 1,000 or Armstrong's v neighbors stood outside and hundreds of thousands watch~ on television as Tetslar beamed the service to 16 Eur1; pean countries. Peggy Lee flew in from the West Coast to sing "'The Lord's Prayer." For Armstrong's Ydfe of 29 years. Lucille, !hey sang "Just a Closer Walk Wilh Thee." He had come 1,500 miles from his native New Orleans to win his greatest fame but like all those other jaumen in ' •111 ll-..... "' SAFE ASHORE, MOTHER AND CHILOREN WATCH GROUNOED BOAT Father Wis Not Talking About Mishap et Boise Chic• Sailboat Runs Aground Off Bolsa State Beach A v.•oman anrl two children '-lere rtscued from a sailboat which had run aground at Bo!sa Chica State Beach this morning. Huntington Beach city \Heguards said they swam l\.lrs Barrie Folsom and her children . Larry, 7. and Sherry, 4. to shore as the boat was helplessly bobbing in the surfline. The 37-fool ves sel, named "Centurion" ran aground at 6.45 a.m. near lifeguard station 22. It.~ opera!nr was identified as Clarence Folsom. 34, of 21772 Kiowa Lane. Huntington Beach. Lifeguard Capt. Dou,1.!las D'Arnall 5aid Fo lsom would not discuss ho111 the mishap occurred. The boa! \\'as in trans11 from the S<:iuthwes!ern Yacht Club in S::in Diego to the L<ing Beach ri.1arina 11t the time. The vessel, which had been taking on Prisoner Has Real Proble1n Nev.-port Beach police go to all reasonable lengths to protect the health and welfare of t he I r prisoners but nothing could be done for one Thursday. Detective Todd Wilkinson'.s 19- year-old arrestee was asked about i.ny ailments or medical problem& by jailers, before being booktd on a burgluy charge and admitted to ll cell . He said be suffers fr om claustrophobia, lhe fear of being confined In .1 limited 8pece. water fr om the acc1denl, was lowed by the Coast Guard cutter .. Evans " to a shipyard in Long Bea ch for repairs. Poison Spilled Oul NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A shipping container loaded with 69 barrels of a highly toxic chemlcal broke while being loaded onto a freighter Thursday night, some of the barrels iplit and shipping on the ~1is.sissippi Rive r was .stopped lor a lime. The. signal to resume river shipping was given afte r a team of chemists said no danger was involved. Leag1re Decision District Rept"esent.ative8 of Orange County's 25 ciUe! wr1ngltd for two hours 'Thursday night and finally' spilt 13-12 In support' ol an Assembly bill lo put the fate of the County Harbor Di8trict up to the voters. The. League of Cities !members alSll spilt 13-12 over naming a representative to !he. LOCa l Agency Formation Com· mission ILAFC). They replaced Fullerton CQUncilman Louis Reinhardt with Los Ale.m1tos Mayor Pro Tern Joseph Hyde. The vote on the harbor distrlct was ac· tually a defeat of 11 motion to !Upport Assemblymen Kenneth Cory's ( D. Anaheim) bill whlch would relain the dlstrlcl I! 1 separa te lAxing agency and add parks to it.s jurisdi ction. The league had voted 2()..3 last April fl> support the bUl by Assemblym3n John l JP•, 0 -:.___ • --· I Clio the city where Di1icland was born, they played "When the Saints Go Marching In" for Armstrong, wbo died in his sleep Tuesday of a heart attack at the age oJ 71 . Armstrong's wife and a former wile, jazz pianist Lillian Hard in, had said their private goodbyes ~rlier at a neighborhood funeral home. Mr 1 . Armstrong. in bluk dress and shawl , cried quietly as she stood near his grey steel coffin. ua State Dove Will Join 1972 Race LOS ANGELES IA P) -Rep. Paul N. McCloskey Jr., the most ouUpoken Republican crilic of President Nixon's Vietnam war policies, announced today he will enter the 1972 Calirornia presiden· tili!l primary eleclion "pledged to endihg: Utt' war conditioned anly upon return ti the prisoners of war.'' , "This will not be i 11ngle ls!Ut cam- paign,"' \he San Mateo, Calif.. con· gressman said in 1 stattmeat iasur:d in advance of a news conference. "We seek in addition to ending the war lo restore truth in &overnment, to achieve 1 return to historic Republican moral com· mitment on social Issue! rather than the present 'Southern Strategy' and a restoration of judicial excellence and in· dependence.." McCloskey, 43, thta formally undertook a ca mpaign he said he would launch on1y if Nixo n failed to change his Indochina policy and if no other prominent Republie&n entered the race as a .,eace candidate. McCloskey, who has assailed the President's policies in speeches for months, advocating quick withdrawal or U.S. war force s, made no mention in his formal statement of entering other primaries. such as the fi rst-in-tht-natloo one in New . Hampshlle. The Californi a pr imary is June 6, 1972. McCloske.y said he would form and head his own slate . Nixon has not said v.·helher he will enter primaries. It has been widely a ssumed in Wa shington that he woul d not A presidentiar aide indicated before McCloskey's news conference that the Presid~nt doubtlei:;s "v.·ill not abdicate" if faced \.11ith a primary challenge. f<.1 cCloskey announced the start of a "vigorous drive to register new 11oters in the Republican pa rty and to register those Democrats v•ho may choose. to do so." "Under the present palicies of lhe Presi- dent, vi ce president and allorney general, the Republican party is dying," he aaid. "It is clear t.hal 1971 could well be 1 disaster if new voters are given no in· cenUve to register as Republican!.'' Saying that three times m o r e Democrats than Republicans are being registered among under-21 voters in California, McCloskey added "'if this trend continues it !pClll the death of the Republican party." Mourners began arriving at late morn- ing at the church which is cooled only by fans. As temperatures rose to the high 80!!, w:hers handed out small paper fans, some beari111 a picture of lhe late Dr. Martin Luther Kint: Jr. Outside, neighbors remembered how Armstrong always ws.s ready to play at local charitable events. "He would never forget if he Could help it. Goodwill am· bassador -that fil..!l him ~ry well," Mrs. Thelma Davis said. e The list of honor&ry pallbearers, wu ln its own way, a tribute to .the man who thrilled crowda in Belgrade.. Accra, Bangkok and MosC<lw with his musical genius and infectious grin. The lisl Included telev ision personaliti~ Johnny Carson ind David Frost, Mayors John Lin<tsty of New York and Moon Landrieu of New Orleans, musicians Gene Krupa, Guy Lombardo, Lionel Hampton and Benny Goodman, columnists Earl Wilson and Leonard ATLANTIC OCIAM .... ···. ..,,, Htwt MAii THIS IS SECTION OF SOUTH AMERICA HIT llY QUAKE Chile ind Argentin• Severely Shaken Lite Thuraday Train Troubles Beach Frees Wayward Railroader An Anaheim engineer with an iron horse and whal police claim was an iron v.·ill was booked briefly in Hunlina:ton Beach City Jail Thursday night. Police said Felix John Konzem . 57. was the rngineer of a three-car freight train which was invol\'ed in a collision with a car near Adams Avenue and Lake Street. Konzem spent lwo hours going lhrough the booking process and was released without bail when he signed a promise to appear in West Orange C.Ounty Judicial District Court. Meanwhile, however, bis train stayed right where he left it -blocking traffic oh Adams. Police identified the driver of the car as William Henry Burg~as, ~I, of 18394 Basswood St, Fountain Valley. who air parenC!y suffered only minor injuries in the crash. Nonemof his three passengers were reported injured. But when officers arrived on the scene to invcXigatt. the crash, they allege engineer °'konzem refused to identify himse II. So officers arrested the engineer on suspic1on of obstructing a peace officer in the discharge of his duty -' misde- meanor complaint. A police spokesman explained that locomotive engineers .ere nol required to carry a llcen.~e as car dr ivers . So when he allegedly refused kl identify himself, he was charged with obstruction. An automobile driver in a similar situa· lion would prob.ably be cited under the vehicle code section which r~uires dri vers to carry a license, the spoke.!lman noted. Up to Voters Beach May Name Two Facilities After Gallienne A park or • school or both may be named alter the late Wlllia'm H. (Bill) Galllenne, former mantttt of the Hun- t.ingt.on Beach Clamber or Commeree. Brigg• <R-FuJlerton) and that declsloft stand.!. Brl111' bill would put the matter to the voten. Support. for lhe Cory bill hid been sought by the Board of Supervllora ·at a recent cil,y-county meeting. Orange Coast cities apllt f-3 on the issue. ·Newport Beach , Llpwi Beach. and Seal Beach supported the Cory bill while San Juan Capi.sU'•no. Huntington Beach, Los Alamitcc 11nd Fountain Vallty vottd on the other 1kle. The vote on a representative on the LAFC flr&t involved three cand.Jd1tea, Reinhardt, Hyde and TU&tln M1yor Tony Coco , Relnh1rdt and Hyde 101 nine vota each and C.oco MVeD, Coco w11 later elected 1lternate LAFC member by a 13-12 vote over Reinhardt. Ma.yor Thom1s Forster of San Juan Capistrano argu@d before the final vote on the Cory bill that a decWon should 'be poatponed and· lbe qitestlon referred back to the various city counclll. ·''They do not really ·tUlderatand either blU ," he con. tended. · The city repreienta.tlves w e r e unanlmoua on one subject. 11iey don't like Lhe property tax bill approved by the supervisors \ll'h lch will list only four categories -schools, city, county and 1pecial dlstrlctl. They Voted to urge the supervll!Ors to return to the former format llst1n1 au taxm1 •1encle1 separately. 1'hole who apoke: on the subject felt that the cities would &et blamed for high taz bDll U the breakdown wt! not ll.'Jed, Mayor Georg• McCracken noted at a meeUna of the city cooncU thia•week that the HOME Council was recommendlot that a mljor park be n1med after the civic leider who built up • reput!:Uon as '1EI GtneralisstmG" tor his ~motion of Huntington Be~h and organilaUcm of the IMdependen~e Day Parade. McCracken uid that he would ask Parka and Recreation Director Norm Worthy to talk with represent3tJve1 of the Huntincton Beach City (elementary) School District on the pouiblllty ol a OIChool ll!d ldlac<nt city park ~lo · bein, non><d ill Gtlll,....'1 honor. -. Lyons and composer Harold Arlen. But Thursday .for the most part, wu the day when the unknowns who bought Armstrong recordings by the mi1Hon:1 paid their respects to the dynamic ainget and musician. By the thousands they filed passed hi9 coffin in a National Guard armory berl -many weeping. some genuflectins ind crossing themselves. Armstrong's body was clad in a black fSee SATCHMO, P•ce t~ Scores Die; 11 Cities Devastated SANTIAGO IUPJ ) -Chile's worst earthquake since 1965, a 11/.i-minute tremor that reached 10 on the Merca\U scale of 12. killed scores of persons to- da y and caused widespread destruction. At least fi6 persons were killed and more than 300 injured in the pre -midn ight T_hursday shock which was fo\lov;ed. by at l•ast 14 after.shoe~ that kept the etiuntry iD 1~pe.nse until dawn F1id1y. Casualties were estimatt.d by the Interior ministry. All of the casualties were in 11 citie..• along the nortbem ehd of the fertile cen- tral valley nestled between the Andes and tbe coast in this quake-prone 1aod on I.ht lower west coast ol South America. In the port o( V~lparaiso, 25 were dead, itlc/udlng 8 in the beach resort town of Vina Del Mar. There were It reported dead in Santiago and 5 in San Felipe. Some were killed in accidents caused by panic, others by fa.l ling walls and debris. Three died in Illapel, the ep icenter of the quake. There the quake reached an intensity a( 10. It was recorded al 6 in Santiago, the capital. President Salvador Allende declared the norlh<entral tone a disaster are, placed troops on alert and ordered out extra-strength police detachments t.q discourage looting . Allende took a helicopter early Friday to Valparaiso and IJ!apel, which was isolated by landsli des on the Pan American Highway. The quake was felt from Arica. on tbt Peruvian border, to Temuco, 1,400 miles to !he south . It v.·as the country's strongest quake since !11arch 28, 1965, when 300 persons were killed by a trem<lf also centered in the northern end of the central valley. Allende went on national radio Ul urge calm '"the government of your comrade- president is here .... to help ..• .I ask you. citizens, I demand, stay calm .'' · It was five minutes past 11 p.m. in San- tiago when the quake hit. It began gently but built up quic kly. There w.as a hQr .. rendous. subterranean grinding noiM NJd the lights went out. Panic .set in . Santiago shook for 1v, minutes but farther north in the valley the quake lasted a mlntue, 55 .seconds. Panicky citizens, many ln pajamas, ran into the streel.s. Flying glass, fallinl racades and cornices and panicky cai drivers accounted for the first casuaJties. !See ,CHILE, Page !) Oranee Weather The weatherman predktS low cloudJ Ind fog today and Saturday, clearing by noon with tempera. lures along the coast around 7S and 90 inland. Lows ol 65 dearctt in both 1rea11. INSIDE TODAY The Po.oeo.nt of tkl MD.Ster• ~ and Pettival of Art' opcm.1 tu.d wt'tk in La.gu.na Beach. Pktwru and a. sto~ are in todatl'i W'e"- ender1 Page 2!. •Ntlftt b C.llft,,,1• , Clltdtl., U• 1 Cl_.,._ >Ml c-•c• JI (NUWltC Jt Otlltfl ""'k" • ••""111 ..... ' l•twMltl-' »-JI l'l'Mfl<t• 1 .. 17 H--14 A• ........ ,. II _... .... -~ """"' \I Htllffttl Iii-M ~·-'-" 1 IMrtt ll·t1 Si.ct Mel'bh ll-1' T1141......_ H n...1.,., .... W1tf111W ' w ........... 1).11 WwN JlllWI '& ·-- ----·--r---------~ -. --~___... ...... ,. ·---.,... --~-·__;·_. -~----:1:. -----· ... 1 ~ ' - -"J.== -.· ......... --··-' . -. ~ .. _____ .,_ ...... ___ _ .. ~-... --.r1~ -----.~ -f ..... .·....._ ___ ..... --_,,...___ 1 · ~ •·r·\.tlt.i ,, --'"' . .. -r ---··---- t DAIL\' PllO'r •• lnff.atioa Feared I j • State Okays Nixon Abandons Vocational Economy Target School Plan WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Nixon ad- ministration has abandoned. for all prac- t.ioal purposes, it.s Wget ol a $1.0M- trilllon national tconomy th.ii yur, the most controvenl.al forecaat In it& January f'COOOfTlic report to Congreu. Dr. Paul W. McCracken, cbainnan of Presid--~t Nixon's Council or Economic Advisers. lOld Congress Th ursday pli1hing the economy toward that target in the Ian half of the year could ac- * * * Wholesale Price Rise 0.4 Percent WASHINGTON (UPI) -Wholtsale pricea rose 0,4 percent in June for the se· cond straight month, the government said Friday, indicating little chlnge in the •d· mi~stration'1 !4Ue against inflation. Ylholesale price increases generally result in higher retail prices after about a month. The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor st.USUCI said the over-all index advanced last month lo 114.3 percent of the 1987 figure. This means it now cost! $11.43 t0 buy the same package of whole· 5ale goods that cost $10 four years ago. The inc~ase in the indez: ror June was 0.4 percent both with and without seasonal adju!ltmenl. The index wu 3.S percent higher than ln June, 1970. For the gix month! rrom December through June. the index ro5e at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6 percent. The bureau 11aid wholesale prices of groceries and other food ready for sale to the consumer rose 0.7 percent in June, but this is nonnal for this time of the year. After seasonal adjustment, food price!! were unchanged from May. Wholesale price!I of fresh fruits, fresh and dried vegetables, grain, eggs, live poultry and milk for reprocessing in- creased in J une. Prices declined in meat, sugar and confectionary and other dairy producta. The industrial commoditie!I index in- cre~ o.J percent in June, half the in- ~reaseh I• May. After seasonal ad- 1ustmenb, the June lncrta!le wa5 0.3 per- cent, compared with 0.4 percent in Ma y. Farm products increas~ 1.8 percent - 1.7 percent after seasona1 adjustment - in ~~floc<ssed foods and feeds •d· v~ , 1 percent, although following adJ u for seasonal factor!!, thtse deer 0:1 percent. Livestock prices were down slightly, with a drop in cattle prices more than offsetting an advance 1n Jambll and hogs. l'rom Page 1 CHILE ... Many were injured fallinc dov:n darkentd stairways. In Valparaiso, part of th' roof of the Imperial Ohema fell in , crushing a sptt· Utor to death and touching off a stampede to exit_, in which an additional 30 persons were injured. The Cathedral of Valparaiso. damagtd in the 1985 quake, dumped its dome do.,,,·n into the pews. An tstimated 8i> percent of structures In Illa~ were damaged and in a. score or towns more than 30 per cent of buildings affect'd to ;;om!' dtgrP.e, police said. Industrial Aild structural damaet ap- peared certain to reach into the millions -0f dollars. OU.N•I COAST DAILY PllOT CUHGI COAST ,.Ul l!SHl"G COMl"ANY l•l.•rt N. We.4 p,_tdefll 11111 l'WIWIW J1c.li: k. Cvr{.'f ¥-. ,,_ ........... ~I """""" n ....... "••"ir ·~!IOf' Tii-•• A. M.,,i.1 ... M .......... E•ltw A1111 Dirli:i11 W*I Or._ C_,ty M llW A lb•rt W. l1t•1 ...... i.i. E:dllW Hntl ..... '-• Offtff 11111 a.1c.h 1 ... 1.,, .... f11 1lll"t Acl<llr•111 P.O. 111 7,0. '2641 -"""" ......,.. a.di! :tl:I ...... t ,.,_ a. .. Molee; JJI W•I ••Y Strwt H__. a.di: tan H--1 ... !_,,. ... ~I Jb; ...,. 11!1 talftlfri9 llMI \ ""'·-. -•• I f)"I'. -- cel"rale inflation. McCracken acknowledged the economy in the first si x n1ont'1s of 1971 fe:JI below the sdrninlstranon·s forecasts, "wh ile in- flation has <"Onti.nued higher and the rise of real output and employment have rise n less than we ex~ctcd ·· In January~ lhe admintstralion ~aid Gross National PrOducl. outpul of the na- 1.lon's good.!i and services. should ciln1b by 9 percent thi!I year t.o a total ot. $l.065 trill kin . That kind of GNP gro.,,,·th wa5 ~de<!, It said, to reduce unemployment \.o about 4 5 percent and inflation, as measured by GNP standard&, to 3 percent by mld-1972. McCrlH:ken was more cautious about the3e prediction!! in testimony Thursday before ~ Senate-House Economic Com· mittee, saying only that the ri9ing rate of inflation would deceltrate this year and unemployment would decline. "There is a danger that If 1noncy GNP were now to rise, or be pushed up. Lo reach the targets previously put Jorward, that would revive inflation or at least seriously delay its abatement," he 1111id. McCracken said administration fear of an acceleration in the inflation rate. was the main reason President Nixon chose to reject tax reductions as an economic stimulant. , ''We are now seeing how difficult it is to remove the economy from the con· seque~ of tht inflation I.hat was allo..,.,_ ed to develop from 19&5 to 1968.'' he said. "To permit the inflation to revive, for some short·run and doubUut advantage to ou~v~. would~ highly irresponsible." the chairman added. saying Congress al ready has made the 1972 fiscal year budget some $7 blllion more expansive than Nixon proposed. Famed Rock Star Jim Morrison Dies in Paris PARIS (UPI) -American rock star Jim .~orri!lon, 27, lead singer or "The Doors ,"' whose raw sexual on-stage style made him an international star -and a defendant in an obscenity trial -died of a heart attack last Saturday and wa!I buried secretly in a Pan& ~etcry, police reported toda y. Police said Morrison was disCQ\'l!red unconscious in the bathroom of his clue apai'tment by Pamela Courson, 25. of LO!> .-An11les, hl1 ~panitlq for the past fi\'e yean: and regarded as his co1nmon law \Vife. "Miss Courson said \t'hl'n Morrison awoke last Saturday. he \vas not fechns well," a police spokesman said. ''He ask· eel her to get a bath read y 11nd then entered the bathroom. "Not hearing any noise, 1.1iss Cour90n later opened the door to find Morrison lyin g unconscious in the bath " The officer at the precinct ror the fourth Arrondissement, a fashionable district of Paris, said 1.torrison was dead v.·hen a police ambulance arrived at hi9 apartment. He said a doctor later issued a certificate a\lribu ting death to a hearl attack. T~ JX)iice off!('('r said :\1orrison ..,.,a!I buried \\'edne!lday in the historic Pere La chaise cemetery. one of the oldest In Paris, in private sen'ices arrangM bv ~1iss CourS<!n. The ser\·1ces were a ~­ tended by only a few close frlend.<;. A record industry spokesn1an ~:11d :\l ot· ri!IOn v.·as in Pans 11nt1ng a hooli. Bill Siddoos. ~torri,on·~ n1an a.o::er, s:ilrl in Los Angeles lha1 1he lni\laJ news of the si nger 's death was kepi secret "lo a\ ri1d the notoriet yan d c1rrus·likt> atmosphrrr that surrounded Lhe deaths of such nth<'r rock personalities as Janis Jophn and Jim Hendrix." Siddons said he strived in Los Ang ele s from Paris Thursday ni gh1. Although Morrtson and "The Doors'' achieved widespread a<"claim in rock music cin::lt.!i througb their hard.hitting sound, Morrison Wlls in the headlines several times becuu!lt of his slage anlirs \.\'hich caused the group to be banned In several U.S. cities. He wa!I arl'4!sted 11 few ~ears ago 1n ;\11ami for using obscene !i;nguagr and exposing himself during a concert Hr \.\'I S convicted last October. fined S:,00 and sentenc-e:d to si x months in jail. He was free on $50,000 bail pending an ap- ptal at the time of his death. D.t.ILY "ILOT 11111 !"~ ... Ftczz a11d Fire Weer, t .. ountain Valley motorcycle officer Bob Remillard explains \Vorkings of his equipment to children at llarper playground. His appearance \Vednesday \Vas part of a Fountain Valley Recreation Department's ··ruzz and Fire \Veek." one of several programs dreamed up by departn1ent officials to ainaze. en· tertain and enlighten youngsters al 10 playground~. Upcoming themes for \\'eekly progra1ns include .. Laugh-in" and •·J)ollution Solution" Bicycle Trail Plan Okayed Countywide Network Approved in Principle By JACK BROBACK Of fll• DlllY "1'-1 !l•ff A program to eventually provide a countywlde network of bicycle trails has been approved in principle by lhe Orange County Board of Supervisors. Board members sent the 6J.page report by the Environmental Planning Division of lhe County Planning Department and the Road Department to the Planning Commission for public hearings. The planners are to report on lhe feasibility or the countyv•idc bike trails system an d their opinion on the report's recommendation that would "comn1il the cdunty to develop a recreation and lransportation bicycle system in the unin· c:orporated area and to coordinate with the cities the development of a bicycle system throughout the county." A distinction is made between bicycle ''ways" and "trails." "Ways '' according lo Planning Director Yo~esl Dickason are an exi1ting street tir road designated as suitable for bicycle traffic , specially marked to improve safrty but not having a bicycle Jane physically separated from motor vehicle lrarflo-. "Trails'' on !he other hand are pathways established specifically for bicycle traffic. Federal Judge Nixes Trc1nsfer Of Davis Case SAN fRA!\'CISCO (UPI ) -A federal judge tuda~· refused to transfer Angela Davis' kidnap·murder-conspiracy case from California slate courts. A bicycle way along Culver Drive to serve the University Park area in Irv ine and UCI is one of two ~roposed pilot pro- jec!s. The Cuh·er Drive project was sug· gested by citizens of the area and 11·ould ut ilize the parking lanes. 1'hc other pilot project "·ould be in the Orange Park area and be gate"·ays to open space and recrea!ional areas such as Irvine and O'Neill parks. The planning department w a s originally asked to study the feasibility or the two requests bu! a county1vide system v.·as offered, Dickason sciid. because : "Advantages of a con1prehen~ive system 1vou!d far outwei,gh sny singular or sporadic atlemp1s which would devote resources to only a fe v.· communities.·· A skeletal plan of bicycle trails outlines G6 different routes throughout the county. A "first level'' of 26 trails would pro- vide routes to and through seven regional parks and to Huntington Beach. Newport Beach. Laguna Beach and 540 Juan Capistrano. Total length woultf be !25 miles. Second level routes of 188 milts "'ould lead to coJlrges and junior !!: es and throujh all 25 county ci " · l inking historical , scenic and recrei:tl sites and entertainment fa cilities · Such as Disneyland and Knoll's Berry Fatm. Of tbr 125 miles of first level (Outes 85 miles or fi8 percent v.·ould . be In uniocorporaled :i recis. The seco{!d level routes would be largely within Lbe ci!ies with only 52 of the 188 miles or 28 percent in unincorporated county areas ... Dickason pointed out that only Ne \vpott Beach and Costa J\fesa now have formal bicycle trail plans. but he added that l:l other ci!ies arr in th e process of develop· ing plans. Llpper Newport Bay and the Capistrano Valley were cited as example!! of area!\ where local bicycle circuits ha v e particular potential, 'The Upper Bay offers aesthetic qL1alily and would service both Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and the Irvine community. The Capistrano Va!Jey network \.\'Ould emphasize !historical and recreational activities. A circuit route to and through the marine recreation areas of Dana Poinl and Doheny Beach_ San Juan Capistrano Mission and his t or i ca I do .,,,·ntown zones. r u r a ! agricultural regions and relatively un spoiled natural areas of San Juan Creek canyon would have vasl potential as a system, the report stated. 'The plan offers regulations f o r establishing bicycle facilities in future and existing regional parks and a re-. quirement is suggested for dedica tion of \\'BYS in planned communities and sub- divisions and along arterial high.,,,•ay!I and roads. Costs of implementing the program \1·ere estimated with the admonition th&t land acquisition is lbe most expensi\'e factor . The average purch;ise price of a mile of land for trails eight feet wide would 11piroxlmstely $30,000. Construction costs would approximate $6.000 a mlle. The cosl e.!ltimate concluded, "Ap- proximate mile costs could range from a9 to1v as $350 for re!lidential streets where signing is the only expen!le to as high as $43,000 for some trails which may require signing. surface material, fencing and land acquisition. The figures do not include maintenance costs "'hich would admittedly ~ signiU· cant. By RUD I NIEOZfEl .SKJ 01 lllt O•llv l"ti.t SI•" Stule :;ehuol offif'1ul~ loday gavt their ble~s1ng \u A 1ot·:it 1011al cducat \On pr~ gram that would pool li1e re:;ources nl three Orangt' ('oast School distr11·t~. Thf' 1.1n>gr.'.lt'1. knO\\tl .is lhr !legion.ii Ot·l'Upa11011 l'ru~ran1 11ll)P 1. \\,IS ap· prO\~d b~ (hr S!a!P \ l)(•alll>nRI J-:duc:a\LOll Cun1m1tlee and 1he s1a1 r Board of f':du t·at ion lt links the 1 [unl1ng1011 Beach t.:nion ltlgh Sehool District. the Ne1vporl·Me.sa l n1ried School D1stric·t snd the 1'ustjn l'111on High School f)1striet. .lack S. Roptr. superu1\endent of lhP Huntington Hrarh l 'n1011 High School l>istr1ct. who :1l1Jng 111th two ntht'i' sehoolrne.a JOurne.red !o Sa n Francisco to persuade both Uoards .... aid hr 11as '1hrillrd·' hv thr dl'velvp1nrnt. ·\Ve shr111irl h<l\'f' 1h1s progra111 revved up and re:1d,i.' 10 !>tart by th is fall," he said. ~' linking the Hu1111ngton Be a r h dislrict \Vili1 the Newport·Mrsa Unified School District and the Tustin t.;nion High: Schoo! District students 1vill be" ab!r lo 1ake advantagt" of a grea1cr 1•ar1et .v or 1 oc;itional courses. ~chOl'.11 olf1ci:1ls sa 1d. .. A :;tudent living v.·ithin our district in- terested in plastics technology is unablr to take classes in this field becausie there <1re no l·ou rst's offered in our dtstric:I " The nexl step. <icc:ording to Roper. 11·ould be formation of a governing board from school board members of the three participating districts. if the program is approveJ by the Orange County school board, county supervisors would have the authority to levy taxes for Its operation. &hoolmen estimate ii ""'ould cost less than one cent per $100 of assessed valua· tion. or about $75,000 for the first year o [ operation. From Page 1 SATCHMO ... silk suit and pink shirt. Under his right hand was his trademark, a white handkerchief he had al11·ay5 used lo "mop his chops:' placed there by his \Vife. The mourners \Yere black. 1vhite, the young and aged of all walks o( life. One middl,tage black 1~·oman blew a kiss. A man ·'placed a single rose on the cuket. t he battered old cor~t with wh~·~tchou> Jauocbed his c11rur-~wa11 put atop the coffin by Artie Siefert ''a friend and admirer'' of Armstrong. "He was the finest that I knew of. His death is a great loss. His personality v,·a~ ''ery pleasant, I think everybody loved him. 1 loved everything about him," said Mrs. Gloria Marker, a small gray-haired lady. t\1rs. Sadie Hendricks of lhe Bronx. dabbed at h~r eyes v,·ith a handkerchief and said: "They·11 never find another Satchmo. He was an original." Erne!lt Broglin said he had been "rais· ed with Satchmo" in a boys' home i.n Nev,· Orleans. l' S. 1)1str1C'l .Judge Samuel Conti sent b?.::k ln ~1 ;.in11 County Superior Court the ca~c o( Lhe former l"CLA protessor and her co-delend;int Ruehell t\fagt"e . SALE CONTINUES !'f111\i (l!so rrfu.~erl to disqualify hi1nselr. illager, 11hri ha~ di~rupted several \011er C[lurt prl)('ct>ding~. inte rrupted th(' 1udgr nnrp or 111icr but did not dis rurt 1h,.. hr:i r1ng Aftrr 4:'J minute.<: hP 11·as 1akE'11 at his own ri·que~\ tn a nearby holchng t'l'l l. \1 hcrr he ct1uld listen lo \1hat 11as ~~id in t'Ourl l~ater. 11h<'ll !he iudge Nidressed tiin1selF to :\1agrr·s t'a~e. t.hc :l2·yrar~ld San Qur11!111 ro11\iC1 \1a~ brought back in· to court Tl\<'n1 y n11nules later. ho\.\ever, he was ren10\ rd again aJtrr arguing \Yith the JLLdgt" :ibout the ~erving nf papers. Conn then issued a ruling that future rcmo\al peUt1ons sen! to lhe U.S. District Courl Clerk by Magee or !\1iss Davis .... ·ould only be "lodged "·ith" the court, rather than filed. 111l' jud)!r s~1d ~lagtt v.·as abusing th(' l<'g:1l ~\<.t1>1n. pointing out that he had hlcrl 1i !Y.-t111ons with the court since th!:' f1ri.1 of the ~ear CHINA R"J. $879.00 SALE $699°0 Ava il"ble lrt Yellow or Green 7 County W 0111a11 A viato1·s Complete De1~by Fligl1t SALE FEATURES OTHER SELECT GROUPS FROM HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE -UPHOLSTERY, SHERRILL -MARGE CAR- SON -HENREDON LAMPS, PICTURES & ACCESSORIES ALSO RE- DUCED. From Wlre Service• Seven Or111ge County woman aviators are amone contestants in tht Canada·to- Louisiana Powder Puff Derby awaiting today's judge!I' deci.llons in Baton Rouge, Loulsian1. Th' wlnner In lhe 2,400 mile air raee. who receives $10,000 will be announced late r loday . Flyi ng time i nd horsepo11tr are being ct>mputed to dettrmine ph1re merit. Pre.sent unofficial leader is litni Rich· ard.son of Y11kim11. Washington. a (light Instructor who has lrlcd for 20 yrars to win the $2$.IXK> conttst Sht had !he bel'it flying time·tO-hDrsepower retio of the 144 r:ntranls gotni into Thursd8)1.'t fln11I day of flight. Mrs. Rich11rd~on. flight schl"IOt 0\1•nrr and operlllor. n~w her ?M-horsepower Cessna without a C()..pllot into Bat.on Rouge shortly before noon Thur!lday. Ornn~e County partici pants in the fHeht \\'h1ch began f.1onda y in Calgary. Alberta, are. -Dorolhv W11.llt of El Toro with Wally f unk of Hermosa Beach In a Piper Coman chP. -Shirlry Tanner of ~e11·port Bea ch .,,,·1th Claire Walter of Los Angele!\ In a Mooney M20. -\\'1lms r\esselrosd of Newport Stach and SAndra Ruller of \Vestmin11ter. -fo.1llrg~rf't Buth and Peggy Lawton, bott\ of La H11bra, in a Ct!l!rla 20~L -Oorene Christensen of S:inlB Ana \rith Arnv Knn1ng of Lns Vega~: Nev. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NIWPOIT STOii O,IN NIDAY 'llL' 7td IJl~tfll!IUft ~ NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W•1tcllff.Or., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Profe11lon1l lnlerior De1lgn•r1 Available -AID INTERIORS I'll• .. Ten p,... Mett ef Or~ C•••ty -140·126J LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co•1t Hl9.,w1y P.,one: 494-6551 - .. -----'---#-.. :===-===------·-~r -___ ,., ... ~-+--,,.._ :_.:..::'.'.::-"."'. ' ~~ \. ------~ --~-·--· .. ..:.. ____ _, ___ .. ----·~ ,'l""·~· ..... ·::. ........... j r -... _,,.. ------_:,.-__ -_ --·~ ---- j j 1 I I ' I ' ( ' '7 1.1'1 Ttlt~t Second Fiddle Cats long have bee n acknowledged champs of night vi sion, but tabby no\v takes SCl'Ond place to this two-inch disc developed by Tube Divis- ion of Varian Associates, Palo Alto. It contains hundreds of mi cro- scopic image in tensifiers capable of making an image 10 ,000 times brig hter. It can be used in special equipment, allowing observer to see a person hundreds of yards away in the dark. Swi11dler Billie Sol Este s To Leave Prison Monday i ... ,. ' .. -· L. ..... l"IMli. LEAVING PRISON QU IETLY Parolee Billi e Sol Estes Ex-addic ts T ell Subco 1111nittee Of NY Drug V se WASHINGTON (UPI ) Jn her neighborhood , '"lt"s much easier to get heroin than to get liquor," pretty 15-year· (lid Lynne Bongiorno of Queens. N,Y., told a Senate subcommillee Thursday. Her dark bro.,..·n hair held back by 11 pink barrcuc. the teen-ager told of drug usc since age l\, shouti ng hc roin until she Joined a rehab1l1tat1on program nine n1on!hs ago "I knc.w what l1ad happened to others \\'ho took dope but I didn't think 1\ would happen lo nie :· she said. 1\nothcr New Yorker. Louis Rivera. 15, of the So uth Bronx, was a heroin addict for a year and a half before undergoing treatment seven months ago . "I started smoking pot and drinking beer and whisky." the youth told Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff ( D ·Conn . ), Chairml n of the Senate Government Operatiorui Subcommittee. "II was available lo us everywhere," Lynne said, "at parties, ln . .school, on the street. I even knew a polioemBll who was ielling drugs." Another witness. Vietnam veteran Albert B. Linder, 25, recalled. "It was much easier to get a good bag of dope than a clean glass of water.'" Now working to help drug addicts in Harlem . Linder became a heroin addict while in Vietnam. When he returned to the slat~. ··r had to steal 11nd I had to liteal big to keep n1y hablt," he testified. The country was "heading back to a time like the Roaring Twenties," Linder said. "Guys who have been ducking bullets in rice paddies think nothing of robbing a bank to feed their habit." The three witne53f.S were brought before tbe subcommittee by Graham S. Finney, commissioner of New York Clly'1 Addiction Services Ageney. While "•pplauding" the Admtni!tra· lion's antldrug abuse proposals, Finoey said they had bee:n ma~ too late and were inadequately financed. New York City and the entire. state during this fiscal )'ear will ht spending more than tbt $1 SS mi1Uon being sought by the Adm inislra- Uon, he said. Addiction , Finney said, must be con- gidered ill the seme realm as cancer. ht:11 rt disease and ment11\ illness . He also malntainf"d th3l ''loo little attention has been paid to the sc11rcity 11nd demand for !rained personnel in the drug treatment 1111(1 preventio n fields." l EL PASO, Tex. (UPI ) -Billie Sol Estes, a legendary figure among Texas s'olo·indlers, leaves federal prison on parole Monday and the warden as well as Este5' wife !ays it will be a silent departure. Mrs. Estes said In Abilene. Tex., where she now lives, a condition of Estes' parole is that he stay out of "promoti ona l ac- tivities." She said the family takes this to mean "keeping his mouth shut." Therefore, she said, Estes will not give reporters any interviews. "He has told us he <loes not want tG participate in any public ity,'' La Tuna Federal Reformatory Warden William Zachem said. "We will do everything in our power to assis t him in that en- deavor." Zachem said one way of helping Estes to avoid publicity \\"iii be to not tell anybody outside the prison what time he will be released ~1onday. Estes. senlenced lo 15 years for fraud, has served six years and four months in U.S. prisons in Leavenworth. Kans.; Sandstone, r.tinn.; and finally in La Tuna, near El Paso. Estes for three or four years ran a swindle in West Texas that involved get· ting farmers to sign chattel mortgages for aP1hydroos ammonia fertilizer tanks they did not need and Estes really never intended to manufacture. Estes gave them 10 percent of the mortgage to sign and promised to send them the money monthly to make the mortgage payment.!. He then discounted the mortgages to big finance companies. Whal he got from the finance com· panies he invested in gra in elevators and in fertilizer businessu. From the elevator and fertilizer busineSl!I profll3 he intended to send the farmers money IG pay off the mortgages. A~ one time, he had a paper empire of $150 million but could never quite work out his scheme as far as paying the fanners "'BS concerned. At one time there were 20 counts or fraud and conspiracy against Estes. in additio n to a state conviction. He wa.~ sentence<! to 15 years for freud and the <Jthcr cha rges were dropped. Estes fina lly gaine<l parole on his st· cond try. ~!is first attempt, in January, 1970, was turned down withou t ex· planation. $142,000 Stolen, 3 Gunned Down In Brinks Heist NEW YORK (AP) -Three p<TllOl1S. two of them Brinks Inc. guards. were shot and $142.000 was stolen in a payroll robbery at the Mun icipal Bu ilding today, police reported. The guards were delivering money to the building. Today was pay day for city employ98. Potic& said the third person 8hol was an elevator operator. Further det.aihi were not lnuned\ately available. ' The wounded men were reported in satisfactory condition at n e a r by Beekman-Downtown Hospital. The Brinks men were identified by the hospital as Raymond F . Aul'!, 24, Pinewood, N.J., ahc>t ln the leg and hand, and HarGld Allen, 31, of Brtntwood, N.Y., lhol. in the abdomen. The elevator operator was Regin1ld NoorR, llO, of Mamattan. &hot tn the rlght arm. tht hoopltal said. An employe al the Municipal Crtdll Un'lon •aid the money WU being delivered to its offl«I on the third floor ol the Munkipal Building, just east of Ci· ly Hall Park. The crtdil un'°'1 opened with 1 reserve supply or ca~ on hand and M>lnt city workers arrived at the credit union office shortly after I a.m. t.o ca!h their pay check! when they heard sbot11 from the direction of the ele\'ator. Fr!l1ay, MY "· lm H DAILY PILOT :J. President 'Sticking to Guns'~~ Nixon Vows to Release Camp Pendleton Beach Lands By JOHN VALTERZA Of fN CMllY f'llM Sl•tt six miles of S&n Onofre shoreline, recrea· Hon buildings: for Marine enlistees and 3,400 acres of San Mateo Canyon be declared surplus. At that time, Mr. Nlx<m roruaw no problems with Congressional approval of hl.s plan to open the prime beach front starUng a Western White House buffer zone and stretching six miles downcoast. Pmident Nixon 13 sticking to his vow to release six miles of Camp Pendleton beach lands to the public despite a rettnt setback from a House committee, a top press aide said today. Gerald Warren, deputy press secretary to the President , would not , however, concede that an announcement from the Chief Executive would be forthcoming on the beach opening issue during the cur· rent visit in San Clemente. Police Can Be 'Longhairs' But the setback did C<!Ole when the House Armed Services Committee heard recommendations from the General SeD> vices Administration that the canyon·~ would best be disposed of by sale fo · • private bands, not deeding to ,the public ' for recreation. · The powerful committee's recom· mendation-stiU being considered by t~ • Department of Defense -was that the : canyon remain in Marine Corps l possession and that some of the beaches , invol~·ed be leased for recreation on a 25- year basis with a strong clause allowing Rep. A1phonzo Bell CR-Los Angeles) said last week that the President planned to reaffinn his stand on the sffected Camp Pendleton coastline during !he cur- rent visit to Southern California. "I couldn 't go so far as to say an an- nouncement is forthcoming," Warren said. "J do know that discussions on that issue and other similar ones arc co n- tinuing, but we can't announce any solu· tion yet." It was on a visit this past spring that the President announced his decision that BERKELEY (AP} - A short haircut and a clean shave no longer will be re- quired for policemen in this university town where long hair and beards are common. Because the Clly Council unanimously threw out • ban on long hair Biid beards this week, officers will be hired and p~ moted "on merit alGne without regard to length of hair or facial hair," said 1.4'.lni Hancock, one of three new council members elected on a radical. ticket in April and sponsor of the policy change. Until now, Berkeley police have been permilted aldeburns no longer than three Chief Bruce Baker last year relu:ed an old prohibition against mwtaches. as IGng as they "not extend below the cor- ners of the mouth." Mrs. Hancock sa.ys Jong-haired and bearded police candldate:i have com- plained to her they we.re told tG get a trim before they could be considered. Baker confirmed that was the case, and said shaggy applicants no longer will be rebuffed following the elghl·mt.mber council's action Tu'-'day night. The city of 116,000 zurrounds the University of C8lifornla campus. a military takeover in time of extreme emergency. The recommendation registered shock~ among state parks officials who claimed' they had never been told of committee hearings. J.· Bell, long a cham pion of opening o~ PendleLon coastline, accused Rep . John G. Schmitz (R-Tustin) of sabotaging the President's plans before the committee, ~ , Co1neup to -where your backyard is a park ., . -· and the oeean is your neighbor T•~I 1~• S1" 01e~o f 11•"1y 10 1~1 1111Dor Bor.,1~­ .,.,., Oil •1mp '" <..-o.11 Me6• 0 111• Sov1n ·~~ro• - "'"•ly J mole~ 1., •9!n Sl·,~r Tutn •·o~• ard con1•~11• to 1~• Oct•n~,.,., Pi•' l11m'tnlld mOO~I' Where a seaeull perches on your back fence. And smog is some· thine other people put up with. Because you 're permanently caressed by soft sea breezes. Come up to where your kids will play in the perfect safety of the 21/t acre Marina View Park. Where you can walk the dog around land· scaped paseos. And wat ch beautiful r.u ns ets over Catalina Island. Come up to the spacious luxury of a two· story Buccola Home. Where your ma.ster r.uite embraces a huge dressing area with vanities, walk·in closets •nd king.size bathroom, alt in perfect proportion tG the re1ally oversize bedroom. 4 bedroom 3 bath homes F•OM $33,950 "5 LOW AS ANNUAL l'fltCEHTAGE AATE excellent Conventional Financing w~h low, low down payment ... and JOU own the land! ASK ABOUT OUR 'INSTANT TRAC!' PLAN" BUCCOLA HOMES lf71 .,_, "IH Wiii"' M •ttJMft IUMOll• ""-"'llllllC ............ , •••t" '" .... ....., •• 1•11-..,.,,_~,, H:::::- &•In Of11t• T•I•,.,_: (1141 Ma.our .. \ ·v \ \ ;\! ! Come up to where your tiled entry foyer leads to a step.down sunken living room with massive fireplace. And to a family room with slidin1 gla ss doors open ing onto a private outdoor patio. Come up to where you'll iind these finer livin g fea tures 111 included at no extra cost: wa!l·IO·Wall carpet ing throughout. floor to cei1ine: masonry fireplaces, cathedral ceilinas with full insulation, luminous ce ili ncs in kitchens and baths, decorator selected li&ht f ixtures. all electric appliances, including delux e dishwasher, natural wood kitchen cabinets, massive shake ind crvshed tile roofing, concrete driveways and complete fencln1. Come up to Succola HOMES OCEANVIEW PARK The On ly New Close-In Homes in Costa Mesa •• I , ' '· ., 1 " ' . ' 1 . . • • • • l ' • . . ' ·------,,1 .. _ -.--.,.... ___ ----··-~--• .-·-,..___._ i.N'"1 . ~--·:.---_:.__----~-----·1 .._~--.­ ·"" ----••"fJ tt-..-.-. >-'·•·· .... ,...._~, --. ---.. ---~ ·····•·· ..i:"'-\. I">--.1 n1..:...a-· •• 1· ~·----~ ......... : • .:•--··· ~---· ,.,...·-·---~ ---" .• f ~All V PllOT \ \ \ . ' •· I ~ps Where Has All English Gone By TIIOMAS ~1URPHINE GROOVY RAPS DEPT. -After somt years in the communications busines3, WaJt~ J. Campbell, editor.In.chief of Jodustry Week Magazine, ha.!! discovered that he'.!! havlng some problems with words. He passes on lo hi:; reader.!! these observations: ---· Fridft, Jutr 9, 1971 ------· U.S. Hands Over Last DMZ Post SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Army today handed over to South Vietnamese forces the last American poiltlon in the Demilitarited Zone (DMZ) defensive network as BS2 bombers pounded North Vietnamese unit.s on a nearby hill. Allied military spokevnen at the same time reported new North Vietnamese mortar attacks against Fire Base Fuller. the moot.aintop fortreise also located along the DMZ. U.S. forces turned over to Sooth Viet· nam today Fire Base Charlie 2 where 32 Americans died when a North Viet~ namese rocket hit a bunker May 22. UPI correspondent Stewart Kel!erma1t said 750 Gls and l:>O tanks, personnel car4 riers, artillery, Jeeps and trucks pulled out after a short ceremooy at noon transferring the b.a.se to Saigon troops. About 150 other Gls will stay lo man a battery of eight·inch guns and radar! to help reduce the threat of a sudden North Vietnamese attack. fortifications were blown up nol only by the attacking North Vietnamese but by intensive American fighlt:r-bomber and helicopter strikes. The new attacks against Fuller follow· ed reports of a raid by South Vietnan'lf.stl elite Black Panther troops against a Communist truck sl.orage area and supply zone 24 miles south oi the DMZ Thurs· day. It followed a t:hree-.hour series ot raids on the same area by U.S. 852 bombers and jet fighter-bombers. The South Vietnamese commandos un- covered 22,000 pounds ol rice, three new Soviet-made trucks, 18 drume of gasoline, six antiaircraft guns and other materiel. Communiques from Phnom Penh u id the Cambodian military conunand had ordered the anny to work an eight hour d&Y3 from l)OW on. Up to now rhe military had been on a 61h hour day. "When the children w~e in elementary end middle school.!!, we resigned ounelves to hearing every situation ap- praised as keen, cool, smooth or groovy, depending on what the younger set'tll v.·ord was for that season. After all, we rea!!oned, they .soon would outgrow the habit of using one word to cover all possi· ble subjects. FILIPINOS FIND TRIBE Tauday Manube STILL Group LIVING IN STONE AGE ON MINDANAO ISLAND Has N1 v1r Heard of Salt, Sugar, Tobacco A$ t.he base was handed ovf'r lo the ~uth Vietnamese, B5Zs bon1bed a ridge l/1ree miles away and massive arti!lery barrages boomed off into the plains leading north toward the DMZ. The artillery had lx>en called in hecauSf' of rears of a rocket attack during the switchover when hundreds of troops were massed at Charlie 2. "Actually since the beginning of ~ war, we bave been working long hours," said a Cambodian high command spokesman. "Bul often fioldiers and secretaries did not come lo work. Only the officers did ." ''Now we are not so sure. Isolated People "ON A SS.MINUTE flight from New York to Cleveland, two young adults seated behind us conducted a takeoff.to. touchdown conversation in which the term "Right On" occurnd 112 tiln~. We really couldn't figure out what the U· pression meant, if anything. "Then we went to a luncheon meeting. 'Stone Age' Tribe Found Gen. Pham Van Phu. commander of the Vietnamese Isl Infantry Division, said, "I think n1y men ·will do just fine with Uie Americans gone from here. The North Vietnamese might try to attack us like lhey did at Fuller but we are ready for them ." S. Viet Drugs 'N ot as Bad As Expected' The speaker intoned bi.! subject: 'Are You Relevant'!' Relevant to what, for heaven's sake'! ··we continued puzzled as the speaker exhorted his audience not to become im· patient with those who disregarded the rule!! of organized society and trespassed on the right.s of others. It wa!!. he solemn· Jy a.!l.5Ul't(I, their life !>lyle. And if they didn't do their thing, they probably would get uptight. '•WITH OTlll:R members of the 11u- dience, we discovered another noisome form of pollutio n -that of the English language. Like pollution of the en· vjronment, that contamination arise!! from many sources-the un iversities arid the ghettos, the young and the nol so young, from the federal bureaucracy, the pres!';, and 1'1adison Avenue. MANILA (UPIJ -The Philippine government said today il had discove~ a tribe st.1ll living in stone age conditions ~ backward its people had never tasted salt or sugar nor smoked tobacco. Government social workers said a tribe kncrwn as the T~days were found on Mindanao. the southernmost or t.he major islands of the Philippines last nionth. They live deep in a rain forest. "The Tasadays could be among the few if not the only people in the world !oday who do not know of or use tobacco." said Dr. Robert B. Fox, director of the Presidential Assistance for National Minorities. Fox said even the most isolated peoples of Africa and New Guinea knew of tobac· co in the 17th century. But not the Tasadays. "The discovery of th~ people is of great 5Cieotific interest, particularly to slud!es or man'.!!. cultural and technological development," Fox said, ''for they are food gatherers and trappers whctt own technology ls st.ill based on the use of stone tools." He said the Ta.sadays apparently had lived in isolation for more than 500 years. "They have no linguistic t.enns for rice and other cultivated plants which they don't plant. much less eat.'' said Fox. a native of Galveston, Tex., who has lived in the Philippines for 25 years. He said they live on wild planl"l and 1ungle animals which Uiey butcher wilh bamboo knives and stone axes and cook over fires made by rubbing slicks together. The Tasadays are naked except for some who v.·ea r loin clothes made from orchid leaves which they believe will p~ tect their genitals from evil spirits, mem· bers of the .'(Ovenunent party said. fox suggest.eel the Tasadays may have been driven lo their isolated refuge in fear of an epidemic known to ha ve swept South<':ist h-l1ndanflo in the early part of the 20th ccl1tlll)' or before. He said they speak in terrified tenns of "fugu," mean· ing epidemic. Jn a fore st clearing v.•hcre the govern· ment helicopter landed. the social workers met a Ta saday family of 24 person.~. includin~ IJ children, Fox said. He said they reported to an interpreter lhf'y knew there were different people v.·ho lived around them, having heard their \'Olces from a distance. Fire Base Charlie % was the secood American base in the DMZ chain to be turned over to lhe South Vietnamese in the past 24 hours. On Thursday. U.S. lroops v:ithdrew from Alpha Four. a hilltop fortress whiclt UP I erroneously said was the last American position along the D~1:Z. ln other parts of Vietno:irn action was light and scatt.ered, allled spokesmen reported in Saigon. The U.S. command said three other BS2 missions were nown elsewhere in South Vietnam all northeast and northwest of the abandoned base at Khe Sanh near the o:...tz. SAIGON (UPI) -Dr. Jerome H. Jaf. fe President Nixon's special co03ultant o~ drugs, arrived in South Vietnam toda1: and .said he feels the heroin problem among American Gls may not be as ex· tensive as originally feared. In reply to a question on original estimates concerning the number of GI heroin users. Jaffe said : "Yes, the initial estimates are that it is not as bad as most pessimists would have us believe." He declined, ho~'ever, lo discuss any figures on the number of so ldiers on drugs or the nun1bers who can be rehabilitated. "No longer do we chat or converse: we r ap. No longer do we make a decision: we exercise an option. just 11.!1 President Nixon does. No longer do we discuss: v.·e Initiate a dialog and hopefully, it will be a meaningful dialog. No longer do we try something ne w; we introduce innovative techniques. ••o·•' """'""'""'~'"sn•••••••..,M111•••••••w•-.,.,...,,,.""""""""*""amm•cH!¥l_.., .. ,.,.,,. .. .-~-... ·..:... .: :::: . -· :!:'""", ...... ..,.,, • ..,,... The bombardment o( Fuller Thursday night included an undetennined number of l20mm mortar round!!. Vietnamese troops sent to rebuild fortifications aft.er Fuller was overrun and destroyed by North Vietnamese troops tv.·o weeks ago suffered casualties described as light. Jaife arrived al Saigon 's Tan Son Nhu t Airport with a party of five, which in· eluded two olher physicians, to spend three days on a fact.finding mission ol the drug problem in the war zone. H1 was greeted upon arrival by Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, Commander ef U.S. Forces in Vietnam. "WE AGREE TJIAT the English language should be a living and growing resource. We think it should grow up - not down. We yeam for the simple ma- jesty of the language as used by Winston Churchill ('J have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat') or Abraham Lincoln, or Kipling, Keats, Dicken.!!, and osometime!t, Fr<1nkli11 D. Roosevelt. .. \\'hen we near the barr<1gc of inst.ant cliche.!1 with which v.·e have been born· barded for the last 10 years, we have only Ori(' consolation "This, too. shall pass." * Well Waller. you may "'e\1 be right. But these is a strong chance that v.·hen it passes, it shall pass on lo something else generated by the new generation. Right On. Vote-at-1 8 Queried AK.RON, Ohio t UPI\ -\\"1lham Frew J..ong of nearby ~111cedoni;:i. the nation':oi oldest mayor at age 91, said lov.·ering the \•oti ng age tn l8 1-1·as a "dangerous ex· pernnent" becausc .vounger person~ do 1101 have enough experience to qualify to ,-01e. ··1 understand their ambition, but there Is a question in my mind whether they are qualified to make decisions without 1he eq>erlence." said Long. who first ran tor polltical offi ce at age 82. N. Viet General Says U.S. Has Two Choices LONDON IUPJJ -North Vietnamese military mastern1!nd Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap said in an interview released today the United States has trapped itself in a "'tunnel without end" in Vietnam. Giap said America has only two choices: "Stop the war or change strategy." Giap, Hanoi's defense minister. said President Nixon's Vietnamization policy \vas "the concept of changing the skin color of the rorpses at the front " He prl"dicled "total bankruptcy" for the pro- gram. United Press International Television News tUPITN) said the rare 1nterv1ew Yl'as made by East German television recenlly in 11anoi It was d1!>trlbuled by UPITN"s London headuqarler!\ Giap. 59. a Former history teai.:hc r credittd \.\'i!h being the bratn!\ behind !he North Vietnamese and Viel Cong military !!tratcgy in Sollth Vietnam, said the Uni ted States has failed !o learn de!>pile iL~ constant changing of strategy fron1 green beret counterinsurgency opcr;i!ions to massive bombing or i\orth Vietnan1 "Thus. America now finds itself 1rar· ped in a tunnel without end and sees only two alternative.' -slop the war or a change of strategy," Giap said. Giap said the simplest answer was for the United States lo pull all its troops out of Vietnain. •·tr lhe U.S. imperialists stop their ag- gression fully and completely and finally v;·ilhdraw from Vietnam, then there will automatically be no more captured or imprisoned American soldiers," Gia p said. • The lon ger the United States slays In Vietnam •·the greater will be t.he number of captured Americans," he said. "That is obvious ·· Ciap. who led the Viet Minh in victory 01·er the French at the fortress of Oien Bien Phu in May, 1954, said the Nixon policy of V1etnamization is "a concept of pursuing the war" further. •·It is a strat.agem of letting Vtet· namcse fight \'ir1namese and using thr. blood and bones of the \·ietnamese in lhe ~erv1ce of !11c dirty 1nterec;ts of the An1er1can reaction forC'C's," Giap said. If the United Slates could not win with its massive manpower, Giap said, '"how can the marionette army {South Viet- namese) alone, no matter to what extent equipped lake over for the United States the entire burden of the war ••• ?" Sunny, Warm Over U.S. Neiv Pacific Swrni Recor<led nt No rth Rockies C•lifornla ntvt(W(lf'ffOU ftATIOHAlwt:ATMUSltl'i'IC[ TO J:OOA.M. CST 7 ·to· 7f Temperatures '' u""" ,.,.." •••• .... 11o1t1! •• 1 1 Unll-4 l'te11 ln1ttnt11t"•' Mio<-. ........ I P"ld Clf'tt Wtt!~u "'II In ••-I for ~""thern c:11llornl1 !d<:lt• w1tfl itolt ntoM 1nO N rlv "'"'"'"" lo• (!"""" ,.,., lac•I !oa tl""'I lht tOU!. t11•h l""" ""''· "'1;:'"T"i':: ~~'!~1.r.mo.,.1tur1 ch•""" le. A-lfo• hl(I OUMhllll wll1\ hlqh1 fodSy _,. l.ltvd•IY .... , H 1 1 C:IYIC c..,,.,. 9"11 '" 0"""1ohl -of u. &IKl'let -·• 1un"' wl111 h!1h1 """' n 11111 ""' w11.., "· "lart11 of s.."'' 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(.G~Hnul'd lo t r!e "" i«J-111 willl hitih !etl'I_..,,_,, .. n11r ... -...-ti--CllHlll •114 ••• •-1111 w1!1 1~11 "'°' 100• In 1nru1d ., .... Hottn t 1Pll'I •~ 1111 1111i.,. Tllut\dlW Coastal l'tlr •0111'f, l;,,hl v1rl1bi. w,...i, "''M l '>d .....,..,,,~, 1'o\ttl .,_~1"9 wHl"I" • to It ~'IOtl ·~ 1n1,,•acrt• ktdlV l '>d !.llu•dt W. Htth lo<lo• 1111r ~ Co11t11 l•mtte•1tvr11 r1r>11 ,,.,.. .a to 1J l~lt"<I 1-.oort'U"< ,,,,.. '""" ,. >o IC Wt '" 1trn~.,.l lU•t .. Sun, Moon. Tld~• l'lt!OAY " " 1"1•11 111111 ll lto .... •1 ,-In! low J t1•"'· ·11 l.ICOfld filth 11·!1•m. '' $t>COrld' llJl>I l .Ool p ""· 11 ~"~ ll!Wt I "• m Soll I ~I~ "'· ¥00~ ahtl t ).l PI" '11J 1 01 I "' Al!MlnY " .. .llbU<111trQ111 ,, • "' All..,lo " " "' AN:!lorltt " " B•••mltld " " 8 0iU ~ • fliKlon " • 8 r1>,,n1~lllt " " Bvtt•lo .. " (h1r11>lt"e " .. (hlc1ttn " n ·" (lll(:l.,n11l • " Cl..,tltr.d • • 0111<11 • " °'""'~ • " Ot• """'*' " " ... Ot!"'ll " • l'1lr'blnlo " " ""'"'" .. .. Htl-• •• 1P"ldll ... •••ll• " • " Jtc'-'11« • " ·" ,._ • " 1{1nu1 "• " " ..... "-· , . " L<1t A,..1IH " " l <>ul1 .. 1111 " " ........ ~~:. " " ......... , .. " M lh•l'l•.-.. " " ., .. O•l•ont • " ,,_ Yo<' " " '<o••~ P!ttf9 ., " o ........ " " ()!, ,~..,,,,. ,,. " " o ..... ~. • " .. Pflll•(ltl ... 11 .. ,, l''°'Otnl• •• • l'lf!lt>u•th " • .n ""'lit"<!, Mt " .. l'att1111d, •• " • ... ··~l{I ,,. " • ··~ " " -.~ .... , ·~ .- Military .<\id Amounts Told For Greece \VASllING TO N (AP) -The once·shun- ned Greek military government would get $117 niillion in U.S. arm~ ~d t~i!'; fiscal year under Nixon adm1n1strat1on proposals whose secrecy label has been lifted for the first time. The State Ot>partment, which tradi· tionally has kept individual aid amounts secret. released the new figures t~ay after Sen. Wi1\ia1n Proxmire (Q.\V1s. l, threatened to publicize them on his own unless the administration could show why they should be v.·ithhcld. Tile coonu-y ·by -country brcakdo.,., n shows how the l!nited Stales plans lo SJl<'nd. $2.3 billion 1n m11it<11)' assis~nti', niilit.ary crcdil sales and excess m ilitary materiel in the fiscal year that began July I. C.rccce, whoc;f' a1(! \\'••" -.,hul off after a mil1tarv roup 111 Arri! 1967. would grt St!l R 1l11lhon 111 d1rt'ct n11!1tary aid. $60 million in flnn~ c;rtles and $38 million in exce~s L; S 1n1l1l<rry supplies and equip- ment. Prec;1dcnl 1\1'\on re~u1nrd the military aid prograrn lo Grccre last Septen1ber, ciling Grrc-k n1£'n1bersh1p in the North Atlantic Tre:i!y Organization and its strategic positron on Europe's southern flank. Proxmire said figures were supplied for 43 nations. "AHhough the State Department made nn argumtnl that the military security of the United Slates w<1s al stake," Prox. mire said the amounts for six Middle East couniries and the Philippines v.·i\I not be released until later because of delicate neg011aLions now under way. British Troops Fight lrisl1 Mob LONDONDERRY. Northern lreland (AP ) -British troops baltled rioting mobs of Roman Catholics into the early hours today in a bloody prelude to the 12th of ,July celebrations by militant Protestents on Mondav . Jn lighjjng lhat tUrned the Catholic Bogside district into a battleground, the troops fired twice into the rioters' ranks, killing: t~·o men and wounding a third. The army said the mob fired first at the soldiers. Hundreds of youths. cheered on by crowd!! of spectato~. al~ pelted the soldiers with gasoline and nail bombs. bricks and bottles. The Bnlish Army announced it was bnn.ging .')(I() n1ore Soldiers into the pro- vince. increasing its strength locally to 11.000. Also during ttw-nigh1 A land mint blev.· up en ermy truck crossu1g a brid~c near Fire Base FuUer changed hands five times aft.er the Communists overran it and iL'i SY!tcm of bunkers and other Agnew Talks to 600 A111ericans in Arabia JEDDAH. Saudi Arabia (UPI) - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew today praised the "quiet diplomacy" of Americans living in Arab lands. for building good will and lessening tension. Under a blazing sun with the tern· perature near 100 degrees, Agnew spoke to more than 600 membeTs or the American community gathered in the garden of Ambassador Nicholas G. Thacher's residence. It \.\'as the firs t time on his round-lhe- ...,·orld diplomatic mission that Agnew broke away from ceremoniaJ duties to speak to Americans living away from home. Am11gh, in1unng one soldier. Abooi 10 f' f Jtfi pounds ol gengnile .. ploded al th• office ace 0 sery Among studies Jaffe and his groop want to make are the operational ability of three specially developed machines flown to Vietnam last month to test every serviceman or woman leaving the war zone for possible drug addiction. Officials reported n1ixed succeS.!I with the devices .,,,.·hich conduct urinalysis tests. Jaffe said he v.'as reluctant lo discuss any figures on success or failure of the system until "v•e have a calm and objective analysis. After all, the program only has been operating for three Yl·eeks." Jaffe said his trip won't be concerned 5pecifically with drug traffic into Vie!· nam, although "by talking to Gls we c get an idea on their supply routes." Sou Vielnam, under orde rs from the U.S. milit.ary. has been conducting a crackdov.·n on drug traffic into the coun· try. ~1ilitary sources have said that thP. medical tests to weed out heroin use~ beforr they go home have discoverd A durg addiction rate of only about 2 to S percent of some 10.000 Gls tested. of a ca!!h register company in Belfa51 . ciusing considerable damage, but no Olli" Misery and starvation are reflected in the fa ces of an Ea:oit Pakistan ,vas hurt. • reft1gee rn9ther ,and her babv at a <an1p some\11ht'.!rn in~ ln~i;I.. -·· -·~-.. .-•• , _ _..__ ... ....... 11 """ .,. -tJ.r., --_.. __ • .. ""i;-· . .--.. .. ---·-----"'-~-··-,~ '"'_....,_ --·.~ .... ,~. _.;,._. -· .. -. -l ) '\f!"_.:,...__-='"":::"'T.:: ~ .. -;-:·::.t~ -f', ~ ... ---4> ....... ' .. ~.. .,.. 1 ~ --""vj!'•r1n----~~.\ .. • ··~-• -~"7''"' .,.. .. . ----cMI:.. ·---'" --, .•. -~-"!: -• .:..:...;;;;; -• --~-. -""'• ·~.,~ .. '----·-.,.. • . - - , r ·7 l I I • - DARY PILOT EDITOR~ PAG~ Local Taxpayers Hit Governor Reagan's record·breaking slash of nearly $504 million from the 1971·72 state budget, offered as a heroic act of tax saving, comes through as a hard \~:hack at taxpayers at the local level. All protestations by the governor and his staff to the contrary, the heavy·handed blue·penciling means that local property taxpayers will probably have to pick up a.dded expenses for welfare, n1edical programs and pub- lic educa!Jon. No responsi ble authority in the state outside the governor's staff will conf1rn1 the governor's contentions. But those closest to the problem -county and school officials -have been nearly unanim1>us in saying that the slashed budget inevitably means only a shift from the broad state base to the narrow property base of the a.dded cost of state·mandated programs in the three fields . The Legislature can't esc ape some share of blame for the situati on. to be sure. But the major responsibility now rests on the governor. His zefl.1 to be able to make good his rash promise of "no lax increase this year" ap· pears likely to insure tax increases at the local level. The 'Wild Rivers' Debate Preserving as much or California's "wild rivers" as may reasonably be possible is a laudable goal. A bill now. in lhe S~cramento legis.lativ e hopper would ~v~ll off in perpetuity as free-flowing rivers the Eel. Trinity and Klamath rivers of northern California. \1:hieh the lhree rivers are located. They are banded t& gether as the Eel River Water Council, a result of the m+UTii:million dollar damage resulting from uncontrolled lloods, especially on the Eel River. They want not only flood control but the means to meet their own increasina: water and recreational needs. Central and Southern California also stand to lose in a major \Vay if 42 percent or the state's total water resources (which the three rivers represent) are fenced off permanently. 'J'he State Water Projctt -approved by the voter! -includes development of North Coast rivers. as need· ed. to maintain the yield of the State W1.ler Project and augment the Sac:ran1ento-San Joaquin Delta through lhe projected Peripheral Canal. _ Fresh water to offset lhe growing salinity of Colo· rado River water in Southern California is to con1e from this source. No proved alternative now exists, despite all the yield in sight from desalted sea water and recla· mation of used water. First in iine for development in support of local flood control and recreation, as well as augmenting sup- plies to the Delta and Southern California is the Dos Rios Dam on a branch of the Eel River. ' Governor Reagan suspetided con:;;truction of the Do:i; Rios Dam in order to re-examine its in1pact. This action \Vas reasonable. So is a bi.JI introduced by Sen. Randolph Collier ID·Yreka). (~olllcr's bill calls for basin·wide studies of multi·purpose benefits to be had from develop- ment of so n1e ri ve rs as well as th(' need to fence oft some free·flowing rivers, or sections of them. ·' ~pPI This bill is strongly opposed, however, by the verv people who would, at a superficial glance. be expected lo want the three rivers kept in their wild state. These are the residents of the seven counties in The Collier plan certainly is a more moderate and broadly beneficial approach to statewide needs than the tnisguided and shortsighted proposal of the "\vild rivers" enthusiasts. <!'• .. [\ ~,.,, ~""'t:-t~ ' wr SKOOL~ HAVE DEVf LOPED m UM. 5YSTfM f oR T!:fil' H-g~." Answering Some Queries From Readers Answers to Readers' Queries: ''Dear Mr. Harris: l have tried looking up the word 'Rubaiyyat' in four dic- tionaries, and have failed to find it. Why is Omar Khayyam's poem called the 'R ubaiyyat' and what does that mean?" -C. L., Penna. "Rubaiyyat" is the plural or the Persian word "Ru· ba1.''andmea11s "quatrains." A quat· ra in is simply a poem with four -line stanzas, and Omar's poem is a Jong col· lection of such qua!· ra ins , ar ''Rubaiyyat." "DEAR ~t R. HAR RIS: Why do ~ many writers and speakers today use the word 'ovcrkllL' and what dnes it mean? How is I! possible to overkill anything?" - J. 8. H .. Oregon. "Overkill" in modern military parlance mean.c; the capacity \.0 destroy the l.olal population of an area or country '!'O many times over. For once, bolh the U.S. and the Sovicl -Union ha ve the destr uctive capability to wipe oul each ot her 's population 10 or 15 times over: Jointly thes~ force s ha ve the ~quivalenl, of 40,()()1) pound:;; of TNT for c1·crv man. wotnan and child in both coUnlnes. "DEAR MR. HARRIS: Do you agree \\.'1th some crit ics of ou r national JlfillCY that \•le gJ\ r too much ;n1·ay in the form (lf foreign aid?" -H B , !owa. \\'e have reduCiO'd our foreign econoini<' es:".istance to one-fortieth of the 11m0un l V.'e spend on arrnamenl.1i annually: al though we are by far the wor ld 's Dear Gloomy Gus Polilical enemies In Congress are friends on one issue; The heroin menace. 1'1aybe Nixon could get some progress out of the Demo- crat·controlled Congress if he'd re· name his programs -like Heroin· Welfare, Marijuana-Housing and LSD·lnflalion. -D. 1'. S. Tlll1 f t l!ur1 ••llffl1 rtNtn ' """"' M l ftKIH lrllv """' If ·~· "OWWIHr. '--' ~""· HI •H Y• ,.. QICllmy Gu .. ()1111 P'll91. richest country, we rank only eleventh among aid-givers in the amount the U.S. contributes. measured as a percentage of national product.. Our self·image of the U.S. a~ tht "great philanthropist" is a sentimental illusion among a people who constilute only 6 percent of the world's fX1pulation and consume more than .W percent of its resources. "DEAR MR. HARRIS: \\'e <ire slu· dying. 'legislative reform' in our high school class , and would like to know wha t you think might be the most effectivt reform we could work for?" -N. P., New Jersey. The worst trick pulled by the U.S. Senate LS the de vice of attaching a "rider" to a bill. when the rider \s legislation on some totally unrelated sub- ject. This has the effect either of killing the main bill <>r slipping through a rider not in the public interest Such sleazy and undemocratic procedures should be abolished by laY.'. "DEAR ~1R . HARR IS: Why do museums continue to store so much useless junk in space that could be taken u(l by more meaningful exhibHs~" -A. N .• Ill. When U. of Wi sconsin scienlisls wanted lo flnd (lLJl why predatory birds were in danger of ('X!incllon . they exan'uned thousands of ·usele55' empty egg shells al lhf' Fie.Id Museum and leamed tha t air pollulJon was lh1nn1ng th e 'he 11 s , resulting in more breakage and Je~s hatching. Dr. Rallison as Censor To I.he Editor : So ihe Orange County Board of Educa. lion is in a dile1nma over J;)an Baez·., book, "Daybreak" ('·Baez Book Stirs Up County Trustees". July 2J. Certain members of lhe board want the book censored out of the Orange County school libraf)' systems while others wish to ap- prove ii. I agree y,•ith the members that wish to approve it. Dr. Dale llallison. a Sanla Ana dentist end a board member. is spearheading the attack In censor the book . As a member of the John Birch Society. Dr. Ra1h&o n ~hould rea lir.e the righ:.S guaranteed in our Constitution. The first Amendment ifl the Bill of Rights sets forth the right of every American to read wha l he or she chooses. This. as anyl)ne can see, con· tr11dict.~ the very essence of the word censorship. AND SINCE WHEN does a Santa Ana Quotes l)r. E1rl Chell, former V1ce Chancellor. UC Bttktley -''Many hu.,ines:r>mcn have 11trugglt.d wilh the problem that H their husines,.1 survives 11 wage. or tax increase. that ls· proof that 'profit s were too high .' So. too. we in higher tducation h11ve the problem that if the projected budget. is cut, and we survive, 'lhere wa~ fat in the buds~r:· ( ' I Letteri jrom readers lltt wtlcomt. Norma/.ly tvriter.! ihould convty their messages rn 300 word$ oT lt$S. Thr. right to condtnst letter' to fi e .rpac• or el im111ait libel i.t reserved. All let· ters n111st includt signature and mail· f nf1 address, but Tiames ma11 bt wit~ hr.Id nn request 1j iufji.cient rea&on Lt npparent. Poetru wilt ttof bt pub- ltshed. dentisl have the right to decide what should be censored and what !11ouldn't? Do he and a few others like, him control I.he. influx of c:very book contained in the Orange County school B)'stem? l itn-- cercly hope not Or. Rallison went on to say Unll "Daybreak is of poor llt«Ary qu1.llty," lf every book in the school system that Is of poor llter11ry quality were nimovtd from the shelves, ha book population would bt redo~ by 11bout 25 percent. Beskies, it is only one man 's opinion C<Jnceming the quallty of the book. If he doeiin't like il, he do~'t have to read it : but he (loemi't have the right kl tell us that we can't either. CHRIS BRODERICK , It ls ltnportant to Make Distinctiotas Vietnam Error vs. High Motivation In the wake of the Pentagon papers demands are beiog heard for a reex- amination of .America's. whole foretgn policy since World War II. The argument is that Vietnam was not just a single aberration but a direct, logical, almost inevitable consequence of tht U.S. "obsession" with opposing coo1- munism in the world. As one critic, Senator McGovern , puts it,·• ... we sel <>Ul on the assumption lhat we had lo send American troops (lr American mili tary equipment, or do whatever was nece.!Sary too combat a Communist revolutionist nc> matter where he !'lhowed up and no matter how corrupt the government was Lhat he was revolting against." THE CR ITICISM IS jusfifierl as far as it goes, and the Nixon administration ls right to impose limitations on the U.S. world role . Nearly everyone, ourselves included, now believes that the Johnson admini stration's vast enlargemeril of the U.S. role in Vietnam was a mistake. And certainl y it did derive from a general concern for trying to help people keep from being taken over by the Com· mun1sts . Sul lhat motivation ls not an ap- propriate indictmenl or the nation's en· tfre; anti-Cammunist foreign policy. Viet· Guest Editori a l · ...... ~ I nam was a mistake not because of Washington 's Inten tions bul because, for the soundest of miHtary and other reasons, it was a most unfortunate place Lo choose to make a sland. An overall policy or opposition to Communist ag· grandiument in ttle world should not mean that lhe U.S. automatically fights il .out wht>rever the enemy threatens. The error was of course compounded as the An1erican military commitment grr.w rapirlly out of proportion lo any realizable gains. GRANTING ALL THAT, the fact re· mains that if 1he U.S. had not pursued its b!'oad anti.Communist policy, lhe world would be in a much sorrier state than iL is today. People understandably tend lo forget the origins of the cold war . Indeed , some of the so-eal!ed revisionist historian!i have been assiduously engaged in al- t.empting to make it appear that the U.S. was at least as responsible as the Com· muni:st.s far the cold war. Il'a not so, as anyone on lhe scene a quarter-eentury ag0 ought to be able In testily. The U.S. made unwise decisions al Yal ta and Potsdam; their unwisdom. however. consisted not in thwarting Com · munist power bul in easing its path. Even so. il wa:-beginning lo dawn on President Roosevelt before he died that Stalin was going to be a very tough customer in Lhe post.war era. THE SOVIETS lost no l i m t demonstrating just how tough. They disrupted Berlin and sought in every way short of direct military attack to take <>ver all or Germany. Before long their minio ns seir.ed Czechoslovakia -the first lin1e, that is. 1'his outrage was so frigh tening in i!.<1 i111plications ror Western t:u rope that IL greatly hr!pcd propel the formallon n( the North AUantlc Treaty Organization, wilh the U.S. and il.<1 nuclear shield the dominanl rnembcr. NATO notwilhstand· ing. il ls by no 1neans improbable that ::italin 1night have unlea shed the Red Army against Western Europe had he liv e(! a lew years lo nger, Is it to be seriously suggested that the U.S. should not have involved itseU in the tHort to save Western Europe from com· muolsm? !\1EANWHILE THE Chinese Com· 1nunlsts. fac1\italcd by the U . S . gove rnm ent's blundering endeavor to ef- fect a coalition government . had taken over the nlalnland. The U:S., a Pacifie fX1Wer . would have been irresponsible not lo view that development with concern; the threat to Southeast Asia especially was obvious. 1t JS often said, well, the Chinese Con1· munists never did move south after alL This overlooks the ir activities in the Korean y,·ar and their net inconsiderabl e supfXlrl of the Communists in Vietnam. Be yond that, a question : Would the Chinese Reds havP. been so "docile" if it were not abundantly evident that the U.S. 111ight rcsi.~t. an effort lo conquer all SouthcasL Asia:' J\'O~E Of" THESE circumstances ex· ru ses the mishandling of America's Viet• nam involvcn1ent, certainly not the deception underlined in the Pentagon papers. Al .11 li.n1e when many American· flage\lators .are sounding off. however, it is important lo niake rllstinctions between a specific misap plication of policy and the high molivallon -nothing less than human freedom -of the policy itself. '\\1all Street Journal Food Fears Are Largely Unjustified "Although OiJr food supply has never 111 hist-Ory been more abundanl, varied. nr sale. the consumer is running si:ared," writes Dr. Mel111n A. BcnanJe 1n Thr Chemicals We Eal ~ An11.·r11.:an 1 lcri Lage Press. $6.95 J. The.'M' !cars <irf' largrl~ 11n- JUS\ified , Or Benarde con1rnds. and he presents pcrsuas1vc -and re assur1n11: - evidence that the public ha~ overreactrd to press reports aOOul the. dang er of pest icide residues and chemical add11l\'E!S in foods. In Thr Che mical s We Eat, Dr. Benarde l'lfferR a balanced view of lhe situation . "l do oot mean to imply that I consider chemicals in food a trivial problem," he wrltes. "I do nol. On the other hand , I am nol worried by their presence -and neither should you be." His book explains why. 1'0 PUT TH E WHOLE question into perspective, Dr. Benarde points out that all living things are composed of c~mlcaJs which are no less chemica l than 11 food aciditive synthesi1.ed in the laboratory. Moreover, a great maoy na tural foods contain potentially toxic chemical~. for example, cyanide is pre~ent in lima beans, bul it is deac- tivated by the heat of cooking. And com· n1on table salt is t:ssent1al to life, yet a large amount absorbed in a short time would probably kl!J the ealer. Dr. Benarde defines in layman's terrns many of the chemkals t.hat are added to .-----B11 George --~ Dear George: My husband refuses to take baths hecau~ h~ say "I'll get a cold." Do you have any suggestions? DISGUSTED Dear Disgusted · How does he fee! about being ~nt to the dry cleaners7 r Send your prohlellll) to George and Je t him d(l your worrying for vou . f ree: your mind and allow yourstlf to think lip nr.w worr~e~.) I T he Boo kn1an food . and he describts why they are U!i'C'rt . anrl how they function . The:;e addil1ve5 inr.J11de sweeteners, 1Javor1ng, coloring, LhiC"kening , firming and leavening agents, and many other categories. TO ILLUSTRATE how an additive can improve food. the author reminds us that not Joog ago peanut butter separated in tG oil on top and a gummy glob <>n the bot· tom-which had lo be mashed together before we. Today cht?mkal emulsifier~ have made peanut butter -and many other products -instantly usable. Jn fa ct. without additives a whole range of convenience foods on which we have con1!'. lo depend would cease to exist. "Food additives Are as sah: as il i~ humanly possible to mak!' them .'' Or. Benardr asserts. "Bec.•;:iu:-e of \hr t>X· t.rernclv low levels of add1t1vf>i:; used 1n food s enormous quantities wou ld ha\'c tn he ingested at one timf' to (lmducc adv£'rse f'ffecLc;. '' 1 le outlines the cx~ h;:iust1 ve testing proi.;cdure.~ that Lhe Food and Drug A~ministral1on requires of manufacturers before an additive. can be certified for human C<1n&1mption. AS FOR PESTICIDES, evidence in· dicates that the "pesticide residues we are absorbing do nat represent t healtt1 hazard ." Dr. Benarde discusses the con• tradlctions inhe.renl in the pesticide con- troversy. On the one hand the public con- demns pesticides -yet al the same time it worrie~ about future famines. To feed the world 's eirploding population. more Where Federal Taxes Go The 11verage federal tax burden per household in the fiscal year beginning ,Ju· ly l wlll amount to an estimated $3,165, up $245 fmm the 1971 burden. On the basis of 1972 federal budget S(lending by program, the largest part of the household tax load stem~ rrom nalional defense. $1,070. Right behind -by $10 - is e.<Jlirnated spending for health and welfare (including 60Cial instiran~) ..... $Lfl60. On the same per-program basis, lowest per household expenditure, $44, Is for .space research and technology . The average tax burden includes indi11idual income and l'IOCial security taxes, federal excise, and federal taxes collected from business bat paid in pan. by consumers. Tas Burden Per Household TOTAL .............. IJ,185 Nationa l Dtfense . , ... , .......... ", ... .. .. . .... 1,070 Health and Welfare (Includes Social Insurance) •.•. ,,.,, ... ,......... 1,060 Interest ............. . ........................................... 272 Commerce and Transportation .................................... ,... 151 Veterans' Benefits and Services . ............ . . .••. ............. ...... 147 Educfltion and Manpower Training . , , , •..•.... , • ,. , .. ·-· ........•• _. , . , 122 S~ial Allowances ....... ,,,.,, .............. ~ ........... , .....•• ,... 82 Agriculture and Agricullural Resources ........ , ,, , ....... , ..... , .. .. . 80 c;eneral C'r0vemmenl ' ' . " .. ' " ' ... '.' ' . . . . . • . . .. . . . . . 69 Community Development and Hou11ing • , ..... ,. , .......... _ .. , . . . . . . . . 62 Nalura.I R.esources ..... ...... ,, ......••..........•.•.•....... ,.... 59 lntem11tion11\ Aff11Jrs and finance ......... , ........................ ,. • ~ Sp1tct ReM!arch and Technology , , , . , ... , . . . . 44 !Undistributed adjuslmenl!-inttrgovemmcnt.a l == --St09) Tu Foundation, Inc. --·- • • 11nd more f()()d musl be produced and then protected untd 1l can be harvested, processed, marketed . bo11ght. and eaten. Hnw is lhis to he d11ne without pl'Sticide.'!I'? f)r. Benardr d~\loll's a chi!pler to "Foods of the Future'' in whi ch he lliscus.~es irradiation as a means of pr eservlng fresh foods, -as well ll!i the possibil ities <Jf usi ng flou r made of ground whole fish as an iriexpens.ive pro- tei n source . and of spinning soybean fiber to creale protein·rich artificial meal!!. THE AUTHOR CONCLUDES with Jt plea to food scientists kl keep the public better informed, and to recapture their subject from journalisl.s and politicians. Dr. Benarde is a professor (lf Epidemiology and Community Medicine . at Hahnemann Metl.ical Collcg~ and Hospital in Philadelphia. Tn addition to many scholarly art.icles, he has published three books . Race AgaiMt Famine, Our Precarious Habitat, and Disinfection. and conducted a te l evision $how. "Enviranment and Health ." He js a Fellow of the American Public Health Association and of the British Royal Society of Health. Born in Brooklyn, N!!W York , Dr. Benarde now lives in Prine~ ton. N. J. with his "Ire and ·three chlldren. Ana D: Dale --~mai- l'riday, July 9, 1971 The editorial page of the Doalp Pilot seeks to inform and afim.. tdote readers by presenting thla, newspaper's opinions and com- mentar11 o-n topics C1f inae1t1& and signiJlconce, b11 pTOtridino a: forum Jor the-ezpres3fon of our readers' opinfons, and by prc.!enting tht. diverse-view- point! of informed obserwn 011.d spokesmen on topic1 of the da1,i. Rob<rt N. Weed, Pu blisher -·~ -- I I I I I t -------...... ----'• frldi!, July 9, 1971 DAll.Y PILOT 5 Tooth Ad States Wieldf"1l A:r • 'Tough' -Nader Welfare Payment,s to;Needy Cut Cycle Hoppers Bike enthusiasts debark in San Francis co fron1 a 'Pedal Hopper' bus \\'hich the Ala~eda Contra Costa Transit Distri ct inauguated Thursday ,,...ith a pair of specially converted buses, each with space for 24 bikes and riders. ' ( ' .}. Locld1eed Air Loan Pressure 'May he Bluff'-House Unit \\'ASHINGTON {UPI) nalph Nader Thursday asked lhf' Federcl Trade Com- mission to require cautionary labeling that toothpaste con- taining stannous (\in1 Ouoride \\.'ill stain teeth a light brown. Nader a lso says Colgate with t\IFP 1 inonolluorophos. phate) is falsely ad vertising iL'I product as a •·tooth tough- ener." About 4U percent of all toothpaste sold con ta ins stan- nou s fl uoride. a de c a y - retarding additive. The most Vt'idely sold brands are Crest, Stripe and Pepsodent. The Proc!ff & Gamble Co. Cincinnati, manufacturer of Crest, disputed Nader's clz.ims made in a letter to the FTC Thursday. Procter & Gamble said the source material for Nader's allegations ''are over four years old. Jahd) refer t.o ~taining of debris and other 1nat erial on !hf' teeth whil'h should be ,and norm2Jly are re m o v {' d with proper brushing .. , 1\'ader cited stud ies publis h- ed in !he British Dental Journal in 1967 and the .Journal of Public Health Den· lLStry in 1970. "\Ve are calling your al· lehtion to the danger of tooth staining from a product which should help to clean teeth," Nader said. "This danger ex- ists in all stannous fluoride toothpB1St.es. A "''aming should be given on toothpaste tubes to alert the public to these WASHINGTON (UPI) Tht Nixon Administration has leaked a memorandum to newsmen showing that wellare payments to needy families are being cut in 10 states tnd under consideration for cutuna in at least 12 others. The document appears not cinly to confirm a suspect.ed n11tiooal trend in money-starv- ed states but offers new win. dow dressing for President Nixon's v.•elfare reform plan, wh ich would set a federal floor under welfare payments. Prepared by the J1eaJth, Solons Seeking Veto Overturn WASHINGTON (UPI) -An &I.tempt will be made in the Senate Mf'Xt week: to overturn President Nixon's veto of a bill thal would have fought unemployment by creating 200,NO public y.·orb COM· s truc!ion jobs. Backers of the move were pessim is!Jc they could put together the necessary lwo- thirds majority vote to over· ride the veto. hazards.'' WASHINGTON lAPl A for the guarantee. \\'as given ,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiir============:::;;:::========== House Banking C.Ommit tee committee members at a clos-/1 staff report su~gest.s that ed meeting and not made pressure for a $250 million publir. Hov.·ever. the contents government loan guarantee to have become known. save Lockheed Aircraf! Corp. The report says \hf' ultimate and its jumbo jet airbus may be a bluff. liability of the government. in Continuation of Lockheed's case the loans arc defaul!ed, Progra t b .1d th LtOt 1 could exceed $300 million. m o u1 e airbus may not depend on the Some provisions g ivi ng tile guarani~. thf' report said. or government priority ove r a lternatively there may be in-other debtors may be unen- rormation not yet made public forceable and potential loss of "that the LIO!! is not a s good jobs if the airbus project is ••· d t ·1 ab a n done d may be as ~ a voca es. . • .say 1 Enroll Now Fall Semester ALL-DAY CLASSES Kindergarten lhru 8th Grade • Ttachint tbe 4 R's witll pbo11ics • Door-to-Door Bu:s Serrica •Stfort a.d Attar SQoo.I Care: ·-IoTtitiH l'n r ountnin V!ll/ey 16835 Brookhurst Stref't 962·3312 HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS Keep Your Childre n In Good Hands is." overestimated, it adds. "'It a ppears clear that it is------'------'---------------------------------_:_ ballically the British govern- ment that is insisting on the guarantef'." the report said Thf' aircraft's engines v.·ould be provided by Britain's Rolls· Royce. which suffered finan· cial collapse. The report, critical of the Nixon administralion proposal Judge Sa ys He Won't 'Play God' CINCINNATI (UPJ) -A judge ruled Thursday a teen- age girl arfl ictcd v.·ith cancer has the right to rejecl an operation that m ight increase her chances lo live Judge Benjamin Schwartz of the juven ile court AA id he "refused tD play God ." His ruling ca1ne on ~ pel1- tion by doctors. who asked Schwartz to rrquire the lfi· year-0Jd girl afflicted with bone coocer to submit to Lhe amputation or her right leg. The judge said the uniden- tified girl and her mother knew the consequences of their action and "it is not up tD the court tD thwart their wills.'' "The docton said radium had been tried and they believed it be!t to remove the leg from the hip down to pre- vent the spread or the dise.ut>." the judge said. "'The chances of her coming through the operation suc. cessfully would be about 20 to 30 percent. If 11he does nothing further. the chancf'.'I of her recovering would be 2 to 3 per- cent." Teamsters Name Boss MIAMI BEACH, F11. (AP! -Frank E . FitDimmons has bttn elecled to a five year term Ill president er the world's laraest labor union. t h e two -million • member Teamsters union. Fltnlmmon! was named lo IN post by ar<'lamation 'Jbuncby whftl his only op. ponerrt, 'Theodore Daley of Yonktra. N.Y., withdrew afte r I.ht roU CJll 1tartcd. After hil election to the $1%5,QOG.a-year prnidtncy of the Team1!.er1J, Fitlllimmon~ sa M:t formtt Pn!:Jid!:nt James R. Hoff• would have no role in -11inton~,.Mooi--~-- ,. •-r, . ' I I I • W• t •rt! \ow-a.ry&1.,..P1ymiou1h df1lt'r"-'C1u1c 11cc l no" 1f 'ou'rc happy 'flJlh lhc 111·1y we )C1v1 cc )OUI prc.w:nL c.11 you'U oomt h~ck and buy your '"xi car from u< too. So -we uy 10 ~ttp <'u r •Cr\ rec hnr• sh or I •nd our pcor lc COIJflC-OU$ V.'c 11m 10 do the "orl 11rht 1hc lint t1m~. And "'c don'1 o•crch1 rie for ,.h~I "e\c dont And -.en •Ct ,.n·t 111 "'~ ca re 1N>ut. fl lhc1 \l.e c1~ tnOIJ~I'! ''' lu rr cour1couJ s1lc~mr n to ans,..rr •II _your q~'11ons i nd sOO" •ou JtUL tht (Ir you "Int And "c care rnootl'I 10 !011\Cf 'out nt • .~r wn~ 1 frnr·tOOlh comh lxfor r \Oii dr"• 11 1\0 ~\ \\t 01u' lry u• -you'll •re WE-CARE PACKAGE PIJmoutb Duster. A•l 1boul 1.pt<"il l pric't~ "'°": n ...... ' !hr '"mr•" 1h1i. •m1ll •nrou1h. '" '-'·~ rr>O~~h Sm•:I rnou,h '''''--_ ...... 1-t 1., .. rnrrd. '"" """ J•• •••)to dn•• '"Y 10 f'l!l. a.1 '""~fh 1a ..... ~·· '"'"'"fr"' '"'Y i "'''""'""'· •"d -"---. n6< " ur10(t1J\ " 1 muc h t-.f&rt r•< ~\Our Cbrysler-Pt.Ymoutb Dealers. v . Costa MHG Huntington Beach Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. Huntington Beach Chrysler-Plymouth 2929 Harbor Boulevard 16661 Beach Boulevard -· ·--· -. -·-----·----~ ... • ---· ··--- Educatioo lfld Yletfare Depart. ment (HEW) the summary of trends in ~·elfare payment levels reports possible cuts all higb as 48 percent in New Hampsblre if the st a t e legislature does not approve a $13 million welfare budget. The 10 states w her f' payment.5 to welfare clients will be cut this year a re Alabama. Georgia, Kansas, Maine, Nebraska, New Jt>rsey, New .P.1t>xico. Nt>w York. Rhode Island and South Dakota, according le the memo. Pos:;ible cul.5 loom In A r I z o n a , California, Con. nect.icut. Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, Minnesota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas and Ver· mont, in addJtlon to New Hampshire. On the other hand the report shows five st.Illes and the District of C ol um b ia in- creasing payments in their programs ol aid to families witb dt>pendent children. and two others considering in· creases. liawaii, Mississippi. Nevada, Ohio and Oklahoma are rais- ing benefits, and Maryland and Wisconsin are considering paym•nt booo.,, "1d the report tD HEW U n d e r Secretary John G. Veneman. •·1 think a secondary effect of this memo is Curther 1up- port for welfare relonn," said an administration spokesman. "The ruson it was prepared, was to be responsive lo ques- tions we are certain to get in the Senate. This Is supportive ' to increased federal support for welfare." He said the memorandutn, dated July 2. so far bad re- mained internal e.xcept for its dlstrlbutioo to sever a 1 newsmen. Now enioy barbecues the clean, easy way! Coleman ® gas barbecue : for charcoal-broil flavor! • 6888 REG. 74.81 for deJiO.... borbecuM wi1hout the work -pick gos! 1-spot lighting; odjustob~ grate, controlled smok· ing. 2 83n griU hos room for 24 hombwgen. Add tbi w,a 111 glow of gas lights to yilur entry or patio! 29!!AL ColooK>I style ga• lontem mad. of porceloini1ed a luminum. TemperN gloss pones rem0¥9 to cl.an. JUST SAY "'OtAIGI m" COMPLm INSTALLATION AVAILABL! AT SUGHT EXTWA'OtMm For fast cookouts deluxe Channglow gas BBQ! 89!!w Wrth gos, there's M> lne7SY' preparoHonl 2 le¥eis Jet )'09 cook and worm at 1C1me time! ·~·:? ' r,.0':' . . . . '. Shop Mon-5at 'tl1 9:00. Sun 12·5PM LA CIENEGA--.-~ IJ36.7922 TOARANCE· ........... -.~ ·-·~ .542-6971 FULL.EltTON--·-phor'ie n~79-~ ~ALK ...................... pf'.or'le 868-0911 SANTA ANA .--.... --ol'W':.'ne 547-:6641 nvNTINGTON BEACH Pi"lonoe 71"-892-6611 ,,ANORAMA Cl"rY ... -.ohone 894-8211 VIENTURA. ..... ,p~· 46~5421. 642·7~t ROSEMEAD ..•....•... -.phcn9 !5C07J..3 1 l0 C4NOGA PARK--............... plione BBJ.1000 VINA ..... plior-4 966-74 1 J • ---..-~··-.. -·-' - ! l F .... .. ' Newport Bea~h EDITION VOL 64 , NO. 163 , 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALiFOANIA . Tl1ousands Attend Services NE\V YORK (UPI) -They said good· bye to Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong today with a ser\·ice that sent lhe jau rhythms of the New Orlean!I funeral song. "When the Saints Go Marching In ,'' halfway around the world. Only 500 people could attend the funeral service for the great jazz trumpeter in the simple red brick Corona Congrega· tional Church in a quiet Queem neighborhood. But more lhan l ,000 or Armi;trong's neighbors stood outsidl" and hundreds of thQusands watched on teli!v1s1on as Telstar beamed thf! service to 16 Euro. pean countries. Peggy Lef: flew in from the West Coast In sing "The Lord's Prayer." F'or Armstrong's wire of 29 years, Lucille, they sang "Ju.lit a Closer Walk With Thee," He had come 1,500 miles from his native New Orleans lo win his greatest fame but like all lhose -Other Jazzmen in the city where Ou:1eland was OOrn. lhey played "When the Saial! Go Marching In" for Ai:_mstr<>ng, wbo died ifl bis sleep Tuesday of a heart attack at the af!e of 11. Armstrong's y,·ife and a formt:r y,•1fe, ;azz pianist Lillian Hardin, had said their private goodbyes t:ar!ier al a neighborhood funeral home . M r s . Armstrong. in b!sck dre..ss and shawl, crit:d quietly as she stood near his grey 5leel coffin. .... , . ·" :• ..... ti.iourners began arriving at late morn· ing at the church which is cooled only by fans. A3 temperatures rose to the high llOs. usht:rs handed out small paper fans, some bearing a picture of the late Or. Martin Luther King Jr. OulSide, neighbors remembered how Armstrong always wa& ready to play at local charitable events. •'He would never forgt:t If he could help ii. Goodwill am· bassador -thal fits him very well," Mrs. Thelma Davis .said. • Today's Final TEN CENTS for 'Satchmo' 1'ht: list of honorary pallbearers, was in Its own way . a lribute to the man who thrillt:d crowds in Belgrade, Accra, Bangkok and Moscow with hls mllllical genius and infectious grin. The list included television personalities Johnny Carson and David Frost, Mayors John Lind.say of New York and Moon Landrieu of New Orleans, musicians Gent: Krupa, Guy Lombardo, Lionel Hampton and Benny Goodman, celwnnisb Earl Wllaon and Leonard Lyo ns and composer Harold Arltn. But Thu rsday for the mest part, wu the day when the unkllOWll! who bc>ught Armstrong recordings by the million1 paid therr respects to the dynamic 1inger and musi cian . By the thousands they filed passed hil C()ffin ifl a National Guard armory here -many y,·eeping, some genuflecting and crossing themselves. Armslrong 's body was clad in a black (See SATCHMO, Page %) 11 Cities Shudder; 66 f(nown Dead THIS IS ARTIST'S DRAWING OF PROPOSED CIVIC CENTER FOR NEWPORT BEACH Revised Pl•ns for Combination City Hall ·Police Facility Go to Council Monday Civic Center Design Bared Total Cost of Newport Project Put at $7 Million By L. PETEil KJUEG 01 lht 1><1111 '°1"1•1 •f•H Preliminary deslgna of tht: proposed Newport Beach Civic Center at Newport Center, sh-0wing a total cost, including land , of just under $7 milli0t1, were re- le<1sed today. Revised plans for the complex provide for only ;i i;ingle build ing reduced mark· t:dly in size. as ordered by the council. Original drawings sho"'ed separate city ba ll. ci1y council chambers and police buildings. Clluncil men Mnnday afternoon are ex- pected to review thfi scbematicg and con- ~!.ruc1ion cost budget during their study rie'."sion . Acting City f\.1anager Philip F'. Betlen· court said Monda y nigbt the council will be asked lo approve the desitn and the budget and aulhorir.e the architects \lie!· ton Beckel and Associates. to> proceed with formal preliminary design work . Bettencourt alsn said he expec1 s In h• told to go to work with the cit y's finan· cial CQnsultants to schedu le a bond elec- tion "sometime lhis rall." Vice Mayor How~rd Roger s and at least lwo former councilmen, Dee Cook and Al F'nrgil. havt: expressed npposi· t1on tn moving the munici pal fa cilitie.'i from their prrsenl location l.o l:he nine. acre site immediatrly below Fashion Island. Earlier estimates had pla~d the lotaJ CQ.St at $!1) million . One supporter <>f the project, Counc1l- rnan Carl Kymh1. already has suggested Ellshe1·g Says Ge11erals Hel<l Bacli: To11kin Repo1·t \\'ASHINGTON IUPll -Daniel Ell~­ berg, the admi!(.ed !'!nurce nf the leak nf secret Pentagon papers tn newsmen, 11aid tnday 1hl' .Joint Chief5 or Staff with· held a vital rcporl on the 1964 Tonkin Gulf incidents from then Defel\Sf' Secre- tary Rober1 S. McNam11ra, the Wa llhing- ton S1ar said today. The S1ar said Ellsberg. a former De- fen se Department aide, said the TOflkin Gulf study was ordered carried oot by tht: Rand Corp . where Ellsberg served from 19fi? to 1970. Rand also helped prl!'-- paN! the top secret Pentagon study of U.S. decision-making in Vietnam which wall leaked to newspapers. EllsberJ( told the Star the Tonkin study was wlt.hheld from McNamara 's knnw- lerlge un!il ht: was asked about it at a hearing of the Senalt: Fore ign RelatioRS Commit tee in 1968. was quoted as saying. "Tht .Jnint Chief5 didn"l wan t tht: .secretary to st:e it ••• it had tapes of the secretary's conversa· tions overseas." McNa mara tnld the co mmit tee A1 the lime he had not read all of the report because "J first learned nf it a few days agn when you asked for it.·· Ellsberg. indicted <>n federal char11es of stealing and tuniing over the Penta· gon war study document.'I to the New York Times and other newspapers, told the Star that when he did so he "took it for granted that I would go to prison." But he said he now feels that because of legal ramifications, he may escape Jail. League Decision that Utt pending bond iS!Ue be split intG !Y.'O questions, one o~the city hall and lhE" otJier en the police station. Kymla said that while bolh faci lities are needed , the need for 11 new police station is critical and he feels holding Rn election nn a combined project might jeopardize chances of it receiving the needed two-third.~ majority at the poll.!1. Plans call for the pol ice facility to be tied in some way with the new county judicial district court on ad jacent land, The cost figure.!I prepared by Wrlton BeckPl include a 25 percent contingency in actual construction estimate11 based on a spring 1973 date for seeking construc- tion bids. A breakdown or the cost figurt:ll 11how11 S.1. 7 million for con11truction, $330.000 for i;.ile d!'velopment and $1 million for cost pscalation lhrough April 1973. This places the estirnatM building cosl at a tota l of $5 million. In addition, -0ther costs affecting the project in<'.lude $800.000 for land , $100,000 fnr nff-si!e y,·nrk , $400 .000 for architectur· al fef'~. $200,000 for furnishin~ and decn.- ra\1ng, \200.000 for owner-furnished itern.'I ~nd Pquipment allnwancr. SHXl,000 fnr irrigation and land.~c;ipiniz 11nd .545.0flll fnr the Mnd election . itself. and miscel - !S'e CENTER. Pagt ZI Passersby Put Out Blaze in Fertilizer Where Lhere's 11moke Lhere·.s fire and lht: smoke was emanating from a pile nf fertilizer Thursday al Newport Beach's F'ashien Island. Firemtn responding to the smouldering heap at 1600 San Joaquin Hills Road said passersby had extinguished it when they arrived and did the job in expert fashion. No damage figure was listed. SANTIAGO (UPI) -Olile's worst earthquake 11ince 1965. a ll/,.m.Jnute tremor that reached IO on the Mercalll scale of 12. killed scores <>f persoru ~ day and caused widespread destruction. At least 66 persons were killed and more thM 300 injured in the pre-midnight Thursday shock wh ich was followed by at least 14 aftershock!! that kept the country in suspense until dswn Friday. Casualtiel! v.·ere estimated by the interior ministry. All of the casualties Yt'ere in 11 cilies along lhe northern end of the fertile cen· Ira! valley nestled between the Andes and I.he coast in thi s quake-prone land on the lo"·er ·.i:esl coast of South America. ln the. port of Valparaiso. 25 were dead, lncl uding 8 in the beach resort town of Vina Del Mar. There were 11 reported dead in Santiago and 5 in San Felipe. Some. were ~lied in aci;iden~ CJ.~ by parilc. elhers by lslliJ\t ..f1!1· and debris. Three died in lllapel. the epicenter of the quake. There: the qu1ke reached an intensity of 10. It was recorded at 6 in Santiago, the capital. President Salvador Allende declared tht: north-cenrral zone a disaster art:a., placed troop.~ on alert and ordered out ('xtra -strength police detachment.!I lo discourage looting. Allende took a helicopter early Friday lo Valparaiso and Jllapel, which was isola..ted by landslides on the Pan Amt:rican Highway. The quake was felt from Arica, on the Peruvian border, to Temuco, 1.400 miles to the south. It was the country's strongest quake since March 28, 1965, when 300 persons were kiUed by a tremor also centered in the northern end of the central valley. Allende went on national radio to urge calm "the government of your comrade· president is here .... to help ..• .I ask you , citizens, I demand, stay calm." It "·as five minutes past 11 p.m. in San· tiago when the quake hit. It began gent ly but btult up quickly. There y,·as a hor- rendollS, subterranean grinding noise a.nd the tights went out. Panic set in Santiago shook for J 14 minutes but farther north in the vall<'Y 1he quake lasted a mintue, SS seconds. Panicky cilizens . many In pajamas. ran into the streets. Flying glass. falling facades and cornices and panicky car drivers accounted for lhe first casualties. Many were injured falling down darkened 11airway.!I. In Valparaiso, part of the roof of lhe Imperial Cinema fell in, crushing a spec· tator lo death a.nd touch ing oH a stampede to exits in which an additional 30 persons were injured. The Cathedral of Valparaiso. damaged In the 19& quake, dumped lts dome down into the pew11 . An estimated 8U percent -0£ structures !See: CHILE, Page t) "The lllUdy was deliberate.l.v withheld from the Secretary of Defense." E!lllbert District Up to Voters Priso11er Has Real Probwm Newporl 13each pnlice g:o lo all N'..t!IOnable lengths to prot.eet I.he health and welfart of th t: i r prl!oners but nothing could be done for ene Thur5day. Detective Todd WJlkJnsnn's 19- yt:ar-old arre!tee was asked about any ailments or medkal pniblems by J111lers. before being booked on a buqi;lary char1e and 11dmitted to 11 cell. Ht: s11\d he l'luffer1 from claustropOObi•. the: fear of belna confined In a limited spat;t. Representalive.s of Orange County's 2S eities wrangled for two hours T'hur!klay night and finally split 13-12 in support of an Assembly bill to put the rate of the County Harbor Dist rict up to the votera. The League of Cities membera alsn split 13-12 over naming a representative to Ule Local Agency Form11tion Com· millsion (l.AFCI. They replaced Fullerton councilman Louil! Reinhardt with Los AIMUtot Mayor Pro Tern Joseph Hyde. The vote oo the barber dlllll/id w&1 ac- tually • defeat ef 1 motion to 11upport Aa.semblym11n Kenneth Cory's ( O • Anaheim) bill which would retain the district as a aep11rate taxing 111en<;y and add parks to JU juri~diction . The le~ h11d voted 20-3 l1tsl April ln support the bill by Aaaemblyman John Briggs <R-Fullerton) and that declslnn stand!. Briggs' bill would put the m11tter to the voters. Support for the Cory bill had been sought by the Board of Supervisors .. t a recent city-county meeting. Orange C-Oa.st cities 11pUt 4-3 M the issue. Newport Beach "·Laguna Beach, and Seal Beach s~~ the Cory bill •hl1e San Juan , no, Runtln&lotl Beach, Lo9 Alamttdl 1rountaln Valley voted on the other side. The vote en a representative on the LAFC first involved three candidatl!!I. Reinhardt, Hyde And 'I'Ustln Mayor Tony Coco. Reinh11rdt and Hyde Rel nine votes 'ach and Coco i;e.ven. Coco was later e.lee~rnate LAFC member by a 13· 12 vote over Reinhardt. Mayor Thom11ll Forster of San Juan Capistrano ergued before the final vote on the Cory bill that a decision should be postponed and the question referred back lo the \l&rlous city council!. "They do·not really understand either blll," he con- <ended. Tb!-clty~ representatives we·re unanimous Go one subject They dGni. Ilk• lh• property ~ bill ~ppr<Mld'by lh• supervisor•· wbicb will lilt only feur c11tegorits -schools, city, county ,' ~d special districts. They voted to urge the 11upe"tsors to return to the former format llfUJ\g &II I.axing agencie! ~aralely. ~ who 1poke ,on the 1ubjecl ft:lt that the citie• w.ould &et blamed for hlgh tu. billt If tht breakdown was not used • . . 0 Al""MTIC OC!AN ···. • 400 Ml. Ul'I N.wt MA9< THIS IS SECTION OF SOUTH AMERICA HIT BY QUAKE Chile and Arsientlna Sev•r•ly Shaktn Late Thursday Viet Dove McCloskey Says He'll Enter Race WS ANGELES (AP) -Rep Paul N. ~lcCIOtikey Jr., Lhe most oUt!!poken Republican critic of Prt:sident Nixon's Vietnam war pol!c1es. announced today he will enter the 1972 Californ ia presiderr tJal primary election "pledged lo ending lhe war conditioned only upon retur n ()f the prisoners of war."' "Thi:s will noL be a s 1 n g 1 e J5sue: campaign." the San M a t e o con· gressman said in a statement issued in advance of a new s conference. •·we seek in addition to ending the war to restore trulh in government, to achieve a re.turn to historic Republican meral com· mitment on social issues rather than tbe prt:.senl 'Southern Strategy' and a restoration of judicial e11:cellence and in· dependence." P.tcC\oskey, 43, lh~ formally undertook a campaign he said he would h1unch only if Nixon failed to change bis Indochina policy and if no other promintnt Republican entered the race as a peace candidatt. McCloskey, who has assailed the Prt:sident's policie1 in speeches for months, advocating quick withdrawal of U.S. war forces, made no mention in his formal 1latement of entering other primaries, such as the flrllt-in·the-naUon ont In New Hamps:bire. The California primacy Is June 8, 1972. McCl()Skey 11ald he would form and head hi11 own slate. Nixon bes not 11ald whether be wlll enter primaries. It ba1 been widely assumed in 'Washington that he: would not. A presidential 1lde indicated befm McCloske:y's new• OOftferenot that the Prtltdentdoub1'"3 ''WiU·not •bdiciite" if raced with a prl~ ctialte,nae. Mc:Clost111)'. aruxNftetd tbi !tart d I · "\tll?OfoUI dr1o,i·1 to rqtater new vote'n'in the ftepubllcan plrty and t9 re~ter thole' De.mocr1ta. •ho tnlY cbbGst to do eo." • i.Under the present policies of the Prt1l· dent. vice president and attornty gtneral, the Republican party Is dying," he aald. "It 11 clear that. H72 could well. be I dillaater If aew voters are 1Jven no in- cenlive lo resister as Republicans " Saying that three times m o r 111 Democrats than Republicans are being registered among under-21 vo\tr:s in California. ti.i cCloskey added '>if thl! trend continues it spells the death of the Republican party " ''In my judgment the two-party system is one of lhe balliC 11trengths of our polilical system, but only when OOlh parties are vigorous and healthy. No in· stltution can long survive unless it can attract the idealism, enthusiasm and energy of the finest youn11 people in th• nation." "We will seek to end CIA involvement in the internal affairs of other natioDI and to limit t.hat a11eocy 's operation t& the field of intelligence gathering. 11'e•tlaer The WMlherman predictl lo• clouds and fo1 Uldt'lly *'d Saturday. clearing by noon with tempera-- lures aloog the coast around 71 and 90 inland. Lowa of 65 deifeeS in both areas. INSIDE TODA. Y The Pageant of tha Masters: tntd re:stiual of Am opens nuc week in Laguna Beach. Pk:tu.rea · allll"a-.1«11.ore I• IOdo~'•W••V. tud•r. Page 23. ~. b -.... ' Mllhl .. , ... M C'*'-I"' U• ' --· ·-... (ltt'""" -Or•-c-tr ' , .... u • ,_,. 11·11 '~-• S!Mtl Ml11teh , .. ,, 0.•ltl "-'k" • ,....., .. Mllefiel ·-• ,_ .... .... l11terlllltMtflt ... '#Htti.r • l'IJ!tl'IC:t u.11 .,,_., ,.... ,,.,. ·-" .... "' """ ' ...... La'"'-" " w,.._ ... •• • ------............ ~ ----·-···-· .,.. u. .... --· -~ ·-----· --• ·-------~ ' . ·---,-··· .. ' • - ' L. __ ' ' ' U.S. Probes New Viet Peace Bid • WASHINGTON {AP) -U.S. officiah say tbe Nlron administration is ponder- \ng the significance of a surprise new shift i.ri. the !al.est peace offensive launch- ed by VietnameM Communist leaders. TM ah1lt ii in the form of a demand for tbt ouslu t1f only .Presidtn.l Nguyen Van Thieu from any future South Vietnamese government ready Lo negotiate an end of the war. Previously North Vtt.tnarnese and Vitt Cong leaders b.ad insisted that not Mly Thieu, but Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky and Prime "Minister Tran 'Jblen Khlem, as well, would be unacceptable in a post· war aovernment. "For year1 Com munist dele1att!!!! at tht Paris peace talk! have been calling for removal or the 'Thieu.Ky-Khiem clJque,' '' ooe diplomatic informant said, "They practically pronounced 'Thieu-Ky- Khiem' 111 one word. Now t.'lty've begun i;peaking only of Thieu." The shill ln the C.Ommuru,,t position emerged after Madame Nguyen Th.I Binh prestnted the Viet Cong's latesl peace package-at the Paris conference July I. The proposal was for release of all prisonera held by the Communists in the North ~ South by the yearend, C1>n· current lF:ith withdrawal ef all U.S. troops. Her precise words : '"The U.S. governmeat must. rea11¥ respect the South Vietnam people's rights to self-determination, pul an end to lts In. terference in the Internal affairs of Soutb Vietnam, cease backing the bellicose group headed by Nguyen Van Thieu at present in office in Saigon, and stop a!I maneuvers, including tricks on elections, aimed at malntalnlng the puppet Nguyen Van Thilu." Five daya later Le Due Tho, senior North Vielllamese representative in Paris, endorsed Madame Binh 's proposal and in an interview with the New York Times hammered away .11t Thieu -and Thieu only. He said in part: "Although it is not admltled . . • the whole worl d knows that Thieu has been put in power by the ' U.S. administration. And the Uniltd St.ates will have the decisive voice in the forthcoming elections. "Therefore lf Mr. Nixon Is really disposed to ~ttle the whole problem ar the war • , . the question of change of the ruling group now in office in Saigon - headed by Thieu -is in the pov.'er of the United Stites ... The forthcoming elec· lion in South Vietnam is an opportunity for Mr. Nixon to change Thieu." Autharjtie! in the State Department have f!' doubt this subtle Communist move has significance. But just ho\v much slrn.ificance will be known only when some frank face-to-race talking bei ins belwttn ncgollators for the two fl ides. But meantime, several interpretations have been offered by administration ex- perts a11 to motives of the Vietnamese Communists in changing their position · -An effort lo isolate the inflex ible Thieu who, in the 1967 election, won 35 percent of the votes. -A bid to deepen the already con. siderable split between Thieu and Vice President Ky who, in the past, has boasted of his Northern ori1ins. -An attempt lo advance the prospects of neutralist Gen. Duong Van "Bii;" l\finh who led the 1963 coup that ousted Presi- dent Ngo Dinh Diem . Ky and ~finh are &pposiJlR Thieu in the Oc!nber elections -A signal to Prf'sident i\"ixon that if &nly he WO\lld arrange for Thieu's elec· !oral defe.111 . there would be a basis for an acceptable ne'inli11ted ~ettlement. In thi.!I context Le Due Tho was e;o;ollclt in 1sser1ing his belief Nixon could it he chooses, do just that. OU.Mel COAST DAILY PILOT ft.t.HO& COAST ,UalllHll+O CXIM,.AJCV ••\.•rt N. W••' .,, ...... , ..... ,..,..ltlW J.,l: it e .. ,(.v Vkir' f'rvW.-1 11141 G-•I MIM991" n;.,..,, K'11wiC l fllw 'l"li•'"•' A. Mur,lil•• JMnM • .,. ltllll!' L P•l•r Kti•t lil...,_1 ••di Cl!~ l'tll!W .....,.rt ~ Offtel. . llJJ N1w,•rl l •11l1t ard M·am-. A'd••n: r.o ... ll. 111s, ,,,,, .,_.,.._ C.• Miit: .ul W•I ••'f '"'"' ~ ... di! n: ...... ! ... ~ ... \19 """' .... l•tl•: '"1$ .""" hull¥•"' ""'~; -,..,,,, 11 ·c..,,1rw .... _ .... -. .. --:-·-------·--...-- -------..---~ .. Gro11nd Brol~en While officials broke ground. officially. Thursday for gym at Upper Bay Br~nch of 1-larbor Arca Boys Club .• Jack J\.1c?\tanus twirled basket· ball and dreamed of Septen1bcr \\'hen SI 10,000 facility will be com· pleted. Gym is exarnple of cooperation betv.•cen cornmunity agencies. Boys Club is buil ding it on city land adjacent to Upper Bay Branch on Tustin Avenue in Costa ?\I esa. During school hours, it will be used by students at Newport-?\fcsa school district's nearby Kaiser School. Civic Complex Completio11 Seen by Septe111be1·, 1973 Construction of the $7 million l\'e-1•.'J>Ort Beacb clvlc complex at Newport Centf'r could be completed by September. 1973, according -tD Wellon Becket anq Associ· ates. projttt architects. C011struction would begui nn(' ~eiir earlier provided a bond issue l(l l1n;iuce the proJ,ect -lo be for an amount un- determined as of no\v ~ is passed hy Newpon ~ach voters . Plans for the new buildu1g, unl'eilPd today. call for a 58,000 square foot clry hall and council (·ham bers and a 54,000 square foot police building The two.story structu re v;ould have re- Police Hold Newport Ma11 On Drug Ra11 8)' ARTHUR R. \'l\'SEL 01 tM O•llf PllD1 SltH Lawmen staked nu! at a crudr a1rstr1p in rural Ri\'erside f.-0unty as a plr11cload of ~!exican marijuana \1·orlh $250.1)0{) landed Thursday captured si;o; smllgg!mg suspects, one from Nev.port Bench Spearheaded by !hr l] S Bureau nf Custom~. aulhorities allrgr lhe ~c11r·lnn~ probe may have sme.~hrc1 one organized ring . Barrie E. lc!on1, 25 . or 112 \V. Coast tlighway . Newport Beach. v.a s an1ong lhe six scheduled for arr<'l ignmrnl before a U.S. Qmimissioner today, nn charges of conspiracy to smuggle mar11uana Thrte ~·ere captured at lhe remote airfield. where offic~rs claim a 500-pound shipment of pot "'as seized , whlle the other three v.·ere ar rcsled in nearby Coron a. The long inl'est1gallt1n involved six police agencies incl uding Orange Coast lawmen, bul the y referred all question., lo customs agenLs based al Terminal Island. Steve Cummings, agent in charge nf the case, was in a meetin~ and unavail- able for any additional comment . Booked into Riverside County ,Jail along ·with ldom were Fred 0 . Nelson, 28, David G. Reynold~. 21. Victor t.1aril!o, 23. Donald R. Payseur. 23, and Fo;1; n. May Jr., 21 all of Riverside. Riverside County is a 111ajor dis1r1bu0 tion point for Mexican inarijuane. sn111g· gled into the U.S., due to its proximity to the bd'rder and many areas suitable ror aircraft landings. Sheriff's dtputies i;aid they seb:l!!d 11n additional 880 pounds of pol in Perris Thursday, but the .. 1nclden1 was ap- parently unrelated to the federal opera. !Ion. lnvesti1ators reeovered the marijuana haul from a car abandoned following a high·speed chase by a driver v;ho manag. ed to escape pu;11uers on root. Newport Beach police ill'knn\1·!ed~cd they ha vt' bttn 1nvest1gl'.t1ng lt.lon1. 11ho formerly llved at 377 Vic!oria SI . Cos!a t.1es11 . but releA.Sed no add ilionlll in· formation. Detective Sat. Lto Konkel ~aid ft v.·a.~ aiirted among 11!1 slx \11w .11J:enciell that l!.S. Cu~to ms v;ould rclr::i~r 1nforn1nti1111 . ----- inforced concrete ei;terior walls, columns and lloor systen1s The building 1~ou!d also feature : -An exterior of text ured exposed ag· gregCJte. -lutcnor walls built as movable par· l1tion11. -Doorll and "'indnv.•s wit h glare re- ducing. heat absorbing glass. -Suspended ceilings 1vith acoustical tile. -Floors in publi c lobbies, corrldOTs and priv<1te offices "'ilh masonry paving a nd/or carpet. -A heating system consisting or ll\'O electric hot water boilers. -Three separate central air condition- ing and air handling systems incorporat- ing an economizer to provide 100 percent outside air when temperatures permit. -Recessed lightin~ fixlures. -Combined parking stalls for 50.f cars. Fron• Puge 1 CENTE R ... 1.1neous e-.:pen!'~!. \\'ett on Becket pointed out that the figures do n11l include lhe interest the ('11,\' l\'OU[d PA.V on the bonds, the COSl of 1no\11ng In !hC' ne11• fa cili ty and any add- ed l'O~ts 1! the prOJ('C! i.~ not bu ilt all al on er Other po!enl 1a! costs not included \l'ould be any contingencies: such as surve~'S nr a heliport the cily might want <ind escalation allowance beyond the 25 percent to April 1973. Tiie <irt'hilert did not e~t.imate how much these added costs might be_ Nixon Appoi11ts Ex-Reagan Aide To U.S. Court A former !!Pagan administ ration of· fit'1<1I 1oday 11'.1s n111nNI U.S. Distric t Cour•t J11rfge to pres ide 01·er a nel\'ly ere· <1t erl ~orthern Ca!Horn1:i federal court. Spencer C. \l'illiam!, ~9. SacrameTito, \1 Its aripninted !o one of t1r() federal benches fillrd tod.Jy hy President Nixon 11·ho n1iHlc th(' iippofntrnents at the \\'e~t­ r rn \\'hltr I louse in S;:in Clen1entr. \l'Hl1ams. who maint<1ins private I a w pr:i clices 1n Sacramento ;ind San Jose. ll'ltS d1rec!nr Of the slate Department O( Hu1nan Resources Developmenl from l!t67 to 1970. The second appointee was 111lorney Paul Benson of Grand Forks. N.D .• who "'Ill become El U.S. District Judie in that !il iile, f'rom Pag" 1 CHILE ... In fl l11pel ~·ere damaged and in !> !Mre of ln11'n!I niore than 30 per cent o( buildin1i1 ;\lrectcd to some degree, police aald. Industrial find structural damage ap- pe;:irrd certa in to reAch into the millions (•f dollars, ·--- -· -.... .:. .--. Rock Star Morri,son Dead, 27 PARIS (L'PI) -American rock star J im ~1orr1aon, 27, lead singer of "The [)OOrs," whose rav.· sexual on-stage style made hiin an inlernational st:1r -and a defl'ndant in an ot«enity trial -died of a heart attack last Saturday and "·as buried secre!ly 1n " Pans cemetery, police repo rled Ir.day. Police s:ud ~iorri.son was d1S('()l't:red unconscious in Uie bathroom of h15 chic apartment by Pamela Courson. 25, of L06 Angele:ii , his companion for the past five year.i and regarded as his common lav.· 1\·ife. ''Miss Courson said when t.torri.son awoke last Saturday, he 'W.'I S not feeling l\ell ," a police ::.i>0kesman said. ··He ask- ed her to get a bath ready and theu entered the bathroom. "Not hearing any notsc. ,\1 iss Courson later opened the door to find ~lorrison lying uncoJlscious in the bath_" The officer at the prtcinct for t Ile fourth Arrondissemenl, a fa!!'hionable district of Paris, said Morrison was dead y,·hen a police ambulance arril'ed at his apartment. He said a doctor later issued a certificate attributing dea th to a heart attatk. The poiice officer said i\torrison ·was burled \Yednesday in the historic Pere Lachaise cemetery. one of the oldest in Paris, in pri\'a\e services arranged by fl.1 iss Courson. 'The services l\'ere at- tended by only a few close friends. A record industry spokesman said l\tor· rison was in Paris writing a book. Bill Siddons, Jl.forrison 's manager , said in Los Angeles that the initial news of Ule singer 's death y.·as kept secret "to avoid the notoriet yand circus-like atmosphere that surrounded the deaths of such other rock personalities as Janis Joplin and Jim Hendrix ." Siddons said he arrived ln Lo6 Angeles from Paris Thursday night. Corona del Mar Surgeon Freed On Lower Bail A Corona del t.1ar plastic surgeon charged v.·ilh ~ex crimes involving .a teen<'oged boy was freed on greatly re-due. cd bail Thursday, "'inning one ·wet.k 's continuat1on of arraignment. Dr. Hugh H. Cra1\·ford. 46, posted $625 bail dropped from an original $12,50\) car- ried on tht dual felony warr&Dt'tiwed by Judge Calvin P. Schmidt. The plastic and reconslructive surgery specialist is accused by authorities of sex perversion ?Jld sodomy involving a boy 1nvitt'd to his home over the Fourth or Ju- ly weekend. Newporl Beach detectives arrested him at home Wednesday nighl after presen- ting evidence from their investigation and obtaining the warrant. His arraignment in Harbor Judicial District Court v.•as continued until 9 a.m. next Thursday. _......,, .... --. - . ' Nixon. Abandons Economy Target WASHL~GTON (AP) -The 'Nixon ad· rninistration has abandoned, for all prac- t1ca.! purpo!es, iL'I target of a $1.065- 1rillioo national etonomy \bill year, lhe most t'Ontroversi.a1 forecast 1n its January ec0f\01nic report to Congress. Dr. Paul \V. :-itcCracken, chainnan or Pres1denl Ni xon'.~ Council of Econo1n1c Ad\·isers. told Congress 'f h u rs d a y pushing the econ01ny toward that targel 1n the last ha!f of !be year could ac- celerate inflation. · hlcCracken ackno11iledged the economy in the first sir monLhs of 1971 fell below the administrallon ·s lore<"asts, "while in- rlation has c:onlinued higher and the nsl' of real out put and en1ployment have risen tess than we e:xpected." ln Janu;iry. the achn\nistration sald c~ross National ProdueL output of the na · t1on ·s goods arid services. should climb b,v 9 pPrcen! this year 111 a total ol SI 065 trillion 1'hat kind of (;NP gro\rlh was r~ded, H said . to reduce 11nemplo.v1ncnt to about -1 ~ percent and inflntion. as n1easured by GNP standard!l. to J percent by mid-1972. t.1cCracken wa~ n1ore caut ious about these predictions in testimony 'rhursday before the Senate-House Economic Con1- mlttee. saying only that the rising ra te of inflation \\'Ould decelerate I.his year and unemployment would de<:line. "There is a dang~r th at if money GNP f"ro1n Pag" I SATCHMO ... silk suit and 1pink !ihirl. Under bi.s right h·and was his trademark, a white hi.ndkerchief he had alway! used to "mop his chops," placed there by his wife . The mourners were black, white, the young and aged of all walks or life. One middle-;ige black v.•oman ble\v "' kiss. A man placed a sinjlle rose on the casket. The battered old cornet v.•ith 1vhich Satchmo launched his career v.•as pul atop thl" coffin by Art ie Sil'fert ··a friend and ad111irer" of Arn1 strong . "He wa~ the fuiest !hat I knew of lh<1 death is a great loss His perso nality wa s "ery pleasant. 1 think everybody loved him. I loved everything about him," said f.1rs. Gloria Marker, a small gray-haired lady. hlrs. Sadie llendrirk~ or !hr Bronx, dabbed al her eves \1·1th a handkerchief and said: "The}i ·n never find another Satchmo. He was an original ·· Ernest Broglin said he had been "rai~­ ed with Satchmo" in a boys' home [n New Or lean~. Rolls P1·ices Boosted LOKDON (/\P) -Motorists in the 18- month queue for new Roll!·Roy ce cars v.•i!l have to dig deeper in their pockets /or the new model. On the British market the price tag ls going up $2,880, topping $24 .000 for the firjt time . Expo rt priee increase~ are to be announced !atet. lncreaM!.d production cost! i~ given as the reuon. were now lo rise. or be pushed up, lo rr.ach the targets µreviously pul fonvard. that would revive inflation or at lea,s\ seriouslv deJav 11s aba~ment" he s~ud. fl.tcCr3.cken ·said adrninislraLion fear or an acceleration in the inflation ratt wa'!l the main reason President Nixoll ch0i>r to rcJt l·t 1a~ rf'tiuc11nns as r111 E>ronor111c st1n1u!an1 "\\c-arf' now ~e1'u1i: how diffieult 11 is tu remove the economy from the con- $cqueoces of thf' inflat ion that v.·as allo11 - t'<i 10 develop from 1965 lo 1968," he said. "To pern111 the 1nflal1on lo re \•1ve. lor some shorl-run and doubtful adva ntage lo ourseh·es. 1vould ~ highl v irre!)'J)Onsihle.'' the cha1nnan added. saying Congress already has made !he 1972 fiscal year budget some $7 b1ll1on mo~ erpans11 e than Nixon proposed. * * -t: Wliolesale Prices Rise 0.4 Percent \VASHINGTON !UPI) -Wholesale prices rose 0.4 percent in June for the se- t:ond straight month, the go vernment said Friday. indicating little change in the ad- ministration 's battle aga inst inflation. \\'holesale price increases generally result in higher retail prices aftt'r about a month. The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said the over·all index advanced last month lo 114.3 percent o! the 1967 figure . This means it now costs $11.43 to buy !he same package of whole· :sale goods that cost $10 four years ago. The increase in the index !or June \\'as 0.4 percent both with and without seasonal adjustment. The index w;,s 3.8 percent higher than in June, 19'10 . For !he six nionths rrom December through June , the index rose at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5 percent. The bureau said Y:holesa!r prices of groceries and other food ready for sale lo the consumer ro!e 0.7 percent in ,June, but this is normal for thi~ lime of the yea r. After seasonal adjustment, food price.-. "'ere unchanged fron1 l\1;:iy. \VhoJesale pricei; of fresh fruits, fre!'h and dried vegetables, grain, eggs, 11\e pou'ltry and milk for repr~ssing in- creased in June. Prices declined in meat. sugar and confoctionary and other dairy products. The industrial commoditi!s index in- (-reased 0.2 percent in June. half the in· t'rease for M;iy_ After seasonal Id· 1ustmenls, the June increase was 0.3 per· eenl, compared with 0.4 perce nt in May. Farm products increased 1.8 percent - 1 7 percent after seasonal 11djustn1ent - 10 June. Processed foods and feeds 11.d- \'aoced 0.3 percent, allhot1gh following adjustment for seasonal fa ctors, th ese declined 0.8 percent. Li\•estock prices were down slightly, l\'ith a drop in cattle prices more than offsetting an advance in lamb~ and hogs. SALE CONTINUES CHINA •t<J· $179.00 Av•ilabl. lri Y•llcw or Gre•n SALE 169900 SALE FEATURES OTHER SELECT GROUPS FROM HENREDON . DREXEL -HERITAGE -UPHOLSTERY, SHE RRILL -MARGE CAR- SON -HENREDON LAMPS, PICTURES & ACCESSORIES ALSO RE· DU CED. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEl-HERITAGE NIWPOIT STOii OPIN PRIDAT 'TIL 9 1ttl11111 NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W•1tcllff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Profe11lon1l Interior Oe1lgntr• Avall1bla -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 34.S North Co1tt Highway Phone: 4f4-6.5.5 I --~ ----•-_ _,__..,_. •U• -----. .. ~~·----~ I I \ • . ' • .. • ' ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE Local Taxpayers Hit Governor Reagan's record·breakJng slash or nearly $504 million from the 1971 -72 state budget, offered as a heroic act of tax saving, Comes through as a hard v.1hack at t.a..xpayers <tl the local level. All protestations by the governor and his staff to the contrary, the heavy.handed blue-penciling means Lhat locJ.1 property taxpayers will probably have to pick up 8:dded expenses for welfare, med ical programs and pub- lic educalion. No responsible authority in the state outside the governor's i;taft will confirm the governor's contentions. Bu~ those closest to the problem -county and school orflctals -have been nearly un animous in saying that the slashed budget inevitably means only • shift from t.he broad state base. to the narrow property base or the added cost of state-mandated programs in the three fields. '!'he Legislature can't escape some share of blame for the situation. to be sure. But the major responsibility TIO\v rests on the governor. His zeal to be able to make ~ood h~s rash P.romise of '.'no tax increase this year" ap· pears likely to insure tax increases at the local level. The 'Wild Rivers' Debate Preserving as much of California's "wild rivers" as may reasonably be possible is a laudable goal. A bill now in the Sacramento legislative hopper \vould \vall off in perpetuity as free-flowing r ivers the Eel, Trinity and Klamath rivers of northern CaJifornia . This bill is strongly opposed , however, by the very people who would, at a superficial glance, be expected to want the three rivers kept in their wild state. "M'hich lhe three rivers are locate.:!. They ue banded to- gether as the Eel River Water Cou ncil, a result of lhe murr1:million dollar damage resulting from uncontrolled floods, especially on the Eel River. They want not only flood control but the mean s to meet their own increasing water and recreational needs. Central and Southern California al so stand to lo se in a major way if 42 percent of the slate's total water resources (which the three rivers represent) are fenced off permanently. The State Water Project -approved by the voters -includes devel opment of North Coast rivers, as need· ed, to maintain the yield of !he State Water Project and augment the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta through the projected Peripheral Canal. Fresh water to offsel the groy,•ing salinity of Colo· rado River water in Southern California is to come from this source. No proved alternative now exists, despite all the yield in sight from desalted sea water and recla· mation of used water. First in line for development in support of local flood control and recreation, as well as augmenting sup-- plies lo lite De lta and Southern f:.aliJornia is the Dos Rios Dam on a branch of the r:eJ River. ' l~overnor Reagan suspended <'Onstruction of the Doi. Rios Dam in order to re-examine its intpact. 'l'his action \vas reasonable. Soi~ a bill introduced by Sen. Randolph Collier (D-Yreka). Collier's bill calls for basin-wide studies of multi-purpose benefits to be had from develop· ment of some rivers as well as the need to fence off 1ome free-flowing rivers, or sections of them. '. ··~ .,, • .,, ~'t:-·~ These are the residents of the seven counties in The Collier plan certainly is a more moderate and broadly beneficial approach to statewide needs than the misguided and shortsighted proposal of the "wild rivers" enthusiasts. ~WE SHO!llD HA'lt DfVf LOPlD m A$.M. ~YSTfM FOR lHAT H-~00'6. ~ A nswerin g S ome Queries From R eaders An1wer5 to Readers' Queries~ "Dear Mr. llarris: I hl!Ye tried looking lip the word 'Rubaiyyat' in lour die· tionaries. and have failed to find it. Why i.11; Omar Khayyam 's poem called the 'Rubaiyyat' and what doe! that mean?'' -C. L., Penna. "Rubaiyyat" is the plural of the Perl'iian word "Ru- bai." and me a 11 s "quatrains." A quat- rain ill simply .a poem with four-IJne stanzas, and Omar's poem is a long col- lec tlon of such quat- rain~. or "Rubaiyyat." "DEAR flfR . HARRIS: Why do AO man y wrilers and speakers toda·y use the word 'o verk ill .' and v.·h11t does il mean? J1 ow is it possi ble 1o overkt!I anything?" -J, B H , Oregon. "Overkill " in modern mili tary parlance means tht capacity to dtstroy the toLal population or an area or country lO many time~ over. For once, both the L.: .S. :ind the Soviet Union ha ve the des truc!1ve rapability In wipe out each other" population HI or I ~ times over : Jninllv t he~ forces ha\C the equivalent of 40.()00 pnun<ls of T\'T fnr t>Vf'rv man . "'oina n and ch1lrl 1n both cou11lrlc~ .. DEAR ~TR. HARRIS : Do vou agree \\'ll h some cri1 1cs of nur national policy lh3t we l;l\'C loo muc h aw;;y in the form (}f fnrc11'ln aJrl'''' -Jl. B . Io wa. \\'e ha \ e rcduC'!'rl ou r fore1sn ecnn om1c 11 !\'~l!\'lancr lo one·fortielh of thP SmQUnl 1.1r spend on arma1nenl.~ annually, although we are by far the world 's t Dea r Gloomy Gus Politica.1 enemies In Congress are friends on one issue: Th• heroin menace. Maybe Nixon could get some progress out of the Demo- crat-cootrolled Congress if he'd re- name his programs -like Heroin- Welfare, Marijuana-Housing and LSD-Inflalion. -D. T. S. Tiii• ''""'' ... ~. ,,....... ...._ ... , ...e1111rU1 111911 11 I~• M-IW. 1 ... 11 '"'' HI tHn " 0-r Gu .. Dt liY P!lll, richest country, we rank only eleven th among aid-givers in the amount I.he U.S. ct'Xltribut~. measured as • pcrcentagt of national product. Our l'lelf-image of tht U.S. llS tht '•great philanthropist .. is a s.:ntimenlal illusion amoog a peoplt who constitute only 6 pe.rcent or the world's population and consume more than 40 percent of il3 resources. "DEAR MR. HARRIS: We are !lltu- dying 'legislative reform' in our high ~hool class, and would like to know what you think might be th! most ef(ectivt reform we couJd work for?" -N. P., New Jersey, The wors t trick pulled by the U.S. Senatf> is the device o( atLaching a •·rider" to a bill , when the Mder is legislation on some lotally unrel1ted ~ub­ jttl. This has the effect t itller or killing I.he main bill or slipping through A rider nnl in the public interest Such sltazy and undemocratic procedur~ shou ld be <ibolished hy Jaw. "OEAR f\IR. HARRIS: \Vhv rin museums conti nur. to sto re so ·much ul't le!.5 Junk in space that coolri be. t.aken up by more meaningful exhibits ~" -A. r-.· . 11 l. When t:. of Wisconsin sc1enti.c;U wanttd ~.o find ou t ·why predatory birds were in ri<1nger nf ext \riction. they examined thousands of 'useless· tmpty egg shells ai the f ield f.1useum and learned that air pollution was thinning the she ! 1 s, resultlng in more breakage and less hatching . Dr. Rallison as Censor To Lhe E'.ditor · So the Orange County Board of Educ;i. t1on is in :i dilemma over Joan Baez'!ll book, "Da ybreak .. r ·Baez Book Stirs Up County Trustees", July 2 ~. Certai n members of the board want the book ttnsored out <lf the Orange County .!Choo! library systems while others wish to ap- prove it. I agree with the members that v.·1sh !o approve it. Dr. Dale Rallison , a Santa Ana denlist 11nd a board meml>er. i.c; s~arhcading lht attack to censor lhe book . As a member CJ! the John Birch Society. Dr. Ral lison ghould realize 1.he rights guaranteed Jn our Constit11tion . The first Amendment ln the Bill or Rights .set5 forth the right of evtry Am erican to read what ~ or she choose!!. 1,,i~. A!I anyone can ~. con- tradlcL'll the very fll!ISenCe of the word censorship. AND SlNCE Wit.EN doefi a sant..a Ana Qu.otes Or. Earl Cbtlt. formtr Vice Cbuullor, lJC Berkeley -"Many businessmen have struggltd with th'-problem that if their hu~ineu kurvives I wage nr tax increase, that ls proof 1hat 'profit11 "''ere loo high .' So. too. v.·e In higher education havt the pwiblcm th&l ii the projected budget Is cut. 11nd we ~urvive. 'lhcrt w11s (at in the budget'." • \ Mailho~ ' J Letters from readers orr wtlcorM. NormalL11 writtrs should conve 11 their messages fn 300 word1 or le.11. The right to conckmc letters to ff' space or eliminate libel ls rcrcrvecl. AIL Ltt· ters mwt includ.1 signatur1 and mail· i·na address, but rinmei ma11 ba with· 111!/d on Yequest if Sl'fficient rta&on Lt rippar1nt. Poetrv will net bt pul>- lishtd. dentist have '1he right to decide what ~hould be censored and what d\OUldn'ti Do he and a fN olhl!:n like him control the influi: of every book contained tn th4! Orange County iChool JYslem? l tin· cerely hope not. Or. Rallis(ln wtnt ori lo say th.al ''Daybreak ia of poor literary qu allty." If every book 1n the acbool syatem lh1t IJ of poor literary quality were rtmovcd from tht shelvea, its book populaUon would be rech.iced by about 25 percent. Beskles , it is only one man's opinion concerning the (!Uality of tM: book If he doesn 't like it. ht doesn't have to read It; but M doesn·t hAve the right to ttll ua I.hat wt can 't either. CHRIS BRODERICK - It ls lnaportant to Mal'e Distinctiotts Vietnam Error vs. High Motivation In the wa ke of the Pentagon paper,, demands are being heard for a reex- amination of Ameri ca's whole foreign policy since World War 11. The argumenl is that Vietnam was not just a single aberration but a dire c1, logical, almost inevitable consequence nf lht U.S. "obsession" with (}pposing cont· munism in the v.·orld . As <lnc cril1C', Senator McGovern , puts ii, ", .. \Ye set out on the assumption that we had to send American troops or American military equipment, or do whatever ~·as necessary to combat a Communist revolutionist no matter where he i;howed up and no matter how corrupt the government was that he v.·as revolting against" TH.E CRITTCISM IS justified as far a.~ lt goes, and the Nixon administraUon is right lo impose limitations on the U.S. world role. Nearl y t veryone. ourselves included, now believes that the Johnson administration's vast enlargement <lf the U.S. role in Vieln am was a mistake. And certainly it did derive from a general concern for Lrying to help people keep I rom being taken <lVer by the Com· n1un1st~. But that molivalion Is not 110 11p- propnaLe indictment or the na11on·s en· tire anti-Communist foreign policy. Viet· ' ' Guest Editorial ' .. nam was a mistake not because of Washinglon 's intentions but because . for lhe soundest <lf military and other reasons, it was a most unfortunate place to choose to make a stand. Ao overall pol icy of opp<is1lion lo Communist ag· grandizement in the world should not mean that the U.S. automaticall y fights it oot wherever the enemy th reatens. The errnr Wtll'I <lf t•ourJC com pounderl as the American mititaty commitment ~rf'w rapidly out of proportion Lo any realizable f{ains. GRANTING ALL THAT, the fact re· mains that if the U.S. had not pursued it11 broad an ti.Qlmmunist policy. the wor!rf would be in 11 much sorrier state than 1l ia today. People understandably tend to for~et the <lrigins or the cold war. Indeed, some nf the so-called rev isionist historians have been assiduously engaged in Al· tempting to make it appear that th! U.S. was al least as responsible as the Com- munfsts for the cold war. Ira not ao, as anyone oo the scene a quarter-century ago nughl In be able 1.n testify. The U.S. made unwise decisions :it Yalta and Potsdan1 : their unwisdom, however, consisted nol in thwarting Com· munist power but in easing its path. Even so, il wa s beginning In dawn on President Roosevelt before he died that Stalin was 1o:oing to be a very tough costomer in the post-war era. THE SOVIETS lost no t i m ,. dcmonslrallng just hov.· 1nui;:h. They rlisrupted Berlin anrl sought in every way short or direct military attack lo take ovrr all o( Germany. flt>fore Ion!!; thrir 1ntnions seized Czechoslnvak1a -the f1rsl time. that ls. Thi.~ outrage wa~ so fnj!h len1ng in It~ impl ications for \Vcstcrn l~urope !hat it J.?reatly helped prop<'I the formation nf !he North Atlantic Trca!y Organ11ation. v.·ilh the U.S. and its nuclear shield the dominant member. NATO notwithstand- ing. it i~ by no means improbable that Stalin might havt' unleashed the Red Arrny against Western Europe had he lived a few years longer, Is It to be seriously sug,i?esteri that lhe L'S. !ihouh1 not have involved itself in the rffnrt tn save \Yest.em Europe from com· m11n ism'.' tltEANWH ILE THE Chinese Com· munis\s, facilitated by lhe U. ~. govemmcnfs blundering endeavor to ef· fe ct. a coalition government. had taken over the mainland, The U.S., a Pacific power . \vnuld have heen irresponsible not to view that de velnpmen l with CQncern; the threat to Southeast Asia ei;.pecially was obvious. ll is often said. well , !he Chine se Com· munists never did move sou!h afler all. This overlook.c; thf'1 r 8cUvilies in th• Korean war and their nol inconsiderable supporl of lhe Communists in Vietnam. Beyond tha t. a question: Would th• Ch ine.Sf' Reds have hC'cn sn "docile'' if it v.·ere not abundantly evident that UW!. U.S. might resist an effort to conquer all Southeast Asia ~ NONE OF Tll ESE circumstance3 l!:l· cuses the nllshandling of America'1 Viel· nam involvement, certainly not th8 deception underlined rn Lhe Pentagon papers . At a t!n1e whr.n many American· (]agellator.s are .snunding 1Jfr, however. it i.c; important to inake rii.stinction~ between a specific n1 isappl1cation or policy and the high n1 otiva!1on -nnthing less than human freedom -ol tht policy itself. \\'all Street Journal Food Fears Are Largely Unjustified "A llhou ~h our food suppl y ha.s nP ver in history bet'n m<lre abundant. vaned, or aafe, the consumer 1s running scared," WTites Dr . Melvin A Benarde W1 ThP Chemicals We Ea l 11\merican Heritai.te Pres5, $6 % 1. The~ fears ri re largl'ly un· JUst1'1ed . Dr. Benarde contends. and he. presenl'> persuasive -and reass uring - evidence lhat the public has overreacted to press reports about the danger of pesticide re sidues and chemical additives in food s. ln The Chemicals We Eat. J)r. Benarde nffers a balanced view o( the situation. "1 do not mean to imply thal I oonsider chemicals in food" trivial problem." he "''rites. "I do nol. On the other hand, I Am not worried by their presence -and neither should you bt." His book explains why. TO PUT THE WHOLE que:;t1on into perspoctive, Dr. Ben.arde points out that ,;ill living things art composed or chemicals which are no less chemical lhan a food additivt synthesized in the laboratory. Moreover, a great many natural foods cont.a.in potentially toxic chemicals. F<lr example. cyanide Is present in lima beans, but il is deac- tivated by the heal of cooking. And com· mon table salt is essentia l to ILfe, yrl a large amount absorbed in 11 !'lhort limt would prohably klll the ea1er. Dr. Btnarde drfines in layman's term!'l many of the chemicals that are added to By G eorge--~ Dear Gcor1e : My husband re fuses Lo take b1 th.11; because hf' uy "I'll gf:lt 1 cold." Do you havt any auggestlons? DISGUSTED Dear Disgusted : How cloe.s he feel 8bout being sent to the dry cleaners? j Stnd your probltms lo George 11nd lel him do your worrying for you . frte )'Our mind and allow yourself to think up ntw worrie1.) • The Bookn1an food, and he describes why they ;ire U.'ll'.'rl. and how I.hey function. These additives include t1weeteners, flavoring, coloring, lhirkcning, firming and leavening agenlS, ;ind many other categories. TO ILLUSTRATE how an Add111ve can improve food . the author reminds us that not Jong ago peanut butler separated inlo 011 oo I.Op and a gummy glob <lo the bot· tom-which had lo be mashed l&gethcr bef<lrt use . TClday chemk.;il emuls1fler!I have made J)!!anut bulter ~ ,qnd many l"llher prOOucts -instentty usable. In fact, without additive~ a whole range nf convenience foodi; on which we h:ive come In depend would cease lo exist. "FflOrl 8dd1Lives are a:oi saf~ as it is humanly posslbl!! to n1<1 kP then1 ," Dr . Renarde asserts. "Because nf Lhe ex- tremely low levels of addH ive!i used in food s t'normou.~ quantilir.c; v.ould have to hr inges1NI at one tin1e 10 produce ad verse effects" llr outlines the ex- haustive testing pmcrdures that the food and Drug Adm1n1strat1on requires or manufacturcni ht'forr an additi ve can be: certified for human co nsumption . AS 1'"0R PESTICIDES, evidence in- ri1cates that the "pesticide residues we ar! absorbing do not represen t a health hazard.'' Dr Benardc c11scus.ses the con· tradicLions inherent 1n 1he peit1cide con· troversy. On the one hand the public cno· rlemns pesticides ycl .it the. same time 1t worrie~ about future famines. To feed the "'Orlct's explod ing population, more Where Federal Taxes Go The averagt federal tax burden per household ln 1.he fiscal year beginning .Ju- ly J will amouol to an estimated $3,16!i. up $24S from the 1971 burden . On lhe basis or 1972: federa l budget spending by program. the largest part ol the household t11x load stems from national defense, $1,070. Righl behind -by SJO - la estimated 11pending for health And welfare (including llOCia\ Insu rance) - Sl .060. On tile. 1amt per-program basi.c;, lowest per household expeo<iiture, f-44 , is ror space research and technology. The :ivrrage lax burden includes individual income And ~lal security taxes, federal exclsC. and "fetlcral \axe~ collected fn)l'n business but pa id In part by consumers. Tax 'Burden Per Hou~tbold TOTAL ........................ $3,115 National Defense . , . _ •. -. • . . . . . • .. .. .. • • .. 1.070 Health and Welfa re (Includes Social Jn~urance) •. . .. . . .. . .• .. • .. .. . .. 1,060 IntertSl ......................................... m Commcrct: and Transportation ....................................... , 151 Veterans' Benefits and Services •. , , .••••......•••.......••• ,, , , ..•.. , 147 Education and Manpower Training , ... _ ........ _ .•••••••.......••... , . 12% Special Allow1nccs .............. , .. , , ................ " ••••• ,,.,.... 12 Agrlculturt and Agricultural Resoorcl!s ............................. •o Gener1I C'.ovemment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • • • . • . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . 69 Community Dtvelopmcnt and tlou:;in& • .. . . . . . • .. .. .. . ............. _ 62 Natural Resources ...... ..................................... !t9 lntcm11 tlon1t Affaini 11nd Finance .................................... 54! Space Research 11nd Technology , . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 (Undlstrlbultd 1djust.rncnts-lntcrgovemmcn~l = -$IO!n Tax f oundation. Inc: . and more food most b(' produced and lhen prnle<:ted 11nrll 11 c-an he harvested, processed, marketed , bought, and e.11Len. How i$ lh1.c; tn be done without pesticides'! Dr. Bcna rcle ri~votr~ a l'hRpler to "~'oods nf the Future" 1n which h• discus!'ics irradiation as a means or preserving fresh foods. :is well as the po._.;;sib1litics of usinR flou r made n( ground whole fish as an inexpe nsive pro- tein source , and of spinning soybean fibe r to crea te protein-rich artificial meat.~. 111E AUTHOR CONCLUDES with 11 plea to food scientists to keep the public better informed. and to recapture thei r subject from journahsls and politicians. Dr. Benarde 1s a professor of Epidemiology and Community Medicine at Hahnemann f\1edical Colle~ and Hospital in Philadelphia. Jn addition to many scholarly articl~. he has published three books. Race Against famine. Our Precarious Habitat, and Dislnfe<:tion. and conducted a· t.e It vis Io n show, "Environment aod Health." He is a Fellow of the Ameri can Public HeaJth Association and of the British Royal Society of l:lcalth. Born in Brooklyn; New- York, Dr. Benarde now lives ln PrincfP ton, N. J. with his wife and three children. Au D. Dalt ---iliiil- t'riday, July 9, 1971 The editorial page of th.I ~It Pilot Jf!tk.t to infoma 11nd ~ ula&c reader1 by prestndqi &Me newspaptr11 opinions and CO'f'll.- mentor11 "" topica of htttt11t and aigniffconct, b~ providing n f~m for the c:rprcsrion of our Yt:ader.s' opinions. and b11 presenting the d.itlfrst tMio- polnU of ln/omcd oblfrt.'11'1 (Jnd spokesmen on topiC# of «h• do11. Robert N. Weed, Publlsbor --~- . _,........__ ,, ... I,,._.,, '_.. -. ·---• --~ ·--,. ;~;__;:;:=:: .::=::;:~ • ,..----~ .... ~ ..... -"' -.. -. ..----·~ n -AIO· ,,_... '"* rif .- ·----~-----_.._ __ -------_,,_~ . ~ -..... "Ll-· . .... ---~~ ... , ... ,..__ -.: - frld.,, .11.1/y IJ, 1971 OAJL Y PILOT 5 Tooth Ad States Wielding Ax 'Tough' -Nader Welfare .Payment,S to Needy Cut Cycle Hoppers Ul'I TtltJl!llt Bike enthusiasts debark in San Francisco from a 'Pedal Hopper' bus which the Alameda Contra Costa Transit District inauguated Thursd ay with a pair of s pecially converted buses, each with space for 24 bikes and r id ers. Lockl1eed Air Loa11 Presst1re 'May he Bluff'-House U11it WASHI NGTON !UP!) Ralph Nader Thursday asked the Feder2J Trade C-Om- n1ission to requirf! cautionary labeling that toothpaste con- taining stannous !linJ fluoride will slain teeth a light brown. Nader also say1 Ccilgatc with MFP (mononuorophos- pl\ate ) is falsely advertising il~ product as a "tooth tough- ener." About 40 percent or all toothpaste sold contains stan- nous nuoride, a decay - retarding additive. The most widely sold brands are Crest, Stripe and Pepsodent. The Procter & Gamble Co .. Cincinnati, manufacturer of Crest. disputed Nader's cla.ims made in 21 letter to the PTC Thursday. Procter & Gamble said the source material for Nader's allegations "are over four years old. lahd) refer to staining of debris and other material on the teeth which i.hould be and normally are r em ove d "''ilh proper brushing.'' Nader cited studies publish· ed in the British Dental Journal in 1967 and the Journal of Public Health Den- li.slry in 1970. ··\''e are ealling your at- tention to the danger of looth :staining from a product v.•hich should help to clean teeth!' Nader said. '·This danger ex- ists in all stannous nuoride loothp86tes. A warning should be given on toothpaste tubes to alert the public to these WASHJJ'\GTON (UPI) The Nixon Administration has leaked a memorandum to newsmen showing that welfare payments to needy families are being cut in JO states and under consideratioo for cullini in al least 12 other.!. The document appears not on ly to confirm a suspt:cted na1ional trend in money·slarv· ed states but offers new wio· dow dressing for President !l;ixon's welfare reform plan, which woul d get .a federal floo r under v.·elfare payments. Prepared by the Health, :-iolons Seeking Veto Overturn \\'ASHINGTON (UPI) -Aii z.l.tempt will be made in the Se:nate next wttk to overturn President Nixon"s veto of a bill !hat would have fought unemployment by creating 200.000 public v.·ork~ con- struction jobs. Backers of the move were pessimistic they could put together the necessary two- thlrd.!i majority vote to over. ride the veto. WASHINGTON <AP) A House Banking Committee !taff report suggest.5 thal pressure for a $250 million government loan guarantee to save Loc kheed Aircr11ft Corp. and its jumbo jet airbus may be a bluff. hazards." for the guarantee, was given liliiliiliiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij:=::::::::::::::::::::==::;;::========== committee members at a clos-/1 ed meeting and not made public. However. the contents have become known. Continuation of Loc khee<l"s program to build the LIO\ I airbus may not depend on the guarantee. the report said. or alternatively there may be in· formation not yet made public "that the LIO! I is not as good as the advocates. . _ .say 1l ''·" "'It sppears clear I.hat it is basically the Br1ti.5h gov ern- ment that is insisting on the guarantee," the report said. The aircraft"s engines \YOuld be provided by Britain's Rolls- Roy~. v.·hich suffered finan· cial collap.5e. The report. critical of lhe Nixon administration proposal Judge Says He Won't 'Play God ' CINCIT"NATT (UPI) -A judge ruled Thursdoy a teen- age girl afflicted with cancer ha!'i the riRhl to reject an operation thal might increase her chances to li\'f' JudRf' Benjamin Schwartz of the juvenile rourl said he "refused to play Goel." His ruling came on a peti· tion by doctors. \\·ho asked Schwartz to require the 16- ytar~ld girl afflicted v:ith bone c211cer lo submit lo the amputation or her rlght leg. The judge said the uniden- tified girl and her mother knew the consequtnces of their action and "it is not up to the court to thwart tht:lr wills." '"The doctors said radium had been tried and they believed it best to remove the leg from tht hip down t.o pre- vent the spread of tht dil!U!ie,·• the judge said. "11le chances of her comin& through the operation guc- ceasfully would be about 20 to 30 puce.nt If she does nothing further, the chances of her rteaverfng would be 2 to 3 per- cent" Teamsters Nrune Boss MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (API -Frank E. Fitzsimmons has been elected to • five year term u prHident ef the world's largest labor uruoo. t h e two -mllUm -member THriitttra ullion. Fltalmmons wu named to I.be Poet by acc la m 1t ion 1bunday wbto hl11 only op. pontnt, 'J'heodore t>aley of Yonkar1, N.Y., wlthdrtw after the roU c::all started. Aftt r hig election to lht $12$,000.a -year prtsidency of the TeamAl.tr.!1, fituimmons 11ld former Prealdent Jameg R. Hoffa would h1vt no rolt in ut1lon '1dminlstr11Jon .. The report snys the ultimate liability of the government. in case the loans are defaulted, could exceed S.100 million. Some provisions g1\·ing lhe governn1ent priority ov er other debtors may be unen- forceable and potential loss of jobs if lhe airbus project ls abandoned may be overestimated, it adds. ' t~. ,,. ... - " I I I Enroll Now Fall Semester • . I • t· • "'' c•rt: l'our Chl')·.i«-1 .. )'l!"ll.llllh dHltn .. "C1u1c we: know if 1f'1i"rc: h•rPY -..11h thr -..1y ••c ~crv1rt )Our prtr.tnl u.1 you"IJ <"Omf r>;ick and bu) your nc\t (If from ll\ 100. So -"c try 10 kttr 1•11r 1rr•·1n: line' short 1nd ou1 rtorlc co11!!eou\ \\'e 11m re> Jo rhc "f>r~ Tl!hl lhc lint tlmc. And"' Jt,n·1 01 cn.h1rgc: !Of ,..h11 -..c\c \Jone AnU .\tf'"l•"l: kn"I all '''' tire 1bou1. ttlbc:r. \lie UN rnNJ~b 10 hirr c:ou!ltoUJ u.lcinicn lo 1n1•·cr an )Ou r quricionJ and tbu-<o. \OVJUU tM car you want And •rt care enough to So n1·cr )OUt nt"" c•r .,,.uh 1 fl.11<-1M1h comh bff01r )OU dn1 c 11 11111 IA"c CJ re' Try U) -)Olil"U •ce All·DAY CLASSES Kiaderprtea thni 8th Grade • Te1chinf Hu: .C It's: with pbo11ic s • Door·t•Door Bus Servict • B1for1 ud Atttr School Cart • llnonab'8 Tlitio1 .... ••-"'- f'n Pount.ain Valley 16835 Brookhurst Street 962-3312 HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS Keep Your Ch ildren In Good Hends WE-CARE PACKAGE Plymouth Duster. A•I. 1houl 'f!Klal prita llO": l'.>!J'l<r 1 tkr com~,, 1h11 • >mlll '"""lh, •rl big rrt0u[lh. Sm•\! •rtOuJh In ---· N lo"' rnc..t. r11y rin '"· ... y" dn ..... , .. , 10 ,,.rt. l is UIOl.lgll 10 u 1t ~..., "' mmforl. ,.,,., l 1to.11~1!Cl>fl, 1nd fl& II-~ IO I ll'luch "'''" tlf •~r Chr,.skr-Pl.ymouth Dealers. Costa Mesa Huntinqton Beach Atlas Chrysler -Plymouth, Inc. Huntington Beach Chrysler·P~mouth --0 2:."mlll 2929 Harbor Boulevard 16661 Beach Boulevard • >.., __ _ --· r ..... --•' '---·-···•··--• ---·-·-fl/•• - . ---~-·· --·-·-- Educatioo and Welfare Depart- ment (HEW) the summary of trends in wt:lfare pa)'ll\tnt levels reports possible cuts as higll as 48 percent in New Hampshire if the s t a t e legislature does not approve a $13 million welfare budget. A r I z on a , Calilornia, Con· necticut, Delaware, Idaho, lllinoia:, li-1inue:sotJ , Oregon, Pennsylvania, Te1as and Ver- mont, in adCUUon to New Hampshlre. payment boosU. S&ld the report to HEW U n d e r Secretary John G. Veneman. The 10 states w h e r e paymellis lo welfare clients will be cut lhi.s ytar are Alabama, Georgia, Kansas, Maine, Nebraska, Ntw Jersey, New 1.1exico, Nt.w \'ork, Rhode Island end S o u t h Dakota, according to the memo. On the other hand the rtport shows fivt states and the District of Co l umb i a in· creasini payments in their proarams ol aid to families w:ilh drpendent children. and two others considering in- creMes. "I think a secondary effec t of this mt:mo is further sup- port for welfare reform," :;aid an administration spokesman. "The reason it was prepared, was to be responsive to ques· lions we art certain to get in the Senate. This is supportive to increa.std federal support for welfare." PoMible cuts loom I n Hawaii, Mississippi, Nevada, Ohio and Oklahoma are rais- in& bt.nt!Us, and Maryland and Wisconsin are considering Ht said the memorandum, dated July 2, so far bad re. mained internal except fGr its distribution to s e v e r a 1 newsmen. ' Now enioy barbecues the clean, easy rway! Coleman ® gas barbecue . for charcoal-broil flavor! 6888 RIG. 74.8& JUST SAY "'CHARGE 11!""' f For delicious barbecues without the work: -pick: gos! l ·spot ~g hting; odjustob1 e grote, controlted smok· ing. 2 83" g riill has room for 24 hamburgen. COMPLETE INSTALLATION AVAILABLE Add thi,.,wu1 glow of gas ligbts to yCi!lr llltry or patio! 29~t1AL Colonial styfe gas lantern mode of P<>f~loinized olvminum. Tempered gloss panes rtmoVe to d.an. Al SLIGHT IXTIA"Qt.uol' For fast cookouts deluxe Charmglow gas BBQ! With g<is, there's no rnMSy preparation! 2 levels let YOll cook and warm at some time! . '-Sllop IJlon.Sllt 'Ill 9:00. Su~ 12-SPM t..A CCNt!QA~~]g22 'TO!lt~ANCE ... ~·····-:.·~-"to.or.e 5'2-497 1 l"ULL.Pn"ON~ 7l 2500 NOR'WAU< ........... :..:.;-~i:.:···········~ ee&-0911 SANTA ANA·-·····-....ontln!l 5'7-M-41 HUNTINGTON 8 t.ACH Dnol'Oe 714-$92-1)6 11 MNORAMA Ct"r'I" ---Dhone ~211 V•NTURA .... D~• 485-5411 • 642-75'1 ROSEMUO.~······-·-·~ .573--3110 CANOGA PARK-..•.........•.. Cll"tor"lfl 883--ICXXI COVINA ...... p~ 966-7"41 l • ·~---------. -----:i -··--·- t .,. •• r I • l ~os-ta ·M,sa EDITION , Today's Jl'twal ' N.Y. Stoeks VOL M, NO. 163, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C:A:LIFO!tNIA FRIDAY, JULY 9, '·19j1 TEN CENTS NEW YORK (UPI) -They said good- bye lo Lou1~ "Satchmo" Armstrong today with a servi~ that sent the jaz.z rhythms of the New Orleans funeral song, "When t~ Saints Go Marching In," halfway around the world. Only 500 people could attend the funeral 1ervice for the great jau trumpeltr 1n the simple red brick Corona Congrega- tional Church in a quiet Queeil.'I neighborhood. But more than 1,000 ol Armstrong's State Dove Will Join 1972 Race LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rep. Paul N. ~1cClos key Jr., the mosl outspoken Republican critic of President Nixon's Vietnam war policies, 21nnounced today he will enter lhe 1972 California presiden- tial primary election "pledged to ending the war conditioned only upon return of the prisoners of war." "This will not be a s j n g 1 e issue campaign." the Sa n Ma t e o COtll· gressman said in a statement iss ued in advance of a news conference. "We seek In addition to ending the war ln restore tru th in government, to achieve a return lo historic Republican moral com· mitment on social issues rather than the present 'Southern Strategy' and a restoration of judicial e1cellenct and in- dependence.·• McCloskey, 43, thU.'J formally undertook e ca mpaign ht sa id ha would launch only if Nixon failed to change his Indochina policy and if no other prominent Republican entered the race as a peace candi dat e. ~1cCloskey, who has assailed the Presiden t's policies in speeches for months. advocating qu ick withdrawal of U.S. war forces, made no mention in hill formal statement of entering other primaries, such as the first-in-fue.nalion one in New Hampshire. The California primary is June 6. 1972. McCloskey said he would form and head his ewn slate. l\fesa Teacher's Trial Scheduled On Drug Charge Trial has bPen sel In Long B('ach .July 16 for a Costa Mes11. High Schoo! busin ess instructo r charged wit h two counts of sale of drug~ to students throu1:h c<impus contacts. Carlton Polk , 2!l , or Belmont Shore. \vas cirdered to appear at 9 a.m. in Depart· menl E of Los Angeles County Superior Court at hii; ,June 16 arraignment, when he pleaded innocent. Legal proceedings are held there because a team of Costa Mesa and Long Beach detectives took Polk into custody at home April '11, lo end a lengthy in- vestigation . Relatively small quanti ties of mari- juana, LSD, plus barbiturate and am- phetamine pills were allegedly con- fiscated from his Belmont Shore bachelor pad PolicP claim it was 8 popular hllngnut for romt sludtnts 11nd Allege they usffl one JR.year.old ~nior in the in- ve~tigatlon, 11lon11: wi th a i; p e c i a I operative nicknamed r\trs. Te(ny-bop- P"'- Polk has been free on $6,250 hail !lince he was arrested end ~uspended from teaching duties, pending di sposition of the case. Prisoner Has Real Problem Newport Bf-ach police go to all re.aoonable lengths lo protect I.ht health and welfare of th e i r prisoners but nothing could be done tor one Thursd1ty. Detective Todd Wilkinson 's !tr year-old arr:?lll!'e was asked about any ,.umenu or medical probltftl.! by jailers. before being booked on a burglary charge and admitted to a cell. ffe s.-Jd ht sulfer1 f r o m claustrophobia. the fear of beln& •confined In 1 llmltf!d 1p&ce. Attend Services for 'Satchmo' neighbors stood outside and hundred! of thousands ~·atched on television es 'Telslar beamed the service to 16 Euro- pean coun tries. Peggy Lee flew in from the West Coast lo sing "The Lord's Prayer ." for Armstrong·s wife of 29 years, Lucille, they sang "Just a Closer Walk With Thee." He had come 1,500 miles from his native New Orleans to win his greatest fame but like all those other jazzmen in Ground Broken the city where Dixieland was born. they played "When ~ Saints Go March.ing In" for Arm.strong, who died in hi.1 sleep Tuesday of a heart attack at the age of 71. Armstrong's wife and a former wife, jazz pianist Lillian Hardin, had said thei r private goodbyes earlier at a neighborhood funeral home. M r s • Armstrong, in black dress and shawl, cried quietly as she stood near his grey steel coffin. While officials broke ground. officially, Thursday for gym at Upper Bay Branch of Harbor Area Boys Club, Jack AfcA1anus twirled basket- ball and dreamed of September when SI 10.000 facility will be. OO)Tl- pleted. Gym is example or cooperation between community agencies. Boy5 Club is building It on city la nd adjacent to Upper Bay Branch' on Tustin Avenue in Costa Mesa. During school hou rs, it will be used by students at Nev.'port-Mesa school district's nearby Kaiser School. Service Statio11 , Pleclgit1g Just Gas and Oil, Denied A gas stalion which is a gas station Jn the t11trictest interpretaUon -or would have ~en -bas been vetoed by the Costa Mesa City Council, with faJr trade and free enterprise at issue. The Winall Oil Company station wou.ld have been the fourth at 191.h Street and PlaCf'ntia Avenue, repla cing one now closed. Representative s told COUJlcilmen Tues- da y it would sell only e:as and oil, wilh no oll changes. tire patching , spark plug cleaning or even pushes for cars on cold, damp mornings, charging the city would thus be engaging in rest.riclio111 of trade. He added that free enterprise is built nn competition and 1! one businessman can't s:urvlve unless annlher is kept out lben perhaps Costa ~1esa doesn 't need him. Vice Mayor Willard T. Jordan agreed but a motion lo appro ve the station went 3 lo 2 aga inst ii. with St. Clair and Coun· cilman Jack Hammett in the minority. 155 Mesa Vtiits Moumeni began arriving at late morn- ing at the church which i.! cooled only by f3Il.'I. AA temperature's rose to the high 80s, mbers banded out 1mall paper fans, some bearing a picture of the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Qut,,lde, neighbors remembered how Armstrong always wa.s ready to play at local clleritahle events. "He would never forget if he could help it. Goodwill am- bassador -th.a~ fits him very we!!,'' Mrs. Thelma Davis said. The list of honorary pallbearers. was ln Its own way, a tribute to the man who thrilled crowds in Belgrade, Acaa, Bangkok and Moscow with hiJ musical geniw and infectious grin. The list included te le vlal o n personaJities Johnny Canon and David Frost, Mayors John Lindsay of New York and Moon Landrieu of New Orleans, musicians Gene Krupa, Guy Lombardo, Lionel Hampton and Benny Goodman , columnists Earl Wilson and Leonard Lyon.~ and composer Harold Arlen. But Thursday for the moat part, wu the day when the unknowns wbo bou&hl Armstrong rtt0rdings by the mi!Uon.t paid their respect! to the dynamic s1nger and musician. By the thousands they fi led p.a.58ed hiJ coffin in a National Guard armory here -many weeping, some genunectm, and crossing themselves. Arn1strong's body was ,clad in a blaclf (Stt SATCHr.101 Pap Z) ual{e Roclis Chile 11 Cities Shudder; 66 Known Dead SANTIAGO (UPI) -Chile's worst earthquake since 1965, 11 1¥.i·minute tremor that reached 10 on the Mercalll gca!e of 12. killed scores of persons tG- day and caused widespread destruction. At least 66 persons were killed and more than JOO injured in the pre-midnight Thursday shock which was followed by at least 14 aftershocks that kept the country in suspense until dawn Friday. Casualtiell were estimated by the interior ministry. Alt of the casualties were in 11 cities along the northern end of the fertile cen· tral valley nestled between the Andes and the coast In this quake·prone land on the lower west coasl of South America. ln the port of Valparaiso, 25 were dead, Including 8 in the beach resort town of VirJa Del Mar. There were 1\ reported dead ID Santiago and 5 in San rtU!Se. Some were killed in accidwts caused hy panic, others by falling walls and debris. Three died i!'.I ll\apel, the epicenter of the quake. There the quake reached an intensity of JO. It was recorded at 6 in Santiago, the capital. President Salvador Allende declared the north-central zone a disa.:i:te r area. placed troopa on alert and ordered out extra·strength poli ce detachments to discourage looting. Allende took a helicopter early Friday to Valparaiso and ll!apel, Y.•hich was isol&ed by landslides on.the Pan American Highway, The quake wa!· fel t from Ar ica, on tbe Peruvian border, to Temuco. 1,400 miles lo the south. It was the country 's strongest qu ake since March 2EJ , 1965, whe n JOO persons y,·ere killed by .1 tremor also centered in the northern end of the central valley. Allende y,•ent on national radio to urge calm "the government of your comrade· president is here .... to help .... I ask you, citizens, I demand , stay calm." It was five minutes past 11 p.m. in San- ti ago when the quake hit. It began gently bi.l built up quick!y. There was a hor· rendous. subterranean grinding noise and the lights went out. Panic set in. Santiago shook for 1 ~~ minutes but farther north in the valley the quake lasted a mintue, 55 11econds. Panicky citizens, many In pajamas. ran Into the streeU. Flying gla~. falling facldes and cornicC! and panicky car drivers accounted for the first casoalties. Man y were injured falling down darkened stairways. In Valparaiso. part of ·th~ roof o! the Imperial Cinema fell in, crushing a spec· tator lo death a.nd touching off a stampede kl exilll in which an additional 30 persons were injured. The Cathedral of Valparaiso. damaged In the 1965 quake, dumped its dome down into the pews. • ATLANTIC OCf AN . .... . 0 400 .... U,I Ntwi MW THIS IS SiCTION OF SOUTH AMERICA HIT BY OUAKI Chile and Argentina Severely Shaken Let• Thur1d1y ' . Ellsberg Says Generals Held Bacl{ Tonkit1 Report \.YASHINGTON IUPI) -Daniel E!ls· berg. the admitted source Of the leak of secret Pentagon papers to newsmen, said today the Joint Chiefs of Staff with- held a vital report on the 1964 Tonkin Gulf incidents from then Defense. Secre- tary Robert S. McNamara, the Washing:. ton Star said today. The Star said Ellsberg, a former De. fense Department aide, sai d the Torikin Gulf rtudy was ordered carried nut by the Rand Corp., where Ellsbe rg served from 1967 to 1970. Ra.nd alao helped pre· pare the top secret Penf.agon study or U.S. decision-making in Vietnam which WA!!: lea ked tn newspeper k. Ellsberg told the Star the Tonkin study wa~ withheld from McNamara 's know- lfdge untll he was asked abou t It at a hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 1968, ''The study was dehberately withheld from the Secretary of Defense." Ellsbert was quoted as saying. "The Joint Chiefs didn"l want the secretary to see it ..• 11 had tapes of lhe secretary's conversa· tions overseas ." McNamara told the committee at the time he had not read all of the report because "I first ·learned of it a few daya ago when you asked for it." Ellsberg, indicted on f~eral charges of gtealing and turning over the Penta· gon war study docu ment.s to the New York Ti.mes and other newspapers, told the Star that. when be did so he "took It for granted that I would go to prison.'' But he said he now feels that becaas1 of legal ramifications. he may escape jail. Orange Cout Not only would It thus be quieter and more attracUve, but probably able to operate wilb leu averhead costa and more customer, volume. Councl!men asked Planning ~Director William Dunn wby the plaMing com· miui.on recomQ1ended denh1l and were told I.hat among other thing11 it was a questi oo of economics. 'Sea Port' Tract Proposed Weather ' The weatherman predicta Jaw clou ds and fog today and Saturdey, clearing by noon with temper•· tu.re.a along the coast around 711 and 90 inland. Lows of M decreea:: Commission members noted the three competing stations are struagling. "A ctlt·rate at.ttion would hurt them ," OUM said. upandina on the com• mission's f111dlng. Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley had alttady declared he didn't think Costa Mella netds another service staUon and especlaUy a fourth one at the same In· tersection. Councilman William L. Sl. Cliir ex· ploded, however, at tbe e<X1nomic pr .. teetion aspect "We're way off btse," be thundered, • By. TERRY COVlLLE 01 1M Ottly l'lllt IMll A I.SS.unit bouslll& tract h11s bee" pro- posed for the northern tiJ'I of what Colt1 Mesa officials hope might oae· day ~ come the city 's sea port. ; RJchard Ayres. a Newport Beach dt- velo~lj wlU ask the planning commis- sion MOnda}'r ~ approve .ht>rnQ an 34 acres of land north of Vlcklria Stteet, between Pacific Avtnue 111nd the Senta Aoa Rlvtr. ''We plu to ask the co mmission for 1 de lay In order to 1tudy the tract more," city Plannlng Dtrect.or WUJl.am t:Xmn said tod11y. "Not becluse d ,the hape for a marina, but because of many other prob- lem•." J:>Jnn said the Ayres• plan wruld take a sml'lll part of the Sanf.8 Ana River •• a.rel where a !?larlna-re!ldential area could be built.. "There's another 150 acrea llOllth. alOlllg the SantA Ana River, that could 1Ull be- come a marina,'' Dun n erplained. Eight years a,o a developer wa.nttd to. build a, marina Ull!re. but ne:•·er fol- lowed lhrougb on ii. Since that time die city haa k'"cpt the Marina projett alive as a vagu_e posslblJity. "It will be h.ard lo build Streets Into it." Dunn said of the Ayres-P,toposal. ''The only exit would co me out on Vic· torla , at the hottom ol the clilf, which 111 a rather danteroos art1." · Police 11nd fire Offitt•ls have alao tz .. prtglled concern thal t~ tracl Is lej)lr~t· , ..ct frnnf the "'st ol'c.osta~ Mewa ud WOQld mtk1·pollce 'nd f~e protection difficOlt . "It's also part of tht ireen belt master plan for the trl-1:0unty, Santa Ana River park project," Dliln added. Ayres alao wants to bulk! homes on S,500 square foot Iota, 500 IQUate feet llllaller than the city ~ndard. ~ said city planner• will he asked to hold off approval of Ult tract. ufttil It c:an be 1tudled In more dtPlh; "If it fa approved In the fat ure. it won't destroy .the marina drtam,·• D.lnn added. He allo t1ald the city would love to have AUCh a marin.-, but "It's an expen1lve and dlfUcult project. You have to 10 lhmlah thrN' to five •;tnciu JUlt for asri Ot"al." .lannlnJ oommU,,loner1...meet.at 7:30 p.m., lloiJdo.v ID city """'1ci1 cita mben, 17"F'alr Driw. In OOt.b areas; INSIDE TODAY Tht Pt1:gtant of t'ht-MBSU?'J and Fe1,.rool of Arts .o:pem ~· wetk in. Laguna BtaQl. "P.kturc&i and a stoTU o:rt In todov's Weck-· t nd(r, Pogt 2S. ... 11111 H C1llt•nlll 1 Clltdth11 '" 1 CllHllltol »-4' C-k• n C,.._. JI 0t1111 ""'"" • ·••1i.ri.1 .. _ • '"""''........ JWI ~l11Mc:t lt-U -.. ·-........., lJ _.,_··----~· ·-_____ ., -·-·• ,j ,.._ ___ ·-1' ~ • .,_i..•.-~-.... -.... ..., -~-·~-. ·~-•"In"> .. '···1"'"'.· ... --.... .-' -~. ,. ~ t • ' 2 DAit. ¥-PflOT C Rock Star Morrison Dead, 27 PARIS (U PI) -Ame ric1n nxk st.Ar Jim MoM'iSOn. 27, l.e•d s!na;er of "The Doors,'' wllo~ raw sexual on-1tage style m ade him an inl.f!rnation•I 1tar -and a dt:fendant in an obscenity triaJ -died of a .heart attack last Saturd.11y and was btp:ied secrelly in a Paris cemete,Y, police report-ed today. Police said MorriJl)n wa& discovt!l'ed unconscioUJ in the bathroom cf his chic apartment by Pamela Counon, :z.s. of Los Atlgeles, his companion for the past five ye.'.l.ra and reg arded a.s his common law wilt. "Miss Courson aaid when Morrison awoke last Saturday, he was not fee ling v.·ell," a police spokeaman aald . "He ask· rd -her to 1et a bath rudy and then entered the bathroom. '~Not hearing any noi!e, Mi!s Courson later opened the door to find Morrison lylr.g unconscious in the halh." The olficer at the precinct for the fourth Arrondluement, a fashlonable district Of Paris, 111id MorTlson was dead when a poUce ambulance arrived at his apartment. He said a doctor later issued a certificate attributing death to a htart attack. The police officer 1ald ~forrison was buried Wednesday in the hisU>ric Pere Lachai.se cemetery. one or the oldest in Paris, in private aervlces arranged by 1tiiss cOunon. The services were at- tended by only a few cline friends. A record Industry spokmnan said Mor- rison wu m Paris writing a book. State Approves Coast Schools' Vocation Plan By RUDI NIEDZJELSKI OI IM OlltJ l'IMll llllf State achoo! officiala tOOay gave their blessing to a \'bcaUonal education pro- gram that v.·ould pool the reM>urces of lhrtt Orange Coast School districts. The program, known as the Regional Occu~tlon Program (ROP), was ap- proved by the state Vocational Education C-ommittee and the state Board of Edu- cation. It liilks the Huntington Beach Un ion High School District, the Newport-Me..!la Unified School District and the Tustin Un.Ion High School District. Jac~~r, superintendent of the Huntin Beach Union High School Dlstri , who along with two othf'r school men journeyed lo San Francisco to persuade bolh bo<lrds, said he was "thrilled " by the development. "We shouid have tilis program revved up. and ready to .start by this fall,'' he liatd. By linking the Huntington Be a c h district with the Ntwport·M~a Unified .School District and the Tustin Union Hi1h School· District student::; will ht able to take .advanttge <lf a greater variety of vocational courses. school officials said. "A student living within our district in· lerested in plutlcs technology is tmable to take classes in thLs field bec1use there 11re no COUt'Sa"I offered In our district." The net t step, according to Roper. \lo'Ol.Jld bt fonnation of a governing board from i;chool board membtrs of the three: participating districl'i. If the program is t1pprovtd by the Orange County 5Chool board. county supervisors would have the authonty to levy taxes for its operation. Schoolmen estimate it would cost lesll than one cent ~r SlOO of assessed valua· tlon, or about $75,000 for tile first year of operatioo. OAANG-1 COAST DAILY PILOT ClANGI! COAST P'UI L!IHINCO. C0M'AHV R.e lt trf N. Weed PrH :•tnl Ind l'ulllisfllr Jett. ll. C~rlev V1ao l'ruloll .. I ..... G.tt>w•I Mt NI .... Tllom11 K•1¥il f<llt .. n .... ,, A. M11•,~i11e M•"•l•"9 Ed•"" Ck1o11 11 H. Looi l!itll1rd '· Nell Auru1~. M l "IGl"D E~'""'' Ce•t• Mei• Offlc• JJG W11t l1v Slt••t M1ili119 Add1111 : ,.0 . l oo JSb O, '2626 OtNr omc .. H........,. 111~: Jll:i Nt~I B~: .... t<d L-tt ...... 8M<~: tr. FMI U ... ~ ... ... H11P!llf'ltl19.1 ltlc~: 1111~ 811c~ l 111lt Yt rd 511'1 '*"""It: as N..-11! 11 Ctmlno a;t.11 ,..., .... ,,, .. , 442-4J21 Cl-'"94 Athwrtftli .. ••2·1•11 Clrf<'ltfll, 1911, O•t .... Cett1 "'"'1>11•~1 ... °"""'""'· H• ,...,., '"'"''· 11i.n11111eo\t. "lll"'lel -!ttf' II' t dYOl"llM'ltll"1l ........ _, bo ,...,........ WlfMul 1.-Cltl l>fl• .. 1a1i..;i .: ~; ....... ,, ...,.., dlM ...... ,.111 t t ............ ~ .... c.!1 Mat, Ct!lterl>lt. ""9tf!flolloot '°f c-"'ler tt.H -·""'lvi ll'f !Nn tJ.11 _...,,, ""'"'-" d"llMI .... 11.tl~!~. • ll'•Cl" 0 -· • q =e:-· OAll.V I'll.OT Stt tt l'~ot. • '"!~ttO. ,...~ ... ~· .. '· Nixon Abandons Economy Target. WASHINGTON (AP\ -1'he Nixon Id· 1nJnistratlon l1as abandont'd, for all prac· t1cal purposes. iL'i target of a Sl.065- tril!io11 na tional l'Conomy 1his year, the most euntro1·ers1dl forl.'1.·asl 1n II~ Januarv CC'OfliHHlt.: t epul'! to Clingrt'ss. Dr. i•aul \\'. :O.h:.<:raf'kcn, f'h<1lr111a11 of J'resid"!'nl Nuion\ 1·ou 11l'1I of ~A"f'lnom1c Ad viser~ 1u1d l 'un1:rr~s T h u r s da y push111g 1h~ t·eu11u11L\ !011.11rd lh;j\ targt•l 1n the l;ist hti!f oJ lhc )t:ar l'Oultl al·- t·rlera!e 1nfl:it1011 l\lc.<.:ra{'\.;en aekno\\·ledgt•ct thc t!('OflOn1y in the first six monlh!I of 1971 fell belo1v thc ad m1n1~tration ·s fo recasts. "while in· flation has continued highrr and the rise of real oulput and employment ha\'e risen less than we expe1:ted ·· In Janu!lry. the ad1nini.~tration s<11d <:ross Natiooal Produ1:t. output of the na· lton·.s goods and services, should climb hy 9 percent this year 10 a total of Sl .065 trilliorL That kind of {;N P grov;th wa~ nttded, it sai d, 10 reduce unr1nploy1nrnt lo about 4.5 percent and inflation. as rneasured by GNP standards. to J perecnt b.\' mid·1972. ourselves. would be highly irresponsible." the chairman added, saying Congreu alre.ady has made the 1972 fiscal ye•r budget some $7 billion 1nore expansive than Nixon proposrd. ·.T Wliolesa.le Prices Rise 0.4 Perce11t \VASHINGTON IL PI! -\Vholesalc prices rose 0.4 pereent 111 June for the se- <·ond straight month, the government said Friday. 1ndJcat1ng little ehangr 111 Ille ad · 111in1stra uo11·.~ battle aga111sl 1nfla11on. \l'holesalr pl'li.:l' tncrri1ses generally r<'~ull ln higher retail pnees after aboul a 111ontl1 . A STRING QUARTET HAS COME TO THE ART COLONY TO FILL THE AIR WITH MUSIC From Left to Right Are Angela Juda, David Parker, Fay Ceu••Y and Ronny P1ul l\lcCracken •vas n1ore cau1ious about these predictions in tes\i1nony ·rhursda.v before the Senate-House E:conornic Com· rnitlee. saying only that the rising rate of inflation would decelera1e this ~·e<1r and unemployment would declinl'. The Labor Depar1n1ent's Bureau ol Labor Sta11st1cs said the over.all JJldex ;1d11ant:ed last n1<lnth to 114.3 percent ol the 196; figure . This n1eans it now costs $1 l ti to buy !he sarnc pac kagf' of whole- ::.ale goods that cos1 ~lU four year.~ ago. Beachgoers Get Serenade "There is ~danger that if n1oney GNP were now to\rise. or be pushed up. to reach !be targets previously put forward. that would revive inflation or at leai;t seriously delay its abatemenl." he said. McCracken said administration fear of an acceleration in the inflatioo rate was the main reason President Nixon chose to reject tax reductions as an economic stimulant. The increase in the m<lex for J une was II 4 percent both with and without seasonal adjustment. The index "'as J.6 percent higher than in June. 1970. For tile i;ix months from Qecem ber through Juflt'. the index rose af a seasonally adjusted annual ra te of 5 percent. 4 Harbor Areu Youths Hold Concerts on Sands "We are now seeing how difficult it i.s to remove the economy from the con- sequences of the inflation that was allow- ed to devtlGp from 1965 t<l 1968." he said. 'fhe bureau said wh olesale prices (If i:;roceries and other food ready for sale to 1he consumer rose 0.7 percent in June, but this is normal for this time of the ~·ear. After seasonal adjustment, food prices were unchanged from Jlifay. Adding & new note: or cultural color to the Art Colony scene these wetkends is a quartet of youthful Harbor Area nlus1 · clans treating beachgoers to Saturday and Suoday afternoon concerts of classical music "beca use we love to play." The young players got the idea from news .stories about San Francisco·s stroll· ing string quar!ets -groups of serious musicians combining thei r U.!ents in sidewalk concerts in the Bay City. Angela Juda and Ronny Paul. both 15· year-old students at Costa Mesa High School, playing violin and viola rtspec- tively, David Parker, 22. vloilnist and student at Orange Coast College. and Fay Cau.sey, 2(1, who attends UC Irvine and plays celln. decided they would like to make a similar contribution to outdoor culture <ln the Orange Coast. All n1etnbers of the Orange CoW'lty Chamber Strings. directed by their te2.cher. Adrian Holland , they practiced some classic siring quartets and took to lhe streets in Ma y. On weekend afternoons they play in Laguna's El Pase<> area, to an en- thusiastic, if occasionally somev.·hat damp and sandy wdience of beach fans and tourisLs. Saturday nights they play on Balboa Island and on Wednesday and Fri· tlay nights, more or less, they tun up by the carousel in South Coast Plaza. ln t.heir spare time they practiee a t each other's homes. Significance of New Red Peace Bid Probed WASH INGTON (AP) -U.S. <lfllcials say the. Nixon administration is .ponder· ing thetsignificance or a surprise new shift in llie latest pea~ offensive launch- ed by Vietnamese Co1nmunist leaders. The .shift is in the form or a demand for the ouster of <lniy President Nguyen Van Thieu from any future South Vietnamese government ready to negotiale an end of the war. Previously North Vietnamese and Viet Cong leaders had insisted that not only Thieu, but Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky and Prime t-.1inister Tran Thien Khien1, as v.·ell. v.·ould be unacceptable 1n a pQSt· Y:ar government. "For years Communist deleg!l!rs at thr Paris peace talk~ ha\·e been r:illinR f0r removal of thf' 'Th1eu.l\y-Khie1n clique: " one chploma1lc informant si11d. "They practically pronounrt-d ··n111.'U·I\). Khiem' a.s one v.·ord. Now t'.;cy'\'e begun speaklng only of Thif'u.'' The shift in the Communist posituin emerged after t-.tadamc Ngu~·en Thi Binh fresenled the Viet Cong·.~ latest pea~ package at the Paris conference July I. The proposal was for release of ell Mesa Transfers Duties.· to D As Crime has !'eached such proportions in Costa Mesa that cit~' prosecutors are Just gi"ing up on misdemeanor offrnses Only the District All ornt•v's Office is taking o~·er !est anyone get the wrong 1111· press ion. Cit.v CQuncilmen Tuescla~· nprir01·C"rl formal transfer of prosecution duties in- ~-olving misdemeanors to the iur1sd1cl1011 or locally-based deputy dil1trict attorney~. Cily Atlorney Roy June told coun- cilmen tile decision v.·ill reflect ·a large sav~ng in next year's budget He and bi.s staU will continue lo handle prosecution of municipal code violalions pips fJJher civil matters. Mesa Shores Up Wiring Standor<l Builden in C05la Mesa are now bound to adhere to provisions of the National El~trical Code by city ordinance Tht City CoWlCtl adopted lhe wirini;: re- quiremenlJ Tuesday, iafler diSC'Overing through an oversight lhty had 1echn1taHy bttn caught wilt! .Lheir st.anda rd.s down . They only adopted a few recent revi~ions In the code at 11 prior meetillg, not Ute entire package. prisoners held by lhe CommunisLs in the No rth and South by the yearend, cnn- current wit h withdrawal ef all U.S. troops. Her precise wor.ds: '"The U.S. government must really respect the South Vietnam people's rights to self-determination, put an end to its in· terference in the internal affairs of South Vietnam. cease backing the bellicose group headed by Nguyen Van Thieu al present in office in Saigon, and stop all maneuvers. including tricks on elections, ::iin1ed at maintaining the puppet Nguyen Van Thiru." Fi\'e da\'S later Le Due Tho. stnior !\orth ViCtnainese rrpresenla\1\"e in Parts. endorsed ~tadame Binh ·s proposal <1nd 1n an 1ntervi!'\.\' \\'ith thr Ne\.\· '\'0rk 1·1n1cs hBn1mered a1\'a \' at Thieu -and 'l'hicu only. lie ~aid 1n Part · "Al!hough 1! i<; noL arl1n1ltrd the whn\r 1vorld l;nows that Thlru has been put in power hv the US. administration. And the I 'n i!ed Steles wtl l have the decisive voica in the forthcoming elections. ··therefore if Mr. Nixon ls really disposed to settle the v.·hole problem of the war ... the question of change of the ruling group now in off ice in Saigon - het1ded by Thieu -is in the power of the United States ... The forthcoming elec· lion in South Vietn111m is an opportunity for Mr. Nixon to change Thieu.'' Mes a Councilmen ApproY e Trailer Playroon1 Slots A new feature lo co1nplemenl the n1ysterlnus. silver·gray Bentley hn1ousine parked orten outside Costa Mesa City llall ha!t been approved by the city coun· l' i 1. This one will be a bit less elegant. Councilmen agreed unanimously lo al· lov,r parking of a mobile traller playroom for use by children of mothers visiting the Orange C.Ounty Social Welfare Drparlment branch. Operated two days by the Newport Harbor Aasistance League and it.s junior auxiliary. the Sl.!lttens. the !railer playr.oom v.·ill ortly bf used lhrough 1\u,cu~t "\Ve could 1cqu1re tv.·o morr p1rking 1 c;paces for then1 by getting nd of the Bentley.'· qu!pf!td Conucilman Alvin l.. Pinkie~· So far. no one h•s breen able to deLerm111r who owns tht ~le1ant old car Its 011.•nership bas become lbe subject ef a guessing geme around the Civic Center. Ownership by 1 weUare recipient wa1 ruled out ('arty:- 1'heir repertoire now include.s about IO quarteU. ranging from baroque to modern, and drav.·ing heavily on such (·lassie stalwarts as 1-laydn, Mozart and Scarlatti. Though they do nol solicit money - •·\Ve play for enjoyment," says Fay - enthusiastic listeners often slip donations into the music cases piled on the sidewalk. Recently in Laguna a man v.•ho said he was a profes.sional .symphony 1nusic.ian asked 1.o. sit in for a number, and did so, b<lrrow1ng Ronny's viola. So far the quactel has no problenu with the author ities and little but praise from its S\l,l'prised, but interested audiences. "It's amazing how many people will !~~; a;:Yl·is·t·e:1n:f1r;:~~ !cw~: n~~; hope we'll come back." "'-1 . . J\'[esa Library Unit Gets 5-year Lease A new five·year lease on the building housing the Cosla t-.1esa branch of the county library at 566 W. Center Street has been approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The building is owned by Harry t-.1. Kelso. The lease calls for payment <lf $880 per month for tile 6,374-square·fool building. "T9 pennit the inflation to revive, for some short.run and doubtful advantage to Fron• Page I SATCHMO ... silk suit and pink shirt. Under his right hand was his trademark, a white handkerchief he had always used to "mop hill chops." placed the re by his wife . The mourners weJe black, wh ite, the young and aged of all walk.s of life. One middle-age black woman blew a kiss. A man placed a single rose on the casket. The battertd old con'ltt with wf'lich Satchmo launchtd his career was put atop the coffin by Arlie Siefert ··a lriend and admirer'' of Armstrong . "He was the finest that I knew of. His death is a great loss. His personality "·a~ 11ery pleasant, l think everybody loved him. l loved everything about him." said Mrs. Gloria Marker, a small gray.haired lady. Mrs. Sadie }lendricks of the BronJ, dabbed at her eyes with a h1ndkerchiel and said: "They'll never find another Satchfl]O. He was an original.., Ernest Broglin said he had been "rais· ed with Satchmo'' in a boys' home in New Orleans. Wholesale prices of fresh fn!it.<!. frr.sh and dried veget11bles. grain. eggs, live poultry and milk for reprocessing in· creased in June. Prices declined in meat, sugar and ('Onfeclionary and other dairy produ('lS. The industrial commodities index in· creased 0.2 percent in June, half the in- crease for May. After seasonal ad- justments, the June increase was 0.3 per- cent, compared with 0.4 percent in Ma y. Farm products increased 1.8 percent - 1.7 percent after seasonal adjustment - in June. ~ed foods and feeds ad- \·anced 0.3 percint, although following adjustment for ~asonal factors, ~ de<:lined O.S percent. · · LiJ&tock pn~ were down slff#tt. v:ittr' a drop in cattle prices more-fifan offsetting an advance in lambs and hogs. Holts Prices Boosted LONDON CAP\ -l\·l o1or1~L~ in !he 18- tnonth queue tor new Rolls-Royce cars ""'ill have to dig deeper 1n their pockets ror the new model. On the British market the price tag is going up $2,880, topping $24,000 for the first lime. Export price increases are to be announced later. l ncreased production costs is given as the reason. SALE CONTINUES CHINA R09 . $179.00 A ... ail abls In Yellow or Gr een SALi 169900 SALE FEATURES OTHER SELECT GROUPS FROM HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE -UPHOLSTERY, SHERRILL -MARGE CAR· SON -HENREDON LAMPS, PICTURES & ACCESSORIES ALSO RE- DUCED. DEALERS FOR : HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE HIWPOJT SJOltl O'IH ,ltlDAY 'Tll 9 NEWPO~T BEACH 1727 Wes tell ff Or ., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Prof•••lonel Interior Designer• Avell•ble -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 Nerth Ca11t Highway Phone: 494-6551 rtle119 Tell"" M•n of Or•"9f C•11"'1' -141·116) • __... ..... ..--..... -------··--~-...-..... --------· I ' . DARY P R OT EDITORIAL P~GE Local Taxpayers Hit Governor Reagan's record.breaking slash of nearly $~04 milLion from the 1971-72 state budget offered 1s a heroic act of tax savlng, comes through as ~ hard ~·hack at taxpayers at the local level . All protestations by the governor and his staff to the contrary, the heavy-handed blue-penciling means that local property taxpayers will probably have to pick up a_dded expenses for welfue, medical programs and pub- lic education. No respon sible authority in the slate outside the governor's staff wilt t'onfirm the governor's contentions. Bu~ ~h ose closest lo the problem -county and school off1c1als -have been nearly unanimous ln saying that fhe slashed budget inevitably means only a shift from the broad stale base to the narrov.· property base of the added cost of state-mandated programs in the three fields. The. Leg~slature can't escape some share of blame for the situation. to be sure. But the majo r responsibility now rests on the governor. His zeal to be able to make good his rash promise of "no tax increase this year" ap· pears likely to insure tax increases at the local level. The 'Wild Rivers' Debate Preserving as much of California's "wild rivers'' ~s may reasonably be possible is a laudable goal. A bill no\V. in the S~cramento legislative hopper 1vnu!d ~\'~II off 1n pcrpetu1~y as free-flowing rivers the Eel, Trinity and Klamath rivers of northern California. "·hich the three rivers are located. They are banded ~ gether as the Eel River Water Council, a result of the mum:rnulion dollar damage resulting from uncontrolled floods, especially on the Eel Ri ver. 1'hey want not only flood control but the means to nleet their own lncreasin& ll.'aler and recreational needs. Central and Southern California also stand to lose in a major way if 42 percent of I.he state's total water re~ources (which the three rivers represent) are fenced off permanently. The State Water Project -approved by the voter!I -includes development of North Co ast rivers, as need· ed. to maintain the yield of the State Water Project and augment the Sacramento·San Joaquin Della through the projected Peripheral ('anal. Fresh water lo offset the gro,ving salinity oC Coloa rado River water in Southern Calilornia is to come from this source. No proved alternative now exists, despite all the yield in sighl from desalted sea water and recla· n1ation of used water. First in line for development in support of loc.a.1 fl~od control and recreation, as well as augmenting sup- plies to the Delta and Southern California is the Dos Rios Dam on a branch of the Eel River. ' Governor Reagan suspended construction oC the Do!! Rios Dam in order to re·cxan1ine its impact This action \vas reasonable. So ii= a bill inlroduced by Sen. Randolph Collier iD-YrekaJ. Colller 's bill calls for basin-wide studies of multi-purpose benefits to be had from develop· ment of son1e rivers as v..·ell as the need to fence oft some free-flowing rivers, or sections of them. --- ···'="""' , ..... This bill is strongly opposed, however, by the very people who would, . .at a superficial glance, be expected to want the three rivers kept in their wild slate. These are the residents of the seven counties in The Collier plan rertainly is a more moderate and broadly beneficial approach to statewide needs than lhe misguided and shortsighted proposal of the •·wild rivers" euthusiasts, ~ (!)>~... ~""'t:-.·~ WE SH~ HAVE DtYELOPED m Af .M. >YSTfM FOR THAT H-~QY6." Answering S orrie Queries From Readers Answerw lo Headen;' Queries: "Dear Mr. Harris: I have tried looking up I.he word 'Rubaiyyat' in four die-. tionaries. aind have failed to find ii. Why i.~ Omar Khayyam's poem called the 'Rubaiyyat' and what does that mean?" -C. L., Penna. "Rubaiyyat" is the plural of the PersJan word "Ru· bai," and mea 11 s "quatrains." A qua!- rain is simply a poem wilh rour-line slan7.as. and Omar's poem 1s a long col· lection of such quat- rains, or "Rubaiyyal." "DEAR J\1R. HARRIS: Why r!o so many writers and speakers toda .v use the v.·ord ·overktll.' and what does it mean? How i.~ it possible to overkill anything?" - J . B. H . Ortgon. "Overloll" in modern mil itary parlance means the capacity 1n di!:st.roy the total population of an aft'a or country so many limes over. F"or once. both the U.S. and the So~·iet Union ha ve the destrucnve capabil11y to wipe out each other's population JO or 15 limes over: Jointly !he~ forces ha\'e the equ1.,,alen1 of 40.000 pounrl~ of TNT for P l rrv man, v.·oma n 80d child In both cnuntric5 "DF:AR !\lit. }!ARRIS: Do you agree ~ 1Lh 50mr cril lcs of our nat1nnal PQlicy that we Ji(I\ r too mLirh away in the f(lnn ()f foreign aid ~" -R. R , Iowa. \\le have reduCf'<! our foreign ecnnnm1c 11s~1s t1lnrP \o one-fo rtieth or lhl' amount v.-t" Sf'Jl'nd on armaments annually, although we .are by lar the world J t Dear Gloomy Gus Political enemies In Congress 3re friends on one issue: The heroin menace. ~1aybe Nixon could get some progress out of the Demo· crat·conlrolled Congress if he'd r~ name his programs -like Heroin- Welfare, Marijuana-Housing and LSD-Inflation. -D. T. S. Thlf l••l~rf ••llMll niHtl'I' "'""'" ... t -•U••llY ,,.. .. •I tho n1w~'"'· 1 ..... ""' "' -H V• M 41Hm1 8u., Dl llJ ,.It.I. richest country, we rank only eleventh among aid-givers in the amount the U.S. contributes, measured as a perctnLage of national product. Our self-image of the U.S. as the •·greal philanthropist" is • sentimental illusion among a people who constitute only 6 percen~ or the world 's p:>pulatlon and consume more than fO percent of lls resource!'i. "DEAR MR. HARRIS: We are !i1U· clying 'legislative reform' in our high school class, and would like to know what you think might be the most effective reform we could work for?" -N. P., New Jersey. The worst trick pulled by the U.S. Senate is the device of attaching • "rid er'' to a bill, when the rider is legisl ation on some totally unrel11ted sub- ject. This has the effect either of kilting the main bill or slipp ing through • rider not in the public interest. Such s)ear.y and undemocratic procf!dures shou ld be abolishecl by law ''DEAR P.IR . HARRIS ~ Why fin mu!'eumi-conllnue tn store so much useless 1unk in space tha1 could ~ tak!.'n up bv more meaningful exh1b1l.5?" -A. N , Ill. \\'hfn U of V.'isconsin scientists wanltd tn find out v.•hy predatory birds were in rl;:inger of t>xlincl1on, they ex~m1nM lhousonds or ·u.~e!es.~· empty e11.1: shells ;it lhP field ,\1useum and Jr;irned that 411r pollulion was th1nn1ni:: 1he sh f' l I~, resulting 10 more breakage 11nd les.'i hatching . Dr. Rallison as Censor To the Ed ilor : So ihll!' Orange U'.lunly Board of Educ.a. Uoo l!t in ll dilemma over Joan Baez 'll book. "Daybreak" ("Baez Boolr. Slirs Up County 1'rustees", July 2). Cert.ain member~ of the board want Uie book t~nsored out of I.he Oran~e County school library systems while olhe~ wish 1n ap- prove it. I agree with the members thal ~·ish In approve iL Or. Dale Rallison. 11 Sant a Ana rlenti~t iind a board mc1nber, is spearheading thll!' attack lo censor lhc book. As a me1nber ()f lht .John Birch Society, Dr. Rallison Jhould realize the rights guaranteed in our Constitution. The F'irst Amendmcnl in lhe Bill of Right<; sets forth the right ol ~very Am~ican to read what he or Yie chOO!lts. 1'hi.s. 8! anyone can set, c:on· tradicU the very essence of the word Cf!fl!OTShip. AND SlNCE WHEN does a Santa Ana Quotes Or, F..arl Cbelt, former Vice Chancellor, \JC Berkeley -"Many bw!ncssmen h11ve struggled w1lh the problem that if their bu11lneS3 11urvives 1 w11~e nr tax increase. that Is proof that 'protiL~ wcrt too high • So . too. we In higher education have Ule problem that If lhll!' projected budget is r.ut , 11nd we 11urvivll!', 'thtrt wiis fat 10 the budget'."' \ Mailbox. Letter! from readerr are welcome. Normall u wnters should conve11 their mr.~soge1 tn 300 1vords or ltss. The right to condense letters tn fit spdcc or eliminate hbet is reserved. AU lei· ters nutst include signature and moil· h1a address, but names mo11 be with· held '"' rtque,,t if su/ftcitnt tea.ton is op11are:nt. Poetr11 1uill not b• pub· lished. denllsl have !he right to decide wtu1t &hould be censored and wh•t 3houldn't? Do he and • f~ olhers like hlm t'Ontrol the inOu.x of every book contained In tht Orange County .echool syattm? I SUt· cerely hoPe not. Or. Rallison went on lo s11oy that ''Daybreak is of poor literary quality." If every book In the school 1ystem that i3 of poor literary quality were rl!!movtd from the ~elves. lts book population would bl red~ by &boot 2.'i percenL. Besides, it 1~ only ont m11n's opinion "oncernin~ ~ quality of the book . If he doesn't like 1t. he dof!ll'n 't have to re11d it; but he d!M!fin 't h"Vf' the right to lelt u1 th11t we can't tither. CHRIS 6RODERIGK - It Is Important to Make Distinctions Vietnam Error vs. High Motivation ln the wake or the Pentagon paper11 demands are being heard for il ree.x· aminalion or America's whole foreign policy since World War TL The argumenl ill that Vietnam was not just 11 single aberraUon but a direct, logical, almost inevitable consequence of the U.S. ''obsession" with opposing com· munism in th e l\'orld. A'i one critic, Senator McGoverl'!, put! it, " .. , we set out on the assumpli on that v.·e had to se.nd American troops or American military equipment. <1r do whatever v.·1s nec~ary to combat a Communist revolutionist no matter where he showed up and no matter how corrupt the government was lhal he was revolting against." THE CRITICIS~1 JS justified as far a.~ it goes, and the Nixon admini!ltration i,, right to impose limitations: oo the U.S. world role. Nearly evei"yone, ourselves included, now believes that the ,Johnson ;idminislralinn's vast enlargement of the U.S. role in Vietnam was a mistake. And cerlaln!y it did derive from 8 general concern for trying to help people keep from being taken over by the Com· munists. But that motivation is not an ap- propriate indictment of the nation's en· lire antl-Commimist foreign policy, Viet· -.. ..... ~ Guest Editorial '-· nam was a mistake not because of Washington 's intentions but because, for the soundest of military and other reasons, it was a most unfortunate place to choose 1n make a !!land. An overall policy of opposition to Communist ag· grandizement in the world should 11ot mean that the U.S. B.utomatica\ly fights it out wherever the eoemy threatens. The l'rror wa!I of cour!le ct1mpounded as the An1eric111 militM)' commitment grew rapidly out of proportion to an y realizable gains. GRANTING ALL THAT, the fact re- mains that if the U.S. had not pursued it!! broad 11nti:Communist policy, the world would be in a much sorrier state than i ~ is today. People understandably tend to forget the origins of the cold war. Indeed, some of the so-called revisionist hist orians have been assiduously engaged in al· I.empting to make it 8ppear that the U.S. wu at least as responsible as the Com- munists for the cold war, ,ll'1 not liO, as anyone on the scene a quarter-century ago <1ught lo bf able tn testify. The 0.S, made unwise decisions al Yalta and Potsdam: _their unwisdom, however, consisted not in thwartinR Com· mun ist power but in Pasing its path, Evrn so, lt wa~ beginning to dawn on President Roosevelt before he died that Stalin ~~ going to be a very tough customer in the post-war era. THE SOVIETS lost no I i m e demonstrating JUSl how tough. They disrupted Berlin and soughl 1n every wtty short of direct military attack to take over all of Germany. Before \0011: their minions seizrd Czechoslovakia -the first ti me, that is . 1'his outrage w;i.~ so fr1ghten1ng in it~ irnphcations for Weslrrn F:urnpe that it j!really helped propel the formation o! the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, with the U.S. and it~ nuclear shield the dominant member, NATO notwjthstand· ing, it i:<: by no n1eans improbable that Stalin might have unleashed the Red Army against Western Europe had he J1vecl a few years longer. Is il to be seriously suggested that the U.S. should not have involved itself in the effort In save Western Europe from com· munism ? MEA1''WH1LE THE Chinese Com· 1nunists, fa ctlitated by lhe U . S , ~ovemment's blunde ring endeavor lo ef. feel ;i ('oalition government. had taken over lhr n1ainland. The U.S., a Pacific power. would ha ve been irresponsible not lo view th;:it development with concern; the threat to Southeast Asia especially v.·as ob1·ious. It ill often said, well, the Chinese Com· munists never did move south arter all. This overlook!! their aclivitie!I in the Korean war Bnrl their not inconsiderablt support or the Communists in Vietnam. Reyond 1ha!, a question : Would the Chinese Reds have bern so "docile" if i' were not ;ibundanlly evident lhat the U.S. might resist an effort to conquer all Southeast Asia? NONE Of' THESE circumstance~ ex- cusel'i the n1ishandting of America's Viel· nam in volven1en1 , certainly not th• deception undrrllned Jn lhe Pentagon papers. At a tln1e when many American· flage!Jalors are sou nd fng orr, however. it is imporlant to make distincLionll between a specific misapplication ol policy and the high motivation -nothin,it less than human freedom -or the policy it.sell. Wall Street Journal Food Fears Are Largely Unjustified "A lthou i.ih our food i1upply has nf'Ver in hi~tory been more abundant, va r11"d, or fia fe, thP consu mer is running srart>d,'' writes Dr. Melvin A. Benanle 1n Thf' Chemicals \Vt 1--:at 1 Amencan Heri l<iRe Press. $fi.95 l. The9f' fears are largely un- JUSUf1<1d, Dr. Benard!': con\rnd.~. ~nrl he presenLs persuasiv e -;:ind reass11ru1g - evidence that the public has overrea<:1r-d to press reporL~ abou t the d;:ioger or pestlciOe residues and chemical additives in foods. In The Cheml cals We Eat, Dr. Benarde o{fers a balanced view oi the situation. •·I t1Q not mean to imply that I consider chemicals in food a trivial problem," he ~Titefi. "I do not. On the other hand , I am not M>rried by their presence -and neither should you be." His book explains why. TO PUT THE WHOLE quei;tion into perspective, Dr. Benarde points oul thal alt living thlngs are composed nf l'hemicals which are oo less chemical than a food additive sy nthesized In the laboratory. Mort'ver, a great man y n11tural Jood11 contain potentially toxa: chemicals. For example, cyun1de 1.'I prtsent in lima beans. but ii. is dcac- Livaled by the heat of cooking. And com· mon table salt is e.sst:ntial to 11rc. yr! 11 l.4rgt amount absorbed in 11 short lime would probably kill the ea1er, Dr. Benarde define.'! in layman 's terms many of the chemical! that are addtd to ~--By George --~ Dear George: My ho.Wand reJu~s tn take b11tM btcause he say "I'll get • cold." Do you have: any suggeilioM? DlSGUSTt:D Dear Oi~gusted: l~ow docs he feel about Ming sent to the dry cleaners? i Send your problems lo Georg• and let him do your worrying for you. F'ree your mind and 11llow yourself to think up new worries.) T he Bookn1a11 !nod. and ht" desrribes why 1hf'y are u<ied , ;1nrl how they function. The~ 11dr1 1t1vt".~ includ e sweeteners. Oavoring. colonn~. thickening, firming and leavening agenL~. and many other categories. TO JU.USTRATE how an additiYe can Improve food, the author reminds us that not long ago peanut butter separated into oil on top and a gummy glob on the bol· tom-which had lo bt mashed together before use. Today chemkal emulsifier!! have made peanut butter -and many nlhc.r product!!! -instantly usable. In fact, without additives a whole rMge or convenience foods on which we ha ve e<ime lo depend would cease to cx1sl. "Food additi ves 11re 11~ salt: as it i!I humanly po.~s1hle to make the m.'' Dr. BrnardP asserts. "Bt>l'ause of 1hf' ex- lrt>mr ly low lf:ve.ls of add1tivei; used in food !> enormoul'i qu.1nt1tirs would ha ve to l>f' 1n,(.les1N1 at,, one timf' to produce Hdversf' crfl'CL'I " llr outlines lhe ~· haustive testing procedures thal the food and Drug Adrnin1strat1on requires of manufaclurrrs before an additive can be certified for human consun1pt1on. AS fOR PESTICIDES. evidence in· dicates that lhe "pesticide residues we are absorbing do nol represent a health hazard ." Dr. Beoarde discusses the con· tradiclion! inherent in the pesticide coo. troversy. On the ooe hand the public con· demns pesticides -yet Bt the same time il worries about future famines. To feed the world"!! exploding population. mo~ Where Federal Taxes Go The 1vt.rage federal tax burden per hou&ehold in the fiscal year beginning Ju~ ly I wl!I 11mount to 11n estimated $3,165, up $245 from tht 1971 burden, On the basi!I of 1972 federal budget spending by program. the largest parl of the household tax load stems rrom nallonal defense, $1,070. Right behind -by $10 - is estimated 1pendlng for heal1!1 and welfare (Including social ln~vrance) - $1 ,000. On the same per-program basi!'i, lowest per househnld expenditlJre, $4~. is for space research and technology . The average tax burden includes individual income and .90Ciaf security taxes. federal excise, and fed eral taxt'!!i collected from bu!liness but pald in part by consumers. Tu Burden Per Household TOTAL . .. . ....................... '3.11.S National Detense .. . . .. . .. . . . . .. . . . .. . . . 1,070 Health and Welfare (lncludes Social ln!urance) ..................... , 1,000 Interest -····· .. ........................................ 27:Z C<lmmerce and Transport.al.ion ...... , , , .•................ , . •• •• . . . . . . . JS! \'eterans' Beoefits and Services , ....................... , . . •• . . . . ...... l47 Education and M;iinpower Tr1lnln1 • , , . , .... , , , .••... , , .... ,,, ...•. ,.. 122 Special Allowances •• . .. .. . . . . . . ............••••• ,.. •• . . . . . .. . . . R:Z Agriculture and Aj:ricultural Resources , .............. , ...••....••. , . . 89 C~eneral Gonmmenl ..... .............................. 69 C<lmrnunlty Development and lioui1ing-.................... , ..• , . .. .. . • M Natura.I Rta0urcea ........... , ......•.........•...•.........•........ 59 Tnlen1ationat Affair• and t•inance ......................... , ..... , .. ••• 56 Spact Re.warc:h Rnd Technology . . .. .. . , . .. • .. .. .. .. . .. 44 iUndl~tribut.ed adjustment3-lnttrgovemmenlal = -SJOOl Tax fouad1tlon, lo<': ... and more food must be produced 11nd then protr:cted until it cun be harvested, processed , markelf'd, hough!, 11nd eaten. Hnw 1s !h1.~ lo be door without pesticid~? Dr. Ben;irdt d::'\'01t.<; a chapter to ··~·oodli of the Future'' In which he discus~es irradiation as a means of presrrv1ng fresh foods, as well as t~ possibilities of us1n~ flour made of Ji(round wht'lle f1~h as an inexpensivP. pro· tein source. and or spi,1ning soybean fiber to create protein-ric h artificial meats. THE AUTHOR CONCLUDES with a pita 1n food scientists 1n keep the publi c helter informed. and to recapture their subject rrom journsliN and politicians. Dr. Benarde is A professot of Epldemiclogy and Community Medicine al Hahnemann Medical Collegtl and H05µital in Philadelphia. Jn addition to many scholarly articles. he has published three books. Race Against Fatnine. Our Precarious Habitat, and Disinfection, and conducted a t-elevislon show, "Environment and Health ." He is a Fellow nf the American Public Heallh A$Meiation and of the BriUsh Roy11 I Society of Health. Born in Brooklyn, New York , Dr . Benarde now lives in Prince- ton. N, J . with his wife and Utree children. Au D. Del• ---- Frid a y, July 9, 1971 ' The edftorlcl poot of th1 Daav Pilot 1teks to inform and' 1tfm. ulate readeT1 bv prcsmtirtQ SMr newspapc:r'1 opinion.I and com.- mentaru ·an toJ"e.t of bttntt& and tignifleance, bv protrldinQ o forum for Ute txprttriOft of our readers' opinions. and b~ presenhng tht divcr1e trl11D- pofnta: nf Informed ob11rwra and i1pokesmen on topia of «ll• daw, Robert N, Wee d, Pubu.Jier • _____ ,_..., _______ _,..,=·-~ ------~··•lfl--· -·----~-~-=--'--- t . -' ' Frida,, July 'I, 1'171 DAILY PILOT 5 Tooth Ad States Wielding Ax 'Tough' -Nader Welfare Payments to Needy Cut Cycle Hoppers Bike enthusiasts debark in San F rancisco from a 'Pedal Hopper' bus \\•hich the Ala~eda Contra Costa Transit District inauguated Thursday \vith a pair of spec1ally converted buses, each \Vilh sp ace for 24 bikes and riders.. Lockheed Air Loru1 Pressrn·e 'May be Bluf £' -House Unit WASHJNGTON (UPI) Ralph Nader Thw-sday a sked the Feder?J Trade Com· mission to require cautionary labeling that toothpaste con- taining stannous (tin) fluoride will stain teeth a light brown. Nader also say! Colgate with MF'P lmononuorophos- phate) is falsely advertising lls product a!'i a .. toolh tough- ener." About 40 percent of all toothpaste sold contains stan- nous fluoride, a de c a y - retarding. additiv,. The most widely sold brands are Crest, St.ripe and Pepsodent. The Procter & Gamble Co .• Cincinnati, manufacturer of Crest, disputed Nader's c\s.ims ma.de in a letter to the FTC Thursday. Procter & Gamble said the source material for Nader'! allegations "are over four years old. lahd) refer to staining of debris and other 1naterial on the teeth \\•hich should ~ and nonn2Jly are rt' m o v rd with proper brushing.·· J\'<1der ei!ed studies publish- ed in the Arilish Dental Journal in 1967 and the Journal of Public Health Den- tistry in 1970. "\\'e are calling your at- tetition lo the danger of tooth staining from a product which should help to clean teeth," Nader said. "This danger ex- ists in all stannous fluoride toothpeistes. A warning should be given on toothpaste tubes to alert the public to these hazards." WASHI~GTON fUPll The Nixon Administration has leaked a memorandum to new smen showing that wellare payment.11 to needy families are being cut in 10 at.at.es and under consideration ror cuttlni Jn al least 12 others. The document appears not e>nly to confirm a :rul!ipected national trend in money-slarv· ed st.ate! but offers new win- dow dressing for President Niion's y,•elfare reform plan. which would set a federal noor under welfare payments. Prepared by the Health, So lons Seeking Veto Overturn WASHINGTON (UPI) -;.,, z.ttempt will be made in the Senate nert weelc to overturn President Nixon's veto of a bill that would have fought unemployment by creating 200,000 public v.•ork! con- struction jobs. Backers of lhe move were pessimistic they could put to1i::ether !he nec,s.sary two- thirds majority vote lo over- ride the veto. WASHINGTON IAP ) A for the guarantee, Via s given,.---------------~---------------- House Banking Committee committee members at a clos-[ staff report suggests that ed mef'ling and not made pressure for a $250 million public. However. the contents government loan guarantee !o have become kno\\·n. save Lockh""d A•··c•Aft Co•p. '""' ' ' ' 1'he report says the ultimate and its jumbo jet airbus may be a bluff. liability of the government. in Continuation of Lockhet><l's (_·ase the Joans are defaulted, could exceed $300 million. program to build the LIO! I Enroll Now Fall Semester ALL-DAY CLASSES Kindergarten thru 8th Grade • Tuehilf lile 4 R's wiUi pboaics • Door-ta-Door Bu Sartica • Btfore lld After School Care •...,_le Tlitiot f'n Fountain Valle11 16835 Brookhurs l St-rtet 962-3312 HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS KHp Your Childr•n In Good Hands airbus may not depend on the Some provisions giving the guarantee, the report said, or government priority over alternativel y there m ay be in-other debtors may be unen- formation not yet made public forct'able and potential loss of "that the L!Oll is not as good jobs if the airbus project ls as the 11dvocales .. , .say it -~·~b~•~"~d~o~"~e~d~~m~•~Y:__::b~el_=========~=======================-!. · .. ove restimated, it adds. IS."Jt appears clear that it is basically the British govern- ment that is insisting on the guarantee." the report said The aircraft's engines \\'OUld be prov ided by Britain'! Rolls- Royce. which suffered finan- cial collapse. The rtport. critical or lhe Nixon administration proposal Judge Says H e Won't 'Play God' CINCINNATI fUP I) -A judge ruled Thursd?.y ti teen- age girl arnicted with c;incer has th e ri,l(hl lo rcJC-CI an operation that might increase her chances to live Judge BenJam1n Schwarlz or the iuveni\e 1.'Qurt said he "refused to play 1;oc1" His ruhng ca1ne on 11 pel 1- tlon by doc lors. \\ho asked Schwartz. to require the Hi- year-0ld glrl afflicted "''ilh bone cancer In submil to the amputation of her right leg. The judge said the uniden- tifitd gjrl and her mother knew the consequences of their 1ction and "it is oot up to the court to thwart their wills.'' '"l'be doctors said radium had been tried and they believed It be~t to remove the leg from tht: hip down to pre- vent the spread of the disuse," the judge said. ""Ibe chances of her coming throogh the operation suc- cessfull y "'·ould bf about 20 to 30 percent If she doe! nothing further. the chances of her recovering would be 2 to 3 per- cent.'' Teamsters Name Boss MlAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP\ -Frank E. FiW:lmmon! ha s been elected to 1 live year term as president ef the world'• lar11:est l1bor union. t h e two • million • membef' Tumlter• union. FilzllmmM5 w11 named to the post by ac c l1m1l ion Thund•Y when his only op· ponent, 'T'heOOore Daley of Yonkers, N.Y., withdrew after lht roll call started. After his election to tht fUl,~a-year presidency of tbt Teamstr:rs, Fitzsimmons 11id former Pruident James · R. Boffa would have ne rolt in ·-' . ~·--... ( I .. "'fart! Yow Ory.it1-Pl)lllOVlh dultr1.. '(101c wt l now 1f '011'rt happy w11h tht w1y "'t ltf\'I« yo11r pruenl ci r you'll mmt t.,ck .1 nd buy your nut c.ar from u5100. So -we. uy 4o lrcp l'UI 1crv1cc hnc1 1h0ft 1nd our pt"opk. courtto111. \\'c 1im 10 do the llork 11&hl ihc f\nt time. And we dnn"t 01·erch1r&c fo1 111h11 ll t'\•t dont And 1tr\1cc iYl't all we cart 1bou1, uthcr. Wt c.1rc enough to h1rr rountou.s ul~mcn 10 1ns.,.·cr all )'OUT quc111on1 and 1ho"' 1riu 1u11 lhc car you w1nL And we care enough to go O"t l )OUr nrw <"11 ... ..;1h1 Me-tooth comb Mfort )Oii dn1c u •"'' \l,'c Carr' Try 11~-you1l 1rc • l... WE-CARE PACKAGE PJ,ymouth Duster. A~I.. •booe Jpttlll pri«~ no•' Dull<!• \IN CO!l'll"tl th11, ''"d~~nou&h, •rt h11 r-.iV Sn'IO!! <TIO\li h 10 N In-. pnu1d. ~uy on ~·"•••)'le dn~ ••" •o ro•~· 1111 •l'MXIJll 10 ""' ~,. •ft uomron. < ., ... 1 1!11 •UPI~'"' 1nd •uH u '"''°'"h" • ''""~ i..~, u r ~\Our Chrysler-Pl,ymo uth Dealers. --Oi"--:iw v Costa Mesa Huntington Beach Atlas Chrysler·Plymoutb, Inc. Huntington ffeach Chrysler-Plymouth 2929 ttarbor, Boulevard 16661 Beach Boulevard .. •• 7 -<111-w e 41_.w,.. ma t •1 1·"" EducatiO('I aTld Welfare Oep;irt- ment tHEW) the summary of trtnds in welfare payment' levels reports pmisible cuts as high as 48 percent in New llampshire if lhe state legi!la.ture does not approve a $13 million welfare budget. 'The lD stales w here payments to "''elfare client~ will be cut this year are Alabama, Georgia, Kansas. Maine, Nebraska, Ne\lo' Jersey, New t.!exien. Ne w York. Rhode Island and Sou t h Dakota, according lo the memo. Possible cuts loom I n Ar l z on a. California. Col). necticu4 Delawvt, ld.1ho, ll!inOis, Minnesota; Oregon, PeMsylvanl1, Texu and Ver· mont. in addition to New Hampshire. On I.be other hand the report show! five !I.ales and the District of Columbia in- creasing payment.! in their programs of aid to families wilb dependent children, and two others considering in- creases. Hawaii, Mississippi, Nevada, Ohio and Oklahoma are rais- ing benefils, and ?>.1aryland and Wisconsin are considering paym<nt boo616. Aid the report to HEW U n de r Stcret.ary John G. Ventmlll. "I think a aecondpy effect ~f this ?MmO ia: fluther sup- port for welfare reform," said an administration spoktsman. "The reason lt was prepared, was to be responsive to ques. lions we are certain lo 1et in the Senate. This I! supportive to increased federal support for welfare." He said the memora.odum, dated July 2. so far bad re- mained internal uctpt for its di!ltibution to ! e v e r a I newsmen. Now enioy barbecues the clean, easy. way! -. Coleman® gas ba1becue for charcoal-broil flavor! : 6888 RIG. 74.88 fer de?K:ious barbecues without the work -pick gas! l·spot Mghti,,g; adiustable grate, controlled smok· ing. 283N grill has room for 24 homborgerL JUST SAT ""OIAIGI m- COMPLETE INSTALLATION AVAILABLE AT SUGH1' EXnA"CMIJtGI ! For fast cookouts deluxe Channglow gas BBQ! Add the-w!lflll glow of gas lights Jo JO!lf entry or patio! 29!!AL Colooiol Nyle gas lo'"'"' mode of porceJolnized aWminum. Tempered glou pone1 remove-to de-an.. 89~ With gas, there's no rne-ny prepcuotionl 2 levels Jet )'OW cook and worm ot same tWnel ·~~ ' ' . . . . ' . ' Shop Mon-Sat 'UI 9:00. Su~ 12-5PM UI CIENlliG-'---phooe e.36-7922 TORRANCE.-....... _., •• : ••• _phor'.e 542..g<)71 FULLERTON _.,_pn:ine 714-87g..2~ NM'WALK. . ... ······•··--···-·-"'*'°"'"' 868.¢911 SANTA ANA ··=·:--Cli"one 547-6641 HUNTINGTON l!EACH ~hOl"le 71~92-6611 PANORAMA CI TY ··---~ 894-8211 V ENTURA ..• 0'°'0!')61 48!'>5421 • 6':2-7541 ROSEMEAD ...... -........ pt-one !5COVIN73-3J 10 CANOGA PARK-.............. Dt"Ol"NI 883.1000 A .•.. c~ 966.74 11 - ·~ . .. .. ~ ... -. .,._ • ·-• Saddleha~k Today's FiW.J EDITION * VOL 64, NO. 163 , 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 9, '1971 TEN CE~ Sewer Woes to Force Irvine School Clo ·sure? lr,.ine School will have a new building SOOf\, Not becllu!le its overcrcw:l~·ed_ Not because an old building is ia1!1ng down. But bf.cause !he cesspools are full. "We cannot sink another cesspool on that property," said Rex Nerison. Assis· !ant Superintendent of the San Joaquin Elementary School District. "\\'e're going to ha vP lo hook up lo a ~ewer line or close the school " Nerison told the board of lrustees State Pri111ary Y.'ednesday thal the district would ba11e to pay about SI00,000 to hook up to the closest sewer, In order to get a state loan for the pr~ ject -!hey \\'ill ha11e lo apply for a loan to rebuild the original Irvine School building and include the sewer hook up m the project. "As far as we can determine the original Irvine School building was built in 1929 Our engineers feel il does not comply with Field Act earthquake safety McClosky Says He'll Enter Race LOS ANGELES 1AP) -Rep. Paul N. ~lcCloskey Jr., the mosl outsJX)ken Republican crilic of President Nixon's Vietnam war policies, a nnounced today he wi ll enter the 1972 California presiden· tial primary election "pledged lo ending the war conditioned t1nly upon return of the prisoners of war." "This will not be a single issue cam· paign.'' the San Mateo. Calif., con· grcssman said in a statement issued in advance of a ne\1·s conference. "We seek in addition to ending the war to restore lruth in government. to achieve a return to historic Republican n1oral con1· mitment on social issues rather than the prri;ent 'Southern Strategy' and . a res!oration of Judicial exc~llence and in· depenrlE'nce.'' ~lcCJoskcy. 43, thus formally undertook 11 campai;::n he said he 1,1·oulr1 launch only If Nixon failed to change his Indochina policy and if no nther prominent Dotvn the Mission T1·ail Lang nu ge S kill Unit Approve1l EAST JRV !~E: -A Title l pro1ect to Improve language :;:kills . for biline:ual s1 udenls in 1he San .Joaqwn Elementary &hool Dis1rirt has been appro\'ed by the Board of Trustees The prClJeC!. \\'hich t.ast ye~r helped 111 ~lcxican·American children 1 m pro~ e language arls. will be expanded during thP coming year. . In addition to a full lime teacher. the program \\'ill havl! t1,10 Spanish speaking a ides. Jt will be held during both ~essions at Irvine Elementary School. • Cnrktnib Sel f..1JSS!ON VlF..JO -A no-hos t cocktail party ls bl'inJZ !'ponsored hy the Sad- dleback Democratic Club Saturday, July Republican entered the race as a peace candidate. f\1cCloskey, who has assailed the President's policies in speeches for months, advocating quick withdrawal of U.S. "'ar forces, made no menlioo in his formal statement of entering other·. prirnarie~. such as the first-ln-lhe-nation one in New Hampshire. The Califomia p~imary is June 6. 1972. McCloskey 1aid he \\'Ould form and head hi5 own slate. Nixon has not said whether he will enter primaries. It has been widel y assumed in Washington that he woul d not. A presidential aide indicated before f\1cCloskey ·s news c<1nference that the President doobtless "will not abdicate" if faced with a primary challenge. f..1cCloskey announced the start of a "vigorou.s drive to register new voters in the Republlcan party and to register those Democrats who may choose to do so." · "l'ndcr the present policies of the Presi· dent. vice president end attorney general, the Republican party is dyi ng ." he said. "It is clear that 1972 could well be a disaster if new voters are given no in- centive to register as Republic ans '' Saying that three times m ore Democrals than Republicans are being registered among under·21 vn!ers in California, f\1cCloskev added "if this !rend continues it !ipei ls the death or the Republican party." Learn-to-swim Class Schedu.Ied Registration fnr the second !earn.~ S\\'im program of the summer will be held from 9 lo 1\ ·30 a.m. Saturday at lhe San Clemente Ci ty Pool. The three-week program, sponsored by the Capistrano Unified School District, ls open to youngsters in the district who have complett'd the first grade. The registration fee is $1 . Classes will meet daily In the mornings beginning Monday at the city pool and will each last for 40 mlnules. There att rnore than 300 openings in the program. Youngsters who are now completing the first segment of the program may re- register in the second eession Tuesday on a "space available'' basis. standards soil would have to be replaced or put out of use by 11175 anyway," said Nerison. ''Because of the recent earthquake the state is more willing to approve ap- plications to replace pre.field Act buildings. I. feel we have a very good chance to get the loan appro11ed." The board sanctioned the application which had to be ·submitted by July 9· in order lo ~ studied by the slate alloca· tions board during its August meeting. ua U appro\·ed in Augu~. the \\'Ork could ~ completed for the opening of school Ill September. The sewer hne that 1s the most economical to reach, according to ad· ministraUve findings, is on Jeffrey Road and is part of the lrvine Water District. The board has asked for a complete set of rigures on various alternatives before they sign any agreement with the Irvine Water District for se.wer service. Board P resident Gratian Bidart asked if when the school was closed ona during the year for sewer problems it was because of a break or because of an overload. Nerison said it had been an overload and at that time two more cesspaobi had been dug, "But we are at the point where we can· not dig any mol'f:," Nerison. Tht. ground is saturated. •·we don't have facilities lo accommodate even the number of children we h.ave al the school now." e o ts .. • ' Bob Dameron asked why the board was not told about the problem &OOOe('. Nerison said' the dislrict ha• been discussing the problem with Irvine Wat.et District and the lrvirie Company for two years. The buiding that will be replaced on 1M Irvine School campus ls one that includes six classrooms, administrative offices, an~estrooms. It was originally built by the~rvine Ranch to serve children of employes and was donated to the school dislrict in 1935. Scores Die; " ' ,, i 11 Cities Devastated I • ·: 1 .! -~ DAIL V "11.01 ltatl "Nit GRIM REMINDER OF AIRPLANE TRAGEDY; TOO GRIM TOO LONG THINK RESIDENTS C1pistr .. no Beach Dwell1 r1 Wo~d Lik e to See Charr.cf Remains Riied For Esthetlt R_11son1 Scars of Tragedy Remain Capistrano Building Hit by Plane Still Stands By PATRICK BOYLE 01 ,,.. o.n, ,11,, 111n On a foggy September morning in 1970 . Capistrano Beach residents were awakened to thf! sound of an explosinn when a single--engine aircraft crashed in · to a downtown laundromat. killing the pilot and hurling a woman l.hrough the wall of her apartment. Almosl 10 months later. lhe charred ruins of the crash still blot the busln~ss district &.long Dohrny Park Road in the tlJllall seaside community. Although several residenls have corn· plained about the burned bullding and l!ld· jactnt vacant lot, nothing has been done to date pending the ootcome of an in· surance settlement. Damage to the buildings was initially ~t at S56.000. The cruh. at 34241 Doheny Park Road, tmk I.he life of Sflulh Laguna resident flayrnond Addis, a northern California sc hool s11peru11.l'ndenl. The laundromat al the location was demolished. but an ad· jacent restaurant building. t11 lthough bad· ly burned. is still standing. Orange Coon!y department of building and safety official!i, aware of the number of citizen complaints of the "eyesore.'' have taken no action to have the building tom down. "II is hard to invoke lhe building code if the siluat1on L~ not of a hazardous n11ture," a department spokesman said . "Eyesores are not necessarily a criterion for in11oking any action." The Capislrano Beach Chamber of Commerce is currently looking into hav· ing the building tom down. hut I.he owners or the. property say nothing will ~ dnne until at least Aug. 4, when the in- !iurance settlement IS supposed to be completed. "The resident.s of the area couldn't be complaining any more than I have been complaining," said Mrs. Jacqueline Byrum. a Pico Rivera woman who owns the land along with her sister, Mrs. June ~itchell. Mrs. Byrum said Jhe plans to demolish the ruined building as SOOll as company insuring the aircraft pays her for lhe damage. She said nothing could be touch- ed at the site until the settlement in the event further evidence of th e damage was needed. "We feel that we have to be careful about what we do to the site now," Mrs. Byrum said. "I t ha11 to lit there like it is until the negotiations are complete." SANTIAGO (U PI) -Chile's worst earthquake since 1965, a iv,.minute tremor that reached 10 on the Mercalll scale of 12 , killed scores of persons Fri- day and caused widespread destruction. At least 66 persons were killed and more than 300 injured in the pre-midnight Thursday shock which was followed by at ltast 14 an~ribocb that kept the country In stai>ense Until dawn Friday. Casualtia were estimated by tht interior ministry. All of the casualties were in 11 citie'S: along the northern end of the fertile cen· tral valley nestled between tbe Andes and tht. coast in thi1 quake-p-one lalld on the Lower west coast of South America. In the port of Valparaiso, 25 were dead. including 8 in the beach resort town of Vina Del Mar. There were I I reported dead in Santiag<i and~ in San Felipe. Some wer~ killed in accident! caused by panic, others by falling walls and debris. Three died in Illape!, the epicenter of the quake. There the quake reach~d an intensity of 10. It was recorded al 6 in Santi1go, tile: capital. President Salvador Allende declared the north-<:enlral zone. a disa5ter are&, placed troop.'! on alert and ordered out extra·slrength police detachments to discourage looting. Allende took a helicopter early Friday to Valparaiso and Illape1, which was isolated by landslides on the Pan American Highway. The quake was fell from Arica. on the Peruvian border, to Temuco, 1,400 miles to the south. It was the country's slrongtsl quake since March 28, 1966, \\'hen 300 persons were killed by a tremor a lso centered in the northem end of the central valley. Allende went on national radio to w'ge calm "Lhe government of your comrade· president is here .... to help .... I 1sll: you. citizens, I demand, stay calm.'' It was five minutes past 11 p.m. in San· tiago when the quake hit. It began gently but built up quickly. There was a bor· rendous, subterranean grinding noise and the lights went out Panic set In. Santiago sbook for 1y, minutes but farther north in the valley the quake lasted • mintuf, M seconds. Panicky citizens, many ln pajamas. ran Into the street!. Flying glass, famng facade! and cornices and panicky car drivers accounted for the first casualtlea. Many were injured falling down darktned st.airways. Ora.,e Coat 10 . Tiie c11cn! wil\ tAkc p\a('c 1n the ~ltss1on Virjo tnn al 8 p.m. The public Is lnvitcd. San Clenaente Action Weatller • Seiver• St,ugl1t EL TORO -Parklane Residential School is looking for \'oluntet'rs to do sevo'ing. . Mrs. J . T Warnack. se\\·ing director, 11Jso is looking fnr donalions of yarn. trim. bright colored pieces of cotton and jig saw puzzles. Jaycees' Park Offer OK'd ti.1rs. Byrum noted that following the crash, she had planned to rebuild the burm d restaurant, but county offlcia!J ruled the building w1s more than $0 per- cenl destroyed and had to be tom down . Mrs. Byrum would not say whether she plans to rebuild on the property fo»owlng the Insurance 1e~tlanent. The weatherman predict& low clouds and fog today and Saturday, clearing by noon with temper• turts along the coast around '1ti ed 90 inland. Lowa of M degrees ln both areas. Anynne Interesting in d on a l 1 n g materials or sewing for the school are asked lo call the school 11t 1\34).7770 between 10 a .m. and 3 p.m. weekdays. • Donc:f! Tonight MISSION VIEJO -An annual Sad· <tieback Little League fund-rai~ing danC'e is scheduled fo r toolght al 9 p rn . in the Mission Vie jo tnn. The event is ~ponsored by tht lea11tuc's Women's aux iliary and i~ open to parenl~ of boys playlng In the baseball league. Admission wW be $3 per couple. The City of San Clemente has JCCepted the local Jaycees' offer to fully land scape city property at Linda Lane as a neighborhood park. And in the swift, unanlmou1 city coun- cil action Wednesday l' am e com. mendation for the service e r fort calculated lo me donated funds, labor and skill to cooiplete the park package: with landscaping and picnic areas. Jaycee President Al Filger Jr. made a brief presentation of the idea~ for the project -set to be the inauguration of a long·range plan by hi~ group lo deve:lop more grren bell~ In the city The plan, which will btcome reality At! Mon as ftll"lds are collected. already bad won concurrence by planning com- mi•ionen and the Parka and RecrtaOon Commluion. F'Hger told councilmen that some money ·a1~ady had been committed to the project by local service groups. A formal plan for the work was furnished free by 11 central county landscape p\an-. ning firm known u Pod. The Jaycee offer wae one: of two ac· ~ cepted by councilmen Wednesday. San Clemente'a Kiwania Club reeelvc<I 11'1-principle approval tGr 11lmil1r project wh.icb binges on the etate relinquishment " of surplus frl!f:'Way land at the 200 block of East Avenida Cordoba. The scenic patcel. said Kiwania President Hoyt Kridtr, would be an 1cre in size and woold be equipped by the club with a cupola. telescope, sundial, benchel and off stttel·parking. Expenses for the devek>pment wou1d be bome by the club, he &aid. In both project!, the rwk1 would be developed by the 11:roup~. then maintained In perpetuity by the city. The Klwani~ offer will stand awaiting a nnal wnrd from the State Division of 1tlghways which m ust decidt on donating the land for k>cal park purposes. -· .. t.....- -~-...... -~.----------...,=------·· ·----· •••x.-_,,.--·~·~.:::;)'""t·-•""~--·~ ~ "I hope the settlement doe.sn'l have to ao to court," she aald, noUng this would c1use even further dell,)'s, "but the crash ia slill under lnver;tjgatlon. "We hope to have the bulldir)g torn down In the very near futurt, thou.ah." sl;le added. CluJ> Dance Set • The Shlpmatet SquAre Dance Club will Mld lta monthly d1nce Saturday at 8 p.m. 111t San Juan Elementary School. 31141 El Cam.too Real, s.n Juan Caplltrano. INSIDE TODAY Tilt Pagtont of tht Mruttr• ond Festival of ArU op«na nut wtik iri Loguno Beach. Picturer and a storu arr. fri toda11'r W ttk- endtr, Pa gt 2l. -..... llWIMI ,...,.. 11 N ....... ,._ W Or .... C-ry , .,_., , .. ,, , ... Mer'llth 11-1& Tei.vltllioil n r11ee,_ .... WMllMr 4 .,.___,, ,._ 1•n --. .......... IWI ----. -:.. .... ~-•• :.~-~·~,_.;..-.. ~ .... ~~·=•r:.\•"~r • • • • I Irvine Cit11 . Citizens Protest Prisoner Has Real Probleni Schools Division Nev.·port •Beach police 80 to all reatonablt l•naths to ;roteet the hltlih Ind wttt'1rt Gt t h e: I r prisoners but nolhinc could be done for one Thursdly. ... Irvine arta homeowntrl, already plJgued by city of Santa Ana lawsuits over proJ>Med boundaries of the new ci ty of· lrvlnt , ha.ve a new pre>bl1m today - 6Chool district boundaries. Through tbe Council of Communities or lrvlne {CCI ), a 3.iiO-slgoature prtition baa been fi led with the Orange County Department of Education protesting prtsent plans for splitting up the Tustin Union Higb Scbool DiJtrlct into thrte IJSlified dlstrlcL!I. ·The petition asb that the county S<:hool officials schedule a public hearing on or before July 21 for ronslderation of a new Wliflcation plan to be subm.itled by CCI apd the Irvine Council on EducaliOl'I. The 350 signs.lures on the petition 1'8pre1ent mot'! than 10 percent of Irvine's registered voters, as required by the State Education Code in calling a Four New Buses To Start Service I n Lag1ma Beach Four new 21-~senger buses built by the Flxl~e Company of Loud enville, Ohio. will be irl service en Laguna's city bus roote in appror:imately two to three months. The City CouncU voted this week to ac- cept I.ht Ohio firm's low bid of $14,247 ptr vehicle after administr&tive assistant Al Autry advM them Q'1e feder1I Depart- ment of Tran!pe>rtatlon, which is finan- cing two-third.I of the purchase. requirt.s acceptance cf the low bld if all s~ilica­ lions are met. The Flxible bus, Autry said, exceeds specifica Uon.s. It is a 2M horsepower vehicle wlth a 390 cubic inch engine and he2.vy duly hydrau lic brakes. he said, and should be able to negotiate Lagtma 's hilly terrain "easily." The federal grant, he told the council. does permlt the city to request special features deemed desirable provided the cost does not eicffd that of the next lowest bid, in this case a figure cf $16.579 far Gillig biwes. The Flxible Ccmpany, the council was informed. bas 800 couhes operating in Los ~ at this time and is plaMlng la esta:b!l!h a full parl..!i warehcuse ln the u ea within the ne:1t few months. Phfl!ners Slate Special Session On General Plan Laguna Beach plannlng comm\$sioners will plunge back into the 127-paae General Plan document at 1 special study session Monday evening, in an atttmpt to move "less controversial" sections on to the City CounC'I\ for approval. Plannlng Director Wayne Moody has been asked by comml.uion chairman William Lambourne to pick out such sec- tions and review them for the a>m· mission prior to discu!sion. Al tbf! 7:30 p.m. session f\1onday. ~1oody will re port en the Community Facilities and Utilities elements of the plan and there will be further discussion cf lhe Land Urie element. al ready revttW· ed by Commlsa ioner Carl Johnson. Also up for rev iew will be a proposal from the Laguna Greenbelt Inc. that the eucalyptus grove in L..aguna Canyon at Milligan Way be purchased for public U51! and preserved a! 1 landmark 1t lhe entry to Lal"UTla Beach. OIANAI COAS't DAILY PILOT OU.N'~ '°'4'T l'U&LllHIN~ C0M"AM't' 11:•\o•rt N. w •• d ,.m_I •1111 l'\Otl.....,. Jt c~ •. Cwtlty Vkt ,,.. ..... , .... G._ .. M.aMtW ni-·· x •• .,11 .lf ltor n'""'' A. Mw•,.lrii~1 M•M91"" lt•IW CJi•rltt M. Loa• ll:i,~or4 '· Ntll Atllllo~: M ..... lnt ll411to L.t• .. -.-11 OfflM ]Jl foru l A·•~uo M1ili~g •""••U: ,.0. l•Y •••. 9265 2 S-a-N Oflk • J OI N.rlh U C1111lR• -111, 92672 ...... °""" C•11t1 Mu11 uo w .. r ••'>' S1t•t H1w-1 l•ot~: lU3 Now-• •..,1~•rl H1111ll"'*' ._,,,, 1n15 •~ 9tui.v••• public hearing. W. Fred Fry. CCI vice chairman, said Irvine residents object vigorously to pro- posal now under sludy by the County Committee for School Dis Ir i cl ~rganl:iation . He charged that the committee's plans strip the proposed new Irvine Cnified School District of its commercial and in- dustrial ta,,-bases and give these valuabli! assets to the proposed new Tustin and Mission Viejo unified districts. "Most of the enrichment would be lo the Tustin Oi~trict," said Fry. ··Mission Viejo, under lhe plans the county con1- milte:e SN>m.s lo favor. "'ould not be much better off than we would be after a few more years of growth." The CC I leader clai1ned Irvine was not piggy on the subject. "We don't v.·ant all of Irvine's commercial and industrial lax bMe for ourselves," he added. "We ere willing to share d as equally as possible with Tustin and Mission Viejo ." He said it was that kind of plan CCI would submit lo the public hearing. The Irvine unification study is to be jointly flnanced by UCI and the Irvine C.Cmpany. Among parlicip11nts a re Marian Ellis Md M. E. Peterson. co- cbalrmen of the CCJ's education com- mittee. Thousands Bid Last Farewell To Satchmo NEW YORK (UPI) -They sald iood· bye: to Louis ''Satchmo" Armstrong today with a service: that sent the jazz rythms of the New Orleans funeral song, "When ... the Saints Go Marching In," halfv.·ay around the world. Only 500 people could attend the funeraJ service for the great jazz trumpeter In the simple red brick Corona Congrega. tional Church in a quiet Queens neighborhood. , But more than t,000 or Armstrong's neighbors stood outside and hundreds cf thousand! watched on television as Tel.star beamed tbe service to 1& Euro- pean countries. Peggy Let flew in frcm th e West Coast lo ain& . "Tb"' Lord 's Prayer." Fer Amutronf'a wile of ZI years, Lucille, they ung "Just a Closer Walk With Thee.'' He had come 1,500 miles from his native New Orleans to win his greatest fame but like all those olher jazzmen in the city where Dixieland was born, they played ''When the Saints Go Marching Tn" for Armstrong, who died in his sleep Tuesday of a heart attack at the tl@:e of 71. Armstrong's wife and a former '"'ife, jau pianist Lillian Hard in. had aald their private goodbyes ea rlier al a neighborhood funeral home. ti.I r s • Armstrong, in blllC:k dre.s!l and shawl, tried quietly as .she stood near hls grey steel coffin. f..1ourners began arriving at late morn- ing at the church \l'h1ch ts cooltd nnly by fans. ~ temperatures rose to the high 80s. ushers banded out small paper fa ns. some bearing a picture of the late Dr. !llartin Lulher King Jr_ Outside. neighbors remembered hl')111 Armstrong alv1ays wa.s ready to play at local charitable events . "He would never forget if he cou!d help it. Good11.1ll arn- bassador -that fits him very v.ell,'' Mrs. Thehna Davis said The list of honorary pallbearer~. \\'as in its ov.·n way. a trlbut.e to 1he man who thrilled crowd~ In Belgrade, Accra, Bangkok and Moscow 111ith his muslcal gen ius and infectious grin. The list included t el evision person al ities Johnny Carson and Oa\'td Frost. Mayor.; John Lindsay or New York and Jl.1oon Landrieu of New Orleans, musicians Gene Kru pa, Guy Lombardo, Lionel Hampton and Benny Goodman, columnists E arl Wilson and Lennard Lyons and composer Harold Arlen. But Thursday for the mo!t part, wa~ the da y when the unknowns who boughl Armstrong rtcording:s by the millions pa id their respects to t.he dynamic singer and musician. Detective Todd Wllklnson'• 1~ year-0ld arre.stee wa! asked about any ai lrnenls or medical probltms by jailers, berore being booked on a burglary charge and admitted to a cell. lie said he suffers from claustrophobia, the fear cl being conl1ned in a limited spact. Little Friend Of President Doing Better Four-year-old Danny Jones of San Clen1eote has been taken from intensl11e care at Lost Angeles Children's Hospit11I late this v,.•eek after spending two months In extre1nely critical condition after open· heart surgery. Fami!y spokesmen said the little boy also left a hospital bed for the first time this week during the long, tense con- valescent period. He look a trip around a ward in a v,.·hcelchair, The boy, who received widespread at- tention \.\'hen President Nixon personalty wished him good luck in the ri~ky surgery, has had several emergency operations since the original surgery v,.·hich successfully n1ended holes 1n his heart, evident since birth. Since the surgery, Danny has en· coontered pneumonia and b I e e di n g ulce rs. Activ ity in San Clemente geared toward helping Danny's fam ily cope with massive medical bills continuts a! the boy's condition improves. Spokesmen for the fund set up to offset the bill! said contributions still are being received and plans have been started to schedule benefi t e:vents to raise more money , Donations still are being sou ght by drive organizer Mrs. Peggy L..andell. Donors can make: contributions at the San Clemente branch of United Ca lifornia Bank, in care of the: Dennis and DaMy Jones Fund. Planners to Get Second Look At 'Use Variance At the request cf attorney Will iam WilCtixen. Laguna Beach city councilmen agreed this week to ask the Planning Commission to take another look at its denial of a use variance for a new car storage lot at 965 Glenneyre Sl. Spea king in behalf of his client, Barwick Imports Inc., local Datsun dealer. Wilcoxen maintained the proposed U!e !lhould not have required a variance slnce the sitr already was approved as a parking Jot and car storage is a similar use. Ci!y attornty Tully Seymour told the council lhe applicant \\las "st.tered into a blind <ille\'" \\'hen he "'as a(l\•ised to serk a varlanl-e because new stair law pro· h1b1ts the issuance or use va1 iances 10 1·1rcun1vent 1oning regulations. The ques. tion .~hould have been 9:hether thti u.~c \\OUld be the same as a parking lot. Ile said Barv•lck :-uh.leases the site of hls auto dealership from Sheffer L.:iguna Beach tl·lortuaf)' and \\';i~ storing new car!> on the lot approved for nlortuary parking. Neighbors in the largely residential <irea compla1nrd of nn1se and Rasoline fumes resulting from the use. However, argued \Vilcoxen, the new cars were sim pl y parked until sold and the: storage: 11sc \\'OUld ~<'nerate less traffic in and (}Ut of the lot than the former parking use. Realtor JO(' Hom. one of thn.st' pro- testing the use, pninted out that although parking lot use is acceptable in the C·l 1commerc1all zone, the property in ques· lion 1s in a C·t ALS (arch;tr<:ture and land super\ 1slon) zone which requirer special approl'al. Wil coxen tmphasized that his clitnl is seeking ooly a temporary permit since he is atlempt1n11 to relocate the auto dealership and hA!l three a!ternalt sites under consideration. Nixon, Aides Rest Easy On FiI·st Days of Visit Tht Admlnlslrallon has been keeping a relatively ~laxed pro(ile on this trip west with Presid~l Nixon getUng some liUn poolside ln San Cle:mente and his Press Secretary swatting a te nnis ball while !Jn aklt briefed the press ror him. Youthful Press Secretary R o n a I d Zle11ler also s1Jlled forth to the beach be: low Laguna 's Surf and Sand Hotel to !Ms a football with obvious east. The restful pace was expected tn pJekup arter !ht Wtekend. President Ni xon m!'t Thursd11y for the lh ird straight day with Secrel1ry or St1te Wiiiiam r . Rogers on a spectrum of foreiif' affairs , This lncluded the peace di.scussion in Paril. The U.S. his turned down a Viet Cone demand for pulling all U.S. troops out of Vietnam In exd1ange for release of prisoners or war. Brig. Gen. Alexande.r tlf, Ha ig Jr, deputy assistant lo Lhe Presi dent for Na· tlonal Security Affairs, abo sat in on the me!llngs. Gerald Warren. Deputy Pre• a Secretary. side!tepped a question Thun- day on whether the U.S. reply to the Communist puce plan was the final v.·ord. He: said he believed David K.E. Bruc-t. chif'f t:,S, nei;iot11lor. had asked the othtr !ide to join in any meaningful negotJa. lions In uthtr matters Thur~ay, the Presi- dent nominated Benjamin Oliver D•vl.s Jr , !i3, relirtd Negro Air F'on;e lieutenant ae:ne:ral, to be Assistant $(>cre1 ~ry of Transportation for Safety and Congun1e.r Allairs. :;: ,.-l, ..... ....... --------~-··-----~-='°'~:---. 4------ -------~ ~.- - Harbor Vote Approved League of Cities Votes 13-12 for Bill Repre:sent.at.ivu cf Orange Count}'$ 25 c\lles wrancled for two hours Thursday night and finally split 13·12 in support of an Assembly b1!1 to put the late of the Cnunly Harbor District up to the ll(Jters. The League of Cities mE'mbers also split 1:1·12 over nanting a re1>rf'senta1n·e to 1he Loca l Ai.:ency Formation Com· n11ss1on tLAFC). They replaced fuJ\erto11 councilman Louis Reinhardt with U1s Al21Tlilo.~ Mayo r Pro Tern Joseph ll yde. 'fht \'ote on the harbor distriC'l \\las aC· tually a de.feat of a mol!on to .!.Upport Asse1nblym:H1 KenntU1 l \1r~·s 1 D· Anaheim) bill 11.•hich 11ou!d ret::un the district as a separate taxing "-i:ency and add parks to Jls jurisdic!ion. The le8f:!Ue had \'Oled m.J las! April to support the bill by Assemblyman John Driggs (R·f'ullertonJ and that decision staJ1ds. Briggs' bi ll would put the rnattcr lo the voters. Support for lhe (;Ory bill had been sought by !ht' Board c.if Supervisors at .a recent clty-counl)' meeting. · Orange CudSL cities spil l 4.,1 on the issue Newport Beach. ~1guna Beach, and Seal Rtuch supported ll\e Cory bill "hile San Ju?.11 Capislrano, Huntington Beach. Los Alamitos and fountain Valley l'oted on the other sidt. 1'ht> 1u1t' on :1 represcnla!he on the J.AFt' firs! 1111olvvd thr('e candida1es, Reinhardt, l-l~d(' and Tustin t.tayor Tony l'oco. Bernhardt and Hyde gol nine votes each and Coco seven. Coco v.•as later clttted altemate LAFC n1ember by a JJ-l2 vote over Reinhardt. ~1?.yur Thomas Forstrr of San Juan Capisl rono argutd befort !he final vot1 no the Cory bill that a de<>i.sion ::;hould be postponed. and the Question referred bat:k to the various city councils '·Thty do n~)t I rtally understand either bill .. he l'o11· I ended. 1'he cit) rE'prrsentutil'f'S \I e r c unanlnious on one subject Thty don't like Ult> property lax bill approved by the .suf}t'r\•1sors which will lisl only four t·;ilegorie.s -school-;, cit y. county a.nd .special d1slrl('!S. 'D1t"y voled 10 urgt• th(' :;uper,·1-;or.s lo rl'lurn to the f1>rn1er formal hsllng ?JI taxing agencies srparately. Those "'ho ~poke on the subje('t felt that the <'llie:.s \\"Ould gel blamed for lugh lax b1ll.s if thc- breakdown was not used. Rock Superstar Succumbs Heart Attack Kills Ji111 Morrison of 'Doors ' PARIS (UPI) -An1eri can rock star Jim Morrison. 27, lead singer of "The Doors," whose raw sexual on·stage style made him an international star -and a defendant in an obscenity trial -died of a h"eart attack last Saturday and was buried secretly in a Paris 1:en1ete~, police reported today. Police said 1.1i;>rr1son \\as d1SCO\'l•red uncooscious in the bathroom or his chic apartment by l'a1ne!a Courson. 25. ot Lu.s Angeles. his companion for the past [jve years and regarded as his common Ja111 wife. "i\liss Courson said when Morrison awoke la.~t Saturda~. he 1vas not teeling well," a police spoktisman said. ··He ask- ed her to get a bath ready and then entered lhe bathroo1n. "No! hearing an.v noisl'. ti.·liss Courson later opened U1e duor lo find t.1orrison l)•1ng llllCOnsc1ou:. in the h'11h." The orf1cl'r a1 1hc precinct fnr the four1h i\rrond1sscn1rnl. a lash1011able 1tistnr1 of Par1~. said !\!ornson was dead 11·hcn a pohce ambulance atn\·ed a1 hts <tpartn1enL He .s1ud a rlOc!or later 1ssuf'rl a t('r11f1catt· a1tnbut1ng death 10 a heart attack. 'fhe poi1ce otficer said ~1orrtSOn \1·as 7 County W 01nan A viato1~s Complete Derby Flight From \\'lre Services Seven Orange County v.•oman avi ators are among contestants ln the Canada·to- Louisiana Pov.·der Puff Derby awa iting today's judges' decisions in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The winner in the 2.400 milt air Tace, who rtceives $10.000 v.·ill be armwnced lat.er loday. Flying time and horsepowe r are being computed to deter'tnioe. place merit. _ Present unofficial leader i! GenJ 'Rich- ardson of Yakima. Washington , .8. flighl instructor who has tried for 20 years to win the $25,000 contest She had the best flying lime-to-hor~power ratio of lhe 144 entrants going into Thursday·s final day cf flight. Mrs. Richa rdson, fl ight school owner and operator, flew her 285·horsepowcr Cessna without a co-pilot into Baton Rouge shortly before noon Thursday. Orange County participants in the fiight \Vh!ch began Monday in Calgary, Alberta, &II!'. -Dorolhy \Valli of El Toro v.·ith \\'all,v Funk cf Hermosa Beach in a Piper Comanche. -Shirley Tanner of ~ewport Beach \l'ilh Claire Walter ol Las Angeles in a f\looney f..120. -\Vilma Nesselroad of Newport Beach and Sandra Ruller of \Vestminster. -i\·largartl Bulh and Peggy Lawton, both of La Habra, in a Cessna 206. -Dorene: Christensen of Santa Ana 111ith Amy Koning of Las Vegas, t\e\'. Gree ter E iler La1·sen Ren1 a ins i n Hospita l Laguna Beach Greeter Eiler Larsen re- n1ains 1n satisfactory condition al Veterans Hospital in Long B t. a ch. a spokesman said this morninR . "lle·s quite live l}' and itching to get out. but so far no release date has been n11?ntioned," the spokesman .~aid. Larsen. 81. was ad1nitted to the hospital June 17, due to a mild illness and loss or appelile. buried \Vednesday in the hi9toric Pere La chaise cemetery, one of the old~t in Paris , in private services arranged by f..1i ss Courson. The Sf'rvices were al· tended by only a few close friends. A reconi industry spokesn1an said r..1or- r1son 11.'as in Paris v.·r1ting a book. Rill Siddons. ~lorr1son's manager. said in Los An~eles tha1 the initial ne11.•s of the :-anger's death was kept sccrtt "lo avoid tl:e notoriet )and eircus-like atn1osphere lhal surrounded the dearhs of such other rock personalities as Janis Joplin and Ji1n Hendrix ." Siddons said he arrived in Los Ange les from Paris Thursday night. Althou gh Morrison and "The Doors·· achieved \\'idcspread acclaim in rock 111us1c circles through their hard-hitting sound, Morrison was in the headlines several times becuuse of hi' stage an tics which caust'd the group to be banned U1 several U.S. cities. He was arr~sted a tew years ago in ~lia1ni for u.~ing obsCfne language and exposing himself during a concert. Ht 11·as con,·icted last October. fined S500 and sentenced lo six months in jail. He was free on $50,000 bail rwnd1ng an ap- peal at the time of his death . ~lorrison's f..1iami appearance sparked teenagers there lo counter v•ilh a .. rally for de<:ency" vdlich th organizers Jell 11•ould !'hO\\' that the majarlty of young people do net subscribe to f..1orriscin's at- llludes. A native of f..1elbourne. Fla., the son of Rear Adm. George S. Morrison, Jin1 form- ed .. The Doors" Ln 1965 in Loo Angeles. The group went to th'.! lop of the chan.s \l'ith "Break on Through'' and fo\lol'ed shortly after with the sonc that made them one of the top rock acts in lbe na- tion. "Light f..1 y Fire." Their latest single \\'as "Riders on the Stonn." Siddons said !11orrison had been In Paris with his v.•ife Pamela since March . He said the singer "had seen a doctor ln PHris about a respiratory problem and had complained of this problem on Satur. day, the day of his death." SALE CONTINUES CHI NA R91. $87'.00 Avail eb1e In Y•flow or .. Gr•en SALE 5699°0 SALE FEATURES OTHER SELECT GROUPS FROM HENREDON DREXEL-HER ITAGE -UPHOL STERY, SHERRI LL -MARGE CAR- SON -HENREDON LAMPS, PICTURES & ACCE SSORIE S ALSO RE· DU CED. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL-HERITAGE NrwPOIT JTO•• or1N FllDAT "TIL' 7ed1J1111l.t ~ NEWPORT BEACH Profe1slonal Interior LAGUNA BEACH 1727 Wt1tcllff Or., 642·2050 Dt 1lgf'!t rs Av1U1blt -AID 345 North Cc11t Highwiy OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 I N T E R I 0 RS Phone: 494-4551 --~ - ' I I ' ' ,I r, 1 ....... -.. . . "';_,, .. ,\; ........ ----...__ ..,.... -=-..,...,-, jl Laguna Beaeh EDITION VOL. 64 , NO. 163, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA I Board to Receive Petitions By FREDERICK SCHOE~1EHL 01 lfl.o 01/1~ P'lltl Sutt Seventy-live petitions will be presented to members of the Laguna Beach Uni£1ed School D1stncl hoard in support of Superintendent \\1ilham Ullnm a11d !he in· novative education 1n the Laguna Beach schools. The petitions have been circulated bv members of the s1x-werk old Laguna Beach Property Owners AssoclaUon, ac- Need Sewers rording to spokesman for the group, Ernie Quigley, 2748 Temple Hill! Orrve. They are lo be given the board at the Ju· ly 20 meeting. "\\'r: are very concerned a b o u t statements by nev.· members of the board that the contracts of Dr. William Ullom, Dr. Robert Reeves &id Dr. Charles Hess will be bought off by the board," Quigley said this morning. Such a move, Quig!e.y said, could cost Moratorium Set On New Houses A temporary moratonu111 on the Issuance of building permits for new con- struction in Arch Beach Heights areas not served by sanitary sewers 1Vas voted by the Laguna Beach City Council \Vednesday night. The moratorium , e f I e ct i v e im- mediately, will continue at least until the Laguna Niguel Man Arraigned 011 Hit-ru11 Robert J . Wilson. 29651 Via P811, Laguna Niguel "·as arraigned Thursday morning on charges of felony hit and nin, folio" ing a crash in Laguna Beach which in1ured t"o pcrsnns. f ollo\\'ing the arraignment before Judge Da \"1d Aarnn, 1n South Orange County :O.tunicipaJ Court, \\'ilson. 36, "·as released on his O"'n recognizance. A prrlim1 n:iry hearing "'as set for !I a.m. J1il1 1:.. twrorc Judge Rich:1rd Ham ilton. \\ t!son l!i bf:licvccl hy pnllcc to h;n e rr:ir cnclccl a rno1 orcycle carrying ~:iurice Covault nf l3aldw1n Hills and h1.q female co111 pan1on. Ruth .\1 r:-.1a nn of Artr ~1a. Pol1cr sairf hoth vrh1rles \1·rre 1r;nrl1ng south ;ilnng P;i c1f1c \n;i~t Highway nei'lr Lcnrn1l Stre:>l 1n l.agu11a Beach when Lhf' 1Vreck occurred at 2 a rn. Thursd;iy morning Polire allr~rd th;it \Vi!son i;;prd off, lr;i1·1ng CnY;ltil1 ;ind l\.1i~s Mr.\1ann lying injured on the side. of the h1gh"'"Y - Polict. err1\'1ng at the scene. noticed li,::ht colored p;iint on the motorcycle. and M"nt out a .iien!!ra l broadcast for police unit.s to look 011\ for a light colored ccr wi th front end damage. Such a vehicle \\'RS spotted minules later along Crown Valley Parkway by Orange Coun!y Sheriffs. They arrested Wilson. who was later booked by Laguna Beach police. Miss l\1c ~ann. Ill. is in serious con· dition today at Srl\Jth Coast Community Hospital wllh he;id injuries. Covault, 20, Is listed in satisf;ictory condition. Laguna Child Listed Serious After Accident • A four·yeu-old Laguna Beach girl who suffered head injuries and facial lacera- tions when she ran into the side of a mov- ing low truck Thursday afternoon is re.ported in serious, but slightly improved condition today at South Coast Com- munity Hospita l Police said Michelle Marline!, 4M Locust St .. Wll'l standing on a curb neu her home waiting for her mother, Mrs. Kaye Martinel. to crQSl the street. when hen she suddenly darted into tile roadway ind intr. the 11ide of the truck, which was &0uthbo11nd on Cypress Drive. The vehicle wa,, driven by Arthur R. Hage, 25. 11n employe of Larry Hunt Tow· Ing Service. The 5:4n p,m, incident oc- curred 11t the !nte r~tlon of Cypress Drive tind J.QCust Slrl!ct. '... :po-' -:r. ,....._ __ ... __ -... ~ ~-· -~ council has had an opportunity lo hear a complete report on the sewer situation in the area at a speci11! study session called for 7:30 p.m. Friday, July 16 in council chambers. At that time Director or Public Works Joseph Sweany "'ill present reports from lhe Health Deparlment and from Boyle Engineering which began engineerinl design of sewers in Assessment District 69.1 in 1969, on instruction of the City Council. The assessment district was initiated on lhe basis of a communication from the Health Department following complaints from residents of leaching from cesspools and septic systems. Jn March, 1970, work on the se"·er plans was ordered slopped by the ci ty because no further funds had been budgeted, but, according lo Sweany, Boyle proceeded with the plans an· ticipaling the district would be reac- tivated. In the meantime, said Sweany, more than 52 percent of developable property in the district ha~ been built upon and failures of A e pt i c systems again are bringing complaints. The Building Department 8,llain has been conducting percolation lest11 in the area and reports prohlems in con- structing nf'w septic systems because of difficulty of access on the 2ft-foot lots as more and more ;ire developed. Councilman Ed"·ard Lorr. an Arch Be;ich I/eights resident himself. ex.- presserl the opinion that "no septic tank th;it 1s properly maintained has failed '' and suggested that evidence the ground "'ill not take more private sewer systems is ··very skimpy." The Arch Beach Height s llonleowners A ~socialion only 1Van1ed lo halt develop- ment of 25-foot loti; because of density considerations when it initiaterf com- plaints about private sewer systems, Lorr said. "They failed to achieve this," he added . and the city inst.ead proceeded v.-il.h plans to install sanitary sewers. On Lorr's motion, the council agreed to declare the building moratorium pending receipt of a full statu~ report on the assessment districL The permit ban, it was noted , will ap- ply only to new construction in areas where there are no sanitary sewers, and not lo additions or remodeling jobs. Works Director Feted for Speed In Bike Danger Laguna Berich Director of Public Works Joseph Sweany received a bouquet from city councilman Edward Lorr at this week'! council meeting for his speed in persuading the St:ite Division of Highways to remove a bicycle haurd on Coast Jtighway. Lorr said ~ had re«ived compl1int1 from citizens about stonn dre.in gralinp alongside the highway at Emerald Bay and in other areas. With bars running parallel with the road , the gratings, 111id Lorr, had developed into real bike traps and CNJ!e.d several riders to lake tumbles. "When you start talking About ac· c1dent1," grlMed Sweany, '''Ille State Division nf Hlghwi:iy1 can ~mellmes mn .. ·e "'"i!h considera ble speed." a 1 ---1~-.-..... ,,.,, ,, ..... the district any.,•:here rrom S!00 ,000 lo $150,000. Contracts of the thret men - the top district admini strators -wtre renewed by outgoing members of the board before new trustees Will?am Thomas, Gerald Linke and l\.trs. Patricia GiUette took office. Quigley claimed that the three new members •·are ag&inst the innovative ap-. proach to education. I'm afraid they'll thro111 out the baby with the bath water." He suggested I.Hat problems vdthin the innnvative. system should be corrected as opposed to scrapp1no; all programs. .. \Ve have a tough enough job with the. budget already. There'.s no way we can buy olr any contracts.'' commented Thomas, who was elected president of the board" at last Tuesday's meeting. ··These rumors that we're going to do it are the funniest thing I"ve heard yet.'' "As long as U!Jom pf:rfOrms to our standards there will be no problem. I said that 1n the election and I'll sa.y ii again now." Thomas emphasized. Quigley said the petitions will probably contain about ""750 to 1,000" !ignature.s of persons "'ithin the school district. The petitions read, in part; •·we. the Laguna Beach residents are concerned about public statements by several school board members tha.t $100,000 to . $150,000 may be spent to buy off the contracts of Dr. William Ullom and olbe.r district sup- DAILY l"LLOt 1!111 P'""'9 A STRING QUARTET HAS COME TO THE ART COLONY TO FILL THE AIR WITH MUSIC From Left to Right Are Angela Juda, David Parker, Fay Cauuy and Ronny Paul Beachgoers Get Serenade 4 Harbor Area Youths Hold Concerts at Laguna Adding 3 new note of cultural color tn the Art Colony scene these weekends is a quartet of youthful Harbor Area musi- cians treating beachgoers 10 Si:iturday .and Sunday afternoon concerts nr classical music "because "'e love to play ." The young players got the idea from news stories about San Francisco's stroll- ing string quartets -groups or serious musicians combining their latents in sidewalk concerts in the Bay City. Angela Juda and Ronny Paul, both 15· year-old students 11! Costa ~{esa High School, playing violin and viola respec- tively, David Parker, 22. violinist and .11tudent at Orange Coast College, and fay Causey. 20, who attends UC rrvine and play.11 cello, decided they would like to make a s1m1lar contrihution to outdoor culture on the Orange Coast. All members of the Orange County Chamber Strings. directed by their tee.cher , Adrian Holland. they practiced some classic string quartets and took to the slreets in May_ On weekend afternoons they play in Laguna 's El Paseo area, to an en· thusiastic, ii occasionally somewhat d;imp and sandy t.udience of beach fans and tourists. Saturday nights they play on Balboa Island and on Wednesday and fri· day nighls. more or less, they turn up by the carousel in South Coast Plaza. In their spare time they praclLce at each other's homes. The ir repertoire now includes about 10 quartets, ranging from baroque to modern. and drawing heavily on such classic stalwarts a~ liaydn, Mozart and Scarlatti. Though they do not solicit money - "We play for enjoyment.'' sa.ys fay - enthusiastic listeners often slip donations into the music cases piled on the sidewalk. Recently In Laguna a man who said he was a profes,,ional symphony musician asked to sit in for a number, and did so, borrowing Ronny's viol a. So far the quartet has no problems with the authorities and little but praise from its surprised, but interested audience.'!. "It's amazing how many people will stay and listen through a whole number." says fay, "and a lot of them say they hope we 'll come bacl ." Slides Make Points Council Views 'Late Show' The .late sMw at the Laguna Beach Ci- ty Council Wednesday night found two citizens taking advantage ol "oral" com- mW1icatiOtl! time to !Oustrate tbejr op- posing views with colored .slides.- P'urniture fiailher WiJHam lbk in- troduced the medium to the' ·council ehamber by asking and receiv\ng permission to lllU!trale a few po.inti .he wi!lhed to make by projecting slides. A M:reen wa!I duly lowered and lights dimmed and Leak proceeded to project views of the rear or SunnY 's Sidewalk Cafe, operated by Ma yo r Richard Goldberg al'ld his wife, to show how a new ~idewalk and 1tep1 encroachtd into !ht ----.. " l.."><---. -~- I adjacen~ Hei.sler Park, time ago to illustrate a Laguna The city, said Leak, should remove t.be ~·eyeson'" In need Of •beauLillcaUon -a offending ·concrete and replace i~ with •P-'Shot of old furniture. Ind qtbe.r t.raih plleij propriate garden planting. behind the building •in qUeslk111, . Turner lmpie.dl.ately ifter Leak's presentation, oofnmented, ~·Noboay stepped forw1rd to realty. board presideDt Robert Turner, a complain about lh11 misuse: of park pro- poli!lhed pholographer, requested per· ptrl.y.'' miuion to illustrate his remarks with He then switched to a current view of some slides. the rear of the remodeled, rre11hly Turnt'r's slldei;, It developed, also were painted building, including the walk In ·of the rear of the mayor's new care. but que!tlon, a flower bed and a bench. "I were de~ignd to illustrate how the area think \hia is a great Improvement," uld had in fact been improved by the new Turner. tenant. The council made no response. to tbe Projc~ first a 1hde taken some dual pre,,entatlon. --·--~---·------------·-----~--~-·----~--------"-·" ... ~~---~ - 'i oday'• Fl•al N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Ullom port staff. "We feel Dr. Ullom hL'I bttn ln- strumental 1n developing and im- plementing an educational aystem which is constantly attempting to im· prove it.self." Quigley said the petitions, which are being circulated by the 50 members of the Property Owners Association will be collected next week, tallied and prepared for presentation to the board at the next meeting. Scores Die; 11 Cities Devastated SANTIAGO <UPI ) -Chile's worst earthquake since 1965, a ll/4-minut1 tremor that reached 10 on the Me.rcalll scale of 12, ki!Jed scores of persons Fri- day and caused widespread destruction. At least 66 persons were killed and more than 300 injured in the pre-midnight Thursday shock which was followed by at least 1-4 aftershocks that kept the country in 11wpense until dawn Friday. Cuualtlei were estimated by the Interior minlltry. All or the casualties were ln 11 citiet along the northern end of the fertile cen- tral valley nt19t'!ecl between the Andes and the coast in this quake-prone land on the lower west coast of South America. In the port of VaJparai~, 25 were dead, Including 8 in the beach resort town of Vina Del Mar. There "'ere II re.ported dead in Santiago and 5 in San Felipe. Some were killed in accidents caused by panic. others by faJling walls and debris. Three died in Illapel, the epicenter of the quake. There the quake reached an intensity of 10. It was recorded at fi in Santia10, the capital. President Salvador Allende declared the north-centra l zone a disaster area.. placed troop.'! on alert and ordered out extra-strength police detachments to discourage looting. Allende took a helicopter early Friday to Valparai~ and Illapel, which \\'as isolated by landslides on the Pan Aml!'rlcan Highway. The quake was felt from Arica, on the Peruvian border, to Temuco. 1,400 milet to the south. IL was the cou.ntry'I strongest quake since March 28, 1965, when 300 persons were kil!ed by a tremor also centered in the northern end of I.bl central valley. Dive From Rock lnjttres Youth A 12-year old boy WA!i injured Thursday afternoon in Laguna Beach while di vfnl near the rocks off Fisherman'• Cove. Lifeguards reported that Jobn Hobbs. of Mountain View, hit his head on a roclty pr1>jection near the ''blowhole" at W! cove. ·~ He was rescued from the water bY guard Terry Klein and. rushed by am· bulance to South Coast Community Hospital. He was later relem!d to the care of a private physlci1111. Orange Weatller The weatherman predict& low clouds and fog today and Saturday, clearing by noon with tempera· ·t tures along . the coast around 71. ' and to inland. Lowa of 66 dqreei• in both 1re1s. INSIDE TODA.Y Tht Pagtant of tM MG.S tcra and FtstivoL of Art& opent ne.it week in Lagu.na Stach. Pk::ture1 t and a story art i-n toda11'1 W•c"" t ndtr, Page 23. IHllftt 22 C1t1i.f!Oia , eMdllllf Uf 1 ci.u11"' P-4' c-14• fl ,,.._,... II OMtll ... lktt I l•lt.t"lll t>..-I l!lllWllM!MWI 11-• ,i-, U·11 -.. .............. u Ml•ltl ... llWllNI ,lllllh 11 ... , ............... Gt'MM C...., r ·-" , .. ,, lt.d' M.lrll«tl 1Jol& T•lt•t.1111 " Ttlffl.rt ... w........ • w-·• Jffwll 1>1• Wlt'l!I..._ f I w~ 1-Wl , • 2 DAILY PILOT Irvine Clt f1 Citizens Protest Priso1ier Has Real Problem Schools Division NewpQrt Bea.ch po~ 10 to au rt.uOrllble ltncths to watect tbe hlall.h and 'Mlf•rt oi t h e l r prisonu1 but nothing could be dllne for one Thursday. . Irvine aru bomecwner1, already placued by city cf Santa An.1 lawsuits over proposed boundtrles of lhe nt w city cf Irvine, htwe a nell' problem today - iiehool district boundaries. Through the Council of CommuniUes of 1rvine (CCl), 1 35Q..signature petlUon has bttn filed with the Orange Counly Department ol Education protesting prtM:nl plans for spliUing up the Tu~Un Union High School District into three unified district:!:. _1be petition asb that the county school officials AChedule a public hearing on or before July 21 for conslduat..ion of a ne w unification plan to be submined by CCI and the Irvine Council on Education. The 350 sign~ures cn the petition represent more than 10 percent of Irvine's registered voters. as required by the State Education Code in calling a Four New Buses To Start Service In Laguna Beach Four ntw 21-passt.nger buses built by the Fliirlle Company of Loudenville, Ohio, wllf be in service on Laguna's city bus route iri approximately two to three mont.hs. The City Ciouncil voted this \\'ttk to ac· cepl the Ohio firm'11 low bid of $14.247 ptr vehicle after admin.Utralive assislant Al Autry advi,,ed them the federal Depart. ment of Transportation, which is finan· c ing two-thirds of the purchase, requires acceptance or the low bid if all specifica· lions are met. The Flxible bus, Autry 11aid, exceeds 6pecifications. It 111 a m horsepower vehicle with a 390 cubic inch engine and hez.vy duty hydraulic brakes, he said. and should be able to negotiate Laguna 's hilly terrain· •·easily." The federal grant. he told the council. dot.! permit the city to request special features deemed desirable provided the cost doe! not exceed that of th e next Jowt;llt bid, in this case 1 figure of ,115,579 for Gillig bUMes. The Flx1blt Company, the council was inforraed. bas 800 coaches opuatlng in Los AiaiilM at this lime and is plaMlng to eatiblbh a full parts warehouse in the area within the next few months. PlNuiers Slate Special Session On General Plan Lagtma Beach planning commissioners will plunge back into lhe 127·page ~neral Plan document al a special study M!ssion Monday evening. in an attempt lo move "leu controversial'' sections on lit Lbe City Counc:U for approval. Planning Directo r Wayne Moody has been a:sUd by comml!!ion chairman WiUiam Lambourne to pick out such sec- Uons and review them for the com· mission prior to discussion. At ~ 1:30 p.m. session ~londay, Moody wUl report on the Community Facilities and t;ti\ities elements of the plan and there will be further discussion cf the 1..and Use element, already revi ew- ed by Commissioner Carl Johnson. Also up for review wi ll ~ a proposal from the Laguna Greenbelt lnc. that the t'ucalyptw grove in Laguna Canyon at Milligan Way be purchased for public use and'preserved as a landmark at the entry to Laguna Beach. OIANIJI COAST < DAILY PILOT Olt1Jtf;3 C.OA1T r u11..15MIHO. CCM,AHY le\,,r+ N. w,,J ,.,.__, enll l"WI..,,., J1tf( k. Cu1ltv VlCll ,,..w .. 1 ..,. ~ .. ""'-~ Tiie"'•' kH ¥il .t:lli.r n.."' ...... 1o1 ... ,,,; •• ~··1- 0 .,1 .. H. L .. , lic~1..r P, N11I AaolllallO ~"Iii ... l.lllW'a "-tll-'"'" Offk• ~J'! F.1•11 A•••v• M•lliri• 1clcl••••• r.o. le•'~'· •2•s? s-ca.-.,. O"k • 3 05 Norttl () C 1111i,.. Re t l, 92671 -0-COlll Mfio1• Siii Wet! 11'1 $+•..-t M.....,,..1 IHt~· lU3 "'""°"' 110u·...,,r1 tfWllll'll• .. w.11: 1111) -..acn o ... 1,w11t public hearing. \V, Fred Fry, CCI vice chairman. s11id Irvine residents object \Jeorously to pro- posal now under study by t!1r County Committ.ee for School D 1st r 1 c l Reorganli.ation He charged that the committee's plan~ strip lhe proposed nev: Irvi ne Un1f1ed School District of its commercial and in- dustrial t8.'t bases and g1\'e theSf' valuable assets to the proposed new Tu.silo and A1Wion Viejo unified districts. ··Most of the enrichment i,1•ould be to lhe Tustin District;' said Fry. "'Mission Viejo. under the plans the couuty com- mittee seems to f evor, v:ould not be much better orf than we would be after a few more years of growlh." The CCI leader claimed Irvine was not piggy on tbe subjeet. ··we don 't want ell of ltvlne's commercial and industrial tax base for ourselves," he added. •·we are willing to share it a s equally as possible wi th TusUn and Mission Viejo." He said it ·was that kind or plan CCI would submit lo the public hearing. Tbe Irvine unification study i11 to be jGinUy financed by UCI and th e Jrvlne Company. Among participants a r e Marian Ellis c~'ld "11. E. Peterson, co- chairmen ol the CCl's education com- mittee. Thousands Bid Last Farewell To Satchmo NEW YORK {UPI) -They said good· bye lo Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong today with a service that sent the jau rythms of the New Orleans funeral song. "When the Saintl Go Marching Jn,'' halfway around the world. Only 500 people could attend the funeral service for the great jazz trumpeter in the simple red brick Corona Congrega· tional Church in a quiet Queens neighborhood. But more than 1,000 <lr Armstrong's nele:bbors stood out.side and hundreds of thousands watched on television as 7 elstar beamed the service to 16 Euro- pe.an countries. Pegn Lee flew in from the West Coast to sing ·'The Lord's Prayer." f or Arnuttona'• wlfe of 2' years, Lucille, they .s8llf "Just a doser Walk With Thee." He had come 1,500 miles from his n1live New Orleans to win his greatest fame but like all those other jaz.zn1en in the city where Dixieland was born, they played "When the Saints Go Marching In" for Arrmtrong, who died in his sleep Tuuday of a heart attack at the age or 71. • Armstrong's wife and a former wife. jau pianist Lillian Hardin, had said their pr ivate goodbyes earlier al a neighborhood funeral home. M r s , Armstrong. In bJsck dress and shawl, cried quietly as she stood near his grey steel coffin. :0.Journers began arri\'ing at 1aie mom- ing at the church which is cooled only by fans. As temperatures rose lo the high 80s, ushers handed out small paprr fa ns, some bearing a pi cture ol rhe !.1\r Ur. r.1arlln Luther King Jr, Outside, neighbors remembered hov.• Armstrong always wa.s read} to play at local chantable f've nls. "lie 11ould ne1('r forget if he could help 1! Gi11'\d\.\dl am- bassador -that l1!s him vrrv 1rell," !ltrs. Thelma Davis said. · The Hst or honorary pallbearers. v,as in Its 0\.1-'n wa v. a tribute 10 the rnan 11ho thrilled c r0wd3 in Belgr11de, Accra, Bangkok and ~1oscov: with his niusical gtnius and infrctious grin. The hst included l elev i sio n personalities J ohnny Carson and David Frost, ~1ayors John Lindsay of New York and 1'1oon Landrieu of Ne"' Orleans, musicians Gene Krupa, Guy Lombardo, Lionel Hampton and Benny Goodman. cotumni11ls Earl \\'llson and Leonard Lyons and composer Harold Arlen. But Thursday for the most part, v.·as the day when the unknowns ''ho bought Armstrong recordings by the millions paid their respects to the dynsmic singer a.nd musician. Detective Todd Wilkinson's lt- year-old arrestee was asked about any a il mrnts or medical problems by jailers, before being booked on a burglary charge and admitted to a cell He said he suffers ( r o m t•l 11ustrophobia. the fear o! being confined in a limited .space. L ittle Friend Of Presiden t Doi ng B etter four·year-old Danny Jones of San Clen1ente has been taken from inlrnsive care at Ulst Angeles Children's Hospital late this week after spending two months ln extremely critical condition after open· heart surgery. Family spokesmen said the little boy also left a hospital bed for the first lime this week during the long, tense con· valescent period. He took a trip around a Yl'ard in a whetlchair. The boy, who received i,1•idespread al· lention when President Nixon personally w1shed h1m good luck in the risky surgery. has had several emergency operations since the original surgery whrch successfully mended holes in his heart, evident since birth. Since the .surgery, Danny has en- countered pneumonia and b I e e d i n g ulcers. Activity in San Clemente geared toward helping Denny's family cope with massive medical bills continues as the boy·s conditi on im proves. Spokesmen for the fund sel up to offset the bills said contributions slill are being received and p lans have been started to schedule bP.nefi t events to raise more n1oney. Donations s till are being sought by drive organizer Mrs. Peggy Landell. Donors can make contributions at the San Clemente branch of United California Bank, in care of the Dennis and Danny Jones Fund. Planners to Get Second Look At Use .Variance At the r~uest c f a tlcnit y William Wilcoxen. Laguna Beach city councilmen agreed this week to ask the Planning Commission to lake aoother look a l its denial of a use variance for a new c.ar s torage lol at 965 Glenneyre St. Speaking in beh11\f of his clien t, Berwick Imports Inc., local Datsun dealer. Wilcoxen maintained the pro~ use should not h8\'e required a variance since the site already was approved 1s a parking lot and car storage is a similar U>e. Ci lv attomev Tullv Sevmour told the counCi! !hr apPhcant· was· "Slt"ered into a blmd alley" i,1 hen he "'as advised to seek a variance because new stale Jaw pro- h 1h1 t ~ the 1sStJance of use \ ariances to r 1rc111n1 1'nt 1.on1ng regu\;1.tions. Thr ques· Liou .c.hou!tl ha1 e been \l"hether lhe u~c 1.1ould be \he sanie as a parking lot , hi" said Bani 1ck sub-lt>ases !ht> .:;ite or his auto 1Jr::ilrr~htp fr1un Shrffer Laguna BeaC'h :01ur1uary :inrl l\'!lS storini:; nc\.\ cars on l hf lol appro1·Pd for n1or1uary parking. 1'\e1ghbors 1n the largely residential :irrR co1npla1ned of noise and J,::asolinf' lu111t'S rr ~ullin~ fro1n lhe use. Hol\'C\'rr, <irgued \\ ilc:oxrn, tJ1c ne w cars were <.i n1ply parked unlil oold and the s!orege u~c \\'Ould gf';nerele \e~s traffic in and out uf the lot than the former parking use. Realtor J(lt' Hom. onP of th06e pro- testing the UM', pointrd out that althouih parking lol ust> is acceplablt in lhe C·l ~C()m1nerc1a!' ione. the properly in ques- ti-On is in a C'-1 AL.~ (erchitt-<:\ure Md land supervision) z.one 11•hlch ~Uirt.! speci al approval. Wilcoxen en'phasized that his client i~ sttking only a temporary permit since he is attempting to relocate the. auto dealership and has three alttmate sit~ under consideration. Nixo11 , Aide s Rest Easy 011 Fi1·st Day s of Vi sit The Administration has been keeping a prisoners of 1var. rtlatively relaxed profile -0n ll'us tnp v.·est Brig. C.en. Ale:tander ~I . Haig Jr .• with President Ni xon gelling some sun rlepulv assistant to the President for ,.;;1;. poolsidt In San Clemente and his Press tlonal Security Affairs, also sat in on the Secretary swatting a tennis ba II while an 1neelings. aJde briefed the press for him. Gerald Warren. Dt!tpuly Pr e g !I Youthful Press Secretary R on 1 l d ~ret11ry , side-ste pped a question ThUT'!· Ziegler 1bo u\lled forth to the btach d11y on whether the li.S. rtply to the below Laguna·~ Surf and Sand Hotel to Communist peace plan w1s lhe fina l to&., 1 footb1U wlth obvious e11se. \\'Ord. The restful Jl'I Ce "''1!15 txptcled to lie srud tie btlitved 011\'lc1 KE. Bn1rf'. pickup after the "''cekend chief U.S. negotiator. had e~k~ the othrr President Nbcon met Thur~ctay for the sid<' to Join in an y meaningful ne1otia· third stral~ht rl11y with Sf':cret11ry of Sl!illf' (l(lns Y.1UJl11m P. Rogtrs on a 5pec:trum of In other matters Thursday. the Presi· foreign affairs. dPnt nonlineterl Benjamin Oliver Davl!i This Included the peace discussion In ,Ir . 58, retlrrd Negro Air Foret P8rls. The U.S. has turned rlown a Viet Jlcutt'nant general. to be As..'1!ltnt Cong demand for pulling 1111 U.S. troop~ Srcrelary ol Transportation !or Safety 1t M '.'\:"\.!"'-~" tJC~ -a; .... Uu,uf __ .lUld..C~":~"'Jtt\UllrS.__ ~ _:-_ ···--..--_, ------'-----.. --~ -r _..._ .. Harb9r Vote Ap.pr9ved L eag ue of Cities Votes 13 -12 for B ill Represent.aUves of Orange County's 2S cities wran&led for two hours Thursday nl~ht and fin ally 11pllt 13-12 in sllpport of an Assembly bill to put the fate of the County Harbor Dis1ri c1 up to the \'oter.s . The U>ague of Cities mt'rnbf'rs also split 13-12 over naming a rt'prrsentat1\e lo the Local Agency Forrnat1on Con1· mission i LAFC). They replaced Fu!lertun rouncilman Louis lleinhardt \\'ith Los Alamltos Mayor Pro Ten1 Joseph Hyde. Tht \'Ole on thf' harbor district \\'as ac- tually a defeat of a mo!Jon to support Assernt..lyman l\ennelh Cory's \ I)· Anahein1) bill \.\hich \.\OUld retain t.he di5trlct a.s a seperat~ laxing agency and add parks lo its jurisdiction. The.leAgue had voted 2(>..J la st April to support lbt bill by As.semblyman John Briggs !R-Fullrrlon) aJ1tl that decis ion stands. Briggs' bill would put lhe matter lo the voters. Support for the Cory bill h~d Ueen ~ought by the Board of Suptr.•lsors at a recent t'ily-cou111y meeting. Orangt> Coast l'it1es split 4·3 on the issue Neli'port Re11eh. La~una Bea.eh , ;ind seal Beach supported the ('orv bill \.\hlle San Jui\11 Capistrano, Hw1ting1011 &ach. I.As A!cin11to~ and Fountain Valley voled on thf' other shtr. The \'Ole on a reprl'~Entative on the 1.1\FC first in volved l !ir~ ca11d1date~. Re inhardt. llyde and Tustin r.layor Tony L'oco. Reinhardt and llyde gol nine vo trs each and Coco &even t:oco was later elected altemate LAF'C n1ember by a !3-12 \'Ole O\'er Reinhardt. MP.yor Thomas Forsltr of San Juan Capistrano argued befort' the linal \'ot• on the Corv bill lhat a dt'('i.'Hon should be IMlponed °and the questiOn referred baclo to the various city coun cils. ··They do not really understand either bill.'' he con- l!"ndf'd. TI1e cil} repre~enta111.·Ps 11 r r e unanimous On one sub1ect , Thr v don·l flkf' the property tax bill appro1.•ed by the .superviS<1ts "'h1ch \.\'ill IL~t onlv lou r ca\pgones -~chools. city. coun.ly and special dislri('L~. ·1,,c) voled to urge thr super\·1sors !et tl·t urn to the former format hsling 7J I 1a.~1ng agencies stparately. Those who spoke on the subject frlt !hat !he ci!ltll \1·ould get blamed for high tax bills if the breakdown was not u.sed. Rock Superstar Succumbs Heart A ttack K ills Ji1 n Morrison of 'Doors' PARIS (UPI ) -American l'IX'k star J im MorTison, 27, lead singer of ''The Doors," whose raw sexual on-stage style made him an int.ernalional star -and a defendant in an obscenity trial -died of a heart attack last Saturd11 y and i,1·as buried secretly in a Paris cemete ry, police reported today. Police sai1! r.lorrison \1·as discovi:rrd unconscious in lhe ba!hroom of his chic apartment by Pan1ela Courson. 25. of Los Angeles, his companion for the past fi ve years and regarded as his common Ja\V wlfe. "Miss Courson said wben Mor rison awl)ke last Saturday. he v.•as not feeling \\fill," a IX)lice spokesman said. •·He ask- ed her to get a ha th ready and thrn entered the bathroo1n. "Not J1eanng any noi~c, Miss Courson later openrd the door to find r.1orri!!On Jyini;c unconscious in the br11h" The of!icer at !he 11rec1ncl for the fourth Arrondi~sc:men1, a Jashionab!e rlistncl of Paris. said .Vl ol'rison \\'as dead \1·hen a police ambulance arn1·ed at his apanment. He said a doc!or la ter issued a certificate attributing death to a heart a\\ack. The poiice officer said :-.torrison was 7 County Woman Aviators Complete Derby Fligl1t From \Vire Services Seven Orange County woman avi ators are among contestanl.3 in the Canada·tO- Louislana Powder Puff Derby awailing today's judges' decisions in Baton Rouge, Laulsiena. The wiMtr in the 2.400 mile air race, who receives SI0.000 will be announced late r today. Flying time and horsepower are being computed lo determine place merit. . P resent unofflcial leader is C. Rich· ardson of Yakima. \Vashingtofi:,'j flight instructor who has tried for 3) .pars to win the US,000 contest. She had ile best flying time-to-horsepower ratio ot the 144 entrants going into Thursday's filial d1y Of flight. Mrs. Richard!l<ln. night school owner and operator, flew her 285-horsepower Cessna without a co-pilot into. Baton Rouge shortly before noon Thursday. Orange County participants In t}je fii ght which began ~1onday in CaJgary, Alberta. are: -Dorothy Waltz of El Toro wilh Wally Funk of Hermosa Beach in a Piper roinanchf'. -Shirley Tanner of Newport Beach "'i\h Claire Walter or Los Angeles in a j\·lr.onev r.120. -\\'llm a Nesselroad of t>.'ei,1·porl Beach and Sandra Ruller of \Vestm1nster. -Margaret Buth and Peggy Lawton . both of La Habra, in a Cessna 206. -Dorene Christensen of San!a Ana with Amy Koning of Las Vegas, Nev. Greeter Eile r Larsen Re ma ins in Hos pital l..3f!:una Beach Greeter Eiler Larsen re- mains in sA!isr11ctory condition at Veterans Hospital in Long Be a c h. a spo kesman said Lhi s morning . ··1-1e·s qu1le J\\'l'ly and it ching to gel out. but so far no release da!t has bee.n me11tiont'1l, ·· tile spokesman said Larsen. 81. was admitted lo the hospital June 17, due lo a mild illness and loss of appetite. buried \\lt dnesday in the historic Pe.re La chaise cemetery. one of the oldest in Paris, in private services arr.!lnged by ~1iss Courson. The services Yl'tre at· tended by cnly a fe\\' close friends. A record industry spokesman said r.1or- riS<ln \1·a~ in Paris writing a hook. 811\ Siddons, ~torrison's manager, s:.11d in Los Angeles !hat the initial nf'"\l·s of the ~1nger"s death \.\'a.s kept secret "lo a\'Otd 1r.e notoriet yand circus-like atn1osphere th at surroundt(I the deaths of such other rock per50nalities as Janis J oplin and J 1n1 Hendrix.·· Siddons said he arrived in Los Angeles from Paris ThursdAy night. Although \1orriS<Jn and ''The Doors'' achieved v.·idespread acclaim in rock 1nusic circles through their hard-hilling ~ound. ,\lorrison 'Y.'as in the headlines several times becuuse of his stage antics i,1·hich caustd 1he group to be banned 111 several U.S. ci!ies He \\'as arr~sted a few years ago in :Oliaini for using ohsrene language and expo.sing him:;;elf durin~ a concert. He \1'as ron1·icted last October. fined ~500 and sentenced lo six months in 1ai1. HI! \\'as free on $50,000 bait pending an ap- peal at the time of his death. \lorr\son·s ~-li ami .appearance sparkPd teenagers there to counter V.'ith a ''tally for decency·• which th organizers felt -..... ·ould shaw that the majority of young people do nol .subscribe to Morrison's at-. tilude~. A natire of l\lelbourne. Fla .. the son ci Rear Adm. George S. r.1orrison, J im form- ed ··The Doors·· in 1965 in L<:is Angeles. The group went lo the top nf !hf' chart." \\'ilh '·Break on Through"' and followed ~hortly after \.\'ith the s-0ng that made lhem one of the t0p rock nets In the na- tion . "Light r-.ly Jo'(re " Their latest single "·as ''Riders on the Storm.·· :;1ddons ~aid ~torri:ion had bt>rn in Pa ris with his "·ife Parn~la since :0.1arch. He said lhe singer "had seen a doc tor ln Paris about a respiratory problem and had complained of this problem on Satur- day. the day of his death." SALE CONTINUES CHINA - .... $179 .00 Av•ilabl e In Yellow o r Gre•n SALE 169900 SALE FEATURES OTHER SELECT GROUPS FROM HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE -UPHOLSTERY, SHE RRILL -MARGE CAR· SON -HENREDON LAMPS, PICTURES & ACCESSORIES ALSO RE· DU CED. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL-HERITAGE NIWPO•T STO•I Ol'IN H IDAT 'Tll t N!WPORT BEACH 1127 Westcllff Dr ., 642-20$0 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Prafe 11ion•l Interi or De1lgne r1 Av1llable -AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BlACH 345 North Co11t Highway Phone: 494-6551 ·-_ ... ..._ -· ... -""'. -----------,.·····--· ,.,._ ~ ----·---------,.,_ ' ' 7 ' .. •, -----------• San Clemente • • Today's Flnal Capis'Crano EDITION N.Y. Stoeks '* VOL. 64, NO. 163, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS Sewer Woes to Force Irvine School Clo ·sure? In·1ne School \\'ill ha1•t 11. new building soon. r..ot beC'ause its overcrodwed Not becaui;e an old building i1 fal11n& down. But because the ces!'-pools are full . ''\\!e cannot sink another cesspool on that properly." said Rex ~er1son, Assi~· !ant Superinli:'ndent of the San Joaquin Etrmentary School Oistrict. "We"re gf)in~ lo ha1e !o hOOk up lo a !!ewpr line nr Cl(lsr the schMl " Nerison told !he board of trustees State P1·iniary \\'ecfnesd ay lhal the districl 14·ould have to pay aboat 1100,000 to hook up lo the closest sewer. In order to get a sta te loAn fo1 the pro- jeel -they will have to apply for a loan to rebuild lhe or1gir.al Irvine School buildi ng and include the sewer hook up in lh e project. "As far as we can dtlermi nt thl': original lrvtne School building was built in 1929. Our engirittrs feel it does nol comply with Field Act earthquake safety standards so it would have lo b.: replac~ or put out of USt' by 1975 anyway," r;a.id N~rison . "Bei:ause of the r@<'ent earthquake the slate is more v•ill ing to approve ap- plications to replacll'! pre-Field Act build ings. t feet we ·have a very good chan« to get the loan approved.'' The board sancti~d lhe application which had to be su bmitted by July 9 in order to be studied by tht state alloca· lions boa.rd during ii.$ Aug ust meeting. lf appro\·ed rn· August, the v.·ork could be completed for the opening of school in September. The sewer hne that JS the most economical to reach, according to ad- ministrative findings, is on Jeffrey Road and is part of the Irvine Water District. The board has asked for a complete set of figures an various alternatives before they sig n any agreement \.1-'ith the Ir1·ine Water District for sewer service. Board President Gratian Bidart asked ~""~ .. ' ' 'I • , .. ... I 1f v.·hen the school wa.11 closed once during thf' year for sewer problems il was becauSE>. ()f a break or because of an overload . Nerlson said it had been an overload and at that Ume two more cesspools' had been dug. •·But we are a t the point where we can- not dig any more," Ner ison. The ground is saturated. ''We don't have facilities to acco mmodate even the. number of children we have at the school now .'' r • I ' • McClosky Says .,, ' • J, I I '. ) . ' '\ . ' J j• , . I He '11 Enter Race LOS ANGELt-:S I APl -Rep. Paul N. ~1 cCloskey .Jr., the most outspoken Republican critic of Presidt'nl Nixon's Vietnam war policies. announced today h.e will enter the 1972 California presiden- tial pr1mar~· election "pledged lo ending the war conditioned only upon return of the prL<;oners of war " "This \Oo'ill not be; a single issue cam- paign,'' the San Jl.1ateo, Calif.. con· gressman said in a statement issued in advance of a news confer f'n ce. •·we seek in addition lo ending the war lo restore truth in government. to achieve a return to historic Hepublican moral com· mitment on social issues rather than !ht present 'Southern Strategy' and a restoration of judicial cxcel!c nce and in- depenrlencc.'' McCloskey. 43. thus formally undertook fl campai_i;::n he s;i1d he would launch only tr i\ixon faded 10 change his Indochina policy and 1f no other prominent Dotvn the Mission Trail Langu."ge Skill Unit Approved t-:AST IR\'JN~~ -A Title I project lo Improve lan~uage skills for billngu<1! student!'! in !hP S;in Joaquin Elementary School Di!'!trict ha~ been approved by the Board of Trusters. The project. v.111ch last .vear helped 18 ~\exicao-Amencan children i m pr ov e language Arts. will be expanded during the comir:g yeAr. Jn add ition to ii full lime teacher, the program will ha\·e two Spanish speaking aides. It w\11 bt' held durin~ hoth _!;MSions al lrvine Elementary School. • C'orklalb Set MISSIOI'\ VlE:.10 -A no-hos! cocktail party is hcln!{ spc'lnsored by the Sad- dlebeck Democratic Club Saturday. July JO The event w11l \<1ke plA<'e in the Mission Viejo Inn ;it 8 p.m. The public is invited. • .<;en·er• So11ght EL TORO -Parklaoe Residential School is looking for 'volunteers to do 1ewirlfl;. • Mrs. J. T. W;irnack. sewing dil'l'<:lor, 11lso i~ looking for donations of yam, lriin, brighl colored pietts of cotton and Jig 311w puzzles. Anyone in1t>resling in don a ting materi8ls or sew ing for the school are asked to call the school 11t 830-7770 between 10 a m. and 3 p.m. wttkdays. • Dn11re Tonight MISSION VIEJO -l\n annual Sad- rlleback Little Le1tgue fund-ral~ing dance iii scheduled for ton\ghl •111 9 p,m. in the Mission Viejn Inn . The ttven! is ~pon.'l(lrod hy tlwo le11gue's• Women'i 11uxi\111ry and iJ open to parents of hoys playing ln lhe:' bueblll league. Ad mission will be S:J per couple. Republican entered the ract as a peace candidate. Jl.1cCloskey , who has assailed the Presiden!"s policies in speeches for months, advocating quick withdrawal of U.S. \\'ar forces, made no mtntion in his formal statement of entering other primaries. such as the first-in-lhf'-nation one in New Hampshire. The California primary ts .June 6, 1972. McCloskey said he would form and head his own slate. Nixon has not s11id whether ht will enter primaries. It has been widely assumed In Washin5ton that he would not . A presidential aide indicated before McCloskey 's news conference that t~ President doubtless "will not 1bdicatt:'' if faced with a primary challenge. McCloskey announced the start ()f 11 ''vigorous drive lo register naw voters in the Repuhlican party and to register 1ho.~e Democrats who ma y choose to do "'· "Under the present policies or the Presi. DAILY ,ILOT 1._H fi~e .. dent. vice president 11nd attorne.v general, lhe Republican parly is dyin1.'' he said. "It is clear that 1972 cou ld well be a disaster If new voters are given no in- centive to regisltT 11s Republicans." GRIM REMINDER OF AIRPLANE TRAGEDY; TOO GRIM TOO lONG THINK RESIDEPjTS C1pi1tr1no Beach Dwellers Would Like to Se• Ch1rred Remains R1z11d For Esth1tic Re1sons . _Sayin g thl!I three timM mo re De~rats than Republicans 11.re being reg15tered among under-21 voters in California. McClo~y added "if this trend co ntinues ii Spells the death or the Republican party,'' Scars of Tragedy Remain Learn-to-swim Class Scheduled Capistrano Building Hit by Plane Still Stands Registration for the llttf!nd lt.am-to- sw im program of the summer will be held from 9 lo ILJO a.m. Saturd ay al the San Clemente City Pool. The three-week program, sponsored by the Capistrano Unified School District, ls open lo youngsters In the district whcl ha ve <.ompleled the first gr.adt. Tht registration fet. is $1. Classes will meet daily In the morning~ beginning Monday at the city pool and will each last for 40 minutes. There an more th811 300 openings in the program. Youngsten; who are now completing the first segment of the program may re- register in the second iieMion Tuesday on a "space available" baais. By PATRICK BOYLE Of HI• D•!,., 1'1111 Jtt!f On .11 fog gy September morning in 1970. Capistrano Beach residents w ~ r f' awakmed lo the sound of 11n explosion when a single~ngine ain:-ra f! crashed in- lo a downtown laundromal. kill ing !hr: pilot and hurling a woman through the wall of her apartment. Almoal 10 mootru later. the charred ruin! of the crash still blot the business district along Doheny Park Road in th e &mall &e85ide community. AlthOup aevetal residcnl.s have com- plained about the burned building and ad- jacent vacant lot, noUling has ~en done to date pending the outcome of an in· surance setllemeiit. Damage to the buildings was in.ltiaµy set 11.t $56.000. The cruh, at 34241 Doheny Park f\oad, San Clemente Action look the hie <lf South La.'luna resident Raymond Addis, a northern Callfnm1ii school superintendent. The laundromat al 1he location was demolished, but an l'Ld· Jacenl restaurant building. al though bad- ly burned. is still st.a nding. Orange Cnunty departmcnl of building and safety officials, aware of the number nf ci tizen complaints of the "eyesore." have taken no action lo have the building torn down . "11 is hard (() invoke the building code If lhe siluation i.~ not of a hazardous nature." 11 department spokesman said. "Eyesores are not nece55arily a criterion for invoking any action ." The Capistrano Beach Olamber of Commerce is currenlly looking in to ha v- ing the building torn down. but the owners of the property say nothing will Jaycees' Park Offer Ol('d ' The City or San Clemente: baa accepted 90oa u ·fund.s are collected, llmdt had . the local J1.ycf:f'...11 ' afftr to fully land&ctJl'.' won c:Oncurrence by planning 'oom· city property at Unda Lane Ill a nti•)onen and.tht ·Parks and Recreation neighborhood park. 1 And in the swtn, UD&aimou! city cnun-CornmlSlion . cil action Wednesday came com-Fil,er told councilmen that 10me mendation for £be ttrviee t I f o rt money alrtady had ~ committed to calculated to use donated fu~1. labor tht proje:cl by local service ~· A 11.nd skill to complete the: part pacta1e rormaJ plan fqr tbe 'ork waJ IW'nl1hed wllh 'lambcaping ml pkrk areu. free by a cmtril cOunty ·ia~pe pllln- Jayett Ptesldtnt·AI Fll1er Jr. made a nlng llrm known as Pod: ~ , brief presentatton'~°'· d>!-1lttu'8! for .~ 1'>e: •Ja).-cff .-()(fer• wa•lone Of '1two ac- projeet -•. ~to be'Uw.°.iMUIUfation.~..i ~ cepted by• councilmen WedneldiQt. Jong-r'ange'.f>lan by his group 'to de~JOp· ' San Clementi'• K.Jwania Club re:aived ] more grffn belta In !he city. ln-prtnclplt approval for a similar pro}ed The plan, whlch will becomt reality u which hlnaea on the 1tate relinquishment of surplus freeway land at the 200 block of East Avenida Cordoba. TI)e: scenic parcel, said K.iwani.s President Hoyt Krider , Would be an acre in siie an'd would be t!fJUipped by the club with 11 cupala. telescope, sundial, benches and off street-parking. Expense• for the development would be home ~ lht: club. he said. ln both projects, the parka would be developed by the groups, then malnt.aintd In 'perpetuily by the city . · The KiwAnls offtt w!TI sund aW11iting • final word from the State: Division of Hlgl'lwa ys which mu~t decide on donatin& the ·lsnd for local park purpasee:. b!' done unti l a! least Aug . 4, when the 1n- ~urr1nre sclllement is .!Upposed to be completed. '"The residents of the area cou ldn't be compla1n1ng any n1ore than I have been cnmplain1n_i;:," said Mrs. Jacqueline Byrum. a Pico Rivtra woman who owns the lan d along with her sister. Mrs. June f\.1itchell. Mrs Byrum said she plans to demolish the ruined building as SOOR as compan y insuring the aircraft pays her for the damage. She said nothing <00ld be·lnuch· ed at lhe site until the settlement in the event furthe r evidence of I he damage was needed. "We feel that we have W be careful about wha t we do to Lhe site now," Mr1 . Byrum said. "It haJI to sit Lhere lile it.' ls until the negotiations are complete." Mrs. Byrum noted t.hat following the crash, she had planned lo rebuild the bur~d restaurant. but coUl1ty or£kials ruled the building wa." more: than 50 per· ce.nl destroyed and had lo be. torn down. Mrs. Byrum would not say whether she plans to rebuild on 'the property following the insurance eetUeme:nt. •·i hope the settlement doesn't have tn g:o to court.'' &tie: aaid, noUng this would cause even further deltya, "but th&~ra!il \s 'slill uhdet lnvelligallon. "We hope to have the building torn dOwn in the very near future, t.bouah," she added. Chili Dance Set The Shipmates Square Dance Club will hold \ti monthly dance ~aturday at 8 p.m. al San Jusn Elementary .School, 31642 El Camino Rt:ail, San Juan Capistrano. Bob Dameron asked why the board was not lnld about the problem sooner. 1'.'erison 1aid the district has been discussing the problem with Irvine Water District and lhe Irvine Company for two years. The buiding that will be replaced on the. lrvine School campus is one that includes six classrooms. administrative offices, and restrooms. It was originally built by the Irvine Ranch to ~rve children of employes and was donated to the school district in ! 935. • 1e Scores Die; 11 Cities Devastated SANTIAGO (UPI ) -Chile'a worst e!lrthquake since 1965, a 1\4-minute tremor that reached 10 on the Mercalll scale of 12, killed scores of persons Fri• day and caused widespread destruction. Al least 66 persons were killed and more th81l 300 injured in the pre-midnight Thursd ay shock which was followt:d by at least 14 aftershocks lhat kept lhe country In suspense untll dav.·n Friday. Casualties were estimated by the interior ministry. All of the casualties were: in 11 cities along the northern end o( the fertile: cen· tra\ valley nestled between the Andes and the'coast in this quake-prone land on the lower west coast of Soulh America. In the port of Valparaiso. 25 were dead, Including 8 in the b<!ach resort town of Vina Del Mar. There were 11 reported dead in Santiaeo and fl in San Felipe. Some were killed in 11ccidenbi caused by panic, others by fe.lling walls and debris. Three died in Illapel, the epicenter of the quake. There the quake reached an intensity or ' 10. fl was recorded al 6 in Santiago, the capital. President Salvador Allende declared the north-central zone a disaster area.. placed troops on alert and ordered out extra-strength police detachmenl.s to discourage looting_ Allende took a helicopter early Friday to Valparaiso and Illape.1 , which was isolBl.ed by landslides on the Pan American Highway. The qua ke v.'as fclt from Arica, on the Peruvian border. to Temuco, 1,400 mile.s to the south . It v.·as the country's strongest quake since March 23. 1965, v.·hen JOO persons were killed by a tremor also centered in the northern end of the central valley. Allende v.·ent on national radio to urg:a calm "the government of your comrade· president is here.. . .to help .... I ask you, citizens, I demand, stay calm ." II was five minutes past II p.m. in S.in- tiago when the quake hit. It began gently bul built up quickly. There was a hor· rendou.s, subterranean grinding noise and the lights went out. Panlc set in. Santiago sbook for 11/4 minutes bul farther north in the valley the quake lasted a mintue, 55 seconds. Panicky citizens, many In pajama s, ran Into the stretU. Flying glass. falling facades and cornices and panicky car drivers accounted for the ftrst casualties. Many were injured falling down darkened stairways. Orange Coast We•tlaer The wealhenna.n predict& low clouds and fog: loday and Saturday, clearing by noon with tempera· lures along: the coast around 75 and 90 Inland. t.o..a of 65 deg:ree.s in both areas. INSIDE TODAY The-Pageant of tht Ma.!ttrs and F'titival of Arts o~m nczt wtek· in. Laguna Beach. Picturu and a $to"ll are in todau'i Wttk· ender, Pnge 23. _,.. ..... MlllHI """' " "'~ ........ ~c_,, 1 Uw'h 1MI ""* ~., ...... "hleYlllN ft TIM•1-.... ... """' 4 ._.. 111.-i 1).14 ...... "-. --~ SJ.JI --· --.J. • ,.. ~' . ·: -::~::. ... ,t;:~-~-;,;-::;-:.:-::. ''""""' , ~ ~-... ·---___,. . ,.-u ·· ·~-,,.--, _ _.._ ~ •: ~· ~· ----· ----·----.... ·--. - ---·----·~ --' . -----·--_._ l -. I DAU.¥ PILOT Jmne Cltv Citizens Protest Prisoner Has Real Problem Schools Division Newport Btach police ao to all reuonable lenat)u: to protect I.he health and welfare ol t h e J r prisoner• but nothing could be dolll: [or one Thursday. lrvint area homeownen:, already plagued by city of Santa Anil lawsuits '!Vet proposed boundaries of the new city of Irvine, havt a new problem today - school district boundaries. Through the CDuncil of Communities of Jrvint (CCt), a 350-slgnature ptlitlon has been filed with the Orange County ~partment of Education protesting present plans for splitting up the Tustin Union High School DI.strict into lhrtt unified dlslricu. ~petition asb that the county school officials schedule a public hearing on or before July 21 for consideration of a new unification plan to be submitted by CCI .and the Irvine Council on Education. The 350 signatures on the petition represent more than 10 percent of lrvine'a regl"tered voters, as required by the Slale Education Code in calling a Four New Buses To Start Service In Laguna Beach Four new 21-pa.ssenger buses built by the Flxlble Company of Loudenville, Ohio, wlU be in service on Laguna's c\ty bu.! rout.e In approximately t wo to three months. The City Council voled this week to ac- cept the Ohio firm's low bid or $14.247 per \•ehicle after administrative assistant Al Autry advised them the federal Depart- ment or Transportation, which is finan- cing two-thirds of the purchase. requires accept.anct: or the low bid if all specifica- tions are met. The Flxible bus, Autry said, exceeds &pecificatlon:i. lt i5 a m horsepower vehicle with a 390 cubic inch engine and hez.vy duty hydraulic brakes, he said. and 11ho4ld be able to negotiate Laguna's hilly terrain "easily." The federal grant. he told the council. doe8 permit the city to request special featureJ deemed desirable provided the cost does not exceed that of the next lowest bid, in this case a figure of $16,S79 for Gillig busse.s. n>e Flxlble Company. the council was informed, has 800 coaches operating in Los Angeles at this time and ls plaMing to establilh a full-part! ware.house in the. area within the ne1t few months. Planners Slate Special Session On General Plan t.aguna Beacti planning commissioners will plunge back into the 127·page General Plan document at a special study session t.!onday evening, in an attempt t& move "less controversial., sections on te the City Counrll for approval. Planning Director Wayne Moody has been alked by commission chairman William Lambourne to pick out .such sec· tion.s and re.vi~w thtm for !ht com- mission prior lo discu.'ision. At the 7:30 p.m. ses!Jon 1'-1onday, J..1ood)' v.•ill rrport en the Community Facilities and Utilities eltmrnts of the plan and there will be further discussion of the. Land Use element. already rev iew· ed by Corruni.'i!ioner Carl Johnson. Also up for review \\'[Ii be a proposal from tl1f' Lagun11 G~tnbel\ Inc. thal the eucalyptus grove in Laguna Canyon at Milligan Way be purchased for public use and preserved as a landmark at the entry to LailJna Beach. OIAM•I COAST DAILY PILOT Cu.MG:! CO.UT f'Ual..ISHIHI) COMPANY' 1';,\H,t N. w,,, Pr•iMnl IMld ,.,...!>Mr Jtcli R. Cv•lw V\c:tt ,,_ ... ..,, , ... G-tl #11.-tft" Tli•llltl "••Vil 1;,1tror Tho,,.tt A. M•rplo.lR• Nionttltlt El•.,. Ch•1l11 M. t,,, 1';iolo.1rJ r. Ntll ""ltltlll """" .. ~.h .. l ~ ........... Offk• 212 F1r11! A••"u• Jro11ili11t ,,_.,,u, r.o. •~· ~~•. '''s2 5-c ....... Offlc• ~OS N•rtb ll C•111i11• A11I, '2672 ...... Off! ... (ttlt Mtt•• »O w"t l•Y S1•"' "'-' &H(h: Ul3 Pol1Wf,.fl 1..,11vtrlf Hwfll'"'*' I.ad!: 111Js ._,. a.ui.~1•4 public hearing. \\'. Fred Fry, CCI vice chairman. said Irvine residenl!I objecl vigorously to pro- posal now under study by lhr. County Committre for School D I s t r 1 c t Reorganiz.alion_ He charged that !ht. committee's plan!!" strip the propo!ied new Irvine Uni fied School District of il.'I commercial and in· duslrial t11.11 ba.ws and givt. these valuable assel.'I to the proposed new Tustin and Mission Viejo unified district!. "Most 0£ the tnrichmt"nt v.ould be to the Tustin District,'' said fry. ··t.1ission Viejo. under the plaru the county com- mittee seems to fa vor, would not be much better off than we would be after a few more years of growth." The CC I leader claimed Irvine v.-&s not piggy on the subject. •·we don't \Vant all of lrvioe·s commercial and industrial tax bMe !or ourselves," he added. "We are willing to share it as equally as poss;ible with Tustin and 1'-tission Viejo." He said it was that k.ind of plan CCI would submlt to the public hearing. The Irvine unification study is to be jointly financed by UCJ and the "Irvine Company. Among participants a r e Marian Ellis znd 1'-1'. E. Peterson. co-- chairmen of the CCI"s education com- ntiltee. Thousands Bid Last Farewell To Satchmo NEW YORK (UPI) -They said good- bye to Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong today with a service that sent the jazz rythms of the New Orleans funeral song, ''When the Saint& G<t Marching In," halfway around the world. Only 500 peoplt could attend the funeral service for the great jazz trumpeter in the simple red brick Corona C.Ongrega- tional Church in a quiet Queem neighborhood. But more than I,000 of Armstrong·s neighbors stood outJJde. and hundreds of lhousaads watched on television as Telstar beamed the service to 16 Euro- pean countries. . Peggy Lee flew in from the West Coast to sing "Tbe Lord's Prayer." For Armstrong's wife of 29 years, Lucille. they .!itng "Just a Closer Walk With Thee." He had come 1,500 miles lrom hi! native New Orleans to win his greatest fame but like all lhose other jazzmen In the. city where Dixieland was born, they played "When the Saints Go Marching In" for Arm!ltrong, who died in h~ sleep Tuesday of a heart attack at the a@:e of 11. Armstrong's wife and a former wife, jazz pianist Lillian Hardin, had said their private goodbyes earlier el a neighborhood funeral home. f.1 rs. Arm:slrong. in black dress and shav.•1, cried quiel)y as she :stood near his grey stetl corfin. Mourners began arriving a t \ale morn- ing al the. church which is cooled onl} by fans, AA temperatures rose to tht high 80s. ushers handed out small paper fans, some. bearing a picture ol lhf> 1ate Or. J\fartin Luther King Jr. Outside. neighhors rrmembered how Armstrong a Iv.-a) s \\'aa ready to p!a,v al local charitable. events. "Hr v.•ould nPve r forget if he C<Juld help H Goodv.·11l a n1- bassador -thal fil.'I him \"ery .,.,ell," Mrs. Thelma Davis s;ud. The list of honorary pallbrarers, \\·as in Its ov.·n way, a tribute to the man who lhrllled crowds in Belgrade. Accr;i , Bangkok and Moscow with his musical genius and infectious grin. The list included t e I e \' I s ; n n personalities Johnny Carson and David Frost. ~1ayors John Lind11ay of New York and Moon l..andrieu of New Orleans, musicians Gene Krupa, Guy Lombardo, Lionel Hampton and BeMy Goodman, columnists Earl Wilson and Leonard Lyons and co1nposer Harold Arlen. But Thursday for the most part, "''" the day ""hen the unknov.·ns who bought Armstrong recordings by I.he million! paid their respects to the dynamic sin&e.r and musician. Dt:terlive Todd Wilkinson'• lt- year-old arrester was asked about any aihnenls or medical problems by jailers. btfore being booked on a burglary charge and admilled to a c~ll . He said he suJfers from claustrophobia , the fear or bting confined in a limited !lp&Ce. Little Friend Of President Doi11g Better F'our-year-o!d Danny Jones of San Clemente has been taken from intensive care at Los\ Angeles Children's Hospilal late this week after spending tY!'O n1onths in cxtreml'ly critical condition afler open- heart surgery. F'amily spokesmen said the little boy also left a hospital bed for the first time this wttk during the long, tense con- \'alescent period. He took .a trip around a ward in a wheelchair. The boy, who received y,·idespread at- tention when President l"i"ixun personally wished him good luck in the risky s urgery. has had Se\'eral emergency operations since the original surgery which successfully mended holes in his hearl. evident since birth.\ Since the surii~ry, .nahny ha~ en- countered pneumonia and b I e e ding ulcers. Activity in San Clemente geared toward helping Danny·s family cope with massive medical bills cor:tinues as the boy's condition improves. Spokesmen for the fund set up to olfset the bills said contributions still are being received and plans have been started to schedule benefit events to raise more 1noney. Donations still are being .sought by drive. organizer Mrs. Peggy Landell. Donors can make contributions at the San Clemente branch of United California Bank, in care of the Dennis and Dinny Jones Fund. Planners to Get Second Look At Use Variance At the request of attorney 'Villiam Wilcoxen, Laguna Beach city councilmen agreed this v.·eek to ask the Planning Commission lo take another look at its denial of a use variance for a new car storage lot at 965 Gle.nney~ St. Speaking in behalf of his client, Barv.•ick Imports In('., local Datsun dealer, \Vilcoxen maintained tbe proposed use should not have required a variance since the silf' already was approved a! a parking lot and car storage is a similar ""· City atlorney Tully S(>ymour told the <''lunci1 the applicant was "slttred ~nlo a blllld a\l ry" v.·hen he \\"BS ad\·ised lo setk a \ Ariance because ntw state law pro- l11bns the 1ssuan1:e or use variances lo rircun1venl zoning reguJations. The ques- 11011 . ..+iou!d have been \Vhether the use \\(lU\d be the same as a parking lot. he ~a icl Bar.\·ick sub·l<'ases the site or hill 111uto dl'alership from Sheffer Laguna Beach \lor1uary ;:ind \\',,~ storinR new cars on the lot approved for n1ortuary parking. Nr1ghbors tn the largely re:;identi11I area <:omplnined of noise and gasoline lumt'll re.sultini;: from the use. Howev1.>r, :1q~ued Wllcoxen. the. new cars \\'ere ~imply parked until sold and the storage 11.~e \\"Ould i;:enerate less lraffic in and out or the !ot than the fonner parking use. Ht"a ltor Joe Horn. one of those pro- testing the use, pointe-d out that although parking lo! use is acc~ptable in the C·l !commercial) zone, the property in ques- tion is •n a C-1 ALS (architecture and land supervision) zone which requires special approval. \\'ilcoxe.n emphasized that his client is seeking only a temporary permit since he is attempting to relocate the auto dealership and has three alternate sites under consideration. Nix.011, Aides Rest Easy On Fi1·st Days of Visit The Admlnlstr1tlon has bttn keeping a Nlalively relased profile on this trip west with Pffilident Ni1on celling some sun poolside ln San Clcme.nte ind his Pre&s Stcretary swatting a tennla ball while an aide brieftd the prtls for him. Youthful Preas Secretary Ron a 1 d Ziegler 1130 sallied forth to thr beach bt:low Laguna's Surf and Sand tiotel lo tosa a footb11l with obvious ease. The res~ful pact was expected lo pickup after tht weekend. Presidtnl Nixon met Thur1day for lhe th ird straiaht day with Secretary of Stitt Wiiiiam P. Rogers on a spectrum of foreign afh1lr11. This included the pl':Jlt e discussion In P.1.rls. The U.S. hu turned down a Vitt Conf demand for pu lllng JIJ U.S. troops out of Vietnam in exchange for release of . ~~--.__ -I"----~ _·p--...,. I , • .., • prisonl'rs of \\"ar. Brig. Grn. Alell:ander M. Haig Jr,, deputy assistant to the President for Ne· tional Security Affalrs. also sat in on the meetings. Gerald Warren. Deputy Pre 1 l Secretary, sidestepped a que.!!UOO Thurs- day on whether the U.S. reply to the Communist peace plan was the final word. He said ht. believed David K.E. Bruce, chief U.S. negotialOr, had 1sked the other sldr to join in any meaningful oejotil- IJons. ln othtr mattent Thursday, lhe Presi- dent nominated 8enj1mln OUver Davis Jr., ~. retired Negro Air Feret lieutenant general. to be A~stant Secretary ot Tr11n11Portalion for S.fely and Consumer Affairs . ---------~--· ·-· . . . ,---.-.--. -- Harbor Vote Approved League of Cities Votes 13-12 for Bill I Reprffenlltlvts of Orange County"s 25 c::iUes wnn1led for two hours Thursday night and f\n11ly 1pllt 13-12 in support of an As51!!mbly bill to put the. late of the. County Harbor District up to the \'olers. The League of Cll1es 1ne1nbers also i;plit 13-12 over nan\Jng a representative to the Local Agency Form3tion Co1n- 1nission 1LAF'C). They rPplaced Fullerton councilman Louis Reinhardt with Los Alnrnitos Mayor Pro Tern Joseph Hyde. The vote on the harbor di slnct v.·as ac- tually a defeat or a 1not1on 10 support Assemblyman Kenneth Cory's ( D • Anaheim) bill whic h \\"OUld retain the district a.s a separate taxing agency and add parks to its jurisdiction. Tht Jee.gur had \"Oled 2(}3 last April to support the bill by Asaemblyman John Briggs <R·F'Ulle-rton) and that decision stands, Briggs' bill would put the matter to the voters. Support for the Cory bill had be.en sought by the Board of Supe rvisors at a recent cil}'-<.-Uunty n1ceting Orange CnR.~l cities s p!H 4.3 on lhe issue. Ne.,rport Beach, Laguna Be.ach. and Seal Be;ic:h supportl'd the Cory bill while San Ju:>J1 Capistrano, Hwi!ing ton Re ach. Los Alan1itos and FoUlllain Valley \Oled on the other sidP. The vote on a re11rl•senta\Jve on the \.AFC first 111\ul~td lhree tand1dates, Reinhardt, Hyde and Tustin t-.1ayor Tony Coco. Reinhard t and Hyde got nine \"OIM each and Coco St'\f'n Corn was later l'll'Cted alternalt LAF'C member by a lJ.12 vote over Reinhardt. tt1a.yor Thomas Forster of San Juin Capistrano argued before thl' final vot e on the Cory bill that a decL~1on should be postponed and the question referred bac ~ to !he various city councils .. They do not really understand eithe r bill:' he con- tended. The city 1·rpresental1vl's \\' ~ r' una11in1uus 011 one sub]t"CL Th t y don't like the property tax bi!! approved by I.he .~upervisors which v.lll 11.!lt only four t.'ale~or1es ~ schools, city, l"OUnty and .spt'ti al d1str1c1s. TI1ey voted to urge t!w.> supt>rv1sors Ir> return to lhe former format IJSling al.I taxing agencies separately. Those wha .spoke on the subjec:t felt that the c11ies .,.,·outd get blamed !or high lai: billi if U1e breakdown was not used. Rock Superstar Succumbs fl eart Attnck Kills Jini Morrison of 'Doors' PARIS (li PJ) -An1erican rock star J im Morrison, 27. lead singer of "The Doors," whose raw srxual on-stage style made him an international .star -and a defendant in an obscenity trial -died of a hearl atlark last Saturday and was buried secretly in a Paris cemetery, pohce reported today. Police said ~1orrison \\'as diSCO\'~rtd uncoosciou~ 1n the ba!hroom of his chic apartment by Pamela Courson. 25, ol Loo Angeles. hi s companion for the past five years and regarded as his common law v.ife . "~1W Courson said v.·hen tttorrison av.•oke lasl Saturda~. he was nut reeling v.·ell," a pollce spokesman said. "He ask· ed her to get a bath ready and then enter!d the bathrooin. "Not hearing any nolst . t.liss Courson later openeq the door lo hnd r.torrison lying uncon...cious in the bath." · The officer al thr precinct for lhe fourth ArrondisSt>ntent. a fashionable district or Paris. sa.id j\.·lorr1son \Vas dead v.'hen a police ambulance arri\'ed at hts apartment. lie said a doctor later issued a certi[icate attributing death lo a heart a ttack. Thz poi1cc oHiccr said '.\lornson \\'as 7 County W oma11 Aviators Complete Derby Fligl1t From \\'Ire Ser\•ice1 Seven Orange CoUl11y v.·oman a \'iators a.re among contestant.! in lhe Canada-to- Louisiana Powdtr Puff Derby awaiting today's judges' decisions in Bat.on Rouge, Uluisiana. The winner in the 2.400 mile air race. who receives $10,000 will be. announced liter today. Flying lime and horsepower are being computed to determine place merit. Present unofficial leader is Geni R ich- ardson of Yakima. Washington, a n ighl instruc1.or who has tried for 20 years to win the $15,000 contest. She had the besL nying lime-to-horsepower ratio or the: 144 entrants going into Thursday's final day of !light. t-.trs. Richardson, !l ight school O\\-ner and operator, flew hl'r 285-horsepower Cessna without a C().pilot into BalOn Rouge shortly before noon Thursday. Orange County participants in lhe fiighl which began t.tonday in Calgary, Alberta, are: -Dorothy \Va!tz of El Toro \\'ith \Vally Funk of Hennosa Beach in a Piper Comanche. -Shlr!ey TannPr or :\ell'port Beach \1•ith Claire \\'alter or Los Angeles in a f\tooney t-120. -Wilma N1.>sselroad of Ne\\•porl Beach and Sandra Ruller of \Vestininster. -f.iargaret Buth and Peggy La1\'ton, both of La Habra. in a Ces.~a 206. -Dorene Christensen of Santa Ana with Amy Koning of Las Vegas. Nev. Greeter Eiler Lar~en Re1nains in Hos pital Laguna Beach GrPeler Eiler Larsen re- n1ains in satisfal'lory condition at Veterans Hospital in Long Be a ch. a spokesman said I.his morning. .. He's quilc lively and ilching to get out , but so far no release dale has be.en n1entionet1,·· the .<;pokesman said . Larsen. 81 , was admitted to the hospital June 17, due to a 1nild illness and loss of appetite. buried \\'ednesda y in Ute histonc Pere La chaise cemet.ery, one of the oldest in Paris, in private. .servi~es arranged by l\1iss Courson. The services ""·ere at- tended by only a few close friends. A record industry spokesman satd t.lor· rison \1·as in Paris \\Tiling a book. Bill Siddons, '.\lorrison's manager. said in Los Angeles that the initial news of the :-inger·s death \\'as kept secret "to avoid lt:e notoriet yand circus-like atmosphere that surrounded t.he deaths of such other rock perwnalitirs as Janis J ophn a.nd J1n1 Hendrix:· Siddons said he arrived in Los Angeles from Paris Thursday night. Although t-.lorrison and "The Doors" achieved y,•idespread acclaim in ro<:"k n1usic circles lhrrnigh their h;ird-hilting sound, Morrison wa~ in the headlines ~everal Limes bccuus(' or his s1age antics \\·hich caused 1he group to be banned l!l several U.S. cities. He was a rrt>sted a few years ago in ~l!ami for using obscene languaEe and exposing himself during a C<Jncert. He \\"as convicted last Octnber. fined $500 and sentenced lo six months in jail. He ll'as frer on $50.000 bail pending an ap- peal al the time of his death. ,\1orrison's J\-liami appearanct sparked tttnagers lllere to counter y,•1\h a ··rally for de<.'ency .. l\'hich th organizers felt would shov.• 1hat the rna jority of young people do not subscribe to t-.lorrison·s at- titudes. A native of ~te!bourne, fla., the son of Rear .o\dm. George S. Morrison, Jim lorm- l"d ·'The Doors .. in 1965 in Lai Angeles. The group went to tht top of th!' charts y,·ith "'Break on Through"' and fo]]oy,·ed shortly after \1•ith the song that made 1hem one of lhe top rock acts iJ1 the na- tion ... Light r.1y F ire." Their latest single \\•as '"Riders on the s101m:' Siddons said '-lorrison had ber.n in Paris with his y,•ife Pamela since J\1arch. He said the singer "had seen a doctor ln Paris about a resp6ratory problem and had complained of lhis problem on Satur- da)'. the day of his death." SALE CONTINUES CHIN.II .... $179.00 A ... ai1•b11 In '(el low or .Gr•en UL! $699°0 SALE FEATURES OTHER SELECT GROUPS FROM HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE -UPHOLSTERY, SHERRILL -MARGE CAR- SON -HENREDON LAMPS, PICTURES & ACCESSORIES ALSO RE- DUCED. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HERITAGE NIWl'OIT STOii OPIN PllDAT 'Tll' NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Weattllff Or., 641-2050 OPEN F~ICAY 'TIL 9 Profet1lon1l lnterlor Dfflgnen Available -.AID INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co•st Hl9hw1y Phon•: 4f4.655 l -~------........ ·-. .... .. ---·· ··--· ------~ .. _;..........._~ .I ..... __ _ ,_ _ ...... ---. -~--· ----::·-----' ··- ' L pac ""' cer mg bui 0 !)On '" "'' rep era '" C•I We It tha p_ro t sin I fla1 '"P sto Ric E h" ""sh No 191 rec cor !'S!i '" Fe Cou s ly j bca ext P'" rra test lhe1 rou F por I" Col the co '"' crit leg fl f)ro Iha dis h" fO\~· '" cor Jon ~pa is . pie Jid niq '~ I I Bus ine~s Not Jolted By Qual{es Engineers for the project have been a w a r e of "shrinkage stress" m the North Kaiser Tower since May 1970. However. the most recently di scovered cracks ac- cording to e n g i n e e r i n g estimates, were caused or ag- gravated by the I a r g e February 9th Los Angeles County earthquake. Shrinkage occurs when new· ly joined support columns and beam s cool and contract arter extensive welding has ex- panded the steel. The latest cracks which need ultra-sonic testing equipment to detect !hem were round during a routine city inspection. Flower Street Ltd . the <.·or· poration constructing I h e largest buildings in Southern California. says the design or the buildings allowed and compensated for suc·h llaws and "the cracks :ire not critical to the structural in- tegrity of the buildings ·· However. engineers al the project said it was fortunate that the cracks w er e discovered becaulle it could have had bearing on the tower's ability to withstand earthquakes had they not been corrected. A quick che<::k with proposed tenants planning to occupy space m the office pl;m1 which is still scheduled to be com- pleted this year express con- ridence m the modern tech- niques of skyscraper con- st.ruclion. .. ' . -..... . . . . . . . . . . .. . -. -.. . ~. . . . . -....... . . . . . . . ..... DAJLV PILOT J Cl Diversity Brings su~~e A tla1itic Researcli Ove rco1nes A erospace Cut Jolts Early p I a n n I n g for d1vers1flcalJon is the key to the "how sweet it is" song no\v bemg sung by a Costa Mesa aerospace firm which is reporting increased employ- ment, new business prospects and forecasts of substantial revenue boosts. Atlantic Research/Systems D1v1s1on on Harbor B11uJevard in Costa Mesa began to diversify from a one product line company two years before lhe aerospace depression, ac- cording to R. G. Vande Vrede. vice president and general manager. lie said the big break came in 1962 when the division was selected to be the prime con· tractor tor a s1gn1f1cant por- tion or lhc [)dense Depart- ment advanced ballistic rer.n- try system. This program studies al- ma.spheric reentry phenomena via sohd propellant booster vehicles that carry payload-; some 200 miles above the earth and back again at velocity speeds e x c e e d i n iz 22.000 feet per second. To dale, systems d1v1s1on has launched more than I 2 5 Athena boo::ter vehicles with a rehabihty rate exceeding 93 percent. l 't1hzmg t~e c; y s l e m s technology gained from the Athena and other aerospace SUMMER JOB -J eannelle Tapscott (right), a West- minster High School senior this fall, learns the job of proof operator for part·timc employment at Security Pacific Bank's Beach & Edinger Branch in Huntington Beach while Proof Operator l\larlcnc Klintworth looks on. Bank, Scliools J oi11 111 New Work Project The lluntmglon Beach Union 1 ligh School District and · Security Pacific N a I i on a I Bank have joined efforts in a work-experience p r o g r a m which is paying "ff summer jobs. Called "Exploratory Work Experience Program," the program began in the spring semester where students in- itially participated in a two· hour bank orientation ~sion and nine two hour obs'erva- hons al various branch posi- 11ons. preparing the student ror a conct•ntratrd :lO hours of training at his dC's1red pos1- t1on. According to school and bank offic1:ils, lhr program presents an o p p o r t u n i I y through which stucknts can lrarn business "rrom lhe in- side'' and business ran INll D ::.Ludents n<'rds and Vl<'WS Most or lhose w h o participated in thr spring semester phac;c or t h e program are now continuing in summer jobs with various West County branches of Security Pacific Bank. 6 3 bui .. programs, the dmsion has stepped into other lields. Several inverted and ::-on- vent1onal vee hulled fiberglass and alummum boats were designed which subsequently led to production contracts from the US. Navy for riverine assault and target boats. Current a 12-fool c-m- binallon fire and harbor police patrol boal is being con· structed for the City or San Diego To help with environmental problems. the division has constructed and is r. o w marketing both portable and fixed electronic devices which measure pollutants in diesel Western Business Optimistic Not since 1955 h a v e businessmen in the western United States been more op- timistic about third quarter business activity than they are today, according to the latest Western Business Forecast survey taken by t h e Prudential Insurance Com· pany. When Prudential a s k e d businessmen in the West to compare t h e i r anticipated business activity for the third quarter of 1971 wi~ this year's second quarter activity. 72-percent said they thought their third quarter business would be better. l:l percent though it woufd slay the sarnr. and 15 percent foresaw a decrease. The 72 percent figure ii. the highest degree of optimism P\pressed for any t h i r d 11uarter economic a c t i v i t y since 1955. when 77 percent or the businessmen polled in the Wesl looked for an increase. Jn the Southern California· A r i z o n a • N evada region businessmen are less op- timistic. Sixly·nine percent of the businessmen polled in the region anticipate an increase in their economic activity during the next three months when compared to lhe past three, while 11 percent expect business to be the same and 20-percent look for a decline. Among the industries polled by Prudential. finance is the most optimistic. Ninety-four percent of those surveyed in this industry look for their third q u a r t e r business lo equal or exceed that experienced during the same perid last year. smoke An oll conlamment and recovery syslem has been designed lo help clean up ocean and harbor 011 spills. Further d1vers1f1cat1on has been made into the expanding field of data handling equip- ment and with the production of pyrotechnics and related ordnance materials. The division has added more than two bundred people to its staff since the (Jrst of the year and now employs more than 800. The impact on employ· ment is predicted to surge upward and more Orange County residents could be ad- ded to the payroll within the next six months. Vande Vrede -6aid. ATLANTIC RESEARCH EXPANDS INTO NON-AEROSPACE PROJECTS Combin1tion Police and Fire Patrol Bo1t for S.n Diego Port District ,. State Unemployment Rate in Drop; Statistics Encourage Reagan Aides California's unemployment rate edged down twc:rtenths of one percent in June to 7.2 per- cent. the lowest rate in thre(' months. a top R e a g a n UCI Offers F ive Classes 111 Business Regis tra tion is now being accepted al UC Irvine Ex· tensions for I ive classes in Business Administ ration and five in Computer Science, all of which begin July 12. The classes will be held on Monday and Thursday even- ings from 7 to 10 p.m., .July 12 through August 23, al the Buena Park High School and UC Irvine. B u s i n e s s Administration courses offered are "lnlrodur- t 1on to Operations Researth ·• taught by Paul B. Moranda, Ph.D . "Business Statistics'' by Joseph C. Napoli. M.S.: and "Leadership Principles and Practice" by Jack Little. PhD. . 1\vo concurrent courses arc offered in Organ1zat1on and Management Theory . one of Introduction to Computers ;rnd Information Processing will be l(lught by Lee Hausman, M.B.A : Problem Solving with Computers by John II. Gissel, M . S . ; '"Information· Structures·• by Emmel A. Rixford. M B.A : "Comiler Construction., by Larry II. Canter and ··systems Methodology" by Francis F. Marlin. M.A. For further information. call the l 'C Irvine Extension Information Office, 833-5414. A d m I n i s t r al1on official reported today. The official. Alan C. Nelson, director of the State Depart- ment of Human Resources Development. who issued the monthly state employment and unemployment statistics. said. however. "we still can't predict a definite downturn in Newport Fir1n to Share 111 Huge Alaska Project u n e m p I o y m e n t, but the statistics are encouraging." Nelson said the unemploy· ment rate for both April and May was 7.4 percent. He said HRO's latest survey s how ed that. wh i le unemployment rose by 65,000 between May and June to 669,000, employment r o s e 83,000 to a total civilian employment of 8,128,000. The total labor for~. be ad· ded, consisting of l h e A prr-planning study contract for a huge Anchorage, employed and the unemployed Alaska convention and sports complex, civic center, library looking for work, w a 8 and recreational facilities have been awarded to a nationally 8 7 f 648 000 · k h. 1 · · r· h . . 97,000, up ror 8, , 1n nown arc 1tectura -engmeermg 1rm w ose western region-M al headquarters are in Newport Beach. ~~·Ison said lhe totfll tabor Chuck Lowery, spokesman for Ellerbe Associates. 2182 force in June 1970 was Dupont Drive, said his firm, whose headquarters are in St. 8,734,000; and unemployment Paul, Minn., has already begun studies on the project find in June 1971 was up by 126,000 plan to present initial reports to the Alaska legislature for over the June 1970 level. review by mid·December. • • T h e over.the-month fn· No price tag has yet been put on lhe project. but ac· crease i n unemployment cordmg to Robert E. Sharpe. Anchorage cily manager, it between May and June wH will be among the largest civic building projects ever unde~s than usual for thill taken m the 49th state. period," Nelson said. ''The Ellerbe Architects-Engineers associa ted firms are Mc· typical increases in unemploy- Ent1re and Penderghast Arch1tect.<1 of Anchorage. and Econ· ment among s tu de n ls , omic Research Associates of Los Angeles. graduates, and summer job Laguna Man Gets Honor The California Association of Life Underwriters which represents over 8,700 life and health insurance professionals around the stale. ha s elected M. E. Thompson, CLU, of Laguna Beach, president.elect for 1971-72. A member oC the CALU long range planning committee, he has just completed a term as Vice President f o 11 ow i n g duties as tr~asurer of the association. Jle has also serv- ed as a regiona l vice president and president of the Los seekers was partly offset by a reduction in the number of in· dividuals a p p I y i n g far unemployment i n s u r a n o, benefits. Agriculture accounted •ftp> the largest employment il$- crease in June, Nelson ssf4(, followed by trade, govemmejlJ and services. : He said the usual May-.JiM expansion in transportaticft and utilities "was restrai~. in part because of a ti:adt dispute." Thompson is manager of thr Life Insurance Department of R. A. Rowan and Co . Los Angeles based general in· suranee company. He entered the life insurance field in 1946, and has worked primarily in Los Angeles and Orange coun· ties. •. Angeles Life Underwriters filii------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Association. An active civic leader, he is presently a director of the Florence Crillenton Home of Orange County and t h e California Division, American Cancer Society, 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG T~RM LEASE l y Company eJNr•tM Cll•llt S71.00I le llJS,tOI all Ulll lltlllt. (7141 642.0Ut The erg M-Mutual Savings offers th• naUon'a highest rate on Insured aavlnga w1th a choice of 4 lnaured guaranteed-to-grow savings plans, Including 1% ($5,000 minimum, 2 to 5 years); 5%% ($1,000 minimum, 1 to 5 years). Equally Important. Th• Big M cares enough to give you very personal Mrvlce. I FREI! SAFE Dl!POllT IOX with accounts of U.SOO or mew. I Mutual Savings eoron•d•IMarofflce:2"7Ea•teo..tHtgttw.,/f1'M01o end l oen A1eocle1ton Other offices In Covina. West Arcadia, Pasadena and Glendale ..-.----..-... • I .. -· ...,_ .... ... .._ ··, • ,. --;.L~ ...,.c..u._;..._.,• ~ _........... .. .. ~ ................... . I Jf DAILY PILOT SC LEGAL Nanes LEGAL NOTICE JI 111 11 Jll(TITIOUI •UI Niii NAMI ITATIMINT , .. 111 lo"' "I H JO'\ I 00 f'I butl-.. C DAMA TO A. "°NI !.X Ctn Ml' 11 Cati• MIMI Ct 119 n 1 Cft111to G O•"'' o Utt c ... 11t1 JI 6« COiii WU Cl fQrnt1 T-1 llual'l•U I, ri.,,. c-uc!"' bY en 1,..,1., OU•I C G 011"19 o TI! I 1l1len'IM I 911 W"' It>• C t r'I< 1111 Or1ntt COUM'V on Jv • l v 9ettv J •••• , tn Dt PVIY , .. C (KJMY ' t11 Counry ~~ tlled O '"" Coo• Otl • ,, . I Ill I J y y l t lJ lO II LEGAL r-;OTICE " 111$1 f'l(T!T!OUI I USI Nf.SI NAME ll.t.Tf.Ml"NT 1"111 to 0"'"'11 oe •o~• '• On 11 bu> nus es C ... L KO JA COMP,ANV Ull Wes c O lllewPO t letcn W ''"'A Sw1nn •01 1-11 n, \ Si n a ol.nt Ct I Ct A f>.t! I 1n " ' ' I • n1 Ce Tl'> I l>llS ""11 I bt n11 conovc O'd ~v 1 P1 tn1 >f'>p w em A s ... 1nn 1'1'>1 1 • emtnt ~d w" n1 C~ It o 0 tntt Coun v on Ju • l y Btt v J 61 111 tn D1nu v ". (<> nh' . " COIJMV Pub !he.I 0 t nge '""' DI v J .. y t I 11 JO fl ' " ' .. '" .. LEGAL NOTICE JI tllS JI CTITIOUI I UI Niii J<IAMI IT.l.TIMINT 111 cwnt ~"'"lo oon11 bUI n•• GLOllE HE llALO JJO Wo1 ~1• Ji ti! COi I M•SI Cl o 11 I •)17 Or•119e Coo1 Pub •llln1 Comoon• • Ct! to 1111 c ... ..., • "" no we• 1111 Strttl Ca1t1 Mt tl Co 10 n t •1•11 T11 1 1>111 11111 1 bl n1 tot1auc tO bV I C01'"6r1llon J ACIC I CUll LEV V t i P 11l<1en 1nd Gt~ 1 Men111 Tn 1 1t1ttmenl I "" w !II II• Coun v C t lk of 0 '"'' C11<1n • on Junt 1 llY lltYt v J Mt d<lo• Ooou v Co1.m y Cll>"k Publ 11\od 0 1110. COi• J unt U 1nd Jul• 1 o 16 " ' " LEGAL NOTJCE ,. 111 !I !' CTI TJOUi I US NISS NAiMI STATIMl!NT ' . "'" Tl\• o low 111 ot 111111 1 e ao 111 bu1 neu .. SOUTH ORANGE SUPPLV UQl M ll1 dv Crc • Foun 1 11 \I I t Y Cl lorn 1 l>outll O 1ngt Suoo • nee oo • td 11 Co l!Mn I Co DI) • 011 1701 M e. O• Cn;lt FtkJn1 nV1 t• Ct 16 11 1 Tll 1 "'-''nu s 1 co..Ouc 10 flv • co ""'"on J 1m11 \I Httd p •• 0 111 Tll 1 >l1tem1n w11 td w n Int C()o n IV C tk o O t"" Coun v 1111 Ju v • '" Pub lolled 0 l "llt COi• 01 ry Ju vt 1 'J :ll ltll LEGAL NOTICE "' 11!11 I' CT T OUS IUS NI SS NAMI! ST .. Tl!Ml!NT T~• " >ow nr or •on• • r ao ng bu1 nr .. llOAT u o '" ?llOJ A JOHN YACHT Nntl>O I ~ ... O L E X~YS IN1UllANCE 8 va NrwPo ''''" " Joh11 II 0 Lr ••• 9!• S•n II unc t.rtw-llttc~ Ct ! 10 " • 11?00 l~ 1 &v• n•u ' b~ ng conau( ra bv on 1110 v dvt John 11 OL•••v Th I 111 t mt n td w M ~• C t k of 0 1n11r Cnunv o~ Ju v llY fttl Y J Ill II• f l\ DI PVIV '" Put> 1~«1 0 •n~ Cblll ~ Iv J u v 96 1l .lCl91 LEGAL NOTICE "' '11S l'ICT TIOUl I US NE S1 NAMI I TATIMl!flll Th• !o low no o• ion• t ~UI l>IU 10 Coun v . " Coun v " . I Ji I Git .. !< CO TYPE 191 W 11 ~ S Co1l1 Mt•t Po y A Hena ~I. 71Jt Ct n• n P c~ • M••• o '"' 1 .a .... l•l' ~· Nt 1n 10 L•Qun1 N tut Thi• b<Jlllll!H I be no <O""V' ..,, fl• • "''"''"" Pn v " "• a 111 •1 1emt nl rawn 1,.cowv C t o 0 t nt t ((ll;n ~ on Ju"• 1) tl BY lltve • J ~ld<IO• Ooou • Caun , .. Pullt .,,.., 0 """'' Co• J""t l 5 1nOJu•l • LEGAL f'.;OTICB: ' . llU' Wall Street The cono;ensus analvsts polled b} ln\e.slmenl Dealers 1ncr('ase 1ngS" n corporate WJI MINGTON Del IUPll Un I lnc n Dallas-real estate hrm has sued Kentucky r ned Chicken Corp n r Louis\ 11le in SUp<'rior court for unspecified dama~cs grov.1ng out of lhe cancella\J on of a $20 1n11l1on real estate sale and lea seback deal in 1%9 Un 1 c!e.imrd Ke n I u ck v 1-ned Chicken entered the de;i 1 and cancellM it a weC'k latr.r as a s!oc k man1pu!at1ng move The cnurt gran rrd Unit s motion lo sequester I 17 1)()() sha res of Kentucky ~ ncd Ch JC ken stock ov. ned by the company s President John V Brov.n !o 1nsurE' th e\ th~ su I J" answered In Louisville Brown termed the s u ! ! ri rllcu lou~ DALLAS liPI I Vought Ae ronau tics Co a unit or LTV Aerospace Corp ha s obtained a rontract lo design o tracked <11r cushion \e h1cle for the US r>Ppartmenl nf Transpor1iillOn 1 TV Af'rn"pact' a1o;;n obta1nt'd ~ nrv. $1 09 m11\1nn contract For :-\;n y and Air Forte comba t planrs LEGAL :\OTICE . "" "'er T ous I U!o NI\\ NAMI 1TAflMI NT PCll! ! ... • • " t H II " "' co.~ • u~· n ' C•~ • Cou~ " 11111 o .. " , (fl'l'IOU5 I U5l lll$1 NANll! ITATINllN'I "' ... 1~t 10 lo"'"' llt oon1 I I dt "Cl flUI n111 .. !' NI! .I.Ill PENTALI IM G on11•• t I L1111~1 1111(.lo .J1c• I V• ..,,,~ tH \; ·~~·~ • S I ~DU"' ll•lt~ Tio 1 llu• ~· > \ "" Ill (~""Ut ~ D• I~ !~O G~• jo ~t.\l•r>-•n , .. , ···~· .,., ... ~ 11\t O• • r • • ot o •11to '°""'' 011 J~"' "-----i&' ll•"t • J M1ct<1<11 ~n~tv , .. l..EGAL NOTICE P ~ ~•d o •~Q• Cot• 0 11., "to ------~~c_--------!Ju ' • l) ,X) "' H U I .. ,. ,ICITITIOVS IUllNl\I NANll' •TATIMIN1' taHowl"' --11 1101n1 bu~ .,.., '" " OA.ILY P ILOT lll Wt' llt• ' ,,.. " LEGAL NOTICE ,. 11161 , (TIT OUS I US Niii NAMl SlATI MINT o "'"'·~po "°"' •, oo;n1 &u11....,,, Cetlt Mn.o C• IOI',. 1 J1f1t Or-C61ll P\lbl 1111 ... Ce••IPl llY I I Ct\jforftll CDl'-"IOn )JO Wt,t II•., llrH! Cot 1 Mt ... Cl lo<~ I tit.JI Tiiis but l<lfU. 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" > • ~ ~ 1 I J II.-.. 0 ~ ~ • ' " ' JOit -t lo ' . . .. • ,. -1 ·~ • ' .. ' • • 1 • -.. .. 15 • -.: :i lJ . -.. Fi11ance Briefs i'i ~ F.NAH W1!1 tU PI ) K1n1berly Clark Corp 1n• nounccd 1l will build " d1~posable Diaper con11ert1ng plant here to be in opera· lion early next yerir 1lle C(lffi• pany presently m a k es d1spo~a ble d iaper~ at 1~ Mem phis plant S111nbola ..... -,,. ---....... --JI> ::..:-:::::.;:·:.:;-::.::. • .::.:;::::~·::..::::_..:::.:._,:~ 1 L.t"" ·-----~----.. -.---~-· .. ------~-·-------~---·-••'-·~~-------· -- -; ;. •••• ,--····---~-..:.::--•• --~·-------·------------------"'· I • .ff OAILY PILOT Buxom Gal • Save s· Shot • Fo1· Golfe1~ SOUTJiPORT, England Jack Nicklaus bounced 1 ball off a bu~om English woman, Georgina Millinson, in the British Open golf championship Thul"3day. The lucky bounce probably saved him a !hot. ll happened at lhe 3:;3-yard fi!th · hole · Nicklaus hit his second shot too powerfully and lhe ball would have gone past lht green into bushes 1r Georgina hadn't been in the way. The ball bounced off her and rolled to six feel from the eup. Nicklaus missed the pu'.L But ht gave her the ball as a souvenir. Britain's Tony Jacklin. former U.S. and 5rltish Open champion, had an ex· 9ftience to match that or Nicklaus. Thi." c}ne came al the eighth \\'hen the ball re!! near a fernale fan's binocular case. Jacklin sought a ruling from official~ a.nd was allowed 3 free drop. He finished ihe hole with a par. e llole-i11-011e SOUTHPORT. England -Britain'1 Lionel Platt~ carved 11 \itt!e bit or British Open history for himself Thursday with a hole-in-0ne. He did it at the 2l2-yard fourth hole . A six iron from the elrvated green soared over the traps, hit a bank and rolled into the cup. · "Ho"'· about that,'" said Plaits. "I don 't !Uppost I'll win !he Open , but 1he fans "'·on·L forget that shot in a hurry." Platts went on to score a 72 and finish· ed v"ith a two-round total af I~. e Jt1c-olu Lend• • LONG BEACH -Only 32 of lhe 16& ~layers who started the 47lh Southern Califamia PG A Championships were lrft today as the third round beg<1n at the El Dor8do Park golf course. : Tomrny Jacobs, lhe veteran pro frn1n (,a Costa , Calif.. led the pack Thur~d:.iy :(S six or thr eight seeded players won w:o matches each in the $1~.000 evenL ~~ther see<l~d players advancing \1·rre ~immy Powell or Yorba Linda. Cal1I , .ferry Barber of Los Angeles, Ed l\\crnns t Los Angeles. Pinky S1evenson ()f Lc>ng each and Mac llun!er of Los Angelts. ruce \Vyall of \Vh11tier and 1\·lonle nders of Santa Barhara. suffered upset sses Thursday. • 9 S111ilh R11llies BAASTAD. Swcdrn -Stan Smith or Pasadena lost the flrsl set then ralhed tn 4efeat Jaime Pinto Bravo of Chile in the ,terond round of the lnternalional Grand Pri~ tennis tourna1nrn!. 4-6, 6-2. 7·6. fi.4 ~ Patrick Proisy Qf France also ad1·.1nccd by beating Ove Benglsson, Sweden . 6-4. 6- 4. ·~ ~ Earlier Ilic Nastase or Rom01n1a ;id· ~anced . bul his countryman lon Tiriae 'tost to Ray Rutfels. Australia. ;. f\retC" S f11di11111 ; CHICAGO -htayor Richard .J Dairy iaid Thursday that he is f'xploring thr possibility of using the present .~1tt' ol Soldit'r Field !or a new stadium. Dalev·s remarks at a news confercncP tepresf.ntccl a shift lrorn lus pN'v1ously determined stance to build a stadium on the lakrfront unrnrd1atcly southeast ()f Soldier ~·1e!d e J\"p11•t•t)1111,e lt.i11 s : GST AAD, S" 11 zerland -Jell Boro11 it1k qr Berl..eley n1oved into the quarter-lina!s nl the S\\1ss [n\ernanonal TC'nn1s C1uirn- p1on~hips Thur~day along \\'Ith lnp-scedC'd .John Krwcombto nf A11!.trah1;1. the \\'1n1blednn chan1pion Horo"·Lak 11·hipped .Joh11 1\lc~a11drr, J.ii slralia. 4-6. 6-l 8-6. Nt>11•to1nhr put ouL Ce<ifl ~lasters, Austrilll..1. li·4, 6·4 Toin Okker. of The Nethl'rland ~. al~n j!H1nrd lhe round of cii:h1 h,I' defeating: }'r<ink Scdgn1an. Australia, fi-0 6-2, as did !\1kk1 Pilil'. Vugosla1•ia. v.ho delra!ed Barry Phillips-Moore. Aust1't~l1:1 . 6·2. 6-0 e itfil1t•1111l.:1•t• J ,1.-11rfp 1· 'llL\\'AUKEE -Hul puL1t1lR lla\t r:ichclberger. b\oon11ng to ~l :~rdom alter lhree struggling ye ars on !hr pra tour, ~as cautiouslv scen11ng hie. flr sl victory a.rter a 7..undtr par 64 Thursday in the first round of lhe $125.000 Greater Mil waukee Open Golf Tournament. 1 Eichelberger, 27, had a two-stroke lead (l\'er Dan Sikes. Ken Still. Jim Ja1nieson pnd Jim King after a devastating opening round in which 55 players broke par 71 r nd 26 others malC'hed it over the 6.45.1· rard Tnpoli golf course. Cl1argers at UCI 'For Grid Drill ' . Tilt San Diego Charger!! of the Nallooal Football League's Amer ican Conf:!:rence an back at UC Irvine again for the &Um· • cner. , 11avin& opened their UCI :summer QW11rttrs Thursday. t~e Border _City pro- fesaionall are reporting In spht groups with the rookies coming into camp Satur. jJa1 and the veterans reporting on Wed- /"':!1•Y· , Two-a-dlty drills, v.·hlch will be open to 18....JJUblH:, will begin Monda y with ~•tt practice sessions at 9 a.m. and l The Ch1reers begin their preseason tchedulfl Aug. 7 when the George Allen· coached Washinf\00 Red!'kin!!i invade San J>il:ao Stadium to t&ekle Ski G illman ·~ d>al'gte. Allen arid Giilman are former LA RMms' htlld coetd'les. ,, .. . ' ' ' It's Osteen Against Marichal Tonight LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Jf5 a big series -to have a respectable lead at the All-Star break we've got to win lwo , 1u1yl" San Francisco Giant!!i' Manager Charlie Fox: a_, hi st club begins a three-ga1ne series with the battered Los Angeles Dodgers tonight. Juan Mariehal, 10·5, pltches for San Francisco, against the Dodgers' Claude Osteen, 9-6. Saturday evening it'll be Gaylord Perry against l)on Sulton and on S~day Ron Bryant will oppose Los Angeles' Al Downing. The Dodgers had pulled to within 3~ game!§ of the Giants' National League Wesl lead with a tv.o-game sweep in San f'rancisC'o early thts week , but have fallen f1ve ga1ncs behind after being swept 1n four games by the Ctucago Cubs San Francisco snapped a four·game losing streak by combining John Cun1- bcrland's six-hit pilthing with Bobby Bonds' hitt ing and \Villie M('(;ovey 's return lo the llneup for a 4·2 tr iumph over the Houston Astros Thursday . MeCovey provided an inspiration by to1ning off the di sabled !isl and tum1ng in three solid fielding plays that a less ex- perienced first baseman -namely \Vili1e Mays -may not have executed. McCovey, just off the 15-dey disabled list to re3t a cumbersome left knee, says he feels \'ery good. "l"m wearing a brace on the knee now and I have much more ~upport -but it 's still not right.'' Willie Davis, who managed only two hits in 22 previous at·ba l3, stormed the Chitago Cubs for three singles a:id a dou- ble. Bul the Cuhll still managed to clip 1he Dodgers, +2, and complete a four4 game s .... ·eep of the series. Davis jumped his batting average back lo .351 with his four hits but it wasn 't cnaug!.J as Don Kessinger also had four hits for Ch icago. And Biiiy Will iams had three as well to drive in lhr~ of the Cubs' rour runs. Ken Holtzman , 11-9. went the d1stanrt He wasn't even schedultd to pitch but when Bill I-lands turned up with a blister, J1 oltzman valunteered. Holtzman was tagged for Los Angeles' anly two runs in the fir st Inning wht<n Richie Allen singled home the first one and Jim Lefebvre doubled home the se- cond. "We're all right.'' Insisted Davis af· terward. ''I was in a slump and broke oor ()f it. The club will do the same, just watch and see." 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W•IU..m~, W , o.vh, l(tUlf'tQt•. ~B -;:., .. 1~., ~ -llttkt••. ,,,_ H It Ell: II SD Holllm•~ (W.I·') t 10 1 1 1 I M~ller {L.O·l l I ' J 1 I J j!<OW<r !11 111 T•,,.,. -1 !O "'ne<>donc• -)•,IN Dodgers Pavis, Alston Added To All-stars SAN t'RANCISCO 1,AP ! -P1ltsburgh Pirates· star Rober\.o Cle1nente drew tu s Jl th All..Slar Game assignment today a.s Cincinnati Reds' manager S p ark Y Anderson completed the Nationa l League a;quad. Clernente. four-tin1e league batlini; champion. will take a ,310 All-Star bat· ting averagl' into next Tuesday nlght'11 game at Detroit. He finished filth among National League outfielders in voting by baseball fans thal determined the i;tarling line-up. Anderson named 12 players to tomp!elc the 2.8-man squad . Catcher Manny Sangui lltn of Pittsburgh, first baseman Nale Colbert or San Diego and outfielders Bobby Bonas or San Francisco and \Viltie Davis of Loll" Angeles were put on the All.Star team. for the first time. PHILADELPHIA'S DERON JOHNSON COMES IN WITH KEY RUN IN 7-5 WIN OVER MONTREAL. The others nan1ed were infielders Don Kessinger and Ron Sant.o of Chica~o . .Lte May ()f Cincinnati and Felix Millan of Atlanta, and outfielders [..()U Brock of S!. Louis. Pele Rose of Cinc1nna1i and Runty Staub of i\o1ontreal. Blue Seeking 18th Victor y; Faces A11o:els OAKLAND I AP ) -Can the California Angels catch tht Oakland A ·s 1n the American League Westcn1 Division pen· nan\ race" ~1ost scoH at callini: i1 11 race. 11'.• n1ore lrke a runaway for t11e A·.,, \Vhu lead :second·placc Kansas City hy I\ -------- (ha TV 'J'o11i11l1f Cl1ai111 e l. 5 11t 8 ~ames, third-place l\tinnetoiOla by l~':! llnd fourth-plac e California by 16'i And C<ilifornia manager Lefl.v Phillips hC'Jit1·e.s Angel pennant talk -considcr- ine lhe circun1Sl.ancr" -11'ould be unrealistic . His team JUSl used a threc· ~,une sv.eep of the Tll"in<;. capped h~· Thursday·s 7-~ \1C10rl to \a<':11e lhe tl n·1o;1on ba<;e1ncnl. \taking The Angel s' task nl a:-;cending h1!."her in the standings e'en toughe r i~ Vida Rhll' 17-3, whQ pitches f(lr O:ikl:ind here tonight in 1he first of a !hr{'('·gamr :;rries. lliidy ~lay, ~·:'>. goes for lh" An-;et.<;. Fotir consr<·utl\·~· 1·1c!urirs, ho1ve\'f'r. h;ne given Ph11!1ps renewed hope lh;it sr11ncthing can he salvaged from a s!'a,on \1-rought with controversy -the Al!"~ .l ohnson su~pensinn -ancl iniury -thr sort> flJOI (lf shorls1op .l 1m Vregos1 "\\le 'rr starting to h1I wh<·n it count~ and \\'e're pl<iyin.1; rr;iJ good ball·• Ph1llq1~ ~:11d ··11 ·~ no l11n 10 losr . bcrause lh1• gu\·<; ,:irt down . l!'s rral easy w!Y.'n you·rr 11 111- ning. though . hrcau.-;(' e\"erybody"s happy and a lot of thing.<; get overl ooke<t " \\"hilc 11nply1ng th;it Oakland n11ght ha\"e an 1nsurn1ount11.ble lead, Phillip.<:. said se<:<>nd place definitely is "''1\11111 reach "\\'e"re going to play one game at a time. I think "''e made a mislak' last spring by talking about "''inning when 1\"t should have done it on the field. "We're going to try ta get to second, then go from there. H's nol too realis\lc to be thinking abQut a pennant "'·hen you're 16 games behind ." Tony Gonzalez' first horne run or the year. a t"'·o-run shot in lhe scC<lnd inning, sparked the Angels p<isl the T\\•ins. The Angels scored the ir fir st nu1 when .lohn Stephenson reached first on an in- field popup that land~ in \hr mlddle or three Twins, then came home on an in· field out. CAL!,.Oat.U.t. MllOta,Ol.t. .. ' • • .. . .. "'"""•'. " • ' • , ,, . .,.,, " • • Rl•fr$, " • • • • lo••'· " ' • • '"""· ~ • • • ' Rf•""' .. ' • • Go1111le!, If ' ' ' llUltbf••· .. ' • ' Sl~ton. < ' • • C•111t<>.,,, n • ' ' McMv\I.,.. lb • , • Hon, ct • • ' • """"" .. • • • ' Alve• • ' • • • Coril9!!1ro. rt , • • • Ml!IP""ld . < • ' • o lrlf", •• ' • • • ,~.11. • • • • • Mv•Dll~ . • ' • ' • T"""'•t, Jb • ' ' • L•I~, • • • • • lllf~f, • ' • • • "''""· • • • • • Stt~lli....i. • • • • • K811, ~ ' • ' • w11111"''· • • • • • Tl•C'>~t-+, t • • • • Toi•! " ' ' • Tol•I " . " • (olltoti•• '" "' "' ' M,lnMM!a •• ~ '" 1 ' ...,,.,,,.,,, W,J.11 '" ' ' ' L•ltK,,._ I) l ' ' ' • • ' Alltfl " • • • • l,.oiibOlf "' l l 'l • ' ' '"to 11r><1 J 1/J ' • • ' Wllllt rn• ' • • ' • ' 1'1111 • • • • • ~·"-L .... ,.~ 111•-'· Mv•<>~• l -l ll • )1,7'1 UPI T11t11holo INDIA N RED LOPE Z UNLOADS WITH A 1-2 SHOT Lopez Knocked Out Jo,. DelGadille in 4th at LA. Vataba Try ing Out Ra11is 01J en Practice At Fiillerton Ca1np The i;:rt.~lesl passer in UCLA history and one of the mast exciting pass receiv- ers in Stanfo rd history learned up Thursda}' for the first pass completion as the Los Angeles Ra;ns opened their rook ie training camp at Cal Stale. (Fullerton). Coach Tommy Prothro, head man s year ago at UCLA, greeted quartcrbac~ Denn is Dummil, pass catcher Randy Vataha and ~S others including 39 rookies when camp opened. Dummit and Vataha, although thry looKed great on the first day. are still longshots to make lhe team for 1971. Vatahn is a former Golden \\'e.~t College player. Dummit was stunned \vhen he \\asn·t selected in <l.ny of the 17 rounds of the National rootball League drat! this "'inter and Va!aha , \\ho caught J im Plunketl passes \vi1h regularity !as\ year. \\'3S the R:in1s' 17ttrpil'k. Durnmit recently signed as a free agent. Two-a-day workouts arc scheduled bu1 Prolhro ha s said he will not be. as rigorous as "'a~ George Allen .... ·11cn he \\3:'1 boss of the Hams. Prothro said he m1ghl allow drills to Ulpcr off lo one pe.r day ii he nolcd the pl&}'ers warranted it. Pressure's 011 And Trevino Ca11 Stand It SOUTHPORT. lngland tAP I -"l '\'c already spent last week "s money," Joked Lee Trevino, "and I'm looking for more this "'·eek." Trevino. with the United !'itatcs and Canadian Open golf titles under his he!t, shared th~ lead on 139 "'ith Britain':oi Tony Jacklin aflcr the first two rounds or !he Brilish Open al Hoyal Birkdale. ''The pressure i.~ on and I can stand I!." said the 31-year-o ld ,\.lex1ean- An1crican. "1be la\v o( averages i~ against nie win- ning three great titles in four weeks, but rny v:ifc and 1 bath think that I can carry off this old crown."' After "''inning the Canadian Open at f.1ontreal, Trcvina flew lo Britain and sa id : "l"d trade one of my U.S. Open tillcs for the Britsh truv.'n any tune·· The field \las reduced lo 82 after .1li holes -and the only American regular to tniss th:! cut "''as Frank Beard of Louis\'i!le, Ky , 1vho wound up 1vith a ~ec<lnd-round 81 fo r 15~ The cut <'amc al 151 . and Roya! B1rkda1e·s 7,0SO·yard, par 35.37 -72 hnks <'ould gel angry with the n1en lelt 1n the field , So far the conrhtinn~ h:1ve been sln111sl prrfcc! al Birkc!ale. Bu1 that could change ol"ernight. Birkdalc is a courst that ~ulldcnly t·a11 turn naslv v.·hen the \\'ind blows 1n lron1 the lrish' Sea and the sun gives \Y<IY to rain. Brcl\thing do"''TI the nrcks of Trevino and ,Jacklin, "''inn!!r of both the U.S. and Brilic;h Opens in 1969, "'·as a new name for British fans -Liang Huan Lu. The man from Taiwan, a st<1r of the Far East circuit. was one shat back on 140. Argentina's Roberto di Vicenui and perennial st..'lf Gery Player of South Africa were at 141 and presenting a big thrrat to the leaders. Pive players were at 142 including rlefending chan1pion Jack Nicklaus and the always dangerou5 Billy Casper •. "f:verylhing d~pends on how well you drive at Birkdale.'' said Trevino. "All 1 can ssy is I'm driving well. I think the man wtw:i master!> the par fi ves will lake !hf title. "I n1anaged lo master the 18lh yester4 day with an eagle-and sa nk a 4~-footcr . \Vilh that behind you, you go into the third round feeling good." Rose, 1Yho scored lhe 11·1nn1ng run in the 12th inning of last )'Car's All-Siar <.:ame, "''as nained lo the Nal1ona l League squad for 1he sixth time . Santo has been selected se\"en times. Anderson al so announced th a t managers Walter Alston of Los Angele!'i, Danny i\1urtaugh or Pittsburgh and Preston Gomez of San Diego will serve a! All-Star coaches. The team trainer w1U be Leo Hughes o( the San l'rancisco Giants. Club Reject s $3 Million Offer for Pele SAO PA ULO, Brazil {AP) -Official~ of the Brazilian Santos club announced Thursday nigh\ they had turned down an offer af ~J n1illion frorn a French club for fan1ed soccer star Pelc. \"asco Fae!. presidenl of Santos. said the president of the Paris Sau1t Germain Club. Guv Crescent, made the offer , stressing ih<it $2 million would go ta San- tos and $1 million to Pele . Faet said the offer \las rcfu:-.r cl ''because \\'P.. have 11\her plan~ to n1ake more money \\'1th Pelc on our teatn ·· HP. added that "evervone can he ~ure th;i l Pelf' "·ii! never be transfl'rred and w1ll t•o<.l h1~ career playing with us.·• T!1f· 30-vear-old Pelc , who led Hrazil lo lhe \\'orld Soccer Cup in 197P, earlier harl !hreat.£,ned tu quit profe~sianal soecl'r fnr good becaus(' of a controver~y over b1:o1 rlecision to retire fron1 the Brazahan na- tional teani. Pelc is scheduled lo play h1s las1 ga1ne for the national lcam on July !8 aft.er which he plans to play with his le3m, Santos, for three more year~ Pele said that when he first announced his plan ta retire !ram the national team "everyone atreed with me bu( oow, a}l or a sudden, there has been a change of op1· nion." Pele continued · .. the people rpu~t understand that I'm not doing this to hann anybody. I will continue pla}iini;: "'ilh Sanlos, but if to play with Sanlos l must also play with !he nalional selec- l1on. then my nexl step "''lll be to-qui t professional soccer. •·1 wouldn't like thal to hap)X'n. but If there is a day .,.,•hen a player has lo an- nounce his retirement. then I have chosen mi ne . I know 1"11 suffer a lot of press11rt.~. but my answer Lo; definite.'' ·• A's Fans Fume Over All-Star Snub OAK.LANI) fAP) -Oak land A1hlel1c~ orHcials and fan.~ fume because only Vida Blue and autflclder fu>ggic Jackson were nan1cd to U1e An1erican League AJl.-Star te111n Ulue. 17-3, \\'a~ self'cted a~ s\<trt1ni: hurler for Tur,.~day ·s All Star game, 11nd Jack.-.on wa~ named as a lasl·n1inute replitcerncn! for 1n1urcrl Tony Oliva of lhe l\11nnr~ota Twin~ Roth no1n1n1tt1on.~ wert' by r·:arl ~ .,. \\leaver. AL All·Star manager and pilot of the world champion Balli:nore Oriole!!i. Fans failed to elect t.vcn one Alhletics pl:iyer "''hen they chose the starting eight players. Weaver selected pitchers and the bcn ch. "It disa\lpointed and dismayed me not lo hA\"C any of the A ·!I selected," said Oakland owner Charle~ f"inley . And n1an;:iger Dick \Vllliamii of lhc A ·:oi r11llcd 1! "atrocious" that 11 club \\'Jlh 11 ·~--~ .. ,~ .. -... ....___..~ ) l ~..._ lead of 11 games should be so under- represented 1n the classic. "lt"s the worst selecting 1 've. ever seen," Williams fum - ed . \\'caver said in Baltimore Thursday night , .. There probAbly are SC\'erAl players on the Oakland club capable of performing in an All-Star game. The1r ~election!! would have been warranted, hut whn se place \\'oulfi they havt taken'.' "I C'ouldn't see leaving any of the men I ...... _ _....,, selected for the tean1 off because tt]ry we.re either higher in the voling, ti.aV1ni: better yesir batting-average v.•ise. lx>t- tcr won-los t percentages or earned-run averages. \\leaver said the only other Onkland player he considered was pitcher Jim "Catfish" Hunter, 11·6 Asktid about lhird baseman Sal Sando, Wesver pointed out that 0111 t.1elton or Ch1c<1gn h11d more. ho1nr. runs • . , -- DAil'\' P ILOT ltlll "ha" GO TO MISSION VIEJO TO LEARN ABOUT AMCHITKA Libraria n Rowe Recei ves Study From Roger DeSautels Rare Book Gift Viejo I-las Only Copy in California If you wanl to,, read about Amchitka Island you·ll have lo go to Mission ViCJO or to anothe r state. The only copy 1n California of Archaeology Report -Amchilka Island, Alaska no1v rests in Lhe t.liss1on Viejo Regional branch of the Orange County Library. The book v:as a gift to the tounty llbrary system on Its 501h anniversary by Roger J. Desautels of Costa fl1esa whose co1npany prepared the study for the Atomic Energy Commission. It 1vas officially presented to tounty librarian Harry Rowe during a ceremony at the Mission Viejo facility on \Yed- nesday. The island is in !he Aleutian chain and Is in an area \vhere underground nuclear lesting is done by the government. ''\Ve spent 512 n1onths investigat\,ng gites wh ich might possibly be endangered by ground motion," said De~u1uteJs. ··\Ve ended up v.·ith the largest single collection of Aleut artifar!s in 1he \VOrld ." He said the island. v•hich has not been Inhabited since World \Var I!, is now in- fested by large, fur covered rats, sea hons, otters, marine birds and fish . "There arc no trees, only tundra." 1 le said 12 tons of artifacts \Vere brough back by the expedition, the largest being whale ribs used in house structures and the smallest, tiny ivory needles. Desautels said he'd like to see more v.·ork done in site investigations of the northe rn ;ireas of Japan and even Siberia, if it were possible. "If \\'e did v.·e might be able to prove the theory that man moved from Siberia across the Bering Sea to Alaska and out along the Aleutian Islands down to the northernmost islands of Japan. "\Ve call this the loop theory and !here's a big scientific argument aOOut 1t," he said. Desautels said 100 copies of his study \Vere published and now lie in various archives around the country. His conipany is currently doing an archeological study of the 'Irvine Ranch and other areas in Orange County and hopes more areas privately owned in southern Orange County may soon be opened to excavation before developmenl covers their secrets. J oaq11in Trustees Table Merit Pay Progra1n r.ferit p:iy for tear.hers in the Sad- rl!eback Valley is dead-at least for another year. Tr~1stees of the San .Jn:iquin Elen1en- lary School Disirict \Oted una11in1ously \l,"ednesday lo lahle a nonautomatil" salary increase progran1 for the l9il-i2 &choof year. Bui it will conl111ue lo he ~l11d1ed for possible adoption on the follo\\"Jng year, according to Supcnnlcntlcnl. Ralph Gates. "I still hope we 'll be the first district to have a workable merit pay plan," said Trustee Robert Dameron. The proposad which has been opposed by San Joaquin's teachers, was initiated by the Board of Trustees lo replace an automatic salary increase program. The board, administration, c I a s s i f i e d employe.s and teachers all ha ve spent months trying to formulate a workable plan. Teachers had bce11 opposed to merit pay because they felt it would produce an atmosphere of coinpetition in which teachers would be unwilling to share ti1eir ideas. They frequently said in public n1cetings that this atn1osphere would be detrin1ental to learning. Last month all three cmplo~'e groups in Ille district presented plans for emp!oye evaluation. The performance valuations followed basic guidelines prepared by the administration in what they called the Professional Advancement Yardstick \PAY) plan. Each group presented criteria for placement on pay's three s a I a r y levels-minimum, basic. and "super." "We still need additional evaluation,'' said Superintendent Ralph Gates. "T recommend that we defer the whole thing and not put it into effect in September." The board v.·ill continue to study merit pay which they said they want so that good tea chers can be rewarded with ex- tra compensation and the average teacher will not be rewarded for "ex- isting one more year." But rinding a program acceptable to all groups setms still a prime hurdle. Police Launcl1 Campaign On Youthful Hitclihiking SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police here launched a campaign today to warn hitchhikers about the potential dangers they face when they climb into a stranger's car. And they're doing it by going right to the source. Officers who spot a hitchhiker will stop and give the person a pamphlet which ex· plains bllchhik.ing laws and features two newspaper accounts of crimes including rape and murder -against hitchhikers. In addition, the thumber will be asked t.o show identification. If he or she is under 18. the policemnn will take the name and nddres::; of lhe pcr~on 's parents. and ;i letter will be sent them by the juvenile dcpartmf'nl Deputy Police Chief William Gort. told a news conltrence Thursday Iha\ the pr1r -- gram is the first of its kind in the nation and is educational in nature. No record will be kept of the contact between of- ficer and hitchhiker, he llaid. Ritchhiking is legal in California as long as the thumber is off the freeway and not standing in the street. Warren Kanagy, chief deputy or the county sheriff's department. 11aid hls department plans to undertake the same program within the next two weeks. Law enforcement officers hope the pro- cedure will reduce some of the crime associated with hitchhiking by convincing hitchhikers to stop or by getting their parents to forbid them from thumbing a ride. Gore said crimes agairlst hitchhikers Y.'ere on the rise in San Diego. but could not ci te any statistics to that effect. F"ridAY. July '· 1971 s OAJLV PILOT 3 President 'Sticking to Guns' Nixon Vows to Release Camp Pendleton Beach Lands By JOltN VALTERZA Of "" Otll~ P'llel Slttf President Nixon is sticking to his vow to release six miles of Camp Pendleton beach landl!I to the public despite a recent setbac'-from a House committee. a top ' press aide said today. Gerald Warreo, deputy press secretary Meeting. Slated i11 E~ Toro The Orange Counly planning con1- m1ssion win hold a public hearing in El Toro Tuesday at 7:30 p.n1 . on a Leisure World request to circumvent lhe new county parks ordinance. The hearing will be held in the multipurpose room of Aliso Elementary School, 22882 Loumant Drive. The Leisure World retirement com- munity and Rossmoor Corporation. the developers, have asked for a variance ex- cluding the community from the new law, which went into effect July l. The ordinance requires that developers provide 21,; acres of public parks for every 1,000 residents in the planned com- mun.ily. In lieu of providing the parks. the law stipulates that the company may pay the county $255 per residential unit for park land acquisition. Although Rossmoor ofticials claim lo have fulfilled the land requirement, coun- ty planners say the facilities are private and, therefore, do not meet the letter of the new law. The variance requested by the C<Jm- pany would allow the existing private pa rks and recreational facilities to [ulfill the ordinance requirement. to the President, would not, however, concede that an announcement from the Chief Executive would be forthcoming on the beach opening issue during lhe cur- rent visit in San Clemente. Rep. Alphonzo Bell tR-Los Angeles) said last week that the President pl anned to reaffirm his stand on the affected Camp Pendleton coastline during the cur- rent visit to Southern California. "I couldn't go so far as to say an an- nouncement .is forthcoming," Warren said. "I do know that discussions on that issue and other similar ones are con- tinuing, but we can't announce any solu- tion yet." It was on a visit this past spring that the President announced his decision that si x miles of San Onorre shoreline, recrea- tion buildings for Marine enlistees and 3,400 acres of San Mateo Canyon be declared surplus. Al that time, Mr. Nixon foresaw no problems with Congressional approval of his plan to open the prime beach front starling a Western White H<iuse buffer zone and sLretching six miles downcoa.st. But the setback did come when the House Armed Services Committee heard r ecommendations from the General. Ser- vices Administration that the canYon would best be disposed of by sale to private hands, not deeding to the put>µc for recreation. The powerful committee's recot11- mendation-still being considered by the Departn1ent of De fense -was that ~ canyon remain in r.Jarine ~ possession and that some of the be'ac:fi¢'1 involved be leased for recreation on a '28· year basis with a strong clause a\lowSltg a military takeover in time of extrdt!e. emergency. · .. : 1lle recominendation registered shock among state parks officials who claimed they had never been told of committee hearings. Bell , long 11 champion of opening o[ Pendleton coastline, accused Rep. Jo)u) G. Schn1itz (R-Tustin l of sabotagin"g \ht; President's plans before the committee~ Conte up . ' to ~here your backyard is a park and the ocean is your neighbor ' 1A~• 1oa St~ OI~~~ r1e1>w1; ,.., '"" H;·r~· R'I~'' \lft<C oil '"'~II<~(.~··~ l'~>d. l'•'>P l'.< .. "•Of"'·'' "'A1"1•f 3 "'''"'•'<>I·'"'!->'""·' 11,• r 1c1 a·1 t:onl>nue to 1i.n O'ean"r.•• Paok 1.·n.,;11~!1 r·o~c ; .. Where a seagull perches on your back fence, And smog is some- thing other people put up with. Because you're permanently caressed by soft sea breezes. Come up to where your kid s will play in the perfect safety of the 21/z acre Marina View Park. Where you can walk the dog around land· scaped paseos. And watch beautiful sunsets over Catalina Is land. Come up to the spacious luxury of a two -story Bue cola Home. Where your master suite embraces a huge d1ess1ng area with vani ties, walk-in closets and king-size bathroom, all iri perfect pro portion to the regally oversize bedroom. 4 bedroom 3 bath homes FAOM $33,950 AS LOW AS ""INU"l PEACfNlAGE !!ATE' excellent Conventional finan cing with low, low down payment ... and you own lhe land! ASK ABOUT OUR 'INSTANT TRADE' PLAN BUCCOLA HOMES t•11 Cl'l"tl ,.Ill WI""" If ll11!1~1l &lltCi'1ll~ If 11--•Hll~I "Ctll llWlt•I &•If_ .. fw tllt '""'•1'1 Su~llt•ff &p11\m1"1f ,.~ .... -.... ··~ ...... !1lt1 OHlc1 l•••pllort•: (711) 1•1·0337 • \ i ' Come up to where your tiled entry foyer leads to a step-down sunken living room with massive fireplace. And lo a family room with sliding glass doors opening onto a private outdoor patio. Come up to where you'll find l hese finer living features all included at no extra cost: wall·to-wall carpetin g throughout, floor to ceiling masonry fireplaces, cathedral ceilings with full insulation, luminous ceilings in kitchens and baths, deco rator selected light fixtures, all electric appliances. including deluxe dishwasher, natural wood kitchen cabinets. massive shake and crushed tile roofing, concrete driveways and co mplete fencing. Come up to Sucrola HOMES OCEANVIEW PARK The Only New Close-In Homes in Costa Mesa 'ty11(r1I 111,. C••ll P1it1 Sl3 !'150 Oown P1y,.,tn! l5.8SO Mon!tilV P1vm1n1' $!13 lor 360 monlti~. 1r~luC11 nQ pnnt•ll~I 1nd lnt•'fj\ •t fl 9~ 1nnu1I pe<ctnt1g1 r111. ·-\ IJll~L-411' ~---· • J. ..... r . " " " -. " . . . . • • : ' • • • ' • ' ' • , , , l ! l • • • • • • • l • • ' • • • • ' • . • . • . ' . • • ' ' • ' j l l ' .. ... -... -.. ·-· 4'' DAIL V PILOT I \ \ ~ps Where Has All English Gone . ' By TH'OMAS MURPHINE GROOVY RAPS DEPT. -After !Ome )'e&ra in the commurucatioru busineh, V.'aHer J. Campbell, edlt.or-in.cbief or Industry Weelr. Mag11.zine, ha.s discovered that he's having some problems with words. He passes on to his readers these observations : "When the children were in elementary and middle schools, we r e s i g n e d ourselves to hearing every situation ap- prai~ aa keen, cool, smooth or groovy, depending on what the younger set's word was for that season. After all, we reasoned, they IOOn would outgrow the habit of using one word to cover all p;>Ui· ble subjecta. "Now we art not so sure. *'ON 4 15-MJNUTE flight from New York to Qeveland, two young adults sealed behind us conducted a takeoff-to- louchdown conversation in wh:ich the tenn "Right On" occurred 112 times. We really couldn't figure out what I.he ex- pression meant, if snythlng, ·''Then we went to a luncheon mttting. The speaker intoned his subject: 'Are You Relevant~· Relevant to what, for heaven'• sake? ""'e continued ponied &ll the speaker exhorted his audience not to become im· patient with those who dil!iregarded the rules of organized aociety and trellpassed on the rijhts of otherll. It was, he solemn- ly assured, their life i;tyle. And if they didn't do their thing, they probably would get uptight. •'WITH OTHER members of the .!IU· dience, we discovered another noisome form of pollution -that of the English language. Like pollution of the en- vironment, that contamination arisell from many sources-the universities and the ghettos, the young and the not so young, from the federal bureaucracy, the press, and Madison Avenue. "No longer do we chat or convene; we rap. No lol'J8er do we make a clecision ; we exercise an option, just as Presiclent Nixon does. No longer do we cliscuss: we lnHiate a dialog and hopefully, it will be a me1nin gful dialog. No longer do ~-e try something new ; we in troduce innovati\'e techniques. "WE AGRE E THAT the English language should be. a living and growing resource. We think it should grow up - not down. We yearn for the simple mll· JCSty of the language as used by \\1inston Churchill ('I have noth ing to orrer but blood, toll, tears and i;weal'l or Abraham Lincoln , or Kipling, Keats. Dickens, and sometimes, Franklin D. Roosevelt. ''When we near the barrage of instant c\ich es with which we have been bom- barded for the last 10 years, we ha ve only ont consolation : "Tbls, too , shall pass.'' * \\'ell Walter, you 1nay well be right. But these is a strong chance that \\'hen it passes, it shall pass on to i:.omething else a ent"r11ted by the new generation. Right On . Vote-at-13 Queried AKRON, Ohio 1UPll -\\'11\\am Frew LQng of nearby Macedonia. the nation's oldest mayor a1 age 91. said lowering the voting age to 18 was a "dangerous ex- perime:nt" because younger person'.'I do not have eoough experience to qualify to vote. "I understand their ambition. but there Is a question in my mind v.·hether they are quali!ied In make decisions v.1thout the e%per lence." said Long, who first ran lor political off ice at age 82. " ' Frldl)', July ~. 1~71 UPIT ....... FILIPINOS FIND TRIBE STILL LIVING IN STONE AGE ON MINDANAO ISLAND Taud1y Manubt Group Has Never Heard of S.lt, Sugar, Tobacco Isolated People 'Stone Age'· Tribe Found MANILA (UPI) -The Philippirtf; government said today it had discove~ a tribe still living in stone age coodition.5 so bedtward Its people had never tasled saJt or sugar nor smoked tobacco. Government BOCial wurkers said a tribe kn!7wn u the Tasadays were found oo Mindanao. the southernm06l of lhe major islands of the Philippines last monlh. They live deep In a rain fon:st. "Tile Tasadaya could be among the few if not the only people in the world today 'who do not know of or ust l.Obacco," said Dr. Robert B. Fox, director of the Prellidential All&istance for National Minorities. f'ox said even the most j90\ated peoplu: af Africa and New Guinea knew d. tobac· co in the 17th ce.nt.ury. But not the Tasadays. "The discovery af these people is of great scientific interest, particularly to studies of man's cultural a n d technological development," Fox said. "fOi they are food gatherers and trappers whoM own technology is rt.ill based oo the u.se of stone tools." He said the Tasadays apparenUy had lived in isolation for more than 500 year11. "They have no linguistic tenns for rice and other cultivated plants which they don 't plant. much Jes.s eat," E;aid Fox . .:i native o( Galveston, Tex., who has lived in the Philippines for 25 yean;. He said they live on wild plants and jungle animals which they butcher wilh bamboo knive.s and stone axes and cook over fire.s made by rubbing sticks together. The Tasadays are naked except for some woo wear loin clothe$ made from orchid leaves which they believe will pro- te<>t their genitals from evil spirits, mem- bers of the government party said. Fox suggested the Tasadays may have been driven to Lheir isolated. refuge in fear of an epidemic known to have swept Southeast f\.lindanao in the early part of the 20th century or before. He said they speak in terrified tenns of "fugu," mean- i11g epidemic. In a forest ..::!earing where the govern- ment helicopter landed, lhe social v•orkers met a Tasaday family of 24 person~. including 13 children. Fox said. He said they reported to an interpretf!r they kney,• there were different people who lived around them. having heard their voices from a distance. .. ICl ... liZ"''°"'°'~~ ... .,,~Wl/Jl ........ ., ....................... =~M~i!D.., ............... ~~?L".++8 ~ N. Viet General Says U.S. Has Two Choices LONDON (UPI) -North Vietnamest military ma.s~rmind Gen . Vo Nguyen Glap 1aid in an interview released today the United States has trapped it.self in a .. tunnel without end" in Vietnam. Giap said America has only two choices: "Stop the war or c:hange strategy." Giap, Hanoi's defense minister, said President Nixon's Vietnamizatlon policy was "the concept of changing the likin color of the corpMll at the front .'' He predicted "total bankruptcy" for the pro- gram. United Pre~s lnternal1onal Tele,·ision News (UPITN) uld the rare interview v.·11s made by East Gennan television rect"nlly in Hanoi. It was <listributed by UPITN's London headuqarters. Gfap, 59, a fonner history ltachrr credited with being the brains behind the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong milill!ry i:.trategy in South Vietnam, said the L"nited States has failed to learn de~p\te its con~tant changing of strategy frtl!n green beret counterinsurgency operations to massive bombing of North Vietnam . "Thus, America now finds :tself lrap- ped in a tunnel without end and sees only 114·0 al~maUvea -stop the war or a change of strategy," Giap said. Gi ap said the simplest answer wa.s for the Uni ted States to pull all ita troopll out of Vietnam. "If the U.S. imperialists stop their 11g- gr~ssion fully and completely and finally withdraw from Vietnam, then there will automatically be no more captured or imprisoned American .soldiers,'' Giap said. The longer the Un ited St.ates st..!lys In Vietnam "the greater ~·Ill be the number of captured Americans," he said. "That 1s obvious."' Giap, who led the Viet Minh in victory over the French at the fortress of Dien Bien Phu in ~1ay, I9M, ,<;Aid the Nixon policy of Vietnamization i!'I "a concept of pursuing the war" further. ''It is a stratagem of letting Viet- namese fight VietMmese and using the blood and bones of the Vietnamese in !he service of the dirty inlere!'itS of the American reaction forces." Giap said. II the United Stat.e~ cou ld not win with 11.s massi ve manp:iwer. Giap said, "how can the marionette army (South Viet- namese) ;ilone, no mailer to what extent equipped take over fnr the United State!'I lhe entire burden of lhe war ••• ?" Military . .\.id Amounts Told For Greece WASHINGTON (API -'The once-shun- ned Greek military government would get $117 million in U.S. arms aid th is fiscal year under Nixon administration prop:isals whose secrecy label has been lifted for the first lime. The St.ale Department, which tradi- tionally has kept individual aid amounts secret, released the nevi fi gures today after Sen. Willia1n Proxmire iD-Wls.). threatened to publicize them on his O\\'n unless the admlni~tration could show why they should be withheld. 'The country -by -country breekdo\~ shows how the United States plans to spend $2.3 billion in military assistan("I;'. military credit sales and excess military materiel in the fi scal yl!ar that began July L Greece, who~e aid \\'as <:hut off arter 11 military coup in llprtl 1!167, would ~et $19.8 million 111 direct n11l1tary aid. $60 milhon in arnls ~ales anri $38 million 1n exce5s U.S. military supplies and equip- ment. Presiclenl Nixon resu111rd the military 111d progrArn 10 Grerce last September. c1linR Gr{'ek mcn1her~h1p in the North lltlan!ic Trea1y Orgriniiat1on and it-!' strategic position on Europe'li southern flank. Sunny, Warm Over U.S. Proxmirr said figures \.\'ere supplied for 43 nat ions. "Alrhough lhf' State f)epartment made no ar~umrnt that the military security of the Unltt>d States v.·as al stake," Prox- mire said. the 11mounts for six h1iddle F.asl countries and the Philippines will not be released unhl later because of delicate negotiations now under way. Neiv Pacific Srorn1 Recorded at Nortli Rockies Ten1perature• B ·u· h Troops " , ................ ~.. 11. s A, lllt"" ,<r.l-u1.-- ,t.tl1M1 An(i'oor•I• &e~1rollt11I lolu 8Mle" .,.,..,.,,.vi!!• 8ul'l•le C~1'10ltl C~l~•Jo' Cl..cl~"•'I cr...-.11"11 0 •11•• Hl1ll L,.. p,.,.., ~ ?. ,~; Fi2ht lrisl1 Moh 4'l ~I LJ ~ ~ LONDONDERRY, Northr.m lrel11nd ., "' (AP) -British t.roops battled rioting !! ~ mobll of Roman Catholics into the early " •' hours today in a bloody prelude to the ~ ~ ·11 12th of J uly celebrations by militant oo 10 Prot estants on ~1onday. ;: ~ In fighting that turned the Catholic 11 u .OI Bogslde district into a battleground, U1e ;~ : troops fired twl(.'e into lhe rioters' ranks, •• u killing two men and wounding a third. !:' ;: ~' The army said the mob fittd first at •• •• " the soldiers. Hundreds of youths, cheerM ~ ~ oo by crowds of spectators. also pelted 104 n the soldiers v.·ith gasollne and nail bomb5, ~ ~ bricks and bottles. •J 1> The British Army announced it v.·a.s ~ ~ 11 bringing 500 more 90ldlers into U\f' pro- ~ u \•lnce. increasin&" its strength locally t.o ~~ ~ 11.000. nd bl '" <.1 Also during the night A !a n1lne e:w ., '' up 11n army tn1ck cro.<;s1ng a bridge near : ;; ·" Armagh. injuring one soldier. About 40 '°' 1111 pound• of gelignite exploded a t the office : ~ ·11 of a cash regl~ter company In Belf11st, ;: : .OI c:auslng considerable daml'Jge, but no one IAst DMZ Bae U.S. Hands Over Last DMZ Post SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Anny 1Dd1y tianded over to South Vletnamme forces the last American position in the Demilltariied Zon e (DMZ ) ddensive network u BS2 bombers pounded North Vietnamese unita on a nearby hftl. Allied military sp:>kesmen at the same time reported new North Vietnamese mortar attacks against Firt Base Fuller, the mout.aintop fortrMS al.so located along the DMZ. U.S. forces turned over to South Viet- nam today Fitt: Ba.5t Charlif 2 where 32 American.'1 died when a North Viet-- namese rocket hit a bunker May 21. UPT correspondent Stewart Kellmnaa said 750 Gls and 150 t.ank3, personne.1 car- riers, artillery, jeeps and truckir pulled out after a !Mrt ceremony at noon transferring the base to Saigon troops _ About 150 other Gls will stay to man a batltt)' of eight-Olch guns and radar! to help reduct the thrut or a rudden North Vi~attack. As Lhe bue was handed over l.o ~ South Vietnamese, 852s bombed a ridge three miles away and maStiive artillery barrages boomed orf into the plains leading north toward the DMZ. The artil!ery tuid been called in because of fears: of a rocket attack duri.ng the switchover when hundreds of lroop!:i were massed at Charlie 2. Gen. Pha"ll Van Phu, commander of the Vietnamese 1st lnfanlty Division, said, "I think my mtti will do just fine wilh the Americans gone from here. The North Vietnamese might try to attack us like they did al Fuller but we are n:ady for them." Fire Base Charlie 2 was the second American base in ttie DMZ chain to be turned over to the South Vietnam~ in the past 24 hours. On Thursday, U.S. troops withdrew from Alpha Four, a hilltop fortress which UPI erroneously said wa~ t.he last Ame1ican position along lhe DMZ. Jn oU'ler parls of Vietnam action y,•a.s light and scattered, allied spokesmen reported in Saigoo. The U.S. command said three other B52 ~ioM were Oov.TI e\sey,·here in South Vietnam all northeast and northwest <:I the abandoned base at Khe Sanh near the DMZ. The bombardment of Fuller Thursday night included an undetermined number of \Wmm mortar rounds . Viel.name.st troops sent to rebuild fortdficatioos after Fuller wa, overrun and destroyed by North Vietnamese troops two weeks ago .surferecl casualtit.! de3Cribed as light. fire Base Fuller changed hands five tim~ after lhe. Communists overran it and its system ol bunkers and other Agnew Talks lo 600 An1ericans in Arabia JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia (UPI) - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew today praised lhe ''quiet dipl omacy" of American:s living in Arab land~. for buildi ng good Y.'ill and lessening tension . Under a blazing sun with the tem- perature nea r 100 degrees. Agnew spoke to more than 600 members of the American community gathered in the garden of Ambassador Nicholas G. Thacher's resirl~nce. It was the first time on his round-the- '4'orld diplomatic rtU ssion that Agnew broke away from ceremorUal duties to speak Lo Americans living away from home. Face of Misery fortifications wert blown up not cnly by the attacking North Vietnamf.M' but by intensive American lighter-bomber and helicopter strikes. The new attack! against Fuller follow- ed f'q)Ort.'I of a raid by Sooth Vietnln'M!IH ellte Black Panther lroopa aaa.in!lt a Communist truck storage area and supplJ zooe 24 miles 800th of the DMZ Thun- day. It fol)OWed a tttree-.hour serie. of raids on the same are; a by U.S. S52 bombers and jet flghler-bombera. The South Vietnamese commandor un- covered 22,000 pounds of rice, three ne-w Soviet-made trucks, IS drums of gP'line, six antiaircraft guns and other rriateriel. Communiques fJ"Qm Phnom Penh said the Cambodian military command had ordered the army to vrork an eigtit hour days from now on. Up to now the military had been on a 6'/z hour day. "A.ctually since the beginni.ne of thll war, ·~e bave beef'I work ing long hours," said a Cambodian high ccmmand spokesman. "But oft1!n soldie-rs and i;ecretarieo did not C<Jme to work. Only the officers did ." S. Viet Drugs 'Not as Bad As Expected' SAIGON (UPI) -Dr. Jerome H. Jaf- fe, President Nixon 's special con,,ultant on drugs, arrived in South Vie_tnam todaJ and said he feels the heroin problem among American Gls may not be as ex· tensive as originally feared. Jn reply to a queslion on original estimates concerning the nun1ber of GI heroin users J affe said; "Yes, the initial estimates a;e that it is not as bad as most pessimists would have us believe.·• i-le declined, hO\l'C\'er, to discuss a ny figures on the number of soldiers on. drugs or th~ numbers "'ho can be' rehabilitated. Jaffe arrived at Saigon's Tan Son Nbut Airport with a party of five, which in- cluded two other physicians. to ~nd three days on a fact-finding mission of the drug problem in the war zone. He \.\'as greeted upon arrival by Gen. Creighton \V, Abrams. Commander el U.S. Forces in Vietnam. Among studies Jaffe and his group want to make are the operational ability or three specially developed machine• fl o\l.·n to Vietnam la.st month to test every serviceman or woman leaving the war zone for possible drug addiction. Officials reported mixed success with the devices which conduct urinalysia lests. Jaffe said he was reluctant to discuss any figures on succes!; or failure of the system until "we hflve a calm and (lbjective analysis. Afler all, the program t1nly has been operating for three "'eeks." Jaffe said his Lri? y,·on't be concerned specifically with drug traffic into Viel - nam. al!hough ··by talking to Gls we c get an Idea on their supply routes." Sou Vietnam, uncler orders from the U.S. military. hM been conducting a crackdown on drug trarfic into the coun- trv. Atilitary sources have Aa id that tM medical tests to v.·eed out heroin users before they go home have discoverd a durg addiction rate of only about 2 to I percenl of 1ome 10,000 Gls tested. Tlitisery and starvallon are renected In the face5 of an East P~kista.n re(ugf;e n1 othcr .and hi;r baby at_ a £il~P somew~cr,e in India.. ,,-" was h11~ • ·-w...-n.••·...,.~-.~.:;.;;.., ... ~,.,.o )'~~ -.... -rw · rr.~ ~ .,.,-.-... ... ... DAJL y PIL OT S :. ·~ ----~---·-·-~--~-- • Tooth Ad State$ Wielding Ax • 'Tough' -Nader Welfare P·ayments to Needy Cut Cycle ffo1111e1·s Bike en thu~iasts debark in San Franc1sto fron1 a 'Pedal Hopper' bus \•:hich the :\lameda Contra ('osta 'frans1t District inauguated Thursday \vith a pair of specially converted buses, each \rith space for 24 bikes and riders. • WASHINGTON \UPI) Ralph Nader Thursd ay asked the Feder2J Trade Com- mission to require cautionary labeling tha t toothpaste con· taining stannous itin) fluori de will stain teeth a light bro 'ol-n. Nader also says Colgate \vi!h ~1 FP t nionofluoropho~· phate) is falsely advertising its produt1 as a "tooth tough- ener " About 40 percent of all toothpaste sold contains stan- nous fluoride. a decay . retarding additive. The most "'idely sold brands are Crest, Stripe and Pepsodent Ttie Procter & Gan1ble Co .. Cincinnati. ma nufacturer of Crest. disputed Nade r's cla.lms 1nade in a letter to the FTC 11iursday. Procter & Gamble ~Aid U1e source materia l for Nader's allegations "are over four years old, (ahd ) refer to staining of debris and othe r 1naterial on the teeth which should be and normally are re in o v e d with proper brushing." Nader cited studies publi~h· ed in the Briti!h Dental Journal in 1967 and the Journal of Public Health Den· tistry in 1970. \YASH INGT0:-4 I UPI ) The Nili'.On Administra tion has leaked a memorandum to newsmen shov.·iJli that welfare payments to needy families are being cut in JO states and under conside ration for cutting in 11l least 1% others. The document appears not on ly lo confirm • suspected national trend in money-.!tarv· ed states but offers new \Vin- dow drea!i ng for President Nixon's \~·ellare refo rm pl an. whicb would set a federal floor under welfart payments. Prepared by the Health , "l olons Seeking Ve to Overturn WASHI NGTON (UPI) -An Utempt wi ll be made in the Senate next week to overturn President Nixon's veto of a bill that "·ould have fought unem ployment by creating 200.000 public "'orks con· struction jobs. Backers of the move were pe!simi stic I.hey could put together the necessary tv.·o- lhlrd s majority vote to over· ride the veto. Locl\:l1eecl Ai1· Loa11 Presst11·e "We are calling your al· teiltion lo the danger of toot h :staining from a product \1-'hich should help to clean teeth,'' Nader :said. '·This danger ex· 1sts in all stannous fluoride toolhpaistes. A wa rning should be given on toothpasle tubes to alert Ule public to these hazards.'' 'May be Bluff'-House Unit \VASHl N(;TON /Al') i\ House Banking Cunun1llee staff report suggesti; !hal pressure fnr a $250 n1illion government loan gu;1rantce to save LM k.l1eed Aircraft Corp. and ils JUrnbo JI.'! airbus 1n<1y be <i bluff. Continuation !If l.oc·k llccd·._ prograin to build the LlOl 1 ;11rbus n1ay not 1tepend 011 the guarantee. the report said. or 11lternat11"ely there may be in- lorma\1on not ~el rnade pubhe •·tha! th e 1.101 1 is not <is goorl as lhc advocates .... say 1l ;, ··1t appears clear Iha! 11 1~ basically the British govern· ment that 1s insistin,g on !hf' guaranter.'' !he rrport ~;!Id ThC' a1rcrar1 ·s eng1r1t•s 1\·0uld he pro1 idrd by Britau1·s Hnlls· H0~cf'. 11·hic h suffered f111a11· ria l collap.~c The report. rril11.:H I or thr Nixon ad1ninis!ra11on proposa l Judge Sa ys He Won't 'PJa v God ' CJ.\"C l~:'l:i\TT il"PJ) -A judge rule1! Thur. .. d:'.\ a tet-tl· a.Ile girl alflu·1cd \111h can{·er ha<; t!H• right 111 11·ir1·t ,tn ,,ppra1111!1 lh;H ttlll!ht lll~Tl';J~C' hrr eh;incr s I•) Iii r Jud~f' Reni:in11n 1'th11;u·11 nf t11r J11v1•n1h· e11ur·t ~a id ht· · rrfu<;rrl lo pl :i~ c;nd" His rul111g r.1mt• 1111 ;:i prt1· liPn h\" <lll<'lnr·i;. 11 ho a~kC'cl ~r-h11·11r t1. to rl·quirr the-1r. 1rar-old 1{1rl affli<'!t•tl 11·l1h boric c;-.twl'r t11 ~uhm1t lo 1he an1put::itinn of hrr right I~ The judge i;a1d tl1e unirlen· ttflrrl girl :1nd hrr rnother knew the conscqu('nccs {Jf their action and "ii is not up tfl 1he court to thwarl their \\ills.·• •·The doctors said radium had bern tned ;ind they belif'ved it bei;t In rernove the lf'g from the hip dnll"n to pre- ' cnt the sprC'lld rif the dis<'ase." lhe judge said. "The chances of her coming through the orcralion suc- cessfully would he about 20 lo JO percent. If she does nothing further. the chances of her recovering would be 2 to 3 pe r· cent.'' Teamsters Nan1e Boss f\.tlAMl BEACH. Fla. IAPl -F'rank E. Fitzsimmons hai; been elected to R fi ve year term as president of thl' "·orld's largest labor union t he two . million ·member Tea msters union. Fltulmmons wa! named to the post by ac clamation Thursday when his only op- ponent. Theodore Daley of Vonke:rs, N.Y .. withdrew a!ter U1e: roll call started After hill e1er t1on to thr $125,000-a-yellr pn~sJdenry of !he Tear11~1er~. F1t1s1n1111Q11s s<-1id fnrmf'r Prri;utf'nt .Jarnr~ R. l-lo(fa "'ould hAvP no role in union adjl1injslra_tio_!!. ~i'f-"~"" ~ ... -- for thr guarantee. •N<i s g1ven ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir============:;;::=========::.I eun1111i!h:t' n1cn1bers at a clos-11 cd 1nccti11g and nol n1ade public. However. 1he t:onten1s have bc<'on1e known. Tlir repo rt sa~·s Lhe ult1n1ale l1abilit~· of thf' government. u1 case thf' loans are defaulted, <:ould excf'C'd S300 m11!1on. !:;01nc prO\'is101Js g1 v1n g the gnvrrnincnl pnorlly o v r r other drb1ors 1nay bC' unen· forceablr ;ind !)<lh~n11al l~s of johs if the airbus proiect is aban dnne d may be nverest1n1ated. 1t adds. Enroll Now Fall Semester All-DAY CLASSES Kiadergartea lhni 8th Grade • Ttacl!ilf "' 4 R's with phonics • Door-tHJoor Bus Sel'Yice • Before aad After School Care • Reasonable Tuition •••• 171 Fountain Vallet1 16835 Brookhurst Street 96 2·331 2 HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS Keep Your Children In Good Hands \\'r ··••r' l our (hr)\lrr-Plnnouth dt'llrr .. "C1u<f we ~no'"' 11 '"u"rc h~rr' '"ilh !hr '"a\ .... e ,er•1ce )OUr pre~n1 car you'll come hdC~ ~nd 1'>111 •f'ur ne•I ,., from u• 100 S(l--.•e 1ry 10 ~tcr WE·CARE ~KAGE ""' ,~,.,~f hnr• 1hor1 Bnd our r eople cou11 rou5. \\'e 11m tn do 1hr """'" n;h1 1hr JH.>l llmt And'"< don t 01crch1r3e lor "hAl .\nd o,e•"•f ••n"1111 "' lll f 1bout. r1tht1 \\e c~r• enn111h '" t"" .. n111rou' ~alf•men lf' 1n•"t11!1 )OUT qut•l•("!n' and •h"" "'" 1u•I 1he <d! \1H1 "~n1 And""' r11t ennu1h 10 10 0••1 ~"u1 """•JI '""h i lint 1001h tt)mh hr(nrt \n11 dn1 c It l"~' \\t ( Jlt' fr} U• .'t"lll II 'l't Plymouth Duster. A~k •hvl 11t1ttl•I Jtric'" '""'~ D~·t•r"• 1h<.romru1 1hJ1111.,1ll """"I~' ''1 bog <POUJh Sm1ll r l'kl11gh '" _ _.._ i.. 1 ..... rn•hl. ,.,~ "" I"" c~~~ 10 dn•<. ti>' •o P"l 1111 rnou,.ti lo ""' ~·• '" «•mfo ... ·••1) 1 ~., '""'""'· l ftd "dt U 1rl'I001h U I mud1 h>U tr ••• A \Our Chryskr-PIJ'mo1llh Dealers. --os.u:me V' Costa MHO Huntln1Jton Beach Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. Huntington Beach Chrysler-Plymouth 2929 Harbor Boulevard 16661 Beach Boulevard IO·~-----~-=--.:,.. __ ..:_~ -_....::_ ....:::..:r-. ..,. . . • Education and Wetrare Depart- ment f 1-tEW ) the summary of trends in welfare payment levels reports po!Sible cul! M high as 48 percent in New Hampshire if the s t a t e leg\.&l11ture does not approve a $13 million welfare budget. A rlt on a , California, Con- necticut, Delaware, Idaho, llhnols, MtMesota, Oregon, Pennsylvania. Texas and Ver · mont, in addition lo f\ew Hampsblre. payment boo&ts, 1a1d the ; report to t!EW U n d e r • Secrelary John G. Ve neman . "I think a 5eC<>ndary effect of I.his memo i! furthe r sup- port for "'elfare reform," 1aid an administration spokesman. 11le 10 states w he r e payments to weltare cUen ts will be cut this year are Alabama, Georgia. Kansas, Maine, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexlco, Ne1v 'll'ork, Rhode Isl an d and So u l h Dakota, according to the memo. On the othe r hand the report shows five states and !he District or C ol u mb i a in· creasi ng payments In lheir programs of aid to fami lie:s with dependent children, and two olhers considering in· creases. .. The reason it was prepared, · was to be r~ponsive to ques- lions we are certain to get in the Senate. Th is is rupportivi : to incre ased fede ral support" for \\"eifare ." Possible cuts loom I n Hawaii, l\1ississippi, Nevada, Ohio and Oklahoma are rais- ing benefits, and Maryland and Wiscon.&in are considering He said the memorandum, dated July 2, so far had re--· ma ined internal exupt for ii! distribution lo se v er a 1 new!men. Nowi enioy barbecues , the clean, easy~ way! . ... . f \ Coleman® gas bartJecue for charcoal-broil flavor! · 6888 uo. 74.11 For delicious borbe-cues wTthout the work -pick gos! 1-spot ~ghti n g; od;ustoble grate, controll.d 1mOk· ing . 283" grill hos room for 24 hcmburgen. JUST SAT ""CMllOI l'n- COMPLETE INSTALLATION AVAILABLE AT SLIGHT~ atAtOI ~ I For fast cookouts deluxe Charmglow gas BBQ! Add the-w9rm glow of gas lights to your entry or patio! Coloniol styl e gas lantern made of poreeloin ized oluminum. Tempered gloss pones remove to clean. All HOUT Jlll1ALIATION W ith ga s, there's no messy preparation! 2 levels let yo. cook ond warm ot some ti~! . ' Shop Mon·Sat 'UI 9:00. Sun 12-SPM LA Cll~:r••.-;:G.A .---·pnone 836-7922 TOAl'tANCE~ ............... • .... --l'*\Ol"le ~2-897 1 FULU:ATON, .. _.,pi"w:lne 714-879-2500 NORWALK ...•....... , ............ p~ !68-091 1 SANTA ANA .......... _phone 5'17~1 H\JNTlNGTON l!EACH p/"'or"le 714-892-661 1 Pt' NQRAMA CITY ·--Dl"'O"oe 894-8211 VENTURA .... ~s 485-5421 • 642· 754 1 ROSEM~O .. -.....• -• .phcne ~_l:l_l,~0 CANOGA PARK-............... ooone 883-1000 .......... .._ ..... phone 966-7411 • ------·-... ' ) .. ' .. ' ... " . ·~ .. .., 1 DARY P ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' I -: .. 1. :..r;J<o ...... . -. •, -' -!:; : :-': ·-· -.. : . =· . -... .:_.: .. • -. ·:. . -. .. . Local Taxpayers Hit Governor Reagan's record-breaking slash of nearly '504 million from the 1971·72 state budget, offered as a heroic acl of tax saving, comes through as a hard whack at t.a.xpayers al the local level. Ali protestations by the governor and his staff to the contr ary. the heavy-handed blue-penciling means that local property taxpayers will probably have to pick up added expenses for \11elfare, medical programs and pub- lic education . No responsible autho rity in the · state outsi de the governor's staff wil l confirm the governor's contentions. But those closest to the problem -county and school officials -have be~n n~arly unanimous in saying that the slashed budget 1nev1tably means only a s h i!t from the broad s tale base Lo the narrow properly base of the added cost of state-mandated programs in the three fields The Legislature can't escape some share of blame for the s ituation. to be sure. But the major responsibillty no1v rests o n the governor. His zeal to be able to make good hrs rash promise of "no tax increase this year" ap- pears likely lo insure tax increases at the local level. The 'Wild Ri vers' Debate Preserving as much or California's ';wild rivers" as may reasonably be possible is a laudable goal. A bill now in the Sacramento legislative h opper \VOU!d v.•all off in perpetuity as free-flowing rivers the EeJ, Trinity and Klamath rivers of northern California . This bill is s trongly opposed, however. by the very people who would. _at a superficial glance, be expected to want the three rivers kept in their wild sta te. These are the residents of the seven counties in Dear which the three rive-rs are located. They are banded lo· gether as the Eel River Water Council, a result of the. rrlUl'ii-rnillion do!Jar damage resulting from uncontroUed floods, especially on the Eel River. They want not onJy flood control but the means to meet their own increasing water and recreational needs. Central and Southern California also stand to lo5e in a major way if 42 percent of the state's totaJ water resources (which the three rivers represent) are fenced of! permanently. The !':itale Water Project -approved by the voter! -includes development of North Coast rivers, as need· ed . to maintain the yield of the State Waler Project and augment the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta through the projected Peripheral Canal. Fresh voater to offset the groy,•ing salinity of ('olo- radu River water in Southern California is to come from this source. No proved alternative now exists, despite all the yield in sight fl'om desalted sea water and recla· mation of used water. First in line for development in support of local flood control and recreation. as well as augmenting sup· pl_ies to the Delta and Southern California, is the Dos Rios Dam on a branch of the l<;el River. Governor Reagan suspended co·ns truc tion of the Do~ Rios Dam in order to re-examine it~ impact. '11his ;iction was reasonable. Soi~ a bill introduced by Sen. Randolph Collier (0-Yreka). Collier's bill c..:alls for basin-wide studies of multi-purpose benefit~ to be had from develop- ment of some rivers as well as the need to fence oft some free-flowing rivers, or sections of them. The Collier plan certainly is a more moderate and broadly beneficial approach to statewide needs than the misguided and shortsighted proposal oC the ''wild rivers" enthusiasts. It ls lt11porta11t to Make Disti11ctio11s Gloomy Gus Vietnam Error vs. High Motivation ''DEAR 1\111. HARRIS: Why tlo ~ many wri ters and speakers today use th e word 'overkill.' and what does 1t mean., How 1s JI posslble 10 overkill an} thtng'.'" -,I B H • Orej!,on. Political enemies In Congress are friends on one issue: The heroin menace. Maybe Nixon could get some progress out of the Dem(). crat-controllcd Congress if he'd re· name his programs -like Heroin· Welfare, t.iarijuana-Housing and LSD-Inflation. -D. T. S. T~I• t11111r• r11i.c11 ,..,.,... ..,_.. ftot MClt .. rll1 IN .. II l~I ft-.. ••tf'. 5tn• 1twr ,.., "1v1 19 G1Mrn1 Gv .. OoltJ '1111. richest country, we rank only Plevr.nth among aid-givers in the amount the. U.S. contribute11. measured as a percentage of national producl. Our self·image nl the U.S. aJ1 tile "great philanthropisl" i.'! a senlimenl.al illusion among a people whn constitute only 6 percent or the world's population and consume more than <40 percent of its resources. "DEAR l't1R. HARRIS: We are slu· dyJng ·legislative reform· Jn our high school class, and would like lo know what you th ink might he the most effective reform we could work for 7" -N. P., New J ersey . The worst trick pulled by the U.S. In the wake of the Penta~on paper!! <lemands are being heard for a reex· amination or America·ll whole foreign policy since World War JI. The argument is that Vietnam was not just a llingle \lx>rration but a direct. logical, almost inevitable consequence or the U.S. "obsession" with opposing com- munism in the world. As one critic. Senator McGovern, pots lt, " ... we set out on the assumption that we had to send American troopll or American military equipment, i;ir do whateve r wa.~ necessary to combat a Communist revolutionist nn matter where he showeri up and no matter how corrupt lhe ;:overnment was that he wa.~ revolling against." THE CRITICISJ\f IS justified as far a!! it goes, and the Nixon admini3tralion i.~ right to impose limitations on the U.S. \•1orld role. Neai"ly everyone. ourselves included . now believeii that the Johnson administration's vast enlargement of the ll S. role in Vietnam was a mistake. Anti 1.:erlalnl y it did derive from a general concern for trying to help people keep fro1n being taken over by the Com· munisls. But that motivation is not an ap· propriate indictment of the nation'ii en- tire anti-Communisl foreign policy. Viet· .... Guest Editorial r - nam was a mistake not because or Washington 's intentions but because, for tht soundest of military and other reasons, it was a most unfortunate place lo choo.~e to make a stand. An overall policy of opposition to Communtsl ag- grandizement in the world should nol mean that the U.S. automatic ally fights it out wht>rever the enemy threatens. Thr. t>rror was or 1·our~e compounded as thr. Amer ican military commitment grew rapidly ouL of proportion lo an y realizable ga ins. GRA~'TING ALL THAT, the fact re· mains that if the U.S. had not pursued its broad anti.Communist policy, the world would be in a much sorrier state than it is today. People understandably lend to fori;et the origins or the cold war. Indeed. some of the so--called revisionist historians have been assiduously engaged in at· tempting to make ii appear that the U.S. was at least as responsible as lhe Com· munistii for the cold war. 1t'a not so, as anyone on the scene • quarter-century ago ought to be able to testify. The U.S. made unwise decisions at Yalta ll.Od Potsdam: their unwisdom, however. consisted not in !hwarting Conl· munisl power but in easing i!s path. r;ven so, it wa~ beginning lo dawn on President Roosevelt before he died that St.al1n wa.~ going to be a very tough customer in the post-war era. THE SOVIETS lost no l i m e demonstrating JUSI how tough . They disrupted Berlin and soughl 1n every way short or direct military a\\ack to lake over all or c:ermany. Before Ion.I! their minions seized Czechoslovak ia -the first lime, that is. This outrage was so frightening in it,. implications for Western ~.:urope that 11 greatly helped propel the formation or the Norlh Atlanllc Treaty Organization, with the U.S. and its nu clear shield the dominant mcmbC"r. NATO notwilhstand· ing, ii is by no means improbahle Lhat Stalin might have unleashed the Red Army against Western Europe had he li ved a !ew years longer, Is l! to be se riously suggcsl<'d Lhat !he U.S. should not have involved itself in the effort to save Western Europe from com· munism? MEANWllILE TllE Chinese Com· munists. fa c:1lilalcd by the U . S, government'~ blundering endeavor to ef- fect a coalilion government, had takel\ over !he ma inla nd. The U.S .. a Pacific power, woulrl have hcen irresponsible not to view that development with concern ; the threat to Southeast Asi a especially was nbvious. It is often said , well , the Chinese Com· mun1sts never di<1 move sou!h after alt This overlooks their aclll'!l!CS in !he Korean war ancl their not incon~iderable ~upport or the Con1munists 1n V1tlnam . Beyonrl that. a question· \\'ould 1he. Chinese Reds havP been so "'docile" 1f II wert not abundantly evident that lht U.!' m1~ht resisl an tffort to conquer all Southeast A:;ia~ !'\ONE (JF TllESE <.·ircumslances ex cuses the mishandling of An1erica·s V1r1· nanl involvcn1cn1. Ci!rta1nly not lht> <leception u11drrlrncd in the Pentagon papers. 1\t a t1n1t v.hrn 1nany An1cri<:an- flagellators a rc sounchni;: ulf. however. 1t is important to rnai;c rt1st1nction' between a specific 1nisapplication of policy and the high nH>livatJon -noth 1ni: less than human [reellom -of lhe policy itself. \\'alt Street ,Journal , "O\•erkill" in modern military par lance i, means lhe capacity to deslroy the t.ntal , • population or an area or country so many • time' over. For on~. bolh the U.S. and ! · ihe Sov1rt [j n1nn ha\'e the des1rucn1•e , . "Capability In wipe out each nthrr's 1.jiopulation 10 nr 1:; times nvtr: Jointly lheM> rorce~ have the equ1valrnt of .ffi .000 Senate-is the device of attach1n,2 • "rider" to a bill, when 1ht rider 111 legislation on some totally unrelated sul>- Ject. Th1s has I~ effect either of killing the main bill or slipping throu gh 11 r1rler nnl 1n the public: interest. Such sleazy and undemocratic: procedures should be abolished by law . "DEAR 1\1R. HARRIS: \\'hy <1n museums cont1nut to store so much USfless iunk 1n space lhal cnukl bt ta\;en up b\' more meaningful exh1b1ts ~" -A. N , 111. Food Fears Are Largely Unjustified ·~ jiound<:. ol T~T ror e\'rr} man woman ;1nd child 10 both countries : '·OE~R ·MR. llAllRIS: Do you agrtf' \\·11h sonle critics of ou1· national policy 'that v.·e gi ve loo much away 10 lhe form of fore111n aid.," -It B . Iowa. \l.'e have reduced our foreign eeonnm1r assistanct 10 nne-Fnrt1eth of lhe amount WP '3 pt'nd on armamen~ a nnually ; a lthough we are by far the world'• \Vhe n C. of ¥.'1sconsin scienllsl~ wanted to find out whv predatory h1rds were tn danger of rxl1nction, thf'y ('Xam1ne<1 thousands rif ·useless' Pmp!y egg shells ;it lhr Field J\1t1seum and learned lha1 air pQllut1on was lh1nn1ng the ~ h e 11 ~ • re~ultin~ 1n more breakage i!od less hatching. Dr. Rallison as Censor •' • . To the Editor · So the Orange County Board of Educll. lion 1s in a dilemma 01·er Joan Baez's ·book. "Daybreak" ("Baez Book Stin Up County Tn1slees". .Ju ly 21. Cert.tin · members of Ult board want the book :censored out of !ht" Orange County M:hool -:: library sy!llems while others v.·ish to ap- \:.~prove lt. I agru wit.ti lhe members lhal ~··wish to approve 11. ;.: Dr. Dale Rallison. • Santa Ana dentist ::::_and a board member. i.~ spt"arheadlng the ;:attack to censor the book. A~ a me.mber ;: of Lhe John Birch Society, Dr. RalliBOn r: 1hould realize thr right.<:. RU&ranteed In ~~our Comtilution. Thr F'irst Amendment ':.: kl the 8111 of Rights sets forth t:he right of ~: evuy Am~lcan to re11d what he or she ;;.: cltOOl'i~. This, 11~ anyone can ,,tt, con· ,._: 1rltdlcls the 1ery essence ol the. word ~= ~rshl p. '· ~ ': AND·SlNCE WUEN dots a Santa Ana '• .: ... .-i~~ Quotes !~i :"l Or. E•rl Chell. fnrmtr Vice Chancellor, ;: ; UC Berte.It)' -''M1ny bualne1sn1en have: :!: atruggltd with lhf' problem tb•t If their ::: busintlil survive•• wage. or ta.1 lncrtt11$e, • ;, lhat Is proof that 'prof1ti1 wtre too high.' ~·l Sn, too, we in hlj:'her educatlon have l.h• ··t problem 1h11t if the. pn11rclt?d budget il :;. cul. 11nd we 1urv1ve. 'therr was fat in the ;: 'uda:et'." . -, i\'1 a ilhox LeUert fron1 ,.-eadtrt orii uielcame. No rrnallu writers should convc11 their rnessages in 300 words or less. The t·iglit t.o coridense letttrt to fit tpacc er t:li111inatt libel is res1:rt.>ed. AU le i· lers miist include signature <1nd mail· i11g address, btit names mou be with· he ld on request i/ sufficient reason I.~ apparent. Poetr11 will not be pub- lished. flentist havt. the. right to dee!~ ~·hal ~hould be ceroored and what shou\dn'I? Do he and a rew others likt hlm cootrol lht inOux of every book contained In tht Orange County achoo! sy$tem! I skl· c~ely hoJX oot. T>r. Rallison went Ofl to sAY that ''Daybreak Is or poor /II.Crary quality." Ir every book In the !Chool system lh1t I& (If poor literary quality were removed from tht shelves, JU book populaUon ~uld bt reduced by about 2S pt~!. Besides. 11 is only o~ man's opinion concerning the Quality of I.ht book. If he doesn't like ii . he doftqi't have lo read ii: but hf doetn't h11vf' the r1fht lo tell ua lhaL we cJ1i't either. CilRIS BRODERICK ' Although our food supply has ne ver in history been more abundant. varied. or r;ale, tht consumer i! running scared." wriles [)r. Melvin A Benarde in The f:hen11c;il.<; We Eat 1 American Her\tage: Press, S.6.!l.'i ). The9e !ears are largely tin· JUSt 1hed, Or. Benarde contends, and he preseoL-. persuasive -and reassurinli - evidence that the public has overreacted lo press reports aboul the danger of pest1cute residues and chemical additives in foods. In The Chemical.<:. We Eat, Dr. Bcnarde offers a balanced view ol lhe silualion. "I tin not mean lo imply that I consider rhemicals in food a trivial problem," he writes. "\ do not. Ori the other hand, I .am not. v.·orried by their presence -and nf'1ther should you be." Hi! book explains ¥.·hy. TO PUT THE WHOLE question into pl'rspective, Dr. Benarde points oul that <i ll living things are composed "' chemicals which are no less chemic;1I than a food additive syntllesized in the laboratory. f\.1oreover, 11 great many natural foods contain potentially toxic chemicals. For example. cya.nide i.~ present in lima beans, bul it is de11c- liva!ed by !tie heat of cooking. And com· mon lable sail i:o1 essential lc life. yrl 11 largt' amount absorbed in ll short time wou ld probably kill tht-eater. Dr. Renarde define., in layman's terms many ol lhe chemicals lhat are added t.o By George --- Dear Geor1e: My husband refusr.s to takt balhi1 Mcause ~ uy "I'll get a cold." Oo you have any suggestions? DISGUSTED Of'llr t)iSfl:Ullttd: How dne!I he feel about being ~nt to the dry cleaners7 1 Send your problems to George and let him do your worrying for vou . Frei' "our mind and 11llow yourself to think up new worries.) ~-_,. .-......--~-------~--------- - --· ------ T he Book111a n lood . and he rlcscr\bes why they are used. ;ind how they function. These additives include swttlencrs, flavoring . colorin.i::. thic\;ening, firming and leavening agents, and many other calegories. TO IU.USTRATE how an additive ran improve food , the author reminds us lha t not long ago peanut butler separated into nil on top and a gum1ny glob on the bot· tom-wruch had to be mashed together beft)re use. Today chemical emulsifierii have made peanut butter ...-. and many other products -instantly u~ble. In fact. without additives a whole range or convenience foods on which we have cc1me tn depend would cease In ex1s1 . "VM<1 litddit1ves are a~ safl! as 11. ls humanly possible to ma\;e them.·· Dr. Benarde asserts. •·secau~e of the ex· tremely low loe~el!! of additives used 1n foods enormous quantities would have to be ingested al one lime lo procluce ;id verse effects." Mc outlines the c1· haustive testing procedure:; that the Food anrl Drug Adm in1slral1Qn requires of manufacturers before an additive can be certified for human consumption. ' AS FOR PESTICIDES. evidence in· <ii cat.e~ thal Lhe "pesticide residues we are absorbing do not represent a health hazard." Dr. Benarde discusses the con· tradictions inherent in the pesticide con- troversy. On the one hand the public con-- <iemns pesticides -yel at the same time it worries about future famines. To feed the world's explochng populatJon, more Where Federal Taxes Go The a verage federal tax burden per houllthold in the fiscal 'year beginning Ju- ly 1 will amount lo an estimate<! $.1, 165, up $24$ fmm tht 1971 burden. On the basis of 1972 federal budget spending by program. the largest part of the household IAt Jnad stem~ from national defense, Sl.070. Right behind -by SIO - is f.3tlmaled spending for health anri TOT Al. Nalk>na l Defensoe Health and WeUart (Includes Social lnle:rest welfal'f! (including social lnsuran~) - Sl.060. On the same pe:r-program basls, lnwr.st per household expcndilure, $44. is for spilct research and ttthnology. The average tax burden includes individual income .and !i!Xial security taxes. federal r.xcL~. and fcdr.ral taxes collected from bu.sines.~ but paid in part by cansumcr~. Tax Rarcltn Ptt Hou!lehold . .. .. . .. .$3,lii . ......•• '..... . . . . . 1,070 Insurance ) ........... ,.......... 1.060 Commerce and Transportation .• ,, .. , , . , , ........ , .. 272 151 147 I22 82 RO Veterans' &:nefit.s and Services . ............ ..... .. ......... .. tducation and Manpawer Tr1inlng .. .. .. .. . . ....................... . Spec::ial AUowances . . . . . . . .. , , , .. . • .......•.... Agriculture •nd Agricultural Re~ur<:es , .. , , . , , • , . ,, .... ,. .... c;encral Government Community Dt.vek>pment and Housing N11tur11J RellOUrces . "' lntcmationAI Affair~ 11nd f'inllnt'f' Space Re..\earch and Technology , l Undistributed adju3tments-lntcrgovernmcn lal " " :'i!l sr. 44 Tax found11tlon. lnC' . • -· ... --\ and mor11 roorl n1ust hr produt:crl Rnrf then prntecll'rl 11nlll 1t c;in he h;irveslt•(t. proc~ed, rna1·kctrd, hou~hl, arid Paten. How \s !his 1n he <lone without pcstic1<le.<:." llr. 13enardr ll~vo1t•c; a C"hap1 r r tn .. Foods of the Future" 1n \\·h1eh hfl d1scus11es 1rrad1at1on as a means of prestrv1ng fresh loo<ls, a.<:. well a.~ tht' possibil111es of u~ln~ fl(1ur made <1/ ground whnli> l1sh ~.~an 1nexrir.ns111r prn· tein sourcc, ancl of sp1nnin,i:: !>Oyhrao filler lo create protein-rich art1flc1al mea\s. THE AUTHOR CO NCLUDE!' w11h 111 plea to food scientists to krep 1ht: publH' heller informed. ancl to rttapluTl' their subject from jnurnalist..c; and politicians. Dr. Bcnarde 1.<:. a professor of Epidemiology and Communi1y Merl1c1nr at Hahnemann r.1cd1ca! Collcg1: and Hospital in Philadelphia. In additinn 10 man,J sclro!arly artJclCll, he has pu blishe"d thrl!e hooks. Race Aga1ns; F'11m1nt', Q11r Precarious Habitat. and Disinfccllon. and conducl.ed a t t> I e 111 s ion show. ''Environment and Health." lie i~ 11 Fellow ()f the American Public Ucallh Associatlon anct or the British Roy;i l Society of Htalth. Rom in Brookl)"I, Nrw York, Dr. Bcnarde now lives in Prince- ton . N. J. with his wife and thrt>t children. Friday. July 9, 1971 Thi! t ditoriat pagl! "' thl' Dai111 Pilot seeks to inform and 1tim· ulatl' readfTI by prr..stnting thU nl'wspoper's opiniora end eom- mt!'ntary 0"1t !opics of fntn'f!1t and sign1ficancr., by providing • forum for thf! t Xptf!Jsion of 0111 readers' opinionii, a11d bu pre.!rnti1117 tht ditlfrse vino- roin l,~ of informed nb~trvt".t 1u1cl spokesmen 01l topic:1 of th.tr d(ly, Robert N. Weed. Publi$her 1•--...- • • CHECKING •UP• 747 Chutes Peel Off Panty .Hose By L. M. BOYi> LAWMEN .JUST don't ~el the prestige thf•1• o u i.: h t . ·Who's \I. ho" for tnstancr, names nunw1ous do r Io 1 s , Jawyers and M'1en11s1-;. but nnl e1 en onr police ch1rf 1s l1~trd t ht• re 1 n . . STILL THTNK 11 nolt• worlhv Lht• rebellious sons uf l11d1an· Sikhs are gorng drfiantly to barbers now Iv get halfl·uts ... OUR LOVE ANO WAR MAN also has added to his files that famous quotation of Catht•rine the Great: "M('n make love more intensely at 20. but make Jove better. however. at 30." NAMES' or the women, mar- ried or not, were Lossed into a big bowl. Th~n the men, likewise married or not. drew said names from said bowL This little neighborhood lottery was conducted on St. V?Jen- tine's Day during the reign of England 's good Queen Anne. The man and the woman whose name he picked out of the bowl got together then. According to custom, they devoted the rest of the rlav to kissing each other. M islcr, does this bygone I radii ion in- terest you? Consider the women i~ vour block. Is there any lady ;n particular whose name you'd like to see tossed into such a towl" AM NOW TOLD thi• world's widest street 1-; the Mo11umcn· tal Axis in Brasilia . A six-lane boulevud 273.4 yards wide IT'S THE H 0 T SUNSHINE that makes the glia monster dangero11s. When cool, he's harmless. Bear that in mind. i<'e down your pd gila mnnster. 1r ;rny .... .IUST l : IF you ilf P 27 fl years old. exactly half thP p€ople in the counlry arr old- er and half younger CUSTOMER SERVlCE: Q. .. What proportion of the gt'O\.\ n women play golf?" A. Break-; down to about one in every 35 111'l'f 19 vear old .•.. Q. •·Which is the smarter. a rar· coon or a h o u ~ e c a t ? ' A. raccoon a raccoon. • FIG URE the country as a whole gets abou t 30 inches of rainfall a year. Say 21 inches goes right back into the at· mosphcre whoosh as vapor. Th?.! leaves nine inches. Three inches of it stays on the ground. There the citizenry ran use it. But six inches gets away. Please note, a reward if offered for i n r o r m a t i o n leading to the capture of that six inches. REMARKABLE PLANE, the Boeing 747. Almost without fl aw. One problem did show up, however. Those planrs are equipped with emergency exi,t chutes. as you know. In a practice evacuation. s a i d chute most peculiarly peeled the panty hose off the girls in miniskirts. Believe Boeing got that fixed, though. Hope so, anyway, 1 guess. EV EN THE COMBfNE D WEALTH of all the nations is not enough to pay fo r an hour nf daylight. At the usual rates ror electricity, I mean, if we had to pay for sunshine by lhe ki lowatt hour, the Meter Reader would just have lo give up in a matter of minutes and turn the thing off. Y01'r questions anrl cnm· tnPtlts are welcomed mid 1r1// /Jp used rn CHECKIN(; UP wherever pnssihl P. Please address yonr letrers to L. M. Boyd, P.O. R<ir 187.5. NPwrnrt Beach, Cali· f on11a 92660. Gold Dig f)K~d LA Park Mine Gets Backing LA Sheriff Punishing Officers? LOS ANGELES IAPl -An attorney for a peace officer's group says Sheriff Peter Pitchess is punishing the men In his departmehl who he once praised for their performance in putting down last year's lsla Vista nots. Wilham J . Ramey sard P1tchcss disbanded Lhe Special Enforcement Bureau a n d transferred its officers after il was reported lhat a federal grand Jury was considering tn· dieting some or the officers for brutality in pulling down thr disorders at the Uni~rsily of lahfornia al Santa Barbara student co mmunity. The attorney, represenl i11g the 4,000-man Los Angeles County Professional Peace Of- ficers Association. s a i d Pi tchess al.so had political moLivalions b e h i n d the disbandment. .. Jt is we II known lhat Sheriff Pilchess ls one of the leading contenders for the job of director of the FBI," he said. A spokesman for Pitchess admitted that charges by Isla Vista residents was one of the reasons behind disbanding the elite tactical force but denied that Pitchess was seeking the FBI post. The spokesman said the main reason P i t c h e s s reassigned SEB ofricers was because he was dissatisfied with lhe overall work or the unit. Ramey spoke al a rlf'w <; eon- ference Thursday, thi' dav after Pitchess eliminated the SEB He said 73 men wrrr reassigned wilhin two Wl'eks. many of them al an 11 percent pay decre11se and to less desirable jobs Court Askc'l To Bar .Boost F'rldtY. July CJ, 1971 Senate Democrats .· DAIL V PILOT ~ . . . . 'No Compromise' Aid Plan Readied ; SACRAMENTO (UPI) -fathers who fail to pay for made. Beilenson d1$agreed saytn11 Senate Democrats are prepar-support of the ir offspring. Legislalivt. Analyst A. Alan that the department and b.I ing ror a take-it·or.le.ave.it Beilenson told the com-Post and Roy Bell, deputy started from different bases showdown with Republicans Id d. 1 t· d on whi'ch gran'-would ...... mltlee his measure Woo Co.,t 1rect"r o 1nance, aaree 14 ..,., over a welfare ''reform'' pro-" " 0 E 11i ploy es Wlllk Out ()ver Cuts gra1i1 they consider preferable thP state $10 million more with the figure, but Charles calculated to determine the to Gov. Ronald Reagan's plan. Pach year for welfare, but Hobbs. deputy state social costs. He also charged Hobbs d would tighten up areas where welfare director put the cost with allempting to "mislead'' Reagan has alread y brande h 1 L. $86 ·lJ' the committee. the Democralic-sponsored pr~ _s_om_e_p_a_y_me_nt_! _s_o_u_d_n_ot_ue __ a_t __ m_1_1_on_._______ ---------- posal "lolally meaningless." The Senate Finance Com- mittee Thursday endorsed the measure by Sen. Anthony C. Beilenson 1 D-Beverly Hills) on a 7-6 p11rty lirl€ vote . Rut before lhe Democratic- dominated panel at:led. its mernbers rejected 48 of 49 amendments i;ponsored by Republican Sen. Clair W Burgener of San Diego, which would have restored proposals strongly supported by the SA."J BERNARDINO IAPl -A 185-member campus chapter of the California State F.mployes Assoeiation voled Thursday lo strike -the first go.:;~1~.~r.i! a rehash of the employe group known to do so since Gov. Reagan's veto of 8 sp::-c1fir policy decisions made 5 percent salary increase for by the policy committee," he slate employcs. said, referring to hi~ con- Anlhony Brillo, president of sensu.> compromise approved bv the Senate Health and the chapter at California St?.te Welfare Committee. C>f which College at San Bernardino, he is chairman. said members voted by 3 J-l On a unanimous voice vote margin to ask the CSEA state leaders to permit the walkout. the committee adopted an A spokesman for the amendment enabling counties association's district office in to gain a greater share of the Los Angeles said the chapter money they recover from was tht! £irst to vote to strike. rathers who are del inquent in The spokesman. Dick Gleeb, supporting their children, h h Burgener said the provisions said five other c apters ave Id ... t· ,, \'Oted in straw polls of their wou a~t as an rncen 1ve members in favor of some -~r counties to track down the sort of action 7"' a strike.1 .. ...,--------.. 1 slowdown. or sick-in. ''We're not encouraging our people to strike.·• he said. saying that any permission would have to come from thel SCEA board al its Saturday meeting in Sacrc>.rne11lo. 1 UNITED STATES NAT ION Al, BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH The campus chapter has ab<lut 35 profcssois among 1tsl NOW Ol'EN members, Britto said. Reagan vetoed a 5 percent I SATURDAYS t to 1 r.M. MON.-THURS. 10·5 ,,M. FRIDAYS 10-6 1',M. (114) 540·521 1. Locatad In: So. Coast Piasa, Cost• Maia cost of living increase for state employrs last Saturday I before signing Lhe $6 7!l billion state budget for 1!171·72. A CSEA official said then he didn 'I expect a strike. The employcs 2.ssociaLion has been concentrating its efforts on I H. M. STOLTE SACRAMENTO (AP) gelling lhe legislature to over-1 Consumer advocates are ask-·~riidie~th;eivieitoi'iGilijeejbisiajid~.iili=::::::::::::: ing the California Supremel-1 - Court to bar Pacific Telephonr and Telegraph Co. from in- creasing its statewide rates by $143 million on Mondav. The petition requesting the ro11rt order was filed Thurs- day in the court's Sacramento office by consumrr advocate LOS ANGELES rl'PI) - The city of Los Angeles ha~ J:(iven a hrarded drapery hanger perm1ss 1fln to prosperl for gold in 11 downtown park 1r he cuts m the city treasury for some or thr nugget ~. Wilham M. Bennett. A former F:ly~1an Park MP day with a member or lhP State Public hnme made metal detector lililities C:ommi.ssion. and a ·· anrl \\ r got a reading." JI group called Consumers Arise may he gold . or il may be "a "low. Brnnett is a member of l bunch of beer c a n s . • • the St ate Board of Equaliza-1 l 11)0. liilillll• Hanekamp said, but he's will---------------------------------- But the Board of Rerrcat ion :ind Park Commissioners ftr~l argued over how much thr city'~ percentage should be, acling· on the request from Garv Jl?.iwkamp. 30 His r xcavations should nol be more than 6 frrl neer or 4 feet wide, lht• bo;.irrl rulrd Thur~day. cinn hP.11 have to prodde $.100,000 ins urr:t nrr tn rnver iniurics In ;:iny r:1rk 11~rr~ who might f<ltl into his minr Han rk amr :-;111rl hr ;inn a fr irnrl \.\rrr \\al k1ng through mg to gamble and turn pro- spector amid the freeways . 111e city council al fir.sl wanted 50 percent of My gold founrl. '•Jr it w4s my property. I "'ouldn'l want you digging around m my lawn unless I gnl 50 percehl and I feel the :;::imr wav about city pn1- prrt\' .'1 said Boa rd President Rr;.id PyP. Th r board finally agreed on 25 prn.·Pnl nf the ftrsl ~500 1\orth or gnld. and half of ;rn vthing over tha t. ------- TuMdav.July 13 ONLY THE PAT BOONE FAMILY SHOW In the Outt.loor Amphitheater 8 P.M. • Wednesdn¥". July 14 SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY • Thu•"'•V lulv IS PEPSI FAMILY DAY •3-RING CIRCUS Lawt•nce W•i~ Sia•• JO /INN CASILE 1nd AR lllUR OIJN(..AN SKILES 81 HENOEcRSON olus otlll'r Inc> Kll LEVIS, HANGTEN & THINGS /V'.s~c'ric/',1 '2 Lc;·:ure WecJ Stor~'19.!per 1028 lrvlne, Newport Beach, California 92680, Phone 642-7061 Model EWD21MM No-Frost, no defrosting- even in the 297-lb. freezer *Over 31 sq. ft. of shelf space -all the room you need tor fresh, frozen foods * Refrigerator section alone is · 12.85 cu. ft. big -shelves ad· just to fit the foods you buy * Adjustable shelves in both super.storage doors * Charcoal air purification sys- te m * Big, easy-rolling wheels <<¥> Whirlpool t<eeps up to 480 cubes on hand ~ enough for a cou- ple or a crow<!. No trays lo till or spill. Adjustable ''cube size'' con- trol, too. Shop our complete selection of Whirlpool refri2erators! • Bank Financing Av•il•ble 45 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE NOW 3 BIG LOCATIONS Golden West & Warner 401 Main Brookhurst & Warner HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON FOUNTAIN VALLEY BEACH tALU ONl.'I' U ltvlCI & $ALU SALIS ONLY 842-5596 536-7561 962-2456 . '"I.•• -11' l iw./,. ·--I II , -,._,,_- • For Tl1e Record Dissolutions Of Marriage Death /\'otleea •LAI• A!k• 11:. •111r. A•t 1), rtoldtnt of Coot• Mt ... 81t• el Clttll!. J ul• I , 1'7L ~er­ vlctt .,.....1...,, IT ltll ltoodw1Y M.,· """· IOWLl l l'IO<t~et 1-1 .... m•·, Lt rkopur, Ccro..a cMl Mtr. 0.T• cl MUI!. Ju•v I, ltll, ltrvlt•• "'''".,. "' l'otl!i<e vlow M#>r-tu1rv, COOK ,.,~ J_ c_00~ lh•ldrr>l r>l Hun11nt 10t1 IH<fl, O••• ot aoolh, J~'• I, 1011, .$tr• .,.icu ,,....,,"" t i Smllh• Mlth11r•, IMA,.111 ~tltn 11:. Sh1!1r. lllll Uo•• Llf\de L1n1, G1rtt n C.rovt. 01tf o! d .. n,. J\11> I, 1'11, :r;wnrlv.n Dy ~ ....... ""' Ct>.o•IH: dlUtMt <. Mro. Nt nc• Fein, ~" 01-; or\111 °"" ,,.....i-dtUt Mor. Funtr1l ••rvl<1• t r.:! '"" !1rm1n! Will M ~eld 1n ldlhO Fftll•. ldtno. a.Hr , .. ,. MHI Mer+u••Y •••• ,..~In~ C1itK!1ro. O.vl" G l nur"on Ull Sn Pnmont, 0-14, rutlt rlon CNTt of dMlt\, JUIY 1, 111!. ~urv•vM DV Httn!I, Mr. t rd M"- JOl'on Thun1on; TWO t>rotMr\, JOIHI Jt ·• iM Sa111a Monl~•1 Mlcllatl J. Tllu"'°"' ., .. , 1r•ndmO'~t<0, Am• Tnuruon. Mer. '''" Mitllloa •; Cllrlt!l"t Harr!"11en, Pl•l•w•ll, Mi(ll\oo•. ~trv!(t• wttt M id -·v. F•IO•" I PM, Podfl( Vltw (II•""''· 11'11••"""'' Poclllc VJ-M.,,,erlll P1r-. P••'f'( v11w M(ll'Tv••v. Olr1c1<>r•. T••c•v ~llwa rd s . Trat•v. Aot U , ~ l»t N. Clllf~H AYt , l~ .O.nltln . Dolt fJf 11 .. ,, .. JulY /, \'11. SurYIYlll "' ... 110, °"""I. Prlvllt u rvlcn wt•• lltlll 1r atll llrM<tY-'fY ""°"'"ry. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF ~10RTUARY &l'1 E. 111}; SL, Coata. Mtsl -• BALTZ MOR11JAlllF11 Corelll f!lel Mar 513.Hst Costa Me1a . "'-Ul-1 • BELL BROADWAY MOR11JARY UO Broltdway. Col&I Met.a u W4ll • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACO MORTUARY 1115 l.afant Canyoo RC. CM-MIS • PACIFIC VIEW MEMOIUAL PARlt Ct•etery Mm11WJ ClulJOI SMI Pacific Vltw Drive Nt..,.n Buell, c.!Horall -· • PUlt FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME '7lt18'111 A\'9. ·---• SMml'I MOllTUAllY ., Mala II. -Bllllltqtoo - ?-~-· FridrJ, July•. 1'71 UCI Scholar Eyes Tots' Handicaps Board OK's Plaza Funds By GEORGE LEIDAL Of fM Dlll-1 PllM It .... JRVfNE -A UC Irvint. a:r1dua"' 1tudtnt hu begun a study or lnf111t bthavior to find out why blind and deaf in- f ants lose the 1billty to com- municate through facial e.1- pressions. Rita Lipinski, 25. haa bttn granted a $10,500 fellowship and research 1ranl to atudy both slghttd and bl!Jld lnlonls for a sis. month perlM. SANTA ANA -Orange The results of her work will have collected data while stu-studied until it ii lliX montrui JX!681bly related lO the absence County Supervisors ha ve ap- comprise her doc Io r al dying other aspect.s of infant old. of sight. "A blind chUd lo~ proved a transfer of fund s tn dissertation which she hopes development. Later, :she will go to Mes.ico his ability le> smile after :dx allow the awarding or s will be a book "that might This v.·eek the stude.nt of to do a similar study to monlhll," she said. $716.974 conlrac:t to cons1ruel help parents spot unusual anthropological Jinguistlcs be-determine v.·hat differences 'l'he smile, and olher facial a Civic Center Plaza of Fou11- ~avior in their babies." gan observing a sighted there may be between the movemenls all well as tains. The grant awarded by the newborn at St. Joseph 's development of facial e.1-gesturts with hands and feet The rnonev. 1irevu1usly ap- National Institute of Mental Hospital in Orange. In the pressions among newborM are means of non-verbal com-propriated In a JOLnt venture Health is unusual in that such coming weeks she hopes to there. munkation found in ·adults. belwee11 the couJ1ty and th(' C1• research moneys usually go to find two blind infants and Besides visual observation By studying and recording tv of Sant a Ana, w1l! al!O\'>' fa culty and not graduate another sighted one. of the smiles, gurgles and Coo.1 how these melhods of non· Construclion of the plaui and students. The four then would be ~ub-of infants, f\.1is s Lapinski will verbal c 0 m mu n i ca ti o n an underground garagf'. Loc11· "An inventory of the ject to two or three visits a use a portable video tape de\'elop. doctors, parents and t1on is in the h('art of tile C'I\ !i· re""rloire of infant behavior week by Miss Lapinski for recorder to get a pern1anenl soci•I workers may be better center south or tl1e n('ii' r-DAU.Y PILOT St•ll f'h•I• ) his never been done," ,\1iss observation of the chi ld whi le record for further study. prepared to help parents of eour!house ll!1d ad joining r I(' • Lapin!ki noted . a 1 l hough it is sleeping. being fed or Her concern is centered on blind or deaf children, she STUDIES INFANTS new la1v l1brarv building 11011 Books Givell.·-'-'-'-'-"_1_0_1_h_•_r_r_.,_•_•_rc_h_e_rs __ 1y_i_o_g_,_w_•_ke_._E_•_c_h_w_i_ll _be __ 1_h_e_changes in be ha vi o_r __ .. _i_d_. ____________ u_c_1·_s_L_•_P_i_n_•_k_Y _____ ,_ea_r_io_g_co_m_p1e·11on. __ _ HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT' By Retirees To Uni High IRVI NE -What do students at Irvine's University High School have in common with retired residents of Leisure World? Books-about 2,000 volumes. Leisure World residents, through the Hason of 71-year- old C. R. Armstron1, have contrH~uted quality used books to the new University High School's library during its first year of operation. Arm1trong, librarian for 4.2 years at Washington State University, Pullman, Wa1h., also helped oraaniu l..eisure World's 11,000 volume libr1ry in 1966. "Leisure \Vorld haa many pt<iple with very fine books and they don't have 1 place to keep them so they turn them over to the library," explains Armstrong. When duplicate donations are received, Univ er1ity High's librarian, Virginia Kirkham, his been given flnt choice of those appropriate for 11tudenta. Most duplicate books received hlvt bttn fiction, biography, history or books about art. Child Death Case Ends 30222 Crown Valley Parkway and Hillhurst in Laguna Niguel f'OUHTAIH VALLll:Y -11'M MllMlll It. 11 T1lffr1 f'OUtolTAIH VALLIV -11111 Httl>Or ltv•. Mlll ltln•tr IL TOftO -II Tl .. 11 ft1cWIMll<I R1MI HUl"Tlf'l•TOJC 11 ... CI" -1lll1 luch llY•. 11 ... II.ft!• SANT ... A,,. ... -1-. w. IGl .... r .... l•ln.i ••• Wl!STMIMSTE" -"21 Wt1tml,.•Ttr 11 °"""' WHI ce...,... with ..i.o.. oomnv i... 40c ar. Non-Detergent ii ..... !!! ....... :U,Motor Oil 2 ~~ 41' ~o.tngM"lt-Mtt-ls Ga.'t. Speo;ifkoliom.. .Mad.I [,.ckntwly I« TNHty. MHh gQ'O"t. °""lfk.otiont ML. CMotot Light!. Non-Ot!..,.~nr, ..,_ corbon ciepotltl. '-" ....... ..,.... ,. ~--.... HllYJ Du!J Mutor 011 2 l 531 ~--.-..iwu. Premium IOW-30 OH 3 1 -•• ~ .. ~ lllllq: t. ,_,,,... • Tr1nt111lsslon Fluid 3 : $1 DO COITA M•S.o.. -2M H1reer Slvll, •t Wl~n ti. HUNTIJCCITON IWACH -W1mtr ,,._ S•MtG•lt COiT ... MISA -2U I , 11"' 51, HUNTIHGTDH •IACH -ftU At•m• 11 ·-~"""' HUNTJNllfOlll 11:,llCH -'"ii'ii''ii'iMiii'•'•;-.,"' ... "' ... p."' ...... -~ s3t1 llJOn-Vinyl S1rf Riders -........... $2" Women's Tank Tops, SheDs & Tuniu 17!. Speedol Motor Oil Reg.~ Deluxe Padded " ' IC &uy~Q..art.andSa-.. 5 ... 69' it.c,. '20-30 or "40 t•r W1ighr, Patio Chairs $J,. Ladles' Slllfts 99' Women's '2" Value! Twin & Pmit Shifts Vinyl Sandals . Allfo Mat Set • $111 l'-b-•lty ••vln In Bortfoot uylm i., 77' ·~ ~ ;"?" ,,,,;,., $299 Yi"Y! W j th bock, l n Probatio1i SANTA ANA -A D'Wl who &nee factd murder charge• following !.ht death of an in- fant !tit in hia c1re by Its paren!J bu bttn placed .rJ. three ye1rs prebation by an Orange County Suptrior C'.ourt judge. Judie Byron K. Mcf.11llen ruled that the three month!! spent by James David Broady, 29, SAnta Anl, at the Chino (;uidance Facility wa!I suf- fi cient punishment for reduced charges of mantlaughter. He further ruled that the defen- dant can return te his home st.ate of Ohio. Broady was arreated last Oct. 27 at the office of a Gardtn Grove physician "'ho conllcted police after ex- amining f1t1l injuri11 1uffered by 17-month-old Bobby Dean Ralei1h. Broady carried the deed boy in hi1 arms to the doctor's office. Police said Broady admitted kicking tht little boy in the !lomech while the parents y.·ere ab11ent from the: home. Doctors said the chlld's in· juries ~·ere consistent 9.'it~ th~e inflicted by kicking and a heavy be1ting. Median Cable Barriers Get State Okay SANT A ANA -A $323,000 contract for making greater drlvi na 1afety from here to San Juan Capistrano along two freew1y1 ha! btPn awarded to the United Stales Stefl Corp. of Glendale . The job is allotted a m11· lmum of 130 working days. ac- cordini to the ,tate DlviJlon of Highway• which rejtcttd four other bidJ. Mtdlan cable barriers will be Installed at various point.II on the Santa Ana and San Deigo freeways. Santa Ana fo"reeway barrier construction will involve 14,6 milt• rrom San Juan Capllltreno to the San Deigo Frttway interchange. 1'le San Delao Freeway ln- 11t1llaHon will e.itend from 1 half.mile south of the Ct1l\•er Drive overcrot~ina nr.11r Irvine to just l(llth flf thf Rtd Hill A\•enut ov1rcr011in1. Grant Awarded A..~AHEIM -1'ht J 11mes lrvlnt Found.Ilion ha1 1w1rd- ed 1 560.00'I 1r1nt to Martin Luthtr Ho11pit1l htrt for the purch&H ef medical equlp- menL --- 12> $1" L~ 1"-for all con, .....,..,., ..... bto>"" .. hor-......... -.. ., .. I-hot Battery '" Booster Cables 781 How""' hondv. PO'I" for ""-11. 8 It. lenotll:-1vo- collon trip .p1- do!~ r....-- •1 11 Set of I Spart Plugs -1~~-i~~; 10.000mil•I. Group 1-2·3-4-'· ,.,,_ __ -·~~ T ..... tap._.. becl. with e4-juitobl. 11 r I d , fa1dlni,~· ""''""" I 121 •SG. M0Mp11\lt• Q" o 11 ly _, f2" Swfyef Style a.Ir lhllbnlla §$)97 W1olhtr • ,._ ~islonl, CQlorn,.I !-t.,,,.yinyf :sunb•tllo dam(>S "' (hair, t<iblt, ... ~.1 116. ' - I "' i .~ ;L l ' l '' ' ' • " d•o•m look,""" ~t rop,Mcllif1.._ 10-!B"6 1 M-ll"' s .. m,,..,,., be'4' """'· Co!Ol't . $]" ColCll'ful Men's 111111 Boys' Swim Tl'llnks $1'' ··-Pr••s How.,iten w .. , ...... .,.. tm-pn"t~cot- dlllonol tty I• ton .. '""' -llo; short• Ol'>d ,..,obo;i10!• M-<>ffjtonJ~ p f i c . d summer fun, 11rQUP. Btst Si1" JO-AO. ""'' 691 to 'ln Frames for Documents ' < Reg. 57" • 4 Shelf .. $ Metal Bookcase I . .................. 0 . . .._.., ....... ••n.....,1n111111 Sctutchf ... wolnut Cl NW dolcorctor 0¥0- codo, st ... ! 11'<1• it\ ooJ,,,,,,,._ 36 .. h~fi. 36" ..tdoi, '~'•" o..p 'V~l6. • $11.11 ,_,... ,..... """"-, •.•• s.;.,,tch ,.... .ol""' .... ~/\..:.:ado linkh. ,_ 461 ci.;c. F <1rT10o.a b r o n d • .. 1Tt> oir nnl'li<w> linl,,., "'or 11; n botlr.t., Pok•r, Plnoc.hl1, 8•;.too er J""*"> lnd<I• . Stainless Steel Kitchen Tools ,_...._ 3~$1 00 1.,, ....... .,. • • tntillS .._ • »tnH s,_ • -Cafle • ,_., ,,,.., • htlt9 .. .., • l'tt ,.,. . ....,..., ____ ~ :'\~---L--.;; .;.: .... ..-...-..c, •• .~ --~-_\I --~-- • " • i - Tm1les Losing Mala ys ian Battle 12 I NJ URED I N BULL RUN Coun~ilwo111an Likes Job BERKELEY ~UPI ) politics. young blaCk attorneys, run-P.1rs. Hancock, 30, a PAi'.1PLONA. Spain t UPll Before April 6 IlollM Hancock "We need more women," ning together on 1 slate sup-graduate of Antioch CoUege,I -'IV.·elve Aficionados were was a housev.·1fe. a mother of she said. "Women are able to ported by student!:, Berkeley doesn't flt lhe stereotype of a 1n1ured Thursday none of two youag daughters and an gel away from the conceplioo .. street people," hard-core Berkeley rad i ca I . Her thein gravely -in the second activist fn community politi~. Lhat politics 1s a means of revolutionaries and liberal fessir in the Agriculture running or lhe bulls at Lhe San I I w t De 1111~ Jh f '" h b d J ph · f NT Today she's still a housewife ga n ng power. omen can cu mocrats, ~ ree o ..,..e us an , ose , 1s a pro essor RA AU ABANG, Malaysia table tennis balls. They are " F'erm1n Fiesta It brought lo lh-ugh the bureaucratic red fo"" ncant ""Wlcil seats in Department of the University (AP) Th I 1· I Jh ' 26 h b d · and a mother, but .she's also •v ..... ....., - e i gan IC ea ery prized de t I ca c y along 1 c num er uijure in two ~e of three radicals elected lo tape and get to the issues," the election. of Ca lifornla , and she admits turtles are back. flippering r-.1 I · • t l II' days. she said. f"lh ed b that her politic5 diffe r . from past touri~ts to deliver their a ays1a s eas coas . s In clear, .sunn v wcalhPr, the e city council in a campaign A u seat, vacal y DIJL't' ,JLDf WRnE n RIGHT A C••tft!"'Mellc• CMrM .. l'trtllh W. H..i; h ........ .., fill l.ANCI WllTlll ..... _, te ••II· A4 .... : Jll It S•••f f'I., T--. Arls.. 111tl. eggs to merchants .,.,. h 0 hard for a visilor to know si.~ bulls for the ·evening's Cor· that attracted nationwide et· Because of h t r 1..'0m· liberal councilman Warren ~r:~ of th~e ~=~pl~ion~~ threaten them wi th extinction. why . Because of the con-rida were freed from lheir tentlon. mittment, Mrs. Hancock has Widener when he was eleeted _ _;;~;__::___::=-~=~=========~ M lh II I h. sistency, no amount of boiling l"orrals shortly afler su nrise to Now that she has had a become a key figure in the mayor, must be filled by a munity. o er tur es ove l is 12-struggle for the balance of maJO· rity vole of the council. ·1 •-h Th h b h will harden them, <1nd they run lhe half-mile to the bull· taste of the politician's life, m1 e -ac . oug roe ures power Oil the nine-man coun· · · Kid Llk A k And urge tourists to ride the must be eaten wilh a sloppy rings, with an rstin1ated 200 Mrs. Hancock says she is '"I'm committed to nanung a S . e lO S y turtles, and villagers scoop up slurp. The taste. one is told, IS Panip!onicas and tourists "totally committed'" lo getting c1l woman to that seat," Mrs the eggs almost before they _•:cq::<.::"':·red:::_·~~~~~~~....".'P~r~in~t~in~g~•:l~~·~d~o~f~lh~e~m~·~~~m::'.or~e::._:w:om::::•n:_~in~':'l:':••:_~io::._::._M:r~•~-::._H:•:""":=:'::._•=n:d::._t~w~•::._~H=an:coc:::k::_:••~i=d.::._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-"-~~~ hi t the sand .. tht turtles keep coming back. Nightly from May to Sep- te-mber, up to 30 heave onto the beach like eight-foot ladies handbags. Thty spend two hours ashort, laying 100-200 eggs each. Zoalogists say lhe l ea t her-backed sea l u rt I es -Detmochelys - come from the Philippines. Thty're part of a South China Sea ''population" and related lo leathcrly turtles elsewhere. F'arther south or Chendor. other species of sea turlles. all a little smaller but still im- mense, lay their eggs the same way wit.h the same gallery hovering around. The government issues a season's lease to the highest bidder fllr egg rights here. It cost $6,667 this year. The win- ner hires "turtle men" and may gross $10,000 in a good year. He must sell a portion of the eggs to the state-run hatchery nearby to insure the species continues to some extent. This protects some eggs from iguanas, crabs and ponchcrs, but many feel nature's system o r f e r e d , hatched turtles better odds-at le a st before modern marketin~ teehniques v.·ere developed. At Chendor, the leaseholder Is reequircd to leave JO per- cent of the eggs in the sands, hut there i!i not much control. Fewer turtles turn up there every year. Chendor falls under the scope of the energetic Pahang St.ate touris1 officer. Turtle· v.·atching is a highl y organized sport. A huge billboard scts forth the rules. One demands \•isitors wail in spe('ially built enclosure and advises: ··vou v.·111 be invited to proceed to the rear of the turtle . "It warns anyone fr om causing lhe least holder to suffer •'any fina ncial loss." Here, a tiny Malay village on the east roast or \Vest Malaysia. things are less formal. Tourists camp on the beach and buy beer and rice rrom hawkers who r u n senson:ll s ! a l I !i , Spect alnrs often ou tnumber the. turtles, even though it means a vigil beginning a1 10 p.m. and lasting toward dawn. Many tourists stay at a motel ~ miles away and rommute. Turtle men patrol t he be11ches from after dinner to sun-up, hovering Impatiently until the turtles ma k c themselves comfortable and naively scoop sand over their eggs to hid them. Spectators don t make much difference unles~ they paw the tur1les bcfor!'" egg.layin_i:. ex- perts say. The call of t h1~ be a c h·with turlle-pleasinJ? slope~ and sand-is just too stroni;:. The r ubbery shelled e11Jl5 look something like dented Crackdo,vn 01arged In Guinea PARJS lAPJ -An organiza- tion of Guinean exlle.s charged loday that President Sekou Toure has a rrested 5,000 persons in ty.·o months in an effort "lo decimate all the Guinean elite." Purges and trials began shortly after the invasion al· tempt l11st Nov. 22 by polil ical exiles from P ortugue~e Guinea. The Reunion of Gui- neans in Europe said that in Kankan, Guinea's s e cond large.st city, 500 men and women were. assrmbled In tht tOY.'n square nnd marched aboard cattle cars for ship- ment to Conak ry, the capital. Observers In Oakarno--non- Communist newsmen are al- lowed Inside Guinea-say there afficlal services are being hit hardest by the arre~ts : lhf' 11rmy, the Information service~ and rural economy. P.fost of the top military of- fi~rs were replaced e1trlier this wttk, acrording lo broad- ca<;l!: from Conakry. Toure in on broadcast tn\d 1 youth congres.s that "every ~!!ponsible person whoiie v.·ork rf'SUlt! in II n~Jo?Atlve balAnCf' 11hrf'I will not only be fired l)u1 l'rrested ." Some pur,it'd of- flci11 I!! wNe accused or del 11y- ln2 deliveries of lools and ~r;;.d~ --· "I,....,,.• ··-~.fl, Adv•rti1ed 1pecials good lhru th• 14th day of July and then we'll make aome more good ones. you b.tcha Gunga Din. Old Ev Wickey PARKING AT THE BELLFLOWER STORE IS ••• GREAT Well. it's the end of a n e ra. How many fenders got bopped in lhe 29 years there without ample parking? Who knows. Now it'a gone {sob). W• bought the entire block. 10 bring the bus. BUILT-IN BAR BQ 1711 This ia a rugged thing made out ol old armored cars from the Desert campaign. You b r'ick ii in and ii Iasi s. CRYSTAL CYLINDER SWAG looks like a lot mor• money. Elegant cap a nd base. C ryatal·lilce (Like that Cadillac ford you just bought.) 997 SO FT. HOSE AHD HANGER /I II ' I Well. this is cheap enough. don't you think? Somelhing to water those dear sweel lilies with. LOUVER WINDOWS 24"' High 4.99 30" High 5.99 36" High 7.88 42" High 9.88 48"' High 10.88 54" High I 1.88 60" High 13.88 Any ti•• up to C2 Inch•• wide. wilh op•ra1or1. JACK STANDS Adjusla ble to put the thing up when you do the big repairs. {Pat Ake rs allll was the best dam copywriler I ev8r·ki:iew,) • ' I! . ' If you love bagpipes • • • MEANWHILE BACK TO BUSINESS OZITE! OUT OF ZITE REAL OZ. ITE:: AT THIS 'PRICE.! ., . - '. .. . ...... .. •· ~j !~·' If'~ ... ' ' , .. ·' ' .. • I l ·, • ,,;~ 1 \ • I .. "('~ GENUINE OZITE In th• dark of night our foyczl crew made the transfer. W• had to hav• this atulf. but It is our cr..d. not to sell at ~ular. W• have It, pleo.ty. ln colors. May we be forgiven. but th• customer comes first. Cholc• ol colors: Heather, Blue-Green. Avocado. and Gold. CAN YOU DIG THIS? c LIN. FT. ROLL OUT THE CARPET. MAMA YOU WON'T PAY REGULAR. 6 FT. WIDTH !ST QUALITY TWO MAH PUP TEHT P ut two men in it, thr-skinny boy scouts. fou r cubs. half a do:s:•n dawgs, or one mean mountain lion. Complete with p egs and !in ... 97c S GAL. WATER BOY Don't head lot th• de1er1 or Tacation without ii or you'll be stopping at ev•ry 9 0 1 1taion on the way. 247 CORM BROOM Th• kind my mother used to use OD. me when I cam• home at midnight 1auc•d up. (Ob. lt'1 great lo have lived in hard lim•a.) 77c SHAG RUG RAKE # Brings the nap bac k up. nice and UuU y. (And you can rak• leove.1 with ii. uni••• you WCIDI to buy OD• of our m•tal on•• too.} 197 Would you believe m• if I told you I typed this wlth the cat s itt ing on Ike machine? (H• almost fainted when he read th• copy.) 97c 90 DAY FLEA TAG f or your pets who can't w.ar the collar. (They •••m lo !ee l someon•'• out to get th•m.) II works! SUPER MAILBOX A little public relations stull here, John. ltS the old 1730 Model with a fac•lift. Holds a lot, 10 ke•p tho!!• 'card1 and lelt•rs go lng.199 WINDOW LOCKS SA-SH 0 LOCKS . for double hung wood windows. ju1t put in place and lh• burglar can la.Ir:• a walk to the guy down th• street. CORK PAK PAK OF4 'S Truth. I bough t !lix cases whol•sal• and paid mor• than this. (Now lhey make the price. rat1.) ·-. \~aw~-~~~-~-·~" !<"DECORATOR BEADS ' ' 29~KG. 61> FT. Jt •••m• today'• youth lo••• to make awi m 1uil1 out ol this. C arrie Nation. wh•r• or• you. now that we need you? •,; ·. -·f·-.. ' ...... --~· "'•>'"" -· -1_ • ---... --;:::=.:·· w -----~ -~ .... __ --_::::;:;::=:·;·-·· .. ~-~ :._: _ _.:______ --·•-.-,.. --.,._M_., • ..J,J. ••;a; _ .... ,;;-.:11"..,_~-1 ~ ..... -~---·----• -\ ,:.._. ' •• . ·~-~ . .. . OAJL 'r PILOT LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NC7TIC& LEGAL NC7TICE NOl'IU! OP MOTICI ., ,\11\.IC llS£11NO 1'0 CAJI ltO. I'.... NOTICI 1'0 COfll1'1At1'otll MAUKA\.'I ...... •• Ml\.D • .,. TNI ......... COUMT'f (111'1,KATI ., COl ..... 1191111 ,\,-OQkUHITlllllO -TINNll count CHAlll Ll!I lllAY l!ll NSO!of, Pl•l"llff YI ,UMNINO COMMllllOH 0111 l'llO-001 ... •tnlMlll UMHI TN IOolr• .i fll..U!...,, ... I I MO> AHN.\ i.OllUINI l l!MION. O.lenol•ftl. ll'OSllO .t.Mlf'IDMlltfl 10 Tiii l'ICTntoUI 111.t.MI ScMel Dl11•kl will rettl~• -"" ,.. .. HO. 11-li-M5 tOMllllO CODI THE IJNDlll5U:;NED COlll'OU.TION "1i!I 111 tt>e A""'lnl 1lr•I .... l lllltllllf• I Y Ylrtl>e flt ,., oK\ltlM 111oWOS .., -Mf"ff'I' wrtlf'lr INll It 11 («IOuctl,,. • ~., '"l•rmffl•'• ldwt~ ,,_.., l'teru•rv 26, !t'1 D'"t ttw s., ...... Court. L .......... nt .!:..::. l'le,,.._l,,. ..... ~*II;' llutll\*U II *4111 ....... N-Nrt A~-.,,., l••I •••ell ,-.ii.-......... c-itY "' Of•-· ., ... "' CttlNfrilt, •w. •• • .... .,.,.., • • a •• <~. Ct WI. UNI., ""tleilll-,,., ... "' lt•(f\. Ct llltt"I•, tw !""""""" •ll ..... u-t l""""tlll ..,llrllll In tt.,.., of """" OrtllM Cou""" ,.le.,,IM c ........ i .. i.n, ll!IVl&O~T flt OU.HGI! COAIT •"' ''"'.... ,_torlll 100" ~"",._ •I Uont lllf •tt110n •• .,,,.,.,..,nt crK llor t nd ;::1<•11 1i' :;:':'f11 ·~·" .. ~1'c:,:,;'..i:!~.::".=; tt>t "'"" of Mlll """ ..,. tit "'llKl••I 1'1ooGll11111111 o1 lmnl• (,our11 ••ti,... Cllt rleo by •-•• l~m1nt w 0.. •ltu Of 1 .. 11IM1t It M "84-1: T~• .,·-it wlll bl ,..,,1...,. 111 lt>9 ci.blW ~11!9 1 Mi llll!t ncl 91 &J.!.I 1111 Pl"-" •m'"""'-,. rl>e '".. AMl!llCAN WATl!I ll'll:OOUC11 .i.ove A""'lnl•1tt llo11 l l/llllll'lt 11n11I 1:• K1'111ti,. -... ••Ill,....,...,.,..., ... ,,.,, .~le ~°":"it"' Z!'Nr Clodl, II .m ....... o • .,.... co•.-OUllON. tit Vt• ..... Souno:I, .. M. '"l"c l l•nM•IJ l imo, Jutl lO. lt71. of "" llsu•,_ .t Miii df(wllon. t ,..,,.. .., y, • otn '· X ""-' 1 .. cll, Ct lllO<ft!t. 111' a<C.,..011\CI wl"' ltM CI 11 11 I e I l•vlld u-•II 1111 <19111, ltllt tnll 1 .. 1-.i H~:~ :i"~W:,;'"::-c.':.• to~•:.-:::":.J~ Dllltll Junt t, lt11. (>oc>,lnitnh, l'ltn• i nd SP«filull-"' of atld lull...,_ dlb ... Ill tl>t ,,_,,., In 11.0l.0 I II. 1,':,. Hl .. WoY Oldlullon A.MillCAH WATlll: l'llOOUCTI Hll"'1 C•rler l r>Ql~Mrl"" (g.mptflY. t M f . Ille Courll'f e;f OrtMt, 11•1• e;f Cttlll)l"nlt , tftd I ' ...:~to l~ ~~Id t.-..1 COl,OllATION Jr• S!rMI, L-l•Kh, Ct llflrnlt , t t'llt IJ•acrlbMI •• fllli-.: "'' · 1 · :ICll -lhl Str .. t ,,.., td<Mftd• l•wtd lhllllo 1>rlor le ''" LOt 1'1 ef TrKI N•. w.tt , •I Mewn on ,,_, lnlt'l'ldl ,. clltll'f "-1"1"" ft .. 14 H-.orT ltKll. Ctll! ... 111• bid -Int 4•11 11 wtllch dnit ..... y will 1 M•t r.c:IH"ll..i In I.all 111, •tt .. 1', HCllon. LMllllW ll:•t Y bl 1Wbllcly """'" •Ml rM~. 17, 1 .. lf, 10 ..... 21 ol Ml1U !lt noo.JI S•Td l'Vbllc ~"ti"• on .... •bov• .,. ll'•HJO.lnT , .... l'lt n• -5P9<11kt l\o,,. .... , h Mt1>1, rKOr111 flt Ortnt• C.,ml'f, Poled •mtntlmenl Wiii bl llt ld •I l;lO STATI" OF CAl..IFOll:Ni.\ otil•I"" by rMVt1llnt '"'""In pt•oon .., Collto<nl•. P.m., ...-•• KICHI tl\t rMltlr 11 -.lbl1,.., COUNTY 01' Oii.ANGE ) U wMit dtY• ti 11\t Admlnl1tr1Tlon l 11lldlnt NOTICE IS Hl!lilV GIYeN mtt Oii Juty 20, lt11 , In Ill• llHrlnt •llCI mffll,,_ On 11111 111111 IJtY OI JIH\t, 1'1\, b91ort II M(G•Ut l\ tnlwmt<ll•I• Scnool. t<t th JlllY 16. lt7\. el 10:00 o'tlOC~ 4 .M, t t ....,, ti tho OrtnH County l'l•nnl119 ,,.,., • NtllrY l'ubllc In t nd for IN lt lll Ill~-o11 ... 1ne 1 torOl'l!Mll mu1t 11•,,_ ~ MUlllCIPtl C°"rl, U1 Wnl 1'11" Clfy of C.....,mlu ion, EnglnMflnt B11lld!nt , ClO County tnll lltlt, Hf-II• -11rtll ~•ltd t ·tO llttnot In t <t.,,.dtr>ee ftl!I\ Cos!t Mt11, Coutl!y of Or•llH , Stole fll Civic Ct n!..-Orlv• Wnl. II:_,. IM. l t nlt Mflr•• ,,.,., LH!tlow • ..,.y, ~-n It Cht pltr ,, OlvltOl'I 3 fll 1111 llutlMU •Ml Ct lll.,nl•, I wlll Mii ti rubllc auctton lo ._,.., Ct!ll.,"11, •I wlolc~ flm• t fld •l•t l NII ti bt JM "'ffldlllt ol 1111 CtrH11· ll'rt«H!on• CoOe. •• t mc<><loO. tt.e h!.,,t•I b!adlr, '°' <•M in l•wllil t lf HrlOM •!!l>lt l1vorlne ot ep-lnt !Ion. IM! 1:.ot-culld Ill• wl!Mll l1111r.,......,1 Tllort wlll bt 1 •lln d-111 t i Tw1111,,. ............. ot "'' Unl!MI SltltJ, 111 !llt r1..,.1, .. 1d ,r_....i 1m11\dmt nh will be l\ot rd. '" bllltlf 'Ill "" C.,..l'Oftll.., ll'llrt ln !!Vt Oo!loro UtJ.00) far lttclo 1d of l'l•nS tilt• tlld ln•tr111 ol ••Id ludt ,,.,.nl 6ebtot F..-!urrn., d1!tll1 '".,.di,,. .. kl ••• nomed. tnd tdo1-1"'91<1 ,. "'' "'" tnll Sptctl!tt lloN. Clllclo• tlo t ll bf mtd<I In "'' t bcwl dt•<•fbetl .,_.,., or so Hoed ·m·-•n•·· I ll lnlort•tH ... _... 1uc:h <.o<-••lt-11 ••.C:UIM lf'lf 11..... •1Ytbl1 10 ltt! B••tl> Scneol Dll lf lct. m11dl !lier_, •> mt y bl "°"'"''rt lo •tt lnvll..i II e1ll II !tit fllfl<• fll lh• (OF,ICIAL Sl!AL) Oi -11 will bl r.,urnt6 II l'l•"I '"" "'ll'IY ttld t XKUllon. wllfl t ee•""' 1,.. Or•"9• Counl'f ,.1,""1.,. Commlulon, C~rl1111»1 Ho!tr.>•n SPtcl!l<o!I-••I rer11r"" In -OOll· ,.,"' t nd cosh. Ent lr>Hrlnt l ulldl"', tOD Civic Conlor Nfll •rl' l'ubllc..C1!llorftlt dll!fn •"" unmtJ"lr.l<I. Mttkld ~• dr1wln11 O.ltd II CDllt Mft•, C•lllotPll•, Junt Drive Weot, ._... ISl. S1111t An•, ,.rlno:!i•tl Ofllc1 In •"" mlu lnt -·•• .,,., unbo./fld ....,Hie•• 21, l,11. Ct lllorr1l1, wlt1r• Mid r•o1•1•d O<t"91 County . llonl •rt 111111<...,., rttlOnl f1>t ffrl1ltu1 • 0 . 0 . Wlllo.lrUWI, •m-menh ••• on lilt "'Ml •Vl !ll O!t tor MY Cwnmlt1lon l!itirtt .. Cit -Ill. MH9hl l P<lbllc lfllH<ll'Oll. Mllrdt 2t. 1m TM a°"'"' "' EdU(•lll>fl ··-VII -M"nltlP•t Court, Or•"M C0<iftlY Slvt rt W. 8 t llH l'ul>lithlcl Ortnt t (Oolsl Otll• l'llol, l'l .... I t• rt la<I •nY or 111 pr-lilt •NI le H•rbot Jllllleitol Olotrlei .\Ull lt nl l'leM lnt Junt U, ?:I •no! J"I' t. t , 1111 1Sl7·11 .,.,1_.. onv l"!ormt l!l'f In 1nv P•OO>OO•I I Y II. H , Goodt, DtJl\llY Ol•a<lor .... SK••"'" •K•l~eCI I!•<" bl<ldt • In tultmllllnt • JClllll C. Wtltolllt O•ANGE COUNTY LEGAL NOTICE •roPOttl m11" tlt nll'f Ml lnltnl le comp1¥ ll'llollllltt'o A!IHIWf "LANNING CO.<N.\tlSIOll 1 "'I"' !tit E•«ull•t Ord~'1 on E111tl '11 Cl¥1c Cfll!Mr Drlvt wn1, Suitt-W "uDllll\N Ort ,,.• Coot! 011!1 ,.llo!, J.,. T-nm f m.ioymtnl Opport11nlly 11"' t !!ICh t 11• h•I• Au, CtHMr11!1 t11'1 1, t, un 1'6'·11 eond In lh• ,.....,,., of ttn Pt•(•nt ot nl' l'1<bU-Or•n.. (Mlf O•lly "•lot, NOTl(I TO .. lllONI •ld , J urit 2!. July 2, t, 1111 UlJ.11 LEGAL NOTICE •STATI" ·~:•::~::: ~H 1~':,•1Tl' ;~''"tnl to Section• 1111 s '"" 1n1., flf • 1111 Lt bor Co01 t nd '"ullllont flt I~• Nolle• 11 tlt>rflt1 1lven: To !11 Ptf$Olll Ctll!CH"nl• Ao~ron!lctsnlp c 0 "n c 11. lllOTtC• O" ll'U.LIC 111•.t.llUI• TO lnlt rHt..i, """'"'., 11 crl<lllo ... llolro, ·• ~r al pr-Iv latnlured .,.. LEGAL NO'l1CE IHt!t ... or 11 .... 1-1, !n n..1 o!ltlt .i em,..oym1 ' '' , ________________ , •• ltlLO I Y Tit• Oll:ANGI COUNTY GEO"GI" t!". EGGETT, dK•tlN . w!IOS• Ptl~llcu •ht ll ......... torlfl n tit t n 1'91H ,.UNlllllM& COMMllllON 01111 11'11:0. l•ll lddrttl w•t Jno Boyvl-Dr!vt , ,to.,11 llt'llYl1Tlon1. l'lCTlttOUI 1\IUPf•SI POSIO AMINDM•lfl'I TO Tiii c ... ont lltl Mt r, Ctllfornle; "''' lttltrt In <omPll1"ct wllll lht Ltt>tr CM f, MAM• tTATIMIMT ZOWINe COOi, lttlim•nl•rv .,. _, ldml"ll!flllon ht"'° to11l11 ol t ll C011te11Yt l!trt tlnln"! Tht loli-lnt ptrion II d1ln• .._,,IMll l'urou•nl to -l'lt nnln• I nd z..,lnt .... ,. luvtd ,. • l!AllL. WAlllEH E•· 1t reemenll tor <••11s nHd~"' '"' wot~ •s; Ltw, •• tmend<lll, tnd or<kr cil 1111 a<uror, by CollntV JllO!it'• Cour1, , 'cco.it1 ''' on Ille •nd 1v1ll1bl1 lo.• ln1H<tlon l~ Oll:ANGI!' COAST DA ILY l'ILOT. 3l0 Ortntt Counl'f .. llnnln• Commln lDf", ol <OMHt""! ludtcllCl len ol ~ Sll lt flt "',''•,licit_. o:i !no l\O~l~~ln a::,,~:,~, W"I l lY '""'· CMll MIN. C•lllornl• nollct II l\tr ltly t lVltn "''' • 1111bllc h••r· ,ICH"ld• "'II (I··-...... , rJ&21 Int w!H bf h•ld bv .. Id Comml11len on Thll 11\t to!lowlnt ""oft 1o lnd•llltd 11 ol lndu1trlt l ll•lt!lon•. Ortnt • Cot1! l'ubll1hln• Cct111•1ny, • o>rof>OSN 1m1Mmt-nh to ttlt OrtftH or holflnv .,.rsont l prct111r1Y ot '"' 1tlo Tht minimum !or 0~trllm• •nd Sunot~ Ct ll!ornl1 Cerpartllon, 3lO Wnl 8tY County Zonlnt Codi , 11 •mt Mld, Ortntt 01tt<11nl! UNllEO CALIFORNIA aANI<, or HolldoY work: ovt,r!lmo ;ri~llthtll ~: MAKIN.G READY -Robert G. \Vemple, commander of the Balboa Pow~:-Squadron. checks the banners his v.'ife, Kathy Oeft), and Jacqueline Chapin are pre- paring f or the Safe Boating Week parade to be held Saturday in Newport Harbor. Str'"'t, Cost• Mt••• C•litorni1 t2•~1 County, Ct llfornlt lo~l l!•ol CHI! Hl11\w1y, Coron,i 0.1 bt lesl tn1n ont 1n 0,,.. t mtl 1 T~ll bu1lnt11 It bflnt conduclN tY t S•ld t mtndmtnii •rt d"lt ftt!M t!"X· Mtr. Ori n" CounlY, Ctll'°'nl1. b11lc """"Y 1111 pluo tpollctblo emolov•~ Corl'Oftllon. Htl lt n.r t nd proJOS1 to t"""nd SK!lon Tht l lht Undt rlltnMI d11lrt1 ~ ff'CllVt P•Ymtn!I' SUndtY 1•11d r;:1111:y lwo.:: ; Jt <l: II:. C1<rl1y, 11.02u.2 TEM-'O•A"Y USE 0, A "'' u ld ,.,_..1 l>fOHrtv Of co!IKI "'' riot .... lhtn two I mn • •• c ~r, Viet .. re.ldon1 t tllll MOllLEHOME IESIDENCE DUlllNG cltlm (1) Ind lo ftrTIO'll 11111 colllCIN or r1" plus IPPllcoblo l<llPIOY•• ~I I 1· G1nort l M•nttt< CON5TllUCTION, Thi ••OP01od am-· rectlvod lrom lllt St•" ol Ct llhw'nl• to t he hoH<ltYI UPOll wnltn lllCh rtltl llllll Tnl1 '"""'tnl filed wll!I "'' County men! ••oPoSl'I lo •<Id "mol!llt c.,.. !l>e ••Id 11elt ,.,,,.,.. ltltt ro 1rst11Mnltrt bt ••Id Mi ll bt •II holldtY• rocotnl1t0 r" Clt rk .i Or1,,.t CwnlY .., JuM 21, 1'11. tlruc:tien ol'llc.eo" to ll>t ,,.,..,....,11oiwc1 or .t t dmlnldr•llon hi v• btfn IHUod. lh• eoU~lvt bt r11lnln1 llfffmt-nl t O· I v l•v1rly J, M•cklo:<. O.PlllY county &tetlon 411 "'-h•vl,,. el1!m1 tNIMI rt)I Pllc1blt lo I~• P•rllcUlt r cr11t .nll Clerk. St ld ·...,bli< httrl"" '" tht tbo~• ,... dK..,...I or tn lnlorl'lt Jn 11111 ffl•I• tnd clt u l!lctllOl'I. . . Blacl\:f in Ends Long Silence, Power Boat Parade Set l'ublllhtO °''"'' Co•sl Dilly l'llol, _... t mtndmenf will 111 htld ,1 !·JO wlllllM ,. ol!!KI i. 1111<11 rtmo·11J mui! In •tao1d•r1C• "'''~ Sect""' tns ot ""' IC'°C~--c"_:_'~_:_c'c"c"_::''-'c·_'c'c• c"c'-'---"C'C>C>_l 1 1.m., ... •t ooon thtrHfl., 11 -llblf , '111 t lYt wrltt•n ....tl<t ol' 1uth oliltt"llon lo C1lllCH"nl1 L1Dor Cocte, 51he COl!lrlrl~'°'; LEGAL NOTICE JulY )0 lf1l In "-hfforlne •llCI mqtln• !ht "rllln .,. ,.rsont lndftttM no .,. 11'1•11, 11 • Pl"•ll'f lo "" ltll.,. PD « r-11 ~ 111• Ort ftt• county l'li rinlnt holdlnt M.....,.t l .,.......,..... ol, The .i.e .. 1u0dlvb lon on wllOH lllflt ll rlll <OltlrKI Commlii!on l!nt lftfff"lll9 Bul ldlnt «Ml dtnl. So.Kio llO'll« mulf bl 1iv111 It !tit 11 ma<le or t w.,atd, forft l! ••• T...,,1v-----------------ICIYI~ Ct nlt ; Ortv• Wt ll, !loom 1 .. , 'stnrt PfrlOn hold1nt ~ Ptttorit l or-r1Y or llvt U?J.O()l Dolll" flH" ol dt Ct lltnd1f , Attt C•llllH"n!t at Wl'llcll 11mi t nd pl.Ce ••tln•I wltom 11\9 elttm I• mtdt t i Ille dtv, o• POr11on 111.,eot, •or tKh workmtft NOT!CR 01' T•UlT•I l SALi t i! P,.rllH"ll .rif. .. '•'IOl'I ... or oPPDlln• •ddrtl l ti 1titl0' t bct-.t wl"'ln; 3(1 OAYS Ptld lou !!lo" 1111 sllP~ltlH fflVt lllM T. I . NI. lUll '•id or00>00to •m ... amen!s wlll bt "'"" 1tt1r fl rll l'Uellctlldn tf thl1 ntllc~ r•ltl ltf" t\tell ,...,k fl" crtll Ill wllldl well On JulY 'Jrd. l,71, •I ll ;OI) A.M .. lltf'-F lvrth r 11 1 11 d! kl • Di1ecl J wn• :n, 1'11 wlflcm•R 11 t mrltYllll !or 1nv 1111b!Lc work Sllt w Corportllon, • C•tltornl1 cor-POS: ~ '1 1 1 ir't'~r nr...:• ,,. Sltntd • Et tl Worten d-undtt !~1 contr•Ci bY lllm IN" by t n porotion •• dl/Jy ''""'"'et! Tru11e. unaer ••• tm me" 1' • n •rt£ """°"' A• EX4'C~tor .i ll>t Estltt .i subeonlra<lot 11nd., him. 1nd 1uro11•nl lo Ot.cl ol T•usl ol1IN 0.. lnvU"t lo,.,c•l~l•I :ht •~let r' 1"'1 GEORGE E EGGETT '" 1ceordtnc• wl!~ S<CllG" ll ll ol lht Mtrc~ 10, lt6', reurdl<I Morell 10. 1t6t, En~7'' 1 ounll !ldl •1111.= crv°r'"c"' ~, wooo, SCMll, wH1T•tlLL. Colllornl• ltbot Codi, 11\o Conlr•cTv •• lr>ot. '-lo, 7512, In book 716•, 1111 311. Ori r.oe.,.:; "'; II u 11~j1 S ! : 1~ ~I~ o•YMON & WA"l•N Jlltl~ •• • P1n1\1Y lo ~ Sltle or pallllctl cl Offlci•I ll.KCH"dl In "'' olflce of !tit v• t• ' oom • •n • ftl , • AftlrMYt 41 L•w sublllvloion on w,_1 -•II !ht con!tlt l Closes 011 Wi11dward Passage For Safety By AL\fON LOCKABEY t .. lltlt l~li.r Another h ead-to-h e a d battle betw een \\lindward Pa s s age and Bla c kfi n in t he Transpacific y~ht race. That fo rmat developed a~ Blackfin, after three day:i of silenc e, c ame up a t rollca ll lo re port a position 34 m ile:i a stern of Windward P assa ge. And WP "'a! be g i nning to make noises like another tli>.psed time reCXlrd . H er poi;i- Hon at the 8 a .m . Thursday rollc all placed he r l ,J?.1 miles from H on o lulu, seven miles ahead of h~r rourth d a y report in the 1969 r a ce But chanc es of a new e la ps· f'd lime record by WP or a ny other of !he fro nt runner."! seemed r emote "'ith a verage "'"inds over the c o u rs e reporl~ a t ltl-1 2 knots . Indic ations from the Coast G uard's Oce2.11 Station Novcm· be.r , far to UM! no r th west of lhe course, were e v en ligh ter 11"inds w eer In s to.re. 'I11e u su al 25-30 knot trade wind s were howling a c ross l\1olo k ai C han· nel in the vicinity of the finish. A tropical s 1orm boiling in lhe South Pac ific wa s not t'X- pect~ to reach the ra c ing fleet. e vr:n those \\'h ich wert' n1oving sou!h of the h umbh ne cour~e. A look at thr cha rls o f the 196! race sh0\\'5 I h a t \\'indward P assaRe \\·ou\d h?.ve. lo a ve rag e 23J m iles per da y for nine day s to beat !tit elapsed lime record In the 1969 r ac e \\'1nd\\·ard P assage finis ht'd t~ 2.225·mi!e C'.'ou rst' tn 9 days, 9 hours and 24 m inutes. bul an elapsed time pe.n clty for a starting line fool pas~c! the record to Bla c kiin 11 h1ch finished a n hou r behin d \\'I'. Ondine (;iiled to report for the t h ird s tl'a ight da.1>, but a ~ h i p -to.sh or e trans inission ove r h igh Sf a.~ radio Kl\!i was monito red by ano!h~r boal in the fleet. Ondine gal"e a Ja UtucJe .Jo ngitude positio n lha l p la cr:d her 1.437 m iles fron1 Honolulu. and t z.il·end Char lie of the six 73-footers. Argonaut: (5) Mamie. T 11·0 s ma\!er y achts failed In L•111ua. 1n<1 1°"111va. ocsito..,, 01 report Thursday . One of them th• en!lr• 11"1: Al ICE, 1 :45 N -llO:Ol\11 "'as tht-previou."l corrected AKMANTE. 2t ~•s -1 n ~so t ime leader Dakar. th t' :::pAiN ... ~uJ:"J0:._04,:;c,Jr'0' Newport-41 skippered b y !~~~5Tu2l'!~ ii:~~,.~ 111.i7 \\'illlam V. Goodley of Del Rey eA'lUNA, 21:4J -1n:n Yacht C lub. The other was the :~t~~~·n~':,OJ ~9\~~.1> C al-40 Duello with tht Nav al tt ~~ i9..~~'::'ii~: ~,0ii -_ 1 ~/~1 Academy cr~w aboard. 1 Lue srJtEAK. l't:SJ -1:io:11 flOLO HOSl , l0:40 -"~;JIJ The failure of D~ar lo BUCCANE ER, ,,,SI -l)J:Ot CHINOOI(. ll:5l -!1'1:1) r e port m oved t he Class D en-g:~ff~T~o~Ti'r~ 111.51 try , Blue Orpheus. an Ericson-0011olHY o. :i.:11 _ 131 ,:11 39 k. ed b R. h d OUELLO. No '"'°'' s 1pper y lC ar ENCOllE. l l :S4 -!30.11 J ohnson, Long Beach Y a cht ~~~~~'~NJOfi·, ~:~21,\3130.11 C lub, into the o v erall handicap F1c ..:LE ouct<... JO 11 -IJO .,. lead . ~t~N~ 'i:·~bu-0.11'1~~> 11.~2 R h h d. 12•·;6 unnerup on I e an ic a p FLY ING CLl>UO, IE .. H ,, lt sc ale "'as th~ C al -40 1211·Jt Gll•VIEAll O, 11·11 -Ill Ol E sperance, a C las s C entry, c u1N1v e 11E, JO::n -111·si b l NTll El'IO II, lO:DD -J1f·SO skipper ed by Bruce Cra tree. 1<.t.MAL11, 11:u -111 11 San Diego Yacht C lub. ClaS!I B t::IALOA 11. 1'·05 -ill.JO t<OLOHE, Xl:05 -17'.U leader was the C-Olumbia-43 KON•s EA v, ,.,.,. -121 .:11 L•ALLEGllO, '111;0 -Ill $} Encore e<rskippered by Dic k Lt:PllECHA¥N, l'f v -121 is Bla tter man a n d Bill Lawho r n t~~A~,~~i11!._Hj,f:Jl -in:•o of Balboa. Yacht C lub. ~:NM~i·,rr:~•1;:-~,1~'~1,4o W indw ard Passage ,\·as still 1 ~~NlCOME llV STR EET. 1•·>0 holding dov•n the No. 1 spot in ::~~ .~~~i :l!·~ jj,~~:1• Class A. ~~~~~1~·1;~~1,.-, ~;~,.fJ Elapsed time leaders \.\'ith N1M&l~, 19 :•1 -11':0• d istan ces to Honolulu : g~~,1~1c'A~'£?40 --'~9'.k I!) 'Vindw ard P11.~sagr:. PLE t.t.oEs. 2t:'1tl -11':05 OUA~ll. 11:00 -12'1:•1 l ,328: 12) Black lin, !,362: (3) 11A.SC AL. '111 :42 -1J1 :o.c ll OWENA, 2':51! -11':11 Gra y bear d, l ,398; (4 ) K ia loa saNor 1PEll, 111:11 -n1:~1 I I 4 ~•NGV!NO. 7t:Ool -12t ·O II . l .398; 5 8UCCi.'lleer, I, IJ2; SATIN OOLL, 21:21 -171 1J 161 Ondine. 1,437: (71 Baruna , ~~yBu~t·il'J'-11~".f~JO 1.449 : {8) !l.fln Sette . 1,477: (9) l~'b~V.~:3:1 -:.1ni~, Stor my, 1,437: (JO ) Dorothy 0 , ~uNDOWNEij! 11:s1 -1Jll 01 TOTIS VIiii .!, ll:SI -12'.ll 1,497; (II ) Warrior, l.498: 112 ) v ALE11 1&. ;30 -nt .Ol VIS"ION. ']ll•JCI -l7J·U A rie s. 1,499. VIUANT ,7f•ll) -111·1s ffa ndic ap leaders: II ) B lue :i'N"o'i.:.~~·011=~ASs!~i1.• ,1 ss Orphf'u~: (21 Esperanc~; j31 1~,~owvNo, ,.," _ u• ~ r.·loond a y: !41 A riana: 151 xANH.ur "E, JO·io -1)(1 °' Balboa P ower sq u a d r 0 n Coun!Y llKCH"d ... "' Ori n•• Counl'(, $1•t• lorn!•, ""'"' ~•Td .... 0-•mtn.Omtntl ..,. ""'"" IMlllll Av-I• m-"' twt rd<lll, klr11U ""Twenty. . . ol C1llFG-nlf ''" ~ lilt tnll •••llt Dlt tor t ubllc 11<-,.,0 . IOX Ut:I llVt (ll5.00I Ooll1r1 for ••di wor~m1n m embers 'viii dress sh ip fo r a WILL SELL AT PUI LIC AUCTION TO ipeeiocn, Intl ....... ,"'1111 sau1 tmPleyed In '"" •Jrt c11llOl'I of lh• COfllrtct . t ( J bo d S d HIGHl!ST lllDOE• POI CASH (p1 Vt bl1 illlt rf W. Btllf'I l'Ubl111\M Orin" Cotl! r>1ily l'llOI, Dv 11'11 contt•Clor o<' by 1nv 1uMon!r1uot CO Or U al para e a tur ay II llmt of 1tll in ltWIU! tnOl\fY o1 11\o AUll!tft l l'ltnnlnt Ju"t 2$. tnd Julw 2, f, Im 1161 ·11 •or tt<n c1ltnd1r OtY during which 1ucl'I I h Id t th ht Unl!M Stt!e1) 11 111• front t nt rt nct of Olreclor •nd *'•!•rt workm1n It 11c11lr'"' or ptrmll!ld ta wort! 0 er a 0 fl er y a c smen Sh n-Sn•w Cor1>0rot1on, uoo Et •t M•Yl•lr OllANGI! COUNTY ..,0,1 mt n 1 hauro lft 1n1 1111 c•111101r 11 nd shoreside \Vatc h ers that Ave .. Or•11111. c11uorn11, 1 11 r l&nt, 1111e PLiloNNING COMMtSSION LEGAL NO'llCE ••• •nll • llHrt 1~ anv ,,.. <•lfflll•r • t nd ln!t1tll conv...,N lo •nll now hold b~ "uDll•l\H Or1nie c,..11 Dilly ll'olo!, Ju· ;.Mic In vlol1llon o• 11\t provl1Ton1 ol 11'11' Safe Boating is m ore than )USl I• uncle' 111d Oetd •I Tru1! In ll'lt Pro-Iv •, un 11&3·71 1rt1c1ts, n cept 11 1mendlMI In ltc:!ltn Ptr!v 1ll~1IN In 11ld Counl'( t nd S!t te '·1'17' 1115 ct !tit Lob<>' Code a s logan, dncribed II: "ICTITIOU5 bUllNes• aOAIO OF Tll:U~TE ES Loi ?, l lock A, Trt ct 5SJ, ••~tr mep LEGAL NOTICE Ill.I.Ml 11.t.T•MllllT Seit II••<" Sdlool Ol11rlct The parade lhro ug h the rec.,..d'll in book 10. C•M 4 or t h• lol!owlnt r1r-.1 ''' lloin1 Bol" & Seti fl11eh low!t vt rft Mlw:tll1n-.1 M•pl, r1<:or01 of Ort ntt •All "'' llu1ln1so t o: Sttl BttCh, C•ll!o•nl1 \Vate rs of Ne wport Harbor will Coun!Y, C1illornl1. NOTICI TO c•101to•1 SUNNY HILLS DIVELO•MENT co.. lh : Ml •K N. Or•nltr EXCEPTING TH Ell!,IOM 11'1 • iUttllllOll COURT OI' TH• '"6l Bl•th S!rMI, NIWl'Ofl •••ch, Olstrlt ! Superl~t-tnl tlimax a week-long national SOUlH 1.11 '"' "'''"°"'· IT•tl 0 , CALlttOllHIA ,011 c 1111ornlt t?•u. r u1>1i1nl!d Or•"g• C0t1t Ctll' ,.,101. Tho olrMI Mld••U fl\d olllor common THI" COUNTY OI' OllANOI WM, LYON OEYl!LOPMENT CO., Julv ,, t, 1'71 17fi,.11 ob s ervance of Saf~ Boating de111"t llon, It •nY, ot mt r111 ••ooortv "'· A'4H•M INC .• • Ct lllornl• cor-•llon. ""l l---------------- <l•<e•lbtd t bcwt II CUfPOrlN to bl: IHl f:Oll lt ol ALMA H. CDl'Fl!Y, DK Ot l· l lrdt l lrfff, NtwPCH"t ••tc~. Ctllt.rnlt \\'e e k. H•rbor lllvd., Cott• Mn •, C•lllo•nl•. •d 1':1114•. Tht 11n<lt r1l1....i f r1J1! .. Ghc!1lm1 t ny NOTICI! IS HEllEI Y GIVl!t-/ 10 "'" THE COLWELL COMl'ANY, t l -------~-~------ LEGAL NOTICE The colo rful p rocession \\'ill start a t 1:30 p .m . in tht' turn- ing basin off B e rkshire 's Restaura nl. do wn the b a v a nd brf'ak ln the <"hannel off B ahia Cor inthian a nd Balboa y a cht clu b s . Heading the p a rad e will be PBS Cmdr. Bob \\'emple'l'I P rin c e ss Kathy ti. Grand niars hals a board the P rincess Kathy II \viii be seve r al of r adio KMPC 's s taff, includin g Geo ff Edwards and J i m llt blllty for t ny lncorrKIMH ol !ht 1lfff'I crKlto" of ll'lt tbcwt .,.mN dKNtnl C~lltorni• corPOrtll6", l22:I Weol S!~ltl IA.II ))U •ddttll t M ol1>1r <omrnon dttlt ntll0<>, II !hot t ll '"'"°"" ~tvl"' <lt lm• lttlni! !ho Slc•tl, Los Anltlto. C1t!lornl• t0020. NOTICI TO ClllOITO•I t nY. ,,,._n nert ln, . ••id dKedent ••• rH ul•N 10 Iii• "'""· Tnl1 bu1ln1u !• e-u~tcl bY • ioint JUl'llllOll CO UllT 01' TH• St ld ••It wm .. m•d• . ...,, WolhO<I! WIJl'I "'" ftt(~$U'Y VOUCl'l•r\, In '"" of!i(t venrvrt. STAT• 01' CALll'O•NIA ,Ott c ..... 1nt nl IN" w•rr1nty, tl<orns If lmpUod, or"'• cl,...t or th• t btlvt t nl;tlod cou•I. er TH I COLWELL COMPANY THI" COUNTY OF 01.\NGI rtgArdln• 11111. P<>Uen lon.' or tft· lo prnenl th•m, wllh 1111 "'''""'''rt a y llle"ora F, llytn. N•. A·Ol-U eumbt•r1Ct1, to ftY ll'lt re<n1•nln• prlncJ. WM.IC/lift. fO !tit 11noort1'"" ti rn• lt \W Viet Pre1ldt nl E,,.11 f11 HE LEN 111. MORGAN, P•I •~m ol !l'lt no!t (1) iK11r..i b! 1•10 olllt e.o Of Mc0.,.An, Gr••n ~ Sylvlt , 550 E . T~l1 l!t ltment w•s tolt<I wllll t~e oec .. le<I. 0 ..... Of t rust, lo-wit: Jl7,000.00, woth I,,. C~aom•n Avt ., Or•"9t. C•lltorn!t f:J6U,. County Clt rl ot 0 •1n9t COlln,. on Jun! NOTICE IS ME llEllY GIVEN to tho ter11t '""'""'. •• """ldtd In ••Id no11 wttlc~ ;, tht pit <• ef bl/sin•" ol Ille 1,, ltH. crn 11or1 tf 1111 1bc>\O• ne"'e<I GKN"" {I), •dvt nc•t . •I 1ny, unO•r tho !erm1 fll 11~1Jtt•i•ntcl !n •II "''"'" ..,rttlnlnt lo •ICH.1.110 '· llYAN Jh•I •II oe•SOl1I ntvl<>1 <lt lmo •t•lnot tn• •1\d Dte<I of Tru1r. IHI. <.II••••• tnd •l<-th• e.ielt o1 ••Id docN ent, wlrhln tour A"'""' •I L•• ~•10 docedonl ••• r1<1ulrld lo lilt lllel'll. oonies ol !tie Tr111tw •llCI ol "'-fru1h """''"' •ll•r t~• f!r'I P11bllc•tlott et !hi• J:tlJ ""'"' ll•llt Slrffl ,.11~ Ill• rwc•u•r• VOYdtoro. In "'• flllc• cr11!ecl bY ••Id OH<I Ofl l rutt. ~o!lt•. L .. Anftlft, C•ll,.,~I• ,.... ot "'' cluk 01 1,,, •l>o~• onllllod cmirt, or th1 l>IMflclt rv under ••Id Otea ot Dt!td Jun•''· 1'71 T·11MJ . "' •••otnl !~em, wnn lltc .,.enury Trull htrt!olCH"I IXKUIH lfld llt!lveted THE F1 115T NATIONAL l'ubll111N Oren ... CO.II 0.,ly l'olol. ~OU(~lrl, lo 11\t undtt1lt ned 1! int 11 .. lo !fie una1rsl1ntd • wr lt11n Oecl1r•1lon IANI( OF ORANGE July 7. f, 11. 13, 1'11 114 11 olllt•• o! MCOWEN. Gll.EEN & SYLVIA, of 0.lt ull •"" 0.mt nd "'' !•It. •'Id • COUNTY 5jO I!: Chopmtn Avt., Orantt. Cttlhtrt1Tt. wrlt!en Nollet ol Otft ull •nd Elecl!cn IO E•ocv!CH" fll !I'll wm LEliAL NOTICE '™'· wlllcn I• •~• ~II<• 01 bull""" ol Seit. Th• undt tolvned c•v1N ••I~ Nollet Of !he 1bc.,. ~•mt<! ~•Cecttnt 1111 lln<lt rilvP\e<I In •IT monort oort•lnlf\9 of ae;faull and Elocllen to Sall lo bt MeOWl!N, Gll:•IH & SYLVIA 1'·1N 7• re lh• ••lat• of ••Id dectd•n!. wlll\ln four rttoron In th• counf'f '*~"' the •••I ue E. Cll••m•ri Av•., tvll• A ll'ICTll lOUI 1uuN•s1 ''"'""'' •!!•r 1~t tlrtt pvblktllon .i thlt PICl>tfty ls IOC:t 1ecl. Orlftff, Ctllftrfllt f'2"4 ltAMI STAT•MIHT riollce. -------1 Slt n·Sh•w Coroor•Tion, t .. : '3'·Jltl Tht f(lllOWl"t Ptltoftl ore llOlflt tltlt<I Juflt 11. lt ll A Ct lllornl• cor""rt llon Alltrn1,1 ,., l!x1<u!., bui lneu is: WILL IAM E. MOllG"-N llickland. •• St id T•u1T••• "ubllshl!d Ortngo Co11I 01!1v "do!. CO•EY'S l'OOOLE l'AllLOll, 14lll2 ExKufor cl 11\o WI!! 11~ Mt urotto Sli•w July '· I•, tJ, .», 1'11 UJ1·1! L•k• llrffl, Gt•d•n G'cve. C1lllor11•1 Of lhf' t b<lv• nt motl doct!!•fl t A11tllorlzed Slgnt 1u" f:!tl3 MCGWIN, Sll!:t:N A !YLYIA l "I :17'4f LEGAL f'liOTICE GA!llltE L M. CORE Y, '1 o I Uf Ii. C~••""" Avo .. Sullt A Ot!f: J 1Jnf 15, 1'11 M•tdDWlork Dnvt , ttunll<>1!Dn l!HCh, Or1111t, Cllll.,ftll t'UU l'ubl!ol\MI Ort n1t (0t1! Dt ll Y Pilot. NOTICI INVITING llOI Collfornl• "1Ut Tl1: tU.Sl .. '·"-'-'-'-·-'-·-'-'-·-'-'-"-------'-"_'_'"_ NOTICE 15 HEREI Y GIVEN "''' ltll LOIS A, CClllE Y, 5101 Me,•~,"1 1rk A".~ .. n,,','." • .!''o',,'!',,ulorC••o> llotra o1 tru.ree1 o1 th• ,..,,.111n Vollov Or!vo, Hunllnf10n l••<n, 11 ro,nl• •" """' " -DlllY l'llo!, 1131-1! Sc~ool Ol5trlct cl Ort ngo counT~. t'l6n J11ly I', 11, 2l, lO. "11 Ct lllorni•, will rKelvo •••It!! bid• up II Thll bu1lnt11 h belnt conllueltd bY •!---------------- ----------------):00 P.M . ..,. 11\e ll !I\ Ot V at JI/IV. 1'1l. •! P•rtner.,,IP. LEGAL NOTICE II' 1t1'Zl !ht olflce of ••kl idlool dlstdcl •ur<hl,.. l !GNED: G•bflt! M, Cor•v ,.ICTITIOUS IUilNIS1 ir• 0 1p•r1m1nl " wnlch lime ••Ml bid• l ei• A. Cotov 1---~~~-~~~~~,,,co---NAMI tTATIMINT Will b• OPtntd t ncl retd !0< "'' f\J rnl•l\lnt T~ll s1t!lmenl 111'41 ..,\II\ lho CounlV 1Ul'llllO• COU•T 01' TN• ' Th• lcllowl"• peroon 11 dolflt bus•ntt; el m•Tttltl• t nd t1t>or tor lno!•ll•llon ot 1 Clerk °' Ort n1t CcunlY on J~I~ 1• 1'1l bv STATI" 01' CA\.l,O•N1A "Oii , e1: dr"'' l•wn todn~lf'r iyslim t i tw. lo~ody J. M..:tdO•. Dt•utv Ccun<y c1 .. o.. THI" COUltTY O' OIAJfGI! SOUlHEll:N CALl,OllNIA "Ufl LICA «hooll. To bt lur"llllH In t(cordtnco PubllSh..:t Or•nvt Cots! 0 1Jiy -'llot, Ju· No . .l.4"15 TION SERVICE. UI .t.v•nld• Arlene, with so.cillctl!on1 ...., on '111 Jn 1n1 Iv f, 16, ll, JO lt TI !13'·11 Nl>TICI 0 1' HI.ARING 01' "ITIT\ON Son C+e<"e"'•· C•ll tornlt t?an Purcl\U IM D..,1r1ont "I ol !IH f'0Unl1ln 1'01 l'llOIATI! 0 1' WILL .I.NO l'Oll Glori• Arline Bl•kt , olJI Av0.,;a1 V•lle• S<t,001 Ols1rlc l, Nu,,,D•• On• LEGAL NOTICE Ll!"•llS ll5TI MI NYA•'f LEGAL NOTICE d ~ ( VA ru -ICO, ll:CI -,,. OI \\.in ""3"'" Passa ge: Ii 1 --'-'o'o'o0c•cc'c'c'c'o'c'c· c"c·o•:__:-_:_'"c..:·>c'_:c::========-==-c..:=== En('ore: t7) Argonaut ; ~3 ) J\·la mie: (9) B lu e Streak; (\Ol Sto rmy. ~I I) A r ie s : 112 1 [)(iro thy O; ~13 ) Bla.c kfin: (1 4) Alice . (l~) Q uas <'I": (16) Arlt n1, Son Cltmt,.lt, Ct lilor11 l1 f'lln L;IMllouH l •ne, corn•r et Ttl ... '1 ""a ------------~~--1 1!11111 or 001115 E. !(It.LIAN. 11111 This butln•" " Ooln, conduc!NI b'f t n Nowlond i!rw!, Ffllnltl~ V • 11 t Y. Int F°"'"t'I" Vl llt'f' SchOO: Oi1!rk1 know"•• 0 0 11 13 EL!LlaETH l(lLll.t.N, l"dlvldut l (l !ilornl' "170f, IOo1 rd of l ru•T•" 6a<l1r~ t puto!lc ""'' OIC••>N , Intrepid II . \17) Kialoa II : . # .~ ; 118) !l.lontgom e ry Street : !!9) 1 • ~; \\'oodwynd : (20) Blu e Norther . CL .\S~ A -11) \Vindward Passage ; (21 S torm y; (.1) A rie s: (4) Dorothy O; tSJ B lack fin CLASS B -i I) Encorl': (11 Rlue Norther : <3) f ic kle Duck : (~) Sundowner : (5) Loco V iente II. CLASS C -(1) E sperance; (21 Moonday; t3 J Ar iana ; \t) Our Will Slacks Let Breathe You Easy . Glarl• l.•l 11e Bltk• fl Y OllOEll 0~ TH£ I OAll.0 l"t w•ll Oo ne!a on J~IY 11. 1'71 ht 1•t nl NOT ICE IS HE llEfl Y ('IYEN 11111 Darr Tllo• •Ta!•m""! lllt<t W•lll !tit (tklnlv 0~ TRUSTEES. a ,...,11rl/Cl,an t na ..,.ln1tnonce 1rorm Ann 1(11~" Swttt "''lilt<! nertin t ""I· Cl••~ ol Ort nvo (OUM~ o~ Ju111 )0. \171 FOUNT I.IN VAllEV SCKOOL drl lft ... t<Mnl •I '"' "'"''" St l>ool, lion !or p•ol>1t~ o! will 1nd !or l••u~nc· ol D• B1 .. .,1., J. Mt ddo•, o...,..,,., Covnl'r OISTll lC T 1 ... s !t MI YntJ "' F<111n ... !n Vl llf'Y TO l •ttt'I l ••l•m•"'''"' lo P1h!\onf'r. Cl••k \'llll!AAI C, CllllNI , 1111 Cil'f el Fo\tn!•I" Vt llf". Th• oubllc '"ttren<• le w~l<ll 11 mt dt le• l11rn.,, P11blltlloO o .. ~tt Cot!! OtilY ,.,lo!, JU· Clerk M "'' ll<r•rd ,,,,..,no will bl hi lO 11 1 '"°"'lor l0trO parll<ul1r1, t nd 11111 tl>t !lmt t fld Pllct I., t , U. 2J. )0, 1111 11.'if.Jl Pu1li•-O•t n11t C .. fl C"l"f r ole!, • ' T !Pnt ti lht Fountt in Vol· of he•r!n• !h• !HTit I>•> bt'rn 1<• !or J "lt .----;;;;:-;-;-;:;;;;:;;;;;----j ''~"~'_!:'·_'c'·cem".'' _______ _!:"~~:.'.11 """'"'" 1', 1'11 , u 1,30 1,m., In '"' <ourtroom of ltY Schoo! Ol•trlct C11rtlc11lum M•!e<l•I< O•c•nma~! No l 01 ••IG cour!. "' 100 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N~CE Ci ni..-. Nv"'""' Ont l l,nlnou>t lt~e. Civic Conter Orl•t Wu !, In 11'1• City 11 '"' '·flU ,ICTITIOUS I UUNl'i NAMI !TAT•MINT h llowlnt Ptr..,., 11 d1ln1 buolnou VI I l'cunt1lr\ Vollf't. $•~!1 "n• C•lllo•nl8 ,.ubll~hM Or1nt1 c ... 11 O•ilY l'llol. Ju• Oa ll!d J~lv 1, lfll NOTICI OP' tt UI LIC l'flA.lltN• ly ,, ltll 1'11·1! W E. ST JOl'fN ,..OTICE IS l'f Ell.EI Y GIVEN !1'd t Caun!Y (llf~ ouDlic n .. rlnt Will bt h•IO bv lilt City LEGAL NOTICE OONALO w, lf llLliloN, Jll , Council cl "'' CllY ol CMll M....., o~ J wl'l-----------------1 .. " Ctmiu1 Drive, ' lt , lt J!, ll !tit l\QYr ol ':J(I o.m • G• •• ' ••••••• N...,Hrt ltatll, t t ll'9r•ll t2t0 "LOT "lllNT ING, 3)1) WHI l •Y 100~ tnor1o!I..-1, lfl• molter mov bt NOTICI 0 Cll l trtt•. Cotl1 "'·'''· Ct ll!•rnl1 t'/6ll hN rd, In"'" COllncU C/>omblr 01 tllt c ,1, I UP'l lllOI COU•T 0, TH• TM: llll) , ... Jl>I O•t n•1 Ce15t Publl!hln• Como1nv. t Ht ll, 11 "•I• Dtlve. (C>Ta M.-st , 5TiloT I O"' CALl,Olll NIA '°Oil At!tt~ty llr l'l!l!lln1r Call!CH"nl1 Cor...,rt !lon, lJO w .. 1 .,, Ct ll!ctnlf, on !fie lellewint oolil!oft lcor lH• COUNTY O"' OIANGI P11bll1hN Or0to11 Cct 1t D•llV "'""'· JL>· Str .. t, CO!ll• M@~•. Cf lllo<nl1 t'/117 thlf19t In tent: Nt, A'4ttM Iv t, 10, U, lt ll 1f<M.71 Thi• bu1l1>1H lo belnt cot\llvctt<I bV • ll:E l ONE PETITION lt·ll·I , b•lnt Int O E1l•l1 .. WILHELMINA H. COTTON. Corpor•~l:~·I( II . CUllLl"Y, •rfl!IOll ct i.J•tolO 1. s ... e .. Hom. " I I. ~o~~r£ IS HElll!IY GIVEN I l31S F1lrvlew llOold, Co1l1 Mt1•, tor 0.~ "'":i----------------Vltt l'•11ldon1 •...:! oormlulon to •••on• Proat•lv !oco•ed '" cr..:tl•CH"• ttl !ht t boYt n•"""' llK ..,tnt l'·lfnt Gtnor•I M•n•Mr • '"' ·-•! .... •f Ill• norlhwosl ("'""' 11111 •II HflDnl h•~lnt elt lmt ·~•Intl lht 1'1CT ITIOUS IUllNlll TM1 1111.mMI tiled .... 1~ "'' c .... nl\I cl Adtm! Av•n11• '"" Ftlrvl-llotd .. 1a dKtd•nl ••• rooulred lo fUt lht m. NIMI ITAT•MINT C!@rl ol O•antt Coun..,. on· JuM ti, 1111 . trom Ml It ll•·C" w!lh 1111 "tctHlrt VOU'C~"'"' 1" !ht olfk t Tht to!lowln1 P"'flOnl t rl o.I"" i..o1lntt.o &v a1v1rl• J . 11\•0do• O.ouh CounlY NOllCE 15 FUrfl HE'll GIVE N "''' t i ot !ht clerk•' !ht t boVt t ntllllMI tour1. er '" Clor' ••Id 11 .... •nd Plett t nY t ftd •II "'"°"' to ..... tnl "'""· will\ 11\t nec.u•rv 50UTH£11:N c ... Lt, 0 II: NI A AT-"ub!IS1'1d Ort n10 Cot !! Doily "•IOI, l"!tretJ..i m t v IPMlr ,,,., bl ~torO bV v...,..C:1't11, II 1111 llncll 'lltnoll ti "'-Olflct TOllNEY SE'.llVI CE, •JI Avenlet LEGAL NOTICE Two Clubs Undefeated lt'1 truly 1po k•n ••• 1 selection lrom J e ck Bidwe ll', lummer ileckl w ill ke•p you 'cool •II 1eelo n. St.rt with the new ihipmertt of doubl• knits . , li9htwei9ht, ea1y to cer• for, and in lot 1 of bright 1ummer color1 e nd printi. Anoth1r cool pent i1 the 111•r· iucker we 1h 1lecio:;, in bre•:ry combi- n1tion1 e>f blues or browns. The dau- b!• knits 1+•rt •t $25., the w•1h \leeks are $13 . Jeck Bidwell l•tl your wall•f breath• •esy, too. Ju.,. 25, t "" J uly 1. '· ''· 11'1! 1•:'9·11 "''CITY c ounc!I ., "'"'cltv .t Cool• .Y.t •• of hl1 Anorn1•, Sill"' S. F••nknn, •lt ••i.111 . Stn Cltmente. Cf!llCH"nlt 91'" on tho 1loremt nl1-d ll:t1-l'tllllOft E•1I 17lfl 5"ttMI, Corte Meo1. Ct lltornle Gl~I,\ All l lNI flLAKE, QI N., 1-11°". m lT, W~lc~ h 1111 elt(I of blltlMH ol Avtnldt Atl1nt , 5•n Cl-I .. E ILEEN '°· .-MINN EY 11\t "Nl•r1lt nl0' In t ll mt llt r\ -11ln!nt C•lllom!• rnn LEGAL NOTICE In 1st Day of Cup Race Two yac h t clu bs e merged wilb unblemis h ed r e. c o r d s Thursday in the firs\ day·s competition o f 8 :-.lboa Yad1t Club's Governor"s Cup matc h r.ace series for juniors. The series It being sailed in Cal-25 sloops over a S·m ile 'vindw.ard-leew«rd course in the ooean off Balboa Pier . \fnde.feated ~'ere ~' i 1 s Fletcher Beach of the deftn- d t n g BV C and Jeff ~fcDermaid. Alamitos Bay YC. With only nine c lubs entered, BYC and ABYC drew • bye In one. of -the three aeries. lhus sailln1 only two races. Windint up tht thrff wlu with 2-1 t'!COfdl' W'l!1'I! Loi A"lela Yacht Cub and Kina H1rl>Ol'Y-Club. SERIES I J e fl ~1c0trm1id, ABYC d e f Dtn- nii Duraan. BCYC; John Dii1h, NHYC dtJ Mark Jdwton, KHYC: V • n c e £4wardl, Ven vc. def Bruce. C61lllOl'I SI BYC; Slt:ve Wal1h • C B YC de f LAYC. Doug SERIES II -htc Dermaid d e f Golison; Beach def Wals h ; J o rgen son def D u r g a n : J ohn,.ton def. Edwarru. SERIES Ill -Beach de ! Daigh : Durgan def Golison; Johnston d ef Walsh; ,Jorgl!nson def . Edwards. Lodge lloldup l\Ian Sentenced AUBUR.i."i (UPI) -Patric k \Y. 1'1e0owell, 29, San Fran- ciSCO\ was sentenc ed to st•te p rison Wednesday for his part In the abortive holdup attempt of a Squaw Valley SkJ Loctat la.!it Feb. t. Superior Court Judft Pro Tern Way ne Wyl~ senlenced McDowell to fiYe years to llft in prison for robbery and gave him another fi\le-ye.a.r term beca1111 ht was c1rrytn1 firearm• during the r&bbery. .---.,~. ··-:- -------' .t • ...._tj· ...... Cl1Y Clttt fll lllt lo lilt llltlt fJf "!d 11..:fftn!, w!ltl fout Thlt b«l•nt11 lo 111,,.. c-ucltd •v tft l'·lf llJ CllY .i Coslt Mt•• m"'"'' t it., 11\t llrll 1111allctll.,, 91 !hit lncllvlduol. l'ICTITIOUt IUllNISS l'woll~fd Or•n .. Co•1I Did¥ Pilot. notl<f . SIGLOlllA AllLIN[ l l Al:E NAMI ITATRMINT J11lv •. n ll iw.n Cflltd Junt 30, 1'11. Thl1 $11!fmt "! fll td wit~ lht County l ht lot1owlM """"I t rt ~aint•I----------------llov...-I . c.llM Cltr\ et Or1n;t Counl'( Df" J u111 IQ, ttll llll•IMSt '" E•t<Ulor by lnotrly J. MtOd<>~. ~·y c_,,, SLATER DEVELOl'MEMT CO .. UIJ LEGAL NOTICE eof !~ Wiii fll t l!rk. !_l~!,h SlrM!, N....,_, •••di, Ct lllornlt•I----------------!ht •bOvt n•""" •«e<l•nl l'ubll1....,, Or1nc1 c .. u 0111¥ r uot, Ju-.. ,_ II' ,117 SILIM I . l'•AltlCLIM ly t, II. 11. )0, ltll llJS.71, WM. LYON Ol!VELOl'ME NT CO.. P'l(TITIOUI IUSINlll tit 1•11 11111 Slrtll INC.. t C111!Gtnl1 corPOtHlon, .... J ltAMI ITATIM•NT Co•lt Mftt, C•liltllllt f2nl LEGAL N0'11CE fl ltth Stroot, NtwH(t •••<~. C1llfornlt T~I lollowlM pllMll 11 Oil"' l w1IMll T .. c 11141 .U·Dll ~:. CO•W<" COM-•'" o t i. Art...-, .~ ..... "' Ol•tclff ... C-• 0•''' '''''• l'·lf7Tt ~ "~ ' " l'ILOT ADVt:JtTISI!•. :U0 Wnt l.tY ""'"' r."141 -PtCTITIOU5 IUllNISI Ct lllornlt <or l'Orlllon, 112J West s1,1n Slretl, c ... 1. MIN. C•lllornl• t7t21 Jul y 1. •• ''· tl, lt ll 17'1·11 NAMI" ITATIMINT ST!etl, l o. AngllH, C1llW nl1 90010 Orono• '°"''! ,.11b111nino ComP•n•· ,,1c_:_:_c:__:.__::-'_:._________ , •• •>'-·-> Thi• b11•in•., lo tonducltd bv • lolftl ''" ""' "' ""0111 t rt lk>lrit IWlll'ltll ~ C1lllcrnl1 CCH"Por•llon, 3)11 Wt1I ltY LEGAL NOTICE 11· '""'"'''· s•·-•· ,._.,, ""'· ''''"'"'' _,, 1---------------. <\ tttl! COLWl!'LL COMl'ANY -· ~-· "'" 011..1.HGI!' COUNTY JOUllN.1.L. 111 I Y lll<~trO F. I ••"· l~lt bVllftHI U btlnt C-UC"IW ho • WOT IC a 0, 11111T•1tTION TO •NG.I.Cl Av1nl11t Arltn•, 51" C I Im t ~t t • Wlc1 Pr•ildl nl Colpeff!lon. IN THI IA.LI 0' ... LCOMOLtC C111tornlt 1':1111 l MI 1tt11r,,..,1 wt o flied ,..\th mt COWft. J ACI( II. CUI Ll!Y, l lVlllAOll GICH"I• .O.rlln• lltk~, Ill Avtnldt Iv Cln of Oronit County M JUM 2t, Vitt l'tf'l!dtnl •n• July J, l'Tl A•!tnt, St~ Cl1mtnl•, C•lllot~ll "6)1 1•11. G-r•I ~n••tr T• Wltom 11 Mt v Conctrn' T1'1• bu1lnn t 11 btlna c-..Oted bw .., lllCNAID II'. JtY.l.N TMo 1!t lemtnl 1111111 with tne C°"nl'f ll ftld!vlcfl.>t l. JHJ W I I I""' Ur Cl1rt ti Ottntt C-l'f on: Jun. 21, lt11. ~ubltct le lu utMt fll 1111 ctn .. ,,.. SI GLOlll.I. AllLI N£ ILAll:E LH A:..... C•li;r;:. MH t: ... :_ .... .,. .... J, M•-· O.tu!Y Counl'f ~.:o-:..!;.:...i""'!:..!!... ~ ~';f' .i:·~~ c1'!:'~· .,''Ot.".':;'1 c:~ .. ";!.'~J ... : ~i:~ l'ubllM..i o •• ...;. ~ .. " Ot llv l'itol, M tl$11td O•tMt C1111 Diii• l'llot. ~.:.~~· ., -., .... i-• ._,I ..... ",...: .... •fly J M•d-. °'""''Y Ctu,.,., ' .. ,, > o M ,, >•> >> > > J!JM H tlld Jiiiy 2. '· 1~ 1'11 U71-Ti > > 11::-::_:·C:'·_:::· ~·~:::_ _____ :::_•~·:::• 1~c::_:_:c_:_::.:::_::_::_:__::c __ _c::_c1 )Gt: M.r1... -'-•· ••tbol • 1""· '"'"11'"" Or•nat CM11 o.11y ,.1111, LEGAL NOTICE N-• IMctl Jwly '· ,,, n. lO ltll l n.1·11 LEGAL NOTlcr "ur-nt ,. ~ l11ttnlletl. -un-1----;-~:Ccc--Ccc=.,.---=-= ~n __ _:::::::__:::.:_::::~:_ __ J-----.;-;;;;;-----! ,~.,11nl0' to ,,..,.,"" ,. -°"',,,..,..,,' LEG•L N~CE ,..": I' 11111 ol AICoholk ... .,_ (Ot'llrtl I., II• • V 11 •-t \M l'ICTITI0\11 IUllHlll Wlr!C~ " "'"'' .... '" •lc..,,..,Fe ....... 1-----;;:;;c;;-:c:o-:c::c:----· l'ICTITIOUI I UllNlll II.I.Ma ITATIMINT , .. lk lllH fir 111 .. 1 •"""I-., MlllWI; NOTICI 0, I.I.LI NAMI ITATl¥1"T Tiit t.1-1,,. H rlOll 11 ftln, lituilfttH ON SALE IE'l!ll Nollet !• ~""bv t lveri """""'' If we- "-ltllCl'Wlnt H r-. 11 '°'"' but!ntn ••· An.,._ ckll<IM ,. ,... ... , ""' 11...,.nc.t tltn1 lOll •nd lOn .r "'• c 1 .. 11 Codf "' "" •t: M.A.Y CO. I E.\UtY SALON, Stull! fll tue:to llnloM -y 1111 t _....,. "'''"' lltli e;f C•tlfornlt !ht ~...,.,,1, ...... 0 & L THI! Hl!WS l'IEU , DO W"I ltY (°"''' l'ltlt, J3ll l r l1lfl, (Mlt Mft.t, 11 •ny tffkt ti1 11w 0..1,.,,...,,I tf S-• Clftl.,. w111 ••II ti "'bll( •udlon. l trftl, CMlt Mist, Cf llloo'nlt "611 Ct ll'9rllla. Akal'\otllc .._-, .. C..,trll. fl" "" moll 19 II 711S '1•< .. !llt llr~I. Cotto M•11. Ort .... CMll l'ubllllllnt C-Hll~, • St l!tmt n & Ltf1 '1' c .. 1, Mttt . IM. t tt... 0..r11NN flt Aleollfllc ..... ., ... i:!1~J:i.'1 1~Gll t ;; onfol~edty, IM -~ Ct llfor1111 c.,._,,ltfl, J» w .. 1 •tY C•lltornl• c ..... .,.. "'"" """"""· N-c...irt1. 1:n1 o strwt, a.u.,..11110 • .,_ .... t-o'.wtti • • 11111 oltt<•ltM Slrto!, Ct tlt M111. Ctlllornlt mt7 Vt rt., N.Y. 100\t. C1llfwrn!1, 9'*1(, .. 11 fl M <Ktlv.., lHO •MG >• T~ll bl/1lntH I• btlnt ~""'" ,, • Tiils 11tu.iftOH1 I• -..C:1N b"f • w!lll1n XI .. YI "' ,... Alto -,,_... w • oclY l v11 s~1•1 . 19 c ... ..,.t !IOll, corpert llM, $tUt mt n & Lt h' fll CMtt •reml .... _. llnl _lttl, mll!ID ••Ollndo .0::'7.i~r.!'~~~:~: l l<tftu Wf. GHC JACI( •. (Ul lfY, Met•. Inc. for dtnltt ., _...., bv .... Tl>t .... ..,. Sold ••It I• lnr 1h• PU•-· I II l'rl Viet l'rn lotnl ..... SottNI ... OuBin, 1.... ... -lie...... llN" "'-... 1, Of ll!'ft Cf ,.,. Ul'\Ctt l\ltnM FM •• •• •• ' n,• G-••I M1n11@r locrettry tk91>Mlc ~ ..... l!'ll '°"" 91 w f'l t\e•· ••••Ito •It 1" Th\1 11t11,,.,.n1 tlltd wl!ll "'' C011n1Y T~I• 11•!-~I "''' 111.,. w"" "'' Coun• tlon ""Y bl ""'111-,,..... .,.., ttrle1 ol o,,.., 1~1, "" d•v ef J 1 nn Clt1k .i Or•n" Cwnl'f on: J une ti, i,n , l'f C1.,.tt fll Or1n,. CaUflf'r on J ulY t , "-O.P11•tmtt11, G ._ L ,._,,.r•t c:nif. I Y lrttrly J. MtOdOK D....,l'f Cou~h lm . 1.~111" T. (.,cottn 21&.I "•cM!I• SI'"' ti;~~11,,.,,... OronM c °"''' Dllll• ,.11... P T·'*l 11'1!¥1111 J. Co,_.n c .. 11 Mt u . t'.1111,,."1' ,,,,., \ltlll11'1M' Ort "" CMll ll•llV l'+lt>t. ,.ublltl>M Orin .. CMll Dtl!Y Pll... ..._blllllM °''"'' COolol OtllY l'I•(.,,,..,• Ju111 '' •l>f J"l'f 1. '' 16, ltn 1u .. r1 Jut• '· 1t. )J. lG. l tn 1..,..,., JulY 1, un 1.,.....:1 IY t, 1'71 ~1 ,., .... _ ···~--------~-.~,·~·-·~ .. -----..._..--~· .. 11,')111-t.' • ----·~ • --~~-------' -····~-··--~ ---,.-- • ! -· tlM 100 F'rlday, Jur, t, ]q71 -........ LL.._C...-. ...................... ~ .... ,_ .. . . & COSTA MESA and HUNTINGTON BEACH STORES ONLY! DAI LY PIL01 DAILY 10 .. 10 SUNDAY 10 to 1 ""' .... ""'""'·""""· ,,.........,, ................. . "~ther he't & very bad ahot, or we're juat not· mta.nt for each other." I 3 Largest 3-H.P. 19" High Rise Buildings Restyle City Skylines i ROT ARY MOWER ·I 2 DAYS ONLY $39.65 I Model KM I 00 Push-ty pe rotary rnn\\ er \1·it.h Br!iigS and Stratton recall· st11.rt englnC'. Control on T-handle. Reg. 44.96. K·MART MOWER BARGAIN 2 DAYS ONLY Model KM200 546.96 .] horst' po1vrr Brigg!! 11.nd Stratt11n rcrnil ·start motor l!! I featured \n 1his 22-\nch !111\S<~rrcd v.·hf'~·I \l\\,·n mQ\\'er. Sturdy "T'-handle, 7·• \l'hef'ls, l'n~ine controls on the handle. Reg. 53.96. I SALE 50' GARDEN HOSE 2 DAYS ONLY $1.97 Plastic Rarden hoi;~ tor lung \11s1in~ serv11·c and flf'.•obiliRJ Pvf'n in colder lf'lllpf'rl'l\Ul'f'::I. 50 fl. hu~('. ~." inr1Pr d!ame-- ter. ,~,. ____ .. ,.."'. LOS ANGELES \AP) -in the last 15 years. high rise buildiJJiS pave restyled the skylines oJ. the three largest Cities tn California, where 11rowth iradillonally has been Out. not up. Planners say the skyscraper boom i!! evidence of a vigorous tCMomy, and necessary for development of m o d e r n downtown area11. S om e specific projects have been pr o,t,f~.t1 from en- vironmentalists, but the pace ef building continues. Perh11p1 lhe most striking change has been in the profile ~r Uls Angeles, traditionally the plaster city. California's largest city-population nearly 3 mUlton-had a 13-st.ory height limit until 19~. Only the 27-floor spire or city hall soared hiiher. ReScindinl of tht !&\\-'·aimed at restrlclliig do'oftltown con- gestion rather than as an earthquake safe ty measure - has l'6\l\ttd in so1ne t1>o·o-score high risers poking into the 1mog. One ef the first v:as the 32· 8l0l)' Occidental Center tower, in the soulhern downlo\vn sec· tion. Now it's overshadowed by the likes of lhe 42-story Union Bank Building. lhe twin Atlantic-Richfield towers at 52 stories, and others. Secu.rity Pacific Bank plans a 56-story structur·e. and United Californi a Bank as annoUttced the granddaddy of them all, • fi2-storie.r. High risers have sprouted elsewhere. in Hollywood, i11 Century City, at various points along Wilshire Boulevard. and in such pqpalous suburbs a.!: Ille San Fernando Valley and Orange Co unty. In San Francisco, the beautiful city by the bay, the fabled hill! that once \\'ere studded with structure~ of modera~ height now sprout a fe rest of to\\'ers. 1-.fany a view has been blocked in the n11ne of progress. Uiude!t opposition has come from a dres.!:maker. Al\!in Duskin , llr'fiO colh!:cted 50tne <45,000 signatures on an in-~ .f:-~ .:;J<:: itiative petition that would ban ntw skyscrapers withou~ a referendum . Sin Franci~co·s hjgh risers lend to be •·status sy mbol" type office buildings. akin to those in Los Angeles and San Diego. Among them are the Bank of America Buildings. ~ storieg: iran!'iamerica at 48; Security Pacific at 46: Wells Fargo, 43 : Aetna Life, 38: Union Bank. 37: Pacific , Insurance. 33. Hotels, too. are f' soaring : the Hilton. i6, Hyatt . House, 36 and St. Francis To~·er. 32. Focus of opposition shifted lo the water[ront last year when planners approved a 4- MODEL KMJOO story U.S. Steel cor'nplex. 2 DAYS ONLY Telegraph Hill dwellers an~ I A-.. 61.96 Model KMJOO II others pr_ot~s .~ed tha 22" mower ,1·llh ~1,~ tl.P. Brl_1:gll k Strnttnn f'ni;:1nf'. Jn. · ••t.fanhattan1zailon ~f the J!ne tunnrl dC'rk. Verlical-pull start('!'. I' 1n•·h poly 11·J1rf'I~. t shore would block views and >li 1 ---·-smooth out dramatic dips in )lo-I •¥Iii !il%5M1..........._.,..__.." -. ":'",.·~~ the natural skyline. Public of-~~-... ~~«:""«'.S-"'t"'~T,'I\,., ---: ... "".fl'.Z::: ficials favored the project. ·~ ~ ~ , .· - calling il urban renewer of the ' .ragglng \\'aterfronl economy. The board or supervisors 1 bas ).<e! to· rule on the project. " In San Diego. hair a dozen · buildings 20 stories or more ht1ve opened since the early 1960s. Before then. 15 ~tortes ~ was lops. Again, the upward , lhru!t is led largely by banks. ~ There's the Uni ted ·States Na-1 tional Bank bulldlng at 25 ~~;l'\,~he th~·~0~'.,u:~0~ DOUBLE KNIT POLYESTER \Vestgate Plaza. The Bank of $ America plans a lower on four • 2. 97 YO. ~: downtov.•n blOCki. San Diego r t Gas and Electric opened 11 20-58''. and 62" 11·idC" doub!". knit pnlr··~l··r raor i•'" f'>i' n('\\' " . 1~ srnn~ ttnd ~ummt>r f11sh1nn.~. All n1al·J\1nc ,1·a~hablf', no f story headquarters in 1968 d • ironin~ needed. 10to12 yard Jru~!h '<. "" the Charter Oil building soars fl _ • )1 2i. ~J; 14--n a.~~ . \~ There have been complaints ~-ii..~ 't1'1M.t' aboul proposed t.all buildings .1::. ~ " along the short. A view-block -...--:; ' .--R.EMINGTONI ing apartment house in Pacific ._,..... Beach riled bun g a I ow t: 1' M<Ji....=4,w,.,,;rnm:;M<in;:~ > l?V tM..1N 1 • ' 3112 H.P. ROT ARY MOWER ' 2 DAYS ONLY $56 65 R~. 79.96 Model KM•OO e " h'.acy pn11-pr-pn1·kf'd la1\·n 111u11l'I' \l'llh :Pi HP BriRgl'I &. S1r11t1nn Pr11.:ine. llns :.!1 -in«li ta~1 nlu111\1111111 deck and vcr- :~ lirRl-pull .s1artf'1'. t.:a.~~" U-sha1wd h1111dl1•. Lr.~~~~~ .::"1t,f"..... ""!"", ... _ WOMEN'S & TEEN'S CLEARANCE SANDALS I , ..• __ . ~· I ~ " ' '· ,. ~ '. I I , .. 't I • STYLISH JAMAICA SETS REG. 3.96 2 DAYS ONLY 2o~~~s $1.00 . l ~!any mor'° styl i·.~ not pli•tu!"f'd. Sh1>p ••111·ly fnr Uf'f:I !If'-.. ~ Suprr surnrTif'r rnnlrr.~ In t:• n1~y coordlna1f'cl :-1rif)f'-11.nd-solid con1bin11ti(lns. V ,1 nt>f'k lines. Cot!nn Rnd nylon knit ror ,.aiy rari· S11"~ ill· 18. ~ Jection. Asstd. sun1n1er l'<llor~. Sitf'~ ~.in. W.u ........ i:::sw•i.~~ ;r j • " ·' ~ dv.·ellers. a 1 Pickets march in f rt1nl or a ft 1 ' •• ~ f con~lruct1on site for an 11-, ~tory hotel in scenic La Jt11la. ' Pacific Southwest Airlines is talking. softly. about a 16· story hotel near Sta World in ,.1 r.11ssion Bay. t .. 1 .. ": F • • ,. l·GAL. DICANTlll FOR PICN ICS AND SUMMER OUTINGS 2 DAYS ONLY sac Jeff Hitches Rides With Wheelchair SAVEi ADDING MACHINE ·i DESK FILE ORGANIZER 'I Sunday Only 6888 ' I Rr-g. 88.88. J::lcrtric. ~ I~ Feotures divideri for 8 8 I 0 keys. Adds 7 b five doy~, open hold- coh., totals 8. NO/)" l} er, indenfolion for C Discount Price. -Charge ii ' ' • l -~ ~ ... -~ DRY ROASTED P'ANUTS 2 PAYS ONLY 57C LOS ANGELES (U PI\ - When it comes to thumbing rldff Across the N o r t h Americ1n tontinent there's only '*"t hitch where Jtff Llntl•Y i1 concffne!d -he's been conflMd to a wheelchair for ruOlt ol his 21 years. But for the pe.sl seven years his "''and~Just hu changed him to 1 mac ln motion, to prove to bimlelf that ')O fou r· ~·heeltd handicap would pre· vent him from criss<ros.Ung the U.S.A. or the forests of Wu.tern Canada . ••t fttl aotry for people Who 811.y they never can get away anywhere·,'' said L a n g I e y outatrt\clllnl his t.humb Jlek any ~foottd hitchhiker an Langley, who has been cMp-l_.., '""'!If -.... ,.1, 11 ,.i., add bu. Slvcl -' f poper cl1p1. tttc. In the San Ana. Freeway. Smlfh Corone Mtll. IOI 55.00 L' coordinole color1.. p!ed with mtnfn&lUs since ln-" ._., .w.... -.... ~llMimi~•rw::i~.""· .... •••'"'iii fancy, caD!!I ·Hayward, lits ~~. .--.:.:~mw =n~ft"Aa..~. homebase, llrst oiled hil rl ~ wheelch1ir In 1964 for an iin· pul slvt cross-country journey to New Orleans· with a friend. "ll wa!!I no sweat,'' tit remembered. •·we made It in three days.'' Langley hash i I c hh I 'k ed throua:h every state on the mainland but Vermo-nt, travel- ing with a toolhbnlsh, a bottle of mouthWa!h, and a change. of clothes padding hll ~at. The tanned, !!portshirted voW\g man turns h i s Wheelchairs Into wed vehiclea once a year and , ht goe1 throulh a palr of g1ovts every few weeks to pre.vent blisters. I " ALUMINUM AC . AUTOLITE & CHAMPION H1' )Bit 1dnoturt .;ii ... ,. SCREEN DOOR SPARK PLUGS gfd into Rhode ISIMIO and along th• w1y, 1leeplng I• 2 DAYS '7 88 ONLY 54c abandoned car1 when rides ONLY • aa. Our .... 19.'7 2 Doy1 Only 12 oz. l8 r Pl1nlrr1 Ory Rna~trd Peanut!! RN' a grf'&1 snack! No su1a1r or oil!! u~f'cl 111 procf'11slng. • W'H ll.t: QUANTITll:i U.ST FOCAL PHOTO ALBUMS 2 DAYS ONLY 97c '! 1i" ' . ' . " ' " "'' I• Coast Student Win8 Honors Corona del Mar High School lf'lud•t.e· Catherine M. Eby, dau&ht•r ct. Mr. and Mr1. Rotiert L. Eby, 419 Vitt.ti Bollit.a.· Newport Stach. ·h•1 bttn' iwllirded honon at en- trAnct by Wt11tmont College 1n Saota B1rb.tr1. The honors are bQM on Miss l:by's high acadtmk performance • i Corona· del Mar Hi1h. ' !I • beck, dodglna: yelptn, dogs J DAYS I d d kkl tnt 2000 spinning l"ffl ho1 tovgh, di.-<011 olum inum lro1N , Jmootfi, wtrt few In llC I · O l0"-32"·36"X$0'". Complete Chanje plup for peak pe.rtonnanct", lncreutd powtr, ae-4-gaot drive for fost retritivi~. Cotormatc~ rod ii mode of Buy 81'Vpr~I ~t thl! lO'ffl " diners In nll'll tn1'fnl on rainy with grill end hardware for crlerallon t1nd ga11 mileage. pr. b 1 f'be 1 Kmart dl8oount prlct, ~· ·-1;.ao- • nigh~. pi;h~••:•~":''~'':":· ...... .;.,..,..,..,..,!;::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ... ~'.".".·.'"..,".".'.' ... '~•~•~•~•~''~'"~"':...h~6•1:/~l'~·~Sho~,=p~K:.::m=•~"~•:nd:.:..,.::::l ...... ..:M::ov:·~•n:•:••:h~·=··.·..,;.·: .. :· ... ":::•~ Uingley's modw aperand!.11 •~tn a ruri<>us motorl•I plclu C O $ T A M I S A I h!m up, is te qu ickly squlrm Into the front pat, collapslnr lh• whttlch1lr 1!1d 1towlng II 2200 HARBOR BLVD. ln the back in it!.$ than IWC (at W 11 a on ) minutes. .· . ---- HUNTINGTON BEACH 19101 MAGNOLIA • •• (at G1rfleldl . -· o ,\'j~J~' :.:s::" f!l4C::WI , I I • Jll DAILY PILOT African Trip Set ByAg11ew NAIROBI. KE NYA IU PI J - Vice Presirlent Spiro T. Agnew begins a strictly low-key journey through three African countries s\<1r\;ng S<iturday as part af his round-the-world tour. He will get a friendly recep- tion in Ethiopia , Kenya and the Congo, whose capital was called U!opoldville du r i n g Belgian colonial rule but is now called Kinshasa. Priva1e1y: ho.,.,·ever, some African official<; have criticiz- ed the vice president's advisers of arranging an i!incrary .,..,hich "'ill take him fron1 the African continent almost directly to Portugal. The Black African nations are pledged to seek the lndepend~ncc of Portugal's big African territories. including Mozambique, Angola a n rl Portuguese Guinea On his African travels, Agnew will shake hands and dine with an emperor and two presidents and watch the wildlife of Africa. Bui he will make £cw public addresses during his seven-day journey. His African hosts. have liChcduled low.key programs along his equatorial route. No large or no i s y dernonstral1ons arc likely. nor would they be allowed. lJ.S dipliimatic sources s a i d . Foreign Minister N j fl r o g e Mungai .said ""'e sh a I I \\'elcome him bce«use he is an elected reprc.~e ntative of the An1erican people. Of course. he's v.·elcome." On .July 10 Agnew will n1akc his first landing on the African continent at Addis Ababa. Ethiopia. home of the 41 -na- tinn Organization of African Unity IOAU) a rugged n1oun - lain kingdom of 20 million rul- ed £or the last 40 years by Emperior Haile Selassie The 78 -year-old en1peror. ~·hn prefers the tllle "Lion of Judah·' v.·hn traces his an- cestors back to the Queen of Sheba. will host Agnew at his bufl-r·nlorcd palace 1n the hilly capital \1•hrre scores o I G(JJdsn1ith" and traditu1nal pavcn1cnt-hascd artists offer v.·arcs v. hllr 1·attle and goals roam untrnded. Agn<'v.' WJll probably sec few .o:tudcnl". until now the keenest F1ppnncnts of Scl;iss1e His rc.(!.1n1P 1s ~111! ba~erl nn .:in r labora1e network nr feudal lords who exist by land rent s iinpo.sed nn peasants. Heport s tv.·n weeks ago said 15.000 students had lx·rn rounded up in 1he capi1<il Rfler ;:inli- governmcnt demonstrations. Jn the past 20 years. Ethiopia has received more than $140 million in ll.S military aid, more than half of all its military assistance to Africa in that lime. The 40,000-man Ethiopian Army and Air Jo~orce is U.S. trained and the United St.ales maintains a communications b;ise near Asmara in the north with 3.500 American person- nel. including families. Selassie's christian kingdom Is wedged in between Somalia and the Sudan, Moslem states tacitly aiding two anti-Ethio- pian guerrilla n1ovemenl,, and he will be geld of the con- tinued American s u pp o rt Agnew's viail will symbolize. The American vict>-president will meet another of Africa's "elder statesmen," K e n y a Pr~ident Jo mo Kenyatla, when he lands at Nairobi July 12. The vice presidentiAI parly will occupy three noors of the 17-story Hlllon, N a I r o bi ' .s tallest building overlooking Irle er Africa's c I ea n e 1 I capitals, covered In shrubs and trees. Agnew will meet Kenyatta. 1low-speaking wearer of pin- 1triped suits. during a lunch at litate house. a whi te, baronial building once the home (If British governors. 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'°'-••G TORRANCE del omo fo\h10f" 1quorl! phone 541·6971 ... -- LA CIENEGA lo c•enega <1! 18th \t. pl.on,. 836-7911 NORWALK imper•(l1 ot no•wo!k blvd. onl! 868-0911 --'--·- FULLERTON harbc:ir at orongeth<1rP9 phone 71 .it.879.].500 HUNTINGTON BEACH ed'"3,e' ol h,.och boulevard p one 71 A-892·6611 4 _·, SANTA ANA PANORAMA CITY ROSEMEAD br11tol <11 !ieveriieenlh tob1os or 1oscoe rosemeod blvd. ot s.an b-mord1rio phone .5.it7-t.8Al hone 89.it.8111 freeway -ohone 573.3110 VENTURA CANOGA PARK COVINA 500 )Oulh m•llJ rood toponC flozo borronco ot 1<Hl bt-1 'ln rd;no .it B.5-.5421 642-7.541 phon• 6 .JOOO freeway -phone 966-7A11 --~. ·-· -- • • · 1 J ' I 1 ' I ' -~ DEBUT MEANINGFUL ' Most debut.antes and fathers probahly were surprisl'd at the emptine~~ flf :he building when they arrived at C~lldrf i 's llome Society headquarters in S;i~ta Ana for the annual father-daughter h,ur. There are n& b<ibies in residen t at he adoption agflne}, and the .onl; infants they saw were those specially b1•1ughr in for the tour. ThC' building is onl~ 11 se1 .es ef offices and waiting rooms ril·cd 11,th roys and one small roorn equip1n;d fo·· a \.\'ell baby clinic The drt1n1a thal unfolds al Ciuldri 1f~ Haine Society each day is carr "d or 1n homes and hospitals throughout 1ne tr 1n- !y and.played but briefly in !hr CHS of- fices. The Newporl Harhor dcbula•ilcs ~nd the ir fathers saw the clinic \rh1 re a ie w hilb1es were being checked by doct,,rs, !hr "delivery" room where adopti ve parents meet lhei!' children for the first lime and the playroom whe re olrler children are observer! by rx·vc hia1rl(: gocial 11,orkers and prospective 11dop;11·e parent.~, They saw slides of lhe hard-to-pltice children the society work s 11 ilh ~nd learned of the auxiliaries' SEAHCH program to !'orate families /or tticm. They learned 11! the siruggle a youn~ 11n11·ed mother ha.<; in decid ing ;1hethrl" or not In keep hrr baby and the l'Xten~iv~ counseling services offered by the SO( ·cty t-0 any won1an facing a pr~b!e111 in pregnancy that has to do 1v11h fu1ure plans for her child. Explaining !he role the debu•ante ball has in raising fund s lo keep th1• socirly"s budget in lhe black was Mrs. G:-anl ilrn- dricks. director of vn!unl r0rs \\'ho coordinates the supportive eff{1 :·ts ol the 19 county auxiliaries. Tbe gir ls discovered that the aux- iliaries. through evr.nlc; such a~ lhe debutante ball. supply more than 25 per· cent of the budget for the .sla!e\ii de adop- tion agency. and that there arr on!~ twn f"llher debutante balls given by CHS aux· Jl1aries throughout the state. Through a series of slides thry learnrd \h;,t it costs apprnxin1ately $14110 to 11lare a normnl l"hild, while the cost nf plc1c1n_I( 11 raciallv mixed or med lr'a!lv han- dicapped .chilrl soa rs lo around S4,6Q11. ri1<1n.v new roinm i!mcnts to en·r., \.\'hether for CHS or another rausr pro- bably 11•rre 1nade by the girl~ ~1lent!y during the tour. if the past is 11 n~· guide to lhe pre~ent and future. ·'The.sr gi r'5 ara the future v•orkers." Mr5. Hen rlrick~ s;1id. °'Once they get started you can"t Ii lop them." Purpose of their debut ha s becom e mor e meaningful for Ch ild ren '• Home Society debutantes and th eir fathers after touri ng the headquarters. View in g the weighing of o baby in the well baby clinic are I left to right I Miss Claudio Ann e Carver, Leroy Longhenry Carver and Miss Diane Ruth Barr ett. BEA, ANDERSON, Editor '"~''" Julr '· lt11 ..... IJ Love's Rocky Road Often Dead Ends DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read with in- terest the letter about "The Other WomM." It's time you printed the other side of the story, Ann. There IS one. you know. Perhaps it doesn't CQincide with your concept of morality , but it DOES ex· ist and I wish you"d be fair and print it. Only the Other Woman knows what it's like to be in Jove with a married man who can't (or won't! gel a divorce. I am not only the Other Woman . I al so am a divorcee with three children. In this town I am labeled Br2.lld X. Being the Other \Voman puts me on the outside of everything. but I have an added stigma which is even worse. Last year I gave birth to his out-Of-wedloc k child. J've known for six rocky yea rs how wrong and fu tile !his affa ir is hut I loved him deeply and l let my heart rule my head. No:-v I am hopelessly trapped . I can't lead a. norma l life. People whi sper behind niy back. No decent nian wnuld consider asking me out. Very few v.·ome n will associate with me. I am hungry for adul t company. If it v.·eren't for my kids, I'd lose my mind. So you see. Ann . \Ve are not all tramps and she-devils. \Ve are real people who took a wrong turn in the road and ended up on a -DEAD END STREET DEAR O.E.S.: Thank ynu for writing. It 's too late to offer ad\'lce, dear, so I of- fer you my condolences. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am wr iling lo complain about your frivolous reply to lhe short-hai red 1vaitres.s wh o con1plained because she has to wear a hairnet while a Jong-fiaired fello w who works 11·ith her docs not Your answer was funny but not helpful. JI also displayed a wealth of ig· norance about the health codes and con- su1ner protection laws across the United States. ALL food handlers arc rcqwred by Jaw to control their hair in a way that \\'ill ;i ssure the consumer that hair will be kept out of the food and off lhe contact surfaces. Since the Mvent of long hair styles on n1ales ii has become incre;isingly difficult for operators of food service establishments to convmce ALL petl!IOO- f?l that they must protect the corusumer1 against hair in the food, using whatever means necessary to do SQ. Your aruwet didn't help. -C.B.S., DEPT, OF HEALTH, MINNESOTA DEAR C.B.S.: Thanks for lbe come-up- pance. I deserved IL 1£ the law 1ay1 hairnets for ever ybody, regardle11 or BU". that se ttles It. Come to think of It, i'd rather see a feUa in a soood than a hair In my soup. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband had a brief and unhappy marriage when he was much younger. They had one child 11 months after the wedding, so you see it was not a shotgun affair. The problem is that my mother-in-law has an enormous pi cture of my husband'• son ln her living room. It is prominently displayed l.'.lld impossible to miss. Since it is her only grandchild I can see why she would be proud of him . Soon 1 will be bringing my family to his mother's place, and I.hey do not know about this child. I never felt it was anyone's businesii to n1en1ion his former marriage. I realize the picture must stay. I have no right to ask my mother-in-law to remove it. flfy husband has told me I can say whatever 1 wish. CM you help me fi nd the words? -NE\V ORLEANS DILEMMA DEAR New: A glrl ~ho marrle5 a di\·~rced man should tell her family that he had a previous marriage -and they cerlainly should be Wormed Of any children that resulted from that mar· riage. I urge you to tell them BEFORE they see the picture and ask, "Who fl that?" -or you might be revtvtni 10me fainted relatives In your motber-ln-law'1 house. Pf anning for Parenthood: A Perilous Task By JO OLSON Of lllt DlllY !'!111 ~11•1 J1';: h;1rd In p1a n the s.i•·~ of inur f;:in11ly 1hese da.vs, ..,,·1th erolog · cx- JX'fl'i ;ind soc1olo g1~ts sho1 1.1 ng their throrics fron1 opposite eP~S o'. the rooni. If you ha1·r. a l;irgt fa ·n1l .1-, \'oll ;i1·r o\·erpopulahng 11c 1~orld , ;nrl if rou don '1 have an ch 11rlrrn )'OU are ~elf1s!1 II you li;ive only nne •'11ld you nre li~priv 1ng hun or t1'e J'+Y 11r sharing. All thr lhrories sound l)la1 s1hle 11nd logical. so who 's rigll'? :n tile opinion of ,\fr. 'td ~trs. Erwin .J. Keup of Costa ~l sa who have eigl1t children and 'Ol:ldn '! gi ve up any of them. 1111 s1Le flf their family isn't a Lhrea\ bl I an asset lo the world. '"I hope the children all u~I nakf' 11 conlribution to the ~ot ' ." ~1_r!<. Keu p said ... We're t(J'11lf: raise them as good citizens." J The Keups, bolh '! 11 e g e graduates. met at a mh r while she ;1·as attending Alver11. ~1Ueg~ ln ri.1Hwaukee and he w1. in law school al Marquette. They feel that it is "ur o Goti '' hov.• large a family is. "I:~ -eally you r own business hr-'.~ ·nan.v children you have." M1· ~eup 5aid. rela ting that they ~r·:>1ved son1~ population control l~cr ature In the nia il when they nlj"i~1-d to Costa Mesa from Pennsyl1fL!~. HAS REWARDS Though coping \\•it h ~ ];it'°'e lami· Iv is tiring. 1\ has 1ts re11;ird~. ~rnong ;1•hirh are coml'mi-'1nship and a ready supply or ~1y:natt's for the youngest children The Keups try to do sorrdh1:ig AS 11 family almost every 'cr·kend , 11 nd Erwin and Mary try lo ..ingle each child out for attentitl'l lif often as possible. Gcllin~ awa.1 W(c!h.f':r 1~ importanl for them 11~ I ·rou ple loo, the v fetl. For Mary, "''ho ls frorr I family -,· -,-i-- l ' ol eight., her children arr an e~­ pre$sion of hrrself. '"t\1.v farnil.~ is me." she says, For En1·1n . an nn)y child, tun 1n~ ri~11! children 1~ a lrcn1c11r1ous r~· )X'rlrnrc ··1 til1nk I rnlssrd quite a b11 b.v bring an onl.v rh1ld ."' h<' rrlaterl_ "Jt IO(lk n1e :;;rvcral ~·ca rs lnngrr In adjust tn lifr. Tl1r.v"re niueh belier adJ11Sted than I 11·a~ ·· The eight Jilt Ir Keups ;111 ;ire sold on their brothers rind s1slrrs. 100 Chns. lJ. says. "Yo11 rlon'I i::rl lo!Y-:'ly." Ellen. 11. rn mn1cn!s th;it thcrr are n1 nre pmple a1·ound ..,,·hen snn1ething happens. Cra ig. 10, finds tha t there arr more pCQple to challenge and play games with. Kenny, 9. likes lo live in a big hou ~c and havr some!>ne 10 ~hare ""'ilh. ~faricay. II. thinks their f11mi!y trips are fun, lhough her ''hrnther always beats her up." K11ren. 7. likes the abundantt of playmatrs hut not the teasing. :ind Elaine, 5. likes the whole famil_I'. Peter, 16 n1n11th .•. enjoys the al- lenllon or all his brothers and sisters. DISADVANTAGES The disadvantages nf a large family are evident: twelve mouths lo feed every night (Erwin's father and Mary·s sister live ;1•ith I.hem \: 10 pairs of feel to buy shoes for. and lhe limitation on en-lertainment.· Biil, the advantages far flU lweigh t.he disadvantages for the KeuPfi . Erwin sums up their feelings when he sa,vs, "! would do it all over a,gain." Tn h<ivt> lhree children "'as the initial decision of ri.fr and Mr<:.. rit .. who bolh also are co J leg e graduates, After I.heir fir st child was s. and severs! efforts to conceive fa iled, they really began to examine lhf' reasons they wanted twn additional children. A book titled "Thr Only Child," bl' !K Nnrme Cutter and l)r, 7'"1rholas J\foseley helped di spell tt!e myth thal the only child has tn be poorly ad justed . The only chilcf,-with proper parental guidance, can develop in- dependence. c r ea I i v i l y and respo nsibility, the same trait., usually found in the oldest child in a fam ily. l\1rs. ~t R~latcd . "F'ranklin Roosevelt , Robert Lo\Jiit ~Levenson <111d Allx'rr Einstein al! were only children " A single child ha~ !o put. up w11h a certain amount of lonellness. h11t ~1r~ J\1. Irie.~ to remedy I.his by 1naking sure her daughtrr alwa,vs lias enough pl<i.vn1a!rs. "Yo~ ran send tncm home when they get out of hand ," she addW. r.tORE Tlr.fE Adva11tages for lhe parent are t.hat they can devote more lime, energy and money to a single child. "The mo!her can do morr. for herself,.. Mrs . M. said. "Career women often have one child. ··l\Iore people should consider a. one child family ," Mr s. M. cnn- <'ludcd. Wilh the post.war babies now giv1n.e; birth 1J1emselves. she !eels popul ation is out of control. Another coast couple feels the population explosion is at the root of all pollution problems. They love children so much Ibey lren't going to have any at all. Mr . and Mrs. C., also college graduates. began studying lhe pollution problem seriously about four years ago, then arrivf'd at a firm decifjon to refrain from having'@ldren. "There are Sig-alerts now and soon there will be no square of ground with trees for children to appreciate," Mrs. C. stated. "All 11nimals control population -why shouldn't we ?" !\f r. C, from a gheuo area or Chicago. haS ..:;een lhe result of too many people 1n too small a place, and is influencing many students in his cl asses 1n crisis biology lo con· si der the: im p licat i on11 or ()Verpopulal ion. ISee PERILOL:S TASK, rage l'J ------.! ---- ' _,..,_._ __ _ ----. - j - I .. I l ' --' -··-· SHARING PRIDE IN MARRIAGE, ROSES Mr. 1nd Mrl. Walter Mertz path Anniversary Pair Honored by Cards A shower or cards from Community Church Congrega- tlon and an unusual greeting from "around the \Oo'Orid" marked the 60th wedd ing an- niversary of t.fr. and Mrs. Walter Mert.z of Corona de! Mar. A stewardess neighbor. Miss Charlotte Farrell, brought the honored couple a card signed by her passengers on a 747 flight. representing most of the 50 states, J apan, 1'hai!and, and several European coun- tries. ri.1rs. P.1erlz isn't sure what the gift symbol is for 60 years of marriage. "Besides we were engaged for th r'ec and a ha!f years before t.hat while l finished nurse's !rain ing. Marriage just !akrs a lot of love and shar- ing," she said. Betrothal Announced During Buffet Party The couple was niarried in Pomona nfter coming to California in 1905 from New ll11mpshire and Ohio. They have had the same house wltlt a "pride and joy" rose garden in Corona del !\-tar for 25 years. During & cocktail buffet for 50 guests in the Redlands home of Mr. and r.trs. Hov.·ard JANE SIEVER From Poge 13 J. Siever. they announced the engagement of their daughter. Jane t.fercedes Siever of Balboa to Richard Starbuck Robinson Jr. of Lido Isle, Nev>'port Beach. Miss Siever is a graduate of Redlands High Schoo! and earned her bachelor of fine arts degree ?.t the University of Southern California where she pledged Pi Beta Phi. Her fiance, son of Mr. :end fl.1rs. Richard S. Robinson of Flintridge and Ne w p o rt Beach, is a graduate of La Canada HiRh School and USC '1'hcre he rec('ivcd a BS in business adn1inistralion f'J"ld affiliated \Vith Phi Ka ppa Psi. lie is a member of the Newporl !!arbor Yacht Club. Ne\\'porl Athletic Club and lhc 1...-0s Angeles Athletic Club. A DE'c. 4 wedding in the Redlands Firs! Presbyter ian Church is being planned. i\1rs. Mertz's pastime is n1gmaking and her l'iusband , a retired rancher and fru it Jl:TOwer at I.he Riverside ex· pcri mcnta l station, is .. stilt happiest when he is out in the garden wilh the hose." They are the parents of \Yaltcr r.1crtz Jr.. \Ya sco; .James Mertz, Upland: George Mertz, tugboat seaman on Pacific routes, and the late Mrs. Louise Ramirez. Tl1e re arc nine grandchi ldren and fh·e great-grandchildren. • • • Perilous Task They advocate abort ion <ind tl'.'vcrsal or 1ncomr tax deduc- 11on rules. ond wnte to com· ranies \\·hose C'o1nmcrc1als show large families. Though !11r. and fllrs. C. feel that having large families is great for some reasons, the time Oas come lo change. "\\'e really believe everyone has to do something about the population problem and it has to start with us." f ive years ago, Stanford University's Dr. Paul Erlich started an organization to fight the popu lation po\lut1on problem. Zer o Popula lion Growth. A spokesmen for the Orange County chapter la 8 r i a n 11yres. county coordinator- elect who reiterates t be philosophy of Mrs. C. so much for babies we'd like them to be able to have one or t\Oo'O of their own . ··some pe<iple now are r~st r !ctlng thrmsclves frnm being grandparents.· he said , ZPG believes th;it there is a rea l correlation b c t we e n population and pollution. MARNE MILLER Winter Rites Set "\\le are i n cf f i c i en l ecologically. We follow the sa me ecology rules that other species do. bu t y,•e are more A \'.'inter wedding is being destructive to I h e en-planned by P.farne Miller and vironmenl,'' Myres said. Robert Michael Jlenstridge, so n of Mr. and Mrs Fred V. If everyone had two children lienstrldge of Huntington or les~. lhe population of the Beach. United States would level off Their betrothal was an· by 2025 or 2030 . "The family nounct'd by her parents. Mr. sn;e should be limited to an and Mrs. Max ~lil!er , during a aver.:ige of two. Some people patio brunch at the ir Ne\Oo·port should have more, but most Beach home. shouldn ·1." P.1iss P.til ler was graduated Club Business w en Not on Perking Vacation Or<111nge Coast club members and individuals are varying regular meetings and in-- stallaUons with "laiy days" parties and vacatlon trips. Mesa Rebekoh s Visilors are welcome for a noon card party on Thurs- day, July 15, spon50red by Mesa Rebekah Lodge 402. A pink lemonade picnic luncheon in Odd Fellows Temple, Costa Mesa, will precede the games. Further information may be obtained by calling Mrs. Henry WedesweUer. Triple Links The Cost.a Mesa home of outgoing president Mrs. David Orr will be the scene of in- stallation ceremonies 'tor new officers on Monday, July 26. A potluck dinner at 6 p.m. will precede the installation, Mrs. Henry Wedesweiler will Your Horoscope direcl. Incoming olfi~rs ln- ctude I.he Mmes . Albert Ou:on, preaident; Roy Coe, vice president; M a I c o Im S. Overton. secretary, a n d Andrew 1...-0lmaugh, treasurer. Irvine Juniors The Irvine Junior Woman's Club board met in the home of Mrs. Gerald Muu.y. Mrs. Rober l Livingston. youth chairman. announced the gift or $110 to I.he Tustin Drug Rap Center and Mrs. Roland Buck , conservation chalnnan, told of the delivery of M pine trees to O'Neill Park to aid in a restoration program. The budget for the coming year was submitted f o r discussioo. Hol iday Trip Vacationing at the Santa rarbara Biltmore for a sum- er holiday were Newport • Virgo: Changes Due, Appreciate Services SATURDAY, JULY 10 By SYDNEY OMARR Two majo r savings and loan associations in Southern California · provide t heir customers wll.h reg u 1 a r monthly astrological forecasts which r prepare. I consider this not only a personal ac· colade but yet another in- dication of the continuinJI:" growing pop u I a r i I y of astrology in all areas AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 • Feb. 18): Take initiative, begin project. Welcome the new. Brighten surroundings. Enter- tain and be enlertained. Stress individuality, Lead rather than follow. You're going places. PISCES (Feb. 19-!11arch 20 ): Remember promises made t1> one confined lo home, hospi tal. You work exceptionally well now with special groups, organitations. Intuition ls working overtime . Beach resldenls Mr. and Mrs. Ri chard Stoneman and Mr. and Mrs. Roberl Hagland. Holy Euchar ist "Zero Popul•lion Growth ls not againat babies -we are. Myres. v.·ho is department from N<'wport Harbor Hi gh CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ch111irman of biology el Sch.,ol. attended the Uni vcrsi· 19): New approach l o: Cypress College, said he and ty of Oregon and the Universi-budgetry matters a pp e. a r s I his wife really had to think ty or Nevada and now Is a stu. necessity. Trim none~sentlals.[ about whether or not lo eve.n dent. al Califo rnia St a t e Your Innate sense of liming ha ve one child. Collegl' at Fullerton. Her will ser;e especially well in Luncheon Focuses On Health He fttls the population pro-£lance is a senior al CSCF. this 1.rea. No to extravagance. blem will be solved either byrr::;;;::'.;::::=::::;::;::;:;:::;:;;;;;;:;:;::;::;::;::;::;:====::;11 starvation. d;sease. peslHence HONG BONG or an Intellige nt means. •·we need a "'hole new outlook on limiting in life, in· Vibrant heallh through good eluding such things as rlune t ating habits is the topic lo ~ buggies. motor scooters on lhe !l'potlighted by the South Coast'\ desert and aluminum cans. Christian Women's Club for its "But. 111 will be zero luncheon on Tuasd1y .. July 1:1. any11.·ay if the population Members and guests are 1n-d()('sn't stop." vited to gather at 12 · 15 p.m. in ~----=========; Ben Brown 's resta urant. South Laguna . When You'rr Well I t 's Always Spri n,qlime will be the ttUt for a lalk by lwo nnlural k«I~ expcrti;: who also will disUJs~ nnturnl \"itamins and ~~£e~:~:._ .... --- KIDS LOVE UNC LE LEN Soturdoys in Th e DAILY PILOT CUSTOM tAllOlll & IHllTMAICUI MMANDO' IN IANTA .. HA 0.•• 10.000 S.tltllH c..,.,_ -100% Ow_ .... lelto,__ 2 SUITS s135 l>O\ll ll i1111 Plll-(nlMI IUH """ s,,,,,l ,•1<• .. 1. Dev-lo (~II ,., •• S J !I" .... ~tit ••... •• l•u•••I~ ....... lj "'·~~··· .......•• s:i. w .. 1 •.•••• 11 S•lr•• ..... ~ ••••• 1!1 .,. ... •• ., .. •• • ~Iv• du•f & '"'''"' 11•°'1 Ol~~lt l•lh 1 .,U.~lo 1-,a...-.-... ...... SALi JULY f·11·11 ......... _ SAVI U, TO 50 "• ... ......, ftl-c...-"'-...Ito. ~ •. si.c'" S•lm. 1.000 fllotlSI ••111'11 l•lllCI •WI '" ANY SIZI • 4 WltK ONVflY • Fiii AllllArtONI • fAST ,ATMINTl e FRIEND OR SPOUSE? -A p sychiat rist o (for~ advice on how to remain friends -even though married. e NO COOKS ALLOWED -Jl.·lerv Griffin says his "'ilc, Julann. who won't al!O\v hinl to hire a cook for her, "cooks like a pioneer lady" to pro-- vide plenty of food for a family that loves to eat. All Coming Sa ~urd ay . Ill the ~----• LEGAL NOTICE ,.------ .. LEGAL NOTICE -_ ....... . .. • Busines s Not Jolted By Quakes Engineers for the project have been a \Va re or ''shrinkage stress·• in the North Ka iser Tower since May 1970. However. the most recently discovered cracks ac- cording ro c n g i n c c r 1 n g estimates, were caused or ag- gravated by thl' I a r g e February 9th Los Angeles County earthquake. Shrinkngc occurs when nc\1'- ly joined support colun111s and beams cool and contrael after cx1ensivc wel ding has ex- panded the steel. The la1cst cracks \l'hich need ultra-sonic testing cquipn1cnt !o detect the111 "·ere found during a routine city inspection. Flo\'1er Street L1d . the ror- poration constructing I h c l<1rgcsl buildings 1n Southern Ca!ilornia. says the design or the buildings allowed and compcns:'lted for such flav•s :ind .. the cracks are nol critical to the structur;1l in- tegrity of the buildings."' ll ow ever. engineers a1 the prnjecl said it was for tunate th al the cracks v.· er c discovered because i! cou ld have had bearing nn the tov.·er·s abH1\y to \Ylthstand earthquakes had they not been corrected A quick check \\"llh proposed tcnan1s planning 10 occupy 5pace in the offi ce plaza v•luch 1s still scheduled to be com- plc1cd this year express con- 1 ulencc in the n1odcrn tech ni1111cs pf skyscraper con- ~1ruct1on. F"rld.,, Ju ly 9, 1971 DAILY PILOT JlJ 0i'7ersity Brings St•~~ess Atlautic Research 0 'Ve rconies Aerospace Cut Jolts £arly planning for diversification LS the key to the "how swttl it is" song oow being sung by a Costa Mesa aerospace firm which is reporti ng increased en1ploy- men\, new business prospects and forecasts of substantial revenue boosts. Atlantic Researcht~ys1c1ns Division vn Harbor Boulevard In Costa !ifesa began to diversify from a one producl hne con1pany two years before thl" aerospace depression. ac- cording to R. G. Vande Vrede, v1ce president and general manager. lie said the btg break came in 1962 when the division was .. selected lo be \~ prime con- tractor ror a s1gn1f1cant por- tion of the Defense Depart- 1nenl advanced balllstic reen- lry system. This progran1 studies at- n1osphcric reentry phenomena via solid propellant boosler vehicles Iha! carry payloads !'.Onie 200 miles above the earth and b;ick again at velocity speeds exceed i n g 22.000 feel per st'<'ond. To <late, syslen1s division has launched more than l 2 5 Athena booster vehicles v.·ith a reha bihly rate exceeding 93 percent. Ulilizing the s y s I e m s technology gained rron1 the Alhena and other aerospace - -_::i. SUMMER JOB -Jeannelle Tapscott fright), a \.Vest- n1inster High School senior this fall. learns the job of proof operator for part-ti1ne e1nployn1cnt at Security Pacific Bank's Beach & Edinger Branch in f-Juntington Beach \vhile Proof Operator l\·larlcnc Kl in t\vorth looks on_ Bank, Schools Joi1l In New Work Project The Huntington Beach Union High School D1stricl and Security Pacific N a I i on a I Bank ha ve joined efforts 1n rt work -rxperiencc p r o gr a m \\"hich is paying ,,rr surnmcr jobs. CallC'd ''Exploralory \Vnrk Experience Prograrn." thr program began in the spring seniester where students in- illally parllcipated 1n a l\\'O- hour bank orientation session and nine (\\'O hour obscrva- llons al various branch posi- tions. preparing the student for a cont'i'nlratcd 30 hours of 1 raining <ti h1.~ desired posi- tion . According to school and bank olfrcials. the rrogra1n presents an opportunity through \1•hi{'h ~halcnts can lrarn business ''fro rn the in· s1dr'' and businrss r;in lcaln ~tudents needs ;:ind vie ws. l\fOSf Of thOSt' II' h 0 particr1>aled in thr spring serncstcr pha~c of the progra111 arc nov.· t'Ootinuing in sumnier jobs v.·i th various \Vest County branches or Securi1y Pacific Bank. 6 3 bui progra ms. the division has stepped into other fields. Sev~ral i11verttd and con- ventional vee hulled fiberglass and aluminum boats were designed which subsequently led to production contract!! from the U.S. Navy for riverine assault and target boats. Cu rrenl a 42-foot com· bination firE' and harbor police patrol boat is being con· structed ror the City of San Diego. To help with environmental problems. the division has constructed and is now marketing both portablr and fixed electronic devices which measure pollutants in diesel -. smoke. An oil containment and recovery system has been designed to help clean up ocean and harbor oil spills. Further dlverslflcation has been 1nade into the expanding field of data handling equip- ment and with the production of pyrotechnics and related ordnance materials. Tne division has added more than two hundred people to its staff since the first of the year and now employs more than 800. The impact on employ- 1nent is predicted to surge upward and more Orange Cou nty residents could be ad- ded to the payroll within the next six months, Vande Vrede said. ATLANTIC RESEARCH EXPANDS INTO NON-AEROSPACE PROJECTS Combin•tion Police and Fire Patrol Boat for San Diego Port Distrld Western Business Opti11iistic State Unemployment Rate in Drop; Statistics Encourage Reag·a1i Aides Not si ni.:e 1955 h a v" businessmen in the western United States been more op- timistic about third quarter business activity than they are today, according to the latest Western Business forecast survey taken by l h r Prudential Insurance Com- pany. When Prudential a s k e d businessmen in the \Y est to compare the i r anticipated business activ ity for the third quarter of 1971 with this year·s second quarter activity. 72-percent said they thought their third quarter business would be better, 13 percent though it ""oufd stay the same, and 15 percent foreJ:lw a decrease. The 72 percent figure is the highest degree or optimism expressed for any I h i r d quarter economic a c t i v i I y since 1955, when 77 percent or the businessmen polled in the \\'est looked for an increase Jn the Southern California· Arizona-Nevada region businessmen are less op- timist ic. Sixty-nine percent of the businessmen polled in the region anticipate an increase in their economic activity during the next three n1onth.~ when compared to the pasl three. v.·hile 11 percent expecl business to be the same and 20-percent look for a decline. An1ong the Industries polled by Prudential. finance is the n1ost optimistic. Ninety-four percent of those surveyed in this industry look [or their third q u a r t e r busi ness to equal or excet:'d that experienced during the same perid last year. . .. ' Cal ifo rnia's unemployment rate edged do\.\'Tl tv.'o-\enths of one percent in June to 7.2 per- cent, the lowest rate in three months, a top Reagan UCI Offers Five Classes In Business Rl?gistralion is now being accepted· at UC Irvine Ex- tensions for five classes in Business Administration and five in Computer Science, all of which begin July 12. The classes will be held on t.1onday and Thursday even- ing-' from 7 to 10 p.m., July 12 through August 23 , al the Buena Park High School and UC Irvine. Bu s i n es s Administration courses offered are "lntroduc· tion to Operations Research'' taught by Paul B. f\ioranda , Ph.D.: "Business Statistics" by Joseph C. Napoli. t-.1.S.: and "Leadership Principles and Practice'' by Jack Little, Ph.D. Two conet1rrent courses are offered in Organization and ril anagement Theory. one or Introduction to Computers and Information Processing v.·ilt be taught by L e e Hausman. i\ol.8.A.; Problem Solving with Computerli by J ohn H. Gissel, M . S . ; "Information Structures'' by Em1net A. Rixford. M.B.A.: "Comiler Construction" by Larry II. Canter and .. Systems ~lethodology .. by Francis F. Martin. 1\1 .A. For further information. call the UC Irvine Extension Information Office. 833-5414. ;:., '• . • • ' ' • ' • ., • • > Adm In isl ration official reported today. The official, Al an C. Nelson. director of the State Depart- ment or Hu man Resources Developnienl, who issued !he monthly state employment and unemployment statistics, said, howe ver, "wr still can't predict a definite dov.'Tllum in Newport Fir1n to Share In Huge Alaska Project A pre-planning study contract for a huge Anchorage. Alaska convention and sports compl ex, civic center, library and recreationa l facilities hove been av.'arded to a nationally known architectural-engineering firm whose v.·estem region- al headquarters are in Newport Beach. Chuck Lowery, spokesman for Ellerbe Associates, 2182 Dupont Drive. said his firm, v.•hose headquarters are in St. Paul , 1\-linn .. has already begun studies on the project and phin to present inilia l reports to the Ahiska legislature for review by mid-Deceniber. No price lag has yet been put on the project. but ac- cording to Roberl E. Sharpe, Anchorage city manager. it will be among the largest civic bu ilding projects ever under- taken in the 49th stale. Ellerbe Architecls·Engineers associated firms are J\·lc- f:ntire and Pcndcrghi\Sl Architect~ of Anchorage, and Econ- omic Research Associates of Los Angeles. Laguna Ma11 Gets Honor u n e 111 r Io y me n t, but U1e statistics are encouraging." Nelson said the unemploy- ment rate for both April and t-.lay v.·as 7.4 percent. 11e said HRD·s latest survey sho w ed that, while unemploymenl rose by 65,00I) belween fl.lay and J une to 669.000, employment rose 83.000 to a total civilian employment of 8,128,000. T'he lotal labor force, he ad- ded, consisting of the employed and the unemployed looking for work. w a ~ 8.797.000. up fror 8,648,000 in J\1oy . Nelson s:iid the tota l labor fnrce in June 1970 wa~ fl .734.000: and unemployment in June 1971 \\'llS up by 126,000 over the June 1970 level. ' ' The over·the-mnnlh In · rrease i n unemployment betv.·een May and June wa~ less thaJ1 usual for lhi~ period," Nelson said. ''The typical increases in unemp\oy- rnent ainong s l u den t s, graduates, and summer job !'ieekers was partly offsel hy a reduction in the numher or in- dividuals a p p I yin g for unemployment i n s u r a n c e benefits. The California Association of Life Underwriters v.·hich represents over 8,700 life and health insurance professionals around thr state. has elected ~L E. Thompson. CLU, of Laguna Beach, president-elect for 1971-72. A member of the CALU long Agriculture accounted for the largest employment in-range planning committee, he rrease in June, Nelson said. has just completed a term as followed by trade. government Vice President f o 11 owing and services. Thompson is manager of the Life Insurance Department of R. A. Rowan and Co.. Los Angeles based general in· surance company. He entered the life insurance field in 19'16, and has worked primarily in Los Angeles and Orange coon· ties. duties a~ treasurer of the He said the usual May-Jun.11 association. He has also serv-f'Xpansion in transportation and utilities "was restrained, ed as a regional vice president in part because of ti trade and president or the Los dispute.'' Angeles Life Underwriterslpi __________ ;;; Association. An active civ ic lea der. he is presently a director of the Florence Crillenton Home of Orange County and I he California Division, American Cancer Society. ' • 10°/o NNN CARE FREE LONG TERM LEASE ' • .. •, I Y Comp•ftY ,,.r1IMI (lllitl ,19,00I M t1lS .... •II ell~ 11111:11. 17141 ,42-0590 • •• ' . -,. > . ' ' • . , • .,1 The Big M -Mutual Savings offers the nation's highest rate on Insured savings with 1 choice of 4 Insured guaranteed.to-grow savings plans, Including 6% (SS,000 minimum, 2 to 5 years); 5%% ($1 ,000 minimum, 1to5 years). Equally important, The Big M carea enough to give you very personal Hrvlce. I FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX with ......... of u.soo.. ...... I Mutual Savings eoronade1Moro111ce: 2H1 Ea11eo11t Hlghwey/11~10 11'<1 lo•" ~l1t1on Other olllces In Covina, West Arcadia, Paaadena and Glendale ...----... .., --··---··---.,_, ... ----~ ... -,. .. ~ ~cX ··~ -r-• --· --. ' _.. -• l } -. I I I • J ~ .... _ J t D.lll V PILDT LEGAL NO'nCE "ui. "1CTITIOUI IUSIMll'i MAMI 11'AftMawt ~-'°4-11111 ~· .,. 11161 ... M lMU '' l"OW ll Ol!Hll l.t.ll'.I. l&JI l'rl"C I t. .... CMI• M.tw C1lll nt:lt s Fr1dar J~!y q 1~71 Wall Street Chatter OVER THE COUNTER '--'.,,... lllliW ... ttlW ... 111 ...... II •HN~lmtt.i)' t AM. ,,.,.. l't.UO "ric• .. Mf ilKlflN relf I tr Ml rllUI' mtrlc .. lfll •• (ln>tn .. _ NASO Listings for Thur•d1y, July 8, 1971 C I W!Jrtf<lnt•Oll J r 'ltJI l'rt"Cll LIM ( .. !. MeN Ctllt '1tJi l 11rlftw M WOl1fl"'9'1en ?I.JI "''"'l'lllll~~~ ..... ~ .......... llllllllllll'i•11 ........ lll .. llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll .................................... lllllllll ...... llllllllllllll l •M Coilll MIM (1111 '1UI. Thi• 11o1t.1M•• 1, w 1 ... """""'"'•., , .. tl!'W YORK IUPI ) L"'llloll 1 1 ,,,....111•• 1..-v A J<IW VOJtK IA"l l•"lt9 • I 1"11 •u1 Ru t* •~•£IP•• e• h"' u ," nk (1> .. • .. ... l 11rl-W ... lll!!W~ )j -T~• /(II twl"" •I liui 1 F •IV. ~1 "!I FHI 1\~ I ,. E bt ~>>I '\., I , F n~ln El "'''' ,, .. ....,..., 1190 w"' "'• <-~~ !'Ummer ra y should • hf'"rn ~ ., _ ••~1'"11 21 .. 21" cv" '""' 10 to• e1c:1. 6• 111o ,.., " " e ~'"T • • • • 8•~·· MO n: ,,<(,fl•-.. , ... I e O(" lovd '10 .. ~ "'"" 1r .. ~£~~;;~~;:.~~ .'.~ E~ :;~~~~ ""1~~:: ~i~;:·,::'.~f !~~~"tf '.!~ ~~ 11:1:11: .:;; :i~ 1~:;~~ iE ii: Ii.;.};~ C<.lmpa.ny says lhe tn " I on.:.. • '"" 11r1c" 1l<a l'-O••, l'a ,t }.,,. i:::-:•:, 11; ~ ... ~' &""ic: ~•'c LEGAL NOTICE " 11\rl "'n-rr1ou1 1ut1"1s1 ltAMa if.llTIJll!a .. T "'' .. tel-... ,.., .......... """~ C O"MATO .. 1.0l'tS "' C..-.... S Call• MtW C• ,.,..,11 Ch1rl*> G 0 1..,110 uu (...-.><:• '°II« (el I MU.I C• l'°'n I Tl\ 1 bu1!nau • M l,.. c-..ti.o I)• 1~ I"" y eu•I C G 01,,..., Th I Olflfn'•nl I Ml w !fl "" C 1rt: ol 0<111" Coun y O<> J .. 1., I • lttt't' J 11.-.rt•n O.vrv C ork J'ublll,...,, Ori n.. C1>101 Do ., " .., Jul• t !A rl )II t7 Hll 1 LEGAL NOTICE f 1111' ,!CTIT OU~ I U5 l<fS5 1<.llJlllE ST .. TfMIEl'tT T"t '" ""' nt ~ ><>n> 1 • 110 nt tlu1 nt >1 •> C"l KON,t. COM"'*'NY 111, Wt i ( 0 NtwPOrl l••t" WllM It SW•"" ·~ .. ., n1 Sin~ A"f Co I Co A Se 1 tn 17'lil l u•1 '"'no Ct T"I• 1>u1 .,.,. • ~ n1 tanovt to b• • "'""" .,, ~ w I•"' 11 s'"'"" rn 1 >U •m~n! fllHI '"' h '"'' C • ~fl 0 •~111 Counv"" Juv !ly l•t • J !la QI •n 00PU Y "" """ >l>«I O eng• t""' 0 1 v JvlY I 6 13 lO !11 LEGAL NOTICE , ... l)l "1CTl'f10US IUSll'tl55 lllil•Mf 5TA'ff:MINT c ... "'" . " Cfl<m v '"' .. lo ""'l"G Pe 10<> 1 ~o nt oua ""'' GLOIE HEilt"lD l:IO Wti !11• SI M l Co> 1 M101 Co 11> n a 11,21 Or1M f Co11t "ub( '" ... CDm .. 1nv I (I '"'" I Co """'on )lO W•• llV ''1'tt! COl!I Mt11 C1ll!e n 1 ttl17 Th\ tuslnt •• I• b<olng con<lvt t.i I>• 1 C"'P«t !lon J"(I( It CURLEY V Cf P H don! t n<I Gtne •I M1ntto Tll!t 1111....,f nl t td "' ti\ In~ Covn y (Irk cl 0 1n9~ Coun •on Junt l 9 1 BY lt•er V J MtOOO• Oe~u v Covntv Cit ~ il'u' 1hH O 1n1>< CM• Ju"t 11 1nd Ju V I I 16 '" " LEGAL NOTICE , 11U4 il'ICTITIOUS IUSIHlfi' N"MI ST.t.flME"T "' ''"' '"' "' -"' .......... ,. Oil"' b.r.i ""' .. SOUTH 011.t.NGE SUPPLY 11?0.l M ft tdv Crrl1 F01m1n V t •v Ct It n t S•ut11 Ori n .. SuPI>" ""' .., • t<t A. C1 '"'" t Co"° t on ll~l M Ii <1• C •<If F"""'' n Vt •• C• 1n n 1 Thi• l>ul ,.... I tondvcltd bT I ttl( -•llDf' tmu V HotO P •• dt n Tiii• 1 tt...,en w~~ I t d w II ht Covn ~ Clerk ot Ortn'1t (O<.tnt\' on Ju v 6 "" "ubll•"ed 0 •"II* ((>Ill 0. Iv "' o Jl,llv l ll?l.)01'7 1!!007 LEGAL NOTICE ~ 111'1 , CTIT OUi IUSll<lfSS NAMI Sf.t.TEMfNl T"lf to!"'"' n~ ~• ..,n, • • doln• bU. ntl> .. JOHN V4CHT """"'"' ' ~ ... OLEX~"! !N!U"°&.NCE I •0 Newpo• "' ,..,. ,, Jllolln I Ol••tY IU ~•n I '>ti H-oorl I••<" C•! fo n t '7.16.0 Th• bu$ln•~• I bt n; conoucioo b• an In<! •ldu•I J ""n I O L••~Y Thll 1t1t1mfnl U ed w 1' "" C t r• el 0 •"'' ClllJ" • "" Jv • l y l 111V J llo•ra1 Of\ Ot PVl'I Clo k (oun y ' " CouNY l'ub 1""" O onw ("'"' Ot Y Juv • 1• 73 .)() l•I LEGAL NOTICE f tlU ll'tC TITIOU5 II.IS loll1' H"M• l f.llliMENl dicators a.re 1n an oversold 11 1~ • "°'' 1 "lltk " • JS""»" g•• n 1" ~ 1 E••'o " • ,,.. c;.,. 11. e. •E"' 1s li"U"'I°""' fl lt<. 1,,. •lu• c: '''''~e11u•• 0 1 11"" i,Guo11 cood1llon for lhe first ltm• In Hot' "' n " 100• ,..,. 1'4> "11 o.co 11 11,, 111. e 1, '"" , .. , , G111 1 1 MS O !II<> U 4.i ... 8ttdon I "' I Ot Kb "• '-1"'1.l"°F"'" (p f 1 ~G 1111\ W "'"' lo• Jl 12 8 lllk> U\.o Off; Oolh 011 le.>. 10'9 Fl (OICO " a vta.r The companv predicts u "' B•• no. »ll •••• S<• 21 ~~ 12 0.1 c ... , 11 1t I} "•n c1• """ 1~ 'g~ '•(1 Vo 1't I nk n ,., 1' lrwnt "' 1'4 """ Ot '"Br n JJV •i n '•• 1.: r; dw• 1 lM market sh<>uld lurn up 1"1"''"'• '"" &• 111;o 11.., o ...... E i ~ l • F• d•n E , ~" r;~ "'' n F <I U nl lFoo U • llu<Ob M U"i 16"-O •m C • l'll ~ r nOl o• r; •llhl.tl a week to 10 day• "ou1 rl1I• '"'~•"• JI 11 ~, o • • "" l.., l"" "'"' o • ! ! ,..,, c; :~~ ~~n 4A (p 6 l\;,8~nntln S\li 6\liOI on 4 •> Fn111 1So! ..... G ,t. M 1 a!l.r lh. f·-t •f Julv AF4 i> 5 II ll !. 111 n $.... 16 Ill> 0 It '"' ~ )""" ,, !lo• •I'> .. G .... Ml u ~ v .I.ID nc I l .. C•IW5v 1•nll O •nC11 1'1<.lOI>'• C.enlll G .I. TS lhC , .. I .. Ctmb N I 7"' OO<v o l\o 9\li F> " M 1 2:1'.. 1!': G :~~ "3" con'iensus 11 m o n g analyst! po!ltd by I hi> Investment Dealers digest is that stock prices should rise sharply by the end of the vear afte r a summer or l1tlle t'hange The company says ~7 percent looked for no change over the summer .,.. hile ap prox1m2.t.ely one third bche\ed pnces would nse and the rest saw lower prices for the October December quarter n1ore !han two thirds an t1c1pated a rising market iand) a resounding 89 percent believe the market will advance 1n 1he first three Quarters of 1972 the digest says "VM (<> Io flt. Ct nn M II 102 106 Oon1 1.J l • ~ li\lo f.!PM ~" )0, )111o, Gull n 11 41>t nd !._ 1 C1n"on I l~ 101 Oow Jont 45 ~ ISl'o F "M '"'' ,~ s G.v """ •cu•~n '.>'/ :11 .. ''" •O " 14 •'-OO• • 013 I l'I !! fs wnF ? H .llOm3 I~ ! ... C•P Mlet 1 21 'l 1'l'\o Ouni.," 0 J l~> F1t•n1 1R"° 1:~• H:tp~ AO<! In w I ... ll'tl (op s.... ,.... I g~•I •" ' • 9" F. Tt II H F Aov 111.,, l'io l"C••n ,t.lr •"> '" ulren ll o .-.Fo woU Jl,(, •iH'"1'° ..... Sc lO'iolC...,(1PfK 1~.l.-EZP•"' 1'-F'>O<IF " .,.:.,,:.~:n "' r><! !>o ?!'llC•tCP ,,.. '"E• .. sh ll lll:iFOH 0 ll!ol7>.He1AP Alblt HO l'I• i ... c. I!• ,,,. l ... Ebt n " Ill. .... F m 1 ! ~1,' l~'i l: ~ c,•,,', ~.,P 1,1~ ',',." ',',?~,, 's", 11 o ,. ... Fe• G "' 1t ' 1~\\ ~od~m n 4 con lll •S 45~ ci vni '";;'c 9 ~ ~;: v l > l'A. Fe•o,,.11 S • } 1 H"""" "d•n E• '"' l C•n o• JJ ll'f Ho' Ille• -.1co lnd n lll'IC•nV "5 1 t "ll•m••'"lll"IO"'M•'"'""'"•••f~g:,:dc. '*' To<~ ? • l .. Cenv ltb 16 ... 1• H"tk M 9 ,t.lv 8fv 5., 5 •Chl nG•"' )(I XI "' a E~u• l~ 10"" c~. , o ~, 6.,. >lvd• "•D 41•n BA' t 10 c~"' L•• 1.,. 11 ~ MUTUAL Hv • P "'oe C m I }'ii c~e•A " , .S> >lv• t C1> "'phnm ?>. ? .. ("flO 1,1! 11 I I'>• n! AP n Goo J , • 1 c~ 13 og l , 1 6 mdo• SY "" eu " 11 , I c" ton .,, 1"' m•• Cp ,. " ~•D J I I • c~ •S• 111 llll nd Nut . Am E•o 11"'1\llO ) C~ lsS pf 91 03 '*'"' Fn JO'll C n M l 1'~ '"' ,o.i:n is 1~ .. 1s"cu .. u1,. ,..,, 11~ ,..,,., "'" " • , 9 , c 1 .. u1 & '' 1• '*'" G•• 66 66 o (o k Ml l • 1'~ FUNDS IA Med co ;II'> 16 C "'" 9 •• I ,o.m ''"" n n C tn n O I l l'"']lllllll•••llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll ] i '*' "'W• <I '' 9 , c Ow CP '°" 1 '>I ' :~~~u: !I ~ .. s1 ~~··" FO ;~ .. '!~ INYl<,TING (4 11UH' ~.,~.~ nc "'"~' "n t .. Q ~Corn ( 37 J1"' CO,,.l"ANlll "• Gu ~ 9 ~· too 1Sou lJ ,t. C• no 0 6 oCom Sh 11"' lt '> NEW YORK !""l "t•• 80• JlS IJSQ J•otD FL ,t.o M•• l • •Com G•• 11 • T"t IQ ownv ~uo nve 01 G ouo J•oun c A ~MoP I . 1~. CoMw ... ?• ';s • on• 1UPQ •O b• IDS no S)I Sil J•m w. l<kW G 11\ l:l'ICnn Pv &\>lo h• Noon1 """' Mu OOt Q~ JomU>Y • ne n 1 • , (mo Cm 10;,,; !l ~ • on o 50<1J ! •• P oo • •• Io J 11v F~• A ow H JI~ 11 C"1o ln•I S\\ ,,,_01••t In< t f Soc• 99}1 61 JOSYn M I<" <la l} • ll M (mp Tee 6\,, 1 hf • <11 a .,n t h Sel•c• 9" 9 U KMS nd Th t k k f ,t.penS• < ~ (am e> l,.,l,,,neH l><vr •>Vt Py TNIS)K1• SI e soc mare! i,i\er ... ,c:cso 03 ,.,,. Con "•• lt>.rito,,<ouo "••• .,.,,,1"vRo» 1n1 1 K••S 01 further 1rregufartlv should " ""' LI 11 s, con R<><k 11 lt •o o !b d o 1x>uv" • • n '16 u 16 IC••• /AUi<! Sc • S Con •n l • (l,i.,od) Tnv •dY •V I lt I JI l(ami n " begtn to tend higher later in ~~cd ':..~ ~~ ~ ~~:"\0 ~ 1,... &d A•k jo.:'n~",,k 1 1J 1 01 ~::,.~,' the ye2.r the Jnternat1onal~:n9 "~.,c: ~· ~"!~"::'~.· :~,.1~~:~! :": Fs~~,1 ~"r,,.,o~· r:"~'" K•• T Sla t Sl!Cal bureau prcd1cts.i'="-'-'--'-'-'='-'--''-'-'-'cc'="_c'c'-='-'c_'='-) c, wln Ill ll Cv Bl 1~!! ~jj ~:-;~Co Th Jn<on l<! •la Cu Bl !O )<l ~ "" <"IG 4 e company believes the up ln•u io 1i 1 c 8 , , , AdV>I 1!1611 (~ K "'l5 Ktwd trend will follow more "'"• F 1 ~1 " cu 1<1 ::~ :~ ~!uv ~~~ f;iv orable earnings reports Ne\V Ro11tcs :,~v'.°F 11i'1 ~n ~~ ~1 ;z~;',~ ~::·c~.'1:-Fluc1uat1ng bood prcesshoold "1"" Fo 11 c ... si 1•1 tso1C••• .. c; 4•~• ll~C~•S•l.)(IStKnan begin lo slahl1zt w1lh yields "nh• J 111' 17 "" • • ll , 1 KlnQ• ~ l<mc•n 1 ll I Ill"" t •b 1 67 I JI K .. Co still conlmu1ng on a high level G d ""' "'"' l l• i "" • c,1 o" n """" V<><1 t "m O•• 10 lJ ~•no• fd 619 /jJ L•n• n J( adds ran e "'"' E• • ~ •• SH Lt G " 0 10 L•nd "'~ ""'" E•P eu 1L•• R<!\ I I~ I 11 Lo • Wd C•o 9 I OClL~tv Fd 1 01 171 l~•o" n The chances lor an eventual penelrallon of the 950 1000 area on the Dow Jones Industrial Average ?J"e much better todav than when past attempts were registered Harris Upham and Co sa) ~ 'The company beh1ves the trig ger could comP from a real increase in corporate "arn 1ngs \VH MINGTON Del (U PI ) -Unit Inc ;i Dallas real estate ftrm has sued Kentucky rned Chicken Corp of Lou1sv1lle 1n s ipcnn r court ror unspt>c1!1ed dan1ages grnwu g nul of lhc cancellat1on of a s~o m!l!ion real csta1e ~a!e and Jea~eback deal tn 1969 l/n l cli\/med K e n 1 u t' k v fried Chicken entered lhe deal and canctlled it a week la1cr as ::i stock manlpul!t1ng mnve 'The court j;lrant t d llnit s motion In sequester 1171)()0 shares of l\enlucky Fried Chicken stock owned by Lhc company s President John Y Brou.n to insure th11t the ~u1t ,~ :.n5wered In L<iu1~v11le Brnwn termed the ~ u 1 t r d1culous OALL'\S UPl1 \i (}\lght To Air West in<TI• 94()10 27L l•5 k 60•JlfA<!Y(P vo• 19 ••L lt lnv ll:/9l)Oloh(QI Soe< t ;' t..nc N1 I• 161 l•• Go 50<~ O]jCILnt ;9o Lo,.,> BF "'"' G h • 6 1~Loom1 l t v., l n ~<n 1 "'"' " J I Sii (•n•d l 16J 16 LQdnt '°'"' Mui t ]0 C 7' (•o •T 11 ti Lobl•w \,\.ASHINGTON \AP)-'The"'nNC.~ l\IJt Mu •16 •t6L<><1Eln 4n<ho G """ l~ o 1<0 a 6• l•1>cn c C1v1I Acronaut cs-Board has Ct D I h • II Lv n !I" 11 )I l l J M•O "' G c;wn tllJ lMt vn• n II~ t6?M"l 'M granted Air Wes1 aulhnr ty to " ... 1 11 • 01 M~nh" s n , 1 M• ~ v Fd nv • • 0 Jl M~ G" 6 I• 6 t• M• 1c Vtn •I 'la }I) ;JO Mo"""'U" (O A< on '" S •O F ••~ 1iJ f?o "'" >lovg!\ton lndeo 6 16 I 6J Fnn" SOI•" M•n '' 151 operate nonstop services 1n California betwten Uis Aog e le s -Onlario and Fnd B 101111M~" Fn1nc So<• •••IMT •4 S7! Eureka-Arcata and belween 8~5~,~~ ,:iJ ~~l ::;1g i1.1:~1 A p p I e \ a J I e y and e.,, • Fd 11 • •l M .. ,, , is , Js n le •• ~ G 119 ""M~""' i.o• ,0,Mn~· w Palmdale-Lancaster B••<n •I o•o o~Ma "M 1 11 6,1 Mad C• T Bo•<" " un•v" Moon• n 01 J a. Ma •• he [,o~ An~eles-Eureka B• 1 K•n o JQ a 1• MOO<l , i 1 1 n M dw c; t th I d 8 1 k G ~ 16 I 7l M F FO ! tO t 1 M D nonsop a.u onv v.as ma eaond•• ••• 11•M1F G~ sit 316 M M• effective 1mmed1.alely:~:1"F~n~ 1 i~·~·.11 ::;u~~0~v ~~~1~~. ;i!Jhough lhe CAB allowed 2\l 80•1 ~"" un•v• M om .. ~I o 16 1 SQ Accoui1tants Bw" FO •OJ ••OMul s~. )6Ul!•i da\s for fl11ng nb1ect10ns lo 1ls Buloc• c.,,... Mu 1, 100 100 Mc"'~' llu<~ \I 6RINE4 Mui O SO ~I Mohw~ R ten!al!\P decl~l(IO tn atnend C•non • O 11 11 N• n" •• ,6 Mon1 Co D•" II <lltoi1 St<Ur S• Mrto• I' Air Wells cert1f1ratr N• w s os 1 st 11. "" O•• 1 ii Moo . ' Th b d d I NY Vn to 0 •9 !lo~~ of& SOIM" •n K e (lar sat e 1minal on su "" "'" 1? n Ill c. ~ , 11 , 1 Mt• 1 ... I th d I d I 8v• MJ 16 • I c; ... n • 11 0 SI M oT .., o e rrqure 1nern1c !af'c(; Funo OIO 1s" s0; 1 JO 1~11 Mo c" M l t " ' a t O Id'""""' 106 I~• nco s l 191 "'" Cuc sop a .1.an rr ncsc v.ou C•o Gh ls• ltl 51oc• Ill,, Mu•. enable the a1rl1ne to bvpas~ C•c 5" 666 >ON• G ~ • 16 10 1 Mu oh " C•n v Sh un••• N• w (• J O I 6 NCC nd the con ges1cd Bav Area and Ch•"" a F n<1• Heu'"' Fa 1 t 11• N• ·~ co 8•l•n i 90 1101 Ne'"' W<I lJ1 l<S• N1 C1 ~ reducetra11elllmebya.smuch cc ~r 1119J N""'"" 1 01 1o N• c;1.o Gw" \96 I I Nrh s t 11.111100N >fo•~ as an hout And a hall '"'om 11 11• No ••i 1 o s D "'' Lb W hi] SD~' I OJ l 11 D<~•n~ I 01 I Oii N f>l l"' A r est w c c~nllnu1ng c~ ... c. "'°' Om•~• 1, 1 J~ N sec "' t ]hi I II d ''" l•ltllQOFna oioN•ISnc'"' o ~erve e oca tra ic nee s Fund 1os.1 si o Fun~ "II oo N• SI• o( 1ht San Francisco-Eureka ~ .. 0~0 i: io1gr;', wms ~~~ ;;:1~J~.0t>t market plans a new round soo io 11 JI oo~•"" 1 • • .11 N <h '" " (h~n < tOl!OIOOpp 1. M ) ~ '7 Nesn ,o. lrp service CDcn • 01c s~ o 1 111 N••n I\ Eov v •• ••lP1c• "nd '1110 .151"4oC• r; f uno 1Jlll1P"u ll'v !•t11 NEuO (, win • " I J1 """" &q • I 11HW N• f, In~•"' •U on ... /J'u ••• ,9,NW "S• Voo '" l 'I P "• 11~11 1 No'" ro Co u (, h 1• .Jt < ltiP 0 ,., OJ~ 1 Nu JI < Com~ !I~ Sll \!O P n• I 'I~ 1151'1~ ... M Cw h Al •0 1111"~" En Ill 1030hn A " . ,. " . ,. ~ ,. -• • s • .IV> 211". l& .. It"' J.S •• ,• ,. ,. " ·~ "" " ' ' " '" ' " • " ' ' '. '" • " ' " ' • ' " "'' .. ''" •• ' ' " ' ' " • ' " s•~ ~"' l•o I ' . ... :Ill . H>o S '. ' 0 • 1 IVo ''"' 9! " "• .,.,., to cwlnt nu1~n1 • ..,11n111 1• Aeronau\ics Co a un1lol LTV Aerospace Corp has obtained a contract lo design a tracked air rw h1nn \ eh1cle lor the US Depart1nent of Transport al nn ! IV Aero~ra(e al~o ohlA1ncd ;;i ne.,.. S109 n11\hon ('Ontracl f0r Na\ v and Air Force combat plane~ Cw h C l ltl P nn rd 1 Dl lllOOllo "•• Cpmo ,.,, 1 1.1 t 1 P A~ si n W'>:'cc-'c"c'c':..__c:__c:.:::_::::'."....'.'-'.".'.:'....'.C (O"'O (D II Gilt.II ~ CO tY"f tt\ W 11" COi I MHI Pal y " Ho1>d lkl 12,. (oth• "' P C0i 1 M111 0 1n1 !IH1ot l •l1 l-11 N 1 t n 11 L1eun1 "'fl.It f~I• bU1lne11 h twol1>~ tonauttHf bv t ltrtl>f .... ~ Po y A >11nd ~' Th • IUl•m•nt ! fO .... " "' C~vn v C t k O!O t na•C111J"""" J •; IJ Bv Stiff v J Mtao....-Oonv•• Cou" v "' l'ubl '"~ 0 •no• Cnt • 0 1 v JunoU t ndJu•l• t ! LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE 1---I' IHI I' CTll OU~ I US Nii~ l<AM E ~J•TIMI NT IU,111110• COUllCT 0 1' TMt ST.I.Tl 0 , CA L l'OllCHl.11 il'Clilt THI COUHTV 0 ' Ollt"NOf ''• n O"! "~ "t •on 1 ~" "~ ~u• ~~" 1<1e ""'"u •• ~ttf•C• 011' l'iEt.ftlNO o• ,,, f ON P<"!llT tn "0~ f 'll"OQ ~ e , , •o• "•Dl4TI 01' WILL 4NO •011 I "'~"'"" ~ "" Col • "'••• l •TTlllCS llSTl<Mf_"T"lt Y !•ONO •Oh I< Po t'1 71) B " No WAIVIO! Co• o "•1• E1t1t1 O JOHN f WEii [R 0 1 ln \ ~"'MIU O bt "f onrl •<I ~· •~ ,.,.,..g no ~ d"• N0l1CI" IS HEltEIY G VEN tti o W l • Oh" "o • •t oM1n Smt~ ! n10 .., nu•~• ot T"• ''"''"" t •d ""~ ~. C0<nv t onk> o•ol>fi!f ol w •n~ "' uu1n~• 0 C •'<I 0 '"!>O C" nv •~ ~1 ll •, ~· f • Tfl 1m1n o v o Pt 0"f llo~O ~·. ~·•• Y J "•ddM Ooou!v Cnu " W• vt<I) ~!O '" • n -ch • m o~• "' D"b •h"" o •n , Co" 01 • P 0 ' ''"" •orlltult • •nd ~• 1'1 I m t •"di Ju~• H •nO J y 1 ) t f1 "111 I • ~Ct o! "•arl"• II• 1111•1 !\•d bl•~ ,. for Ju• 11 1111 a l l(I •m n '"• -----<OU"'"°"' 111 Ot wr1m•n• ... 1 "' ,. 0 LEG ~L NOT lCf, <OU ! tl100 C•cC""U 0 v•W11 In I~• CIT fll S•n 1 -.n• C1 1!0 11 1 D•Nd Junt ~I ltll W E 5T JOHN cou .. t• ci.•11. llA•WOOa 50D•I< ,1,HO ADICll'tiO"' Ut N .. "" Cl11t1r Dr!•• tvll• "'""'-4.lof lt-"'1 ltlUI Cll!Nrftll '1..0 Ttl 11111 '°" Ulf Att.n>ITt tw "•11111""' PuD Ishee:! Or1nte C0&1t DI V r lo' Ju!v 1 3 t un 1111 1 LEGAL NOTICE f l!UI I' CT TIOU5 11JS1Ml~t N.l.ME tl.l.f(MINT 'T"• '<' o'"' n1 Pe w<>I '" oo ~• b" n~1 " ,,,, F c IM~C.E! nn Ed•" ... ,,. ,_o JI Cfl• • MU~ """ Lo Qn(ln G• nr """ "la n Co•• M••• T" 1 b~• non 1 bl' nt t"""uct..i b• on "<I"" 0 JOhn L G• n• ! TM• ' 1!omtn! •d "' "' "• C •II. <>' 0 t nf• Covn • en Jv Y fh fttlfY J !1 a uen Oto~• (O'.J~ v ' " Coun v --------------]<•• •uD •~td O t na• C""' Ju1v•1n.JO•I Do v r> 1t1 111 ' '" .. ... •ICITITIOUS I UJll<l"SS ""Ml ST.t.TEMEl<T io I°"'~ "' ..,,, ' do"' bu• n-JJ LEGA L NOTICE ' Hiil I'!(' T OUS llU!!l<tSi N.llMf SllTIMINT Cit.!\.., "l01 3.)'.I w .. 9•• s ~ Cal • M~·· C•ll!n ~ " •1111 TMt !~ 1(1 ... •9 "' "'"' & , <IOl"tl ""' " ... 0 '"" Cooi1 l'ub o." •• ((lmnony • 1, C.111"""• C"'"°8tan \,WI We> l •Y W£1tEtN lll)LOE~S COMF' .. NY SltM ! (01•• M-C• '"'" • tllll 4)21 I tl~ $ ft! .. 1wl>(>rt 8••t~ C';1 I l~ ' bu• "'" I• "' ... t.Y,Ovt Id bY • 0()~~" 0 N(lo 111 It vlt • Wt • c..--•1~ "'""" ll••C~ C• )"(I( II CUltlf:Y Tn ~u•"t" I ti-•• <O'l(IV(td bV •n Vlc•~••llfl"•"<I oovov• GtM t M1n11~ Oon•lf! 0 Nc-l~ i o a •m•n I rd,..",,.,. 0\ f 1~, '"""""~ t ·~ w ~ ~~ Coun,.. C 1•• ot o •~•· c.,.,nlY"" Ju"• l ( • • o o ""'' en n • o• JUIY • t i ~~U~I':~ ~ .~:~~<~t~::, (: ~G "1~·~ I:• :.., J 0 ::.:· ·;.,.,Ot•::V v (: ",. y )\ ... IS tMJvY)'' ,, •l• , • 6 n. Yi 111 n •}I From Coast Gai.J1 Honor Comn B<I ComD fO Com•• ron o o Cnn• ~u (o •oG 011\ Con Mu ,no I•! (Qn r.. •• sil ?" ~ ~~. ,,01 !) '1 CnWO" !11••91 ~.v.:~o· 109 1. 11 At>o ",, ~ D• •w• 0 o OJ ti ,t.bh LI> O Do 1 11' •o l"CF nn ).0 O••W l !I t•IA<MeC t• •O Ot • • Jt 10 l! •cmo MO l~ O t oo 1 0 I •l1Adm1E <lg "o < "'I t9A<!M \ 10 0••• 11190,t.~m • .,o O O• BS• I 11.0.dO "I •Se D ••'d •0!5" 6~i l /I A-n•t•l •O nua! Steven~0n Trnph11 com 0 •• 1 • •• 1 l9I~' dd• F nn• E• on&HO"'• d n nv 4 )I 4 o A• n•L O l pr1llrn cond1rll'd b\I 1ht'I B••o D n1 ~"' J\JlJ\ll:vu . Co Gwh 110J 11 l\••n 1• .110 "'" "< assoc1al1on fll !ht meet1n~ in <~"' •1' •11 C~m 11 o 1 o ... ••"" .. Hnnolulu ~·:\ 'n i 1 \1~· F" ~ ~ :.:: .~00 The Orange Coa~t Callforn1fl Chapter fll 1he N a t 1 on a I Assoc1at1on nf Arcounlants ha~ been awarded 11n achieve menl banner for an outstan ding ptrformanC'P n the an L b K hf' Eb1d 41 •I !l:'*'J ~du1 '• Cd y e1t f'orhV 1971).IEP• GI llll• 1 • 9 .,1 •~ on• • 71 pres dent tht rhapter rom E,_~ ,',. '' 1~· d Am o • • r... n '"' c !II •iS• ~~· S Ol 161 ••••• "'' Piled f'Oough po1nl~ In a ,'~t,", n 1 J i S•n G" or111 •u1Ab• 'IC 1 " •ll •S•~ •~I 09 1 •1""'-"' ll-1\Umbernffl(!l\l\l'S 1n(lud1ngEo"'• 9JI 0 •1\~"" '" l H ,t e•n•um Eoul Gh t \J 0 9Sh•• •~ J)llll;i l•'o\•n~ lll flltendance at t f 1 I n 1 r a I Eou " n s• 1 oi s"•• "' u 1 A • "" ' » b h h F• <I 91lO•S~•mD o,•3 M4,t."'lllt9 meetings mem er~ 1p growt f• m 1u o 11 o si 1 <I• F~ 0 J.l • •• r~ 1'19 d t I bl I t F ~I • G OUP S 1m• ~Unrl A ool <I •O an re en ion pu 1c rr a 10011 con o • sn 10 11 (•o o 1 oi • •o "" o i and miinuscrlpt wr11lng to 0 • n• 10 '"~·· 10 1 "I• l•o"w :Ji> E»~' 1'St l)o; Tu• •IOoJ"l<IC"l(I rank 13th 1n the 164 Chapters Ev • 1i,. I• •l srn ~ " o 111011 • d M1 n •o FOi 1 0 /9)~w I~ 1 •)l OOt l'°' dM' H competing for a'.lards Onl} "" n 10• 11 • s ... ~ c, 1 » 1 11" 1d "" M h saem 11' II Sov• ~• llM •96 Al od•• o tetop25chapler~rece1\e ,."" 1si11~So•i • o~}O"..is oi • h t b f: nenc 11 P 01 fS F m G •IO •to Al td Su~' ar 1evemen anners O•n• •so • •11s 1 • ~ "11 •• 11 ... 1.t~ is. This cha pter which mceJs al MOu J •1 •Ji s ~·~"'•n Fund• A • ·~ ~ Into.., !•< •11 •m Ind •Ol • Aoll•" ,.., !he Affpnrter loo Hotel w •n voni •'II • 11 ,...,o ' n o ,., co• 111 v F1 Fd V• 1)0)\)15 ,~V< 11! Jtl Am•lut 611 lhe b;!nner in their f1rsl vear F1" ,,•,v•110 s • n 1tM Fd1 •M!l"'C 10 I .., l nlo llJ l~•n ?Otllfl •l "m• E• 10 n operation and was the onlv c. "'~ un•v1 I C•~ o o } o 1 Am E• ,,,1611 Cahforn1a chapler so honored F;\'"~lu 1 '1z•;•" su5"t! ,., ,,,', 11 1 '11 :~~~·~,1 ~ Merger Plan Completed l'tt N• 111 I Sl Glw I Ot 4 J ",t.fF 90 F• St • 110 llCI ~umt 1? JlS-.mJ. ,. 1(1 F • C10 •ll Toe~ 91 I H,.13••• ~1 "•! 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Mvt 1 OJ IO•A,,.EP"' 1 D Completion of \ht n1ergt:r of "'0"' l " 1 " Un un<I ' os 11 OI •m E •o no USG"" 107'1111 U~n" !•<Gp 1mE•o 0 Thf' ()Jeon Co1npan11 o/ Ne\v FoF O!o o H to 11 8 01~ • •; 1~ 1 AGn1n 1 0 'U"d"'GD N•lnvl•••!IAGn1>\ll rinrl Be;i ch 1nln l n1lt'd States co"""' • ~ o tl u c .. p 1 11 111 • c,"" n ~ Imo•< .,~ •o WM•~ _ .. ,.a Am Ho •D Flier Corporal100 was ;in ""111 1.s.11•uUnieo l'unc• ,., 1"m• o d f "" b Pia 716 1st Acu" 7, llO "' HOO"•• 1 nounrc 101nl y t, .. ,ay y Lou\~ i: .. d """ • °' • •1 co" G l •1 i 11 ""' H<>•• i. F: Purmort Chairman o( g:;.•T.e 1i ~ :g:: f~~ne 1: ll 1~ ~ ~"'~";;t~. H• l ln1 ted Stales Filler and c '> 111 1 J6 'u St e" 1 u 1 u .o. Mt Ct• oo G•DllP I.,.: Vl"tl 10 Oil 11 0) l<m MO!O I Karri A Wl'i1~ Prf"s1<lenl of """' • n •Su Fo C•n 1 •i 1 ff •H• Go• 110 81 on 191 t II Vt luf l nt Fd it. ~•!0• D 9 Duro n c.,.,..., St un 1•0 "• L 1 , 111"'m s.,, i G!~F~ .. Ill •SJ lnCO"' Sll s11 "" s.no 6(11> lln11ed St ale! f Iler tx. 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I~ .. ~. -,_ • • .. ; .,_ . • •• II"< -lo ,,,, _, Finance Briefs • ' " NEW VORK IC PI) -Th• \v1den1n~ gap bet"een ~lo<:k ) 1eld ~ aJld bond yie lds 1 ~ ~J nl( 1 ewed w1rh some conc('rn by the f ral'rr M 11 n a g I!' m r f1 t A'soc1ate5 If the e1pecled econom c 1n1provement fails In materialize lliP co mpany .said bofld ~lock rela!1onsh1ps would hrin~ 11: hal l tn the bull markel Me11nwh le • busuv:ss cy· rle expan sion ba sed nn grl'IW-- 1ng oonsumer purdla ~es in- creased 1nvt.nto ry demand, And a gr11dual upturn 1n capital goods sipend1ng win 1mpro11e ~a r n r n gs and d1111dends suff1 ctentlv 11' con linue tht-preference ror l!llocki; over bonds Fra~r 111.id S11mbols flt u ., • • unolllcl• n ou cho w ,. no t a ••••., "'"'" <lond, n h• lo •oo nt t1b t ••• •nnu11 .rlobu ••m•nto t.•••d"" th• 11t ~u• terlY " • '" ,,, U •r lfm """"" dK t r•flen J "< 11 •' r.:. .,. f& d!vld-o ., ooym ... h l'IOI ... ,i., ' " .l ,. .r " u ' 1 ·~ ~ • ' ' ·w, ' " '" " ' '" • " " " • '" • .. •• " , . 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HW• + Ai ¥ -.-o1l1!r b!lllo<! d• t ',"' 1~~-\'o •-5••• n flt ! 1 ~;: 1;t: = U clof-Cll td t -1.x d "<ttM Y-b Ill ... 'j~ n .. + .. !!tfld 11111 •• n In tuu ••-tlll I• dlit,.,_ 11\ _J _ V. butlon of-I• ,llMI ll-Wllhwt "''"' f ,... j'. lo f l /I I w-Wlth Wt trt llll W4-W,_, <Ii. l" J"6 + "" rlbutH. .,1-w"'n 1011td. ,,._N•ltt • J~t! n1 \:: _ ~ d1Uv1 y H • '\t -t~ YI-I~ lllft.ru1>lt Y w '''' vt,~f9 ., 114 • ~ + II &e n1 1to•1•nln <1 11ndw IM l 1n1v u•l(t 'i ' ~'-'.,. :i.l t ,t.c t ~, "'u I •1 •o vmld llV •11c./I cti,,.. 114 IJI,(,, + v. ••n to •1-1!1< ,,,.,.,, cl-C•fl fief! .... • '> '1 -I/, ll-51UT1~•11 l-0$a I I" I I •-MllVtM I • I • bond• ,, • .., •& Y l!l'I•• 1..i l>Y ma! I'll'( .~~ .·:· --~ "d-Nt~I t 1V <!• VI >J • ..,_., "''"' .... 11~ ..... 1,, &ft •• ,..,, ',., • ... ____ ,_,_ ' I • I ' ! ij ., t .. Ja DAILY PILOT Buxon1 Gal Saves Shot Fo1· Golfe1· SOUTHPORT, England J a c k Nicklaus bounced a ball off a buxo1n English woman . Georgina f\ti\linson . in the British 01>en golf championship Thursday. The lucky bounce pro b.ably saved him a lihol. Jt happened at the 358-yard fifth hole. Nicklaus hit hi~ secorxl shot tno pov.'erfully and th!? baH .,.·ould ha ve gone past the green into bushes if Georgina hadn't been in the way . The ball bounc~d off her and rolled to s1x feet from lhe cup. Nicklaus missed the putt. But he gave her lhe ball as a 10Uvenir. Brita in's To ny Jac klin. former U.S. and British Open champion. had an ex· pt"rience to 1natch !hat <>f l'\ick laus. This O{IC came at the eighth when the ball fell near a f~rna!e fan's binocul ar ca~. .J acklin sought a ruling f rorn official11 11 nd was allowed a free drop. lie fin ished the hole with a par. e Jlofe-i11-011e SOUTHPORT, ~.:ngland Britain's Lionel Plal1 s carved a Jit1 1e bit of British Open history for himself Thursda y with a h-Ole-in-0ne. He did it at the 212-yard fourth hole. A gix iron from the elevated green soared nver the traps. hit a bank and rolled intG thf' cup. "'How about that."' said Plall s. "l dan"t ~uppasc 1"11 win the Open. but the Jans v.·on't forgf'I that shot in a hurry " Pl atts "'ent on to S<.'ore a 72 and finish- f'd with ll two-round total of lfJO. e J ocobs Lend• LONG BEACH -Only :'12 of lhr 163 pl.ayers \~,.ho started the '17th Southern Californi a PGA Chan1pionships were left today as the lhird round began at the El Dorado Park golf course. Tommy J acobs, the veteran pro lroin J.a Cost<1 , Calif.. led the pack Thursday as si x of the eight seeded players won twe matches each in the $13,000 event. Other seed"'.!d players advancing 11·ere ,Jimmy Powell 0£ Yorb<I Linda. Calif.. .ferry Barber of J.os Angeles. Ed Me rcins flf Los Angeles. P inky Stevenson of Long Beach and Mac Hunter of Los Angeles. Bruce \Vyall of Whi ttier and i'.lontf' Sanders or Santa Barba ra . suffered upset losses Thursday. e S111ifl1 R11tlies BAASTA D. S"·edcn -St.an Smith of Pa.:.adena IOl'lt the first sci then rallied to defeat J aime Pinto Bra vo of Chile in the J;trond round of the lntemalional Grand Prix tennis tournamf'nt. 4-6, 6-2 . 7-6. 6-4. Patrick Proisy of France also advanced by beating Ove Bengtsson. Sweden. 6-4. 6- 0, 6-4. Earlier l11e Na staSt' of Homania ;id- \•anced, but his countryn1an Jon Tirlac lost to Ray Ruffcls. Australia. e Ne11' St11di11111 CHICAGO -Mayor Hichard J. Oaley t.ai d Thursdciy lhat he is ex ploring thP possibility of using the prcscnl s!\e of Soldier Field for a new sladiun1. Dal ey"s remark s a! a nN 'S coolerentf' repre5"nled a shift rrom his previously cletermined st ance to btnld a stadium on the lakefronl immediately souUieast or Soldier Field e i\'e1t•f't:1111t1e lt'i11s (;ST:\AD. S\\"1t1.erland -Jeff Boro11·1::1k nf Berkeley mo1·ed into the quarter-finals ol the S"·iss International Tmnis Ch:i m- p1onsh1ps Thursday al<•ng "1th to1r seeclf'd .lohn Ne"M1nbc of Aust ral1<1. the \1"1mblcdon champion BorO\l'iak ll"hll)[K'"tl ,f(ihn 1\ \rx an{ler. /\U.~t ral1 a . 4-6. 6·3. 8-6 i'if'w(·on1ix' pul out f:roff ;\1 asler~. Au.~tra h;1. 6-t 6-4 Tom Okker. of The Nc1bf'rla nc!s. also J!a1ned the round <11 <'lght by defeating }-'rank Sedgt11Rn , Australia , fi-0. li-2. ;is did NiJ.;ki Pilic. Y11gosla\·1a, \\"ho defeated ~arry Philhps-~1oore. Austr;ilia . li-2. 6-0 e /tlit11·n11t.:ee f ... e trd•••· '.\1JL\VA UKEE -Hot pull ing Oa\t r:1chelbcrger. blooming to ~tardom af1e r lhree struggling years on lh<> pro 1011r. was cautiously scenting his first \"lclory after a 7-under par 6~ Thursclay 1n rhe first round of the $125.000 Greater Mil"·aukee O~n Goll Tournainent. Eichelberger. 27. had a t"·o-strokf' lead n1'er Dan Sikes. l\i-n Sllll, Jin1 Jamieson and Jim King after a dcvaslating opening round in "'hich 5& playeri; broke par 71 and 26 others malche<i I\ over the 6.453- yard Tripoli golf course. Chargers at UCI For Gricl Drill ~ :-ian Diego Chargers ol the National Football Uague's American Confercnct att back at UC Irvine again ,for the sum-.,.,.. Having opened lheir UCI summer quarters Thursday. the Border City pro- fessionals are reparting in 5')lit groups "·Ith the rookies coming into camp Satur- day and the vetf'rans reporl ing on \\1ed- nc~ay. Two-a-day drill~, v.·hach wil l be open IO ~ public. wUI begin ~tonday "'ith ;.s;:nitt: praci lce ~sions at 9 a.m. and 3 T~ CharJcr~ begin 1he1r presf:AYln liChedule Aug. 7 when the Gfflrae Allen- roached Washington llcdsk.in~ invade San Diego Stadium lo tackle Sid G11lman·s ch<1.rge&. Allen 11nd Gillman arc ronncr LA Ra ms' head coaches. ·-:.--~ ...... It's O·steen Against Marichal Tonigl1t LOS ANGELES (AP) -''It's a big series -to have a respectable lead at the AU-Star break v.·e've got to win t"·o . .says Soon Francisco Giants• f-.tanager Charhe t'ox as his club begins a three-game series with the battered Los Angeles Dodgers tonight. Juan J.1arichat, 10-S, pitches for San Francisco, aga insl lhe Dodgers' Claude Osteen, 9-6. Saturday evening it 'II be Gaylord Perry against Don Sutlon and on Sunday Ron Bryant will oppost: Los Angeles' Al Downing. The Dodgers had pulled to within 3 ~1' games of the Giants' National League \Vest lead w1lh a two·game sweep In San f'rancisco early lh1s week, but have fallen fi ve ga1nes behind after bein g swept in four games by the Chi cago Cubs. San Francisco :;napped a four-game losing strenk by combining John Cum - berland 's six-hit pitching with Bobby Bonds' hilting and \!Jillie McCovey·s return lo the lineup for a 4-2 triumph over the Houston Astros Thursday, f\1cCovey prov ided an inspiration hy toming off the disabled list and turning in three solid fielding plays th at a less ex- perienced first baseman -na1nely Willi e Mays -ma y not have execu\ed. McCovey, jusl off tM l~ay disabled hst t.o rest a cumbersome left knee. says he feels very good . •·rm wearing a brace on the knee now and I have much more su pport -but it 's st.ill not right." \Vlllie Davi.'!, who managed only two hits in 22 prev ious at-bats, stormed t-he Chicago Cubs for three singles and a dou- ble. But the Cubs still managed to chp the Dodgers, 4-2, and complete a four- game sweep of the series. Davis jumped his batting average back lo .351 with his four hits but it wasn"t enough as Don Kessinger also had four hits for Chicago. And Billy William! had three a~ well to drl\'e 1n three ol the Cubs' four runs. Ken Holtzman, 8-9. "'ent the d1stancf'. 11111 wasn 't even scheduled lo pitch bul when Bill Hands turned up wit h a bl ister , i loll1.man volunteered. Holtzman was tagged for Los Angeles' only two run.~ in the first innin g "tien Ric hie Allen singled horne the first one and Jim Lerebvre doubled home tilt se- cond "'\Ve 're Ji.II nght." Insisted Davis af- terward. ''I wa s in 11 slump and broke ou1 or iL The club will do !hr same, just watch and set." C"l(olGO lOi ,lllc;l ll, ... , ~ ... O:••.,n<J••. ,, 1 J , o ll•l•nlof'• u llK>~I-70 I l 0 MOii, II l!Wlllltm•. It J I J W D••»· ot P~!-. !I> I O t It "lit", ID S..t111>. lD 1 o o W P••-•r. lb Hoc~mtn, " l 0 l 0 l e•tO•r• iP Jcm ... rl O O D O Q&rw<n, " ,, ' .. ~ . . ' ' ' • • ' . •• " . • • ti D•vls, d o o o F •rouM>~ t Monln, t J 0 O 0 M<Wllf r. P ~ 0 Holl'"'""· o • o o o Wllh, Pl\ ' 0 0 Brewcr. ~ 0 ~ 0 G•1b'r~•.,..,,,_p11 1 O o Tol•I> J! • 11 !OIOI> JS I If (hotf(IO 001 010 001 • I.°" ;o.not•e> 700 000 WO 1 E -Ff•O..,>On, W P1r•rc R A,llon. VAl0n11nr . OP -O!i.o90 : Lo• 41t9elt > I l OB (~1<111" ' L"" "'llfl•T'"' ~ 111 l •••O-'•· e W• Ii•"'" W 0.•" l(.,\\n9er SB !("'""~"'· ~ ll •c~cr!. ' IP 14 It flt. •I 10 tlo!l!m•n IW.I t ) • la 1 l l l MOCll~r (l.O·~I I 1 J B•ower 1 >I y,,..,. -l 10. """"°'"'" -,, 161. Dodgers Davis, Alston Added To All-stars SAN FAA NCISCO tA P> -Pitl:sburgh Pirates' star Roberto Cle1ne.nle. drew his Jlth All-Star Game. assignment today 11s Cincinnali Reds'· rnanager S p ark V Andersoo completed the Nat ional League liquad. Clemeflte, fou r-tirne le<1gue batting champion . 1vil! la ke a .JJO All-Star bat• ting average into next Tuesday night'! game at Detroit. He fin ished fifth among National League outfielders in voting by baseball fans that detennined the iilarting line-up. Anderson named 12 players lo complete the 28-man squad. Catcher !\lanny San gu i 11 en of Pittsburgh, first bascn1an Nate Colbert of San Diego and outfielders Bobby Bonds of San F'rancisco and \Villie Da vis of JA)f; Angeles were put on the All-Star team for the first tin1e . PHILADELPHIA'S CERON JOHNSON COMES JN WITH KEY RUN JN 7.5 WIN OVER MONTREAL. The others named were inf1eld<'rs Don Kessinger and Ron Santo of Chicago, Lee May of Cincinnati and Felix ~1i Han of Atlanta. an d outfi elders Lou Brock of St. Louis, Pete Rose of Cincinna ti and Rust.r St<1ub of Montre.i l. Blue Seel\.i11g 18th Victory; Faces A11~els OAKLA:\'fl i AP) -Can !hf' Cal 1forn ii1 Angels eat ch !he Oakland A ·s 1n !hf' Arnerican Ll'ague \Veslem 0 11·is1on pt'n· nan\ ract" 1\1ost scoff at caJl 1nR it 11 race. II'• mo re like a runa,vay for lhP A ·s. "'ho 1ead second-place K<1 nsas _Ci ty by I l f)r1 'fl' 'f11r1igt11 Cl1n1111ef 5 ''' 8 ga111cs, third-place r.1inn<'tiota by 1 ~•, and fou rth-pl;ice California by 161,, And California manager Lefty Phillips believes Angel pennant tal k -cons1der- in!! the circumstanc es -.,..·01ild be unrcahstic. His team JUSt used a threc- ga me sweep of the Tu•ins. e;ipped by Thursday·s 7-4 \•1ctory, lo 1·acale !he ri 11i-.1nn b:is.emenl \lakin g lhe Angel~' task uf t1.;c1·nd1ni.: h1~hc r 1n thr ~1;111ding~ c \'en 1oughP r 1• \.ida Blur. 17-3. 1vho pitches for Oakland hrre 1on1Rh l in !he first ol a three-gan1c :.erie~ Hudy ~l ay, ~-J. J.:O('S lnr th'!' Ani;rls Four f'Onscl·u111·e \'ic1orir~. ho1vevr r. ha\e ~11rn Ph1l l1 p.s rene11t>1:I hop4 • th.it .~!11nf'thulf! cn u be :o1<1ll'~RCd from a ~~a sfln \1'rouglit 11 1l h rnntrovrrsy -!he Altll J ohn son suspension -and inJ11rv -the sorr fool of shorlstop J1n1 Fregosi "\\'£>'re st<1r l1n g to h11 whrr, 1t to11nl ~ auri wr "rr playing real good ball." Pl1lll 1ps said '"l!'s no f11n lo lose. becnusc the .i:u y~ get doll'n. It 's real easy whc:n you"re \\'In- ning, though, beca u.<;e everyboc!y"s happy and a 101 or things get ove rlooked.'' \\'hi le implying that 0 <1kland mi_1thl ha\'e an insurmountable lead. Phillip.~ .s<ad second plael' definitely is within re:'leh. "'\\'e"rr i:oing to piny ont _llame al .;i lime I think "·c made a mistake last spring by tal king about winning when "'t should have done it on ihc field. ·'\\'e're goin g to fry to get lo second. then go from there. 11 "s not too reahst1c to be think ing abo ut a pe nnant when you "rr 16 games behind.'' Tony Co-0nza lez· first home run of th e year, a '"'()-run shot in the second innuig, sparked the Anfi!;els pa st the T\.\·ins. The Angels sco red the ir first nin "'hi•n .Jnhn Stephenson reochcd fi rst on iln in· field pt>pup th11t land~ 1n lhe 1nidd!e of three T"·ins. lhen c<1n1e horn<: on an in- field ou t MINNllOlA .. ' . " •• .. , ~lom••· ~ ' ' • ' "''"'"· " ' • ' ' Riv..-.. " • • • • lo•••· .. ' • ' • Borr•. '" • • • ' RHH . " ' • ' • Go->181•1. u ' ' ' 1(111~b••w, " ' • • ' S1•Pht n00t"I. ' ' • • • Ct.•Of nu , .. ' ' ' MCM'111t n. )0 ' ' • t<~11. " • • • Scenct•. " • • ' J..l•e•. " ' • • • Con•llt ro. " ' ' • .M•ltfrWld. ' ' • • • 0 8•1•"· "' • • • f l>fll, • • • • • ,,.., ........ • • • • ll!omu ~ • ' ' • L1Roc,,... • • • • • l LIODMr. • ' • • • t.ll•n, • • • • • 5trlc"•"'· • • • • • 1(1tr • .. ' • ' • Wllllt m ,, • • • • l l1<llnJl l. ~ ' • • • •olol ~ • • • To11t " "' ' CoU+o•nl• "' .. .. , -• ,,.lnnt •O•• , . .. . " -' ' Mu•""• W I II " ' ' ' ' ' LI Rotllo " ' ' • • ' •11·~ " ' • • • Lut~Oo'r I .o.J " ' ' ' ~··;~i.nd J 111 • ' • ' W11!11m1 • • • • • ' tl•ll • • • • S••-L. l'll•n ,,, __ , Mv•""• l _, J1 • ll 1•1 --. • 1JP1 ToleP~OIO JND IAN RED LO PEZ UNLOADS WITH A 1.2 SHOT Lopet Knocked Out Jose DelGlldille in 4tli at LA. Vataha Tr~'ing Ou~ Rci11is Operi Practice At Fi1llerton Ca1np Thr. grr.atrst passC'r in UCLA history and one flf the tnost exciting pas:> receiv- ers in Stanford his tory tcan1ed up Thursday for !he first pass con1plet1on as the Lo~ Angeles fl.;;~ns opened their rookie 1ra1 n1ng ciunp at Cal State 1Fullrrton ). Coach To1nmy l'rothru. !1r:id n1an a year ago at UCLA . ~reeled quartC'rbae k Dennis Dununit pass catchf'r Randy \'ataha and 4~ orhers inr-lud1ng 39 rookies \1·hcn carnp opened. Dumm it and Vat:1ha, allhough 1hey looked great on the fi rst duy . are .still longshots to make the tenm fur I!l7 l. Vataha is a former c:ulden \\"rs! College pl ayl'r Du1nmi t "·as stunned \1·hcn he "·as11"t selected in any of the 17 rounds of Lhe National Football League dr<1rt th1~ \11n ler and Vataha. who caught J im Plunkett passes \vilh regulanly lasL yc<1r. "'<IS the nams' lllh pick. Dumm1l recently signed as a free agent Two-a-day \Vorkouls :irr sr·hrdulrcl bu1 Pro1hro h:is s111rl he '1'111 nut br a~ rigorous RS 11·a~ l;rorgr. Allcn 1vhen he v.i1~ hoss of the Hiuns. Prothro said hr might nllow dri lls to t:iper· urr to flllt' per d<Jy 11 hf' noted th e pla}'crs warranted il Pressure 's 011 And Trevi110 Can Sta11d It SOLTHPOHT. England t AP ) ~ '·I've already ~pent last \\'eek"s nioncy," joked J.ce. 1'rev1no, ··.and r m looking for more th is week." Trevino. \\'l!h the lin1led States and Can<idian Open i:ol f titles under his belt, shared 111!' lead on !.19 w11h Britain'.~ 'J"ony Jacklin after the fir st !\\'O rounds or the Bnt1sh Open at Hoyal Birkda!e. .. The pressure is on <1 nd I can stand 11 ·• said 1hc 3!-year -old l\lcxican· An1encan. "The law of average~ is against me wi n- ning three great ri1les in four wee ks. bul rny 1v1fc and l both think lhal 1 can carry off this old cro"•n.'' After \1'1nning the Canadian Open at t.1011\real, Trevino flew to Britain and ~;iid "'1''1 trade one. of niy US. Open tit les for 1he Britsh cro\1·n any time" Thr field wa.<1 rc<.lu..:l.J lo 62 af!er 36 h"lcs -and 1he only American rf'gular to uuss 1hr f'U t \\as Vrank Beard of Lou1s\ille. l\y . who 11 ound up 1-.1th A i-rtond-r11und 8! lnr lj l The t·u1 e•1n11• a1 1.11. and no.1a! Brrkd.'.!IC s 7,080 )'<1rrl. 1):i r JJ-37 -72 1111 1;~ <'r.til<l _!!el an,;r.v Wil h !hr inc n lc!l in the l1t•ld . .'i(l f;1r thi' rond111nns h;i1·c been ;i l1no.~1. p<'rfre1 at Rirkrla le But Iha ! cn11ld ch;ini::e ovcrniglit R1rkda lr is a course 1h;1 l :<111!dcnly {",1n 111rn nn~l v when lhc 11')/lcl blnws in from lhf' \nsh.Sea and the sun g1res way to r;11n AreaU1ing down the necks of Trevino and Jacklin. winn-?r of hoU1 the U.S. and Bri!ish Opens in 1969. was a new name lor Bri!ish fan s -Liang Huan Lu, 11ie man fron1 Taiwan. a s1<ir of the Far f-:;i~I circuit. \\'a~ one shot ba ck ("In 110. Argenlina·s Roberto di Viccnzo and J)('rennial star Ga ry Pla yer of South Africa \1•ere at 141 and presenting a big threat to the leaders. F'ive playeri; were al 142 includ ing defend ing chnr11p\on Jack Nicklaus and th~ nlways dangerou s Billy Casper · '"F.veryth1 ng ll~nds on how 1vcll you dri1·e at Birkdale," said Trevino. "All I Cfln S<lY I.~ I'm driving \l'Cll. I th in k the 1nan who 1n asters the par fives will lake the tit le. "'I n1an aged lo n)aste r the 18th yeslt'r· d<l~' wit h an eagle and sAnk a 45-foolrr . l\'ith tha t behind you. you go into the thi rd round feelini; good.'' Rose. "'ho scored the wi nnint: ru n in the l2U1 inning of last year's All-Star Gam e, "'as na1ned to the National League squad for the sixth lime. Sarito has been selected seven tunes Anderson also announced I h a I n1anagers \\'alter Alston of l...os Angele~, Danny i\1urtaugh of r1tt sburgh a.nil Preston C'.omez of San U1ego will serve a5 All~Star t'Oaches. The learn trainer wil l be Leo Hughes of the San Francisco G1ttnt:s. Club Rejects $3 Millio11 Offer for Pele SAO PAU LO, Brazil \AP) -Uff 1cial11 of the Brazilian Santos club announ eed Thursday night they had turned down .Jn offer of SJ million from a French club lor famed soccer star Pete - \'asco Fact. president of Santo~ .. '!61d thr president of the Paris Sa 111t Germain Club. Gu~· Cres<:-ent . n1adr !he orfer, stressi ng that $2 n11lhon \1•ould go In $an- tos and $1 n1illion to Pelc. Fac.t said the (lf/rr 111-;: rrl 11:-<'d •·o~·cause 11 e ha ve other pla n~ to 1nak e n1ure n1oncv 1\•ith P1.'lc on our tc:1 n1 tlr added that · '·everyone ean ht' ~urr !hal Pele 111i!l never be lra11s fl'rre<l arHI will end his career pJ;i~i ng "\th us." The 30-ycar-0ld Pel£>, 1\110 ll!d l\r ~1.11 !B 1l1e \rorld Soccer Cup 111 1970. rarh er had threatened to quit profr ss1r1n<1 I ~"' rrr for goo(! becausr of ii con1ro\"rr~1 01rr In, decision to re tire tron1 the Br atal1•1n na - tional team. Pele is scheduled to play 111.~ la~t ~arne. for the national learn on .Jul.v Ill a1 1er 1\'hich he plans to play 11·1th h1~ team, Santos. for three n1ore years Pelc sa•d that \.\·hen he first an111t11ncerl his pl an to relire fron1 th e 11at1011:il 1carn "'everyone agreed \\"llh lllt' but nQW . an O( a sudden. there h<1s heen <1 ch<111gr ul opi- nio n ·· Pele continued. ""the pC'oplc mu~t under~land 1hat r m not doing rh1~ 1B harm any body. I will con11nue pla )'1n1? with Santos, bul if to pl ay w11h S.1n1os I mus~ also play "'·ith the na 11onal ~elec­ tion, then my next step ""Ill be to qu1 l proressional soccer '"I wouldn"l like lha1 to happe n. hut if there i.~ a day v.·hen a plHyc>r ha.~ In 1:1n- nounce his re ti ren1rn!, then I ha1 r i hOSf'I\ n1ine. I kno1\' I'll s11Hcr a lot of r 1·i-,,urcs, but my answer is def1n1!e.·• A's Fans Fume Over All-Star Snub OAKLAi'I D (AP\ -Oakland Athleltcs officials <1nd fArt~ fun1e because only Vida Blue apd outfK:lder Reggie Jackso n wcr(' named to tJ1e American League All-Star tearll. Blue, 17-3. "II~ ~f'lcctcd as ~1 art1n1? hurler for Tue~dil\' ~ All Slf1r J:an1e, and Ja ck ~on w:a~ 111H)1p1J <1.t SI las1-n1inutC rrpl11cr1nrnt for iniured Tony Oh1'8 o( thr t.linnesota T"•1n~ noth n11m111ar1nn~ 1\Cr(' by J·:~1 I \\'<!aver. AL All-Siar manager ll nd pilot or !he world champion Baltimore Orioleli Fans railrd lo elecl even one Athletics player \.\'hen they cholle the starting ei~ht p1;iycrs. \Veaver select'd pitchers and the be rich "It d1 ~:ip1101nt ed arld d1sn1Ryed nit no! to h:tvr any of the A·~ selected." said (};1kland uw.ner Charles Finley. And n)anagcr Dick \Villian1s of 1hr A ·s c:i llcd It "atrociou s'' that a club \1·1th ;r • lead of 11 ga1nes should lM> w undcr- repre~nlerl in the classic. "It 's the: v.·orst selecting I've ever seen." Williams fum- ed. \l'eavPr ~air! in RAlt1more Thursday tli~ht. ' There 11robably arf' several players on lhc Oa kland club capable or p1.•rForn1ini; 111 nn All·St:ir g111ne. Their selection~ would have heen 1varranted, but 1vho~e ph1ce wuu lrl lht'y h;ive t:iken ~ .. , couldn"t ice lea\"ing aoy or the nicn I • 'Tl> • 1 selected for thf' teatn olf be( <1uc~ they were either higher 1n thr \O\ini:, ha1•11'1g better year batt1ng-averaRe 11 1,r hel- ter \VOn-Josl pcrcenlaRes or l':uned-run averages."' Wea ver !laid the 0111~ olhrr fl.,~land player he conskierc£1 11•a.~ ptl r l\r 1 ./1111 "Catfish"' llun1cr. 11 6 1\,krd ~hfi,11 1hird basernan Sal Bt1ndo. \\'ra1·1•r p•11111, d out thAl Bill !\lelton of C"hicai:;•1 h;ul nioro hon1c. runs -··-·--v -... ---~---· , ..:.=-----....!:;."'IWl 'P~ . .,...~ ........... ...:, • ' • I a Kings, Stay ~~~~~~"~""" tinJton Beach r e m a. i n c d 1-1~efcated in Huntfnglon sum- mf basketball action Thurs- day night with in1pressive vie· tories. Host Huntington rolled to an ea5y 85-50 victory over La ' Quinta bt!hind a 2 7 · p u i n l perforn1ance by Steve Brooks v.·hile C:Orona's Sea Kings bf'ltcd cold shooti ng Rancho Alamitos, 67·34, at Marina. Jn the other M::o.rina tilt, the host Vikings s Lo pp e d West minster, 60-58. in an overtime session. In gaines at EdL'iOn, the host Chargers ran their league record to 5-1 \\'ilh a 67-45 win "' over Buena Park behind the play of Rod Snook . And Garden Grove tu rned back Vjlla Park, 63.-61 , in overtin1c. Jn the second Hw1tingto11 e;on1c, Fountain Valley won its first league tilt "'ilh a 72-57 triumph over BQ\sa. Grande. Elthon U ll •• II pf to J 0 ) I 0• ~ • ' ' ,. P•rk•r n 1, Zlrt>tl l " " ' ' ' 0 C1M111n I l McKinney 1 o' 2lmmcrm1n 0 Hinton 0 • lOllll• 19 9 19 Scor• br Ou1r1 .. • .. lluene P•rk 7 11 10 11-•I ,,_.., l:.cllto0n 1' H 2J foo.ont11n 11111e1 UU ~fl••·· I 0 l 16 Rel!l'r Sulllvtn Adams Hlllllelcl l urn' WedO!e Sw•no.on l adt>n••eln I < 1 13 1 0 0 • I 0 0 l l 1 19 0 ' ' 0 ' • lot111 ll • score by ou1rters Fovn11ln V1llev 1' !4 l• ' ' l• l l &ol11 15 11 ·~ •~.ocn Cll) I• 11 pt to 7 l I I I 1 1 l 16 I I S 0 11 I I • 1 \ I I l J ' 0 l • 0 0 I 0 I 1 J • I I l 1 l•U71~ Scort br ou1rt1r1 .l o Culnl1 I 16 II 16 10 Huntln91on 8e1c,., 10 l • 16 1~u Coron• dtl Mir UI! It 11 ,1 1p Q I I I • 0 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . . ' ' 0 ' ' ' 0 0 ' 0 0 tt " Scor1 by Ou1rtu• 0 ' ' ' " • ' ' 0 ' ' ' ' ' ,. ' ' " • ' • ' 0 .. R1ncr>o A11mo101 I I ' ·-~ ll-61 Corone Oel Mir ll lJ 1• M1rln1 U•f "'"''' A!l•m' flr>od•n ~ ..... Po •1•1 f o,d tt~l!on lo!1h It It •I Ip 0 • 11 • 0 • • • 16 S I I• 0 • ' 0 0 0 lS 11 ' ' ' " • " .. ~ W11tmon111r I 11 I 1.-'"'""~''m" to~n1nn ~n!1H 61H~elo~ ~li..i";.~"' li~rrl1 TO!•I• 11 II Pl lo . ' ' . . " ' ' • S o I • • ' " ' 0 0 0 " ' ' ' ' ' " " " • ~ Scw1 b~ Ou1rt'" ,_,.,rn1 Wts'lm1o•!t r I~ 16 ll ll ~-611 19 lJ 10 11 •-51 Gra11t's, La Fo11da Tri11111ph John Valle!~' to~sed in 21 points and Skip \Villian1s iparkled on defense as Grant':-; s trefl ked to a 73-61 Costa Mesa open league baskelbal l win O\·er Lacrnn1le Th u rs d a y night at Orange Coast College. In another till, La F'onda. behind 1he all-round plr.y of Ron Todd and HAlph Chandos, lripped \\'oody's \Vharf, 66-54. Todd hit 15 points to lead the "inners while Chrindos, the rormer Mater Dei star, canned 15. John FAirchild and (;reg Kind potted 15 each for Woo- dy's. Vallely, Williams and Craig F•lconer led a second half surge that sa\v Grant's pull all'ay from a two point hilftime lead lo a coinfortable ma gin V!ltl¥ V. tlom• F (Oner r!ln , ""' 8 ·~· i Vor ot•h m'" mmlt "00 Ii Ii~ r ••r ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 0 • 0 •I '" ' " . " 0 " ' • ' ' .1 1n ' ' l l 11 ' . 11 JJ !'1) " ' • ' " •' '• ' J 11 ' ' " 0 ' ' 0 0 ' 0 i I ' ••• 1. ""' " "'~'- • • ' • " ' • I """"' 0 ' 11 ' n ~' ll, L11mml• ?t. WIJHJ"I WllH1 !JO ) rnt n• "" "' fl It 11 IP ' 0 l 10 . ' ' ' 0 .. ' • --• Sears • Prices Effccli\'C f<'riday. July tJ and Sa tu rday, July JO I • . Friday, Jtily CJ, 1971 DAILY PILOT 19 --'---'------------------· --• ' --·-,,.,-·--.---. "' ' I . . . FRIDAY And SATURDAr ON ~'-... "'\'I;~(, JULY 9th AND 10th Hurry ... Quantitiflo Llmit~d .. ' ·i. .. ' :j; .. . ,, . OlJR BEST 4 PLY NYLON • ; ,. ·rr . 'II·: ,. ' " • ·' t ·~· ,, 1. GUARANTEED/36..:Monthsf 6.50x L :~ Tul)elr~s Blri ck\\'all Plus l.76 F.F..T. :\ncl ()Id l 'i rr ' SIZE T •• ~·-1• F.1·:.T. r ,.; •• - • D eep 1rcaJ Jur greater 1n 1 lea~(', w ide tre.tli !o r better l fdlfi<)n 'l'11IJt•lr!oiio l ~l a('k wu ll ------ h.:iOx I:!_ I l.9J I .7h --- 7.7:lx 14 IH.91 2.14 R.25x 14 2 1. 'J:! :?.:i2 Tuhele•• Whitewall - • P.ttl'ntl·d ~at"ety shoulder hir i11Js1rivc steering and ctirncr i n~ con trol, ruggcJ ({jfl51fU CflCH1 -- A~k ,,•bout :ie11.r & l "o,1ve,1ie11t Cretli.t J'/a11 A. 6.Sllx 13 7,3:;, 14 7.75x l4 8.25x l4 8.55x l4 8.15xl5 8.45xl 5 14.91 19.91 2 1.9.1 24.93 27. 9:1 25. 'l:l 28.93 I . I<• 2.0 I 2.14 -2 .. 32 - 2.50 2.37 2.<W 1-~ ~-L~S1 'A'rE l'n s~enµ~r Tir~ Guara11trf~ ~ (;ueranl~c,J A•ainsl: All tire failures from normal road h:u-~ 1 ards or defec1s 1n material or workmanship. ~ I For I-low Loni: For 1he life of 1he original 1reaJ. ' !!!!! Wh•• Sean Will Do: In exchange for 1he tire, replace i1 l h<1.rA- I ing only for 1he propor1ion of current selling price plus Federal Excise Tax that represen1s tread used. Repair nail punctures 11t no charge. (;uaranleed Aa:ainsl: Tread wcar-ou1. For I-low Loni(: "fhe number of months specificcl. What S~an Will Do: In exchange for rhe tire, replace it char.i,:- ing che curreru se lling price plus Federal Excise Tax less 1he following allowance: MonlhA Guaranlertl 18 co 24 27 10 39 \ " . • ' ' AJJowance 10% 20 ,;\. '" 'i ' ·•· ~. " . .1. · l " .•. " . ' .. ~ I ·}.~ ., ... . •rt . ~ •t :r . ,,,. "t ·-.rf ·! ' ..... ,. '.• .. " 1•. ~ .:=;~ •· t • • ' ' • ' ' " ' " . " SHOP SUNDAY 12·NOON To 5:00 p.m . •MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 a.m . to 9:00 p.m. •SATURDAYS 9:30 a.m . to 6 :00 p.m . •FREE PARKING -· 'oo • .. < m ••• t l"lm41. ,. LI Pt""• (Ul It IT 11 lo 0 " " ' ' ' ' ' ' 0 ' " ' " ' ' 1 n o • ,. 10 11 ,... L.1 Fondl 14, W-'~'• 11 I UfH.\ l'Allt CANOGA l'l,ll .l<I0·0•• 1 CQIOll'TON .a .. ,,.,, .~2·)161 C0Vt1'1.\ '116·0•1 l 11 "'ONl f 4•l-lf11 GLr1>10.-u ~·J-1004, , ....... ,, t<OLLTWOOD 46'1·1'1•1 •WGUWQQD •11.2111 IONG 61.-CH 4lJ·0121 OL 'IOl"C I. JOTO 161-Jll l 0 11•1'1GI 4l7.]100 PlS•DIN4 ••l -.l21 1,JJ1·•~11 Scars llA.1.11 '-OllUCK AND CO, .. •ll-4141 l•Hf,\ ff f '•IHGI •44·•011 S•Hf,\ •NA J•1·ll7 I SANT• ,,.ONl(I, .l••-•11' SOUTH CO.llf PL.All, 140..J.lU 1ij0Ul•ND O.\IS ••7-4SM, SJl•llJl TOllAHCl ,.,_,,,, Ul'Ll,N9 •11-1•17 Vl,UlY 76J-1 .. 61 , ••4·1)10 VllMOHT 7S•·l•I I , .... , •• 11 ... °"'''"''"" -"•"' ··"·' ... ~ ... ... -- I . . . 20 D41t Y PILOl Friday, July Q, }q]I ----.................................. -........... .,. .. ""'' 'SJ•~ Start Your E11gi11es! by Deke Hou/gate l\!arkie had a little black bot Thal told hin1 ho\I/ to go <\nd erer.v,1·here that ti.la rkJe 1'he box was sure to knuw, 11Clll Everybody v.·onders ho11· in only three yea1·s ~l arl, J)onoliue has berome the faste~t driver in U. S. Auto Club 500--mile championship racing. He's admittedly not the most daredev il driver 'fhe 1969 lndv rookie of the vear led the 1971 Jnd1anapohs 500 ~\11! hi s transmission broke. LaSl Saturday he won the inaugural Ppcono 500 aft er taking tl1e pole position and dom1natmg the r\jce most of thr 11·0.\'. Alr~ady he is predicting he 11·ill qualify for the California 500 11l Ontario. a! something like 185' n1iles an hour '{es. i\lark Donohue ha s a secret weapon. and no! :iurpri~­ lngty -since he 1s an engineer as well a ~ a race driver -it 1.~ ;i liu le black bolt.. Donohue i~ onl' of the fev.· peoplr in racing who cU!Tl'n1ly u~e a n1echanical recon.Jer Lo set down on paper "·hat things are occurring to his race car \\"lien he is te~ting it . \\'Ith the recorrler. \\•hich art.~ like an airltner's flight rt- corder to tracr such variables as engine speeds. temperatures, pcessures and tlvna1nic movement~ of the vehic le. i1self. Dono-hCl~ and his creW are able lo pinpoinl exactl.v what lhey need to dO to n1ake the car go fa ster. : Donohue ·~ engineering sidekicks. Don Cox and Chuck Cant- ~11. also make liberal use of the computer to digest data they extract from the race ear t.lark drive~. '. So V.'ht>n Donohue. the latest super star of USAC racing. goes on the lrack he knO\l'S scientifically more about the m"achine he Is driving than any ()f the veterans he competes against can guess aboul their 01111 Stu111lur1l Decelop111e11t Ho1rtii1e For years !~ standard development routine ha~ been th~ tf:ick te st A driver makes fi ve laps or so at speed. comes in lhc plts. checks his lap limes and tries to describe lo his crew chief v.ijlat he feels happening to the car. ~ .4.fler a brief conference. the t1\'0 agree lo whatever change I.~ lo be made to the car. and the driver goes out for Five more la'p~. ' Some drivers have lillle to sav. because thev can't describe ;:idequately the sensations they rf.el 1vhile driv.ing. Otherl'i are \'tr~' descrip!ivc. but no matter ho\v good they are in communi- cating 1vilh !he crew thief the best !ha1 can be sa id abou! !hi s method is that it is seat of th<" prtnts reckoning. -~ \\'hen Donohue comes off the track. they open up the 1illl<" htack box and look a! the squiggly lines in~ide while tal king to hjm. There is just no gue sswork v.'ilh the Sunoco fl lcLaren crew. Donohue is not the only race driver to make usr nf reco rd- ing device~ to improve hi s race car. but he is onr of a handful -AAd is undoubtedly at this point the best of the lot ~.\\'hen he 11·as an lnd.ianapolis rookie Ile ruffled a fr11 r.~1ab­ li~ment t,vpes when hr called soine of lheir standard praet1 ces •·~ck magic." ~·: "\\'e heard in all seriou~ness." Donohue ;;;1id. "lha1 1hr thillg to do is run a ne1v engine on !hr dynamometer \ale in the a"1rnoon. then let it res1 ovt>iTiight. Thal \vould give the 1nole-c~es a chance to adjust. and v.·hen v.·r 11•otJld run the enginr tt\rtnext d;iy v.•e'd ~et more pol\·cr. ~ "I !hat 11·ere rrue. the v.•ay to go 11·ould be 111 run vo u r rit,e ine and put i! in :;torage for two 1vcek~. Thrn ii 11•o uld ha1·e l~ best ad justed molrsculf'.~ around. and you'd blow e1·ery- ~y off" :· lliffere11•· .. f)f Opi11i•>•• Drag racing is JI young man's ~port , ri::ht? "\\P rong." say~ :~·ear--0ld James \\'arren. •·ho con1petes ahnu~t v.·eelily in a :!lll m.p.h. fuel dragstt r against ftllO\\'s not much more than hklt' his agr. _-."I don't think yo ungrr guys have l'ln advantage." he ~aid. "'fhey might ha1·e beUtr reartion. but af1 er you drh•e a lont tihle }'OU get lo v.·here you ('01ne out quick and lt:a\'f' (lhe starlo litg line I to~ether. ._· "I lh in k I gel as many rtd light<; 11s anybody f'l sr. As a nfiatttr of far t. l'\'E' had two of them Jn the last mo nth." :· A red light i~ the rlisqua llt'icatlon i.ignal a raeer gets v.b('n he;, le:ivei; lhe slartin11: line loo soo n. S-0me rlrag rarer~ belie\'<' ltf.ty ha\lt. to get • certain perrentagr nf them or they're not t..,..ln( hard enoui::h. :: \\'arrrn has li1rrally matured \\'ilh !hr straii::ht-line n1otor i;ipQrL Hr lirst elimbed in • car and atcelrrattd down a dra)!' ~llflp in 195.l. before many nf hi!> ('ntnpeliH•rs loda y lilarted leerning to read and \\'ritr. : Becau~e he li\'tS in Bal.:rrsfirlcl and co1nmu te-: often In the 1..it:i ,\ngtle~ arrn. \\'hrre ml\\I nf the big timr mt't>t~ For fuf'I di9)!.~ters arr hrJd in the \\'r~I . he anrl his parlnf'rs. rar 1111nrr ~ger Coburn and spo nsor l\l:ir\in l\lillrr. arr l;nn\\·n a~ thr •·Ridge Roule Tr rrors." ,,,.,., k' llf*····· ,,, •.. , .• ,,> ."ipt•t•fl." Th<' \\'arren-Coburn-i\lill rr (';u· 1" br-s1 known rr,r ih t<•r '-Ref'ds lnl'ariahly, \\"arren C'lock!i thf' fastrst top-t nd spt·rd nr aQ..1! n1N't he i,~ in. or al lt•::ii;t second fastei;l Hr 11a~ onr tif th1· fifst !o hit 220 n1 .p.h. al the end nf a qua1·trr-111ilr one nf !he fir.st a1 225. 2.10 and 23;, \\';i rrcn c:1:plalns : E\'er.vbnd.v shut.~ orr at thr top end, bf'r.;.iu~I' lllr\ arr i::r:i r"d l'O loll' 1hHt slop speed br.1ts the bearings oul of t11r11· r ng1nr~ S~e gu,v.~ tell mr that if they hl'lvr !110 runi; ::i1 2'.!0 lhr.1·'1·r Hiroug-h for 1he rl a1 . ~ "\\'e 're not ruiining th;ll low nl a ge;1r ThC' rr:-il of i1 b :ill d~e to Roger and t.he. 11·ay he builds th i_. rnginr ., '. Still popul ar. still enlh11.~1asLic about tht spor!. \V;irrrn trlL~ h~<> feelings about drag racing· "1 don·1 kno"' if vou ju~t ha vt' to lovr draJ?; 1·;ic1ng or 11h;1I, bUt it"s a renl l.r exci!ing game. It 's a challenge. 11 ~ee111s likr i1 nc;ver ends. I just started driving and got bet1 cr <ind q1.11cke r. New thini;:s eomt' up and you want to try lhrm \'ou ju.~t k('ep ,01n.:· ·' Like 11 dtie:1 10 n1osr professional r:irers. !he far1 1ha1 !hcrr 11« still youn~:;ters drai: racing on the public ~1 1·cet 1' annoy.o; \o{arrrn . :; "\\'e havt ~rudge races on most strips 11011·." he said. "A lt.ji:! can race alrnosl an.1· night he n·ants. If a kid get.-; caught on t.l)\ street racing. he doesn't have much of an excuse. :: ··The only thing lhat really bums me up is when yo u read in llji newspaper. 'dra g racrrs get killl'd racing on thf' streel.' I ll.!'tSS an.v time yo u take off lrom ii stop signal yo u're d1·ag 1·1Cring. a ~ far ai; the public J$ conce111ed It's unfortun!lte thnl t,_rt is any 1·ac1ng on the slr<'et v.•hen he ha\'r. thr srrips 11'e do." ~ Ocea11 Fishing Report OClf.l•OIDf -!•! """'"" ) b•• "T•Cull•, !1 bo<'ll1.,, )61 IM'-1, I V<'il<lwlO>l. '10~ &l!MICCI<~. • '.IHT.I MONICA -<I o"OI•"· }/' )Alito -..u, XIII ••Ml II•"· I k•lll><>I. I }>a"•tudt •IDOHDO -l?l 1no10.. I! '.>Jb•cr.re, 2 barrt tud•. I I -aa, )l';O ,ti!~ bn\ . ...SI bl.,. b•" ~0<a• n ,•,...1.,.1 ; 11 t:>A'• I kollbul. \.OJ ""'lckfl'•I, J2' roe~ cod. •' SE.IL ll!.ICH -113 •"Cl"'~ It> ....... I hallbl!1. B•ro• -111 •"a'"' " .... .,.,u,,.. l2 _j.... "" 1>111 ... , :'n\ft;kf!'ll. '"' i..OWO s t.ACM ll'~hrf l lkdl""I -)fl U!tl .. 1: ~J l ltMI(.,..,, J7' llln. I rod< cod. !Stl.....,I l'lor) -It 1<1qltr• JU !MIU. I k1lll>UI. '>Cl l"\o<;:-•"' ~.,~. .-6J •flfll .,. U blu, '1 m1l~•••I. ll'Kllk IHrtfitlll"f) -10. 1""1"" ;J •lti-tcor•, JU c.ilCe btu • DAM.I "MAlll' -IU Or"O:ll••i l,CI) b ... 1. lQ "''t~•r•I. !) bt111cvt11, J "-11"'11. , l»fll'-. VIHfUll .. -'1 """'"'' •10 b•" I•) l>ll>f OOH, J k1!11><>t. - MOIUIO •1tY cv1,,,·. l • .,,11 ... 1 -I? •~al"" •l 1;.io •0-·1. }/l roi;I (O(I 1 ,.1,,..,.,, IS•~ Sl.,,.Oft) -}7 .~oltc•c •l Iona ~od. •J'I PO<~ occi, t\) C>lu• b••~ l'Oltl MUI HEMI -&7 onolo" •U <l ll<o 1>1$•, )l ~IHI>~! MALllU -la ••nl•" •• ~ollfr. lu n, I~ ~&libul. llS ro-tk red ~ltl>I l'EOIO (nno S!rofl l •""l"•l -~1 a"(ll""· tO oll>l(O"'. l,.trr'1'i L••~'"I) -•I •no'"" j' •l~•<o•• '1 l>afl•lo. JU tollto l>au. /1 1•"" btu. ~ l>•u! ""'" S.INTA IAlll .. 11.1 -It 1ngl•10 ))O tO<• n<d IC 11 .... cod Ni!Wl'OllT !D1voy'1 l«~••) -11{ •nr'"" 11> 1lb1ror• 1 "-'"•'""' 1) l:H'I~'"'· /II l>AU, I t<>(t\ f~. )JO ~1110 ""'" t\O m•o•0<e< (Att'I l ••O•I•! -I) 1no••" 96 •11>•<0"' "AllAO•SE COVf -11 1 •"ft'"" t•) (Iii«> b• , \D ~Ollbu! ?~I <IX~ t<I<! IMl'[ltlitl I E.I.CM -•• •"a'"' I v•llOW'fl .P 'I~ lll•r><V~• •Iii >•~~ N u . I I oll>•f "'" I.IN 01100 I M~•lt111I l'lo<I -· /~ l~ll~" I,,.., Ol~"<OI' Procedure For Deer, • Elk Hm1ts l'ollu\1 ing t he California _, r:ish and Gain!' Com1111ssion's adop tion tJf 2J special deer hunts-, a special elk hunt and a .:-pecial antelope hunt for the lf/7 1·71 .season, !he Depart- nient of Fish and l;ame offers ltlt follow111g 1nfor1nation on how lo apply for the statewide drp,wing for the perm1U 1n- 1olvetl : Our Hunts 'fhe commission authori<'.ed 23 special anterless and either· S{'X deer hunts for which \O,liaO pern1Hs will be available. l\1aps showing the name, code number and area of each hunt will be available about July 28 "'herevcr hunt ing licenses are sold. Applicants mu st file on the applic2.liou card attached t.o lheir 1971 deer lags. The ap- plications are not transferable. For the Camp Pendleton hunt. applicants must be 16 or older. Each deer tag holder mav file one application and ma~ in dicate his first and second J11nior Co11rse Bln~ers choice of hunts. The ap-M k O'M t 4 d d C · plication must show 1 he ar ~ara, · an Te um1n1n g. 14 , recently toured the J\t1ss1on Viejo n<imes. code numbers ar.d Golf Cl ub Jn ne~r ~ecord fashion. O'J\.lea ra shot a 76 1vhile Cumm ing aced the zone nr the hunt is zoned) of 15th hole and birdie d t\1·0 others for a 74. 1'hey 1vi1! enroll at i\lission Viejo the hunts applied for. 10 _1_l_ig_h_S_c_h_o_o_l _i_n _l_ll_e_ra_1_1 _a_s_f_r_c_s_h_m_e_n_. __ _ mu 1 ! i pl '·period hun ts, assignments will be by draw. ing. Up to £our persons may f!Je as a par1y by mailing their ap- plications in one envelope. but !hey must be for the san1t: hunt s. Applications for s p e c i a I hunts in the early deer scas1n1 area must reach !he orc·:i S;>.:;ran1ento headquarter!i •lo la!er than 5 p.m. Aug. 9, v.·1th the drav.•ing lo be held Aug . 10. Applica tions for s pr ti ii! hunt s in the !a tc-~eason eirro must reach the D F G '.~ Sacramento headquarters bv 5 p.m. Aug. 17, with the drawing Aug. I!! ln1medi;1tely lollow1ng Ilic dl';Jll'ings, s u er es sf u I a;i· pl1 cants ll'ill br no1iFird by rn ail to send $5 filr ll1e spcc:;'.1 der.r perrnit Last year. in ~1 ~prr1;1I hunts 1vith !1.22.'i prrn1ils. 1.742 t1ecr were rerorted !aken. Antelope llnnl Application forms for lhe :;pcei;JJ antelope hunt will !Jr available aboul .Julv I :-l 11lie rcver hun\Jng lieen~rs .'Ire sold . The applications tnu.~l he 111 the DF'G 's Saeramt·11lt> headq uarters by 5 p nl. Aug :\ Su{·cessful appli('IHl!s will iie nntHied lo remit $15 ror th•'1r pennit. The dra1l'ing 11111 llc /\ug. 7. Elk lluut 'fh(' l' 0 Ill m i .'j S i 0 11 1 1.'I~ ;\lllhorized a special hunt \1'1\h ~00 permits for Hoc ky t.\01111· lain elk of eilhcr sex in the: rugged Squav.· Cr<'ek area no rlh and cast of Sha~ta Laf.r 111 Shasta and Siskiyou Coun· ties. The hunt 11·ill bl'. Nov. 1.1 !hrough J)rt'. ~. Appliratinn lnnTl~ for 111r r!k hl1n1 will bt' a1·ail<'.ble. 111 early Scplcn1ber 11hcre1·er hunling !u ·1•n'>r~ arr i;old The ap- 11l1ca!1un~ n1u~1 ht• rcceil•ed 111 lhf' DFr;·s S;1eran1ento he;id- f!ll;1rh•f., h~ ~ r rn (lt\ ~ VCI Has E11ougli Talent For Winning· Season--Tift 1'im Tift reels UC lrvine has ma1fr a 1n<lj(1r major break-!hrough th1~ ye<1r in the nui tter or recruiting basketball pla yers. "To m.v kno\\'ledgc, Scott t-.1 agnuson <'Ind O:ive Baker· are the fi rst \wo pl<iyers we havr becri able to recruit awoi y from other ma lur colleges like the Pacific-8 schools. fl·linncso.ta. Utah and LSU . "~1agnuson 1vas being sough! by al lrast ll()WAHD HANDY four of the nlajor univt'rsitics ever~· body," Ti fl rl'1'e<ils . \\lhile lhe bnsketball season is ~!ill n1onrhs a11·ay fron1 reality. Tifl 1vaxrs enthusiastic whe~ talking about Antcall'r prospce!s lor !he ensuing _\·cars. "\\'r 1vill have a better 1ean1 1h1~ cor11111g season th::1n we had J:isl ~·ear. physically <1nd 111;1ture. The: record 11·c post ni<i.v Ix' 111isll';1d- ing bl'Cause v.•e have ni:idr such a <·h;.inge 1n our schedule. "[l v.·111 he 1nuch 1norc d1f11cult and t·hal- J('ng111g and the sutcess ot the tca1n i;hould be measured not in victories but in the nun1· ber of v.·ins 11·e gel over 1he 11 univt•rs1tv ](•1·1•\ !can1s we pin~•." · UC! v:ill ope n the 1971~7~ se:ison 1111h four ~arnes fln t,hc r:istcm srabo<.ird ag:1111.'il ln11i..: established basketball pt>11crs bu! Tift i.~n't 11·orried aboul learn 1Tlnr;ilr :-.hould UCI losr all four gan1es. •·Any tirne you are 1~ol<itrd on <1 lrq1 ii helps 111 grl. !hr le;1111 1·lnsf'r l1>gt•!lu·r Th!'v gf•I lo kn,1w eat·/\ fi!her hr11er and ~f'I .1 lr1l oi 11ie r:1r!.1 ~ea~Qtl problr1ns out of lhr 11,11 " v;1rsit;v thi s eon1ing: ye:~r." he e~plain$. "He 11·111 givr us so1ne height up front and I'm sure he can help us a ~rrat de<if. "l'l1il R.hvne and Bill il·loore ll'ill be nn the front line -,1·i1h Sieve P:1rker. Jim Pinola, H1chcirrl Cl<11·k_ Garrick Barr and Gary Den- 1on thallcnging, ''\\'earl' th inking about rnov1ng Ed Bu rlin g- h:ini brick to tile tronl line again but won'l kno1v ahout this un til 11·r star-I pracritc. "Burlinghan1 playe d the backcourt v.·1th Trrl.v Holph and Rrad Haker las! year and 11 ii! be joined b_v Fred illos ier ;"Jnd Pinola 111 11 huttl!' for !hr st;1rt1ng a;;si~n menr s " /J1'nlon, illos1rr and l!Oll'i1rrl l!a ll'k1ns ar(' 11p lro1n la~t ,ve.1r s lilJL~l.:'lnding rrcshn1<-in 1r;1111 1'.losl of 1h1s u1111 11 Ill gradu;.ite ntx1 .lunc. bul Tif! 1sn·1 worried. .. \\ e llll\ ~' rnough good fr~:;hrncn 1·nn1ln~ in tn g11 f' us our second stl'aigh! ()Utstanding: 11e~1son ' hr says with confidence. "All \\'(' v.·1!1 havr to do af!er 011.~ next ~eason Is lo rccruil lhe ke.v pl<1yer.~ 1ve fet'[ 11c 11ill nt·cd.'' \l'hilC' T1Fl docsn·1 tlll'i!ll vn rwn _\C<Jrs in ad1·ance. hf' doe~ admit. hr is currently 11·ork· ing on the 19T1-7:J schedule th at alread.v in· rludes I rips In Hil11'<li1 for three ga111es and a ;.1ving !hrou~h the Pac 1f1r I\orth11·esl. He addi; lhal a third trip m;"Jy be necei;~arl' 111 rnrnpli'1e the schedule bu1 i~ noncon1mil- t;1I i1t the present lime. Tifl leels !hat pl a.v1ng 1110 g.-::i1ne.~ lit lht: A11.'lln·11n Cnnven1ion Cen1cr i.~ onl.v a fo1"en1n· ncr of !111n~s Lo cflme. "\\'c .11'!' iinprovin~ <our :-chedulc and !he r·onvent1on C'(•nter i~ a n111th more alln1cti1·e pl:1cr 1o pl<1_1 It givrs us ;i rn:1jflr class ~itua- 11011 . \\'hliC' his hc:id is 111 the elnud.~ !he~r da\'~. rl1·ean1111~ ab<lut thr f111lll'l'. h(' kno1rs 1t \~ill ~·01nl' d11wn !n t <lr\h In a hurry oner 1hr r;ill "Our 1Tl11SI tT1l1r:il 11i•"k rlur1ng Ilic roin1n~ ~f';l,~111 11dl hr \\hl'n 11r p!a,1 (';11S!;ile1Loni;: Hl':i<'h 1 r;1 nked 17111 1n lh(' 11a!111n . H:111·;i11 1,1n\.-1'd l!11h .1nil q11.1r1rrl1n~l1!>t 111 lhr '\IT • A11glers Catchi11g Albacore A good catch ol albcicore l/1 the Orange Coast waters wa s reported Thursday by area landing <lperators. At the newly opened Dana Wharf Sportfislung, anglers 11·ere averaging three to four albacore each 11•11h the <1 verage 11·e1g ht Hl-15 pounds. The fish were taken on the east side of San Clen1e11te Island. Local coastal catching mostly fe1v barracuda. boats 11ere bass with a The new Dana Sportfish1og began business just a v.·eek ago after transferring i!s operation from San Clemente. "Fishing has been real good lately for all boats." reports a Dana Wharf official. Art's Landing and Da vey's Locker both reported good albacore catches, also on the east end of San Clemente lsland. "The albacore fishing has been real good the last fe1v days." says an Ari's Landing operator. "The local boat.~ have had good catches or bass and mackerel and \ve've been fair on barracud::i. Th e albacore have beeo running sniallcr 110-12 pounds) and 11·e\·e had quite a few sculp in and lot s cf blue bass." Ba ss was the big catch out tif Davey's Locker Thursday ll'ith 715 hooked. Dav ey's also reported good catches of blue bass and mackerel. And 127 albacore were hook- ed b.v fi shernien out of D11 vey·s. All cf the landings repnrted using liYe bait lanchtivics). MD Niue, Santa Ana l 'ic Lt-4 .\later Dei·s fllar·k Slanbra dr·ovc in three runs 11i lh a 11'1- ple and a double as !he .\!onarchs bttl!led to an e1gh1 inning 4-4 tie wi1h Santa Ana Thursd<1y night in Santa An<1 i;umnier league b.1~eball <1c- r1on ;il fll crnorial Park. Stanbra . who \\'ill be a junior in SeptembE:r, delivered his dnuble in the first to plate .Jim l;;1rd c<1 1rho h;id .singled. G;ir<l ea had advanced 111 i;('c;ind on ~l ike Arneranthes· one-baser. Then with lhr /11onarth$ 11'ailing 4-2 in the lif!h, ~tan­ bra b11nged nut his three-bag- ger 11·i1h mates Dave Najara and Gardea aboa rd. ,\later Dei got its other run in lhe third on Gil rdea·s single ;ind a pair of Sanla Ana er- rors Coarh To1n Carroll's lra111 rch1rns tn action Thur~d;"Jy f;ic 1ng Fnn1hlll al Ii a 1 .\lemorial Park. •J••~f~. ,. r, ""~' '' ""'"""'~'~" ,, 1 ,, • ( ,, ,, ~'~""·'~ 1h .,.., ' I~ l\d••1•0. II I "' ~ '" I ''' ~ C> ' -' ~-~~· '· ' .... ,. ~ ' . ., .. ~ " .. ' ' 0 • ' • 0 • ~ t~I ' " • 0 " ' ' ' 0 " • ' 0 " • " • i\ll{'<'t'~~1ul ;1.ppl1ea11L~ 11111 b<' 11ol1l1rd b\' n1al1 l11 send S25 tnr 1hr1r rl\.. rern11t. The rlr;;i11111g v.111 ht ()Cl 7. llo1v doe.~ T1t1 lll\1\.. .1t thr pcrson1K·I hi' 11 1!1 ha1·r ava1lciblr lur tile t·nn11ng se;1,,un ;ind llH' _:,Pars ahc;o.d '' ··Raker v.111 br Iii(' lone Jn'~h1n;111 nn 1hr nnrl l'ugt•! Sound. \\('~lf'rn Heg1on;il .\'C1\/\ ''"" "' 1··1c•· II , I I " '~~·· A ·1~ ~Q• ocn co .... ., ·~· . '' J ~p ,,·, CYCLIST!:> • IN ACT IO N A bevy of Orange Cou nty speed1111y n1utorl'Ytle racers, headed by lluntinglon Beacli's Hick Woods, paces tonight's 11 cckJy prograrn al Orange County Fairgrounds. The first of 23 racing rvents beg.ins at 8. Other eountians in Friday's program include Ed \\'illiam' tCosta ~1esa l , Summe r f\.\C'Knighl 1 Newport Beach), H.uebcn Benites ISanla Ana) and La1Ty Shnw 1 Puller\ on l Brothers 1vil l share the bill· ing tonight. Those con1peting include Brue.. and G re g Ha serot of Whittier. Steve and fl·like Bast of Van Nuys. Bruce and John ~~landers of Hun-- tington and Hick and Gene \l/oods. Gene \Voods, 12. w i 11 perform in the special mini • bike races du r i n g in- tcrn1ission. IVIV Trio Too Much For Eagles Anyt11nc basketball a high tea m has school thcee players v.·ith 20 or more points in one gan1e it usually comes oul a v.•inner. And that 11·as lhe case ror i\.'li ssio n Viejo l·hgh in Thurs- day night's Costa Me s • Jlecreation summer league play at Estancia High as lhrff Diab!os hit the magic 20 mark in a 67-56 victory over Estan- <:i!i's Eagles. Gil Normandie paced U1e 11·ay fo r the Diablos with 21 11·hil<' 1\l ike Bowen and Roh Ferguson \\'ere not [a r behind with 20 each. The three ac- t·ounlcd for all but six points of fl1ission Viejo's tot;il. Estancia \\'as led by guard Craig Hays v.·ith 14. In other gan1es, fl1ater DeL behind the play of Georg• l !erold. turned back Orange, fi5-52. <ind San Clemente fell to Santa Ana. 62-41. Herold 11'1t~ a one-man sho1v for :\later Dei's fl1ona1ch.s. tos:~ing in 29 f)Oinls. includ icg 22 from the field . J.ie canned 16 1n the opening hal f in h,elp- ing 1\J;iter Dei to a 14 poi nt ad- vantage 135-21) H°'~M C•••" Cucvl•r "'""~e ,~•·• K•i<V JJc,1~ R•'" ,,,.,. H~l1t\1r< '' II ,1 tJo I ' ,. ' ~ 1~ " " /.\.,., O•• ;;, , • • ' ' . . '" ' . 0 , 11 11 41 S•n Citmtn~· (41\ P 10~1• \I""""'~ Do,.l1n~ <!~II> W"'-' ''"'''"'0" B•v'- 'fr'-'' ll•1!t. ..... m•Mt 11 1 ·,·~·( " r """ r.~;o.o• 'I ·~,,·~ t~IA·< ., ...... r-••v·o~ '3'<'"''. I""' ,,..,,.' H~·11,..,., •• h I• II •! t. • ' ' 0 • • " " • • • • " \ \ 11 1l ,, .. M"<<O" \/·~10 !111 fl •' t• ~ 1 I• ' ' • . " " ' • " to !I •' •• ~ I 'I ' ' " ' • • • ., ,. , ' " r -1 .... ll'(l rg1' 111v1~111n 1·1:1 tnps "·~'" D"' ,1,. ~ic 00' ·~~~--'=-~-~-"-:~~~~~~.......;, Aren Briefs l\11'.:X:lCO CITY -1'hrre Orange l"oas1 area youngste rs earnrd high finishes in an 1n- 1crn.1r10110'J youth 11·re.c::tling 1ournan1ent completed Tues- <lay a! the lnstitutli Po\1t rcn1co l\11einna l here in lht tllexi ca n i·apl!nl T 11· e 1 v r-.1·rar·ti\d Tr1-r v .l:1cksn11 nf Hu n1111g1on Beilch':- \\'.1rdl0w S1·honl pl;1ccd !purlh at 91 pounds 11·hilt 14-.ve:ir-n!rl Tt'\Vinkle !Cos ta ~f cs ii l Jnter med 1at<' .students .Jim illaxey ( !Ol l ;>:1d fl lark to.Ii Iler ft 141 were i;ixth in the ir divisions. The lath•r is hrndt'd for Es1anc1a llll:h 111 lhc fall Top Orangr Coun1.1· evn- tcsiant in the five-da.v mert was Buena Par<k's 12-i·rar-n ld Bob Legaspi. 11·ho capt\.ired !hr 86-pound cro11·n. Alsti ron1pctini: ln I h t tourner 11·hic:h 1 n r l u d e d youll1ful <'nlrHnls fro1n all over tilt U.S. and 14 nther co untrie s \1'as Rra ln!ermf'<.hi>.'t s!udenl .Ii m Snyder of Costa ~lei;a. I lo"·cver. he v.·.as bl'.'~tt bv an upset ~tomach and ad- vanced 111!0 thr final~ of the 1.1:'!-pound ('IAss be/or" having 10 forfeit h1~ f1n;il op1k1rt uni1~. ('nst11 .\1esans Jor~r Fc·rna11. dcz ! 45-pnund cl:iss), Uubby Cro\1'!" j 67 J and Greg Ashl('v 11 48 ) al:-io qualified fnr the fl·1e~il'<lll junket bul wt'rl' unrhlr to aeeon1p<'ln~· th(' area group due lo a lack of funds Jackson was sponsnrctl by tile Huntington Reach Hccrca- t1011 Dept. whilt> tl-1 axt'~'· i11illt'r and Sn.1·der 111ade !he trip tlllfler the ;iu::;pice.~ of 'hr Costa l\1csa Rrcreation DrpL ftlidgt•t flfl("t"." A hut Ctl!l lt'Sl. is in 1hr 11nrk-: lo11 1ght al El Toro SpecJ1.,a.v as lhe top three driven;: on Jhe Na tional ~1idget Raci ng Assoe1at1on point l1s1 1,;nock he: .. 1~ in lln rxciting thr(·c- qu;1r\t•r 1nidgct card First !line !rial 1s al 7 n'clocli ll'ith the trophy d:1~l1 slated for 8.30. Canoga Park ·~ flhl;r ~110111 si ts atop lhe Nil-1RA h~t. Rut Covinii·s Dal'e Fender ;ind Bob ri 1 cC~1w of Sou th Cate ;u·c II l1h1n 18 points or the S:1n Frrnandn Val!Pv driver and :·Jl three 11·if1 be rticing Friday ;it El Toro. I In the United Stales Racing Club midge! competition :it El Toro. tnranwhile, Lnkc11·nn<l's 1 Bflh Olivrro i.~ the turr~n1 p111111 ·1rar!cr A.-. 11ilh lhl' Nr-,,tRA lhrer-1 quarter mid&rl~. S;llurrla> ' racinjl star!s 11·i1h 7 o'rl11"!'I l11Tlr rr111I~ and fi nishes ~'!!h thr 8·30 trophy dash. Bc1seball S ta.ridi11g·s .\,\Jf':l\ICA \; Ll::At;u1·: t~ast lliYi ~ion H;"Jlt1mntr Rost11n Del roil New \'orl., Cleveland \\"aslling1on 0 11 kln11d l\;111:.ti~ I '11 I i\!1nnesnt11 ,\ni:el\ i\1ih1;111ki·1· Cllit·ago \\' L :,:' :11 ,, :i.1 :rn ,17 " 50 " " r nu,1a•v'1 •.••~'" (~I("<>~ I An•"!< I !,''"""'M• I "'"""'>e'" I ""'"'~"~•on 1 l'lo·•cn 5, C ''•"'•"d 1 o .. •O•• 3 N•"' Vr•I I '~ •w•"~,.... l ~"ll'N (·'• l l<><!a•'• G•m., O•ho.I •~ol•re•" !~I •' \1••1~1PQ!o11 ! /I l•O"' f;!l 1 7 15 " " 11 1 ~~I ' 16' l 17 " Clt••l·~n 10""""'" ~ht •t B.inmo'• IP•tm•' 11. ~~hi "'"''N• I P•I"' p 11 " "'"" Yo" IS•o•Pl .. ., ... 1 1• ""M \;Olw•u•f' !~l~lon •II •I (M(•qo 1»nn•n 11\ n•o!•! ~·~'"' t llv lltodlund I Sl •' Monn'.'O'~ {f'N•Y 11 I• '"M •n•ol\ IM•• 1·11 •' Q,1~l•nd !lllu• 11 JI. nl~M ~:\TH)~AI.. l.EAGUE Ea st Oi rision !'1tl sburgh Ne"· York <'h1<"<ign SI 1,0111~ r h1!adelphia ~·1on rre;1l \\! [. :11 .11; ·" ,, " " \\'tst nil'ision ~:in Frnnci.~c<1 !"1:! .14 [)nd!:ers I !ouston 1\tl;int;1 ('inclrin~dl S11n Diego .1!1 ·10 " !">1 s;; T~<1'1d••'t ll~'U!lt S•" ~'""''•ro • Ho~''on I Pnll•d~loMa I. Mo"'"" I "'"'~u,<>h 7 c:"ci""AT• l (~·t•n~ • Pod•t" ? On• o""''' """"""<! ro(l•v'• Go.,,•• Pl't . .640 .5fi1 .:'!42 500 ~'.!4 .:'!9:! fiO!I ~1.12 .SIR 4~9 .4~~ .. 1.53 GB 7 • ,, " 18' ~ :!I ' ' IO 16' . :! 11 ~ H•>1· !en !~n•·O<~ I I 8"~ Bl•""'""f"'' 5 II •I ~1 lou• !"•u • 1~ •rd C••••cn "11 i ,,.. "'""' {'O""•'I ·~·"'" ,, o· ~·,~h .... •Y" 111 ot P~.1 •(l•tn~ o l ~"Or1 I". nloM l\nan!I l N&•h boll "' r,11,1>v•Q~ !8"'"' •I) "'O~I N•w ""o'' !S-•~er 10·•\ n• (1nc•n•.rl <C."m lie• • '1 no~M Cn·t•~o (t<lnd< • 1 '"d O•<••• i>n o• 110.,n•m ?·\l, •I San 01"90 l ~nll•rt< 69 ~nn ••111• J.JJ), 7 S•~ Ft•n««O !0.,f•n '~I. n<g~I ISTH ANNIVERSARY SALEll BIGGEST & BEST YET! DEAN LE WIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Moder11 & Complete Servic:e &; Paris Dept. 646-9303 540-9468 Modern Body Shop for All Cara Urang-r County':; Largest and l\lost f\!odern T oyota a nd Volvo Dealer O\'ERSf:AS Dfl1\'f:IT Sl'ECIALISn ~. ---.-., -• DEAN LEWIS WQIY!OlTIAl ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS '71 COROLLA SPECIAL $1777 DE MO.: ~9~! ~ SEE THE ALL NEW TOYOTA CELICA SPT. CPI. IMMEDIATE DELIYl•Y ~ VOLVO 1971 DEMO S4098 164 SEDAN ""u!emtlic, 11.•d•o, H~•'•' ::3371 • ... l I ., • The A.fM/d Palmer Method VARY CLUBFACE WITH LIE OF BA1L JN SAND , · A good way to standardize your sand play is to vary the facina or your club according lo the depth of the ball in the $Ind. • I 1uggcst that when the ball rettt on top or the sand (lop il- l'ustfation) you race 1hc club slight- 1 y . to the right or your target. f:'tce it at the target when the ball is slightly deprcs!.Cd .(middle i11ustration), and to the left when the baU i5 buried (bollom illu~tr•­ tion). . L ~ The more you aim the clubfacc to the lcfl, the dcc~r it will cut jnto the sand, which is just what you need whrn tile ball is low io the bunker. +'o. ~() u11 w.n.~.,..._- .. HITTING THE IRONS"-otlers solid arip, atantt and swlnapoinl· •rs to boou iron pl11 a nd lowtf 1011 i.COrt s! Send 20$ •nd • 1t1m ped, return envelope lo Arnold Palmer, t /o th1~ P•l)9r. WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? By JJM NIEMIEC The albacore bite is on and almost every boat is getUng in on the hot action. There have already been, for this early in the r;eason .. counts of Jongfins in excess of l:'>O fish per boat, and that's good bad fishin '. The hoats from Newport Harbor are fi shing the longfins from the 4J Fathom Spot to just a few hours off the beac h. The fi sh seem to be everywhere. Don Hansen at Dana Wharf Sportfishing is even sendlng out the half day Qoats in hopes of intercepting the migrating schools oi tis~ •. The best action locally is around !he east end of San Clemente lsl:ind. but by this weekend the fish could well move into the area of the 209 and eve n the east end of Catalina or the 14-mile-ban k is not out or the question. The start of the season indicates that the fishing should be rxeellcnt all year. 'fhe fish are small and the water and bait condtticins are prime for that good consist.ant run on the inside. The federal fis h and ga1ne offi ce predicts that this year will he excellent for the fisherman. The water is warming up a bit, but th·e fish are here and that is the best sign of all. All the area dee p sea landings are running daily albacore lrips, ieaving flround midnight or before. Schedules will change as lhe fish move closer lo Newport. The phone numbers for the lancliilgs arc: Da vey's Locker 673·1434, Art's Landing 675-0550, Dana Whar[ 496-5794 and l{tmlington Beach 536-9772. Gt1od llnss Co1a11fs Repor~ed Catalina Island is gh•ing up some good carcbes of callro bass to 11lx··pounds. reporls Jim Johnson of the harbor area. John50n was" fishing "'Ith Hilly Ashb y of lido Isla nd over the weekend al>oard the sportfisher Sha"''n-E out of Newport and picked up limft11 df ba&s from the area around Long Point. It \.\'RS tbe maiden voyage for the boat which is expected U> ~ee lots of albacore and marlin action this summer. The pair of an81en y,•ere using Hght Garcia tackJe and fh;hlng bomber• rig- ged "''.ilh squid close to shore to bag the nice catch. Bass, barracuda and bon ilo are still making a very good r;hO\\'ilig for coastal party boat anglers, but the yellowtaD are listed as S<'Arce this week. Tlie altentlon of mos t fishermen wlll turn to albacore for the. next few months leaving the coastal kelp beds aJmo1t an- (l islurbcd. LoadR are light and rlghlng is good for all day, half day a lKI twilight runs out or all the harbor landings. lltnonn%o Off Point Louin The hottest spot in the whole ocean ror albacore is only some :JS-'50 miles off Point Loma. Open party, charter and private boats arc all returning to the docks with more fish than have t:!Ver been checked in this early in the season. The fish Are small, averaging about 13 pounds. bu t they are hilting everything throv.'n at them. including shiny sinkers. ,Jig sl.Ops are frequent and just about ev ery strike brings the longfin s rushing to the \)oat. Some sort of rishini:: record was set J\1onday when Stu Sadikoff, Don Gold and Phil Klausner, all of Los Angeles, ehart- rred the 1\5 foot Bandito for the day and returned to the dock \\'ilh 150 albacore. There were only the three anglers on board and that figures nut to a 50 rish Pf'r m11n average. Sadikoff sald that in all his years of fishing. hr had never seen it as good, nor was he ever r;o \ired. The hot spot fnr the trio of anglers "''as 43 miles of P oint t..om<i . 1.1·here the bite was \\'1de open. The party was r igged "''[th ~ahce Stroker rods vdth matching reels and heavy line in pre- pa ration for the fish expl osion. ~f,.rker• Sel al Fathom Spot. Ralph Clock oi Nt\.\'port Beach, representing the 811lbtH• An'!'llng Cluh, ran tht boat Tick Tork out to the Z09 and -43 faJhorn s pots and anchored bouys pin pointing these spnl1 earlier lh1s "'eek. The markers are used hy many boats to loc•te their posl- tlnn In the vast ocean off shore. The area around the %09 Is a fatorlt.e i;pnt for harbor Rrea marlin engler5 and the 4Z fathom 11poiJ11.,a good albacore hole. "'tb(: bouys a re rl11ged with beacons and can be seen for quite 11ome dliilaMe. Thl1 is a yearly tr ip for Clock, wbo ••• re5pon1· Ible fot getting the spots marked ori&lnally. ' Stole R erord Trout Caught Richard J{einwald of Bishop set a new !!late record for a bro"'·n trout last week. Heinwald was fishing from the shore on Lake Crowley when he hooked and landed a 25-potmd, 13-ounce German Brown trout, !he largest ever taken in California. Ttic rish hit an Eddie Po!X' fishhack lure in a black s1cle colol' in the south channel of the popular high sierra Jake. Pope, who has been manufacturing trout and bass lures for many years, Usts this catch as the highlight or his many years in busineu. Big Rear Litke trout have moved into deep water and anglers trolling Dave Davis blades rigged with wonns are accounting tor rt1ir catches of small !rout. Still fishermen are also getting lrjlo the action near the dam, uRing TNT 11nd salmon eggs. Ila•• on Feeding Spree A good movement of has1 11 being reported •t moil Huth· lantl la•e• a1 warm we ather lncre•1ed the appetites of Ute brnn1o-tiacb. Vall Lalct I! fair tor bas1 to 41/s po1&11d1 for •ngler• Ulllng WtnflS, Purple BandlU 1od Smttbwlck surface plugs. Qapple: blvt&U 11nd catfish af't; .JH lhted a1 t11r to good. Lakes Rm•h&w, Wohlford and lbe S•n Diego lake1 are 1tlll l:f~uctlve with some b111 e:tcttdlnJ nine pounds !>ting ntlted. J\ubbtr worml f11bed •lowly 1long tbe bottom are lbe best en-- ttccr1. · ()ranRe Covnly an1ler Jay F1lr returned from • wet.•tnd f'5htni trip to Lake l\1oha\'t and said th•t ba11 fltbln• wu very ~ Fair boated 19 ba11 111 tllr« dlYt of flahin& wtU. Ute IYefw ace Welglllng more tllu four pounds. ; -Accordlni &o Fair the bU1 i re 1pt1wnln1 In deep water and are )Jtt1111 very cood oa fllptall worm1. Tbe fl•blnc pressure 11 ••Y'.down 11 h!ih day time tempe:ratnrt• art dlfflcall to wllll- 1).1114,. • ... ··If•~ Lln-.e t1f Costa Mt•• fished • Inca! pot bole lhl1 past wtet and 111.d tl11t the am.all b11111 are very responsive to pop- per• w n r II: e d clo•e !<I t.t«e. Llnt.e picked qp • nice limit or bucket-mo11tht ill two pound• u1lnR Neverka popptn. ··---·--... .,__-, __ . ·-.. - Alamitos Racing Entries l v~•r '" '" ... '" "' "' "' '" 1'111TH II.AC• -4CI) v•rd1. l VNr <lid• .. OJI>. All-~IL Purot s.noo. Y•n•ff A~ !W1tten1 ... MIH P1rr II•• !Hi rt 11' H1n•l@I (At!•lrl 11• Tuc•lln Min !S"'<th) 111 Drill IC1rdo11l 111 lll11tff !Lll>hl m ) llf .. Ftlda;, July ff. l9n DAJLY PILOT 2J Around the Area's Greens More than 270 golfers partklpated in the annual Potllkker tournament • t Meadowlark Coif Cciurse over the July 4th weekend wllh Jim Gaumer winning l<lw gross honors in a sudden-deallt playoff over John Richardson. Gaumer and Richardson closed the three days of co m- petition with idenUcf•J ~05 scores. 1t lhen took only 01 • .! extra hole for Gaumer tc; an- nex lhe championship. A Ue also resulted for first in the A flight competition. Don Shirey and Ken Sachse each recorded 215 y,•Jth Shirey ccppiog V(ith crown on lhe third extra hole. Eddie Pendergast was the R rught wintier with 222 \\'ilh Doug Mercer defeating Chri:I Christianson in a C flight playoff after each had record- ed 232 for the three days. \Va!ler Foden won the D title y,·ith a 2.15. A women's club guest day tournament scored on a best ball of partner's basis, found Barba~a Sanders and BoMie Nuccio tying with Barbara Dunham and Jeanne J{ight for fir.st place with 66. A five-way Ue resulted for second al 67 between teams of Diana Hooper and Marcella Crandall, Flo Baker and AudrP.y Brown. C h a r i t y Thayer and Betty Olson, Roberta Wa Lson and Joyce Thielman and Pat Eorio and Harriet dtanville. Rnnrho SJ The women's club oI Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course held an even holes tournament dur- ing the past wee k with Helen Hodges and r..1illie John~on tying with Vannie Sturgis for first p\&ce in A fl ight with 35. Betty Blakemore won the C crown wllh 35 followed by VI· vlan Troutman with 39 ~. K11y Leutwiler V.'lil!l lhe D flight 1.1-·inner with a 311. frcb1e Comt Only a. fe w entr!e.s remain for the 16th annual member- t;uesl tournament at Irvine Coast Country Club. 1lie fi eld is limited to 144 teams ror the tourney lhal "''Ill be held July JO-Aug. I. The first day competition will be a better baJ! of partners' affair ; the second day will feature a scotch pinehurst event ; and the lhird aod final day "''ill be a. combined net score of partners. Ra lph Compton, a long-tlme me1nher at Irvine Coast. had the honor or being the first to ace the new fourlh hole at Irvine Coast. He did it Thurs- day using a six wood to traverse the 144-yard distance, most of it over water. Costt1 ~leso Ralph Centolella, assistant greenskeeper at Costa Mesa Golf Course, v.·on low gross honors over the weekend when he fired a 72 O\'er the Los Lagos Course. Shawn l{ichardson \Y3 S 1he net victor wifh a 61 follo"'·ed by L.ee Billings {65) and a tie for th ird bet\\'een Bill \Vallace and Bud Sleva (69 ). ~fission Viejo Ray Carrasco "''ill defend ~us men 's club championship al r..!ission Viejo Country Club on the y,·eekend of July 17-18 in a two-day, 36-hole competition. association of El Toro f\.1arlne Golf Course held 1 flag wurnament recently. The A fl ight champion Ls r..1 rs. To m Gay followed by Mrs . Andrew Heaton. Mr s. Robert D'Lameter, Mrs. Pat Mucclacc!o and Mrs. David Fitzpatrick in that order. The B flight victor was Mrs, Harry Deal with r.-tr s. 'Joe Smoak second and Mrs. L.J. :J\!urth11 third. Two lies resulted in C flight. r-.1rs Jan1cs Roberts and ~1rs. William f>.1cClure tied for first place followed by Mrs. Jim !\1arlin and t-.1rs. Ken Fendler. ~I esn Verde A criss t:rO!lS tournamenl was staged at Me!a Verde Country Club recenUy by !he "'"omen·s club. The A fli ght winners in- cluded r..1 mes, Donald Smith (first), Willir.m Neth. Bertley Mumma and John Adams. The B fl ight victors included Mmes . John Verfurlh ffirsl) followed by Wilbert Malick, ·Michael Rapport and Albert McConnell. In the C flight competition, Mme!-'. Gordon Hebert, Robert Hendrick, Edward Ikenberry Eagles Take 10-4 Loss Larry Blatterman banged In three goals in a losing cause <'-'> Estancia High's water polo lcan1 fell to Foothill , 1()..4, Wed- nesday night in Costa Mesa surr11ner league AAA division action at Estancia. ahd Horac~ CYJ>Ut llni&hed in that order. El Niguel 'fhe most p r e s t i g i ous tournan1ent of the year at El Niguel Country Club i h Laguna Niguel wHI bt staged lhls week when the fourth an- nual invitaLional h and I c a p tournament for the Ste~·ens Manning trophy is played over the 6,700-yard course J uly 8-10. The field has been (')(\ended to 1()9 lwo-man teams with en- tries limited to in vitees and partners over 21 years of age \.\'ll h handicaps of 15 or less. Paul W&ttrman with es. JI flight went 10 Mm.ea. Ida ft(. Schomaker and C o r JI. e 11 U"I Toomey (45) w)tll Mr s. Raymond Stys firing a 70 lot~ low gross honors. The C flight went lo Mmes • Courtney Yager and Ike Westmoreland (411). Mrs. Art Griffin was Jow gross winner wlth 77 and Mrs. William . Casparis the low net viclorf. with 42. Big Cn111101• Big C<inyon Country Club dt . Ney,·port Beach recorded if.!' flrst·ev er bole-in-one during · Lhe past week when Art l\]Wphy of Orz,ige aced lhtr' !dlles l lhree-par on t b e Among amateurs playing in the tourney are Dr. Bud Taylor . Que~I Lake, form er W lk C coorse. a er up star; Do n Crowell . l\1esa Verde, former ~turphy belted a driver Into~ left-handed world champion: lhe "'·1nd on the 2.13-yard 15th Dr. Bill Foolr. El Ntguel : and hole lo score his ace. He \va1.i Kemp and John Richardson, playing in company of other· Palos Verdes. t lub members Doug Eve, Bill Ju a recent best ball tourna-Corwin and Bill Moorr.. ment, Ha rry Milk e and Bill li"--oi..;;;o;,.,;,.o;,.o;,.o;,.o;,.I(•;· T'ylor "'med together for G 0 L F E R $ first place with a net SC1lre of 61 Wiit! LIW•HllHlkl'"" · l'rl,llct Al T~• Mr. Md Mrs. W i 11 i e NEWPORT ER INN Carpenter teamed with Mr. PAR 3 GOLF COURSE ' " and Mrs. Charles Le.Bon in a $l .OO with thli •d w .. k day1 mixed best ball of foursome!]~~~~~~~~~~~, tournament for a net score of ' ,• 129. .· l~ag11na Beo'"'' The Laguna. Beach Country Cl ub women's club staged a best ball of twosome touma- menl recently and the team of Gracia Johnson and Mrs. John Poor came in with a 55. Second place went to f•1rs. FOR ADVERTISING IN OUT 'N' ABOUT PHONE NORM STANLEY'. ' ' '· ,. 11!V•MTM llA.CI -•OO ~ftfd1. J yffr 0111~. Alow•~tt1. Pu .. t noa. Second place went I e ~rd;;;~of1~u{;!,~::1~•r) 1~; Dorothy \\'right \.\'ilh a 3fl1 ~. !\1 ission Viejo is also plan- ning a head to the annual amateur tourney lo be staged J uly 31 and Aug. I with entry 1leadline on July 24 . It is a 36- hole medal play affair. Jeff Davis scored l he Eagles' olher go al. In other games, Lon g Beal'h l\1 illl kan do .... ·ned Anaheim. 7-2, Buena Park routed Long Beach Wilson, 10-1, and Valen- cia lripped Chaffey, 9-2. Courtney Yager and Catherine DeLong (56) with a lie for lhird al 58 between Mmes. Walter Davison and Leonard Drexelius on one team and Raymond Stys and Herbert Thomas on the other. 642-4321 R<>e~tt 11ar o8v !Ca•doul 111 The B flight crown was wo11 ChlcO a:r:1n (W•rt!1 11• El 'l'oro ·rhe three month ringer championship of A flight wasJ~~~~~~~~~~~~ g~:~~ ~ .. '('ri"h.0..~{1 11: by Phyl!is Stafford (32) \.\'llh l•l~I• c Trulv tH•,dl~o! 1u Trudy Bone second (32\.'l). M•m1•ll (Hort) 116 -----------won by Mmes, John Poor and I: l!IGHTM !IA.Cl -l)~ Y8•dl. l Y••• chi• .. uo. PurJt $10.000. T~I Go JO•• iebv 1Ch1n !Ll1>h•ml 1C 1we1~ ll1r (Adf ld ~nooV'Ff:C."k~!71"i'b., <ni l Kewt• llff Teop (~'')"' Wl\1t1w1v To G<:> !~m !hf ll•nd <1t Angtlo (ll:Obln•onl Rov•I Ooullon !W1tson) Dl•rn<lt'ld Sun Jot !Pt r,,.rl MIMTH ltAC• -t10 Vt•do. J veer old• ~ uo. c 111m1114, Pu"• s1100. ~~~~"\;.'.'~~.~1.~i l l><! Wftf> ~Hording ! Lllllt L•<t !l~obln1...,l Mina Sln Y {(rotbY) P1r1o:er• 1m'i ' tAd11r1 Ct!c~ Dtc~ Llo~1m 1 Su~ln Lulu Arnten) 1'orw1•d e.u.,.,. !Hi rt) Al .. •ll•"lt Coll Couect lllplllllml Ala1nitos Results s•coNo 11.•c• -a v•rGo. 3 , .. , <1ldo 1. up. c111m1no. Pu•u $1000. Ml O•vld tS!r1u"I lt .00 7 •o •.IO C111!1ll1t !lllltV) 500 360 Bto G•1nd1ddr !W1h 0ttl •.00 Tim• -.XI 7110. A.ho Ron -Qun t MOO"· Ch••olno R<o<:-el, P101 Boe' 1111 Jof!'o Qu1U, Mo•'lt• Miii. Moon Cl1bM•. '(ro!cll..i -l""ll n llllcuH. I'm .fll•t, LOllUO~t. Wiie~ Cur! Go. llt r 0.¥fd. $? Nlt hlt' 09Utlf I -llorltl ll1cktl & t -M1 D1w/f, l'tll 111.~0 n ,, ... 11Han NI.Mt' O....,blt . I -•••lo! R1c•1t • I. -1idl•n l ll(UI!, Lttt l<•t t,h, l'•hl Ul.10. THl•O llACI" -l!O ••rdt , 1 ~••• <1ld meldtn• Clllmlno. PU•lt 11000. Cr°"" A l un1 !Dr1v1rl 2•.1'0 ~O ; ff! f'ol• otc~ !Ad1lr) 1.eo 1 ~n G••o! l h1md1• ($tft UU ) S I~ r 1.,.., -19 '110 . .&II<! lhn-l 1!1n Glor., 0..ft't C•"V !)1>11, lwlft~lf l •udolf, Dflfh S!tVt , Nu•l>lr fl u~ny, C:~•ntt A!, M•. Ml)O" M~ktr Scr1ttkfd -lm1 ~II• Two, ,1.r111ur1t11, 5od1'1 Crlc~11, ro,,v•t Pf!>· p.,on1, l'OU•TM •AC• -~" Y••d1. l vou oldt .. uc, Allow•nt••. Putst t1JIXI. (DH) Pro"''1'11UI Girl tAllloon) 4 111 !.l'O '"'° !Ottl 3110¥'1 ltf<IUflt !Ll..tl1ml 7.00 'Ill l IG Tolla"'' Chic~ fll •nko ) 1.60 Tim• -.Jr 1110. Alte R"' -3un G""'-'• Wiiiow R .. eue1t. Trl1h'• ltrr..i. GI N•I,,.,, Ht Kr1td•o. flll'TH !!:AC•~ Yl•<ll. 1 ~Mr oldo. Allow-••· l'un 1 Sl~. , _ • Go Oot.lblf Go IA ... l•I '·-"' It Surt M-fp.,n.,./ • . .O l.CI Al1,..11,,. J111 (Ct•do•I J.00 Tlmt -,11 Jt10. AllO lltn -WHt1' Crtlt. Gttt!lt<n1n J11 Deb Ott•. Orlfll"° Gir l. Na u ••ttlW'•. 11XTM !!:A.Cl' .:J:iO" ~••dt 1 V''' old mll~tn• Putlf tltOO. Tht S..b1irbln Ootlml1!' ('"b c• flut~• Pork Trutkll N'Wln ,,..,_) '·'° t .IG t,«I Mlc\1~1 C~••IUlr 'W•"""l 1.1(1 1.1"1 L...,,.ln1 WI"" <•1nlul J.00 Tl,... -.11 '110. Al•• ll1n -Roi .. Tiii l id, "rl!e, llot>bl1 Rttd S ir, Trutkl l.,.o, C•Mlv 1(1!'1 &•"· Tr•<k ~•loM, 911 Truclrl•. St ri tcn-.;I -ChuOlllG Tiny. Onl G1v. ti a•1c11, 11 :-T,;t1ri. M' Wiii I t -Ml(kl"P 'I , ... , .... f'1lf Mt,M, taVINTM ltA.CI -tMI YI•~•. J vt1r 1)1111 f1111M l,od "'''"· ~(llo'lft(fl, P11r11 U11lt!. Hu1M1' ,1.lrrr•H' Ml_ .. ,..,,,, Ctu., of W-1 S•••il, •1\1>111'1 IClc11111 10r"'''' t,IO 1.tll 1.l'O D1ndv l•r Olli !C•rdol•• t.e J.l'O ow.Ill To Gt> (A&lr) J.20 ll;".t;,,·~'1~lr11.n. we 1vt11 hit It. ll;utrv ... ..., Geld. '" k••l<IM1. •1•MTM ltACI -JJll v1r!l!_,_!_.,.lt' 914'\ I. 100, A.flftwM>e ... ,UfM ""'°' .."""'' ov-1c..-..1 M.IO lJ.IO SM ""!I l•h1u1I (Afl!ll l,'8 1·• a.. Pf ll:ock..i tlCJ"'' ·• Tlnlt -,11 I/ I. -.iw ••" -11 111run. .......i.11 oc. _.,.., l)ot!'I CMrl', Wllth 1!h, "1'11 •1111. W• 1er11c111t. WIMTM 11.A..C• -•IO Vt •1f:o.1.., \'tit !ld1 & llO. C~l11'1~1 Purw "-· .llf ,. •<" IAU I I.lit •.Ml 'f l"l.111 Mii< ... lV I 1.00 f, D'A•CV IC•Y ! ... I) 1 T!"'I -,4' I /It , .11.., ••"' -1«ret 0 1,....., 11111 w111 • llu~v·~1rrltr, YU• On 1"11¥1rtv, Oto\111 • "'• •(f l ""· '' 1~~• t _ (i;f ttr -• I -l"l1t1 Mlldlla. l"tlf hM.M. Give yourself a brake ... COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE 95 most American cars HERE'S WHAT WE DO I e N•w Llnl119 Fro11t & R.or e Rebulltl All Wlinl Cyll11der. • ,DC .. Profit w1i .. 1 l1arln91 e Rftllrhtel All Drum1 e ll•1d-flu1h & Adjw1t Hydrowflc. Syst1111 e Road T .. t Car USE GENERAL'S CONVENIENT AllTO.CHARGE PLAN no money down ••• month• to pay SMALL CARS & IMPORTS 13 9 5 T I RES :.'/. Whitewall DATSUN·TDYOTA OPIL-,IAT 600112 60011 l S601IJ S20rlJ t·UeH SPllD rRICISION WHEEL BALANCE On YeMr C•r $250 .. ..... , SUMMER TIRE VALUES Black walls G78x15 BEL TED 600x1 J E78x14 P.S. INDY RADIALS! GENERAL JET RAD AN MAG WHEELS TIRES __.....fRDNT END ~ALIGNMENT t1•11t•c-l •lo;l-LIMllfl -(hryollf'-flllnll & MffUH'Y GI 71·1 I Hl 71·15 LI 71-1 5 ~ \If • M.41<1'IYIC*M" ~ -- Crooked wheels rob your car of LIMITED maximum performance, ride, steer- ing and tire weo.r. We correct TIME easier, can1ber, toe-In, toe-out to $299~., Sl .tl your car manufacturer's 11pecitlca· OFFER tlon~. and safely check and adjuat I·---------------your ateerlng. TAKE YOUR PICK! USED TIRES only $8 5~°"ff ....... "'" C:Olflpect to",, ...... 14 ..... $595 --,.,,. tl•ll 1111 i9cll l•Kn IANKAMUICAlD MASTI• C:HA•CH Don Swedlund SET OF 4 • • • • • • DATSUN TOYOTA ....... ~ .... •IHI ftlltll I-HOLE MAGS AVAILABLE for~ ton Camp•rs end P ick-ups, slightly higher. COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours : 7:30 to 6:00 Dilly PHONE: •' . .i:-.... -· - --------··.·-·---t -~~--·-~ --.. ---. . -----• • • ~. rl di al lo • ,. o< Cll pc hi ~ • ~ •• • . . " m. ., i tb .. '1 I ' 1~1 .: ' • '\ '~ hi • ' ''1 Ht. 1., n/ ' ' •• I ~ I~ ' ., •• 1• ,, rii ru .. , ,. Cl Dlll V PILOT ' _ ... __ Ca ricer ' : No. 1 Concer11 ': WASHINGTON 1AP1-Sen. ::i:dward M. Kennedy, l)- ' ·".':'J.1ass.) said W ed n es d,. ';I _:~cancer is the No . 1 health t·nn- ~~rn of the Americ;in people :and a bold nev.· program 1.~ •:becded to conquer 11. : • He made the 2."scrtion in urging the Sena te lo pass legislation lo set up a new in- dependent Conquest of Caneer Agency lo lry to finr! the causes of and cures for till' various lypes of cancers. I The Senate v.·as expectrd lnl pass thE' le~is!ation o Vt rwhctmingly. Kenned}. chairman of !he Sen a t e Heallh subeommillec. said that no! only the greater stature provided the <'ancC'r research agency by thC' hill but also greatly increased financing are needed in the fight on the d isease. The Un iled States spen1 $125 for every American on the war in Vietnam in 1969 bul on- ly 89 cents per person on cancer research. he said . Yet . , h.e said, cancer dc<>.ths in 1970 were eight tinles the nu rn bl'r or Jives lost in the last si x years of fighting in the '.l'ar. The bill presented by l\cn- nedy represented a con1- promise Oelween one hr 111-I troduced last January and n proposal sent up by President Nixon in f\.f ay. ~ The nc\\' agency would ~ ilbsorb and continue the work ()f the 34-year~~ld Canc!'r 1nstitute of the Na t ion a 1 1 ·institutes of Health. Bethesda. l>,ld • Under il s new indr.pcndenl, )talus. the agency wnu!d report directl.v 10 1hc president both as to its budgel and its 1cienLHic program. Jts director would be na1nedl b y the prcsiden1 and '-'Oil· firmed by the SenatC'. giv1ng l him higfier st.a!us than 1hr present. head of the Canrcr Instilulc . Some scn;i.tors, ho'.l•cvt•r. ... ita id 1hey had n1isg1vinf.(s 'nbout lhP measurl'. Thl'y said they fca.red it n11ght lead lo the dismantling of NI H . ca ll- ed by some of the grcalC'st biochemical rcs1•arch strue-' lure in the world. Srns. Alan Cranston, \)I Calif 1, and I ;a_1 lnrd N1'\son, (0-\Vis 1 said thl'I brl1t•\1•d cant'C'r rrsrarch cni.1ld be i·ar.I ric<I on ITI{ll'\ rllcct1vclv 1{ 1t j were carried on wi1h1n 1ht' ad m inisLrativc framC'.l'ork oi l N.l H. a nd all it s sup)>f1rt1nf.( facililil'S. "\\.'(' bt'!irv(' !h;il 10!<111,v in- dcp!'ndcnl i;t:uus fnr an~· in- fllit ute will tpnd to weaken N I. H . and 10 hinder the suc- crss of an al!ack on cancer or 11ny other diseases. rather than strengthen it.'' they declared. Kennedy. however. rcjecl('d this rontcntinn. saying his .sub- commitlee had drafted the final version so there will he "the closest coo pr r a l i on bet ween the TIC'.I' ;:o.gcncy cind tht N.l.H." Head Start Hunt Set Thf' Hunlin~lon Bcl'lch Cnrn- munily Center has launched a search for a di rrctor. !wo teachers and two !cacher •Ide.~ to man lhe rcntrr's 'Head Slart program this fall. • Applications for thr posi- tions are being accepted ;a\ lhe center. J09 Sth St., on 1 •@ekdays . David l.. J) a \' id so n . coordinator for the Communily Center, says the I-lead Start program will enroll JO pre- IChoolers this September. Jn addition to s ta f I . David300 is lookin11: fo r a building to houSf" lhe progra1n. fl must h11ve thi> following faciUUeii:: two cla511room.~. two rfllroom11 . office, kitchen , 11nd •n out._,ide area ~uilable for 1'11:1U Uon. --=-- • " ANAHEIM .21 44 w. L1N°COLN ·,,;.·,. ••• IAST or ••OO ICNU•I TI •' PHONl'774·1300 • FOUNTAJN:.VALLff·' I • 1 7JJOO s. llOOWHUISY f1llO TAUS '°"'" or "4U.f ) -·1: PHONI Wa-3311 ! ~- l/N·IROOK Pincor's Famous 20'' Wide GARDEN NEEDS ROTARY MOWER Ca r b id e Tip EDGER BLADES • D•orno nrJ hard (O fbod e 11eel tip, •A s11 e lo Id olmo1I every edge r. REG. 99c f ree Spra yer ORTHO ISOTOX • Reg. S9.96 vnlue -declare wor on go1den pesl!. ' $598 NOW SAVf $3.98 / Aluminum GRASS STOP • -i " w 1de 11 •O fl. long edging p 1 e•enls gross & rooh from $preoding to flower bed5. REG . $1 .39 99c V 3 h.p. Briggs and Straiton engin e with recoil starter . lo" Tubu lar steel handle with remot e controls . V' Ad just able 1" to 3" cull ing height . REG. $49.95 "XB20 ROTARY MOWER V 20" deck, 3 H.P. B<iggs & Stratton engin e -no choking, priming, nothing to adjust. &,;' Equipped with gross catcher bog. 0 7G20 $5495 REG. $64.95 SAVE $I 0.001 $)995 SAVE $10.001 Self-Propelled REEL MOWER """"2 h.p. Briggs & Stratton e ngine with easy-spin recoil starter. V 1 B" cut -precision ground reel. V" Safety designed chain & belt guard . V" Cu tt ing height adjustable from 3/a"to3". '/a" Dia. Nylon Reinforced GARDEN HOSE • B•g V~" ~ 50' hose delrve11 mote .... ate•,., 11"1'1 lime. • Rv1lproof b tCHI couplong1. RE G. $6.29 $399 4 Patterned OSCILLATING SPRINKLER • Woter1 up to 2250 sq. It. • Adju1tob1e 4 po1111on control. REG. $3.49 $249 ~· SAVf $1.001 Australian TREE FERN •Grows to 18 Ft. • lu11 ur•OUS o rthing fr Of1ds. RE G. $1.2 9 89( V Hord wearing baked e namel finish. REG. $89.95 SAVE $10.001 Better Qua llty BAMBOO RAKE • Gri1h1H up !h e leove1 1011. • l1e•11 forct d l•ri e1 -lull AB " handle. REG. 59c 39c long Handled TURF EDGER •Well balanced, tempered 1teel edge•. Perfecl for tho1• 1moll jobs. • 9" blode, full 1iie hnndle. REG. $1 .49 99c .5 Cu . ft. CONTRACTOR'S WHEELBARROW • All 11eet, • Soll becring wheeli. • Hardwood handles. REG. $31 .99 $2499 .SAVI $7 .001 Sol• Pri<•S Honored Through W•d., July 14. • --··- 50% OFF SALE 50 LB. BAG SUPER BEST LAWN FOOD PELLETS ''Prevent Summer Lawn Slumpl'' • Loaded with 7 essential nutri ents to improve tired, weak lawns. • Get amazing re sults . • Pell etized-easy to apply with any spreader. REG. $5.98 50 LB. BAG FACTORY BUY-OUT! Big 8 Ft. x 6 Ft. STORAGE SHED Deluxe features Include: """'"So la r Bright Skylighls. ...,. Air-Flow louvr e """'"Glide-Rite Sl iding Doors . ....,.-6 Ft. 4" Peak heigh t. """'"Triple Pla stic finish. """'"Durable, oll metal con struc tion. Deluxe In everything but prlcef • REG. 599.99 8 'x 1 O' Rog .$ l 19.99 Now Onl~ $99.99 • . .... J;I:"' r•..,..,,._ •----·------------·--·---~-~·-----.~~=----.... ,..._ °" I' l::P• • l I - . . ' .. l • rr lday, Jull 9, 1971 ' E A Complete Guide ••• Where to go • •• What to do • •• 'Equestrian Triad' Featured at Festival .,.,.,..., __ ~,~~~.,,. ~."! .. '!'!, • . ,. .. ; . . ~ , 'i . ;/i;-_~.~. ·• . ·• ST EPHEN ZELARNEY AND JOHN HARNEY GET MADE UP FOR 'TRIAD' ROLES Makeup Artists are Mary Pegg and Dorothy Brookbank, from left A SMILING JOHN HARNEY GETS ADVICE AND A NAPOLEON HAT ADJUSTMENT Bert Pettey and ~oris Auerbach Want Bonaparte's Costume Just Right Soutl1 Coast Students STEPHEN ZE LARNEY, TOM MARTIN, JOHN HARNEY WAIT Makeup Compl eted, Costume Perfectly Adjusted, Trto Is Ready Becon1e Life Sized Art By FREDERICK SCHOEME HL 01 tll• O•Jlv 1'1 .. 1 11111 Three painlin1::s. depicting soldiers of thr Napoleonic perind will corne 1n life thi.~ sunirner during the 36lh Annual F'es!ival of Arts and Pageant of the Ma sters in Laguna Beach. Knov•n as the "Equestrian Triad." the nil paintin,'ls "Officer of the Chas.~eur!' nf the Gu11rd." and ;.The \Vounded Cuirass1er'' by Theodore Ge1ricault and ··sonaparle" by Jacques l..ouis Davi." will he presented iJi life size form "''ilh three South Coast student" as models. Thon1as Martin. 13, of Laguna Beach v.•ill mortcl as the chasseur. He will sit atop .ti horsr . fTra 1ed on the 1welve.fnnt- '11gh set. painted exactly as the original by Gericault When on stal!,r at 1he !rv1nf' Bn11 l. <'nm· plelr \lo'l1h .r;pec1 al liJlhllnJ!.. lhr rr-rrea11on 11•ill look !1ke the or1g1nal , and apprar l"-'O d1n1en.~1nnal. Thf' cuira ssirr. porlra_vi>d hy S1r phrn 7.elarney, !4, "f Lagun;i l:leaf·h will show the armored soldier standing 1n front or his hor se. To 11ch1ev1:. !he !wo-diinrnsio nal effrct, 7.c!arney mu.~t stand on a s1erp pl:itform. in shoes bolled tff the ,<;e1 "ll'i; act ually easier this year.'' said 7.e!arney, who has been in the Pageant the pa!it two years: in "Gettysburg" last yf'ar and ··Dance of l)('ck '' in 1969. John Harney, 18, IJf Costa r-.1e!!ll, a pre-med student at liC lrvinP. will model as Napoleon himscU in ··Bonaparte." Harney was inspired lo join the volun1eer cast of well over 350. after seeing last year·~ Pageant. Martin, Zelamey and .Harney will bf: cast for lhe first week ef the pageant and will altcrn11te weeks with a secnnd c11st e( Rick Criswell of Dana Point , Frank Armstrong of Huntington Beach 11nd Joe Schroder of TuStin . Producer l)on Williamson said the Tnad 1s ene or Lhe more difficull art works to pul on s!a~e. hecause it involves three works rathrf than one. "It JlL~t n1ul1iphe~ our work by three to get ii on stage during the run of the show ." Each evening, from July 16 to August 29. 28 presentations. comprising a 1otal or 45 different art v.·orks w1!1 be sho\1•0. For lhf' 12th year in a row. !he Pagl';int h;is sold out for all performances. The on!v way lo get l1ckels is through can- ce!iations. which are available al the box .iflice JUS1 brfore 8 :lO r rn. showtin1e. The PaJ!.eanl of thr 1\-l astrr~ 1.~ just one p;:irt of the daily a1·t1v1l1cs at the sun1n1rr Veslival of Arls. ~1ore than 175 ;:ir11~!~ will displ ay their works in booths 11.x:alcd throughout the fes11val grounrl ~. wh1eh arf' open from noon until 1nidn1ghl every day during 1hc fes tival run . "Free.for-Alt" art classes are hr·ld dai- ly fur youngsters. Puppe! shnw.~ arr put tJn several timc5 daily by 'l'nny l 'rhano. On Sundays, outdoor performances by the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet, the ~-rsllva l Chorale 11nd the Lyric Opera Assoe1ation tl Orange County Are held. The Festival originated in !9:l2 undrr the dirf'clion of Laguna Beach artist John Hinchman and except for the World War II years ha5 run every yea r. The P11geant began in 1934. During the early years. both the Festival anrl lhe Pageant were held at various spots in downlown Laguna. until 1941 when the lrvine Bowl Park became home for the two pro- ductions. STUART DURKEE. STAGE MANAGER, POSITIONS HARNEY Hor••• Ar• Mounted from Porttbl• Steps Then Adjustments Made Festival to Teem Witli Art Variety The Festival of f rls grounds will IX' .11 live with the creations of over J7S award-winn ing arli9\s and craftsmen for the full run 1Jf the festival, July 16 through Aug. 29. Jewelers. wcflvers, graphic artists, sculptors and plllters will exhibit anrl of- fer for sa le a wide variety of their work representing all periods of arts. A free-for.all art class, w h er~ Youngsters may do their own thing wl1h crayon9, and a J unio r Art Gallery where the works of 150 Orange County school children are displayed also are big at- traclions. A puppet show prc,crued In the Festival F'orl1m several limes each clay by Tony lJrh11no will featurr "Roy8 1 Conrerl" v.•itll Dusty's Pup1>el:!: of •, •• ;. • ll'EEKENDER >. ... INSIDE FEATURES :• ,, Ffldoy, July•~ 1171 • Havin~ trouble deciding where go for fun this week? Oo ·il the e111 way -check out the Guide to F on Page 24. In the Galleries Gulde to f un OC fair Hollywood Bov.·\ Llpitian~ Stan ~laplane Travel Out 'N' About KCET'i Sundays Ebsens on Stage Live Thealt'r "Fortdne. Men's Televislo11 Ui;t Crblltl' Pare Pa,;e U rage t4 . Pare PaKe 2 Page is Pa1te1 is. zt .. P.11ge1 zwi rare it Page %t Page~ Eyes" rage Pa Kt Pore Pa1e , f('le vision f:imr 11loni,t with olhtr r1cw Guide to fl.1ovies Com Its P1111e l TRI ~~-~.~A~U~~ !:.~~::~?o~~ .:~RIC~~L::' BONAPAR:.E. !~.:~~~~~~· c.~~~~~R~ ~:~L ~--·-h·-~~I~~ '~'.!:'".::.-·- ------·--~ --------I :_;t. EQUES TRIAN •• ·-••111111•.~~--~-~.~-~~!""•.~-~~Jl!lc"J!I~!_ -___ ... ,~·- ·~· -.,,._ p • •. _,,. ~ -• J~}"'-: ..-~ ---· -· .-. ' ... • If DAILY I'll.OT frlQl, J~ty 9, 1971 Yo•r Gttlde t o Fun Stallions • Kid's Play Ill Huntington Featured • J ULY I · ~I CERAMICS, HOBBY SHOW -Sd. Calif. Hobby Crafts As· sociates are holding a handicraft show in the Anaheim '€onvention Center, 800 W. Katella, Anaheim, July 9 • ll. "Major beneficiary o( the profit.. is the Foundation for the J unior Blind. Hours: Fri. -Sil. II a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sun. 1100n lo 6 p.m. Tickets, Sl.~ for adults; children 6 to 16, 60 cents; under 6 free. J UL V I TEEN DANCE -The Westminster Teen Club will hold a ance (mo!t Sat nights) for teens 15 through 18 years who ive in Westminster or atte.nd Bo\sa Grande, Fountain Val- ey, La Quinta or Westminster High Schools. Admission for members, $1 ; non-members, $1.50. J ULY I AND CONCERT -The Westminster Community Band will k1 a series of Fri. concerti at McFadden Park, 980 1 Mc- dden Ave., Wt.stmin!'ter at 7 p.m. Concerts are set for uly 9 and 23; Aug. 6 and 20, and Sept. 3. No admission arge. JULY t • AUG. %'1 : ~Il.M-0-RAMA -A program of "Movies under the Stars,'' · ponsored by the Newport Beach Library, Santiago Film · ~ircuit and Fashion Island. will be shown at 8:30 p.m. each · riday evening through Aug. 27 in th e mall at Fashion : . 1Jand. r~nms geared to family audiences will be enter- , ining and informative. •• ;I JULY t -11 ; · fm>RY QOUR -The Cotita Mesa Library, 566 Center St., ! · J:osta Mesa, has scheduled some Summer programs for l:~ldren. On July 9, JJpecial films, "Mood Surfing" and "The · • · Ue M1riner" will be shown at 10:30 a.m. The Children's ater Guild will perform "Alice in Wonderland" at 1:30 .m. oo J uly 14. JULY t · Z4 TRIP TO NORTH POLE -Te!smlM Planetarium at Santa Ana College, 1580 W. 17th St., Santa Ana, ia having a series ~?n the Galleries ·r All California Show • Laguna Ill LAGUNA ART ASSOCIATION -307 Cliff Drive, Laguna &ach. On exhibit to run concurrently with the Festival of Arts, July 16 • Aug. 1.8. the All California Show. Docent tours at 2 p.m. Fri., Sat. and Sun. SAWDUST FESTIVAL -700 block of Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach. Festival of art.s and craft.s will open July 16 lo run through Aug. 29. Over 160 area artist.s ~·ill di.splay their work from 10 a.m .. to midnight. Admission free. SHERMAN FOUNDATION GALLERY -2625 E. Coast High. way, Corona del Mi r. IFonnerly Coffee Garden Gallery.) Hours : 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mon.Sat. The Junior League of Newport Harbor exhibit features watercolor and oil yaintin1s by Rex Brandt, through J uly l:>. BOWEM MUSEUM -2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours: 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tues.-Sat.: 1 to ~ p.m. Sun., and 7 to 9 p.m. Wed and Thurs. No charge. On exhibit "Art of Learn- ing Medicine," etchings by May H. Lesaer, throup:h July 25. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regula r busines.s hours, oil paintings by Douglas De.ane. through July. TRANS AMERICAN TITLE -l'ltl E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. On e.1hibit during regular business hours, oil paintings by Louise Young, through J uly. NB CIVIC CENTER GALLERY -3300 Ne>w-port Blvd., Nev.·· port Beach. Currently on e.1hlblt in city hall during regular business hours. photos of Upper Newport Bay by Joan Cloverdale through Aug . COSTA MESA LIBRARY -566 Center St.. Costa ltiesa. On exhibit, during regular Hbrliry hours, Mexican artifacts also oil paintings by Carol Lopez and Robbie Fol!, through July. P.tESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa li1esa. Currently on exhibit through July, oil paint· lng1 by Lavenne Charron. AVCO SAVlNG -3310 Bristol, Costa Mesa. On exhibit dur· ing regular busineSJJ hours, oil paintings by Sooty West through July. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular businw hours through July, paintings by Mildred Kuyper. DOWNEY SAVINGS -360 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. On ex- hibit during regular buslnes.s hours. pencil renderings, water- colors and oil paintings by Helen Prothers, lhrough July. FIRST NATIONAL BANK -1650 Adams Sl.. Costa Mesa. On exhibit acrylic paintings by Dorinda Cook and oil paint- tnga by W. J. Scott, through July. CHAU.IS GALLERI ES -l!!IO S. Coast Highway, Laguna Bech. On elhibil July 17-Aug. 14, new p1intin1s by Jo Anne llfil . Hours : ll a .m. to 5 p.m. daily. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, New- port Beach. On exhibit during regular busineSJ hours, through Aug., pen and ink drawings by Frttlerick L. Payne. HUNTER'S BOOKS THE WIST'~ f!NHT IOOKSTOUS f<>R 120 YIA,S-SINCI 1151 loc1ttd At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA Phone (714) 543·9343 H ,500 lleob I ro,,-..1 JJ,000 U1...i Gr"'lllt Cords IARIOAINS G•LOUI OPEN EVE NINGS 'TIL 9 P./11. of public shows each \l.'ed. at 7.15 p.m. and Fri. at 7 p.m. The Film, "Scanning the Summer Skies," wlll be shown through July. The performances are free but reserva· lions are requested. Phone 547-9:>61. JULY 11 JAZZ St-:SS ION -Jazz Incorporated will hold a Jazz Ses- sion at 2 p.m. in the l!untlngton Beach r-.toose Lodge, 7409 Lorge Circle, llunlington Beach, July 11. Featured artist will be J ohnny Guarnieri. Local musicians "'ill perform on the feature set "·1th him. J\1usician! and members free. Guest licket.s, $2. JULY I? FASHION ISLAND CONCERTS -The Monday nighl con· certs at Fashion Island will return for the months of July and August with J1enry Brandon directing the band. Every- thing from Bachararh to Sousa will be heard at the 9: 1:> p.m. concert. Bring a sit-upon and enjoy music under U1e skies. No charge. JULY ll-13 LIPlZZAN l!ORSE SHOW -''The Wonderful World of Horses'' featuring the l.ipizzans will be staged in the Ana- heim Convention Center Arena, 800 \V. Katella, Anaheim, July 12 · 13. Tickets, $4, $:>, $6, may be purchased at the Arena box office or from most ticket agencies. For informa- llon phone 635-5000. J ULY 13 FOLK ttfUSIC CONCERT -",James P;itrick and James" along with Alicia Cory will perform a folk music conct!rt at 8 p.m., July 13 in lhe Zonia Clubhouse, 2110 15th St., Newport Beach. Tickets, $2, at lhe door. J ULY 13 • 18 OC FAIR -The Orange County Fair will open July 13 lo run through July 18 from JO a.m. daily. Horse shows, ex· hlbits, Oower shows, a midway and entertainment will run through the six..(fay event at the Orange County Fairgrounds, 88 fo'air Drive, Cosl.3 r-.1esa. Admission, $1 for adults; 75 cents for 12 lo 16 years: 25 cents for 6 to 11 years, children under 6 and servicemen in uniform admitted free. JULY It · 28 STORY HOUR -The l~aguna Beach Library, 2CJ7 N. Coast Highway, Laguna holds a story hour for children each \Ved. 2t 10 a.m. JULY 15 • 29 STORY HOUR -A story hour for pre-school children will be held in the Mariner's Library, 2005 Dover Drive, New· port Beach, each Thu1·sday at 10 a.m. The Corona de\ Mar Library, 420 Marlgo\d Ave., Corona de! Mar will hold a story hour for pre-schoolers every second and fourth Thurs· day of the month at 10 a.m. J ULY 15 ANTIQUE SHOW -An antique show and sale "'ill be held at the Newporter Inn. 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach, July l&-18. Items will touch every perjod, style and craft in the world of yesterday. !fours: I to 10 p.m. Thurs.-Sat.; l to 7 p.m. Sun. Admission $1.7:> for adults; children under 12 free JULY 16 • AUG. 29 ART·A·FA IR -A group of artists will present Art-A-Fair at 346 N. Coast lfighwa)', Laguna Beach, through Aug. 29. Ad- mission, 25 cents. Hours: Sun. ·Thurs., 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.; Sat. • Sun. Noon to midnight JUL,, 16 • AUG. Z9 FESTIVAL OF ARTS -'l'he Laguna Beach Festival of Art.s and Pageant of the Masters will be held on the Festival of Arts grounds, 650 Lagun.:i Canyon Road. Laguna Beach .• July 16 through Aug. 29. The Pageant is presented each evening in the Irvine Bowl on the grounds at 8:30 pm. The Festival which includes artists, craftsmen, puppet shov:s and music on the green each Sunday. opens at noon each day. 175 craftsmen will show and sell their work. JULY 16 • 18 FIESTA LA CHRISTIANITA -San Clemente's fiesta La Chrisl!anila will be held July 16 through 18 with actor Clu Gu\ager acting ns Grand l\1arshal of the parade on Sal. There will be game booths, a carnival and manv other <LC· th·ilies for all to cnjo~'. Dinner ror Sal at the Elk's Lodge will be $3, av:iilahle RI ::ill banks in the city. The Sal. after- noon activities will include Spanish dancers. a queen·s pag- eant and then dmner and dancing. ,JUL r 16 • SErT. JO PROGR Ar-.1 FOR t\ll)S -The r-.1esa Verde Librarv. 296!1 r-.1esa Verde Drl\'C Ens1, Cost.1 r-.tesa has many prOgran1s for children during the sumn1cr. Pre·school story hours are held at JO :ind l l a n1. each \\'ed. and 'I'hurs. Evrry other Friday thcrr ;ire films f(l r chilclrrn first through third grade. July 16. the "R('d Ballrion" \.l'i ll be shOl\TI, and "l\f.l'S· teries of the Deep'' and "Tales of Hiawatha,'' \\'ill be. screened July 30. JULY 22 SURFER JR. DANCES -The \\'estminster Surfer Jr. Teen Cit.lb will hold a dance on the sccond and rourth Friday o( the month for 7th and 8th graders. Ttie 7:30 to 9:30 dance will be In the Commwlily Center, 8200 \Veslmlnster A~·e. Admission 50 cents. At Center If ynu are planning to attend the "Wonderful World •! Horses .and Royal Lipizzan Stallion Show" July 12·13 at the Anaheim Conventio n Center, 800 W. Katel l a , Anaheim, here is a brief ex· planation of the Lipizzaners' famed "airs above the ground" n1ovements -the f.:intastic lea1s of tbese famed equine ballet dancers as taught for over 400 years in the Spanish Riding School in Vit'nn<i:. first there is the capriole. 'I'he stallion takes a great leap into the air fron1 a stand-still position and kicks out violently with his hind legs while tucking his forelegs under his chest. He sometimes attains an elevation of six feet. In the croupade, another maneuver, l/1e jump is similar to the capriole, but he tucks both fore and hind legs under his belly at the height of his leap. 'Then there's tne spectacular courbette. I/ere the horse, some 1400 pounds and over, balances himself on his hind l~gs and Jumps, keeping his ~ _ hind legs together and bis ~­ front legs off the ground. Next comes the !evade, the piaffe, the piroutte, the dressage, and the quadrille. ., ' '~ • "Al ' ... ', v t~k . .'(~ \. ,v~} A t tlie Fair A test of muscle strength and balance, the !evade is ex- tra-ordinarily difficult. Here lhe horse must maintain a hunched position at an ap- proximate 4:> degrees angle to the ground. In contrast. the The Pat Boone family or stage, screen and television fame \Viii entertain in the piaffe , requiring c 0 m PI e t e Amphitheater at the Orange County Fair, Tuesday, J uly 13 at 8 p.n1. In photo mental relaxation as well as poise and balance, has the are Pat and his wife Shirley, center. In b.:ick from left are daughters Cherry, , stallion performing a cadence Lindy, Debby and Laury. trot while standing in one spot. ---'--------'------------------------- As for the Pirouette fa Lipizzan Is past master of lh is feat) he balances himself on hi s hind legs, pivoting in a half or full circle before coming down on all fours again. Philharmonic Set Su1runer Conce rts at flolly,wood Bo,wl Possibly one of the most entertaining of Lip i z z an movements is the qu:idril1e. actually a perfectly cadenced military drilj performed by a F"our composers 'rill have from !he "Abdurtion from the Berlioz progr.:im Aug. 31. In group of \\'h1le Stallions as the e\'enings devoted e11!1r<'ly to Scr:ig!io" and the "Jupil('r" atldit1nn to the Syn1phonie orchestra plays an engaging their symphonic music during Symphony. Fantastique, a cl or Ben military march The dressage. 1 h e L 0 s A n g e 1 es Zubin ~1eht;i, music dirrctor Gazzara ~·ill be featured in \\hich is part of nearly every Philharmonic's ten .we ek of lhe Los Ange 1 es the dran1ntic sequel to the horse sho1v compcti!ion, is Philharmonic, \.l'ill conduct the equally a~ amazing and e\'e-season a! Hollyv.'ood Bov.·l U1is Symphonic, "Lelio," in a pro- ca!ching, Herc the Lipizzan· is summer. a n nu a 1 'Tchaikovsky Spec· duction that y,·i!I include tile guided through a routine by Josef Krips, fonner prin-t3cu l:ir on Aug:. 7 "'i th Los Los Angeles Master Chorale, his trainer v"ith out the use of cipal conductor of lhe Vienna An~eles pianist 11 or a c i 0 and video and 11ghl projeclions hands, reins or ]('g~ being St:ile Opera, "'ill conduct bolh \.1l1i('rrcz n1aking his Bowl staged by the Center Theatre perceptible to lhe audience. 1 "· h dt•lJut as soloist for the First G<'""I'." Gocdon Davicls·"o. Cy Ho,vard To Write Ne,v Novel an al -Dl;'.et oven progran1 on vu ., " July 1.1 and an a\l-~1oznrt cun-/'1a no Cont'cr1o. i\1ehta will r.·lehta also "'ill conduct an ;1lso co11duct the ''Pathetiquc" all-\Vngner program with cert two nights later. Tile Syniphony <ind the ''llH2" soprano Ingrid Ujoner and Beethoven concert will feature 01•crture, acrnmpanied by a tenor Jess Thonias on 'I'ue~· the Bowl debut of Los Angeles mi!it:iry band, cannon, and day. Au g. 17. The orchestral· pianist Stephen Bishop pl .:iying firl'\\'Ork~. The 'I'ch3iko\'sky Yocal concert 1\•ill include the the Third Piano Cor1ccrlo. Sp<:c1acul::ir has been an an-Prrlude, Lo1·e Duet and Krips also will conduct the nu;1\ ~cll-<iut. since its incc,pt1on Liehestod fron1 "Tristan and Egmont O\'ert11re and the in 19G9. Isolde," and Siegfried's Rhine Symphony No. 7. The Phi! h ;:i r in on i c' s Journev, Funeral ~1 arch and The July 15 Mozart program associate conductor, r.erhard Tmn1ol~tion Scene from "Die Cy llo\\·ard has been signrd 11·ill mark two more Bowl Samurl. "'ill conduct an all· Gotterdammerung " lo 11-rite and direct EU I ~---------------...;-....;.,_,_iiiiiiiii r-.1f'B:"lin·s nei\·est n 0 1, e (, Debuts. Ba rry Tuck1vell wil111 "Erery Little Crook and Nan· he the soloist for the Second h Horn Concerto, and Alfred ny,"" ich has been acquired Brendel 11•ill make his fir~1 b.Y ~IG~I. B<<WI app0 a•a0 ce plai·ing lhc\1 The 111r1urc 11'11\ IX' a Cy ~ ' " YISIT VIL LAGE Wf:ST Piano Concerto in F K 459 DURIN G THE FlSTIVAL OF A.ATS !Inward · LCQn:ird Arkcr1n:in ' ' '· · prodiic1ion wllh Ackcnnan The all-~1n7nrt progr:im also 791 Laqun11 Canyon Ra11d, Laqun-Pre. Parltinq-494-9J90 producing. It is slat('{\ for a _includes the lively o,1('rturc1L,. ___ .;_ __ .;_ ___ ..;.,.. __ ...,,....;._...,~~'!!!!:, fall produr11on 1n H0lly,\·n{)d. 1: _ -• ~:' 0•11~~~;::~;~~h'~''."~'r/~~~; Nob od y Ca n Bring Yo u Fresher Produce! hi s d1reetorial debut 11·11h the h11>!.hly ~urcessf11! "Ul\·ers and 01hcr Srr.:ingcrs.'' "El'ery Little Crook and Nanny" will be published by !Yiuhleday in t.1arcr., 19~2. l\1cBain is a pen n:ime for Evan Hunter. rnany of "·ho~r novels ha\·e been turned into suC'cessful filn1-., startinR "'ilh "Bl:ickboard Jungle" in the 1950's. We're et the market every morning at 2 a .m. carefully "selecling our own," and we've been "selecting our own'' for over 30 ycl!lr,! Th ... t's why we're nlllionlllly a cc.la im ed Worlds Finest Produce House! We have everythi ng ! Berries-5 kinds! Melons-6 Kirids ! Pe11ches-b Varielies! Then of course we have Fresh Figs, Kiwi Fruit, Bartlett Peari, Queen• Anne Plums, and hundred, more. Come See! Come Save! -I •••••• -•Weekend Flower S pec i•I • -I•·-.. ·- • GORGEOUS • ---------• • W .. kend Flower Sp1cle l • • ROSES • S No. 1 Floritt Quallty • Limit 2 Doz. ~ . . • CARNATIONS • 01ver :J • • by debro : 2 Do•, 99¢ : • 99¢ • We wire flowers • _,. ~'- • With Thl1 Coupon • • With Thl1 Coupo!'I • • .......... -···-··· •• EVERYBODY SAVES WITH OUR "MONEY MAKING" COUPON S • •••••••• • Juicy, Ort1111lt Graw11 • • • • • ORANGES 6¢ POUND ••••••••••• Fir S11m..,.t Sotadt. • • • • • ICEBERG LETIUCE 1 Q¢ HEAD ••• • • • • • • • ly P11pular O.manlll • LK al Graw" • TOMATOES 19¢ BASKET • • • • • • • • • • • • LIMIT 10 LIS, • LIM IT FIVf: • LIMIT 2 14 511.ITS • With Thlt Coupon With Thlt Coupon With Thl1 Coupon • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE JULY 13 GO WILD! DRIVE TO AFRICA ! 9 LIC>N CC>UNTl\Y SJIFJIRI These restauranl1 dema nd the fine1 t for their cu1tomer1. Th at's why th ey feature Newport Produce! Patroni11 them! Howards, Newport; The Arches, Newport: Ha11ks Ocean Front, Newport; Tht lorn, Cos+• Me1 1 : Myerhofk . Irv ine; .t nd over 255 others. How a bout your c•lling us? N 0 WI Nationally Ac cleim.d Wor ld's Finest Pro duce Hou•• ~ N~!~Q~!.k ~~~~~CE Phwie 67l-1 71J 67M7l l 675-62•1 llFnlCJI N WllDLIFE PRESERVli Locat1d on San Dl•l• Fre1wry at Moulton Parkwar, L11una Hills, Oran1e Count1 ._ lOil : ~"""''''''''\\\\\\\\\'l•lllllll.l.IJ',J,(,/,/..~ ~ • -----, --- ---1)T)\I': 2616 Newport Boulevard on tht Pn lnsula "35 Yeors of Produc1 Know How" "iVhert q1utlity i$ !lie Order of th!! lioust" -------"-':::J;~I:-'· G.. ------• ~~ -i=---------~--~ : 1'! >-_,_ ----- J I • I ! l . ' Travel Prices Going Up • Ill Italy By STAN DELAPLANE f\111 .AN, Ita ly-It's \1'arn1 summer nO\Y in Italy. Ever~body spends the evening Jn the sidewalk cafes. Y.•atching the hotpants go by. pasted on the most beautiful \\'Otncn in the land or the Caesars. Prices are up. An Inexpensive restaurant gets $2.50 to $3 for lunch. But it includes a carafe of 11·ine . l/\J 1vay s ask for carafe v•ine, about 35 cents. The bottled 1\•ine 11 ill be S2 -and maybe not as good.l T1v1rl spaghetti 011 your fork \Vith a large s poon as .a bac kup Don 't cu t iC It offend:. the Italians. And you n11ss the fun of sucking up the loose ends. * \\le can1e by train from S1v 1ss Lake Lu ga no to Italian Lake Con10. 'f'he Villa d'Este 1s one of the last elegant hotels for gracious living. It \ras built in lh e 1500!:1 as a Cardin al 's palace -,,·hen Cardinals \\'ere rich and labor \\'as cheap. Each high-ceili nged bedroom has different furnishings. f''inc dining roo1n. Extensive menu. ~feated swin1ming pool fl oats in the lake. MagnifiC'· cnt gardens 400 years old . And fairly expensive -~40 to S50 a day. * 'fhere are doze ns of lakeside villages '''here the nudge is easier. And all along the lake are private c:a1npin g grounds \Vith gay. striped tents set on bar· bered la1vns. 'i'ou can pitch a luxurious ca1np for a dollar or 11,·o a da y. * The autostradas are high-speed free\vays '''hich Italians drive by pu shing the pedal to the floor and using t.he horn instead of brakes. Florence seems to be over the great flood of 1967. r\nd tou rists sit again in the piazza and ad1ni re the statue of David. * "Should we take paperbacks with vs? My hvs· band say1 we can buy books in English all over Europe.'' Plenty in all capital c1t1es. JliJton hotel nev:s- stand and airports have lhe best seleclion. Lot of Eng!L~h paperbarks \\·c don't see at home -they're good on the n1urdar n1 ys teries. Ne\\'spaper you find every\\"hcre 1s the International 1-Jera ld-'l'ribune. Like lhe old t\'c \v York 1-lcrald·Tri bune used to be. And in Rome , the l{ome Daily t\meriran Is ;i mu.~t . * ", •. and how many ci91r1tte1. to take?" All countries seem to aJlow l\VO cartons. Bul hardly anybody opens your bags or seems to ca r·c. so I take three. English Customs asks. Ans\ver' "Just enough for rny O\Vn use." /Don't lie. But don't n1akc 1t difficull for him by spelling it out. Unless he ask~ ho1\• 1nan y.) * Entering francc. there arc l\\O cxils through <"ustoms. One marked: ··so1nething to dec:Jare " 'fhe other: '·Nothing to decl are." \Valk out that nnc You aren't asked anything. * No1v bel\\"een countries: There's a rrer port 11 ith lo1v prices in the \\'ailing roon1 1\F'l'ER ~ou 11ass passport control. Buy more there The airplanes sell cigarettes at free port prices, but 1\"s chanr.1, They rnay not have your brand. 'l'hey n111y not ha1 c any at all. * .l\irlincs used In sell free port rcrJ un1c and liquor on board. But. I didn't sec any thi s t11 nc rrtay· be it didn't. pay. * "W• will b• in Japan in August. What kind of clothe1 ... ?" Lightest \Veight sumn1er. Tokyo i:-; rniscrabl.v hot and htnnid -I'd give it t\vo day~ and th en head for a seaside resort or the beautiful inns in Lhe ll akone mountains. No t only su n1mer hun1 idit y, but auto exhaust fumes are overpo\vering * J\1o taxi driver in Tokyo can find AN\''fl!ING by street address. ~-tainly there aren't an y street addresses -just districts. So. if you find a resta ur- ant you like. pi ck up something ,,·ith the telephone n111nber on it: ~latches. Paper cover of the chop- !'liC'ks. Give th is to the taxi driver. J\olakc a n1ot1on like telephoning and give him a IQ.yen piece. lie phones. They tell him ho11• to get there WorJ<l 'frip By Cruiser IlJans Set Ailey Had • Begin11ing 111 LA Area .l\h1n A1lt.')' w1tl1 h I$ Anu·ricun L);:inl·r Theti.tcr. Hfr llt!anng al the (;reek ThralrP. 1n I.us Angclt·s. with V1kk1 l'<1rr through Sunl1;1y. started 111, dance career :n Los Angele~ 11•1!11 Lcstrr• llurt11n Allf'r llor!on's de ath . Ailev •'(111t111uetl w1111 !h•· 1·11111p:u1y .1nrl 111 Ni•\\' Y11rk studied 111odt'rn Ualll't• w1lh t1·1.irth:1 1:r;ih;in1. and Chor<.'Ogr;,iphy 1•1lh l )uri~ Hll1111lhr1·) 111~ !:lroal.111,ay dcl.Jul 1\<1' ;i~ !1'.ullng Uunl·Pr 1n House or Flu11rrs. and he su bsc(1urntly ap1w>a rrd 111 ""Si ng . l\l<1n. SJ nt(" 111!h lt;1rrv Bl•l.1fon11•. :'Ind ,,1111 l.rn.1 llornt• 111 "Ja. tH:ll~;l 111 I!!~ Ail1•1 1111!111·d hl, l\111cnc:111 0:111rC Th 1• a ! r r , l"Ullll)lhl'iJ Hf J6 Hro;rtll';a~ COil• !1·111por;1r1· d~11,·1·rs S111'crssf1il :11lpr:ir;1n<'CS in Nt.•11• Yllrli 111·r1' 11\ll1111t•d 1)1• t')i\CJldl'Ct lo11r~ uf EurntJt'. · A!ric;i ~111d 1 l1r S11v1t'I t tn10n u fl d e r ~p<111s11rsh1p nl llir S l ;i l.i• l)1•parltnl'111 II(" ;ilso 1·h()rP0~1·;1ph~ for olht•1' 1·u111p:1nu•s. n<ll;1hil' t!ll' .lot frcy , lh1rk111's~ ;11ul !h" i\1ni•r11·:1n Ballr! Tht•:1lrt'_ 1\l 1ht• 1:ret.'h h 1 ~ pn1- c.r:11n uieJudt·~ .. ~·1n111·r~ • :1 h111l1·1 ;1btiu1 lht• l:1Tl' .!:u11s .lnplin. "C'r.\'" ;ind "ll1•vcl a- ttQn"" d;u1ecd Ill sp1n\u;i!s ~ung h.1 1hr Los Angel<'s Juhilrr Stnc.t•rs !1i·rfo rn111n1·1·s ttf \i1kk1 l";irr a11(l lhf' 1\ll 111 Ailt'.I A111rn1·an di111rr Thr11lcr arc b1'1nJ: p1f'sr11rrd ::it 8 :lO p 111 DAfl V l'TlM' Zl; ••• EHl'OJlf' Castle-Hotels Best Alirr \Ou have 1·1~ttt:d llit: regu lar i11)1llll1ght~ 111 Eurup<'. "hat can you do for an ~11- t'O re Q How about ~1r~utl1ni; ,. fC1\' nights !11 an anC'1ent ca~· tlt·. an old 1no11;ister.v. 1Jr a prince's p<1l<Jce"! Then' nre n1a11y such unusual gu1·,1 houses avatla ble. and you dor1 '1 ha\·c to be 1lt nohlt• h1r1h [Q ~'llJO)' tht'lll. ad.iplf'd 11 ~·1ng or ll fr\'1 1(1111•r\ lor ~ u e ~ I ac- ('0111111od11t1on, Your hos1 or lh1~h's' 111;iy bt• a lJaron , a dukt·. a pnntt'.~!'! or an :111·l1<lu1·l1c~~ ~losl nunH'l"ou~ •lf th c i·:1 ~11c-h.itC!~ are 111 \~'esl (;cnniHl)' 1;l11eh bo:tsts 11 ell •)I "r 100 !•r;1nt.'I' <ind Austria li;i1•· 11".J l'ly ;,,, lll;111} ()thrr r•1unlr'1l·~ 011t·nng ,, wide 1 <1T1(•ty of 11•rr;i1n an(! \lylr.'I lnl'IUdt• llrlg1111n. lll'nn1ark, 1;rl''1I Hnta1n. Cr r r c· r . llollan1!. Ireland. lt;ily, Lux· <'mbourg. Portugal. Scotland, :-ioa1n, Swe den and Swt1zerland lr1 several eounl.rie!'! thef'f' :irl' c.ast.es 1v111ch ho I d "medieval banque ts," or -knightly 1n ~al!'!." featuring roods and ll'Jnes prepared l11 1h1· ancient w11v. and eaten 1\ 1th ancienr -st};!e t;ibleware . In lhl' ;1ccon1 pan1ment or pcn1Kl -eostumed rntertaint'N playing muSll" or !he middll' 11grs This concept originattd 1n Ireland "hl're ll is sti ll very succrssful. Thcrt· art• r11or£' than ~,1.111 ~u1·h ··i:as1 lr-~otc!~ ·• 111 16 t"\lu11 tru•, of w~stern ~:uropr , 11 l 1 t·atulogued desrr1ll<.'d 111appcd and rnany ptl'luretl u1 thr guidebook. "Ca~lle-llotrl~\ of l::uroµt· " The p;1pcrl.J;1ck h11s JUSI been updatet1Jor1!171 1 r-----------------------. 11 i!h ;1 supplement 11 h1ch ;1dd~ 1111111.' nr11 r~1ati11shmrn1~ 10 I See by Today's lhl' grow111g list I This of11c111! g111ci'.!l)()()k 101 Want Ads l·:urope·s tnost 11nust1;1I 11t·· !"O!TlJTIW!a1Hln~ I~ p11blt~hf'cl h) Rul.Jl'rl 11 Long. li.1~ Bcl!1nurr A\•e E:1~t :\1eadow , NY J 11,.54. al $2 95 postpaid II has 1:12 page~. ovrr 2 fl 0 11· lustrat1011s or cas11e.-;. n111I rtli19s of each country w1th l c·;1stlc localions Rate. loc:.1- !1011s. and olher dala ;i s wt•ll as 1nl(•rest111g h1storic<1 ! nutr~ 11.1'!" gll en Thn11gh r11lt'~ in lhese \Jld ca.~Lli•s rangr wulcly. 1nnsl of lhe111 ('OSI l~~s thilll !hr '1\"ef."!ge vs !TIO[l'I, 11nd offer 1nodcrn a1nenit 1e~. • t.r~•kln,i:: for a nrw l10ust?? Ch<•r•k lh<' clnss1flr1\ ad& f,,r !!<'II' l1~!oni:., Ill thl'! OPJ-;,'; J!(JU . ..;t; ~rr-1ion or our p."i JIPI' this Frirtay 11.nd ~.1ll1nl11y. e .JU'.\;QUE !'iALE! ~·urn\. !Uf'i', iUlllflUf':o; 11/ld JUl"Kflle lh1~ \\r'C'kcnd. S!'f' JU.SI 1111:.1 }011 r-;in r11ck up •1 h.1n~a1n p1 IL~-.~ • ,\l11k,. th1~ 111•('krnit ~rrut?! V1.~11 lhr gr:ind up;>ninr f'f Grnr>rnl A1111111on ~1ight l'rnff'I" ,{· Flrd Baron Fly4 1n~ Cluh. $.01 per pound r•CI""· ~11-cr.ilt riispJ;iys. •lrill• 1ng for ;, hours f'N>i! fll:!h1 1nstrucllon. July IOrh and !Ith ~Ian~' of them 11re r;imou~ for their rcslaur;ints and w1nl' cell11rs. Olten the si}l'etueular !1l('a\1on. ;ircl11!ct·turc 11 n d h1.~lorv 1n:1kc thc111 a \oun~I atlra<."t1nn Sotnc arr '"h1·111g r:i'!l('s". sti ll tht' rr:.1d('nces nf l._ _____________ ...,_..,. _____ ~ t1tl~d f;~nHh<·~ 11h1t•h h<l\"C TCRUISE Plastic Toys Are Best For 011tdoors Ca111pi11{ Africa will be one or fh(' many highlights of oi 90-d;iy around-the-\1·orld cruise an- nounced by Pacific Far East Linc for nexl spring aboard the luxur y liner SS to.1ariposa saili ng lron1 Los Ange)('s on f\larch 10. TIL There·s nn end lo the n1>- portunit1cs fur lun in !he OU\· doors. r s pc c 1 ;i I I~ lor _voung!>ters for ihcm c\'Cry thicket and s1rcarn presents a ne\\" challenge Children explore. dt<;t"Ol"l'r and learn in An1crica's surn- n1er pla.1·gro unds The experience lca1•es 1hrn1 asking lo return lo the out- doors again and again Toys arc speciCtl co1npanio11s In children ll"h<'re\'cr the y n1ay go They prnv idr a hclpi11~ hand for Mom and Dad on can1pi11g trips \\"hrlc 11-r1rk111g nrnund !he carnpsi!r on !he cooking and cleaning chores. IO}'S keep ~'oun,!i:sl er.~ s;1fcl.v occupied, full of laughter and OUl o( 01c 1\orking area \\hi!e parents go ;ibo111 keepinlif! the camping locale in order. 1'hrff' in1por111nt l:u.:lor:. ul judgin~ !he t1bility of a tor lo be usefu l during a Journey· arc Its compat1b1hty \11th th1• ~·oungster . !hr durabrhty of !he toy and safrty Toys thal h<nr :-1M'c1:i l nic;:ini ng to )Otir child :.hould cerl;:ilnly br included HOlloC\'!'r. if the plaything IS ,·cr~· fragile or small enough lo be misplaced and possibly Jost. encourage substitutes.. A toy lost in the outdoor.~ 111ea ns the loss of a special friend lo a child. Rug,t?ed plastit· IO\'S arc idea l fo r outdoor recreation. On the way lo I h r campground, !hey pr ov 1 d e plenty of entertainment for children riding in an aut o's back scaL Toughness is a trade111ark of pln~! i! Ln.v.-; The~; are 111;idr In handle the rough 'n tumble lre11t1nrnl children give thetn Drop "ern. toss "ern, dunk lhc1n in a cree k. and plastic to~·s \1•ill no! only with stand the punishn1ent. bu1 be ready 101· rl'en n1ore. Pl11stir lo\"s are ;is durabl e as the outdoclr~ is rugged S:ifet\ cannot hf> ovcrlookrd in ftllin°g up a child's lo~· chtst for an outdoors trip Plastic toy~ have easy lo m:inipul:ile ~rnoot h 'urFaced parts that ;:11 nid cutting or :;cratrhin~. 1'01·~. ~ueh as !hose nffrrrd b~ iupper11arr. are \'aried lo ;ippeal to all childrrn The 20.000-ton cruise ship 11•ill be the only Arner1{'an flag hoer rnaking a 11orld crui~e 1n 19i2, and the only world cruise ship depa rting from Cali(orn1a. During the voyagr, !he riia riposa \\"ill v1sil the area.~ ol Polynesia and ri1el11nesi<1. r\ew Zealand. Austra!i11. New Guinea, Indonesia, ri tal<iysia. India, East Afr ica. Soul h Afric<i. South An1eric11, th(' Caribbean and i\lexico. Over 25 ports of call arc scheduled. inc luding such ex· o1ic places as Papcr1e, Ba!i, Singapore, riladras. K1·11ka1 oa . Rio de J11neiro. Port of Spain. Cape To11n and 1'l on1ba~a. i\ con1prchensi\"e prograrn ol !>ightsec1ng excur:.ion~ 11nd ('\"\ended overland tours will hr av;iil;il)te. (lr pa.s~rngPr~ may explore on their 01rn lnfonna11on on PF F. I.·!- prcrn1ere ""\\'orld C r u t ~ c ' · t11hich 1~ sub1rcL tn !he u~ua! i:;ovcrnnicnt ;ipprn\ al 1. rn:i.1 hr obtained From local tra\f'I ;ig!'nl~ ANNOUNCEMENT -p FASHION J ISLAND NI:WPORT CENTER SUNDAY SHOPPING The following stores are now OPEN SUNDAYS FROM 12 TO 5 P.M. for your shopping convenience: 1. AT EASE 16. THE RIGGER 2. BATH SHOP 17. RUSSO'S WONDERFUL 3. BOB BURNS WORLD OF PETS INC . 4. B. DAL TON BOOKSELLER 11. SEE'S 5. BROADWAY 6. COCO'S 7. EL POCO I. HAIR HUNTERS 9. HATCH'S HALLMARK 10. ISLAND COFFEE HOUSE ' 11. J. C. PENNEY 12. KARLS TOYS 13. MARK SCOTT 14. MEDITERRANEAN IMPORTS IS. MUSIC HALL 19. THE SHOWOFF 20. SILVERWOOOS 21. VIKINGS FOUR 22. WAL TAH CLARKE'S HAWAIIAN SHOP 23. LERNER SHOPS 24. APROPOS U . BACK STREET 26. ARKRAFT FINE FURNITURE 27. YAMATO RESTAURANT SHOP THE OPEN.AIR. OCEAN .VIEW MALL • ··----------- ... -- n and 12 days. Round trip from s395~ I • 'Bl<ierl Ofl I l·Oay mon•~1.,m Ji•P an(f SIJD~C! IO "'lliab~lfy. fheSS F•"l"illn(ISS F••,...•l'ld••1olL.oe<tat1fl.-.,. '-SITMAR CRUISES • n.. "9C.tion you ho.. to .... to bck... 1000 Wiishire Bl~d, Los Angele~. CA 90017 Phone (213) •65-8662 .. :: .-•• •' ·' t; 1: ·I ~ '• ~ ~ :. .; ·I ' Maiden voyage Caribbean cruise, 17days from'425. Sailing lrom Fort Lauderdale to Los Angeles, Nawernbcrtt. • ·---·-·VA - ----~---------·· -·-----. ,ff!':.:.'-.!.. -::1--""-;"-~'---;;.,, ... -=-~'"'""''-~~ -• r»--· -· --.. ----- I 1 .· • ,. .. . .. . ,. .. ,. . I· ,. .. ... . . . .. ~ . . . . ~·----- DAILV PILOT frfd.ly July !J, 1q71 ----- ~ ................ -.. • • ··-w ..... - OUT l\'EEKENDER ' I AB 0 UT N B11 NOR!lf STANLEY OR ANGE C OUNTY 'S RESTAURANT , NIGH T CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE Bal-Po1 ·1 Louu;re There's one experience \\hich is especialty rc- \'1ard1n g ln 1h1s busine"S of steady d ining out- chancing upon a reall~-11nr n1eal in a place \l1herr no advan1·<' ~u~gc~t1on hints of the J!Ood fortunr 1 to come. . ~ • l • . ,_ As the name properly indicates. ?tlorrs BaJ- Porl Lounge 111 ;\c11port Beach is an cstablishrncnt \1ith e1nphasi:-, on colktails Bul that should deter rio one trorn paying a visit ror the sole purpose of eating dinner. RELAXED ATMOSP~RE It 111u :-,t be noted quilkly that tfic excellent food is :-,erred 111 rclax1n~ and attractive sur roundings Beyond bc1ni,: <i cu1._1' litl!c fun s pot for unhurried l111b1b111g. d1nl:'rS here 11ill find the a\mos phcrr cqu<1ll .v agrcc;ibl<' 1'hc c.lin 1ng area i ~ sn1all -as is the place generally -accornn1odating perhaps 30 to 40 pat· rons. '!'his establishes a pleasant intimacy 'l"h ich is furLh er enhan<·cd b_v di1n lighting. dark red table- cloth:-,. and clcli~htful old En gli sh and French print.~ on 01t:: panclcc1 \\ allio -~ ~ Dropping b.v the Bal-Port for an early even- ing drin k Ja~t \\'ednrsd:iy, 11c then opted lo stay for d inner J\~ {'1 crvlh1ng about the rncal later eon- firrncd. this ~01nC\\'hat spu r"{)f-the 1nonlent decision l<'d to a grl:'al South ('oast dining discovery. MANAGER ELL IO TT In all f;i1r11c.~s 11·c have to give due <"redit to n ogcr Elliott !he JOVl;l ! 1nan:1ger. 11ho initiated tile 1dc:i In kl.!cping 111th the overall picture. the rncnu lso sti cks to the :.n1al! side. Con1pletc dinner en· trees arc rx;ictl y slx in nun1ber. FULL OINNERS '/'hcse range in price fro1n $2.25 for bar·bc-cue <·hicken, to $4.:lO for a Nc1v York steak .. '\ll are ervcd \lilh salad ~brou ght to the table in a large serve-yourself bov.•1 and in greater riuantity than one could hope to consume), a piping hot crork of beans, an individual loar of sourdough hread and a cutting board. and a choice Of potatoes -baked or t'rcnch fric.o; Our 111·0 :-electi on~ \\ere Nc 1v )'ork Steak 1a <·hoi re cul of beef at once tender. juity and cook- ed to medium-rare perfecti on), and the beef bro- <·hette. 83 .35. The latter netted a sizeable skt'11·er filled 11·ith delicious portions or beef tenderloin. green pepper, n1ushrooms and onions .~'""o~~ '\\i~~ BEANS ARE SPECIAL 1\,,-~pccial seal of approval 1nusl be given to the <"rock of I.Jeans th at accon1panied dinner. 1-lerelofo rc 11·e've alv.•ays been in different about such a side dish, but the n1arvelous preparation and sauce iu this case turned us into dedicated devotees. 1'here are four other items on the bill of fare should you \Vant a lighter ,repast. These include a ~teak Hoagie. served 1vith French fries, $2, and a steak sand1vich, 11·ith salad and choice of potatoes . !2.80. The other t11'0 are an Italian meatball sandv.'ich . ~1.35, and an Italian sausage sand wich. Sl.80. Both :ire served 11·ith Italian salad. FINE SERVICE :\nother important factor in the total enjoy· n1ent of our dinner 11·as the courteous and efficient ~ervice 11·e received. The 1vailress-knot\'n lo u.~ only by first nan1e., Linda -ranked 1rith the be st ro und an y1\"herc. Dinner ~ervice is limited lo fiVe nights a \veek so don't n1ake plans to go on Sunday or A1onda y .. Other11•ise, the 1nuch-to-be-recommended bU! of fa re is a1,1;iilab le from 6 to 10 p.m .. Tuesday th rough 'fhursday, and from 6 to 11 on Friday and Safur· day. ~'--'!""""~~-~---~-!'"'lliiii..-......... -----~~.;!i'ti :n; NOW APPEARING-TUE. THRU SAT. 1!." FLING r~,· ...._:.. ··- PAUL LEMOINE DUO Su"da yi .ind Mond•yi JAN DENEAU TRIO No Cover-No Minimum COC•TAILS LAGUNA FLEUR DE LIS 1460 S. COAST BLVD. LAGUNA BEACH FRIE r.t.lklNG IN llAI TIM MORGON FRl.-SAT. JULY 9-10 JUMBO COCKTAILS- 4 to 6 DAILY --Col Tjoder l Jaclr Ca1ta11io J o.., Sor~tio11 -51111., J~ly 11 -J r .M.-2 A.M. Cill Tjadrr Appeilring Nightly Mon. thrv Thur1. -9-l A.M. ----S.iturda y .ind Sunday Brunc.h ---- CHOIC{ Of 1, HU£VOS RANCHEll O!i 2. STEA~ l EGGS J, t:r.r.s IENEDICT plu' EXTENSIVE IRUN CH MENU C 4tl FOR RESERVATIONS -S~l-11 4• 21.01 W COAST HIGHWAY -NEWPORT llACH W£0 .. (SDAY Hali but Steak, choice of poletoe\ T"UllSO.lV Fil et of Sole, choice of pol.il oe1 . S4l U~04Y . Sl.l t Salmon Steal!, choic e of poL1ioe1 : SUNDAY ···-s 1.4t .... Sl .4t .... Sl.O $I .It J umbo Shrimp, choic.11 of polaloei Fe.11turl119 Th• Fin11t Pies South •f 17th S tr11t ~ec1 Ala not •••~ed o" H,.1,.i~~· '" Holod•~ W 1ek1nd• : 1 101 Newport Blvd., Newport Be ach -Open 2'4 Hr1. " : ·'· . ~:-,,. .... , : '· n ,•:-. .:~.-:."":.~·:.,..... ..,"tt_~· '.:'IY<l~~ .. ---........, \· '1.·~~ ,.~ [ 'v.__..,1. ... "C.'• .__.., .... !:'."-"(ji.~~'/t"1f ,V!'>~I""' -~ •1 THl NlXT BEST THING 10 VISITING THE-ISLANDS ~J_ :'\l ''··. ~'.; llOU::iE J\101\J 'S i\"{r\' ENTEITAINMENT • 7 Nll;HTS A WEEK DANCING MON.0TUl5.·WID. ~ * Larry Lake Sin1;('r l.uita1isl * HAP HALL DUO wil~ O.I "~•h .., J•u 1'11f . tftnt $1111. For Early Risers Open D•ily From ---•nd Lat• Pl11yers 6 A.M. f\, 2 A.M. Re ar.Mesa Theater s~E,,s:E Co,~a Mes• _!41 l.:_19tll St._J11•t eff_N!wp_ert ll_ff. f 1i11e lfuli~11 C11isi11~ Co clt0.,ails 232S E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 lteMf'Y.-tit lll OP'"'" D~tv -5 ,.111. tu 2 •·'II· CLOSE D MONDAY FINEST SEAFOOD AND OYSTER BAR IN THE SOUTHLAND ·! VOLCAi'I U i ~ r.~r ) :!,-, 4 , .... SHOP . 1_J .1 630 LIDO l'ARK DRIVE IT ?.",,.; ' I '""'""" • c.:t. NEWPORT BEACH 675-0100 • f'lflt ,..., F1eturin9 1 ~~ l'::::i:~==~!l!l=============~~il .. ;;. ".,........ :-\__,., ,/.Ii- ' --lu>CI S•••"' ";! .~ .. '"' •••• ,... ...... MOKl"S FAMOUS ~~ TEMPLE GARDENS • ', LUNCH e D'NNER I URGUS •. SHAKlS .~\ ,, LATE: DINNERS 8teeld est ~ r.,. TIKI LOUNGE lunch ~ 1 i -:.~ Son_g1 Of C•win Dinn er l .''" 1400 PALISADES ROAD · COSTA MESA *'~. • '( INeJt .. tk le4tw•¥ l•el l51·14ll : I ;l ____ A_G_R_E_A_T_S_U_MM_E_R_T_R-EA_T ___ , '''·j BEFORE OR AFTER THE BEACH ( ~ YOLCA.No HOUSE I Moir s ' .. ". or'-f,., H .... ;,.~ R·b1 fo1 l ... 19 t t1 1' ;· Ill,,., 10 <1lli•• E11lrtt1 '"" Stltth k tl•I LOUNGE fOll r OLY NE$1A.N DIJNWI :i;: ______________ ___,( '( •"" ...... •~,~A\•" '"), "=~"''"'""""-""" ,.,~ · tl,9J~.~""IJl#-(µ..V'~~-~.A1V:tv ~·$:!1T'111lf:~. ~t-1Ss:£1tf!'slnurnn1. LUNCHEON & DINNER DAILY Vtslt Our RICKSHA COCKTAIL ~:,.~~!1~E MIL WILLS AT THI rlANO f r n•urlni: ~:'(n!lt Trnri<"lll Drink~ INTlll AINMINf P.,1. .. s.t. -• , .•. -1 .... HAP'rY HOUI 4 TO 1 r.M. MONDAY THIOUGH THUISO .. T 1SOCI ArAM's (•t H1r berJ COSTA MIS.A 540.1 '37 540, I t2l ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY · SATURDAY . By way ot yet another attraction. there's ~nter­ lainment on tap, from 9 p.m. to 2 a.n1., Thursday librough Saturday. The l"Urrent <im liscn1ent features t:dn :i. at the piano bar. 'fhc Bal-Port Lounge hold,: ! 1r1n and t;leady -"9t to mention zestfully th anks to 11ober':;; c ndJe·ss round of jokes ~ at 4507 \\'. Pacific Coast I fighl\'ay, Nc,vport Beach . Dold Qua Ii I y Jrnagine a couple of ardent food enthusiasts spending a lifetime ntaking, baking and c1lfing :o:moked meats. 1'o this labor of love add the con- r urrent preparation of gourmet goodies of e~ery kind and description. Conjure ur such a vision and you get a pretly good picture of a r ather remarkable husband 1°d v.·ife leain nov.• in our 1nidst. They arc fialph and Elaine Dold, 11 ho opened their unique business - Dold-Quality -in C'osta f\-lesa about eight months ago . FIRST IN LA ' \Vhal the Oolds are operating locally is acluaOy an enlarged· edition of their former l ... os Angele s establish1nent. That was an exclusive delicatessan and catering service they ran for 32 years at 851~ ~1elrose Ave. {J Like n1any other per rn ancnt residents or the area, the Dol ds fi rst logged many years as \l'eek- cnd visitors until the South f'oast siren cal l 1nad1: 1nol'ing niandat()r_v. ('losi ng the J_,os Angeles spol. the_v sat out i.:onslruction of the llC\\' Costa l\"lcsa rta('t' In \\"bal'!i bcron1e their fu1!-t11ne Corona dcl ~lar ho111c. Durinf? the Los Angeles years Dold-Quality al· tracted a legion of dedicated fans. 'l"h csc ranged from lo\v-budget house1vives \vho indulged in a one- a-ycar shopping spree to t itans of the entert;iin· n1cn1 and bu.~inrss \\'Orlcls "·ho plat:ed 1vcekly orders. Real Canlonese F~od eat here or take home. ST AG CHINESE CASINO 111 21 st pl., Newpo rt Beach ORiole 3·9560 Ope11 Teo• lro~11cf Oolt,o 12·12 -F-rl. oncf S.t. 'tll J •.111. ,-..,"" THE FINE SEAFOOD RESTAURANT WITH A SWEEPING V IEW OF BEAUTIFUL NEWPORT HARBOR 673-4633 400 MAIN. BA LBOA PENINSULA NOTHING ON OUR MENU IS OVER $3 .99 • STEAK & LOBSTER e CHOICI T-Bone STEAK e NEW YOik STRIP ........ . Nothing hiQher on the menu. N1turally-19ed U.S.D.A. Choice beef only. No tenderi1trt • St•lk dinners start 1t $1 .65 i nd include sal1d, to1st & patatoes. Biked potatoes from 11 A.M. 'Iii 9 P.M. I "Well · done" steaks t ooked with .. nd•r lovi ng care, too ! S~EC IAL Cl!ILDREN"S MENU ALSO: A pewee pl•t• for the Little T ot 1 29c, OPEN DAILY 11 A.M .• 9 P.M. 22 67 FAIRVIEW IAf WILSONI COSTA MESA 541-0368 HIGH PRAISE t~rom_ one highly-placed and ~fied partisan d1e y received several invaluable testimon ials now displayed \!.'ilh great pride on a \\'all. It would ht 1nost unlikely, after all, for anyone to fail to framt and exhibit communications extolling their producl.5 by the late President Eisenhov.1er. .. " ,.--.. l>'-<\-l.. ... < Ralph is a de:sccndant of the German·born fam· 1Jy \l"hi<:h Jounded the Dold Ale.at Packing Co. in lluffalo, N.Y., in 1850. Before the business wa,, 111ped out in the 19.29 stock n1arket crash, it gretv lo a fir1n "'ith 3,000 employees and branch plants 1~1 Omaha, Neb., and Kansas City and Wichita. l\ans. POOLED K NOWLEDGE Ora11·ing on his experience fro1n the family con- cern and l~ler positions \\'ith siinilar companies, Jtalph \1·as Joined by Elaine -a lady of no small batkground in the food bus iness herself - in launching Dold-Quality. 'fhe original smoke h ouse and bakery soon expanded into a full -scale deli i nd <·atcring operation \\'ith g ro\vlh continuing r ight up lo the present day. ~~~~ Princi pal Dold·Quality products are home- cured. hickory-smoked meats and fine sausa ges, go urmet frozen foods, home-baked continental pa strie);. breads. cookies and cakes. In addition to 3.i 1nuulh·11·atering 1•arieties of sausage, smoked n1eats include harn. bacon. turkey. pork loin, bee( tongue. goose and. at Ch ristmas time. leg-of-lamb. In. preparing the n1eats. all smoking is done 111th l11rkory \\'Ood transported fron1 Jackson, J\1Jo. BAKERY TOO ,\n1ong: the bakery specialtie$, home·m ade ~read_s i1~c!ude 11·hite. egg. stone-ground graham, S\11cd1sh Ji mpa and cheese bread I made '\'llh a three· year-a_ged rheddar). Pastries include a fan1ous ca,-.. rot cake. Ba vari.an cream cake put together \!.·ith t·ustard and \1·h1pped crca1n. Danish apple cake, Continued on P.age 27 ® ffilYRKO Lu nc htton Dinnt r Cotkt1i11 Ouen 7 duyi 13!1 ~o. Lo~ Koble~. P11s;ide11;1 • 795-70CIS :13 ·ro11 n & Country, Or~"!IO • $41 -3303 SEAFOOD CONYER SA TION E ... er yon~ is talking about our delicious iteemed clems .i nd 91ent ( 16-2 0 01.) A.u stre li.i n lobster Teil,. SUNDAY BRUNCH Serwtd from 10 A.M •• 2 r .M. E"ltrl•inm t~I & O•ncin9 HA.P'rY HOUR Mo11. • Fri. S te 1 '·"'· wi1ll Her• 1f oe111'r" l.t.N9UET FACILI Tl lS J l7 P'ACIFI C COAST HWY. HUN TI NGTON IEACH Ol'IH 1 01"YS Re•o•vtf<onJ Acceplecl For l'••lltt fl j tr ..,.,1 DON JOSE' i\tlW APPEARl.~G HAYDEN CAUSEY ON GUITAR GARY EARL AND SULTRY SHIRLEY BELLAMY ON VOCALS Enchilad1 ind Taco ................. SI .JS Chili Re/leno · Enchil1da . _ .... , ... , .. Sl .50 Sene4 with llllct, 1--. T"telll lt11 0114 Stho FINES T Ml!XICAN FOOD AT RUSONAILI P'AICIS e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adams 'lat Magnolia) Hunt. Beach 962·7911 -- We Prorni1 e You Good .,d A MERICAN CUISINE Carol Roberts from the DUNIS HOTEL LA5 Yll;AS NOW APPEARING IN THE COCKTAIL LOUNGE ·o. lhru SAT. NIGHTS 8:JO P.M .• 2 A.M, 8961 Adams Avt. IAt M091tollal Huftth•9t0f't IHc:h -f&l-5050 -. -:.-;."'.~ --~-::--·=-~-=---·~--· . --··-_ _._, ·--·---·----·.-· ----·· • ffio, •• ..,-.. -·· 'i:1.~--r_...... I "f;I,L -...::;:.. ... --..... :_ v f!r i'r, .:,.• · · 1!" ,.-.,:.._- \ I I WEEKENDER Slai11builde1· Ed Sit11s ll ailed as one of the 'vorld's finest shipbuilders, Ed Sims of l~agun a Beach \Vas co1nmissioncd to build "Young America" for F'ar \Vest Services, Inc. In the photo he ls putting a fevv finishing touches Continued from Page 26 pound cake, Gern1an-style sto!len, and, at Christn1as. the German gingerbread·l.ike leidkuchen. A fc1v pro.~pect s in lhe gourmet frozen food department arc roast beef hash, chicken cacciatora, S1\"edish-st.ylc 1ncatba!Js 1rith gravy, creamed chip· ped beer. sn1oked turkey a la king, n1acaroni and l:hcesc. veal cordon blcu. minestrone soup. \\li1hout k1101ving it. on the out 'n' about !rail you niay have eaten soinc Dold-Quality itc1ns since the establish1ncnt purveys a substantial quanlity of meats and rastries to many of Lo:;; Angeles and Or- ange County's top restaurants. In the catering oper- ation their service is lin1ited lo food preparation. LUNCH ROOM Beyond dropping in to stork up on the Dold's retail delicacies, there's a small lunch roon1 in oper- ation fron1 11 a.rn. to 2 p.111. 'l'uesday through Fri- clay. The offerings include a nice assortment of sand\1·iches and deli plates. CHOICES Nl1n1bercd a1nong the latter -alt uniformly priced at $1 .2!i and -"Crvcd 11·ith a choice of t1vo ltc1n .~ bet1veen hot Gcrn1<1n potato salad, baked bean,; or role ."la11' -;ire Pn!i.~h sausage, knack- 11·11r~l anr'I 11·icnC'r. \re ordC'red the first l\\·o, found thcn1 satisfying in every particular. and gave special nods of approval to the potato salad and beans. NF.W SUMMER DINNER HOURS S1.1n. thru Th1.1r1. .5 to 11 Fri. & Sat. S to 12 GOLDFISH POND KOi C.\ll,, LILLIES WATEll HYACINTHS "0ND FILTRATION UNITS WE HAVE EVlltYl"IHNG l'Olt THE GOLDFISH ~ON O r:rl;:i-;rd and ca~u;;J lo1t11n<lt"Y Corner of Pork & Morine lalboa lslond 673~530 SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH ,,. W, WI LSO N. COSTA ME SA lo/f l'•i•vi •"' "d.l SU-1''1 WIS All•"I•, HUlo!TIMGTON aEACH ""·0111 ---·----... Fridar, July '· l <J7l OAJLY PILOf ~1 OUT 'N ABOUT - Pasta Pronto YE.AL CUTLET IWIEftA OSCAR In addition to keeping close tabs on the Orange Cc .. ilty restaurant scene, there's another activity tied to our love of food. This pleasant pursuit i!! tracking down books that shed light on the subject's myriad facets. JU:STAUMN1' tip., cr•b 1-01. ••uc• 150•del· Continent•I Cuisine ~P..-0 will\ aoor,..11•. f Cockt1il1 AfrltONCf. JO Servin g SILECT Lunch~on and Dinner DINNll INTlllS J\.fonday thrwgh Sa turdatf. MIKE JO~OAN Close d Sundays DUO Ent••teinin9 One of the best volumes to come our \Vay re- ceoUy is \Villiam F.. l\tassee's fascinating and thorough guide to Italian cookery -"Pasta Pronto" (Creative Horne Library, 1971 -$5 .95). w • ... loc•t•d nerl to tho Moy Co. io South Coast Pla1e. lJll S. lf-kr.I The author. with assistance from wife, Dorothy tven, and daughter, Catherine Tremper, takes the lover of Italian food a\vay from the tyranny of can- ned tomato puree and packaged pasta. 140·3141 on the 1850 American clipper ship which is on dis- play at the Moonraker Restaurant, across from the Orange County airport Dessert took the form of t~·o eminently de- licious slices of chocolate fantasy cake. Sandwich prospects, tabbed from a lo\v of 7~ cents to a high of $1.20, include meatloaf, ham- burger, cheeseburger. frankfurter, knack,vurst, ham and Swiss cheese, bar·b-q pork, bar·b-q beef, and ham . Located at 2915 Bristol St.. corner of Randolph . <:osta Mesa. Dold-Quali t y maintains store hours of 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. WITH RELATIVE EASE 'fhe J\fa ssee family runs both neophyte and prac- ticed gourmet through the gamut; fron1 antipasto to dessert; providing detailed and carefully tested recipes for elaborate suppers, light snacks. and simple but elegant dishes \Vhich can be prepared \Vi th relative ease by the household cook. Every last detail is presented, including menus and wine selections for different dishes. In Chapter IV ("Chinese Noodles and Other Foregn Affairs"), the reader is even treated to an international tour of pastas in other countries . • BETTER HOME MADE Perhaps the most exciting contribution thi~ book makes to Italian cuisin e is the opening chapter on making noodles at home. Massee's method is fast and simple -and the results are bound to make an yone s'vear off packaged noodle!'i forever. The same dough is used for canneloni, too. FOR our OF '!'HIS WORl.P Df:J.IVERY SEF.VIC!> • In Newport Be<1d1 & Co5t~ Me~a Coll 646-7136 !n Hun1ington Beach 847·1214 •• • FAMILY PIZZA PARLOR S Among other gems of information in ''Pasta Pronto" is a li st of classic cheeses to use in cooking and for eating. La st, but far from least, the book also tells you everything you need to kno\V about tomatoes and tomato sauces, olive oil , garlic, onions. herbs and other seasonings. PIPING HOT PIZZAS (WITH PtZZAZ!) DEL1V(R£D TO YOUR DOOR IN MINUTES. IN ME·N·EOS SPACE AG[ t.1081LE OVENS. PRIDCE lf,fta(ES RESTAURANT SEAPOOD _, STEAKS Tv• .. Wed., T~vr. Op.on 4 pm l'ri., S<>I., Sun. Op•n 11 •m !Cl11td M1nd1y1J $.I HIA .I.NA: ism lltrW '""'· '3!·117e (I blotll. N. of Ulnt••) .lLlill llllT PRESENTS Th e Sensation1I TONY FLORES Guitarist I Voce I i1t Folk, Cle1sicel, Spanish TUE. THRU SAT. GINO LANZI Mond1y Night• FEATURING DINNHS 1,. th • S." Fr•"ci1c:o Ment11t lACI OF LAMI STUIS e SU.FOOD 5 TO 11 NIGHTLY IUSINISSMAH'S LUNCH 11 000 TO 5 SATURDAY-11t•5 LUNCH OR BRUNCH SUNDAY-BRUNCH Or IN IYllT DAY ON THI OCEAN AOJAC!Ml TO MEWl'OltT alACH l'tl'lt 2106 W. OCEAN FRONT NEW~ORT IEACH cfiirporter qnn Cflotel MEDITERRANEAN DINING ROOM c.f>t•i~'1 T•b l• Coff•• S~o" C•ll>•r.t C1c:kr.n l11.1r.t• ENTlfATAINMEMT ••• DAN CINIS M!Mtt11t .. 111 l11111111t l111M fll.71)n MAf'AHTHllR RI.VO. NE\\'PORT Rt·:Al 'll. f'Al,JF. ~llPfffS l 1 :JI •111-J p111 ._,_, li :OO p-..11 p111 .., .... l1 :10 •11t·J .... 421 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 645-5410 I ---·---· 1~ The ~ a.r HAMBURGER -rg ~ HAMLET l' LUNCH s••YID-11 A.M.0J:JI r.M. MONDAT THIU ••IDAT DINNll---'·1f P.M. MON·THUIS. 6°1.1 P.M. Pll..-SAT. COMPLnl DINNIU -SJ.61 U' Spec'1tlliinf In PllMI lits -SJ.JI 119'411 SPAllllll -SJ.71 l111111uet F1cillty COCKTAIL LOUN•I OPIN 11 A.M.·I A.M. DANCIN• Nl•"1LT TO LIYI tllO 2641 HAUOR ILYD. COSTA" MISA -541-9471 "THREI FOR THE IOAD" IN THI HIWl'Olll AllA LA CAVE RESTAURANT STEAKS, LOBSTER & PRIME RIB, .COCKTAILS • WINE ~RESfNT tNG OUR NEW TWILIGHT SPECIALS-5:00 TO 6:45 P.M. C OM,.LETE O!NNEAS-Setv •ol with lou•ol 9•••" 1•l•d with chooc o of clrenin9. 1nowll•k• po+1• +ot 1, t•rcl1n v•9•it bl•1, cli""'' roll. l1v1r19t 1clcl;Honel. l.UNDA'f WlDNlSOAY ~•••' ,.,im • ~ib of loef. •u iu• l.91 lu r~tv M1 rco Polo-c••"b'"V •f uc e l .7 5 Ch:cktn .1. M••vl1nJ l.9J Ptf>p•••cl SI••• lip1 w;lh •99 ~oocll,, 1.50 MONDAY lHUll$0A Y ll.•11t Tri •ntl• ef lt•f. •u ju• 2.75 M.,ic•n Oinn•• (no ,.I.oil l.S5 v,.1 s,.l!op!ni J,50 Short Rib, el loel-countrv 1lyle J,75 lUISDAT FllUIAT Po!!•ol Swi11 S•··~-... 1 .... 1 t '''V l .TI lob.tor Mewb~r9-1n t 1nerole l .91 l1rbetuecl ,. .. ,. Sl•c•1 J.50 V11! c.r;forni1 J.50 AND IYIRY NIGH T'S TWILIGHT S,.fCl.lL -TO,. 511llOIN STf.lK .••.•••••••••••. SJ.JI 1695'/i IRVINE AVE. ! Corner of 17th Street) Dinner Wkclv1 S:00-11 pm, COSTA MESA -646-7944 F ... l Sit. ~:OD· 12 "·"'· I EVERY SATURDAY I • French Fries • French Fried Onion Rings • Tossed Salad • Roll and Bult er l rin9 •friend! Te~e •d.,.ente9e cf this clelicicul din· ner for 2, et a just ri9ht pric:1. 1/1 lb. tender choic e ste1k, cut to lredford House sp1cillc:eticns. Be good to • fri•nd, or meybe the femily7 Thit me1I, is • f1vorite wit~ell • , , you'll be • winner! -0118" Delly Men. thru Sit. t:JO e.m. t• t '·"'· JurHley '1lfi;1i/j KNOWN FOR VALUES 10 a.m. te '--'·"" GllANT ,LAZA -BROOKHURST & ADAMS -HUNTINGTON BEACH ---;;;::...;;..::..;:;::~;:;:~=:::-~ . ---------... -~ ----·-·=·" ... --'?t~ ~.. • , • .__ zr.-..---~---· .. - .•. \ I I • I ' ,,.,r.• "~· ... ·J,'.•~··-.. . "' Eb sens 'Beweeping State' Stagi11g For Plav Prison Homosexuals in 'Fortune' ARTHUR FIEDLER CONDUCTS POPS Ntw Series Opens. on KCET This Sunday Night 'Evening at Pops' Scheduled 011 KCET l. T.he return of Arlhur FiedlC'r iiiCI the Boston Pops and Ma.c:terpiece Th('a!re·s "The F irst Churchills." plus a nrw .series of An1cr1can folk music. v.·i!I offer \ariC'd Sunday-night fare on KCET (Channel 28 1 beginning this Sw1day. "Evening at Pops." the Peabody Award-winning serirs of summer conerrts by guc~t <1rtis!.~ 1,1•1th F1crll{'r and the Boslnn Pop.<: Orrhcslra. opens 1 r1cv.· serir~ of 12 concrns vd1h an &11.Tchalkovsky pro- gram 111. 8 p.m. Soloist i:ii pianist Eurl \liilrl playing the Piano Concrrto J\'o. I in B-flat minor. Other works on the program include the fntrnductinn to Act 111 from "Swan Lake,'" the Rr1ar Rose Waltz front "Slrrp1ni;i Btauty.'' and the rousing 1812 Overture, complete v.ith can· oon fire. Then at 9 p.m , J1Jhn Nevil le and Susan Han1psh1re stc.r as the f1rs1 Oukr and 11uche~s of l\.iarlbornugh in the repnse dcl>ur of ~I a s I e r p 1 r 1· r Theatre·.~ 12-part drama. "The First Churchills " Set 1n li1h and lllth renturv England. !he weekl~· rpisodr.s portra~· one of the mnsl remarkable periorls in E:ni::ltsh history -the timr of the English Restoration . the rr1gn nf Louis XIV of Fr;incr. and !hr Sc\"en Years \1.';ir Concluding the Sund:.~ -night fare on C"hannt>l 28 will be "American Orl\"SSl'\'." a new fnur-p<irt 5erie.s dil{'umen1ing 1\1nrnca's hcri!agr through folk musir. at 10 p rn Tht• .ser1('S JS a mu.~1cal flllgrirnage throui:,:h plaCl'S and t1n1es \h;it inspired our uni- quely AmerK'a n folk songs. 1•;,1ch progran1 i.~ sel in <10 l11storir;illy significant luc;>.- t1on. ;1nrl 1>t;rforrners with fnlk- n1us1c haekgrounds p;ir\1(·ul<1r- ly appropri11tc to thu..;e ~1trs apprar in conet'rts s!<1J!ed rspet:1ally for trlev1s1on llsear Br<1nd. popular folksu1,i:er and ern1nrnt folklor1.~t. hosL~ \he hour.Jong progran1s . · F1rsl eOlr\ 10 the sl'ries, "Off to the Sea A~ain ." 1s set ag:>.1.nst the n1aJes11c seascape of Bar !!arbor. ~1ainr. Jn .~ong and slur\". Hr;ind <111</ gur:-;t.~ J);1re \"an Honk, Torn Paxton, /)nnaJ Leiiee, Li1c Cla ncy Brothers and 1'.1 c K e n d r c e ~rnng recreate the spirit of Americ;i's scaf<1r1ng er;1. .. 2nd Feature Walt'"' Motth1111 "A NEW LEAF" • • •t"CM ••vu •• ••••• • • ... "···· .._... ............ """' 8~7 9608 • H'-''""'"0'0" •• ...,.; RATED G ·. BUT MAY BE TOO INTENSE FOR YOUNGER CHILDREN. The story ~ 9G al the fFPOst g1t1C11/ floors "' man • history' ... The--•ill•sf through your /rl1rrme! Alllll 111 g M · .ll.IB ml 00 RBD iiiiilMN Nfl~NC MKJW.l5iirirrON l!Oiii~ r.ilWli1 t !-=-..;-.;:] IQlClt. ~""1: ....... l'f.:l\.111 Tf~OI'"'"'''.,._. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT •DWA.ftOS HARBOR,::;':.} _ ...... ,, .. ,_,, ,.... ..... .... "" "ND TOP T"RlllER· 1 nna 11 TII( un111 Of TltE •If Of I I l'1i 1, II' ·1, ,,I THE FD Biii PROJECT: 1 11'""·~ l'l.'.1Ult llC.ll~Ull.Ot'~ I ~ lamil'i 11.Jll 1>4;rtr••Y 11.....:!!f tl11s SIHJlmf'r durinf,l 1he Cherry County /'la:-house produ1.:tion 0 r ··T;ike Mer, She's .'.11ne," By CA~OACE PEARSO.\I 01 "" D111J ~'"' '1111 "\V/Jr11, 111 ri1.~prnrt> 1r1//1 fo11u11e 011d 111eH '.o; e yi>~. l . nil olnrie, be11ief'p 'IL!/ 011trost stoit .. :· From tlus ext:erpl of v.h1rh l1a~ lot~ 11! ad1·a1'1J1ges ·"W••na< 111 prt·p:1ring for thr n11d .July ~' »«1 ... "11"' .. h'::..e:::::::::3itE~ Sli1'111l)( l-11r 1111<' thin~ rrhrarsals L • EHi' H lirt·r1(' Tho•y 1akl' µlace ' 'Ive ... ;111yt1n1c thr 1t1r<·r al·lurs an'~ I tngr!hl'r in !hr1r Ralboa lslan'1 ";itcrrrnnt honir rind the Th rules jlrt' naturals for !hem e eate111 The furav into ~unirner ~ :r;toc·k "ill bi' the first for Bnn~ n1r Ebsen. J!l. 'tlho is l<1k1nfo! a :-r;ir off frnrn collr~e to study rlrarn;i Budrh travrl cd last surnrnrr lnr the fJr~t \1n1r 1n st·1·er;il _\t'ar.,. an1! :""<1ne~. wh11 n1a111l.v dnr~ d1r~·el1n!-(. hasn't dt•nr a pla .v .~1ner '"\l y F'.:iir 1.;irl~" R! Orangr (' o a s t Cnll'•_gr f11ur .11-.1r~ ;igo 'rile !rip In Trtl\"t'rsc Cllv. 111 11"!1 fur tht• .l1dy 1.l·20 p1•rformantP will tJ.e a vac<1- 11nri for Ow 1hn'P F.:bsrns h11l \;incy pron1iscs the audienl'e .. will get a goo<1 show out of ti." Th('v don ·1 know Lhe re~! of 1he ra~l n1e111bers but are ac- qti::11n1('d 111th the the <1te r dif('Ctor, nu1h Bailry. v.·ho pursued B<tudv until he con- sented to <1ppear in the pro- duction . \l n~t talrnl is boo k e d 1hrnugh <1grnts. for su1nn1cr .~to<'k N<1ncy s<11d not . the rnuu• elected h\• the brash \11<'h1gan direct or. Thou1:h N;inc v E:b~cn is lonk1ng for'tlarrl . \o hring on ~!.:it;!' w11h hrr husband and 1h1ughtrr. dlre<:llni;;: iJ; her first !01 ('. ~he 111;,Jorc·d 111 theater arls '11 Vassar College and rnet her tiusband w!iile bnth serveli in thr C'n<is! (;uard. They were 1narrird in Sr;il!le in uniform, Hudrl.v ii half a slnpe ;ihe<1d uf her On 1hc1r wa.v \n tornplrtinR lhe1r 21ith ~r;1r of n1arriaRe. t·ach has 1.:halkcd up an 1n1- p r r t<:~11·r l1s1 of Ht"- C"nrnph.~hmrnt.~. Aurlrly i.~ a h1~1nr1<1n. sailor . a 111 ho r, 1\ ntrr anrl hoat designer Rnd hu1!dt'r . <111r\ J\'<1ncv 1~ a11 r~­ P''rt 1t1r<'Clor. hon1en111ker <1nd n10Lher as well as an actress nl 1101r. !n her J)(ISl1 1nn ;i s d1rt'("tnr of the .\·ewp11rt ll11rbnr \h1k1rrn "s 1·heatrr (;uiJ1I. she v.nrks \.\llh talrnlrd p!'O[llf' /nun the HartlQr Arra producing pla vs to ra1~i· fund.~ fr•r rh1ldrri1'.~ frr:1111·r 1lr;im;itt<·s l"las~s, 'I ht• 11,.~, prnd11(·f1nn or thr gr1111p 11ill hr ··r;11i..t·rs or Hrvrr'tl•Vr·k." ii ln1r tall' frn111 1hf' lort• of llif' Hudson Vallr1· ir1 Nrw York . Srt in lf\.12, ii Is 1hf' st0r1 or twn h.1kcrs \\'ho t1·1rrl 1.11 'rut (':lch nthrr out of husin('SS . "Charle y"s Aunt "' ComPdy nn slagl' <1t South Cn<1sl Rtf)fr!ory . 1827 Nrv.·porl Bl vd . at 8".10 pm \Ved -Sun , through 1\ug 14 Hrser\"a\1ons --646· 1363. "i\1-1ake tJlld Sing·• A three-act (.'!dford ()dels drarna nn ~tage 1n th<' Arcn<1 The<1Ler <JI ('al SL1tr F11llC'1·ton , 1100 N. S1a1r Cn)lpgc Hild . Fuller1on. al 8 3f1 p 111 .Jul~ 9 - 11 and 15 -18. !1escrva11uns 670-3371. ··The Odd Couple'' ;>,'t>i! Slmon·s con1ecty on s!<1gr a1 the Laguna Moulton Playhouse 60fi Lagun<1 C<1nyon Road. Laguna Beach. al 8 .10 p m .. Wed.-Sat., Julv 14-Aug 21. Reservations -4~-0743. "Don't Drink the \\';Her" Woody Alltn comedv 11n i;laj!:e <11 the San Cleinen1c Commun1t~· Thc<1trr. 2 O 2 Avenida Ca br 111 n . San Clemente. a1 8 .10 Thur" Sa1 . Ju\v 15 -31. He."ervat1ons -492-04fi5_ Anthony Quinn Joins Anthnn,1• Quinn's nrv.· ARr- TV serirs, ''Thr Jl,J;<n <ind Thr (ily." prcn1irring !'rpt. l.':i on th r nrt"·ork. n1<1rk~ ii rr11n1nn f1Jr h1n1 \1•ilh his 11rr1tv t:f\- stf!r. i\lala Powers. "''hn pl<'l1 ~ lhP part of his execut11"e a.~si.~­ tant . Tony and 1'.1<1l<1 !<1st work<'rl tngelhrr \\hrn thry c-o-s l;irrrd in lini\•ersal's feature film . .. (ii.\" B<'neeth the Sea.'' a few Phone (1424:!21 For Weekenfler Advertising ' ' '"' Shakespeare's 29th Soruiet lhe name for a new movie was 1aken. But the makers ol '"Fortune and Men"s Eyes" will nul be alone in beweeping lhe n1ov1r·.~ "'out{·as t state" with audiences. Everyone can "'-'eep for what 111i1:ht have been -or what should ha"·e heen. In their elmost-unre!ent1ng rx<1m1na11on of hornosexua!ity 111 prison. the filmn1akrrs si>em dr!errn1nf'rl to be as bn1t111 as possible in a Ques! fnr "rP11li1v" Although there are only three fairly expltl'lt sexual scenes, the atmosphere throughout is ch<1rged with e \•1olrnt , depressing air. Pnwn ho1nnsexuahty is iin ATM»TM Clf"l!.'.DOMIE nt£A Adula $2.25 Jn.$1.50 Child. .75 Or••9• Co1m1v·• •IO<i<~uo!or ~~.,. V•lu• "'KLUTE .. (R) "'BREWSTER McCLOUD .. (RI "CARNAL K NOWLEDGE'' l!1<nn9 J•(O No<hO"O" Ann M 1r9«t 0~"'1 U I -~how 11 Ou1k "'ESCAPE Fl!OM THE ~lA,.f.T OF THE APES" "IUT(H CASSIDY & TH I SUNDANCE 1<10" O~n At 7 -!now 1! Du1- "Sh•"" h h•• n•m•. Sh•" I• h" 1•ma. .<11 .. "'\l(l~'-1"'. O~n Al 1 -Show •I Du1k """' O! Po~ull• ~,.,., •• ,VAN"S DAUGHTE•" M•rlo Thom•• ""JEN .. V"' """' ·~ FROM HERMAN RAUCHER"S NATIONAL BEST SELLER A Rober1 Mull1g en/Richard A Roth P1oduct1on JENNl~E.R O'NEILL· GARY GRIMES· JERRY HOUSER. OLIVER CONANT '1'00ucM by OlreclH by lillt9ic: by RICH.ARO A. ROTH AOBEAT MULLIGAN MICHEL LEGRAND T'>~ ~<'"'11111• scun<'l l••c~ "'II"' Oy r.l>c.~ lf9•~nd 1Y1•!1bl,.,,..w.,ne-rfh119 '"'""d' T[C'""(:OlOfl • @=-...=.;;::-~ l1eM w~'""' S•-.11 A l\onney Le•!k.ue s.i-,.,c, 2ND GREAT WEEK AT ALL 4 THEATRES IDWA .. DI HARBOR t.:':.2 Oil-._,,. IT ~ I T COITA llfM ...... 11 • ---·~-----------' ··------·~·· .... ---:z----..!-.--:... .. ._..,._ .... _ -----. -~. ·=-...... ;;;;:::;,~:;:::.;::::~~:: . . . ~ ·-. ~-. =;;;....,.,.....;;:;:~. ·-·~-·••-,---· .. -__. ~ ~ ............ ·-· w1u . ..,........,._,.. .... .-~c.;o ... _,~• • importanl problem a number of reant newspaper and magaUne arlicle.s have ex- amined. The public should be made aware of the depth and St"ope ol the problem. But a superficial movie is not the place to gain any understanding. "Fortune" chooses to cop for the sensa- tional. for the obv ious <1nd becomes ··Yellow Journalis1n" on Jtln1. The rnov1e prnmntell Jtself as an examination of a system which causes a vic1flus eircle of abuse. But ii falls short by attacking your senses wittiout including ynur brain. II never explains why or how . And 11 comm1ls an el"en .,.,or~ offense -taking advantage nf and rxploit1ng the very subject ll prettnds to be helping. The basic plot concerns 11 boy 1Wl'ndell Burton) srnt to prison on a marijuana charge or1g1nally brought by his father. Already 1n his l'ell are a sad, sexually-used young man !Danny F"reedman l, <1 bullying ag.1:ressor ( Zcw.iey Hall) and a petulanl lransves- tire 1 MJctiael Greer I. Burton "s change frorn unscathed lo f'~­ plol!ed lo agressor is chronicl- ed. The acting lhroughoul 1.!I excellent, but ii can"t hide th e ract that the audience is never allow~d lo know I he characters nr 1-1·hy I h t y reacted sn d1/le1 ent!y to th1 homosexual r x p e r l t n c e , linderstand1nR never triumphs over sens<111on. Of special note should be the exceptional arung or Greer as the 1rans\C'Sl1te comic relief, Queenie. HP v.h1nes. dances and drips sarc<1sm through his lines, n1ak1ng v.hat could ha\'e been " strictly ramp rolP. n1orr than ordinar}" Rated "'ll." the film i, nn the screen <1\ the F o 1 Hollywood Theater It will be shown in Oran~e County theaters 1n the near future. World War '.l\.vo ·was just ending. , World War Murphy is about to begin. ; Sl/\N f'I llLLIPS ·PH ILIPPI~ NOIRC:T ., H ORS r J/\NSON : .. :-' ". II \ ,F, ·f" :J ... ,.,. ' ' f\ v/\r1 '~ n1 f t 1 v rRonuc:: r 11 1r~ ~-~·-... ;GP~...:.:-::'.. 1r~1· _:,:: 11l~ ,: ;I;\·.<~ (~11:.1:-1,-" '~,,· ... : 1 {n~ .., r ,,.,.. · ... ·-·-·· PREMIERE ORANGE C UNTY ENGAGEMENT 101~~\lb.11m 2nd FEATURE AT BOTH THEATRES "WHERE EAGLES DARE" Joseph E. Levine presents a Mike Nichols Fil m slamng Jack Nicholson o • ro ~ ~ 0 ~ 0 . "' c .c u "' f- • c Q . ;;; > rn c "" CL ::; >. -" u "' u '" ~ c5 u c "' u "' 0 ~ u 0 ct "' c > .3 ui Mike Nichols the producer ind direct~r of 'Who 's Afra id nf l/i1ginia Wolff! "The Graduate .... Catch 22" NOW ! Gives You 1 lmon in Lit! (.t's Funny -Funny -Funny!) Jack Nicholson Candice Bergen Arthur Garfunkel Ann -Margret Jules Feiffer EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY INDOOR ENGAGEMENT IUNOAY THltV THUI SDA" -i . I 11 ~•IOIY .. IA.TU•o•v -,,,._,.,. •e,. MATIN(I Sl fUlt f:'&Y IND SUNOAY NO l f5f-"10 S[AT~ " <T> w <T> ~ <O <T> ~ )> "' :r c: ~ G'l "' -c ~ , "' )> " ~ ' s: !!! ~ ci "' ~ ~ ro ;><; " 0 >; iii" ~ ~ "' ' >; :r :ll iii s: 0 -<T> ~ 0 =r iii' 0 z · "' !". ... : • "" '" .. ' I ' , ) " .l " TV DAILY LOG Friday Evening JULY !I Saturday Moming JULY 10 ~·oo IJ 111 ... ltfTJ Dt.Ulflht 7:00 IJ Su•-S.111ett« (})QC Nns R.1toner, Sml111. 0 9 m J1111loMMJ IAn B 11"8C Ntw1 Tom Snyd•r . ID 1li1M"'*'• 0 Sh O'Cloct MiMt : (C) (IO) "Tiie 7:JO I) O..tty'1 rr..i-. ll1l~111•g.~ Ctncl1Jt10ft (dlll'llt) '5 1 0 m H.clli.' ...... --flur1 l fflCllllf, Kath1rin1 H•J (J) 111_,. b~ln. Wendtl l Corey, £ar1 Holhm1n O lllct ~ Uoyd Bodi•. ([) s--s-.t..t 0 I Spy 9 Ulldt 1'111 m ni. n1frbtorltt m Ytt1 , rritnds t!J Star lfelii l:OO G 11111 1111111,/hlld lhMM Ko• ED A n..1. W.11/Chu tit '• f'•ll 0 m WMdy .... ,.o. e> nt1ttr r1 .. 11y D CI> 00 u.~ lhl' @!'! Hotldert 3" (I) Chester tfle l•lll• m o.111t v111rr 0111 o ..-.: H1rr.-.11..-. ''" S9•tL .. a') Pf..-. /Im Htwtho1111 m Clltlon1 :lO @ HIWS 8111 Huddy. l :lO EJ @I m TlM hfll- 0 I l flCIX:l ! ..._,With M1 .,, 8 C.11141111 P'i'tt'llt l1inie ll.1110 M1l.l Ktr1n 11 uen prt m Cl-IU4 p1nn1 kN a 111rhtclub 1nr11trnent l 1:00 ID ()) Sttlrl11 l tllt "*• l ot- (!!Trilt! M C.X11qutnctt Nts I]) CIS Hews Wtller Cronki(t, 0 ~ m Dr. Dtlittlt !@) Nit New. 01v!d Brlnkl11 O M-.: .. hp frM lftlOUyn'" ID TH flytnr llu~ (colMlt)'\ '51-8eh Lupi, Ch1r11!t, fD tt.dp,oci11 llldrt 0 (fl fl) l•ITJ L..U Show m Stltdtcl fil111t m Mowle:t: "'l1C81'1 ~ IN •ect• a;, OUlrt R11110rt {west1<n ) '5&--8ri1n Oc.nlt>J, fil11n m Dullo ilPll P1ti111t J1n.u1n. HD-Oar en ... ,.H (sei.ti) ffi ABC NIWI '61i--O.nn11 Moo11. l•nd1 Sier1in1. :Oll 0 W Ntwt W11ttr Cronkrl t. ID~: ''1111111 ti Conllid" (drt· 0 m Nit Ntw1 Otwid llr!nklt)', '"I) '~[clwarcl Arnold, .lohn ,I.au. 00 Te Ttll tll• TIVlll "'1'11t1 If AdfMture" {.OV.n!urt) ·54 0 Wll.t'1 Mr lln1? --Oon O.f0f1, lon Cl11nty Jr, @) Diet. Ytn o,t1 m c.eri• J l •ttrr• m 1 L-LllCJ m ,.. __ ., L.ttiflO m (() °''Jll't t :lO o ®I m Tiit "'"' hlltlltt fD Thlrt, Ml1111t11 Wit• • • . @ Tlj1-; Mndlw te llt SOl!tll fID CMtt tllt LM111 WW 0 (}) Tiit O.bl1 d1c•W1 fl! Ali1elltoe "'""' 0 MIN: CC) "I.alt To1111•...t" ED Mwl1 lt111t (wtlltrn) '66 -Mlhofl'.I' S!tff1ns, :lO 0 JM ln-1 (RJ Kari11 Oor. (1) Mcwit: CC) {Zllri "OcMtl'1 11" Ki) Arrlbl ti MeN (c.omtd)'j 'r.6--0tan M1 rti11, fr1nk 10:00 I) (J) Josi• l ~ P'Neyc.11\1 Sinatra. 0 @I @D HA. Pvf111tllf o im m 1411-c~.,.,,.1 (I) {!)RNI Elita• Rwllll 0 A111ll •-·Up 0 CIJ II« Whitis 0 @ !ID 1111 l r1dy l •nd1> (R) U) Luc~ Libre (!) MCl'+'!t: (C) (90) "\tit 0.,. 111 IO:lO fJ ([) HlriM 'lebttrottelt ~111ptll" ('9flt1Kult f) 'Ii() -Ste"H 0 t1) m Htrt C-the lrvnl' RffYtl, Chri:stint K1ulm1n11 O Mll'tl1: "Tw OellM I.not" (dr1. 0 MllliOll $ Movit: (2-r) "Onio~· l'l'lt ) 'S2-Jolln lite!, Sl•v• lrodit . htad" /oomtdy) 'S&--And'f Gnfl1tll, O (J) Sky Km1 f1hd1 f 1rr. Willer M1t1hau. 11 :00 f) ({l Arthlt's funhou• m Truth Of Ct11t11111tn0ts 0 ®J m M•i0t Ltt(lll ltwbtll ID It T1kt1 t Thltl' CJ) Mcwlt: "Winp of Dtn .. r," Zacll· EI,;! R1ppin1 Up tlM WMt t ry Setttt Kty Kendall . ([!) Cin1m1 JO 0 I]) Wo!Dr MOlnt @D Ellrtllt1 Musle1ln Q MlllM: (Cl "Upncl ef 1 CIHl- 5 mJ Cunlion tH S.111ndos nt11tlf" (wes!ern) '66-RM R1!1dell, 0 ,\n1tl 81..0.lt Thi C1'11fornlt Judith Oofnyi. MJtels mM1 tl'tt 01kl1nd A's 1! 01k a;J V1rltcl1d lend. 1 l:lO 0 rn Thi Kenly loJ'I 0 @ CE NtfNIJ l ttlt P'rof-QJ MO'lie: "ttlfil•tJ Dnrntf" (1111· m Ta Ttft tht l111tt1 '"') 'Sol -Rkhard Conl t, »In n;J Uvin1 loot Benn1tt. fij Srlvlt J [nrlQYI (I) Mino I Maae 11~1 I) 1+11d11111t-. (R) Q) l111·U11t 0 @) @m 1111111 tf Ille C1111t (Rl 0 CJ) m Tlu P'utrid1• ''"'n' (R) Afternoon m Dt ,id fr11t $~•• Gu111, Mcques !A:twlle1u, R1bbi Mti1 Kl· 12:00 6 S.C.Obf·Doe han~. fred1 P•rnt. 0 likMe: .... 111 ti Sa~ f1n1111ckt~ m Drr11~1t \•1sltrn) '.4 7-0on•ld Woods. Glon1 fD Artitb i11 "-la (It) W&1dtn. CID Pttltnt t.r lil'lnl 0 IJ) £D ,\Mtft-.. ndsl.Md 55 ml Cl.tlltillfl d• St1undo1 (ii Btl••n If) rtJ US 'ridtf Mt¥1t: (CJ {2111) fl) l11tfl '"'U.UC. "Tr.vii l ot•n, D . .l.~ (R) (d11m1 ) EI!J ... ncul11 (10 llr) '69 -V1~ MOfrow, Hal Holbrook. 12:30 I) m Tht Mtn~-Br1~d1 Vto:un, Geor21 Gr;u1rd . (6) ~bflt HofM Sh" Smlt Jlh rlowe. J"mtJ C1ll1h1n D Molit: "l1lt Thr• Slool'I ~. 0 r6) ffi Tll11 Glr1 (R) Orbit" (comtdy) '62. @ f1lon1 Sq111d m Klnp If Co!!Htdy ED A111triC1n Flint lflltltvtt Tht •trt 1;00 0 011t11rcllJ l .Mirtti., €r:) 30 fltl i"U!t'l @ Citll_PUl,. l'Tofllt " @I) La Cr1 td1 8le11 Cri1dl @ Mll'+'I•: Fo1 ltt • lll~lf, 1111111 fID llD111111r1 w11o~ltt Traver1, D1vid Sumnlf. 0 {1)@ Q) T1lt Odd Couplt (R) 0 Movlt: ft} "G unMllO~t" (W•!I· O 81l111 W1rd Ntwi t1n1 '~J -.lud1i M ur~tiy, Sut1n (JJ Quts1 IM .Yvtftlll!f Cabn1 ([!) Mnlult/Pnff(1 Deli: lIJTY I t1M1 11 LNoti~I ' fE l • Ctu1 d• M1ri11 Ctuctl l m WHtllld Ntw1 .. O i19J ms 1r1~1• R•11•rl /RJ iI!Dttru~MUN t 0 (}) l'i) ll!) LM, A....nan Slylt al ril" f•t111u ' 0 Movie: {90) .,11 W..t Strtef' l:lO I) TIM.._.., (dram~) '62-4.!t" Ltdd . Roel Stti @ Yok11f ,\fric11ftwt .... aei m Ntwt F'llln1m/f 1shm1n 0 IOd·ksi111 'tf ln\tnt1ri11111t Mo4lf (!) MO'llt: "S.aon .. Klf'IM~ 1.,.!I· trn) '49 -Wilhtt11 Elliott, 4dr11n 8ooTn Q) M111tr1p ~ H1mtl ~osu 'uestl ·~ !em,~ Brol•n o! ~1rru1 w,lby I •O ol 2:00 IJ Oult)"1 TrW!ffw ED I IPIC1A;~ I Cnh! A pro/111 Johnny G1.1~ 1 (j Aaou lllt ftn~ ta;) l11ch1 lib•• 0 N1•1 K""ln ~~ndtrl m l'lllW'l B•ll Jntin\ ail £t Dhrlo dt Uni S.norlta Dt· unit 0 (()ID NNI 0 rlOJ m Nin 9 M°"41: "for WhoM llM .. n T~l\1 (dr1m1) '•3--G ary Coc1>tr, In. 2nd Berrmen f1) DNtll Y11l'1 °'YI O (Il(l)N ... m McMr. (C) NM. Swonl"1 Nnr (1dY9111Urt) '52--((irlltl Wiidt, MIU· """ O'H1r1. Dt n O'H1111hy. ID 1•1 TIM Otel a1) SI Ne flltf11 T1 l~ ill t;iw1111 l4 JO 0 ..... i rlffl• o i1i m Win.., CM.. o rn (!)a>~~ """ m "'°"'~ (C) "Mr 'Mrit.t "'7" l«1rntdy) '51---3ob HOPt. ~hdy l•· ... m MooM: "Dtf&t•t , ...... <•dWl'I tu rt) 'S9-Btllnd1 I •, Allf'll G1ylCH m ~ '#ltb • ".W•· hilt Dr, E;dw11d St1!nbrool. :40 0 M"4t: (C) "l"9 U.. tfltl flt HO!W" (westlfrt) ~!-StM Codi· ''"· Slltr!J .i.ckiotl. :10 ID All-MIM Sllw. "'ti-ti tilt n ... btttllld," "H..t " .. M•k" tnd (t) "SellMe. • :00 f) w.wi.: "SHIM C.rf'" {11tilfl l11rt ) '51--0tnt Md~ ClllHM 1111111. [!J DOl!a - :05 RO) M..-11: "Crtltlfltl Willi Awtt11t U1" (~cl II) '!16--Jtff MOITOW, 1111 RttJIOll, .10 m""" :•5 O W.W; "t'ua•k ltt" (watt1nl 'SJ-.lol11n1 Dnl, Jolln lrtltlld, O Mnvit: "H~r. ""'"tb1~ (tre1111l ·~t -Ann Sner•d•n. Kent S111•lh, Ro~rt Al~I Q ROllfr DtrbJ ~Know 'l'M1 I/bit ~..i1: "llowlnr Mlif' !1r1m1) ·)!· -!01ry Coo!>lf, Svt111 St1n· .,,, m SllOfb WO)r\4 m Not lftttl' l:lO fJ TIM ''"' Undon Siio• (l) Srtin1 M_, tn a..i D Tiit ltrry htM Stte. 11) ront• I Mint 0 Ml¥it: (t) "1\e Mia Wiit C..11111 C1111t o.t!i" (dram1) ·~on D1Hr1n1, H111I Court m Mo.It : '"S-T,..t" (dn · 11'11) '67-Jt mts fr1nd1C11i. ~~ Qellfllp m: Whip tt AMfltwt al"1 ..... J:OO D Cea111•MMI WMll • ~·· trill Dr. lctw1rd SttiftbraN. (f.) ~ ,... .. .. Dat"' fdr1m1) 'IO-R~ 811rT • .!Mn B1nnttt, IJ M..W: (C) "1\e l•tien• (dflllll) 'sg_John WIJl'lt , .i.ttrt) H1.111t1r. lhltlit Wood. a Sdtlta Fldlt9 ""'""' CJ) MMtt: "1\t L"'f Wiit" (drlJM) '54-klho!!J Quinn 'tt1l1 C11tl1. C!) Mnkalt /D..., I Willi m IMI• ... _. m n..111 ,.din EIJlihtwll- J:JO D °" u.ri• 11-.i Kttttt11 e •• n..a.......,. (i) ..... : 'Vrfr'IUr.~ l'1u Ii> ch111.n, Mtrlt WtildtM. l!I ClllWrtrl• .......... Cll (] lil11Mt ,. L.-m r,.......,. m,..,_..,. This Week Treat the Family to Dinner In One of Orange County's Fine Restaurants. OAJLV PILOT Z9 Nothing but Fun Winter Cruises Scheduled / ~ <:? MS'f-U,. ecti'f'...WN t ~ • If a study were ever made of w h vacation area pro- duced tht mo.st v Iv 1 d memo es And dreams. the Carib an woµld prob1bly win in a ee7.e. Nowhere else in lhe w rid can such an e.1otic medl ' of European, African aJ1d eolc cuslom."I bf: found. Thro-../ in 11 touch of Las Vegas Md Jou have a holiday paroid~e that can't be baat. Like French food~ Try ~1artin1quc, w here the croissants will be as t.asly as in Pac1s, but where the more advenhtrOIJ.'i can find such in· triguing native dishes as "Colon1bo " pork or beef prepared with an rndiM seed comparablt to curry and saf· fron: or "Calalou ," n thick soup composed of Ftreens and gumbo. For dessert, have 11. "maracadja," the Io ca I passion fruit which is yello~1. apple·sh2Ptd and ta.st.es like a pumpkin. lnlere~tt:rt in languages" Vi sit thii Dutch islands or Aruba anrl Curacao where they speak Papiamento. a curiou."I niel:inge of English, nutch, S panish and Portugucsc. Elevated t tJ languagt status, P;>.piamento is now !aught at the Universi· ty of Amslerdarr, in Holland . Dancil!g! The limbo will let you know how agile you are, or are.n~t. and the rollicking i;oundll of the steel band will blend In wilh lhe charm and ambierice Df the moment. Ardlitt>cture? Take you r pic k born Spanish tile roofs, Georgian columnades from Englahd and Dutch paslel- shaded hoU3C.!'i wilh delicate fili~rtt and fretwork. There 's even 11 windmill , wilh a disCQl heque UP6lairs. Stw:ipping in the free ports is une:rcelltd. Savings, nn a tremendous variety of goods, can be .11s much as 50 percent orr stateside prices. One of lhe bes t, and most Or1n9e Coynly '•emltro En91,m1nl! Stov• McQuee" •I•<• In "LI' M•NS" (0! Sll VI McOUH" In '"1'Ma TMOMAS CllOWN .... ~ ... Ill" ..... ~.~ .. ~ .. -. '"'"" .... c ....... f71•1~•1·&011 pl"' • A l~~ ... ,kl~ "Hl •ll1' IS A tOHl!lY HUNTfll" , __ WMlol~-· 111·.0~ W•l••r M•"~•~ •·4 NEW l l'I'" iG\ ............ " ....... ,,.,14. "' "" ll!:~clu•lw• 0<1-1~ si.o ... 11111 1 undt< 11 myll bf" will\ a-ront "I UMMl'll 01' 'It" !II ) Jli"' • All~ Jlr~ln "Nl ... 111 IS A LONll.V HUNfllt" f!lu• ltk h1rd llu•- •1¥Hlllll l•OLI S D•lll" IOt"I -..... ~ .. , .. _..._ ...... ., tJ4-1Ht All Color l•dUllV9! ll!"Mr 17 mutt bl w!ln P••onl "JO~ COCkll, MAO ooeS & I NGLISMMI N" l0'1 pl~I • l oc• H ..... ,.., "'ltlTTY MAIDS ALL IN 4 llOW" t•) l ...... ~ .. W•t•olR-0 lll·I JJl ----w1 .. u u 411 Co+H .,nuv £,.!trtl lnmenlt J-Mel G••Mf "IU'P'Oltf YOUR LOC4L OUNf'IGMTlll" 10 1 pl\n JUntt Gt "''' "SUP'P'Ollf YCIUlt LOC4L SMt•lf'f'" 1•1 ---· --...... All Color l"GW """"' II mull bl wl!TI Htf\'11 "A M~N CAtt lCI NOltJI" !0,l ~I~• Wiiii•"' H&k't'"" £•~"" ~~r,nlno ''THI WllO tUN':H" (11.l comfortable. ways to set this holiday Wilnderland is by sailing on titht-r <lf a pair or 17-dey cruises aboard lhe Princess Italia which link lhe Wesl C<last wilh the West Jndies. This handsome, all- flrst~Jas!I luxury cruise hoer will be your hotel·in·port 11s you roam through each ex· citing stopover between IM Angel~ and Fort Lauderdale, Fla, Each of the pre-Christmas sailings, offered by Los Angeles -based Pr t n ces s cruises, includes a daytime pasage through the Panama Canal. Passengers '>l.'iil feel like they are sailing on nauli- cal elevators as the canal lock!! lower and ra ise thP Princess Italia t.o and from sea level. Tilere is a running ~hipboard commentary on the fascinating process. The second or the two cruises also stops at Balboa . where passeng.ers can visit Panama City, one of Lhe trade crossroads of the world. Both cruises include calls 11L one Snuth Ame rican port. At Cartagena, on the Ca ribbean coast of Columbia, the days of pirate raids and Spanish grandees a.re gone but the port .retains an aura of history with such imposing 11ig hts as the Palace of the Inquisition. La Guaira is the port of C.aracas, capital of Venezuela. Even those \•;ho have laken mahy cable rides will marvel at the ascenseion from the shore, <lver the mountains. tn Caracas. The view of the bustling metropolis and it~ surroundings is truly spec· tacular. Acapulco, on Lhe Melocan Riviera, is another port visit('rl on each cruise. Cosmopo\il;in :ind quaint at t.he same tiinr, Ace.pu!co offers a chance to taste a riot of discotheques a1 night and to purge yourself diurnally on the go Id c n beaches. One of Lhe more colorful al· tractions al another stop, FUN FOR EVERYONE A.I 0nate C-MJ' .. Pl-t 1e.r1 ......... ,t1-c.....-: l'AVtUOI Qm!.tlt NA11114T[D HARIOll CRUIS[S 0 41l Y COCKTAIL CRUISES NIGHTLY OATALXM'A PASSE:N'OER SERVICE NEWPORT TO AV.ALON SKIFF R6N'l'Ab5 "'5 SKlffS At<ID OUTBOAllOS CALL f71() gJJ.5245 fo.I ABOVE Sport Fishing 0£(P SCA TR!~ ()All Y •.. 673 143• ~11 ~!~-~ ' _, -400 MAIN STREET 1M'lbUI BALBOA Pt:HIHSU~A ROBERT GOULET How ttiru July 15 lwt1 Stlows Per NiRhl 8 p.m. i nd Mldnit llt • COMING,.. JOSE FELICIANO ... K•r•Stevena July 17 tllru 25 A .. rlt1'1 Srt1tts1 V1c1U1R lq, Fo' R•terv•lion. c•ll: ZEnlth 9-11924 " l<iriga C11tll• Lek• T1hol:/N•v1d1 1702) 831·1111 W1Jlemst.ad, ca p it s I 1'1( Curacao. is the Queen Emm<; Pontoon Bridge. largest of i~ t}pe 1n the '>l.'Drld. The sight nf !he bridge opening up for the Princess Italia is un . forgettable Between shopping bouts -11nd Curacao is ri!led one of 1he best freeporti:; 1n the Caribbean -you might Activities Hostess on 'Princess' Pr1ncc~s Cruisi's has ta1nrd Niki Harrnon for s~ond consecutive su nuncr as junior acuv!l1es hostes11 aboard the Princess Italia during thC' liner's series of cruises lo 1\lask<t and Can<oda t.1iss Harnion gives arts and cr<ifls lessons for childrer. and adults. She abo runs other i>pcc1al prograrns for children inrluding tcen-:ige f'venl s. ...-. ant Lo lry some goat slew. The shopping is just about 1s good on Aruba where passenger!! often wilt take soulful looks at the sw1ylng divi-divi trees after Mmt!time!I I e M·lhan-soulful encounters .,.,,ith the booming gambling casinos. SL George, capital o f Grenada, is especially pic- turesque. Colorfully-t iled roofs slant up the green hills almO!!t directly from the Carenage or dock area. No matter how \'OU follow the quaint and winding streets. the aromatic scents let you know right a•Nay you're 1n one of the 1pice c2.(Jilals of the world. EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~A .. l>il "r,., '' ~ <•, 1 -~\fl ~ '" '.,4,, h•n9-t•n j•ckots ~.ft~t111er1c.•rd e •••* di,,• '\.. 1 f11hi•11 1111,.., .. wporl Urilf' 644-1070 She has ptrfor111ed thJ"oughout Lhf' countr.\', both 2ND FEATURE AT CINEMA WIST-"IUTCH CAlllDY- 1n nlgh1 clubs and on television 1--=~~~;l~N~D~•~-';C~l;N~E;M~•~¥1~l~JO-~~";'~•~IN~T;Y~O~U~l~W~•~G~O~N~"=:~~~~~~~~~;; and radio, as a 1nusica l clown playing novcHy instruments. Prio." to her position with the Princess Italia, she has 'o\o'Ork- ed on such ships as the "Queen of Bermuda ," .. Bcrgcnslord" and "Vic- toria ." The all·first.class Princess ltalia .. ~1ill make San Francisco her summer hom,. for the Ala ska/Canad;i c r u 1 s es . Departure dates are July I. 15, anrt 29 and .<\ug. 12. Ports of call rtre Junertu, Skagwa y. Kf'tchikan and Sitkii 1 n A lask;i; V ;incouvcr, V 1ctoria ;ind Alert Bay 1n Canada. == 'LE MANS"_ ·~\ =---.~· =---' -t EDWARD• ~ ; ctj·J1!,i TH•ATR: ......:. .. -·<CO.•• ... ~ -, ... ,,~1 ---· ... ·~-.. ---·. Cruise to Mexico with a There's little luxury left in life to compare with a Princess Cruise. The Princess Italia is the most lavish cruise sh ip ever based in Los An- geles.It's a one-class sh ip-all First Yo u'll enjoy the beauty of the colorful coastline of Mexico through lhe fl oor-to-ceiling windows in_ the Grand Salon . Ports of call The Princess Italia goes to sea from Los An· geles for an 11 day cruise August 27, andJanu· ary 31. Fora 10 dayc ruise,September7and17. On eac h cruise, yo u spend a full day in Puerto Vallarta, once the hideaway of the very rich; and a day in charming Mazatlan. The 11 day cruise gives you two days in glittering Acapulco; th e other cruises, one day. Our 14 day cruises, sailing December 15 and 29. January 14, and February 11 also give you a day in Manzanilio and one in Zihuatanejo. Attentive service The superb service on the Princess Italia re- • .... fleets the training of our Italian chefs, waiters and maitre d' in the finest hotels in Europe. Attentive cabin stewards provide room service at any hour of the day or night Ah, the food Contin ental gourmet specialties make every meal a deligh t How about Shishkebab a la Creque, for lunch ? Veal Medallions Villa D'este followed by Crepes Suzette, for dinner. And yo u order your wine from a cellar of over ten thousand bottles. The gala social calendar offers you just as much, or as little, as you want to do. And in eve ry place yo u visit, you stay in the same ocean-going resort hotel with no packing or unpacking. Call your travel agent now while choice cabins are available. Or mail the coupon for brochures. Cruise fares from $410 to $1485, subject to space availability. r--------·-----1 Princess Cruises, 3435 "'TuhU't Blvd. Loi Anael~ CA 90010 I Said me brochurH oo J :;: D~•ili-/&Am-D~/~~ j City Sl>lt Z!p I Mytravdaaent --1' Princess CruiseS.n L~· Mako ·cm:btanJSoutb":~·AlubJCwd& I I I I ·.s; ... ~.~-r-··, .;_,.·~:, ..... ·: ... " • ,. :!0 IAIL Y PILOT f rlday, J~ly 9 1'171 'Kltate' .Jane Fonda plays a h igh class call girl in lhe motion piclure, "Klute," \Vhich is currently on sc reens in Orange Cou nty theaters. Adul!i U .1J; JrJ. 1!.1'; Cftlld•en IJ< J&m"'> C.Atn~• '"SU,.PDll:T YO Ult LOCAl GU>jFIG"TEll" !GI plus "TH( LOST V~LLEV" !GPJ OmAr 5n~rl• Mich8•1 c--1.,e MOVIE RATINOS FOR PAREIVTS AND YOUNG PEOPI.£ '"• 0&1oc• .. • °' '~• ,.,.,..,, ·• 10 ,~101"' ""'"~" ·-· .... ''""I>-'•'• ~· "'""'" <-I~ ,,.,.,"9 br "'"'' ,,,.,.,.., -------------------- ............................ ... '<11 :cfl .... ~ ., .. , "'"'" ·~· '"' 4a. .... , TheOwl ...,.,,,.. '"'""" <OOf"' "" .,_ ..... and die Pussyr.at fRl ALSO PLAYING- "Sea dreams" 4 Nf;W f llM IY •fTEll fllENCH Di1f<lbw1"d by MocoG illlwrcy·F•t•'"on Filrn1 NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ,. JOE COCKER 1 1 "MAD OOGS AND ENGLISHMEN" tN FULL STEREOPHONIC SOUND L plus "PRETTY MAIDS ALL IN A ROW" .......__ WEEKDAYS6 :4S,SAT.,SUN .1:15 2nd H;t Richo•d Bu.ion "VILLAIN" WEDNESDAY BEST ENTERTAINMENT BET " ... flM clii•k• for o '~"'"'°' ••tlli"''' ••· t•rtoln"""'t" -LA TIMES ''. ..• ,,,_.. .,.to ttt. •tot• .. -Rt:GISTIR '',,, ,., .. ,._ .. -WAIUETY ". , . "° *"' lllller ion off"'lttt 11101111tH .. -Or .... Co•llty ,,._.. oU yoo1" -l"ILOt ••, .. wll4ftt t1i.,i., lff tMotr• 111 tow11" -HfWrO•Tla Box Office: 646· T l63 or all Agencies Your Gtcide to Movies 'Bunny O'Hare' Stars Davis, Borgnine E 1! 1 to,'" Nc;te~ This ,~1ov1e g1t1cl e rs prf'poi ed by tlie f ilms com1nittee of JJarbor (,'ou11cil P'l'A . f.1rs. N ipel Bailey t.! president aud Afrs. Bruce Nordland is corrimitCee chairfl'telll. It 1 ~ lntenfled as a 1·eference 111 determnn·ng suitable f 1 l 1n s fo r certain age !JTOU(JJ an d will appear ttieekly. Y o 11 r views nre solicited. A1ail them to Alo- vir G1nde. c a re of t h e lJAJLY /'/LO'/'. * ADULTS The Andtrso11 Tapt"s (R)· Scan Connery portrays ., crin11nal mastcr1n1nd planning lo heist an entire IJilxury apartment aided by electronic equipment. At the same time both hoods and police are spying on him with the aid or surveillance devices. 1'he April f''ools (GP\: Fan- tasy about a married man who meets his boss' \\life at a cocktail party. They run-off to live in Paris. Jack Lcn1mon stars. Bunny O'Hare ~R l : Posing as hi1>pics on a motorcycle. Ernest Borgnlne and Belle Davis star in modern version or Bonnie and Clyde. Having Jost their mortgage and in need of funds to support their ne'er-do-well children, they rob banks. Klute (ll)· Jane Fonda portr.<1y<> aspiring actress turn- ed prostitute. Unable I o establish real relationships she regards her business as a fori n of 11 c t ing . Don Su1hcr!and is roliccrnan on !Hint for hcst friend 1n th is n1urdcr 1nystery. The La st Valle.y !GP!: version or Broad"·ay co1nedy having prmtitutc·"·1th-a·heart· of gold theme. Plaza Suitt iGP): Screen version of stage trilogy star- ring Walter 11atthau: as a high powered executive wor- ried about erosion of sex- uality; a Hollywood producer trying to seduce an old homclov.·n girlfriend and as father of a reluctant bride, Summer of '4% (RI: f'ostalgic return lo war years depicting three teenage Loys awakening to romance and sex . They while away summer at Eastern shore resort plan- ning conquests. Se n s i I iv e Hermie falls in love 11nth beautiful Army wife. The Villain tRJ: Richard Burton portra)·.~ Vic Dakin - a psychopathic homostxual who masterminds a brutal payroll robbery. Nigel Daven· port is the tough detective in- spector assigned to the case in thi.~ British thriller. MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS Andromeda Strain ( G ) : Suspenseful story or race against time. Scientists in underground desert lab try Lo isolate rare disea s e lransported to earth from another planet. Stars David Wayne. I EscaJ)(: From The Plant! Of The Apes (GP): Third science ri ction film dealing w i t h premise that a planet exists "'here apes rule. and captured astronauts are caged for scientific vivisection. I n "Escape'' the apes wage war on \Vashington, D.C. I t.-fallhau portrays a luxury hungry bachelor "'ho 1s down to hil last quarter-million. Elaine Mily plays the rich Jove interest in lhis slapstick style comedy. ltyan'1 l)aughler 1G P): Robert t.1itchum and Sarah ~tiles slar in a love story set in scenic Ireland in 1916. Restless, beautiful wife of middle-aged school teacher has affair \\'ilh Englis h n1ajor. Tragedy for all results Su pport Your Local Gu11- fighter IG1 : James Garner and Suzanne Pleshette star 1n \.'.estern t'<lmedy of mistaken identity. Believing him lo be notorious gunfighter. he decides to go ahead and play the part. AU goes well until real gunfighter shows up. Von Richthofl'n And Bro"'·n (GP): World War I is the scene of action as the Rf'd Baron of Germany and !he Canadian wheat farmer Brown of the English R.A.F'. b::itlle it out over F'rench skies. "'hen Dinosaurs Ruled The Ea rjh jG;: Tale or dinosaur era when rock people try lo appease angry gods causing earthquakes by sacrificing the blonde virgins of the village. \Vild Rovers IGPI : Ex· istentialist western starring \Villiam Holden and Ryan AQUA PET TlllO"ICAL 1'1$H, l ltD!. RODIHfS LARGEST SELECTION Of TROPICAL FISH IN THE AREA St01 w.,,..,, Huntln<Jl•11 looclri C•r,..r Sp•l..,d•I• •"41 Wunoc HUNTINGTON lf.ACH 14,·ll 12 .\lason and ~tarred * local bank. tran~1t and garbage strikes. o ·Neat as cowpokes n Karl Jack Lemmon and Sandy Den· Maiden's va!I\ Montan raflCh nis are the coopie trying !ft Itching to get rich the1rob the cope with the Big City during 'fhl' letter 1mmediattl1 'leppelln \GPJ · Wnr War I Z0,080 Leagues Under 1'ht ofrrr the t11Je 111d1catt11 !hi- British soldier is sen ~ spy Sea (G): Wall Disney version rating given the picture b/I 011 Gern1an dlrigibl~ con· of the Jules Verne classii.: rite ~lotion Picture Codt. st~cti~n -He gets. ~valved about Captain Nemo and 1·1te Code A 11d Ralntg pro- v.· 1th inventors wife a n d murder and intrigue beneath 9ra1n niay be /ou11rl on 0111 becon1es participant 1n t~e the sea. Kirk Douglas, James nf the motion picture ]Xl(Jtl. Zepplin·s nuss1on against his ---_ - own £ngl.nd ;._¥¥1f'f+'f-1f)f)f)f)f)f )f)f)f'f'f'f+'f-1f'(i:. f"AAIJLY . COME SEf. D.P. iC •~ "'"' 1a1 ~' "' ! CERAMICS AMERICANA -+c J\lrQueen does some of his ...._ HOlllf.S AND CRAFTS -i( ov.n driving in this story ..,-22•d 011nwol sho ... lng _.,. y,·oven around the Le ~'lans. Jt-.t11oh•I"' Conw.-itlo11 C.11t.r-II·' doilr; 1u11doy 12·6 "'l' Frnnce. "'" """'by Mkhel :+ JULY 8·9· 10-1 lth -+c Legrand is background for Jt e 150 Eihlbltof'$, 1 ooo ntrl•$ -fu11 for all -fc drivers ROing 200 \I.I' H. 1n Jt e 1ri1,011, ltorri. ...,, s.~ 1C rain. darkness and doY.n city I e °"''""'''•tk1111 l Db ploys ol C•ramlc.$, Hobb!•• lo Crotts 1c The Out-Of-Town~rs ~Gl : * KIDS HOURLY____ ~·2•5 25C ~ streets. Jt I DOOR PRIZf.5 lluniorous experiences of man * •·" 60• SPECIAL GUEST oft odult tic· _.,. and wife who go to New York lf--und••' FllEE STARS ket with otl "'l' from Ohio Joe a job mlecview. ******* * *************11, "•PLAZA SUITE' IS NEIL SIMON'S I LATEST· GIFT TO HOLLYWOOD! Enriched by not one but four stop-the· presses Jdormances!" -CHARLE~ ~\l~MPLIN, L.A. Times ""' .. ~. , I I ,/ Priest and mriyor c1Jnnivc to I urn won1enfolk over to rnerrcnarie.~ occupying la".t village untouched by Thirty ,·cars \Var. Captain's mi.~tress burned <ii stake only afler pro- fessor kills her to prcvcn1 burning al ive . .Jr.nny GP): 1\larlo Thomas portrays .J~nny, a pregnant girl fron1 New England, \\'ho goes to New York. 'T'here she marries a young man for con· venicnce. v.·ho wishes to avoid 1;::::::::::~:::::::::::'.I "Hollywood h~~ fashioned a hit! The aura of success that surrounds Npi l Simon 's 'Plaza Suite' is almost over· whelming. Evecyone involved gives us his money 's worth. There is little or no monkeying with the play. It worked be· fore and it will continue to work on thousands of screens!" The 0y,·J And The Pu~syc11l lR•· Barbra Streisand and George Segal star in film !he draft. l.~n1Tenee of Arabia t Gl : Four hour ri lm about T. E. Lav.Tence. the l egen dary English soldier \\'ho leads the revolt against the Turks in the Ar11b ian desert in \Vorld \Var I. A New Leaf IGI Watter r'HONE S41·1 SS1 Co1tth1•0•0 Show DoUr lro111 1 p.111. PRICES UNT IL 4 r'.M. - Ath1lt$ 011d J11nlo~ SI.SO Chlldro" 15r EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN Enjoy those GOLDEN YEARS with a hobby filled with fun and profit! 11lso lGP) "VO N RICHTHOFEN AND BROWN" "JENNY" ~ . ' •nd N[WFOfl l 8 t ACH • Ot J I JSO ~ St111dcry .1110.u.., .• 1:00 fil'·"" P.rfd•Y & Sett1r44if . , l :JI fll'·"" Meth••• WH •.... , . 2:00 , .... Mt. Mett.M , .•• 1 :JO l l :ff Stio. M•ti-, , .. l :OO l 4:10 f :f.!tJ:I•11 Now thru Tuesday --' -HOLLIS ALPERT, Satu•day Rnv ievJ CDfo"lil<d P1c!u1es pr~st~I~ IAWRENCt i:rwasum·I OF ARABIA ijillWI SJAIUllll JAlllAIA \ullll la IW' ,.,.,,, ,, A~IHU~ H!l 11~ ,, ···•••,,Ill:'\' Sl"ION • ·•· "•· HOWlRU W KOCH ::,:.;~,·;;:;; to•" •111011ico1 H' I A.I I' ..... ~ ··-·' I '•' """'' '·<lc•t !,L rtR F\1'.'AI l'ilOI\ ,<!' 'IU:H:o;l(Lt.Ufl' ~torrin9 PREMIERE ENGAGEMEN T• 2ND FEATURE Al 60"'1 IHflJP;<, • JRD GREAT WEEK AlEC GUINNESS· JACK HAWKINS ANTHONY QUINN • JOSE fERRER , ... ~ Jock 1Amrno11 "The Out of Towners" , __ Wa ler Malt au Elaine Mov "Aneta Leaf" ~,z~ \. ~· by rvl(ll.-,lLt.p !G \•'""'-.. . ..... .,. .... . ~" •010 EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT-SHOWING NOW!! SCI lo TAl\a mRIO SOVND Mli'OGCX~iN~:>.:~.'1A\trJ>fe'r' ;:.·c-.:. . ' 1:•~rcx:·&r· -~ l"":J ,..;,llO'\l ~·.1.:LI l••: .. •er•OQ...c,. i•'Y/'0 o ·"-e<k<P' :•.•I'·~~ 0.·N""3'b't/'it~Aucx:.t ,..,Ay.., . ...,i,J. ·• ·~\' .... (,f"J'.••f-• 1) •. .., f1Mn:oclb.,.HAW!'~~f\f~"[AQo)(lcnc •CI< ·IA.fl.L ~(.,..,, ~~ Box Office Opens at 7:1 S Show Starts at Du sk WIStMINSfll Hl ·WAY 39 DRIVl.IN ~-~.~ ~ '" ~ .. .i r~·~'''"""" , •••• 01 Pretty Maids all in a rr:m \(i-..1.,.....~,n ·-urA:N "'~-I:".:> lvfvV.C.'.iA~',I"~".': C~, ,.: , , "' •. •"'C:' :::. •:_;;.,-~ ' r .re~ ... -~10---... ::; ' -· '' ... "----="'-__, -1 .. '() -OPEN OAILYAT6:45 P.M. .. SAT. SUN & HOLIDAYS FROM 1 :00 P.M. IN fUll ll(R(O. 'HONI( SOUND • --"• •• ·".. .. _ -:...-~_·~ -· •··-·-:__ -· .c.-,,.~ .-:r-· __ ,,.1--....,..---~.·~,..,, _____ ,,,_, -----·· ----~I.,,,...•• ~"ilj;O-;u;;o;~;:;;...,--;; ..... ~.--;;;...-. ---·--~· --~~---_..;.....;~~~·""'"""""'·"'. ., -... ~ --------..--------·-''" ~tsf.,.. -... _ .,C..'w..••~----. -!>:I .. ~o.· -:----~··-·-.,-..::---.-. ·-~l,.. -~-:-'!'"• ...... ·-· . -. . .. ~·--·- I D T M Fl D A ,, "' Qlli l ,, : An ,, '" " ~ Slti " IC• , " Pe litl' · 1 D " ., lo 31, .di ;) T ' ·1, A .IP ' ' ~l l ' 'l' I ti " )6 •O '2 I " " " " IO DICK TRACY CiRENAPES! ~ fiNE WEAPONS FOR GUERRIUA WARFARE. TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan -..------.,.--..,·"' HUSH VER MOUTH, HARWY! oo.v vm r-.,.------:-:-:-:--....-1 Y-YOO GONNA flOa us YOUSE 5!1UGEST I ro StJCH A TIN& IN FRONT SNOOK IE, PEAR, WArl OJTSIDE NOW, SNAK:-EYE? O' ME aAaY 13RUDl7ER?! .• 1'1NK O' DA MP LIKE A GOOD IK>Y WHILST I eXAMF'Lf, DA C'RllUPf INHOONCE. ON PULL DIS HEIST Di:M IENPER SENSY~llTIES!,"AS PA ' ....... . . ·--. MUn AND JEFF FIGMENTS ~P. .. UHP. .. lltP. .. Ccw.E.. ~bHT BN:K HERE AND fJNISfl ~R MILK ! PLAIN JANE 1W1!$ IS "/SENT~ Y'IWJW ! "'"'"'~ ;.7 ACROSS 44 U111amtd Ytslcrday's Pulile So!vert; PEANUTS · -rf&r By Al Smith SORRY-· I ATE A WHOLE RUM CAKE LAST NIGHT·-- WHOOE'E WAS, IT s ·rRONG, By Dale Hale By Fronk Baginski Ll'L ABNER l'uFF!!-~!! ·STEAD O' CJ!tJl4.A"YIN• CPDOKED MIL.£S J700 Cf'.OOt<aD MILES ..... 'fHGlNK GoooNess ... MOON MULLINS fr1d.,-, Ju!r II, 1971 'W~ KIN FLIP H IM-l!ND Ol&lt. t:.NP !.' .. .IT'S ...lfRiDqy /II . -. -' (!j <;",'TH IS""" sui; AS AN AMERICAN. • P j:_ ISN ryouR y YOU CAN FEEL PRETTY :: ') rn-LUCICY DAY, poou~ OF vouosoLF. : ;}t~ ~ MULL l~S. ,.. .., I' ,.... '"' .• SNAPPY -, CABCO G·~~ ' ANIMAL CRACKERS µ1, FOLKS! I AM A C~OCODILE BIRD! 1<16 PRAcria;, wHAT IS CAllEDA SIMBlonc ~LATIQ/.l­ SH1P, Wrf~ CaxoDll-ES-· 1T'~~~~~~~""1 ~ ... IT WOIZKS LIKE "THIS I B€CAUSE IOE 4E.AN lfle. cevcJs 7"EErtL ~e GLADll/ ;: AU.OWS US TO HOP Ri@H-r r llJTO HI S vef!l/ MOIJ1'H ! ,, OAJLV PILOT ~1 By Al Copp NO C>IOK2!! iAASS Tl-I' WA"/ '10' 15 POIMTIM'.'! By Ferd Johnson • .. WHAT THE GA~AGE 15 GOING TO CH ARGE YoiJ WILi. DO WONDf;RS FDR THE (j~OSS NATIONAL Pf<ODUCT ! ~~\;1 (~~-·,_; Q . .J . ;:...; By Roger BoUen -OF aJVf!SE. HOfPllJG OUT IS Ml0Tt1ER -&:~. \,,_.) 0 0 c 4~ Claw of a bird Rigid ol pre~ '•'< ···~~ :P 1•. ,1.,0 rofl ~••II MR.MUM b Symbol of ~7 Frrnand _, qui,tn,ss Fr. painttr ~ J~zz de~olets 4q Observ t Ant 1tnl SO Chokt Aegt,;in S2 Go up t oun\•y of 53 llllllQ, in ldH A.sia Miner Sol Kind o! sM~ll •, Skin of dog I 1fo1m~I .111 animal 57 He ld a ; Carrie to ei'Jr\h srss10I'! • : PrriOO whe11 5q Oi~t1nct1"1~ I 1111liflg IS ~rritl l~t1on ()I( 2 WOllfS bl Upset ,1 G.ime pl~yed b4 lrr1!~led" on hl)l'"Sfb~clc !t1fl)(mal ·1 Doctrines bl Re911l ~l·~r1 I Convey from bB Pic~sa111 o<Je plate d 1Sl)OS1\1~\ to anotl1er 2 word s J Travels 111illl 70 Lump ol t arH1 .difflc1,1/1y 71 AddlHonal ::.; Thr consc iaus 72 Emuls •vt'" self agent used in ;1 Atlempt to do cosniet1t\ ~7 Pounds pe1 71 Ftma lt turds square tnch: 74 K11!td Abbr. 7S --C,1ria1. , .. i "Rio-" ~1 l on9 period of time 33 And other ll!lSptClfird things: Abt.r. J~ Not 1ar9t 3b Light anchor '0 Dawdle ~2 Having liv'd morr ye;us " Yi.l!tfWa)'> sy~lem of Ontario OOll'N t -rn1chine 2 Kind l Being 111' 531'1'1'" 4 More delical ' ( ol ~Pl•l (ND U ><Vil ~I I C •V T <l OA !:E •R 1 l l f, o I l ·P r c t~• Ll"5 ~ lri• obs ~rvtrs b '~J 7'1'71 ~1 Low rc9~r1J 3B M1r:h J1 Gr~~k ltSt~l- 7 l\trn•te .ince ~!~UP 8 llonClf 41 CtindPnsed q Ho11sellcil1 wat~1 vaoor 10 Hra~ covrrm~s 43 Q.,1\ .1 1)Clsl 111!,9h r.p 4b Amer•,Jll 12 Ma•011tc rar toonht doorkee~r •B T~i'e tiac k 13 T ,11~ 18 Alaska or Y11kon na\i~e 22 Ccrntr m a room 24 C.omp;irtm~n! f<X a domt5 l1C ~ l Measuri!lg 111stn.wntnts S4 Vct andah 55 Immature '"' Sb Kirid of fruit Se Fish In ~ an1rni1 c~a in way 27 Throw bO Unll of lh1ng5 ~t mtaSIJt 28 Anclffll. Grttk b2 Commun1s\s covered walk b] Facial lta!tr t 30 Tree b5 Emerald ~It 32 ·-Bn.nswick: bb Fender C&n. provini:e blemish JS On tht ltvtl; f.Cj Condensed Slang 111oistur' MISS PEACH PERKINS I DON'T KNO W WHY .• Bur I TI-llNlo: JOHNN Y'S LYING TO ME'. WHY WOOLD HE-1-4.C.VE TO BE TA.Kl NG SOME SOl::T OF INVENTOIN AT IJl6HT-? TSK, "TSK ! WJ..«T \\llLL YOU 00 WHEN YOU'"'E' A GF:OWN MAN w rrH PROFESSIONAt-RE$~181~1TJES _? 0 ' ' I I ,..-:"' .. ~ ~ ··" . . - \IEAM, WE HA.D A TEN~NT SY THE NA."E OJ: ~AV Wl--IEELE!i! LIVING It.I TH IS !.O il.DU.JG .. BOT SHE MOVED OUT A ·WEEK 0 1<! SO A.GO •. , N 0 NOTICE •. JUST MOVED our! By Mell GC00 ,MOR'.NIN.;. UH, t;Of A 0.lttLL ON"IW •. 7 '\ '·' ', cZ.' ... : ~ ' By John Mllet I r~.r.,, ' ' 1 ..•• , ... . ...... , .. ,_ .. ,, .. . DENNIS THE MENACE • ---···· s . . • !Ts lll(E A GAME. EVoRY VAY SHI" CJ:Jl.ES Ill HE~E AN' HIOfS All MY STUFF /' l J ---·~·---er--.. ' -. -----= --~ • • r 32 DAIL Y PILOT , Frtda)', July fJ , 1q71 ~---L~S CHRYSLER I PLYMOUTH! IMPERIAL _. .. ' -'t"''.' ' ••• 1-r·~ ·-· ~~f ., L_ ... WE '~E J~ff,\.;·,. . JV\~tlit:l. \ l S~iJi\;.L. i .. " " ~··a; -.... 1971 CHRYSLE R 2 D O~:< l -'. LOADE D WITH : v.s, Auto. Trans., Tinted Glass, P /Bucket Sen ls, Vinyl Interior, P/Windows, AM/FM Ra dio, R/Speak· er, Vinyl Roof, W/S, W, Power Steering, Power Disc Brakes, Fact. Air Cond. Serial =CH23TIC2 5J207) j n• < "' • .,, '• 'd ... ~1: t "' /: \,. ',/,I $595 '68 CHR YSLER JOO VB, ~11•rn1~' c, r•din. ho.I•" pnw~< i le~··ng lo b·~~c• "'' Le nrl ., """''' ,..;"""'"'-(008-0LHI F ll ~Y 4 DOOR v~. •c·~m•I < t .d • .,, ~-.1 0' re""' •'""""q. f. f "·~ . " Ct~•"· I • I/\~ J /I $1295 '64 DODGE !iT,.flO N WAGO N VS ~ulom~fic. -!.~rl 10, he11t~ IY RX2l0) • ~I . I ·' ljt:· ,,,; •-" '68 DODGE CHARGER VII , o ~lo m •l;t, rodio, "ho•lt•,· power 1h<t•· '"'' wh;fo..,.•111, ~inyl top. IWWX2 61) '69 PONTIAC LE MANS V8, •t1Tom•l;c. ,.d,.,, h•"'"'· powor 1le11ioq & l'H•kt •. eir conrl., l•nd•u !op. I XWN- 828) ., ........ ' ' " " .. ·-·- -. . •.:... • . -- . · , ' r ,, ' '"'. , ... J ·~·r· -.• ~ .. ,f'~ ·-.. ~· ' ·.., · · ·:.. Vg"'6QUTH . -' ; t.. .. :T aL ~ G>•: A -, t ~ •• ,,,-...... DUSTER USED CAR '66 CHRYSLER JOO V8, •ulom•I;,, r•dio. ho•+et, power 1!ot rin<J & b'"~"'· W S.W, ,,;_,. cond, {RTZ2~6 ) , '69 MUSTANG VS, •u!om•l ;t ,,,j,.,, l>••le r, powor •lo•• cq powor br•~~•. ,...,.,,. ·•d~woll tire!. r zsr. 47~) ER A ND NEW 1971 CRICKET ~ ·9··""" . 6 5 ~ ~~-/ -.·l"ll:I..~ " -·~,... 1-Jj ~ ' ' -. ' '' ,I' --~ /''!';.. -.... 1•· '"-f'f-" .. .. ~" \ y \: ~. ' 1 t=r~1 ... ;. \t. • ,_c '• I J !"\~! \:..,. \_;~ ' "' ,j '68 PONTIAC VENTUR A VR, •u l~m•:,,, r•d<<1, ~~••••, powor dear'"';! & b••ke1, who!• w•ll" ,;, '"",j !'""'"' win• dow>. I WWJ8J7) • ' ' 1.s: '68 CHRYS LER JOO 4 OJI. H.T. VB , ~U!e>M~!it, r•o'io. ~•~lfr, "ow•< 1le••;ng. po.,..or b·•~oi•. t<1rdo•• •~o. ..,1 .. 11w11ll1, •if' c~nd d.c n•~';J. (VfP. 96 2) JOO 4 DOOR HDTP. " '"· -.,,. .. ' r ·~ ~. ~~-1~, r~~·r·r, ' • t r ,, ~ r' . c~nd,. t1onin9_ 1i[Z2Jl1 5895 '69 OLDSMOl!tl.E. . 'fl ·~r.-; ""-~ • r,~;~.i f~,11~1"' ·\IOOO. 't tdio, h•~hr , llOW~t ''"'"'" & br11io.01, I ZVC502 f; I I T:J N r1c 1'i.lf" (,.,<I '" t •• ""' ., ~~--I/ 11~ I JI . ~5 95 '67 DODGE DAr.T 270 7 d • H 1 VR '"t~,.,~- 1•t. ••rl"' h•"''"'· n,.,,... "' dn'""~. ••r <-O~d ;. l1on1~7. IUVVOSll ... • , • , , •• • , . • / · , . , '63 '66 '67 '65 '66 '67 '67 '66 '65 Frida,, 4iMf 9, 1971 WEEKEND, SAT.·S~N •• MON. 9 A.M. to 10 P.M . . . NEW CARS USED CARS IMPORTS TRUCKS & CANlPERS ON SALE AND READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!!- CONTINENTAL Mally delu•• ••trot lnch1dl11q factory olr. !YXY336") PONTIAC 2 • 2 421 YB, <1utomo1lc, pow•r 1taerh19, rodlo, heater. ITFA20Jl CORTINA G.T. Rodia. Heota•, luclriat 5.eah. f·TXU152) MUSTANG Y·B. power 1teorl119, r11dlo, htalor. IMll.F4751 CHEVROLET Impala YB, ouromotlc, u1dlo, hecrttr. fVDUS151 VWBUG ftodlo. t.eoter, fl!lill Equipt. !VGP078 J DATSUN S.do11. Vi11yl lnt.rlor, heeler. All orl9i11ot llQSl,51 MUSTANG HARDTOP', FACT(')RY AIR. Y-8. a11to. tranl., pow•• ltHrl"'), radio, heetf1'. l lSl·IUIO CHEVROLET Wagon IEl.AIR. ¥1, outo .• pow .. •tffrin9. l r'IP-4641 EW1971 $488j '67 DATSUN ROADSTER 1•1111 wllh 2 fol'•· 4 IPffd, l"Clldlo, llHMr. IYU.•t4) FORD LTD HARDlOI', FACTORY" All, V.t , auto. tr•111., !M-• 1tff1l119, ra dio, ffaMr, vl11yl roof. IZZW611 I PONTIAC Le Mans f a<:IO'l 111lr, a uto. 1To111 .. pow•• 1re.ri'"I, radio, lriootor, landau top. 171 DJ1S91 FALCON 2 Door 6 cyl., 01110. fto111., rodl•, h1Htt1t1. (127,IJ) $888 '68 $9881 '68 $688 1 67 ~~~J·.~~ .~.~.'!~~ .~rix $1188 I '69 P.I ., ttroto 1M'11ch 11tot. (TYD2471 $688 I '67, ~~-~; .. ~~~~.~. $1288 I '69 elr co11d!tlo11h••· IYTS)ll l MAVERICK 2 DOOR, acc•11t t roup, rcrdlo, h.ator, whltewoll1. 190SCRWJ DODGE Charger RT F11ll po-r, foctoty olr, mony olti.r 01tro1. {VRH955) COUGAR XR7 lood.d w l•Jt101ll YI , factory oir, 011,0., l'.S., l'·dl1c brak1t1, llltrftl lop•. IWEG7741 DODGE Van Royal bli11t fin/th with 1ilwer 1trlpe1. Near 11ew co11dltlo1 thr11·011!. 11440]71 FORD Galaxie 500 \'.8, 01/tO. llOIU., power lt"rl"', radio, hirciler. Llcenw 682-Al'S. FORD Cu stom VB Awtomotlc, power 1l1t1trl119, rodio, lleater, d1tl11re t1lm. l022DFll FORD Station Waqori FAIRLANf V-1, A1111t. Trolli., llodlo, heoter. Vocotlo11 rtody. ll'f6D0l0 SUPER VAN fCONOLIMI. Y·I. ~ACTORT AIR, rodio, lt.111er, all h1tayY duty equlpr. 1402l0DI BRONCO Wagon ' Wheel d1i••· F'ACTORY AIR, H.ol'9r, llCj)G-2601 f<ORD Galaxie 500 HARDTOP'. ¥·1, f:ACT. AIR , 110••• tt .. rh19, 01110. tro111., rodlo, h•oter. (170ACUI NEW1971 ' IMMEDIATE DILIV!RY $191!T9$59Q~ DOWN \\IONTHL Y i PYMT PYMT FULL I PRICE i ~!91.'<0 ;, !lie !olnl rl~. riv..,!. onrl $5Q S~ ;, totol """ l"I~"'' i~rl tp._ '71 I ct~"·fl.c''•nol' ,.,f,otQ~'"""""' c·~rl•lo•J6,...o• Orf,.,,~d1»•"'' p•<e r 1sS21 ~75A·nd n 'no~r"c~a•ri"• ln •t! lll""""""'''"ovo•e.le1t<>.,oy co~f..1u co~~P''"''S/041>9S," 1 •nP•ln •&I,(""'" ll RIOW!l '09)) ANNUAl PERClNTAGE RATE 10.DO IMMEDIATE DELIVERY AT WILSON F' llD 1 :: 0 1971 MUSTANG (Serial No. J F61L 170002) s FULL PRICE BRAND NEW $ 1971 TORINO (Serial No. 1A27L176814) FULL PRICE SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE -B~~D 1971 T-BI D FACTORY AIR CrlJileomotic, ciower Ueering/bro~e1, radio, heofe~,' elc, s4 -ll YBJN l29598 ). FULL PRICE USE ONE OF OUR MANY WAYS TO FINANCE YOUR NEW CAR OR TRUCK INCLUDING-IANK OF AMHICA, UNITED CALIF. BANK OR FORD MOTOR CREDIT CORP. WITH YOUR APPROVED CREDIT . • • • ! ·:· . :: ' ---... _-:. ~--·' ... ~.--.:.......:~ -·-=--~·.:.::_;:::,.;,. .. _·...;;;_..:_::-_;_ .. -_--:~ ·-... ;;-:;_.}.~ ~ .......... ..¢-:; -. -.. ~,:., .. --~ .. = ;;..--.,..:..._··----:-------... --·· -··--.. ____ .._.,,.-~.r 1\)'\-\ ' ... -----=-__.,.. ~ -, .!:__ ---==----=------~ .;::-_1 --. .... I • :e. ... if ""'" PILOT '\ frlfWt, Jul1 9, 1971 Everyone Hat Something Th at Someone Elie Want. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It , Find It, Trade It With e Want Ad • ' The Biggest Mar~place on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results • [ __ , .... I~! ---I~! _,__ I~ I _,__ I~! _, ..... I~ I ---I~ I -... -l~I ---I~ I -.... I~ ' OeMral MACNAB -IRVINE : . Fl NE R HOMES VER SHORES '.:Beautiful brick &· 11ood invite you to enler :: thl" fharrniu g 11c11 home. Over 3000 sq. ft. .;-4 Hfl -4 hath -lg. island kilchen ad· ·_: jou11n~ l·"I{. Priced under replace1nenl costs . for thi s rn arvelous f;1n1 ilv ho1ne. _ $89,500 ·Open Sunday 1-5 p ni. I 124 Santiago. llo\"er .-: Shores. exc 1TJNG VIEWS BAY & OCEAN · New offering -spacious 3 BR -FR - : breakf<1sl area & forn1;.i1 DR. J-{eavy !$hake ,.·roof. Lg. corner lot -fee simple .. $79.500 6.IFPHAVEN COTTAGE, MOUNTAIN VIEW , Irnmacutate :l BJ~ -2 bath collage \V /sun· ':deck, covered patio Prime hillside lot v.'/ :~large usable yard. Sharp r eady to move in ;~.al $39.900. ~HOME WITH ''ZING"! f'.'Soaring ceilings in a 3 BR & den ho1ne \V/a ;~friendly FR. Truly unique custon1 in a highly :.-:d esirable location on fee land. 592,500. ·=· ~WPORT ISLAND -PIER & FLOAT :::Decorator's home -2 BR . den . 2 baths - !~fabulous kitchen -covered palio terrace. ::'As king . .. . . . . . . ~96.000 ~PECIAL BAYFRONT BUY 1 P ier & Slip. Exci ting. c harn1ing, v.•arm & ; friendly. 3 BR 's -Den -Large Bayside ' Patio. . ..... $117 .500. I ~ALBOA PENINSULA t; 5 BR -4 bath -on 2 lols facing park - ::-~lose to Bay, launching ramp. tennis club. ~: Jdaho \Vhite pine 111terior -red\\'ood exteri- l: Or. Shake roor. Over ::1000 ~q. n. of A-I COil· l~i;truction. Asking . . . . . . .... $!:15,000. (PECTACULAR VI EWS -SAN JUAN CAP-1~ IST~ANO -lfor~es \\'elco n1e ... easy com- •mut1ng. Several 11}.1. acre ranch e states in 1;hills uverlookincr (,H pis tr<.1no \'al]e\• J'\loun· I ' . D • ", · la1ns , ana PL J'\·lari11a, .Sniog free. Easy :access l.o S.D. Frce\\·ay. Each parcel per· !:.mils spacious hon1e, pool . barn. corrals. pas- ::lure. $21 ,000 to $25.000/acre. DOVER SHORES BAYFRONT SACRIFICE : A majestic 5 BR horne \l'/a studv & billiard ; sized Ji~rary. Dine by the li~hts ·of a 2-story · chandelier. Beautiful 111ansard roof. rier & : Slip will accommodate a large boat. ~179.500. 1 _ 0pen Sunday 1-5 p.m . 210 Evening Star Lane, ! Dover Shores. ' llBOVE IT ALL Beaulifu! p<1nora1n 1c view of c hannel & bay. 2 BR . 2 balh, all elect ric kit. Ne\\' expensive cpts. & drapes. Underground parking. llot ponl. boat slip available. Ca!l 67!>-3210. $52.000. Open Sunday l-5 p.111. 3121 \Vest Coast H\vy. Apt. SA, Ne .. vport Beach. CONFIDENTIAL To the royal fa rnily look ing for their \'ery O\vn fairyland palace: Over 4.000 sq. ft. of palatial ele~anre \\•la breathtaking v1ev.•. Tru!y fit for a king 1 4 BR -31.h baths -FR. 5112,500. C-1 WITH HIGH POTENTIAL Drive b.\' 3000 Ne\\"port Blvd. Then call Lois 1-liller. 675--3210. fnr deta1l'i. Ask ing S85 .000 -near lhe ne\v "('annery" Development. MACNAB · IRVINE '675·3210 642·8235 1080 Ba y1ide Oriv• 901 Dov•~ Driv• N•wport Beach Salisbury l~t·a l ry *BALBOA ISLAND* OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 230 PEARL ~i<·e 2 bdrm. honlf' on lgP. Joi. s1orlt'·1 throw 10 tilt l\<n·th Bny! ON RUBY Slt'J,>11 lu .\u. ll.i.y 11r, 1.:ho1et ll" 111u111ng hl'11<•h. Cl..r~LOru lllHI( -dt'l'Ol"lltL1r·11 carpetii & drapr~. (~fl-:l'OUI J1'111 nd hon1t•. C.aritg .. &!.rnlt'd lot apt. GRF:AT POTF:N1'1AL! ON OPAL ;\r SO. 1:111~ Nict• <1li.ler horne ll'llh Hr. llt.'W qua.lily 2 BR. 11µ1. l•ir way li•!ii than re· plact'lt1\'UI t'OSI & O\\'llCl" w/ L'ilJTY the lrU~l d ;•('d. ON DIAMOND 2 Bed1\x1111 Jiou~f' on frnn1 of J,,1 11·1th rll"tlr new 2 bdrm. ap!. tH'f'r rlouhlr garage: 011 1'<"ar. Or!ert'd \\'llY below re- placen1f'nl <'O!fts. $59.500. LITTLE ISLAND On Abalone. Very nice & neat u 11. pin 2 BR., 2 Ba. ~Rr 'round home plu~ wry nict 2 R!t apt. Ju!:I reduN'd $1.500• ON GARNET .-.:H"I' durilPX. JU!t reduet'i! $10.00'.I fu1· 1mn1t"dia1e Wt. Th11 "·1U no! lasr • cal! U!~ CLIFFHAVEN .i.~O 1-\l/\'GS RD. Nier 2 Bd - rn1 ., den houtic: owner 111y1 ··~I'll. ~<'IJ. sell."' Drive b.v. 1·all !fo 5('('! All o11err will IJf' f'unMidl'l"f'<I Salisbury R"<1h1 3JJ ~1ARIN~: ;,VE, 673-6900 HAI.BOA ISLAND C OLLEGE PARK LARGE LOT 3 BR· 2 BA 111is home hiu; Bit ol the le8· turrs & 11uali111·~ znany Jll'O- plP llof)I' to find in a lllllgll' 11n1per1.1: ~;xf'ellenl loca · 11on, ver.v iJ1arp ('()rldiliou. 1"110m tor boa!. tra ilt>r, pool, otddlnonal t•ons"lntrtion, !'1<' i'iit~ly land:<1it·11ped, tntil trees, !tpriJ1kler !<y&tem, 12 x l~ covered p:itio -and a ~·~·;. 8SSlln1aOIC' VA loan Pricf' $31,:iCKI. Phooe 54&-231.l In SI.'!'. -E- General General REALTORS 644-7270 TOMORROWS HOME TODAY Everything you ever dreamed of having in your ultimate home, can be yours today. Let us have the pleasure or showing you one of the outstanding bay VIE\V homes available. 5 lovely bedrooms, 5 deluxe pullman baths, gracious formal dining rm, gourmet kitchen. family rm, maids qtrs. 4 car gar. Call for an appt. to see this exceptio nal home. !il69,000. • BRING THE STEAKS • \VS...HAVE THE POOL and a real family· Reared 3 Bedrm. home with 2 bath:i;. family rm, fireplace, bltin kltch. VACANT. Priced lo sell. $33,950. CASH A PROBLEM? [f you want to buy but feel yo u don't have enough cash· opportunity is knocking. tlere's a real family sized home (3300 sq. ft.) 2 story. 5 super bedrms. 21h ba, family rm, formal dining rm, 2 fireplaces. VACANT and ready for immediate occupancy. Lease/option · lov.'. low down. $43,950. QUICK! CALL A FIREMAN! 'fhis is the holtest deal in tov.•n. Almo!'t ne\v split level 4 BR, 3 B.>\, huge game rm , f1m.ily rm. 3 car gar, 3-ton refrigeration, ankle deep shag thruout. custom drps. fabulous drop lights. Profess. ldscpg & sprinklers. As5u1ne 7% VA loan. Ov.'ner anxious~ ...... $42 ,650. GOOD BUY, BY BEACH * 8 UNITS* So. of the Hwy in beautiful Corona del Mar. Very desirable. well cared for, IO\\' ma in ten- ance units. Xlnt tenants. A good buy al ,127,000. 644-7270 ;'/tl4ti11 -SIHid ~l •n-J REALTORs8 (Formerly OeL•ncy Real Est1te) 2821 EAST COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR , CALI~. DuPLEx T11'Q separa1r 2 bN:lrooml 11••••·············· h"n1r~ on 1 101 . Ro1h un11~ Gener•I Gener•! !run! 1111 .~tr'N·l ;iud f'U<'h ha,, I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii u1J11·11luril :-i1 nl~. \\"alk toll ~l¥>J>1lH~. s1·hools and \!Grli S:t:'i~ and 011"ll•'r tn a huiry to M-11. CALL 6T.r4~)1. •C~&CO.I _, __ ,.. .. 111.10 1 --crD0TslE-- a eau1. J Bit 'J ba 1~unr "n 11. double 11Trr'o'I to 111n'f'I \I'! 1n BAYCREST'S BEST ,;, I 4 Bedrm., fa mily rm .. din ing rm. & oversi~d sparkling pool. Spacious ldscpd. lot. Fruit trees. !82,500. Open Sun. 1-5, 1801 Glenwood {Santiago to Ashford. left to Glen\\·ood) WANT ACTION??? \\'l::"R£ SOLD OUT. BLiSl- Nt;SS HAS BEEN SOTER- Hll-"/C, MOST Of' OUR LISTJ:-\GS ARE NOW JN t-;c:.("ROW. OWNER • lN· \'!-:.~TORS ARE A10VJNG REt,ORI!: I:-; T ER EST RA'l'l::S GO UP• CALL F'OR A ~'REF. APPRAISAL • NO OBLlGATIOf"'S, If Y 0 U \\'ANT A .fAST SALE LET P ROFESSIONAL.5, IN A LOi\G 'rl.\lE ESl"ABW5ll- ED OFf'fCE , REPRESE!\'T YOU. A CALL IS ALL YOU NEED TO DO. ALL ON ONE LEVEL How many rooms hav._. you seen in a 11ng1e story? \Vf'll, t.ry th!&: 4 Bedroom!. '2 baths, modern roomy k11ch· en, large family rwn1, bn.o11.kla111 nook, and FOJ{:\1- AL Dl~ING R00111! 11·1 a truly lovely ant.I l~l;\l.o\CU- 1..ATE tJome 111 a floe Costa ~leq, llt'Ct ion. B~t of all, il"1 FllA or VA terms "'tll ae1J you!! Only $34.9".il. JOa,,. co:rs '~WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (Qpen Evenin91) See t!ns 10 ix'\ie1'e and :ip. prf'<.·i111.., just hO\v hcaut1Jul, ~ and t••imlorlable aJIY home c8n hf·' Featurf'ti 4 hedrooms. J bilth1, fa1nily room "·i1h brick fif"t'l>l ;ice alld ''"e~ bar. formal dining roo1n, shultl•rii:, Pllnellnii:. shelving, bookcas!'s, ms.111· nirtt land~oping. romplt•le ~prinkler systl'm. maximum pnval'Y ;,u1d nian), many extras that mus1 bf> ."N'n~ Price $46,!00 Pbone·:,.i&-2313. \0 THE REAL '"'\. ESTATCRS ·. ' '. CAN'T FIND IT? 1t \\'ILL BUILD your dt'("an1 home. l-luv, i;1aff l'tlr mm· plete Jiomc package. Put your confidence in ollr 49 Ytan of quality custon1 homt building, Stt e.xamplr of prof'luct .a I ~ Galft.Xy, Dover Shor,..;;, Ivan Wells & Sons • 642-2511 • General * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. POOL -PALMS -PRIVACY 4 Bdrm. DR, huge lot. incl. room for boat & trailer. Centrally located [or schools, shop. ping, playground. Pool area truly tropical. 1\uto. sprinklers. . . . . . , , .......... $57,500 DOVER SHORES! (:real \11e1\·! Vou are in vited to see this ele- gant home with 4 bdrn1s, FR & formal DR. Built by one of finest builders. Decorator colors. model kitchen & 3-car garage. All electric. l·lurry for this one' . ~95.000 1700 ANTIGUA OPEN SAT-SUN . 1·5:30 LINDA ISLE -$155,000 \Vant a Brand new v.1aterfront ho1ne ? Then move r ight inlo this architect designed 4 BR w ; farn rm, dining rn1 & study? Exciting high ceilin~ -1-many new n1odern features. 8 J.INuA ISLE OPEN SAT-SUN 1-5:30 FRENCH REGENCV ON LINDA ISLE! A touch of forinality from the grand dining rea overlooking the huge step-down L.R. ircular stairway. 4 Lge BR & fam. r1n. ll60,000. See broker at 8 Linda Isle. LINDA ISLE -$155,000 Fabulous J\1E\V 4 BR home on thi8 island of yachting k fun. FR. study & lge. DR. Un- usuaJ architectural design. 2 Sty ceilings & frpl area. See broker at 8 Linda Isle. 1,INDA ISLE -$145 ,000 You "\l love the beautiful entrance oC this gra- c ious 5 BR hon1e '"ith step-down fam. rm. & a ttractive 'vet bar. Formal dlnin~ area. Smart decor. Plumbed for pool. Pier/slip. 107 LINDA ISLE OPEN SUN. 1·5 :30 EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE -$250,000 Exquisite decor in this luxurious English style 5 BR home. 3 Fireplaces, rich wool cptng, elegant. draperies. abundant 1narble, air-cond. J'ier/slip. Call for brochure. DOVER SHORES BEAUTY K~\V 4 Bdrm & den hon1e. 2·Story li\·ing rm "·1th gallery. Garden r1n '''/\\1et bar & large formal dining roonl. . . . . . ..... $105.000 410 MORNINC STAR OPEN SUN. 1·5:30 CAMEO SHORES -$175,000 'fry exchangin g your .sn1aller ho1ne for this luxury 4 BR & den. !\·lost beautiful patio, PO?' & lanai in area. Lge. rms & quality built thruout. Choice corner sile "'/vie"'· IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY -$54,500 A Corona det !\liar home plus rental in rear. Lovely tree-lined street. 3 Blocks from ocean. Beamed ceilings, s hutters, v.·/w cptng. 515 POINSETT IA OPEN SUN. J-5 :30 DOVER SHORES WATERFRONT Gla1norous new "European style" exterior. 5 Bdrrns plus maid's room. Large patios, Pool. pier & slip. By appt. ........ $175 .000 CAPE COO ON CRESCENT BAY Att~ntion \\'hale-watchers, surf-riders, sun- h<1thers! lJeautiful 5 Bdrm v,oater-oriented home. J>egged flrs., cedar closets ... !175,000 CHOICE LOTS -PRIME LOCATIONS 00' l;-ront. level. fee . . . . ... _ .. , .. S 27.500 90' Pan. vie"'· corner. lease . . . S 31 500 94 ' \lie\\' site on Galaxy, lease ..... S 38:500 57' \Vaterfront. pie r 'slip. lease .... $ 49.500 \1u China Cove. bay & ocean. Fee .. $ 65,000 45 ' Linda Isl e. lease ....... , . , . , .... S 73 000 108' Linda Isle, lease , . , , • , . $125:000 "Our 26t'1 Ye1r" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors NEAR BEACH ASSUME 6°/o VA LOAN I Spac 11:.u6 :Z·•tory ho.in• in grts1 lor11 11011 llll(I 11t 1gtl- IJOrl1t,,.~I f(';n111 1·~ l bf:od. I n•,nl~ 1', IM1h~. ln··ge fiim. tlv I "•Jilt 11111< hrh"k fire--- 1 j•).,1Y'. :-OJ>;H"kl1J1g 1·lf'all and -.11.11 11 thn .. 1i.:-h<)l1I, 1·1•ady lo 11101r in an.d 1>1\JO), (h\neM; v•·t \ an,11i11~ 10 lif'li and m11~1 ha vr S • bPrtroonu IHlll)t' ;.-. b0011 l\S pc.tll~ible~ F\111 pl'lre $J6,1'5(1. Phone ~1311 lor Info. O THE RE/IT, ''"'\. I.:STATCRS ' . NEWPORT BEACH BACK BAY Today's Best Buy Enjoy 111ce, rool brt't!les In 1111! loq.:;e 3 bPdmom, 2~1 bath ho1nf'. 18" x 20' family rni. tirf'plact'', bui!ri n~, CJllll & <!rps, dbl gar, shake root Price only $32.500. Lachenmyer R<>altor :ill60 Nr\\'port Bl., C.M. Call 646-3928/T·:veii 646$49 --TREE-LINED BEAUTY in C~ta i\1es11. J bedroom 1 ·us f'a1111ly Room. '"HARD- \\"001)"' fluora that 1packle. "l luxurious bathll. Park-Uke yard ju~t g-re111 tor CaliJor. n1a living. Appraised a nd ready to &t I J al $'24,950. VETS No Doll'n and mini• 1nurr dOll'n to F1-fA. ANX- IOUS : Walker & Lee 279(} Harbor Blvd. at Adama ;:;.i:i.!!-191 Oprn 'til 9 PM FIXER UPPER-WOW! Bring pa1111 hrush, l""l<lM· mask. hip hoots • f., money to buy thJ!i 3 hr 111 ;>.:e"1>Qrt Shores. $3,000 less 1han a ny oiht'r on the market. Va. C'ant . ready lo go_ Call now to st"e. 1:.00 Ac!111n~ A1f'., C.i\1. ""6880 $29,750 A11ume 53/4"/o Loan 4 Bdrm & Family Rm gf'llr living room \\ 11h mas· s11·e hand.<;on1e fireplace large <'ntry hall, dinlni roo111. !hil·k like-new carpet- ing. bu1lt ·1n ran~r. oven & d l~h,111.shC'r, park l1kr yard, nprn 1il 9 P~l . ~~lil-1720. TARBELL 29SS Harbor -OPEN-SAT/SUN. 1-5 2401 Via Marina N'pt. Beach, Ba<'k B11v vle"·· 3 Bdrn1s. '1. den: lg~. yard. Xlnt fur ett!err1111n1ng. 712 L•rkspur Corona. /Jrl ,\1111·. Charming l hrlrm. trpk. Jt-2 Loi room tn huil~l ' ~ a1,··:-1 r.:iti.Ol~l. "11!!!111'~ I thP 11nr.,•d Zur1( Ii C'1rd ·· Bill Grundy, Rltr. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 8_33_Do_~_r ~r._. N_.B_._ ti-12-16~lfl G9neral = 2 3 Bedrm., 3 baths. family rm v.·ith firepl., forn1al dining rm., unique carpeted ki tchen. $fi2,500. Pool Time I Grar1011ll. f'Xtra l<in:r1 :i RR j OON 'v. FRANKLIN REALTOR • 673-2222 • 2111 San Jo1quin Hillt Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 What <loes this house m ean to you? • PHONE 675-6000 and identi- fy the REAL ESTATE firm rep - re1ented by thi1 hou1e and win $100.00 CasJ1 Drawing Saturday .5 P.M. Wtnner need not be present, --------- Dally Piiot Classified 2 BP., \'~ ha. L-onrlo 11 /Ji:" 1111!10 & rlhl , i.:11r. 11;, f\1i. to o.·1•at1, llunt. Be/I. EZ 1lo"·n p11yt. 1u 611'"!. tllA lua.n. OO.S-6i(;7 011 1185[! 6'12-7fi71 . DOVER SHORES-VIEW f'\"fl"n.~1vr 4·rps&d1·rt~ .;n·, * * * * * *I SANDPOINTE--:l Ha home. f\rfpl, l.1!1 11~ I* 411' 111 ~,·il(t l,: 1IP<'k1il po-.-11 Dr11n111t1t' <l·tl''•h.,.••111 , :l'~ balll Spa ciou.~ 2 story entry srts the tone for that "open feeling" everybody \\"anl.s. Custo1n 4 bdrn1., 3 bath. lrg. family rm. \'iew fron1 every roorn . $85.000, 1Q06 S1ntiago Dr. Open Sat. & Sun. 1-5. ('!o:ce to ~ll school~ t: :,·,.,,1 .. 1 ;;G::,::n::0,:'.0:;1------.,G.-0-n-0-,,-1.-------111" s!«1 y ~1 1u··~· ~1ne 1n port Cj'tllf'I'. Cnll fi.lfi-~/ I !r11.11i;::e Co11111~ ·, 111"i.I ron. E ve!! 646-5649. \'f'!l lf trt looH1n11. (Jnly one yf'flr old l'lll r11Uy 11nd J11•f!.utJfully \1111dsc·11rll.'•I . nt':ar !:•"l"lll01q. [ltil'k's &· fl J 1 y ~"•Utld~. 1 1nm111f's lo 3 Ir~ 11·ay1, Sfiulh <'oa~1 Plaza. Sha.a: l"lll'l)f'lin~. f1l"""phttt, S.lj,9!X1 (h111f'r ~E>ll1ng prln- c1 1~1.~ nnl). ~~·,7 .3111. G•neral ROY J. WARD f'ORISI L Ol.SOV 2006 Galaxy Drive, N.B. '" CO., Realtors 646-1550 Lachenmyer Realtor ll1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!D!!ol!v!!••!!!!S!!ho!!•!!H!!!!O!!ff!!l c!!e!!!!!!!!l!I!!!!!!!! I HARB 0 R OPEN 1 DAYS A \VEEK G•ner•I II Gener•I Sh&~'!.H1~~~~S bfod. PORT BEACH room. 2 bath "'1th lai;:P PA-1 ACRE RANCH Cfl.SCADINC ,.,.arer!all Into • NEW t10. i\Atul'lll l'ood l-... b1nelai, "1FAI T('P .!J COLONIAL 1p11rklin11: pool. ~lurltd •un I J:"' buil1-1rrl' appharl('f'!: -dtrk, 3 ovtr11iud ~droom!t. CHARMING 3 BEDROO~t. 2 4 ' DEN /-4 BA Fl r~a<'t -\\'elk to \\'nl· I -atparalt lam. rm., 11nd all I BAi1t, lovrly f)fltio, nice "HORSES'' terms $77,~. Brok' r I al"'!!., nclual\'t!. C'llff , f.ll\nnenr; Parle., Ll- 842-4-455 or !>40-51.0. Agent '"-3255 b ·"ry or tenni1 eouru. WALK TO LAKE I t1'.9"0. C&JI 6<6-TITI. BACK BA y Gen•••I Genarel AREA l lnl>rllrvabll'! Qulet lrtt l111"tl S t. In lhls ,.-:orkr-011~ "old 11•01'ld 1·h1u·rn· o•r." 4 n111l!~h·r lll'droom• hUKP panf'lrrt family ronn1' 23 plrtu1-e win· 11011· in Jl1·in1.: room "'Ith 11n1q11e-flreplllCC'. Larli[e 2~ ~? ft. drf'nm kllch - Pn. \\all (Jf 1:IMJ opens \n f'lr1•11ttd PllllO ~:Ith llPf'('lacular v lrw. ZoJW'd tor horvs. Truly• •ho"'·· plar,.. Crta I area for chJldr~n . t.lutt lf'il quick. DIAL 645-G30l I OHi \I I. Ol.\O\ #FA l 't~R 2299 Harbor. Co.ta Met• 11:\ll.Y PILOT !or action! See Our Baylront Visit Our Coron• d•I Mer Office * l, To see the best ln bayrront honies rrom 1128,000 or a chaMel front duplex at $7\l,500. * 2. To take a F REE 30 MIN . HARBOR CRUISE via TV &. see all the great places to live & the points of fnter· est of Ne>A·port Harbor. HOME SHOW REALTORS 35.lS Eaoo c.... H11hw•y (Aifou del Mar .. 'O THl:RCAL '"'\. f:STATI.:RS $24,950 5 Bdrms Den & F•mlly Rm Channln1 homt, Prime iO- t'ltk>n in tine tt11idenUaJ 1f'('tk>n. Huge family rm buUt-ln rangt & oven. tort-; r.-... •ir hftl1n1 unll, na1ur*1 wood • 1bil'Jt'l1, fittpl1ct. brk, ~n 1U 9 PM. 5'60-1121 TARBELL 2'55 Hubo• 3 Bdrm. Hom~ 11~ Bath, coverl'd pa!lo N1.r- r>e1•. dl'9pet, qulet ~ll'efl , S23.)00. T"rm1. R.oy McC•rdle Realtor UIO Newprirt Rl\'d., C.~f. 541-772' PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 Lind• l1le Drive Qualily con!ltruct., new 5 BR, 41h ba. home w/\vate:front liv. rm.'& din, r1n. Oak paMl· ed family rm. w/frplc. M:1tr. BR. 'v/sittlng area & £rplc. . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . SI 79,500 26 Linda l1le Oriv• Decorator furnished. 5 BR. 5 bath home fac- ing llarbor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna . Ready for immed. occupancy. W/dock .... $200,000 SJ Linda lal• Orlv• ~ome .on lagoon, 5 BR ., 4'h ba .. v,i/4 frplcs., 1acuiz1 tub, hd\\•d. flrs .. sep, liv. rm. din. ( ' rm., an1. rm. & brk£st. rm ....... , . $175.000 72 Lind• lal• Drive 1'r 1 aditional 6 .BR .. 5'h ba. home on lagoon '"·,dock. Furnished. decorated & lndscpd. 2 mas ter bdrm. suiles ....... , , . , ... $200,000 Waterfront Lot No. 44. 108 ft. on waler ........ , . $125,000 For compl•le Information on •II homM & lots, pl••se c•ll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dover Or., Sult. 3, N.8. "42'"'"20 ORANGE COAST'S SALESMAN •• BEST PILOT CLASSIFIED Oceanfront-0,.-up'l~ex--I Tnp lllr.Hnl' Pn 11iil('('r Tip·lf>l"l shaJlP. ~hake Root, t lc. Only $!!1,:.00. Penin1ule Point LnvP\~· 3 Bdnn. l Ba . home-. Terrific pe.llo. 1,'t B!k. to h11rbor rntrana', A aleal at ~.500. JONF.S REALTY 673-6710 2001 W, Balboa, N.B. * OPEN HOUSE * SAT. & SUN. 1·5 3061 CAROB, E ASTBLUFF <4 Bf'drn1, formal dlnlni, 190" \>iPW. IAJ'2tt1 lt"J1 irl Eal(. bluf!. SOUTH COAST REAL ESTATE 1500 Adami Ave .. CM 54.S..8424 {Open E vea.) BUY TODAY Move In Tomerrow NottUng m do, J-lar'hor VI~"' ~ BR. 211 b1., ~·Ith l1unUy rm, Alt t~nrfd, lnchcpd. I r!t'('(IT1tr<I . ~.llOO, Home Show Reeltor1 "Annt h!lr Hou!W!hunttnt" ~ E. CM111 Hwy., Cd~1 675-7225 Tor that lttm uncler try t~ Penny PlncM.r Friday, July'· 1971 o.<!LY flLOT 36 COLLEGE * PARK * 3 BEDROOM corner lot with "EXTRA SPECIAL" rum· pu:s room. $17,1/;'lto p11ys 6'0 GI loan, assumable by any- one~ \Vhos,-> first'' I~:'-1lEDl­ ATE OCCUPANCY, $26, 950 . ~ REDR00~1 ~hafl! hon1(' nn C~1lgalt" A V(', J ust l'l?du1·ed Ill pr1(:e lo fit rno~! anyont•s ,budget. G! ;.1,'(. Joan is-a.;. "£.UAtftf>le a t $!7j, Ml•. lni•!w::!- ing all la.'l;es etc. J/l-t ,\1£Dl- ATI:: occrJPA,'\CY .. $29,950. l HUGE BE'DROO~! plus 11 lamily rMn1, plus 2 firi'- placC's. n1 ak£>S this Ken J<o!l home on Columbia Dr. a real choi('l' item'. It is an "es1a1e'' sale and \\'e 111!1 subn11t to the court your off- er F1-IA assumable loan $30,500. TI-IE VF:RY BEST is nonr too good for your wHr so show her a rl('IV \vay of0l1ving ·1n thi! ~ brdroon1 plus fan1i!y room cuslomiied home. There's n()ne-Other like 11 anyv.t1ere! 2300 sq fl or ex· tra special kind or llv1ng. $39,950. Newport •• f Jiirvi•w 646-8811 (a nytime) BALBOA ISLAND ENGLISH half s1d1ng, used I brick. tree~. shake roof, dormer \V1n<lows. 2 • ~ly, home. Ne11r So. Bfl y. Lgc, coun11y kl!ch., n1a~s1ve u~cr! t ;--ick frrl. 15.'\24 ~lstr. bd· rrn. • * • • • $7.000 00\.VN. Clean ('IIDUJ.;h to eat! 2 BR. home. I-bdrm. apL over gar., plus cxl ra room & ba1h. NC'a1· So. Bay. * * * * * 1\'l.i\RJN~ Ave. Co1n111rn·iaJ bldg. Splrndid orr<•rtun11y~ I * * * * • 6 UNITS, Rr~. & r·o1n1ne1·c. Good 1nc."()n1r, good p1·of11. HARDESTY REALTORS 675-2866 HEART OF BALBOA l)c>luX (l('r'ln tront 11ur1r-..:. Uirge :; l)('rlroom. 'l h111h \<i1h coinplrte built·ln kll· 1 rhrn~ lntC'riurs • frrshly I painted. li;cpln':"· pa\1'1, VI('\\', 11·alk1ni: d!Sf<JllC(' to cvel)1hin;. $69,,:,00 Call 6·1{).7111 . l I _I BUILD SIX UNITS On J~ri:!e to::· x 11~1· coriwr 101. A!l 11!!ht1rs sc11·rr in slrt'!'I. Pn('" to srll ;it i1t9:,0 . wi1h po:o;sil:il<' rrrms. General 2 BR Condo EXECUTIVE HOME l iif-iijiiloiWiiW .. ~IIn chOi~ adult .section of Monticdlo. Popular ba.lt"Dny Pete Barrell Jea/t'I ln pr'Htlae are. of Newport Beach. Lot 1"3Jtl12. OrapH It. carpctt like new, built-in v11.cuum t!nlt. lmprtUlve entry, electric pnge door, 4 huge ~. 3 :rtep- dOwn i.th&. ANO the own~r LI amdoUs. C!llt now and make your otl'~r. CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCHURE OF CURRENT LISTINGS OFF!CE OPEN SAT. r. SUN. FOREVER VIEW Of I !arbor & ocean. Beautiful 4 Bdrm., din- Jng room home. VACANT -see anytime. A(:T NO \V on this rare find. Assume loan 6~ r;v. $74 ,500. tfarry Frederick EASTBLUFF OPEN SUN. 1-5 New listing! 2220 ARBUTUS. 4 Bdrm .. 2112 ba. Lusk home. Large family rm .. formal din. Beautifully decorated. Large sunny patio. Great home for entertaining. $49,950. l·larriett Davies NEW LISTING $54,500 OPE N SUN. 1·5; 915 ALEPPO (If., block So. of Alta Vista). 4 Bedroom Lusk built home. J.ge. family rn1. Covered patio. Room for pool. Some vle\v. O'vner transferred. Mary Lou 1-Iarion OPEN SUN. 2 TO 4 46-15 GORHAJ\1 , C;oneo Shores. C.orner lot, forever view. 3 BR. 3 Ba th home. Adult home. Great for entertaining. Ready for pool. S84,950. IAl\'era Burns 4527 BRIGHTON ROAD OPEN SA.T. & SUN. 1·5 P.M. Cameo Shores oceanfront hon1e -absolutely beautiful! Forn1al dining room , library, 3 large bed- rooms. 31;2 baths. Walled patio w/pool. Steps to beach. $225,020. OUTSTANDING VIEW Of J.larbor. OPEN for inspection SAT. & SUN. l TO 5; 1210 STARBOARD in Harbor View, with 4 bdrms., dining room , 3 car garage. $74,500. Harry Frederick DOVER SHORES WATERFRONT Owner moving -home priced below market. 3 Bdrn1s .. din. rm .. fam. rm. l ... ge. vie"' living rm. Beautifully lndscpd. patio. Only $98,500. ~itr. Vreeland VIEW FROM THE TOP See this lge. 3 BR. 2 bath Harbor View home that O\Vner says, "sell at once!", Separate forma l din. rn1 ., separate fam. rm. with frpl c .. bll-i n kitch. Heduced to sell -only $48,500. Ar t Gordon LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS Gorgeous Paci fic viev,1 from Topside Lane hon1e. Brick fireplaces & beamed ceilings in family roon1 & llving room, Large din. room: ktchen 'v'breakf:ist room. 4 Bedrooms. 21;2 baths. 3 Car garage. $69,500. Carol Tatum ELEGANT TOWNHOUSE l 1niversit.v P::irk -finest location -pool. tennis. gol(; near U.C'.I. Lo\11 n1aintenance - a must see. 3 BR., fam. rm .. 21fiJ ba. -a really lovel y hoine. Call for app't. Fee. $48,95 0. "(;huck" J ... e1vi s HARBOR VIEW HILLS ·rerrific 3 BR. home. Separate family room "·/fireplace. Beautiful swi mmin~ pool. Bay & ocean vie\v. $79.500. Cathryn Tennille EMERALD BAY OCEANFRONT Spectacular coa stline vie\V. Finest design & conslruct.ion. For1nal din in g roo1n. large \vood paneled playroom \V/bar. 4 Bedrooms, .E(ues l suite & rnaid's room. 6l/2 Baths. At- tracti ve terms. $325.000. Belle Partch model. lmmed. occupancy, '""""". . . $22,950 Corono del Mar Home & Apt Thrte to chooff trom. Lrg C bi tri-!evel home + 1 br apt, 10% down. $63,500 (2) 4-PlexH Mesa del M&r unit~ in b'l!atlli- lul cond. $1185 monthly in· ('Om,. LS% doWn. Call for &ppt, Ill) Re. $105,000 642-1771 Anytime MODEL HOME Not originally, it just turned out r..hat \•1ay, Spacious 3 bedroom hon1e expertiy re- modeled and upgraded \11th plush :i;hag carpeting and beautiMly selected panel- ting thMJoul. Oteerful all builtin country kitchen. Any· one can assume 6% VA Joan. Tremendous valUe al only $31.500. For details - Ca.It 540-1151 fopen eves), pre6tlnLJ BAYCREST FOUR •nd POOL -Move-in condition, fam- ily room, fireplace, beated & filtered pool - with huge covered patio adjacent to it. Large lot and circular drive, fenced side yard for boat or camper. Excellent landscaping, sprinklers. $69,950. (Call 642-4353 for more del>ils) C·ORONA HIGHLANDS HIGH ON A HILL -This 3 bedroom home with pool, has a little of the old '~·ith a little of the new. Living room with rireplace. fam- ily roon1 with fireplace, outside covered pa- tio with wet bar and view deck. Immaculate condition. Price of $58,500 includes land. 540 De Anza Open Sun. 1-5 2.7 ACRE COUNTRY ESTATE ROOMY · AIR CONDITIONED 3 BEDROOM. DEN AND 3 BATHS, room for horses and pool. Lovely landscaping and big trees, com- pletely fenced lVith chain link. In Orange. ,98,000. WATCH THE WAVES BASK ANO SWIM -in your front yard. Oceanfront 2 story, 4 bedrooms, fa m i I y room and dining room. neat and comfortable. R·2, planned to convert to duplex. $67,500. Walker & Lee 2043 \Vestclitt Drive &16-m1 Open 'tiJ 9 PM COLLEGE PARK l + POOL ~tp home a.mong sharp Tlf!'ighborlng homes. NeYllY palnled Interior, good ce.r- pets, Mlllly built·in l!helve! for storage. Altractiv1 pa- tio adjoining a fine pool in tropical landscape. Act quit'kly, • it won't lut al $31,000. (."all 546-2313. \-0 THE RE AL > ESTATER.S EXECUTIVES!! One of the moat popular! Luxuriout1 Jiving! Larire torn1J dining, irep dinette, huge family rm. w/fpi &. Wet bar . .( Lrg BR! Beaut. ldscpd! Xlnt loc! $46,500. Call :>15-84:?4 (open eves.) \oi:._th c OdSt Offic:• Open Saturdays & Sundayt J PETE BARRETT REALTY A .~.~.T.~.,A~; ;,·,,:.., • 1605 Wntcllff Dr •• N.a. lush lndscpi:. 2 El(tra bldgs. .... 642 5200 • a11 '" ''"' '''""· o~" • w/<arry ht T.D. S~lio& I ¢/>:Th HlllTAGI I I '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I '""' .,,,, 121.soo. ~ ~ MAL ISTA11 _I" Gener•I General CQRBIN- NEED ROOM $27,000 This unusually 11harp. !.resh- ly painted l\Om(' has l:hrtt lovely bed1ooms ~ of \Vhich is huge -approxi- m11.tely 20' x 23'. See how thii; room \\'ti 8d;;.pted to acrormnodale four boys. The home·, many features also include a flagst011e pa· tin and boii1 ·i11 ~e. Please call 54&-2313 tor an appointmen1, \-0' THE REAL {'\.ESTATERS ' ' ,. . ' ' ' . BRICK and SHAKE La\1sh use ot brick. and 11. s\1·eeping shak.-, roor \Vill C'har1n all that :fee !I, .C BR, 2 BA, large covered patio fl -er firepi1. a11d loo.els &: loads of custom features! Call no1v to i;ee !hi.~ excep- tional $34,9j(l value. Call ir!.l-8424 (open eves), \outh . (" oast . - -BAY & BEACH REAL TY. In<. all or writ• for your free copy f •Ur Homos For Living Maga:iino. WHY LIST WITH BAY & BEACH? _ .. You get double exposure -local multi- ple listing service PLUS exclusive NATION- AL MULTI-LIST, with agents in 300 cities across the nation - it costs you no more! LOW, LOW DOWN PAYMENT O\vner transferred! Seldom can you buy a 3 bdrm. & den/dining rm. plus brkfst. rm .. on such favorable terms. Extras include antique m irrored wet bar. lush carpet. drapes & built· ins. Your own terms at $35,750. VIEW! LOCATION! •.. an easy \Valk to Little Corona Beach. l · Level, 2 bdrm. & studio home; beam ceiling5, brick frplc., carp. & drapes included. Fee land (you ov•n it). Wide 50 ft. lot. 869.500. RANCH MINDED? Beautifully developed. 4 bdrm., family rm., & \Yet bar home, complete \Vith pool & fa- cilities tor dogs, horses or name it. fruit fall- ing off the trees! Approx. 11/.1 acres, n r. San Juan Capistr ano. $85,000. MARTIN "REALTORS 6""7612 4 Bedroom -$2S,9SD. with 21\, ba!hs ye1! Covered ~flClCJ.Sed patio make~ excel- lent play l"OOffi . Neat and cll'an, owner anxiou~ -leav- lng area. cau now 10 sel', 1500 Adams Ave., C.1'.1. ~.588() ~ild•r• Atta.ntion R-2 Newport Beach 0>mer lo , J Blk, !\'> oc~an. Good rental area, $28,000_ Call; 673-366.'.I 644·::6:19 Eves, associated BROKERS-REALTORS ZOZS W 8olboo 61l·l66J ATIENTION BUILDERS! <2 ODO BY OWNER ~ 4, Llttl• blAnd. E'"'Pl~oal C)W)\.ce f~ v18' lot in tM hllla Of Mna Verde. Level, """" rraded. relldy to buu.d upon In al~edy devel()ped twtom nt:l(hborhood. One ol a !rind ten at thl• low pie« of $71,960. QIU 546-2313 for an appointment to att. 10 THI: l<CAl, '"'\. 1:ST!ITCHS qu11Uty home in garden aet-4 Bdrm & D•n lina. All elec. 2 BR, 2 BA. Family Rm & l both• Offend at apprll'l. S7l-7oro. Ownu tn11nalerred! Entry Bay.hor11 ha.It. dlnlnt rm, fircplac~ of OPEN -...,..--,-,,,-C-,.-,-,v-\o-w natural brick, l ba~h fac!I· or. Tmm1ic 2 br, 1 bl horrw. lty, built-int, open til 9 PM. Comb liv/din rn1. Crpt. le ~l~ drpit ~I. 2-<:IU' 1ar. Beaut TARBELL 1720 Harbor lndscpd w/JY-&r petlo It GOV,. REPOSSESSION, !()W rov'd lan.1. ite«111 widow dn. Atsume }Qw int lo!t.n. wishe1 to lf:ll. SfOOO cuh Euy quaI\ty\ll(. Bk r . ttq'd, ha.lance financed by 642-4~ anytime. owner. 5'~2 or 67l-7914 . Open Houses THIS WEEKEND . .., ,.. .. ...., .,....,. ..................... . , .. ,. ··-•·"""t-Al .................... . -'-:rlM4 .. .,..._ 4etWI ., ~Mfrilhtt .._ ...,. la .... _,., tAU.Y ,,LOT WANT ADS.,.._ .......... ,... hfi• ,., .... ., ...... -...... lht •••• 1 ... ,!Mtl .... tMt ..,,_ ... "'"'· HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedroem) 1312 Dolphin Tenact , (Inrine Terrace) KB., 637-8550 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (l lffroom) 230 Pearl. Balboa Island 673-6900 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 4645 Gorham (Cameo Shores) Cdf\.f 833-0100; 6""2430 (Sun 2-4) 712 f_,arkspur, Corona de! Mar 673-2222 (Sat & Sun l·S) (l Br. & Family •r Den) 1723 Labrador Dr., (Mesa Verde) CM 546-1401, $29,900 (Sat & Sun 12·5) 2042 Galaxy (Dover Shores) NB 640.5513 (Daily 9-6) 1649 Minorca Or. (Mesa Verde) CM 832-5715 or 557--0753 (Fri. Sat, Sun.) 331 22 Palo Alto. Dana Point $32.900 (lhru weekend) 522 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach Has Hall. (11 4) 684-1941 (Sun J-5) 726 Bison, (Eastbluff) NB 644-0745, $43,900 (Sat & SWI 1-5) *540 DeAnza (Corona Highlands) CdM 642·5200 (SWI l·S) 4527 Brighton Rd. (Cameo Shores) CdM 833-0100; 64+2430 (Sat & Sun 1-5) **2001 Bayside Dr .. Corona del Mar 673-8550 (Sat 1-6) *1!30 Pembroke Ln . (W.,,tcliff) NB 670.2101 (SWI 1·5) 2401 Via Marina. Newport Beach 673·2222 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2812 Cliff Drive, Ne\vport Beach 641>1171 (Sat & Sun 1·5) *1225 Nottingham , Newport Beach 646-1!1! (Sun 1-5) 1945 Santiago, New port Beach 646-7171 (Sun 2-5) *418 Ogle Circle, Costa Jvlesa 646-7111 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 3111 Coolidge, Costa J\1esa 646-711! (Sun 2·6) (4 Bedreom} 2301 Arbutus (Eastbluff) NB 670.5930 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 14 Br. & FJimily or Oen ) 3076 GibraJtar (l\!esa Verde) CT\1' 540.5946 (Sat & Sun) 16532 \Vheeler Circle. Huntington Beach 847-6284. $28.500 (Daily) 1906 Santit1.go (·Dover Shores) NB 646--0228 (Sat & Sun 1·5) * 1801 Glenwood (Baycrest) NB 646--0228 (Su n 1-5) 2220 Arbutus <Eastbluff) NB 833-0700 ; 644-2430 (Sun 1-5) Sll5 Alleppo. Ne\vport Beach 833-0700 ; 644-2430 (Sun 1-5) 1700 Antigua (Dover Shoresl NB 644-4910. $95.1100 (Sal & Sun 1-5:30) **8 Linda Isl e Dr. (Linda Isle) NB 644-4910. 1155,1100 I Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 410 Morning Star (Dover Shores) NB 644-4910, 1105,1100 (Sun 1-5:30) 2057 Commodore (Baycrest) NB G42-823S, 114,500 (SU11day) 1124 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235. $89,500 (Sunday) 19621 \Vaterbury, liuntington Beach 646-7171 (Sat 1-5) 20082 Beaumont Cir., fluntington Beach 646-1171 (Sun 1·5) 2042 Port Provence, Newport Beach 64&-1171 (Sun 1-5) (S Br. &. FJimily or Den ) **107 Linda ls lt Dr., (Linda Isle) NB 644-4910. 1145.1100 (Sun 1-5:30) **210 Evening Star (Dover Shore.s) NB G42·R2J5 (Sunday) 2006 Galaxy (Dover Shore.s) NB 642-8235 (Daily) 1900 Port \Veybridge (Hrbr. Vu Rme.) N.B .. 644-4960, $59.900 (Sat & Sun 1-5) CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE (l Br. & l'arn.) 548 Visla Grande (Eastbluff) NB 673-6550 (Sat & Sun 1·5) DUPLEXE$ FOR SALE 12Brr.1Br) *314 Goldenrod, Corona del ~lar 673-6510 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (3Brr.1Brl 621 Larkspur, Corona del Mar 673-6510 (Sun 1-S) 14 Br & 2 Ir} 515-515 1fJ Poin.settia, Corona del Mar 64+4910, '54.500 (Sun 1-5;30) INVESTMENT l'ROl'ERTY FOR SALE (2 a.drown) **3121 W. Coast Hwy., Apt. S.A, N.8 . 675-3210 (SundllJ') IA YFRONT LOTS FOR SALE **1641 Bayside Dr., Newport S.ach 642-82M (Sat I< Sun) --.-.... -----:-----.. --.. ------~---..... ----.. --·· ..... --·-' ---_.. --··---··---------. -~ -----'------....... --~ .. -.... -,,....,__ ... -----::..~.......;:.·-·---...... ~::;..:.·.:;,.~~ 0 --•M•O•----.. -··,~·--==-..-::::-_ ---•. -~ ·---... --• • I I I ' " . : ' l : : ' .. l • ' ,. ' r.wu. Jul• '· nn '• ' " '· :~ ·, _ ..... * MESA VERDE * 4 br, 2 ba l)n cnrrl('r lf't '" --~ .. -·-..----1-------~----..-.-.. r ,_...~c;::;;.::;; ~ ~--;;,q : 'll(@l A r.r:ri;: --·---~-. -----_ ... _ ~· :___-=-::=-.=--__ -,--_..., ---·= ·,';',_;.;;;-"";;o'-~'-"-''-~-"":;-;:._ ............ _~_ .... -. ~ .. ;_-:·-.:;:,,__: ---·-., ---_,·~~--.;. __ _..... .... _ -1----' ---;;:;...-~··- 1st TD Loan 7"'° INTE~ 2nd TD Loan 260 NEED CASH SlOCKl OR .\10R£ See Avco Thrift for 11. }{ea! Estate loan. Upon 11.pproval u~ the moll!!y however you like. Also ask about our unsecured personal loans. AVCO THRltJ * CASH BUYER * 620 Newport Center Drive 833-3440 $40,<XXl lat TD on C-2 pa.reel. Sold at $60,00J. Strong buyer i!J c·cn'llltruc11ng bldg, fence, lndscpr, ere. Pays Sl200 qrtly, incl. 9%. D!K<>unt 10% Brk. 49J.-1 153. ----. I~ ~I -~·-..... ~J~~ TO BUY O" HoUMI Furnished 300 200 Generel *LEASE-RENTALS* CORONA DEL !\-1AR, So. or Hwy -Aug 15--Sept 26 -2 BR l~ Ba. $175 wk. ' Beautifully, complPtely ~­ derorated 3 Bedrm, 3 Bath -2 story, 2Cl'x30' bonus room gardener. Vacant. lmmed'. occ. $325.00. 5 Bedrm. 3 Bath -2 1tory, 2 tireplaccs. Vacant lmmed occ. $J!};j,OO, ' e DOLUIOUSE -Pet1tct for 11ni1 wuman. Fine. loc. Only Sl15 ALA Rerltals e 645-3900 • CllAR:\lJNG & Private - Beam ~LI, ~I UIJ] pd $12$. ALA Rental1 'e 645-3900 * MINIHOME $125 lnt'lds util. JdeeJ !Or larly. BEACON * 645-011 1 * NEAR THE BEAC H RENTAL FINDERS f rNJ l o l.a,.dJMrla 645-0111 CU W.1 .... COSTA..,,. SELL A BUSINl!SS F"EEll HOLLAND BUS. SALES lendlord1-0wners 'The Brokw W'.ltb Empathy" Y.'e wtll J-efcr f~n .. nta ta you 1TI6 On.nrt Aw ., C.l\f. fREE o! chui:e ..• Many NM.170: 5«).Q608 &nytinM dealrable tena.nta on our We need 5'1e1 people walfin( llst. ALA Rentel1 e '45-J900 WATERBED STORE SUM~IER .i yrl y. rtnlals : Avs. lOXI +/wk rroe•. Buai-liner l'lome1 in beach artA MIS stiJJ e:cptndint? Very BW Grundy Ritt. 642-4620 rtaa. for lmmed We. TI4/ 673-2310 12-5 pm. 1 BR HAf' -Sl30. Atiula, no I EA trrY Shop in La .. ,,.. pets. Stan! Vll\11 Tr Jr Park . .. --ll.' W Bay, C.M. 84!ach for u.J~. Cenrra.Jly I ;;::-;-:--;o;'-'-''-"-'-----1 kic:al~. Good traffk:. Reaa. Coste M••• Call 496-5809. OLDER houte-1 br. PuUy OCllNG COITEE 5 H 0 P furn. Quiet. rl(!Prly people. TOR SALE! u:>. 261 r.lesa Or. ~7342. 96.2·7697 bt:l11.·n 5 " 111 pm The fulesl dnw In the Weit SiJ1 the old 1tuff . . a Daily Pilot CllJJlll Buy the new aturr Ad, MJ-5671 ·---_ ... _, ·-· -----• -----·--. ·-.. ----·- - l~I --- r o n ~;11 Lu~:~;ou~,.~'.11~ VEH.Y CLJ::A."i 3 be<Jroon1 ON watrr-3 bi', 3 ba. Y.tl CHAR}.flNG commodlous OL..'C I Br. l'lt'W. f'r~d&iN ROYAL SURES l.'OlllP urn in K' uvu:. home wi th large lent't<I bar . 32'xti~' waler rights honlt' near ;acht club. 2 br. appluuit'f', Queen llJ b!d. at Lakf' t·or .. s!. 1 Br. J Ba . )81'<1 and lovely carpet~ " w/dock. t or h.'Ut. Hrg 1), ba. elec kllchen. lge Con1pt crpt'd, Call "6-9271 MOnL APTS. \h n, d1u 1111. r .. 1n r n1, 1111 11.11neU1 ug. t--anuhes <1nly, Harbour. !.92-3183. r ins, ~u1 patio. f\lrn or 1~"c'-'-·=-------*.e5 PER WK. l'>.!n1I C!ub, IJ<JUI &. lukt• :S200 ,\lo. ''all A I ." 1 I'~ Q ~ I ' .I ll/ 1 , 1 "' '" Irvin• uni. I yr li<t'. RE'b. Phone .uv, ;o.1 • STUDIO w/ocelUI UP f)fl\ I •' Ill(). •I 0.: ll,<f :-..JG-4J.U "- fllU .i. 8:Ji-QJ6.; -------~7,~~::':'.:'.~~~~:l,'~'"~'~™"~'':'.c--1=14~/~88>-~=3'=9~1--o~r .,,·tt~e. All util pd, Prl. -----l:l BR & U..'n, 'l. ba, dbl i:ar, 792-4033. patio, crpl$, dJ1>11, quiet, CDaily & WMltly Rat es) Laguna Beach fl'n~U. ili sposal, elec door J HR. 2 b<1 . oonu~ rn1 .. $315 Newport Beach single 11to1y, adul1.s. 548-692.0 Complete kHchle-n, hneni, 1-"0 R lca~r-2 b1 l1u1nt' 210:,z l..a1.-u1111 l')'n Jt(l. S:.'00 n1v Call -1 ~1\--1Uj:! "i'"'IJ•·r. Z'J94 Collri;,. lJr. J BR. 2 b;1's. Au·1um .. ~lij -----------l BR. Jo'rplc, be1.m&, patio. J P:llvnit 1erv1~. hnted pool., L'!l~ 1110 L.w . 833-86-18 ah ti :1 BR. ";!!;, bu, tam. rrn, S325 LG. 1111. firpl. :: Br. r..r. IK'h, Adult. U11J pd. Sl55 I mo. TV .r. maid aitr'Vl~ opoonal jlnl :1 Bfl. 2 ba. A1 riun1 .... $300 Partly furl\. park.. Pre!. lg, Yr-11.rly. Open J-iou1:1e, 111 i:;, Studle la I BMroom ,-2b l"-1\ /XIJ<ll"IUUX SUnfl<'1'k S.· nu1gn1hf'1;Jlt v1c11 ~l:l.1 nio -l!H-563:; ., •·r. • p C ~ BR., :u,, ba!hs fan1ily r m 1-el. 28(1.l 1'ewport Blvd . 21.!t st ~ * ;. ll • l.ar. allo. rpts, • -=c;.,::,:;·,.=:='~~·===-· I (C mil., lo N•"·po~ o--•. f'L"OI\\ $J2.) tO $3j(J \\r E-19160. " '' U'C"&UI drri~. ~to~r. relng. Quiel 1----------SHARP 2 BR:-$160 ;; m.llfs to Oisneylandl ll'upA·al ~eu 1ng leir adult!' 4 Bl!, 2'' ba .• family roorn, Condomin ium• FURN , Htd Pooi. Ad.Ila/no e•i 'f30 I 1 bl, >l6' sep homes lrom $33.) to $365 U f 320 -~ on Y " lo shops. , n urn. Pel.!! 2272 Maple .liL or :! llH, nt•ar h•·t11•l1 , ni.·f' ~;i rit b4:..,1 1.13 or &16-4-130. WE llAVE OTHERS 1-,.;::.;.;;.;.;..-'-----= 642•9j 20. 901 So. Harbor Santa Ana s:t..o 1no on l•';•'' '" s:...oo -.-.1----~~-General tBt1~~~ 1'1cfadden "- 111•1 xun1n11·1· 4~1 :noo 1 B! •. _ HA, crpts, bl11n~. r·uRN 1 Br. Crpts, drape1. 1 Edina;,rl double garage, largr yard, £,\STBLUfP Condominium.. Adult. UHi paid. SI«lmo. Lido Isle ru C .. 1hul1c church $22.l. New t BR. Tennia, Pool. 'Ce a.riy, Ope-n HJ"JUse, l36 E. \\Al l:.lt~ HO:-.'T I Br ~·ll :\IATCllA:\I RLT Y IH6-!8,Ti' SJ <::., 644-4834 20th SI. 64i-.&520. \'1., J.tdo Nunt (',,u 1 n:;i 2 lir, I 1:1.l .• duple . .; crpls. Cost<1 Me1<1 I BR, bean1 cr.illt1a:, 1unny, ~...:1--0:J~\lor t2r:1 :.?i!Hd7. fl·l11·t'd Uat k yard. O n "SINCE 1946" secluded, i mm a c ul a t e . I d oo 1 "' ! B k Bid DELUXE IO\\'nhome-3 br, , u ~ e -s a c. $1....,/mo, sc es ern an i Adul l!i, no pets. i 2 5 61:l--'IS60. Un1vers11y Park garage, pool. S.?Sj mo Open Shahnii r Dr. D •ys 833-0101 Nig h ts house Sat &. Sun. 10-5. l41 1,c.,..=".;:c_:::.c_ ___ _ LCL 1.i<l~lrQnt I B1· ·i B:1.; :; BR, 2 ba, fen<-t>d yd . S:lOO Riviera , nr Tusun &. Santa QUIET Attrac Studios $110 Ir; !il\"l' ~ .. ~11 r• ~],1~1 <l"SLrilhl~· 1110. 2260 .1-'ederaJ, c i\l Isabel Aves. Up. 1 BR. 5120 UP. Adlt.s, f,)(·;111•d I Yr 1~1· -.1{l1·t1ng &IG--1772 a ft 1 pn1 I , TUR'l'Li:: ROCK * no pet!. 213;, Eld~n. A1ir. Newport Beach Tustin ! BR TO\\llli'HOUSE -t'rplc, air cond, pool, a.11 deluxe teatures }'OU could .,·i.ah tor 15500 Tustin Villagt \\'a;• No. '?O. 542-2857 or 53l;f92-1. 'Pt. Unfurl\, 3'5 l1lbCN Penln1ula ~··pt ~t:'Ol"I ~'" · ll irl. gilrir. SP ACIOUS l Br hon1e. Bhns 3 !lit. :.! Ba ........... $350 Duplexes U nfurn. lSO Apt. 6. rr•J :. i:rpt/drps, fncd ~d. :\Jany • U:\"!\'l::RSITY PA RK 111 Costa Mes• l-1-B_R_._A_dl _____ P_oo_l._ld_•_•_l_l_o~ 2 BR, Cov'd parking apact", H1••!i Jn1ir1 ltli r "7 1·6060 :-.tras, S27;,. 64~1$-18. :: BR. 'l ba. lnl"-c ...... S3l,j bl'IChelONI . Spac. $12;) l $130, Laundry, Nt!ll'ly renovated, Houses U n f urn. 305 CllEERFUL 2 BR hou~r . :: 13H. 'l'~ ha. tnli!i" .... S30? DUPLEX, l02'l Victoria., 2 199:1 Chureh. 548-96JJ. l blk to bay or ~aeh. Yf!ar I :: B!t. 21 , ba. tnhi>C .... Sl7.J br, b!tns, l·rpts, drpK, p;r.llo, I~"· 122:i mo. A\•••·1 •'mmed. Gene,ai ~ara~r . {rps. ~!01·t:, Sl.J..i. ~ * 5156-DELUXE I BR. Ex-ii~ \V. \\"ilson.ti·Hi·li28 :: BR. 2 ha ············ Sl2:i g11 r.S170.54 . 673--tJ26, tl7~210 agl. ~-;;--;;;-;:--;;:;:;~;;:-;-;;:-I;:~:::__:::~~~~:'..'.:'.._~ ;: BH. '1 lia ............ Sl? I BR, bltns. relrig, crpts, pan<.lo mob!!~ l'lo~. 132 W. e T:.\H f~ l:\"IJ[:,l:.D• 1 Ur. ;: Br hoU.'if', <"Pl<, dp<. nf'wly 2, • $3'"'" WUilOn, S-6-4.l:IJ.I. DL"\:. duplex l BR 2 BA, yr!y j l ill{ ~ .,.,, ....... ,. · ~ drps. RPspuns. adults. l!H<l >.111• ••1', fcn1·1·(1 )II, l'lld d!'l'Oi-o:ilcd, ICn('.('d yd, $~:;_;, (i d h.11 fl.-laplP, $l4j_ 838-0S61. • $125-NICE 1 Br. ll2 W. lse. r\ew ~int, drpA, Cl'pls. ~")" 1-.id ... & JX'I ~ S J~:i. 1110. 6 16-4:l~O. • re I -\Vilson, Co~!• i1es1. Clll All appl'!. SJ8..4949. ,\LA l{r111als e ti1 >-'.:ti!.~ 2 B l B CHAR:'l1ING 2 Br. fireplace. 6-4.l--UIQ. Corone del Mar r/ a, gara~e. !ncd yd. l Child OK. Sl10 mo. C~t. -----------\iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii e SPl~EADING r:oo1n -'.: Br, Sl;JO/n10. 3»-B University REALTY 968-IOSJ. LRG llllllny 1 Br nicely turn, lnc1J _111, rncl ,i.:d1· Ku!~ & Dr., C.~1. 642-8029. I~~~~~~~~~~~~ I g&T, lndry rm. No pc~. ,1.. ·----l.i n1 v. Park Ce111er, Irvine; s1•0. 6-1" "="". "•" ••22. fl"ll'>. ~ li.1. * * * * * ~ ,,........,.,., '""""'" :\LA .(•nra s ...... ~vv ~and 3 lx'd. housC"s :;:;J t:ast Ap.ti'"tmefltlflllflt9"t 111111 TRAILER, 1uitable for <.."Otv f"r1"1, July '· 1971 OAll't ~Lef 37 New New New VIiia Cordova COOL. FRESH! QUIET -SAFE tNur Back &y t 40 Unit Adult Apartment Complex: ONLY 121 2 BR loft Entert&inina; will be 1 plea11- lll'lt, Dtcoratina: thil Jo11e1y, apa.ck1lr. •P'l 'viil bt a joy. • Special cabinet ~~ • Lock pn.rn w/ la •tor • Bm ceil • Lndry • P11llm • ow /dl.spl • Huae-au stve • Special 90Undproolinr e Deep 2 oolor 1haz carpets, drapes GAS .r. WATER PAID Mo. to Mo. From $170 2323 llden Avt , CM See Mrr. 1td Woodhead 646 0032 ...... Newport- NOW YOU CAii AFFOIO NEWPORT BEACH E njoy 1750,000 health club I< 1pa: 7 pools, 7 tennis courta:. Bachelor, l or 2 Br's. Also 2-- itory townhouses w/ 2 or 3 BR'.s. Elec. kitch- ens , private balcony or patio. From $175. Subterranean parking elev maid service. FulJ-lioe food market' dr y 'clflaner, beauty :salon within complex.' 7 beaut. model apu. V am to I pm daily, other times by appt. Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rd!. N. of Fashion Island. 714: &U-1900 !or lea11ina: info. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS --------. - A .. t, Unfurn. ""r Apt Unfv•n ..... -::...,.-:-:-----...: . . . Costa Me1a Huntlntten a.ach DELUXE * FRESH AIR APARTMENTS Walk J blks to BNch! /\OW AVAILABLE Beaut. bia :J BR a ptt, w/11•1 """"'" AJr Cond • f'rplc' a -3 S1\'lm· crpts, d!"Pll, bl.tn3 excePt rf- * Span;,. EJHance m•"< Pool, • ll•'-'lh SV• • frig, >150. No ,;"11.,, oo I Qll •• ienni_, Crl.s • Ga.me lr Bil-I liard Room. ~~. 536-lTI I l "-2 BEDROO:'>l 3 BR, 2 Ba, S2:i0 per mo, 1 y1·1 Quiet Adult Livi"t Shag cpt e drPI e bll.lu BeautituJ Pool e Ail UtiJ Pd 2 BR. Jl70 Adul ts only-no pe11 241 Avoc1do St. 646-0919 ~'RO:\I Sl~O new. Drps, litiai erptg ,1 MEDITERRANEAN ll'J>(c, din rm, d11h\\·hr, d lspt,\ priv poltio, ~ncl aar Jndry· VILLAGE nn. Childrt n ok . No pets" 16582 Goldtn We-st SL. Avail ! 2400 Harbor Blvd ., C.~L 1714) a;;1.so20 1120· 962-2fi!M . I THE BEST CO.!>i'S LESS flENTAL 01-'t'ICI:: BEACHBLUfF APTS. I l n1agw: "·et bar, fireplace. OPEN 10 A.\1 TO ti P!\I 2 .r. 3 BR, 2 BA. pool, patio. beam ceilings, rough-ht\\-·n r 7--,~--,~~-~~--I I. b . . t . l BR. Dupiex. 11'", N•w d"'· Nr 1hoppin1. 842--347? Ol' pane '[Iii:. 1g pnva t pe.llo. CN 147_39;,7, lBR.-211. BATH, d e 1 u x f! crpt, drps " paint. Parklikf" 1 --------~-~ <"lubhouse , pool, V-b&ll, &: surroundinas No ~Is or LGE 2 br, 2 b., pr.tio. •ncl it'& unde1· SXlO a1 l87 \V. chi.ldN:n. Older perm . garqe. No pets. 1 child ok. I' 1 • 61 ~ .,..., Call Anytln\r 8.U.OS20 I I~ • V.\C",\TJO:--i }f',u· routKI 1 2ls1 S!, Co~la !\!_es_' __ ~ BH. 2•~ ba on pvt p11rk,•--------' Y pie . :\lature people only. L.r ·•t111•/1-Plr1~. •111c1!1 1,,,1 ~EH. (.;arag(', Crri. No pE'I~. 11 /pool & trnn1s pnv1lcges. S120 + util'1. 64&-1600. Bay St. othtr 2 BR'1 from lenanl only . .>18-6920. Sl5CI. 5J6.-15Th. ON TI:'l ACP.ES ~16..l. * l BR, 1 BA. GARDEN -.-LO-V_E_L_Y_, -,c,.-,-,--b-,-.' BA'. •'IEAD0"'0• APT', C d 1 d·"I :-ilf'f!' In 01.T:tn Ut1 I JXI ~110 Rl'fer rrq'd. S\j() 1110 + S3i:i. S."'..i-~J. AL.\ l~Pn111I:< • i)r .. ::~oo riPpo~1 1. &i6-.i6~7_. -~-c Lagun;-5--,-.-c7h~---Apta. Furn . 360 Huntingten Be~ch l I& 2 BR. Furn, A Unturn. " .. " ., Unit11. Shaa; crp\g, drpii, rpfs, rps -1tove. a ... •I }..,u-eplaCH / s.riv. patica. * Call 646-0073 * d"·hr. patio, beam ceihnas, $12.l. Sl~l. ! • III· ,\r: Tll lS~ 2 Rr \\alk $19:>-2 Br , I Ba, fe n1·C"tl ~arrt. ( frpk• cpts. drps. 2171 P.ul'al Poola Tennis Contnt'l Bldst. frplc, gar. :;l65CI J::ldtn. 2 BR. No chUdttn or peta. La Qul.nta Henna•• ""'s.. Lano, 01"' --EL CORDOVA '"-""· 11651>10. ""'" paid. 1"". c.n 1 l'l lir a• _h. Crpt~. Jqi!., i•l11 d Pl 6 2-222'.' uk SJ:", _::._1 _. --~~~~-FOR LEASE Ren! Beautiful Furn.irur. H {MacArtbur N' Cout HWy) 962-8314. I AT \'ICl'OHIA BLACH for &s little..., Apts. • THE GABLES • ,\L \ r:••IJ!ilb • lil..o·:!f{)ft VACANT .\lf'&il Vel'df' J h1', Un111ue l bd rm. ho1nc, lo-ONE MONTH Spu ush Country Estat• Liv-3 BR, 3 ba, bltlns: 3 YT old. /\'E\V l & 2 BR Luxury Apt~. 2 Br, 11~ Ba""/ .i:ar. $1:>5. 2 BR. $140. 8-42-8365 \ •&i"d on tnf' 1x:r11n side of ini " Sn~ciou.s A"la. Ter-00 D•h••'h•·.·. x"• ,, •• ,1." < '"P· Adil~. Cp~, drps, bltn.s, tnd *2 BR BUNGALOW sao rilf'l\ !.'.~:-~ul i~· -~~pt~l~ t .!:,O . . II . l~I' 8,.~ ;)1\.1 O! .>.)1-01.J..l ~ ~ ,._ ~ l7 fl lov.•er <lupl~ t111it. " ' "' ""' ., " d / · \\' pd '"Jl C L B h I I''').' ., Vio1or1a Beach. • l'aced pool ·, •Unit'.en ,., BBQ h _, I I · Y w pallo. lr · *• · •gune ••c " I \Valk_ lo beach, &hopping, oan.1s, u~ury s Ill& crpt a. 0 A <'" '110 I to; n1.!l u1·r adl l~. G.u'. 011 t --___ ·-(),,1standing ocran vw11•, :!'i comp •I• with Unbelievable Llvinr -Only '-~•"<. -, l•o•'I & POOL. i'ilnge \"e, ....,.., · !d'I ' :'.l hSA Verde ;: Gt', 11\'al & BEACON * 645-0111 s!1ady. $2.i011110. deposit, 2 BA. Crpl/drps:. ,"14~·122;,, ... iochool. Gas, walt.r, ga.i·deu· ""' " "' N.E:AR BEACH-New l • 2 ba1 l1s. 2 sw1ken tubs. 2 hre-your 100°/o 1 B r unf $150-furn $175 ing. Cpts/<lrps incl. Yr. Adults • No pe1.~. \\'EST 11lcit 2 b1', l ba. BR 1~' b pool Ad t N l I sir bd ·m All Purcha1e Option 2 Sr unf $175 furn $210 •?nn 1)77 Charle St. 642-4470 w/p;i tio crpts drps bltn~ '• ~ a, -' u_lli. 0 p nrcs. in m . 1 · Lease . .,.,.,.,/n\o. 509 Ac1cla. • • ., • '""' · · pets. Ue, 217.i S. Oras. Hwy.I * N PT HGTS .l 131 . '! Ba, !n(d ------S2 SO Da na Point l'Pd crdar cxtcrior. A1ll1quc J11d, item selecllon. ALL UTIL INCLUDED ti7;>-4356. Adulla pref'd. 1:a1:port. \Vat'r pa.i • Su;J & 4!J.l-4481 or 528-674:1. ~lained ;;:lass \1lndow. Colo1·-24 Hour Dely. Special Bonus; a lilvt!r-you!' work; Y.'ill ne~llate l~===~=-~-~-1 *COROLIOO APTS* * * * 1 1 1 64' 2'"" OCEANFRONT viUa. Srwoc. r d ~ky l1ghts. l\i1chC'!I 11 all CUSTOM pla ted c.:a.ndle 1nUUer la u Ul'f' rrn · .r ~v. ..-LSI·. v1t·1\' ;; Br, rlrn ? Ba a b~-•• d 2 Bf.!. Studios I:. 11treet levels. LIKE LIVING IN 1 ,::.c::::::,.--,-1..acular vie\\', priv. beacb :Z I * 645_0111 · -· huil1-tns 1nclu(h11g :\u1011e Furniture R•nt <1I youl'1 u you ••"i l1u1 • YO OW O ~BR, 11!ove, ttlrig, cpts, dp~. pr•l.o BEACON I "•'' ~'.~:,11 );I, <l i•ps. l tJll 1~2 -~,~~). cr111l.'r w au<1.ch1nc11 1.;;. '.)17 '•V, 19tJi c .:\I. 5-JH-3481 \1·hen you visit our mode.ls. ~~ ::~;,~s~~~fE1'~~~: UR H H ME ··· i'ar, fenced yd. mature Br. $J2:> Illo. 494-46.>3. e 11"\"Y ,·.,11,,~,, -.., .... ; .:.11·1.1 10. ~1;1.:; -~ .1-J. Ui•o•dl'rl iu·tcs5 ui patliiiay. Anaheim ' 774-UOO 4 blkl! s. of San Diteo f'N-')' 2 Br, 11,il llc-. t;nfw·o. Cpl:!, adult~. s14:; + $j() deposll l<1guna Hills nr11l,1 il•'l'lll. l1•1:-.. 1lrps. i\1:'!_%-~'il::i. !£·ads 10 the beact1. Laltabi·a 694.3108 on Beach, J blk \V, on Ho ll (.all 673·3378. dips, ~ncl. patio. &12--J;l31 all 7 pin Of "11111 ')l\0 East Bluff YRLY . LEi\SE BEACH RATES TOO HIGH" to l62ll ParKsldt WM. PARK your car !: ~·alk; nr WILSON GARDENS \\·tekehds. 3 BR, 2 BA, cpts, drps, pool: ALA R enta ls 0 645-3900 $:Ml ._10 :-.'Tll , -1 (TI4) 1'7·5441 ocean, nr 11hop'i · Nt"' 1pts. Apt& ==~===~~~-USP, d'v.·s.hr. dbl 1ar .1 LOVFLY 4 BR ., ba I -' Con1e Sf't. us! 1800 \V. Lin-2 Br, 2 Ba, beam ceil. M::onv Ph. 642-6811 a h. 1 pm. sta9.50 ATTRAC, 2 BR .. I 494.266), 837-2749. ~ ' • · \f!SSION Rl:ALT\' roln Anahe ( B \ \ -v BA., crpt~. drp~. beam ct!il· e 1: \J~!·: Jnd•·t>d' ~ Bi Xlnr srpa1·a1 .. lan1 lTll . .-\\';uJ .ruly os· .,: C Ill , _,.. • im. iv 11 x TaJi. 330-A Mariiuerite. I • ..,.,...,,..,,...,,....,.,.,.., I Mes• Verde 'tli 1 Lr . S.ll-.1 '"'· oas 11)· .,...,.una J\notj 's Bei'ry f'arin i.: " A \Vay of Life " ST:i 873 1n.:s, p11tio entry. Adlts only- 1"1 ~11 n•lng ::O:nil fJf'I ok ,~\~11 ~s~, J mo . PllO:\E (71 •11 .:1~1-073 1 01sneylandi. II) 774--0!t."lO. SOLTEROS APTS >4 or 548-7983. Park-like Surroundi"t no pets. Ref's. 23,;4 Santi AVAIL A 11 2 BR 'l~-· M..r a 1 · I ---' t:;-;TIRE Up;;tain;, 2 BR , QUIE'r • lJELUXE ::l-039 ua:. s · · A LA Rentals • 645-3900 H untin ton Beach :\"IC:E 4 B~. dC'n. 2 Ba, \'lf'1\ B •lbo<1Peninsula I l'.a1•ly C-.Uif.. st.ttin&. Auul~ l!IOlll', dlspoi;.al. 2 blks l·:l l. J BR AP'I'S Ana Avr.. 67' . ;J, Carp., drapes, bll-1M. Encl. - ---9 I hOmf'. C pls, rl qls, r><ll10. -only, Beautilul lge bach i.:. J p SPAC 2 s, •P'". l l", Hid i;:ar. Sl ~. 2916 Pepper l'rff- \\'a1,.r pd, S2!Jj, 011ncr. :\!I D Peninsua, 2 Br, pkg.I l br apts. 2 11'ardro~. d1-mo. 40~P;. rer nlr-ar Nr shop'z •Adults ooly Pool. Play yd. Cpt.!, di?-!, Lane. Apr. D. or ~•JI alt * 1 BLK OCEAN $325 I I mark~t. Chma C<tvf'. Sl50 rv patios • Htd Pools ~ "" ~E'~Cb~1· 'l*Bn 16415 ~-)1;'; FOR LEASE .)Ji-1807. lridry. newlyrtno11 a l ed,1 ,-idE'd bdth, dP.<.'Oratlve I: M • • A Bltru:, patio, JUdi ok. 6:30 pm. 551-1407. • -.. Bit , 2 Ba. hlt1ns. near 20Rl-BR l'\o. Lagun a, nr S 2~2 5_1 n1 o . yl'. ltase. func oonal frplc. swtmmmg 3 BDru.t., ni<'f' patio; Joa or ar1'1n1que ptl. 199! Jvia~ No, J 548-7660 DLX 2 Ir 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl * DOLLHOUSE $145 !'>( hOol. Roon1 for boa! ~nd lwac h. uld pd, quiet. Aug. 1 673-4.i2ti. pool, rec hall, ping POfll' .I: eabinet.s, b!tn~. ca.rp. l Jm Santa Ana Ave., C?tt 2714 Colle,e r\o. ' 646-2287 a11.r, fl50 I.: up. Rental Ofc: 1ra1lf'r. Vrry i•lca11. S22.>1 SZi.i n10. 49-1-8262 2 BDR~f. frplc, balcony, 315 pool, •auna, lndry I.: pV1 ra· drape!!. No Pfls. l\ljT. Apt 113 646-55(2 2 BR. Very clean. New c..,..t. 309,j l'olace A11e . .:>46-1034.. 1110 CONT JN E NT A L Don franklin Rlrr. 673-2"122 .,.. · M esa del-M-<1 r E. Bay. s2;,o mo. Lease rage_. • 1 LARGE 2 BR. 2 IA. l kid~ OK, no pet~. $14j mo. Newport Beach COA TS yearly. lnqt11re at Apt. C. BREAKF ASfS SUNDAYS. l BR. 2 BA, uppe1· duplex . APT. UPSTArRS 770 Shalimar, ~5136 a!t BEACON * 645-0111 * 3 BR. 2 BA. S16S l\1d~ 11,•lt-vn1r. ~lllb Cp t ' IJ1·p ' 673-1121 or 5-l!l--7771 $!40-$l6:i. 1730l KeeOOn Ln Clo.'\e to betich & Ahpa. $300. CHlLDREN "~'l.CO'fE .,-Pi\1. ~~~=~~--* St pa to 8e<1ch * Cll EERY :> bed1'oom:s a nd l . . • " !l bJk y,·est or Beach, l nc.. " " -:-• WALLAC E df'n, F·, lni thx. Fu·rplacc • $3.) \\·K & UP -On Ocean h!k north or Slater) 842·7848. ::·s.83:>-23.).i clay~. 67~2 ~~1,., .. ~.ectric Gold i·Jeda..llfon SHARP 2 BR·S14S 2 BR. 2 ba., bltn.s, ~an REAL TORS and C'llc:lCIS('d ya rd, diJuble Lilve!y ~achelors l _Bfl. " "" UNf. Patio. bl!ns, pool. v;""'· Adult, only, No pet&. Ope n Ev•ningr. •a "l"" J u Jo 1 pflpcr•cd l\ta1d service. Pool. U!1l pd. AVAIL now, turn bachelor e NE\V 2 br, I ba.·$2.50 mo, 2466 Sant<1 Ane Av•. Adlts/no Pt"U, .. J49 E, Bay Yrly $275, Avail. no1v? e 962-4454 e ~9:~1';.d and nr 1'1 y c:arpctr:i ~ •Call 61:,.s_7.,_•__ 11iudio apt stparate bath util .incl. Crpts, drps, range, 642-1131 Aft•rnoon or 642-9i..10. * * * • • • • rein• Call -•1 7 p ------~=~-~-~~--! 3 BR. 2 b1 ., bllns, Children BEACON * 645-0ll I *COZY COTTAGE $l5 ··i • 1h1-ou>;l1ou1. ~W.>.00 pe r PENINSULA Pt. Nice l BR. cpt.1 t.. drps. Urll pald. XIT11 6_3--44 .. " ... m. 'l BR DUPLEX Bl-~AUT up redec 2 Br. \\'-11•, 11o·elCQine. $300 Yeal"ly. Avail· 1 l~r l',.ii., 1,lr;il hw '· BJ::l.JR00:'11. elcer blt !ll n1onlh -:"l!C'~ll l>cl .\lar \l:JO/mo. Util pd. No pels. closels, Lile houS!!kttpinr ' J .. Crpt1, drps & bl1J1g new drps, bllns, rli~p. ear nr a ble no"·~ BEACON · * 645.0l I I H/0, r A hr;:it, 1!!ll :;:::11·, Cil ll :)·l:>-91:iJ Yearly. 613-~. unit. 5 min trom beach .. No j SPACIOUS I BR ll'plc, ltove, LARGE fENCED YA.RD i hops A OCC. Penn •dlts, Call: 673•3G(iJ 6-IZ-22S.5 Eves, It llt"cd lol , 111011!" 111 !oct;iy. COOL :l hr OOuH', schl"s & OCEANf'P.ONT _ SU mn1er or Pf'lB. 1160 mo. Call alter 4: reh'ir + oveniztd a:a.r., 2 Jo"OR CJ1ILOREN &, PETS, no peU! $140. ~·005-9 • t..:I ,\CJ I Bu11:.-uln11 -I Dr 11•11 ""~ .... ,, """ """0 adhs '~-S"0 m p • ' ,.,,, ,.. • " · pa1·k.~ nea rl.Jy. $:riJ rno. Ask yrly. Quit>t, maturt couple, ~~-· · ...-:, ...,., 0 · vt garage. S15J. * BEAUTIFUL 1 Ir 2 BR. '"11 r, fn1: :)nil JH'I. L'l il pd ;; Gl-~Dft00:"11, 2 halh, <'!r,·l Joi· J;.ck /'eek· :)1:)...9-191 . no pet~. Rea!. 67~:'i72Z LRG 1 BR red!!<:, xtra IW0--400J. 811 P;i.t1lu 1no, C.!\I, 549-1746 C \\1(! l.ilt1n g /o J-A hf'al Cl'P" 1------I ' II '" p I I f'OR 1 ...... ~1ux .,, -Q- -E --ontemporary Gard~ AptB, ALAR I • 64 3900 ' , ' ~BP. I d -A . C d I Ma co!!'t s, ....... oo, p;ito. ....., ' new * UI T l * p,,,·,, ''P'"' pool enta 5 5. ih·p,, J\ht 1,,.111ll'd, rlhl ,,,r, .. .. r 11i;(' .11a,... c1.Pi;s o r on• • r l . . .. • • I ' ' ,1,,.. Also 1 Bach S9:i. Adult&. e 'c 2 BR, 1 BA . 2 B-, ocp<•. d•·p•,, b"'OO")', $1'>1>-SJG,-, Call a-46--5163. tr!lc1•<I. 1J,l·1/\J, ~111111klt>r'~. t•I' "-"' or can11lt'r. ""· U , ~ " ' I & I ' .1 .,1,1.. 1-UR:\ISllE::D Bachelor 1pl '536-fiTI7. nobstrucltd view of b.ii.y k Jocked i al'. N~ bu, • --• B ·.I.II \ !·:· "! B1 -tu1 •'. 1 ar-,.nl 11101 c 111 tod.iy Sl lj. iuo. ~! · as · .J' .t-.r ,,,. Uol pd. di _, G • JUST RE;\tODELED 5ht1 i: t'fp!~/drl_l~ FREE util, furn I BR 1pt r\r ocean. A ts oniy. 7H992. fhf'atre, AdllB, no pet.s. ;j',_:·,' ~/;~I g,.,_ 111'1' .ii llJ· P•'I' nhiCllll ~161...i.r;J Mesa Verde S120/mo. Ml--7'i92. beach. pool. $135 up. Ca.II SPACIOUS <t Bi'. 21 1 Ba. a.II Avail no"« $14,j mo. t;.l,j.J.)J,j l"~~~~()(~~~· ~;=n.i:;;_ ALA Rentals e 64S.J900 __ ~ ·.---------2 Hr. rurn. f"l'piC". Yearly. So. 536-3717, 536-7282, 536-1366. bit-ins. Crpl.!I A drp~. Encl ' e QUIETI I • "A". 636-4120. _ _ $31.1 Br .. n11 nu tr1-lr1rl. JC()() ~ Bl"l., 2 ha a va il 8/1, $~:)() ol H••-Ad''''·' '"'''· -''"ie Im iac. 644-8799 ' 'l'/I I , " no I BR 11.pl, """· Encl '"'''· . n . l Br, d~. new c'""l'K. Baller > ABULOUS 2 ... '. ;,. II·•"'· I.• 111~<!11, I hr, l ba. lrg II\' I'll\ Ill••. 1~1 .~ L-1:.t .. tl1•a 11u1g ""!.~. Sll!O/n10. 61.3-::.022. .,..., .,. • . Bly, liv rm I I ' I .1 I ""o ,.... ""' 2 ba. ilJ L&kr. St , S36--0'l7,j Coat<1 Mei• I H.11rbor 11hop'•· IAl:J..:ed / ·-• ol lrpl 2 Bd ••I"'" , 111·.,1···· 1•·•;•) \,/111arhl(" !rplc, Sti•p du11n · 1h·p . .il,)""'CV<!'I ~· sp11ai n, , rm, associated BROKERS-REAL TOR S 202 5 W Dolboo 67l·l661 MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS 2 & l BR Units no1111vailable for adul t~ drsirin1 lo live admid.st bt-auty by the .e1 in the pre1tigiou1 Wfstditr 1•.i11ll• I 'il'WI :\•1 l f'cl ~rpr 1.,n11al ain rni ra m IN t 8 -ch----Costa M e1a or 536-:1700. r a r. Adult.,, no pets. $14j / 1 ~1 Ba, SIS;J tropical pool. ,\~·111 tlPlld 1 1·111., 11rt bar. blihn,r11 & ewpor eac •YURN I br S:l:~mo. Block FAIRWAY mo,ti-1~3.)lJ or6-W-07il. 14:iE.1Sth St.642-4603. f'ROM $230 , 1.1; ~ 1, \ 1,111, 11 111 ,\ ,...1111 , i.;;1111{' ~11\, c..,111tl!Hl"ll" ~·l(".111-C ASA de ORO to beach. No pe t 1 .1 ./ DRIVE BY 2 BR, .1 1~ BA, Mharp, <'rp1~. 1\!r Buckl,.y, .1\la nager 1 • COl:Y COTT1\ll~. 2 81• '''SUAI c 11 L" · I ""• VILLA APJS. -I d 1-I A Ubl l'1 " J .... , .. Av NB p.i1 .... rrpl'.d/'i"·•l.hl 111t"·l 111~ 01rn, .. 1.or ;.:-11 , ..,;, ~ a 1. 11·1ng 1n A,213 /433--0.,,.. l•l rf'owe r St.IHJt.Uniurn. 1-p~ .• .....,1q. t. vaa e ..... ,.,,fl! f ·• i!li1 ""' S:!.;O jl. .. 1,., i\;.;L 1·1pl.•/1!q·~-Al l "ipin, 121;;1 l•otir llll·;L1i1•n. t nrd )llL"oL 11ar111 l\-!erl1terranean at1n011· L B h &Bt location 1n C.i\1 m11", S16J mo . 973 VAiencia, Cl'lll 64~02i:z i!H--l i ,1 l.1,,oM.1(i(;, t.nt l lf<•I', Sl:.?.i . phcrc .:'pacious color l'O· eguna e<1c tr-ili·O~~o. ti4.j.j9i0 Apt. Ko. 1, 5.i7-7768. -"p0A~R7K~~NE"w=p~o•R=T.---I t ' , • h 1 ,\!,,\ ftrntal~ • 6l.1-3!lUO ord1natrd apts ·designed & HAVE three 1 bi· turn 2 &. 3 BR'a -------3 BR r ! ARTM S (,,\hi i r:i):-.;·1, • 111 ~ h1-1, I\ .1 1. t ... 1· .• h.1, c•ov"r"d apt~. ?riva~ pitJo. pool. indiv. * $170 * , am .s~e apt, bl111s, AP ENT olii!i. 1,,1,1 A· 11 .11111~ ririv. p;i 1 +••, tJI 1 11 -,, <'p l-, e :O-'.l~l\"PURT ll EIGllTS . 1 lurnisht>d ,or 11lYle & rom· xln1 location. $150 to $16.l. Jaundry tac. l Br, J•,, BH, patio bltns, drps, ~.'/\V cpt, gar, nr Bachelor, 1 or 2 B«lroom.s, s .• ix\ ~:ui-t;;;~~· 1 ·;i .,~1,;huu1 V:<tant 11<J\I Ar 2 13a s1or,./1'c fr1i:;. Cp1g, fort ~ lleH/ed ~I ~ tiKJtc~ flea.le"< flt'al E.~Ulle. 917 Near Orange Co. Au·port It crpl~. drJlit, A.'!k at>Ou: QUr 11hop'g & 1chl1. 962-4180. and Townhou11e1. Spa, ponl.~. Corona del Mar ~215 n10 C;Lll Sh11"11•y Ctn11 I 1h'PS, lrpl, fnrd yr! Sli.l. ~\u:·e R1;~1r1~ul~~ ~0"~u. Glenneyrr, Laa Bc_,_. ___ 1 UCl. Adult.sonly. discount plan. RS() ("enler LRG. cl~an 2 Br, adults ovtr ltnni!i. 1'~rom $175. Acro~1 111un~. 1li.,i1r F 1 11 •l 1> r ~ Al.A Renlab • 61:..,3900 1 BR .-$J7j turn. l BR, util pd. Sngl prof. 20U2 Santa Ana Ave. St., C.~1. 642-8340 35. No pets. Nr ~hop'g, from ItaRhion l&land I t Jam- /l.f'ai ly, S~'l-l·li7 or fi-16~136 ;, RH, 3 BA. lri: ~-;;;.-on UTILITIES INCLUDED per110n only. No hrad1. s1;;o. !\tar. lllrs. J o•chim, Apt l·A 3 BR,"'"'21 r-hil""il c,cdci,-. _c_p_r-,, ..:.llc2>c'cl•,•c•.,cP';·--:><_S-:,-.24cOc7c. __ boree &: SM Joaquin Hills 1'1 ··~ 111 acrr st>Clul!rd he<ort of Jfi• \V. \\'ilson 642-1971 2 min heh. 491-115~. 5'EK:i2.15 d1'J)s, bltns. $190/nio. No * * STUNNING G1rden apt, I 'R""°'"d"•~·,101c14c',,-""-'-""~·--,I LEi\'>F;, ~21.'i 1no, l::irgr '}. hr N B. w/1 1r1y o r hills &. Newport Beech ORLEANS APTS pets. 998 E. Ca m j n 0 . 1 Br, pool-ucreation room. SEACL?Ff' Manor Apf!. l h('•h••>!ll~.::; hath'. 11,1n•H-S.· rh•n, rani::r s,. O\f'll, r1(·W f'1L>h1on l ~l11 nd. UOllJUf' rrn-GARDEN LIVI NG --·--------• ~=>1. $140. 64~5j'.IO. BR. Ir Bachelor apt. Crpt1, .ui11o \.lc11, 11·11ly <111 out. paint, lcnef'd )d, nr brach. j t11( ho111 r . $42:1 n10 on lc11 St>. Quier . a ttrac. pleasant. UW 3 !\JOS. sub-lease, 7/15. 12 '~Bc._~,.~,.'hl~-~-~-UNFURN 2 br duplex-Pvt drps, hltn1, iarb dispou.J. ~! 111d1n::: homr, Ju\uiy ap-Jst, Jai;I & deposit Sma\J Rt>! rt'l!"d. 6~;,-·1·186 P••d. H••<"d -1. BR. furn. apt. par Ii ADULTS o :o-;LY I e:o y redec. beaut 1 ~ Ba. p,,, .... tio. 152!1 $-·· 1 '" '" ,....... 2 "' :l BR. All3.il, Priva•· ... aardena .r. pool. Na.IP.u yard, 1 child ok. 1150 mo. r-fl'11111"11 '"" P•'r 111on! 1 pe l, child OJ\ .. )36-(}2:..S F~A ....... Rl.UrrC onrlo, ne111 4 1 BR. _ $145/Mo. roiel\·port. &y " ocean vie11'. u: p.i l'" E 22 _ _. 549-3666 ah 6_ Placenti1 Ave, Alk abou t I I • II \I " I t10, pool. indiv. Jaund.-.. tac, m•.. -' rou St. c~:.:.:c-:c-"--c:ccc--.,--,. ~·· ..., ... c.:i )<',Lr.) (';:!"'" .:;'. .. ' r . BIGLll:.ST ~ hr, b~I area BR. 2' 1 BA , ftun. nn . ADULTS Sl:JO P.lo, R,r. req {Ni. Orange Co. A~~ Tus-642--364.>. j BR duplex -crpls, drp~. 1 -'-"'~-'~'~"'="~""'-· =-==-c.,.·~~· lio~i·i-. lo>r ilJlJll 61·"s..Jj() _ A\aLI 7/1,j/7~. ~;; n10. carJlf'I. drapes, pool, lenn15, 7\0 \\'. 18th St .. C.:\1. I Rich Irwin Rltr. &ra-6060 " tin at l7!h SI ; nr. \\'~tclitt). LGE 3 br, 2 bfi . i vail July ilo\·e b relril'. $14!). utiJ • NOW OPEN e ,: Al: ~ l~;1 , ::r.11 nHn:<. Ln!'ld~ S100 -"t>rurit d~. CaU n1::r.rkr 1, K'hool Lrasc. sm . HO D y p OCEA.."(FRO?o.'T 3 Br. 2 Ba. 1 JO. Adult.s. Bttns. crpta. paid, 642-7806. 24'2 Flov."r. 21Ml2 Santa Ana Ave. Spac. r11•f'11 r rl.'[IJI! d~h" hr, Sb11 lry Con1 n~. llon1e ul<'htde~ m a 1n1en1 n c r. . LI A LAZA yr lit. S3~Sl50. C'.ood kids 1141 Tu C c iou.s 2 BR, 2 BA w/lrplc, r..-I stin, OSI• ~ltn. ollege Pk. $1.9,"i. 646-4939. e KE\V LARGE l BR rr•p1 rt, rlrp_'rJ. l.Jl·•'an ~_1ilr or t"lnrlcrs. f{('alty, ll:<l:Z--44i7. 644->!8J.1. DELUXE Spacious I BR 1:. pt.l ok. 221 4 \\'. Ocean-l\I M '"T'I..--pri. patio. Loads or dOKts. 2 ' I :S H 1 er· 1 l'I. • ""mpson 642·4E 'l 2 BR a pt·Patio, b 1 t n 1 , \\'/rarai:~. N~ar Sou t h 1"11 S3" u1u r11r y lSR hou~f'. la11:c ~·ard. *BLOCK T O BEACH turn 11.pt SllJ. rated pool, tronl 675--6060 or 67a-1410. Coait Plii•. C&ll 54a-232l. Htd pool, {ACJ'OM from S.A, tij ; .. .'.:.~'~· 4!!&-2..1.i."i ____ ~antgr. Q>111'1. 2 kid~ nk. E.'\ECUTJVJ:: 2 + Fam rm, 2 Arnple pllfklng. Adolr.s -no 1 BR. yrly, 1in1le adult, pool. rarai't. SIJO. &12-J03G, ~ Country Club). $!90. SJT-O'lJ '_ I Hll l!OUSE Sl(l\1', r~frl-,!. 1170 1no. 1229 Or!a.,.·arc St. ba , Jrpl c, t·ile sun deck, pa.. P<'ls. J96.'i Pomona, CM. blk to ocel1\, $1.lJ. 67a-7225 2c~~~l~rp~~ 111~~~· ni~'. Or•nae. Apt C _D_•_•_•_P_•_lnt--c--:--NEWPORT Mf!C'.litern.ne1n, (11~1'°"111. rr11!r·, drp-.. 2 IJ\ks H.B. !w crp:JS, drps, re!rlg. BACHELOR Nictly furn, or 644--06.17 eve1. pvt J>l!.tio, e ncl far w/addlL 1-BR. cptg. drpt:, •love, & Ira 2 A 3 br. delwi• f-plf:x 1n n1.11 ~rl, ~hop~ -Ctuna f"OR LEASt:· j br, d1 n"g nn.1 S'Z9J i . .l'ILS<'. 548-8.">32 el~c bl!n1, Orps, New .,.,lw YEARLY LEAS!!: -OCEAN. parking, \!/ill allow 2 refng. Patio. $U;;. mo. 71l lp'!~~~EN:S ·:· i pl!, F"tom Sis:>. Nr. Hoaa: C111·r $!1~1 rnn. •10~ F\'ri1lro f. \l'/IY dl'ps. Avail July ISth, \JNIQUt::-2 b 2 bB I sh91i cr-p~, N.. E . Co~ta f'RONT UpptT 3 BR, 2 BA . ch Id r n _ n 0 pet.c , Bl4 \V. 18th Apt D 67>-1827 * &4l4905 * Hosp. Adulta, no pefll. -I -HR-2-llo-Oc•ruri \'1e1~· S37. SOO b 1 I r, ' ' ~ .f l\fc!ia, Uril paid. Working BKR 642--4816 H lit a.II :>41-"'~"" * 2 BR., upper, bltns, cpt.~, --~~.CC'-'-"'----642-4387. . . . , "·... wn Y app on y. l't'11f'h. frplr Nn. adll only. 5-1::.-4893, Call , . am on or c "'Xlll or d .... .s. r.o ,,.lA. 1115 mo. '"" East Bi·--~~~=~-~--l'r1v. bf'uC"h<'s. Av11 1I. Aug. 96S-12':18. B:iysirlr Vilh1gt. Adults. no e WE HAVE RENTALS? e 64>0806 aft 5. .,. ,..~ ....., vn * 2 BR, l Y. BA TWNHSJo:·, 1 ~1. .'! ily lt'll ~C $\j() n1n . .,,,. NEAR ocr.an, 3 Br, 2 b::r.. lam Jlf'I S. \'rly only. $260 !2131 * REDEC. Lrg 1 1 BR. cen-1 l\rintrr and Yt!arly 1 -.~--R=EoG=EoN=c"y~--.-W. \\'l1.50n. $45--0760. -----------Adults, only, no p et 1 . llo111r Show l?rnltor!> 67.1-•L .1 e~nn 158-11 61 or ~te mgr. tral loc. poo , carport, ABBEY R"ALTY 64,_~.~ $175. NEW 2 BR APT. $200/mo. 1723 Bedford Ln. ___ ----Duple;, rrn. bltns. cr111.~ . ...,.,., mo, __ _ lldlts/no pets. 5l3S/mo. 560 ::::=:.:....:.::."c.:::.:...~--~-l 1:\tMAC. 2 BR, 1 Ba. Sh111 NEWPORT BEACH 's,."1,~:-,, !'i: Ba Ira~. 962-0046. W E STCLIFF AREA \V. J~amilton. 6 4 6 _4 16 o, New-' Helihtt cn>f'r. ~If clean. aa.s ove.n, 151.~~" 2!~ .ST. VIiii Granada Apt1. ,-=~',_533_,· ;;-:=--=-==-c • "".,., cpt.~. <!rps. l BR 2 Ba no Lovely l br, 2 ba w/pool. ,..--· · dshwhr, encl au patio. 317 ...........,... ___ Four bedroom& wtth ba.Jeort-WESTCLIFf' att1, 2 BR, 2 ~2 .. JO/r\io yrly, 67J-ti l4:i or iiGBI Camel Cir~: trnni,.d occupancy. Ser at ;,.i3--07GO. CLE'A,"( 1 Cl'~ BR. Adul tA, no W. \Vlhon. SllS UNF l br upper -crpt.1, lfl'll •bovt 6 'Wlo•. Gn.dotm BA, fplc, retrlr. Adults on-~16-'l290. Call: n lh5JOI. S28-llS!l 121j Pembroke. 6-Mi-2145 LOVELY 2 BR Apta. Heated pelt. La k1t. S125-S\SO. 201 Call 548-3605 disposal, porch. p 1 r k ' I Hvinr I qu~t ..uTOf.•ndtna: ly, Fl"e!!hly pt.lnted. UXI. - -F" , R .1 Pool. CIOM to 1hops. Front E 161h St NB •~1-·-• Ad"i'• ""~ """" M mo. 61:>-4562. !'llfll~~-C I;~. /' ~ .,n;· '.l;'~n, $210 :: BR/ l 11' Ba, BA YVIEW-Northbluff 4 BR, A nar otf-11tr prk'i · Adults, . , . _... ....,., HAllOR GREENS ... " . .. "'' .,,.....,,~. fOt ram.Uy th idilldml rl1n r n1. .1 nin •' · 01n-rrpls/drps, "ale-r ~finer. 2•, RA IO\\Tlhou!!,, tam mr, Sl60 TIME FOR GARDEN 6 STODIO APTS LOVELY T\VNfJSE -2 bia: Near OJronl del Mar Hlah 1 0CEANFR"==="'o~NT""01~Bc,-,~,c&='.~1 1 1n:: Ca n)·on Rd . 0 p en ,. "-h _" ... , !pl '"'"' 1400 64'"'7>" no pet~. · • , b< + ,,. I ~ 2 1•• 2 School F1tt~1aee, wet bu A .,.. be ._. Good ltM1I tl .... , "'. i/<•in. ..'.:.'.'.:~ '_ ,..,,.-_•·-~-' ,. . ......, ' 1911 Pomona Ave .. C.~f. Blic-h.1, J, S 8R'1. from $110. ...,:" -.,., -· .,. J• • .......,. ,... .~ 2 "" ,. -u . ., p • -c CASH "" Pe·-· W•", C.M. pools. sn:.. !14;r7474 built-In kitchen appll~ ale. 2214 w. Ocoel.nfront. -~ .-1--1, -11 11 -3 3 BR. ua.. hou~. ncd. n 1ve rs1 Y <1r $2S Per Week & Up QUI K ~-~ 133 AMIGOS WAY 64f.299l 57>6060 or fTh-1410. L"",·. r~,, ~ <orl.~r , 1·~11 :J..li~ ~ baf'k yrl . \\'a!k TO llhop~. ,:X-,·cF.1.:j' 3 ..... + ~normous BACHELOR It l BR. 54i-OS70 LRG 2 BR., UpiJtairs, crpta, CokiW'f'll. 8&n1'er • Co. 1 ,.-.~,cs=R,~,c.='.,-_..., __ ,,..,,,,_,.-1 " ~ II, lln ' • t] I aZl-6919 E\"1!5 ;. lo !I -UI • ,..E •• , drp!, r-anze, CatJIOrt. no Dll .. ,._ YP::r.r l'"'C. ll\'U1I Aue IJ 17""''°"'~ .. =,.--.-bonu~ rin on 1rf'f'nl>flt . Nr TV A mv_1id tervcavail. THROUGH A .,.... uo:uxe 1 or 2 br unr pe-t1, SlJCI. 6~n11. ~In& ~nt Sfl-5221 blt.M: pe.llo, pr, $1.IS. GAl'ftnr r rnrld. &l.J.~'1~ i RR. .,.IJl.<;, le nct<I yard. pool~. trnn1~. lll'hl,.. $375. 4JO ictoria, .i\1. l ptl 9.'/pvt PAlioA, I child I ~::C,~'-"'"-'-"'-'C.:.---SPACIOUS 2 br to\\'nhte _ 548-JTOt, 873-2310. 2 R!:, den, d•n nnm ... 'l'Jll'.'~ Ncii·portc~\;"~_2452 4~1 s 11 n d b u ra Way. BUSINESS l"ll4'M ap e c 1 a l DAILY PILOT =~j~~.li~ b;~m;;:t 2d!~· ,;;~ .::i'i. ~~ :~ •""•h"°w,·hr•, c:i~. ~L~,...,.dJiMI. k3•s~R'12;;;-~B~A-, •,,.~1=n1~,-..,,:::::.:::ri,I r rpt>e, •!1•pc:. s2;~ " l'" i nyum,.. \\'kly ratts now otfer-M to ol Harbor B\v-d. 13415 Sl.nta Ana. A1,-e. C~1. ~-~~C--~--~~"---1 tfl!'pS to be1ch OI' bay. 1213 flf'I ~ 67:'.-6~7~ LUXURIOU~ 3 P.r, nr ocran. TIRf:U of 11\111 old furniture? f'Vtr)'One. Low 18 $36 "'k, Huntington Beach mo. ~. Rfl"a. ~1113. r100 rTlo 1~ .... 21611 Zamor11 tri really nor 1~1 hllrd ~11.Lark . l\ln!tl, 2301 Npt WANT AD BEAUTIFUL 2 Br, JI~ Ra LGE delw:e 2 br. 2 bti. Costa Mesa Ln !l62--00 l6. 10 ff'plac,, Juio'f w•lch the Bl,·d . 641)-744." ----Studio, rwi111 crpta A pl\int. Adult! onJy. 142--9991 or f2 BR, r•n&e-o\'en, refri&. YEARLY-Le 1 Br/1 Biii I I d · W ~ bit 64~1611 Id 1 tlo .. --Duplex, 1 blk oet".ll, "' blk :'-~~\\'L) rl l't'n r ~ 131·. L~r , ', \V !11 TE: ELEPHANTS" tw-nllure ol mllcl'l Aneo'J! The &ale~I l"llW in the ~I 642-5678 .,,, ~"• n3, c a rp or I . . w , poo' pa ' c ... _." rnrrl :i-·d $~10 ;\\(), lsr Fsst rt'St1JU 11,.. )\l,f a phone i;"Olumr11 In tM Clusltlfd • , • Dally Pilot Cluslfied Jl60/mo. No pet1-l child A rood vr1nt Ml a a aood $llJ Adam11 • Brookhurst. blly. $2Wmo. 5TS-l230. :"'I l'i'i.'1--1~~; ~:~-li161I ,.1111 111\a)I • f.12-567R ___ ~rtion Ad, 6·12-5678 ----------' _ok_._"8_!:l_C._m_ioo._;_~'4<-04-'-'~'cl~ • ...:l~o·~·~•~tm~•~o~I------_2_1_3c.n&-_;__31_~_. ______ We'll help yau ..n1 I04m \ OCEAN BLVD. BEAUTY -_'tT _~ _;;;:-_--=-:;. _.!..._~-_:._ --.:-;;::---.... •' ·-.r--~ .·--- --«'I .~ _...,, •• a ..... ._.r ....... _..,... ·--· . -· . ---.=::;.--· ---,;,: :;-;;.. ... .,:;-:;;.:.:.·;..;:-;;;;-::::==;:;---. -.;;;;;;oo;;o::c:::':lC'.:::'::-:::.;·:;·-::-::;: '";;;,,' .. --.....;. ____ .... __ ~;;;;;;.;;;·..; .. :;.;~;::;;;===:I;;; .. ;:;;;.,,;;;;;;;i __ ,.,_...__....._.£. ilW>:c & IZ:,_,'*'1_1•• f:?w=•r ' 7' *"--••""-Wt .. !. · ••=~•-; ii .,r_;;; " ,-;;,.---a o::::;\'"- ( . -- '• I ' ' ' , .. OAJLV P!\Ot Frld.t1, July ti, 1'971 Apts., Furn. or Unfvrn. Apt5., 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 3·70 Summer is great FUN at MERRIMAC WOODS Apts., Apts., Summer R•ntala 420 r R•ntals Want.d Furn. or Unfutn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ---------~ Jo'OUND miniatUtt poodle. 4ltO Found (free ad1) 550 Found (frM •d1) ,H __________ 1-----------· N.B. J br houu !or Aui \11 1 t.lAruRE Busl~!i! man 1n c;-o • 'la<·k. Cl•pped SMALL Dachshund vie Santa untlngton B•ach Santa Ana c ... ,. ., A ,,_ Del c M c Beacon Bay. Pvl beach dM want~ houst or doplf'.'t !thort. Has yellow t.'flllar na mar, · · all to 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;f1_C~al~~IC6~7~'>--01:C:8~1:·____ \i·uh Lea~....Opiion ro buy. wllh rhu1estone1. foLJnd vie. ='"c'c"c"=''c,,-Pch_Sl_'-'..c.7_66c::_· __ I ON BEACH' VILLA MARSEILLES Vac•tlon Rental1 425 I PO Box 36:>, Cd.\!. or Baker a11d Fairview. FOUN[)....R.ed canvas tennit • BRANO NEW \VA.'ITED: UnJurn Nt'wport Tom Kimmel 548-1610. bag vie 4th & Orclud, CdM. SPACIOUS TRAD~ use ol 3 BR hoU!!ie w I cpt & (!l"J)~. Year. _B_LA_C_K_k_m_al_•_P_"P_P_Y_W_lw-hl "'67~'-~'~425=·=,,---:cc--~-1 NE\V 4l BR. APTS F'1'01n S230 Furniture: Available Carpets-drapes-dish washer healed pool-saunu.tennia 1~c room-ocean 11le1v1 patios·ample parklna Security guartls. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC & 2 Bdrm . Apts-. A-Jran1t" Lake Tahot', t.'Om-.2ly~l0"...:'c'c· ...:"'c~--"c'_1·:.____ neck & pe.ws &. bm spot! GREYHOUND, Fe 01 a I e . Adult Living plttely furnished, Io r COUPLE need cheap rr-rrtaJ wearing I.lea rollar, oo Found vie. Beach & EllU, Furn. & Unfurn. similar acoom1noda0011~ al or garage to store turnituN', l1een.~I'. lound vie Santa ;;;H~-·:;·c,;;ldc',;"c"...:lyc.c"=>-'3959oC'=·=·c__I Dishwasher.colorcoorcl!nat-Laguna Beach. 213 . C.i\f.or N.8 . at'f'a.67:.-0922 lsabl'I & Santa Ana, C.~1 . rOUND--Female Doxi~typt ed appliances • pluab •hag~_:'...:.,_:..::399::::3...:. ------= 64)-3867. dog, Pomon11. Ave. Nursing ~·arpet , choice ot l color Rentals to Share 430 ~ fOUND on Newport BL nr ,o'c.""~'~"='""':::~c'c"'=;·c-----I schen1e1 _ l balh5 • atall ---A11nouno;em1nt1 J 'r'1111 32nd St, blk horn--rimn1f'd f'OUND-Greal De.ne, vie shov.·ers -mirrored V.'ard-C~ffi1STIAN man 23, lookillJt L-------•. prescrip!1on glasses, nan1~ Bushard & Atlan!a, H.B. robe donl"S _ Indirect light. for sa1ne lo find & llha~ apt Spencer & trame Jtaiy NWO 96z_3836 aft 5. ing In kitchen _ brealdasl ui H B. or C.M. ana. Hl!!ide ot sha.Jti;. 673-&385. ,;c.:,~.:..:::....:::,_-~~-~I . -~ S3lkil59 Announcements 500 I-==...::...::=::::...::.:..:::::_ fOUND, ma.le, B!uepoinr bar • huge private !enc~.,_::.:...::.;.;...· ______ ~ ''OUND Cock-A-Poo, y0"""· 7u OCEAN AVE JIB 1 ~ • .,,. Siarnese cat. rn S • • ·• · · patio • plush landscaplog • \VOMAN roomate wanted " ,714) c~" 14!!7 O small, black ma.le dog. Clemente, 492-l62ti. Or ~-" 0 .1 brlck Bar-B.Q's. Jarge beat, 2.<>-30 apL ,1·/pool own ba. 1 At range Cnty A.P. r: open IO am-u pm 81 y d 1 O E Need11 owner or good home. SMALL \VlLLlAM WALTERS CO. e pools & lana: l-'8~42-:...::20~7~6· ___ ~-~-I GRAND P NING Marvelous "''atch dog . yng grey/black I 3101 So. Bristol St. SHARE inv water(ronl home July \01h & 111h . uf GC'nrral 962-4862. CCockapoo. t"ound in Cdt.I. -(u M1' N ol So C°""I Pla•") /d k ;1 ~",,,. A1•1a11on Fligh1 Crntrr & al!: 644-8799. *KIDS WELCOME* ~ . · · .,..., ..... w _ oc · "~n, .,.,.....,,, year.'§. FOUND frmalP Tan Scll<'r ===-~-~---1 ' .,,,,,, '" T--'oy. Atlr'"''.''' Santi An• SljC)/mo. 67:>-433L R,-d Baron F'Jy1ng Club. k· fOUND cockapoo, 6 mo, blk " ~ ' PHONE 557 8200 11er lb rides. Aircraft 1hs· typr dog. Floppy ears, 2 & 3 Bil ~pts. SJS9-$J89. 1 : • 1\IAN & son. Jj & 1:':!, will pay l o n gt a 1 I-short hair, Vic: w/ii•ht spots, rem, Vic: Vic· play~. drawing tor ::0 hrs lr<-e Iona & Npt Blvd. 548-9346. All E .... '.ras. POOL, p('l.~ ok. to $00. Share renr w/mother t t l g h t mstructiou. Pil: Edwards & Heil, H.B. 17362 Keelson Lane Ap! A. & infants. 54:.-705:1. ;,.io-&J30, 19531 Airport \\'ay 1 _.,._...:..:_"...:..:"'-·-------SM black dog wlrl!d collar, 812-623~ or 968-7510.' R.otal• 11~J Office Rental 440 "'S'c"c'c"c· ~=-==----1 FOUND-t-.lost1y brm11n, partly ~~150~~ Shantar &. Adams. Liveable luxury with all Newport Beach _ MODERN OFFICES HANO -DRA\VN J)(lr!ra1ts. white Chihuahua 111lflf'a ==cc'------1 These-conveniences plus mare! 1 RESORT LIVING Rooms 400 *COSTA MESA* !:idios;~·1 ~iner~noow~~~i; ~1/1~.r, P~~:sevici;~~~1~1 : ~~:fuu~·~~~~;e3. ln e Clubhouse e Pool e Serene Atmosphere sporadically if no response 6-46-9262 or 646-8088. APPROX. 3 rno old kitten e Social Life e Indoor & Outdoor Sports Lu1'ury apt Jiving '11 SI nil!· ROOilf for rrnt-Share house S7:J_ & SllO per mo., So. Calif. lhe 11rt1s t 11·11! s re k LOST: Toy collie -black w/11·hi!'e feet & throe! vie. & 2 R' I ]ion ft'crea11on .. s1v1mn11ng, . . f'ir~-r National Bank Bldg., N p· ... "''' 1 B 5 w /terraces 1,.1111 1.s. billiard.~. sand vol· facLl1t1es, TV & stereo. M~le 230 E. 171h Si. C.M. 642-148:. ' · 1; re en f' r ' · f ie 1 d ! . tn-<'Olor fcniale -Jeanf'tte ewport 1er . ..,..,,......, -· or female b1wn 11!-30. Quiet -------·_____ ArtmospheN: 64~751. RE\VAflD call c o 11 e ct ADULT Cockatiel whistles 11 FROM $ 140 to $27 5 I Jcvba!l, health clubs, sauna!. neighhorhood. $90 mo. DESK space available S50 '73--7509 aft 4 P!\f. ·I iblio" p ·•y -m -• OPEN audition11 Lag" o • -----------loL Vic: Br i ! to l & Ad It O I 1 1 .. se, ~. '"" · '' -642--'1930 9--3; 645-2J26 air fi. mo. \Vil! provide furniture " U s n Y 1· \de 1rnnis pt'O & pro shop Prl'-SchooJ bf'nellT, "Thr BLACK maie min. Poodle, Paularino, C. flt , 546-1694. Mod I 0 D 'I at S5 mo. Ans\l:ering service 4 M • • s pen a1 Y M & niueh nHJl'I', Sin~les. 1 & LRG m.~tr bedrm, pvt en! & ava!Jable. 222 Forest Ave, L1\lle Princl'." 49-t---6093 e1•r . 1•;ell cared for. Also reddish, FOUND Collie blk '''/."°me 2S err1mac Way, Costa esa 2 B!t. ~·urn/ unrurn, Ren1$ barh nr OCC Quir! area, Laguna Beach. 494--9466 blonde male Cock-a-poo. brown. Vic. Bushanl & Apt. Unfurn. 365 1 Apts., f fr'!ln1 SlJ.'i., ,1'\n Jrasl' n'-ref 's r eq 'd, ~2-9i89, C.M. Adam~. HB 962-2631. ~10-1998/&l'l-4l 70 NE\V \Vaterfront O!rit.'eS 1/-) N•wport B•ach Furn. or Unfurn. 370 I qu1rrd. :.lodcls Oprn Daily .-1-• • s37,} 10 S4J;> t.lonth Perionils f'OUND July 5 -Black r.1ALE eagle _ blk, 111.n. \vhf. ,,..,.._ _________ 1 General JO Iv ti. LGE sunny rm, pv1 balh & Abovl! The J~landf'r . female kitten vie Georgia Pl Folµld June 24 Edinger & LOVELY 2 Br. l'pt/drp~. I Pnlrance nr \\'arner & 341 Bayside Dr., .N'pt, Beach & Iowa St, Mesa Verde Goldenwest 897-1739. suudeck patio. stv/relrig. -~ SOUTH BAY CLUB Rrarh Blvd. S 1 ;1 f wk, Bil! Grundy Rlrr. 642-4620 Personals 530 arl'a, C.r.1. 545-8646. Adults. $185/Jno. 646--1972. : PALM MESA APTS I i1u.~1.fot s111g-I<' p<'npl('I _,_,,_,_-4_&_i9 _________ DESK space •va1labl• ~"-" LOS'r in Broadv.·11y H.B. Lost 555 '"=--~-------! Nrwport Bearh 1 BLOCI ' FR0\1 y Xl I · '" """Reno\\·ncd Hindu Spiritual1sl OCEANFR0 0 NT -tge 1, 2, &·I ' lrvl••~ ,r,, 1611,_ 64-1.o.JJO i " · BA ·-n 1no. \Viii provide turriihire n1en's dressing rn1, ruby ari>a P111 ha & ,-nt S90 wk 1-Advice on all malters. ,.,,,,_ "•··d ,.,,._ Rc11·ard 3 l)r apt. ~uninier t..· ,,·1nter , Bac!J('Jor tulfllfll . ·-... $I!) I · · -at "1110. Answering service Lovr. t.larrillg(', Busiriess ... " LOST: since fl1en1orial Day, v1c C.fll., nr. Po1nona, Sn1l blk ~hiny coal female, sh! hi· <log, It brwn feet k moulh. Ans to ''G EE BEE... Reward. Ca I l 548-7223. 714/:l21--09S~ or 6i:rl688. I Ba Cllt'lor /utu ......... ~113 · OAKWOOD GARDEN $.'\00fn10. 67~-7185 ____ <\ll&ilable.17875 Beach Blvd. 842-387~ Newport Shores J.Rf'! unf\irn .......... Sl1ll. APARTMENTS BE:AUT!f'UL vlr11 . '•block J.luntington Beach. 642.-4321 ~~:nf; ag.~~n107 1~a~~m~ fOUND Cameo ~hores & I l-BH furn •.••. , , . lnun S\:.... 11 1'.,0l'I hi·ing rfor adoh~J 10 Ocean. S2'.°l 1~·k &. Up. 2500 PROFESSIONAL Bldg. 45c 312 N. El Camino Real, Coas1 H11y June 27th, young Ul\'fURN 2 BR. 2 BA Apt. 2-P.1? unful'n .......... ~ltil'l. N•'ll'port Be:r ch Sea view. Cd'.11, SQ fl. Air-cond, crpls, drpll, San Clemenle St>alpoint female k 1 t I en , YPar.; lcasr. i\'pl Sh<ire'> 2·BR furn., ••.•.. I tori\ .~li:i. lfill1 f,. lrv111p 611-8110 CLEAN, QUll't lrg BR. 1v/w gd parking. Xlnt loc JJO E. •192-9136, 492-0070 644--00C30:C.... ______ _ B!k 10 hrs('h V i e11• I e P<JOL .-V ISTADEL ME-SA_ 1 , wardrobr<'lo51't. pr1vhomP, 17t~~ St. ~·~f. PET':: BAR· 494-~502 e SAt.;.\A rve.~f11knr:!~. 6·16-2(1.12. RErT RLI Y &l2-43J3 ------• .JAf·uzr.r i Apartments ----. . .San Clement• · 1 t.· 2 Bit. Ftil'n. & unL Di~h· 1' Summer Rent4_1s 420 DESK ~pace ~vailab!e $j() ---------1 1.·,51 :.1.-.sa !)r ;,an1 a .1\11~ • . mo. \Vil! pro\llde furniture: BRAi\'0 NI::\\' drlux,. '! & ~ 1~<i shrr · ~l ove and Re frig · * BALBOA ISL AN D at $5 mo. Ans1\•ering service BR apt~. Close H> f){"ach &: , Costa Mesa Sh11g '"'.·p,1 g·~t'g Rec ,<;_enter. HOTEL. Apts-Rooms. By available. 305 No. El shpg. Vacuum. alar111 .t· in·' n.r.NT S!,.l'IS S1.1.1. Dayf\\'eek or Month. Camino Real, San 1er-com systrn1. rlrC' gaf{"s, UJeSliB--'IU ZJ Tustin & Mesa Drive 67:.-3611 Clemente. 492-4420 lrpics. gar. door npcraloi·s. \--* ~~~~5_5 _*--OCEAN Front torncr tiuple.'\, * NE\VPORT BEACH * pri. Plllio~-/\rlul1i:. Av111I, Nrll' Br;1u11f11l GarQrn Apfl!'l · • NICE • ;1()11 Srll ~hoi·r, ~ BH, 122:, Aero~~ rrom Civic Ce:nler. .Tuly 2;>1h. 612-j~OO 111('111.~. f'fll'illl' P;;11os. Pool. ThC' niost l)rautiful 1·1('11· nr il'k, nf'ii' •I f.1!{. 1 BA upstr~ A1r-Crprg-Prk'g. JOO 10 t·on LE:i\SF.-2R-f{AP1'-( Spa. (._;,.~·ag(' Luxunoll~ 1hr h:iy l.· ocr.~n in 111 ... s3:i0. wk. &-l~r-07.\•l. 1000 sq. It. 35c. f\e.-;I 10 Bea\h 11.JO rno. I l:111ds(·ap1ng Adull~. no pcl~. llalll•r an•11. '1 BR . .2 BA CLE.AN Bach. apts or slping Drf'Dee * 673-:i862 * 492-4·12:1 * , Furn1~h•'d, Unfun11shrd. 11pts, for 1('115f'. 642-2202 I nns. Step~ bl'h. $7~/ ... •k & 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM EXPERIENCED-- llousE'--5lttcrs J:11;i il Protect your llomr & prop. Curren1 local T'f'f's !For boord on!y• !'>l8--:itil3 ''Jackie'" PREGNANT? Adop1 i'!ln , ilhortion. vaser:tomy counsrllng k 1nforn1al•OlJ 642-4436 . HOUSE lilt home wh1k you Prof<'s~ional Re/rrcnCl'~. ~21Jl vai-ation. "'"om an 421--43:l0 1.,~--A~-'! BR . $1 7\ 3 Bf{ . S'Jj?l , .1nt1 na 1 up. :ll:i l:, Balboa Blvd. From 300 sQ/fL 35c sQ . ft. 1"1 1·: :.'!SL,{' ;.1 i;.1~.~~lll:i NOW'S THE !i~t:._. _ 67:.-2464 or 541·50.1_2 __ P.l.COl-IOLJCS Anonymous, ---------AT lhe 1,...:il'11, 1\'f·11•por1-~ b1· e XLNT OfFICF. SPACE Pl\rlne 5'1~-7217 or \\Tile CAN'T BE BEAT ~J.'\GLE STORY Soulh &a Atrnosphrre 2 BR. -2 BA1'11 Hu;::.:!~::~~c:~t~:~v1n~ TIME FOR !1x~:~·111'.1P ~~~ ~ 3'.~·~; ~~i~ 1~~;· l~~~'.1 N.1~~067~~i.31:i.» ;:~·e:::2~:u~:s~~~~~s;;g. for Adt1!1.s QUICK CASH +i73---'l777. Bu,lnesi Rental '4S gest selection ~r? St-e the C D I S I DAILY PILaJ' Classified aSQ e 0 ! LAGUNA 8Pach-Virw. nr , , . , FOUND-Large l:>ri>rd rlog, LOST in \Vrslclllf Baycresl corner of N·pr. & Fairvf{"w area. male Samo.Yan Husky Rd., Cos1a fl-1r~a. Call & wfapricot ears. Answf'rs to identify. 64~79. the nan1e of "Damien." \Ve FOUND, Apricot POOflle, moved &. our dog got av.·ay: male, fuund on v.'e!t sidC' of \Vould appreciate any ht!p. Cosla fl-1esa. Owner please 842--7306. _,_,_11_&_,_,_,_,1_ifcy_._....., __ 34_1_· __ 11 'YR old le1n Cocker mix !l!ED s11.r fein ale dog. white Red-gold w/~me b!k hair 11'/hro11·n spols, wr.ru-in~ 2. on back &, tail, bushy tail. flea collars. found vi('. 23rd Answers lo '· \V 0 0 LI f ' · & Orange, C.fl-L 64G-47J6. 213/431-6427. I.[\ Bracelet. vie Santa Ana 1R!Slt Sellf'r n1a!e 11 1 )TS. River Jetty, call to identi1y. Lo~! Ne"•'POrl J wk5. ago. 64::.-4999. Scar on nose, 11.•ht niark on FOUND-t-·c1nalr ('ill grey side. Rr11ard 67.>-5934. 11·/br-O\\'n spot~ v1r ?-<lcsa LOST July 4th. Vie. Orange Verde !\Orth. ;i.15-7346. & :llst St. CM. Brn male boxer 10 yrs. Heward. HOUSE llunting? \Vatch the Ll 8_4829. Service Directory. Check lt for the service you need. BLACK poodle, 4 mo old. lost I I , I I 8 I b I 4 ATTRAC store & 0'11cr sf'cl1on now . Carpel~ & drps & '1. Br:·fllr!l/unl, Pv1 pa· TH ROUGH A 11' 1·" .rs p<; : r s ps ---------vie Bt1shard & Ada.n1s. A'' C,,,,,.,,"''"d I . Bf' 4~H-!749 or 2131214-6386. ~.PDCC!> S:iO &_ up. D11•nt,11n v " ,. l1•l. frp r 1n 1 ,, f'h'vlltnr<;, ._.. I ( I * . :--:--. . _ ,-....n , uan .11.p1s rano, nr , * * * * * flllS\\'f'I'~ IQ ' ' i\] 11 X , ' ' Pr1va1r Pa!!os <.lst1wshrs, \'T'JllS, d1'fl"· P('!S liRf'.A I 3 Br. by Big Corona. 111,ssion 493--1153. I l!EATED POOL .11'!'rptrd. ~·ruin $1·1:1 . DAILY PILOT Avnil. ouw. S200 1vrrk ,-------------------- PJel\ly of IQ.wn [ :!t6GJ Brookhurst f.;1, llB. !lonir Show H»all0r.~ 67.i-722:i SllO\VROOCI r.f mlg. " otr1"' Re1vard. %8-:l\88. OLD Cock er & ten'lrr, bro1111/red, Susie. I 1r i\le$9 Verd". Rt 11• a rd . 5.1(}-..'il~. Carpoi'1 & Sl{li'aJ::<" * 1714\ %'.l.tli:iJ * N AD sp11tf'. ose to Lal{una O(', l1lDDt-:N V!Ll~AGE ' ___ f WA T . 1 :-;T\if)JO ;ipJ, So. La'-11na. 2 $9J To $350 !Ito. 494-46;).1 :?:oo S<illlh !'al t;, , e ,. OCf;AN Vl/o:\V-~'R0'.11 I' bl ks 10 bt>DCh, $75 wk . /\11a1J 1 d . 1 R t 1 ~~O Trader's Paradise Santa Ana • 5.!6-Ll'J.}, $1 ... 1. 1 Ur. rurn Qr un!urn 642 _5678 .Inly \8--Au.r.: Li 4fl9-262S_. _ n ustr1a en a CASA PLAY/\. 141h It 1oAILY PILOT for action! NEW INDUSTRIAL 1 ~,..,...,....,,..,....,,..,......, I \Val nut. Call 5.1!H!J6i I 7~---------1 Cll)I &1'1-567~ & S.i.ve! SLOGS, lines 1 LOST-Irish Seiter, fen\ale. I an., to "Red ... Lie i4j52. Vir·. fl!i<;sion Virjo. Children 1 upset. R<'1vru-d. 830-.171~. LOST-\Vhitr toy p00dlt \'IC ;.-p-.. -.. ---jApts., Apt5., IAPts-:-;---*COSTA MESA* Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn, 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 1200 .1::.16 & 1740 sq It unit~. ti mes l·-----------7' Prll•a1e offieC's. plenty of Santa Ana S1nta Ana Santi Ana Santa Ana parking, near SD ftte11•ay. 1 1 l\eC'lson & Slflter, H.B. 1 Rcwarrl. 8-47-(J.161. First Showing . ,, S•l doll'! lf'lllt' ~our ~CH111~.~lrrs h('!iinrl ,,·hrn yuu ('OIUC 01·rr In ln.~re<-·! tlrangr Count}'·~ glillerin~. 11c\v aparlmcnt {.'()lflOllJUity-SOUTH COA"1' 1·11.w~. For whil(' you're flrlmirin~ the '"llljllll011S prival(' (;Juhhou~(' A11d l11~11riantl)' lantl,capcd ground~. we: havl" a fc,11 J<oodics ll1ul'll delight their little hearts Ion. Like our $500,000 Chikl Care Center 11nd playland. !Oll'm f'.l.lA~T v11..us i~ where both adu1t.s A 11d chil<lrcn 11avt' the: be~I of everything. D•cor•lor slyled I, 1a3·b.tdroom1p.arlmenl.homes • Cenlr1/ 91s r1fri9er1led elr-conditioning • 8.tl•nced Power Kitche:n i • Color-hermonired •ppl••nces, including di1hw11h1r • Privel1 terrec11 • W•/11.in werdroOe1 • 4000-lq. '1 . C/11bho11.1e wi1h 1nlert1inln9 & dinirt0 fecillli1r, uvn11, billi1rcls, c-1rdroom1 • C1ben1~, b1rbec11e, Dedminlon, shulfl1ho1rd • 3 h11lld poolr end J•cuzii •Child C1rt C1nl1r a pl1ylend. All this family luxury living from$145 a month c. NA'f'TRESS REALTOR d 11 COSTA fl1ESA 642-'J4S:'i I 0 ars I \\'HITE fcn1alr ca!, r.altni mark<'rl. arounrl .June 2.S. 2·1 .rr 1'lrl grn1lr1n;in df'.~11'1'\. ''---------------------" 1· Id "· 407 l"' .n1era n..V. . -·"'·' IQ J'i'llt 1't"a:<011a bly pr1C'f';J ! I ~~------1 i;aragP or g1wst 11011,.,, ap1. ')1 ' 1 .r·.1• !(11 BPrmuda ~' .. r th\' l1nf'sl ro1n 111undra-1 1,, • v R I" I LO:-;T -~hn;i.u1f'r malf' :"Alt C'\I d I I · ,. rr··r 1r, 11 .. oa 1n -· or surroun 111g Dlin,... c \'. Pa 1n cµ>,,er1 n;ar,,, Urani:'P Co -.~hn11~ Islnnrl Rcwarti 714 6114--71.1J. arr11. Call b1,1n II & ;,, f'~· !or 1011•nhou,,-, l"e•vpon .1.1', rr!urn-lrarl" tor hn11J:•'. ---"--'---'-'-:....-'-C:::-'.I f'PPI Suri_ C.10--!lf.6.i ,\1 r 1l,·11ch arra nr " l~nrl or~ Rrh ~t'f'a tii:>-722.'1 LOST Blk t. T11n f('n111lr Fl ro\\rll'r. ~·~·212~ 111· r>11 .Uf,~I "l.,..S Doxie!< yr.~ olr!, \II(' Oni.ngp APPP.O;i.. :mo sq r 1 ! Palni Spruig~ 1 ;~';;m::;:-.~~· l'A\'F:.\1A1\ER. flu ~i1 f.· Drln1ar. C.:\1. 646---4169. \111rrhou~r & ~1nrRj!:r. J·.lrr ll•llnr. ~Bf{, 11!:1, povl l·q d('1 I;, ~OR ,'\r11·!l{)r: l'fll'·rr 11\'il ll. \1-1 mnl', l{k· $20,0f~. Takf' JT\('(Jlllr ()I' Jtt'I' "Q 11 ~.\l V1r tor1r.. (' .\1 •·1101111·1 2171 Brrnlv.!)l11/ p,, ti-lb-71U:1. /'.,r i;: lli·. 71·1 ::zs-.~10 1 b~li--0014 . -------\\'1!1 U'il•if' h·11nr Cn:1~1 \1+l 1280 ~q II. r"rw h!rlg I Cou111ry-Club qolf rnr n1hf'r· 11/oflkr, l~r rr:ir door 1787 ~hip for 111tr rnodr! st11 11 .. n \\'h11T1rr :-1. (•~I . Dayi; w:igon, .o.por!<-1·ar, 11olls. &H7-~,0:J.1. f,:,T~ 64&-0681. ti4ti-J9i'O ah Ii FlBEftGLA°:5s--;'\lf1-;rs--l.· Nf'\\'j)01'1 Bl'll<~-1 sn. •1·0!'\rl11·nrkrrs \\rlcon1e. 2~ ~·~ha, bltn~. nr hcnt·h Vnr·. ~Q It t. up. Xtra + hazard Eq S19.000. for TD ':!.. ln1. f1rP spnl'lkler.o, ll91-3S7J. ~ntall hou~r C :'11. Lnchl'n· COSf A r--t('~a cornrr 127' on 111,yrr RJrr. 6l6-3~~~ 19th SI , 90' 0!1 \\'h1trrr 9CKJ -;--~o;w-l'ro/f's~1on;il ~q ft bu•ld1ng 642-3-190 _ J.llflJ::, w1!'l arccpr Tru~1 Rentals Wanted 460 Orrrl ~ (>1· ;~ ro 11r11 In.in Brok<'r, UNFURN -4/J i)r hnu.o.e in N1vpl Bch, 11'~1 of Coa~1 1 H1vy. l'r Je11.~e. Re~ponsible l * fam. 1-6:-i9-2.167. * * L.\I arf';i p!'r>Pfl'\Y. Call ;i(1 b rirn. .1·19-fl.11'.\ BflA:\0 nrw 1\·a1rlrn 1!11n1- 1nJ.'.lf'l!l ll;itt.-.r• 4 Br .+ fam. nn 1i~r " dtJ<·k. T1·ad.-. for Instruction I~ Schools & instruction• 575 T D ·.~. !;ind, .. A.<k /or 1---,,.--.,,,-,,,--,---- .111r·k Grskr, bl'kr :'i.\6-.%.\0 I rlA:'\'0 LESSO:'\S II;\ vr: units. trade for ho1nf' pr1C'l'.'d !o $.\~.OOJ Cos I a ,\lrsa to l1ana P~1111 arra. Pica~e a~k for Jack Gesk(', i)rnkPr, 516·86.JD L/',\rn !he b;;~ics: s1gh!- n•arl1ng, lh~r:", f'tr. Call Hruce 1U.C.T. mv~11'.' hkgrnd l flflt:r i pm J.l&-4478. llhal do y<'Ju havf' to trAde~ I[ I~ l .1~1 11 h"rC' -in Orange StNi<:n •od fltl)l1r1 ~ouniy 'i; largl'~I r,...ad h·ad-- in~ PoSI , fi42-567S * * Baby•itting COSTA MESA PRE-SCHOOL .<::pecial Summtr Progntm 18,t & :\lonro\'ia. !~ day + tu!! day sessions. Planned progran1, hot lunches. Aie:I 2-6, hrs 6:30 A:\t -6 P ,\l. St'! 1vk-CO;\lPARE! 642-4050 BABYSITIING girl. Nc1i·porl f.a~1hluff a~a - co!leg{" Bf'l'IC'h Ref 5 . (i.\.J-4.121. \\lll~L care for childi'f'n by the week. Loving care. So. Costa ~Jes.a. fi4.>-4574 or ~6--4478. BABYSITIING rv('nin rs . 615--0503. afternoons k Call Jsne SAYE f:ASH! c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 1-... -1[5) f-... -1~ .__I _" .... _ ..... __.l[ll] I ftcltji•IJ•=* l[Il)[ ~, .... l[Il] I l[Il] I L1 ... 1i:utt J[{l]l.___ ... ...,_ .... __,J[ll] ~I ;;;"''*';;;';;;l;;tJ1 J•~ W1ntH, Mole 700 H•lp Wanhd, MI. I" 7lOH•lpWontod, Ml. I" 7IOH•lpW1ntod,M& I" 711 H1lpW1ntod, M& I" 710 H•lp W1nlH, Ml I' 111 HolflW1 ...... M& I' 710 ill aTIIF.:R ol 2 11"Cukl likt: rn care for your chtld homt. tH&-6307. Contractor 1n our r.t\' \\'ay, quali!y home rtpair. \Valla, ceiling, floors t'tr. No JOh too sn1a.ll. S.17-0036, 24 hr .,n,., sen', Additions. !It Rtmodehni Gt>N-lck & Son, Lir. 67~1 * 549-21 iO Electrical ·-· • . _-..... _ --J ~, ------____ ... ··-·t~·~-.. _.:-..i, _____ _ Don ------ COOKS GENERAL KITCHEN Men and Wamen Apply at New Bradford Restaurant NOW acc•ptlng 1pplic1tlon1 for WAITRESSES -Full and P1rt tlm• FOOD HANDLERS -Full ind P1 rt tim• UTILITY PEOPLE -Full ind P1rt ti.,,. -Benefilc; include Vacation. Sick Leave. Life Insurance. Relirement, Paid Holidays. Employe Discount, Apply In 1>9rton ---. ------"-·· --____ ...., . ..,.._, --·--· • ----~-------- EXECUTIVE SECRET ARY J . F. Pritchard 4t Co., an International d ... 1ign ind con1tructor for U:le proce1s indus- try, ia o~ning a new \Vest Coast otfice. We are looking for a sharp, capable secretary possessing associated 1kUJ1. Thia individual "'Ill be re11pon1lble for thti duties ()f tht West Coast saJes force. Offices will be open and interviews will be held Monday, July 12. This position requires a responsible individual. IC you can meet the requirement, plta3e con-tact : X·MILITARY MEN • No d~ or •:icper. necessary. \\'OULD YOU LfKE TO Pl.!T Y 0 UR. r.1fLJTAR\' TRArNING TO \\'ORK toR. YOURSELF'? \VE \YOULD LIKE TO EMPLOY MEN wrrn YOUR TYPE OF BACKGROUND, LAGUNA HILLS DAY BUSBOYS ti l't"!J old Mon thru. Fri, 1-5 Apply In Pttton ~l A\•e De L.carlot• Lquna Hills lAt the El Turn off ra.mp \\'E \\'ILL G IVE .YOU 1., .. ..,s ... Dii.IOpiin.,..wii•i.Y) ....... TiiE HIGHEST DEGREE I . OF TRArNING TO EN· ABLE YOU TO ST ART A PRESTIGE CAR EER WITH TREfo,U:NOOUS SECURITY il COilfPENSATION. MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE TIELIPHOHI CASHllll Auto ~llpcrit:Dt;.e DJ><nd .. -""led." ..,,. "' .urt. DIAN LIWIS IMPORTS ........ TELEPHON!: llOlldton. M•rutt 111oma.n nnderd 4 hr per day. Work .at hom•. C&l.l 541--ml la~ art. er e~e. f\IPJST-Acct .clttk l dlcy'll wk, must M able to work S..1 '7 Son, Call 1\tn. Myer. !JON ONLY 5'9-0377. VllETNAM VETlllAN On~ in & lifetime <>ppor. to .iart on mrm1 ct.rH:r in • loca.J branch ol ont of coon· tries bl& comp.mew. :'WI· ned tninln1 prorram l•r. )V . lH.rn 11·nu. you l!&m. Fine bl!llt'tiU pkl!, C.r. o · P"llM"ll paid. Stan ~. Call Helen Hayes, 540-faD COASTAL AGENCY 2790 Harbor Bl •I Adam• \\' AJTRESSES aper. o;;: 71. Costume •up p l i e d . S.rlinf'r Re1taurant. 1868::11 IM-•ch Blvd, 11.B. Apply in Jlf!r501\, \\'AITRESS Y.'antiNI, ov•r n. Exp, Apply Swllm Cl'i&Wt, 414 N. Ni!!wport B.l\'d, \l.1ANTED Re c ttpl . tor photorraphy Mudlo. Ewptr ~-C...11 ~'-7103. I~ Appliances Ill l'urnlture 111 1 ___ ... ----_--;; __ L -· J _ ... __ ,.. _ _. • l -· . -. . . ' ' .. \. ........ . I~--·_· .. ~!~ I -I~ ~I _ .... _ •. __,]~._I ;;;;;'"'*;;;;;"";;::;'~~·I l..,......,_'AO"~''"~I~ [ '~'~ -----""'~)~! llil1.__I '_-_""'___,llil -3 Lin••· :i "fimn, $2.00 f'umlture 110 Gere .. S•le Ill Plano1/0rgen1 126 G•ntr.tl 900 Boet•, S•il 909 Cycl••· Bike•, m BIG a:tat• it JW1ing 11.lt of 11 l'OOrDll ol furn. will PrK"l. R' \'f'l~t 90fa l love M"at, lorinal .ltnlng rm s e 1 , h i d~-a-btd, unporled ttakwood lables, occa.s10nal cha.in;, be.11ul S pa n j 1 h kiqsize bedroom M'I, Ii' col· ltt !ablt, 2 end l.'Omn10<1es. Abo Wt-Slinghouse culor console, ttc. Wlll sa<·rificr I all. 21J 44.l-llil I f'AN'!'A!TlC 8a?boa llland g ar~trt AM. 'Elimlnaior 11urfboard, Car r a c k , Paymuter, 'Larnps, Sr:'#ing macilint' accrs1., M i I le g1aSli, Collector's plates. F'.C. towels, Lug ta i •. Plaque., Delco ware, Sta.in- less ~ cookware. Oime1. rum & beautiluJ "11\inp" '- muctl m~. 216 Coll ini Ave, Balboa Jsle, 16-4 Sat l Su n. JOHN'S BIKES -NEW- Columbt• • Pr•mium St•yr • Romana 10 spdl 484.51).f.l!ll.OO 5 ~· $65-$85 J ~s. mtn & women $53.50-$70 -REPAIRS- • WOULD YOU BELIEVE rREE ORGAN LESSONS 1tS kmg u you liker No rei.::- 1mation. No obligallon. Just Comf'. Mondays 7:30 pru COAST MUSIC 642-2851 SU MMER C LEARAN CE SAL1': I SHAGGY, loveable, w• 11 mannered puppy 1~ to good ho~ w/Jencf'd yan:i. 545-4~2'1. LOVABLE I mo okt mAlt 11ger k HI)', shots. altPred, box U'810e'd. 644--0139 alt 6 pn1. -=-----SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS • ~'H>blt -P1kf'T -!lilanr - ·r.11 .... 'dry -wr.~r ALANl\l.'T Scoot•r1 92.Sl---------HOBIE 14' 1---------ITRLR & c:ebana on wat.l"r. 2 IAt<t model • J...1ke-Jlt'W t'On· br. Divorrt. wr Joe $7500. dJ11011, Be9t otter takea; • TH• 6-12-9996', 64Z..16J 1. '"'"""'·~~--HONDA 1_M_•_••_r _H_om_ .. ___ 940_ CAL 25-Complet• racmg & • CON DOR cru•'"•· 8 "''' oa•I>. 91, ''fRfEDUND..,.. llP, radio, man)' exlras. Ln .Sidf' tie 1.va1L Eve 1 .... ,.,,,. -.... tMWY. "1 537.£824 • 1!!!3-7566 T~ yH cht th11t'1 not 1. boa!. BILL COR.NIN FORD About an aleot1ol1c: "Whl'n .f'R EE f P1n G t rni a n he gt!l:l!'. thr~ shPef.& Ill T~ Shephrrrl 1ho1J!, spllyf'rl. ! Wind, hi' bPt"'Ol'Tlf'l!I A \\'ET yr. ~weet d 1, po & 1 11 on. HLANKl':T... SLOO P. 1970 I• be r J: 1 a~ s, Orange Couniy',, Condor Dis- PATIO SALE. Hi-fi, 6' MOVING hy owner. Beaur. c· bitll'l S6:i: relrig $40; cus!om buLlt 80fa & love I • · Wf' do expert npair 011 all makee &. models 234(J NEWPORT BLVD, CM NEW HOURS Kawai, S1e1nw11y, Baldwin, Wurhtzf!r, Grand. \f)nn, Allen, };le. $2!r.i .&.. up. Jtl:."'N· TAI~li. Yriendly telcpho11e in for. 494-303.1 1 V.'ANTFD;--,,0,-~~~-I lilrep~ ~. 17 It., nils, out. e THE BIKE SHACK• triburor, ZlO S. Main St .• -.-,_"·'·~ • iesel l1sh1og board, trailer, ~u1k, ""'· NEW BICYCLES Ora.n~e. Close to UU"er ma-Wll1 A....,..,.n Husky nerds lioat .,.,·/rlytng hridg~g~ f ,_ or-~ I •w pulnlt, hie Jin". 11~. PARTS e ACCES~ORJ ~:S J0r n>rwaya • ...,,, . ........., v• 01.~ of cRrl', Has ru be eond. 35.UOO to 40.000. Will " ._ =J Ki 7 0444 i;tirared in 1 umn1 er . trade vacant land in Nni'dl1. ll41-l444 or 962--0497. EXPERT REPAIRS ---·--·-------I seat, 2 nlAIChl~ cha.Jr!!, Brun11w1ck rer pool bible King 6 pc, armoire br. suitt , S2"l..5: drapes, drapery rod.'!, 1Pm kl 10pm Mon-rri " • -MU-S"f"°E·-,-1,. o. -... ,.,-,"-2 ON ALL MAKES BEAUT For·d "Crusaire" <>.>1-9': l busil11!$5 11rea of Hun11nJ:IOn "" ......, .~ • ...,-" also QUf'l•n 5 pc br set All pictuff's &: m i r rors, Sat-Sun 9ern lo 6pm "ood CQfltt & L'Omrnode set. won1e111, boys &: If x l r Is 645-4720 Jo~IF:LD'S PIANO CO. J8l1 Nrwport Blvd. ""''·' I lok• ,-.. , ,,,., Oprn 12-8 PM, Sat-Sun JO-~ \'an -15.0'Xl n1i, l'ornpl stll HOlt~E fl1ANURF:, YOU .BE'acb of f'Qual \111 I u,.. .,.. ,. n" , l HAUL. Wrnr: Bux t;1g Kula. r-,1;:illi, !)jl(1111 ·rakrs 4 fM'OJll& 093 C BAKER, CM oon!"d. H1r conrt. hyd l<•p, Hide-a-hcd, gamr 1 r t , clothing. lOr-$5". A,;i;or!efl -Will Takr Tradr-Ira - naug. sofa & 2 111atching odds & r.nds , Solt.&. Sun. All * AUCTION-* ctia1n;, custom Jainps. much day. 54~8. )014 Presidio 1nore. ~1ui;1 be ~ o I d, Dr., C.M. I "2-22.·,3 · .°'Jf'ar Fa1n•1rw e ~16"~1 .·io t11~1 n1•rr l!i)l(lO -A~l{1ni.:: • !147-:i.1!7:t ... llit-..•al1 967:1.1 .,., ·· llAMMONO, SI e i n way, ===~ -- -1:,200 l>i.>-062! :'i'amaha. New A ulif'd DARLJNGOurfykitlPn~ B r\ITl:;No.337.2.saUs.dolly,11.o. 74 Chopprr "/lrailf'r :-69-'J4·:-\.I.' b Lrk p1an011 of mos1 makes. Bt>st hlk/whl, .grey/whl, Ol"J.: & 2 ets ~Marin• 904 ~ood 1-~1nd, $6~; SABOT ~n. 1·ornplPt1•ly i-us1nni. n.r..v: (~ri<litlVll1 nne ai.:o. e new Costa Mf'sa 714/64.l-.1250 832-6874. GARAGE Sale -Saddle, HOUSE ca111era.11, Rntiques, china, coins, brass, nunk, jewrlry, (·handl'hC!'S, ala~~. TV, hoat 11101or, lugaage, rug ah11.1n· pooer, lspe recor41r rs , phonograph, books, f{'(_'Ord~. r·lothes, loys, dlamondr.. Sal, Sun, •lOOI Morningstar, l[tg b.oysillSo.Calif.at&hmldt Cft lico to grl h omes. quip. 2340. 2 st11ls, dolly, $150. lie. 14.:;o CC s1~.~v har F... ~ .• n. 73 -:-::---::-:--------67" "·"'° . . ... '7".ll Mu5ic Co .• J907 N. Main, \i 6i7i>-i3il5i. 9i.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii •• -~"'~--'·uslom Sf'al . $17!00 or -..111 1-----------1 GAR. Salt RDF' 1in1er l'Ode San!a Ana. flagi; .''llav. "-\VPa. lnbll'V. COLUJ\.1BIA .16, $5000 1.., 111. rradf' f(1r ~loop, f'lj. val. Trail•rs, Travel 94S SO.l'~A & chr, 175. 3 11.ay""·ood-Walcef1eld t b Is. f $:JO. 3 1bls tNr.vermarl, $."li. Game tbl & 4 cllr.s, S65. Dresser, hdbrd, frame. box spt1nJ: & n111ll, SlO. Rrlrig, $75. Gas range $30, 2 n1ar· ble roffet> lbls, $30 f'a. Drop tear tbl & ~ chrs. Sl5. 24611 Elden Ave. Apt. E. C1\1. ~S-1071 . I 1,---------- G RANDAUGll TER I CLOCK-Antique I l ii I 1 ii n clock. lnl ere5lini;: con· versatJon piece as -..·e11 a.'! a precision time p i e <: e • f'lnlshed In antique yellow. 63%." hi 5168 : 10 DRAWER CHEST -Italian sl,yle chesl. Beaut fin In antiquf' white 11nd roughed 73" hi J17~. 6«-49'0. ef:eavin ~ Auchon Jo'ri. 7~. 7 pm -.-EUR-.-PlcA"N"O",-,-ood~-00-od~.1 I [El burs chock.'! <'If'. 10-:i ter;.>sl Moorui~ N.B. 01e~PI, 6-1:.!-ti.~91.c~~--- .t•urn. ApplJ, Anllques SIOO or bes! ofler. 968-1779:._ htl and Supplie1 ] L Sar-Sun J0i6 Buckinghan\ l'aeini.; gt'ar. &1&--4370 '10-At\1ER. Eaglf' 2.1R "" J:i !1. C!>n:trtl' travrl h·iul!!r, 31°1~·i11:'.· .~=~:.ie,"1 ,.51,', ,· S h' 8 . _ ~ N. B. ~ t.1U.ST SC'll! ~"5:--;h~·k Xhu t'Otl<l, new Curnutt sl1>rps 4· ·"""ning, f:X(~I "" ,,.,, ewing Mac 1nes 82 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;~~;;;;; ·c 1 '· 1 (•()11d. OvPn, ('nnler, $77() or 1-,-70-E I ,, !IP 11n•·r1;las.~ sa1JboaL 2 Yrs s ioe..:s, HJ.; tank. Oools, llhr 5-l!J..1241 * ~7-771.1 · v1nru<e ...... manual old. &4&-027,1_ pan1.!>, S~:lll. 4rl6-:?l!i2. v.~l_tn1de for flu·!.'.~~1914 SPAN. Liv rm RI $123. Last No11·ce Pets, General 850 f;l&rt. .l ga15 lanks. 2 J(ilS ---7 ---~ l.i' .SCOTSJ\.1AN T ra J I er. /l()Sl'S, 3 pf(lp:;_ f'prf. 1·nnrt. GLADIATOR-L.apwortt1, 2~'. I Honda 100 SL, l<l 1nifPS, Rrlrig ll~. Maple dbl bed BANTAM o•ho',k• $1 G "° o (:hf'n11c~• Pu11• Pol, Jl Voll SEWING MACHIN E .. "' • ef'Sf' $4U'.J. ·""e Stf'Vf' at Nf'wport J1bcrgl.'J lilOOp, lots r4u1p x ra.s, ~lrPPI or riir1. Nf'"' .... $3.'>. Coniemp dbl dresser G~hng S3. Du<:klings S2. Pier , Dory fleet. 17141 ~!l-456.l. 13<-ll hrlnicl 11111 $370• and JIO l1ghtl1. $6:..0 or he~t HUNTINGTON JI arbour $:JO. Dresser SJ(I. Setter. blu Uncla imed freigtil 4o brand 26.12 Mesa Dr. (Upper Rayl --------1=----~11-67~6 nlfrr. ~8..s9'".r.1 1'11' fl..1 1·2164, Garage Sale, furn, JX!wer vl;.'!vet uphol $al. Span new 1971 deJux auto, zig.zag --• 2.5 KW Onan. 117 wilt!<, $275, J3' CaJ Car, 1970 moriel, · · Jr--;J1V.cv=E=.L-c'l'RAILER-: tools, hoal equip. Power 41inette art. fi chair• $60. sf',ving n111chinf>S. Bullon-LARGE°Silvf'r Arowana s:.i1); 12 voll n1arine bal1f'ry S20: rracly 10 !WI.II. Y.i/nr.w rr!r. HMS Tnun1ph T1i;cr 100 ·. I~ hid · th" hole.'!, 1.1g-zags, blind hems. l:i gallon 11quanum $.II, call nrw illOOhol i tove $2.'>. $S.i0. 714/528-4622. rl'huill ;,oxT en'! & trans. "1nvr, ovrn, 1·rfrli;:. PIC. gcnf'ralor. Harll015, Power Oll.'i Jlems, t very ini;: R47-4!Ml. :.::&-.l91:?. -• . !IQ'V Resrnred. 1'1U!<I Ser, (.'Iran k ready to go. ss::r1. lawn n10wrr, 3/IP oulboarrl p<'rfect cond. 1669 Tustin monograms, ere. COLUMBIA .'16, S.lOOO ~ 1n. , • 1!93-.'i.~.1 n1otor, books, 411she~. r lc. Ave. C.M. fUJI Price $36.02 fa. PET Amaron Parro1 w/cage I CYLINDER Png, 11:as or 1rrf'st. MoorinJo( N.B. Diesel, $800 &12::?·191 ~,,c,-c. "c'o"tcDcEc.NC"Cfc._c-,-c,-- 3.12'l i)covon Circle, 592-5901. 'w=AcT=CH=~R<-.,-,-,~s=o-m_m_•_r 160. keroSPn, rr.blt f.!arine hra41 rac1ni;: gear. 646-4l70. '71 ~uiuki 1:0 r-.1.x. 22 HP 'J~ 1249'. .uc:on, mo. Joly lOrh &. Jlth. 9am to S ·I u ~Cl d " :,.iR.-j12l & 25' P1ver Tri, "42-:t79!l. 8 • Akronp 21 ··. Filtron. $7~ in· o · '1· pecia ! .-..Jv ean, a Jusl, Cash or sm. mon!h!y pay-1-----------7'=o;c=C"Cc--c-c~~-7.I oats, Slip1/0ock1 910 \'f'S!Pd. f{idrien JU time.~. • ~16.lS e 6pm. polish, standR.td mo\lements men1s. Supply llmiled. Jst Call ISl 1 A1\.fERICAN hoill trailer \Vlll ccc-~-GIG·-A~NcT=lcC~,.~;gch·cboc-hood-c only. Coast Pa""·n '-rome, 1st <:all basis. Phone I take 12-14.' boo.I. $45 . PVT dock .space a\lail-Side $~l(')O. 646-:\48R • '70 IDEAL2!1 1' tr!r. Usf'd o:arage i;a!e fr1't s1and1ng J e"·rh;y, 2426 Newporl, Shipping k Receiving, WANTED: An.x.iou.a. 10 find 642-lf.>114. tif', lip lo 28' sailbos.1, 9' KA\VASAKI 125 trail bikt iwice. 5r.lf-('()n("d, &crtflce frplc, i;:uns, hsrhld ~ds, 642-8402. 545.&23& 24 houni, young Siamese ca l, al1ererl, 40 ll.P. $75 also 60 HP. SIOO. beam ma.'<. Peninsula, i65 Good rond, $225. Cal j S299.'>_. =""~--"-'.-'-·~~--~I fishing tackle, loys, clothing REFRJG, & litove s:ri. each Sporting Goods l30 houS<"pel. r·ree or small Ice Srott ouHioard m 0 t 0 r i; mo, Adul t.~. 67~ _ MtHl.~06 14' AWO rra1lf'r. Xlnt l.'nnrl . lents, saboi sail, 11ntiques? or $4.J. for set. 2 Jo'rench ~18-31 53. ' 5.'1-7294 pnvalt pllrly. BOAT i;Jip avail, July lst, tW TANDEM bicycle like nrw Many e11tras. See to believe. Many trP11.surrs ~n1P junk Prov. ()('C. cbairs, 11prirot SURFBOARD $15., women's SEALPOJNT ,";ianlP!if' Kit · ----'.---'--'......--] 60'-70'. Wide slip. v./ehilri's ~at, '$60. Cal! ='=7c"o·="'~8-4_0_5'_~--~~ J<: up, 10 am Sal & Sun 41'1\ l·n!or. S4J. lor both. Kil. !bl, limall wel suit s:i, child's l l, lf'o5 lull blood . J-'::i thrr ~ Boats, Power 906 673-6606 ;i flrr ;lpin: f.44-1l2fi TRAVEL tr 11 1 J er 1!l6fi ti2nd s1. Npt Shores. h e $10 646-'!781! J'atks $a, pingpong ta bit $1\ 1 · -----------SL.JP I .,,, I"-· llOO SC< t ·n1-11 Sleep 6 Good l' n1n1 , . , -·--mf'n ·~ J!:Olr club~ D3 t'Xlra r 1 ll m P I on, housr broken . .._ SALE BY O\VNER or ...... sa1 "'"'' per .. ·6.'> y A J\f A HA 2j()cr is a . . s , Harbour. 6<1Z-J6a9. __ GE~r:-\Vork1 ng .-on-Call after 5. !"l.'>7--6.'Jl!l. mn. YDS-3. Good cond. RPblr f'On41, $."JOO. ~7 MOVING out or i!ilate-F'ul'n. •lilion 16.'l or bt'sl o!ff'r. lonJ: $95. 644-0027. SIAMESE KITTENS Twin ~rw .'lO' Chris Craft •• 67:>-ll!rr! •* moror. 1'Ur flirt. or strf'rt. nol ll yf'ar old. Gold llOlil Sterf'O ncorder player .$60 GREEK kneeboftrd 5. l',. 307 Crr.s1 , 118 cah cruiser-Man.I' tust blln -sLtP SPACE AVAIL 12.'J() or besl olfrr. 5-1~7. SleC'IX 4. 64&.3896 SMALL TRAILER bet! $IT.!. floral print awivel or best l')!fer. 548-8895 or Good rond. $60, Ask for t·abinet.s, ~helws & xtras. 25 . ..,10• SAILBOATS 1---.ccT"°E,R"Rol"r"ic""°c---1-----------1 P\r.aSE" huy my houseful or chair $35, 9 piece cuMom " 2 Mike. 645-1878. RDf. P"'-'r rlinghy. Con1pl . . . * Auto Service, Parts 949 furniturf'. &-l!ing all. .1\.1.akr made diOPUe $20 eadl pif'rf'. -~!-164 ' =~---Dogs 854 tTplrl. Xlnl cond. Mr1or111Jo( * 67J...6606 * * Mtni B1k' Ir offer. ;,48-5981 J\1isc. household a rticlt5 G.F.. 14•a.sber .\dryer. 2 yr~ T~f.~=io, HiFi, 836 GERMAN Shepll<'rri, 1'\i!Jj. il\11111 B;:iy~ide V 1 lla~c 1 jO' m1n1 soort :;ki boa! \l'f40 * $7.i. 612-4802·-=~-l NLW fJres Ii l"lm.s. 40.000 CRUSHED Vrlvf't ~d i 2X-$5. 16882 R.oSll Lane, 0111,· llhOO_: ovalldin1'114"0 ~31 well Shttl5. 6 yrs. mall'. Manor. S6900. fi 73-21l7 hr :.lrreury eng. 1iskinJ: ·69TriurnphTP~6:lll mile C.olden t·alron. 140. \I.'/ c airs & ea ; 673 -32 .. _ · SlfiOO 644-1195 c nreen }il'ing room thai~. 11 .B., off Warn1•r, 847-7376. J97l ZENITH & Adn11rill pr<ligN'I!. lo\le!! t·h1ldrrn. or ·\Kl , s1 .. ,wn hy app1 I · ' rrian1 forks, Llkt new 5.17-fi."41 ... 1na!<:hina f'nd table11 $15; 10 1 -""°,.;~7'~1'.~"~ ''~~'-~~IAlm~;:;;;;;;;;:;~i;;;J;;;;;;;:;I S25 f' a r h. 5 pc hlk &. 1 HP f'lec mo!or $20; 80,000 )'r old TV SIO. 5.57-8058. rlolif' out ,;alt. Prit:ed tw.low well behavf'!I llPf'<l.'I i'Ood on Y. BOAT sllr1 for rr.nr. N·p1. * * .>v-vu90 • • v.•hi!e dir.et!e set. like new, BTI.J .F.A. furnace-S50; :t 1 cc..,~~----~---1 lhe. diS<:OUnter1 + frf'r rnlor homf'. Yrre, !146-49""J.l. SKI or F[~H. 1€-' Po1ver Cat !Wach. si.:..o PPr fl. n1in. TRIU~1Pll .1970 Trophy 5IXl AUTO arii•S50nl's for Jmporl $45. Brau!. new studio solid walnur door~ & 3 BDRM. H'ts. gtass lop an If' n 11 & 1 n" ta 11 f' fl e KASH BASENJIS-AKC ,1·/6.'i hp t-.1rrru ry, includes S50. 57;,...2414 Aft. 5 P.t\f. S/!25. Yamaha 1970, '11~ t'ar. Cover. nrv<'r usf'd $2.l, rouch('l; w/mat. covrrlet1cs, hardware, Jot.!. of m isc hldi;: d ining nn rret $175, Relrig. w/console. f>·uH sclrC"1ion ir pups 1 1 1 ud .\. 5 mall. 1rail('r. Tow:<: tw>:aut1 lully. & rc.·r1 1 S450. 962-5.<J.16 lu~gaJ:r ra<'k S2fl. 573--075J. bols1ers. ,,.. swai;: lam~. mater ials, trlr frame bed. \\/Jce maker Sl7;i. Zig·ZllR: you hurry! Yr~. v.•e lake barklf'ss, odorlf'ss. ldf'al lor 1aunchr!I l1kf' " drcan1. Boats, Speed & Ski 911 .70 HONDA CLI75-KLJ---;:;; 2 NEW lirr~ & rin1s, '40,000 $19 ea. UFf. 188.'l Harbor 2648 WPslminstrr Pl, CM . 11e1v. mach. in cabinet Jro: tr11dcs, ollrr d1~rount tor 1 11 6.1~:l2:t6 lnrludrs filw>r rJ.Jw Mil , · ~ n11l e Golden falcon, $40. Bl d C M c.A<> .-.¥1 llli!tei'll 962-1169 Cll~h & Sf'rvlcr whal WP sell . a11 s. 1 · · filnk h k 1 , 1 lo lfi. 75 hr, OR J\.1erc,. trl. ,,.. 1·011'1. Lf'ss than 12()'1 mis. ~17-G:")'fl v · ·• · · .,.."", .. ,;, · Sal 10-:i. ---~c I • U(' " ~~ ~. 0 ing ,.n·,.~. $GOil. T::ikP a look. 963 $499.9~1/of/f'r. 557-2472 · · ----• ,..·EUp,;ght frre7.er, ~Plf· ABC Color TV, Orao~f' i\HD\VAY /{ENNl::LS -lop [,, ;:i<·1'""s. Xlnl l'Ond. -----lj~~~~~~~~~~~l !-.10RE than sacrifice: 8. RUt-.1MA GE :O::ALE -U~Pd ......, P1·r~ld1n Dr !Me~~ d•I 'I '"" ..,----'' drfrostln•: ~aut Ji;:e JI.ltd ii County"5 larges! z e n J l h Germ11n Shepherds. Pet' ~ f'i() 1!16-1%0 · · ' """ '' ar "" Triumph j(XJ, J'f'('Pnlly black 11au,.ahyde sofa & 1 I••"".''"-· ""k <h a ,··,, .. _ · · · · tr"al'kl C ?II •,·,7 °-• 1 I-" ,.,. 1 1 I ~ "" "' •r "" ' I dealf'r. 9021 Atlanta •I Snuw SIOl'k. Board 1 - -------·· ··• ...,,,,,..,_ ovPr1auru ... ;.or >rslo · loves£'al, nf'vcr uscrl, $150 -c lothing. m1S1'. Sponsn~ed by coff£'e lab e; .slerPO, ~'Om· "'"' T DE equuy 10 :r2· Luhr.~ -CRUl".'ALONG, ,.,b"•'d m-. !er, C:all 6~4-00!i6. Mto• lor ~"' M ,, ponf'nt~. ~179 Columbinr, \llC MaKnoHa . H.B. ·""'-3.329 hn•N1s. R9.1-.1fi49, 2.~ "r•i bk 2 1 -~ "" .. ~------~· less than 12 Orll? rost; " Altn1s11, or Ntv.por1 ll~rtior. .~ .. c •• • 1" eye,. ~i· V 1 -M•gnolla /, Hril, Jo·.v. STERE0,-1911 O"<l•o'm•d ~f R ' -~ 111 ,irln Norrl, Lido * ,i, '71 /IONOA 17:.. Mini rolfl'C tahlr : 'l I n-i l'Om· 27 .. 1 Jo1ower St., C.M. !Oam· " • vvo; ti1AN P1ncheri:: pU!'I', t has fly hr1rlr. S/S ].dr; 21l:27HY17/93~920. caul•••••••••••I modl's; Hide-a-hf.1; t'nm· 4pm, Sa t k Sun, J uly 10 & APPROX 115 yrl~ "'OOI lay -11.Wa y. G arrC1ird young malr, Wl'.'JJ rr11111pd r:1d10. h:11t lank, rlf'plh 1-,-cnnrl. 400 mi. $52!1. General 950 plf'tf'. Spanish ldngs17.r bdrm ll. <'llrpf'ling, hcli;:e 17:i, cost 1urnlablt, AM/~·M !!1erf'O, $7i ,\.lust J.r ll, moving. !1nder. J:all<'y, rlr. Ov.'e .I-OR SAJ.F:: 1:t' Boat with 1_6_71-_2&_ . .,,_,,,_1_·------l:::::'"':'.-.C:-::--"".'-----I i:et. All vf'ry rras. J>\·I pry. I o===oc-c=-c-c--c S20 yd, p1·actica1ty ne"'· rarilo & tape ph1yer. Air :~lfi.-;.619. $1700. %R-1:142. tr;iilrr & 60 l·IP Scoll 1nn1or. '67 VW .Rus 9-pa!\s, 38.!:00 JACOBSON 21" ro 1 • r Y k / -----------$400 00 '."l.11-729-l Mobil• Homes 935 21:1/92;,...3671. rnower, S60: Pionrr;r 644--03.J:t. •p e a eri wcross-<i\'er SA MOYED pups, 5 n1o's, • 26' C11~1on1 '16. 177 !IP nu·s, mak~ nffPr. ·.l6 I -~=="°"""''"'-;-'°"" ----· 1 1 l')'Slem. Still hra11rJ nr", Pnrsche. nds 140rk, makt' BOISE CASCADE A,"1/FM oiuHiplrx tuner, BAYSHORES pre-dPmnl I on >.Int quah1y. Ch 11 111p1 on Chry~ Vll, !;Ip~ ~. j!"a!lry, CON TEMPO MODEL HOME S?.0; 2 i;:old contf'mporary sale. l00'1r woo r rlPle ~· gr11(, >.-rayrd ~!ock. $12;i H'a", ,., .~. ~ii I •trek, .~ 1p '" I L· !iOld for S.119 v./wa rr:.n1y. bk I I " " 0 I I I I llil offer. c· r I ' c y c I t! "'!Ill N Pay off balance ol SIW nr 6, • 1 B ...... Traos""'lation rh n1111orcyrlr, n1ake oiler. FURNISHINGS c::ha1rs, $10 ra: m15c. haby c-C1irpet, Dut1·h door~. orge •mall payme.nls. Cr f d 11 up ..• ~....,2:.4 :\Val Y o\l·nrr s~~::.o. ,..... .. LAGUNA HlllS Con11adcrably below l<'holr-1!1'111.~. 1976 Porl Cardigan, JlilOV'. 64;,...l)M. dept, 893-05()1. S11AC1 J\!AR-H~n-Kf'-;:)rlf'!s. 6i .l--OZlFi. -------~ i ·A~'-"cl/.c:,9_2_-_i:_,;.RcC·..---.---~=I Mle. Sat, 7/10, 9.3 111 Jnlrr. N.B. M4-:il:i2. -;--~4.000 lh. CLARK 1;rnniln Shor I 11111r11d 13.l' 0 \\'ENS RRIGANTINE ~iquel/ lassies 953 ----SANSU I T-l{XX)A. 1"20 \1·:111 C S I /R 21JIJI RIDC. :,;o.,,-----·---1 i11rs Delivery St!rviC'f', 16.lll GARAGE Salt Mtsa Verdr. J<'ORKl..11'1 $\?JO. Pointers. Ar\C 11uds-pups. ]96:l-E1et: i;altt.v 2 .'> K.\V.. ampars1 a• ent 920 · •E ROL'TF: DR. js,10 Forri P.U. y.g ll•lh••". limp., 1urntablf', 111pe deck, ON o IC I •1 11 Pk " Babcock St, Cflf. Public in. r>esrr1 Rose China, movir Phon!! 673-6945 612~1424. AN. S/.,, CR AD~~. Xlnt orner o "ou on W)'J "OOd N d vi1l'd . 1 2 speakcr5 included. - -i•nnd . Wkrl;:iys 117 l ~ 3 4 4 0; l\'AGON1\lA.STt:R -Stal!on Pres!lg~ 11d11lt comn1unily. "' engine. re § v.o~k. =~=-~~~--can1cra & flood lilf's, sm BEAUT Y .'!hop equiprntnl: S:YXl/olfPr. 642-i.i9l S:.1ALI~ stan<l11.rd AK(' rrg, wagon 1r11vrl i.:arnpl'r wi!h adJacent to L c i .s", ft Sl(lO or hest offer. 836-5671. ,\1'TIQUE "B k " Ou c n "pp l i an c" ', r r Y -~I a 1 F rh· complett /or l rrd f'loxif' fp I Ch 1<.·krnls :i.lS-!lR.10. k b I " • -' ~ ii er, n a s!eniwarr, garrlen 1001~. .very ing, 21" COLOR 1V -Must ' maf'. am---------~lil\'r. 1>Ul · 11'r 11'·· Joli ing v.·nrld. Bl'auufuJ i;urround· Dune Buggies 956 Phyfe riin1ng rrn sl'1 fi man .shop. Cost $2500: 11ac sacnlicr, 595: 19 .. partablt pion slock. S.l~•. 1"16·0Hl2 I 20' SKIPJACK rl lrJi'Jlf·. bu111nr lllP, Qt1een ings, all luxury #lppoint· C:OO. 0'.".-,,-------1 rha1rs & hu flf'I ; ~ postf'r n1i!<c. 201& S. Capl'lla. C.M. $7JO/br:<:t ofr. 5.''17-062:1. w/bllJl radio SJ~; 21 .. B&\V i\i-:Cl"xixerJ;liii-:--t yr~SI~ 1 t.. !dr. L1k(' nt:w, .S1S r11dio, l"llr l11•d, 5 h:c l\indn"s, 2 Jl)C'nts. Therapeutic: pool. J\.ft:TAL J,lakf' i;:-rr('n flune bdrm sri. Bcautyrcst mal· .SUPER Garao:e. S 1 1.-. WHITE RQW-:-~Jita1rr-:-m iable mod1>l S20, h4~-:i62\ 1·mpJlf'r1. R1tisrd w Ism l · rl1•r winch. rl\·. r1r. Only J'Ollf vrnts. f1 hrrgta.<,i:; 111p, Sauna:<:. Lxercise gym 4 bug)U' \\ /VW rn;":, Run!'\ !r1'~~ & hox~pnnJ:~. df"F"SSPr, Playh~. i:;ardtn I oo I 1, <:arat w/v.•edding h 11 nrl . T.I'" ADMIRAt.:-coiorTV-con-ch1lrlrrn. 6<'!;1 ofr. l!.17-:..;!11. f."1{ill(), 612.9996 or 642-HiJ I. JulJ,v lrlS\llalrrf, J;:rnrrous billiard \ablrs, much, m;ich >:ood. Lol:;. of l'pare part:;., mirror & chest. Mint cond. Relaxac1wr, bahy f u r n, Value $300; sa(' $150. 41J \.'iEIMARAN ER pup 111 r-;_ :-f;j~JNRU-o~:Jfi-; •·11pbo;.ircianc1s1oragr!<pat:f', morr• f<ir ~air nr lracle for 1m. ~642-4062. <:lolhcs, toy~, m\~c hem~. Siin111 Ana Avf', N.B. Milt, ~·ioor buffrr. Ar\C rrg, 6 010 old. SlOO. Sr1or11'man . OM<'-J:..'l V6. JG J<ill. walrr I <ink , SC'e ~aut. riirn modr!s in _irav_:~~r.'......;"111-72~ DESPE.:R.-AcToE=· ~,c.-ch71-,-,~k !IO;!J A41f'lia Cir, H B · -ClU-B • • :>49-:l91i.i • • 64 l-74 ':t '!'fS rarlio. lull rnvPr. Xh11 mE'l~l1an1<·al Jaelun~ sy:;tr•m, park-hk" .~ruin~. '10 J\.1E\'ERS TO\V'D -'fi.'i 9 S YACHT -Tv-:--s,e~oCnmh<>--' ·•·· ti 1 Lk n;i11i.:ah)'rlr liOfa ;, lnv<'scat, 962-991. Sal .• un. S (;~:RMl\N SHORT HAffi 1'0™!._S27.i0. 67~20.ll. 1 I' U\r in rrinr, 1 ·p m'\1 CALL K'11).:Jfl00 or /!:'\(l.7!100 V\V pwr. 19;'t{t. 540-SY.lfl r\l"'~·rr u~r<t , SJ:ll'I. DinPt1P GARAGF:Sale-Siit&Sun.~ MEMBER HIP $.itl ]41~ (;[..,\STRON:-:il-jllrrr. 1"•11rl1r 1on, $900. 62l-J7~l 11rp --:----·--riay~; ;i.10-92.)1 ('VCS &. H1 . j' Cflfl('r !;il)lr. 2 end lo 5. Bdrm se1, up"'h' J..,rav1n~ ~lalf' -644-lill9~ • f..16-;.!14~ • pups-Al.:(" /1elri chan1p1on I ,.. !J31-7Z'J.I ARADISJ:: ir1 l.11!0 Arra 1 \\knr1~ -----_ ___ linP. J{rady 1., i.:o. ~2-'.\S21. ranopy, trai f'r, (·,, f'{!lllp. ----_ hr. ! ba 1rlr !..· r;il)ana ---,,:::c,-""""--c---c l i'Onirnr>41r~. IY'avt·iful kin~-piano. lahlr, mirror ~. JO'xl37'fOLEfltANCati11;-;;;;l ,i'-1Ur\TZ ·1 $.· 8 rraek 1111"' -_ Trndf'r.~lo ,r1~h.:.o1: ..... :t;.il·I. '59 Dodge 1/1 Ton PU ))11 1111. \'II'\\ surl(!t•ck. rvil~t"iO Dull(' Bu~~. J.irccl ~1cHn I :\111~1sacrif1"" I ' ' I I'-d ti I ' ,,,, 2'"" 1v1~ I \'ORl\.'ill!RJo: purr .',-----------' ,, I h rl 1 · ~r .. · · ... ~. an1ps,swnJ(sr.msc. ·""' $R5. Usr tv.·1cr , f'.\ccen rtr1..:, . ·~"' ,~,,v ~n. 26'Tv.•in~crr,i·Drakr,r;ihin iron, 71.ovrrf':i can1p· h.1y hr::irh. Ar1ul1 srrllnn. )('gnl,Sl ,200. \.IS 19111 !' I U ('d'l 11 k H ~"-~ r 'I «< '"07 hcaufllul .I; 1110 l"llrl 111alr. 1 4 · • · '"" r, " ..US a,,,.,, <'Orldillon. ..0<11(1 ' P~ . .,.,.,,...,.,, . rnril'f'r, rlf'Pds wnrk . $],:ill() ('!', liCCflS "' tan~c. tte prls al!owi-d iflPn l rrllrr. .-..:,7.....-~9~ or ;1.\6-11ll5 V H II ·~1 7294 N°uTilirr, $1.'l:i. S.'t'-1~111. 00 I IJ,,r-;JSI! hr 7 ~-srt "'1th 17 1rw I s1 ~ ~ _ _ _ .· ___ -;--; 49.\-l)t{)fi I ·'· ovrn, "~«.:'.:/'!~·.,\-Ci , n11•111 or 111.ntl rC'lrf';ir. As El61l-Cnrvai;:--Dune Bu~gy drav.rr~ l1•1a1 .t· kin,_ hdbrd. '-.-:1 UN QUE SALE • lY SCOTSJ\1AN Tr a 1 l tr • 1 ~ B 1'~ A UT I ~ U L R()XF.R -.-. -·---.-. -~ ~r11_"_C111! ·1·l 1·.li.l/. f11rn1!<hed l'i;,oo; 11 n I 11 r n ;.,,,..,, Tirf'~ $:1Z~i. '~~· . I> I I ' I I 1 • plJp<;; fll"!l rolor 2 o>11s I~ L) \1AN 12{1 \lr1• r111;.Pr ~·01, I -,-,I"·,"-I'"•" \I k II , •.. • 1.1,.1 nr an1~111n1ni;:s.r , rurn1IU l'f',Ant1qul'.'!'l&.un11ut ChPm1caJPortaP~1 .J ~Voll • F1•el0You • $")' %1-AAt~ . '·· 110 11ftrlr ,\. 11111 C'•'l'r r~' • !'af', "'" n 01\tJ _'..n""' ~ rn f't', ...... \'IT•! !*12-~!l\;I P"rlf'~1al ha~~. $!:~). ~111! t'rl·Sat ,t. ~un .10·~ pm. 112.'> 11ivl 110 lu::hts. S6:ill or· hest . . 1 -1. • _ · ··_ _ _ _ I 51'¥.I.'>. f;i~fi.',I~ nr i;.12-4641 j ,·a1111"'r, 10'~, like II<'\\. :'1-1 OR/I, J·;--JJQrnr ,--:~:,~ Trucks 962 nan 1~h l'alnul A 11 "1 1 r~1 \11r111ria, nr tll'\ll'.lkh1Jrs1, nflfr rl'IR.i(.1%nr :-).11 .211>.1 3Lines,2Times,$2.00 Ht1:.;11 s;urr frn1alr. 10 m,., --.. -.,.. -1 . --HuunePA~~ls_._1":"'1! tni11•1 , P!'r1narwn1/y ln.alrrl 111 C::•1111h i~l.,r T~ ~~1.c_rf'i\ I C M._2rnrl rr ~a)~--\\IJLL-mOV"e-anYi"hin.;:-y(,~ I olrl l<.x!·t•p11nnal pa pr rs. e .!O .~1,ir , ACl-\e I ;.11·k .... ~\.{1.i. -~·l•-l>i21,, L. \la111mon1 !. A k" ~. l J In· l-cl9c5c0-F-O-R-D--P-l-C-K-U-P-1 S ~Ill All l1kr nrv. >.11~><!1·\ . l l'". l~I" ~ . .,.,, Xlrll. '". "rl _1~.'.,'.l."!f. Call Trtj C,\,\l l".ll--"' ,.-,. . - -. -' ·-Jlll.Y 10 f.· 11. ~>14 ~ buy in 1h1~ ii'llUmn 11nrl \\'ANT JtOOI! ilfomf' for -..·h! __ ~' ,..,,~., n-n h ~ ., r " fl . lf'fo·-.t aiall 1(1 rii;:l!t P<lrl\' 6 •·,vi, Slwk ~hlll, n1d10 , heat• STEP !,,.iilr:o., Nl!l<'f' 111hlrs.: Hayfron1 . Rillhoa l~lanrl mof'f'. ,Call 11 trf'r 3.lO p.ni. rn11.lr rioocil,. w / PR per,, 4 ~ 1:-u r r Y-k 111., n;-1 '"-'2'._'!<·_ '·,..::·•-:_ ____ 1 .'il1trdui.1. 01.·n ;.frPpf' ~. lf 111IPrrs!Pd ~·11 11 &1-1-.).1-0.~ er, 1923061:..1 l .• Pa.:'! rr \\aln11I f1nt~h1 l.a"n f11rn1l\H'P, i,:la11st~. ~'l&-\.648. l.o~r.~klds.ti..\6-4"lSt h<>u~rhrokrri ,(, \\'Prnfd: 27' DR.AKf>>t :rafl F J.11 $72:1. Phurwti4.J~,)~2. 111t7pm $399 hc'dl'O'lm -.e!•, s:{l/SI'! :1 po11ery, Polaro\d, ielt'S('Ol)e, ~-uCHSJAS -fERNS--,}.REE L.ONC:HA lREU-KJT: !"rrrl homr~. ~~K\-49::0. I fn1i.•rr. 2T.1 ~fl· Ch1·~~·1 cA:'11P1'~1t .sl!ELL lnr~-J~TnRA\;E ___ HIGHLAND MOTORS rira11i'r t'hl'~I~. S2~ parh. \lo1hf'!1 I. many <o0l1 huy~. -----llrm1-la~1. $2.!Y.l.>. 67~~.i. ""'fl\' . 21~· !I ho B .'ii J;uli:e can~ 7:-X--Sl. ~1 F. Ti'.:NS. e JRIS!I s~,nr:n. ---. _ -1'/boo1 & •·a~o door. Good 1• •·1·pr~. 2 BP.. Rf'ady for ·' ar r lvrt. UF~·. llill:• l!arh<Jr Sl\'d, M~G-J::verythi~i s .I 23Nl StrPrl, Ci">~ta Mr~ll . 6-14...()f-.tifi l 0111 1Jld /rrnalr. l :llJ . .'lfC l'Af'Fl\lAl\Ell Flush 1'011\l t11:l-!1.11j ~t•llC" hoinr rt"'a,v fmn1 llomr Cosla .\1f'.;a bt.l-ii-HH C.J\1:..;'>1~!1[17. i;:o. l)1nc t!e .~f'!, "trrf'O, ANA . ncl"!--1-----li-16-:il~. I drrk, lo hrs. 01vr1rr: Call f 1\Li'ORY-4"1 1 r~lrai;:;;:-, All ~kins, !1'10111~. rlf'. l:M17 ("Jl~.'VY v.·111rlnw t'll"Oi 1\'F.\V -""11•rl ~uclirl i'fu1iro;., rnapl' 1able~. J:arrlrn tool!; At-.\ . ":'°111 11.ir l'O 1 innf'r ll~:ALTH''· happ~ ki!1~n~. ;.L.R'lAN-5-1-h .J :111 6 rm ;,.i[l..0111!. $1 .1.)(). tBY!l~'!f21 \\"PstPrn •')l, (<'J"rnt ,.11,,_ 1~ork"'I 0'" ' :?!i rath. 2 Pr. Sllllnish :'"~l!;i & 6'" .,83, .10,. v.·/adJ. window framt, 9000 t rPt In .;:oc:xi 1'(1111r. Tll.!"r vc. " lC'p rru pupp\Pll., .-----\la)(lrw;i _v ,(,_Half Pin i, h,,m \ , . • " ., "· I misc. .,.....~ · • """ BTU $7~ )<19-J70t d , ~ 7 "k~. 3 Jenialrs, AKC. 11_ BOSTON Whalrr -33 HP $79:1. 1'(;9 \V. f.Q!h St, C \l _ I~/, :ll.!9~liO ___ $109.,. 6-W-9647 11'.!11P{'n g k ~ lovf' 11r11!, 11kP fl('w 112!1. 7 An11hr1m, A11t ~-r .M. · ·· • · -· slr!Pf' 11~ lahbys. ;..i.'Ki.ll. ;,.Jf>--4~2.~. t·.\1nrudr. 2 ~ra1s. f'vr r1.v. CTB·k NEWPORT 13~.H Sp rrn! .l pn1. ;offrr f; J.O call fl. f.Ofas, l1kr new. $79 r ach. LI00--<1---1 --::rv-fNJo:AR new "'11sher /,, dryf'r TAURU~ K1tty !<llprr fam111 $1100. 6"i':>-6:tff1. ye es, I e1, $i'i pool, rlu .<f'. S-.;IJ li:f' 4fl.'>-1~J:'., ,,.~k for S•rve. L:Ft·. \AA.·, lla.rhor Bl\'J, • · eeprr 50 a. ' S.'JO t a<'h, tM-droom ~u\lP l :W. I on g ha 1rrd llRf'r, <'all !R ISH St'llrr, /rmalr, 5 mos ~ --------, Scooters 925 . - - - --C.M ~}'fli-9,1~7. la'.11~. ~:ha1 ~s, hooks, tny11. 96&-3."JOJ, 101_.,1 i\taika1 H.B. ~>4R-"!:t;i:l. olrl. f'XCPI hrrt'rling. $IOO. '66 Tolly .l2' T.S r B, Joi· rnv<:r. p<i!111 ln1·J! yd, nr1v '.1.1 fnrd <..:600 truck, CDnt1 CORNER '"'"r v.f~& 1111r.c. 1 .• 1 V111 l tha,.a. NB. POUL tablf' _ $la;-Piog l")n,ii ---lf'n11:i :t> i:;1.1-4(}1l. n1ar. S11.cn r1ce. ,\Ju!;! 11rr. ~B ICYCLES, 20" in 26". $10. ~~pls. r1,•.B8121;~. 1:i60 i-ond. Iii" van holly 2-~[l(t 67:>41:..J Sal & Sun. 9-ti. fl ~ERJ\.1AN shPphf'ni ---;~lli-j()98. to $20. Bo)'s & ~Iris. Eves. ai.:rntia . ID!:: sp D3 M:'!lr a.:<le. a~kin~ Sl95. Call holslPl"l< -S79. \\11lnu1 f'Qffef' BOAT h•k• ,h,.lvf'--;--ropo<e, table -$20. Both new, puppif'.' 6 v.'k!< old. GrtBI Al::ACLI:: PUPS Ar\C. 8 v.ks. -H-b-I S , \1'11 Paularino, C.\I. .~<'t mngr. 67:.-437·t altl•r ;1;,'lO, bl2-S!}.ll, & nd t hl $10 JI '" 5411-11281 1; d '16 0696 ~ho!J; f, P11prr,;, O i• 4 ail •304 1' ~a npa f';~ Al ;a.for 0:':",· [ rPgistf'r paint i Un, bo11.t --· FOR RENT "1 ·i !". ,i• • • · -Cllll: 1147_21 ~ 11.'1 71 pm I $800. ('Ill!: 1130-,'J(f.12 SOIWL"llN -Pt.a Picker. Good NEV.' 20X4~ 1940 Ford P.U. V-11-flathrad 6:.~ ,:.17 -.... ·' ""'' · £r~r r1r. 10-5. Sat.-Sun. CABIN RLUfP(;°1n!f(i rn 11I11.V11 n. l'Ond. $60. DELUXI'~ u 111 1. 2 BR. l{OOf( en~inl'!, Nl"Cd.s work.· "~··· •1 lh • -k b D ~· ·--' • d SJLf.::Y Tl::RRI E°R-P"P-~ Boats, R•nt/Chart'r 908 · :_ __ 1076 Bu1·k1ngham N.8. 1• 11.mmo ....., E'll' Y ay or r l'f'f' ro 11:1..,., homf. Sp;lyr &14-2624 1'rpls, rirp.\, ilppl''. Jo.OR. $300. or hest oiler. ~16-~J!lll. USE!) wonc!l'u 41hl. bed ~pr. ELEC flryer, garrlf'n 10015, WK. ~ttpg 7. 5.11 .. l.174. fema\~ .vr~:..51~~--Al\\, lfl \1k". f\lio~ablr, 2 c.tis + Catlina 27 .67 HONDA CBl60 · pr1Cfti s;iJi:il. \Veslf'rn ;\I.II \VILLY"s Panel J . t.. n1a.1 1. .tfdr11v.·rr ,..hfo5t. ....,,.0 ••ble ''"''·yo!•, "-by 1 B.M, E1£'ctric ty""'wf'ltf'r ~. ''RIENl)l.Y 1 .. 11 ,,,, + I .. ~ n1alrs. $100 . N97--0!!0ti. ,. h 1 . . 121 3 No. Harbor, fiarila Atlft . ocr, .F ord 1 n l J\ ,~ , , "" -,.. " r ' ·' -------ullaranrce l e o-..·es t ra!e~ tn Gd Cond, Xlras. &i~1.'J() equ1ppr41, 4 .-;prrd. \Vill van1 )', nor an1p, ~n\a p!ay)"lf'fl, elr. Sat k Sun, old~r modtl. rle11.n 1n lovely orangt 1on1~. 2 mull1. I grry GERfl-IAN ~hor1ha1 r l'n111tfr So. Cali! "Catlin(! c:ruis-$2.lO &14--0a.19 · __ rnekr 11 11:oo41 rfr1tl. 644-28fil. •~hl~. r P rl" 0 ,., ri rhaiSI', 26:1() v1s!11. ilrl Om, N.B. ronrl. S4i 613-'1 2!\2 femalt. 646-3601. pupp1t.~. 7\1.:r. ch 1 mp , ing <:lu h ... Location Ne\\'J)Ort _ BA\'S!Dt~ -N f; \\' f' o RT ·""~'""occ----~=~~~ rn1~c. 1,1,·1rf'rlfllh gai;tr~ & 2 -STOY!-: v.'hill', s;,:J:-12~1.l CLITE f1Uily-k1tlf!ll5 11f'"d stock. 646-215!1 ll;irbor. 71 4/968-41140 for in[o. 1968 Jl~NDI~· ~· J2.1,9 S27:1. REACH Sarr1fice 10 X ~ w. 67 _ Ec;~1ne, Rflt, l.1,(00 By 4's. :.4R-2.i69. ~) M;ocollaneous Ill h .. ,-1 0• _,,., '"' & ••d i~. -AK,.. \\.IRf'-JIA R nr ma e o ('r 8-986 alter 8 X 2 l r ir ri k n11. . nl runn1n' cond. u" ···~ ,,., "" 00mf'. ~ ,-I ED TER· Boats, Sail 909 .1 J1n1. ·1 I b hin, v w. l9~c · $124.'i. 4.~7-10!!~ 1-trDE~-bl'd S75-$.li.i l ' r,owt>r niJt: $20. 551-0761 "'• 5-I0-3:m •,. Rlt:R, l male. poo. <' u sr\ i;p rent J. -----0-~~~~-~1 couch 147 :111. V r 1 \' f' I * AUCTION * Wh I h l L 'k N l YNG nialr Cfll' 11 whill' 1 I. S.'A> .. :ll.12-4:i22 1 ~ACR IFIC~; :12' P.C. ~lonp. HONDA 196:"1 S.90. Ovf'Nl!ZC t·p S.'>700. 67fl-.4l74 '6.J Chevy Van: 6 11t1Ck lo mi, lo\'{'ll('llt $41.511. All l1kr nf'". 1-'ine t'urnilure •e c • r-1 • ew 1 TLACUP & -Racr f'(JUIPP"d Top <:ond. riir( t1rrs, P-.;tnis, J~et NEWllX·lS gd c:orld $97:i. 6"2..,11171 . &: Apph<tfl<.~s ~. * Call 540-5779 :;~111.r:. ~~iyt"'d "·hi!t.> pup11 k artulr.,. 1;y l:x;~~ $1900. 646-2j77 . lr~al.:_ Sl~l!47-:W44_. ---PRICl::D S.1,6.10. t.o.b. Cho1C'r • 4~7-1()1!~ Garag• S•I• Ill Auetic)n, t'rlday, 7:00 p.m. M itc•ll•MOUS l2Q e 9 MO. old puff' bl:;rk ~f'n.'lf'r . 642-1a."l1 . RACING Nibo!, Xlnt cnn<I, SCll\\IJNN :.;11ngni,v "l,ady of rif'{'()r. Dri:r.5. 1ipp1·~. 1 or '64 Intern'! Tra\'elall. Auto Windy's Auction Barn W•nted R Hoc••• 856 No ~r.r111rhrfi. ~lu.•I ~u. f air". L1kr Clf"V.'. $2.l. 2 AR. \Vcs1rrn M.11. 1213 tr11ns, PB/PS, lrl hitch. SAT 10-4, 102.l Pre11dio Dr .. C.M. Everythins; lrnm Gatn('S In II W11 •her. ......,,,, MOVIN\r Antiqur r u r n • gla•ware & othrr misc. 1979 ()ran.gT' Ave., C.M. FAMILY moving from C.M., Wutl~ machine, TV, >"um, elt'. 309 I!. l!tth SI. HOUSEHOLD tum. Odds It ends. 239 La JOl111 Dr., N.8 . S.t " Sun to to 8. GAR.AGE SaJ. -ST.Jl llum· minabtrd, F.V. 91ii-&t00. J u. ly 10th. Furn It ml~I. FAMILY mov~ from C.M .. Wutilni Tnflchlnr., TV , Funt ~ff'. 309 £, 19th ~I BUYING iilve:r dollar7. Labni.dor £'lrirvtr, Ma5 $219. 646-!!28.l, 67~2620. • 614--0180 * N. lhirb(lr. Rl9-6.l~ Xlnt . conri. 644-5057 rtai,., Newpor1 . CM 6*i·l!686 PAPf'rl'I. liU-l.179. g yr old ho 19-1 · -c--~~-~--Brhind 'fony·11 Blrl it Mllil'I llilvM' ('()inll. ~Id, 1)a:Yinli:" CUTE 7 "'ks old killrni1. quartrr-n:e type • I.JOO 14 No. 1000. ('.nod 10 londa CB 17:i. Ex\. NEW XJX52 l BR, 2 h.11, 70 hevy 1, Ton 4 w·hl 41rivt , KENMORE rl«I dryrr. ll top dollar. fi~76.'ill. matt. Xlnt for beiinneN;, rond No trallrr. $8$, ronrl lnrlu1trli hclmet. Brsr Ready to movl! Jn. $ll ,9.i0. V-S, 4 spe~d. heavy duty •c· We&nt:lf & hox trained. S.l50. 67~:\105. 673-7307 offer. ;>46-JU44. Trrn1s. Greenleaf Park. ce.s.ooric5, 675-66AJ . mos old. $65; G.E. ttlrig, Mu1ic•l ln1truments m Black k 11.l(f'r. fi7~'>225. LEA~E braut1f .. ' 1 1150 Whittier. C.M. 543--1698 ···1 >'ORD P.U, "·/·.~ Old• 16', hf)lfflm fref-1.er . fros! "" ,, Ar111J. g· SABOT hy ~hock lull 1969 HONDA TRAIL 90 fl Sp .. " • rrre. SlJ~>; 36 .. No~~ KA.t ORUM. .-;lllrkl. stick.-; & SAMOYEOS pure bred, mfllt Sl:J-n10. 6 mo. m inimum. rat'f', comp!, w/hanrl dolly, X1ras. Xlnl rnnd. • m. cog. Nttds somt \\'Ork. $200 t!Ovt, excel cond, $:,0; bn15hfo.-;. Likr new $:al. Kirk, or ff'malt. f'f'~ req. Call 96.'i-1:io6 _ -'i2._'.i! rontl. sl9;.., ·492-Hl13. Sl!f.1. fi7l:-:l6Ui ONLY $75(1 rln. Balan~ like AA is. !140-.1420 all 5. _ ff'trig, very lt(MXI rond, $60. 6"6-31)). ReM:Uf', 897-lBl l.• CllESTNUT m11r ... S yrli olrl, 21 FT. Victory, incl, lrlr. z, HONDA ~<: mtnl hikr, 2 N'lll for 1970 2 Br. 20x4l all 19:JO I Ton Panel Trui:::k gd 2114 O:lnlinenl.lll C.M. Pll\Yful kiltena I blk & v.·ht I JCp\rllM, rxp rider. S2'Zi or ~itbOarrl. $:2.250. boy'a hikes. Any or all-best 7 trRs. 1" f11.mlly park. conct. s:m. Call btw ~ "-6 Pl•nos/Organl 126 blk, 1 flaer. 6 wk!. trained blil olr, 847-Sll73. ~ril--0·17'2 R.l:t-:2400 t:Xt 224 offf'r . 64-1-6.'!42. !~!;,,..Wt-stem M.H. Ph. P m fi73-14~i.i. l COMPLETE bdrm litt1, -1, wraned 54~1~. -~""' =-=o=~~--~~~I W~t\flfithoul!P' T'f'f •• Admiral 4100 WURLITZER n11tC1in -APPALOOSA m11IP. Movini;:, ~· HULL f\Oly. F:x<:alihur, VESPA 125 et w/windshitold. ADULT PARK _ C.M. ,69 '6.l otEV ~ ton, noblt V-1! up..rirht dr:t.>p fl'ffl4', desk. !airly fll'\\', perfttl rond. l BEAUT )'nil ..idult rat!I mu~t lif'll. Bf'sl offrr. Ron I cr11dlr . Ntw rond. $1100. Branrl T'lf'w cond. Ordy 1,000 1 Wx.l 2 b 2 ba tni;t. Z f'xtra. ta.nk1. $1100. 18972 IJi~!rr I.Ant:. Jl.8. Prl•'"d r('a/i. '!t44-8:i7_!:__ nf'('r] aOO<I home~. a.uw1~1:1 fill-N)lO ,-·· ~G-Z.:,11 ___ mi. 962--0!)j(). ___ 1;~1';Jr,wlnd~v.'.~. :i~ sfnr: f.46-:'.62:i=~,~-~~--I !16Z-321'.l1. STUOIO rrand, ;;·5" lmrn11r or :i4:\-290J ___ -APPALOOSA gf'lr11ni.::. :.i yrs Kite W /Trlr Xlnt Cond TACO Mini B1kf', J MP. 57;, h1:0 :lx7 stor11ge sh,.ri5, tl!!nc-"62 CHEVY PU, Cood con· KINGSIZE bQ>1 1pr1nr1 $'&>, rond. Mu.~t 1111r Makt orctr 7 &-11111 hf'al!hy, lcl!!rn~ mu~t nld BRJ::n TO SllOW. Rraaonahlf'. 67.l.Jl7l.l Boy's Stingray, $'](!. C11.JI 1'11 yd, ln<lsl'p 6<1:).-07Sl dltion. S6.'il au dJ'1"r $50. !1M5 Vilh1 Pvt pty, B-264~. havr lovlntt homt~ g "'k"'· $1.':(l(J • * * $.'\O-J.l!l7 ;:--WEED II & ~~1419. --e 61fi...:i84!1 e HB !U-007i -----pa n INIHll"d. 8JJ....(13.i·l _ _ reap", .clra.n _ LANCER, like nr1v. 24x:-:l, ~ . _ ---Pacific Dr. · · 1. WAl..NlIT Raldw1n Org11· SHlll...ANI) f"IOOY .. 4 ,vn. nut th~ treasures&. triish ~ l~ill llondit .t'ill Cl. GI'()<! hr, 2 ha.. mnriy xfr11~. New '69 HJ -1.UX i·oYOTA GEIGER Counff:~:ot~lle nt r.onic 77 wfth hrndl, f1ke -FR-EE KITTENS-"''"II tra11)ed. $9:l nr St.la tum Into c11sh thrn a Daily Conri. Extrafi ~ll f>.16-.~1"1 11dlt pk, CM. Own" r TRUCK. XlrM: rond. 64~4 condflion , S.'t5. 5..11-~. Ml'"", ~. ~7-~7A• 8!M.tll92 • v./lull t11f'k. ~3-.\.113. P ilot 011ulfied 141. 642-5678 t\nyl.Jmf' hefnno l :Jll P~I . f'Al=,-JR2J . 11ftrr fi pm , +e· ''?rt-· M -~-. . --·--,_ __ ·--. -::-: .. -..-·--·---·--::.. -------:... -:...-~-~ --:...--~ _..... -. . --__ ... --· ..... ~ .. ---_..._--·.-· ' \ R R Co '70 ., • " •h ' 13 FO m ol co H. A friday, Jul1 9, 1971 OAILYPILOT 41 ~-'-"'_"_'_M_""_' _,) 1 ~ ) ( Autos for Si~ 962 Autas Wanted 1§1 !1 Autos, Imported 968 1§11;.I ~·"·~·""-~l§J~l:l~-~ ... -~l§J~l~.._I ;;;'-"";;;'-~"';;;'_1~l§l;,:;I ;;-;;;;"';;-~I~§] 970 Aul .. , lmportocl 970 Aulot, lmportocl 970 Autos. lmportocl l§l I 1§11 970 Autos, Imported Trucks • HI. 1 RECREATION CENTER ROY CARVER, Inc. 2925 !·!arbor Blvd. Costa Me:>a 546-ol444 '70 r·ord Super Van. <.:aniper oonvt>rsion. V8, autu. fai.: Air, paneled. 1nsulatC'd ,(. carpetf'd. Re11r s r a t. 1hide-a-bt'fl\. tablf', irt>hox. louvered v.1nclo'.l s w/drps, 4 speaker ~·rn & tape strNO. SJ400. 846-19:!0. ~·oRD-F:l'onolirw Ch;"b-\lan Lo n1i. A-I ror.rl, S950 or bc~t nlfcr. 968-308.t Autos Wanted 968 ANNIVERSARY •so PINTO W/AUTO. Tran~. S:i day, 5e n1ile. THEODORE ROBINS FORD ~ HARBOR BLVD. CO:iT! r.-tJ::SA 6-12-00Jn IMPORTS \VANTED Oraoge Countif':!; ·rop $ BUYER BILL J\IAXEY 'l'OYOTA 188111 Beach Blv<I. H. Beach. Ph. 8•l7-85.'i5 WE PAY TOP CASH tor used can .\ t:ruclt$, Just call us for tree estimates, GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Sales Manager 18211 BeacJi Blvd. l·luntington Beach M.7-6087 Kl S.3331 ANNIVERSARY •50 AUTOS WANTED Top dollar for clean used c;:•rs. St·t-Andy Brown. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA :O.!ESA 6-12-0UJO \\'F. PAY TOP DOLLAR ~·OR TOP USED CARS If your car is e.-.;tra clean, sec us f1rsl. RAUER BUICK 2::.1 E. 17th St. ro~lll )lesa f).l.~-77fi:i Autos, Imported 970 V \V. CA:\1PE!l Van. Porst'hr Engine, nrw lrans .• bralu•s, t1rc.s. $3200 vr1·1J1ahle 1n- vrs1n1rnt. $2000 r i rm , 833--0'.!8:l. Autos, Imported 970 CHECK THESE VALUES e '65 1 VW CAMPER N•w p•inl •nd upho!1i•ry, lRQM107) $1899 ----. e '66 :~~~;.~,p~.~~1~.~N $1699 I SZT 171 l e I 66 ~~ ~:~.~~~~·~•rr. (VWNJ12) • I 69 ~~. ~•~n~.~~OE:~~'~ !ZAM'408 ) VW BEATLE N•w En9in•, N•"' Ptint, ITJEOb5l --- $1099 $1999 $1099 vw BUG $499 Prited lo •ell NOW. (J!7C1Cll ----:~.;~:.~ :e~?.~.A $1699 lXNl7l9l TRIUMPH TR6 Whit•, LO ~• N.w. !ZNJ§lll e '67 MUSTANG Auto. +1.,n1., l!.dio, !lEZ9~ I) • '69 ~~l~.~t~n~.:r~, ~~~.Y (STE bSO ) OLOS CUTLASS St•. W1190~. SHARP! !YPZ18?) $2499 $999 $1899 $1799 Harbour Volkswagen 18711 Beach Blvd. 842-4435 Huntington Beach AUDI __ C_O_R_Tl_N_A__ RAT --JENSEN MERCEDES .aENZ • AUDI, ·n 100 LS 2.dr. Elm green, aulo, r adio. 6.'iOO ml. $.1995. Day~ 673-8282 : t~'\'r!: 518-7302. 1967 CORTINA GT '69 Fiat 124 C-. '350. 968-1611 bef 9 pm rr---~~===c_.;""-15 gpt"ed • &autitul &Tttn. DATSUN lmmacu!att> in every way. AUSTIN AMERICA 1 -------1 1zsx'"' ims.oo D~~,!>:~~N MIRACLE MAZDA 1~9 AUSTIN A r11f'r 1ca n 1'.l,000 m1. S9SO or b:..r o!r. Pvt rt1: ~:..-4326. AUSTIN HEALEY AND Home of ~ Rotary Engine SUNDAYS Zl50 Harbc~. c;o... ... Mesa 111835 Beach Blvd. 045-5700 Hw1tington Beach 1970 }'JAT 850 sport cou~. admfl I ~~~"2_-m_1~"'~"~·~"'°"'-"---I mags, custom f'xhaust & • '66 01•Tsun 1300 Stn \Vgn 4 many olher exlras. L'xL'el spd. 25o lin's ,r,, parts Chang-concl. Sacri!ict". Leaving ror TEST DRIVE rdlastyear.Gd.Confl.$640 ~If'~~'· :n East. Ca!J Cash T!11s Sat &. SUn only "'l"""'VL~ THE ALL NEW io.:i. "'~:~~RI l-'--'-"Hc:_,l"'L"'L""M~A~N~- JENSF.N AtnllORIZED Ml.ES :. SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS • '67 250 S. Air. p/1, Ami Fm, pwr wndws, 4 spd fir sh.Jtt, Only $3995 -take your trade. e '64 2'10 S. Auto, p/s, An1/ Jo'm. Jn supbttb co11d. New er r trade ill. Financing, HOUSE OF IMPORTS 3100 W. C.out Hwy. Authorized MB Dealer ~-~N-•~wpo-""~~~B="=c=h:__ Bllf'na Park (ll 523-7250 KARMANN GHIA KAR./\1ANN Ghia, '63, very rl('an. good runnuig cond. S800. 892-529'4. 1967 KARMANN Ghia-1 pvt o"·ncr 52,000 mi. Best ofter. 557-2497. 128 SEDAN ----------1·&1 HILL..'1AN staLIOn WP' -'60 KAR~lANN Ghia. Well e '70 '.<SO C 5 pass O:>upe. FERRARI Good roncl. $395 or offer. cared for. to.lust sell. S400. Loaded! Atr, li1erco, landau, Front Wheel Drive YfJU l•'IP it to your:sclf !O JCS/ drive !he nc1v '7l Fial at B.J. Spor!S<.:ar Center be- fort-you huy 11ny car. AUTHORIZED 1_P_h<>_o_•_'1_S"'4 __ 1_9. _____ M1ss1on Viejo S.17-4260 err . SALES & SERVICE e 1970 280 SE. Auln, air, ccn- All Models Immediate Delivery Priced Fram Sl,495.00 Bill Jones' NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Ne"·port Be.a.ch FIAT lQTUS MAZDA rral !ock'g sylitc1n. ·fobacco hr'.l'n w/Cognac tn!. LOTUS '71 MAZDA HOUSE OF IMPORTS AITTHORIZED 686.11 Manchester SALES & SEfl.VICE Bra~ new 4 Door Sedan. Btu'na Park. t \) 52'3-7T.10 Radio, h"ater, frt disc b!'llk-:..::.c:::..:..:::.:::__c.:_::::::::::::1 rs, EZl glass, nylon carpe~. 190 Se?an, sunroof, leather, buck('( sea.ts. \0486:'>.J) $2247. new tirrs, looks good, runs NEWPORT IMPORTS MIRACLE MAZDA good."""· C•ll '"" 6 pm B. J. SPORTSCAR CTR. • Co1nplete Stock of 3lJJO w. Coast H\11)'. Home of ihe Rotary Enginf: 2150 Harbor, Carta Mesa. 645-5700 or anyt1n1e v.·eekend s, 540-~198, 1970 i'>lERCEDES Benz 2805. :.1.inl cond, 17,750 n1i. Very rt'as. Pvt pfy. 544~J78. ~tJU The i;:;:~~B:~:e west ,.j .. a Daily Pilot Classified 1'J::3 J.l:irhor. Cn~l;i :\lrsa 540-4491 aaBii Think S-Ad. 642-5678 "FRIEDLANDER" l-i-A:::;ut_oos:::;, N:;::e::..w--~98~0 Call 642-5678 & Saver Autos, N•w BMW Automotive Excellence G ROY CARVER, Inc. I 292.'i 1-Jarbor Bll'rl. Cnsht ]..·!rsa ~16-4444 I Autos, Imported 970 IJ750 IEACH ILYD. :Hwy. 391 893-7566 • 537.6824 Sa~ your ..:ar • :t'a not far! Just reach for your phone &. call Daily 1'1.101 C:assilied 642-5678 Charge your ad -today! Turn those \Vhitc Elephants Into cash thru a D~ Pilot Dime-a-line ad!! Autos, Imported WHY THE RED BARON WAS A BIG SHOT. His plane had a BMW engine. You can have one too, and a car to go with it. See us for the free booklet, "33 Reasons Why BMW is Better." Or as k fo r the key. You'll get the message. BAVARIAN MOTOR WORKS ROY CARVER, INC. AUTHORIZED BMW DEALER 2925 l-ladJor Blvd. Costa Mesa • CADILLAC Annual JulY: Stock Reduction Choase from on• of Southern California's Largest Collection of Quality Cadillacs & New Car Trade-Ins SEDAN DE VILLES 1 r to Cllooae fram 1966 SfOAN Oe Villi •ACTOlf Altl (ONDIYIONl- 'Ull llAfHll INtlllOI v •• ,1 P<1ddod !••· fu ll .,. ... , ••· 110.,, A,,_/PM redlo, A1diol flro• ' "'""' o!h•t dolu•O •dtOt. ko ,. apo,o<loto. !SIYIOJ) $1999 1961 SID, Df VIUI IACTOl f AIR CONOITIONINO V(oy! ... ddod !op, pluo• do•• r. loot••• To!•'·• lull pew•• ' • ~o•I of o•••r ... lu•O '""' l•<I. ... ,./fM ••~lo IWICO~)) $2999 COUPE DE VILLES 20 to Cltoa•• from 1966 CH. DI YIUf 1ACTORT AIR CONDlllONIN9 Nll llATHll INflllOl ~<tddod I••· full ,,__, lod. 10!1 I •oloo<OOI< OINdo,, ''°'"· A#./ P#., ""·i ""·An ••uo•l..,ol i..rl ISISll~ $1••• 1f67 CPL DI VIUI rACTOIT All CONDITIONINlt Nll LIAttttR INTlllOa r,11 ,.._,. •l•rl •••· 11•1 1. 1010- ""PT< •!O•,i•1. AM/f#., "'•"1 othor M l••• ••"••· IV~'l'l>l $2666 J96S t.1ERCEDES, 220 SE, •!jm miles, a/c, p/s, p/b, new tires 833-3487. MERCEDES, 190 C, 1964 &"dan. Lo miles, rww !ires, mint cond. $1,650. 83.1-2179. '62 220-S, 1 owner, 63,IXXI mi's, Slandard trans. $137~. 67J.-5620, l'Vf': 673-0728 WANTED: Lati> mod('! ~lt'rredt>s, 4 c-ylioclcr, uodcr $2,:JOO. :i·16-638fl. MG MG AITTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. C!>Mt HW)'. Newport Beach ~ THINI •''~'' ''FRIEDLANDER'" 1J1S-IU.CH (HWY. 1t) 893-7566 • 537-6824 '66 r.1GB. low mi ·~. nr1v paint, wire ,,·hl.'i", $1125. Owner. Call &14~529. '63 MG MIDG=E~T -1 $4j(] * Call 5-18-31&1 MGB '67 1\1GB GT. lo miles, \.\11rc v.'h('t'ls r/h, ori~ 011·ner. 637-936.1 nr !¥.1~133~. OPEL '68 OPEL RALL YE A creamy yellnw Jastback with mag wheel!! & rad1aJ ures, low miles. XVD067 $1289 I 5464444 I~!!!\"""""'~~"""':'""-~ ~!"!f!!!'!'!!~~l!!!fl!!'!!!-!!!!l!!!! Autos, Imported 970-Autas--:-lmport•d 970 [Autos, lmported ___ 9j() Autos, Imported 970 196f SIO. Of VIUI rACr o •T All CONDITIONINI ru~l llATHll INTlllOI Viorl 1•P. '"': pewor, _,loch, tl!o ' •• 1 ..... 1 ..... 11.,, ....... ••<. lll.SV'OH 1f6f crL DI Villi 1ACfORT All CGNDITIONINll Pull loolho• l•!O•:.,, ...,._,,..till tolo1<0•I< ol•<i•1. ""4• to<l-I, !loh! ,..,1 .. 1, "'""'· '1'•1•• tyro1, o!C. (Y IYOo•! No ntonry dt')\vn on any nf CV('r 200 Tl('W & used cars on hand (on approved crr'- d1!1, B. J. SPORTSCAR CENTER, ltiC. 13133 Ha rbor oulevard st.?1 M esa, lrf. 92626 'Le 14 B0r~fEts FIATS ALL MODELS IN STOCK 1971 Fiat 850 Spider. Front wheel disc brake~. And forget the oplions. They're bullt-1n, (Ser 97820) Full Price s1995 1971 Fiat 124 Spider. Twin overhe.-id c.-im engine wrapped 1n styling by Italy's Pina-farina, ALL COLORS IN STOCK NEW '71 FIA TS 8. J. SPORTSCAR CENTER, ltlC. 1333 Haiofioule"acd osta Mesa. !if. 92626 1'Li..'. 14 0°NES We need t rade·lnsl Amerlcaf1 or Imparts- Sports cars, wogan.1, etc. 1971 Fial ltd Coupe. Action.look styling. 100°0 Full Factory Warranty only 5700 miles Demons!ra!or (Ser. 42242) Full Price s2995 f'S-e• 7168•) AS LOW '1495 ALL MODELS IN STOCK -IMMEDIAJE DELIVERY -SELECT YOUR COLOR SERVICE All i.i... ,_,_ ... -.. s ._i .. ,_,....... ,. '"'"-ERVICE ..... '"" " .......... -···-·· llBllJII (-ft.to k'r I (,,.i-,, .. , U..,, TM! Bill Jones' B. J. Sportscar Center 2833 HARIOR AT ADAMS COSTA MESA 540·4491 aaaa $•33> 196f SIDAN 01 YIUI llll JHAN ~7,000 MILll 1ACt OIT All CONDl110NINO '•II """"" •••>I 100, l>oou•llul '""'"'''' & looli>o' !'l••le,_ •iH i tolo"o•I< ,, .. ,;•1. doo• 1.,.0._ J.,./IM rod,•. • boo•••I ill¥· 6901 1970 SfOAN Dl Vllll ONlf \<1,000 Jolll~ll ,A(TORT' Al• CONDITIONING Vi••! "°P• f•ll oowor, lu•u•io;> 10 .. ,,.. ' l•o!h°' '"'"';"'· l ru•• olo•••I & 1-d•d wll• ell l~o d .. luro •ltOo. "'"" bo ,.,"'~tho• ,. oppo0<iolo. (1~1CTMI Convertibles 5 to Choo•• from 1t66 <ONYllTllll JAClOIT All CONlllTIONI ... Juli llO-f l•<I, Ill! •1'HI, 511001 -~,,.. , .... io. All lo••••• 1 ... ,. 1or, ~"' lot~o, 01<. !UDtt•I 1t61 CONYllTllll •ACTOIT AUi CONDlflONI ... n.iLl LIAfHll INTlllOI J.11 pe"ll>lo ,.._, l•<I. 1•11 ' 10lo1<oo.i< tlM<i••· -· lo<b, ,.., ... 01<. Ati.ol•,.11 -•llf•I 1Uf'1tJ 1t69 CONVllTllll lfll TMAN ,1,000 Mltll rAClOIT All (0NlltT!OfU ... r.11 .,._,, ,..,..., -lo <b. 1111 I IOl•uo~I< •'M"hf , "•I• ....... 1. lo<•tl• •• , ••• ' ......... l>r "'· !YPU•ll! S•••• 1f6' CPl. DI VIUI JUIT 1•,000 Milli IAC'TOIT' All CONPlt10NIHCI NLl LIATNll INTlllOI v1011 •••· 1.11 ,...,.,. 1il1 ,. ... . loa, '°'" lo<b, """-0 ... ,,. .. J.#./1M rodlo. ol<, ""· ' 11•11 ••••'*""" Ito••. IYGl'l}741 1970 C,I, 111 Villi 1ACl0lf AIR CONO IYIONINO '•ddod top. 1\111 loe••" I•••""" .11 .... 1~1 ... -•• "" ... ~ ... 1. ""'""· ' •••Y lo"', lo• .,11 .. 1 16101\lil $5666 El Dorado's JO to Cltoaae from 1f67 ft. DOIAOO rAClOIT All CONPlflGNllM 1Ul~ llAfNll INTIRIOI '""'"°' ••o. loll ""w"'· •••-, 11101 oo•llM I, rO<llo! llr•• & "'""' ., .. , Mloo• •"o" jWV)Cll $2777 it6' n DOIAOO '•UO<I '°'• loll loe1~•t !•t••lor, .... t ... ,, po-011'!0~ l•tl. -lo<b, lilt ....... , ' ...,. 1 ... 1.,01 .,11.,, UVD76ll 1f70 U DOIADO llll THAN l•.000 MUii rACTGRT Altl CONOITIONO .. ML llAfHll INTlalot: Vlorl .... 1•11 ,...., h•<I, rlll &. •• 1 ... oo.i< .... 11 .... -· l<Kti, .... , ... ..., "'· ., ... ' .. ,,,.. Mo<IM of I~• l oM." j61Jtoll lraughams 1970 llOU9HAM 1961 llOUOHAM 9,JM MIUI lOCAl l'I GWNIR rACTOIT All CONOlllONI,.. fAC'TOIT Al OHDITIONINO Oo•ffour Ill••• A •llMlv•o!y 1... i••vtl""' Ploo-..i. "'"'""' pe«al>I•. P~•-, .. , 1v11 loo••· ... 1~1. r.n '"'"' I"'"· VI•"" •r ,,, .. ;., • "'*" ..,.,, HI••• ,.,. Pvll ... -....... 0... C.~11\M dr• .... I lfo" !'Of• lo<kl, l""ok .... -. O!<. A ..... 1'"'1 .1n, ... 1 ..... 1w.1rt101 • NABERS CADILLAC A11l~lt'1,.., lltol« fltoYlrlfo• tit. O<•~fl C-tp Het&ef ArM 2600 Hubor Blvd., In Cosio M111 Coll 541).9100 Opon hes. r. Sunday • ·--·-.. __ ,. __ ..,..._ ~---,.---·· .. --'.··· -· '-:---·-,--• .. Bill Maxey Toyota 18881 BEAOI BL. ll-17·~~.i.11 HUNTINGTON BEACH ·70 OPEL CT, 102 h-f'I, 4-~p<I. extra~. xln! Mnrl. $2JOO. &i:.-.;,!lill. 1966 Opel K11det fastback-Air ron<I, v"rY rl,.,an. Good cond. $700. 67.1-RI 17. '68 OPF.L, J{ADE.:T'r. c ood condition, $SOO. * :'.>-1:l-17M * '69 OPEL. wiocl t"<lnd. Good trans. c~r. i'Vlust St'll. $1150. :-i?.&-51!.'11. PORSCHE WE BUY USED Porsches DON BURNS PRESTIGE PORSCHE, AUDI 1.".6."\l Harbor Blvd., G.G, (Just S, of C.G. Frwy.) '3&-21.13 1970 PORSCHE 9U T, white w/hlack int., 5 speed~ forward, Mag r ims, e.lec. ~unroof, air cond, 11m/fm Blaupunkt. l..caM?d new Oct, 1970 for $8~. Must sell. t.1ay either aMume lc11!1C Al $6675.29 or buy for $6959.69. 494--0446 aft U . ·5;:. Ponche "C'' COllpe-, new eng. !ires, exhauwt. Ex~I. oond. serv. records. $2,7SO or ofler. 49J.-0089. 1951 CARRERA SPEED- STER, very clean, •646-6319• NOW'S THE TIME FOR Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD . .. ... ·~ - CALL US NOWll PHONI 557·9220 INSTANT CREDIT YOU lllD AID STIL1 SAVI YOU MONEY I .If you art ntw in Colilomio 3. If you art ntW on your ;ob 2. If you owt money on your'· If you hov1 littl• or no .:or • crtdit ln Ml TIT TO AIUHI Tiii CllDtT AU TUMS TOI •ID IOTIIAT TOii MAT Ori¥1 ...... Todoy in .. c« 11 )'OUl'dlllir:1H 1:~0'71 DODGE VAN 8100 FULLY FACT. EQUIPPED $2689 fUll PRICE ORDER YOURS TODAY M~l~~GE '71 (Ol T IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $1974 fUll PRICE LARGEST INVENTORY OF COLTS IN ORANGE COUNTY B:~D '71 DEMON ~~~~1s ' IMMEDIATI DELIVllY Ser. 'II ll29BIE.120175 '70CHEVY PICKUP & CAMPER V-8, Heater. Duo! Broke Sys. tem, Chrome Grill & Bumper:.. Just Righi For VncolionJ. fUllrttCE fUll PRKE '6SDODGE PICKUP V-8. rodlo. heo•er, WW IHU. 8' IM!d S,J()<)75 '69DODGE '440 V..fl. otJfo, t•on•., lotlory o•• cond•tioning, •odro, l\t>o•. e•. wh;••woU tire., vinyl uwil yPW213 ~"'"''~1288 '66MUSTANG Autio. Iro n•., •od•o. heoter, boc~•• 1eot'! . .S ~0008 '70FORD GALAXY 500 M.T. A .. 111 Iron•~ loclory 01• ca~dltoon. inq, powe1 11ee,.ng, ~ .. o~es, tod+o, l>•o!er, wl>i-oU lo•ei, •06AKf $ fu11r•K1 1886 '67CHEYY CNlVEllf A.ulo, !•on•., 1odlo, h1ot••· w~eel co~•" 250 lngi~oo. TWY'tl' IUU ,IKl$599 •• Ser. :If CE l 405126291 Ser.# YH27C08159609 '70Y.W. BUG '70 Plymouth ROADRUNNER 38 3 v.9, o""'· .,,..,\ .• fo<:tory "" oond« ,.,,.,Ml, power''""'' ng, 111nvt •ot.•. •~d. bt1cl~! ,em1, c1n,er console 130A~'I' '67PONTIAC l DR. K.T. v.11, oo."o. traM.o fo~tn•~ o.r condotioning, powe• 1teerin9, rod0et. lle<1l11•, UVK?24 IUU ,l1U $599 '70CHIYT IMrALA M.T. v.s, 01t1a. ''""'" powe• •1eetin'1o rodiQ. heot•"· w h1l•woll ti111, '65T·BIRD H.T. fotlo"f o;, tond;llolol!og, rodio, h•oler. full 11owff Pl!J 21S .............. • I· I\ \<I. ••• .... ---: J, ' ' , .. ~. f •.'> • . ... ,. .. . " Auto., New 980Auto&,New 980Autos, ,..,w 980 Autot, New ~ = ~ ~ • .,, " z -> c .,, Ill .. A I c .,, ~ .. ~ • ~ ~ =-~ .. ... °' • Ill z ~ " • ~ Q~ ai:: 0" ... ~ ....,: '°" -:E z 0 I.I .... < ... Cl ai: ... o~ ..... 0 -co '°" -" an an en en c:::. "' c 0 --.. ~ --a ... c ;1~ ~ to :·,i ~ Cl~ t 1 Ji ; ~ l!o ai: li 11,:~ i ll o~ l J ... c ,1, ii~ .. ·1 ~ ... " -. '° ~ 1.r ~~i tii • j ·t " -~ >~-I .!"{ an an en en cc c:::. --<..: -~~ ~~ 1H ~;::; :1 . . >-.. p--· o:;i r~ .: ; !'. ... ~ il •f ·" .. oo. t)l .... i -co 'n · .;; i ... v .. ' • Ill z ,.... ~ t'w ~~ UJQ zu ~-,_ ___ .,;.;.·_ . . ----!'-==------""'--?::" =-~~ie-.. ~~ --,,,_ ,_ an an en en cc • cc • -• "' • 3' I.I --• '"' ..: .! . --. ~{JI u: '[fl,; t-'" z~ =1~11 ai: .::: i t t f J,jli:.-, OM . l -... . ii 1 ;• A."? ;1;h :&: : • 0 l •• . ~ ~ • -11 .. °':: "') '~ °' ~ 'f' 'I' , ·r . "'° -~ t!ll1 '°" :t l ;i ~ -~ -v an an .. en en c "' cc a :&: --~ -GI .... L .. • -~tt i Z Q] •• ... it~·~ t .i ~ c: .}~~,: .. ID'-~ j~! o" i I ~1 i OL ... 0 A.% Iii.l X v ., • 2 .:~.::z ... ~ i ,, ,... ~ "-.. Si'5 ., "'° -... . . '° .. ;~: .. ~ ,;. ¥ ~-:: I -" -·-- 990 , -· iCll ... v -ICll: A. ... ... Cl: "' 3:: 0 z ... ICll: 0 :e >-z Cl: :e ·~ ...... l§l I , _____ _ Autos., lmporttd 970 Autos, Imported 970 ! Autos, Imported 970 1 Autos, lmport9d 970 Autos, Imported 970 l--,;...O_R:..,.S_C_H_E __ I VOLKSWAGEN I VOLKSWAGEN I VOLKSWAGEN I VOLKSWAGEN 1965 Porsc~. ~bll eng & 1968 VW -Phanto1n itey, 'titi Vollts !or Sale good cOnd, '69 VW CONY. '69 VW BUG trans'. new ures. X1nt l"Ond. sunroof, radw, new br<1ke ~. I i'\ew re built "n~1ne ., 1 Df'"u·ablr burr;\ 101fe,, NJ 01 Call aft 6 pm, or wknds. g!asi. tlCJOd, header;-_ :-..1111 Any11.:1y-b1~ Ille" and 831J..8798. ma1nte11a~. $99:>. :HS--0-1~7 .• rhro1l'le r1nu;..chocolate 1°11' rnlicae.r • nf'll' 11'" YV131ti. Set 11 -You ll bU) • '62 PORSCHE_ Rt'd Cab. "68 V\V caniper. Xlnt coru\ bro"n makf' offr t. !i-lll-591H 11 Reblt '"'· xio1 "'""· """'· 12150. o.· moo. + TOP. --,69-VW-BUG 11569 673-7399. Bal. $850. Pr1. Pa r I Y · :\<) n1onr1 r1n1111 on ;.111 n! • l!i61 PORSCHE 9U, ~8--07\l. 11 rna; 111\ecls, dl r. <YXU-1 nver zoo" n"11' & lbl'd ·<'ar~ Xlnl cone!. 1968 VW F astback. Pnctd I~ 71171 $139a full pnce. Cali un hanrl !on app1u1rd 1'1'f'- $3693 6-15-5951 srll be/ore 7/lj/71 Call 194-Ti~4 1 r!i; •. 1970 PORSCHE 914 . Perf. ill~. Duna~an, 541}-l·l24 lv 71 V\\' \'an, Chroine Bill Maxey Toyota · 5:30 pn1 daily_ I ~f>N'd dlr. Radio. Heater 1 ZDY:?971 'fl!ke older car 1n 11-id" or :;mall do11n. \rill r.i1<11K'f' p1"a1r pa.rt}. Cll.ll l~l -'>!111 or ;rl6-ll736. J';.16~ V\\'~qU";;·eback, luel Ill· ,,.c11(tn, Jlf'\\ tu'f'~. brakes £. 1u11f'-UV. l'ad10, oni. owrlf'r. :.li SOO a~·1ual n11lt·~. Pricl', SJ \00 • asn C11ll 6il--Jji;,. con<:!., lo"" mill's. !\.-lust sell bumpers. Chrome reverst' 1"8>:;1 B~~ACll BL S~i-S~.:1:1 1m1ned. Best o lr. 675--1570. '61 V\V bu~. e .\ c" I \\ht els. Perel11 !n't's, part1Ql HUNTINGTON BEACH --. \'\\-V-AN ·::ig e • PORo~.1 " 912 0 • ,· g mec:han1caJ conrl. 8l'~t OJ 1•,uniwi· $2900 6 7 ;, -:J 7 O 6, ,. 0,., .. , .,...r "' ' ' c--11 •I 11 I II C.1n1""r un11. :.r11 " f('r tJ7J-:J5b(l, 1 ·""'" H' 0 I !-. U !" o"ner. 31,CXXI mt. 675-7225 or · ~6--0J7:l , Bu~ llil' new s Tu!I ~1!'.t<·rn. GUOl'I u·11.ns . Good 6~·1-06.17. \Ve'll help ;,.•ou sell~ 642-567!1 [For bes1 re;-ul!s! 642-5678 \ ('.nnd S-llJO. ;..-.7-9080 . \970 911-T Por~che. s a I970 V\V Squareback 12,()()() -'--------- ? _. I>' m1 radio. Asking $1JOO_ Autos, Imported 970 1 Autos, Imported 970 Autos. Imported 970 pea.ranee group. e, 1ec:t. ~~~i. 7.000 mi. 644--1129 •ro1. 912 ··w ·" x·~ '69 \'\\'. 32,000 JI.Illes. xt;;'i ""'~ . "" co .. ,., .... as. d 1 ,,~ \l 1 II $"9. C(,n 1 ion. .JVV, • U.'i SC' ' .KJ J. .J&-1667 \I 5 P :..18-2765 * * 6-IZ--0261 ,) , lC'f :'11. ROVER '67 ROYER 2000 TC '10 V\V Bug. Exec! cond. i1 .100 . 673--7486 '10 Pop-lop camp e r . ,\:\-1/F"f.I radio. new ures. DN>p clan>\ hnish _ genuine S329j. Ca!! 968--0&56. 1eather sears. \VYC448. &e 't>I V\\', :<uper clean, rrhud1 it • You'll Duy it engute. Body perfect. P. & $1469. II. S6.10. ·199-3114 . No 111oney dol\n on any of • '59 V\V-XJrll cond Nef'cb over 200 new & used can; trans. $175. 39j Cosia :\ll's<i on hand Ion approved ere-St , c .r-.1. dirt. T 1~,'"'=~v7.1~,,~b,-,-G~oo<~,-"-"""'" Bill Maxey oyota """'" · I 1!1881 BEACH BL. 847·8:>5.i * 557~S808 * HUNTINGTON BEACH '6.J V\V Bus, Brand new n10- • 1969 Lan<! Rover 88. Xlnt tor, New hrakf's, $1300. cond. N'rerl~ !ires. $211."A} • * ~>1S-2j()J '* * firm. Aft jpn1, 646-4903 :\1UST SELL '69 F"a:<thack - TOYOTA DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA 1971 To:;ota Df"mo #j99! auto. fuel 1nji;ct1on. R&H, lo mi. $1j()(). j.\8-4708 .'-'c=---... * '69 BUG ~ 1 011 ll<'r. $1100. 968-6j()2 aft 6 or \1-knt1S . '61 V\\', :dnt cond. ~tust sell. ' $-150. Runs good. I 673-828.:i I '69 V\\'. Xlnt ron.-t1t1on. I $1777 011ner 2::.rro mi. Ne11• tu·f' .. 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. BRING YOUR TRADE OVER 1 SO NEW & USED IN STOCK Bugs, Buss es, Porsches, C<!!mpers , Squ<!lre B<!lcks, F<!lstba cks & The New Type 4's. I Open 7 Days A Week I @; HARBOUR VOLKSWAGEN S1J9j, 4~1-2SCJ. No Oo11·n Paymt'n! I "\\'EED It & reap" .. clean $65.]1 mo.* our the trrast1res & trash -I/arbor Arf'a·~ Only E.xclusivr A11lhorizrd Volks11a~Pn Dealrr turn in!u ca~h thru a Daily 18711 BEACH BLVD. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH J6 mos Delerred paynienl Pllot Cla.ssifird ad. 642--5678 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![!'l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!!!!~ .. -!!!!!1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ pnce $T.:jl.J6 or i.:ash price ""!! -~---- S\8%.8S Incl Tax & Lie. APR Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9B0Autos, New 9B0Autas, New 980 ]~.jJ"; .. un approl'f'd crC'di!. ··-~~~~~ijiiiiiiiii~iiij~pij~~~lijlijilj~rri~7~iii fac1ory D1reci SalPS, SC'rvice & Par1s. 1966 Harbor Blvd., Co~la ,\IP~. 616·fl:lO:I. '70 Toyota Mark II Air rondi11on, Clean. Priced b1>Jo11· n1ark.et valllf'. 1710- C1A J\1 $1895.00 MIRACLE MAZDA !101ne of the Rotary Engine 2150 HarOOr. Co~ra ~lesa 645-5700 ~~-I '69 TOYOTA CORONA 4-dr, Lo mi's, .~Int cond, $1150. :,\&-,117ti0. '69 TOYOTA SEDAN 2 Door. 4 ~peE'd, Rarl10, lleat- f'r !:War! Sharp. (022.<\GCl Slfl't"1 tf!J mQr,uis ~motors Laguna Beach 900 So. Cst. Highway 494-7503 * 540-3100 LA:\D C11.1~rr ~l<i. 1\illl;. \\'arn h11hs, Vni\'. t1rr~. nr11·1 Sf'ill"'. 20.oo:t tlli. :i~O.j2:l1 ·ri1; T<J:-.-01-;-c .. ro11;;s3:..o or h-;-t nff<'r rall :>10-~:i.1. '71 Toyota Waqon l~:".l n1·1g1n11I nHlr~ 8f'<IU- llf(ll '1h1tr-bli1f' 1ntf'nor. i\r11 r;ir 11arra111y a1·a1lahle. t!fllCR!)t $19!1."1.00 MIRACLE MAZDA il<"Jn1p nf lt\fo Rnt11i;.• En21ne ~1:i0 Harhor. COi.ta i\lt':.a 645-5700 !--------• TOYOTA C'oro lla /aslhack, 1971 X\nt cnnd :>.lust SC'<'. tiil-8062. '70 Toyota 4 Dr. Turq1101~P Air n:inrht1on. Ex- l"t'llf"n! cond1non. Thi~ \\'(ln 't Ja~t lon.i:. (66688~1 $1595.00 MIRACLE MAZDA lln111e o! thr Ro1arv Eni;:1ne 2L'.i0 Ha rbor. Cosl11. :.IM;a 645·5100 TRIUMPH TI-IE TRIUMPH VB STAG NOW ON DISPLAY Come In for A lf'st drive! FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER r:o E_ ];;I Sr .. !"; A. ~7-0764 Open ria ily 9-9; rlo~ed Sunday 1968 TR-4A w/IR..<\. Racing tlrr~. n1a2 ..,,.hli. A glra! at $1500. S.Jfi.-4955. '68 TR 4 A 11•/ IRS. ma.g "'hef'ls, 1·acin11: tire~. A !'ireal al !1 500 !l4i;....\fl:'l.'i I 'fi9 Triumph GT6 •, 1011~ Kon1 :<hnck~. "lln! rond. n1ak<' ftffer 49:,...0&~7 'fi.1 TRJl'\l Pii--~-.:;pJTF!RE C'Clthl • Xln! l"Onl1. fi.l 1-0Tifi --- 'fH TRI. \\1rr -'heel~. BJ"i. Good Mnrl. Si9~ • .. A.\l-Orool •• '71 Firebird • '""0 ''""'"q I y I I • ! • r I 0 ' ~ ...,.,.~""" w"" AU10m•!' '''"""" n< """" ..... "Q & nt,<•r· 117•~1H 1r91/l, 00< $3807 Coit '71 Fire bird " ~•>'nn"~t• ''•n'm'' ''"" r<>v.r· ,. •• , OQ "' D••I •• ··-condohor•ng ( 22lll IL 1 !OJIJ) Ooc $3643 Coit '71 Firebird ~ U" 1 ••<IO•V !"QU•;.ol'd I''""'•' ·'-'"'a • ~-·~·· "' •vt""'"'" ··~"'""' """ ... cM•do!iOrnng (1Bflll10'96n! Oo• $3542 Cost '71 Fire bird • a<>l~en b~Aulv, WllV °'<'0'~ !'Qtl ie>Df'd. "' •t1IO.,..l llC 1ren~m·"•an. """er ••t•• no & b•~··· .,, ""'d ''~""'0· .. ,, . ..., gll U , tllJl/1ll0'96J9! Oo• $3631 Coit '71 Fire bird ( u' '0 .... ~ul<>Of'Ct. "·' A.u!O,.,~hc ''•"•mlu•""· ... '"""'''°";"fl, t , n t r d Olt•>. <O<d4VI too. .. ~ ... W~!I , .... ,,..,1n ru.,om ,...,,,1 co••" PONfr >!ff' .. , • ""' ... , b••~~ . ... d•O .I. httltr. {V4 11L!ll9 l!I\ Oo• $3865 Coit '71 Firebird ~ ull~ '"' ·~-' '""'rr•d. " •u1om•n< ,, '~'"''' 'I 0 n , .. <0"" """'"g •· '"" ol• .,.,.., .. ',.., Q • ·~ ,-ewe• ~'~· •• " ~.'&"""''' \;11e.HLl09 . Oo' $3643 Cost '71 Firebird "' rnn~'''""·"C ····•"'1 0'-"· "'''""'•"' "'""r" ~·en " ""'"'"' ''"" '•n • """'"' 8,. ... """'" • I ea'"' 111J8/lll/19DoUI Oo• $3615 Cost '71 Fire bird VO ""'""""' r !r•n\"1>\ '~ "" conO·•·~n.no. t·n\ ~ 11 · "' "'"'"' \!o~•·ng ' ..... .... , """' .. """' A h•r•~' (l/J811Ll~l•I Oo• $3627 Cost '71 Fire bird ~Ullf Tl,!DrV •ao,.rDf'd ••d,n & ~~···· •i1JlllL OOOlll! o"' $2872 Coit '71 Firebird " •ulo....,11< !r1n•m•• •km. ,,,. . .., c••u. '" ,.,..,. dd•00•"0 •~G·<t & ~ ...... """'"' '""""fl •"" ~· ,, b••··· 1 77JlllL!O~Jl Oo• $3631 Co•t '71 Fire bird cool lronl~~I Lim• '"'~""" ' ~.i••lor " ronl!l•.oe•OQ. ~· •u•O· "'~··· ''""'m''"on I ·~' '69 Firebird '7 0 Hornet '•pr!'<). ,_,,.,,, ""'' ~f<I'' A.\J!Om•l•Co . , "'"" 0"'.., eronomv •nQ•""· ,, . e<:'I 0'"'" '"" 0 & n(•'•• f11~'1Ll'~~~I '" I cen_. "o. ~._.., H Bl•lll Ii> • .... Oo• $3661 Coit $2388 $1789 '71 Fire bird '69 Grand '67 Malibu A;,. (onanoon•n11 V ' ""'" "'"''~ 1• on"'"'""" ~· ~' ., .. ,.ng & •·~••• '"' ~ gl• .. Olll>!L'01?'J9, Prix ""h" A P•c••o• \'/ ·~ ,, '<>n '"" """'""' """''"Q "'"0-m1r.~ l1An1n'UJOlOn, ~' co"n • onono pO..,. ~itlyl '00' ••a,o, Oo• $3542 Coit '71 Firebird 0< \t•e•"'<I fr<! l»W• ~e.1'"' fl ZN 6ll) ' "'"' "'· ""'"'.' "''000"'1 fY'I. T Oil) $1588 $2999 VO ""'""'~"< ''""'"';' !10n ..,..,.,, •I••• n!/ ... Pl'"'"' "'"'"'· ... '""" '66 Mustang '68 Wildcat Wdh ~ulOM O lo( u ..... ,~9 ""'"" 91~ .. '""'n • ~fAIPr. JlHlll l !090•1) Oo• $3630 Cost '71 Fire bird l~ltlm•t r ''""'"'"\,on v ~~1 •"O' ''""'"' "'""· ......... , . ···~ ···••\""· "° ... , VO •nQ r• •111•0, """'e•. !oclb•y ""· no•''' tS£U 91l! P!>Wr< WO!>CIOWI •"If $989 IOP<M<I W"ft A ~•OYI '00' !lCA IOI! $1997 '71 Pinto '69 Fiat " hn•"6 Q'"'" "°"'~' le•• Thn~ ' ' ' . ' ., •M ,...,..., b·~··'· '""" • l<rA •r • <1,ono Miln • ' b •• ~ • ·-t••nl"''' tOnv•rf 111~/!Ll!lSIJ\ l·on ·~d"' s h.,,t I)()(( "'f l er. l •ln C!H) Only Ooc $3343 Cost $2188 $1388 '71 Firebird ". IU'O"'M < 1 •• ,.,..,,,_ '69 Ford '69 Cougar ••O" A" [t),,d·!•O"•"il· 00" CUSTOM ~~•o,,,.i.c ,, ....... 1 .. •• • ......... 0 '"' ,...w •• b•lkH. tl"t..i o!•n, •I dle> "o" e>ewr• ., .. ,_ • 000' • ..i~ ... " '"~• YP"lY! •<>Of "' •~to . .., ...... ,,., .. tO•V "' '""'"''"'" • ~"''' Ul•llL 1Ctfft ~ ••• Jl61 8ELf '"'· <)(Vl "" Ooc $3828 Coit $1299 $2598 -.... -.:--·-... -:::r ~--~.,.,_ ____________ ... ----~···~· ... ·----··--·~--·--::::-·--_ ... -............. ,. -----··-·-... _ -· -----· ------. Frldar, JuJJ '· 1971 OAILY fll.DT [ ......... ]~! ---l§J I ---I~ I ---I~ I '"'""'.. 1§1 f -.... I~ I --.. 1§1 I ,_.... l§l I ....... _ Autos, Us.cf 990 Autos, UMct 990 Aut.., U-990 Autol, UMCI 990 Autos, UMd 990 Auto., U- UNCOLN 990 AutGs, UHd 990 Autoo,UNd . 990 Autos. Used VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROLET vw ·~ • New tfts '-bat· 1966 CHEVY II tery: Good roncl. $750/o!ler. 2 Dr Sed, 6 cyl., auto tran1, 6t2~227 or 673--4.957 al\ 6 pn1 radio, heater. (RYl.A41J '68 VW Bug, whne Good $699 cond. New hrks. m~Uler 1: HIGHLAND MOTORS battery. $1000. ~-2145 H&rbor Blvd. 1967 V\V But:. Very Gd corn!. Corta Mesa &!5-54(1.1 Make ortl'r Must sell by 377 '68 CAMARO reblt t>ng. 1115. 846-0168 eves. w/headers, auto trans, '"' VW ~bk 33 000 stock rear-end. 700) miles. vu ..,.1 • • n11, nu &12~701 paint, xlnl l\1ust Sf'll th1s1~--·-----­'>~•kend $1195. ::MS-4910. BEAUTIFUi'.. '60 Olcvy, f. 1967 V\V Bug-Blue. Xlnt dr, Hrdtp, PIS, PIB, Xllll cond Sile Cal! H !I z el mech cond, $1!1.:i. 64&-5640. Russ~!!. &12-1141 bel S pm. '63 CHEVY ~ door, runs i--""'vc:-o=L"'v::;;o:----i •"""· '":'· '"·""" CONTINENTAL 1966 LINCOLN Conunental. R/H, air, full power, R uns gd. SlOOO. Pvt ply. 6"--048L CORVAIR '65 Carvair 4 Dr. Ell"cellent cond11ion. Air con- dition. Clean. tROJ!H3) 5'595.00 MIRACLE MAZDA __ C_O_U_G_A_R __ FORD MERCURY 1968 Cougu XR7 '69 FORD Wanon • . ., Llncolo Coopo, FUiiy 2 Dr HT, Priced !or Quick , loaded. Air, l&nd&u. lthr, 1970 Mercury Colony Sale. Ek>autlful Pl11.Unwn fin· Country Squire, 9 Pus, Fae· etc. Buy below wholesale at Park W•oon 10 Peas. tocy Air Condltlon1nr, v.1, $32S5. Xlnt tlnancing, ''Like Nn-" 19000 miles. ~en~!) da:~~ea~ Auto., Power Stttnllf. Pow. • '66 I.Jncoln 4 Dr. Futty Smart tulip ,veUow finish landau root. Aulo trans, Ra· er Brak~. Luggage Rack, equip. Al the low pnce ot with saddle tan interior. Low '.\tiles. {SKG4121 •~ ~--· ·-N•w ,.. Equl~ •-I"~'-•"-· dio. Heatf.'r. Powrr Stttrin&:, .,.,.,.,_ ""'"" -.. ...... .,.,_.. ._ --J uuu· f'IC'. a ~al clean car. (Wl{R.. $AVE trade-in!. out. Pull Powtt. Tactory Air 0581 Sale Priced S1S45. John-HOUSE OF IMPORTS Cond, Tit Stttrtng Wheei, 8011 &. Son, 2626 Harbor Autboriied MB Dealer Twin Comfort I~ seats, Blvd .. Costa. tilna. 5'HJ.-5630 (1) 523.7250 L&ndau Roal, RooJ Rack. INVE:ST?t1ENT Co. .sttklng etc. See And tNt drive this 1968 Cougfll'-P/1. air cond, lt ....._ .... ...... DV VAN '63 Ford, V!, 4 •pd. financially reapOmlbJe prin-~ut .. ul car ........ y (A • H n. E · grttn. Good cond. Pvt pty, "8) J·"·--• So -ome of the •wlllry ngu'll! hydrn, hi performance. Sell c1pal lo a.s.sun1e lea.5e on .,..,_., .: n, .o<M<J 2150 Harbor, Costa J\.lrsa Sl800. &4Z..56S9. or trade Jo.r vw or chopper 1971 Lincoln Conrinl"ntal H&J'bor Blvd., Cost.a Mf.'Sa. 645.5700 DODGE Call aft 4 pm, Dan, coupe. All x'tra& drk brn, !l40-:i6JO. '63 CORVAIR Monza convt., 1---------675-0406 brn le&ther inter. Lo ml'a 1959 STA. WAGON auto tra.n!, Xlnt (:Orl(f, Ton. l~ DODGE De.rt 4 door, 1---------·l'fi6 J:VIPALA Wag. PIS. ne11.u tncL, Sl2S. 546-2889. R.&H, auto tram. $395. DEAN LEWIS P/8, AIC. Lug. rack. Xtn '66 Corva1r Conv. Auto, mu1t ,"~'""'~~'~·=-~-~~ ~,,.,="°F'"on1-,-,G".i~~-,,-,-SOO=.-,~D"R call 644-4777 days, 67l--2SU V·8, &uto trans, factory air !lT, ful! powt-r. air, original I =·~~··====~=~ rond.ilJOnlng, power 1tttr- oy,•ncr tan11Jy 2nd car agen-'70 CONTINENTAL, 8000 mi, inr, power (disc) brakes, cy -.ervircl B1ue Sook $1435 11.ll extras, M lC'hel ln radial power windows, nadio, heat• r;a.Je $1195 962-1113. tire1, privete owner. $6COO. er, whlt~an.. tuned glaSJ. clean. $1150. M&-5629. S{'[I, le11.v1ng co untry , '68 DODGE Chnrger-P\1-T, VOLVO 1-,-,,-,-.00--C-"'-,0-m--F-,bo-cg~IM-,1 _,,.. __ 29_30_.______ eir. &uto. vinyl top. I owner. DEMO SALE GT Ch•""· ,.,, v .. '""· CORVmE ...:'...:'·""-· ="7'""~n~. =~-,..,,..132 FALCON 4~9'J5. (GGP242J '71 FORDS: Gal&xiea, $199 """'""· & "'"""'· """ MERCURY HIGHLAND MOTORS '6."l CHEVY 4 DR SEDAN LO ---------$2998 ml. rt h, .xlnt cond. $650. Corp. {n4l TI~2. 2145 Harbor Blvd. 1971 Volvo 144 Sed. 675-7319 Denio 11 1360 '60 Chevy Xln'! running $3098 1971 Volvo 142 Sed Demo • 3"268 $4098 1971 Volvo 164 ~ cond. Good trans. car. sn:i 646-2032 CHRYSLER '55 CHEVY 2 dr. sedan, V-8 stick, xtnt cond.. original, S250 or best offer. 847--5140. . Sell idle 11em1 now! factory Direct Sales, ~rv1ce Call 642--5678 Now! & Parts, 1346 Harbor Hlvd., Autos, New C,'.\L 6-l&-!1303 1969 Volvo Sta. Wag. '67 CORVETTE FASTBACK SACRIFICE '66 FUTUR.A, 111tom. pwr MAVERICK 1970. Lo mi. air '6S MERCURY Couiar XR7, Colt& MN& 645-~ .Ug, radio. heattt. Clea.n . l cond, vinyl top, auto trans. Alf. PIS, P/B, Landau top, '67 Parklane Btourrham, 12100 ~ .... l'I ~· $1795. 64l-Dl53. • owner. S67S. 493-107() =~·~~=='=~=·~---i~~~~-----1 delux nylon inter., Auto, ---===---'65 GALA.XIE 500, 4 dr, py,T, '65 J\fERC ~lontcl&ir, excel A/C, PIS. PIB, Stereo :\lust ~JI '67 Veit. Sharp "4Z7" $19'JS. Call Steve 5-\6-8640. FORD · h 1•N> oond. A steal al ~JO. N · I &If, rt . "IV\/; tape, ew ttrts, va ves, 494-5751 548-5927. brakes. Be&ut cond. -,,=.,-FO~R"D~-F-•i"c1,.6-.,.-XL~,-. 1 '63 METEOR \1-'a&on, air \Vhile wired intenor. J575. cond, radio. heater. 50.IXX) 8.13-2057 mt. lmmac. $495. 493-1070. ~ co r v e 1 t e, '69 m 1963 FORD stat.ion wagon, w/headen hi~r1se, AFB, air, ired tire11, 1ite.J at Sl98. Hunt 4 IP posi. tract. Ariser, =Good=~""-""~· -"'~8-_"9_2_7. __ ,, maa wheet11, new tires, DON'T give It away, ~t ---------1\TERC '66. tac air, full power, new tires, Xlnt cond. 962-0950. AM I Fl'if. $1.()(X) tum. Call quick cub for 1t with • ~7-5749. DAILY Pn.DT Oualfled 980 Sell idle Items n::iwl Call 642-5678 a: SL\'el Unen1ployed, must • e 11, $1495. Lee, 673-4536. 1910 Marquis 2 DR HT. powder blue. alr, full power. Under :ll,000 mi. $1250. Pvt Pty: 645-5016. MERCURY 1971 Mercury Colony P•rk 10 Paa w&IO«'I. Step Up to the finest. nu. al'tr't.C1tlre li&ht )'t'llow sold exterior wilh natlJrai H<ktLf interior l like new, Equipped with it ail auto tr.na, Radio, Heater, Auto temp a.Jr Cond, f'oower Sleeri~, Po we r Brakes. Powe-r Windows, 6 way Po~ Seats, Tilt Stttr- ing ""heel and much more Jncludlng roof rack. Like new in every det.ail. ~and test drive today. ClnCJEl Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa roof~. 540-5630 MUSTANG MUSTANG 1965 MUSTANG V..8, auto trans, rad)o, er. !SVR~ll $795 HIGH LAND MOTO 7145 Harbor Blvd. c~ Mesa &ts. 1910 MUSfAN'G MA $239S. Uke new. Pvt 642-9031. 1970 Cutlass Supreme-- air, pwr, sterro. Lo $3000. Owner 5J6....fi697. '62 Olds Cutla.sli. liharp, runs &QOCI. :w&-2054 alter 6. '63 Olds Wa11on $400 '69 Mustang, pov.·er disc * * 646-104A * * brakes, air cond. delt1."1;l' in-I ;1;;96;;9'°Co:cuco:.,:::.,::--;sc:,:::,,..=me-. ..,, terior, vinyl lop. Perteet po'ft·er, xlnt cond. 1'1ake cond. SZl.95 or best ofter. kr. Call 846-«J.11. cn41 547-9191 or 673-33.M. 1 ·.o;.,,-,-:,::-oodcc:""':;-. -."'i.s"-1"'>."'Ca1,-c1-,-, '65 Mustang 289, auto. p/11, after 6 PM & a.II day p/b, belted tire&, 26.00'.J mi. wknd. 4964829. ""· Ph. """""· 1---=P""L y=M'"'o"'uo-oT=H~- ·51 Mustang GTA-1'.laoy xlrati. $1350 finn Call Dan ~7874 or SJG...7656. MUST ~I 1970 '68 J'i.1USTANG Co-,-,,-. --I .383, 4 apd. Inunaculat•. P S V-8, offer. ~1757. I , auto. $1200. 541-MOJ 1966 Plymouth Daily Pilot \Yant Ads have b6rp.1na p.lore. for sale. sharp. .,,_..,.. E:<<..'('ptional!y Clean Beautiful m1dn1ght blue fin. ish wuh harmonizing in1er· ior, J::quip1>ed w1lh at110 trans. Rad io, Heater. e1c. RerJects excl'llent ca~. f4·13- A YD) S199S. Johnson & Son. 2626 Harbor Blvd., Cost.IL AT CONNELL CHEVROLET THIS YEAR Mesa. 540-.1630. ~ yoQir PREVIOUS CUSTOMERS HA ~E SENT US 28% "FRIEDLANDER" . ,,..·:::.~'"f~ro .. OF OUR USED CAR BUSINESS. ISN'T THAT WONDERFUL, ?.lust sell. $1 ,250. &16-7993 THANK YOU. OUR BANK DOESN'T HAVE ENOUGH MONEY TO BUY JUST ONE 1971 Vacia Hatchback Cpe. Radio. Auto. 1rl!.ns .. Low. Low l'oliles. (674BZG) 1970 Monte Carlo 2 Dr. Coupe. Gorgeous Bronze Car. White Vinyl Root, Air, Po~·er Stt"erini. Power Brakes, 1571BS\Vl, I o..,:ner mllK. 1 7A~uto-,,~u~ .. ~d ---..990'"'1 0F THOSE CUSTOMERS. WE FEEL WE EARNED THAT KIND OF RE~S~PE~C~T.:,.. _________ _:~============J BUICK 1 0 ORIG owoec, ''3 R"io~. SO WHY DON T Y U. • • • • • Xlnt cond. 7CXJ!2 Iris & 4th 1970 KINGSWOOD WAGON 6 Pass., Po,ver Miles. (P2397) Steering, Air Cond., Power Brakes, Radio, Auto., 24,603 $J499 St, Cdt>.I, anyt1n1e ., 644-1564 aft 6. ---~-1 1968 BUICK Special -Xlnt Buy oond, lo mi. SJ600. Pvl pty. Aft 5: 30 pm , 546-5585. 1 '·66=e"o~k~k-cR"°;'"vi"oc"•-. '"xl°'o7t -:-.,.c:od-:;-. ,1 airlcond WHERE YOU ARE TREAT!D LIKE A CUSTOMER BEFORE AND AFTER YOU BUYI Ca.11 839-1675 Buy WHERE YOU CAN, WITH '63 BUICK SKYLARK CONFIDENCE, REFER YOUR vs, id running cone!. FRIENDS TOO GET A SQUARE $450. 548-2846 1970 Camaro Coupe $2499 1970 Nova S2299 1969 Impala Cus. Cpe. $1999 Radio, Stick, 6 Cyl. Like Brand New. 12,000 Miles. (908BQD) 4 Dr. Sed. Radio, Auto., 6 Cy!., Economy Car, at a real price. (350ASQ) Vinyl Roof, Radio, Power Steering, Auto. Trans., Dead Sharp. (YPS917) DEALI $850. 1966 Special St11tion 1 ________________________________________________________ -:~------------------·il Wagon. R/H A/C 642-7182. Ir CADILLAC Larg•st Selection OF LUXURIOUS CADILLACS In Orang• County 1963 thru J970's ·~ 2600 liARBOR BL., COSTA f\1ESA 540.9100 Open Sunday '71 COUPE DE VILLE Loaderi. only 4.00CJ mile~. Corpora.non presidents' 1.•1ifes· private car. Like ne1v in every re~["lf:rL Call Krn! I Allt>n 8~2-4435 !or demon. s1rai1con 11ppo1nt1nenL 1967 Coupe dt> V11lf' air. all po.,.:er. lo m1, new tlrei. Abo vf' av~. $2350. &l~ ... 1691 Anylime 1968 Carlilh1c ronvertiblt, tX· eel cond. White wired lei.ther interior. SJ.250. Call ~8-3008 aft. 6 pm. QUICK SALE, 'lib Cad C.Onvt ., All necf'~s. $1375. * * 64.:J..-0770 *. ·1970 Black El Dorado-Like new. 16.IXXl mi. Loaded >,1.•fe:.:tras. 645--0350. CAMARO '70 CAMARO 13.910 origin.al mill!&. Fantas· (ic gold "'"'Ith i;:old interior. New car warranry ava1J&ble. 1996A YDl S26!f1.00 MIRACLE MAZDA Home of the Rotary Engine 2150 Harbor, °'6"ta Mesa 64S-S 700 .'69 Z.28 C&maro, xlnl cond. Call: 675-1493 CHEVROLET "fl& El Camino, V3, 1.u!o, a \r 1.hocks. trlr hiteh, Jo ml. $1300. offer, 492--t797. '63 Qievy Bel Air 1 Or, 6 cyl, automatic. S3'r.l. C&IJ 548-3214 '66 CHEVELl..E SS 396, 4. apd , Ma.r•. Very cl"-n. Call alt 6 pm: f).46..5979. 1970 CAM.ARO, full lae ~Ip + alr. Mua l all, leavina country. 844'7114 1969 MALIBU COUPE 2 Dr. llardtop. Auto., Radio, Power Steering, Vinyl Roof. Pretty Car. !YC1'1193l \VO\V!~ $1899 1969 NOVA 6 Cyl. ·1 Dr. Serl, Radio. Po\1Jer Stetnng, Aulo. Clean, Clean, Clean. (849<..T'C 1 $1999 1969 CAMARO COUPE Car Sold :-.;,..,,. J~ere. Auto .. Power Slf'trtng, Radto, Air Cond . t·aciory 50.000 Mile \Varranty Remainini;. Dead Sl<tarp. CZ\VX323! $2499 1969 NOVA COUPE V-8. Po,•·er Steerinf, Radio, Low 1'!1les. Razor Sharp, {2CJ183l $2099 1968 CHEVY 4 Dr. Sed11n. R&dio. Po,ver Strering. Aulo .• Air Cond., l ()\\·ner New car Trade·in. {WVR809J $1499 1968 IMPALA COUPE 2 Dr. Hardtop. Radio, Power St@erin£, Auto. Trans. CUFZ285J {Buy, Buy, Buy) $1699 1968 CAPRICE 4 Dr. H&rdtop. <Beat One). Radio. Pn\\'f'r Steerini;:-, Vinyl Roof, Auto .. fO\••er Brakes. Best Buy On The Lot. CXEW831) $1699 1967 CAPRICE 4 Dr. Hardtnp. Auto., Power Steering, Radio, Air Cond., V!nyl Roof. (SZX893l $1399 1967 MALIBU 2 Dr. Hardtop. Radio, Pn10.•er Slcf'ring, Vinyl Root. Auto. PreUy Thing. (VOT067) $1399 1966 CORVAIR COUPE Be6t One. Sharp, 4 Spel"d, 140 HP. (TPK240) $799 1966 IMPALA 2 Door Hardtop. OrliillAI mile&, power steering, .11.ut1> matic, radio. ITPC097) $999 1965 MUSTANG COUPE 3 Speed, V-8, Radio, Power SiHrini. RN.! fine c.a.r. <NRB278) $999 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 1970 MAVERICK COUPE Stick, V·8, Radio. Uke Brand New. (YYJ4901 $1699 1970 TORINO 2 Dr. Hardtop. Auto., Radin. Power Steerina:. Air cond. 19,000 l\1ile Car-Nice. (291 AKT) $2099 1969 TORINO 2 Donr Hardtop. V·8, Stick Shift, Radio. Sharp Car. (665CPH ~. 28,000 ]'.11\ea. $1599 1963 OLDSMOBILE <I Or. H11.rdtor. 36,000 1'1ile~. Cartful ~ ner. Power Steering, Auto., Radio. (0KP5121 $699 1968 BUICK SKYLARK 2 Dr. H&rdtop. J6,731 Miles. Power Steerln1. Radio. All", Auto. {VJ"P042) $2099 1966 PLYMOUTH FURY 2 4 Door Hardtop. Power Steerlna:, Air, Radio, Auto. Nice -Clean -Bargain. (SKJ3091 $999 1969 EL CAMINO V·8, Auto .. Powtt Stttrina, Radlo. {6SMQDJ $2199 1970 FORD 112 TON PICKUP V-8, Radio, Stick. Sharp. (5n51A) $2299 1968 CHEVROLET t/3 TON V-8. Al.Ho., Radio, Custom Sport Ce.b. Sharp. (16106C) $1799 1964 CHEV. 1/2 TON PICKUP Stick. 6 CyJ. <P83564l $999 USED VANS Wnt Coe11t Dlstrlltutor -COME Sii - llt Ones-Small Onn COME SH RARE -1958 MERCEDES BENZ 4 Door. 220S. Needs a V&lvt" J ob, otherwise clean as a pin \I.1th 4 Speed, Radio, Air Conditioning. Wh,y don't you l'fllore thl• dude. Crtz477 ) $1299 546-12 • -~-. ' ... -. . ' . . ... '' • Friday, July 9, l'i1 l PIOA ...... Now 9IOAuto1, New iliii. ..... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 980Auto., N.w 980Autos, New PIO Aulot, Now 980 Autos, New PIO ''SPECIALIZING IN UALITY'' FIRST OFFERING 1971 DEMONSTRATORS ALL HAVE POWER AND AIR CONDITIONING-LOW MILEAGE WARRANTIES- RIVIERA s5973 Cu1to"' llH909612l" WAS $7207.77 ELECTRA s53ss Cu1tom 2 cloor (IH410Mll WAS $6-409.00 LE SABRE s4593 Cudo"' 2 Door. !ICI01'966l WAS $5494.64 SPORT WAGON $4227 llZI041S l WAS $4867.01 HOW'S THIS FOR A TRAVEL PACKAGE Brand New 1971 OPEL Wagon With Fantastic Eriba Puck Camping Tra iler FULLY !QUIPPED TRAVEL TRAI LER WITH STOVE -ICE BOX -SINK - CLOSET -All CONVENIENCE EX· TRA S. WE SELL ONLY THE FINEST USED CARS AT SENSIBLE PRICES '70 JAGUAR XKE '68 SKYLARK '68 RIVIERA '67 COUGAR Cl>uP'I'. ' 'l>ftd lr•rismlul<ln, ••· Cuitom CO•W••llbl•. VI, autom•· Tiii• lo~•I~ 1Mmm•rlng wlll!t fm,....cul•I• c•r in1l<I• ~nd cul. dl<I, t..ater, dl•Om• wire """"l•, !le, radio, ""'"" full power, fie-Jl lvltri hb• bl•ck 11'1e<IOr •n<I A 1cw m1i.e11e gtm w11n me l•t!O,..,. •ir cotldlfPOfllng, bl-.:k tory •Ir, buek-' 1eeh, coniDI• A c1nl0m "'nyl IQ!>. Full -•NI w•rr•n!v bOO~ ohll ""•il•ble. 11•11>•r ln!..-IOr. J11>! •n lm....,.cu-bNutUur caretully drive.. llKal l•c!Ory air cDfllllrl1111in11 cl cou,..t Equipped wirh "''· ouJomatic, la1• •utcmobllt. Sold and •t,.,,lcecl t u!omcblle you mu11 ddvo. !WXG Looks Qrfft wllll th"e 1por1 r•dlo '""" heartr, power •l"1!rlng. by u1. 5511 chroma wll"lt '°"· tWQZ 13" A m<<1! '"'" car, (UCL :xiii $4995 '70 OPEL Stallo1' wagon. 1~·• ';IDrgeoVI 11111• wlllOll lo ~ulpped wl!ll •uh> ma!lc tr•/'Otmlniofl, r•dlo Ar><! ~eate<, l••v• enoin•. l..;goge ••<~, WSW. In ·~ctlle<i! <ondl- l•on, (lolS ASJI $1995 ·-·--,. $1995 $2995 $1495 EXTRAORDINARY .BUY! '70 JAGUAR XJ SEDAN \Vi!h only 15,00CI miles. You "'Ori't find many or these Rround. Fully equipped with factory a ir, po1ver 11·in· dn1v.~. pt111·C'r steerin1<, pov1rr disc brakes on all 4 11 hf'f'ls, Al\1-Vt-I radio. British Haciru: green C'Xtr rior 11•1l h Ian l<'athe r intrrior. If you've r vrr rr~!ly 1uantcd ultimate tuxl1ry, h('re is yo ur chant·e. (950BQE ) JAGUAR IRAN D N!W 1971 KADETTES • ALL ~~DUCED s1 00 OVER FACTORY INVOICE 2 DOO R SEDANS-4 DOOR SEDANS-WAGONS- AUTOMATICS-4 SPEEDS-CHOICE OF COLORS Brand New OPEL Kadette MODEL 31 2 DOOR SEDAN !Jl-917·4~!.!i) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON "GM'S MOST ECONOMICAL CAR" • 234 E. 17TH ST. AUTUORIZEll B UICK -OPEL-JAGUAR SALES and .SER V ICE COSTA MESA 548-7765 NOBODY BEATS OUR DEALS!! BUY FROM ••. Orange County's Fastest Growing Chevrolet Dealer JOHN CONNELL "NO GIMMICS -NO GIVEAWAYS JUST 21 YEARS OF HONEST DEALING" • DON'T BE . MISLEAD BY ALL THE LOW PRICE CLAIMS -YOU CAN GET AS GOOD A PRICE HERE IN TOWN WITHOUT NEEDLESS TIME SPENT SHOPPING FAR AWAY! EXAMPLE: BRAND NEW 1971 Vega 411 -Not Striped l••utiful y•llow •ll't•rior, AM r•dio, hee+•r, tint•cl 9 l.a 1l, 171belt.dwhit•w•ll1, •tc.1 23727 31 ('i8ll OYll 70 VEGAS IN STOCK-ALL 10 COl.OUll 52 150 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ·CONNELL CHE VROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546·1200 ~ -,,. --,.\ ~· ..... "lllt-'1.t ........ , '- Autos, Used 990 Autos, N•w 980 Autos, New 980 Au tos, New PLYMOUTH 1969 PJ.vmouth Roa<lrunne r. 30,000 miles Excellent eond. Racing ltf{'S • & wheels. fi.16-3411. "66 Ply. SignC"t R/H, std. trans., V-S 2"il C.I.D. I _owTl('r, \'ery clea n, asking $&95, 96&---2-176. PONTIAC ---~-1969 Pontiac GTO 2 Dr. H.T. \ili~l St•il I Popular Grrt•n n11.~1 n1C'lal1c ('\lrrior, 111th dark .cr"'('{'n buckc; sra1~ J.: eonsolr. Lan- 1lau Hoof. 111110 tra11.~. !{<1 -, ct10. HealCT, P1111 cr B1·akr~. I Pnwcr S!l'<'r1n.:. rat·lory, Air :;;1vlrrl ~rrrl \l'hN"ls. r lr' (:'\"ft;~1~~1 ~.ilr l'r11·"d $1'.'l':Y.•. Jnhn<;(!n S.· Son. 162fi j !l;irllflT" Rh·rl , Cn~la ,\lesa . !• 10-56.10 1960 VENTURA V-A, auto trnns, poWt'r S!f'f"I'· 1n!o(. po11·rr 111n<lo\\s, rarho, hC'11tcr, 11•h1:c11.·alls. ~GKP­ T;"iCil. S299 HIGHLAND MOTORS 21~:1 Harbor Blvd. CO!'ila J\.lr~11 &l.'1-'.)"!1}1 '60 PONTIAC Sin \\lgn, PIS, PIB, Rrblt mo1or & 1 rrui~. Nl'w tirrs & hatt. Xlnt cond, Pvt ply, $275. 962-97:.S. '65 Pontiac Lt-i\1ans, RIH. P IS, PIG, Auto, New tn"t"S. $795. 833-0094. f 1966 Ponl!ac GTO-Full p11·r I &. a1r, lo m1. Ong O\\'IJer. I $1200. 96S-006Q. '70 Catalina, aulo, p/s, \'inyl top, 15,000 miles, a Ir , 8'12-4168 an 6 pm. RAMBLER 1960 RA\\1BLER sedan. Auto trnn~. P/~. Xlnl cond. $200. 96&---3570. !M44 Sllrike Ave., Fount VaUey STUDEBAKER "64 STUDEBAKER OnJ:Hl.1.1 01unrr. Very rood rondition 549--0J57. T-BIRD '6~ T -Bird good rondltion """· ~11-i2!M 196.'i TI-IUNDERBffiD, l11n- I dau. All p.,.,'1', a ir, lo n1lles. C1lll 968.J(HQ aft 4 p.n1. II CLOSE-OUT OF ALL REMAINING '71 MERCURYS B~:~D 1971 COUGAR • Sol•cl o ~if!, .... ~;;, .,...11., powtr 1ltt •i"'), po..,er d.,c bra~el, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ANY BRAND NEW 1971 MERCURY MONTEGO IN STOCK-WE WILL SELL FOR 30/ OVER DEALER /0 INVOICE! OUR SELECTION OF 1971 ·MERCURYS HAS NEVER BEEN BETTER. IT'S TIME FOR YOU TO MAKE OUTSTANDING SAVINGS RIGHT NOW AT ••. JOHNSON & SON 1 Mile So11tll of "on Oi~o Frc~woy 1 ·57 T-Bird; Orii;:: OWN'T. t.f11ke oUrr. 642-9'170, Eves llL.:~~~~~!!!:!!!!~:!!! 67~7409 Mr Myt'~. -- Lincoln Continental • Mark Ill • Mercury • Cougar 642·098 1 --·f1 ).J. , ... •• EXAMPLE: Br and New 1971 TORONADO Custom equipped with air cond., tilt & tele steering wheel, AM·FM stereo, power wJn$lows, power seats, Brougham interior, padded roaf, pow.er disc ,. brakes,l urbo-hydramatlc, power steering , and more. I 3A6571 M724333). SAVE$1367 FROM WINDOW STICKER PRICE GIANT DEMONSTRATOR CLEARANCE SALE!! (26) '71 STAFF CARS REDUCED FOR· QUICK SALE! 98'5-CUTLASS SUPREMES- TORONADOS-WAGONS-HONDAS FACTORY WARRANTIES -FULLY EQUIPPED -VERY LOW MILEAGE OVER 120 NEW '71 OLDSMOBILES & GMC TRUCKS DISCOUNTED DURING THIS CLEARANCE EVEN T NEW 1971 GMC TRUCK SPECIALS NEW '71 HONDA SPRINT VI, powt• br 1~1 1 rodic, 1;n1, 91111, door •d\j1 <j•d•., bumper 9rd1., rt ll¥ 1h11>•. S•tnnt bron1t . mt lchin'l inter. 11 00- 697) Windo w 51.cke• SJ4'l l, SALE PR ICE BRANO NEW '71 GMC I MOIT WH llL IASE VAN A~•-•ttl, powt r l:1t1~tl, J 1p1td 1ulom1lic, 91u9•1, c:hrom• "wmpt f 9rd 1., dirk y1l- low w/bl 1tk inter. !ISSOISI Window Sticker 'llO'l . -- I TON STAKE W111 ""''' mirro•1. H.O. 1~ock1- 1pring•-•u•.. )50 VI, dut l whetl>. H D. t loc. •o:iuip., 91u9e" 8•11 ft. 1t1~t bodv. 1117575 ) Window Stit ~e r SALE PRICE BRANO NEW '71 GMC 2 TON Lon9 W.I .. CES750l, l~O VB, 4 1pd.1 11>d., cl u1I tlep ft nk1, 1.25•20 10 ply 1;,,, & bud wltl1., 1•10 ft. lt1I bed w/hyd. bulk ~.,cf & 01k floor1. I I I 7- 4521 Window Slic:ker $6211 J& !l'lonthi an opprowird • crirdlr. To!ol cash prkir lnc:l11dln9 101111 tar ond 1'71 llcel!M fee SlS,,.71. Oeferrird poyll'lirnr ptkir lt1e ludh19 tor, lic:irnse and finonc:o c:har9n S l 8,l.44. ANNUAL f'lRCENTAGE RA.TE 18.9J 0 o. $200 47°!. CASH OR TRA DE DO WN BIG SELECTION COLORS 36 MONTHS VISIT OUR BIG NEW AND USED TRUCK CENTER! • From Light Pickups to Heavy Duly Custom Rigs • OUR TRUCK EXPERTS CAN ~~P.VE YOU BE ST • GMC the truck people from General Motors TRUCK & CAMPER SPECIAL New '71 GMC 'I• Ton Camper Special fiftl. 91•11, cu1t. tpl. !ruck .,../trim ll'lld91., c1mp1r mltton. H.D. ,hock1 -IJ"in91 -1l•b.lo 11r, t ulo .. P.S., P-cl i1' br •~••, 750•1 6 • ply tir11, RIH. JSO VI. With l 'h' ANGELUS C1b-o ... , C1mp11r with 1c•••n door, 1i111 d int lt•. 1+ovt, ovt n, lt r91 ic• b••, tl•tP• 6, I YO(lcl• inltrio•. 1111('1,6) 12682) TRUCK & CAMPER LOOK: Compare these sale prices anywhere and you'll know mean SALE! 1967 El Dorado Loed od with ell powtr •~uipt. i ncl t ir . . conclitionin9, A R11I Si111I -Lie, \YOH 2131 1968 Bonneville 4 Or. H.T. Auto., Powt r St1ttin9, Vinyl 1601, 1956 Volkswagen HERE !S YOUR CHANCE FOR TRANS- PORTAT ION. !G8A229 l 1968 Chev. Caprice R1dio, H11l11r, Auto. Tr1n1., 'ow t r St11 rin9, .. hi lt 1icl1,.1ll1, V-1 t n9in1, vinyl top, 1ir c:onditionin9. LOOK AT THIS CHEVY BUYE RS. Lie:. IXSS441~ 1969 Mercury Montego MX Auto .. Pow•r Stetrin9, Con1ol1, V.I En9in1, Vinyl Top. 1ir 'onditionin9. Be1uliful Gold Color. TH IS ONE WON'T LAST. l ie:. IZVE201 J 1964 Corvair OUR SUPER BUY! 1966 FORD 1/2 TON Setter take edvenlege of !hit buy. l ie. •T36488. •1095 1967 Mustang -WOW -WHAT A DEAL. l ie. (816CPH ) 1968 Oldsmobile A~to., Pow1r St 111 •n9, Vi"yl Top, •ir to"clilioni"9, V-1 En9ine. Lie. !XVF- 9561 1964 Grand Prix TURKEY SAYS -BUY THIS ONE - Lit. !0Slt0b2! 1967 Ford 4 Dr. Stcl•"· Lie, 165 I IEJI \ : I • • . . . J . I'. • . • • . . ' • • . . ' • ' . J ' .1 .. ., " .. :1 :1 ., .:j .. . , .. .. .. .. . , .. ., ,.. ., ., .. .. ., ., .. . • .. 'I .. .. ._, ·1 :1 ... ·:I l ' ' ' ! :-1 ' I ' .. " " j " .. ... ,, " ' I ·! ..j ' ·' .. " .. , i l ' ·I J ' ·: '! ' .. " • ' • ' ' ·' ,, .. ' ...,_..,_ I I· • • ........ ,., • ,..,,, -·1 •••• ~ -. i ?'° • • I ' : ~· .{'t'•• '', '· I ' ...t.,• '• . ,· . ' ' .1>.\ll Y PllOT f ritU,r, J11'19. 1971 IT'S CLEANUP TIME! ' A 1971 MUSTANG --. TIME a NEW 1971 FORD F-100 STYLESIDE PICKUP Cu1tom. Vt, renter pq., •mp & oil 9eu9e1, tool hox, c:rui1ometic, ept. vecuum Doo•t•r, AM -FM stereo r1c:Uo, power 1t•erin9, G71 • 15 tires, 10651 l Wlll4ow Stldror $4150.20 Alllllwonwy l'rlce $lH6.70 SAVE $953'0 THIS WEEK ONLY BRAND NEW GU SEPTEMBER DISCOUNTS IN JULY! Mu•••ns H.T. $895 0 V-1, 1uto., powe r steering, r1dlo. ....tit FREI 10 GAL. GAS TOOi DISCOUNTS ON ALL TRUCKS 1971 TORINOS HARDTOPS -SEDANS -GT's $500VER L~v~1f1Y Hundreds of new 1971 cars and trucks that must be sold before the '72s arrive now at final year end discounts. Come in while selec· tions are full! PLUS RENT A PINTO I Auto. Trans.I $5 DAY 5~ MILE DEMONSTRATOR SALE! STATION WAGONS-LTD'S-GALAXllS- TORINOS-MUSTANCiS-lANCHUOS SU PER ON ANY TORINO IN OUR BIG STOCK BE SURE TO GET YOUR 50 GALLONS OF FREE GAS. B~:D 1971 MUSTANG. MACH I 12• R•"' •ir 1ng .. SJ1orf In+••· G•tt .. Cru;10· "'elic, Cen..-. &rp., Jl.S., Pwr, Oi1c Brh ., tilt ..... h.,l, .;, co~.!., AM-FM 1+1r•l:i, P-will• tlo"''· I IOOOS9 ) I O~Sl l W-Sttr. SSS.59 .&1111.,.rsory l'rl~ S46tt.50 50 GALLONS OF GAS FREE! SAV INGS PLUS ANNIVERSARY SAVE $85910 BUY WHERE YOU WISH, WE WILL PAY FOR ITI DIAGNOSTIC CENTER Over 130 vital fests for reliability, perfor· mance and safefy, in J'ust 30 minutes, full written report include • REGULAR S9.9l SPECIAL S7.50 WITH TH IS AO SO GAL. FREE GAS CAMPER SALE IYllT NIW 1970 ~A~l '50 OVER FACTORY IN STOCK ILASHID TO INVOICE llG SILICTION-NO DIAW ADDIO CHAlGES-11 MODELS TO CHOOSI FROM. We Are Tiie Ora.it• C..ty ·shew CaH Dealer For El Dorado Compen. RENT A CAMPER Reserve Today for Assured Dates~ PLUS FREE 50 GAL GAS. 50 GALLONS FREE GA S WITH EVERY NEW & USED CAR & TRUCK S MUSTANG SALE Many to choose from. '65 thru '71 models. Coupes, hardtops, convertible and 2 + 2 Fastbacks. Some with 4 speeds, also air conditioning and automatic models with power steering. EXAMPLE: 1970 MUSTANG Fully fattory e~ui pp ed, extras. [899ACGI OUR PRICE $1996 '67 MUSTANCi 2+2 VS, R&H, 4 ~l)l'"d. ALL OFFERS CONSIDERfD TRADES ACCIPTID PAID FOR OR NOT! • TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS • '63 ~~~~T.1~:~~. auto., P.S. Good miles. IJJT746J Super shlltp hardtop. Automatic, '58 CORYETIE radio, heater. lllT458! $8 96 FORD-LTD GAIJUCl•I - TORINO WAGON SALE Many to choose from! '65 thru '70 Mod1ls, Sport Roofs, For· mals, 2 door and 4 door Hardtops and Sedans. Full power, air conditioning. Warranties available. EXAMPLE: 1970 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR Auto .. pow11r s+eerin g & br•ke1, r•dio, heater, carp11ft, chrome trim. Good mil es. W •rrenty evei\ebl•. ~ 151538 ) OUR PRICE $1596 '71 PLY. BARRACUDA $3196 H .T. VS, auto., P.S . R&H . air cone!., undf'r 5JXlO milf's, Wa.rr. a\•atlable ~898CXH ! good mile!>. 1 VTilt504) '68 PONT. FIREBIRD 2 dr. H.T. Auto., Rl-H, pov.·er steering, good miles. <VZS729 l '63 ~~;i~~!1!'t.~~~o~cl. $1796 '69 COUCiAR $ Good mil•" !IOX538l Auto .. R&:H. pov.,-er steer· 2096 PLYMOUTH WAGON ;~ .. ~H!!ii~!~.~~ $1196 ~' ~~~.Av~o"z:1sTER: $1996 $496 p .. _;S,.;,Good __ m_i!t_" _______ ' _'""_''_· -!98-4A_S_I<_' -----~PA9401 '61 Y.vf.' IUG $996 '6 T B H T $796 Fully f>etocy <Qulpp<d. 4 • IRD , • (XUR196J R.lH, auto .. air cond., power 1teerin1. ing, Air cond., iooa miles. '63 iood milt~. IAKC285J $596 (JO<BSKl f .,11 po•·H, f•clocy ,;,, ' ----------Good miles. (0IC3641 '67 FORD FAIRLANE 500 4 dr. sedan. R&H. au to., P.S., V8. (UDE479l $896 '6t CAD Cpe. de YUie $4496 '69 FIAT 150 SPYDU H.T. F'uH ~1o1·er. fact. a1.r. Good miles, r~ with black Ar-T-F'i\--1, ~1nyl roof. crulsf' top. tZBT345! control. t1Jt-ttlt. whl ., aood SALES DEPT. HOURS •• tires. <888ASG) I AM TO t PM MON·fll I AM TO 6 PM SAT 10 AM TO 6 l'M SUN I PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 'HOLDS II Dtolta Custom 2 Dr. HT. F'u!l po"·tr. hu:rory air. Good milts. 453 eng. "'/ turbo. IYCL6JII 7 AM Te 9 PM MON 7 AM Ta 6 PM TUE-FRI I $2996 'H DODCiE Chlll'9or RT $2296 R,adio. htalPr, 11 u1.o., P.S .. 111r cond .. i::ood m1IE's. (671AZGJ PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS • •• ·:-:;i.. "_.,....,_"'-'-""_=_· ·,;..:;.-......;._-=-.... -c>';.!;..~= -·--. ' ••. ---• ·-~~"--~---·-•0:-,1 ~-:::::.::.··..;-~~;....::::1!"'1~~ ~-.. .... -..... ~ . ...,...~l''l'-1...-_.,~ -1·-,.·-a~.,.,..-":' --;;a 11 ------· ~-----·--·~---• , •!' •·__..,_ ,.. ' _.,._--1•-'l~'f.''l ~f. ---·-.-.--, <\! T • ---~·-__ ,. ---··· -·------·---"' ---- pr ''" ' •II 1.1 r r r.. "' '" lo " ,, .'Ill t 11n clrl •h ~c th• hi.• Cl "in Sta