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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-07-27 - Orange Coast Pilot_, ' • B :andit ·Duo Eln~k 2 Chieken Stands Oi Day!)s Be~eipts DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON, :JULY 27, J97 ( VOL."'-NO. 1'9, I S•CTIONI, II ~Ae•I ~No . .Job for Man' • Nun Keep~ Tabs Vitnl Test On Lady Dresses VATICAN CITY (UPI) With hemlines rising 2nd necklines descending in swrl.ering Rome. Vatican officials rta- tioned a nun at the doors if St. Peter's B11sillca Tuesday· to keep out w<>men revealing too much thigh or bosom. "!l's no job for a man," said one assigned lo rule on hemlines and necklines. Vatican officials said some of the male security guards had been getting too le- nient "It's 0() job for a man," said 'o e prelate. referring to the task of censoring thousands of pretty young tourist.!! every day. The nun, Identified only as Sister Fiorella, v.·as turning away as many as one girl in every two during the height of Tuesday's tourist rush. A rebuffed New York girl. wearing a demu re dress but with lhe hemline four inches above the knee. asked : ''.\re they crazy? I go to confession in shorts back home ." Sister Fiorella. aided by a novice nun and one of the Basi lica's ushers. was at her busiest around noon when the temperalure hovered in the !ow nineties. Hundreds of girls poured off lour buses, but those with bare shoulders, low necklines or any apprecial)le artu1unt of thigh Jn slitJt were turned /aw at with a wag 0£ Sister Fiorella 's finger. The usher dealt with ·argumentative touri!ls by shouting "via",or "fu.i" (gel out). • • 'The campaign produced one o! the 5trangf!t fashion parades in Rome. One American girl w'"8ring a micro- g)tirt was rebuffed the (ht time but got tntG the bl:lsilira on a second .at,t.e01pt by wearinK her boy friend'tJ sweater~ which reachet! almost kl her knees. Shei pulled .. Oraioge <:east Weather More of that nice beach weather ~ in store again for the Orange Coast harbor area. The tempera~ hires shoukf again reicb Into the pleasant 70's. ; • INSIDE TODAY Tht Ntor Joat ir in turmoil. See skH'l/, 1UIL3trodon, Poge 4. C.lllfftlla • Clleckl" u, ' Cl•HlftM • 71-1'1 """'" 11 '"'"--' 11 0..tll Jk!ICM I l:dltlrill ,._ I ..... ,, .. _, ,,.,. 'lt11M9 II Morftf:-U *"" L..,.,.,f U ,,_.'1191 If.ft .. lillftHI ,._,. 11 ..il9MI..... I °'"'" c.itr • lrlwlll ht'ttf' M ,..,,.. """ fttct .l.Ut*.tls 1•11 T~ lt ~,.,. , .. ,. WMlll« ' Wt"""'' l'ftWt U· U . .,,. ...... . down her skirt to cover her knees. Other girls covered knees or shoulders with scarves or let down !heir he.ms on the spot. A girl from C.11.lifomia, with her hem about three inches above the knee, told the implacable Sister Fiorella: "But I put on my only dress to see the basilica ." Had the girl worn her cwitomary blue jeans, she would have been allowed in. Another girl ·protested: •' Ho I y mackerel. This is the longest dre.ss l've ~ot.·• It came to about four inches above the knet'. Men in rhorts were banned. So were those who gallantly lent their shirts to their ladies and tried to enltr bare· chested. A sign at the enlrance lo the basilica warns in five languages : "In order lo preservt an atmosphere of reverence, en- trance cannot be granted to men dressed In shorts nor to women wearing minigowru or ~l~veless dresses." . . . Chicken Stand's '$.400 i~ ~e~ipts Hussein Umar and David X'.anntrult were frying Col.' SanCters•· duct-en Mo·n-.- day in Weslrrii"13ter .. and . {;qata ~e:ia respectively, when two bandits s.aunter~d in and plucked the day'1 rece;Jlts t.ht old· fashioned way. One of the bandits had an antique cap-- and-J>all piatol used in both of the &tickups. which netted about $400, pollce in the two cities said. lnve!tlgalof1 siid the bandila first entered the Kentueky Fried Chicken Mop at 7051 Westminster Ave., where Umar was on duty: 11'le assistant manager was forced to hand over about $200 in the 11 ;30 a.m. holdup. The bandita esca~ with the loot ill ••chicken btlckel. 1 • Police were atill writing reporta of that robbery at I :30 p.m., w~en the pair ·brazenly pushed· past the cqunter at 2900 Harbof' Blvd., Costa Mesa, where Kan- nerteJt was cooking chicUn. Orderina him to open the safe, the aun- men, 23 to 24 yeara old and both ab:· footers. took $186. Ripping the telephone off the wall -u they had also done In Westmlns~ -the young desperadoe11 fled atTOM nearby Warehouse Road, according to witnesses. Detectives said Kannerult WJd them the antique pistol , with 1 fiv&>lnch barrel or large bore. looked clean and quite capabt, of belng fired. .. -~ -~ For Moon SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo l~'s astronauts succe53fully t~ted their mltin rocket engine today at 11 :15 A.M. PDT. The brief firing apparently meant they can proceed with a moon landing despite a snort circuit problem. A,,lronauts David R. Scott. Alfred ~t . Worden and ~ames B. Irwin were directed to attempt to fire a brief burst from the engine to make a minor course change. Flight director Glynn S. Lunney said there were about two chi:lnces out of three the rocket would work using makeshift control procedures , and clear the way for the lunar landing. The problem posed no danger to the RStronauts. Even if the moon landing wa5 called off, they would be able to return safely lo earth . The astronauts awoke at ·Jt a.m. EDT foday after a long night's sleep and were told of the r;pecial test. Apollo lS wa11 nearly halfway to the moon at the time. Ground communicator Joseph Allt:n told lhe astronauts about the latest think- ing on the problem . He said the Apollo IS backup commander on the ground, Richard S. C..ordon, rehearsed the special test prOC1!:dures before the instruction!! were radioed up to the spacemen. The short developed a few hour!! .11.fter launch Monday in one half of the system used ·to control the engine . The astronauts were directed to attempt 'to blast only the laulty part of the system .. Th6 problem, signaled by a flickering instrument paneJ checklight -could have come from one of three possibilitie1 - the worst of which would wash out the moon landing. The ·6bjet1 -of the engine ·test was to pinpoint the trouble. "We're gGing to try to re.c_reate the prnblem,'' l.AJnney said in a late morning news br\et'ing, "If you Push the circuit breaker and you dOn't get a burn, then you've got 1 problem .... ' · In the worst situation, officials 1akl, circuit breakerr contro!Ung one of two identical valve systems would be knocked . oui. 1\lat wnuld mean there would be no backup to the r~inlng valve 11y11tem, and'ln that case, Apollo IS would not be ~rmitt.ed to carTy oul the landing . The reasoning was that when lbe astronauts go irto lunar orbit Thursday, 1pace officials want to make certain they have two alternatives for bla5tlng out and ntuming to earth. The 11pecla1 test was ordered in1te1d of waitlng until 4:29 p.m. EDT. when an engine firing had been previou1ly Rt to airrect tbt sp;i.ceshlP.'• ptth lo the mooo. Engineers here and at North Amerlc11n Rockwell's plant in Downey, worked thrbughout the night lo duplicate the pro- IS.. APOU.0, Paft ll • Pendleton Guard . . . -. Killed; Fellow Sentry Arrested m e·n tri e ·a.··· . . . I . t ~ : ~ . ,.,..> '· ,, ·• ·~, •tv l..--...J :") ' _· ' •• l '·' . . • . ·- •. .~i DAILY ,.ILOT Sta" l'Mlt FIRE CAPT. DUNCAN INSPECTS DAMAGE AT TAILSPIN BAR lnv1ltigator1 S1y $20,000 Fire Wai Set PurpoMly Police Seeking Suspect In H ztntington Bar Fire Huntington Beach tnvesUgators today are &eeklng a suspect in the $20,000 arson of a north side bar. Ttie TaUspin bar, 5042 Warner Ave. wa11 gut(ed by a flre 'which btoke out at about S •·V" Monday. Fife · Capt. Carl Duncan iiaid In· Mexico's East Ceast S~pping Into Gull ! SAN DIEGO (AP) -·Every year one or ' t•o\inchea ()( a large ·chunk o!'Muko'1 •icoalt allpt into Ute· Gulf of Mexk:o, a~t 1eientltta 11y. The 1s,ooo. *!'!""-mile landalldt illl been happeoJni for two mllllon years. A ·-.r study conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey and Mexican acienUllc or1anl.u..t,jonll .1ho)Ve4 that earth la.Y~rs btileath \he glllf11 1eafloor art crumpled In a pattern 1imllr.r to that found at the: ban Of large landslldea, ukl Georae Moore. a rovernment geologist. -- VesUgators have classed the ' fire as arson. ·•we found aample11 of unburned fuel that had soaked the carpet, towels ind curtain!," he said. · Duncan said the suapect appari:nUy spread gasoline lhrnughout the bar before touchlng off the costly blaze with a niad flare. None of the buildings. wblch turround the bar In the smlll shopping center at Bo\sa Chica {toad ind Wimer Avenue were dsmaged by 'tbe fii;t. , The bar 111 owned and managed by CUn- ton R. Hµlchlson,• 5.161 Bona.nu ·Drive, Huntlnfl<>n Beach. Completes Testing EDW ARL\5 AIR 1'0RCE BASE (A Pl - The X24A, an experimental wlnglesii !if· uoa )>ody lh>t. hu ~ .no1m 1.ota.mllea per hour and as· high as· 71,000 feet, has completed Its flight teat procram. the N1Uonal AeroMulk:a and s p I c I Administration ha4 announced. • ' , . -·---. --~~ Santa Fe's Date Slated Saturday By TERRY COVILLE Ot IH 01H1 ,.lllt Stiff If Santa Fe Railroad workers strike Saturday a $600,000 Valencia orange crop won't be plucked frGm Orange County trees and several hundred plcker11 and packing house workers will be idled, ac- cording to county growers. The strike will nearly paralyze Orange County growers who !Upply aboul 10 per~ cent of California's Valencia orange crop. Oranges represent the only major crop currently shipped from the county, growers said . "We can leave oranges on the trees for '"• week or two and only lose a few," uya ;William J. Williams, vice president of the lrvine Com pany agricultural divi&ion, largest grower In the county. "But we won't hire anyone lo pick, or pack. Tbe &trike won "t hurl the Irvine Company much. but it will put a lot of people out of work." Santa Fe handles nearly 100 percent of Orange County's shipping. U rail workers strlke Saturday, a5 expected, the rallroad will make Wednesday the last day fruit can be i;hipped out of the cowity. All county orange crops go through (See ORANGF.s, Pa1e Z) Camp Pendleton Marine Sentry Shot to Death Camp Pendleton autborltie1 today divulged th.at a yol:lllg Marine sentry wu 11hot tel death while on duty last Sunday .afternoon and that anOtber Lealhemeck from the same Uhit ii-being held ·in the incident. · Base 11pokesmen 11ald the dead serviceman was Pfc. John A. Hacker, 19, of Perryville, Mo. Hacker, authorlUes said, w111 dead on arrival at the base hospital al about I p.m. Sunday. He had been ahot once in the chest with an M·14 rUle. Autboritles delalned 17·year-old Pfc. John V. Shute, hornet.own not tm- ~ately available, ln the lDclde:nL · Spoi<amen would nol characltt!Je the role Shwe esstrtedly had In the.Jhoolln&, but did. aay II< bu been orde<td. under "house arrest" and bas been 1rtorded-1 lawyer dur1111 lhe followup probe. , Both young men bad be<n attached i. ·the Studeol company of the Si:1'toola Ba'- tallon at the base. ' 11 · Reports · elsewhere today . fOld U. shooting w" the third thlt yW,•to..olvlnc sen.tries at the larg, ·hue. ~ ; •. Bme rpoke3r'nen said 'thej "*c.11 ~~ one min« shooung durlJll ~ dlllJ this ye•ti • minor incident 'tlfbldl' .. qulred no hospital .trtatment. --,,, . • I • • ) • ' ' ' • IWLY 'ILOT s DAILY ,lL OT fltff ,.,..,_ COSTA MESA 'S MAYOR WILSON WITH SOME OF THE WOMEN IN HIS LIFE From Ltft, Mmff. St. Cl1lr, Pinkley, Wiison, Jorden and H1mm•tt ~~~~~~~~~~- Loan Backers For Lockheed Get Setbacks WASHINGTON (AP) -The ad. m:inl!tration effort kl provide financial a.Id ftr Lockheed Aircraft Corp., already Rt back in the two Senate votes, was descr1J:>ed today by Sen. M,ike Mansfield of Montana as "11 voyage into an area where we really have no business." The Seoat.t Democratic leader. said that feeling, and eoncern about the precedent. the bW would stl. led to the Monday vie· tories of senators opposed to~ blll. It Is designed to provide a S250-million loan guarantee which advocates say is essen- tial to save Lockheed from bankruptcy, Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, the Republican leader, said those setbacks did not indicate eventual defeat of the measure. "It's still uncertain as to what will happen," be said. ScoU aaid supporters of the bill exptt:t to gain 'Strength Wedne!day when they try for a second time to limit debate on the bill. But he said they probably will not be able to gain the lwo·thirds vote they need U11less Mansfield supports the limitation on talk. "It's an uphill thing all tht: way," Srott said. Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr. flnd .·Va .} rneanwhilt: announct:d his opposition to the bill, which aulhorius S2 billion to pro- vid e loan iuaranttts to major business - t:nterprisu facing financial failurt: that would damage the t:conomy or lt:ad to serious unemployment. "I have found It difficult to reach a conclusion that tax fund s. funds obtained from I.ht: st:at of the wage eamers. should be used lo rescue huge private enterprise corporations." Byrd ssid. With surprising ease. Lockheed op- ponents Jed by Sen. \Vil!iam Proxmire ([)..Wis.), defeated the first attempt Mon- day to limit debate . Then , they beat back an effort to ki!J an amendment removing favored status for Lockheed from a bill to r~cue any major business M financial trouble. That amendment was pending before the ·~ale today although Lockheed backers appear unlikely lo allow a vote soon. Evidently .!iensing it5 passage they blocked a direct vote Monday night Both Proxmire and I h e ad· ministration's chief floor spokesman. Sen. John Tov.·er l R-Tex ), said Lockheed supporters came off far worseo than either opttt.ed in the vote on limiting debate . The vote \l'as 41 aga inst cutting off deba~ and 42 for, 18 votes shy of the needed tv.·~thirds Alt.hough cloture often fa il!> on the lir.~t try, those seeking to end a fi!ibuste.r usually muster at least majority. DAILY PILOT " ............ -·-s. Chae•• OllAHOI COAST l"UILISHIHG COMl'ANY 11 ... ,,.. N. w ,,4 ,, ...... 11 •Ml ,.._,.,..... Jtcl. II. Cw•l•1 ' \Ike f',_~ erAI GtMttl M~ f Th•1111•...k •• .-il '""r • ll!tM•t A. M1,1,,llf11e M•"'911!1 14111W Cherie• H. l1e1 lllcl!er4 '· Nell .... ltl9<!1 M~lnl 1411"" -C.N "'""' llO W•t 111 St'fff .....,_, 9MCll: J»:I N-1 aeu:_,,, 1..--'-<Ii: 112 l'-t A-.1.>S ....,....,.,. kt(fl: 11•1~ &Mell ................ a. CS-1e,i • H~ 11 C.rnlNI 111111 " .. ~·iu::~ . + ~· "1'-«.-. ....•. .,Jn- 'Powe1·s Bel1ind Council ' Get Pictures 011 Walls Women bavt been traditionally con· sidered the power behind the throne. Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson doesn't feel modem tlmu and city go11e.mment have altered tM old adage. "A wife iii re:sponsible for the succe!s of the office holder,'' he says. To honor the Sttret powers of Costa Me&a, Mayor Wilson haa decorated the wall.s of hb: new office at city hall with "color photographic portarits of eacb city councilman's wife. "They have to put up Y:ith so much of cur public and pl!:l'SOnal lives. They in· tercept all the nasty phone calls.'' Wilson explaine.d. "They should be honored ." The eolor portrail!I were taken by lhe police department photographer. Not surprisingly, the wome.n had the last word. Two -Mrs . Wilson and Mrl. Jack: Hammett -had their pictures retaken. But aU the portraits have been ap- pro11ed now. and wiU go on the walls of Wilson's fifth floor office this week . ·'This is the first offiCf. a mayor er city coundlrnan In Cost.a Mesa ha1 had,·• Mexican Youth Nearly Dies From Snake Bite By JOHN VALTEltZA Of "" Dtlh' l'!ltl lt•fl A 2l-year-<1ld Mexican na tional was recovering tod11y after a pred1wn snakebite ordeal at San Onofre Bluffs State Park which nearly took his life. Juan Perez. whose hcmetown in Mexico was not immediately determined, was found in convulsions at &bout 3 a.m. IA>- day by eoncess!on stand employea at the recently opened state park south of Sin Clemente. Perez had been bitten by a rattleanake sometime during tM. dark hours 11 he walked northward along lhe bluffs. ap- parently evading Border Patrol officers at the Onofre eheckpoinl. Rangers said they notified patrolmen and San Clemente authorities for assistance after the emergency t1!1 . In San Clemente. police attempltd to call a !ocaJ ambulance service. but nc one answered the phone, they said r.toments later IJ,ey dis pa t ch e d Fireman Sheldon Schmitt in a city station v.·agon to the park south of the city limits. Perez, local spokesmen said . .,.,.as ~ken to South Coast Community Hospital for t"mergen cy treatment. then lransferred to Orange County Medical Center. Nurses there said this morning that ht was in satisfactory condition after his bout with the viper. The snakebite was the flrsl reported sinCf. public use. began at thr ruaged, brush·C'Overed bluffs whic h loom 011er sandy beaches below. State Park rangers said. however. lhat sel"eral sightings of large, health~· rat- Uesoakes ha11e been reported since the park opened for the first time during the Indepe.ndenee Day v.·eekend. '"The brush is ideal for them down Uiere." said one ranger. "and the fond is plentiful. We warn visitor• to the park lo be evtremely careful, t:t1pecially v.·hen it"s dark." The park has lradit\onally been lhe route for aliens migratin& northward on foot, affording roncealmenl from Border Pttrolmtn. tn recent months one man leading " group cf immigrant.!I along the blufftops In the same vicinity fell to hi! death tr-to a canyon. Air Wing Completes Last Viet Mission SAIGON IAPI -The U.S. 7lh A~ Fcrce Announced today thAt the 460th Tactical ReconnaiManct Wing new lts last combat miqion today and beg;an preparatioru for Its lnectlvatlon on Aug. 31 The 8.ir,G.man wlng Is commanded by Col. DAie L Flower1 of Phoenix. Ari!., and has 1ervtd In lndochln1 for five yean. rlying r"°nnaiM•net mission~ over North and South Vietnam, t..oa and Cambodia . It ha5 been butd et Saigon'• Tan Son ~'hut air base. • -'" , I ' ! Wilson said. "I'm going to try and bring some cf the city's nostalgia kl it." The portrait.!I of city council wives form the fir1t step in dlia e:adeavor. Wilson is quite.proud of the sound fami- ly life demonstrated by each city rouncil couple. He rapidly ticks off the longevily cf each marriage: "Lucille and Alvin Pinkley, 44 years: Maryalice and Robert Wilwn. 32 years; Mary Jc and Jack Hammel, JI years; Ruth and Willard Jordan. 30 years. and Claudine and William St. Clair. 29 years." "I"m extremely pleas~ that our wives are S-O patient with us," Wilson smiled. 'Misspending' Charges Lodged Against State LOS ANGELES (AP) -The head ot an executive job placeme.ot firm haa ac- cused state officials of "misspending'' much of lhe SJ.4 million in federal fundl allocated to Los Angeles County to help displaced aeroapact workers find new job!. A. M. Hughes Jr., whose company, tma&e West, la trylna to tricrease lts fljn' ding for oonlrovenial pilot program Us· Ing ll(lme cf the same federal aid. said many of the grants to community agen· cles are for programs that are overly ex· pensive and inelfecllve. One grant cf $243,920 to the Community and Human Resources Agency was to provide training jobs and 11upportive services for only 88 persons. Hughea said at a news eonference Monday. Lee Gcniales. program coordinator. replied that the accusation w a 111 "ridiculous." Th~ go11ernor and the State Department of Human R es o u r c e s De11elopmenl, which made the grant. "should be commended for the displaced worker prcgram with its emphasis on 'hire now, train later.'" he sa id. Hughes a\!IO said many HRD granls w~re .approved "for political reaMIO~ ·• The executi11e director of the Community and Human Resourct!s Agency, he said-. is an appointee of Gov. Reagan. Hughes also criticized HRO for wasting money by hiring aerospace people "who couldn't find jobs for themsel11es" to find them for others in a program called Ex· perlence Unlimited . An HRD spokesman replied that the unemployed a er o space professionals working For Experience Unlimi~d locally have found 4, 172 jobs for their roileagues. Hughes said he is distressed hy HRD'iii reluctanCf. to award Image West a new contract to v1s!\y upand his Project: Action program kl aid engineers, scien· tist.!I and technicians. GI Will Appeal Hair y Conviction By Arniy Court FORT DIX. N.J . fUPl i-A 23-year-<1ld draftee. in the Army one month, was ronv!cted hy fl spe<:ial court martial Monda y of refusing lwo orders to cut his shoulder·length ponytail A third charge accu5ing Gtorge Em· mer of Egg Harbor City. N.J . of violating lilppearance standards was dismi5sed by Capt. Anthony McNuUy, mil ltary trlal judge. McNully sentenced Emmer to 90 days at hard labor, but rffi>mmended the senltnce be suspe:nded. Emmer also w1s ordered to forfeil S89 per month of his salary, for three months. Ci11il11n lawyer Sttpben Hyman said he , .,.,·ould appeal on Emme.r's bei'lalf. Emmer. who was fin 11nemployed l1boratory Uehnic\tn before he was dr11.fted June 22. has been confined to Ille baae'1 reeeptlon center since his In· d11ction . His 1r1n1fer kl the stockade wa~ delayed overnight whlle his lawyer prepared an 1ppeal. MeNully saiid thtil tn the btlll of his knowledge the Army has no power tc phy1l~ally forct Emmf!r to cut his hair. He s11ld onee Emmer Cf>mplete11 his sentence he rould be court martlalltd 1111tn ll he diAObtys another order to con· f(lrm. ' New Idea SOug'lat i ' - Rail Talks Bog; Two Strikes End WASHINGTON IVPJJ -The railroad 11trike talks remalned In a at.ate of col· lapae today as the aovernment tried to tind a leglslaUve way to end the shut- down. But there WU &ood new1 from twc other rtrike froota. -The 58-day-old strike against Western Union ended , ncept in the New York city area, and the co1npany said !he public r-ould send telegrams once again after 12:01 a.m. EDT Wedne6day. I'icket linu came down after the tentative agreement was reached with the l:lnited Telegraph Workers Union but the strike continued in New York where the t:omp.any ia bargaining with a different union. -Nearly 3,000 copper workers returned lo their jobs al two finns in Arizona and negotiators said a settlement covering 10,000 Kennecott Copper Corp. workers in four slat.es appeared near. Talks in Washington between the United Traruportalion Union and the na· tion 's railroads fell apart Monday and no new ses.slons were scheduled. Four major lines are already shut down and six ethers arP. threatened wilh a strike by week '• end. Labor department sources said the NiJ;on Administration wa11 working on le&islatioo kl end the dispute but the pro- cess was complical.ed. A White House emergency board previou.sly recommended i settlement but it.a terms are not precise enough to be incorporated directely in any legislation. "It has become obvious that a volun· tary solution cannot be reached at this lime." said Assistant L...abor Secretary W. J. Usery Jr. in aMounclng that the talks had broken off. Usery said the last two major points of disagreement concerned long train erew runs without extra pay , and the e!imina· tion nf most traditional distinctions between on-I.rain and yard ere w assignments. ThOle items are part cf lhe work rules which the railroads want to change because they consider them cogtly and in· efficient. "lt ls imperatl 11e In the face of moun· ting eccnomic pressurei; that an answer to this impasse be found ." U5ery said. The strike -against the Union Pacific, Southern Pacific. Southern, and Norfolk & Western -has caused grain to pile up ln the Midwest, threatened lhouaands of coal minera wlth layoffs and endangered the chicken industry In some paru cf the nation becau1e of feed ahortaaes. The Western Union arreement. which 1till muat be 1ppro11ed by 17,000 UTW membera, called for a 10 percent in· crease effecti11e Wednesday when the workers offlc1a!ly return to their Jbbs, F rom Pag" 1 ORANGES ... Sunkist which has two exchanges, the Orange County Fruit Exchange in Orange and the Placenli<1 Orange County Ex- change in Placentia. Between the two they ship an a11erage of 150 freight car loa ds of oranges each week. "We might try using truck5. but there won 'l be nearly enough trucks lo keep up our current Je11el," Floyd Wildermuth , manager of the Placentia Exchange:, said. "Two of our growers have al ready stopped picking. The ot hers keep 3sking what it goi ng to happen," Wildennulh said. "The problem is we ha ven't yet ~ notified by Santa Fe that there will be a strike. Everything Is atill up in the air for us." Southern Pacific Railroad workers went on •trike last Saturday, paralyzing all cropJI in Ncrthem -California. "Soft fruit.!I are hurt most. They're Jost completelY. Oranges can wait 1.while, but everyone la affected," Williams ex· plained. Williams said the Sou.them Pacific line, now on strike, handlefl about M percent cf all perishables out of Callfomia, but tbe Sanla Fe line handles all of Orange Coun- ty's crops. Wildennulh said that even lf Santa Fe doesn't go en stri ke, Oranae County would be hurt by the Southern Pacific strike because Santa Fe cars would be taken a~'ay to haul fresh fruit from northern California . "Hit romes," he concluded, ''we'll just try to shift lo trucks. Bul right now we don't really know 1,1•hat's going to happen, and that's the worst part." Senate Witness Says Bets Finance Rackets WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Boston man who has spent almost a!l his life with big. time mobsters le!lified today that "The Mob" runs organized crime in lhe United States, financing its v2.st operation.~ through nickel bets placed \\'i!.h ccrner bclokie.s. The witness, Vincent Charle~ Teresa. testified about his own crooked schemes that frequently landed him in jail -in- cluding gambling junkets tn a London club onee as.wcialed with actor George Raft and In casinos in Haiti with the blessings of the late Haitia n dict2J.or, A swarthy. hefty man oow serving a five-year prison term for transportation of stolen securilies. Teresa. 42, v.·as the leadoFf witness as the Senate Permanent lnves l1ga11ons Subcorr.miUee began its fifth v.·eek of hearings {In organized crime "There i5 one big gang that runs organized crime 1n this eountry." Teresa said . "We generally call it 'The Mob.' " He said the organized underwnr!d is often called by olher names such a!'! "The Of- fice'' In the Providence, RJ., New England headquarters. He said that gambling is "t.he single most important acti11ity" (or organlz;ed crime Utat underwrites all other opera- ! ions worldwide. "Gambling is the standby and the foun- dation." Teresa said. ''From it comes the corrupt polilicians and the policemen. the bribes and the payoffs, and scmelimes murder. If you could crush gambling, you v.·ould pul the mob 11ut or business. You 'd have them back on the pushcarts as it v.'as in the old days . , . ''The mob has bar~ls <ind barrels af mont"y. and it all starl~ wilh the man or the woman v.·ho puts a nickel on lhe num. her <it the corner store every day. Everything starts w1lh lhe nickel member, and e11erything else fol101,1·s. "From that nickel number. they 've built casinos 1111 (lvcr !hf' world , they 've gnnf' into lcg1t1mate husinesses. lhey've gone into pol1tiC"!'I, !Ind they pay pol it1- c111ns. \Vhat ~:-' do with that nickel num· be:r is fantastic." Teresa testifit"d. l'rottt Pllfle 1 APOLLO •.. blem -and lhus find Its solution. The 1hort clrcu.lt wa.s the only dlffieulty encountered during the first 14 llourt cl the journey to tht base of two-to.Uutt mile high mountains on the mooa 1n 1earth tor clues to its creallon. ''The analysis to dale seems to indicate that we probably ha 11e an engine that wW work okay, or can be made to worlr: okay,'' flight director Miltoo Windler ..... The astronauts wrestled with the pro- blem on and off Monday afternoon and finally ended their first long day in space. at 12.14 a.m. EDT today. Before going to sleep, ground commun1ca\o r Karl G. Heinze asked the spate flyers how the view was, with earth 7~.000 m1lt>s aw ay, "Ifs fantastic, Karl," ~ported Worden. ''You ought to see it. rnan." ··J'm eating my heart out ," replied Heinze. a scientist-astronaut st i I J awaiting for his spacefiight assignment. The light, when working properly, is to 11igna.l that the command ship's main engine is firing. It did not fire -and was not supposed to -when !he light came on and engineers said this meant there was a short circuit somewht"re in the gystem. Windler listed three possibilities: -The short could be in the in· strumentation Itself, which would net af· feel the mission . -The shcrl could be in the switch , which would mean the engine would fire prematurely if steps were not taken to prevent it. This, Windler said, could be circum11ented by de11ising alternate pro. cP.dures and Apollo 1~ could still land on the moon. -The short may be deeper In ths engine·s circuit breakers. The engine would 11till ope.rate but its backup syatem wtM.tld be eliminated and und.er these con· ditions Apollo IS would nol be permitted to land on the moon. Ballet Dancers Sooth Savage Beast-in Jail DANNEMORA, N.Y. (UPI) -It w1111 11n unlikely meeting -i;ix solo ballet performers 11.nd 700 skeptical pri!onerl inside the !>tone 1,1•alls of the ~t<i!e cnr- rectional facilily here -but each side came away from the occasion Monday with· a better insight into "another v.•ortd.'' The dancers found lhat an alJ-m<ile •·capti11e" audience, most of whom ha~·e not seen a v.·oman in months or e11en years, tend to overlook the finer points of ball.et art as soon as a ballerina steps on i;Lage. Whistles and catcalls v.·cre pr.1valent a.s performer John Clifford tried to give an expla nation of !be work behind a ~llet production. At. one point. prison chaplain. the Rev. Cormack A. Walsh, ~tepped on stage to ask the men to "cool it." The interruptions, howewer, decreased v.·ith the continuation flf the program. and by the end or the last number, most of those in the \,(IOO.seat auditorium sal in rapt attention. The v.·hislles and 1h.ou1s were more in approbation than in ridicule. Graham Ci tes U.S. l\'[aterialisru DriYe OAKLAJ';Tl I AP ) -E~·angellst Billy Grt1ham ~ays Arr1er1can~ an• creating a society based totally on mattrialism, and "when we do this. we v.•ill be little better than the Ccmmuntst~ " f-le tnjrl an audience of Ji.WI Monday night in the fourth dar of .!I crusarle at Oakland Coliseum, ''They have based their entire way of life on ma.terialism v•lthout Gnd " ~-·~~--~~~-~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~ $2.99 CARPETING ? • • • • Sure we liave it-but, usually we try to convince customers to buy carpeting that will complement their homes. Often , in situations where e customer is covering the floor just to sell a house, cheap carpetin g may be a liability. In many coses tlie difference of only ·a dollar a yard will install a quality of carpeting that looks twice es well and will 91 v1 much better service • In o nutshell we 're not trying to necessarily be the "CHEAPEST", I though we often ore I. but the "BEST!! I Wh ich we always ore .) ALDEN'S CARPns • DRAPES 1663 Plcictntia Ave . COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thun., 9 to 5:»-'rl., 9 to 9-J.at., 9:30 to .S ,, ' I --· ., -·--------~ '°'~·=-... :- \ t I ' t ' I t ' r -·· \ ' Hunting~oa: Bea~h • ~ouqt•~ Valley. TodaY'• Fl•al IW.Y. St.ock8 ' YOL 64, ·NO. 178, 2 SECTIONS .. 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA[IFORNIA TEN CENTS 600 Huntington Employes Win Pay lncr·eases By RUDI NIEDZIELSKJ Of llM IMollr .. 1111 SllH More than 600 Huntington Beach city employes received pay raises Monday night when the city council approved ll.'age pacts reached in secret negotiations during the past eight weeks. The increases will be retroactive lo Ju- ly I and wUl cover 346 municipal employes, 149 policemen, 114 firemen and 14 lifeguards. Still pending are negotiations with about 40 members of the Management Police Seel{ Bar Blaze Huntington Beach investigator.s today are seeking a suspect in the $20,000 arson of a north side bar. The Tailspin bar, 5042 \Varner Ave. was g1Hled by a fire. which broke out at about S a .m. Mond ay. Fire Capt. Cati Oimchn s!id In· ve.stlgators have elassea \lie fire as arson. "We found aamplt:s ·of unburned fuel that had soaked the carpet, towels a.nd curtains." he ~atd. Duncan said the suspect apparently gpread gasoline throughout tile bar before tou ching off the coslly blaze with a road flare. None of the buildings which surround the bar in the small shopping center at Bois a Chien Road and Warner A venue were damaged by the fire . The bar is owned and managed by Clin· Ion R. Hutchi.wn, 5361 Bonanza Drive, Huntington Beach. Son Takes Over Dead Mother's Pier Plan Suit A Huntington 8C'ach man refused Mon- day to allow his mother 's death lo delay an S8 million suit filed ajtainst the city <'Ver the effect of the controve rsial "Top of the Pier'' plan on downtown property. Orange County Superior Court Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter grantee! Robert Collins Terry permission to take over as plaintiff in the lawsui t filed last fcb. J7 by Mrs. Elmyra Irene Terry on behalf of herself "and all ot.hcr owners of 133 parce ls of land " in the ocean front area 50ught by the city 's Parking Authority . Mrs. Terry clsimed in her action u Terry does in an amended lawsuit that the value of the 13.72 acres of land sought by the city had depreciated by $8 million as a result of the city's efforts to obtain Ult acreage for parking facilities. She clai med that the cily reneged on an understanding with property owners and the Dowhtown Business Association wllkh would have bllowed the owners to update and rehabilitate the area. Action taken by the ci ty to also ann ex surrounding areas "for the creation of a massive parking lof' had further "depressed to their absolute depth " the 13.72-acre sector, Mrs. Terry argued in her complaint. She stated that persistent city action had made il impossible for any properly owner who wiahed to do llO to aell hi.I pro- perty "e1cept at 1 1ubstant.iaJ lou." Air Wing Completes Last Viet Mission SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. 7th Air , ForC1! announced today !Nit the 4Mth Tactical ReooM11b.sance Wing flew ill last combat m!Mion today and began preparations for Its inactivation on Aug. SJ . The 850·man wing is commanded by C.01. Dale L. flowers of Phoenix. Ariz., ancl has served In Indochina for five years. flying reconnais,,,ance mlaslon1' over North and South VietnAm, La<>! and CambodJa . It has been bMed at Saigon 's T1111 Son Nbut air base. ( -------- Employes Association which are cur- rent!}' stalled over procedural maUer.s. The most controversial wage talks in- vglved the Huntington Beach Police Of- fictrs As,sociation and the Fireman's Association, both of whom had lawsuits pendidg against the. city over alleged "bad faith" during previous negotiating rounds. Bob La Marsh, president of the Fiieman's Association, said his men will get a five percent wage increase, an im- proved uniform allowance, and an educa- tional incentive plan wb.ich will allow them more pay if they improve jolr related skills in school. The lawsuit which was filed by his as50Ciation over tbe alleged "bad faith'' in last. year's negotiations will be im- mediately dropped, according lo La Marsh. "The whole demeanor or the negotia· lions process this year was relily good. \Ve"re well satisfied with the outcome. \Ve feel that we have established solid rapport with the city," he said. 0 ets f" r····--r----" ... -, . ' . . .... . -. l"-· ...., . ' }··. > • . ,· . I ' • ... .. l, •> • ' '" ' ' ' HUNTINGTON PACIFIC'S FENCE WILL COME DOWN Comp1ny and City C1ll Truce While Court Ponders Hu11tii1gton Fir1n, City Form Beacl1 Strru1d Pact The battle over the beach continue.s, but the Huntington Pacific Corporation aod the City of Huntington Beach have agreed to a truce on how il should be run while lawyers are figh!ing it out in the courtroom. At a special cily counril :r.essinn Mon- day night, the council unanimously ap- proved a pact which would give the city full control of the controversial strand until a rourl decision is forthcoming. Involved is a strip of beach lwo and one-half miles long between the city's pier and Bolsa Olica State Beach. As a result of the. agreement. t~e Huntington Pacific Corporation has pro- mise.d not to construct a fence along lhe property. The court restraining order which was won against the fence by the •city June ~ wUl bt: diMOIVt:d. About 100 IeeJ of fence built prior to the court order will be tom down. Until the cJse Is settled, the city WUJ have the right to operate the beach for public recreational purpoees and will have the right to cooatruct and maintain pWJlc shower&' and toilet! on the con- lell<d property. >Cl:ty Attomt:y Don P. Bonfa u ld the ~Ungt.on Pac~ic Col'pol"ltlon has alto qteecl not to build any structures or engage In 11ny activity which Is In- consistent with present operations and Uk'! public recrtational use of the htach. While the litigation i.s pending, the city will provide lifeguard servlet: on the beech at no cost to the Huntington Pacific Corporation. 1'ht: cost of lifeguard fJperations is approximat.ely $40,000 per year, but the cost. wlll be offset by pro- perty tstxea the corpor1tion must pay on the beach and the bluffs area, clt.y nf· fttll!1ls said. - Bill Foster, vice-presldent of llun- tington Plcific, said the stipulation entered by his company and the city, also provides for the construction of cutbs, ' gutters. parking for about 800 additional cars and other improvements along the. beach. The fees from the parking facility will be collected into a 1Jpeeial account which will be used for the improvement of the bluff areas in curbs, gutters. parkln1 facilities, landscaping, cleanup and walkway&. f.ost.t:r said his company would spend at least $30,000 a year on the Im- provements until the. case Is decided, which he estimates i.! between three. to seven years from now. "We will start as soon as the document b finalized. whlch means that we will be building this )'ear." he said. "This was a friendly ne1otlation, We feel both .parties have. benerJted ~by • rt1aon.aWe agreeme~tWe waritt:d to 1•\ ort· "'1h ·lb.II so we could atop 1quabblinc down Uiere:'"Foater adikd. section of Euclid To Be Closed Off fountain Valley residents who are ased to traveling Euclid Street have been aCl- vised to find an alternate route for tbe next two week!. A city spokesman said the streel will be closed between Warner and H•il svenue8 until Aug. 6 due to construcUOn of street improvement! for a new bou11ln.g tract. ------· Ron Pomeroy, president of the Police Officers Association, said his as90Cla~ tion's ~.000 lawsuit for punitive claims also will be d.issolvt:d. It had been filed for alleged damage to the character and inte(rity of associaUon members during negotiations. "The lawsuit Jias served Its purpost:. The problems which caused It have been ironed out and corrected," said Pomeroy, adding that tbe city has bargained in good faith. "We'rt very satisfied with the agree- oon 'Mob Runs On Betting' -Witness ... WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Bo.st.on man '1.·ho has spent almost all hls lift: with big· time mobsters testified today that "The Mob" runs organized crime in the United States. financing iU Vt.St operations tbrou&h nl.cktl beta placed with corner ~kfe.." ~~ . ~.~ ..... + The 'Wltne.ss, Vincent Charle& 'l'eteA, lllill!ed,-bollt hll own CfOOklJCI sehemes ' . . ' . that frequenUy landed hi m in jail -In- cluding gambling junket!;, to a London club once aasociated with actor G~rge Raft aod to casinos ln Haiti wUh the blessings of the late Haitian dlct.at.or, A swarthy, hefty man now servinf a five-year prison tenn for transportation of stolen securities, Teresa, 42, was I.ha lea.doff witne.ss as the Senate Permanent Investigations Subcommittee began lts fifth week of hearings on organized crime. "There is one big gang that nms or11:anized crime In this country," Teresa U:id. "We generally call it 'The Mob.'" He said the organized underworld i.! oflt:n called by other names such as "'Tbe Of. fice" in the Providence, R.I ., New England headquarters. He said that gambllng is "the single mosl important activity" for organized crime that underwrites all nther opera· tions worldwide. "Gambling is the standby and the foun· dation," Teresa said. "'from it comes the corrupt politicians and the policemen. the bribes and the payoffs, and sometimes murder. If you could crush gambling, you would put lhe mob out of business. You'd have them back on the pushcarts as it was ln the old days . , . "The mob has barrels and barrels nf money, end it all starts with the man or the woman who puts a nickel on tht: num- ber 1t the comer store every day. Everything sl1rts with -tht: nickel member, i nd everything else follows . "'from that nickel number, they've built cui.nos all ove.r the world, thty've gone into legitimate businesses, they've gone Into politics, and they pay politi- cians. What they do with that nickel nwn· be.r is fantastic,·• Teresa testified. Biker Cited For His Dog AL!lAMBRA (U f¥1 -John Miller pleaded IMocent Monday In mun1clpal court to a cbarge be car· :·rttd J ~ • "wuate · ;o&d'"' .on bl& mot.orcycle~ When Millu , 1 Lo.a Angelt:s . en;:iaeer, 1oe1 to trial Aue~ tl, he "fill not only try. to . •indicate hlm1ell. but hi• pd, 116! Doj .. The an11fe load, 1ccor<lld( I<> the Callfon>!I flllliwJY 1'aU.I dlallon "" MIDer '1 . ili'I• ""!!>ird. The Ucktl'it111: ''P/>i 1tondloi on hlod lea• wftb l""I! · paws 6ii rider'• '1houlder1 <moibn!Yclti." Miller said It was ttut':, the . dog haa been rid.Ina on hl.s motorcycle for the pa.at . five yem weartna a 1eatht:i' fiylng helinet, goggles and a, ij::arf. BuL Ml!Jer asks, "Wh~t am t cullty of? Givtn;: Red Do& a ride''' ment aM oUr relations w1tb the city are super good," he commented. The Poli<e O!lk:er1 Allociatloo will get all-W::re,iae of seven percent, _aJi lm- (>TOVed unlfOrm 1llowance, arid an edJ)CB- Uonal i.ncenUve plan almlle.r t.o·that of the firemen. Educational btnellls also highlight the agreement wltb. the Munklpa.l Employes A.!socleUon which represent.a the. ma- jority of the city's non-manac:ement personnel except for the safety services. o-a •"1. ,,.., ,,.,.... 'MOB RUNS EVERYTHING• Senate Witness Ter111 2 Bandits Pluck Chicken Stands' $400 in Receipts Hussein Umar and David Kannerzelt were fryina: Col. Sander•' chicken Mon- day in We.tmlnater '1ld" · certa. Mesa respectivelf, whe~ tw'o bandits uuntued In and pluCked the day's receipts Uie old· fashioned way. One of the bandits had an antique cap- and-ball pistol used in both of the !ilickups. which netted about $400, police In the two ciUts said. Investigators &aid the bandits first entered the KenLucky Fried Chicken shop at 7051 \Vestmin.ster Ave ., where Umar was on duty. The aS11istant manager was forC1!d to hand over about $200 in tM 11:30 a.m. holdup. The bandits escaped with the loot in a chicken bucket. Police were still writing reports of that robbery at 1:30 p.m., when the pair brazenly pushed past the ·counter at 2900 Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa, where Kan- nenelt was cooltina chicken. Orderl1g him to open ll!f safe, the ,gun- men, 11 to 24 years old and both aix· footers, took $186. Ripping the telephone off the wall -as they had also done In Weslminslt:r -the young desperadoes fled ·across nearby Warehouse Road, according to witnesses. Detectives said Kannerzelt told them the antique pistol, with a fiv~inch barrel of large· bore, looked clean and quite capable of betng•fired. San Diego Hoi¢1 Picked by GOP ' . Tbe new '25-room Jloy1l TM at the Wharf, Sl;n D;e10.'1 new@~t . aod largut con~Uon hotel. h11 been deaignated dyril)I tb<·tm GOf NatJooil.Cl<Nw'l'tlon. Earl GliOllln, Royat.)11111 pruld<o~ an, neunctd. . ' ' . G•'°'lal! 111d ti>!o Whir! 1111 been .elected "because of l(a ettensive fecUIUes and Pro:idn\Jt:y to all major San Oleio attradlons and meetble locaUons. Tfie hotel ha1 a large convention Cfl)ler; &everal. lara:e· meetlng rooms. tbroe mlaurantl~, lncludlag Ille 00\' 12.000.000 Earl'• SWood Grotto. ind ... ~!dve . re.creatloll facUiUea, includtnc swimming pOril.I, a uuna room and an .Ut'cflo room. . ' . In addition, the members will rective a $35 a month acr~ lncrt:a1e in wages. The lncreue amounU to u over~U average of 3.9 percenL Uf~guards will &bare, tn an avera;:e fn. crea.se Of five perce nt in addition to $25 a n'lonth fo.r underwater'.aearch an'd rt$C'Ue team members. They' will abo btndit from an educational incentive program. Negotiations with the various a!Socia- llons were handled by Personnel Director Ed Thompson in behalf of the. city. , ea Vital Test Clears Way For Trip SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) - Apollo lS's astroqauts successfully fired their main rocket engine today and defeated a pesky short circuit that had threatened to scrub Friday's moon Ian· ding. "That burn was exactly what we wanted lo see." the ground com- municator at the ~1anned Spaceflight Center, Joseph Allen, radioed to U'f! crew shortly after the critical firin1 at 2:11 p.m. EDT. ·•we'll proceed wftb the ncrmal mlsslon.·• or the short which officials feared might make it necessary lo call off the lunar landlng. Allen said: "it means on1y it's a little annoying to have." "Let's go to Hadley!" replied the Apollo 15 commander, Col. David R. Scott. This was a reference to the Jandln& site near one of the most rugged moun- tain ridges on the moon. Scott, and his space colleagues, Alfred M. Worden and James B. Irwin, alao Air Force officers, fired the main rommand .ship's engine for about one secood. Not .only did lhi.s show the problem would not abort lbe primary objective of man's fourth lunar landing, but it ac- complished a minor coorse correction for the trip to the moon. 'Mle critical test firing -nearly two a~ a half hours prior to a built-in course correction in tlle original Apollo flight plan -came half an hour after the spacecraft passed the halfway point in the four-day trip. If the engine had failed to fire , Apollo 15's ambitious landing plans probably would have be.en scrubbed -a severe blow lo the $25 billion U.S. space pro- gram. Even if lhe short hod created hazards to make a lunar landing too risky, there never was any danger lo the astronauts. They would hove continued the trip to and around the moon and back to earth. The bug. which was di3covered shortly arter the command module., the Endeavour, and the. lunar lander Fa Iron docked Monday afternoon, was a sOOrt circuit indicated by a flickering in- strument panel light. Before the engine fi red, Scott got th e light to go on -even though it wu aup- posed to stay off -by lapping tbe control panel. The astronauts llled ~procedures to work around the short. Tried out on the ground In simulators, these procedures will be u!f:d for latt:r maneuvers when the engine will brake Apollo 15 into lunar otbll and later propel (S.. APOU.0, Page Ii Ptfore of that alee beach weather Is in store agiln for the Oraap Coaat harbor area. Tbe temper• lures should 1pln rellch Into Iha J>l•uail~ 70'•· INSIDE TOD~'Y -r-fle Near Baai h in turmoil; Ste ttorv, Ulutirouon, Pa.ae 4. . ~--,, ' " ............. .. tt·• ....... t.-tr ' • ;~~;;<> 11 Srt'ttt ........ ,. 11 .....,_ 'If.le 1 '*' MerMfl .. n '""""'.<::.,-""~ == ,,: 1e .. ......, • II ~· lt4M ,1>11 1 J .., .. ' ,,,,... • • • .... Rail Strike . Threatens .Oranges .. By TERRY COVU..l.!: OI 1fle C.111 "O•t Stiff If Santa Fe Railroad workers strike ·Saturday a $600,000 Valencia orange crop trion't be plucked from Orange County trees and 1everal hundred pickers and packing house workers will be Idled, IC· cording to county growers. The 5lrike will nearly paralyze Orange County growers who supply about 10 per· cent of California's Valencia orange crop. Oranges represent the only major crop currently shipped from the c<>unty, IJ"OWUS said. ·•we can leave oranges on the trees for t week or two and only lose a few," say& Wllliam J . Willia.ms, vice president of the b'vlne Company agriculbJra1 division, Ltrsest grower in the county. ''But we •on't hire anyone to pick, or pack. The 1trike won 't hurl the Irvlne Company much, but it will put a lot of people out of work." Santa Fe handles nearly 100 percent of bran,ge County's shipping. If rail workers: itrtke Saturday. as expected, the railroad Will make Wednesday the last day fruit tan ht shipped out of the county. All county <1range crops go through lunldst which has two exchanies, the Orange County Fruit Ezchange in Orange and the Placentia Orange County Ex· change in Placentia. Between the two :hey ship an average of 150 freight car lo,ad15 of oranges each week. "We mi&ht try using trucks. but there won't be nearly enough trucks to keep up MJ.r current level," Floyd Wildermuth, !l'lanager af the Placentia Ezchange, laid. "'Two of our growers have already 1topped picking. The otliers keep asking t<hat it going Ul happen,'' Wi!dermulh 1aid. "The problem is we haven't yet been notified by Santa Fe that there will be a strike. Everything is still up in the air for us." Southtrn Pacific Railroad workers went on strike last Saturday, paralyzing lll crops in Northern California. "Soft fruits are hurt most. They're los t tompletely. Oranges can wait awhile, but everyone is affected," Williams es:· plained. Williams said the Southern Pacilic line. oow on strike. hAndles about 60 percent of Ill perishables out of California, but the Santa Fe line bandies all of Orange Coun- tY's CltlpS. Wlld~uth said that even 1f Santa Fe lloean't go on strike,""Orange County would ht hurt by the Southern Pacific 1trike because Santa Fe cars would be l.aken away to haul fresb fruit from oorthern California. "'U it comes," he roncl.udecl. "we'll just 1ry to shift to trucks. But right now we don't really know what's going to happen, and that's the worst part." 'Misspending' Charges Lodged ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -The head o! a.n eieeutive job placement firm has ac- cused state officials of "misspending'' much of the $3.4 million in federal funds tllocattd to Los Angeles Counly to help displaced aerospace .,.,·orkers find new Jobs. A. l-1. Hughes Jr., whose company, Image West. is trying to increase its fun. -ding for rontroversial pilol progr11m us- lng some of the same federal aid. said many of the grants to community agen- cies are for programs that are overly ex- pensive and ineffective. One grant of $243.920 to lhe Community and Human Resour ces Agency .,.,.as to provide training jobs and supportive Mrvices for onJy 88 persons, Hughes said !ll a ne.,.,'S C(lnference Monday. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT OIANGll! COAIT ~.Ll9LllHU10 COMPA.lol't' J:ob••t N. w.M Prn id.9nt .,... !"WI"'"""° J ee!. J:. Curl,y Vklt rrw!Hfof • ..;. G-.1 Me11....- n...,,, "••"ii f.d(!W Th•"''' A. Mur,loi"• M•NllllO Edllllt A1111 Dir\i11 w.t 0.-.l'OI! C-1y EdlW Alffrf W. 11t,1 >.1.-:i.1. lldl .... Nnlt ..... '-tlo Offke 1,a1s .. 1clo l•ul•r1rd M•lh"f Aiilr111: r.o. lor 1tO, 11641 .,.. ....... ll"""' •etdl~ 222 11'-! AV911<11l c. .. i. Mtif • D W.I lty !.trwt loltwPWf a'9dlr Jm ~ loulWI"' $•n C.'4P-i.: JIC$ Nor11! Iii CA,.,lf'O 1t1d ' , • T I 1t r CTI41 141-4111 • • • 0.ltlV PILOT Sl•ff PllflM RAIL STRIKE WILL NEARLY PARALYZE ORANGE COUNTY GROWERS -Women Pack Orange for Shipping at Irvine Packing House Rail Talks Collapse; Two Other Strikes End WASHINGTON (UPI) -The railroad strike talks remained In a state of col· lapse today as the government tried to fmd a legislative way to end the shut.. do~ut there wu good nen ft'om two other strike fronts. -The 58-day-old strike ag~nst Western Unio~ ended, excep. in the Nt!w York city area. and the company said the public could send telegrams onee again after 12 ·01 a.m. EDT Wednesday. Picket lines came down after the tentative agreement v.·as reached ~·ith the United Telegraph \V ork ers Union but the strike continued in New York v.·here the company Is bargaining with a different union. -Nearly 3,000 copper workers retumed to their jobs at two firms in Arizona and negotiators said a se!Uement covering J0 ,000 Kennecott Copper Corp. workers in four states appeared near. Talks in \\'ashing!on between the linited Transportation Union and the na- tion's railroads fell apart Monday and no new sessions .,.,,ere scheduled. Four ma jor lines are already shut do .,.,·n and six- olht>rs are threatened with a strike by week's tnd. Labor department sources s11id the l\'ncon Administration .,.,·as working on Grahan1 Cites U.S. l\lateriali sn1 Drive OAKLAND IAP ) -Eva ngtlist Billy Graham says American~ are creating o'J society ba.sed totally on materiali~m. and •·1.1·hen we do this, we will be little better than the Communists." He told an audience of 37.500 Monda y night in the fourth day or a crusade at Oakland Coliseum, "They have based their entire way of life an materialism without God." legislation to end the disput e but the p~ cess was complicated. A \Vhite House emergency board pre\'iously recommended a seltlement but il.s terms are not precise enough to be incorporated directely in any legislation. "It has become abvious that a volun- tary solulioo cannot be reached at thi.!! time," .said Assistant Labor Secretary W. J. Usery Jr. in announcing that the talks had broken off. Usery said the last two major points of disagreement concerned long train crew runs without extra pay, and the elimina· lion of most traditional distinctions between on-train and yard crew assignments. Those Hems are part of the \\'Ork rules which the railroads want to change because they consider them costly and in· efficient. "It is imperative in the fa ce of moun- llng economic pressures that an answer to this impasse be found ," Usery said. The strike -against lhe Union Pacific. Southern Pacific, Southern, and Norfolk & Western -has caused grain to pile up in Lhe t-.lid .... ·est. threatened thousands or caal miners 1.1·ith layoffs and endangered the ch ic ken industry in ~ome parts of the nation heeau~e of feed shortages. The \\'este rn linion ;:igreement. 1.1·hich still must be appro\'ed by 17.000 i;nv members. called for a 10 percent in- crease cffccLi\'e \Vr dnesday .,.,,hen the wnrkers offici11lly return lo their jbb~. Thrre 11lso wnulli be a 9 percent raise in 1972 and a varrcty of fringe benefit..c;. \\'estem L'nion estimated tl1e package would cost the company $31,7 mi llion. 1d- liing "111e are very pleased with the ~et· tlement. ·• The c!'lmpany's offices in New ''!'Irk City remaint>d closed . however, while the firm continuf'd negoliations 1vilh the Communications Workers of America v;ho represent the ap- proximately 3,000 Westtrn Uni on employes in that area. Summer :Workers Don't Get PaY,-Just Experience By RUDI N1EDZIELSKI or fllt D•llr PllU •••H There are no lazy days of summer for Robyn Seaman, a 17-year-old senior al ~larina High School. Since. school let out she ha~ bef.n put- ting in lhree bours • day at the country Day School working with ~'(lunger children. Sometimes she: works as a classroom teacher. while an other days she may be: the blleball umpire or the 15wimmJng coach. "I'm just wild about the Job." ahe uld, evtn though there la no pay, Robyn ls one of thirty students from the five ctmpuse.~ or the Huntington Betch Union High School District who are sptndlng the summer to find out how their drum c11reers are Wtlrklng out as day·t~day work. Wnrk. stations for thf other s!uderiU enrolled In the "Exploratory Work Etc · perience Program" lne lude 11 n I m • I hospilAls, nursery schools. a mental In· stitution. a dairy farm1 a b~nk 11nd a doc· tor's oUlc:r. Robt'rt /\-Jartin, the district's vocational education director, says lhe summer course allows the students to work side by slde with prt)fessionals in their chosen career. If they don't like the work, they can check out before committing their lives to the career. The studenL1 are rotated through various jobs at tht>lr work staUon for a tolal of 60 to 90 hours. Since the ex· ploratory "'ork experience prog.ram ls an educational program, they rece1Ye course credit IMttad of pay. The program optntd at the beginning of vacation with en orientation se.uion by v.·ork experience ttacher J im West. Each v.•eek he keeps tab on his student.!! through eva Juatians forwarded by the employer . Arter CQmplttlng the program atudents v.·ill be expected to ~bmlt a detailtd 1nalysi~ of the caretr II they ~1- perltnced 11. Tht students pe.rtlc lp3tlng in the sum· mer se511ion comt from f'ountain V•lley. Edison. Huntington Be1ch, WestmlMter 1nd Pt1arina hlRh K.hools. ·~ ~~ -. :JllSi,,. ... : ------~~ ·--~-· ~ -:r.it ~-1: ... '>' -.. -;> . . ··•r ., ......,., ... ' ...... l(Joj./_~ ·~ ,_ -· ___ .... _ - • ;....r.,el 'No Job tor Mn' APOLW. • • bet bock lo •"'111 Aue. 6 . The &hort deve.Joped • few OOurs alter launch Monday lr:a GM ball of the sysWD uoed lo conlnll the ..,in.. Tbl ... . . ·-~-were dlnc!od to ottempt w ~I oo11 lhe foully part ol the 1)'1Wn. 1be problem, algnlled by a flickerlnt Wtrument panel cbec.klight -could have come from one of three pos.sibilities - !lie worst of which would wash out the moon landing. Nun Keeps Tabs On Ladies',·Wear The object of the engine test was to pinpoint the trouble. "We're going to try to re-create the problem ," Lunney said in a late mo~nin~ news briefing. "If you push the c1rcu1t breaker and you don't get a bum, then you've gol a problem ." In the worst situation. officials said, t•ircuit breakers control ling one of two identical valve systems would be knocked out That would mean there would be no backup Lo the remaining valve system, and in that case. Apollo IS would not be permitted to carry out the landing. The reasoning was that when the astronauts go into lunar orbit Thursday, space afficials want to make certain they have two alternatives for blasting out and returning to earth. The special test was ordered instead of waiting until 4:29 p.m. EDT, when an engine firing had been previously set to correct the spaceship's path to the moon. Engineers here and at North American Rockwell's plant in Downey, worked throughout the night to duplicate the pro- blem -and thus find its solution. The short circuit was the only difficulty encountered during the first 24 hours of the journey lo the base of tw~to-three mile high maunl.ains on the moon in search fnr clues to its creation. "The analysis to date sef'ms to indicate that we probably have an engine that will work okay, or can be made to work okay," flight director Millon \Vindler laid. The astronauts wrestled with the pr~ blem on and off Monday afternoon and finally ended their first long day in space at 12:14 a.m. EDT today. Before going to sleep, ground communicator Karl G. Heinze asked the space flyers how the view was. with earth 75,000 miles away. "It's rantastic , Karl ," reported Worden, ''You ought to see it, man." "I'm eating my heart out,'' replied Heinze. a scientist-astronaut st i 11 awaiting for his spaceflight assignment. * * * Apollo Pilot's Father Hoists Flag for Launch SAN DfEGO IUPI) -Brig. Gen. Thoma1 Scott, USAF, Rel. hoist.ii the flag on his front lawn whenever there's a special occasion -and Mond;iy there was a special occasion. Scr>tt's son, astronaut David Scott. lifted off with his crewmates from Cape Kennedy on the Apollo JS flight to the moon. "l can't think of a better time to put lhe flag up than now ," the elder Scott said. He .said he displayed the flag for two previous space flights by his son. who commands the Apollo 15 crew. Mrs. Scott said the liftoff was "the most beautiful launch yet." She watched the launching on television with her hus- band and her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Devis or Fallbrook. The ScQtts awoke at 4 a.m. lo get ready for the launching. They had one color trlevision sel and two black and wh ite sets on. e11ch on different network.~. The astronaut's wife and chil dren "'alched the launch at C11pe Kennedy. Gen. Scott said each Oay of !he 12-day ]nurncy .~ASA 1\•1 11 scnli him and his ~·1fe ror1r.~ nf all eonversar1on betwttn the astronauts and !he command center at Houston . A NASA representallvt was .~enL In !hr ~Cflt! hnme tn an5wer the ir f!llf'stinn~ and brief ne~'~men . VATICAN CITY (UPI) With hemlines ri.sing and necklines dMoendJn1 in sweltering Romt-. Vatican offlcial~ sta- tioned a nun at the doors of St. Peter'• Basilica Tuesday to keep eul warMn reVealing loo much thigh or bo!lom. "It's no job for a m11n,'' Mid one assi gned to rule on hemlines and necklines. Vatican officials sa.ld S(Jffie of the male srcurity guards had been getting too le- nien t. "lt's ne job for a man," said & e prelate, referrin« to the task of an.soring thousands of pretty young tcurists eve ry day. The nun , identified onJy as Sisttt Fiore!la, w11s turning awty as many u one girl in every two during the height of Tuesday's tourist rush. A rebuf fed New York girl, wearing a demure dress but with the hemline four inches above the knee. asked : "Are they crazy? I go to confession in shorts back home." Sister Fiorella, aided by a novice nun and one of lhe Basilica's ushers, was at her busiest around noon when the temperat.ure hovered in the low nineties. Hundreds ef girls poured off tour buse.s. but those with bare shoulders, low necklines er any appreciable amount of thigh in sight were turned away with a .,.,,ag of Sister Fiorella"s fingt-r. The usher deall with argumentative tourists by shouting ''via" er "fueri" (get outl. The campaign produced one ef the 11trangest fashion para.des in Rome. One American girl wearing a micro- skirt was rebuffed the first time bul got Into the basilica on a second attempt by wearing her hoy friend 's sweater, whi ch reached almo!t to her knees. She pulled down her skirt lo cover tier knees. Other girls covered knees or shoulde rs with scarves or let down their hems on the spot. A girl from Californ ia, with her hem about three inches above the knee, told the implacable Sister Fiorella : "But I put on my only dress to see the basilica." Had the girl worn her customary blue jeans, she would have been allowed In. Another girl prote.rled : ' ' Ho 1 y mackerel. This 111 the longe!'it dress I've got." It came to about four Inches above the knee . Men In !l'hor-1& were banned. So were Mexican Youth Nearly Dies From Snake Bite A 21-year-old Mexican national was recovering today after a predawn snakebite ordeal at San Onofre Bluffs State Park which neatly took his life. Juan Perez, whose hometown in Mexico w11s not immediately determined , was found in convulsions at about 3 a .m. to- day by concession atand employes 11l the rect!ntly opened state park south of San Clemente. Pt>rez had ~n bitten bv a r111tlesnake Sflmrtlme during the dar-k hours as he ~·alked northward along the bluffs. ap- parently evading Border Patrol off1ct>rs at the Onofre checkpoint . RanJ:ers sa\d they notified patrolmen anrl San Clemente ;:iu thorit ie~ !or assistance after 1he emergency ca!L In San Clemente, poliCf! 11ttempted to ci'l ll a lnc11! 11mbul11nce service. but no one answered the phone , they salt!. those who gallantly lent their 8hirtB to lheir ladles and tried te enter bare. chested. A 1ign at the entrance to the bu.Wea warns in five languages: "In erder te pre§erve an atmosphere of reverence, en- trance cannot be granted to men dressed In llhorU: nor lo women wearinc minigowns or sleeveless dresses." Loan Backers For Lockheed Get Setbacks WASHINGTON (AP) The ad· ministration effort to provide fin111cial aid for Lockheed Aircraft Corp., already set back in the •twn Senate votes, wall' described today by Sen. Mike-Mansfield of Montana as "a voyage into an area where we really have no business.;' The Senate Democratic leader said that feeltng, and co~rn about the precedents the bill would set, led to the Monda y vie· tories of senators opposed to the biU . It is designed to provide a $250-million Jo11n guarantee which ad\'ocales say is essen· tial to save Lockheed from bankruptcy. Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, the Republican leader, said those setbacks did not indicate eventual defeat of the measure. "It's still uncertain .11s to what will happen," he said. Scott said supporters of the bill expect to gain strength Wednesday when they try for a second time to limit debate on the bill. But he said they probably will not be able to gain the two-thirds vote they need unless Mansfield supports the limil<1tion on talk. "It's an uphill thing all the way." Scott said . Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr. (lnd.-Va.) meanwhile announced his opposition IG the bill. which authorizes S2 billion to pro- \•ide loan guaranlee.s to major busineo;s enterprises facing financial failure that would damage the economy or lead to serious unemployment. "f have found it difficult lo reach a conclusion lhal tax fUI1ds, funds obtained from the seat of the wage earners. should be used In rescue huge private enterprise corporations," Byrd said. With surprising ease, Lockheed op- ponenl!I led by Sen. William Proxmire fD-Wi5. l, defe11ted the first attempt Mon- day to limit debate. Driver Survives As Auto Flips A Fountain Valley resident was described in good condition today at Pacifica Hospital after he flipped his con- vertible sports car h-1onday afternoon wh ile driving in Huntington Beach. Gary Douglas Andrewes, 22, of 5931 La Dona Court. told pol ice he .,.,.as driving northbound on Gothard Street bet1.1·een ~lain Street and Eiits Avenue about 2 p m. wht>n hr lost {'(Jnt.rol or tht car. That portion of Gothard has two sh11rp t•urves and 1\ndrewes was apparently rounding the curve clo.!!C~t lo f\.1ain whtn the acci den t look pla ce. accord ing tc polict> reports. Traffic ivesti~alors said the car skid- ded acro~s the t.,.,•o-lane road and flipped fiver on the west shoulder, !anding on its t llfl. $2.99 CARPETING ? • • • • Suro we liove it-but, usually we try to convin ce customers to buy carpeting that will complement their homos . Often, in .situations where a customer is covering the floor ju1t to 1ell • house, cheap carpeting may be • liability. In mony ca••• the difforonct of only " dollar a yord will in1tall a quality of carpeting that looks twic e as well and will give much better 10rvice. In a nut.hell we're not trying to necouarily be the "CHEAPEST", (though we often are). but the "BEST!! (Which we always a re. ) ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 P'lac•ntla Ave. COSTA M!SA 646-4138 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:311-!'rl., 9 to 9-S.t., 9:30 to 5 --" ···--·-. ' ' ) -'I' • _.,-..r~ • t::_ ··• ·- I , H DAIL V PILllT 3 UCI Will ·. Curtail Library Hours • Ill Cutbacks~ By GEORG!. LEJDAL Of .. ~ ~u.t , .... A M0,000 budget Clll.back will result in .1n 11 pucent reducUoi;i in the number ot hours tbt UC lrvint library will be open C.O students next year. John E. Smith, UCI librarian, said Ur day the library wUJ no longer be open to students on Friday nights or Saturday mornings in order for the library to live within itS 19'11-72 budget. Despite a 700 student increase. al UC! next year, tht Governor's budget added liWe money to the total budget provided to UC! last year, altho~h recognition of •t .. growth al UC1 came in the rorm of 30 new facu1ty position5. ~ library budget cut represents two aQ1:1 a half peroent of the ovtrall budget for nut year. S,m.ilh noted. and means a los5 of three and a half library staff posi- tions. The budget also lessens the number of books that may be purchased during the year by 1,500 volumes. Smilh noted that while these books amount to ooly two and a half percent of the hook buying budget, buying them in subsequent years will be more costly, due to inflation. The library hours reduction mean!I students ma\' u~ the library only 85 hours 1 wetk next year, compared lo 9G hour& this year. Smith said, "we'rf: trying to make the cutbacks as gentle as possible on students." Thu.s, Lhe hours eliminated from the library schedule are those show- ing the least amount of student use ln pa.st years. Next year's schedule will provide library servi~ from a a.m. to midnight from Monday to Thursday. Friday the dooors will open at a a.m. and clo~ at 6 p.m. instead of midnight. Saturday hours wl!I be from I to 5 p.m. rather than the 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. schedule offered in past years. • Suodiy -hour• Wiii ""1'i" t.bt ....,, from. I lo 10 l •lll< "Wt w. dciloi tb11 with srea! rtluc> ........ !liol4!i'Sild, no!lnr "It It -wJH ind pound fooJltb ~ assemble great rflOW'l:U .nil lhtn Umh thetr--use: Meat1wbUe, Uit budget atricturea will hive a more immediate eUeCt at Cal S\ate Fullerton where an 11 percent r•duction In Ubrtry hours is to take ef· feet with thl OjNl\lng of the second sum· nler i°" wOloh begin• TueSday. CO olllclala have not determined the fU tftect of the budget on next y..,.., Ubrary schedule, but note th• librtr)' :-;~a(f has bttn cut by 8.3 position• $2.8 Million • Ill ftol of I l.000 11.-.f incrl•I - >""'· 111t "'1tocl _,. -It •I c:sr llbrlly wn1 ltln •• • llour'i ... h WNIC~ -~ Wllll I ft hour I -· ,. lllf durln the Hrti t1111U111r -wh Ojlllltd :l.:':I the pul lllcll yeer. '!11e lotl of U · poeltlono Oft Ille library Staff means 15 or more student ,a&latants may not be employed next year, a coltege •pokeSman u.id .. Should the hirinc freeze be lifted it is.poaaible the nonnaJ library schedule could be resumed. Fullerton officials are concerned that the investment of mllllona of dollm'I In the 300,IXXI volwne1 in lhl library col· '• lletlorl llllY bt llirutened by tho 111111 l!llUllW. Wllhoul """".... 11111 lo return book• to •holvot tlld ma. repain, the colltetlan •Ufffr•, a spj(eaman noted. r The hour> cull by lhe Oran&• eowdy 1ehools, are typical al cul! being rude 11 other •tale colle1e.s and unlversltla. UC Berkeley hu poated a library acbldule limiting acceu to Ila four mlllion volume colledlon by one third as a rtll.llt of 1 1%67,llOO budget cut. Cal St.le Los An&el11 has reduc-' library availability by SO houri a week. Library budget C\lts for the UC 171teb! total '757 ,ooo, for the comffia: year. ~ TahSeen ,• THIS IS THE SCENIC OCEAN VISTA THAT DANA POINT RESIDEN TS HOPE TO PROT ECT Already Two L1w Suits H•v• Been Filed to Prohibit Construction Blockin9 The View Dana Hill Residents Unite Battle Joined With County Ove r Tall Buildings By PATRICK BOYLE Of th• 0..llJ ,.1111 Stitt Hillside Dan• PC>int ruidents have begun organizing for a battle with the county which could ultimatt:ly affect the growth of their booming community. The residents. many of whom live in $40,000 and $50.000 sing le family dwell- ings in the area of Street of the Blue Lantern above Coast Highway, are op+ posing construction of tall apartment buildings on the lower portions of the slope. ''\Ve plan to object lo any conslrucLion for which a variance must be granted:' aaid Jim Rege.lbrugge, chairman of the re~ntly formed Dana Point Civic Association. "\Ve will support the individuals v.·ho have taken the county to court as well as any future high rise that may be pro- posed." he added. The root of the problem goes back to the 1920s, according to county :r.oning l:ommissioner Ray Reed. when the land \\'as subdivided y.•ith lots fronted by ~lretls both front and rear. 'To build on the sloping land without having steep driveways, Reed has been granting variances to permit construction of two and three. story apartments wh1ch would not mtt:t the 2().foot setback re· quirements. The height of the buildings is not ii· legal, Reed notes. because with the elope. onJy two of the stories. or JS feet, would be above the street level. However. his actions have sparked the ire, several ap- peals and at least two lawsuits from area homeowners. Residents across the slrttt -ln the gtngle family dwellings -complain ~ apartment bulldings would block the.tr view of the sea and have fought the gran- ling of the variances, Mlting ccn· stn.ictk>n. Oorta1d Bedoe, of 34122 Street of tht Blue Lantern, recently won a court battle ha!Ung such C011Jtruclion arter both Reed and the Board of Supervisors approved the permit. Beddoe has sinct describt.d Reed u a. "one man varlanCe commlti.e tblt hands out variancts !Utt bllloona at a political picnic." , However. Retd feels a precedent was "t for h11 1ctlon bec1uat two other pro- perty owner• built 1tmnar a~t houaea aeveral year• lfO. .. "The zoning codf, A)'I thll .. lt. homeownen ne1rby blvt the ~ pr1vllege, it ls suffkjtnt reuon far1.,.,_ ting," Reed says. The pcopttt:J' "tf"DCC halld by Beddo<'• oult, Riehm! llooi, has stnce refiled for the amt vC'ftnce, Reed noted. "Most of the lots l11ve been vacant ror a numMr of years." Reed says, "and th(: people who live lMre. now have had a b.iiautlful vieY.'. "The land coulfl bl" rezoned with a limit rin the ht:ighl." he added, "but il would 1rem odd to put a hetcht llr'nit on multl· pie family dwelHngs when sina:lo families •cross the !lttel can ht1vt lwo stortu 'above the street levrl." • -• --;11-;:":"-r-, .•~ ........ -I •' ..i.-1 .. - Hov.·ever. sever<il residents would still hi:e to preserve \heir view and they see fighting the variances as the only recourse available . "The people are upset with the way the county supervisors are ignoring Ille Dana Point area,'• said r-.trs. John Creed. of 33871 El Encanto. "We are not saying the people should not be allowed to build, bul v.'e would like the county to lake a more careful look at the effect the variances will have." Another resident, John Bass. of 34012 Granada Drive. said he was pleased the Civic Association was planning lo lake action . .. There have been too many old timers trying to makr motions and second them, but nothing gets done," said Bass, who noted that he is 66 years old. "There have befn too many talkers and not enough doers. J think these young folks tin the association) are going to g e t somewhere.'' "And I think that nOI\'. any more apar1 - ment building construction will have to go through a lot more legal procedures and not just one individual," Bass added . Atom Activists Ne arii1g Nex t Faceoff 011 On of1·e By JORN VALTERZA Of -Deity "llfl S111f The time is almost here again, y.•hen the cadres of dark·suited experts from major utilities will confront a brigade of Jay opponents bearing reams of handwritten data and yellowed cllpplntJs. The issue -an awe90me one -is whether San Onofre should b~me the world's largest nuclear generating complex. The Atomic Energy Commission will decide. Experienced observers of the phenomenon of the nuciear reactor appli· cation hearings have said last year's Public Utilities Com- mission functions in San Clemente were child's play com- pared to thr AEC edition scheduled ~metlme later this year. Yrt , t~ basic is.sues y.•ill probably remain !he. same. And the nucleus-pardon the tritenes!--Of the entire matter i!: "whom do we trust~" The answers neve.r come easily. \Ve·u see oppoaing faclions of scientists -hearing from emftlenl men proclaiming the safely, virtue and cleanlineaa of nuclear reactors. Then we'll probably get another group -equally as emmenl -scar the pants off everyone with predictions of dire accidents. And all will have their own probability fa ctors t e 11 i n g us somelhing might happen within a glven perk>d of years. And tnronnaUon will come with gobs of testimony !poken in "Nuclear- phy1icse!e, ·• ton.gl:t foreiin to 99 percent of the An1erican public. UWlly uecuUvea will tell how important the new generators will be to our n1Uori'1 p:>Wer crlsiJ • , • how clean the r!actors are (we already know how well loblters grow around coollog system outfalls) and bow nuclear e~ eT1)' la the only way to fly. Laymen and profeukw\11 erltlca will be. out in forct as well -all pos- sessed by aenuJne coritem and a strong element of mistrust of utllitlt1, gov· emment commlssiMs and the pe1ceful atom. Added ta the acmario will be a batch of random inJftdlentJ sucll as civil defense plan1 drl'tm up to evecuate thousands ot ua in case some sort of cata• trophe or sabotage hit.a the nuclear complu . , . perish the thought. Some will arcue that becaUJe Richard Nixon is probably the closest resi- dent ta the art• ln queaUon, lt'1 1otta be 1 safe proposition. ••• And 10meone'• bound to mention the lobsters once 111in. . _ . And whet about 111 the deadly wame th.ll ti.a to be carted away from tbe gl"neraton And buried in concrete vaults where it can slay lethal for 24,000 years? The v1ull1 leak, sometime•. The testimony i! bound to last ror dRys ltld follow a format similar to a lrial. The. defendant. however, wUI be neither the utilities. the aovemment, nor the atom's peaceful use. 1 Faith will be on trial. .... ,.,,. .• .... 1 On Medi-Cal By JACK BROBACK O! If>• O..ily "Utr Stilt A familiar but unwelco.me problem in· vaderl the Orange County Board of Superviso1 s budget he.a rings Monday. Orange County Medical Cent r: r Administrator Robert \Vhile said the present Medi·Cal legislation belog con· liidered in the state senate could cost the county S2.8 million. Last year at this time. \Vhite told board members that state-Ordered cutbacks in ~1edi-Cal would cost the county $.1 million in Joe.:.~ taxes. The result was a five-ce nt tax increase and the abandonment ol lieveral park and beach programs. White Jlso asked for the restoration of $6~3.000 in programs cut by the county administrative office and $262.000 to cover a recent increase in the patient load at the hospital. The hospital administrator said his cslin1ate of an addilional $2.8 million in local Medi-Cal costs could change and urged that the medical center budget be approved not earlier than Friday af· temoon. White suggested that if the state pro-- i::ram again penalized county taxpayers. the supervisors should explore the legal possibilities of sending the state a check for its $10.4 million share of Medi-Cal !et· ting the stale lake over the program. The county co unsel was instructed to research the possibility Earlier. supervisors had revie\ved another vital component of the county's proposed '43.8 million health program Dr. Ernest Klatte. mental heal\h dire<:· tor offrred a $9.6 million budget. almost $3 million over the administrative office's figures and including a $910.000 expansion of the county's drug abusr program. He said re~nt state grants would save the county $500.000 over previous esllmates. Discussion of the mental heal!.h pro-- gram brought forth an estimate by Coun· ty Administrative Officer Robert Thomas that drug abuse cost the county $30 million. more than 10 percent of the $244 million budget. The fi~ure includes direct effo rt. crime and y.·elfare costs. Monday afternoon's session was enlivened by a bill.Cr clash between Cla ire Kelley of Huntington Beach, presi- dent of the Council on Sensible Taxation, and two supervisors. r-.1rs Kenney and Oliff Frazier, representing ano ther county taxpayers group. have continually interrupted board sessions with crit icism during the three days or the he arings. Camp Pendleton Ma1ine Sentry Sl1ot to Deatl1 Camp Pendleton authorities today divulged thal a young MArine sentry was shot to death y.·hlle on duly last Sunday afternoon and that another Leatherneck from the same unit 1s being held in the incident. Base spokrsmen said the dead serviceman was Pfc. John A. Hacker, 19, of Perryville, r-.10. llacktr. authorities said. was dead on arrival al the base hospital at about S p.m. Sunday. He had betn shot once in the che.sl with an ,.,.1-14 rifle. Authorilles detained 17·ycar-old Pfc. John \'. Shute, hometown not im- mediately a\·Jilable. in the incident. Spokesmen would not characterize the role Shute assertedly had in the shooting, but did ga y he has been ordered under ··house arrcsl .. and has been afforded a l;:iwyer during the followup prolle. Both young men had been attached tc> the Student Company of the Schools Bat- talion at the base. Reports elsewherr: today said the shooting was the third this year involving .entries at the large base. Mexico'c East Coast Slipping Into f ulf SAN DIEGO (AP) -Every year one or two Jr.ctlet of a large chunk of Me:ii:ico'• ea11t coast slips into the Gulf of Mexico, government scientists s&y. The 75.~ .o;quarr:-mlle lancbllde has been happening for two mllllon years. A rtcent study conducted by the U.S. Geologlca.I Survey and Mexican scientific organi1.allons showed that rarlh layers beneatI. the gulfs se1tnoor are crumpled In a pattern simtlu to that fc>und at the ba.~e of large landslides, said George Moore. a governmentJ...eol~gi~t. OAILY \l'ILOT St•U \l'Mi. FIRST GARBENST ANGELER AND HIS 'COSMI C TIME PIECE' Mich1el Chaplin Expl1in1 Machine Which Drew Opening Day Crowd ·nas Compulsion~ Ga rb enstangel Contest Under Way · An unemployed computer spcclalls~ from Huntington Beach who says he has a compulsive drive to bu i I d garbenstangels !\londay was first in hnc to enter the world's first Build a Better Garbenstangel Contest. r-.lichael S. Chaplin or 9122 Christine Dri\'e, Huntington Beach, said he saw one or the first challenges published weeks ago by the DAILY PILOT v.·hcn the newspaper first asked readers to build Rube Goldbergian contraptions for the contest. He said he has built musical in· s!ruments as a hobby. his productions having included a il,Ullar. a dulcimer and a clavichord. He y.·as in the midst, he said. of soldering the 1.800 connt:ctions on 900 wirl"s which n1ake his garbenstangel work \\'hen he read about the contest and decided to enter. Thus he was first in line with his rlcc- tric box full of wires when the great Garbenstangel Rallye started Monday morning. He set up hs electric box•which he calls Cosmic Time Piece at Carouse! Court in South Coast Plaza . And y.•hen he plugged 1! in and turned it on crowds began to gather for what is expected to he a week of garbenstanget \••atchlng at the shop- ping crnter in North Costa Mesa. Before the center closed at 9 o'clock !11onday n~ht garbensl.al)gels were scat. tered throughout the Carousel Court area where they will remain on display until Saturday morning's judging. Gary Owens of KMPC and "Laugh-in'' ls l'xpected to enliven the judging with the help of a couple o[ other zanies from show business -the Skiles and Hen· dc.rson comedy team. Gene Tardy. a Golden West Collei• graphic arts instructor who has built i;:a:-benstangels as a hobby for the past H> :years. not only will be a judge of the coa- test but also has a collection of his machines on exhibit at !he plaza. Tardy·s machines put on hourly performances in which one of !hem -·a robot head renamed Gary Garbenstangtl for the run of the show -emcees the performanCf'. . The fifth judge will be Louis Knobbe, "'I. patent attorney_ Action today in the Build a Better Garbenstangel Contest and lnternationsl Rallye centered on the Collegiate Division competition. TY.'O teams from Orange Coast College -one all girls -were rn assemble garbanstangels on the spot. A team from Golden \Vest College wftl takr to the court \Vednesday to try to build a better garbenstangel. A nge la Pleads Innocent; Gets Power of Attorney $AN RAFA EL, Calif (AP) -Black militant Angela Davis formally pleaded innocent Tuesday to murder. kidnap and conspiracy charges. The judge set her trial to begin in 00 days. "f plead not g,uilty," said Miss Davis. her arms folded as she stood before Superior Court Judge Richard E. Arna.son. Just before the plea. the judge handed Miss Davis a legal victory by granting her permission to have tM: powers of a defense attorney In her own trial. Amason said lhis was rarely granted but he felt "the c•u.se or justice will be served.·· He said the court may revoke the privilege II it appears she abuses it. The Judie denied defense requests to d.i1rnlss a grind Jury indJctment a11tnst her on grounds there wu dam1glng pretrial publlcity and that the sr1nd Jury was prejudiced. flowever, be set a pretrial hearing next Monday allowing the defeme t chance: to present what It sayt is evidence tb1t judgt:s who selecttd the 19-m!n county grind jury did not do so lmper50nally. Arnuon s1ld defense attorneys may In· tervlew the selector judjet at this hear· ing. Mi~s Oavifi , 27. Is charged In connection with the Aug. 7 M11rl11 County courthouse gunbattle in which a Judge and three others were slain. She is not accused of be ing present, but of furnishing guns used in an abortive escape attempt and help- ing plot the crime. Bay Problems W ill Be Aired Existing or potential w a t e r quality probfems atfectina four estuarles aJong tbe Or1nge Cout will be discussed Aug. 1 before a state agency • The Callfomla Reg!Mal Wat&r Quality Control Board for the Santa Ana Rep:ion will study UM! 5itu&lUon al Anaheim, SUnstt, Bot.sa and Newport bays. T~mr will be 9:30 a.m. In Room 178 of the Human.ltle1 Building at UC Irvine, with parking 1et a1kfe In Lot Sevtn off BrJd&e Rold. Executive Officer Richard A. Bueermann Invites any per&oN or agencies wiatun gto be heard to notify him at 6848 MaanoUa Ave ., Rlvrrside in writing. '""'-'""'-: --· .,. \.~ ,,.. '~--~· ---'1•1;;--. ~-..... Allt-~ J ,.,.) J' r~b-..-...: ~ ' ----·~ .· -~ ~ -- .. "• \ Reds B·last 4 Copters Sapper Units Slip In,-Do Job, Escape ' AL8ERIA LIBYA SAUDI ARABIA. UPl Nirw• Mfp SAIGON (UPI) -A band of Vlei O>ng sappers aneaked Into an allied airbase near Saigon today, blew up four U.S. helicopters and wounded two Americans. They escaped without a shot being fired, the U.S. command said. American B52 bombers, meanwhile, at- tacked North Vietnamese bunkers and ,;torage areas today, 20 miles west or where South Vietnamese forces have begun a campaign in the A Shau Valley, near the Laotian border. Other B52s car- ried out five strikes in the northern sec4 toe. Reports from Phnom Penh in neigh- boring Crunbodia said a force of 5,000 Cambodian troops swept unopposed today into the vlllage of Pref Kry. 35 miles northwest of the capital,, only to find the Communists had fled 24 hours before. The village was though~ to have been a major Viet Cong logistics headquartirs. Only one brief clash was reported in the <!rive, with no casualties. NEAR EAST IN TURMOIL -Sudan officials in Khartoum have arraigned Communist Party Leader Abdel Khalek Mahjoub on charges be master·mind· ed last week's overthrow of President Jaafar Numeiry that lasted three days. Mahjoub, in turn. was toppled by a counter·coup. A U.S. spokesman said at least four commandos got past the guards at the air base, headquar(ers for the South Viet· namese 5th Infantry Division and an ele- ment of !he U.S. !st Avalalion Brigade at Lai Khc, JO miles north of Saigon. They planted satchel explosive charge!! end destroyed two AHi Cobra gunships and two 0~16 light observation helicopters worth $1.6 million and Oed, the spokesman said. High Sudan Red Executed Lai Khe is one of the best-constructed bases the U.S. government has turned over to the Saigon command as part of Its Vietnamization program, It is en- circled by chain-link fences, concertina wire, sandbags and cement guard posts. Top Communist on Tricil; Russians Blast Purge The spokesman said it was not known whether the guards got through a section of the barricades defended by South Viet- nantese or American units. KHARTOUM (UPI) -Sudanese authorities today hanged Joseph Garang, the former Communist Minister for Southern Affairs, for hi.oJ part in last week's abortive leftist coup, Omdurman Radio armounced. He waa the 13th person &o be executed since the coup was foiled. The radio also reported a military tribunal sentenced Maj. Mubarak Hassan Al Zein to seven years imprisonment for his part in the roup which ousted Presi- dent Jaafar Numeiry for 72 hours. Ha was the third person to be sentenced to jail. Political sources said Communist party leader Abdel Khalek Mahjoub was being tried on charges he masterminded the coup - a trial termed to 6tar event or Numelry's campaign to rout the Com· munist conspirators. A dealh penalty was considered almost certain. Garang was dismissed from his ministerial post this weekend as the government began the mass arrest and trial of persons believed involved in the coup. He was the only cabinet member to be seen openly with the rebel leaders dur· ing that period. Garang was the second civilian to be executed by hanging. The first was Sudan's top labor leader, Shafei Ahmed El "Sheikh. who was executed Monday. Military men charged with the con· spiracy have been shot to death by firing squads. (The purge of Communists in the Sudan was bringing harsh words from Mosrow, which has sent hundreds-of military ad- visers to Khartoum, The B52 Stratofortresses struck five times Monday night and early today in the far northern quarter of South Viet- nam. The command said the bombers Arab Sources Say Egypt (An official statement issued through the Tas~ News Agency expressed Soviet alarm over the virulently anti-Communist campaign and decried what it called the "bloody terror" taking place in the Sudan. It said the Soviet people "express the liope that the Sudanese leadership is aware of the danger of the road onto which they are pushing the country Agne'v Scl1edules Lighter Duties At End of Trip LISBON (UPT) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew booked a light, ceremonial schedule today for the last full day of hi! l I-nation diplomatic tour and prepared to return home and report to President Nix- on. Moving Toward New War All that remained on Agnew'!! itinerary was a luncheon given by Prime Minister Marcelo Caetano and a farewell dinner at the U.S. Embassy. By United Pres1 lntematlonal Arab poliLical sources in Beirut said to- day Egypt appeared to be moving toward a resumption of the ~ of attrition with Israel along the Suez canal. In Cairo, the semiorfic\al Middle East News Agency (MENA l said Egyptian forces were in a gt.ate of maximum preparedness for such a confrontation. MENA, quoting military sources. said "Egyptian anned forces are in a state of maximum preparedness to face the developments of expected evenl3 on the (Suez canal) front and to confront any at,. tempts by the enemy to cast doubt on the abilities of the EgypUan air force." The reports followed the decision Mon- day by the Arab Socialist Union (ASU), Egypt's only political party, to give President Answar Sadat a free hand to press his campaign for the e1plusion of Israel from occupied territory. 'The ASU announc.ement sajd it 1uthorized Sadat to take "practical measures so that the world may know we are detennined and united." Sadat, in a speech Monday, repeated his statements that the conOict with Israel must be settled this year. But he edded, "J am not saying the path to vic- tory must be rompleted this year because the path is long. But this year should witness .•. prac- tical measur~ to liquldate tile con- &equences of the aggre55ion." 'The Arab political 80Urcts in Beirut gaid thi11 pointed to a resumption of the war of attrition which extended from the fall of 1968 to lhe cease-fire of Aug. 5, 1970. "The armed forces scored great suc- cesses in the period before the cease- fire," Sadat said. "'The enemy learned a lesson it cannot forget when Egyptian force!! doMted lsraell Phantom and Skyhawk plane!!." During the war of atrition, Egyptian and Israeli artillery dueled daily across the canal, their planes fought in the skies, l srael launched deep penetration raids and Egypt staged cross-canal commando attacks. The warlike reports from Arab capitals coincided with Tel Aviv reports U.S. Assistant Secretary of Slate Joseph J, Sisco will arrive there \Vednesday in another American effort to keep alive its middle eazt peace initiative. Sisco is expected to stay in lsrael for as long as 10 days for talks with officials from Prime Minister Golda Meir on down. His actual talks will not begin until Friday when a visil by Belgian Foreign Minister Pierre Harmel comes to an end. Israeli officials have made it clear Sisco will be confronted with the government's demand for more Phantom jets to offset what the leadership con- siders a shift in the balance of power in the middle east. They have also indicated . . . ") El.Sheikh and four army officers were executed :r.fonday. The four officers, Including Lt. Col. Babakr Al Nour and Maj. Farouk Hamadallah who were taken from a British airliner in Libya Thursday while en route from London to Khartoum, were executed by firing squad. Sheikh, head of the Trade Union Federation. was hanged. Nour was returning to the Sudanese capital to head the ttvolutionary com4 mand council set up alter last Monday's roup. Numeiry meanwhile approved a 20 year prison sentence today for Dr. Mustafa Khojali and e four year sentence for Lt. Zuheir Kassem All Bakir for what the government-run radio in n ea r by Omdurman said was their part in the coup a gainst him . Political sources said Mahjoub. 4.5. secretary general of the 50.000-membcr Sudanese Communist Party, wa ~ the regime·s most wanted ~1 spcct. They said he faced lhe death penalty despite the an- ticipation of an intensive campaign by the Communist world to save him. The !11iddle East News A J! e n c y (MENA I said rx>lice s-urprised r\.iah joub at midnight Sunday while he slept Jn a deserted house in the ancient city of Omdunnan. !he Sudan's largest city, which is linked to Khartoum fi ve miles to the southeast by street car. The cities are at !he confluence of the White Nile and the Blue Nile in Africa's largest nation. Agnew returns to the United States Wednesday, after a 32-day tour of Korea, Singapore, India, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, Kenya, The Congo, Spain, Morocco and Portugal. There had been some speculation that Agnew might be asked to lead the U.S. delegation to the funeral Thursday of President William V. S. Tubman of Liberia, but the vice president's aides said he was returning to the United States. Robert Finch , counselor to Presi- dent Nixoo, will lead the U.S. delegation. In one of the busiest days of his 32-day journey. Agnew held separate meeting~ with three top Portuguese officials Mon- day after watching on television the Apollo 15 astronauts blast off into space. The vice president first met briefly with A1naral Neto. President of the Na- tional A~sembly, at Sao Benito palace. Then he drove to Que!uz Palace for the meeting voith Caetano. the sucessor to Antonio Salazar. \Oo'ho ruled Portugal for 36 years. Late in lhe afternoon. Agnew \Oo'ent !() Belem Palace for a tea given by Presi· dent Amcrico Thomas, whose duties are chiefly ceremonial. Agne11-'s wife, Judy. and friends Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dundore of Ballimore. also attended the reception . The vice president conferred in private \\'i th Thomas. Winter Weather Arrives Details of Agnew's talks with P ortuguese leaders were not disclosed. It was assumed. however. that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) came under discussion. Portugal is the only nation Agnew visited that ts a member of NATO. Hot, Muggy States in South, East Cool Off There was no indication whether Agnew discussed Portugal's colonies in Africa. Although Portugal considers the provinces a domestic matter, the United States has been ronst.anlly faced with resolutions In the United Nations, pushed bv the African states, seeking to de- nOunce Portugal's grip on its colonie.!I. California PMYIEWOfMOAA NATIOKAlWllTHCWSERVICETO r:ou.a .M. ($T 1 -1•-11 l'I' UNITfD Pll:l!SI HITfllNATIONlL Sou,,..,.,, C•lllornl• rl'lt•ld u...o.r ......,v iJ<ln •vol~ todolv. ~ .... !~t "'" t'l't °"' !or •om• ttlu!WHrJtoo...e" 1~ .... "°"''"*" Otlt<"-. L-e!Ou<h hu!'IO ,,.,.,. "'• «NI•! u .._, 11 11klhl 9fld r~ 1119 rnor~1,,. 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" " n Pair Convicted In Curse Case 11 58 '' BUDAPEST (UPI) -A court con-~: ~ .it victed a man and wife Monday of 11 s1 . n desecrating the grave of a neighbor the "',, !~ ·11 couple said put a curse on their children .... .01 nd ,, s1 that resulted in their being born bli • ~ ;: They were sentenced to 10 months in ja!J • 100 .-Budapest district court said the couple. •1 1• Identified only as Mr. and Mrs. L. J . of n $1 .lt •1 ,. the town of Cegled, had a quarrel with a ~ ~ neighbor, Identified as Mrs. S. G. several 111 ., years ago. •• " ~ .. ~ " n " . •1 72 .Ill' The righl in the middle of their vlllagt "°' atr~t ended with the neighbor woman's curse: "May all your children be born bl ind'' n 7t ·'' 16 ,, "' ~ II ~ ~1 Lnter Mrs. l •. J. gave birth lo tw~ children. both born blind. The children died wlUiin d:iys after birth. Lal.er Mrs. " . .. " 11G Olj) " " " ~ ,, ~' ,, ", °' S. G. d ied ond l11st week. Mr. and Mr,;. L. J., the proSt'cution said. went lo hC'r grave, dug up the coffin and smashed 11 cross over the grave. t dropped more than 360 tons ol e1pl.osives in foor rai~ around Khe Sanh and ooe about a mile south of the OemiLitarized Zone lDMZ) between North and South _Vietnam. Another B52 formation dropped at least 90 tons of bombs on an area four miles southwest of the abandoned former French airstrip al a Luoi, 1ust west of the A Shau Valley near the border with Laos. The target is 20 miles from the area where a battalion-size South VietnamHe force was landed by allied helicoptert MoDday and ran into slight t'Onlact with the Communists. The South Vietnamese command aaid govemmel'lt troops repari.ed killirlg 21 Viet Cong and North Vletname~fe, CaJ>- turing one and detaining four awpected Viel Cong in four clashes ranging from the northern mountains to ·the Mekona Delta. Two More Big .Quakes Rock Ravaged lslnnds I . PORT MORESBY, New Guinea (UPJ) -Two earthquakes nx:ked New Britain today in the wake of a massive quake Monday which caused a tidal wave and wrecked at least one village. They were the fourlh and fiflh earth tremors to hit the South Western Pacific island in two weeks. Eight Australian Navy ships were on staodby alert off New Britain whose main town of Rabaul, 500 miles northeast of Port Moresby, was hardest hit by _:r.fonday:'i quake, which registered 8.3 on the Richter scale. Admnistration officials said the two quakes today registered 6.~ on the Richter scale and hit the Kimbe area on the west coast of New Britain, about 150 miles southwest of Rabaul. Aircraft were chartered to f I y emergency supplies to Kimbe where two Soviets Predict U.S.-Red China Combined 'Plot' MOSCOW (UPJJ -The Soviet Com4 munist Party newspaper Pravda said to- <lay any American·Chinese efforts aimed against the Soviet Union are "bound to boomerang." The authoritative newspaper made the <'Omment in a discussion of the J:>rojected visit to Peking by President Nixon. The article repeated ttie essence of an earlier Pravda commentary but also showed Soviet concern that Mainland China and the United States may be plotting joint action against the Soviet Union . "The long term interests of the world'~ peoples, including the peoples of the Chinese Peoples Republic and the U.S.A., call for decisions strengthening the cause of peace and international security,'' Pravda said. "As for foreign political combination spearheaded against other states, in the long run they are bound to boomerang against their initiators," it said. Normally, Pravda said, the Washington-Peking contacts would be welcomed by the Communist world "if they proceeded from a policy of peaceful coexistence of states with differing socia l order and promoted ronsolidation of peace throughout the world, above all in Southeast Asia. "But the anxiety of intemationa1 democratic opinion has been aroused precisely by the fact that the contacls between Washington and Peking are tak4 ing place in conditions of continuation of the aggressive imperialist rourse of the US.A .. especially in Indochina." Trap Sprung weeks ago another severe earthquake demolished 114. houses and caused thousands of dollars in damage to schools and government buildings. An unconfirmed report from the Kimbe area said a nearby volcano had begun to emit smoke. (In Lima, Peru, there were reports a strong earthquake shook four countries in the northwestern corner of South America .Monday night. Light casualties and damage were reported.) , Administration officials said EurOpean families prepared to leave New Britain for AustraHa, about 600 m.ilea to the 1oothwest. The southern hall of New Ireland, aboot 20 miles east across St. Gtorge-•• Channel from New Britain, was bard hit by tidal waves which rolled in after tht big quake :r.fonday. Reports reaching Port Moresby said at least one village had been destroyed and a Catholic mission had suffered about $16,800 in damages. An aircraft crew which new over the Mettlik plantation today said a Udal wave had swept about half a mile inland, flat- tening palm trees and buildings. Not One Single Smallpox Case Cited in World BOSTON {UPI ) -Nol a single case of smallpox wa,, reported anywhere in the world during 1970, the head of the Na· tional Academy of Sciences said Monday. Dr. Philip Handler of Washington, call4 Ing the apparent eradication of amallpor "one of man's truly great triumphs over his ever-hostile environment," coupled the report with a plea for public un- derstanding of the need for support for research in other fields. He told the opening session of the 23rd International Congress of Pure and AJ>- plied Chemistry, that similar battles can be won over cancer. heart disease and strokes -if suppQrt for research is forthroming. "Hali-way medic a I technology," he said, is not the sotutlon. Handler said a similar situation e1ist1 In the science-ecology struggle. "The brute fact is that ecology is, as yet, a young, little-developed science which requires much nourishment before it can adequately service society. ~ty special plea is that we do not -out of a combination of emotional zeal and ecological ignorance -substitute en- vironmental tragedy for existing en- vironmental deterioration. An armed British soldier inspects a. dismantled booby·trap in North- ern Ireland which would have destroyed his patrol if it had not been detected Along lhe road. The trap was in almo~t the exact spot where "" army jeep was blow'n up last May. \ • ,I ' ---- • -, Newport •e~c--: · t , ' -· E:O>t't~a M· voe. M. NO. 178, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES TEN CENTS 15-cent Tax Hike Pr~jected for Newport Bond By L. PETER KRIEG Ol llMI DallY ~1111 SltU A consultant figures Newport Beach can sell its ci\'ic center bond.~ at a six percent interest rate that would add IS ~nt_, lo the tax rate the first full year of Issue. City Councilmen scheduled October 5 for the election on the $7 million project Monday night after hearing ii.!! financial advisor and a legal consultant outline procedural details. The council decided to waJt ·two weeb bdOre uaigning lht: rigbl to Writt the formal ballot irgwnenl favorin& .paauge of the election. • Only five ~rsons are allowed to sign the statement, which means the iD· dividual signatures of each of the seven c:ouncilmen could not appear beneath it. However, councilmen were told Ma yor Ed Hirth could sign as council represe.n· tative;, leaving room for four other signatures of leaders of th~ planned cllit.ens' committee backing the bonds. 'There was oo oppolition to ~ council action at Monday night's meeting, All votes on the procedural • deWl! c were unanlmoUi. Ernest B. Bt>¥ar. representing the con11ultant firm or Stone and Youngberg, municipal financial consultant.!!, ex· plained the details. He noted that, if the bonds are ap- proved by tw<>-lhird.s of tho5e voUng ln the election. they would probably be t..sued In October, 1172, although they could be 90ld ' in leu than two months alter voter approval. .. Interest for the nrsl nine monlhii would be due on July I. 1973," Bodnar ex- plained. "and semi-annually thereafter on January 1 and July 1." The bonds would mature beginning July I. 1973, and each July 1 thereafter through the year 1997. Bodnar said the first partial year would add 14.2 cent.s to the taJ. rate while the tlrst partial year would add 15. t cen~. He up!ained this amounta to ~bout $19 a year to the resident who owm a1$50,000 house. The rate would de<:rease 'in subsequent years, Bodnar said, at a little more than half-a-cent a year. Bodnar pointed out the estlmat.ed In· teresl rates would apply on)y if the clcy, should the election pass, seek the entire $6,935,000 loan. He Indicated a higher rate could be ei:· 0 0 ets oon o-a New Ideas Sought Rail Talks Bog; Two Strikes End WASHINGTON (UPI) -The railroad 11trike talks remained in a state of col· lapse today as the government tried to lind a legislative way to end the shut- down. But there was good news from two other strike fronts. Newport Protest Against Marina Plan Expected Newport Beach will formally protest a plan for the State: Public Utilities Ulm· niission <PUC) to take control .of the operation of all private marinru on the California coast. Couhci!men voted unanimously Monday night to send staff representatives to a PUC public hearing August 3 in Los Angeles where an examiner will listen to the request for the jurisdictional takeover made by a Marina del Rey boat owners' association. PUC control would give that aaency authority to establish I.he rate.! at "II privately-il"Tled and privately operated marinas. In other action ~1onday. the city coun- cil : -Tabled for two weeks act ion nn 1t move to force P. A. Cassell Lo replace the Edgev.•a1er Place sidewalk he allegedly tore up . -Approved a request for <>Yt.rnight 5torage of dinghies al the 15th, 16\h and 18th Slreet beaches during the Ancient Mariner Hobie Catamaran Point Race Rega tta Augu st 21 and 22. '......Approved the final map for a 55--lol iubdivision on 9.1 acre s in Northbluff, at Ult request of the Holstein C.Ompany. ,-Decided to negotiate with o":'ners of pl'.Operty near Newport Shores in West N!wporl for use of their property for a p~rk pending determination of ownership. -Voted to appl y the California Vehicle Code to the private st.rE">elS in lhe Irvine Company's Big Canyon subdivision above Ne.,.,·porl Center. --Scheduled a public hearing Aug. 9 on proposed revisions to the zoning regula- tions that woo.Id provide for smaller alley &elbacks. -The 58-day-0ld strike against Wesler11t Union ended, except in the New York city area, and the company said the public could send telegram!! once again after 12:01 a.m. EDT Wednesday. Picket lines came down after the tfntative agreement wa!I reached with the United Telegraph Worker!! Union but the !itrike aontinued In New , Yor~ 'il(be1~f.:rrY u ..,....., .. "' .. '" . ' .. -Nearly 3,000 copper workers. relurl'IM to tlteir ioi. ·~ l~lll;nll fia Ariiooa aoit · negotiators said. • settlement· coverinf 10,000 Kennecou. Copper Corp. workers .in four states appeared neJr, Talks in . Washington between thfl United Transportation Ul\ion and the na· tion 's r<iilroad!I fell apart Monday and no new sessions were scheduled. Four major lines are already shut down and 1ix others are threattned with a strike by week's end. Labor department 1ources said the Nixon Administration was working on legislation to end the dispute but the prG- cess was complicated. A White House emergency board previously recommended a settlement but its tenns are oot precise enou&h to be Incorporated directely in any legislation. "It has become obvioua that a volun- tary solution cannot be reached at thi.$ time." said Assistant Labor Secretary W. J . Usery Jr. in announcing: that the talks had broken off. Usery said the last two major polnls of disagreement concerned long train crew runs without exlra pay,. and the elimina- tion of most traditional distinctions between on-train and yard c r e w assignments. Those items are part of the work rule!I which the railroads want to change because they consider them cO!Uy and in· efficient. Newport Employe Pay Average Now $10,000 Almost two-thirds of Newport Beach'a 586 employes earn salaries of SI0.000 or more . city officials di31:!osed today. Of the 302 employes io that bracket, 108 are S\\'Om city policemen. Prtstllt starting salary for a policeman unQer the department's new contract is $10,%24. Breakers Drive l' n'd Be.tter B~l~ve. It OAIL Y l"I LOT Sl•H ,,.~ Unitlentifiied pranksters added this footn-Ote to-street sign .in Newport Beach Monday. Sign. is on windini and often confusing section of Irvine and Tustin Avenues sltirting~west side of Upper Newport Bay. Ciey of ·Newport Beach wants to rename entire stretch o( connected ·.roadway that •ts now called Irvine Avenue, Acacia · Street and Campus ' Drive, giving it single nam.e of Irvine Avenue. Newport Beach is awaiting action on tile matter from county and City of Costa Mesa. Two Face Court On · ·Bookmaking Count on Coast A pair or suspec!ed bookmakers are scheduled for Arraignment Friday, one ""'eek after each was arrested by Newpott Beach police. Ignatius "Sonny" Constantino, 28. was taken into custody when investigators went to his home in Rowland Heights. Detective John Simon , who worked the case with Orafiie County District At· torney's investigators. said Constantino allegedly operated oul of a converted stable tackroom at his home. Constantino and Burton H. Wagoner, :10. of 5115 River Ave., Newport Beach. were booked on felony charges of conspiracy to commit bookmaking. Wagontr had been named earlier ln a warrant issued after the arrest of three alleged accomplices. He was picked up at his place nf employment. a popular Newport Beaclt waterfront restaurant-lounge. N ewport-owne~ Trailer Park Slated for .Study It ma y be a good idea ror ~larinapark residents lo start looking for new places lo park their mobile homes. Newport Beach city councilmen Mon· day night ordered a staff study of the 4.3· acrt city-0wned trailer park on Balboa Peninsula after C.Ouncilman Richard Croul condemned the use of the public properly by private families. "Jl's not producing the revenue it should , first of all ," Croul said, '"it's tak· ing a lot of city property. that should be used by the public, for private use ." Croul alluded to growing sentiment for opening up public property on the bay for public use. and said the city mana1er'1 Qffi 'e should look al the matter now. "I see a problem etiming up," 'he said, "we should attack It early to fin·d a de- cent solution.'' With 53 rental spaces, the trailer park ls producing $66,000 in net revenue to the city treasury each year, Acting City Manager Philip. E. Bettencourt 1aid to· day. Bett.encourt said he will look at alteynative uses !or the land, pointing out that Jt b located at 17th Street and West Balboa Boulevard, immediately adjacent to twa other city-0wned parcels. There is a LS-acre tract thalhouaes the ·Newport Beach American Legion .post which has a lease with less than three years to go and ~property housi.ng the Park!, Beaches ~ .. Recreation Dt:P9n· menl offices that will be. moved to the new civ1c center In Newport Center, Bet· lenoourt said. . . .. Biker Cited For His Dog Residents Get OK on Gate BettencouH. disclosed lie bas received numerous offefs for future le188! ,on the property. most of them rrtim i:r-lvate In· tl!!re!tl wishing Lo develop it, moe:t of them suggesting boating-related oPera· tion11. The park ha11 92-t [rdhl f~t &n· Newport Harbor. * * * Park Attendant ALHAMBRA (UPI) -John Mlller pleaded 1lnnocent Monday in municipal court to a charge he car· ried an "unsafe load'' on his motorcycle. When Miller, • \JJs Angela engineer. goes to trial AU;(. 23. be will not only try· Lo •lndkata himself: but hi.a pet, Red Doc. Tbe unufe lold, accordlrla to tbe C•mornla HJ&llwly Patrol dlaU.O was Miller's larre mQl\IJ'eJ. The ticket re.Id: "Doe ltMdlng on hil)d legs with fronl pawlli on rkler"a rhoulders !motorcycle )." ' Miller said It was true, the dog tui s been riding on his motort:ycle for the past five years wearing a leath~r flylng helmet, goggles and • scarf. But ~1iller asks. "What1 ~m .~ ;uilty of? Giving Red Dog a ride! \ ·~ ' Newport Beach councilmen Mooda y night ·told Breakers Drive ruktentl la' 10 right ahead and build a a:2!e acnm the entrance to their roadw~. even tbou&h.it ii • public street. Aclihg City Alt-y Dtnnil O'Nell lold tlle OtlllllC!t th• cote Is ,..O.bly 'lel•I •I.nee the deed to 1he property tbe street Is on guarantees bomeownera "svrlace rights, the right ol ln(reta and egress. The residents want the pie to keep beach-bound aulol from parkina: in front of their homt..s. BreAkus Drive I~ 1itu11ted right behind the Corona del Mir Stalt: Beach parkina kit and entry to Ule street is g11Ded from the 1cce91 road to tbe parking lot. . The reslder11U of Poppy Avenut don't like the whole ldea. ''If they can have a gate. l want one, too," 11id Mn. Virginia Fouts. 307 Poppy Ave., "we've got the same problem." , Vk:e Mayor Howard Rogers aald ht would au~part ·the request. bU1 he dian't llJ<! the ldeo , either. · Ho"° 'da' r' 1et one oii 'my street,'' Rrifl:er1 , ~ Peninsula J'.81.ident. 1sked. "The problem oL beach parking ~ a concern thrdughout the cominunHy. i. Carl Kegley, lawyer representing the Breakers Drive homeowners. s a I d because of the quutlonable statw of the street, the polkt department Is reluctant to enforte traffic regulations and rui· dents frequently find drlvewa~ blocked, un11ble to do anything about It. Mayor Ed Hirth suggested the c:ouncU .. teke the· ott>er altf!mative, change It to a llitllndard &~t and order it p1trolle4 bt pollce. ·• ' \ Hirth voted to approve the gate, b6wevtt. Councilman Richard Croul urged 1p- pmval af the proposal. saying tbe soluUon had been. worked out aftu a number of meei.lhgs with resklentf. Actfug City Manacer Philip F. set- tencourt s,aid there would be. no gi'oblenis with · servicing the!! street with rea:ular .or emer~ vehklea, noting the city would have the comblnatkln to lhe electric lock and besides, acc:ess could be gained by going through the p11rking lot and tn· Wing' 1t the other tnd, If need be. Crool noted that bcachgoers shnUtrly could enter from the east.em end. but 11a\d 'theolntr.rest in dning eo woald likely be dissipate~ l!llnce they· would atrudy l'ltlv~ Wad to pay the par"klng 'lot. lee. ~-• • • loses Tw~'Bids l't1" M~parl< tU'11dant ~ 1bout u we!~ u ' Ule . reeldenta of tllat city. .....i m(iblleliom• P'rk•h ....U•1~r the N....,,n U.aclt cfty ""1ncil· Moodly nl~t. ' coUncilmen unaplmo.uty tum.d> down t propoo1I by thO '1ty ·lll•ff lo -17!0 for " c1bau for the attendani: lt was Intended u a rorrn of Compensauon for the unpJld city employe. A proposal lo pay the attendant S!O a mcmth was 1imU1rJ1 dloltd ln Ai>rll. Councllman DOnald ·MclnW1 utc:ed for rejediOI\ of the ...,q,,..1 iP"lnU,,. out the •tteodtnl II ll••n frft,li>iii"' Ill 'a tky· owned tr11ilcr at the p&rk 1lte. ' • peeled u 1 ... cub ~ M>uaht and said the city would likely have to pay a premium if it stipulates the bonds may ~ called. which means paid off early. Bodnar said it would be advisable ta seek callable bonds if the c,ity ill con- fronted with high interesl rates at th• time ol the sale. With callable bonds. the project could be refinanced wben interut rates drop, he explained. ea Vital Test Clears Way For Trip SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) - Apollo 15's astronauts successfully fired their main rocket engine today and defeated a pesky short circuit that had 'threatened to scrub Friday'a moon )Ills ding. "That burn was exactly what we wanted to see ," the ground o:>m- municatOr at the Manned Spaceflight Center, Joseph .\lien, radioed to tbt·crew thlit}y after the critical firing •l-2:14 p.m. tor. "We'll proceed with ·the DOl1llll mission.'" - Of the short which official! feared might make it ntcesllary to call off tbe l~ar landing, Allen said: "it means only It's a little annoying to have." "Let's go Lo Hadley!" replied the Apollo 15 commander, Col. David R. Scott. This was a reference to the landing site neat one of the mOt!lt ru&ged 1DOUD- tain ridges on the moon. Scott, and his space colleagues,. AUrecl M. Worden and James B. Irwin, alsO Air Force officers, fired the main rommand ship's engine for about one second. Not ooly did this show the problem would not abort the primary objective of man·s fourth lunar landing, but it ac- complished a minor course eotTCClioD for the trip to the moon. The critical test firina: -nearly twa and a half hours prior to a bu ilt-i n course correction in the original Apollo flight plan -came half an hour after the ,spacecraft passed the halfway point in the four-day trip. If the engine had failed to fire . Apollo tS's ambitious landing plans probably would have been scrubbed -a severe blow to the $25 billion U.S. space pr<>- gram. Even if the short had created hazards to make a lunar landing too risky."fbere never was any 'd1µ1ger to tht: astronaut!. They would have continued the trip to and around the moon and hack to earth. The bug, which was discovered shortly after the command module, t h • Endeavour, and the lunar lander Falcon docked Monday afternoon, was a lhorL circuit indicated by • niokerlnt in· strument panel Ught. Before the engine fired. Scott got the light to gn on -even though It was sup- posed to stay off -by lappin& the. control panel. The astronauts used special p~Ul'tl to work around the short. Tried out on the ground In limulatort. these procedures will be used for later. maneuvers when the engine will brake Apollo IS Into lunar orbit and Jal.er' propel (See APOLJ..O, Pare J) Weathet" More of that nice beach weather ls in store again tor the Orange Coast harbor .re.11. The tempera. lures obould 111atn nocll iolo tlto pleasant '7tl'1. INSWE TODAY ' Tht. Near !ost 1.8' m turmoil. S~e 1torv, iUuatrai~ Page 4. .1 .. I ' . • t ' • ' • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • I DAILY PILOT N 'MOB RUNS EVERYTHING' Senate Wltne11 T er•N Rail Strike Threatens Oranges lly TERRY COVILLE Of tM ltallY l"llft ti.ff U Sant.a Fe :Railroad workers strike Saturday a $600,000 Valencia nranie crop won •t be plucked from Orange County trees and several hundred pickers and packing house workers will be idled, ac- cording lo county growers. The strike will nearly paralyu Orange (.oynty growers who supply about 10 per· cent of Californl8's Valancia or1111e crop. Oranges represent the ol\ly major crop CWTtJltly _shipped from the county, growe.r1 111d. "We can leave oranaes <ln the tret1 for 1 ~~ or tw~ ~only lose a few," 1ays WiJ_ham J. Williams. vice president of the Irvme Company agricultural division. largest gr<lwer in the C<lunty. "But we won't hire anyone to pick, or pack. The 1trike wan't hurt the Irvine Company much, but it will put a lot of people out ot work." Sant.a Fe handles nearly I 00 percent of Orange County•s shipping. If rail workers 1~ik.e Saturday, as upecled, the railroad will make Wednesday the last day fruit can be shipped out of the Cilunty. All oounty orange crops go through Suntist whiCh has twa wl!.l"cbanges, the Orange County Fruit Exchange in Oran1e and the Placentia Oranie County E:r- chanze in Plac~tia. Between the two they &hip an average of 150 frel&ht cu Jaads of oranges each week. "We mi&bt try uglng trucks, but there won't be nearly enough trucks tc keep up our current level," Floyd Wildermuth, manager of the Placentia Exchange u id. ' "Two of our growe.rs have already stopped picking. The others ketp asking what it going to happen," Wildermuth 11ld. "The problem \g we haven't yet been n<ltified by Santa Fe that there will be a strike. Everythlng Is sWJ up i11 th~ lir for us ." Southern Pacific Railroad workers went on strike last Saturday, paralyzing all crops in Northern California. "Soft fruits are hurt mo&t. They're lost mmpletely. Oranges c.an wait awhile, but everyone Ls affected," Williams u· pl ained. Williams said the Southern Pacific Line. now on strike, handles about 50 pucent of all perishables out of California, but the Santa Fe Hne handles all of Orange Coun· ty's crops . Wildermuth said lhat evt n if Sa nta Fe doesn't go <ln strike. Orange County would be hurt by the Southern Pacific strike. because Santa Fe cars would be taken away to ha ul fresh fruit from nort.hem California. OIAH•I COAST DAILY PILOT OllANGl CO ilST l"UI L1IMI NG COiloo l'ANY lto .. t •t N. Wttd ......... , ..... ~11.- J1c1' •. c .... 1 • ., Vl(e 1''"'1 .... 1 .-d ~el ,1,1..,.,... l ll•"''' IC11•il f:tltw Tloo .. •• A. 1rrr1r .... ,i..r111 ....._,,,. t:•tlW L '•'•• IC"f'I .. "-· ·--Cl,., t•l'IW N....,_. ..... ~ )111 N1w11o•t 1,..,1,,.,,4 M•ili 11t Alldr111: ,_O. 111 1111, '264) -0-C...T• Mtu: ll'.I 'Nn• lhy lrrlfll Utt111• l•th: n: ~.,..., .1.v.,w Muo111119tt• ltKh~ 1N1:. lt.ief> ....,...,, .. .... c~"; ., N"'1'1 I I c ..... 1"' "''' l)AILY "II.OT • ..ttti Wll ldl It t"Moellleoll,,.. .. .....,._., 1, IMlll""'9 •hlly """" ...... .. ., "' -J~ttf; l!llllt\eM .............. ·~ ,._,.,.,. ..,~. C.eue ........ """'""t ... • ,._ .. Ito V•llf1. SI~ Cie-.. t cf·,, ........ , ...... ~. •11-'>t --............. llltft. ,.,llltlH t ~ll!tl ... tll~I • ., -.. , .. , '"-·· C-11 Mlt• • T .. 1,11111 171•) M:t-4JJI Cle '""' ~"' '41·•671 On Betting' -Witness ... WAS!DNGTON !UPI) -A B<>cion nun who has spenl almost all hla Ute with bi&· time mobster& testified today I.hat "The Mob" runs organiied crime in the United State.a. finall(in & it& vMt operations through nickel bets p!actd ~1th comer bookies. The witneM, Vincent Charles Teresa, testified about hi3 own crooked IChemes th.It f~quently landed hlm in jail -In- cluding 11mbllng junkei.J to a London club once associated with actor Georae Raft and to ca.si.nO! in Haili wllil the blwinp of the late Halt!lJ'I dicta.tor, A swarthy, hefty man now •ervinc a five-year prt!IOn term for transport.at.ion GI stclen gecurilies, Tere11, 4.Z, was the Jeadoff witnt.s5 as the Senate Permanent InvesU1atioll5 Subcommittte be-gan its fifth wttk ot hearings on erganized . . =·· '"I'ht!re is one big gang that runs or&aniied crime in this country," Terua aaid. ''We aenerally call it 'The Mob.' " He. 11id. th• orfanlzed underworld Ia often called by other names such as "The Of. fiee" in the Providence, R.t.. New England headquarte-rs. He said that gambli11g is ''the single most important activity .. for oraanized crime that underwrites all other opera- tions worldwide. ··Gamblin& ii the standby and the foun- dJ.Uon,'' Teresa said. ·•rrom It comes the corrupt poliUclans and the policemen the bribes and the payoffs, and 10metime1 murder. II yeu could crush 11mbll.n1. you wauld put the mob oot of businus. You'd hive them back on the pu1hcart1 as it was in the old dl:ya ... ''The mob bis barrt:IJ and b.urel1 of money. and lt all 1tart! with the man or the woman who puts a n1clr:el on the num- ber at the corner store every day Everythina 1lart1 with the nlckei member, and everythina else follows. Mexican Youth Nearly Dies From Snake Bite A 21-year-old Me.Dean national wu reco~ today alter a predawn ~ate ~ at. San 1 Onofre · Bluffs State. Park wh!ch nutty took bJs life. Juan Perez. whose hometown in Me1ico Wll ~t munediateJy dtiterm!ned, WIS found in convuWon.! •t about 3 a.m. to- day by concesalon at.and employes at the recently opened 1t1te Plrk ~uth of San Clemente. Per!t had been bitten by a rattlesnake sometime during the dark h<lurs as he walked north~ard along the bluffs , ap- parently evading Border Patrol officers at the Ooofre checkpoint. Rll'l.1ers said they noti1ied patrolmen and San Clemente authorities for .usi.stance after the emergency call . In San Clemente, police atttmpted to call 11 local ambulance service. but no one answered the phone. they said. _Moments later they d i s pa t c b e d FU"eman Sheldon Schmitt in a city station wa.gon to lht park aouth of the city limits. Pt.rez. locaJ spokesmen sald. was t.aktn lo South Coast Community Hoapltal for emergency treatment. then transft.rred to Orange County Medical Center. Nurses there said lhig morn ing that he was in utisfaclory condltlon after hla bout with the viper. The snakebite was the first reported since public UAe began al t.he ru11ed, brush-covered bluffs which loom over sandy beaches below. State Park rangers aaid. however, thAt several sightings of lar&e. healthy rl t· tlesnai.es have heen reported since the park <lpened for the first tJme during the Independence Day wtti.end. "The brush is Ideal fer them down there." u.id one ranger, "and the food is plentiful. We warn villtors lo the park to be evtrtmely careful, npecially whto It's dark." The park h&J tradltkmally bee.n the route far alteru mip-atin& northward on foot. affording co~alment frem Border Patrolmen. In receot months OM man leadini a ll'OUP of immip-anta alons the blufftops in the 11mt vicinlty fell to hia death into a canyon. El.ectric Bill Given to PVC By lrat,e Man Dile Wullner ol Newport Belch h•• submlt~ hi• paytnet1t for his Jutlt ~ee­ trlc bill to tile Public UWltlta Oom· mlsalon lnsload of to tht Southern California g,u,.. Co. Ill pro1>1t of SCE1 advtrtl•lni campailn ,...,.tint nu<l .. r p(IW\lf fleillUet . Wullller'1 complaint lllued to tile tdllO!l Co. Is under lnv01l111tlon by tlle PUC. Wullner 11td U\at lllhoulh hf: 11 not qualified to Judie the "'"1b ol nuclur aeneratina 1y1tem1. he will n6t support publicized promotklo of a •Ua&lt atdt of U!e very UJntroveraial Wue. "If I'm aolq to pay for advtrt1•ln1. I want ll ln apeai both •Idea ot tbt story," 1------------said Wullner. t • COSTA MESA'S MAYOR WILSON WITH SOME OF THE WOMEN IN HIS LifEv '1 Lor 1 ''" .. .,.,. From Ltft, Mme1. St.· Cltir, Pink lty, Wilson, Jordan tnd Hammett ~~~~~~~~~~- From Pqe l 'Powers Behind Council' APOLLO. • • her back lo earth Aug. 6. The short developed a few hours after launch Monday i11 one half of lbe sygtem used to control the en1ine . The a5tronauts were directed to attempt lo blast only the faulty part of t~.e system. Get Pictures on Walls The problem , signaled l>y a flickering instrument panel checklighl -could have come from one of three possibilitles - the worst of which would wash out the mGOn landi11g. The object of the engi11e test was to plnpoi11t the trouble. "We're going to '1y to re-create the problem ," Lunney a.id in a Late morn.ing news briefing. "If you push the circuit breaker and you don't get a bum , then you 've got a problem." In the worst situation, o£ficials said, circuit breakers controlling one of two identical valve systems would be knocked out. That would mean there would be no backup to the remaining valve system, and In that case, Apollo 15 would not be permJtted In carry out the landing. The reasoning was that when the astronauts go into lunar orbit Thursday space officials want to make cert.a.in thef have. two alternatives for )>lasting <lUl and retumlng to earth. The 1peclal test was ordered in1tead o( waiting until 4:29 p.m, EDT, when an enalne firing had been previously set lo correct the 1paceship0s path to the moon. E111lneer1 here and at North American Rockwell '• plant In Downey, worked throuabout the night to duplicate the pro- blem -and thus find its soluti<ln. The 1hort circuit was the only difficulty encountered during the first 24 hours of the journey to the base of two-Lo-three mile high mountains on the moon in search for clues to its creation. Y.'omen have been traditionally con· aiderf'd the power behind the thr<lne . Costa Mesa Mayor Robert \Vilson doesn "t feel modern limes and city go1,·ernmcnl have altered the old adage. "A wife is responsi ble for the success of the office holder," he says. Ta h<lnor the secret powers of Costa Mesa, Mayor \Vilson has decorat.ed the wal ls or his new <lffitt at city hall with color photographic porlarit.s of each city council man's wife. "They have to put up with so much of our public and personal lives. They in· tercept all the nasty phone. calls," Wilson e.xplained. "They should be honored." The color portr11its were taken by the police department phot.ographer . Kol surprisingly, the women had the last word. Two -Mrs. \Y i!son and Mrs. Jack Hammell -had their pictures retaken. But all the portraits h11ve been ar- proved n<lw, and will go on the walls of Wil110n·s fifth f!GOr <lffice this week. ''This is the first office a mayor or city CilUncilman in Costa Mesa has had.'' Wilson said. "I'm going to try and bring 1ome. of the city's nostalgia to it" ~portraits of city council wives form the first step in this endeavor. Wil110n is quite prood of the r.ound fam i- ly life demonstrated by eacll city (.'()uncil couple. He rapidly ticks off the longevity of each marriage: ''IA!dlle and Alvin Pinkley. 44 years ; Maryalice and Robert Newport Parking Fee ·will Double "The analysis to date seems to ind icate that we probably ha ve a.n engine tha t. wi11 W<lrk oka y, <lr can be made l.n wnrk oka y," filght director Milton Windler 11Jd. Told they were losing $!,000 a day in Th revenue, Newport Beach ci~y council- e astronauts wrestled with the pro-men Monday ni~' ordered the ruirk1na blem on and off Monday a!temoon and I!"'" ,.-" finally ended their first long day In •pace fll:t al the N~port Pier l<lt doubled to 2 Ml cents per h<lur in the two rows or at I :14 a.m. EDT today. Before going to meters alon~ the middle of the lot sleep. ground communicator Karl G. Councilmen last month had hikNI the Heinze asked the space flyers how the rl!lte of the meters jn the Jane clostst to vi~w was. with earth 75.000 miles aw ay the be.ac+i. but halked 11.t the change for "It's fan tastic, Karl," reported Worden. Ille other be<'ilU!'ir of objections raised by ''You ought to see it. man." Virt M.a yor Howard Rogers. "_I'm eating my hea rt nut." rephed Rogers , who represents the district , al Wilson , 32 y&ars: Mary Jo and Jack Hammel. ll years. Ruth and Will&rd Jordan, 30 years. and Claud ine and \\'illiam SL Clair, 29 years." "I"m extremt!y pleased that <lUr wh·es are so patient with us," Wilson smiled. 2 Bandits Pluck Chicken Stands' $400 in Receipts Hussein Umar and Dav id Kannerzelt ·were frying Col . Sanders ' chicken Mon- day in Westminster and C<lsta Mesa respeclivel.v. when two bandit:oi sauntl'!red in and plucked the driy 's receipts the old- f11 shioned way. One of the bandits had an antique cap. and-ball pistol used in both or the ~Uckups, which netted about $400, police 1n the two cities said. Investigators sa id the bandits first entered the Ke ntucky Fried Chicken shop at 7051 Westminster A11e., where Umar ~'as on duty. The assistant manager was forced to hand over about $200 in the 11 :30 a.m. !'Oldup._ The bandll.3 escaped wtth the loot In 11 chicken bucket. Police were still writlni reports of that rnbbery at 1:30 p.m., when the pair braienly pushed past the counter at ·2900 Harbor Blvd., C.Osta Mesa, where Kan-- nerzelt was cooking chicken. OrdPring him to open the :oiafe. the gun- men, 23 to 24 years old and bot h six· footers, took SI86. Ripping the telephone off the wall -1111 they harl also done in Westminster -the young desper11docs ned 11cross nearby \\'11rehouse Road, according to w1tnesse~. Detectives said Kannerzelt told them the antique pistol. with a five-inch barrel cif large bore, looked clean and quite capable of being fired . Supervisor Proposes Welfare Bencb Jobs HeU'lze, a scientist-astronaut s t i 1 l the time said thf' merchants v.·ere ada - awaiting for his spacefli ght assignment. m11nlly opposed lo the i11<Tease. although I.OS ANGELES IU P!l -Able-bodi l'rl The light. when W<lrking properly, is In 1t would not afff>f't the 10-eent-per-hour ml'n (In welfare ~hnuld be put lo 1,1·ork 1lgnal that the command ship'!' main meter~ that front alOflg their stnrr.~ buildin$!" bench e5 for bus stop.<:, count\' engine is firing. It did not fire -and was Acting City ti.1anager Phili p F. Be tten· Supervisor Kenneth Hahn said Mond11v · not supp!'lsed to -when the ligh!. camt" cnurt ~111d he invited represe-ntatives of The supervisor s11id hf' h11d asked 0 lht. on and engineers said this meant thPre t~ merrh11nts to 11ltend the meeting \JI cnun1y adm inistrative nfficer 10 wnrk was a short circuit somewhere ln the discuss 1ht prnb!f'm . \\'h(>n oone. ap. '"'ith the Snulhf'rn California RAp id Mesa Clllef Nixes Note ·On Freeway The Pacific Coast Freeway fiJ:ht his now sparked a small insiders b41ttle on the Coo:ta Mesa City Counc il. Mayor Robert Wilr.on today lirf'd o!f a letter lo Govet"nor Reagan denoucin1 a previ~ Jette: sent the Governor b)' Counctl man W1 lllam St . Clair. Wilson said St. Clair's letter -whJch outlined his own solution for the freewa)' ha ssle with Newport Beach -did not represent any official view from Co.sta Mesa. ''This is to inform you thtll ~1r. St. Clair speaks for himse.Jt only, and nol for the city council of th~ city ." wrote th• mayor. St. Clair suggested tha t the Newport Be;.::-h leg <lf the coasl freeway bl! eliminated and tied back into I.he Newport Freeway and I.he proposed ~rona ~ Mar Freeway, SL Clair proposed swinging the Newpo~t Frce~ay west of Ho a I Memonal Hospital, bringing it acrnsa county territory and connecting it to th• coast freeway at the mouth. of the Santa Ana. River. C.Oastal Freeway would then tra vel back inland lo the prophse<I Corona del Mar Freeway, follow that freeway aoutll lo Laguna Seach .11nd totally ig"nore Newport Beach, while satisfying the fr~eway needs of surrounding citle.!!, he said, . The councilman made his suggestions In a 1"11-'0-page letter to the Govem<lr on July 2tl. He also included some sarcastic remarks about Newport llarbor being built by the county and all the taxpayers but said his soluti<ln would at least ~ politically possible. One paragraph in St. Cl air's letter s2.ys: "Newport would like to build a high fence at the city limits, put gate keepers at all entrances, and allow only residenla to enter. In fa ct. tht":y 1,•:ould like to m11k& Newport Beach another Bal boa Bay Club ." Wilson. in his let1er denouncing St. Clair".s action . said: "Any action of the city council of th!s city in regard to any freew?.y in Snuth Orange Cnuntv will be transmitted through regula r ch~nnel~ to the stale director or public works and ta !he. California Highway Com mission , being the persons ;:ind agen cies having the power lo lake action on freeway mat- ters_'' "I'm very sorry if 1 hurt his feelings and didn't go through the proper chan- nels:· St. Clai r, who did not recei ve a copy of WilSCln·s Jetter, said this morning. Police Sink Teeth in Case It 1,1·as the sort or case a patrol man can really sink his reeth into ... after all. il invol ved an elderly San Clemente man 's dentures, wnrth their v.·eight in gold. The officer had been cruising al<lng A11enida Granada late Mon- day evening when an angry ~enior citizen hailed him . The man said another elderly g~ntleman, also ~ngry, had jusl kic ked a dent in his car. The <lfficrr ~tnpped and had a chat with the angry kicker . \\'hy tl id ht dam11ge lhe other man's car ~ "l drOpJM"d my fa lse tte!h in the strett and he ran over them." he told the nHicer. Af!er 11 little more talk, lf'mpl'rs cooled and each man went home Tada~·. nne will probably ~e-ek: rtpairs 111 a local body !<hop The other is vi!iting his dtntlst. sy~tem, pe11red, thP cooT'ICll took lloi action. Transit Oistrict, on h1~ prnpMlll. Windll'!r llsted three possibilities : Ir;:;:;:;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::,;:;:::,:;;;;;;;;;;::,::,::,::,;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;~ -The short could be In lhf' In- strumentation itself, whlcll would not af- fect the mission. -The 11hort e<1uld be in !he switch. which would mean the engine would fire prematurely if steps were not taken tn prevent it. This, Windler said, could be circumvented by devising allt.rnate pro- cedures Md Apollo 15 could still land on tbe moon. -The short may be deeper in the enilne'a clrcult brtakers. The engine would still operate but its backup system would be e.llminated and under these con- ditions Apollo 16 would not be pumltted l.o land on !Joie moon. Reading Blooper In Architect's Design 'Costly' A blueprlnt readin~ blooper by teachers who interprettd an Architect's Une to mean walls wauld divide a large open area In the TeWlnkle Middle School rernodellnJ project resulted ln an 'IB,000 lncnase ln tbe ti nillUon project . Dr. Norm111n Loata, adln1 1uperin· ltndent. told the Newport-Mesa school board, te1cher1 had revlewtd tbt project with the architect before con1tn.ietion ....... 'f'htn. when U1f remodel.lnl effort wag l1unched . the:y d1acovtred, to their chagrin. whm they had thoulht a wa.11 would be. there was none. Sh. • ch•nae order to provide foldin1 doors to divide the area "'' deemed nf!Ces~ary as 111 add on to the remodl'!I j(lb belnc don« by the W. J. Shirley ConstructJon Co. Tru1tee1 approved the change order. ,. $2.99 CARPETING ? • • • • Suro we liovo it-liut, usuolly we try to convinca customers to buy carpetin g +hot will complement their homes. Often, in situations where a customer is covering the floor ju!! lo se ll o house, cheap carpeting moy be • liobility. In mony coses t~e difference of only • dollar a yard will instoll • quolity of carpeting +hot looks twice as well ond will give much better service . ALDEN'S ·In o nutshell we're not trying to neceuorily be the "CHEAPEST", I though we often ore ). but the "BEST!! (Which we always are.) CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 P'lactntia Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4138 HOURI: Mon . Thru Thura., 9 le S:~,rl., t le 9-Sit., 9:30 to S ( r I .. r .. ' f;os1a Mesa EDIT I ON VOL 64, NO. 178, 2 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNJA TUESDAY, J ULY 27, ·197 f . . .. 0 0 ets oon .o-a New Ide as Sought Rail Talks Bog; Two Strikes End WASHlNGTON (UPI) -The ra ilroad strike talks remained In a state or col· lapse today as the government tried lo find a legislative way to end the shut- down. But there "'as good news from two other strike fronts. 'MO B RUNS EVERYTH ING' Senate Witness Teresi Senate Witness Sa ys Tiny Bets Financin g Mob WA SITT NGTON (UPl l -A Bos ton man who has spent almost all his life with big· time mobsters te stified today that ''The Mob" runs organized crime in lhe United States. f1nanc1ng its v;:i.st operations tarough nickel bets placed with corner bookies The "'itness , Vincent Cha rles Teresa. lt>stified about his O"'" crooked schemes that frequcnlly la nded him in jail -in· eluding gambling junkets to a London club once aswcialed wi lh actor George Raft and to casi nos in Hai li with the ble::.sings of the late Haitia n dicta.I.or, A swarthy, hefty man now serving a five-year pr ison term for lransportation flf s1nlen securities. Teresa, 42 , was lhe leadof f v.•i tness ;is lhe Senate Permanent Investigations Subcommittee began its fi f\h week of heiirings on organized crime. "There i.~ one big gang lhat runs orga nized crime in this courtry," Tere!a said. "We gen erally call it 'Tht Mob.' " He sa id the organ17.ed unde rworld is {)ften called by other names such as "The Of· fice"' in lhe Providence, R.J., New England headquarters. He said that gambli ng is "lhe single loo.st important activity" for organized !See MOB, Pace 11 -The 58-day~Jd strike against Westent Union ended , except In the New York city area, and ·0ie company said the public could seild telegrams ooce again aft!:r 12:01 a.m. EDT W!:dnesday. Picket lines came down after th!: tentative agr«m!:Jlt was reached wilh the United Telegraph Workers Union but the strike continued in New York where th!: company is bargaining wit h a different union. -Nearly 3,000 copper work!:r11 retumed to their jobs at'two firms in Arizona and negotiators said a settl!:lllent covering 10,000 Kennecott Copper Corp. workers in four states appeared near. Talks in Washington belween the linited Transportalion Union and the na· lion 's railroads fell apart Monday and no new sessions were scheduled. Four major lines are already shut down and six others are threatened wilh a strike by week 's end. Labor department &ourC!:I said the Nixon Administration was working on legisl"alion to end the dispute but the pro- cen1W1ir c;o!n]!lli:atiM. \ ~~ A White House !:mergency board previouslY recommtr1ded a stttlemeftt bu t its term! are not preclle enough !o be lncorporatffl direct~y ln iny legislation. "It has become obvious I.hat a volun- tary solution cannot ht reached at lhU! lime,'' said Assistant Labor Secretary W. J. Usery Jr. in announcing that the talk11 hall broken off. Usery said !he 111st tw!). major points or disagreement concerned long train crew ru ns wit.bout extra pay, and the elimina- tion of most tradiµonal distinctions between on-train and yard crew assignments. Those items are part of the work rule11 which the railroads want. to change becau~ I.hey coosider them costly and in· eff icient "'It is imperative in the face of moun· ting economic pressu res tha l an answer to this impasse be fou nd ," Usery said. The strike ~ againsl the Union Pacific, Southern Pacific, Southern, and Norfolk: & Western -has caused grain ttl pile up in the MidwC!t. threatened thous11nds of coal miners with layoffs and enriangered the chicken industry in some parts of the nation because of feed shortages. The Westem Union agreement. wh ich still must be. approved by 17 ,000 UTW members, called t,or a 10 percent in· crease effective Wednes day when lhe worker!! officially return to their jbb!!. There also would be a 9 percent raise in 1972 and a variety of fringe benefits. We.stem Union estimated the package would cost !he company $31.7 million, ad· ding "we are very pleased with the set· llement." The compan y's offices in New York City remained closed , however. while the firm continued n!:gotiation11 with the Communications Workers or America who represent t h e ap- proximately 3,000 Western Un Ion employes in that area. DAILY ,ILOT I liff ''""' COSTA MESA'S MAYOR WILSON WITH SOME OF THE WOMEN IN HIS LIFE From Left, Mme1. St. Cl.,,lr, Pinkley, Wilaon, Jordan and Hammett Hail to W 01nen Mesa Ma y or Cr edits Female Push Women tui ve been tradi lionally co~ 1idered the power behind the throae. cO.t. v.. M'if«'' Robert '!(liJ80o doesn't fed modem tim~ and dty government hive altered the old adage. "A wife Is responsible for the success ol the: office holder ,., he says. To honor the secret powers of Costa Mesa, Mayor Wilson has decoraled the walls of his new office at city hall with color photographic portarits of each city councilman's wife. "'They have to put up with so much of nur public and personal Jives. They in· t.ercept all the nasty phone calls," Wilson exple.ined. "They shoukl be honored." The color portraits were taken by the police department photographer. Not surprisingly, the women had the last word. Two -Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Jack Hammett-had their pictures rel.a.ken. But all the portraits have be.en ap- ll'Ofed .. .,w, ~1'ill go Oii ~·ti Wilson'a ftftll flOor office this week. "This la the first office a mayor or city council mu in Costa Mesa ha! had." WilMln 111td ... I'm going to try and brlfll some of Ute city's nostalgia to it." The portraits of city council wiv~ form the first &tep in this endeavor. Wilson is quite proud of the sound fa mi- ly life demonatrated by each city council couple. He rapidly ticks off the longevity of each marriage : "Lucnle and Alvin Pinkley, 44 years; Maryalice and Robert Wilson, 32 yeafs; Mary Jo and Jack Hammet, 31 years; Ruth and Willard Jordan, 30 years, and Claudine and William SI. Clair, 29 years." ··rm extremely pleased tha t our wives are !!O patient with U!!," Wilson amiled. Brazen Bandits Hold Up Two Separate Eateries Hussein Umar and David Kannerze lt were frying Col. Sanders· chicken t1on- day in Westminster and Cost.a Mesa respectively, when f.wo bandils saunlered in and plucked the day's receipts the old· fashi oned way. One of lhe bandits had an antique cap- and-ball pistol used in bolh of the stickups. which net!f'd about $400, police in the two cities said. Investiga tors said the bandits first entered the Kentucky Fried Chicken shop at 7051 Westminster Ave .. where Umar was on duty. The assistant manager was forced to hand ov!:r about $200 in the 11 :JO a.m. holdup. The bandits escaped with the loot In a chicken bucket. Police were still writing repo rts of lhat robbery at 1:30 p.m .. v.·hen the pa ir brazenly pushed past the counter at 2900 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. where Kan- nerzelt was cooking chicken. Ortlering him Lo open the safe. the gun- men. 2J to 24 years old and both six· footers. took $186. Ripp ing the lelephone off the wall -as they had also done in Westminster -the young desperadoes fled acro!i& nearby Warehou!e Road. according to witnesses. Detectives aaid Kannerult told !hem tM anUque pistol, with a five.inch barrel of large bore. looked clean and quite capable of being fired . ~~~~~~~~~~~ Rattler Bites Young Mexican At State Park A 21-year~ld /l.1ulcan natio nal was recovering today after • preda..wn 11nakebUe ordeal at San Onolre 8Juff1 State Park which nearly took his life. Juan Perei, whose homelown in Mex ico was not immediately determined, was found in convulsions at about 3 a.m, to- day by concession stand employes st the recently opened state park south or San Clemente. Perez had been bitten by a rattlesnake 10metlme during the dark hours as he walked northward along the bluffs. ap- parently evading Border Patrol officers at the Onofre checkpoin t. Ranger& said they notified patrolmen and San Clemente authorities for assistance after the emergency call. In San Clemente, police attempted !o call a local ambul11.nce service. but no one ansv.·cred the phone. they said. hloments later they d I s pa l c h e d f ireman Sheldon Schmi tt in a city station v.•o:igon to the park south of the city I units . Perez, local spokes men ~aid . was laken lo South Coast Com munity lfospital for emergency treatmen t. !he n transferred lo Ora nge County Medical Center. Nurses lhere said this morning that he was in satis factory condition after his bout with the viper. The !!nakebite was the first reported since public U!!e began at the. rugged. bru sh-covered bluffs which loom over sandy beaches below. State Park ranger& said , however, that several sightings of large, healthy rat. Uesnakes have be.en reported since the park opened for the Urst time during the Independence Day weekend. "The brush 11 ldee.l for them down there," said one ranger, "and the food ls plentiful. We warn vi!ltora lo the park lo be evtremely careful, especially when ll'1 dark." Biker Cited For His Do g 516 Apartment _Units OK'd The park has traditionally bet:n the route for aliens nllgratlng northward on foot, affordinc concealment from Border Patrolmen. Completes Testing ALHAMBRA <UPtl John !\.filler pleaded innocent Monday in municipal court to a charge he car· ried an "unsafe load'' on his motorcycle. When Miller, a Los Aneelea engineer. goes to trlaJ Aug. ZS, he will not only try to vindicate himself, but his pet, Red Dog. The Wl6llfe load. according to the Califomla Highway Patrol Citation was MUler'1 large mongrel. The ticket read: "Dog standing on bind legs with front paws on rktcr's shoulders (motorcycle)." r.1il\er said it wsis true, the dog hst :o. been riding on hi!! motorcycle for ·lhe past five year1 wearing a leather nying helmet, goggles and a 5Cst.rf. Bul r-.liller Askii:. "Whal 1m I gu ilty of? Givi ng ~ Dog• ride?" I Mesa Comrnis sioners Also Kill 163-Un.it Proposal EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE (AP) - Tbe X2~A. an experimenlal w\f\Jleaa Hf· Ung body Lhat has been flown l,048·mlles per hour and a1 high as 71,000 feet, has completed !ta filght teat ptogram, the National Atronautlca and S p a c e Adrnllllitr1Uoo bu announced. Two apartment project.a with a tota l 516 unit& were swlttty approved Mood11y night by the Costa Mesa PlaMina Com.. mWion. Commissioners til!O killed a 15.1-unlt apartment propou.J and ·delayed action on two other propoal,s that would total · another 85 apartments. The one project wiped out by planners drew SO home owners to the meeting to oppose It. They were. aga inst a requelt to rUOhe S.6 acres west o( Bear Street near the SM Diego Freeway. Charles Yeti.tr, wtme grandperenlll .. bought the land in 1909, claimed tht home owners used the land for "a trash dump " and his parents should be allowed to ae.U it for what they w11nt. C.Ommissioner Nathan Reade 1ummed up the comml&Sion'1 feeling on the prl)o pefty: "I can·t &ee hlch1teMlty there. It lhoukl be homM." • Both approved projec:Ui wert large ..... The first approval was to rer.one l .f 11<res of land behind Southern California College, opening it up for a 244-unit apartment projecl to be built by Lyon,, and Cashloo builder•. The 1eoond appranl went l o Leadership Home.t, allowing con1truc~ion of 272 "famJly style" apahments on 10.9 acrea ol land west of Fairview ~ad between Adam!! Avenue and Warehouse Road. Qirnmisaioner Reade praised the pm- Jecl, 1aylng: "It's refreshing to let the young married couples rind a plac!: to live now. I'd be agalnat il Jr it were• adults only." The. project ls the fir st phase of what may be a 30-acre famil y apartment com· pleri:. Mrs. Lucille Waughtal 1tlacked tht commission approval calling Costa Mesa Jeadera "mfce nlbbllng an cheese to ID.kt I trap." Slit bad al'° oll•Wd Ille cl\y coonctJ IHf -k (Or coooldlrin( raooin( the » -. ot l•od .....i· by Ille S.gentrom r1mUy wbldl will make up Ille buae apanmenl com~1. Tbe two prollflt ~ -to !ht Aug. 1 COITIJllWl\lll ·~ roe rurlhtr 1tudy -were tlilth a{p!all ~1ta. Ont wu for pennlsD!ia to conatnld 10 1partmtnl.& at 1• Wallace. Ave. Comm.lplonu1 fell 10 unit~ w11s "too crowded " for the land, but miibt bt rear· ranged. The otl\C!r delay w~ made on a 75-ublt request for ·140 Wiison St. The ippllcant, w. T. Rochelle, lndk:ated he pl11ns to redt1ign the project to lower the number of apartment• proposed . Firework Cash Fizzles Some , Optlmiata 1hould aomettmes bl a little peS1lml1tlc 8boot peoi1le. The Costa M.,. OpUm~t Club haa completed a formal act00ntlng or 115 fo'ourth or July fireworks booth Income and reduced U $20 over tht original figure . Somebody 11Jpped them coun· terrelt money, according to a repart In lht club'a weekly bulletin . ' --~ .. . . .•.---. . ... ... Today's Ft.al N.Y. St.oeb TE N CENTS ea Vital Test Clears Way For Trip SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo 15's astronauts 1uccessfully llred their main rocket engine today and defeated a pesky short circuit that had threatened to scrub Friday'& moon lan· ding. "'That burn was exactly what we wanted to see,'' the ground com. municator at the Manned Spaceflight Center, Joseph Allen , radioed to the crew 1hortly after the critical firing at J : 14 p.m. EDT. "We'll proceed with the normal mission." Of the. short which officials feared might make it necessary to call off the lunar landing, Allen said: "it mea_n, ooly it's a little annoying to have ." "Let's go to Hadley!" replied the Apollo 15 commander, Col. David R. Sctltt. This was a reference to the landing site near one of the m0&t rugged moun- tain ridges on the moon. Scott, and his space colleagues, Alfred M. Worden and James B. Irwin, also Air Force officers, fired the main command f1 ip's engine for about one second. Not only did this show the problem. would not abort the primary objective of man 's fourth Junar landin(. but It ac- complished a miner course correction for the trip to the moon. The cril.ical test firlng -neariy two and a half hours prior to a built-In course correction in th! original Apollo flight plan -came half an hour after the spacecraft passed the halfway point in the four-day trip. If the engine had fa iled to fire, Apollo 15 's ambitioWJ landing pla n!! probably would have been scrubbed - a 1evere blow to the $25 billion U.S. space pro- gram. • Even If the short had created hazards to make a lunar landing too risky, there 11ever was any danger to the astronauts. They would have continued the trip to and around the moon and back to earth. The bug, which wa!! discovered shortly after the command module, the Endeavour, and the lunar lander Falcon docked 1'1onda y afternoon. was a abort circui t indicated by a flickering in· strument panel light Before the engine fir~. Scott got Uie light to go on -even though it was sup. posed to stay off - by tapping the control panel. The astronauts used special procedures to work around the short Tried out on the ground In simulators. these procedures will be used for later ma neuvers when the engine will brake Apollo 15 into lunar orbit and later propel her back to earth Aug . 6. The short developed a few hours after launch Monday In one half of the system used to control the engine. The astronauts were directed to attempt to blast only the faulty part of the system. The problem, signaled by a flickering Instrum ent panel checkl!ght -could have come from one of three possibilities - the wors t of which would wash out the moon landing. The object of the engine test waa to pinno int the trouble. "\Ve're going to try lo re-create the problem." Lunney said ln a late morning news briefing. "li you push the circuit breaker and you don't get a bum, then you've got a problem." ln the worst situation. officlala 1ald, circuit breakers controlling one of two (Ste APOU.O, Pa1e !) Orange Coan Weather More of that nice beach weather .ts in store acaln for the Orang• C:Out harbor area. The tempera. lures 1hould again reach into the pleasant 70's. INSWE TODAY The Near East t.t: in turmoil. Se!: stor11. Ulus tracion, Poae f . C1Hr.111le I Chtdlhtt U• f (lffMllH 21•tt Ul!llc• lJ ,,.._. 11 OMlll Httkttc I ••tl9f't1t ,... ' •n,..rtar-1 l"tt 'IM<V• " MINK• It All l.l l\flln I) ~ 1t·M ·~ MW!\111 ,..,.. tt HIHMMI...... I Or._ C-tJ • l7IYJI ,.,..., ,. '-'• ,,..,. llldr . ...,,... 19-11 "'''"""" 19 """"'" '""' WM'lltr 4 w--.,...... ,,," Wwlf ,.._. 4 • _! __ _ ' Ii 2 DAILY '1LOT t ; Police Sink Teeth in Ccue 1> It •u the aort of cue a patrol > !DU CUI nilly 11oJ< bis lffth !Jlto ••. altar all, " !Jlvolved an eldorly San Clemente man's denturfl!, worth their weight in gold. TM 6fficer had been cruising alMI Avenida Granada late Mon· t. di.)' evtnina: whe n an angry se.ntor dtiztn bailed him. ' • ' The man said &nolher l!'!de-rly Ctnllf:man, also angry, had Just kicked a dent in his car. Th4! officer slopped and had 1 ch.It with the angry kicker. \Vl'ly did he d1mage thll!: other man's car? "l drop~ my false teeth in the atrftL and ~ ru cvl!:r them,'' be told the officer. After a little more talk, temptrs C'OOled and each man went home. Today, one will probably seek repairs at a local body shop. The other Ls visiting h.i.~ d@ntist. From POJle 1 APOLLO ... " Identical vaJve aystems would be knocked ' ~ out. That would mean there would be no ~ backup to the remaining valve system, \ and in that case, Apollo 15 would not be permilted to carry out the landing. The reasoning was that when the astronauts go inkl lunar orbit Thursday, : apace official& want to make Cf:rtain they : have two alternatives for blasting out and returning to earth. The 1peclal test was ordered instead or waiting unW 4:29 p.m. EDT, when an engine firing had been previously set to eorrtct. the 1paceship'1 path to the moon. Engineer& here and at North American Jtockwtll's plant in Downey, worked throlJ&bout the night to duplicate the peer blem -and thus find its solution. The abort circuit was the only difficulty encountered during the first 24 hours of the journey t.o the base of two-to-three mile hia:h mountains on the moon in search for clues to its creation. "The analysis to date seems to indicate that we probably hRve an engine that will work okay, or can be made to work okay," flight dir!ctor Milton Windler &I.id. The astrnnaut.a wrestled with the pro- blem on and off Monday afternoon and finally ended their first long day in space at U :l4 a.m. EDT today. Before going t.o aleep, around communicator Karl G. Heinze asked tbe space flyers bow the viewwu., with urtb 75,000milea tWRY- "It's fantastic, Karl," reported Worden. "'Y(JIJ ouaht to aee It, man." "I'm .,tine my heart out." replied Heinze, a. acienlllt-astronaut 1 t I I I awaillnC for his apace.flight asslrnment. The light, when working properly, is to algna.1 that the command ship's ma.in engine is firina. It did not fire -and was not supposed to -when th@ light came on and engineers Raid this meant there wa5 a short circuit aomewhere in the system. From Pqe J MOB •.• crime that underwritf:a all tither epera· tiora worldwide. "Gambling I!: the standby and the ftiun- dalion."' Teresa said. "From it comes the corrupl politicians and the policemen. the bribes and the payoffs, and sometimes murder. U you ctlUld crush gambling, you would put the mob out of business. You·d have them back on the pushca.rls as it wa~ in the old days ... "The mob bas barrels and barrels of money, Rnd it al! starU with the man or the woman who puls a nickel on the num· her at the comer store every day. Everything starts with the nic kel member. and everything e!se follows. • OlANGI COAn DAILY PILOT l•\.1rt N. W11J .. , ...... , •t>d ~111111 ...... J 1c\. R.. C url1v Vir.6 p,_~I 1.-.I ~11 M11111ttr n..,..,, IC11vll EOltor TI.e1t111 A. Mur11loift1 #111"1,. E"ler Clo1rl11 M. l••• Riclo 1rd '· Nill Aal!0111: M1111tl"11 l!flll!lrl c... .. _ Offi.. )JO W11t l1y Str11t ~.a: .. , Ad.t r111: ,.0 . le~ 1s•o. •t62' Oftler Offkel tl-1 auc.ro: no "'•,..-' ,..., . .,,.,d ......... l•do: pr. 1'0<1'1 .t.WlllVt M1111tlilllf-a11e+.· 11ar · 1 .. {~ llov~v••lt $lfl (.llfMl!i.; .I0:.0 N.nl\ ll C:1~itlo •011 TI. Ma11or Reactt - Freeway Letter Response Cited The Pacific Coast free-P1ay fight h.as now sparked a small insiders battle on the Cruta ft1esa City Council. Mayor Robert Wilson today llr!CI off a letter to Governor ~agan denouc1ng a prtvious letter sent the Governor by Councilman William Sl. Clair. Wilson said St. C1air's letter -11th1ch outlined his own solution for the freeway hassle ~·ith Ne11i'J)Orl Beach -did not represent any of/Jcial view from Costa Mesa. '"This is le inform you that t.1r. SL Clair speaks for himself only. and not for the city councJ.i of this ci ty," lliTOte the mayor. St. Clair .suggested that the Newport Beach leg of the roast freeway be eliminated and tied back intll the Newport Freeway and the proposed Cortina de Mar Freeway. St. Clair ptopo&ed swinging I.he Newport Freeway west of H o a g Memorial Hospital, bringing it across county territclry and connecting it to the ooatt freeway at the mouth of the Santa Ana River. Coastal Freeway would then travel back inland to the propcll5!CI Corona de! Mar Freeway, follow that freeway south to Laguna Beach and tot.ally ignore Newport Beach, while satisfying the freeway nl"eds of .surrounding cities, he .a!d. The councilman made his suggestions in a two-page letter kl I.he Governor on July 20. He also included some sarcastic remark! about Newport Harbor being built by the coonty and all the taxpayers, but said his .solutioh would at least be politicaUy poMible. One paragraph in St. Clair's letter says: ''Newport would like to build a high fence at the city limits. put gate keepers at a!J entrances, and 11.llow only residents to enter. In fact, they would like to make Ecology Contest In Third Month At Mesa, Grows c:ost.a Mesa's "ecoloiY beiim: al heme" contest is oearing the end of Its third month with the list of partici panL'I grow· in& each month. Tht contest offers various monthly prizes for the best looking home or store, including it.s surrounding environment. Applications for the contest are available at lhe city clerk's office in city hall. Any r!"sident can enter. Rnd resident! may also enter the name of neighbors "'ho may be too shy to boast of the beauty of their own home. At the end of the year's CQntest -next May -free trips to Washington, D. C., San Francisco. Las Vegas and Sacra.men· to will be awarded the year's best en· tries. Judging emphasizes the effort to clean up the exterio r of the home and landscape the yard. Tu·elve winners in six sections of the city are named each month. For further information on I h e "ecology begins at home" contest phone 834-5343. New Backstop Newport Beach another Balboa Bay Club." Wilson. in his letter denouncing St. Clair's action , said: "Any acti on of the city council of this city in regard w any freewa.y in South Orange County will be transmitted through regular chasme!.s to the state director of public works and to the CRlifomia Highway Commission, btlng the persons and agencies having the power to take aclion on freeway mat· ters." "I'm very sorry if I hurl his feelings and didn't go through I.he proper chan· nels," St. Cl Rir, "'ho did not recei11e a copy of Wilson's letter, said this rooming. Holiday Inn Bid · Reviewed, but Not Yet Okayed Plans for a five-story Holiday Inn near South Coa3t Plata were reviewed. but not approved Monday night by Costa Mesa Planning Commissioners. The commission held up approval until Aug . 9 in order lo set.lie a few problems raised by neighboring homeowners. "We we.nt proper trees In break up the block wall effect of the tower," said James Kelley, 3148 Yellowstone Dr. "And I don't want any flashing sign there.'' "Are you opposed to the use of t.hi.s land for .a hotel?" asked ccmm.i.ssion chairman Charles Beck. "I've accepll!d it," replled Kelley. "I'm not wild about it." The 150-room hotel. equipped with restaurant and cocktail lounge. is to be buill at 3131 Brist.ol St . 8'!>ck told the prll.!ipect.ive developers: "Our major objection is hnw the. hotel af· fects the privu:y of the homeowners." "We can't get away from the view into their yRrds." said a Holiday Inn spokesman. "We·ve already spent $30,000 on the design. It can'l be. totally redone." Commissioners indicat.ed they felt some minor points could be agreed on by Aug. 9. Police Auction Slated Saturday In Costa Mesa Kegs of nails, luggage, clothing, watches. automotive acceMOries everything but the kitchen sink -and 41 bicycles and tricycl es gn on the auction block in Costa Mesa Saturday. The quarterly unclaimed property .sale will he at !O a.m. behind the Pol!ce Facility at 99 Fair Drive , ""'ith all items on display before auctioneer Robert McPherson takes bids . Property Sgt. Ed Love.in says th e haul of 157 items i.s much larger than usual hut includes fewer wheeled vehicles than in the pas! Checks N e accepted. Money taken in during uncl aimed pro- perly auctions goes into the city·s general fund . OA ll.V ~11.0T P11ti. W .,.. kl!Ml•1r Baseball fields at TeW \nkle &hoot in Costa Mesa feature new ba ck· stop~ \\"ith cornucopia -Ike shape.s. Rod MacMUllan. director of the Harbor Area Baseball Program . said each or the new backstops cost abou t $1 .700, or about half the price of a conventional backstop of the 11ame size. • . . ~ ----- • DAii. Y Pll.OT st1tf P~ RAIL STRIKE WILL NEARLY PARAL YZE ORANGE COUNTY GROWERS Women Pack Orange for Shipping at Irvine Packing Houn Sister Censor Nun Checks Henilines at Basilica VATICAN CJTY (UPI) \Vith heml ines r isi ng 2nd necklines descending in sweltering Rome, Vatican officials sta- tioned a nu n at the doors of St. Peter'.s Basilica Tuesday tn keep out women revealing too much thigh or bosom. ''It'll no job for a man," said one assigned to rule on hemlines and necklines. Valican officials said Mlme of the male aecurity guards had beeo getting too le· nient. ''It's no Job for 8 man," said e e prelate, referring to lhe task of censoring thousands of pretty young tourist.s every day. The nun, identified only as Sister Flore!h1. was !urning away as many as one glrl in every two during the height of Tuesday's tourist rush. A rebuffed New York glrl. wearing a demure dre5s but with the hemline fo ur inches above the knt.e, 11.sked: "Are they crazy? I go to confession in shorts hack home." Sister Fiorella , 11 ided hy 11 novice nun and one of the Basilica's ushers. 11i·as at her busiest around noon when the temperature hovered in thP low nineties. Hundreds of ,lolirls poured off tour buses, but lhnse i,1·ith bare shoulders, low neck line~ or any appreciable amount nf thigh in sight were turnf'd a~ay "·11 h a wag of Sisler Fiorella's finger. The usher dealt "'i !h a rgumentative tou rists by shouting ''via" or "fuon" (get out l. The campaign produced one nf the 5trangest fashion parades in Rome One American gir! ~·earing a m1cro- ~kirt was rebuffed the first time but got into the basilica on a sect1nd attempt by \1•earing her boy fr iend's sweater, whicR reached almost to her knees. She pulled down her skirt to co ver Mr knees. Other girls covered knees or &ho ulders "'ith scar\'e!I or Jet down their hems nn the spot. A girl from Cal ifomia, with her hem about lhree inches above the knee, told lhe implacable Sister Fiorella: "Butt put on my only dress tn see the basilica." Had the girl worn he r customary blue jeans. she would have been allowed Jn. Another ,11:irl pro!ested: ' ' Ho 1 y mackerel. This is !he longest dress l"ve got." It came to about rour inches above the knee. tl-1en in shorts were banned. So were those who gallantly len! their shirts to their ladies an d tried to enter bare· chested . A sign at !he entrance to th e basilir.t warns in five languages: "In order IG preserve an atmosphere of reverence, en- trance cannot be granted to men dressed In shnrt.o; nor to women wearing mini gowns or steevelt111s dresses.·· Supervisor Proposes Welfare Bench Johs UJS A~C.ELF.S IU PI \ -Able-bodied ml"n nn "·elfare should be put to work building hPnl'he~ for bus s!op.'5, county Supervi§flr Kenneth Hahn said Mond~Y- ThP supervisor said he h11d asked the county adm ini.~!rative officer to wor k "'ith the Southern CaliforniR Rapid Transit District on hi~ proposal. -1 Rail Strike Threatens Oranges ""' By TERRY COVILL!: 01 -OlllV 1'1»1 lllH If Santa Fe RAilroad workers 1trike Saturda y a $600 .000 Valen cia oranre crt.1p won't be plucked from Orange Count1 trtts and several hundred pickers and packia( house workl"rs will be idled, ac· cording to county grow!"rs. The strike will nearly paralyu Oranae County gro .... ·ers who supply 1bout 10 per· cent of California's Val encia orange crop. Oranges represent the only major crop currenlly shipped from the county, growers sa id. "\~'e can lea\'e oranges on the trees !or 1 week or two and only Jose a few," says William J . Williams , vi!'.e president of th • 1rvine Company agricullur::il division, largest grower in the county. "But we won't hire anyone to pick, or pick. The i;trike won't hurt the Irvine Company much, but it will put a lot of people out of work.'' Santa Fe handles nearly 100 percent of Orange County's shipping. ](rail workers strike Sl).turday, as expected, the rallroad will make Wednesday the last day fruit can be shipped out of the county. All county orange crops go throu1h Sunkist which has two excha.nges, the Orange County Fruit Exchange in Orang•. and the Placentia Orange County Ell'.· C"hange in Placentia. Between the two they ship an average of 150 freight car loads of oranges l:!ach week. "\Ve might try using trucks, but there won't be nearly enough trucks to keep up our current level," Floyd Wildermuth. manager of the Placentia E1chan(e. &aid. ··Two of our growers have already stopped picking. The others keep asking what it going to happen," Wildermuth said. "The problem i5 we haven't yet been notified by Santa Fe that there wiU be a strike. Everything is still up in ths air for us." Soulhem Pacific Railroad workers l;\'ent on strike last Saturday, paralyzing all crops in Northern California. "Soft fruits are hurt most. They're lost completely. Oranges can wait awhile, but everyone is affected," Wi!l iams ex4 plained. Williams said the Southern Pacific line, now on strike, handles about 60 percttll of all perishables out of California, but the Santa Fe line handles all of Oran(e Coun- ty's crops. Wildermuth said that even if Sant.a Fe doesn't go on strike, Orange County would be hurt by the Southern Pacific strike because Sant.a f'e cars would be taken away to haul fresh fruit from northern Ca.lifomia. Youth Job Unit Presented $1,000 The Youth Employment Service IYES) Thursday will be presented a $1.000 check lo further its activities by the Exchange Club of Ne.,.,·port Harbnr at a neon luncheon at the Stufl Shirt. YES. located in the Boy·s Club. ~94 Center St .. Cost;i t.lesa . is a \'nlunteer agency \\'h1ch finds employ ment for i;tudenls 14 to middle·20 "s. Companies needing part or full-time tmploye~ call YES. which ha~ more th an 2.000 students on rilf', said Florence Httyo~. director_ In addltir.n In the grant. !he Exchange Club luncheon 111·11! fe;iture KNBC newscastf'r Tom Brokaw a5 guest speaker. He "·ill rli.~cu5s "TV Ne"'s - The 01111len ge of the 10·~." $2.99 CARPETING ? ••• • Sure we lieve it-but, usuolly we try to convince customers to buy carpeting that will complement their homes. Often, in situations where a customer is covering the floor just to sell a house, cheap carpetin9 moy be a liability. In many cases the difference of only a dollar a yard will install a quality cf carpetin9 that looks twice as well and will 9tve much better service. In a nutshell we're net tryin9 to necessarily be tho "CHEAPEST", I though we often are), but the "BEST!I !Which we alwayi ere.) ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac•ntla Ave . COSTA M!SA 646-41138 HOURS: Mo11. Thru Thur1., 9 to 5:3G-!l.rf., 9 to 9-Set., 9:30 to S • I , I ' • • . • • ~S_MdJ.ebaek EDITION YOL 6'1, NO. 178, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES -.. "' • l • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 0 0 ets oon o-a Dana Hills Na1nesNew Principal Walter J. Spencer of Capistrano Beach has been named principal of the new Dana Hills High School. His appointment was aMOunced Mon- day by Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District. The former principal ol ~1arco Forster Junior High in San Juan Capistrano has tierved i;even years as a principal in the school district and four years as an as- sistant principal. Before that he was a teacher, counselor, and coach. Spencer, .47, is married and has three children. He resides at 26748 Calle Maria, Capistrano Beach. He has a bachelor's degree from UCLA and a master'! degree li'om California State C-Ollege, Long Beach. He also has 20 units toward his doctorate al University of Southern California. Spencer has been active in community affairs for many years, serving as an elder at the San Juan Capistrano Com· munity Presbyterian Church, past presi· dent of the San Juan Rotary Club, and a PT A honorary life membtr. He has also servecl io f i v e< ed~Uoo-oric.nted orptli:.aliona and was chalrman,of a..suc-- ce!!ful community effort to obtain lights for Buchheim Field in San JU1n. The new principal will begin his duties Sept. 1. Th@ new campus ls expected to open in Septembf!r of 1972. License Grace Period Ending, 50% Penalty Persons and businesses requiring a city business lice.nse in San Clemente have less than a \11eek left In their grace period before penalties are assessed, city st11.ff said today . Licenses expire each year on July I and a month-long grace period is standard , city officials said. After the deadl ine, a 50-percent pen11.lly assessment accompanies the issuance of a city license said inspector George Jackson. While the deadline is Saturday. City hall will be open only up to 5 p.m. Friday. Jackso n v.·arned last-minut.e license purchasers that city hall will not open on the official deadline day. Father Sues For Son's Injury A San Clemente man wants $10,000 in damages from two Joe.al properly owners for injuries suffered by his eight.year-0ld SCLn four years ago on a vacant lot at Junipero Stdeet and El Camino Real. Kenneth Jones, 13 W. Ramona, blames Toiva H. and Reta Rania for the in- juries llUffered by his son, Mark, on April 2.1, 1967, 1tnd states in his Orange County Superior Court action that the old autos and miscellaneous debris piled on the lot were attractive to local youngsters. COMMANDER PROMOTED Gen . Ross Dwyer Gen. Ross n,vyer Wins New Star The Coml!landlng general of lhe Gamp Pendleton·based 1st f\.iarine Division won prom&tion to Major Geileral by President Nixon this week. 'Geo ... ~~n h "Promotion. with six other brigadier generalli, ac- cording to an annouoc@mf!nt from the White House. The veteran of World War IL Korea and Vietnam assumed command of the 1st Division April 31) when the unit returned from Vietnam duty. It was honored at that time by a personal visit and review by President Nixon . The Comm a n d er-in-Chief also presented the Unit Clt.ation to the DiVision at the elaborate rites. Dwyer, a Marin~ since 1941, won pro- motion to brigadier in 1968 . .His first com- mand at Camp Pendleton was of the 5th Divi1ion starting in August of 1969 . Camp Pendleton Marine Sentry Shot to Death Camp Pendleton authorities today divulged that a young Marine'M?ntry was shot to death while on duty last Sunday afternoon and lhat another Leatherneck from lhe same unit ls being held in the incident. Base spokesmen said the d ea d serviceman was Pfc. John A. Hacker,. 19, of Perryville, f\1o. Hacker. authorities said, was dead on Arrival at the base hospital at about ~ p.m. Sunday. He had been shot once in the chest with an M-14 rine. Authorities detained 17-year-old Pfc. John V. Shute . hometown not im· med iately available, in the incident. Spokesmen would not characterize the role Shute assertedly had in the shooting, but did say he has· been ordered under "house arrest'' and htis been afforded a lawyer during the followup prob@. Both young men had been attaclled to the Student Company of Ult Schools Bat- talion at the base. Reports elsewhere today said the shooting was the third this year involvln1 sentries at the large base. .Police Sink Teeth in Case IL was the sort of ease a pa. tol· man can really sink his teeth into ..• after all, it involved an elderly San Clemente man's dentures, worth their weight in gold. The officer had been cruising along Avcnida Granada late Mon· day evening when an angry senior cititen hailed him. The man said another elderly gentleman , also angry, had just kicked a dent in hls car. The offictr stopped and had a chat with the angry kicker. Why did he damage the other man 's car? "I dropped my false teeth in the street and he ran over them," he told the officer. Afli!r a little more talk. tempers cooled and each man went home. Today, one will probably seek repa irs at a local body shop. The other is visiting hls dentist. Rattler Bites Young Mexican At State Park By JOHN VALTERZA Ol fll• ~ ,lllt St•ll A·1 21:~:01d M.~ natiOllrwu recoverini today after a predawn Mlteblte ordeal at San Onofre Bluffs State Park whieb nearly took his life. Juan Perez. whose hometown in Mexico was not immediately determined, was found in convulsions at about 3 a.m. to- day by concession .stand emp!oy~t thf! recently opened state park sof!ffi'or San Clemente. Peret had been bitten by a rattlesnake sometime during the dark hours as he walked northwa rd along the bluffs, ap- parently evading Border Patrol officers at the Onofre chetkpoinl. Rangers said they notified patrolmen and San Clemente authorilies for aSlllstance after the emergency call. In San Clemente, police attempted to call a local ambulance service. but no !lne answered the phone. !hey sa id. ri.Ioments la ter thev d is pa I c h e d Fireman Sheldon Schriiitt in a city stalio n wagon to the park south of the city limit!. Peret, local spokesmen said. was ta ken lo South Coast Commun ity Hospital for emergency treatment, then transferred to Orange County ~fedical Center. Nurses there said th is morning that he "-BS in satisfactory condition after his bout with the vi per. The snakebite was the firsl reported !ince public use bega n al the rugged, brush-covered bluffs \\'hich loom over sandy beache s below. Stale Park rangers said. however, that several sightings of large, healthy rat· tlesnakes have been reported since the park Op4!!ned for the first time during the Independence 011y weekend. "The brush is ideal for lht>m down there." said one ranger, "and the food is plentiful. We warn visitors to the park to be evtremely careful, especially when It 's dark." The park has traditionall y been the route for aliens migraUng northward on foot . affording concealment from Bordf!r Patrolmen. Jn recent months one man leading a group of immigrants along the blufftops In the !'Lame vicinity fell to his death lnto a canyon. ''llrt rtiost .•'• .... · ·-·-... ·~·--... ' Nicolette Milnes-Walker :wa•ts after arrival Monda y at Newport RI Site is the first woman to make ·a solo crossing of the Atlantic O~e~ non-stop. Park on Freeway Surplus Site Will Be Co11sidered San Clemente planning commissioners \\'ednesd11y will take up the latest aspects of a Kiwanis Club proposal to develop surplus freeway property into a landscaped park. The proposal by lhe loc al ser vice group has won in-principle approval from city councilmen, but now mus t await state ac- tioo declaring the small parcel of acreage on Avenida Cordoba surplus property. Planning comm issioners will hear a staff recommendation on the matter at their Wednesday meeting. The land lies along the San Diego Freeway where Kiwanians propose to use club funds 11nd donated manpower and materials to plant the area and install a telescope and other fixtures to transform !he land into a \'iew park. In contrast to a meeting two wee.ks ago, Wednesday's commission has a light agenda with no public hearings. AJmost all items are under the un- flnishf!d business category and include : -A referral from the city council on a possible amendment to the city zonlng ordinance covering the keeping of pigeons in residential areas. -A policy statement on the concept or developing own-your-own apartments. known as statutory condominium developments . -Evaluation of a parking commission report on proposals to set architectural controls on landscaping of off-street parking areas. -f1urther consideration or revisint parking requirements covering in-~ bank garages. San Juan Seeks Court Ouster Of 5 Families A hearing Into charges by the city or San Juan Capistr;ino thal fi ve families are · defying orders to leave the con· demned Brown's Labor Camp has been scheduled for Aug. 17 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge J. E. 'T'. ''Ned" Rutter has been asked by the elty to confirm the evittton demand filed ag-ainst property owners Philip J . Keresy and Lillian Zaenglein and order the camp closed. The pro~ty at ·:\1841 Well Site Road is leased by' Wil· llam T. Reid . The city claims In Its lawsuit that the property owners were ordered 111.st Nov. 4 to close down the property after health department officials condemned the run· down site as unhf!althy and unsafe. The remainin1 tenants were advised by the city that lhf!y must v11cate by April 19. Jones states that some of the ac· cumulated debris feU on bis son while the boy waa playing on the unfenced proper• ty. S~ets' Sue City First School to Be Razed Judge Rutter has been asked to order f!Viction, demolition of all bW.ldlngs and the fllllng of e@sSpools and 'seepage pits on the site. It has been stated by the ·defendants that thtee nf lhe fl"Ve families still living at the labor camp will aoon be vacating the area. ' In Slide Case De_m'!lition Crews Will Level Las Palmas Campus Pendleton Pay Won't. Be · E'arly A San Clemente couple w1nts "51000 Demolition crew1 will arrive et11rly from the ell)' for da.m':ge ~ne to their .. Wednesday ·afternoon. .to tear San home by what they claw in an 0r1Qie • Qem~nte's plCt.uresqae first school to the County Superior OJurt lawau.tt 1.1 negligent grd;ng 111'<1 ioil wllng: \ '""'nd' Eugene ind Madelyn · Seel.9. 7 1 'The demolftion fJl the Lis Palmas Avenkta Columbo, atate lh1t damage to SC'hool ee.mpus had been scheduled to the home wu first noticed In 1966 and begin Monday. but d@lays forced the landslldf!s since th11.t time have m1de the! starting date to be pushed ahead two residence dangerous and unfit for h1bita-days. lion. The school. which suffrr1 from 11. sag· Thf!)' also blame the city for what they glng roof which defies r@pair, was the clr~lm was the faulty lostallat!on of first c11mpus to serve youngsters In the 1;ewers and storm drains in the area. area after San Clemente began in the late Negligence In that rt~pect has created a 20!. health 'tl1zard. the couple tlitims. Wht!n It topples. it will he the ~econd loc11.I landmark lo faU under the wrecker's baO this year. Last month-San aemcnte'1 Commhnity ClubPoult. rutned by fire, collapsed Jn a matttr o£ houri and ·cHmoUUon aewf . comp(cted lhelt work tn a 111fite weekend. . ' Both buildings were built i.n the heavy Spanish tradition. Lai Palmas. which face11 Old. Plaia. Park, will be replaced with a new school facility following a mo~ modem Spanl1h moti{. The clubhouse will be replaced an a similar fashion . Capistrano Unified School District of· flcials decklttd on ·the demolition 1tveraJ , . ' ' monUtJ ago when it was Icarntd lhllt ~~ Con>• sPo)esmen ~ week roof1'C011.tln~·1<>fa1 despite~ e~rlitr . ~~"~th,,.,,~~ rt>11•••i_,ol.t9n' or rid cen•nllc 1l1< IJld , !hll .ply ,ipd AAiill<nt checjU Wd be ce'l""L • ' • two wet1<1.early Ul1& month .do. bOi 1pply The 11eho0l!• 1ud1WrJum ~d been .ban· tp 'ptndfeton·ba1td J!i.....,.r, --~ for 1tudent UH for several years An E:lslem.!baM!d dllburltttg aWt.e for because of tarlhqulke da~gcrs. . the Marine Corp1 •. l.t;sued · the an· Tbe audllorlum, whJeh for y@ara w11.1 nouncement rectnUy; but th& two-week· the. ICllle of aoclal •nd theatrical evcntl early concept wlll •pply only to aome in i~be community. in rec.nt years J\81 £&stem , ~stallaUona,n 1 • ur\Jtd.•s 1 book tnd ,suppllu 1'&rehouff. Ca.mp Peodlelori Checkt ·Pi:t:~ on ~ Offlcl•la ~aid thf: newer 1eplent;Qf1~e , b115e and at 1 Kanuf Qbi, ·Mo:, ~ttr, tt.mpos, whore t)nder&~lt. classes wut be dlsbUrsed at ,thl . rrtulu' Ume, meet>. will not be rued. 1poke1men !'Laid. '---""!"'-' --... -• -..----- N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS ea Viml Test Clears ,Way For Moon SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPll - Apollo JS's astronauts success£ully te.e;ted their main rocket enginf! today at ll; 16 A.M. PDT. The brief firing apparently meant they can proceed with a moon landing despite a short circuit probl@m. Astronauts David R, Scott, Alfred M. Worden and James B. Irwin wefe directed to attempt lo fire a brief burst from the engine to make a minor course change. Flight director Glynn S. Lunney Ill.Id there were about two chan«& out of three the rocket would work ualng makeshift control procedures, and clear the way for the lunar landing. The problem posed no danger to the astronauts. Even if the moon landing was called off, they would be able to return safely lo earth. The astronauts awoke at 11 a.m, EDT today after a long night's sleep and were told of the special test. Apollo IS wal nearly halfway lo the moon at the time. Ground communicator Joseph Allen told the astronauts about the latest think· ing on the problem. He said lhe Apollo. 15 6ack up commander on the ground, ~chard S. Gordon, rehearsed the spectal test procedures before the in!lltructiool were radioed up to the spacemeo. The 1bort deveJ.oped a few hoUrl ·after launch Monday in onf! haU of the sygtem used lo control the engine. The astronauts were directed to 1ltempt to blast only the faulty part of !he system. The problem, signaled by a flickering Instrument panel checklight -could have come from one of three po!ILSl.billtlea - the worst of which would wash out the moon landing. The object or the engine test was to plnooint the trouble. "\Ve're going to try to re-create the problem," LuMey said in a late morning news briefing. "If you push the circuit breaker and you don't get a bum, then you've got a problem ." In the worst situation, officials 1ald, circuit breakers controlling on@ of two identical valve systems would be knocked out. That would me:an there woUid be no backup to the remaining valve syatt!lm, and in that case, Apollo 15 would not bl ~rmitled. to carry out the landing. The reasoning was that when the astronauts go into lunar orbit Thursday, space officials "·anl to make rertaln they have two alternatives for blasting out and returning to earth. 'T'he special test wa s ordered lostu.d ot waiting until 4:29 p.m. EDT, when an engine firing had been previously set to correct the spaceship's path to the moon. Engineers here and at North American Rockwell"s plant in Downey, worked throughout the night to duplicate the pro- blem -and thus find its solution. The short circuit was the only difficulty encountered during the first 14 hours of the journey to the base of two-00..three mile high mountains on the moon in search for clues to its creation. "The analysis to date seems to indicate that we probably have an engine that will work okay. or can be made to work okay," flight director Milton Windl@r said. The astronauts wrestled with thf! )tt'o- blem on and off Monday aftf!moon and finally ended their fir1t long day ln spice at 12:14 a.m. EDT today. Before going to steep. ground communicator Karl G. Helnie asked Ult space nyers how the view was, With earth 75,000 miles away. Orange Cou& 'We•daer More of lba\ nice be1ch wulher ls In store aga.tn for the Oi'an~ Coast harbor area. The tl:m"pera- lures should •1aln ·reldJ Into the pleasant ?O's. · · " INSmB i>c;i).(f. , .. ' ,.• ... ~ .The 0NtGr 'tatt fl In tui-moil Set JtorU', illt11trotion, Page 4. (•llfll'*-,• CNclli.t Utt (11,tlntll fl•tl CMllC• u ,,...._., 1J °"'"' Mtll<• • lttl-.Ul ..... ' . lfti.tifl_. '"" ' ll'lq11e1 If H«t~ IJ •1111...,.... lJ Mt.... ,,,. \ • • • 1 •• l -'"1' ... '• . . . • ,. --·~·· ...... ' -·---... -, . TuCJd&J, .lu'1 IJ, 1971 Pact Award~d-· : I Dilly PILOT College -~'a4.dleback J:riutee~ fick i.ib~ary Bid '!1te eontract for construction o{ Sa~ dlebaek Colle&t:'s first perm an e n t bulldinc Monday was aw11dtd to the P~ Construction Company by collece lnlstees. 1be Torra.nee-based firm stJbmitted a low bid of $3,171.000 to build th!! library- clU81'00m complex at the Mission Vieio camp.is. The company will be1in grading tht site Aua . 10 and the concre~ buUdin& should be completed by late 1972. School officials had earlier estimatl;d the cost of lbe facility to be about $3.5 mlJllM. 'lllo U bids lj!bQdllod ~ .i.. ddlBI. lUi iorJ llld lllU<Wi ...,. tractort ran u hl&h aa fL• lllllllon. , llJted liicon'ectlY, ll)d ~pan, ottldala In · awm11>1 ·the oontnol to PU wW!ed to ·1Ubttl!uto Ille ·1111;,. . ..,_ Jow Construction, the trust.eta ordered com-bidders for the work. · pany officials to settle a dilpute which ltowever. J. Garret Masonry, one of has arisen among severil cl the job'1 the firms which would have been remov~ sub-contractors. ed from lhe job. protested the subst!lll- AJl:hough the sealed bids llJld liat of sub-tion of Harvey Nadig Masonry , college contractors were submitted Thursday, president Fred Bremer told lruslees. P&A Wormed college officials Monday a Or. Bremer said county legal counsel mistake had been made In the listing ol had been consult.ed and said such a three of the sub-contractors. change could only be made with a pubUc The companies P&A had hired t.o do the hearing since a protest had been filed. $~00,000 Vale1acia Crop The trustees then adjourned to an ex· ecut1ve session to discuss the matter and returned 40 mintJtes later. On returning, board president Alyn Brannon said a resolution had been pass· ed requiring P&A Construction to either employ the Garret firm or lnsure thal the protest is withdrawn. Pending Santa Fe Strike P&A company officials present at the meeting offered no comment in response to the board's action. If the grading and tile work sub-contract substitutions are protested prior to midnight tonigtit. the board will have to hold a public hearing to make the substitutions, Or. Bremer said. Perils County's Oranges By TERRY COVILLE OI rr.. OlllY Plltf ltlfl If Santa Fe llallroad worker• 1trtke Saturday a $&00,000 Valencia orange crop won"t be plucked from Orange County trees and ~evtral hundred pickers and P:,c:kfng house workers will be Idled, ac- cxirdtng to county growers. The atrlke will nearly paralyie Orange County &roWers wbo supply aboul 10 per· 2 .Bandits Pluck Chicken Stand's $400 in Receipts Hussein UllW' and David Kannen:elt wl!re fr ying Col. Sanders' chicken Mon- day ln Westminster .and Costa Meu. nspectively, when two bandits sauntl!rtd in and plucked the day's receipts the old· fashi oned way. One of the bandlt1 had an anUque cap- and·ball pistol used in both of the stickups, which net~d about UOO. Police in the two cities 1aid. Investigators said the bandits first enU:red the Kentucky Fried Chicken shop at 7061 Westminster Ave .• wbe-re Umar wu on duty. 'Ibe uslstanl manager was forctd to hW over about $200 in the 11:30 a.m. bold .... n,, balldil• """pojl wi~ lh• ~ ln a chicken bucket. Police were 1Ull writing repc'lrU of that robbe.ry 1 ft 1:30 p.m., fhtn the pair brar.tnly puahed past the counter al 2000 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mua, where Kan- nertelt was CilOking chicken. Ordering him to open the safl!, the gun. men. 23 to 24 years old and both sil· foo~rs. took $186. Ripping the telephone off the wall -as they had al80 done in Westmlnster -the youna desperadoes ned across nearby Warehouse Road. accordlng to witnesses. Detectives said Kannerzelt told them the antique pistol. with a fiv&-lnth barrel of lsrgl! bore, looked clean and qui~ c:apabll! of being fir ed. Miss Teen Contest Fonns Now Available Entry blanks are now availab\1! for the Miss California Tttn contest. Forms are 1 available at the C&.llfornla·Teen head· quarterG. 2381) N. Tustin Ave., Santa Ana. All girls from 13·17 yearG of age are eligible to enter. Contest lina\ist3 will be selected from thl!ir com pleted e11try forms and attached snap .shots . Miss Clillforn!a Teen for 1971 will ~ geJected Au1. 21 at South Coast Plaza tn Costa Mesa . ' OlAN•I COAST DAILY PILOl Oll:A.lol!lli COAST PUl itSHING COMPANY ••'o•'' N. W11d P-..:. ... t 11'1111 Pu .. l~r Jee• l . C11rl1y VI« Pr91..,.,.I I NI 0-rtl MMYtw no"'•' ll'.11•H &tltw lh1Ntl A. Mut,1!111• Mtn1111111 &t1"'r Ch1rl11 H. Leet ltich1 ... P. N1!1 A111tr.11I Ml,..11!'11 1:~1:.ri 1-t•M .._. OHlu 122 For11t Av111111 M1 IJl119 1cltlr111: ,.0 . lor '''· 92•12 s.. ci-... OHko 301 Netth [I C 1 111i110 lttl, 'f1.1l OH!t r OHie• Ce1t1 Mtst" SlO Wti! Ill' Slr-.f HfWlllOrf ... ell; WJ NtWPOI"! aou , ... ,., Hlolflll1111i.11 a..uu 1111s htdl tou11 ... 1'4 , ••• , •••• f71fl f4J ... JJ1 0• ..... A.4"""90 ... 4tJ-1671 ._ Cle 101 Al 111.,, .. , .. , Tai 1' r a 4tJ...f4H "' i.,.. ..... Al ......... .,. , ............ ..... ·w::.rrllfll, tm, M• c..tl' ll'vMWt .... ~,.. Nt -........ l!Mlff-. .. 1 ... 111 -'*' ... • ...... _,. twr.lft _,, ........ ~ wtlMut ..... ,..... ..... ., Cllll'fl'll'lt -· I . ~, cent of Califomla's Valencia oran1e crop. Oran1e1 repre11ent the ol'l.ly major crop currenUy shipped from the county, grower11 said. "We can leave oranges on the trees for 1 week or two and only lose 1 few ," says William J . WUl!ams, vice president of the Irvine Company agricultural division, largest erower in the county. ''But we won't hire anyone to pick, or pack. The strike won 't hurt the Irvine Company much , but it will put a lot of people out of work." Santa Fe handll!S nearly 100 percent or Oran&e County's shipping. U rail workers strike Saturday, 11 e1pected, the railroad will make Wednesday the list day fruit can be shipped out of the county. All county orange crops go through Sunklst which hss two exchanges, the Orange County Fruit E1change in Orange and the Placentia Orange County E1· chanae ln Placentia. Between the two they ship an avl!rage or 150 freight car loads of orangl!I eacti week. "We mlght try u1in1 trucks. but there won't be nearly enough trucks to keep up our current level ," Floyd Wlldermuth, mana1er of the Placentia E1change, oald. "Two of our growers ha ve already stopped picking. The others keep asking what it going to happen." Wildermuth said. "The problem la we haven't yet been noWled by Santa Fe that there will be a strike. Everythln1 Is 1W1 up ln the air for us." lkilthtm Pac!Ue RaiJroMI -.vorkers went on strike last Saturday, par&JyzinR all crops in Northl!rn C&Jifornia. "Soft fruits •rt hurt moat. Th!!y're lost completely. Oranges can wait 1whlle, but everyone is: affected," Williams ex- p!ainl!d. Williams said the Southern Pacific line. now on strike, hand!eis ahout 60 percent of a!l perishables out of California, but the Santa Fe line handles a.II of OrAnge Coun· ty's crops. \Vildermuth i;a\d that even if Santa Fe doesn't go on strike, Orange County would be hurt by the Southern Pacific slrikl! because Sant.a Fe cars would be taken away to haul fresh fruit from northl!rn California. "If it comes," he concluded, "we'll just try to shift to trucks. But ri1ht nnw we don't really know what's golna: to happen, and that's th!! worst part." Air Wing Completes Last Viet Mi~sion SAIGON <A Pl -The U.S. 7th Air For ce announced today that the 460th Tactical ReconnaiMance Wing flew i!.!I last combat mission today and began preparations for iU !nacUvallon on Aug. 31. The SM-man wing is commanded by CAL Dale L. Flowers or Phoenix . Ariz .. and has .served In Indochina for five y~ars. flying reconnaissance missions over North and South Vil!tnl m. Laos and Cambodia. It has been based at Saigon's Tan Son Nbut air base. Construction of the library-classroom complex al the school has already suf. fered several setbacks, including building design changes to prov ide fewer windows and delay in approv ing the final plans by the stall!. College official5 had o r i g i n a I I y predicll!d lhe building would be ready for occupancy by the beginning or the 19n.73 school year. However, the targl!t dale now is Deeember 1972. Irate Trustee Criticizes Story On Hair Ruling Saddleback Coll!!ge trustee Hans Vogl!l ~londay voiced disapproval of the man· ner in which a 5tate-wide junior college newsletter reported the school's most re· cent dress code action. Vogel said the publication, the Californi a Junior College Association Newsno~s, w1s guilty of an "act or (!mission" in reporting the r~t court decision upholding the college's hair l1!11gth regulations. The newsletter, published in Sacram,n- to and dated July 13. explained the ruling, Vogel admitted. but failed to report the board's suhsl!qllent action in abolishing the dress code. Vogel asked that the trustees 1!1pprovl! writing to the edltor of the newwletter in· forming him of the error. The infonnation printed In the newslet· ter was the result of a news release sub· milted to the publication by Saddll!back officials. Even though a report of the court decision and the board's action were in the re!l!ase. Vogel said the editor had apparently, •" prob ab I y unin· t.entiona\ly," edil.t.'d the story for sake of space. Although trustees Pat Backus and t.1\chael Collins said they did not agree with Vogers wish to write to the l!d i!or. the board unanimously voted to send a letter correcting the mistakl!. College Chief Sets Bond Plea Saddleback OJl\eg:e President Fred H. Bremer will speak early in April to Lei.sure \Vorld \'Oters as part (If a con· linuing program to build Mipport for the collejle's $24 .8 million bond issue .• The head of the Mission Viejo college already has spoken to th!! Retired Tl!acher's A5wci11tion of Laguna Hil!s tci oulitnl! th!! financial n~ds of the com - munity college. On Sept. 8. Dr. Bremer "-'ill speak to members of several Laguna Hills flrganlzations in Clubhouse Three in Leisure World. Capistrano. Trustees .Cut $235,000 Out of Budget By PAMELA HALLAN 01 t11• Dlltf Pll91 lt•lf Budjet cuta amounUna t o ap- proximately $236,000 were made by Tru5ltes of the C1 pl1trano Unified School District Monday. Superintendent Truman Benedict 11ub- mitted a list of Items totalling $263,219 but the board reln!lated one speech therapist. one mulU-handlcapped pro- gram aide and one educationally ba.ndl· capped prOgram alde. Thty also noted two additions to the budget -carpeting for Crown Valley and Plliaadts schools "open" cl1ssroom1 and an lnaurince lncre1ae. "Ai the budget now 1Unds, the 111 for the 1ener1I fund wlll remain u actly the same as it Is th1J ye1r," said Slim Chicas. assistant superintendent for bua\neu . But ta1es will !tlU be Increased even though the tduc1tlon i:ncram and school operation will bt getting no more las money than tt did last year. The bnnd Interest and redem ption lat i nd 1\.ate school bulldln& fund repayment wHI Mill 10 up 34 ctnt~. "We're meeting with County Auditor Vic Helm to see If we can do anything about this," said Truman Benedict . "But it's unlikely that v.·e can get 1t redueed by more than a few cenL'\." All of the budget cul~ werl! m11de from emJlloyes other tha n classroom teactiers 11nd their related 11upplies. capital Im- provements, and othl!r categories not directly related to the cl11ssroom. Trustee George Whi te quei.tioned whether or not the adm inistration had "tield the line" on hiring new employes. lte noted that only five clsasified and three certificated employes had been sug- g:ested for deletion and the board had rtlnltlted GOme of these. Benedict answered that the orlgln11l budg:el did nol contain many new job poaltlons ouUide-tht classroom. Trusttfl Donald Inlay praised the 1d. mlnlstrtillon on Its efforts and 1aid that In bis own mind t~y had done flXlctly a!J they we-re directed. Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. asked about 11111lary increases. Benedict told him If 11ny 11re 1lven th is year they would come from the 1826.000 undistributed reserve fund. The public hearing on the publ\catlon bud,i;:et i~ !JChedultd for Aug. 2. ~ . ·Biker ~ited Fo.rHuDog :Massive Search Al.llAMJ!RA • 'juPn -John '~'k$'~'e""c1>utt"'T~ rled an. ·~· loatt" on fili · mo1«cyde. When M.Wer, a Los Angeles engineer, pa to trial Aug. 23, he will not only try to vindicate hlmselr. but his pet, fled Dog. The unsafe load, according lo the California Highway Patrol cit.alion was Miiier's large mongrel. The ticket read: '"Dog standing on hind legs with front paws on rider's shoulders (motorcycle).'' t.tiller said it was true, the dog h11s been riding on hi! motorcycle for the past five years wearing A leather flying helmet, goggles and a scarf. Bul r-.liller asks, "\Vhat am I guilty of? Giving Red Dog a ride?'' Circus Show To Go On -In Strike By Unltl!d Pre11 lntl!rnational The nationwide strike aga inst four railroads left chickens faced with starva- tion and workers fa ced v.·ith layoffs today but th!! lions and elephants continued riding in style. The Ringling Bros. Barnum and Bailey Circus was to arrive in Los Angele5 today ~ open it& show tonight. The circus usually travels Dil its •wn train, carrying performers. animals and equipment. When the strike hit the Union Pacific, the circu5 planned to move t(I the Southern Pacific to make the trip. But lhe 5lrike spread lo the Southern Pacific and the railroad moved on to the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe and still planned tn arrive in time to set up ror the show tonight. Other induslrie~ \\'ere not as fortunate as the circus. Tile strike today threatened t6 catJse food and fuel shortages and fore!! the layo ff of lhnusands tJf COii! miners and other worker5. Farmers in many areas, caught at harvest lime with no \\'ay t~ ship the ir producl!, were particularly tiard hit. One alllhnrity warned I.hat a prolonged strike could wipe out lhe poultry market in the Southeast. CASPER. Wyo. IUPI) -Deep ln the forest on Caape.r Mounlaln a aim in a tiny clearing reads: "Kevin. the clockwatcher says, 'time to go home.' Wait for mama." At the foot ot the-sign is a toy clock. Rescue experts posted the JJign Monday hoping it and the clock might iure Kevin, a 9-year-old mentally rl!tarded epileptic, out of the wood!J. The idea can1e from the child's schoolteacher al the school for the men- tally retarded, Eleanor Walker. She said in class Kevin was often the clockwat· cher, and something familiar might snap him out of his pattern of running li ke a frightened animal. The boy has successful!y eluded thousands of searchers on f o o t , horseback, and in helicoptera for eight day5. Monday night an Alpine rescue team with tracking dogs movl!d Into an area at dusk where the do1s caught the boy's scent. But the search was called off be.cause David Moore, captain of the rescue unit, said lt was "much too dangerous to keep a man out in this wilderness after dark." The rescue team was called lo lhe area by a !ady wtio said she set some pork ctiops and a toy truck outside her cabin and checked 30 minutes later to find both missin1. Ray Gardner (If the Missouri State Police, handler of a tracking dog, pl!!dged to find the youn1ster today. "I'm going to walk this mountain unW I either find this kid or drop," he said. NatrOfla County Sheriff Bill Estes says the boy has the cunning of a wild animal on the run. "We are no looger conducting this search as If we are looking for a 10.!!t, frightened boy," Estes said. "WI! are conducting this search as if we are look· ing for a deer." The Alpine rescue team took over the search Monday, one week after the boy v.·andered aw11y from his parenls during an outing. ~loor.e said !he boy is being kept warm in the near freezing weather al night because he is hyperactive. The chi ld usually takes nine tranquilize.rs a day, but he has had no medicine since he ran a"·ay. Moore said the boy is swift afoot and "hides v.'here there is just no place to mde ." "You might J~t walk past the kid ·~. • • UPI Tell,._.11 ANXIOUS PARENTS TALK Mr. and Mrs. Dye without ever seeing him," he said. HI! said he thinks the boy will be found alive. ~1oore is in charge of 19 experts from Colorado seven climbers fro m Evergret'n, eight search and rescue men from !he Rocky ~fountain Rescue Unit at Boulder and four women from the Colorado Search and ResctJe Board in Denver. The tracking dogs follow scents throu gh the air, and Moore said they can follow a scent indefinitely. They were given sniff! of a yellow wool cap the boy has worn, providl!d by his mot.her, Mrs, Phillip Dye. "If the kid is within a quarter of • mile, they can go right to hlm," Moore said. The Checkerboard Grain Co. of St. Louis, Mo., a major gupplier of c(lrn to poultry producers in lhe southeastern Unitl!d Stales, was forced to close Mon- day because of the strike against the Norfolk & We5tem Railway Co. Senate Witness Says .. The strike could wipe out the chicken industry in the Southeast," said D.R. Walker, Checkerboard manager. "It C<lUld ruin th!! economy of the area." Bets Finance Rackets A spokesma n for i'lolly Farms, (lne of lh~ natinn·~ largest poultry producers, .satd its 9 m1llion-chicket1 (lperation is Jos. Ing about $40,000 a day. The loss of grain shipments from the Midwest elso af· f~tt'd swine, dairy and beef cattle. Food supplies on Midwestl!rn and Ea5tern grocery shelves were expected 10 bl-heavUy affected by a prolon1ed strike. Some food supplies could virtually disap- pear from slore.s v.·i1hin two \\'eeks if the United Transportation Union strike.5 the Santa Fe -one of six Jine5 the UTIJ says It will strike Friday if the \\'Ork rules strikl! continues. Most southwest Virginia co<il mines shipping by rail faced shutdowns becau.sP or lhe 5trikl!. An industry spokesman said ahoot 50 pe_rcent of the mines of Is land Creek \\'OU!d be stiut down by today by the strike. If the ~trike ctintinues past to- day, the spokesman ~aid, 11bout h11Jf the company's l.700 emp!oyes Vt"Ollld be idled. \VAS!"flNGTON (UPI ) -A Boston man who has spent almost all his life with blg· time mobsters testified today that "The Mob" runs organized crime In the Unitl!d States, flnancin1 Its vMt op~rations through nickel bl!ls placed wllh corner bookie.~. The witnes.s, Vincent Charles Teresa, testified about hi.s own crooked schemes thAt frequenl!y lant1ed him in jail -in- cluding gamhhng junkets to a London cluh once associated with actor George nart and to c11sinos in Haiti \\'1 th the blessings of the late Halllan dicte.lor, A swarthy, hefty man now serving a hve·year prison term for transportation cf stolen securitil!s, Teresa, 42, v.·as the leadoff witness as th!! Senate Permanent Investigations Subcl")mmilll!e began iL~ fifth v.·eek of hearings en tirganlztd crime. "There ls one big gang ttial runs •rganized crime in this country," Tert51 said. "We generally call il 'Thi! Mob.' " He said the organized underworld is oftl!n called by other names such as "The Of· fice" in the Providence, R.J., New England headquarters . He said that gambl 1na is "the single most important act ivity"' for (lfganized crime th<it underwrites all other opera- tions worldwide. ""Gambling is the standby and the foun- dation ," Teresa said . "from 11 comes the corr upt politicians and the policemen, the bribes and the payoffs. and 50metimes murder. If you cnulrl crush gambling, you v.·ould pllt the mob Olli of businc5S . You 'd have them back on the pushcarts as it \\·a.~ in the old day<; ... $2.99 CARPETING ? • • • • Sura we liove it-but, usually we try to convince customers to buy c1rpetin9 that wi ll complement their homes. Often, in situ ations where a customer is covering the floor just to sell a house, cheep carpeting mey be e li ability. In many cases tlie difference of only • dollar e yard will install e quality of corpeling the! looks twice es well end will give much better service. In a nutshell we're not trying to necessarily be the "CH EAPEST ", (though we often ere ). but the "BEST!! (Which we always ere.) ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plac•ntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOU~S: Mon. Thru Thun., 9 lo 5:30-,rl., f to 9-S.I., 9:30 , to l \ • • •• • - 141.~na Beaeh EDITION YOt:. M, NO. 178, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE 'COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' .. ' . -. Today's Fbull N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Laguna Teachers May Be Paid for Work Done UDder a new salary proposal, teachers at Thurston lnterfnediate School in Laa:una Beach could be paid according to tub performed, job re!ponsibilities and re"sults of evaluations, district trustees learned 1'-~ooday night. The new pay scale would replace the one now used which p1ys teachers on the basis of number of years experience in teaching and on the amount o( college units takep, explained Art Fisher, a science teacher at Thurston. "We're :;aying that t.eachen would ge t a bonus !or good work." Fisher said. "It's a much more profe,sional way of paying teachers since it takes into ac· count more than experience and rollcge units." Teachers, Fisher said, would earn "factor points" (or homer o o m responsibilities, nwnber of electives taught, and the number of students seen daily. Points would also be given for col· lege units completed and years or ex· perie nce. More points could-be earned as a result of evaluations of each teacher by students, fellow faculty members and ad· ministrators, Fisher said. Trustee Norman Browne asked Fisher if a '"weak teacher'' who may ha11e many units and years of experience would be making less money than a "strong teacher" with a lesser number of units and years experience. Conceivably yes , Fisher responded , but under the proposal no teacher at Thurston would make less than they made this year. ~O 0 ets Policeman Takes to Surf To Arrest Laguna Supec1 Undaunted by a few ocean wa1Jes, Laguna Beach police officer Jim Slin· aon risked (and ruined) his uniform late Monday as he pursued a narcolic!I suspect Into the Pacific at St. Anne's Beach, finally handcuffing him about 100 feel offshore. Police said a beachfront resident reported a young man behaving su~· piciously and apparently trying to find a hiding place for a brown pa per bag, putting it first in so me shrubbery, then under a rock. After observing his maneuv ers, officer Stinson attempted to question lS. year-old Mike Lawrence Blank of Encinitas. but the youth headed for the water tearing up !he paper bag as he ran, and started swimming seaward . Stinson in hot pursuit. scooped up a piece of the bag, which he said con· tained a leafy green substance resembling marijuana, and took to the sea himself. After a brie( .$lruggle. lh.e officer handcuffed his quarry and seized the remains or his paper big, which police &&kl" later tt.Ul contained M cranu of marijuana. Blank wa!l "tlpoked on 1U5picion of posse.ssioo af marijuana, reli1ting ar· rest and de&troy lnk evidence. Laguna Re sident Severely Burned In Bedroom Fire A Laguna Beach man sustained severe burns early today in a fire which started in his bedroom and spread lhrough other portions or the apartment house doing an estimated $7 ,000 damage. Firemen !!aid George W. Reynolds, Ill, 26. was taken to South Coast Community Hospital follO\.\'lng the 4:30 a.m. blaze. The victim was later transfered lo the burn unit of Orange Councy Med ical Center. where he 1s reported in satisfac· tory condition with first and second degree burns over portions of his body. Fire offi cial.s ~IM!Culalcd today the blaze began in Reynolds' bedroom in apartment B of the house. located al 2787 South Coast Highwa.v. Cause of the fire is ill yet undetermined. Several other persons were occupyinl( the 3-apartment building al lhe time the lire broke out. bu!. all escaped uninjured, including a guest in Re ynolds ' apartment. Firemen said most of the damage to the structure was connned to Reynolds' apartment. The flames did not up an outer wall to the above residence. firemen said, but damage to the above 1partmenl wa s slight. Citywatchers Eye Festival The 1971 Fertival ol the Art.is and P11igeant of the Masters will gel star billing on the KCET educe· tional television progra m "Citywat· chers" to be aired Mondy at 7:30 p.m. Citywatchers Art Seldenbaum and Charles Cha mplin will tto.ke a back stage look at the 36th editk>n of the Laguna Beach pageant. Don ·WIJll1mson, pageant pro- ducer and directar, members of his 91.aff and on-stage parUclpants will be interviewed during lhe hllf·hOO.r color telecast from the TMne Bowl. They'll reveal Jor ltlevision au· diences some of the )ogtatics and behind the scenes mtthanlcs in· volved In piecing the e v e n t together. -tn actual set-up or one of the !iv· Ing picturt'.!s will be included in the: show which will be repeated on Channel 28 at 3:30 p.m. Friday, August 6. • Police Sink Teeth in Case ll was lhc sort or case a partol- man can really sink his teeth into .. , alter all, it invol1Jed an elderly San Clemente man's dentures, worth their weight in gold. The officer had been cruising along Avenida Granada late Mon· day evening when an angry SP.nior cil.izen hailed him. The man said another elderly gentleman, also angry, had just kicked a dent in his car. The officer stopped and had a chat with the angry kicker. Why did he damage the olher man's car'.' "I dropped my false teeth in the street and he ran over them,"' he lold the officer. After a little more talk, lC'mpers cooled and each man wenl home. Today, One will probably seek repairs at a local body shop. The other is visiting his dentist Laguna High's Kids May Attend Saddleback A number of Laguna Beach Hie:h School students may be attending Sad- dleback Community C.ollegc u well ne1t year. district trwitee!I learned Monday night. "We hope to develop a strong program with the junior college." said Donald Haught. high school prlnclpal, "which would allow more ofJerlng1 on the upper le vels." Haught said because of the young age of Lhe junior college. it will not initiate action of high school students to attend. "But when we initiate the action, they aeem very coope.raUve. Courses that high tchool studtnl!J might attend at the oollege would be in Utt area of mathematics, electronk:s a D d language. the princiP'I noted. Jiaug.bt.'s commenta on the use of S&d-- d1eback CoUege ca.me durln1 discusalon of the high school courie of st11dy by the board. The listing will comt up for board approval nut month. Mr!!. Patri~ia Giiiette. 11sked if upw level high school rourses in automatlve mechanic:! would be incorporated with the Regional Occupation Program, run jointly by the LAgu111 Be11ch and Gapb:trano UnUled School Dl!tricl.R. ·I Wilcoxen Will Face High Court Laguna Beach attorney \Y i 11 ! a m Wilcoxen said toda y he will be prepared to respond in San Francisco tomorrow lo a new attempt to have the State Supreme Court block Laguna's Aug . 3 election on an iniliative ordinance limiting bulldin&: height in the city. .. 'Ibe SuptemE Cmrt could · m, 1ht election," 1Rid WUCO"l'.en, "but l don't know or any case where it has 1topped a~ election based on facts such as exist in Laguna Beach today." ln fa ct. he noted. the high stale court in one Case had ruled that stopping an elcc· lion would be "intolera ble interference·• by the court with the legislative branch of the government. Opponents of the inlt.iative Monday petitioned the Supreme Court to sel a hearing on the election . seeking to overturn the ruling of the Fourth District Court of Appeals. which in turn overruled a Superior Court order cancelling the election . The petitioners challenge the juris· dictinn of the District Court in the case. Wilcoxen. representing the five Villa~e Laguna leaders named as respondents in the suit tn stop the election. was given until Wednesday to respond to the new lei;i:~l challenge. If the Supreme Court decide~ to con- duct 21 hearin, it rou!d be. done at any lime between Wednesday and election day next Tuesday. Last week in Superior Court. San!a Ana. Judge J . E. T, Rutter upheld the view that the proposed ordinance to set a three-story, 36-foot height limit. on building in Laguna is a zoning matter and therefore not subject to the initiative pro- cedure. He ordered e I e cl ion prepa ra tions cancelled. However, a hastily filed appeal stayed the. Order and the city clerk was permll- tOO to proceed with mailing of ballots. The appeal subsequently was upheld in the Fourth Dis trict Court of Appeal~. which ruled that 1Ja!idity of the ordinance could be tested after the election. Mrs. Coffin Rites Slated Friday Services wl\1 be held Friday at 2 p.m. at Pacific View Mortuary Chapel for Corinna B. Cof(in , 495 Legion St.. Laguna Beach, who died Saturday at the age of 85. f.frs. Coffin waii the mother of Balrd Coffin, prominent Laguna Beach attorney and minister l'lt St. Mary's Episcopal Church. She had lived at his home for the past. two years. Other survivors besides her son are a daughter, Carol Craig of Los Angeles: five grandchldren, and one g r ea t grandchild. Electric Pacemaker Given lo Man, 90 GRANGEVILLE. ld11ho (AP) -A IJO. year..old man who received an electric pace mel<er for his heart last week L'! back at home, eager to resume his hab it of digging ditches and cutting firewood, Truman Schenck, who will be 91 on Sept. 8, wa.1 rtported "flt as a fiddle" by hL, MJfl, Jack, i logger in the Lewla-Oarlc valley. ;'We W?ll ha ve a three.year grace period," fisher said. "Al the end of the period we'll evaluate all teachers. lf lhey aren't happy with the salary they'll receive, they may resign. accept the cut in pay, or transfer to anothe r school ~·jth. in the district.'' Fi sher noted that any serious disputes by teachers over the amount of money they would make in the new system would be arbitrated by an "academic council." .. Since the salary proposal Is of an ex· oon Big First perimental nature, It had to rec'-iw. ·~ proval from a majority of the tea chers within the entire district, noted Vern Dugger, an administrator at Thurston. "That's stale law,'' Dugger explained . He cited results of a poll that showed 69 or the district teachers in favor of the plan. and 34 opposed, which, he said. in- dicated majority approval of the salary concept . Ron Ros:s . a Laguna Beach High School instructor, said that he felt high school o-a Nicolette Mil nes-Walker wa1Jes after arrival Monday al Newport. R..I. She is the first woman to make a so!o crossing of the Atlantic Ocean non-stop. No Laguna Code School Dress Policy Continues It appears that the "no dress code .. policy at Laguna Beach High School will be extended through the next school year. Trustees met with student body of- flcials Monday night. and voiced support of a proposal which reads : "The matter of dress and grooming is best decided in the home, by Uie student and his parenLs." ''I Uilnk lt'1 very well taken," COUl· men ted Mrs. Patricia Gillette, ''f agree," Gerald Linke .said. "It !lhould definitely be done in the home," oommenttd Mrs. Jane. Boyd, who wu an active supporter of the "in the home" policy when Jt wu firat enacted Burglars Busy Looting Autos Auto burglar& were reported bull y along the orange Coa1t Monday night, with Orange County sheriff'• depuUes today chtclclng thefl, from cars in Corona dtl Mar and South Llpna. · John Gilmore. 28, ot 3•111 Paclf1cCoasl Highway. Soulll ~a, IOI~ ~pu!iel lllal a wallet. pune Ind rli1'\ ·•Ith Ille to&aJ value of $3'10 Wert takeq; from Ills car while it wa1 pa rked Jelr hll hbme. Gary Larson. 19. WhJWer. told dt)Juties th1t a watch llld wallet valued at S45 wen taken from his auto 11hortly after¥ par~ed It near the Ii'vlne Equestrian Stable! on Paclnc ~sl lfiabway ju&t aouth or Comna del Mar. ln1Jtstla:11tot1 saki the window' qi both cars were forced open by the intruders. ., • •• ' ' ' • by Uie board In the lut semester of the 1970 school year. •·t prefer to see the students pick the ball up and rwi with IL " William Thomas stated. Thomas,. however. e:a.id he wa! con· cerned about a "minorlty of studenl!I who look like burru.'' ;'I hope the student leaders will en- courage them to bave more pride. If things get bad. I will vote yes on a dres.s code policy," he said. Thi! prompted Lir:ide to say he wr.s disturbed one day by a hat worn "by some guy in front of the high school." "What is right to you aOO ·me may be different thart what the atudenta think ," Bill Reid, a member of the audience told Linde. "How do you qu&llfy who is respectful .'' "lt should be up to I.he: !ltudent body,'' Linke 1ald. Two other member1 of the audience 11pok1, both vofctng 1pproval of the no dress code policy. It will come up £or board 1pproval 1t the Aui. 3 regular meeting o! the bOord. ·Supervisor Proposes . Welfare Bench Jobs LOS ANGE~ES (UPI) -Abl .. bodl<d men on welfare should be put to· work bulldtni ben ches for bus . rtope. counly Superv isor KC'nneth Hahn 11ld MOnd!lly. The supervisor 11.!lld he had 1Mced the county admhtlstratlve officer to work with the Southern CalUornla Rapid . Transit District, on hit prOpolal . .st ; ' . ~ ' I • .. , • ' . teachers (who voted 17 lo 15 against thll proposal) were not &lven enough in· formation about the new concept. Fisher ooted that !he new pay schedule ha5 been analyzed by the California Teachers Association and that it may become "a model for all of Southera. California." The proposal, to become binding, must receive board approval and Is expected to be an agenda item some time next mon th . ea Vital Test Clears ,Way For Moon SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo l5's astronauts !luccessfully tested their ma.in rocket engine l.oday at 11 :-11 A.M. PDT. '!'ht brief firing apparently meant they can proceed with a mooa. landing despite a short circuit problem. · A!tronauts Da vid R. Scott, AUred M. Worden and James B. lrwin were dµetted t.o attempt to fire a brief burst from the engine to make • mtnor course change. Flight director Glynn S. Lunnty e:ald there were about two chanC!s out of three tbe rocke t would wor.k: lUing make1hHt control ptocedur111 and clear the way for the lunar landing. The problem posed no danger to the astronauts. Even if the moon landing was called off, they wouki be able to return safely to earth. The astronaut& awoke at 11 a.m. EDT today after a tong night'.!! sleep and were told of the special test. Apollo 15 w11 nearly haHway to the moon at the time. Ground ' communicator Joseph Allen told the astronauts about the latest think· ing on the problem. He said the Apollo 15 backup commander on the ground, Richard S. Gordon, rehearsed the special test procedures before the ln5lructioo..s were radioed up to th e spacemen. The short developed a few hou rs after launch Monday In one half of the system used to control the engine. The a.stranauts were directed to attempt. to bla st only the faulty part of the system. The problem, signaled by a fllck¢ng Instrument panel checklighl -could have come from one of Uiree possibilities - the worst of which would wash out the moon landing. The object of the engine test was to pinpoint the trouble. ''\Ve're going to try to re<reate the problem,'' Lunney s1Jld in a late morning news briefing. "If you push the circuit breaker and you don't get a burn, then you've got a probl em." In the worst situation, officials said. circuit breakers controlling one of two identical valve systems would be knocked out. That would mean there would be no backup to the remaining valve system, and in that case. Apollo 15 would not be permitted to carry out the landing_ The reasoning was that when the astrona ut!! go into lunar orbit Thursday, ~pace of.ficlals want to make certain they have two alternatives for blasUng out and returning to etirth.. The special test was orde!'fld inst~ of waiting until 4:29 .p.m. EDT, when u engine firing had bee.n previously At to correct the apacublp'1 path to tbe moon. Wut.ber More of that nice beach weathru- ls in atore 1g1Jn for the Oran,ge Coast harbor area. The tempera- turta· should again reach into the pleaaant 70'J. INSWE TODAY Tht. Nt<J.T 'tt!Jt ti in tmrmotl, See ltbfl, lUuitratton, Pao• (. C•ltflHllla I '""""' "'' ' Cl1ttlfW n-• C""ln 11 c ... -11 11 Dt1fll Mel"'*' I 11•11t1111 ,,.. ' •~1trt1i-1 ,..,. •1111wu 11 Mffft<-II Allll L...,_. I) -.... • St 7" I DA.IL v PILOT College Pacf Awa'rded ·~ Bik;er Cited ' For Hu.Dog . _,_Sc¢.dleback Trustees Pick L~r.(l[)'.;~~·. · , JWi:==..~~- -; .. ,1 1 • • • • _ -· --.... mhnfdii'l coUrtJCt~ ba;car .. 1lie _,.ct for co111lnlctlon of Sad· m!Won. 'll>o 12 bldl wbmltt.d by am-ar•d!nl. W, -it llld .,,,_,, •ioft !1od ·• ;'unule l.ad" on !iJs , dleback Collegt'a first p e rm1n e nt trlldOr1rat1ubl&llufl.t9mUlloa. • u.ted ~y ·ancj 1~.crtJdlll .,. .~et" ·: buildlnt Monday was 1wardl!d to the In ••trdint the contract to Pl:A wl.thtd to au~UI~ tbe.Ulne &tred. low .,When MUltr,'. a Los Angeles P&A Coostruclion Co mpany by college: C:On.structlon. the truatff.I ordered com-blddtrs for the work. engineer, goes to trial Aug, 23. he .tru5teet. piny offic ials to settlt a dlspute which However, J . Garret Ma!Onry, one of will not only try to vindicate The Torrance-based finn submiti.e'd a has arisen among !eYeral <ll the job's the firm s which would havt been remov-him.self, but his pet, Red Dog. low bid of $3,171.000 to build the library-sub-contractors. ed fro m the job. protested the substitu. The unsafe load. accordlng to the classroom co mplex at the Mission Viejo Although tht sealed bids and list of sub-tion of Harvey Nadig Masonry, collt'ge Catifomia Highway Patrol citation campus. The ~pipany wlll begin griding conlractors were submitted Thursd11y. prtaldent F'red Bremer told t.rustee:s. WAS Jl.iiller '.s large mongrel. The the site Au.a:. 10 and the concrete building P&A informed college offidala Monday a Dr. Bremer said county legal counsel ticket read: "Dog standing on hind should be completed by late 1972. mistake bad betn made in I.he ll!ting of had been consulted and said such a legs wit h front paws on rid er·s School officials had earlier estimatM three of the sub-contractors. changt could only be made with a public shoulders {motorcycle)." the cost of the facility to be about $3.5 The companies P&A had hired to do the hearing since a protest had been filed . Miller said it was !rut , the dog The trustees then adjourned to an ex-ha5 been riding on his motorcycle $600,000 Valencia Crop Pending Santa Fe Strike Pe1·ils County's Oranges By TERRY COVILLE Of Iii• Dill~ PUii Iliff If Santa Fe Railroad workers strike Saturday a $600,000 Valencia orange crtJp won't be plucked from Orange County trees and several hundred plcker1 and packing hoUle workerg will he idled. ac· a>rdil!I to county grtJwers. Tht atrlke will nearly paralyze Orange County growers who supply about IO per· 2 Bandits Pluck Chicken Stand's $400 in Receipts Hll!Sein Umar and David Kannerzelt were fryinc C.ol. Sanders' chicken Mon- day in Wutminster and Costa Mesa rtspectively, when two band.ii..!! 11untered ln and plurked the day's receipts the old· fashioned wa y. One <lf the bandits had an antique cap. and-ball pistol used in both of the 1Uckups, which nette-d about $400, police in the two c!Ues said. Investigators said the bandits first entered the Kentucky Fried Chickeo shop at 1051 Westminster Ave., where Umar wu on duty. The auistant manager was forced to hand over about $200 In the 11 :30 a.m. holdu,. ~ ba!ltllll eettapef with the loo~ ln 1 chicken bucket. Police were still writing rtport~ of th1t robborY •I LJO f.m.. wt>en the ~ braz:fnly pt!!hed pdt the cDunter at Harbor Blvd., Costa Mtsa, where Kan- nen:elt waa cooking chicken. Ordtring him to open the safe, the gun- men, 23 to 24 years old and both 11.J:- . foote-rs. took $186. Ripping the telephone off the wall -11 thay had 1l!o done in Westminster -the ·young dt!peradots fled across ntarby ·warehouse Road, according to witnt1:w. Dttectivea aa ld Kannerult told them the antique pistol, with 1 five-inch barrel .af lara:e bort, looked clean and quite capable of being fired. J\'liss Teen Contest Forms Now Available Entry blanks i re now 11v1ilable for the Mias California Teen c:nnttst. Forms are available at tht California-Teen hesd· qu.aITTra, 2.330 N. Tustin Ave .• Santa Ana. All girls from 13-17 years of age 11re e.liglble to enter. Contest fina\lsl..!I will be seitt:ted from their complet«I entry forms and atl1ched snap shots . ctnt <lf Galiforn ia's Valencia orange crop. Oranges represent the only major crnp. currently shipped from the county, growers said. "We can leavt oranges on the trees for a week or two and <lnlY lose a ftw ," says William J. Williama, vice prtsident of the Irvine Company agricultural division, largtst grower in the county. ''But we won't hire anyont to pick, or pack. The strike won't hurt the Irvine Company much. but it will put a Jot of people out of v.·ork." Santa Fe handles nearly JOO pe rcent or Orange County's shipping. If ra il workers strikt S1.turday. 1s t1pected. the railroad will mitke Wednesday the last day frult can be shipped oot of the county. All county or1nge crop~ go through Sunkist which h11 two e1change1, the Orange County Fruit E1changt in Orange and the Placentia Orange C.ounty EI· chan1e in Placentia. Between the two they ship an 1verage of 150 freight car loads of oranges each week. "We might try using trucks, but there won't be ntarly tnough trucks to ktep up our current level," Floyd Wildermuth. manager of lht Placentia Exchange, .said. "Two of our growtrs havt already stopped picking. The others keep asking what it going to happen." Wildermuth saJd, "The probltm is wt haven't yet been notlfled by Santa Ye that there will bl! a strikt. Everything ls still up in the air for us." Southern Paclffe Rallm1d workers went on strike last Saturday, paralyzing all crops in Northern Calllornta . "SOft ff\lilli are hu~ mosti Thty·~ lost compleltly. Oranges can w1it awhile, but evtryone ls afftcted,'1 Williama e1· plained. WU1l1m1 s1id tht Southern Pacific lint. now on strikt, handles about 60 percent of all perlahablts out of California, but the Santa Fe line handles all of Orangt Coun· ty's crops. Wildermuth said that tven If Santa Fe doesn't go on 1trlke. Orange County would be hurt by the Southern Pacilic .strike because Santa Fe cara would be taken away to h1ul fresh fruit from northern California. "If it comes ," he concluded, "we 'll just try to .shift to trucks. But righl now we don't rtally know what's going to happen, and tb1t's tht worst part.'' Air Wing Completes Last Viet Mission ecutive session to discuss the matter and ror tht past five years wearing a rtturned 40 minutes later. leather flying helmet. goggles and On n:turning, board president Alyn a scarf. Brannon said a resolution had been pass· But Mtller asks, "What a m I ed requiring P&A Construction to either guilty of? Giving Red Dog a ride?1' ~ploy the Garret firm or insure that the protest is withdrawn. P&A con1pany officials present at the meeting offe red no comment in response to the board 's action. lf the grading and tile work ,;ub-contract substitutions are protested prior to midnight tonight, the board will have to hold a public hearing to make the substitutions, Dr. Breme r .said. Consliuction of lhe library-classroom complex at the school has already suf- fered several setbacks, including building design changea to provide fewer windows and delay in spproving the final plans by the state. College <lfficials had o r I g I n a 11 y predicted the building would be ready for occupancy by the beginning of the 1972·73 school year. However, the targel date now is December 1972. Irate Trustee Criticizes Story On Hair Ruling Saddleback Colltge tru!lee Hana Vogel Mond1y voiced dls11pprovaJ of the man· ntr in whic h a state-wide junior colltge newsletttr reported the school 's moat re· cent dress code action. Vogel said the publication, t h e California Junior College Association Newsnotes, was gu ilty of an •·act of omission" in reporting th e recent court decision upholding the college's hair length regulations. The ntwsletter, published in Sacramen- to and dated July 13, t xplai ned tht ruling , Vogel admitted, but failed to re port the boa rd's !Ubsequent action in abolishing the dress code. Vogel asked that the trustees approve wri ting to the editor of th e ntwsletter in- forming him of the error. Tht information printed ln the ne v.'slet- ter was the result of tt news rtleaae sub- mitted to tht publication by Saddleback officia ls. Even though a report of the court decision and the board's action were in the reltase. Vogel said the editor had apparently. ' " p r o b a b 1 y unin· tt ntionally," edited the story for sake of space. Although trustees Pat Backus and Michael Collins said they did not agr~ with Vogel's wish to writ e to the editor. tht board un animously voted to send a letter correcting the mistake. College Chief Sets Bond Plea Saddleback College President Fred H. Bremer will s~ak e~rly in April t1J Le~ure Wnrld voter!> as part nf a C(ln • llnu!ng program \IJ build ~upport for the- collt ge'!\ $24.R mlllion bond is."ue. Circus Show To Go On -In Strike By United Press lnternattonal Thi! nationwidt strike against four railroad s lefl chicke ns faced with starva- tiDn and workers faced with layoffs today but the lions and elephants continued riding 1n style. · The Ringling Bros. Barnum and Bailey Circus v.·as to arrive in Los Angeles today lo open its show tonight. The circus usually travels on its own train, carrying performers, animals and equipment. When the strike hit the Union Pacific. the circus planned to move to the Southern Pacific to make the trip. But the strike spread to the Southern Pacific and the railroad moved on to the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe and still planned to arri ve in time to set up for the show tonight. Other indust ries were not as fortunate as the circus. The strike tod;iy thre;itened lo cause food and fuel shortagts and force the l11yoff of thousands of coal miners and other workers. Farmers in many areas, caught at harvest timt with no way t& ship I.heir produce, were particularly hard hit. One authority warned that 11 prolonged strike could wipe eut the poultry market in the Southeast . The Checkerboard Grain Co. ef St. L<luis. Mo .• R major supplitr of corn to poultry producers in the southeastem Uniltd States. v.·as forced to close Mon- day because of the strike against the Norfolk & Western Railway Co. "The s!rike could wipe out the chicken Industry t'n the Sou theast," said D.R. Walker, Checkerboard manager. "It could ruin the economy of the area." A spokesma n for Holly Farms. one of the nation's largest poultry producers ~aid ll.s 9 million -chicken operation is los '. in~ about $40.000 a day. The loss of grain shi pments from !he Midv.·est also af· fected swine, dairy and beef ca tt le. Food supplies on Midv.·estcrn and Eastern. groce ry shelves were expec1ed to be heavily affected by a prolonged strike. Some food supplies could virtually disap· pear from stores v.·ithin two ~·eeks H the United Transportat ion Union strikes the ~ant~ Fe -:-one o~ six lines the UTU i;.ays 11 v.·d! slnke F'nday if the y,·ork rules stnkt continues. Jl.1ost southwest Virginia coal mines shipping by rail faced shutdowns bt'cause of the !>trike An indu.c.try spokesman said abou1 50 percent of thr mine..-of Island Crrck would be shut dov.'n by t(lday by 1he strike. II the strike continues pa.~t !o- da)'. the ~pokesman said. about half the company 's 1.700 emplnyes would be idled l Massive Search ' -~Still ~s-e·e'}{s· Boy CASPER. Wyo. (UPI ) -Deep in the fores t on Casper Mount1in a sign In a ti ny clearing reads: "Kevin, the clockwa tcher says, 'time to go home.' Wait for mama," At lht foot of the sign ls a toy clock. R~sc~e experts posted the sign Monday hoping ll and the clock mi1Jht lure Ktvin , a 9-ytar-old r:tt!;n\al!y retarded epileptic, out of the woods . The idea came from the child'• schoolteacher at the school for the men. tally retarded. Eleanor Walker. She said in class Kevin was often the clockwa t· cher, and somethini.:; familiar might sna p him <lUl of his pattern of ru nn ing li kt a frightened animal. The boy has successfully eluded thousand!'! of searchers on f oot, horseback, and in helicopters for eight days. Monday night an Alpine rescue team with tracking dogs moved in to an area al dusk where the dogs caught I.he boy's scent. But the search was called off because Da vid Moore, captain of the rescue unit, .said it was "much loo dange rous to keep a man out In this wilderntes after dark." The re.acue team was called to the area by a lady who said she set some pork chops and a toy truck out.side her cab in and checked 30 minutes later to find both missing. Ray Gardner of the Jl,iissouri Slate Police, handler or a tracking dog, pledged to find the young!iler today. "I'm going to walk thi s mountai n until 1 either find this kid or drop." he said. Natrona County Sheriff Bill Estes says the boy has the cunning of a wild animal on the run. "\Vt are no longe r conducting th is search as if we are looking for a lost. frightened boy," Estes aa id, "W~ are conducting this .search as if we are look- ing for a deer.'' The Alpine rescu e team took over the !iearch Monday, one week afte r the boy wandered away from his pa rents during an outing. Moore said the hoy is being kept warm in the near freezing weather at nigh t because he is hyperactive. The child usually hikes nine tranqui\iters a day, but he has had no medicine .since he ran <1v•ay. Moore said lhe boy is swift afoot and "hides v.•here there is jusl no pl1ce to hide." "You might just walk past the kid Ul'I Ttll'l'lltl• ANXIOUS PARENTS TALK Mr. 11nd Mrs. Dy• without ever seeing him," he said. He &aid he thinks the boy will be found alive. Moore is in charge of 19 ex:pe.rts from Colorado seven climbers from Evergreen, eight search and rescue men from the Rocky Mountain Rescue Unit at Boulder and four women from the Colorado Search and Rescue Board in Denver. The tracking dogs' follow scents through the air, and Jl.1oore said they can follow 1 scent indefinitely. They were given sniffs of a yellow wool cap the boy has v.·orn, provided by his mother, Mr1. Phillip Dyl!!. '"If the kid ls within a quarter of a mile, they can go right to him," Moore said. Serw,te Witness Says Bets Firw,nce Rackets \VASHlNGTON (UPI) -A Boston man \\'ho has spent almost all his life with big· time mobster!! testified today that "Tht. Jl.iob" run s organi1.ed crime ln the United Slates. financing i i~ v1?.'~l Qperations !hr(lug h nickel bets placed with corner bookies. The witness. Vincent Charles Teresa. testified about h:s own crooked schemes thal frequently landed him Jn jail -1n- <'lud1ng ~ambhn~ junkeUi tAJ a London club flnre Rs.~nciated with ac!nr George Haft 11nd to casinos in Ji;iitl with the blessings ol the !ale Haltian dict2..tor, A sv.•arthy, hef ty man oow ~e rving a live-year prison term r0r transportation nf stnlen securit ies, Teresa. 42. u·as the. leadoff v.•i!ne.~s a.~ the Senate Permanent lnve~t1gation~ Subcommi\\ee began 1L~ fifth week of hearings en &rganiied crime.. ··There is one big gang that runs crganlzed crime in this cou ntry," Teresi said. "We generally c111I it 'Tht Mob."•• He said the organized underworld is olte.n caned by other name.~ such as "'The Of- fice'' in the Provide.net , R.I., New England headquarters. He said that gambl ing is ''the single most important activity" for organized crime that underwrites all other ope:ra· !Ions v.·orldwide. ''Gambling i::; the standby and the foun- dation." Teresa said. "F'rom 11 comes the corrupt politicians and the policemen. the br!bE"s and the payoffs, and i;ometimes murder. If you C'ould crush gambling. you \\'Ould put the mob out of business. You 'd have them b11ck on the pushcarts as 1t u·11 s in the old days Mi.ss Californ ia Teen for 1971 will be r.tlected Aug. 21 at South Coast Plaza tn Cost• Me.s1 . SAIGON (APl -The US. 7th Alr Force announced today I.hat !ht 460lh Tactical Reconnais.,ance 'Ving flew its last combat mi~ion today and began preparations for its inactivation on Au&. 31. Tht head of thP. Mtssil'ln Viejo C'l"lllf'i!'" iilready has spoken !t'I the Rttlrrd Teacher"s As~ociation of Laguna Ifill~ In outilne the financial needs of the rom- mun ity college. , ____________ _ OIAJiilll COAST DAILY PILOT O•ANG>l: COA$T PUl llSHING COMl'ANY lt•li•'' N. w,,4 p,..1:dtol1 t nd P\lllll"'9r The. SW·man wing is com manded by Col, Dalt L. Flowers of Phoeni1, Ariz., and has .served In fndochln1 for fiv e years. flying reconnalMance missions ovtr North and South Vlt tnam, Laos and Cambodia. It h~ been based 1t Saigon's Tan Son Nbut air base. On Sept. 8. Or. Bremer will i;.peak In mtmhers of several L<lguna Hill!\ 11rganizations in Clubhouse Three in Le isure World. $2.99 CARPETING ? • • • • J•ct t . t utl•'( VIC• ,.,...,.,., •1141 G-r•I MtMf'fr n • ..,,, K••"il l.fUOI' Th•l'ltl A. Mur,hi11• Mllllt l"'O 1"191' C~1rltt M. lo~n lie~••" '· N.11 ~1t1.,.1 MtMtlf'lt 1.~Uen '-I•• .... OffSce 212 F., ••• ""'•llU• M•ili119 ......... : ,_o. ••• '''· •1•1z s.. ca-... Offlc• JOI Nerlti El C1..,i111 ~111, •2•7t O,._. Offlc .. (Mii Mu•· UI Wttl a1y Strlltf H•wjWl•t 111<1'1: JlU Nt"""""' IJ&oj 1vt-' Hlll"llf'll!"" ltM.111 17111 ... ell ._....._ • .., Dfr,11.Y PILOT, WHll ... 'ell ll ~..., fMI H .... Pfwt .. It .... Ill ...... •tll1 Ucefll ~ "y "' ••rtll •It ..... 1w .......... ..,._ H.....,I atfdl. C.t• "'-'• Hlllllilll""' .,_... ,_,.,,., v11i.r. 1111 C-1t/ '""'"-,,,. ., ... ~,(II. ·~ wllll -""'*"' """"' l'rWi.-1 -""'llW ..... , It al a w.1 Mr llrwl, ce.i. "'-· Ttl1,a 1 17141 '4MJ21 Cls:wMl4 Mo«thlat MJ..U71 S. Chm ... A.• I••• 1u1t1r Talapl en ••tMH " ........... A.II 11,11twa111t , ........ ,,.., .... "-"'llM• 1m. ~ eeaw· """'1"'"" C:.....lt'/'-Mii -tfll'lt'I, Ulllttrlfllfll, .. !!Mel l'IW""' .,. ,,......,~"' ...... lfl -· "' ~ wlttMlul ...... 1 ,... .., ... \Ill If t119rflfl\I -· ~ ei. .. """" tllll ,, ........ "'"" •1141 ce.11 Mtu, C.11....,.11, ll*u'i.tllll •1 urt'9r U.H .......,..1y, ., .,_ti at n -11'1111 "'lllterf ... !IMlioM, iUJ .... !I'll'/'• Capistrano. Trustees .Cut $235,000 Out of Budget By PAMELA HALLAN 01 ftll 0.HJ Piii! Sttlt Budiet cut.A amounUnt to ·~ proximately $2.3~,000 were m11de by Trusl.ets of the Capistrano Unified School District Monday, Superintendent Truman Benedirt sul>- milled a list of Items totalling $263,119 but the board reiruitattd one .sptteh therapist, one mulU.ftandlc1pped pro- ITam •ide and ont educationally h11ndJ· capped prop-am aidt. Thty also noted two addlllonJJ to th« budget -carpeting for Crown V11ley and Palisades schools "open" classroom• and an insurance tncre1st . --, "As the bud,el now atlnds, th! t11 for lhe gtner1I fund will rem1tn ex•ctly the: same u It la UUs ye1r," pid Sim Chtca!I, au\stant auperinltndtnt for btl&inea. But ta1'' wlll 1tlll be lncreAMJd even lbough t.ht educ1tlon proiram and 5ehool optr1Uoo will be gettlni no more t.t1 money thin it did l11t yea r. Tht bond lnttrtat I nd redemption 1'.1 and state 5Chool bulldln& f\.IDd rep.1ymtnt wt.II 1llll co up 34 ~nt.s. "We're meeting with Counll Auditor f Vic Heim to see If wt can do 1nything about this," said Truman Benedict "But it's unlikely that we can gel it reduced by more. than a few cent.~." All of lhP. budget cuts v.·ere made from em ployt a other than classroom teachers and I.heir related supplies, capital im· pmvcments, and nther cate ~ones not directly related to the class room . Trustee Georgl! Wh ite que.!\lionrd whether or not the admini.stra\Jon hsd "ht ld the lint" on hiring new e:rnploye11. He noted that only five classl(ied and three ctrtificated employes he.d been sug. gested for deletion and the board had reinslaltd some of these. Benedict answered that the original budget did not contaio ml.J'ly new job posltlona ou~ide the classroom. Tru.!it.ee Donald lnl1 y pra istd tht ad· minlt'itr1tlon tm its efforts amt said thet in his own mind thty had done exactly 1s they wtrt directed. Trwttt f'rtd Ntwhart J r. esk;ed about salary \nc~Ast~. Btncdlct told him If 1ny 11re glvtn lhis ye1r they would come from the $62:6,000 uodiitt ributed reserve fund. ' nit public ht.aring on th e publication budget la t'i('htduled for Aug. 2. Suro we liave it-l:iut, usually wo ,try to convince customers to buy carpet'rng that will complement their homes . Often, in situations where a customer is coveri ng the floor just to sell • house , cheap carpeting may be a liabil ity. In many cases the difference of only • dollar e yard will install • quality of carpeting the! looks twice as well ond will 9 ive much better service. In • nutshell we're not trying to noceuarily be the "CHEAPEST ", (though we often are). but the "BEST!! (Wh ich we al-ys are .) ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave, COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon . Thru Thurt., 9 lo 5:3G--Frl., 9 to 9-Sot., 9:30 to 5 ' j . . -- • ' '' San Cle1uente -~apistraa• YOL. 6'1, NO. 178, 2 SECTION S, 28 PAGES •.=. EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • ' ' - 0 0 ets oon o-a Dana Hills Na1nes New ' Principal Walter J. Spencer of Capistrano Beach hall been named principal of the new Dana Hills High School. · His appointment was announced f.fon· day by Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District. The former principal of r..1arco Forster Junior High in San Juan Capistrano has ~erved seven years as a principal in the school district and four years as an as- Ristant principal. Before that he was a teacher, counselor, and coach. Spencer, 47, is married and has three children. He re sides at 2674.8 Calle Maria, Capistrano Beach. He has a bachelor's degree from UCLA and a master's degree from California State College, Long Beach. He also has 20 units toward hls doctorate at University of Southern Callfornia. Spencer has been active in community affairs for many years, serving as an elder at the San Juan Capistrano Corn· munity Presbyterian Church, past presi- dent of the San Juan Rotary Club. and a PTA honorary life member. He has also &erved in f i II e edUCBlion-orienled organiiatiol'ls and was chairman of a suc· ccs.,fuJ community erf(U't to obtain lighls (Dr Buchheim Field in San Juan. The new principel will begin hls rlul.ic~ Sept. 1 The new campus is expected to open in Septemhcr of 1972. Li ce nse Grace Period Ending, 50% Penalty Persons and businesses requiring a city business license in San Clemente have lts.s than a week left in their grace per iod before penalties are assessed, city staff 1aid toda y. Licenses expire each year on July 1 and a month-lon.r: grace period is 1tandard, city officials said. After the deadline, a !'IO·percent penalty assessment accompanies the issuance or 11 city license said inspector George Jackson. While the deadline is Saturday. City llall will be open only up to 5 p.m. Friday. Jnckson waroed last.minute licensr:. purchasers that city hiill will not open on lhe official deadline day. Father Sues For Son's I n jury ' 1A San Clemente man wants $10,000 in damages from two local property owners fbt injurie.!I suffered by his cighl·}·car-o!d 8'0ii four years ago on a vacant lot al Junipero Stdeel and El Camino Real. Kenneth Jones, 13"W. Ramona, blames Toiva H. and Reta H.anla for the in- jurle.!1 suffered by hiti son, Mark. on April ZS, 1967, and states in hls Orange County Stiperior Court action that the old autos 11.nd miscellaneous debris piled on the Jot were attractive to local youngsters. Jones states that some of the "c· cumulated debris fell on h,ls son while the boy was playing on the unfenced proper· ,,. Seets' Sue City In Slide Case ·A San Clemente couple wants $45,000 from the city for damage done to their hmne by what they claim in ao Oran1e Cauaty Superior Court lawsuit i 1 negligent grading and 1<>11 testing. Eugene and Madelyn Seets, 717 Avenida Columbo. state that damage to the Mme was first noticed in 1966 and land~lides since that time have made the rtsl~ai dangerous and unfil for llabila· lion. , They also blame the city for what they claim wa.!I the faulty installation of se..wers 11nd storm '1r11lns In the are11. Negligence in that respect has created 1 r,ea!lh hal.ird. the couple claims • -- Gan. Ross Dwya r Gen. Ross Dwyer Wins Ne,v Star The Commanding general of the Camp Pendleton-based !st Marine Division won promotion to Major General by President I\'ixon this week. Gen. 1\oss Dwyer won the promotion with six other brigadier generals, ac· cording to an announcement from the \-\'hite House. The veteran of World \Var II, Korea snd Vietnam assumed command of the !st Division April 30 when the unit returned from Vietnam duty. It was honored at that time by a pcr~onal visit and review by President Nixon . The Co m m a n d er·in·Chicf also presented the Unit Citation to lhe Division at the elaborate rites. O\\·yer, 1 J\.iarine since ·l941, won pro- motion l.o brigadier in 1968. His first com· mand at Camp Pendleton was 11f the 5th Division starting in August of 1969 • Camp P endleton Marine Sentry Sl1ot to Death Camp PendJc1on authorities lodav divulged that a young J\.1arine sentry wa'S shot to death wh ile nn duty last Sunday afternoon and that another Leatherneck from the same unit 1s being held Jn the incident. Base spokesmen said !he d c ad sl:'rviccman w;:is Pfc. John A. Hacker . !9, OJ Perryville. J\.io. Hacker, authorities said, was dead on arrival at lhe base hospital at about 5 p.m. Sunday. He had been shot once in the chest with an 1\.1-14 rifle. Authorities detained 17-year-0ld Pfc. .John V. Shute, hometown not im· mediately available, in lhe incident. .Spokesmen would not characterize the role Shute assertcdly had in the shooting, hut did say he has been ordered under "house arresl" and has been afforded a \awyer\during the followup probe. Both young men had been attached to the Student Company of the Schools Bal· talion at the base. Reports elsewhere today said lhe shooting was the third this year involving sentries at the large base. Police Sink Teeth in Case 11 was lhe sort of case a pertol· n1an ca n really sink his rceth into ... after all, it involved an elderly San Clen\ente man 's dentures, worth I.heh" weight in gold . The officer had been cruising along Avenida Granada late Mon· day evening when an angry senior citizen hailed him. The man said another elderlv gentleman, also angry, had juSt kicked a dent in his car, The officer stopped and had a chat with the angry kicker. Why did he damage the other man's car? "I dropped my false lttlh in the street and he ran over them ," he told the officer. After a litlle more talk. tempers cooled and each man went home. Today, one will probably seek repairs at a loca l body shop. The other is visiting his dentist. Rattler Bites Young Mexican At State Parl{ By JOHN VALTERZA O! !ht O.!ly 1'1111 Stitt ·A 21.ynr~ld MO:'JC~"' national wu recovering tod11y aftei-a predawn sn akebite ordeal at San Onofre Bluffs St.ate Park which nearly look his life. Juan Perer.. whose hometown in Mexicn was not immediately determined. was found in convulsions al about 3 a.m. to- day by concession stand employcs al the recently opened state park south of &an Clemente. Perez: had been bitten by a rattlesnake sometime during the dark hours as he walked northward along the bluffs. ap- parently evading Border Patrol officers at thC Onofre checkpoint. Rangers &aid they notified p11lrolmen and San Clemente authorities for assistance after the emergency call. Jn San Clemente. police attempted to call a local ambulance service. but no one ansv.·ered the phone. they said. Moments later they dis patched Fireman Sheldon Schmitt in a city slCltion wagon to the park south of the city limits. Perez. lncaJ spokesmen said. was taken to South Coast Community J10l'lp ital for emergency treatment. then transferred lo Orang(' County Medical Center. Nurses there ~aid th is morning that he was 1n salisfaclory condition after his bout "'ilh the viper. The snakebite was the firsl reported ~ince public use began 111 the rugged, brush.covered hluffs which loom over sandy beaches below. State Park rangers said. ho\\1eve r. that several 1ightings of large, healthy rat- tlesnakes have been reported since the park opened for the first time during the Independence Day wetkend. "The brush is ideal ror them down there," said one ranger. "and the food is plentiful. We warn visitors to !he park lo be e\'tremely careful, especially when it"s dark," 1'he park has traditionally been the route for aliens migrating northward on foot, affording concealment from Border Patrolmen, In recent months one man leading 11 group of immigrant... along the blufftop11 In the same vicinlty fell 1:0 his death into a canyon. Utl tal ...... ' ' " Blff J<1'1~st · .. ·:· : .,, " Nieol~tte lifµnes·Walker waves after arrival Mon day at Newport. R.r. She is the fust woman to make a solo crossing of the Atlantic Ocean non·stop~ Parl{ on F1·eeway Surplus Site Will Be Con sidered San Clemente planning commigsioners Wednesday w!ll take up the latest aspecls of a Klwanis Club proposal to develop surplus Freeway property into a landscaped park. The proposal by the local service grouri has won in.principle approval from city counclln1en. but now must await state ac· tion declaring the small parcel of acreage on Avenida Cordoba surplus property. Planning commissioners will hc<1r " st::iff recommendation on the matter at their Wednesday meeting. The land lies along the San Dirgo Freeway wher,e Kiwanians propose to use club funds and donated manpower and materials to plant lhe area and inst<11\ a telescope and olher fixtures to transform the land into a view park. In C1'.lnlrasl to a meeting two 'A"eeks ago. \Vednesday 's commission has a light agenda with no public hearings. Almost all items arr under lhe un· finished business category and include; -A referral from the city council on a possible amendment to the city zoning ordinance c.'Overing the keeping of pigeons in residential areas. \ -A policy statement lfrlthc concept o! developing own·your-0wn apartments, known as statutory condominium developments. -Evaluallon of a parking C1'.lmmission report on proposals to set architectural controls on landscaping ol off-street parking areas. ' -~urther ~onslderation or revising parktng requirements covering in·the- bank garages. San Juan Seeks Co urt Ouster Of 5 F amilies A hearing into charges by the city of San Juan Capistrano that five familie:s are defying orders l.o leave the con· demn~ Brown's Labor Camp has been ~cheduled for Aug. 17 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge J . E.T. ''Ned" Rutter has been asked by the city to confirm the eviction demand filed against property owners Philip J. Keresy and Lillian Zaenglein and order the camp closed. T"he property at :us-11 Well Site Road is leased by WiJ. liam T. Reid . The city claims In Its lawsu.Jt that the property owners were ordered last Nov. 4 to close •down the property after health department officials C'Ondemned the run- down site as unhealthy and unsafe. The remaining tenants were advised by the city that they must vacate by April 19. First School to Be Razed Judge Rutte.r ha:s been asked to order eviction. demolition or all tiul.ldings and the fillptg or cesspool11 and seepage pits on the site. It has been 11tated by the defendants that three ot the five families still living at the labor camp will soon be vacatlng the area. De1nolition Crews Will Level Las Palmas Campus " Demolition cmws will arrive early ' Wedn esday 11flernoon to tear San Clemente·s plcture:11que firgt school to tht ground. The dcmolltlon or the La11 Palma11 School campul' had been scheduled to begin Monday, but delays forced the starting date to be pushed ahead two dayg . The school. whk:ll suffers from 1 sag- i:tlng roof whirh defies repair, was the rirst c11mpus to serve youngsters In the af'l!;a after San Clemente began in \he late 211< When it topples, It will be the gecnnd • local landmark to fall under 'the flcials decklcd on the demollUon sevtraJ wri!cker'i ball this year. month11 11go "hen it· waa learned that Last month San Clemente'' Community Clubhovse, ruined by fire, collapsed In ._ roofs continued to sag despite the earlier matter of hours •nd dcroolitlon crew' removal of tons of red ceramic We and completed tbelr work In 11 1loglt cement. weekend . The gcbool's audltorlum had been.~· Both buildings were built In the heavy -~ for 1W~ ·uae, for several yaars Spanish tradition. becaUY ol e1rthquilke danger&.' Las .Palmas, which face11 Old Pia~'• The •ltdltorlum, which for )'tlll'l •Wall P8rk. will be replaced with a new school . tbe, 101Qe ot~jOclal and theatric.el events facility following II more modem Span1sh in life' community, in rectnl years has motif. served 1s a book •nd aupplle1 warehouse. The cluhhou!le wl11 be replaced Ill a Officials said the newer segment or the similar f11shion . campus, where kinderaarten cl1sses Capistrano Unified School Dl11trlct of-meet1 will not be razed. 1/ ... .. Pendleton.'Pay : Won'f ne Early ¥1l1'1M Corps spckesmcn this week resnlnd~ SOutb CoasJ art.a 'Marine depe~nt1 that news ac:counll 're:por,tlng that pa}' and allotnent checks would .be two W6t~& earl"y this month ~ not apply ltl Ptndlcton·based per501Ule1. An """8st.ern-bRsed i:llabunli\g o.tflce fOr the Mulne, Corps, lss:ued the , In· nouncemtnt rcccnUy. but the two-'!Veek· early concept will 11pply only to IOtne Eastern JnstallatiOlll. 1 Camp Pendleton checks, prepared on b11&e end at a Kan11a1 CJty, Mo .. «nter. will be dlsbllrsed at tht reiuler time. &poktsmen uid. Tod•y's ~al N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS ea Vital Test Clears .Way For Moon SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo 1s·s astronauts successfully te.sted their main rocket engine today at 11 :16 A.M. PDT. The brief firing apparently meant they can proceed with a moon landing despite a short circuit problem. Astronauts Da vid R. Scott, Alfred M. Worden and James B. Irwin were directed to attempt to rire a brief burst from the engine to make a minor course change. Flight director Glynn S. Lunney said there were about two chances out or three the rocket would work using makeshift control procedUl"'l!;S, and clear the way for the lunar landing. The problem posed no danger to the astronauts. Even if the moon landing was called off, they would be able to return safely to earth. The astronauts awoke at 11 a.m. EDT tod ay after a long night's sleep and were told of the special test. Apollo 15 was nearly halfway to the moon at the time. Ground communicator Joseph A!lel'I told the astronauts about the latest think- ing on the problem . He said the Apollo IS backup commander on the ground, Richard S. Gordon. rehearsed the special test procedures before the instruct.Ions were radioed up to the spacemen. The ·short developed· a ..few ·houri after launch Monday in one haU of the system used to control the engine. The astronauts were directed to attempt to blast only the faulty part of the system. The problem. signaled by a Dickering instrument panel checklight -could have come from one of three possibilities - !he worst of which would wash out the moon landing. The object or the engine test was to plnooint the trouble. "We're going to try to re-create the problem.'' Lunney said in a late morning news briefing. "If ynu push the circuil breaker and you don't get a burn, then you've got a problem ." In the worst situation, officials 11ald, circuit breakers controlling one of two Identical valve sys tems would be knocked out. That would mean there would be no backup lo the remaining valve system. and in that case. Apollo 15 would not be permitted lo carry out the landing. The reasoning was that when the astronal!!s go into lunar orbit Thur.!lday, space officials wan t to make certain they have two alternatives for blasting out and returning to earth. The special test was ordered inslead of waiting until 4:29 p.m. EDT, when an Pngine firing had been previously set to correct the spaceship's path to the moon. Engineers here and at North American Rockwell 's plant in Downey, worked throughout the night to duplicate the pro- blem ~and thus find its solution. The short circuit was the only difficulty encountered during the first 24 hours of the journey to the base of twc.-to-three mile high mountains on the moon ln search for clues to Its creation. "The analysis to date seems to indicate that we probably have an engine that wUI work oktty. or can be made to work okay,'' flight director Milton Windler said. The astronaut.s wrestled with the pro- hlem on and off J\.1onday afternoon and finally ended their ftrst long day in space at 12:14 a:m. EDT today. Before going to sleep. ground communicator Karl C. Heinze asked the space flyers how the view was, wilh earth 75,000 miles away. Orange Cout Weather 1tiore of that niee beach weather ill in store 11aln for the Orange COast harbor area. The ~tf1Pe.r~­ ture1 should again reach tnto tho pleasant 70'.s. ,,. INSIDE TODAY • Tht Ntdr EG.$t iJ in tu~oll. Set storu. Ulu.straiion, Poot 4. <•11~~1• • 0.Ckl!ll u, • Cl .. tlfltf n.it c.mk.1 ,. e,.. .. ..,., 1• Dl•Jll N-.tk.M. • 1'1 .. 11•1 "• • L":,~-,~ Hint<-u A~~ L........ lJ Mt.i.. , .. ,. •• " :· ' M11h1.1I l'lllMh 11 lotal1'1!al '""'' ; Oral!N ,_,., I ,,. .... ,,.,. ,, • ...,,. ~U.11 S"kll: ...... ,_.,. 1•11 T11Mi.... lt , 'n!Mftf'\ .. ,. w-. W-•t N-lt.H Wwlrf..... • __ ..,J_· ·- I : DAIL y PILOT College Pact Awarded ' . :.Saddleback Trustees Pick Librar.y Bid -•• t.... ....... ...__ -n.e COl!ltlcl for eonolructloo or Sad-mll1!oo. 'Ille lJ bldl 111bmltlod by -.,.~, t!lo ~k .,,,1, -...... dleback C.Ollt1e 'g first permanent tradon ran u blab u •t.• mHUOo. . lla:ted lfld. compuiJ ottldals bulldln& Mcnday was award~ to lhe InT 1wardinf the contr1et to PfiA tO llU.betf"1W •thrthrte mmd tow Pi.A Cmstn.lction Company by college Conatruetlon, the trusteu ordered ciim-bidders for the work. tnuiteea. pany officials to settle 1 dtapute which However, J . Garret MaMlnry. one of The TOlTanct·based firm submitted 1 has arisen among several at the job's lhe firma which would have been remov- low bid of $3,171,000 to build tht library. sub-eontracl.Ors. ed from the job, protested the substltu- cluaroom complex at lhe Mission Viejo Although lhe sealed bids and list of aulr lion of Harvey Nadig Masonry, college campus. The company will hett:in grading contractors were submitted Thursday, president F'red Bremer told trustees. the lite Aug. 10 and the concrete building P&A informed college officials Monday a Dr. Bremer said county legal counSfl abould be completed by late 1972. mistake had been made in the !!sting of had been consulted and said such a School offlciala had earlier esti mated three of the sub-contractors. change could only be made wilh a public tht cost of the f1cWty to be 1bout $3.$ The companlea P&A had hlred to do the hl!'arlng since a prolest had been filed. The trust~s then adjourned lo 11n e1- $600,000 V ole1acla Crop Pending Santa Fe Strike • Perils County's Oranges By TERRY COVILLE If Santa Fe Railroad workers strike Saturday a $600,000 Valen cia orange crop won't be plucked from Orange County trees and 1everal hundred pidcers and packin; house workers will be idled, ac- oording to county growers. The strike will nearly paralyze Orange County growers who supply about 10 per· 2 Bandits Pluck Chicken Stand's $400 in Receipts Hussein Umar and David Kannerzelt were frying Col. S11nders' chicken Mon- day In Westmlnster and Cost.a Mesa rt1pectlvely. when two b11t1dlts sauntered tn and plucked the day 's receipts the old· fashioned way. One: of the bandit.s had an antique cap- and-ball pistol used in both or the 1ticku ps, which netted about WXl. polict: in the two cities said. Inveatiaators said the bandits firs t erit.emi the Kentucky Fried Chicken shop at 7051 Westminster Ave., where Umar wu on duty. The assistant manager was foretd to hand over about $2:00 in the 11 :30 a.m. holdup. The band.ii.ti eacsped with the loot 1n a chicken bucket. Police were still writing reports of that robbery at l:JO p.m., when the pair bruenly pushed past the counter at 2900 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa. where Kan- ne.nett was cooking chicken. Orderiq him to open the safe, the gun- men, 2.1 to 24 years old and both siI· footers, took $186. Ripping the telephone off lhe wall -as they had also done in Westminster -the young desperadoes ned across nearby Wauhouse Road , according to witnesses. Dttect.ives said Kannerzelt told them the antique pistol, with a five-inch barrel of laree bore, looked clean and quite capable of being fired . Miss T een Contest Forms Now Available Entry blanks are now available for th e Miss California Tee n C1:1ntest. Form& are available at the Calilornla-Tttn head- quarters. 2.180 N. Tustin Ave.. S11nta An11. All girls from 13-17 years or age are eli gible to en~r. c.ontest finalis~ wHI be selected from their completed entry forms and attached sn ap shots. Miss C&lifornia Teen for 1971 1,•;i!l be Wected Aug. 21 Ill South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. OU.Na.I COA$T DAILY PILOl OMNG~ COA$T ,U.lls.HINQ. COM,ANY Jl•1"•f N. "'••d f"••-t Ind l'\l&t!tfllf" cent of California's Valencia orange crop. Oranges represent the only major crop currently shipped from the county, irowers said. "We can leave oranges on the tree.1 for a week or two and only lose a few." 11ays William J . Williams, vice president of the Irvine O>mpany agricultu ral division. largest grower in the county. "But we won't hire anyone t.o pick. or pack. The strike won't hurt the Irvine Company much. but It will put a lot of people out of work.'' Santa Fe hand1es nearly 100 percent of Orange County's shipping. If rail workers strike Saturday, as expec~. the railroad will make. Wednesday the last day fruit can be shipped out of the county. All county orange crops go throu(h Sunklst which has two exchanres, the Orange County Fruit Exchange in Orange and the Placentia Orange County Ex· change In Placentia. Between the two they ship an average of 150 rreij:hl car loads of oranges each wuk. "We might try using truck1, but there won 't be nearly enough trucks to kee p up our current level," Floyd Wildermuth, manager of the Placentia Exchange, Ii.id. "Two of our growers have already stopped picking. The others keep asking what It going to happen ," Wildermuth said. "The problem is we haven't yet been notified by Sant.a Fe that there will be a. strike. Everything is 1till up In the air for us." southern Pacific Rallroad workers went on strike last Saturday. paralyzing all crops in Northem Cal ifornia. "Soft fruits are hurt most. 'They're lost completely. Oranges can wait awhile, but everyone is affected," Williams ex- plained. Williams said the Southern Pacific line. now on strike, handles about 60 percent of all perishable& out of California, but the Santa Fe line handles a.II of Orange Coun- ty's crops . \Vildermuth sllid that even if Santa Fe doesn't go on strike. Orange County would be hurt by the Southern Pacific strike bec1use Santa Fe cars would be t.aken awa y to haul fresh fruit from northern California . "If it comes." he concludM, "we'll jusl try to shift kl trucks. Bul right now we don't really know what'!. golna to h11ppen. and that's the worst part.'' Air Wing Com pl etes Last Viet Mission SAJGON r AP l -The US 7th Alr Force announced t.oday tha!, th" 460th Tactical Reconnais..~ance Wing Flew i\11 last combat missinn today and beiz;in preparations for its inactivation on A-ug. 31 The 850-man wing l!i comm an ded by Col. Dale L. Flowers of PhOf'nix. Ariz., and has served in Indochina for five years. flying reconnais.c;ance mission11 over North and South Vietnam. Lao!. and Cambodia. It has been ba!ed at Saigon's Tan Son Nbut air base. eeutive session to disc uss the matt.er an d returned 40 minutes la!er On returning, board president A!yn Brannon said a resoluuon h11d been pass- ed requiring P&A Construction to either employ the Gs~ret firm or insure that the prot.est is withdrawn. P&A company officials present at the meeting offered no co mment in response: to the board 's action. If the grading and tile work sub-contract sub.stitutions are protested prior lo midnight tonight, the board will have to hold a public hearing to make the substitutions, Dr. Bremer said. Construction of the llbrary-cl11ssroom complex at the school has already sur- fered several setbacks, including building design changes to provide fewer windows and delay in approving the final plans by the state. Co llege officials had or I g ! n a 11 y predicted the building would be ready for occupancy by the beginning of the 1972·73 school year. Howe ver, the target date now is December 1972. Irate Trustee Criticizes Stor y ·On Hair Ruling Saddleback College trustee Hans Vogel Monday voiced disapproval of the man· ner in wh ich a state-wide junior college newsletter reported the school's most re· cent dress code action. Vogel said the publication, I h e California Junior College Association Newsnotes, was guilty of an "act of omission " In reporting the recent court decision upholding the college's ha ir length regulations. The newsletter, published In Sacramen· to and dsted July 13, e,;:plained the rulln11t. Vogt:l admitted, but failed to report the board"s subsequent 11ction in abolishing the. dress codt:. Vogel asked that the trustees approve writing lo the editor of the newsletter in- forming him of the error. The inform ation printed In th e newslet· ter was the result of a news release suh- mltled lo the puh!i cation by Saddleback officials. Even though a report of the court decision 8Jld the board's action were \n the release, Vogel !!Aid the editor had 11pparenlly. '" prob ab l y unin· tenliona11y," cdiLed the story For s11ke or space. Although trustees Pat Backus and Michael Collins said they did not agree with Vogel"s wish to wrile tn the editor. the board unanimously voted to send a letter correcting the mistake. College Chief Sets Bo nd Plea Saddlebark College President Yrttl H. Bremrr will spe.ak e11r ly in Apnl !n Lei.sure World voters RS part nf 11 cnn · tlnui ng pro,!iir:im In build support for the collegt:"s $24.8 mil!l nn hond issur The he11d nl the Mission Vlein cnlle~" already h11s spoken 11:1 the Ritired \e;icher's Association ~f Laguna H1!1s tn outi\nl!' the financial nttds of the Cl'.lm· munity cn11ege . On Sept. 8, Dr Brt:mer "'111 speak to membtrs llf seve:ral LaJUna Hills erganizalion.s in Clubhouse Three In Ltisure World. J 1c\' JI. Curley VI(• ......... ,,, I nd Gtroirtl ,,,,.,..... 1\1'"1' K11vil ldllW ThoN t • A. Murpl!i11• MtntOlng lldlti!N' Q1rJ1~ M. ltot Jl!cl.1r!I '· Nill AMlttt.W Mtfltl"'9 I"~ Capistrano. Trustees Cut $235,000 Out of Budget T ~ .... Offld J!l Ftrtll Avt ftVI M1111~1 •ddr1u : P.O. lo••••. t l•ll s..c ....... OMu JOI N1rfh El C1'"i"1 R11 I, t1•12 Otht-OHie• Ce1lt Mest • UD Wn t It,. ITl'ft'f l>l.w~ •Mell: mi ,.,.,.,_, •eu 1vu • Hl.lfttl1111t1111 ""'"; 11171 httll touiwt .-4 DAl\.V 'II.OT, wllfl '""'dt It ~ 11>1 1>1-""''· II ...,..ii.Moil A lly 11~ ._.. ..., .. ....,..,. t9Jlltflt f9r ~ hlcll. ~ &wd>. C.tt ~t. H1111tlltlt!1111 l>Md'I. ,._,,111 V1llly. SM C.......,ltf , .... ,,_ ............. ~.cl< ....... -- rllfillllll 11:11 ....... "rlf'ICJ•I trlrtti.., ""' Ill *' Ill .,... .. 'f , .... ,. Glek ,.,,..., T • 1'111 1714 ) 64Jo4JJ1 Cl 'fh4I M•ff1 ... MJ·Mfl S.. C' I k Al laf 11 ... 11: Tela;I ·1 4tJ..+llt • LepiM ..... Al ..... &ILi T•pa111 4t4-ffU •CIPrrlf'll. 1'11, o...... Calt!' '""""""""' ~. NI -llllO'IM._Q !ltutl,..I...,, ........ IN"9<" ... 14,,...,1---i'lt ,,....loo ,,,,.., .. ~.. wtlNul ..-ci.1 .... ....... ~,-·. ..... ~-... i.tf M IO 1! H.-,..t 11~ 1f1f ~11 M.,., C..llf0ntl1 S.U-C•lttlllll h' u ""' '' u -~1111y1 av (1'11111 11.11 _,.,.,, """ll•rv 4nt1,..11&n,, l1 n -111•r. - By PAMELA HALLAN Of IM Oll!f ,Ill! 11•" Bud1et cul.5 amounting l o ap- proxim1tel y $2.3$,000 were made by Tru111t.t.5 of lhe Capistrano Unified School District Monday. Superintendent Truman Benedict !ub- mllttd a list of items totalling $263 ,219 but the board reln..~tated one •peech theri:ipi5l, one multi-h1nd!capped p!'O- gram aide and one eilucatlonally h1nd i- capf)e'd program akle. They alM noted twn addlUons IA:I lhe budget -carpeting ror Crown Valley .11nd Palisades school s "open" classrooms and a.n insurance intre1se. "As the budget now st.and1, the tax for the gencr1I fund will rtm1in eJacUy the same as ii is this ye1r." •lid Sim Chic1s. wl.!t.a.nt wpertntendtnt for business. But tares wlll 1t!U ht lncrta!!e<I even though the ed uc-sUnn p-ogram 11nd achoo! ope:ration will be aettlng no more lax money thin It dld last yeitr. The bond Interest 11nd redf!mptlon llx and st11te school bulldlng fund repayment will 5till go up 34 ctnt.s. '"We're meeling wlth County Auditor Vic Heim to see I( we c1n do anything ~bout this." said Truman Benediet. "But it's unlikt.ly that Y•e can gel it redu~d by more than a few ce:nts." All nr the budget cut.s were made rrom employes other thao classroom te11chers 11nd !heir related supplies. capital im- provemenL~. and other categorie! not directly related to the: clAssroom Tru!ilee George White que!ltioned whethcr or not the admini~lration had '"held the line " on hiring new employes. He noted that only nve classified and three cettificated employe., had been sug- gested for deletion and the board had reinstated some of lht:se. Benedict answered lhst the origln1d budget did not C1:1ntain many new job posltion.~ out.side the claSl!room. Trustee Donald I nh1y praised the ad· mini11tration on its effort! and 11id that in his own mind they ht1d done exactly as they were di rected. Trust"e Fred Newhart Jr. 11iiked aboul s11111ry increo!li::ts. Btnedict told him U 11ny 11re given lhi~ year they woold come from lhr $626,000 undistributed reserve fund. The public hearing on the publlc1tlon btidp:t! 1~ srhtduled for Au.a. 2. Lure1 Vied Biker Clwd For ii~' Do g Massive Search ALHAMBRA ( UPIJ John Mill« pl-......... l4lmdoY In munlelpol -Uo • ....... bi car- ried an •'llnMft 10ad" on his motor<y~. When Miller, a Los Angeles englneer, goes lo trial Aug. 23, he wlll not only try to vindicate himself, but his pet, Red Dog. Still ' Seeks' ltoy The unsafe load, accrirding to the California Highway Patrol cltatlnn was Miller's large mongrel. The ticket read . "l)og standing on hind legs with rront paws on rider's shoulders 1motorcycle 1." Miller said ll was true. lhe dog h.11s been riding on his motorcycle for the past (Ive year~ wearing a leather nying helmet. goggles and a scarf. But ~11ller ask~. ··What am I guilty of? Giving Red Dog ll ride ?'' Circus Show To Go On -In Strike By United Press lnternationaJ The nationwide strike against four railroads left chickens faced with starva- 1.Jon and workers fa ced with layoffs today but the lions and elephants continued riding in style. The Ringling Bros. Barnum and Bailey Circus was to arrive 1n Los Angeles today (.(I open its show tonight. The circus usually travels on its own train. carrying performers. animals and equipment. When the strike hit the Union Pacif ic, the circus planned to move to the Southern Paci fic to make the trip, But the strike spread to the Southern Pacifi c and the r;iilroad moved on tn the Atch ison, Topeka nnd Santa Fe and still planned to arrive in time to set up for the 1;hov.• ton ight. Other industries were not as fortunate as the circus. The strike today threatened ff'! cause food and fuel short.ages and for ce the layoff of thousands of coal miner! and other workers. Farmers in many areas, caught at harvest time with no way 1e ship !heir produce. were particularly hard hit One authority warned that a prolon~ed strike could ·wipe oul the ~ttry market in !he Southea.~t CASPE R, Wyo. fUPI) -Deep in I.he fores! on Ca!per Mount•ln a sign in a tiny cle11rlng reads . .. Krvin. the clockwatche r says, 'time to go home.' Wait for 1narna ." Al the foot of the sign 1! a toy clock. Rescue expert! posted the sign Monday hoping it and the clock might lure Kevin, a 9-year-old mentally retarded epileptic, out of the woods. The idea came from the chil d's srhoolteacher al the school for the men- tally retarded, f'~leanor Walker. She said in class Ke\'1n was often the clockwal· ('her, and something familiar might snap him out of his pattern of runn ing like a 1righlened animal. The boy has successfully eluded thous8Jld5 of .'!earchers on f o o I , horseback, and in helicopters for eight days. Monday night an Alpine rescue team with tracki ng dog11 moved Into an area al dusk where the dogs caught the boy 's scent. But the !learch was called off because David Moore, captain of the rescue unlt, said it was "much too dangerous lo keep a man out in this wilderness afte r dark." The rescue team was called to the area by a lady who said she set some pork chops snd a toy truck oul.8ide her cabin and checked 30 minute! later to find both missing. Ray Gardner of the Missouri State Police, handler of a tracking dog, pledged to find the youngster today. "I'm going to ~valk this mountain until I either find this kid or drop." he sAid. Natrona County Shfriff Bill Estes says the boy has the cunning of a wild animal on the run . "We are no longer conducting thi11 search as if we are looking for a lost, frightened boy,'' Esle3 1;a!d. "We are conducting this search as if we are look- ing for a deer.·• Tht: Alpine rescuP team took over the search Monday, one week after !he boy wandered away from his parents during an outing. Moore said the boy is being kept warm in the near freezing weather al nlght because he ill hyper11ctive . The child usually takes nine tranquilizer!! a day, but he has had no medicine since he ra n away. Moore said the boy is swift afoot and "hides where there is just no p\ace to hide." "You might just v.·alk past the kid U,t T1l.,Mle ANXIOUS PARENTS TALK Mr. and Mrs, Dye without ever seeing him." he sa id. He said he thinks the boy will be found alive. Moore is in ('harge of !9 experts from Colorado seven climhers from Evergreen, eight search and re~cue men fro n1 !he Rocky Mountain Rescue Unit at Boulder and four women from the Color<1do Search and Rescue Board in Denver. The tracking dogs fo llow scents through the air. and l'vfnore said they can follnw a scent lnrlefinite ly. The.v "'e re Riven sniff!! of a yellow wool cap the boy has "'orn, provided by his mother, ro.1rs. Philli p Dye. "If the kid is wit hin a quarter ol I mile, they can go right to him," t.ioore said. The Checkerboard Grain Co. t1f St. Lou is, Mo .• 11 majnr supplier of corn In poultry producers in the southeastern United St11tes, was forced te close Mon- day because of the strike against the Norfolk & Western Railway Co. Senate Witness Says "The strike could wipe l!IUt the ch icken industry in lhe Southeast," said D R, Walker. Checkerboard manager. ··rt could ruin the econ~my of the arca." Bets Finance Rackets A spokesman for Holly F::irm5, one or !he natfnn'.o; largest poult ry producer.o;, said its 9 million-chicken eperat ion is !ns· 1 n~ about $40.000 8 da y. The Joss of grain shipments from 1he Mldwc.~l also af· fected swine, dairy and beef cattle. Fond suppl ies on Midweslern and Eastem grocery shelves were expected to be heavily affected by a prolonged strike. Some food supplie.~ could virtually disa p- pear from stores v•it hin lwn week~ if the United Transportation Union strik es the Santa Fe -one nf six line.~ the UTU savs 1t will ittrtk~ Friday if the wnrk rulfs !ltrfke conlinues. Most southwest Vi rgini a co::i l mine.~ shipping by ra il htcPd shu1do11'n!I t)(>('111L~e nf the .~trike. An industry spokesrnan sairf :ibnut 5f1 percent nf !he mints of lslanrf Creek would be shul clown by toda y hy !he str1kt If the strike ('Onlinues p::ist lo. day. the spokesman s11id. ;:ibout h11lf !he c0mp11n.·(~ 1.700 empl0yti; \••0ul d l>f' idled. WASHINGTON (UP!) -A Boston mM who has spent almost all hi.o; life with blg· l!me mobster! te~tifie:d tod11y thal "The ~fob" runs organi1.ed crime In the: United States. financing it~ VMt oper1tions through nickel bets placed with corner bookies. The wit nes!':, Vin~nt Cha rles Teres11, lesLified about his own crooked .~che:mes th;it freque ntly J;inOed him in j3il -in- cludin iz gambling JUnkl!'ts to a London club once associated with actnr GeQr,11e Rafi and tn cai;1nos in Jlaiti \Y1th the blrss1ngs -0r the 111te Ha itian d!ctN or, A !'w arlhy, hefty m;in now serving a fJve·vear priwn term for transport11t1nn 111 stolen securities, Teresa, 42. wa.~ the !e11dof( w 11ne..~s 11s the Senate Permanent lnv~.,tiga t1on~ Subcnmmiltte beg11n il• fifth wet.k of hearings en erganlzed rnme. "Tut.re i~ one big ~<1ng that runs l)r,llanized crime in thi~ counlry." Teres11 said . "We grnerally call il 'ThP Moh.'•• Hr said the oni;ani1ed undcrw(lrld i~ roften called by other names such a.~ '"The or. fice" in the Providence. R.I.. r\ew England headQu::irtc.r~. He siud rha~ gambhng 1~ '"!he singlf!: moi;t impnrt::inl ar11v1ty" for nrganized crime th:.t underwntcs ::i!I other ope ra· hon~ wnrld ,..,•ide. ··Gamhling L'I lhe s1;indbv and the fou n- dal ion," Teres<i said. ··from 1t comes the rnrrupl po1111r1::ins and the pohct'mrn, the bribe~ 11nd the payoff.~, 11nd i;nme11me11 murder If y(lu coulrl <'ru.'ih g:imhhng. you \\.'ould pu! thP mnh nu1 nf hu~1ne.~~ Ynu "d ha ve !hPm hark nn the pu!ihc;:irts as It w:i~ in th!' nld d:iy.• .. • ? • • $2.99 CARPETING • Suro we h••• it-but, u1u•lly we try t o co nvin ce cu•tomers to buy corpeti n9 t h•I wi ll complem ent their hom e1 . Ofte n, in situ ations whe re e c ustom er is c.ove ri n9 the floo r ju 1I lo •ell a ho u10, cheap corpetin9 m•y be a liability. In ma ny <•••• the d iffe re nce of only a do ll or a yard will in1toli a quality of c a rpeting that look. t wice •• well end will 91ve much better 'ervic e. In a nuhholl we're not t ryin g t o neceuoril y be t he "CHEAPEST ", !though we ofte n •r•), but the "BEST!! I Which we alwayi a re, I ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave, COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Tt-.ru Tt-.un,, 9 to 5:30-Frl., 9 to 9-Sit., 9:30 to S -~· ~-..::I_-: ---•'""' . . ..,. -- I 1 ' ' " . . . •: •, ,. ,• •. '• . •• • • ·~ . • . •' c.:. ,, ~· ' " .· .. ,• .. ·~ ~ • ,. ~ , .. ' ' ; .;: ·( . . . •, • . .. '· " ,• ,· ' > < . '.:· . . . . ' '" •' .,·, ~~: . " "· '!: i; '· •, :· :: i' . " • ~-t: i: •• .. ~ ~ ' , ·: . -: ·: ~ :: : . . , . • ~ ·' ~ " :~ . . . . . . . .. ... . ~." ~ ' . ' TLJ15day, July 27, i qn DAILY Pll~T I 0 iscounl OUR NAME MEANS DISCOUNTS EVERYDAY! WE CARRY A FULL LIN E OF QUALITY M ERCHANDISE AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES. PRICES IFFICTIVI: WED. thru TUES., JULY 21th,. AUG. 3, 1971 EXCELLENT FOR ROTISSERIE BONELESS SHOULDER CLOD R AST STORI HOUIS1DAILY10 •.N. to 9 '·"'··SAT. & SUN. 10 •.M. to 1,.m. HAMS FULLY COOKED • SHANK HALF SHORT RIBS OF BEEF '~~"~~~~~~TY 49,t . ' ' . . ' ' ' • \I 'n •: ·,~ '• t.: . f,"-'.'i > >I } I .,_, FARMER JOHN· FAMILY PACK I• ., l ' l ,. . ' ~ --. ' SLICED LOIN CHOPS -.. 8 COUNT ® ~~® ® FESCO e 32 GALLON • °FRESCO e 40 GALLON . l4 0Z.60ffiE•RfG,ORY,OILY ~~ 6.70l. TUBE e FAMILY ~· 60COUNTBOTTlE ~PROTEIN 21 ) 59 -~~~ PEPSODENT 63c ~\1'i1A''" EXCEDRIN 1 Sc PAPAYAS OR FULL OF FLAVOR MANGOES ' SWEET e JUICY SEEDLESS GRAP ES 39~. @ • -4 STAR . DISCOUNTS Ail EXTRA SAVINGS MADI POSSllU ,IT SPICIAL PURCHASES FROM Tiii MANUFACTUlll WlyH THI SAVINGS PAS!,fD ON TO JOUI TRASH CAN LINERS 49c ,..___..., SHAMPOO ;.-II FRESH e BROWN STEAK SIZE MUSHROOMS '~t21b.39c POTATOES 10 39c LI. CILLD IAG . . .. . ............ . Al! MAY • t l ll. PKG . . ALL MEAT WienersJ!' ~ ...... '* MANHA IT AN • 1• OZ •All MEAT • IHICii;: ..::... · BOLOGNA """' »' 55' 35c 48'' 29<' ® ttl'N'cti'M'i,\r'f '° ~· 8 OZ• TUii[ • RCGUlAll OR SWE!TMILK 9' .f Jt PlllSllURY e 7.5 OZ &Cl.If • 3 fl.AV01!5 Instant Breakfast ~· soc 56< 49c PILLSBURY BISCUITS DOWNY • b• OZ. FABRIC SOFTENER ~ )29 @ cltl'ci<'Eti PiE'"0 "" 48'' 41 ' ...... A Ulll T HMlMA e 9 OZ. 6UfT[l!MILi:'. e fROlfN ,,.,::.,., WAFFLES 4-f 43c Fr<1s1<11s . 1 •oz. I'> v.A.r<1£11Es '* ""O'S •'"·Ol. .!* DOG FOOD LfANAND PIZZA S k T nlll 3 ~/ LtvflT ..:::_... nae ray ;.o' 8 c @ 'FORCOEOs"'H""·'°A'"M·OB•lyODEDl" DUTCH PRIDE e l/'JGAllON e FllOZEN IMITATION ICE CREAM 43'' 39' -JOCOON !O NEWBOON s;~i~~'fi'~rd Orange Juice AR'< 39' ~ ' AJAX°CL EANSER /7":;' ?• '* @ il/:1'sit4'eREAD a!'t"'-33' ..::;.., P UNCH1 D~t0;rgent KELLOGG'S • 18 OZ. BOX • SOME STORES CHARGE 43c ®C orn flakes CHRIS & PITIS • 14 OZ. BO TTLE• HICKORY, REGU LAR O R HOT ®BBQ Sauce IVORY • 14 OZ.• PERSONAL SIZE • 4 PACK ®Bar soap 64 OZ. BEVERAGE • 4 Fl.AVORS 2 ®Shasta ~· 15< ~· 66< c c c ,c @ IT'S SMART TO SHOP AND SAVE AT FAD SAllTA AllA 2120 SO. BRISTOl AT WARNER COSTA MHA 2200 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON LA PAIMA 8023 WALK£R AT LA PALMA -··--· .....• ·.· .·--····-············...:·······-·······: •. ·:: •• ·: :.·····:.-·:.·· ., .:.·:.: ..... :·.·.::• :·--·1 .••• :. ·;:.:· .• :: :·· •·· .• • • ••. • -· . ....-~"~ : ....... .,. --···~· I ' 1 I, , .. ' • ........... . ... • .. -- • 'ONLY PILOT SC T11t\d11 J11l1 Z7. 1971 'OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stocli ,List 11...-... i.. ..,.... .... ~ II .,.....llM191y ' A.M. """' ..... p,... .. ..., .............. -..,.. .... ,.._. •. -m'"-. :r~1rw ~ NASO Liatinp hr.Mond1y, July 26, 1971 !~'~.!'1 1 ..................................................................... --1:~1:iR.l1.' 1-~alri'" -"fi: .i.?.:.'L.i~~I I• • ""•'" !WtloNl S.C:urtllet ~I 0..1..,.. Ann DY .. 1001 AH llW! count., ••"*' r..t•n lruurtnc:• &. 1...ru .. 8frnllt !tit.I 11<1<'.lu B•U k t ••nk •nd Tru1r 8rwN Ar 111 8'1•<• ~ •Iii ........ lot Ilk $y Jf\t 3"" lhldb M IUEn>11 ! 24loio 2..i, 8\ICJI...,._ Hern NC :o ll:W. l!lunno111 Midi lkt -01> 44'4 8u<ll !lfl'I ~haw 800 llV:I !;\lo t lWSY u V• I~• J:r>o Jl"' ao•nDf N \It N Ink 11 1Sllo tM Miii IMW•ftCt l"'*I 8 l'•d U11 LI lSt. i.\lo anre!I f> ll'MIWtlfl111 '"ep MIOt AAI~ Mlo~ff$- l<F'A F'rS 11 If ,.tflll Air AIO Int ,.... l'Mi ti TK :~r~ ~~ .:~ ,:~ :~re c:,, Abl<I 11\Ci Uo l>ro 1'1 Gr1> Acu~llnl 11 111"! C11c NG Allml• 2~ l~rCtvnoh C .t.Odl1n W IW. U\tCtnl•• AdY Riil ~ l'Wi Cltll"'I P~ AHll llx ~ 9'Wi C1ny l..lb Air Ind ~ 2'0 l\fln<:I A Albw Ho 1 ~'Jo CMrl 011 .. llllol'"lt 11:\lo ll 4 llm LH ,.lfollC f\11 ..... ~ In Alcon lb "''"' ~I "''' UI A~ El 1~ 21'11 Clll 8rkl9 A!lco lnd , .,,,, u 11m011 .\II Ttcll ,..., 11\o llrl1S. Alli' IUY 1\0 I llrl1l ~ "!Id 'E•ut !I:. ,_.. hm Mt1 A,llyn Ill" I!~ H'iio ltznUI .. A,!oo Ctn'! 1 ?Y, Cll1ft!Jt (I, Al .... nn'I l t-~ Cl1tk Ml A!pln GH 10... lllt l•ul,,. If A El :SV. ~ '! .. 5'f! '" ! Gi.lt.it l' ~ ,.,., •t Ht.La Joi':~ i:::I (~ I~ .\lo I":;'\~' tt§• •,,Nl~ i.1t11,._!! r~~ fr' •,..,c ltl ·~ 'lt Mtt .~..:->• l* "" !. ~~~-I: -" ...... H> COi• tO I,.. I !ii IC Inc J !tt 1'1Mfl¥ d IT ~i1 :~ ~::=: O l"-JJ' fl ll!f I 11.I. 1 Ql~tl Ctl,O lf\4o 20 f'llltl Or• 'il cw EFl~ 31 .... 11'4 I lk 0• 1~ U4i .t.Mld 011 1.20 ,,,. 61 Ooo:u!t'I t tV. Flne•hl 1''1> 11 ''"" Cn 11 Ill', Pirkl H 1:i.. 4V. ,..,d 8•.,... ~~"'2l'll;Pc!MJ u 11 A llltf'lt g oal '11¥'1'7 ,,.,. $ti 2 .... ,1 P1•kY G• 17 .... lJ !:rJ>~~ l....,".&::°'"•'~ •• '-"4•~Ffl •nit I~ 1 tlA Mll ll't.Ji\.\Plrlw H 11h Jt\~A.std-l"ri,.1> """" 1 ?lV. ~ F•IP Ml'9 2•' ?!~ ,_ Ml ISt\I \1'4 Pit F11ft t'll f :i,;. Altllone if, 1'\ti 16\1> unklll 0 Ul. l•ii. FIPMI "" .n r1y M v H .... IJI' •11111 P Slli ' AllCyfl I II l\V. llP fl-I mf:IPM W1 ~ ' re,,_ P :to. 2'>11 fV91lf lJlt 11\i!All lti1dll J 7>.. 11,(, O..rlron \4-b 1$11i FllWnF 1~ 21\0 ull tnl)I 1 '"' P1v t.. nw 1•i.:. ''""All lllUI pf J 1>"o 2Jl'o El Pein! 11>,o f\t FICkntr 111'1 lt Ovrodn j1, •'• PHrt Mf IS\< I~ A!lllcPI pl7,j0 :It• 26tM Ee11" ~ •• ,., ,, 1'1• Ttl tt\\o nu.H•rpe< ll 16'\o Ill~""''"' r ,, ,, All•• c ... p lh flt EIMlrln In J Ho Fl1 W11!J ~" »t H .. llM 6\• f\o PeM P•c 1>t J~ All11 Pl J.OI< " ,, Econ Ult ,,,,. ""' l'DOd F •P "' ""' -" F ll .)f p. GILW "" ,,... ATO 1nc .GI• fl fl Eduef S• ?'o )'11 FOfnt O J~ 25'\ Htrff Jon lf'oli 11' tfll l!W t m Avtem Otr• l'i' t\1' EIP1• r1 15\o 15'h Fr111lflll '"' ,,. Herl! CP ,,.., f',1 llroll! I) 41 Aulomln lftd U 11\.\ EIW. $'$1 ..... ra Foti Grnl 71 71 Her. Ap .,,,, ~ P1Nlbtn U\o U .. AVCO (Ofp ~ I I! ..... k N I FtdtmAI "' H!Otc In •" S 11111" ~ lM IN VQI CP WI Mio ' EIM: Miid 11\t U !'Ml C:P ll'J 1 11\li 11" on "'-J vco "li'° l"' Nr l!lllC!t?l'I 514 fl6 Prnkln !I •1" 9' "" '"" 11111'11 " '"' v~ J' ~ '"" flK Mod l :m Pfecl 1!1 I\~ 1 Hofll l!tt 17\t 17" l'ln~rtn 111'1o 7' v In 0 I l •• , .. E1Klr (ft JI .. Jh "'"" !er )tlo\ ll'4 HDw•O GI 10h 11 lttllln !]'Iii U-.t; AYMI 011 J,I) 70» 711'> EmPS OU 15'o 16 GREil R II\> 11 HDwmd l l \1 Jl"lo Porl Hio:: 71\'J 21\l. ~::· ,:• 11 XI ll it llltEnor~v C 1J\lo JiJoCiRI Cmp ?l\ ll'oH..ck M•o l • •\lo Pou• M l\o l'IO ... 10 Ener11v R H• 1 Gi lb Mt• ,,,, '"" Huru p 1i, TVo Proc Pl .,., ' AHKOll I ,,,, Jll• 12~1 E~•wl111 J~• • • !;1rtnkl 111111"' Hv•ll Cp l~V' u Pro Goll ~\'o ~ 16h 11\•EPICO In ·~· •~1G1\' Glbn J 5V!H,at! lnl I!\\ 11\'>Prud Min m ~8.i>(:kW ~ It .... lQ Eciuly OH 10'• 11 Gen Afrt l' .. • lmaoe ~1 10 11 PubS NM 20\11 7114 ••krOlll 10 tt .... JO Erl• T.c ... ~ G ... lllE• 9 t 't. Im•• CP l>o 11> Put> S HC lllli 11\11 •tit GE 112 ' 6-\'oFPA (p l\:i t'"GUt.<1 I\~ s:\lilno Huclr l;•\30 Pubnllr J'Hi 6 111Tpf ll4 50 13\.• U '• 1ntot lrw: 11 11"' Puret>t 11'1\ 11"1 1noor Punl • .,, Info DllP 51, • P B•flMf l lV. » !'""' pf 1 17 II l~ltl Ind 2t• J\o PUIO (•• 4'~ •"' .,,. _pfl H Ill 111 -· , _ _._. JW'!:J lntrmk In l't Jiii OU•t CM ll'Hi U Ilk ofC•I I J.I 'jllt 11 ln!rmt G 11'4 U,,.. lltT SVll 5 JV, 811'111: Of HY 1 U 1:1'1 lnBk W•~ t'-1 I 1111-Pf ..... I Bi nk Tr 21 • •s IOO MUTUAL inLll1 er, H4 16\lo ll•ft•ll c 10 1"' l1rbw01t 11 15 IJ.11 Int Mull I l•"li 1514 lltlMbl E 21\1 'JV. llrd CA 251 71\/t 7t Int Svt!m 55'' WV. lltlV<:~ C• &5\'J Miio l11lc ll)C 10 16\4 16'• lnlrw1v I! 11"11 11t1rmM U UVI •••le P'2-50 13'-" 1l'• lonlo Inc 11\o 114; llKot fl 15 lJVI llll•o MIQ Your Moriey's ll'orth Am llu1P 111'> 11\t Clln1n 0~ A 'El Lii> ltt. 1~ CJ-C• Am E•• lU llRI. Cot•• Am Finl tt :l'IV. Collin Fd A Pini l! U"-15"-Com (Ir Am F11tn IV. I'• Coml ~n Am GrHI ,5 '5\'> Com G•• A Me<!ICI> 11 • 111• Con, ..... Am Tel•~ 1'-\<o 1011 Com P•~ Am Weld I\• l h Cmp1 Cm Anodlle l~ ll't(mp ln•I Annr.u• II Sl') 53 mo! TK Anken !n 1•, l!'t Comrt• -• , FUNDS l•Sou u1 ?I'• l'fl~ AN<• ll ~ l"l•I Ml pr • 1'-' 1'• Jicoe FL l'• •I\ llHP Env p , ''"' 1tll1no 711 7l'li 11 Ji1u!n c ll'> !•L,ji ll:lddr p~ ?•'lo 11,,.. 81u1tnLll Ill l' 11 Jtn'I Wit l ''> ·\~ Rotd E• Sl'lo 55 lid Lill 11 II. 110.. J1m11>v I I ,,, llobln M 16 lt ll•Vk CICI 50 31'4 J1'4 Jiffy Fdt l !o l'-' l!otl'IM 1~. 1 Bt•rlr•cu l !I If J1nl'n M 1~, 1t4.1 llou11 50'• 51'1\ lleatF<I~ I Ii Load, No-Load Funds--IJ It NEIN VOlltK IAP}lllV Guld t.it tlttcMS Ind lO 1ov.Rowi n tn JV• 1v,8 Kkm1n 50 10 16lt -T~• lollowl"I -tnv.1 aw 12 U ll 11 ICi llr su ,.,,. 11 , Ru• s1ov :If' 1 11,1 Bw D c~ JO II\• 111&!1hon1 111pPlltd bylnyt1!0f1 Grou• IC•l•$11 pr 16..,. 17'hS..011i r J\ J,,_8....c~A.lr 611 t t Vt lllr N1Hon1I Anoe!-IOS nd< J15 S1t1Cilv•• 1l>10'.0!e•n 011 11,Z ll~BtkoPtt )Db '"' J !Ion 01 5K11<illt1 M11!1 100110MIC1m 1n A ll'• ti'l\!Cl nt" El J"" -''o ::1~"M 1 ~b J o II• OHltrt Jn<; lrl PtOW • J.I ~ '1 K1le (ire J 1 J • Scllott !n 1(o I • Bell "ft0.,. 611 ArC1 I"" ~ '"'Con PIP Ard Mio' 11\'Jlll'o(on 11.<>Ck Arlo.MoP 11\'J 11 Conl"n .t.rkWIG 11'41 IN .,tn<O "'"'' I~ J\I, l'iio trP $ How Have They Done? l\ r 1>.I. l/'HI Pl'ICU 1! ... ~ltll SllKlt It JI 21 s..i 1(1y1.,,, l~• •llo Sele Cplr 'No 1 ... Bell f~lrcon lt" 201 ... lheN IKUtlllts !tltcf '20 I" IC ear T• 11 .. 11\'J ik•lPPI H """ 2l"" l!lemlo Co 40 JI ?t cOllld Ill~• btlf\ V•• ~, llO l•ICnM C• lo>..11""'Scrlplo ~ lO!ill-1• 1611 I'• '"'Mid Ibid\ °' ~Inv llt>I! J t5 J 11 ICelleM llo J1"o Selltd Po 15 251'1 lllnOI~ pf J 11•, Jl~ <11kldf Mond•r 11111 n n 12 t'l IC•llon A Ul\ ,,_., s...i. ,, 2~ ,.,,. ttnl'flCll ) '' JI\ ~ a.Jtl A11> Iv, ..... IColh .. I ll llV. !oil1 Com •11. '" lktlen p!O(I t'lli ''°AGE Fncl .'I Jt J «I J Hll'ICk 1 ti I t5 I( ti S ?t\lo Jl\4 51<'1«1 f: 60\ 1 ltfltfl pll JO By SYLVIA PORTER How has the average LOAD mutual fund -lhe fund on ~h1ch you must pa y a sales ch.arge generally around 8:; percent -perfonned over the long·term period from 1950 for investors• In comparison how has the average NO.LOAD fund -lhe fund which attaches no sales fl'eS at all to purchase of 11s shares -performed over lhe !lame 21 year period for 1111 \est.ors~ ANO HOW have both types of funds perfonned during stock market breaks" fQr in· stance, during the sharp declines or 1962 1966 as 11.ell as 1969 70 -crack ups ...,htch made the decade or the 1960s the worst IO-year span for 1n· ves tors In a full quarter-cen· lury' For months I've been seek· Ing answers to these questions: for myself and you F1nn!ly, I ve obtainr-d then1 from Gro11.th fund Researlh Inc , 11( Long Beach Calif , whu h has marle an exha1Jsl1ve study of the figures put togelhC'r a hypothetical a\eragC' $10 000 load and no-load lund and traced each $l0 000 fund froin 1949 through 1970 In ll~ Harbor Area Firm Set V1ncenl J l\IC(~u1nness and .Jack Perry, mutual fund sales Pxecut1ves Jodmer!y w 1 I h Sh a reholders Managemenl Company Los Angeles havr. for rned Na tional Extension Services Jl\ewport Beach The company IS engaged 1n the marke!1ng of 1ndepend£'nl study courses 11.11h th r. pri marv obJecl1\ e {Jf helpin~ management sale!!: per<>nnne1 increase their product1v1t\ 11 l!i: the fi rst venlurc lor hoth men since the) res1gn1 d fnHn Shareh(}lders ~tan11ge rnent 1n l!l711 Shareholders is a leading mutual fund managt • rne.nl and sales nrgan1iat1on v.h1ch dist ributes f1vr mutu,11 funds. 1nclud1ng the Enterprise fund II ye• •• _. "l'"I AM••rl119 $etvka. Te• •re •et •lttl .. oll ef fON ... k Tllll'HOf\11 AHSW!lllNG IUlllAU 835-7777 4Trow 11 71'ilo ,,,,., OW! vr, performance figures, I he=• 5, 1~"' 1mc~:.~ ~: 11 ll:it.Ablrdn 21t t•J""""" Hlltl.IJl(:Ulf EV:. U\\ u"'S""-••·~ '"' , .. 1.nn Sclf!M lO>lo 11V, d"'lr.itr f:tlndl Kini-Fund1 Ktv• Fib 171,. tl\lo Svc Gr• • .... Se11Q11H I I U. Grwtll 7 IJ 1 M °'Pollo 11 OJ 12 ot ~ev ClllF !CM!o 11\l s ....... U W~ &Iii 111:f:~' • research organization did oot A•CC 1111 .,..,_ •'"" '"' Ille• AtlG11 Lt 15\lo I~ vttr Ft'd 1\/o I lncom •«I 1.12 Cin a1 10 ... '' -oo >•" , " ··--''' >> >> " o•-9. fllo lnt1lf IQ l5 11 JI Cll!I IJ "., ,,.,. .,•V• --..... """' • I ' ,. 1 n c I u d e reinvestment of Auto kl s ,,_. '" com Jal d d " th ICC Ind t .-. Dan1l11> o•t• ,,,.."'1vltt• 1 57 to.> Cut 111 10 t21Ki:::1 '£'1 ~ ~~~~.~111T~n J~,~ =~~1 ~1 cap1 gains or 1v1 en • e I'~" At """ ~ Dan1, M performance results are un· 111!,.,. P~'i' ,n: ~~ i: ~n 11141lV.A1tM" 103111 H Cu• IC! 1N IM IClrk Cp J ~ 11115 C1IW1l U""'l~ I"*°""' 6 l\ltA!lll11!d 11? tl1 Cui KJ SU •21Kl'll V •1 Vt 4) SaNI< 'T91 37 l7\.<, 1lrJolm 41 l ~ lV. A!Ul11r1 " 10 95 10 f) (.,, I I 10 03 jl "L.n:. r°.: lt'\o:o <fO'Ai ~w r.1 Ct 111. ,,,,,.. llu L•ua I varnished lk1m 1111 UV. 26 0111 Gen ltn',.. It 414 1 D1t1 Pk1 11111111 p ~l\lo •1~ 01111ft p (I l BOTH FUNDS came out a1umr11 M\lo ™t 011111 Fd '41' M\11 AllAm Fd tJ tl Cua $2 IG " > '', .~ ' >> '"° '' • >> '''•Ii""' '< >< 1:y; •14 Allsl•t• 11 Ill n Ja C11• SJ 1 JJ t 33 t;;;; w:" 11: ;.,\ S:.rn c; 17 '"" IHI hU no iv, 1-.Al!>fll lJHl•lt C111 S6 JOt J!lli r 1 1 ,\.s.,.cirv ~ ~llObbl1 ••k• ,,._ I V. Amct1> 1 51 1 n Po11r • it 'sa L•id" en H'" !44.1 !''"""" ~ 1ra Bot1111 Co Ill ... l1vt1 Mii: U'lli M\li Otvtn lrn way, way ahead m 1.11e 21 llMllne , 1ov. ''* DtLux c 1' j, 10 Am 8111 l 7' J Sfl Cnltllb J s;, I :l'I Ltll '( I> .,.. fo 10 11 fs i.-'""' 8elaC11 2.511 ••'' 4l"" Am Ol~tr 10 ll 11 11 ICnlc~ GI IO Oii 11 °' Liiia <;":'~ ~' ~St in ~d 31 WAI Bond tncl years. re-emphasl%.111g l he ::t1k r_e~ ~4' ~ .... = ~. basic lesson if treated as a :la~!"'w 1~ 1t:Z g:\111c~~~ long-term m\estmenl l he lH\ nv. Am l!qllv .s JJ 5 II L-. Fd 'II JAi Lirwl• •" 10 IOV. St1rl1 Sir 151'o u"" llookMI~ 1 ll SJ~s..114 tr EIUllfll luc;rr~ 10I011 5'LI B 15\~U,,..St•IWbCI "5V.M'411<1'~n 120 11>'11! 11)41, C11>1! 111 t UL•~ llt111 11.tl 11-" LI::., ltt ll ~. 51,1i Subtc Tiii J1t;, •W. •11'9Wlr I JS 11 u"" lncm• 'n 1t lt Lfllrtv "' • n 1 u Lobl" t rn N SUllCMI F 11 11v. 8orm1n l0p Invest I IO t •1 l!lt St~ • 15 t 72 Lot 1£'1 t f\lt S\/Plr ft 11\li lf SOll!dll 2,,. s._1 • u Llr. Inv 1 Jr • °' t.. cft (:n 1tv. ltv. 'TIME oc ~ 11111 '°' l:d Pll u St111:ll •11 tKLlnc N•I 11Jl 11lJM,~I c; Ji 1sv.T1mp1~ "° m S011rn1 111<; mutual fund is an eir:.cellenl vehicle It) OVER THE long-term since 1950 the no-lood funds have clearly demonstrated perfonnance superiority One reason hes Just in the fact thal they have no sales charge, for the $850 saved on the ong111al $10 000 purchase 21 }ears ago grew m the Growth F'und llesearch compilallon lo more lhan $8 000 Al so a higher proportion of no-load funds are oriented toward growth .and despite the market breaks of the 1960s the 21 years saw some spectacular economic Mrowth (3/ ULIRING \I A II KET 1lechnes bOth lo~d and so l11at! furnls lose v<iluc 100 ln the 1962 brC>ak th e funds on average losl 12 10 13 pe 1cenl 111 l96!J.70, they lost 23 to 27 percent ~II \YlllLE i\ $10 000 $0tV 1ng~ ;iccount paying :; pcrce11t co1npounded annually a l s o would have more than doubled -from $10 000 to m ,859 - lhere s simply no comparison in gains (And 1nc1tlentally no savings account paid anywherl" near an average :; percent in 1950--70 I Now here are the abslutely ra~c1nating comparison s 0111 Otc Jt 19" ... It!> 19') llSl lOS• II\! '916 U!I lf!I lt\• "~ ••• 1161 II~] 19~• 1ti! ... ""' •••• 10.0 lflO lo•d .. ~ 5 t U{I 11 '" )/ I\) ..... 1• 100 If 116 11 )j5 1• Ill l? )(I\ ""' Hi,, J, ,., .. JJ6 lf OSI •I •~l S? OJ(l .,_ .. .. ... •• 0?1 80 ~~ ""' No lpO fund l lO OO{I !1 0•0 lj Ht 1 S Sii u Ill 11 •1• 1• ,:14 ?I 911 ?6.IOJ "~ ·~· •• 11• II 0'1 d 5U ••• 61 •J1 11 •11 I! 11' 11)(1 Il l l?J , •• 101 I It .. , .. In slock m ar~et performanl:e. the past 1s no ~tude st all to the future \Vhat s more. O\erall 1950-70 was 3 great markrt period "h1ch 11.e may 001 soon repeal St11l, that perfonnance demands pondering On $10 000 1nvestn1ent a gain of i86 246 1n the no-load fund $60 502 in the no-load fund $60 502 1n the lond fund $17 859 in the savings account 11.m Grlft 6 W 1 H Lilt 't5 11 'jt'OOI J>Ai l""' 111~"' t~ 1'~ l rlfllt Alrw Am tn11 1a1 111Laom11 Savles Mii •it lllo ll'llo •vlor I 'Alo N Sr!H St 141'.l 11.m MlJll 9 7110 It C1nea ]I 00 Jl OQ Mlllkrl , tl '• tll.4 l•'llr Wt 1111'11711 (l.rl1l M'I 110 AmN Gin l sa J 91 Ctplt 11 '' 11 " M I'll> c ·~· 1" TKll PH ."' s 111''11Mv Pl J Anc:l!Of GrDUll Mui It'' •• '' • ' "' ••ltP• -C11>ll a 67 t 'O LMd Abt 10 5! M 8rowr ll'lt lJV. ecum " 11~ '': llrPtt In 'ill Gl'Wlll 111•1J17llllll llro 111JIJJa~'t LP !~,,~'h~~I~~ l'I> 1..,!lctw'I' H1l1l lnc:m• 1111tJM11n1 1~ 1 n 151 1,~,<0°' l•;,io;,T.,,nint H 11Vi:Sow,111/ "' Fd lnW t 15 10 li M•nhln S Ii 5 U M~IUl'I 61, 7 Ill AmO 1~ JV. 8rkwVG I IQ V1n! ~· 00 4t 16 Mkt Giii 'Jl f )J Mt<Jlc H l!"'° 161;, 'Therm /Ii J SV. llklYn\l(i 1 11 /litlrOl'I I 1' S 711 M1111chu1111 Co Mldt' M 6(1 •n TllnY Co ''' 10 8rown Co A.kt H~lllon Fr-I 27 , A• rn 'I' ., 8wnSll•o -Flld A '" ,6(1 ll'NI•• ,Jf i':4 11ld In 101.10•, lnr In :" :;:zs ... nSl'IDI 1'_lo r:..• !~ :ll MZ°;~",,n1~~1:161J •5M~~1: ~ 11'~ l~~lor1~nEGL: ~\lo. ~a=~~'"lr 1'Ji Scltn I.ti j U MIT u" IS U Mi,llt~ 1 J .... ,TrKOr C '''' >>• 81/0d Co ltbMfl '15 t U MIG Jl"'" I'>< Mfdw Gt '2 2l rl'ICn! G 13 ...... o , > a1vrlll"d 11.Jttl MIO Uw>O>o"'-Mlllltfr l'O 11 Tr1n•oO 11402' ,.,.... OP • I I I I 111,rk Gr J 15 a M Ito ~ '' ,-,,MUI Mus u lJ Tr!Mob 11 5\'J ' 1111<19F P1 6(1 "compeey new concep l•Kn Hn 1~111076 •1119,.. 1,,,,,,,M1n1or 1n 1ov,1114TrLe1 "' u ~H1t 8"°••r 1n<l I 1 1 I «I Mid !J Cil :W\• ;ut,t Trldilr • 4" 8ut1For• I 711 .... hich would add a1 rcran,•K•,• ,,•,•,,•,,, ...... ~AM s111.nM11 RT 11v.u;~1r11n oG ·~ ·~eutov•w Ill •rt en ....,_y 12n12n T F llh 11 811nkr llama 011.ners.tup to the protectivel:.i.~111 :~ ;~l::WvF~ •:::1:;::::~·11:~1cftG 1;i: 1~~u~~f.':: ~ ~~1:7.'ik~n;\': I k ( U Booln S!ll 1 a1 9 •6 MIF Giil J )g I 17 Mot!wk R ll • ,, Un C Ho• :JOO ll" llutl No l lit coa o l1 emsurance was1n B"r """ 11nt11'Muus Gw 1011iol1 Mont co1 '~' 7i,un uium ,,•,, e urnior ~155 IDU l'nd I ?I o D5 M Om~G Jn a ... Moor• I' I·• '\0 Un MtG\I II ,.~. ~o lrodUCed th IS Wff);: In a JOlnl llrwn I'd J ff • )6 M Om~nl 10 !f 11 5j Moor• 5 11'\l. ll Vr U$ Snknl I VJ I'• u '"'' ' llu !oc~ C.Olv n Mui 511" "JO 1, JO Mor\'" I( Tt" 7111,1 US £nvl1> 11 (. 11"4 llu •lh• '° announcement by F 1 rs I 11u11c1< is 10 u •!Mu! l"1 1 00 2 00 Ml~ • wt n. P.t us Triln in. 1111,l11u•1> vn 1 • (&ndn !• 90 11 lf1NEA Mui 10 .a JOU Molch I~ I • •'f Univ II.Ir 1 • n . AmericauT1tle ln su rancP 01v1d io •MNi ! Ina 1111 11 uMot c1.,~ ~1 .1•~1uoPen P 11"1l•Caboi CP 10 N"rll S 10.S• II S•Nat St<u' Set ttAutll"' II 1 10 U!ll In<! l~,,_ ll \•lc~oen'r l"a and NV Vn! 111•1111 !l•U1 n 10/)(IJ!l/~,o~ P ) 1>,VtlY Fo• t'OIO •C.•I !Oinfnl llu•111> Fo 1?01 1101 Bona ,96 5 11 NCC l~d Po 11,V1llrv G• ln l \~ ''""""Mn• In ured A rcreft Title s VICO Bu• M~I I IQ I " 0 1 ... " • ll • n N~··· Co u • u. I•!~• LO J J. Ca "oRLll •S ~ I er •(G Fund lQ\11101 Gr.,!n •<llOllilNa•C~ R I>.'" 1110 ~Ir '"'0 C~mo SPllO ) O'·I h Cl Oki ~&o•m 103 110 Pf ~·~ 1'• 111.,"' G&O 11,1f e""r ~ 11 11 canS•ew 4J rlC "' 3 OffiB I V 8 ••II Gin -i IJ l IS 1nrom 5 Jt 5 H .. Hn•o I 'o ll, Volc10 1' 19 (Qnl>~c J ''.><! C f ) 11 ••ll ~h 6 1>4 Ill Sloe~ 1 11 ltJl<al Uh ll ... 1 Vtnlton ..,.. 11 faP !tl?'a 01 erage 0 I H' ITill l (tJ Ttln ll" !4 lljN•I Grll> t 71 IO 6J N •a1enl 7' • /\1\ W1•1 "~ 1<' 11 CM-.111 1 10 111 I r ~entry SI> 1t 01 1S l •Ney" Cet 6 $1 1111N Se--fl!•ll 1 . ••0 W•ln II.cl I' 11,,.,C•raryn 1541 )I 1on do lar a1rcret 1ndus1ry~111nn1,.. F""o Neu"'"" 111517 :xrN•• ~-"' i1,w "P•il• 11,? C•rhsl• ~ llolln 11 11 1?91,New Wla ll!l UlSNl l 51fv, 1•. S\oWSI> Nr. 15-'<o """~·oC&O~ j in .a mannC'r .simllar lo lhat c""' s1 11• l'ION•w'"" 11 11 16 .,N E:naG" l••, 11._w,1 •• Tr e•o 10'4i ioa•o PL111t G,.....11> S IC IJ.INlcll !otr1 17Jl11llNIN•I f• ?Ml.1"'6WtOb If• t t ~~arolp( 11'11 rlQW provided real propertv ln<om 7 !t 1 ;1 Nore~11 n 11is11 Nk~11n " 11 1•" wo 1M w ';!: 1:>\ ~=~~,.G~C:. Mt Specl I fl J !I Oce&n1r I II 111 N!1hn A •1Vt ·~ \lle!dtrn >>•• '' C••IW~' "° 11111 have far reAch1ng eHect c~~•e Gr Bo• Omt•• 1 oo 111 N1e11n 11 •7\oo .,,, We!ln• 111 ,,,', ~·--, • .,1, ~· ,0 C&p' I J1 Id 100 Funlf l• J,(t 15 6J Nol'.•• r t 1' u~ Woll1I' Ill •w" C•ltt , 1 00 the <llfCrafl 1103tlCltl" Fund 107011JJIDI Fu>d t 15101!Nf:vr n11 l'• 4 Wei G~• I~ 15\'(CI Corp r:. F1onr '' 11 Onr wmS IJ 891.'I 19 NW IJ&!G 11• J 1<. W1tc'' P 11>, 13 ~C1 (JI of\ 25 fraternity officials said StirMd 11'111oig::e111 110111u1-Jw PvSv '' '" w ,tn NII. in•, tnlfo •~ocorl ~ 51>ec1 l07'11U PP•nll 1.s ••s No•e Co u •, ;,n,w1tn Mtci ll'I 'PA r11ne1e P 1 'A>rplane ( l••s h1mlC1 111)7017 AIM 17t11•~1NU't R•" 9•,1n'oW•Tn P•b ltV.l•1'Ctl1n PIA4SO 1nancmg ,o1on111 TC S..; 10 10 11 ,1 1>111vv M J"VI ~l w1r s1 ur 1 •~ '"" c1nc:o 1n1 JO "-b b b l!outv •J.ll ll •c•Flld tM IO J.itilOArl 10 1C .. Wtll••! 11h1mC..,Hud 1 .. m:come 1g us1ness: ut l'und 11 0111 °"'"•Ill 11vr 1" , J.i 1110 F1rr u 1•~ w ... 1mn HV. l'" C1n111L1 1 u Gr""MI I !t 111 PiJnn 1o / N I q n11 S~1\t 111. ! Wint W~I 51 o ""' CeoillPS f 1(1 lenders have had no t1.srurance 1ncom t 1110" '• Miii i 41 , u 1 Sc•n 10~ 111~ 1n11 MU 111:, 1••• !en1L~E1 1 Vent S ll J 11 PnU1 IS J• ll 10 Hr T"' I.lo Wo Whc Pl 111 •• 111' ""'°PW I iO that their collateral IS pro-ColY G111> "n t• 21 P11,,1.., 1o 1111 11 '" Mtl '. ,..., ldw•d L n1.1i l'"" enuw.1 l ComS Id S 20 JM Pine 51 11 o 11 •7 Ormonl t evi Wrlctw E •>~ l~ tflt Sor• 1 Pcrly protected. !' I r s I '"" in All t •1 11l Pion E:nl '11 1 11 ner ,.. '"' 7"'• rl1M W ''"' ?• tnTe~• l'D lcwun C: 1 IJ 111 Pion FfWI 11 t• IJOS .,. NII. I ia.. 'Vrdnv [ "' i c•rro D IO American Pres1dl:'nl 0 p Com" 11., 1 •s • n """ 1n" 11 11 n 4l D•v Ctr 1'111 '""' 1enu1 1 111iO ""• c:~l I:" D'':o IComp CP : :O, ,,',~ ,',",',',", •.• ,11 5• u to c,J•,•~,,•, "••" Kennedy asserted A con ~:;:: =~ 10 0110 " G•w•1> '"'1111 ,, ,, c~Mlb•n 1rw: tested title could rC'sult 1n the c,~~·.•,•, Alt i to N £r1 10 11 lo Jt 1ft•mPS 1 :to -~ 1?111711 N Hodr 'l '430 )1 NEW 'l'Ofl!io:: !AP~· Tutldl'I tomJlrl1 ~lrl'j,\ NV7 los~ of a $10 000 or ~:::1e1i""c, 1! ~: 1l :;' =~: ~~"{l 11 ~;1~ ~ Ntw Vlro. S!odt xcll1n•t prlcti /\:J:T 'f~lol ') 0()()000 nl:lfl<' 11~ ''OI ,'',~', "o•"•' 1 11 1 11Pro1 I'd SIS t1' 1,,., "'•'!~c,~~' '{'."' • c ' ,,,··, ,,, 10 ?l 10 ll 1>rnvlc1 • l'(I l i. t~n \ "+•~ Lew Clnt Cftt hem•tron 1 l'•ter•I • ~ 1!77171Jl'r11 SIP 107•l17J ht ... NV 1 11 " Ctry C11> u 00 I) 1l Putn1m Fund• a C~esV• t to Ccn wDlv '01 I 11 l!•ul! I S8 t JI --C~t< Ol)lo , '\1rcr .1tl l lilf CrnW011 1 11 1 11 Cit<ir1 ""l6lJA01cY1rc !Of it """ lt'41 """ Cftnba/\111.1 <loV•t n 70 :Ill 10 20 G-1~ 10 OI \1 '1 AbO!LO 1 10 ;11 i.t•o 5'" JSlo -"-C~• E:~l 111 SerVKf' Irle located in theoo11w••e C.rou• 1ncom •1• ~olACF 1 .... 1 .0 ss u~ si• .. 12,..1,,CMM!I SP~ Oreo• 11 01 ll ll 1nv111 I 5' • lt Acme( le• IO 19 ll" !l 1 ll ~ • 1/\• Mil$~ ot ~AA complex at \\111 J1oger~ or1~w 1i u 1•0 v 1111 •'l'l •UAcmeM•1111 12 s1>. 11 . »~-·• n l'neuT 1 CHlr. l lS tM \lov•1 I ll IMAdm•E• 761 1• ll'• ll"" 11~ /\l!ll'ct u • i'tt'ld 111 Oklahoma (1 t y o .. c .o •&6 IJO Re••" 1o u 11oJAdMllh• JG 1111. •?" 17>1 -. ~111c•Nw 0001 Co~ I~ U 1J u R•nlrtl lS ?l ll 11 A,dd<•·• ... Jt Jh ll .. lJ Jl't 2>1 Cl\OCl'Ull \OCI P scnll} vs more rh Dre~·l 1•,1u •1S11h1" 1s' JEJ Ad,..••I 1u 11 16" 11•~-,,Ch"•''"" r~ ser e an Orr•• Fd 17 •Su u S<nuol• u .o 11 tJ 11.o1n~L1., t •O 191 •l'• a1• 61 , Chromet• 10 2 ()(}() fll\(lflf,:18[ lruilLIUllO/li;, fll.lk Drt'fl L• U" 1! II S<uddO' Fundo 11.otn~l• ~·) I " " ,, (~t1>ml p1 I E•!oo .. How11a IM Inv 1' J7 lj SI Atu!rt• (<1 II 11' ll 11 -.,c~·••1• 6(1 1ng lo:in~ ~ei.:ured by a1rc1 ifl ll•!•n 101,110' Sptcl JilJJotJAllu n tn< 111 1>. 11 111, 1 , ~~·,:.;''',':' The r1rrn prcpllrl!S lh" nin Grw!" l)l?lSlQ 11111n 1!111Jl1 AlrF'r<><t ~Ob •lo' Jl It•• ll"O -'c ~na~ll a. ~ lnco•' 6 1' O 17 C:om St 10 Sl 105? Air RM! •O. " l1 '• ll o 11 10 • (I"" GE 1 16 Jnr!ty of Hrcraft lltle starches s~tcl •" 1n 11 5t curhv Fund• "'J ln<111!!rl1• n 31, 3~ l'• , r nr; "" 11 510{• 1•011 1]1 E<1Y!~ l ll •ltAklon• 11 21 1 •11, 10>0 10'\ • GnMllt l •O ll~(d hy !ht' lending and avLu Fbr<!d! UO•l!l• 1 n~tf! l lS ~o.IAll G•• 11 0 II It IS>.ti 15"4-'• CIT Fnl 1 Etr~l (ii IJ Ol U Ii Ul!te 'N 91'0 AlttO• ln!•I • fl 12 , lll'> 111'1 -1 Cl! el~'< 1 IQ t1un Jr>dustnes l!llu" Tr 1911 St l!d "'m 100010'1 Ablr1oC Jl 10 11i, lll'o 11"' ~ • I"' Inv !iO R h f Emt• SK 631 61t $el SPKS 1••71lt5 AUH•l<n• JI 11 11 0 11'4 ll'lo 1, tvtn• pl!IJ Y t e iSSUanCI' Q F'1rst f:ntrtv ll 16 ll 1' Sent G!h • 16 9 ;.J AIC:•n Alum 1 II '1 .. 11 711'11 -'' 11~ S1r1 American s poilc1es through ~~~~;~* : ~ ,~ ;11·~~'~' td \~~a~~:::~':" ,J: 3' ~ ~;: ~;: = ~ I:~ li1 l~O !he UrlderWri\lOg ag1 eemenl E11ull G•ll t JS 10 llr~tl• A• JO ff JJ II AllAl'FILI 141 lJ 1Sl~ ltt-15 .. -\lo 1•" ,f,1r,•,, •"", • E11ult Pro I U •II 1111r Inv 1117 1' l l AllH CJ !0. «I lJ\1' a"' 121'1 -'<lo v ~ • Insur~ Aircrafl 1s expand1ngFtlrf'IO 105411.n 111rm o 160J1aotA11t1lua 1..0 101 ~'" tt -'"" ~ .. , ",.!." Far"'I l u I~ jl 10 II lldt J'd 10 QJ 10 ft All .. LUll ft J lO 11~1 :1641 -1 Of ~ ..,. 1ls Ulle search runc!lon to 1n-l'!dtihv G• .. p 11m1 1'unc11 A11ttl'w , :w 111 nh 111'> 21t1i _, A':."~t•1 ti Id 'ti ' II (&Pl P Oll lJ XI C1plt t 1'10 f1Al!tld Cllltt 111 l tV. Jl\' ""'-"" NA ;f"~,. c u e 1 e insurance as we i!IS con11d • 1111 ?• 1 "vt~• n u 115\ A1111 ""'1" oo s 21·~ i1 Ji -,,., c 1 se et performance of (' s c r o,., 001ny 1 3' T1u11 •ti •IO AlldMlna 15 1• 1n1 11'4 ti"" c:'l't~. .!t Ell'" 11 HU1115ml111 8 106'\nMAINtd Pd .. ,. 11 11\lt II + "'!oc.~ol i$1 ~rvlces for Cl\ 1[ aircrart sales Ev•~t 1J 11u11 s .. in.,., • ?• 10 01 AJllodPd p1 i 1 41 •S 15 oc• 1110 " I Fklel 111" 11 II $win C.I I let I 00 A!llldS!• t • n ~ lJ JS\/o olllwl Sn~• and re 1nanclng Its prl':!!Jdent Purnn 1n '° 11 17 Sover 1nw ll !tu t5 All'"' t.!P•r 11 ™ 1911 1~ 1' t\ co1l('Ot~ otb M th E K II ( S s111m s 51 • n• s ... c11• 111 1 01 Al l1C1> UI lJI 1• l:Ail 13\lo -'>Ii (011 Pll \ .c a t ew , e y o an TrtM ?~ •.1 21 n l'F•m G1 , 10 • 10 ••1r11111.u1 tO • t• 11'1o '"' -~ coi11n/li!~ .u Francisco staled "'"1"'111 Prot 111~ ~' 1111 .. 5'AIP111P C•m ,. !"'to !''"' + '• 0111,. ••• • Ovn. • ll • &I S1t~dm1n Fund1 A.Ito.I l M Ut lit •l"I l -V. Colons I IOI The pohc1e11 to be Issued b~ 111c1~.1 l tl •,. Am lno l '6 4,. """1s.,. 1 .o , 1"' '"' 21'11 Cokiln111 1 • Airplane Insurance Announced Con1pan v of Sant3 Ana on lnsurt<l BECOME ~ORE EFFECTIVE ll'ICom 1 t1 'J' """'" Jl(t 1•2AM...,C so .i; 1>n M\ji UAi iol! lftdl First American I h rough V•n• •ii • F1<1uc , " 1" A,,,.,.•• 'JO 1 rtf'• f\ ,,.,, -v. eN '" "'' n I d f I d I Pl!Fd Vo 11tOll11 s111n fl!.,. Fos Am e 1 en tO 1 '1 41 o11 In 011 let t\IUT'f! Airtra t inc U e n Pu tnve110•1 1111n 10 •• 711 • Aml1t•• 1:kl su wh w w 1• -"' Ill '"' d I ( • I OllCo 1tt llJ C•• 0 •II ttJ Amtt.f lfl \O 11 IUV.115 .... 1•5'4 -l" fl Pl ! INCREASE YOUR INCOME ' DALE CARNEGIE• COURSE tn 911..;llv• com,...nlt•ll••1s, •·~~.._. 1flll ~un,.~ .-.LU,..., Phono Todoy -17141 633-4191 I I See by Today's Want Ads e Tnl,OEn.<:; PARAfJISF. HECRFA1'l0N LAND'' Nrar l1tkf' fl\t"t~. and Rf!dd1na. \\ant TDs olher tradP or 1111v olr 1 .. rrn~ f!'lr S l'.00 rqu 11;v • This "81 Xl\F 4 2 rl111rk. \\Ire \\llt"Pl~ 1'.l1lhhn11 A;'~1 1' M rt.dt0 will put more fun ln!O )'()Ur llfr e HOW A BOUT 90me •llChl· ly Uled a.ppllllnct"f \V11di. .,.. ril')'i'n. f't'ft1tf't•l<'n ~can I~ 11.TOn&:'I ---•.)""~ orsemen s or 5 '-p r I e GrviTll , 11 10 n s•oc~ 11., l•.., M lrFutr so ,1 •• ''"' •• +l\\ ce11u G•• 1 it coveragr. or englne5 and pro-stoc~ 1u1os's.,,..,..,.1,d 1nv Amio.1r1 •Oo 11• 17" 11 ,,,~-14~01~ ,·~ '"Mull ,,, '" G ...... 1/\ '" IJOAalllitr 1!• JJ ,,,..,, /1 \1 -''c~ pcllersas"ellasairframes F11 N11 '" 1•• sumn i 1 0.111°'A"'"'"1'~ 1\• dh u11 u''-"'-c:!..i",",1 1 •~0 ( ( F1l ""'' un.tlll ll TKll I •• I s ..... aoat I JG uo •l'" •1"' ""' _, _.. y Rotation o engines or r:1o1 """ 1 n sr"' G11> 10 ro lO " Am c1n 110 11, U'llo 3' H'-' -'~ ~:::::~~ 1 !::' overhaul engine p 0 0 11 n g Pl'ld 0111 • •l s ,. TMlt Ai>• 1J 2'I u ,, " c 1n Pll ,, ,, 1n-JS\lo ''"' COl't1f ..i-H • Pwnd.,., G•-!"'"~' 10 11 11 OI Am c.,.,..,,1 7\• 11\ m -~ c ome .. 11 00 agreements Md other com· Grwlto u o u '' tcrin1c1 J" l w • CMln 1 11t n ,,u, ""' 7•'-' • c ..... E ~" ·~ tncorn 11 11 14 t7 l'mp Cit 14 » 1111 A C~en l.2$ »j :M '> M lt'Ao -" Com"' Oh 611 mon practices of lhe aviation Mut11 1n •n owr C•a s11 &XIA"' n1•tll1 1 ,, n 1• 11 • '''""'° •"" SPIC! lltJ1106 rnt (IP , •• l !I ADl•~fl,.. ...... •N H.__,,\eom ... 1 Sci industry ComphCalt l It J e l'our" 10 5' 11 52 T••v Eo 10 61 11 60 A~m 1IV1•t ' ·~,, I ~ ul~ + '>Corn•!• ~I ( I I I d I fr•nklln G•!lllD jUOr I-le<! 1l 116 \I '71 A t f>I •• • ll'o 11'6 •• CM'tlal so res r c 10111 p ace on arge oNrc 1 1J , " wnc Gt J co J,., Mi Pw • l'O -n1 1• • ,.. "' -.~ ~-Ml\'" air fl ' "· b I Orw!ll ••• 7 HTwnC Inc •ot 1uAm •• IM 11 '' '"• f\ -~C"""'M' Jl1 era engines, 1..:re y P IC· um• , " 61, USAA Gt 10 ,, 10 M Atro ,.., l>f tlM ~· '4 ' .. "'t"0ttr1tt '° lng added importance on as:iur. tncom 11~ 1"' untt Mut 10 " 11 '' :0it~ 'ii ..l!, II" ~~ J:~ :!: ~con i'I' 1•"' tl h u• Gov 10 ~11.llUnlllll'ld 10 1J ll MA ;n".Jo ~jJ ~ ,__~Coil '""f lngclearl1 elot eseen1lnl!:!1'dF o ... 10"10.s u nton s~ G"' Am "1r·:oo • 1 Vi 111'i -~?"' '10•~~ t(hu f.nhl ll'ldll'ICG"', af'IM<!11M 1'00A,.._1JOlll ""'"~ ti::•l, 11 e me o wen P ceriwn 'f'10.s111111~v 1 11•01~.!~ .. t7.Jft )!llOl -~f;;;;'•ll'I'~ tranafer or reflnllncln1, Kelly I~~ .• 1~ .. ; ,tn ~;: 1~ ~ \l.ll ~ul~ \'1 • ,~ j?1r" ~:: t~b; ·~•lned P:IT.i , .... 1ilu11lfld Fund• A /li\llCbll.JO ~ +-. Ol'IN;. I t ,fld ...... •• ., Accm 1 n I H .. M~lll Ill. -'J ,,.. ":T: JO FAA Record! Center ,,...,. 11110" COii G• 11111112 l'I .f1 c:it Aw'L~n 1 ...., .,, Set •1• th cen '"" 11 JJ n .,. A i\j' ~ ~ ... -"cewttc. mil nt.atn! reg1strAUOn n!t01u:! lbo'lllt 1 N J 10 trw:om 11 ll Un A ,I -l Ct C•fl ".fl:: on all alrcr1ft englnet over 7fiO 'Z:p k: 1,,. , 11 ~1~ ~ ~ 1g 1 ~ 11' ,ti ~ = ~ r.on11cc ... 1.'4 hQrsepov.•er for which t1lle and !111n 1 n •nu "" C•,,. • '' • g A-l'!"!t;. 11: D t :! ~ :l'"l: ( I om 51 lJ.OI UH V•!llt Unt Pd ...;;\lf'1n111 M ~ -14 t .llf ,. 1nanc.ng agreements 1 re i11ftFt1 A '" , .. v11 LI '" 1 •1 ••"'-4-iFJ IW'IHll., rrcorded at. the request °'~~ .. ·~ ~!nntt ~'W'i'i. lU :::~ .. l~1.. ,. ~~ .. I, nwners or mortas1on of the "~71~1 ,,. 5 ,, ·~'r,,,~::•1• i~ 1 72 A~ /llJ: 1 fl§ ~ ~1,~ = ~ :::~ 1 enii:lnes orwlr.r 1 u. • M v1,,.d • N ':it AW~ • 11 fi" i.-:-ll .,,~ " "•"* 1.56 tJt \11nlf lN 10 K II J4 AW 9'i'I' 1.,1 r.ie \"' -" 9llt Ori F1rs1 American T 111 e ,, .. ( "" 13 » i' SJ v1r tn P '" 'Jt A§?.M .~ I' ','" ~·~ ' .~ ~ '• ~-· "'• I e--hH .. C l.#V 11011117 ldl'I '" l,7JA'" •t lfl~ :fl J ., )t., '• "'' nsurance ......,.,1pany, wit H-a.... .,.....,.11 11 1 o '" , ... ~ Lii(.,. ij" ~-i: Ctlllunu,• I , M• 000 000 """" 11 ti U ti t tll M 1UI lt.l!t""' I(. .fO 1 \oo. --·~ A aMe ! 1n excess o -• H,,11.,. 1" 1 '° t1u,.,.1n G-...,,,P '"' 1. 11 \' •"' "" --· ~·111 has branche.' subsld1ar1es and"'°' ""'" 16" ""' l!•l>I• 70'7 g,. :m:!'x-.~111 1n ,~ ,, .l. -" ~~·!'Cl i "° • ICM 'ltll 105 I !Vtlt lf,111111:1 m ~ ~ ~i;+l'o o 11 .Jilit affiliates 1n 14 wtAtem steltll u1 Gr-Mlll'1 11M1 A::~:~ ~.11 , ; '"' ~ 2' • nd C Th h I h Grwtft • 11 • 'TIC~" I lf tt a.mot"(I \:M ~ r t, l"'• )~~ -\t ~ ~· a uam roug e '"'"" t '° • T•11<1f 111', Ami.• .lCI 1• I°' ,,, '" ,. .. • "" narcnt firm The r I r ll l ,,.,. "' 12 St u w11111 1 " 1 Anoc""4• 1 ',lff, 1 I• 1• 1• \ -.. {I• "( :'O I' • T•llO 11n I J1 Wllltn 11 ,, lJ ll At\.tll 110<• I J2 )60.0 lo!\! ~'41 -1;. f'C lnol 1 It American r1ruancl11I CorporR • ..,. c •• 1016111)f W111dr ·1·1~"Ant::ll'• -~ l "•'' "~·· ·~·· , .... l fOll lion lt trRC'f!~il,nrl~n lo l89t::~~~ 1!:1::1 r~''jtd t~ fti:=:J~,1 ?f '1 ~ ... 1 , .. :!;: ~ttu ·~- 1 I I l~cl' '"' 700 111Wlnllt lO 4 :)) t ll Al(..0 \1tf '" 11•· ,,,, \t -•j,Crom~~ llO fll BO lnsurt'r n I t f! pro-11ndv•t•1 I !It 1 1t !V11 .. 1"11 ',. '. A~O Cn lA A' I '• ll•• l <t '("O'J,•HI~ I l I I ' !NTGll •u10 441w~'"' ,II.I '~•A'l Co•( f •,j • 1Q~• 'lO'~ l.C•owCo!I •i r tcct on oren prope r ' •1c • 1i1>1,01l,111,, u~1 .. 11111.1>l o> 1t• 1t u -,cr.,.n c~ro ____ _i_ _ ___:,_ ·~ -.-j,..J.____ ._ .... ----·--------·-- • ··-----· • -- ' '• ' ' • ,, " .. ,, • ,, • • ' ' ""• ~ . .1, • '. 101> -•• Q'' ... " ~,, '" • i~ •• • " "" . . 4llo .. , ~-·· ,,.. :i ~I~ -i'? SJ.. '• " '. ,,,, '. "" -l " ltlo 0 ... -.. 61 I • ~. -. l!: : ·I u, ~ .. Tur~•Y July 27 l!J71 SC -~-----DAJL Y •!LOT J j Tuesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List N1<1 oco 110 NocoC~ llO No co:S.C 60 N1U•u•C11 41 N~Ai rn o,, NA.v i J6a Na C1n •S N Con .. r XI ~:,'! .. :~ _:J NA(hl lO N• DI I 'l'IJ N• • • 61 N• G~n 10 N1 GVP GI N• Hpm•• N~ "" No nd o ~ ~·"~~ p i! N1 5uc n•~ NI S •nCl lS l~St•cn "" N1 5 ~1 1 .1{1 N• l •• 111 N• UnE 17CI N• om•i 11 N•p une 40 N•v"ow 1 , New<le v I tow~ o J I NEneE 16 NE n ? Je N~w"• JO N•wmn C• N'<Honll ()d NVS EG J OI NVSE ol M N •o MP 0 lol•M PI 4U N1 M<> 3 00 N 11Sh Dla NL n<f 1 "lo Ion.. W j No nCP S9 No•lnd l NA Co• 00 "lnili M 1 ~a No it.m "" 1 NoAmlh 1'0 N<1Allt p • S NoAIH of'l Jl NO-I• 1.J '' N.,.c1nG• 60 No IG•o II No Gs on o0 Nn ~PS l' NoN(,1 l l(l ""5 ...... JQ NS"w o •Ol N\ Pw P'l !O No nq • SOo NO !hOOI Nn nD D 4\ ""'' ... 5 Nw B•nc •D Nnw d N "'' Cl w Nw nCI gAJ Nw Cl olC\ Nw• n o•)O Nw• nMu l 1 Nw!S WJ 10 Nn C1\J O No S "'"" No50!60 NV• Co O•it E •c • 0•1 •I'd ID Occ d P Occ CIP1 <II i Occ 11f> otl 60 Occ aP o'1 • Oo<1en Co 1> Ooden DI 11 Oh nEd I< On Ed I>! • •O g~ :c.t I ~: O• GE o l• Oo. t GI!' nt 10 00 •~G• N 0 n Cn n II Omo • n 61 O"• noL 10 o .... 11 0 """ " 10 0 E •• ' Ou NI M• Ou •(o l5 0 • T •~ Owon ('>Cl IS l)w~n 1 JI Ollnt16n "• r; E ~· no nE n tO ... , Q llJ ... ... )l'loo "• nw " nae Sw A Pof TA.I 1() "•<' .\ T r ~ ,,., n r.o~ no ml' ~ ?I l'onllm5 X1rJ "•nhm Wll. r F'•nl> En Ill) "'"" { •o "" "" I• no no DI" 04 "• kl-Ion !O <>o I I' n Ml """" Con Penn o • "enn I= I """"'' ( ' Ponn~C~ t1I PoPwl 61' J> Pl 11 I "" ... I'll " ' "" "' PLI n!• 10 """'""" ii' r>enw I 111' '(I ,,,.,.. el oO IOt .,n11./n ¥1 Pen u .,.1 1 P.00011 1 0 P•l>llG1• 7 OI ··~" ' "" 1 .... .l'lG Pe nr I JO Pe nc n 1 l>t nc n tO n1t•P•u 10 "" 0 ... 6" P•I e p 1 JI ,. "' ... I' !I ~· ....... ,o ) 0 l'h 'E o• "" El o t I Ph E n 7 ~l P~!E nU 6@ IOh E o I 10 l'h f: "'')(I "n osun XI Ph M!Y 'O I>• Mn n! ' r>n n ll!l ' .... """ ' r>n "'' '° ' • ... ' " ' !~ " •• m • " ' . " " r > H .. ' "' " .. ' " " " l " ,, > " • ~\ .u 1 1• 6 • 11 .. 11 , ... ' 111 ... •6 ' ?I W , .. i.• 1 . 1 7;10 1 ' • '76 ~I ~q I 70 It 1 •• ,, • ' ., "" • • ' .. ,. " .. ~ '* ' ,,. ' ?I lt .. V• J ~ n 5"'> ., . 11~ l l )l'fi jl ~ l J.... )j I 10 o l"o 15'» )ll,lo ll\.'t ,.., ''"" • • ., . •O'll. ll ,, 11 lJ UJ,lo 7l > " • 6 • , '"' 6 l l l'!• 6 :.i ... li)>J, t 2 H•Jl> 71! W'-'o t • ll ''"' l 16... 1• -0-R- " '" ' ,,. ~ • n ·l " ' ~ • •• ' ' " " ' • ' M ' ' ,. .. • " " " ,,} " ' '" ' " "' • .. • • n " • " '" •• •• ffl'o ''" " 'll: , .. ,, .. u· " " " " "' •• ~ ,. •• ''" " '" "" • "" • " " .. " " .. ' . ,. .. '" .. " "' ff ,. ... ' JJ" '"' "" » " • • 1'1•• .,. to 09"1 \(If " ' • • • ...... " ,,: ~ '" " " " ' ' ... " •21o ... 101-. ' ... . ' » 111> ->-- ' " " " ,. " " ' '" 11» '" ,, .. •• m. ·~ • " • lSh •• 71h ' .. ... • • . .. ' . l l 2•\• " . ·~ "' " .. ... " •• "' .,, "" " !!~-.. "" " .. •• ,,.., ,. .... "" • • • ,,. •• ' ... ' " '" •• ". ., >•-• ~ •• ' .. ··-ll .. ' " . -u . i •2 .. + ", • ,._ .. N.l'. Win11ers and Losers I --~--... • " .. • • " -T-•'4 --. "°"' -.. 1 ~ I• ' c • " . " • '" ' "" »• ,.. 00• ,. l2 -~ ''" -.., ' ' lOl .. -"'' " " ,.. ll\ -.. "' '" .. ,. • '" , .. " . , Market Sl1arply Lower in T1·adi11g NEW 'ORK (UPI) - Stocks were sharply lov. er late Tuesday bul 1nns!l y ror th e san1e reasons as 10 recent sessions -toncerrl ove r !ugh une1n ployment 1nflauon and thu e.l'.onon1 y 111 gene1 al Some analysts also attr1huled selling or storks to seasonal 1nfh..1ences allhl)ui:h th ey noted that the big problern is 1nflat1on and 1ndica t1ons that Wa shington 1s havin g llttle succt ~s 1n lOnla1111 ng the upward price spi ral With less than an hour of lract 1ng lo go the Oo\Y Jones Industrial \ \ cragc \1115 off 7 08 11t RB I 79 Standard & Poo r~ 500 sto1 k 1ndrx ~ho1ved a lo ss of 070 al 9797 "hlle dell111cs out~torcd ad vances 924 to 358 among the I 587 ii.sues rross1ng the ta pe Volume al 2 pm amounted to a 170 000 shar es up from 7 440 000 shares traded al a con1parable period the previous session and Electronics among the days widest movers were mostly lower RCA 18~1 Burroughs, Mem orex attracted selling pressure ,,.. ... 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' .I I .I ' tJ• ,J J' ,~"' I I , I I 11 $V. ..... 9\, 11 !IO JOJJ)I Wall Street l Onl o0 o~ l 'OXllO I l l'• 11 ll ll I• • ••• '' ~ \ I S .I Chatter "° ~ • ~ • • • • & • "' 9 ~ 1, 6 1 • I '> I I t• ' 9 6 11 1 • • • 1, Wh•le lhe markP.t h11s oot ", ,' . ,,' ,,' lnoke<l had ,11n1ng down 1t 31'° ' • • • • j 1 .,,1 .., , •o , \o doe..1 not look very good gorng 11 n.~. n,' 131 := U(J f f llutt.nn & Co 1~ 1~ • 7~ 1~1' b<>hrves The e<>mpany 111y! • 1~ ~ ! ;~ ; : -., st;;i!e mate or tri1c11n11: r11n11:e ~ 1l \ 1~~ 1~~ _-. seems to be rlrvclop1na and u "" n ""' -ff'els 1t is not un reiuonable to 1 11 • • -1, l 1 • 1i ''" sav !hilt the breakout fTom ,,..>'lo .J\o d 1 ,.,,. ,,.., ,, , , ttn~ ra n RP i,1 111 point the 1rec :: ~,, t 1 Hon or the next key markl!:t 1; 1~,: 1:~ 1;~ = ~ n1ove • ,,~. lll, 77'1. -• U• 00 .M~ J6 -JI• I tlo I 6~ 1, f I S o I f ,, , ... ,, .. ,, .. l l ~14•l• I "., 7t '' l ... s1111 I •urn • • unor!lc 1r ~ :",: 1~ -:i. u~'""~''"''"°'" ,1,,_..,,..._ 1 ) •• ); u o -,01noo" ~o lo o..,n1 t1&l1 •ttn"'1tl •• U " ll • 7J,,. -'t dllbu ,...,.n • bt1t11 on fflt 1111 ~u•rl• , 1 i'" I 1 -• o ''"' •nnv.. dtc ••ati.n lff.1:11 or 1:~ 1 ~ ,:~ 1~ ' :f •• • d "d_, « P•~m•nll Ml <1111~ 6" '~ lO ~ »"' ~ nA td •t ···~ • I • Id.on 11104 In Ille • o , O\• o" fO owln• tor. ...., 11 HI ~"!; ~~~ ~~ ~ •-.lot t• • t •K•r•1 .._.nnutl I•!• ' 10 ,.,. ,I<-~•• •l>C-d v dt 'ld c-l.<111111 nt11vi. -r.z_ dtnd II-Dec t t<1 « 1111<1 n 1'11 , ... " O ! 'l \ • ock II v d•f>4. t-PI t 1111 t tlf '- '' '~,I~, .. = 1 P1d l'll O<-dV<l'lt1'11 t1Tr!H!Hf ("••lt • i'' j' l••ut on •K<l •ldtl'l<I t r , • ...,ti1r1tou111>ro •1 1' 1,u 1 ~ -• d•. 1-ow.1."' ..... 1., ... ,,, 111i. ijl 1J"' ht 1!'... 0 wo•r h-0.C t 14 tr t• d t li. I tdl n '' • •v J d vi<lf"<I er 1• I wt k-0.(ltrt11 or et• l~ ' ' -"Ill ' ,,. 11'1 1ccwrnw I I Vt lllUf Wllll -• jl • ... dvdtOf\ In 1 r~111 n Ntw 11-.. - d r.: f'Z \ Pt d tn I Yltf dl\olllofnd °"'/l!ld <!eo ' 'I ', l~ 1~ f ., M 1111 t olon 1~1n 11 1•1 '• d~ ... u-. 1t\, '-tnHtln1 •-Doc orl'lf t r •• t In "n , ut Mn lJ ':;:: l~O. 1t0<1 11 vld•Nll 1-P• 11 In 1tock Vii•.., 1 ~ ,,.. ·~ , 1t10 t• lmt Ill cu ll •I ""' tn u d v1C1,,.i l ~ ... 11 • 1t , ............. lr lllullon M IL 1 1 ~ i!') !,!•-t, 1-llle1 11'1 "'' •M •• ·~ SS"' -~ -.-c.n111 •-I!• dl•IHM ·-·· -· "!" I '•" ' •!' -·-• ! lllncl t ncl 11 " 111 IVI! t•-dlt-l!w IJ o!rlo I ,i:, I • 1 ~llon v -El l ltl'lll. Jw-Wltflolll "''"' lll(l• 10114' 11~, 1r.:; 1 I 11n • .,w ... Whb w1 •nt .. wO-Wlle~ tllo '' '"' t 0 tr 001 t4. •l-WM11 ln ... H. ,.._..tlll -•1 1,~ 1~: 11 0 ••v•t J•l •,.. '•' ! '•'• , vj-1" btl'li;•u~tt;Y .. ft\"olv..-.b • 1t!f ft ., • l Ill "' ft Ottll\llfd u-Ille tt!llU''lllltri • '!"' f ,,,. it.t i or ltt\f 1ti.. ~,..,..,.~ by tut~ t- ,.: ~ l 11: f.: _ , ""~ t• ~1-!:o nt• 111 <1-Ct•t lk llttll ',! !' ! ,' I '• • -1 ome..t 1-0.1 t n I II •-M11U ... bc>Nil "tt~ t b t IV 1..., •• tt11 !n' mt u• ,,.., 't ~. • • •• ntt-"'~•I ~·v ••l Y•'Y ..,.._,. w•rr•"I• le 11 ~ • J l 111 , -\lo• MVt t ktft--'-'---------l --.... _ -· " ~---· -----·-T><I T11tsdaJ', J11ly 27, Jm CHECKING •UP• 1 Boyhood Dreams -A Second Looi{ CUSTOMER St:JtVJCE ; Q. ''l 1ay chicktn noodle ls the best-selling soup. Whal do you 1ay, po~?" A. Understand mushroom is No_ I. The-next four, in order. are said to be tomato. chicken no o d J e vtgetable beef and bean. Q. ''ls there anything in the world that will quiet squeaklng bedsprings?'' A. Try a rubdown >A'Hh a cake of wet snap ... Q. "How long does LL take Lo crem;ite a human body?'' A. 'rhrPe hours, zJ:>out. Al 2,700 degrees F. LOO KING INWARD : 1'he mediocre years or middle age are high upon us . friend_ And aren't they great! ! hang a print of Hemington on Sunday afternoon. Feed the Siamese lighting fish. Mix iced tea , omit the sugar. Turn down the cool a notch. Doze fitfully till dinn er steak. And contemplate the purhase of &!riped shirts. To bed. Back on the farm. as a trid- dy lad with happy teeth and melancholy eyes. 60 percent song and 40 perC<'.nl sob. fe1•t beneath the cow and he;1d elsewherf', toward the loft. unencumbered by in1ellect and doub t, I dreamed some. Of grow ing up . Or at least sidc wa.vs. Of drinkin,i:.: a sco1c h in uniform y.•hcre Hemlng1vay drew blood . or sailing most unlonel.v through ./ o s e p h Conrad's SCilS. Or .spying with the fellow spies 1n leather mini-pants on Ge rman cnb· blestones. Of rat1ling ?.rnund t he Bowery likr some 0 d d l>.1clnty re waif. or hitchhiking across Oklahoma lo M on- terrey "''here Steinbeck settled dust. or pretending to the chrome thronP of the cocktail king in Miami. Of chattering into a European news n11crophone like a little late Floyd (;ih- bons. Or springing throug h the bodies to ii th (l us a n d lclephnnts. one or Ben Hechl's unbelievable crisp boys, snap- ping . "Give me the city desk'." Of addressing some benevolence to the: hungry girls or Rome . Of silting soulful. pencil poised, in a flet>t Street pub. or smoking pot in Reynosa. Of singing "San Francisco" •n Kz.m Tong 's Shanghai L il. Berlin, I knew, I'd call my own. and Oslo. Paris and Lucerne. \\'ith a bucket of wa rm milk belween my knees, and an in- finite assembl y of flies. This can1e to pass, all of it. What a mess of un- momentous memories! Bul they are so mewhere else now. I waded out of them, clumsily enough for they were knee- deep. and left them lay , hke mismatched film on a culting- room floor. They are no more a part of now than the :usses of V-J Day when everybody bawled. \Ye're most all alike, I think , we middle-aged men. Except maybe I talk more than I ought. in this writing dodge. But nol>ody knows the alien in- cidents each graying man survives, the dreams turned real, then dreamed again, nobody. and nobody ca res. not even the mw hi m s e I f anymore. Goodbye and God Bless. My feet are closer now to the "''hile lime of the old barn floor than to all the dust and decks and cobblestones thal we re, since. And it is time to water the mon key plant on I.he patio, then go pick up the ladyfriend at Sears. Your questi0"11s and com- ments are welcomed nttd will be used in CHECKING UP 11J/1erever poss i bl t . P/ea.~e address your letters ln L. M. Boyrl, P.O. Boz 1875. Newport Beach, Cali- fornia 92660. Science Kno,v-how N ixo11 Will Discover Reds No Burripkins WASHINGTON !UPI J When Presidcnl N1xnn J:Of'S tn China next year, hr will bf' \'isfting a nation far morr ~op h1stiC'aterl ~<'1r n1 1ficallv than a lot of \\'r i;tcrnrrs sup- pos<'. E veryhnd~· \.;nn""~-nf e1111rio.f'. tha ! Mainland China h;is 111arle nuclear "'Capons :ind !hr missiles with whi ch 111 del1\er th em But the nolion 111'1 t•r1hrlr'~ fl"rsis!s in so1ne c·<1p11;i11~1 C'1rrles that b1.i; China Is ;1n unor.l;(ani1.cd con1:lnn1 <'rHlf' 1n Onr of !he first Lhings the Chinese Communist rulers did y.•;is t{I 1nau.l(urate in 1950 a na. !1onal can1paign for. as the ri1rcrtnrr pu 1s ii. "eradication nf :-;upPrstitinns in the in- crrprr\iltion or n at u r a I phPnon1rna " Snn1f'Whrr<' <ilong \hf' wa v lh1•v (!nt hack :is rn.:iny as they ('0111<1 or thosr (' h i n es c :-.r1rn11sts \1•hll h;iri rcceivr1i lh1·1r graduatf' degrees in \l'rstf•ro n;'.il!on <; ~o if \\'estern sr11'n1'" 1<; good , sn is the ~rirncr nf ( 'nn1m11nl<;! Chinn which suJ)f>rs1i11nn r11lrs n\t•rl,------------, reasnn , Nixon and his s1;iff n11ghl du worse 111 thei r prf'·\'!srt <'r111n- ming thiin to sludy a rrrcntl.v published director~ of sclec1rd scientific i n s t i ! 11 t 1 n n s in J.1Ainland Ch1n<1. It was preparer! hv the Surveys iind Hcseiirch Co rp of Washington, 0 C. for the N11·1 tional S~ience Jo'oundal ion and published by !he Hoo\'Cr ln stl·1 l.utirm Press. It runs to 41i9 page:oi and reports in del ail lhe makrup of .(go Chincst sci e n t i I ; c research and dcvelopn1rn1 in- stitutions through 1967. LET'S BE FRIENDLY IL ynu h;n r nr\1• \lrii:;hhor!'; or kn1Jw of anyone' mnv1 ni;: lo our arra. T•lt•11sc rcll us :-.o l h11l \\'f' may rx1l'nd a frirndly \\f'lcomr and ht'l[l thrn1 lo 0.•rom~· RC'lUMintrd Jn thri1• Ill'" surroundings. So. Coast Visitor 494-4579 494-93'1 Harbor Visitor 646-0174 COAST SUPER MARKET EVERYTHING FOR YOUR PICNIC COAST SUPER MARKET lJ41 E..C-.\ ~. ~IWlllldd t .. Hot Dot • Ch1"c•0:I Chip• I S119Cl1 Napkl111 S1111 Lotl0:11 S1111 Gl•»ff HOME DELIVERY C•ll 111 ~-t ' n •.n1 .. ,,,.Ht&. THE VACATl·ON KNl.TS wherever summertime travel -takes you enjoy Edward s Dacron~ doubl~ kJ:t'ts , Travel anywhere: l oaf somepla~. Enjoy your ieJsureln wh4:11t1way~,,.' Indulge yourself,m a ,;et of coord uia tes qy Edwards of Canfumla. All machine :.Vashable Du PontDacrqn•.pcilyester. Lush colors.like burgundy, aiure, hrown. Smashing-wom~li!ll .or mixed with your ottier sportswear •. from our new~tion • li!l!IM : a. zip.fron t Dacron•shirtiin mixed tones, M-Xl 12.00 b. double knit pant of Dacron" polyester, 32-40 23 .00 c. mac-turtle shi rt, medium to extra-large 11 .00 · d . cardigan sweater, medium. lo extra-large 18..00 e. striped Dacron• shirt with 4-buuon plad cet..M·XL 12.CIO ~ ~ mea'_s spomwear fum i5hing:s 64- . . . ..,... ................. "1>11 ..... 111...,_ .. ·m1y co. south cot1t pl111, 11n ddlego fwy. 1t bri1tol, co1t1 me11; 546-9321 1hop monday th ru ••turd1y 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m ., tund1y noon 't ll 5 p.m.. ,. • MON-SAT-t ,. 6 :J O-.l 1t11ff•y t t• I ~.---_!;·_~::~:"'.==:'.°:::::'.J"".:-~""";;· ;,,..!·~~::'."..-~:::_:::::::.:_:::_:_::::~ .. -... ~~ -·~--~-----~~-11.:.:. -- MAVC:O ·-rr . er~-i,.11>-.... ....,,...~. -. ...~ ..... ___ ...... ~--------- 7 i 7 ' '~ I 1 ) r .. ...,, JulJ %7, 1m s DAILY I'll.IT lf ·ueI ·Will Curtail Library ·_H·our~ • Ill Cutbacks • By GEORO~ LEIDAL ot ... o.i•r ,. '"'" A $60,000 budget cutback will re sult in an 11 percent reducUon ln the num~r of houri the UC 1r¥lne llbr.ary will be open to students nut year. John E. Smith, UCl librarian, :laid to- day the library will no longer be open to students on Friday nights or Saturday mornings in order for the Ubrary to live within Its 1971-72 budget. Despite a 700 student increase at UCI next year, the Governor's budaet add!<! little money to the total budget provided to UCI last year. although recognition of growlll at UC! came lo th< lonn o/ 30 nelf faculty pollUool. The library budget cut represents two and a half percent of lht o\ltrall budget for nut..."}'e&r, Smith noted, and means a loss ol three and a half library sta!f posi- Uoru. The budget also lessens the number of books that may be purchased during the year by 1,500 volumes. S1nith noted that while these books amount lo only two and a halt percent of the book buying budget, buying them in subsequent years wll l bt more cosily, due to inflation. The library hours reduction means studenls may use !he llbrary only 35 ' bouts 1 week nul year, com.pared lQ 96 boun 11\lJ yu.r. Smith said. "we're trying to make lhe cutbacks as genUe as possible on studenll... 'lbw, .I.be hours eliminated from the libr¥Y sehedu1e art those show · ing the least amount of student use in past years. Next year's schedule will provide library service from 8 a.m. to midnight from Monday to Thursday . Friday the dooors will open al 8 a.m. and close at 6 p.m. instead of midnight. Saturday hours will be from 1 to S p.m. rather than the 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. schedule offered in past years. OAll Y l"llOT Sllfl P'~I"' TH IS IS THE SCENIC OCEAN VISTA THAT DANA POINT RESIDENTS HOPE TO PROTECT Already Two Law Suits Have Been Fil ed to Prohibit Construction Blocking The Vi•w Dana Hill Residents Unite Battle Joined With Count y Ove r Tall Buildings By PATRICK BOVLE 01 fll• 011IJ !"Ott llltf Hillside Dana Point residents have begun organizing for a battle with the µiunty which could ultimately affed the growth of their booming community, The rtsidents, many or whom Uve in $40,000 and $50,000 single family dwell· ings in the area of Street of the Blue Lanlern above Coast Highway, are op- posing construction of tall apartment buildings on I.he lower portions of the slope. •·we plan to obj ect to any construction for which a variance must be granted.,·• said Jim Rege\brugge, chainnan of the recently formed Dana Point Civic Association . "We will support the individuals Ylho have taken the county to court as well as any future high rise that may be pro- posed." he added. The root or the problem g~s back to t he J9'l0s, according to county zoning commissioner Ray Reed, when the land \\as subdivided ~·i!h lots fronted by streets both front and rear. To build on t he sloping land without having steep driveways. Reed has been granting '';irlances to permit construction of two and three story apartments which would not meet the 20-foot setback re· qulremenls. The height of the buildlnKs is not ii· legal. Reed note&, because with the slope. only two of the stories, or 35 feet, would be above the street level. However, his actions have sparked the ire, severaJ ap- peals and at least two lawsuit. from are.a homeowners. Residents aero&• the street -ln the gingle fa:nlly dwellings -complain the 11partment bulldin1s would block their view of the sea and have fought the eran- ting of lhe variances, haJtlng con- struction. Donald Bedoe, of S.122 Street of the 'Blue Lantern, recently won a cwrt battle hailing such construction after both Reed .and the Board or Supervlson approved ,lbe perm.it. Beddoe has sln~ described Retd as a. 1"''one man vertance committee thet hands out varlaot"ts like bllloons •at a poUUcal ipicnlc." ' However, Reed feels a preCedent 'WIS \1el for hi• action &ecau.e 'two other pro- ly>erty owners built similar 1partment '1outes several ye:ars ap . ' "The tonlnl code say1 that If homeowners nearby have the aame 1 privilege. It is .ufflelent reuon for gran-~tlng," Retd says. The property owner' ,halted by Beddoe'• l\llt, IUcbmf.-. has since rdlled fbr ~ tame vifia.nce, .Rt<dnotff. "MOil of the: loll haYe been vacant for a number of years." Reed says, "and the people who Uve there now have had a baaullful view. "The land could be rezoned wlth a llmit on the height," he added . "but it would &Mm odd to put a height limit on multi· pit family dwe.lllnas whfon 1tngle f1mllle11 1cnm UM! strttl can hl!lve two stories :ibove the street level." llowever, seve ral residents v.·ould still like lo preserve their view and they see fighting the variances as the only recollrse availablt . "The people are upset with the way the coonty supervisorsrere ignorina the Dani Point area,'' said Mrs. John Creed, of 33871 El Encanto. "We are not sayina the people should not be allowed to build, but \.\'e would like the county to take a more eareful look at the effect the variances will have,'' Another resident. John Bass, or 34012 Granada Drive , said he was pleased the Ci vic Association was planning to take action. "There have been too many old timers 1 rying to make motions and second them, bu t nothing gels done," said Bass, who noltd'thal-hf' llJi Y4!¥S old. "Thert have betn too many talkers and not enough doers. I think these young folks On tht: association) are going to g e t somewhere." "And I think that now, any more aparl· ment building construction will have to go through a lot more legal procedures and not just one individual ," Bass added. Atom Activi sts Nearit1g Next Faceoff 011 Onofre By JOHN VALTERZA OI rite Elel/y P'li.I 11111 The time Is almOlll here atain. when the cadres of dark·SllJled expert.a from major utilities will confront a brigade of Jay oppOnents ~aring reams of handwritten data and yellowed clippings. The issue -an awesome one -is whether San Onofre should become the world's largest lllJC\ear generatina complex. The Atomic Energy Commistion will decide. Experienced observers of the phenomenon of the nuclear reactor appll· cation hearings haV! said Ja~t year's Public Utilities Com· ~ mission functlona in San Clemente were child's play com- pared to the AEC edltlon scheduled 10metime later th.is year. Yet, the basic issues will probably remain the same. And the nucleus-pardon the trlten~f the enUrt maUer is: "whom do we t.n.tst ?" The answers never come easily, We'll tee opposing factions of acientists -hearing from emlnent men proclalm.i.n& the safety, virtue and cleanliness of nuclear reactors. Then we'll probably 1et another group -equally 11 e the panta Off everyone with prediction• of dire accidents . And aJ1 will have tht.ir own probability factors t e 11 in g us something might happen within I 11ven perkld of years. And informaUon will come with gobs of testimony spoken Jn ''Nuclear· phy11caese, ·• tongue loreJp to 9t percenl of the American public. Utility execntJve1 will tell how import.ant the new generatorg wlll be to our naUon'1 power crt1ll ••. how clean the reactor;1 are (we already Jeno" how well lobsten grow around coollna sy1tem oullaU1) and how nuclear en- erc 11 the only way to ny. Laymen and profeaaklna1 chtica will be out in force as well -all po1- wsed by genuine concern and • strong element of mlstru1t of uUJJUea:, rov- e11nment conpniaaions and the pucefuJ atom. Added to the acenarlo wW bf: a bitch of random ingredicnll such u civil defense plans drawn up to evacuate thousands of us ln cue JOme IOrt of cat.a1- lrophe or ubotage hltl the nuclear complex ... perish the thoo&ht Some will ar,ue th.at becau.1t Richard Nixon ii probably the ciolcJt real· dent to the arta ln qutsUon, tt'1 cotta be a sate proposition. ••• And IOl11IOM'1 bound to mention tht lobsttn once again. • . • And what about all the de1dly wagte th1t hu to be carted away from the gt:nerators and bJried In concrete vaults where it can 1tay lethal for 24.000 yeu1? TM vaull.l lt:ak, someUme1. The teatlmony la bound to last for d1y1 and follow a fonnat similar to a trial. The defendant, however. will be neither the utilltie.s , the government, nor the atom's peaceful use. F'ail.h will be on trial ----·-------1 • ...-.. ~ ---·-~· ---~ -- ~~·11111 l'll!l,.ln the -~ '""" trlf It P,1111. "We Wt ~ 11\lJ with tNt 1.tuo- tanet," lftillil Aid, _, '.'k ii ptDl\Y wlae and ]lOUlld foolllh ~ assitmble great ,.,...,.., ."1!1. lltm llmJ{ tbelr .... Meanwb1'911be tluif«et striCturu wilt have a more ~late ertect at cat State l"ulla1on .... •bile an l l percc:nt r1"fuctlon Ju I~ haifn ii lo tue d· loot wllll 1111 .,..U.1 of the lleC<Jnd IUm• mtr HUtari 'll'~lcll beglM Tuesday. Oollta offtctlb· have not determined lht ftall tUtet-of the budget on ne:.t YW°I library schedule, but nole the library atalf hu been cut by t.S pOOUona $2.8 Million Tab Seen On Medi-Cal By JACK BROBACK or Ill• a.or P'li.t 11111 A familiar but un\velcome problem in· vaded the Orange County Board of ::iupervisors budget hearings tltonday. Orange County Medical C e n t e r Administrator Robert \Vlti!e ~aid the present Medi.Cal Jegi!latlon being con· sidered in the state senat.e wuld co.st the county $2.8 million. Last year at I.his time, White told board members lha1 state-ordered cutbacks in A1edi·Cai would cost the county $.! million In local taxes. The result \\'as a rive-cent tax increase and the abandonmeht of several park and beach programs. \\'hite also asked for the restoration of $643 ,000 in programs cut by the county administrative office and $262,000 to cover a recent Increase in the patient load at the hospital. The hospital administrator said his estimate o( an add itional $2.8 million in local Medi-Cal costs could change and urged that the medical center budget be approved not earlier than ·Friday .;if. temoon. White suggested tha t lf the state pro- ,::ram again penaliied county taxpayers, the supervisors should e1plore the legal posslbiliUe1 of sending the state a check for its $10.4 million ahare ol Medi-Cal let· ling the slate take over lhe program. The county counsel was instructed to research lhe possibility. Earlier. supervisors had reviewed another vital component or the county'• proposed $43.8 million health program. Dr. Ernest Klatte, mental health dlrec· tor offered a $9.8 million budget, •lmost $2 milllon over lhe administrative office's figures and including a $910,000 expansion of the county's drug abuse proa:ram. He said recent state grants would save the county SS00,000 over previous estimates. Dl.acuuion of the mental health pro- gram brought forth an estimate by Coun· ty Administrative Officer Robert Thomas that drug abuse cost the county $30 mllllon, more than 10 percent of !he $244' mil\lon budget. The figure includes direct effort, crime and welfare cost!. t.fonday afternoon's session w a s enllvened by a bitter clash between Claire Kelley of Huntington Beach, presi· dent of the Council on Sensible Taxation, and two supervisors. t..lrs. Ke/Uley and Cliff Frazier. representing another county taxpayers group, have cont inually interrupted board sessions with criticism during the three days of the hearings. Co unty Planners Delay Approval Of Nig uel Plan County planning commissioners r.ron· day agai n delayed approval or lhe. l..aguna Niguel revised development p:a n as il relates to coastal areas. They expreued fears that approval might jeopardli.e negotiations between the county and Laguna Niguel owners for more than 4,000 feet of beach south or Salt Creek. Planners did approve other section• or the plan offered by A ''CO Community Developers Inc. \1-'hich calls for an ultimate populaUon of 61,000 on !he 5,20().. acre planned development, down 18 per· cent from previous plaM. The comml1!!lion f\rSt heard the AVCO plan July 12 and delayed action to take a tour of the beach at Salt Creek. AVCO has offered to sell lht county 11.4 acres of beach (or '30,000 an acre and 2.9 acre1 for restrooms for $60,000 an acre. An additional 16.S acres for parking lot! lg orrered at a fair market pri~ to be detennlned by an appral1al. Instructors Get Paycheck Option Tn1trucior1 at Sadd1eb1ck ConununJty Collep now have the option of receiving their ulary in elthtr 10 or lJ monthly ln- 1tallmentl • Trumea voted Monday to a:rant Lhe op. tlon. thll.! changing the pruenl policy of payln1 the yearly aalarit.1 over the 10 month tehool year period. Tht faculty astoellUon at the school hed requested the chance, whtch will enable a teacher to be paid on a regular basis relhtr than go through two month.• o( summer with no paychrck. ···--~ • .__ ro... ' la ... <I I l,tOO -iacrllll -year. . '!Ila -Ullllllr ..-i. It CST !lm'an' WUJ lttft llWifill • ~ Udl ~.-"'""NCI wllh I It bow a "'k ~durllll 1ha~ --lllifflt .,..,.., 4urllll th• put 11Kal yw. TIMI 1ou OI U poalllo111 oil Ille llbraty at.all muns 15 or more student a14lata.nt& may ~t be emPlcwe<I next year, a cOll~ge 1pokemnan sald. Should the hiring freeze be lifted it Is poSlllble the normal library ICheduie could be resumed. Fullerton offic\als are concerned that the investment or milUons of dollars tn · the 300,000 volumes in tba library col- -11113' "' lbrulated by .. -etJtbackt •• Wlihout 1d'q11att tl&tt to µtum boob ta ihal•.. ... - Jrepatra, the colloctloo llllfon, I • spke1man noted . Tile houn cutl by the 0r...,, c...my ~11, are typical <I cutl bdnc mldo at other sta.Le colleres and unlver1lliea. UC Berkeley bas posted a library achedult limiting access to lta four mlllloo volume collection by oot third as a re-lllt of a .$Z67 ,BOO budget cut. Cal State Los An&elea h11 reduced library availability by ao hours a week. Library budget cutl for the UC syatem fot4l_$757,000, for the coming year. DAILY l"tlOT l tlH P'lletre FIRST GARBENSTANGELER ANO HIS 'COSMIC TIME PIECE' Mic hael Chaplin Expl1 in1 Machin 1 Which Drew Opening Day Crowd ·nas Con1pulsion" Garbensta1igel Contest V11.der Way An ·unemployed computer 1pecialis! from Huntington Beach who says he has a compuls ive drive lo b u i Id garbenstangels Monday was first in line lo enter the world 's first Build a Better Garbenstangel Contest. Michael S. Chaplin of 9122 Christine Drive, Huntington Beach, said he saw one or the first challenges published weeks 11go by the DAILY PILOT when the newspaper first asked reader~ lo build Rube Goldbergian contraptions for the contest. He said he has built musical in· struments as a hobby. his productions hav ing included a guitar, a dulcimer and a clavichord. He was in the midst, he said, of soldering the 1,800 connections on 900 wires which make his gsrbenslangel work ~·hen he read about the contest and decided to enter. Thus he was first ln line wlth hls elec· l.ric box full of wires v.·hen the great (;arbenstangel Ra llye st arted f.·londay morning. He scl up hs electric box which he call~ Cosmi c Time Piece al Carousel Court in South Coasl Plaza. And when he plugged it in and turned il on crowd s began to 11ather for what is expected to be a ¥:eek of garbenstangel watching at the sho p· ping center in North Costa Mesa. Before the center closed at 9 o'clock Monday night garbenstange\s were acat· tered throughout the Carousel Court area where they will remain on display until Saturday morning's judging. Gary Owens of KMPC and "Laugh-in'' is expected to enliven the judging with the help of a couple of olher zanies from show business -the Skiles and Hen· derson comedy team. Gene Tardy, a Golden West College graphic arts instructor who has built -ga:-benstangels as a hobby for the past JO years, not only will be a judge o( the con· test but also has a colleetion o! his n1achines on exhibit at the plaza. Tardy's machines put on hourly performances in which one ol them -a robot head renamed Gary Garbenstangel for the run of the .show -emcees the performance. The fiflh judge \\'ill be Louis Knobbe, a patent attorney. Action today In the Build a Better Garbenstangel Contest and lntematlonal Rallye centered on the Collegia te Division co1npetition. Two teams from Orange Coast College -one all girls -were to assemble garbanstangel s on the spot. A team from Colden West Col lege will take to the court \Vednesday to try to buil d a better garbe.nstangel, Gal Solon Opens Fire On Mrs., Miss Labels WASHI NG TON (AP) -Rep. Bella Abzur is asking Congress lo declare war on the se1 prefix:. The New York Democrat, wife or a , stockbroker, Is doing her lhing for women·• libtration by preceding her signature with "Ms." She figures that can be taken for MMI. or Miss if reference must be made at all. But women, she aald, 1hould be con· sidered ai "lndivldual.s and nol aa wives of lndlvidual1. "Womt.ll are haraued dally by a:ovem· ment lnterroptlon1 as to their marital status," she told the House. ''Thus, the lhouaand8 or Kovernment form.s which make up red tape require women to designate MW or Mrs ., while men, ap-. parMUy, are sulJlclently described by the term Mr." Each tlme a woman Is requll'ed to designate either Mrs. or Mia. "she Ls rtmlnded that ber ldtnUty Ir perceived not Mly by her 8eJ: but also by her marital atatw," Mn. Abiug 1ald. but such "s:overnment.al curklllty does not appere.ntly uttod to the priv1t.e Uves of men." . She aald there ts no justiflcaUon "for such Idle curioalty about women. In view of the vast number of fcrm1 wbJch musl be completed by anyone auoclated with the United Stale•, 11.3 ellmlnatl9fl wlll do much to enhance lh: personN respect for ..... --.,.. -- the indiv idual." Thus, she prepared for introduction to- d11y a bill to prohibit a n y "instrumentallty of the United States from using aa a prefix to the name of any person any title which Indicates marital status," as well as a resolution deslgnati.ng Aug. 26 t.'l Women's Equality Day to commemorate the day in 197.0 when women first won the right to vote. Big V olleybaU Game Set Back An exhibition volleyball game, featuring Wilt Chamberlain's Blc Dlpptrl tooi&ht at Laguna Beach High School, hn been PQS!poned until Monday at 8 p.m. in lbe boya' gymnastwn . Chamberlain, who 'WU 1'aca- tionlng In Rome, will not be back u 'JOOn IS hla teamm.ate.1 had IZ)o. Uclpated. Tickets for the event will go on sale at 3 p.m. Monday at the Pm ticket oft1ce. Adults , U, etudtnta, IJ.50 and children under 12, $1. ----~·-· ··)f' -I . •• • -·-- - ALSERIA LIBYA Kllattoulft 0 SAUDI ARABIA I NEAR EAST IN TURMOIL -Sudan of!icials ln Khartoum have arraigned. Communm Party Leader Abdel Khalelt Mahjoub on charges he master-mind- UPI N•_.. Ma' ed 1ast week's overthrow of President Jaafar Numeiry that lasted three days. Mahjoub, in turn, was toppled by a co unter-coup. High Sudan Red Executed Top Communist on Trial; Russians Blast Purge KHARTOUM (UPI) -Sud an e 1 e authorities today hanged Joseph Garang, the former Communist Minister for Southern Allain, for hia part in last week's abortive leftist coup, Omdurman Radio announced. He wa1 the 13th person to be ·executed since the coup was foiled. The rarlJo also reported a mllltary tribunal sentenced Maj. Mubarak Haasan AI Zeln to seven years imprisonment for his part in the coup which ousted Presi· dent Jaafar Numeiry for 72 hours. He was the third person to be sentenced to jail. Polltical sources said Communist party leader Abdel Khalek Mahjoub was being tried on charges he mal!lterminded the coup - a trial tenned to star event of Nwrieiry's campaign to rout the Com· munist' conspirators. A death penalty was considered almost certain. Garang was dismissed from his mlnlsterial post this weekend as the government began the mass arrest and trial of persons believed Involved in the coup. He was the only cabinet member to be seen openly with the rebel leaders dur- ing that period. Garang was the second civilian to be executed by hanging. The first was Sudan's top labor leader, Shafei Ahmed El-Sheikh, who was executed Monday. Military men charged with the con· 11plracy have been shot to death by firing aquads. (The purge of Communists in the Sudan was bringing harsh words from Moecow, which has sent hundreds of military ad- 'Visers to Khartoum. Arab Sources Say Egypt (An official statement Issued through the Tass News Agency expressed Soviet alarm over the virulenUy anti·Communist 1 campaign and decried what it called the "bloody terror" taking place in the Sudan. It said the Soviet people "express the hope that the Sudanese leadership i:1 aware of the danger of the road onto which they are pushing the country Moving Toward New War . . . ") By United Pre11 laWrnatlonaJ Arab poliµcal aources in Beirut aaid ~ day Egypt appeared to be moving toward a resuiription of the war of attrition with lsrael along the Suez canal. In C8Jro, the 1emioffid al Micki.le Eut 'News Age~ (MENA) said Egy}'tl8J'l forte$ wtre in a 1t'ait of maXlmum preparedneS! for such a cohfrontation. MENA, quoting military sources, said t•Egyptian anned forces are in a state of maximum preparedne6.S to face . the developments of expected event.'! on the (Suet canal) front and to confront any at- tempts by the enemy to cast doubt on lhe ebilitie:i of the Egyptian air force." The reports followed the decision Mo~ day by the Arab Socialist Union (ASU ), Egypt's only political party, to give President Answar Sadat a free hand to press his campaign for the explusion of Israel from occupied territory. The ASU announcement said lt 1uthorlzed Sadat to take "practical measures so that the world may know we In! determined and united." Sadat, in a speech Monday, repeated ti.is statement.'! that the conflict with Israel must be settled this year. But he added, "I am not saying the path to vic- tory must be completed this year because the path is long. But this year should witne:111 •.. prac- tical measures to Uqtridate the con- r.equences of the aggre<SSion." The Arab poliUcaJ sources In Bein.it laid this pointed to a resumption of the war of attrition which extended from the fall of 1968 to tlle cease-fire of Aug. 5, 1970. "The armed force3: scored great suc· cesses in the period before the cease- fire," Sadat said. "The enemy learned a lesson it caMol forget when Egyptian forces downed lsraeli Phantom and Skyhawk planes." During the war of atrition, Egyptian and Israeli artillery dueled daily across the canal, their plMes fought in the skies, Israel launched deep penetration raids and Egypt staged cros.s<anal commando attacks. The warlike reports from Arab capitals coincided with Tel Aviv reports U.S. Assistant Secretary of Stale Jooeph J. Sisco will arrive iliere Wednesday in another American effort lo keep alive its middle east peace initiative, Sisco is expected to stay in lS"Tael for 8S long as 10 days for talks with officials from Prime Minister Golda Meir on down. His actual talks will not begin until Friday when a visit by Belgian Foreign Minister Pierre Harn1el comes to an en d. Israeli officials have made it clear Sisco will be confronted wi th the government's demand for more Phantom jei., to offset what the leadership con- siders a shift in the balance of power In the middle east. They have also indicated El-Sheikh and four anny officers were executed Monday. The four officers, including Lt. Col. Babakr Al Nour and Maj. Farouk Hamadallah who were taken from a British airliner in Libya Thursday while en route from London to Khartoum, were executed by firing squad. Shelkh, head of the Trade Union Federation. was hanged. Nour was returning to the Sudanese capital to head the revolutionary com- mand council set up after last Monday's coup. Numeiry meanwhile approved a 20 year prison sentence today for Dr. Mustafa Khojali and a four year sentence for Lt. Zuheir Kassem All Bakir for what the govemment-run radio in n e a r b y Omdurman said was their part in the coup against him. Political sources said Mahjoub. 45, secretary general of the 50,000..member Sudanese Communist Party, was the regime's most wanted suspect. They said he faced the death penalty despite the an- ticipation of an intensive campaign by the Communist world to save him. The f\1iddle Ea5t News Ag t: n c y (f\.1E NA l said police surprised Mahjoub at midnighl Sunday while he slepl in a deserted house in the ancient city of Omdurman. t.he Sudan's largest city, v.·hich is linked to Khartoum five mlles to the r;outheasl by street car. The cities are at the ronnuence of the White Nile and the Blue Nile in Africa's largest nation. 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'"" Wtl""'~­.. n..,.,, Tr. hltfll ~IVl"t In l-llMcll Mlllld91" Wll ft llld tM trMlctM hltll tw fll!dly M. Olflw ~ 111\o llltlfr'd•Y Md ~tdlct..o fof' todlY lfl(l\ldlf SIMI ~ MICNI ..,., l utM!lll ... ,.,_ -• Sum.,...r11 Coastal Molll¥ "'""'" '90-ff. l'-"1 wrl<llll1 '"''""' nl9'11 '"" MOm!/'>9 "°"'' bl(..,.. Mt -•IT t '9 H k-lft ,n ... ._. -1 •M W..,.,.~7. Hllh fod,17 "· Cout.i ...,,__,...,,..., ••""' '"""' 4l '9 n. 1111-i..n-tlvr1t •• ,,.. ,....,.. '4 '9 M. W1i.r 1-.1vrt "- Sun, Moon, Tides TU•IOAV lfCOl'CI ic.. 1·>0•.m. 1.r 111eo11e'°"" ,,,.., "~. .. 1·00 •"' ll ,Ir" lew .......... t lf•m, 14 .)e(On6 "''" ••. ...... l ·Ol. "'· ~ s *""" """"" .. •. t1 • "' ' " 511n I I-1'00 ''"'' SolO ).JI em. Mooll ..... lt:ff ··"'· ,,... l~ . .o ...... -- • Temperature• t r UIOTIO ,II.IS INT•llNATIONAL le..,.,er1l11r" ... P""lpl!1!10f' "' tt.1 J.f.tlovr s>erkxl .nc!IM 1! t '-"'· HI ... LI• ,rK. ...,.,..,...,. " ~ ·" "'"""v""'"' ~ ~ •• •n•"'' .. " A....:-••• ~ .. l1k1,..fl<lld •• " 811,.,.rd " .. eo1 .. " " 111'1•tot> • " flMJWn•vllll " " 11ut1110 " K -~ Chic..., " K Clnel""'" " " ·" Cl-'-"" " " ·" Qa.lllt ~ " . " 0...v•r .. " .. ,,,, ... _ " " Dt1>'1111 n ~ l'•!rbli~ • " ·-~ ,. ~ HonDlul11 " " lndll/'>9POll• n n ·" .Hctuoowllltl " " J-•u " " kfftWICl!y .. .. l•• ..,_, "' " l""'l1vll,. .. • _ ... " ~ ·" Ml-I .. " .. MlhW\llo .. " .. "'""'-'" ,, .. Nrw O<iffl'll " ,, N..,Yo--" " .n "'°""' ''-"• " n ('1~lllld " ~ °'''""""City " ~ .. '"'"~ " .. .,,ll1dol""le ~ " .N "-nlv "' ~ l'l!t•bu"l'h a .. '°Ortl•nd. ...... " " "'°""'""·Ort. .. " lttPld (Jfy " n ' -- I Reds -Blast 4 Copters Sapper Units Slip In, Do Job, Escape SAJGON (UPI) -A band ol Viet Coog sappers sneaked into an allied 1irbue near Saigon today, blew up four U.S. helicopter!! and wounded two Americans. They escaped without a shot being fired, the U.S. command said. American 852 bombeni, meanwhile, a~ tacked North Vietnamese bunkers and storage area.s today, 20 mile.s west of where South Vietnamese forces have begun a campaign in the A Shau Valley, near the Laotian border. Other 852! car- r ied out five strikes in the northern sec- l<>r. Reports from Phnom Penh in neigh- boring Cambodia said a force of 5,000 Cambodian troops ~ep:t unopposed today into the village of Prey Kry, 35 miles northwest or the capital, only to find the Communists had fled 24 hours before. The village was thought to have been a major Viet Cong logistics headquarters. Only one brief clash was reported in the drive, with no casualties. A U.S. spokesman said at least four commandos got past the guards at the air base, headquarters for the South Viet- namese 5th Infantry Division and an ele- ment of the U.S. Isl Avaiation Brigade at Lai Khe, 30 miles north of Saigon. They planted satchel explosive charges and destroyed two AHl Cobra gunships and two OH6 light observation helicopters worth $1.6 million and fled, the spokesman said. Lal Khe is one of the best-constructed bases the U.S. government has turned over to the Saigon command p.s part of it_, Vletnamization program. It is en- circled by chain-link fences, concertina wire, sandbags and cement guard posts. The spokesman said it was not known whether the guards got through a !e<:tion of the barricades defended by South Viet- namese or American units. The B52 Stratofortresses struck five time.,: Monday night and early today in the far northern quarter or South Viet- nam. The command said the bon1ber1 Agnew Schedules Lighter Duties At End of Trip LISBON (UPI) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew booked a light. cef'emonial sotledule today for the last full day of his JI-nation diplomatic tour and prepared to return home and report to President Nii.- on. All that remained on Agnew's itinerary was a luncheon given by Prime Minister Marcelo Caetano and a farewell dinner at the U.S. Embassy. Agnew returns to the United Sta~ Wednesday, after a 32rday tour o( Korea. Singapore, India, Kuwait., Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, Kenya, The Congo, Spain, Morocco and Portugal. There had been some speculation that Agnew might be asked to lead the U.S. delegation to the funeral Thursday of President William V. S. Tubman of Liberia, but the vice president's aides said he was returning to the United States. Robert Finch, counselor to Presi- dent Nixon, will lead the U.S. delegation. In one of the busiest days of his 32-day journey, Agnew held separate meetings with three top Portuguese officials Mon- day after watching on television the Apollo 15 astronauts blast off into space. The vice pre!!ident first met briefly with Amaral Neto, President or the Na- tional Assembly, at Sao Benito palace. Then he drove to Queluz Palace for the meeting witll Caetano. the su~ssor to Antonio Salazar, who ruled Portugal for 36 years. Late in the flflernoon , Agnew went to Belem Palace for a tea given by Presi- dent Americo Thomas, ~'hose duties are chiefl y cere1noniat. Agnew's wife . Judy. and friends Mr. and f\.fr s. Harry Dundore of Baltimore, also all.ended the reception. The vice president conferred in private with 1'homas. Detail! of Agnew's talks w Ith Portuguese leaders were not disclosed. It was assumed, however, that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization fNATO) came under discussion. Portugal is the onl y nation Agnew visited that is a member of NATO. There was no Indication whether Agnew diSC\l.!Sed Portugal's colonies in Africa. Although Portugal considers thfl provinces a domestic matter, the United States has been constantly faced with resolu tions In the United NaUoru. pushed by the African 1tates. seeking to de- nounce Portugal's grip on ii& col011ies. Pair Convicted In Curse Case BUDAPEST (UPI) -A court coo- vlcted a man and wile Monday of desecrating the grave or a neighbor the couple said put a curse on their children that resulted in their being born blind. The.y were sentenced to 10 months in Jail. Budapest district court 1a.Jd the couple, Identified only as Mr. and Mrs. L. J. of the town of Cegled. bad a quUTel with a neighbor, Identified as Mrs. S. G. several years ago . The fight in the middle of their village street tnded with the nelgbbor woman'• cum: "May au your childre..a be born blind ... l.iiter Mrs. L. J . gave birth to tw& d\lldren, both bom hllnd. 1be children died wilhin days after birth. Later Mrs. S. G. died and last week. Mr. and Mn;. L. J ., the pn>l'ecution aaid. went to her grave, dug up the coffln and smashed a cros.-.: over the grave. ' --------~ -' dropped more than 380 U.. of uplo6ives in toor raid& around Khe Sanh and one about a mile south of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) between North and South Vietnam. Another B52 formation dropped at least 90 I.on.! of bombs on an area four miles BOuthwest of the abandoned former French airstrip at a Luoi, jll!t west of the A Shau Valley near the border with l.aru. Tbe target Ls 20 milea from the area • where a batta.lJon..slr.e South Vletnamese force wu landed by allied hellcopter1 Monday and ran inl.O slight contecl with the Communist.!. The Sooth Vietnamese command aaid government troops reported killing 21 Viet Cong and North Vlelo1oiese, Cl~. turing one and del.alnlnc foor 1uspecl4l_d' Viet Cong in four cla.she11 ransing fm!1 the norlhern mounl.alnl to the Mekon' Delta. ~ Two More Big Quakes Rock ,R.avaged Islands PORT MORESBY, New Guinea <UPJ) -Two earthquakes rocked New Britain today in the wake of a massive quake Monday which caused a tidal wave and wrecked at least one villag~. They were the fourth and fifth earth tremors to hit the South Western Pacific laland in two weeks. Eight Australian Navy ships were on 1tandby alert off New Britain whose main town or Rabaul, 500 miles northeast of Port Moresby, wu hardest hit by Monday'1 quake, which registered B.3 on tbe Richter scale. Admnistratioo officials said the two quake.a today registered 1.5 on the Richter scale and hit the Kimbe area on the west coast or New Britain, about 150 miles southwest of Rabaul. Aircraft were chartered to f I y emergency supplie! to Kim.be where two Soviets Predict U.S.-Red China Combined 'Plot' MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet Com· munist Party newspaper Pravda said to- day any American-Chinese efforts aimed against the Soviet Union are .. bound to boomerang." The au!.horitative newspaper made the comment in a discussion of the projected visit to Peking by President Nixon. The article repeated lhe essence of an earlier Pravda commentary but alltO showed Soviet concern that Mainland China and the United Stales may be plotting joint action against the Soviet Union . "The long term interest! of the world,'1 people1, including the peoples of the Chinese Peoples Republic and the U.S.A .• call for decisions strengthening the cause of peace and international security," Pravda said. "As for foreign political combination spearheaded against other slates, io the long run they are bound to boomerang against their initiators," it said. Normally, Pravda said. the Washington-Peking contacts would be welcomed by the Communist world "if they proceeded from a pollcy of peaceful coexistence of states with differing social order and promoted consolidation o( peace throughout the world, above all in Southe83t A3ia. "But the an:r:iety of international democratic opinion has been aroused precisely by the fact that the contacts between Washington and Peking are tak- ing place in conditiorui of contiouation nf the aggressive imperialist course of the U.S.A., especially in Indochina." Trap Sprung weel<A ago another severe earthquake demolished 114 houses and caused thOU!ands of dollan: in damage to acbool1 and government buildings. An unconfirmed report from the Kimbe area said a nearby volcano had begun to emit smoke. (In Lima, Peru, there were reports • strong earthquake shook four countries in the northwestern corner of South America Monday night. Light casua1ties and damage were reported.) Ad.mini!tratiOn ofticlals saJd European families ~ to leave New Britain for Au.stra1ia, about bl mile! to the IOUthWest. The southern hall of New Ireland, about 20· miles eut aCTOl!IS St. Gt!orge'• Cbannel from New Britain. was hard hit by tidal wavt.S which rolled in after the big quake Monday. Reports reaching Port Moresby said at least one village had been destroyed and a Catholic mission bad suffered about $16,800 in damages. An aircraft crew which new over the. MetUik plantation today said a tidal wave had swept about half a mile inland, flat- tening palm trees and buildings. Not One Single Smallpox Case Cited in World BOSTON (UPI) -Not .a single case ot smallpox was reported anywhere In the world during 1970, the bead of the Na• tional Academy of Sciences said Monday. Dr. Philip Handler of Washington, can- ing the apparent eradication of 1mallpox "one of man'1 truly great triumphs over his ever-hostile environment," coupled the report with a plea for public Un· derstanding of the need for support for research in other fields. He told the o~ning session of the 23rd lnternational Congress of Pure and Ap- plied Chemistry, that similar battles can be won over cancer, heart disease and stroke! -if support for research is forthcoming. ''Half-way med I ca I technology," he said, is nol the solution. Handler said a similar situation exists In the science-ecology struggle. "The brute fact i! that ecology is, as yet. a young, little-developed science "'hieb requires much nourishment before lt can adequately service society. My special plea is that v•e do not -out of a combination of emotional zeal and ecological ignorance -substitute en- vironmental tragedy for ei.isting f'n- vironmental deterioration. An 11rmtd British 10ldier inspects 1 dismantled booby-trap In North· crn lreland which wo uld have destroyed his patrnl If It had not been detected along the ro.ad. The trap was in aJmost the exact spot where an army jee.p w11s blown up la~t May. -,.,, ( _ ...... ... "t'., ----- ·- Hiker's Beaven Alter llprisit't· -·- New 01·Iern s Jail Retaliation Eyed NEW ORLEANS fUPI\ - 1'ie district a ttorney's office Intends to 'file ch&ges today against leaders of a prison rebellion despite claims ol a state legislator that jail of- ficials promised there would be no retaliation. The 34 inmates involved in the uprising at the ramshackle Orleans Parish prison held two g u a rd s hostage for nine hours, but relei\sed them unharmed after meeting with police, Black Panther attorneys, N e w Orleans' ooly black judge and Uiuisiana's only black state legislator. Parish prlaon." Others, he llaid, were issued merely \() dra.rnatize the in- mates' situation. "Some of· these things are beyond th~ powers of not only 1ny office but of the city and state," Heyd sNd. "I realty think they .should send no more prisonen here. \Ve have nearly 1,000 already and it is only supposed to house MIO. Thus, by its very nature, it's cruel aod Wlusual punishment to be locked up here." Total U.S. Assets Sag DAILY PILOT 5 Def er--t;ient Call Seen for Draft '• . .. .. •• . . ·" W ASWNGTON (UPI) -1tarts a rtceaa Au1. 6. · ~ Senate Republican L ~ a d e r The receu will continue uti: Hugh Scott has predicted the ~~ LabOr Day. :- 11dministrati()n wUJ 'be forced to call up men previomly gra.Dled defermenl.!l "-to make up manpower shortages caus- ed by the expiration of the Selective Service Law four \\'eeks ago. A conference conunitltt failed again Monday lo resolve differences that ha'l!e., stalled the enactment in Congress of a proposed two-year ext.ensiorl of tbe draft. THINK SALE ; ' • • :• A Dunes Hotel vice president pours cha rnpagne into the parched mouth of Bill Collins, 47 year ol!i film producer from Las Vegas at the end of his lO·day, 222-mile trek acrois Death Valley to Las Vegas. Collins (right) splashes happily in the fountain in front of the Dunes Hotel while some 200 spectators watch. ··we were told that they (priSCln officials) would not retaliate against the prisoners for their action.s," State Rep. Dorothy Taylor said fo!IO'>l.'ing the meeting. Fisticuffs End Postal Meeting \VASJflNGTON (U P!l America·s to~I reserve assel! -gold. convertible fore ign curttncy and drawing rights with lhe inte rna t ion al monetary fund -fell lo $13.5 billiOll in June. the lowest in almosl 33 years. The Pentagon has warned !here will be manpower shortages if nothing is done by September. Rep. F'. Edward Hebert (0-La. ), who heads House conferees. said it was ''possible but not probable" that an agretmenl could be reachtd before C o n g r e s s '' 1: U.S. CofC Says Nixon's But c. spokesman I o r District Attorney J im Gar- rison's office said charges would be filed today against some of the rebel leaders. Among the inmates were son1e of the 12 Black Panthers being tried in state court on at- tempted murder c h a r g e s stemming from a Sept. is. )970, gun battle with New Orleans police. NEW YORK \UPI) -A tense meeting of 2,~ postal employes discussing whether to hold a wildcat strike ended ~ionday with a fisl·swinging brawl. Taking off and often.· • = Plan 'Discourages Work' J\1any disgruntled po s la I v•orkers were protesting an agreement negotiated with the postal service last v.•eek. W ASHJNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Cltamber of Commerce said Monday a study il sponsored indicates President Nixon's proposed iw e 1 fare reform plan would discourage relier recipienls from working and could add as much as $3 billion a year to welfare costs. have non-wage income against ptt'SOM who do not . Those with other income. which they equated with the proposed federal we If are paymenb, tend to quit work after reaching a certa in level of in- come, they said. They compared the proposed federal formula to the effect a • 67 percent income tax \\'OUld have on mosl wage-earners, theorizing they wou ld "'ork fewer houn. The welfare reform plan would run current welfare costs from approximately $9 billion a year now to an estimated $IS billion the first year. The administration con- tends work requiren1ent s and incentives would gradually wean many welfare recipients ()ff relief rolls. After they seized the guards. the inmates issued a list of 10 demands including '"an end to the corrupt judici<:'J syste.111. specifically the dismissal or District Attorney Jim Gar- rison. Yt'e feel that Jim Gar· rison has been proved in- competent to hold public of- fice.'' Garrison. who unsuc- The 1neltt began when three to them tried to climb the speaker"s platform 90 minutes after the mttting began. Air Califor11ia between San Diego and Orange Coon~ -Arch N. Booth, executive vice president of the Olamber, which opposes the Nixon plan. said copies of the lstudy would be sent to members of Congress, governors, trade associations and others. LA Welfare Caseloads cessful J y pro secuted busiJ"le1jsman Clay Shaw on charges of conspiring with Lee Harvey Oswald to kill Presi- dent Kennedy, now is under federal indictments accusing him ol taking bribes fron1 gamblers. Two union leaders. ~1oe Biller. President of the 40,0QO.. n1cmber Postal W o r k er s Uninn. and Vincent Sombratto. head of the 9,000-member branch 36 of the letter carriers union. hurriedly left the building when it was no longer possible to conduct business. fl was branch 36 which began the postal walkout in March 1970 which spread lo other parts of the country. EXCLUSIVELY ON BOEING. 7 37 SUNJETS. Pn:if. Alfred J. Tella and his wife . Doroth y Tell a . Georgetown Universi t y economists who made the study, said many of the · "working poor" to be covered for the first time would work less than they do now despite provisions designed to requi re aod encourage relief reci- pients to work. Show Mystery Decline Most of the i n m a t e s ' demands concerned prison coqditions. They complained af r·ats in the cells. lack of medical treatment, brulalit:-· by the guards and ''outrageous'' bail re· quiremeol.s. Both Biller and Sombratlo said they dislike the recent contract but a strike could Call your ltavcl agent or Air • Cal for fare~ and Teserva·tions. : ~ The Nizon proposal ha!'i passed the Howe and is pen- ding in the Senate. It would provide a $2.400 guaranteed 'anno.al income and allow fami- ly head! to earn $720 more but reduce federal benefits for earnings above that. Reci- pients could earn up to !he $4.3ZO cut off point with gradually reduced f e d e r a 1 benefits. The Tellas said it would di.~courage welfare recipients from working because they V.'Ould lose 67 cents of every dollar earned above the $720 earnings allowed w i t h o u t penalty. They said they reached thi« conclusion by comparing censw figures on person11 who . • ,, ' • ' . LOS ANGELES !UPI) - \Vel fare caseloads are drop- plng in l..DS Angeles County, contrary to predictions of skyrocketing numbers on the rolls. Officials are at a loss to ex· plain Why, but they offer :!IOme theories. "It's an en.igma, especially ' with all the unemplo:yment," said Ellis P. Murphy, Director 'or the County Department of -Social Services. The total number of persons on the county rolls decreased rrom 939,000 in April to 935,000 in May, to 920,000 in June, ac- cording to figures released Monday. Murphy pointed oul that there usually is a slight decrease in the April-June period followed by an upswing later in the summer . "When we get the July and August figures it should tell us a lot more. if they stay down,'' GREEN LEAV1'5 OF SUMMER ~·. time to be planting A time to be "'8ping A time to be img A lie al Yccr IW«1!' ....., __ --•...u.~ ....... aie,.... .... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Slntt 1917 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT !EACH -4<4·1ll0 Opan Mon. a nd Fri., 10 a .f'l'I. fe 9:30 p.m. -.... -· ------~---,,1y4_ -··~--· _, •r .. --'-'" ---· t\-turphy said. Murphy said several factors could play 1 role in the decline. pla y into the hands o( the na·I==========--.::::.==================== tiona l union leadership, which they described as "'fink! and ph onies." NOTICE TO ., Kenned y Pondering Decisio11 Of the de1nands, Sheriff Louis Heyd Jr. said ''some or them were just. In fact, some of them could have been taken from my own pre vlou~ speeches on the condition of Biller said the union'll na- tional leadership v;as trying t.o destroy the militancy of the New York local, and a wildcat strike v•ould allow "the finks to take over." Both leaders pleaded for order during the fight shout ing, "This is what !hey want." PACIFIC TELEPHONE CUSTOMERs ·· NEW YORK !UPI) -A Look magazlne writer said to- day Sen. Ed\Wlfd M. Kennedy told him the po!.Sibllity of assassination was a key con- sideration in reaching a decision whtther to run for the presidency in 1972. Writer Warren Rogers, In the current iss:ue of Look, said Kennedy's wife Joan and others in the family. including Robert Kennedy's oldest son, J oseph III. opposed the can- didacy. But Kennedy denied he ha.cl made any promise to his mother. Rose, lo stay out of the race. TO MORROW-A MnHOD FOR Ll¥1Nfi7 " -- Rogers. who is close lo .reveral members of the Ken- nedy f;:imily, SP.id the Massach.uselts Senator told him during a recent interview the possibility of assassination v.·as "the most crushing" con· s iderat.ion in making a final decision to s e t k the Democratic nomination next year. Th••• IS • .c:l911tlflc, 1t•p·h'f·•l•p pr•c.d11~ for EXPIRllNCIN(i. ,,....._ Ylhlllty. "'•r• Wiii Pow•r ci11d D.,11amlc. Peace •f Ml11tl. llih S.lf .. w•r-h • prh:.ele11 ••Y f•r -t/119 th• chollf!ttH •f llft 19114 htfllll ... ., • ., p• .. 011al toal1. "Even if I were to reach out foc th~ opportunity, personal pressures are overriding - subjecting my family to fears over my .safely . . . the lensiom o( my mother .•. " Kennedy Was quoted a s saying. M1«9tl llehl I kelltl• ef the YOGA CINTIR, 441 I. 17rh $t., Cnt• M .... h"IH Y•• '• e de1r10111tr•tlo11 et Heth• •Ml R•I• Y .... Piii DIMONITIATION tomorrow 11lte !W9CI.) •I I p.111, Ce!M • 'f•• ·~· I .... clalMI 1tart Th11r1., J11l'f 22114, ti _,,, ..... ....,.t I•• .,..~ ........ 1"-"'11 •""' tH tllolll IM ~ w~ "'·'~'""' t r 111tM, 1ll rt !flt MnMlh lltWI Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: * .MAIM CH'FICE:Mh A HIU, L09 Angitl9a • 823-1351 * WILIHI"' 91 QMMIJlCY Pt.ACl:3933 Willhl,. BIYCI., L.A..• -.1216 LA. CMC"CllClllll: 2nd I Bl'Ofldway •t•1102 * HUNnNGTON 81ACK: t1 ttunllnQ1on C.nt•r • (71.4) tt7·1047 * IANJA AN~ LOAN lllMCI AQINCY; 1905 N. MeJn St.• (714) 5474267 * IANTA MONICA: 711 WIWllN Blvd .• 393-4741 '* IANPIDRO: 10thlf'IGltlc•l31·2341 1t WUTCOYJNA: EetUlftdShopplng Clf. • 331-2201 * l'AHOllAllACITY: 8111 Yen Nuyslrvd. • IQ2.1171 * TAllDJl.ti• 11751 Ventura Soutlwrd • MHt14 * LOM llACtf:.ltd I L.ocu1t • 4'7·7411 * _....,._, ... 1,. ...., ..... _ ... 11•1111 ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION \ -M",. __ ---~-· ...... ~ ... --~---~.~~_..., ._ ~ I r •• --· '::--. • y --- The Pacific Telephone and T ele9raph C ompany has been auth- ori1ed to increase certain intrastate rates and char9es effective July 23, ._ 197 1. If, as a resu lt of subsequent iudicial or Public Utilities Commis- sion proceedings, rates are ultimately fiKe<t at levels lower than +hose so authorized, refunds may be required. If you moke long dislence call s belwHn POINTS WITHIN THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA AND PAID FOR AT COIN TELEPHONES OR AT HOTELS OR MOTELS, you should keep • person al record of the calls in order to m a~e • claim for refunds, if required. Records you keep should include: -Telephone number from which you made the cell , including the Area Code. -Telephone number you called, including the Area Code. -Date, duration and charges. We will ~eep the records necessary to make eny refunds th1t mey be required with regard to all other telephone services. PACIFIC TELEPHONE With• $2,500 bllance in your 11vings 1coounti you are eUglbl• to btcome a member. 8ubltan1111 uvlng1 are available-.,hen purchulng m1ny Items Including aulOmoblln, tumlture. •ppllono-, Jewelry. Plua meny ttw MAioel-rnoMY ordera_ •fo depolll -eto. Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COMl"OUND!D DAILY AND PAID QU,MT!,.LY,' 5.00°1•-5.13 "lo Pu.book: No Minimum. 5.25 •/o.5,39"/o Three Month Certlnoete: No Minimum. 5.75°1°-5.92"/o On•Ynr yerttt1 .. to: $1 .000. Minimum. 6.00 "/o-6.18 "lo T~YnrCerttncate; $5,000 Minimum. • EJflOllN Altt#AI EantfttflS • INSURANCE TO s20,ooo ,• ·, .. ... ~ --> ,_,~ •·--·· -... ·-" .., . .._ ... -• -•• ~--~"' ("<I ~ 11 1\.81 I # .. ~ -. • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Recall Again (Ho Hum) As if there weren't enough to keep an Orange County ciJ,iien's mind boggled with cou nty government ,goings-orl, now comes a recall campaign against Second Di:strirt Supervisor David Baker. The organizers of the recaU campaign, an Anaheim electronics technician named Don Swen!lon and a Stan- ton bakery salesman named William S. McKnight, an· nounced the recall with a three·page press reJease and OUlUGOI CITI!EMS MOllLl!E TO lllOi£ Slll'EllVISDlt IU£1 • -.i...u rM J.wtTII 111111-STllllllrlllOU PIUlltll tmlMI• -TIM• PUla1" flll -LIR um lllllMlt ......... W.,C....,M,lL ... 1.-s ........ .....-... c...-r. ........ t, · .....---..eww .,....,,. ......... Auaic*, l.9 ..... .. '-"'· hill c..,., ,.,....., Ur. IS IT MY WOllOll, TH!JI •• a crude paste-up tabloid (see above) attacking Baker for a~ut everything but grand larceny. By innuendo and direct statement, Baker stands convicted (by these two) of stealing from the taxpayer and deliberately thwarting the CJuse of good government. A couple of things about the recall campaign slrike us as ironic. tn the first p lace, Baker handily won re-election to his third term in office, beaUng his opponent, Laurence Schmit 29,126 to 23,027. Strange iudeed that McKnight and Swenson would believe voters o! the second district have changed their minds so abruptly only six n1onths after Baker took office £or the third term. IL is peculiarly parallel to the HJ.fated recall campaign mounted against former Fifth District Supervisor Alton E. AlJen only a few months before his term expired. But it is even stranger to us that McKnight and Swenson picked Baker as their target. As fascinated spectators of the county scene, we have roncluded that David Baker is the most responsible and most effective member of the present five-man board of super visors. lie has erred, certainly, and the DAILY PILOT has disagreed \•iith him on issues. But on the whole. Baker has shown up well in supplying badJy needed knowledge, reason and, usually, thoughtful consideration of the issues facing Orange County government. Since January when !he whole face of county politics began to shift with the power grab by supervisors Robert Battin and Ronald Caspers and their political cronies. Baker often has displayed courage and integrlty that ha~e ke.pt the enlire county government from degeneratmg into a morass of sticky power politics. 1'he recall has scant chance for success. All it can do is sully David Baker's name and maybe that is all it is calculated to do. \Ve trust few Orange Countians will take it seriously. 'No, the vice president is still not commenting on the president's vi.sit to China!' Let's Revive An Old Form Dear LAFC Me1tiber Sounds Oft ' Of Courtesy ( ------~· ' -\ i Charles McCabe \.._ The olher day I got, from someone not partiC"ula rly well-known to me, one of those long, chatty, informative and totally fascinating thing! that used lo be called a leller. The man who sent it knew I had lived for some time in a !mall English vi l- lage. He pas 1ed through there for a day, on a furniture. buying expedition, which is his busi- ness. He stayed at an inn nearby. Be- fore going to bed, he had given me some 1500 words on the beaulies, and ldiosyncracies, and changes o( lhi.!1 village, which he too knew well. THOUGH THE MAN is not a pro- fessional writer, the lelter was written with the same attention to deLail and ef· feet that a professional writer would give to an exacting editor. Gossip was in· terlarded with fact. The architecture, the weather, the crops and lhe shops all received due mention. Anyone, know ing that village or not, would have read the letter with pleasure. The letter gave me pleasure. 11 v.·as written by a man who was pleased to v.·r1Le it. The whole thing was, almost literally, out of this world. WltO WRITES l.ET'T'ERS for plrasure anymore? You may be more lucky than I in thi! respect ; but for me the genre 1s a th ing of the past. I may get three. or lour letters a year, of a kind that I n1ight have expected to get 50 or 60 11 hair century ago. or maybe three or four a week in Victorian days. J get a lair amount of mail, and all or it Interests me. Most of ii is to Lhank me for something I said, or unthank me. These are from people .,.,.ho are con- firmed or upset in their opinion hy something I said, or repre5ent. Others transmit lhformation that sup- ports or undermines some position I take. A lot of it is hortatory, trying lo get me to the side of some po8ition, or event, ()f something. just because l write (or a Dewspaper. Gloomy Gus 'Those who believe execution is no deterrent to crime overlook one thing -a dead murderer cannot kill again. -Diogenes '71 TMI lt•luno r1f1Kft '''""' VllW.. ""' IM'<tn.,.ur ltltM 11 l~t n1w1p1-. S1nlll ,otur otl PffVt ti GIOOm, Ou .. Olltf ~1111. Only once in a while do you get that "considerate" lettrr -which can be either a great outpouring of self, or a cool appraisal of a person, place or event. These letters are serious eUorts at creative expression. They show effort... They are a relic of a more leisurely time, They are a joy and a delight. It is doubtful ii any man of our lime will ever be remotely as well·known to history as Doctor Johnson is to us. This is not because there are not people amongst us who may be as talented as his greet biographer, Boswell. ll is simply that neither Boswell nor Johnson would, in th ese days, think this elaborate sitting for a portrait in words would be worth their time. The person is simply not of great value, and Lhat is true even of the personage. TN A WORLD v.•hose mind has been kidnapped by the idiot box, there are fortunately some obdurately old-fashion- ed souls who still th ink that what people think is important lo record, and lo transmit. They do not send notes. or chits. or postcards v•ith pictures or the Grand Canal. They tend to be other-word· Jy figures. rather: Brilish curates, epicene interior decorators, retired schoolteachers, book dealers and such. for them I say thank God . 1 myself am (JOe of the v.·orld's worst letter wrilt>r11 ; but I Jove and respect this literary form . The one book which never bores me, 11nd \l'ith wh ich I always travel, is Boswell'.! life of Johnson. If I can't get letters frorn my contemporaries, I can read the great n1asters of the form ln the pa!>t : Lord Byron, Horace Walpole, John Keats, And Samuel Pepys and John Evelyn, loo, for all diaries are really letters. It would be nice to talk or a revival of the serious. considerate personal letter n11 a means or communication; but it would he vain. The letter ts as gone as the steamboat. People have other ways of communicating, like v.·rithing in front of rock bands. Rock bands will go. Human ~cenlricity will last fore ver. Trouble is. il will probably outlast those willing or able to record it. Free Cosmetic Surgery Wives and daughters of America's men In uniform can now have their noses straightened, faceJ lifted and bustlinei; expanded at lax-pay. er .. xpe11se by top plastic surgeons in three of .the nation'• best hospitals. S 11 c h operations are being performed in increasing num· bers a t Bethesda Naval H0-1pital, Wal. ter Reed Army Med· fcal Center, bo\h In the Wa:shingto. area, &m Lack.11.nd Air Force BB!e Jiospltal near San Antonio. Wh!UI some are done lo correct ddormiUes or to repair damage from ac· ddents or other sur11ery, many were pttfonned sole.Jy (or cosrn~tlc purposes. IN VIEW of iht boost this bt'ncfit might give morale and the possibililies it opens up for 1tepptd up rt'<':nliting, it'1 a wonder Ow military has kept the pnr l"lm IO quiet. For eumple, the Pentagon mlghl t.ake • pegt from • popular anti·smokJng I I ,1.1:~"t -- 5Jogan : "Join the unhooked generaUon!" or, the old Marine pitch could be changed to read, "The Marine Corps bullds men (and womt'n, too )." There is a reason for the military hospila.ls to offer so1nt: cosmetic surgery. In order for the program to be accredited by the American Bo11ord of Plastic Surgery, It must offer a full range o( plastic surgery ser\•lces. MOREOVF.R. lht military contend.!! cosmetic operations are done strictly on a space-available bl!sls and they receive the lowest priority. Mosl days the doctor1 Rre busy tryin~ l<l ttstore the d11mRged faets and bodies of injured Vietnam \•ctcrans. Capt. Wilbur Latham, chit:f of the plastic surgery divisk>n at 84lthesda Naval Hospita l, expl11ined that all can· c:lidtitts for cosmr.lic .suriery a r • c11refully :riCrecned Power Maneuver • Ill County Seat To the Editor: I would like lo congratulate Jack Broback for his article on the Battin· Caspers Axis in, the Ju13 21 DAILY P ILOT. Few people realize what has happened by the establishing of a political machine in Orange County and the absence of any resemblance of government FOR the people by such a creation. On the Local Agency Formation Com· mission, It appears that the Battin· Caspers Machine may have their third member in Los Alamitos Councilman Joe Hyde, though l hope that this is not true, no matter how obvious it may appear, IF TRUE, the cities or Orange County have lost their voice in the Local Agency Formation Commission to Lhe -power~ hungry alliance within the Board of Supervisors. Possibly the greatest potential city in the United Slates, Irvine, will be killed and no city annexation will be safe to rely on justice based on evidence of a public hearing unless they are willing to grovel for the fav<r itism of the "machine." If the "machine" nourishes, the only gain will be to the City of Santa Ana , Supervisor Battin's home ground, which may explain why the mayor of Santa Ana v1as an active participant for Joe Hyde lo be a LA.FC member. Santa Ana wanls the ~farine Corps Air Station adjoining them which is contested. by Tustin. a por· lion of lhe proposed city of Irvine known as the ''Promised Land" and from the hearing testimony it would appear that they .... ·ant the entire Irvine area ii they can gel the city killed. BAITIN bows lo Sant.a Alla apparently, ( Mailbox ' ' L•l!lrl IAm Atdl'tt •Ill W.lcDml . NOrmlll'f wrUtn Mtuld """""' ltol'lr """"'' ;11 )(JO -•d• or ltn. T~t rl1M It ton<lm11 !ttltrs II Iii IPl (I ar t llmln1l1 tlbtt lo ttM,..,.I~. All lltttr• mwsl Ii.. rlUdt •l•n•lur1 11•d m111ln1 1dclr1n, !>\II n1m11 m11 b1 •lt~~•lcl ..., r1qu11I II ou!llc!tnf rHMft IJ ......... ,Miry wm ... , " PUblllnM regardless of testimony and evideoce. (Obviously he is relying on this move for his re.election next year -God help the people if they won't learn by experience). In my opinion Caspers joil'IS Battin because he needs his vole -his op- position Is based on the Irvine Company's previous support of Supervisor Allen for ~1ecUon and the trade between the Irvine Company and the County of the bac:t bay area -Caspers is out to get even with the Jrvine Company, expand his ego and powe r. lhe people of 1rvine City be damn- ed . Yes, the county needs some changes, the people need to be aware of what is happening and the mayors of Orange County belier Lake a good Jook al their lielection for representation on the Local Agency Formation Commission as Lhey may have given away any voice of cities on the commission, if Joe Hyde becomes the third member Df the "Machine". STAN NORTHRUP Member Local Agency Formation Commission City Councilman - City of San Clemente Cartoon Criticized To the Editor· Your editorial page cartoon of \\'ed· University Is a As Govrrnnr Ronald Reagan said In a speech before the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco last month, there has been a dran1atic decline in recent years in pro- fessors' teaching loads, from 15 to 17 cla!>s hours a week al the University of California in the 1950's to six or seven hours today. One reason for this, of course, was the ris- ing demand for hi g he r education, which meant that professors were in a position lo ask for increased salar· ies and lighter teaching loads. These market conditions W'l!re much exacerbated, moreover, by JMtitutions. eager for instant fame, tfie most notorious being Southern J 11 i n o i s Unive rsity in Carbondale and the State University of New York i!i Buffalo. These universities Taided other institutkins around the counlry for v.·ell-k(lown and ..---B11 George--~ CONFIDENTIAL TO MARTIN WAl~DRON : I'm !IOrry you rniutd Lhe list of the 10 best-dresRd men in America again tlW y~ar. but next yeac I will have it upantkcl to inclu~ your unlq'le, po.Ii· llon .•• Martin W 11 1 d rob , the Eleventh Best-Dressed Man In America. (Send your problems to Gtorg~. Hls subscription lo Cap'n Bllly's Wh\s Bang e~fred and he doe:sn·t have a thing to read.) ......... _ --·-· ........ Hayakawa ' published scholars. with the lures of high pay, small classes and few hours of leaching. Some professors at Buffalo did not even bother to move there but maintained residences in New York City, commuting once a week to meet their few classes. SOUTHERN Il..LINOIS Unive rsity and Buffalo certainly created havoc in the professorial job market. Many in- stitutions were fo~ to offer equally low teachi ng loads and high pay in order lo keep their well-known prof essors . Professors less well·known naturally began to expect similar privileges. It soon beca me ,extremely unfashionable lo have a full teaching load, defined a:i: nine classroom hours In mos t universities, 12 hour! at the state COi· leges. I know that there was 11 drtve on many campuse.!1 of lhe CAiifornia state college l!lystem to reduce teaching loads below the traditional \2, Much of it was done by !iUblerfuge:. People were given "assigned time" (credit fur leaching hours) for perfonntng laslts tha\ have long been 1 regular part of a teacher'! job: student advlslJg, committe:e assignments, new roune preparation and the Uke. SOrtfETlMES two secOona of the same course were !iC~uled fur the same hour. a professor nominally in charge of each SCt'lion. Actually the stcllon.'I met together under on proff'ssor, thtreby ttducing the other professor's teachlng load. Tc11ching 111\Sistanl'I nnd part.time lnslruclors wert :systematically exploited 4•·-~ __ ..._ __ _ nesday, July 2f, 1971 (insinuating that everyone who Is employed in (or by) lhe military services or aspires lo the highest elective oCfice or our land, is either deceptive or half-a-liar) is in poor taste, and is also personally insulting. There may be instances of individual malfeasance in office. Recourse is "You,,.,. u fonolo W..t r. -..,U..""'J.1'.,_ .................. ,,...,.,.,,,...... .. Ibo,.._ • .... 1or.....-...i.· available in law to correct this. But you do a great disservice lo the vast majority (I feel) of those of us who try to serve our country to the best of our ability -in whatever public office we are needed. I v.·as fortunate, but I remember many friends who gave their li\'es that our governmental system might be con· tinued, One or our constant concerns in the Armed forces was to try lo convince able young men that service to our government was a high Ideal, since this individual would be able lo serve his fellow-citizens. Your cartoon doesn't help our effori.!I. And if you are interested in better government, you had best start by being interested in involving better people serv· ing in goverrunent. CARL M. HOBKIRK Commander, U.S. Navy, Retired For the Need11 To the Edilor: Will someone please explain why guys with a million bucks-guys like this Brokate and Ronald Reagan and other! far out on the right-oppose the Idea of a bate subsistence stipend for the out-0[- work citizens of our nation? And not just oppose the idea but 11e- tually write out big checks lobbying against il? Probably these guys' cars cost three times the figure suggested in the Family Assistance Program as the rock-bottom cost of food, clothing and shelter for a family fo r an entire year. OVER 40,000 people in the county are not working. Why? Because there isn't enough work. They aren't lazy or illilerale or Com. munists or drunks. They want to v.·ork. They are good patriotic Americans, many with kids in \'ietnam. Many even have college degrees. I have thought and thought about Ulla question and still can 't figure it out. BOB XAREGOST Place to Teach to protect the leaching loads Clf ~enior professors. Why did all this happen'? Jrs not because professors hate to teach -most of them Jove teaching. But if the system makes a low teaching load a symbol of acade1nic honors and pro- fessional prestige, then naturally you will want as low a teaching load as possible lo prove what a great scholar you are. So the state college professor want the same nine-hour load as university professors. University professors want leaves of absenCf for research, sabbaticals, foun- dation grants -anything to avoid teaching -because: the less you leach, the higher your ac&demic prestige! WHAT JS l\1UCH sought for among some professors therefore is to be ap- pointed a fellow at the Center for the Study of Democratic Institution.'! at Santa Barbara, or the Center for the Advanctd Study of the Behavioral Sciences at Stan- ford , where there are no students to bother you. nie model of institutions of this kind Is All Souls College in Oxford, which ha~ an ei:cellent wine cellar ([am told), of rich endowment -and no students. So long as this kind or Ideal haunl!I professors' minds, so lonR wlll the tbe university's "dedication to leaching'' rmiain a matter of lip.service, and so Jong will eager students continue to be: ohort-changeci It Ls easy lo detect the Of'il:ins of this professional prejudice against teaching. The medieval Church distinguished between the "icUve life•• (of teaching, missionary work, service to the poor) and the ''contemplatlve life" (of prayer and mcdilalion ). The Church 1 cc or de d greater honors lo the latter. SEVEN lfUNDREO yeari1 later, lhe modern university 11Ull ha~ to rid ilself ot lhese remnants of medieval heritage. T have nothing against prayer and meditation. or their modern equlvalenl~. scholarship and research. But a modern university -especia11y one that Is tax· supported -is prima rily engaged in the active life of teaching and service to the st.ate and nation. Therefore, as Professor Robert Nisbet of the University of California at Riverside argues in his re- cent book "The Degradation of the Academic Dogma" (Basic Books, 1970), research and scholarship ln a university must be related to teaching. Research unrelated to teaching can be performed by government or private in· dustry. Universities shou)d not. be bur• dened wilh it. They must not be dcOect.- ed from their baalc purpose, which is education. By S. J. Hayakawa President San Francisco Stale College --~-- Tuesday, July 27, 1971 TM tditorial page of tht Dail 11 Pilot seekJ to inform and rtini. u!atc rtader1 by pre.tenting thi.i ntwspaper's opinloni and com- mentarv on topics of inttrtit and 1igni/icanct, b11 providing o forum for th• txprcs.rion of our Teaders' opinions, qnd b11 pret;entinQ 01.c diver.ti!' vit tD- polnu of in/ome(l observers and tp0kttmen on topta of the aau. Robert N. Weed, PubUshcr ~ >--·~ .. ·--·-----· ~-"--• -----· ·-----.. ... .. - Last Few States Giving In; Slapping Taxes on Income By LOUISE COOK 4-Mtt<ll l"tlM -Wrlltr porate income tax, has passed graduated income tax will be the House and is expected to on the ballot in Ma.ssachuselts Until this year. Oh.lo was pass the Senatl! shortly. in um following legilllative one o( a steadily dwindllng Like S3 other states, the approval earlier this year. A number of states with no state Ohio tax applies to all incomo similar referendum in 1968 1net1me tAx. and is levied on a gdaduatcd failed. The came passage of 1 basis. Three of the states -In Pennsylvania, w h e r e Tue!sd&y, J11l1 27, 1971 DAILY PILOT 7 LEGAL NCYTICE " '14' " 11.. ,11 ... P'ICTITIOlll •us11••'' l'IC'TfTIOUI •u11111111 r tCTITl«ll •UllNlll NAM• 111.t.MI ITATIMIMl NAMI lfATIMNT ITATt:MIMT T~ follo"<ltnt ----••• ooln• butlMK Thol lllllllw\flll ,.,_ •• ..... TIM fl)lklwl"' """"' ...... bi.lllMtt ••-M i.,.tl t t: in. LAGUNA HILLS MO ll!llr. tt<>ME ltEO LYl'I ll"'HCH. CIO ...-C• U.LES, 1#19 Stn Dlqo ,,_,,, llttlf'll, Ith DuPont Orlw , In.I"'-CA. LtO\IN Hiil•, Ct UI, f'W4. MAYFLOWER MOlllLe HOMEI,. R•ydlU• JOM'PllMll I 0111tr11 C•lllornlt t«-t t!on. Pl,,..), 1G ll ••vt>trl'l' WtY, k'wlllt, TM• bullMu Is k ln1 ~ try t CA '146.1. COfPOl'tUon. TMI buolMU 11 IM-1 ... ~ ..., f MAYFLOWER MOlllLE ~El Llmlftd ,..,,,,.,.,,It>. II• llO!>lrl A. c;.ndron llt.,.,.llt JOWl>f>Klfl Prei.klent TMt 1t•lemW>I Iii.I wl., h C-tv Tt111 oto1.,,..1n! lllt<l ""Ith tl'lt CDUnl• Cll"k of OrtnM CouMY on: July I, 1'11 Cltc;k of Ottnet County on· JUM 21. 1'11. l>v lkverlJ J. MfidOoll PotMy CountT B• BtTt'I J. B1r11lf•n. 0.Pu!V County Cler~. Cttrk. Putitlolled Or•oot ,_, OtllY l'llOI. Miil-CC Ju11 1:.. 10. T1 tnd Au""" J. 1rn 1"1•n Plll>lll.l'lt<i Ot•n• C0t1I Dtlly P!IOT,l----------------1 THE Nl!W "<>ltf£11, ll:W I . 11111 11 .. k nl• Ana. C•tll, 11_,, ..__. r-..,., !llO'l a.n ... Dr .. Hllfllllltlllfl IMO\, Ci lll. Thlo bullNU Is l:lt!"9 cooduclN 11¥ M lndlYld\.l•t. R_. Tor.bf Thll 1111.......,1 l~811 •111'1 tl'lt C-IY Clln: of Orl'WI C"'""111 on: Julr 16. lfll. 81 lltlllt rJy J. Maadox. DIP\11\1 Covrt1y Cter1C. PUDlllhe<f OrtttOt Coat! Dtll'/ l'tlaf, JUIY :II, ,, •nd Awu1t l. 10, 1m 1Ml·ll LEGAL NOTICE J111.,. 11 z. 11 •llCI Autiu.r J, 1t11 1'30-11 LEGAL NOTICE 1-------,-.. ------- LEG.U NOTICE r1cT1Ttou1 IUUMlll P lUtJ INAMI: ITATIMIHT PICTITIOUS &UllMlll TM followln11 perllOfll •rt doll'l9 ,.,571 HAMii: STATEMl!NT l>111l~J •• , record $8 billion budget. Alaska, Nebraska and Ver-th ere wa.s no lncol'RC tax at all mont -have fixed the levy at until this yea:-, the state1-----=c=------I Now, Ohio residents are fac· a percent.age o f the graduated legislature pa ssed (l graduated '"l'ake a memo to me. 'I will mt play arotmd today •. I will not play aroandf"l"Y· l will :not' ••• " I Soup Firm 1Goes Broke ed with the prospect of 8 federal income tax. levy only to have it dec lared J>DSllble levy ranging from 1 to 4 percent on individual in-Four states, Illinois, II•-uncpnstitutional by the state come between $5,000 and diana, Massachusetts and Supreme Court. The original '50,000. Michigan, havthee a fixed income fpedroepora't'inl cowmea. taxtied. to the tax-levied at same percen- The situation ls typical of tage no matter wbat the total Gov. Miilon J. Shapp, a whaf's happening acros.!'I. the earnings. Democrat, has proposed country. An Associated Preu A proposal for changing the another income tax -a 2.5 survey s&wed legislature.!'! in state constitution to allow a per cent levy on gross income. about a dozen sta~s have 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I moved either to institute al new income lax or increase an old one in an effort to meeting rising e.xpenditures. Information compiled by the HONGKONG nonprofit Tax Foundation Inc.1 o.-'0•000 Soti.uw "'"-~:::::·;:.!::fool""" NEWARK. N, J, (UPI ) -plan. All of lhe finn's products showed that at the beginning 2 SUITS $135 l•I• Ju"' 11.zt.n-•si I k h ••• ed DOUllf lMtl Bon Viv ant nc., a soupma er ave uco::n recall . of this year eight states -in-• .... ,. • -· 'd k d s· 1 n11-e .. , .. ~ s~•" 11CTITIOUS IUllNl.SI T~t flo llowlnt1 peroon• •rt *'11>9 THE GRAHVLLLI!, «lO H .... l>Orl HAMI. STATl:MENT b<Jilntu e1: (enl•r Orlw, Hl'lltl>Ort leec~, C1lllW· Tiit followlno Pf......,I l rl ~n1 bull"f-lf PLUSH COW 1. CO .. 1011 So. COii! nit '7660. II: Hwy .. L•tlmf leKl'I, (•Ill. GILL 8. c ... ust::Y. ll15-G HG. Ctn1r11 HUNTINGTO N IE ... CH f'QUIPMENT $1tPl\tn E. Cunllll1, OO'I COlortdo, ... v1 .. Glt...S.lt, C•ll!, t l'Jil'l AEHT ... LS, 161' W1rMr "'vtnut, Hun· L-!.e•cll, C•ll l. Frink A. Rl'Hld11, Jr., 1'00 So. Ju ... 11"9IOll !.teen, Ct lltornl1 m.11 f""' Robbin•. :rn MOtnlno C•nron Sr., LOt AnHI.,, Ct lll. fOOl).I. HUNTINGTON BEACH llEHTAL 111., Coron. <!el Mer, Ct lll, HtrKl\e! II. Grttn. "'° To1u<;1 L•k• COMPANY (l!M;'1rPOr•111<! In Ct lllarnlt ) Tnh bu>lntu 11 ... Int coftC!udod 1w 1 Ave., Norll1 1-ioll\<wood, C•ll t. t\602 761' Wt rMr AYtnvt, Hunllnti!Otl lffCll, P•rl11tt1lllp, Tnl1 bullllffl LI (-.ic!ed DI' • Umlhd C•lll'otnle t'/6-11 S1o"'1•n E. Cunll!ft P-ltfl'tl'J.llh>. Tnl1 b<J1lneu la .,.Int c-..c!ed l>Y t Tnl1 1181.,..,,tnl Ille<! wlll1 ~ (°""'ty Htr1tftt! I . GrHft eorPOr•1lon. Clt rk of Ort llllt CounlY on : July 1, !'11. Tlllt 11•1tmlnl w11 U!td wllll !he Coun• HUNTINGTON •EACH llEHT ... L llf e1v .. IY J, MtdOoJI, °""11Y C111tnt'I IV Clt rk of Ort n"" Coun!y on J..,.,. It. COMPANY Cltrk. 1'11, Ci..trle1 L. Y-. Publlol>fd O'lllOM C0t1I 0•11~ Piiot July MllT.OC S«rtl•tv.T•t•lurer 11, 20. '' trld Aut J, 1t11 !141-11 P\/l>ll1htd Ort not Coo1t O•lly Pllol, This 1!1-nl !Ilea whll "'• CDUnlv1 ----.:EiGili:r;;<YnCio---1~'"~'~'~'~1~ .. ~n~.~ ... ~~A~~'.'.".~~'~1':_'~"~''-'~"'.'.':'·~" Cltrk of Oro11ot CDUn!Y on: JllM JS, ltll. LEGAL NOTICE ~~,:.•"•rlr J , Maod...,, OePUIV Counrvl------~~------1 LEGAL NOTICE t2MOC P MIO l-------------- Pul>ll>hed Or•no~ Coo11 O•ltY Pllo!, p~:~T~o~: .. :~!i::~ Julf ._ ll, 20, 11, 1'11 11''1·11 Tlll lollowlng Pfl"90llS 1,1 aoln• bu1lneu P 11n1 PICTtTIOUS •UstNISI HAME ITATEMl'NT II: 1l>t MARINER YACHTS, tl12 N--1 a.· l lvd., HtWPOtl Btldl. C•lllornl1. . THE SANTAN ... CO .. 1111'1 Ml. llelOY CRUISING YACl1TS, INC., dutv or• Clrcle, Founl1ln Vell1y, C1lll. 9'1708 t1nl1t<l •lld e:olsrlno un<lor tl'ld b'I Rol>tt'f Sl•nltT RI~. 11:161 S11nT~ followtnsi PfrlOll 11 11<1!n1 b<J11.,.u LEGAL NOTICE lhe govern menl sai mar ete " tnce the recal , these eluding Ohio -had no income SAVE UP to soy, talnted Vichyssoise that led lo items have been coming into tax. Five other states had a ~c:Al~~ta •;g;; ~~ .., -.i 1011°-i c.. .... """.. T11e h r B dJ d N Y th • ~b • " ' • • • • • '' \,,Ito, s.,-1....,,.,, Sl.U., Skl•"· oo ·. , llJO l'ICTlTIOUS BUSINISI NAM&: STATEMENT following POrlOn h aclnw bu1Jneu vlt!u1 ol l~I low, of the S!1te <If Clll· Lodi St .. l'"oun!e ln Vellr,-. C•lll. 9'JICll lorn!&., 23\2 NllW!>Ot1 Blvd., HIWP<lrl Tn11 b<J•lllUI II belnt conducttd l>V •n Boeeh, C1llfornlt . llldlvldu•L the dea l o a e or , . .. e plant ," Walsh sald. "In limited inco me tax -on in-511!.~~.~~0'.'.:;;;; :; 61 1.000 flNEs1 11111~H , ... 1l1CS eLue PETER CHARTERS. t•l<l man, filed for bankrupl('Y return, these people want their terest, for example, or c.,,,,..,.,. ....... 111 '' •WI r!T ANY SIJ:f un1vers1iv or .. Newaar1 Bt1>ch Monday. money. This creates a n dividends or commuter earn-~~11~,.~".":1. ::::::. ~~ 5! • • w11K D1i1v111Y D~-~"~.~;~1:t ~:~~-11 1• ,.,, Uni•eralty Bankruptcy Judge William economic situation in wh ich ings. "'v• ""'' • ,,.,,,,, • fRll AlTlllATIONS T1111 busl"'u 15 bf,ng conducted bv 111 ,i. .. 1 o.n1. K•ll1 ..... 11 •• 1. •IA.SY rAYMINTS lndlYl<luel. H. 'fallyn appointed Joseph the debtor company, in this The Ohio income tax is part m Jolin w. Wtllt Ill Walsh , a Newark attorney, case Bon Vivanl, cannot meet of a package •-signed to raise "" .. ,,.i., ... , "-• s57-1m -faB This 1111eme~1 1110<i w11~ 1111 U\: 1101 Ill. Mt<Arll\or IA4., Mo. 2(1, Citrl< 01 Ora1>9e Counly on July TM• 1>u1lne11 I• l>tlr.t conducted by t llol>trl !. Rl••• torPO<o!lon. Thi• 1!&1emtnl flltd wltll IM County Edw1td A. Wnlle, Clerk of Orin•• Counly ...,, July 1•, 1'11. Prnldent BY ltvtr!V J. MllldOX, Oepuly COUii!'/ TMt 1111ement lli.d wl"' tl'le Cou11ty Cler~. Clork o1 Or1n911 Coonty on: J u.,. 24, 1'11. Publblltd Orin°" Cots! Dilly Piiot, ~r .. ~.•v1r1v J. Mea"°", O•ouTv C111tntv Juv 1t1. 21 ind ,..ugw J, it. nn 1ttJ.n Pub!l1hod O'lnM Ca.11 0111'1' Piiot, July 20, 21 Ind ... Ul1Jll .J, 11:1. 191\ lm71 LEGAL NOTICE receiver and directed him to the crediters' clairru: by $1.4 billion. The package, 5.o•1• ""• !...,...,,.,,~, "'' &.i.ro1-B• eev1r1Y J. MldOo~. 011>uty CDUnlY ,, 191!. Counrv come up w1 a reorgan1u on o tnary use of credit.'' w ic also cu es a cor· PubHtlled oran .. cee1t O•lr. P11a1, •_.'.':~'."_~~~·~~~_::~~~~·~~·~-,'."~~·~~~:'.:~~:'.'.~~:._ ___ _'~~'.'.:~--~~~~~~~~~--~_.'.':~~~o:~::':'~::':":~::'::"'::,..::''::~:::':"""':::::'::::::::::::::::::::::::'.:'.:::::'I Cltrlt. July 13, :io, n 111<1 AUVU•! l. 1'11 1162·11 LEGAL NOTICE 1-~~~~~.~ ... ==~~~~­ "ICTITIOUI •USIMl:ll HAM• ITATWMl:MT T-mu The ro11ow1rw Plfl«ll .,. c1o1,,. • ' ' • ' Winston tastes good Ake a cigarette should. Winston PILTIJl•OIOA.ftETTl:B Real and rich and good. .. _, .. ,._ ...... --........ ..,.;.,ltn ,• t. ~Gmo:urw. lJ m;,Ntoun1 a1. per cigarette. f IC Repon NOV.70. ·---------________ _....._. __ ,_ 'i ·--.. --.. ----.. '' LEGAL NOTICE HOTIC• TO CAl!OITORI bu1l""1 es: IUl'l!lllOlt COURT 0, THa OLIVE lllANCN APARTMENTS, 24'1 ITATI OP CALIFOllNIA 1'011 Elden A_..,l\IH, COlll Mfsto, ~ '216:11 F 1101 THE COUNTY 01' OIVJolGI Vu!tkl Mt!M/111111, 21lW W, lllr'd SI,. FICTITIOUS I USINl!SI Ht. A-.1'1S4 Torrt nc1, (• toSCM HAMI STATEMIHT Ell1!t ol LAURA J. (Di!:HMIS) S..huko Mthu,,,lta. tlM w. 11Jtd sr .. Tiii !~lowlne per50nJ t rl Oollltl WILLEY, t llO known •• LAURA. J. Torrinao C• f050o1 bullM'• &$: WILLEY, I nd I I LAURA J. DENNIS, Tlll1 bull~ I• bt! ... conduc:llld bJ t GOLOEM E ... GLE (11 ... FTS CO. IJl'l Oe<eo>t<l. perlr>trshlp. Vermont M., Wi>lmlniier, Ct lll, t:i'll NOT ICE IS HEllEllV GIVEN lo ft>t S..!Wko Mthulohl!I Ela!n1 A. Thom1>1on, IS241 Vt rmonr uodl!oll of '"" •bovt MITlld dttl!dent Yt11•1 Mabu1hlt1 Weolm lnster. C•!ll. ' thtl •II Hrton1 h1Yln9 cl1tm1 •t•lnll 11>1 Thlt sl•lement till!<! wll!I Ille c-IY J olln w. Tl>omPoon. 11261 Vtrmonl, H iii d1Ced1nt t r• r1<1ulrtd to Ill• !Mm, Clerk o1 Ot1nN Counly on: June :l"I, We1tmlns1rr, Calif. ""Uh Ill• MCtlM'Y -.cnet1, In Ill• cfllce 1'71. BY BtYtrly J. M.ld<IOX, 0.PV!f l Mi bu•lnfl• lo .,.!no conduCll'd by 1 ol tilt cl1tk of 1111 11>ov1 tn1 111od coun , or Coun!V Clt rk. Pirt~e,.nlp. •o pre1tn! !hem, with tht nKffHrT PUDlltl'I"" Qnn" COOld Dallv Piiot, EIMn• A. Thomi>son VOl/Chlrl. lo th• undert(gnecl II"'' affl<I July,, I), 20, 11, 1'71 17'~11 Joi\" w. Tflompaon °' her '""'"""' A. R. ll EHNISON, ..al T11t1 lfMtmtn! filed wlll'I 1111 County .S.OUtn 5prlno Slrt1!, Sullt JOO, Lo• Cltrk al or~n111 county on: July t, 1971. An~ltt. Ca lllornl1 fOO\J. Wlllch It fM LEGAL NOTICE !l'f Be~eriy J, Mt<ldo•. DtpU!'f Coun!Y 1>l1c1 ol bu•ln••• ol !he un<llrolgned In •111---===-==-='°'co==----Clerk, mttltrl Por!ttnlllll lo 1111 ttl1!1 o1 1•1d HOTICI: TO Cll•DITOllS de<1dtnt, wlltlin lour ~th• at11r 1111 Ho. A 6tJ71 Pub!l!Jlod Orantt Coetl D1ltY Pllal. Ju. fin! PUbllcl!lon a! tnli no'llce. S1111.,l1r C-1 11 lht Still ti Cllllwfllt ly 13. 20, n 1nd Au~u1I l, 1911 1'2A·11 Otlfll July ~. 1t11. hr the CounlY of Or•n1t MIRIAM DENNIS woon E1l1!1 a! OOMEHICA. POLLETTO, 1110 E11Ku!rl11 of !ht Wiii known •• DOMENIC ... P 0 LETT 0 , LEGAL NOTICE of tht 11>ov1 ntmf:d <leCod.nt MAGARIO P"'LETTO, 0 0 ME NI C A p nm A. II. •IHHllON "'"'LETTA., DOMEHICA POLETTO Ind •• PICTITIOUS 9US1HESI 4al $outll 5Prln1 51., Sulit :lllt DOME NIC A POIETTO, O.C:ttU<I. NAME STATEM!NT Loi An1•ln, C11tfornl1 fOOll Nolle. It lltrfllY •lvtn lo credl'°" ot Tht lollowlng Por>on1 "'' dlllng T~I• U!l) 4U-Jf02 th• 11>ov1 ntmed <ltc.O.nl lh•I 111 butlneu 1., Allorn1v ""r E~Kulrb """""' htYlt!ll clelm1 1galntl Ir.. 1ftld ENURESIS CONT ROL SERVICE, 2'1t Pul>!lll>eel Or1g1 Coast [)ally Piiat. dt~tnt lrt rooulrld lo lilt tt>tm, Wl!ll NewPOrt Blvd., New1><1rt llt•c1'1. c1 111. Jul• 13. l'O. 11 111d August 3, 1911 191'·11 !lie ne-telHrf wouchert, !n Ille olflce ol A not I• McG•!f. 1 US Snerln11on Pl., lht Cl1r~ of lto1 •l>ove en!llled cOlll'1. or HewPGrl Beaen. Ct!ll. LEGAL NOTICE la orestnl them with lne r«t111rY JM" B•11en. 1711 Snorlngton Pl .,l-------=~~------lvoucMn lo Ille ur>der1l11nt11 .t "'-clllct HtWPOr! Beecn. C•ll!. l'·Hn of At,,...lch, del V1ll1 I. Sl111tr1, 6Jt ~o. TM• bu1lrttn l1 l>elftll condllded bY t •tCTITIOUS IUSINISS Sorlnl StrMI, Lot A,,..ltt. C1lllarnlt P1rl111r1hlp. Wl>lCll 11 Ille P!Kt of bt.ISIMU a! llo• Jchn eonell NAME STATEMENT u11d1rtltned In 111 m1t11r. Hrltinlftll 11 This s!altmtnl !lltd with ""' County ~ht following Pt roons ••• <10fn1 bulllllll !hi f$llle OI H id decl<kn!, within '""' C!t •k of Or1n111 Coun!Y on: Jul~ II. 1t11. ....... 1 STANTON RENTALS, 111'1 lttch i::r::· •lier !ht Un.I i>ul>llc•llon of thla 8~ 8tYtrly J. Ml ddOJ:. Dtputv Coun!Y lloult Ytfd, Sti nton, C1lllornl1 to'IQ Diieo, July t, lm . '';"u~bili.flod Oraoot Coo1! DtllY Pllol. A·I E<>UIPfT'ent Atnt1l1. Inc . Esllltr FtnOtrlOll JvlY ll), 21 i nd AUla! l. 10, ltll lt7'·11 llrn:or11<>r111'd ln CtlllornlaJ 11151 Bte<h E>rKutrht of ltlt Will Boul1Y1rd, Sltnton. c1nrornl1 tOl\&O. ot ••l<I clt!ctdent Tiil• bu•!nu1 IJ belnt c.andlldt<I 1>1 a A"'lrldt, ff! Vttl• 1 si•1lr• LEGAL NOTICE ton•orlllon. 6)t St. s.i>rlft9 SlrMI 1----------------1 A·I EQU IPMENT RENTALS. L" ........... C.Httm!1 NOTIC• io~1i1DITOlll ~~;,:," L. Youd1, Atlom.v.:11:. btcvlrb SUPERIOR COUltT OP THI S«rf11ry.Jreasuttr Pul>ll"1ed Or•ftllt Coetl Dilly •llot July $TAT! 01' CALtl'OllNIA 1'011 Th!t tl•ltmtnl 11111<! wl!ll "'-Coun!t 13, 20, 11 tnd Autlltll 3 19n lt21·71 THI! COUNTY OP 011.AMOli Clerk DI Or1not Coun!t on: J11n& l~. 1911. ' N•·· A ... tlff BY Bt•lrlY J , M•<l<lo~. 0.PUty Caynty LEGAL NOTICE Es'l•lt o1 RENA R. V"'N OOllEN, (ltrk. Deceesod. t 2U OC NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN lo !ht Publl1h!<I Or1roge Cooll Otlll' Pl!ol, NOTICI! INVITING ltOI crM1tor1 of th• above n•meel dtcld•nl July '• Tl, to, 11, 1'71 11'2·11 Halle• la htrfbv ol•en lh1I Ille l!Ollt'd ol Iha! 111 Hroons hivln~ cleim1 •<>•In!! tM Tru•tee1 cl Ille Coe1t CommunilV Colltve 111<1 <le<e<l~nl •re reouireel to 1111 !hem. LEGAL NOTICE Ol•!rlrt of Or1na• Countv, C1!llornl1, will wflll 41>t neces••r• voueherl. 1.11 lht ofllce t<•.:el•e tult'<I 1>1<11 up lo 11 :Oii 1.m .. ol the clerk cf tne t l>ovt en!Ul«I court, or Tl'lurtdav, "'"'U•f 11, U11, ti ~• lo prtHnl !~em. •wlrh !no neceu•"' 1'·"'4f Pureh11l"'1 Oeor. ol stld Khool dl1trlct YO<JCher., to lll'o u""erJlgntd 11 nie Olllce HOTICll TO CRl!DITOlll !o<;t1ed 1t 1310 ... demo Avenvt, COl!f of nil tlfOtMV•. COOPER. WV ... TT, TEP· J Ul'ElllOR COURT 01' THI Mt$11, C•llfornl•, al wltlcti llmt 111<1 bl<ll PEii .. PLANT, ,11 W••I "" srrtel, Lo• STAT• OP CALll'OllHIA POil will i.. PUbllt!Y -ntd i nd r1td !or: Anni.,., Ct!l!ornla 90017, .,..,,lcn la tM TH• COUHTV·OI' OR.I.MG• 11) Pr!Mlnl of lht Or•"" Coetl Cof-~!ft~r~I ~~:~~~i'n:' ::•1h:':::~~=~I I .... ~~ E1t1lt of ~~:..~:lll~AUMGAllTEN, ~~:....r'~lr, ~~Mr tor lht lt11·7:1 "" 01<;-esld. ' dec!<lenl, within four month• 11t1r !ht !Jl Pr nllnt DI !ht Goldtn WHI Coi. rirot publtc•!lon of !flit "°lk t. ~ NOTICE IS t-IERE!IY GIV!:M lo 11\t teoe SChool Mirws~tl>tf" lor the 1'11·11 Dti.d JlllY t, 1911. <•eCIUor1 al 1111 •bc•t 111m1<1 <lecodenl Schaal Year PAUL v"'"' DOREN lhar t it POtlOnt htvlno tl1lm1 11111111 the All bldi 1,f to l>I In tcmnl&nct wl!ll Admlnlt1rfl0f ol Ill• "''" ltiO <ltcadtnt •rt rooulred 10 flit them, the lnttruc!IO<ll •nd Cond!lloni tnd OI '"' •l>oVe ntmeo lltce<ltn! wilt\ th1 ntt••Hrv v6.icheri. In the allk • SPK!llcalloni wPITch ,,. t\OW en Ulo COOPl!ll, WYATT, TIPPEll & PLANT ot 11'1 tier~ cl ltlt ID<lvt i ntlUld court, or and mtY ... 1«1trod t~ ll'le a!Plq of the •11 Wini 6th Slrffl !o P'uenr lhtm. Wiii! Ille r«tH•.rT Purch11lng Aotnl at ••l<l 1ehoo! <l!otrld . Los An1111t1, C•llfornl• tOllP voucht r1, 10 11"1 unllerllllnod •I '"-Olhce £tell bkkler mu1! 1ul>rnl! wltll 1111 bid t Ttl: illll •llO·l1IO of 1111 l!lorney, Ti-iOMAS J . MIO. c•Mler'a cl\ltck, ctrrllled (ttttk, or bld- AllM"....,.I tor Adm!nlilrl!Of OLETOH. 6lla Wllohlr1 !loulev1rll, Loi aer't b<>nd made payible 10 lttl order of Publl$1'1ed Orar'lle c .... u Oelty Pho!. A~gelu, Callfornl• f!lOH wltlth l1 Ille Ille Coolf Community Collt91 Oltlrlct July U, 20, )1 t nd Augu1t l , 1911 1'10-11 Plt ct 01 buslnoH ot "11 ur>dtrtltned In •II Boero ot TrvotPu !n tn 11noun1 not 1eu l----------------lm1tter1 Pt'rlltn1no lo tht t•!•lt of 111<1 thi n flv• i>erttnl (l'Mol of Ill• lllm bid 11 LEGAL NOTICE HOTICI' TO CRI01T0Ri No. A HUI Superior Court ot me ~!•II of C1 lllornl1 l<>r tho '"""'" al Oranoe. E1t11t o! GEORGE F EWENS, t llO ~-~ 11 GEOllGE EWENS, GEO. F. EWENS, G. F, EWENS, GEORGE FRAN. CIS EWENS, 1<><1 11 GEO. EWENS, o,ce••M!. Oecedanl, within lour mon!h1 •lier Ille 1 outrin•~ th•! "'• b!dllP• will ~n1er \nlo llro! PUbflct ll(lll ol !hi• nollct . fl'• praPOSed Conlr•CT II Int '''"• lt 011ea July'· 1911. 1werded to ftlm.. In !ht ev.nT of flllure to BURTON SCOTT MILLEll en!er ln!o IU<lo con1r•ct, tht proc"11\ of Extcu1or cl tllt WIU '"' C"4!<:t< wtll be forl•l!O'd, or In ~ ca•• Of •no ol>ove named <1Ktd1nt ol 1 bond. "'" full •um 11\lflol will 1>1 THOMAS J. MIOOLl:TOM t<>rrerte-d 10 ••111 1<hool dlt!rlCI. •110 Wll1hlr1 11•~. Ho bidder me• wlltldrlW h it bid tor t Lot A1111t•1, C1Utc,nl1 ~ Period ol torh·llve (IJ\ d•VI 1rtl" 1n1 Tll: !11J) ll1·11H d1!e "' tor tht -nlno lfttttol. A!lorntY far Exe<ulor Tiit Board Cl"! Tru•ltt• flHrvn ltlt Publlther Or~nl1e Co••I Dolly Pllo!. ~lvlltteo o1 ••ltcllt!ll Inf •n<I 111 bids or July ll, ,0, 71 t nd "'uoull J. lf71 19'!&.1! to w1lve 1n1 lrretularltlt• a• ln-Noll<• 11 lltrtb~ ;l~~n ta crt<ll!arl of 1111 abo'Yt no1110<! <lecl!<'ltnl 1hf1 111 .,.,...,,, ll•Ylnv clalmi at1•l~11 Ille •~Id LEGAL NOTICE lor'™lllltl In any bid "' In mo bldolnv. NORMA!i E. W ... l50 N <lece<k.-•rt required la lilt lhom , wl!hl----------------I 1111 nee"'"'' voocll1ro. 1~ 1ne o!llct of T·7ltS4 !ht Cltrk cl lttt &l>ov~ t n!l!lod coutl or HOTIC• TO ClllOITOlll la PreM~I lhtm wl!1'1 1111 Mtt••&rv IUPEA:IOll COURT OF TH• vouehtri l~ Ille u"de,.To ned ti '"' o!!lee STATI OP CALll"OllNIA 1'011 of M&n!•llc• & 81rtl•v. •Oii !toulh Sollno THI COUNTY OF OltANCJI S!retl, rtultt "°8. Loo Antilt l, Ctllfornll No. A-4ffU SeC!v., Bo.or<! al Trul!tft Ol>fn• A\>llUI! 17, 1971-11 :00 • m. P ubllihe<I Oran" ca.11 Otllr Piiot, Jul'/ 20. 11, 1911 100..11 LEGAL NOTICE '°°13 Wiiien I• !ht Pl•t• a! blJllMU of,... Ella1t "' HARRY G. BAUMGARTEN, NOTICli OJ' TllUSTEl'I U.Lli undtrslgM<J In t ll m1tter1 pertllnlnt IO Dpcet>f:d. T.I. Nt. l·IJNI me e1!aTe ol .,,Id d-Cldtnl. wllllln lour NOTIC£ IS H~llEBV GIVEN ta lttf! On Thundiy, AU9Ul l ~. ttn, ti ll ;Olt m0t1lhl •!!tr tl'lt llr1! -~~llttllon of IMI cr1<1Uor1 of !ht 1bovt named lllCedtnt A.M., TITLE INSURANCE "'HO TR UST no~~~M! Juty 7, l'71. Illa! t ll 1>1rton1 llev!ng Cltlm1 totln<I tht COMPANY, 11 dulY •Pool~IN lrui!tt Tt rrli L. EWlfls ind 111<1 dKtdtn! trt required to lilt lhtm, un<1t< t nd pwrutnt te Dffd ot Tt1t•I w11n Ill• nl!CttMl'Y vot1c11tr1. Ill !l>t olllct rtcorclt<I S.ptom.,.r ll 1'61 •• lnll No Gt'Y Ewent, "'<lmlnl1tr1tort of the cltrk of Ill• 11>ovt t ntll1ed cOWI, "' 14116, In boot 1721, "• 2.S1, Cl"! off1c11j :!111"':,:.:;::: of lo Ptt•tnt lt>tm, wi th 1111 MCn ... n' lleconh Jn tf1t otllct al !ht Counry Mtl!ltllc• a l1n:l11 vou011r1, io Ille uncMr111ned •I 1111 orrrct RKonier of °''""• CounlY, C1llfornl•, ol 1111 llt«ntY. T/fOMAS J, MID-WILL SELi.. AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO Cl SOlrtll S'rlnt Slrtct, l •llt 4M DLETON, •210 Wllthlft 6oultffrd, LM. HIGlfE$T 11t00£R FOR CASH !"'°1'1111 Los 11o,,..1e1, C11t!M'ftl1 tlllJ Anve1n, C1Hlarnl• flOOoll wllk1'1 11 the ,, 11,,,. o1 1111 '" ltwtul ,.,.,.,.., o1 "" Allomtr• fw,A<lml"l1tr11tr1 Pl•(t of bu•IM11 Cf tht undtlrslont<I In 111 United Slt!tll tl 1111 IOlltll """' .,.lrtnct t<ll l-OC mll!trl PtrtUnlnt lo tht ttl1!e ol ••Ill ro l!tt old Or•nM C"""ty Courrnou11, P"°"llthtd Onnoe C0t1I OeflY Piiot. lllc-nl , wltnl" lour monlh1 •"., Ille loc•led 1" 11\t 20CI l loc.k ol Wnl S•nli July 1.,_ !O, 'D 11'1d ... 11111t1t J, 1t11 1f1".71 flrll wb!lc•lkl" of 11111 no'l((OI, Ant &oui.ov1r<I (lor..,.../y Wttl .. h Slrff!I 't DlltCI July t, 1Jl1. .. < • C ' ; LEGAL NOTICE S UR.TOM SCOTT MtLLElll "1 nt, 1 lfornlt , t ll rllJhl, tillt tnd ' .. !'. E~e<utor a! lhtl Wiit l~rtll ton'' ..,.vl"l'811_Jo .. 11\11 now 11t10 ~v I! Of l~t tt>oYe namod dKedtltl u .... er 111 "' • ni1t In ltlt Pl"-'1" p lUJt THOMAS J, MIODLl:TON 1lfu1tld In lllld County I nd STiit dt1trll>- ' . PICTITtOUS •USINISI lllt Wlllhlrt ltull'ltrd 811 II: H ... MI!! STATl:Ml:MT < A Lttut'lold Elltlt 111 1nd "I Lat 61 o1 Tlltl fO(lowlnt Pttton 11 <lolnll bullnt11 Lot "'"''111• •llltmll ,.... Tr•d Ho. 12"21, 1• Por "''' rKorllea In tt: Tth ftlt) tll-USI BOOll :m, PoOH """2 lno;!ull-ol W C AllWM'I for l:1tclllar •• THE GENTA:Y, 320 • ..,, Pul>lltlltO Ot1n1• Colt! Otllf Piiot, Mlocelle'-tll Mapa, I",,,. oflk e ol !Mt HIOIOWtY. H•WPorl ll•Kft. JulT IJ, 2(1, 11 tnd Auwu.i J, Im 1'11-n Coun!V lltcor<l•r of ••Ill counly. "'llred<> "'•~ln1g1. 165! 5htrllllllon Pl.. Tht 1lrttt 6dcfrllf -Ollter c-Apt, Jl')J. NewPOrl le1<1o. 1----------------111111-!IOI\, 11 1nv, or lhtl roil .,_,.1y Tn/1 b<J1in111 It !>lint c0flclucl811 l>J t n LEGAL NOTICE <lncrll>td ibovt It 111irpcirttd ta be: ll'ldlYl<lutl. 1----------------1 901 S.nd&a•llt Ort,,., Coron1 Oii Mar, "'llr-Atuln111 NOTIC• TO ClllOITORS C1Utomla, Thi• 1t1tt"'""' !Hod wllh "" County 1u•11111011 COUllT DI' TH• Ttll Ufl<ltrtltntd '""'" dl•d•lms .,,., Cltr1C of Ort"'t Cou"ly on: J1t111 '9, lft1. ITAT• 01' CALll'OllHIA l'Oll t!tl>ll/lf fol' 111"1' lllCOf1'fCll'lllt of tllt 1tr111 BY levt rfY J. Mai;ldo1, Dti>uty Caunty THI COUNTY 01' ORAHOI lddrtu tnd ott>tr ~mon cltlllln.lllon, 11 C!tr1. Na. A ... "4t ,,,.,, .,,,_,, ...... I~. PYl>tl .... od Ortftll'f Ccatl DtlfY Pllal July l1t1t1"' Al CU UOE FLEGAL ilQ At S..kt 1111 ... 111 k ~. but Wllllout lJ, :io, 21 ""' AUt•lft l. nn 111'""11 C. "LIGAL Otc.t•""· cow"'"' or warr-y, eur1u,,,. lmplltll, LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS H£R!llV GIVEN lo Ille t"8rdlft9 llllot, -Hulon, or ..., crtdlhlrt of Ille 11>ovt iume.t cl~ cumbrtnctt. to M1 !hf nmtl!tl"' ..,.111- 11111 111 POrlOM 1'11vln11 cl1lmt _l,.I 1111 clNI tum of 1111 nott !tl MC11rld ~Y ttl<I •·tJl'f H iii dKtOent •r1 rt0ulrtc1 fo Ill• ll'ltnt, Ded of Trutt, h>wll: IJ.M..lf, with 1n- l'ICTITIOUS IUSIN•SI wllh l1'lt lllCtlllrY VDUClltrt. In ll'lt olllcl ttrwl 11\tfl(lll, 11 IO'OVlll,..s 111 tt!d MAMI lTAT•MIHT of mt tltrk of 1111fbcryf 11tlllltd ~ • ., not.ls), -"'•nett." fflT· Urdtt' ........ ,... Tilt 1o11o-.-1111 Pit"_,. tr• oonlt bullntt1 to PrtMnl "-"· wlltl !Pit _..., llf H id Dted « Trvrt, ,_, ch••-aM 11: YOUchtrt. lo 1111 undlrtlofttd ti 1111 ttnot ••-of 1111 Trull• tnd ol w.. trvtlt MIOWA.Y EQUl,MENT llENT ... Ll, of ~Ji 1ttor....,.. WJ"'ton I", Ori-. 4!00 CTHllCI b¥ .. kl DtM of Tr1111. 16U W•r~ A-, t-lunt!r..ion e1.ai, C1mou1 Orlv1, 5c;Ut Mo. SU. H-1 Tht btntlkllfY l,lfldw .. Id DIM tf CtUlorlllt f"'1 lttCll, C•lli'otn!1, ,,UO, wlllctrt II h Trut! htrtfotort llJllClllM tnd dtllwnd HUNTINGTON IE ... Ck llENTAI.. P!Kt Pl MIM11 fl/ ltlt loilld<l•1tontot tn •• fO Ille u"61,..1"'9d I wrlll"' Dtcllrttklrl COMPANY (llltor"llOl'tll'd Jn (6llr11n1lt ) m1llert perl1tnl119 to If.I ttllte of H id of Dlftt1ll t nd Ottn•nd for Sti., 111<1 1 1•u Wtmf'r •.-en1.11. H1mtln"on IM<lo. dle-nt, wtlltln lwr -"" •llw ll'lf wrtll.,. Halk • fl/ Otf.ill 11'111f l&ltdlorl h C..lll')r'r>l1 tun 11n1 ov1111c111on .t 11111 l'IO'llce. sin. Thi uftdtrtltlnt<I UVllll ..ici Htllc• l 11!1 111111M11 11 bt!n• C9l'ldtld811 11¥ • 011811 June u . ltn, of o.t•v" .,,., fll'CI""' h SIM " 1>1 corPOt•llon T110m11 C. l le<t rtcordtlf In "1t covnlY whf!e 1111 ...., t-IUMTIMOTON ll EACN llfNfAL E1KUtor of tllt wfll Pf_,.IY 11 loulld COMPANY Dt tllt 1i.o.<• l\lmtd 6e!;edenl Olli: Juty I. 1tlt, Cl'ltrlel L. Yeucle, WINSTON P. GllllP• TITle IHSUllAM(9 ANO $1(1•t1N •ltHl.,.'Y •tttr!lff t i L1w TRU$T C0Ml'AMY '> Tllll 1111.,,,.M flltcl wl!ll ltlt Counlv •Ht Ctm11111 OrlY9 •• 111d Tn1111t, (ltrt ol Or1nH County"'" JUM 11, ltn. lull• JM lly 1hon\lt AIJtfl" 111 1'MV1r1y J, Mtddall, Oe11111Y Co..nl'I H...,..-f lt6dl, C1Ml9n!l1 nla •m (ltrti, 111. (r10 U1.f#.I l"ul>lhliett Mll'WPlll'! Htrllor Nn1 "'"' t At""'.., "' ••~ulfl' cornltl!W<I W'l!ll 1111 Ot ltr Plitt, HtwPOrl Publtthed Ori n Dtll'I "!!Pl, Publl!.htd Ortng• Co11t D1tly Pllo!, J.,. ....,,_ Ctlllarfll.t.. Jiii; II. 20t ti, nn Ju!Y 4, 13, 70, 11, 1119-11 IY U• 20. )1 '"" Al/OU'll J, lt11 1917·11 )t'll·ll ---...... _ ·-· ----<~ --.. - For the ' ··Record " ' _INrri.M llaMn _,. llMIMI ff I~ ;.,1ow1,,. " or JwlY lJ: ClUICK4410 -J1,,_ W., JI, !106t S... .,..,.,.., l'-llln V1! .• 11'111 Gt1<1 H .. .-, f'lawthllr,,., OILL~"'UltY -•-• 1', ''· 1•11 &,.,.,.; •!'Ii &1111-C., 12, JKI ,,.,... "''' Cln:lt, Hw11""'1Gll llCl'I I RUMIT-+!4N...,. -J""'"" S., 11. l .A~ -Chlfton1 11 .• -n. or '111 Kl,_1 ltd., H1w1*t Id!, IC~n-ltOSIE -M•l'\ly N , C>. 11...-... .... °""""· "· '312 It....,.... Cit •• HUllllMIOt> lltll. us VEG.U, N...... -Mlrrl•M 11-..S IU\19d Mrt IMI....,•: FOJl.TNEY·l"EltLOWITZ -Ju.,. XI. -1 Bnoc1, It, of Sire.<> G•ovt. 111d J<iort:t MklltHt. It, tlf Wnlmln11W. SUlllV1'N-YOUNG -J<1"' XI, JouPl'I E., XI, w'1111 Clll,. M1rl1. 11, bDlh <>I COiii Mew. CAltlSON-MOWll:IEY -J u,.. XI, RICl'I•"' JOMP4'1 l!,. Ind M1rv ll. botll o1 c ... ,.·~-YAX·K1'TS41t1s -J.,... "lO, W1!1.,., 31, 1n<1 ICtyle<W. ).I, Oolll ol Co>t• Mtu. MAltM-t1'Ll-HUFF -J\lf'll 20, John, O , ol l'wnt1l11 V1lley, •"' J 1rty L1<1, JZ, al 0<•-· GlltAY-ltlOl'l!llE -J1>M 20, 1.1111' Clllrl11,· ll. ol ,..__., 1111Cl'I, i nd o.br1 ltlnM. 14 <rl Cool1 MolH. MARTINEZ:~ELT -JUM 1\, R1u1, l t , of Mir-1flll ~..,.,.., 16, of Hun· 11 ... ton Blach. ROGl!RS·lltOGEAS -Juf"ll '1, H1'tl1, 51. rtm1rr!..t Nat1y119, "°· bolll ol Hunll"91W> •-· JONES.8LOIE'fH -J~ 2', Donl!d I'., -46, Ind Llod1, 79, l>a!h ol (0111 Mt-1•. l'OWLEJt-FltlOFINSON -JuM n, Thomll RM .. )(I, 11'111 $h1UU'll Alkl1, ,,, tlolh of WestmlMter. (A080Ulll:NE-SHEALY -JuM ,-,, ErMll Arnold. JO, ol G1rd1n•, Ind N•na AIVI. H. ol Hvnll""'-' 111•<11. IAMl'AT·KAPAOIA -J-2J, ..._,,_ m•l'I J~ :Ii. ol New-1 BtfCll, 1nd J..,.,,,. .. K., 'J4. ., """'Ny, llWll• FIUlZ:ELL-POWflL -J11111 ?3, JDl'ln. n. o1 Caidl Nini, Ind Ul1 M.., '5. flf G1nlen Or11¥1. (A.11\"l!LL-llOllGfRSON -J.,,,. 11, Rabin lllcll1,..,, :W. ol Hl wtl>orM, • 8lld Anlt1 LOUIM, :U. flf Weslmln1•. HERllEltT-McMAHOH -J<1111 14. Ma• MlcftHI, U, ., Ln -Se...:11, •nd Marl1 !"rll'f"I, ... ol .5oufl> l t111t11. MAMELLl·OUNCAH -J..,,. 2~. R11¥ s .. .al, of El Toro, '""' Tlltlm•, •· ol Cosl1 MolY . WAHL.OLSON -JUllf 2f.. Irvin ~. 29, o1 H11"'1111lon I~, 1M 8trt11r1 J t•n. l".I, ol P1r1........,1. KARSTETTl!ll·DA'ol/S -JUM ,,, ~1rd 8., .:i, of F""nt1ln v 1U•Y, 1.-.il Slll1 C1111 .. 1not, .... o l hktr1H1l<I. ,.._ULKNER-GOOOWIN -Ju111 25, Tll-• Oun, Jil. 11'111 (>et1'nn. l7, ~ of LI"'"" lt•<I!. MULLl!N-GR.AIElt -Juno 15, J""t Oll G. Jr.~ 5'. ll>CI Dorlllllt L-., ~I, both of (.or""' Os1 ~r. ~OWLIN·PAl(l!Llf -Ju,.. 25. Jlmm1 EOW11d, U, ol Wti"""ln1!fr, •n<I "'""''' C.r1. H, ol' H11nll1>11lon 8tltll. H1'LL-No<:OON1'LCt -Ju,.. 1S, ltObtrl M... lt. ol Hu11tlnsloll 8HCll, Ind JNNllllf!, :U. ol L"" 1'..0tlet. ICEHOE..OLSON -Jun• 2S, O<>r\t lcl 3S, 11Wl Jal\f'I, :II, bo"' ol Wtllmlnttt• SILOON-H1'UKLANO -Jul'I" ·s. Frldfflc MYrOI\, :K, ol Now I 'I llHl;l"I, '"°' Ju!lt Atllll, 11, Cl' l.t H1br1. l"OOt..E-ltOGEllSON -June Ts , L~ All111, ?3, • Whlmln1l•r. 111d Jud¥ Kl 'I'. M. ol S•t1fl Al\A. lltA~OlltltOTlR -JtJr.1 JI, Wlll!1m Dfllrfl, tJ. ol Gt r<ltn Grevt. Incl Nt r.c:Y J 1nel, .a, ol C .... 11 Miii•. JlfNNIHGS-KHllOEPFElt -June '6. Wllll•M e .• ,,, ,..., E•b• M1r1t, n. bolll ol Hun!lnolon lt1c11. ,,..ILES.-HUFFElt -JuM U. P1<1I Reed, 1', ot S1nl1 A11•, t"ld P1mrt1 Mlr!orll, 7l. II Co.II ,..,_ .. , k lE8\..tNG-THOMA$ -JuM 26. P•ul Howf rtl, ». ol L.-. llMtl!, t r.cl Tommy• GI\'~ JG, ol Foun!lfn \tt lll\'. WILSON·SUTTOlt -J1,1rw ,,, Wllll•M M~ '1· Ind Jotn L .. n, bolh ol Hull-"""°" ......... IMITH-llAllNEI -J""'" 11, Fr•tllc J . Al. 1nd Vlvftln, 41, ball! tit Hunrln•ten 8eadl. McGLASSON-ll ltUCE -J1111t 26, D•n-1\li 5., 21, t nd P1tr!cl1 lr1ri1, 1t, both of COlll Mtlf. KING·l'ETE1t50 N -Jur.1 2,, Urttl Ario. olJ, 1nd T...,I D .. )f, DolPI of Hul\lllWIOl'I 8'1dl. NARPER·NIEMIEC -Ju111 16, JDl'ln, 55, vi CMll lt\llf, tnd l..ot'r1IM, "· ot Tu1!1n. KCNCEL·ICONCEL -JUM .. Edwlfd (.., 41, rem1rrled L-•• Wl\ill);tr. IO. ball! ol Fount1I" V1l1tt. Gllll'FIN-MAY -June 2,, Wiibur 1t., 3', ol Cot""', t nd PttlY L., 11, d Wea1mln1!tr. SllENGl.E·llY'Eltl -Ju"" H, Glen, n . of Ntw_.1 ll•Kh. en<t J""r Moo, J9, of Tu111n. THOMP~.fltCl1 -Ju"' 16, CP11rlt1 w1i...... lL al J1n11 ,.,.., 1n<1 PrlK llll f ill-ti\, 14, al Ntw-1 llN CPI. HOLLl!Y.CIOTTA -Ju"! 16, Mire Allen, U, 1nd St ndr1 LH, 11, both al Huntl,,.,10l'I ll<l1c:h FERGUSON-YO UNG -J u111 ? .. Cll1rllt A., •· •n<I 1Cr11, U. bo1h cl C01!1 Mtw. Vt110EN·VU$1$ -June 76, WUl't!Pi JOI\. lf, Incl L ... I, 11, bo1ll ol Hu.,. 11n11 .... llt•<h. Death l\'o tlres SOOTI HollY W. (81111 Boon, 1tf7 Ml<lla•K•r l trtel, (aolt ,..,. ... D1t1 01 <lellll\, Julv 11. ltn . S<lrvlv"' by wlT•, Cltrt. S••v- kl'I, 11\u,,..,•Y. 11 • m . "•clll< Vltw ClllPll, l'ed llc VllW Mor!111rv, Olrtc-.. ,,. COl'l'IN C.,rfn nt I Coffin. ~! LH l()IO S!, Loou~• llHdl. Diie of -!~. Julv 11. l"I. 5u•- vlved by '°"' ll•hd 8 C.0111!'1, L19un• l llDl'll <11"91\le" C•tal C Cr1I~. Lot AnMlll: five 9r1>'ICIChil<1r1n; -,,.,.,. 1•1r.clchlld. S••vlc••· l"•IOt" 2 P"' , l'Klllc Vltw C.,.1111. lnt.,.m1nt, P•<ll•C Vltw "'-Ill 1'1ra. l'1c111c 'oli...> MOr- "'"'· Olrta.,...I. Ultlt-.tlEI. Fr11'1k M, l.1"1111<1. tll Mlu lOl'I O"v1. Aol. i , Cot• MIM St rvlcn l'tndlllf 11 11 .. 1 ll<'Oi<twtY Mart.,.no, ARBUCKLE A SON WESTCLIFF MORTIJARY U'1 E. 17tb St., Cost. Aten ........ • BALTZ MOR1\JARIES Coroaa del Mw . . . 173-M58 COit.a Mei• . . . 14&-14.U • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Bructwty, Colt. Meu u I-JU> • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1'111 Lapa• ea.y.. Rd. -II • PACll"fC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK c.m-, ~ Cbpel -hdfte Vin Drt•• Newparl -· Calllonla -• PBUF.illll.Y aJUINIAL P1lNlll\AL ., llOMll --· ... ·----• IMll'R'S MORTUU Y lr!MalolL - Ecological Su perunit Moves on SACRAMENTO (UPI) -An omnibus bill sweeping the state's pollution-fighting ef- forts under one super agency narrowly passed the assembly today after oppon"'1ls de- nounced it as the incarnation of (}(xlrgt: OrweJl's "1984." The 151-page bill by Assemblyman Edwin Z'Berg, Democratic chairman or the Natural Res o ur ces O:>m- mittee, went to the Senate on a 43 to 28 vote. At least 41 were necessary. Basically, the proposal would create a powerful seven-member s t a t e en- vironmental quality board ap- pointed by the governor. Eight satellite regional boards would be established to prosecute the war on pOlhrtion Jn the vario~ geog raph ic areas of California. Thi!! bill would abolish such agencies as the State Air Resources Board, !he St.ate Water Resources Cont r o I Board, along V.'ith Regional Water Quality and Air Pollu· lion Control District boards. It would take effect in July l!m. The seven-member slate board, all with salaries or $32,000 a year. would develop a statewide masterplan for protecting the natural en. vironment. It would become law when the legislature ap- proved it. Local governmenls could enact stricte.r controls bul its zoning .ordinances would have to comply with the state minimum standards. Another feature wou1d give private citizens the power to sue for preservation of t h e en- vironment in court. Walkout Threatens Croplands SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) - 'lbe (ear of thousands of dollars or fresh fru1t and ve1etab\e5 rotting in the fields hung over ca!lfomia fann Jand today a s a strike against the Southern Pacific Railroad went into its fourth day. At least 12 crops are oow at the peak of the harvest &ell50n and railroad tramport to eastern markel! is necessary. But Salinas Valley growers shipped the equivalent of 114 rail cars of lettuce by truck ~londay -less than half the normal shipment. Some produce shipments went out via ihe still operating Santa Fe railroad. but the United Transportation Unian has threatened to strike that line on Friday. ··Jr the strike li11gers this week and Santa Fe goes out. I don 't even want to think about the consequences," said one grower. Truckers . already overburdened by a 28-day longshoremen's slrike, have jumped their rates 50 percent and the figure was expected to go higher. The California Council of Groy,·ers estimaled loss ta farmers and related industries al $11.l millioo each day in perishable crops, in cluding let· tuce, lomaloes. cantaloupes and honrydew melons, fruits, berries and sugar beets. Southern Paciric reported its. average revenue loss per day between SJ.5 and $4 million, mainly from freight opera- tions. Growers .in Fresno County said n1illions of dollars worth of sun-ripened cantaloupes and honeydew melons will rot on the vi11e unl ess ;he strike is settled within a few days. About 11.500 train com- muter.; on the San Franci!!co peninsula joined reg u l a r highway travelers J\.fonday, but the highway patrol said the increased traffic on already-jammed free ways posed no further problems. Southern Pacific ordinarily runs 44 trains daily along the peninsula between San Fran-- cisco and San Jose. Greyhound Bus Co. added 25 extra buses to its usual fleet of 75 travel· ing from San Jose. Valley Desalt Facilit y Delayed for Study SANT A ANA -The start of constrnction on the Orange County Water D ist r i c l 's dese.linizatioh plant in Foun- tain Valley has bttn extended 30 days by the district's board af directors. Water district spokesman Neal Kline said the exlension "''as sought in order to get mere time for the review or the plant's environmental im- pacl by various inlerested agencies. He said the district's impact ~tudy has been sent to the city of Fountain Valle y. the county, the Air Pollution Control Di5lrict and the RegionaJ \Valer Quality Control Board. $56 Million Uncollected By Center SA NTA ANA -The Orange County Medical Center Is car- rying $56 million on its book~ .as collectible billings. but $22 mlllion should be written off. "We want to hear from them and until we're satisfied that there wfll be no damaging im· pact, we won't proceed with constructia'n," he said, Work on the plant was originally scheduled to begin in August. The starting dale has been moved to September. Aerajet General is the prime contractor. The plant. which will ~ built ufjacent to the county sanitation districts' facility an Ellis Ave'nue in Fountain Valley, is e1pected ta produce lS million gallons of fresh "'ater per ' day for use in Orange Coun1 y. The "''aler district also pla ns to build a waste water reclamation plant on the same si te. Total cost for the t wo projects will be $17.5 million. The federal Office. of St.line Water is pulling up the ma- jority of the funds for the desalinizatian plant. Mayor Just Leads Unit ~layer Ed Just af Fountain Valley has been elected joint chairman of the Orange Coun- Huey Says I-l e Was Out At Gu nfight OAKLAND <UPI) -Hury P. Newton testified in his awn defense Monday and said he was shot in the stomach and blacked out the marning an Oakland policeman was killed in a police-Black P anther shootout. The Black Panther Party cc>- founder said he wasn't even armed on Oct. 28, 1967 when Officer John Frey wall'. killed and his partner wounded after Newton's car was stopped . Newlan , 29, charged wilh manslaughter in Frey's death. said he was stoppe<I by Frey and his partner. He s'aid that Frey call him abusive names, then knocked him to the ground and shot him in the stomach, The Panther leader said the last thing he heard before he blacked out was "a y,•hole volley of shots and noise." He said he didn't regain con- sciousness until he arrived at a local hospital and detnanded treatment for s t o m a c h y,·ounds. Newton was questioned by his attorney, Charles Garry. then cross-examined by pro- secutor Donald· Whyte ·as the fifth week of his retrial opened with arguments for t h e defense. I ' Garry had earlier asked Alameda County Su p e r i o r Cou rt Judge Harold Hove to dismiss the case nn ground a blood·stained lawbook entitled "California Criminal Law" which Newton said he was carrying the marning of the shooting had been lost while in custody of the state. Solo ns OK Dani Bcu t On 3 Rivers SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Senate Finance Committee ap- proved 7-3 legislation lo ban dam.s on California's three re- maining free-nowing rivers, sending the bill by Sen. Peler Behr to the Senate noor. The measure approved Man-- day would preserve the Eel, Klamath and Trinity rivers. putting them in the "wild and scenic" categary far recrea· lional and scenic use. Behr (R-Tiburon), respon- ding to critics who said dams are needed for flood control, said any flood control "short of actual damming ar im· pounding" would be allowed. William Gianelli, State Wa- ter Resources director, argued that Behr's proposal would lock up 30 to 40 percent of water available for shipment southward through the $3 billion State Water Project. The flood control queslian was the. most emotional with Humboldt County Supervisor Ltt Rice pleading, "Do not pass this • . . . and make it impossible for us to have a dam on the Eel River.·· John Winzler, a consulting engineer from Humboldt County. added that regulated flaws through flood control dams would also help clean up the Eel, "a dirty, filthy polluted river. It is polluted by nature." Beagan Pleased _ _ Io f .-• We lfare Reform ~'1··--~.C~am lnventioqfor,Arti~J eeth 4'lllldll Telll ,.,.,r;..Ftl! Se fhh•.-l;'lii • Compromi-se Set Por U. finl tlmt, tQec;a otftn FIXODCHTboldlditntw.ftrmer •pl.tic cum that bOkk ~ ... ...,.i..,,.-um.w1.)'.Cilllmay turm • ~·w: ocnr tiem bdd bite _,.,,chtw bett.er,iii,1mo.-. befora-fonnl an tlMtk mtrnr mtUBlly. tnnci thlt tf/PJ /wU ~ M · F1~ luts kif ... Re- SACRAMENTO (U PI) bill .u passed by the senate ,..,.. art rae.atial to health. Sir: YClUI' ,_,,.., .. -""::a-~ ........... Dalt .... !hot" lt'1° • mdutiomry • dentilt. ncUbr.!Y-Get •·~ Cov. Ronald Reqan and would have saved au ulledFax~fe¥dailyr UteFIXOO~Dmtµrtl:!J!-ive tegialatlve I ea de r a con-efltlmatM. '2f million. uae. (U.S. Patalt IM,C3.988) ((am at .U dnC c6wl:..-. centrated today on delicate ef-·,=======================================;:-1 forU to negotiate a welfart I HAMS reform compromise benefit· ting both tM "truly needy' and I.be hard-prt.Med property taxpayer. Striving lo resolve the leg!slature"s No. 1 issue before recessing Sunday for a three- week vacation, leaders of both parties met with Reagan throughout the afternoon Moo- day and planned m o re discl!s•ions with the Republican governor today. Reagan was reported by his SPiit.AL I LICID WHOLI ~ iHALP: .. • . • So Good It Will Hah lyoa 'Til It's Gone" ... ,_ ..... ,1 .. 1a., , ...... _ UTA.IL STOltlS .J700 L C..t Hlth'"f,'c .,-... ~ M•r-•71·'0ff press office to be "rdativelyr·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~--~ pleMe<I with the progress" of negotiatiana and "somewhat optimistic that this will pave IU J I. lrfflllllnt, A.u.lm 6JJ..14'1 the way for true welfare reform." The Assembly Welfare Com· mittee held a tumultuous hearing Monday night and adopted several ameodments to Senate-passed legislation sponsored by Sen. Anthony C. Beiletl.'100 (0-Beverly Hills ). But the cammittee delayed ac- tion on the measure itself until later this week. During the hearing, tv.·o Negro committee members objected because they were not invited to the meeting with Reagan and former San Fran- cisca Mayor John F. Shelley Jed a spectators' protest against the hearing's conduct. ·'There are a lot ~r people out here who Would like to hear what you're doing," Shelley told the committee, striding uninvited to t h e ' witness stand and grabbing a microphone. "Thia is an open, public hearing. All we bear is a lot of mumbling." When several spe<:tators seconded the camplaint of Shelley -now a lobbyist for the city of San Francisco - Commitlee Chairman William T. Bagley (R-San Rafael ), shouted, "please be quiet. The committee is '•••orking. '' Negro Assemblymen Bill Greene, (0-Los Angeles), and John J . Miller, (0-Berkeley), complained they were ex- cluded from lhe p r i v a t e meeting in Reagan's affice. Freshman Assemblyman Kenneth L. ~1addy, ( R- Fresnol, countered. •'I he freshmen members of the committee weren't invited either." "It just goes to show you're the new 'you know wh.11t,' " Miller replied bitterly. Under a~ndmenl! proposd by Bagley, Bellenson's bill - the anly significant welfare rerorm mea.mre still alive ln the legislature -wou1d save the state a net $&4 million. The * * * State Aid Levels Dip SACRAMENTO (U PI ) The number of Californians on welfare ha.s declined for the third straight month and the Reagan Administr.11tion says the stale can become a model for the nation. There were 2,199,157 Califor- nians on welfatt in June, down 49,42.8 from the previous month and 9!},283 from March, the state annou~ Monday. "If this trend cohtinuea as more refanm .a re Jm- plemenled. Cal I for n I a ' s welfare progr•m can become a mode.I system for the na- Uon," SI.id St.ate Welfare Director Robert 8. Carleson. Carle90n said the: decrease was due to Gov. Ronald Reagan's efforts to reform welfare.. ANyTltiNG ThAT~ • • ISWO • -,~· . .., NO MINIMUM hAlAi'J t E REOUiREd Yea. thaf a rigfitJ Fr" checking -ftO minimum balance required. Anything that'a_ft'ff ts worth checlttng, and """ la the right tirno td cllock ,ln1o Anatte;m savtnos ... free services. W."ve Joined wtth a major ntltlonal bank offering )OU comptete Savings •nd LC*\ pkJs banking sertic:.. Only at Anaheim Savtngs can you deposit $1!)00 and eem the highest ff\terelt In Ile nation on inlUted savings and receive the benefits of •• , Free checking, Pre- ferred Customer-ntes on auto and bo8t loans. and Preferred Customer rat. on personal loam. Learn about lheH o1 ... HuntloQton Beach oftloo. • fREESAfE dE posiT boxEs "•• with i1ccount bi11enc• of $1 ,000 or more, This i.!I the principal finding of an audit conducted by Arthur Young and Company for the Orange County Grand Jury. ty Sanitation Di.strictl by,----------------------1 6% The report also questions $8 million more in old accounts which lt classifies a5 "highly questionable'' as t o cal-, lectibility. The auditors also com- plained that only so percent or the outpatients are subjected to a financial evaluation when their saurce of )X)SSib\e pa y. ment is not known . This resull! In much unwarranled collection effort which could haw been determined in ad- vance. the repart ital.es. It iJ ali<> noted that the medk:sl center c o 11 e c t Ion department does not dif- ferentiate between large a nd small account balances in l.P- plying cofltclion efforts. Suggested Is a computer listing of accounl.$ re~ivll~le In descending dollar ordu. "This will ensble calleclion personnel to establl 5h priorilieR and determine the appropriate amaunt or effort ta ht applied lo earh ac- count.'' the report conc!urlr!I di5lrict directors. AOVlltTlll.Ml!MT • AD'llRTillMIElrtT He sucettds Norm.an E. Culver, Garden Grove. who "'as elected vice j o i n t chairman. Just, who represenl! Foun- tain Valley, has !let'Ved an the boards of Sanitation Districts 2 and 3 since hls election .11s mayor twa years 1ga. Seven Independent Orange County SanitaUon Districts participate In jo.lnt JX"ojects whi ch include the two waste water treatment pla.nL! serv- ing the county. One is located in Fount.aln Valley and the othe.r iJ in Hwitingtcm Beach. Siguups Set ORANGE -ReglatraUon for Ctr9pman CoUege'1 second summer AC!l.'l!on wU\ continue lhrough J uly 30. Further in- formation m11y he obtained by t alling tht' ~ummcr session of- fict at SJ.l-81121 WE PRAY FOR ~ YOU ...:..-,::. BOW TO GET SAVED To receive. a Praise Sheet Only the and cu go to kl Sffk (he Holy Ghost liit Heaven. Ta receive Jtslll •nd in Adi Qi.aptus one &:: tv.-o. be saved, you and kmd on111 IDd ipllll: •tongues ch«j-_ ~lilt -,..,.. -ta 1111 In ""' al.£ --d or her ...,, llaadwrllln( ..i, iaa... "P'!I mlndes ·anti m tho lollowlDI -= .,..i baaJtmir -1 ..,.vet! ~ atrtol • "'"""· NAME •••••••••••••····•····•··· If -....a t11k Ad btc:t '. ·- NAME -·-·······-···········::.. :..... '""':'a = NAME ............. -............. gulde:n coin pa19 w1tll tbt " Wnnll lnaldo JJ:8US ·HEALS. NAME ···················" .... EVANGELtm ELDRIDGE ft To requeRt us to pray foc RUTH PLUNKE'M', P.O. BOX lle.a ling &c request~ for )'OU 75855, LOS ANGELES, CALIF. and loved anes, check here ..... ~ FREE SO YEARS OF Sl!CUlllTY Ac-n. ... t..ncs "' $211.000 ond pioleeted l1f Anaheim Sav1ngo' 100l(e record al 11fety. '·• ANAHEIM SAVIN·CIS AND LOAN ASSOC IATION ... MAlfrrl OFF.CE: , 87 w. Linc; et In A•- An•helm, Ca<lllomi• PA2·1532 •• 41! Ma!l"I SltMt Huntl"Q1on BaKh, Ctllfom\1 LEf.6Sf1 • ,,__ ..... ~ ... -=.._.;__.=~==----==-.. -.. .l3o- • " --··-.,. ... •. ' ,....._ T\)~ -.. ,. --·-· •/,, ... ' • • -r- ·. .. :~ . .· . . .·· ·:: . •. . .. :· . . :· . " " ' ' ,. " . , .. ~ • .• • ' • ·: Tutsday, July 27, 1971 OAll v PllOT I iscounl OUR NAME MEANS DISCOUNTS EVERYDA YI WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT LOW DISCOUNT. PRICES. PRICES IFFICTIVI: WID. thno TUES., JUIY·21 thro AU&. 3, 1971 .. -----i~~- 1 BONELESS SHOULDER CLOD ROAST STORE MO URS: DAllY 10 0.10. to 9 ,,.,,·SAT. I. SUN. 10 o.ot. to 7 p.m. P.11111111 JoHN . HAMS --------:--~ EXCELLENT FOR ROTISSERIE FULLY COOKED • SHANK HALF ' ' ' ' ' . ·. . . ... ... . .. . . . ' ·~· .,,,, ' . . ' h .~ . ,J . •. · -S:i SWEET eJUICY SEEDLESS GRAPES 39~. 1ARMERJOHN· FAMILYPACK SLICED LOIN CHOPS FRESH e BROWN STEA K SI ZE MUSHROOMS ..!~ ALLMEAT\YienersJ.!• ~ MANHAT TAN •l~OZ •ALL MEA.T •THl(I: \_~ BOLOGNA •n "" »' 55c .@ l'u0N°cii'M'i/ii's"0 ~· 35c 8 OZ e TUBE e REGUlAR OR SWEflMlLK PILLSBURY BISCUITS VAN or KAM~'S . 10.50Z. fROZfN CHICKEN PIE 4-9'' 41c AUNT JEMIMA• 9 OZ. BUIHRM IL~ • fROZEN 20 OZ.• REfltLABtE AJAX CLEANER ~!"":'.... KllAfT • 16 OZ. BOTTLE 4-9'' 29c . FRENCH DRESSING $' ">-,~ 5\B.BAG ~ PILLSBURY FLOUR .&1' '* -Plll58URY • 7.5 OZ. 80 )( • 3 FLAVORS Instant Breakfast 5!' DOWNY • 6( 01. FABRIC SOFTENER Y4 "* 1( OZ. CAN • BURGER ROUNDS • PET STEW ·:121b.39c ..::.. KAL KAN ""''""'" )!' 25c WAFFLES 4-st 43c FR1sK1E5 • 1(oz 6VAR1n1ts "'O'S . 7'1• oz. '* DOG FOOD U ANAND n· 27c PIZZA Snack Tray _9!• 83c @,..-" ,F0RcoE"s"H""·'°A'""·0B.,Y~;E:::: 1 n DUTCH PRIDE • 1/2 GALLON e FROZEN y-. J09 ! IMITATION ICE CREAM 43°' 39c . '•'°"" "''w'o" 0 TROPICAL DEL IGHT PAPAYAS OR FULL Of FLAVOR MANGOES ARI EXTRA .SAVINGS· MADI POSSIBU IY SP.CIA! PUICllASIS FROM THI MANUFAcfu~I· WlyH TWI SAVINGS PASSED ON TO YOi/f .... .. ·: ... _ ........ POTATOES ~39c • s~~in'91i~ld Orange Juice AJf'c 39c ..=.'! AJAx"cLEANSER ~· /'7.:: ?• 4* @iA"1'sit4'eREAD 3f~AL 33c ..::.. PUNcii 'o~t0~rgent ~' KE LlOGG'S • 18 OZ. BOX • SOME STORES CHARGE 43c ®Corn Flakes c CHRIS & PITIS e 1.t OZ. BOTTLE e HICKORY, REGUlAR OR HOT ®BBQ Sauce c IVORY e 14 OZ. e PERSONALSIZ E e 4 PACIC ®Bar soap 64 OZ. BEVERAGE • 4 flAVORS 2 c ®Shasta ,c . ....... ' ........ : . SANTA AIA 2120 SO. BRISTOL AT WARNER COSTA MISA 2200 HARBOR BlVO. AT WILSON LA PALMA 8023 WALKER AT LA PALMA @ IT'S SMART TO SHOP AND SAVE AT FAD ----------------- \ '" ,,--:~ . ' --·--.. -·-) ;.1 • -· -'ll;C.·~---· -.......... -~ . . ......................... ·--~.~--:-... -~-.M"----= -·><•IT ·~.lft-o¥. • , ,,)It.-. .,.. , ...... ~-... .._~ i.11 . -··-_......~--:-....-.· -"' . •" c,r .. T )'i.J/!lllr. _.._ r • re OAll v .. LOT s Tut5di1 Jutr 27, 1•71 f OVER 1THE COUNTER •.-1 ...... W.t1Hw_....,..afW It'} IAa..._ ....... ""*-........... ~ ., --. ......... • ... • NASD Llatlnp fer Mond1y, July 26, 1971 ... ·-AtUro »w 8501-+-t--t--+--+-- 800 l-+-L-t-+-H 8* Hl!W YOlllC (.A~) , ..... -11'11 lollowl"' 1111 ~ It o tl!KIM •k:lo ~Ill• Nttlonol S-111ft IEI Cotolot• Awl~ -ho!: AH '"' ~-"' ....... ,.11 ... INu••lOCO I. lfllll/s.. l tlo\b Art•l•1:.:1 • ~iv !M ~M< ~"h'~ ft it II' ~ '9 i~ H• 2 GIOl'-1 U 2' oio.1 ., 11~ ll'Mo lflC '11 tt1o lf'VI '•lllr Clr tllio 211'.Gl•oll•ll.. W ~,·,•-, .,o a. Jlll'f1' ,,,_ ,,., ~~ J I' .. 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RT s_..1 :5 J l•nt~ r 2 lJI 11' lnB• Wtll ·~ 1 lltoton fir l \o av, :::c: N~~ tJ 100 MUTUAL ',',,L'!.!..,',r, lS'-1 11\lo A.1llolt C 10 I~ t1nlt T ll'o IM IJ 1~ ..,.. 2"-~ 21\lo llltlllM I! ,..,. li'l'I l1bo(lll If 11\.'o 1' lnl Sy•lm "°"' 5''h ll1K~ C" IS'i'll U .... ll1d CR 25• 711• 111. lnt,...ov H 11111. lt•Ymnd tl UV. ttilc Inc 10 21'~ 21•. I011IC1 Inc 11\\ 12\.i R..:111 f~ U 15"" llt•k 1>11 ~ l' our !flo11ey's Worth Am eu11> l•t'I 111~ Cllntn Oil 1 El L•ll ro. 1"" Cl-Cp Am E~11 11' ti~ 1>1•• Am Finl 1' 1'1h ollln fd A Finl LS U'O \Siio om Cit Am fwn ,.,., l!'t Cuml Sii Im GrMI 6l iJl'I Com G•• A Mir<lk P 11 ' 1111 Comw Po Am le(tW 1911 70\t Corn PsY "' rn NDS lolou U! JI\~ 1''4 •toe• Jl :n llottt M'9 l U. l'• FU Jt cob FL l • '"' llttfll Env ffi "'!&t i•• Ml Ill I 1JVI 1• Jo1141tn c u •; U'I. •1ddr 'u 24'.4o Jn1o lltthlnd 20 16 111 Jot¥1 WI! J~o 41/o Rl>Oll Eo. S<IV. SS i&ollsd'ILb N 11 • II , 11¥1YI~ I'• H'o •Kiln M 1• II 11••1 Li b 11 l l • ll~ Illy fll• ,~. J\.lo IOHIM 1•1 I eor k Clg ~ Load, No-Load Funds-Am WI~ l \1 l 'lo mp! CM An.JOltf 24' lh ~mp lnlt II It Jotf'l'l't M 19V. I~ 11.0llll lO<'t SI .... lur! ..... , I ll If NEW YOllllC IAP)hl\I GI/Id tft t.AttCMS ln<ll JO l~lltowon 111 l l, 1,,,.BettFdt 111 l& 1•'• -T"-folll>Wkll -lnvt1 llot 12 U U :JI IC1llr Sit l"" !JV. llton j1oy 311..., .ill 1111 Fd1 Pl • 11'• 11'-4 Ull°'1$ tul>9llod bylnv•1lor1 Gr..,, 1C.ol1Stl pl 1i¥-11VtS1dlltr J , ll'oll~km1n .loO t '"rnt Nttloflil Auorl-IDS n<ll .5:1.S SllKtlv•r 7S~ 16'.lo Sttn Otl lJV. 11 ... &Kl Dick Jo •~ l 11 1on el $.tutHllt MUii lOGllOll Ktmt n A ll~o l.A9ko11tn l!!I .5'4 1•~i&e1d\Alr 00 Anfl~UI I nv. Sl fl'llll Tee I o Ao D11llf• Inc lfl Pr09 o 54 4 fl Kiit C.r1 l , l'lo Stllo11 In Pio l 'M 8e!coPel S.Ob How Have They Done? Anl<on In IV. I'll om•.o Arct lr>d W. II.lo on P•P An:I Moy 11°"' lll'oCon llt0<~ Arl_Mol" 11'11 11 onlr•n Ar•WIG 12'!. l»lo Corlnco Ar111w IR JU. ""' 0!"11 5 "1\1 1'-i !ht 11rlttl ol wMch S!Kl< I• ll Jl s• KIVtlm Jlo 4lo Scio CPlr llo ,,,. llel!len I 60 19\, XlV.!Mll •9CUTlllu 5t19CI •20 tltl(oor l • 17\o llV,Scr""' H lJ\l:i !J11t ll•IC1ntH tOb 11 1' cWld ll•Y• l>Ofn Vf r Pv I IO t• Kl'efl\ C11 1(1.<, 11!,\o Scrll!ff J11o ~!&Ill tio,. 60 llo 7\lo 10~ !bld l or 1t01111hl hW ll.t1ll I U l '' K1Uell 2,,_ n\ S..!od Po 11 lSV. l•ll lhlrcon 11• JJ'.\oi l11i.fdl MOnd11 ltt.r 22 U J t1 KtHOM A 11\IO 1,..... s .. n, 11 Jofllo l~ =·· ~0"""° 1., ~ •u Alli hr 1 ..i I 441 K.rlwd 31 ll¥1 S.l1 Com t \.lo w. it.Id!• .,1 3 By SYLVIA PORTER How has the av!'rage LOAD mutual fund -the fund on which you must pay a sales charge gener ally around 8 5 percent -perfonned over the long term period from 1950 for 1nv~ors' Jn comparison how has tht average NO-LOAD fund -the fund which attac:hes no sales rees al all to purchase of its shares -perfo1 med O\er \he s-ame 21 year period for 1n \esters" AND HOW have both types of funds performed during stock rnarke\ breaks"l For ir1 stance, during the :;harp dechnes of 1962 1966 as well as 1969 70 -cr:ick ups which made the decade of Lhe 1960s lhe worst 10-year span for 1n \!'st.ors 1n a full quarter-cen tury" For months I ve been seek tng answers to these quest1oos fo r myself and vou F1na ll}, 1 ve obt<11nrd them fro n1 Growlh F'und Rc~arch IJJc n[ Long Beach Cahl 11 h1th has made an exh :iust1\e study f)f the ll gures put together a hypolhetical a\cra ge $!0 000 load and oo-loa d fund and traced each $1 0 000 fund from 1949 through 1970 In its Harbor Area Fir1n Set V1ncenl J :-.1cG11lnne~s and J ack Perry, mutual fund sales Pxecllt1ve~ lodml'rl) \1 1 I h S h a reh olders ,\1 11nagemen t C.:on1pany Los Ange les hav e lo rn1ed N.<11lon;il 8xtens1on S!'!rvices t-;c11 porl Beach The cnrnpan) 1'i engaged 1n !he markcnni;? of 1ndrpendt n1 sludv rour<;('~ "t!h t h P pnmarv ...,bJeCt1\1? flf hrlo1n ii: rnanagrnu nl ~;j]e~ prr~onnl'I 111creasc lh<:ir pri 1duc11v1t) It 1s thl' !1r~t '( nll11~ ! •r hoth nu~n sincr the1 rr\1gnrrt from Shareholder~ ~lanai:1• n1en1 in 1970 ~ll.ut•hulcfPr~ ha Jpading 1nu!111\l fund n1ana11.r· ti\rnt arid 'ilr~ rir ~'i1\l1allu11 \1h1ch d 1,t11bu11 <:. f1\r llllllil 11 fund s 1 11 i I u ti 1 n g 1hc l'.:nterpn~r l'urid Jr Y•• e1• 11ot """' ""'".""" Senolc.o Toi •r• 11ot ,.,,.i.,. oll ef Y•lff c.ollt Tllf,HONI ANSWERING IUlllAU 835-7777 Arrow H "'* 7t'fo osm Yr• pe'fonn.nce fiaures I h e Arvld• n 1ra , .... co e~ A._ s, JJ.\ f\lo rou Co 1i1 n-. AG£ Fnd S 1' J 40 J Honer; I '6 I 6l IC.t 11Y Svc ~ 11"4 J-• F ~ 1 IJ-IC• I OO 11 11,,. At>e•an ,2 It 2.All ~otin,tn .,~~-':] 2l.ll w:wlf Eu ,",,~ 1,,'"• ',:","•'"•• l \.o 1., e-11 Pl• 50 l01' J1 \'t AdmlrttlV \lndl tYOI-"""' Kl'll Fib .. .!,, .~ ·~~.·· ~ research organization did not A~c aot o '\4 ,,." rut 11 .. AllG11 U IS\4 1~ vtlr l'Pd 1 , I 11\Cl>ITI 4 olO • H Cw. Il l 11 M 1•.50 l(eY1 PC ISlli l•V. !"°"' 111111 H l'I If ~ fn I II\, G,...11> TU 714 Allollol lt031Jotl(.., Cusf 1~11V.kvtn U -'"'1- 1 n c I u d t reinvestment of Auto kl l 5\4 .,,. com t \o ~ 1nour 10 lS II l4 C111 BJ J9 0 JI l41Clnt1 Int J 1\'I Smi&\11 In IV.• ~ 1rfll'I ~l!o 1'1' ,,.. AdVllfl j 51 6 OJ (119 Ill I 47 t 2t K"'e• El J Jl'J Sno1> Tll U •TVJ II 1.10 BCC Incl t 9'11 Da111!1b capital gauis or d1v1dents ; the 11••11 Al ~ .-01111.,. M f It ltlT ~I'll( t 'llo 10 INI Co 11:\ro 11'"' ..... " 101711.ll Cu& Kl 7f0 IUKlrk Cll ,.,,. 1 5 c .1w11 15\to '":.SI I l \o!o lfllllo•a 1 32 t t? Cu• K2 I 17 • 11 l(nip V09 AU1 <ll So"'E 1tl ,, l llil Dldtr I per ormance resu s are Wl-eine "' 1114 1~ 0111 o.n l '4 1'111 A tut Utt f' 10 ,S 10 H Cu• Sl 10 03 71 N L"'" In l""' .fOl(o Sw GI C" li 1~ 1!1lr ohn 41 d 4 'h AllAm Fii U ti Cu• Sl ID It 11 fl Lind 11111 ~ ~ Svt IEI Sw 17 I ~· L~~' "amLshed air.om 1111 »V. 26 0111 c ... ' ll1rrno It !"'° ? 0111 Pko I"' f \lo All1ltll 11 '° 1J 11 CUI Sl I J2 t lJ I.Ont Wa T¥t l \.lo $(1yr" Cl" 11 IM M 11 e1u111 " 4 1.11 •1 .. 0111111 P 11) BOTH F UNDS came oul ••umrtt · ~'"' 1w oav11 Fd 1•¥1• Mlt U\to 1"1'4 0•"" ltn way , \\ ay ahead m lhe 21 ...illW P '°'"' 11N O.Lu~ c ~ h llffk Hol » $11 0.C:or In l 'lo l"'Afpllo lJ ,.11...lf CuJ S.O 509 5.51 \.anPn In • •\lol1>1cot'I' ~ 1'1i eo;\''" tV. l \'1 Arnc11> 111 111 Pol•• 4 1t •Y L .. dV Cp l•~ l~~lllfld'l'l't ,,,,,_ t7"" B I rfl• If'" 20 Am Bu• l 1' 1 Ji (nlckll 1 Ji 11' \._.., CHI l'l:I '"" Sfd 11 .. lt I .. 11"-f:l:lno O A AHiot,SV,Am Olvff l01211U 'Cnkk GI lOalllO.!Lel• Grp P o PloSltn H~G U >Ni ICtl -'-"" in, 17\/i Am E<tlt' J 17 J H tnox I'd '11 7 41 L-1• •F" ,. 10\fo Sl••I• Sir IS~ 15\'I 1::w •• ' :r'1s "\~ Sol\~ Amir E'••rt» LH Grlll 10 60 II $11 Lin lt•al U'.lo I~ Strollo'lt Cl 1.SV. d \!t l"'"'fll !Op )ears re-em.,.,as1z1ng t e BflJ L•b .s'~ 5lllo 011(1b •• I~ ID•~ C•Pll Ill fMltx 1115" U.9111.ttllqdnlc t:lo Jl(oSubK Ttv Jl-o 4'4 otF<i·s ?l< b I I f t t d Bibi;! Ml f1'i , ... Delhi 011 as c rsson r re.a e a s a 11111111'1 w n~. ll'A o" C•nT U 15\':I tncme 'Jl 10 1t Llbrty Fd I 11 7 ll Lo1t11w ~ 1'-1 5uld1I F 17 11.,., loa Ed pfl g long-term in vestmen t l h e mutual fund 1s an excellent veh icle t2J OVER THE long-term since 1950 the oo-load funds ha ve clearly demonstrated perfonnance superK>rily One reason hes JUS\ 1n the fact that they ha ve no sales cl1arge, for 1he $85() saved on lhe original $10 000 purchase 21 years ago grew 1n the Gr~·th Fund Research comptlallon to more thari $8 000 Also a higher proportion of no-load lunds are oriented toward growth and despite the n1a rket breaks of the 1960s the 21 years saw some spectacular economic gro11th Il l DURl'IG ~I A fl I\ E r declines both load and so-load Funds lose \ alue too In the 1962 break the fu nds on averrige lost 12 to IJ percent 1n 1969-70 they lost 2l to 27 percent ! 11 \\HILE A SIO 000 c;a\ 1ng~ aC'cnunt pay111g 5 percent co111pounded an nu ally a ls o would have more than doubled -from 1101000 to $27,859 - lhere s simply no comparison In gains (And 1nc1dentally no savings a cco unt paid any11here near an average 5 percen l 1n 1950-iO l '.\'ow here arc !ht abslutely fasc1nat1ng compartson ~ Oo!t g,~ 11 ... "" 19!1 19$1 1•s1 ,.,. IO~I "" itH 19'! " . ... \91! U~] '" '" ,. ' ... It• I 19~· .. .. 10 L••• l'u~d • t llO II 111 1) Ill I• ~to " 10. 1t .,. ,, l\\ 1• Ill 1?)1JI ""' J4 1!4 J'j 1•1 .. J16 J9 OSI •I 961 ~1 GJO "~ ., r.G6 !f' 10• ••on •r '" ·~' Ho lood .. ~ 'IOOQ(I 11.ll•D l• l•t 11 ~u I\ Ill ". ' '• o>• ll ,~, 10 !!J l7 l•~ •) ~DI .. 11• I D'~ 0 \II ""' O] OIT 11 011 II 117 100 Ill 1)) ,., 1~111t ~ 1•• In S\(I('~ n1arkrl J1f'1 tiir1nancr the p.1st 1~ no ~l11rtr at ~1 1 !t• th£' f\•tu re \\h~l s morr u\er11 ll 1950-70 \1;1c; a J!reat mnrket period wh1t'h 11r inay not !IOOr repeat Still \hat rierl ormance de n1anL1s pondering On SIO 000 1nl'estment SI lnvcsl t • t '2 Lift $!lo 4 U 'n LDO Elrn t t 'h SUPlr fl llV. If l\ourn, Inc 5HCI t IS Liit Inv 1 ll f OI LYnch C It Al U>t TIME DC ~ 71 • l"ntl "-lrw Stock t ll ... \.Inc N•• l 17111JJ M11fl1n G 11 IJll>T•mP•• 11,•,,.",',,,,•,•,·.r.",',':O Am Gr!h I .. I 71 Liii 4 ts Mt l Pool 1~ J'l'I r ... el• ' • ··~ Am Inv 162 S'2 \.oomls Savle1 Mi i Rllv lT•o l l•i T•vlor t m l\lo llr!<'Mv or l Am Mutt '111 10 1; C1nod JI Oil J1 00 Mt llkrt ,, • t3U Tovlr WI l11V7ll0 llru,.1 Jet 'lmH Giii l» Jtl Ct P•I 11,t !\ltMon"' C 6<~ J\1 1ttl'I ,Ut' ''° S '!dwy H•le·1 l>or Group Mui 1' 111'11 M l rowr l1~ Jll'i ff 1111'1 ' 116 l" i&dw'f'Hl l -1 T Ct Pll 1 61 t SO Lord Abt 10 !$ Movl LP If lOV. l •!ecom J-\o 1 l\rl(,.,...lll• .,... Grwtll l l l•lltl lLutl\ i&ro ll llll2'Mc:Co• '''~'I TY Com l'lo t~lk~~ I U lncm1 1 11 I H ,,,_i nt In I 11 I SI McOuo1 It ~ 20\lo 11NMnl 26 76L'> r 0 Fd Inv • 1S lO ll Monllln JI• J U'Mlllk H t!1 1 t X AmO 1!'1 1-.. ~= rp i'°IO v .... 1 M 04 lt U Mkl GI~ 6 l1 I lJ Mldk: M 1J> .. 2'\11 1~'111 '-! S\"1 INn•w• 11 Atl•on '1i S 20IMou 1chu>ttl Co Mllllrn ..0 "°'" Tlfn' Co , .. 10 l ucy IEr 1 10 Ax• HouehTon "'"'d 111 t Coi Mtdd In l!Ro 10111 Tllln' In 9\o 911 Blldd Co Fnd A S It • .0 lnde11 6 It 1 U Mdl>~ VI IS.\l ltll> 11ttn G•ll ' •II. i&udliF pf 10 Ann d Fn<l t 7t•l'3 M•H ll:W.l2 •JM1a1a c1 l n 111 1otlEL• J l lo Budg~llnd Oullce S!<>ok 6 09 6 H Meu F1n•nc MI01t• 7 1'• lroco• C J'• l'h luttf<>r~ 1 70 SCllfl 411 J lJ~IT 16 21 lJ Jl Mktw Gt 1'I 13 lrncnl G \~1 ll'rio utov•W 10 11~.on tlJ t lj MIG 1JOOU 21M1111pr 10 11 lr•nM>O :114'2' 811nkr Ram~ llVrk Fd IU toll MIO Ul(llt.JOMIH Mui U 1! 1•1Mob H J•,\ t lu~•R pH 50 A Compl.t -•y new t lavrk Gr J 1J i 21 Molt~ ol!t 4..11 Min« In 101'1 11\.lo TrlC<> ,.. 37 Jl:\4 Burt Ind 1 •O l'-1 conct:p a.ocn Hll 107ll101i '"''"' 11171)17 11 G• :i..i;,.w111Tr1C11fr , A41 ll11r!No 1 17• d f l oocn !" 16 '1J 1' I) Mid AM :5 11 i HM ts llT U\o l.WO 1rlln OG IV, f>,\ ~utlH<>r rl Ji 11h1ch 11ould ad alrcralB••• w:.., 1011101• oodv 11 "12 "Ml1tY1 G 11••11>.~1.,.....," 11.,.11 ll11rnc1v 10 a ... ~ G111 t 7J 'U Mooclv • 11 tt n" 11t1<h lV. 11~ Unll•< ~ J'1o "11"'~' 60 ownership to !ht protective flonc1o1~ 1 SI 1 It MIF Fa 161 • • Mohwk R 161, 11 un c Ho• l \• 1~ •usll Univ llolln SI~ I il t .. Mtl' Gin S 70 1...11 Mon! Col 1 , l:U Un Ilium lO'o Jl \ cloakofl1tlc 1nsurance11as1n Bo•• l'"dn ITJlllJtlMuus Gv 101110 J1Moor1 P 1 ... 11~un McGl1 •'• 1 Ci Do!CP?O llo•! Fo d I ::lt 9 O!IM Om1G J It • t0 M-• S 11:i. 11'> US 8nl<nt 10,., I'• (•dfnc~ Ind traduced lhl.'! week Ill a jO!OlB-wn Ftl i n •:W.M Om1hl 10$1 11 11Morr1n w: lt'T.~:I0'4US Envlp 11•.11,,.c.1 l'nanl l ullo<k Ct vln Miit Shro 1i lO 1• JD MltT• WI 71:. 7'1 US 1r~Lfl 71~ 111,, (ol!a~n Mn" announcement by )' 1rst 111111c• i11o uu Mur r1•1 i oo lOOMotch M ''•iv.Univ Alf 1v. 1;i;.c1m1>llt k 1J Candn lt PO 21 It o.IEA Muf 10 iO 10 II Mot Club 3~ o l•lo UP Pen P 11•1 1J 1 C~mo SP I 10 Am er1ran T1tleln sur an1 t' OIYd l d oOINal Ind 1111 11 nMu•ltor 11,11 u i.1 lr d 1•l.U4,Cnn !lrew •O NatW ~ IOS•l!!IHo! Seour $1' IMuron P l l'oV1llv ~or ''• 10 ,(dnJl.JC JlSQ Comp"·"Y of Sant• Ana and NY vn1 111•1111 e111n 10111111Ncc •no '"• , .. IY•llcv G• m 1, 10 'CaP !nJl.S.. i&u•nh Fa ll GI 11 OI 6""" ' •• ) il N•••G c~ 111.o 1.S . J olu• lO I l'•fC.•nllll I 10 I d A ft T ti Se llu• !Avl 110 I ..i O•v"' • ll • /1 NtlCt• II. '"' t >" V•nO 11r ''• 10 Coo C 8octo nsure 1rcra l e rYICf' CG l'Un<I 10 II , , O! G•W'" f •• 10 Jt Nol Gl.O 11'. n Vt nc:t s 11 II• Corbru~ I so I h IP1m I QJ I I.it Pl SI~ 7 l• I I I N Ho1p 14 ·~ V1!<.ro lt it , (1rll~!t 60 Inc. Ok a ama City, Okla Ct pll Gin :r 61 ] 15 l10com s l• ! .. Nil L 0 '.ll ... '.19•• Vfn1ron "XI', ;1 C••OCl.Oh s • f h I Ctlll! Sh l U 111 !tock 1 11 t 11 H P11ont 1•'" 15'h W•d• Pu "Xii.. JI', Col'erage o l e mu \1 ,,., Trln ll ~ io 11 1,,it1 Grlh • 11 10 '2 N S..:lll•h 1,1 ,,,.. w1111 11,, 11 11~, C•r• PLr i ·~ '1ntrv Sh it 0•11l•Neuw Ct! i S1 111No1 5ho"' 1'\ J\~W Ro~a1 11 J Corpltc !l!l bilhon-dollar aircraft industry ~h•nn!"• Fu"d' INeuw Fd i111 11JO Not 511.,, s1o "•W•h NG 1~; u .. f:~;'••"•~ 40 l1l1n 11 tJ 11 '11Ntw Wl4 !J 13 Ii » N 1En1GI! 11', 1~ Wt ttr Tr th !~o 1n .111 manner similar to that c""' st 1 " 1 t0 ~•w•on 11 '1 !'It NJ H•• G 1ot. ~ Wtbb R• , ,., ~::J~~. '°:i G,...lh I Ml 6 ltlN lc~ 5tr• .-, 3' 11 • "'ltllltn f' 21 11'1.:. t lt h! W l~o 16'\ Co1e'l' I «l now provided real property •nc°"' T.JI l ?iH••c••1 11 1•1o;11 "'1•l•n 1 41\~.0 w.r111•n l'o' cci Corp S1>e<I I tJ 1 11 Ocoonor I.. I II l1hn B ~ a•. WtUnt M ll • jj 1"'" Corp ta 11 111 have farreachmg effect C11a• Gr e °' o.....,,. 100 111HoC•r Gs u 16\lo oil•" M l!l-\1 101:. 918,,.1.cD 1 Co1><t I 11 I •t 100 Fund I• SO 1S 15 N Eur 011 314 I Wtll Gt • II UV, el•n 1>IA• 50 on the aircraft financing Fvn" 10:1'1111101 Fund t11 1011 Nw N•tc• H h ll'•W•tc."" 11·, 13 c~ •n• 30 l'•ont ''10 • WmS 1J 19 1s et ww PuSv 11 17 ,,w1•n NA 10 ,.1~c1n Hu11 1 " fraternU)1 off1c1als said SMh1d 11 n IJ 01 Neill 11 61 11 "Nox•I Co M>. ''"' w11n M11 ~ N Con1u1.1 1 s. • SPtc! 10 7' 11 JS :)s>ponn I 6S t 0 Nucl Ric t~, 10\o Ws1n Pun 1''/, lt~ C1<1llPS I 20 A ~I··· fmancm has Chemld 11n)047(1op AIM 1212 1•01 IV• M ])h ll Wll SI Ur I\• ll'>C•nll•EI I !.,.,..., i ';;Dl..,l•I TC St<: 101011'3 lo Ari 10 l~W1•!11! lH'olNltnMl'w 1 20 b b b ''.-, t >-i • 74 l t t Fnd f M 10 54 o••· ,_, L• ''" "'-" >•" '"' ••"W•• , become 1g us1ne.ss, ut F~ 1102110.P1u1 11vr-1-" tlA 11 .. y,.i~ ""' ,........, ·~ Grwlll 1$6 117P..,n S'I I H 7 H ! It•" 1~1~•.lo 1~:1%~: 1 ~~1::!l:~~.~B;•~ Jendershavebadnoa11!\U".111nce 1nc:G1T1 •n 106J~1 Mui •M •II 11c. 1ote l'I' J1.1w11c P L 1114 n,~c.,roc11 10 Von! ! J'l j II Phllt 1S 21 1110 '" Mii ~'• JV. dW•d l. JI'~ ""' Corl·IH d 10 lhat their coUateral 1s pro-colu Gr1h l•U1•21PUtrlm io n 11110rmGftl ' "'' r1c1vt E 1~ ~•Ctun1A1, '° oms 6d S'lO SMPIM S! 11 ..11 11 •2 ,., 1P 2 11-o:l:l\~Wrltht w 7Jl,(,2• (Fl 511 eo. ~dy protected ' F I f S l Cwllh JIB l Al 1 Sl Pion Enl I '1 I II N'-l 5"" Yrdn, E HO l C~•dbrn Inc -Cwl1n c I IJ 1 u Pion f1'd 1 I t• \J OS ... Ct • 16'~ I~ l(>nUI a u"' "'' Chimp$ I 10 Amencan President o pc ........ A• 1ts 1 11P11~ 1nv i 1l11 11 o1S c"'''"' HY i Com• C1> tta /JiPll9r!n lJ j..IU IO Cl\o1eM1nl\ 1 Kennedy <tsstr1t>d 'A con l~: =: 1:~\:~P•J~:una:,,1 21 21 ~=~.1~: I Id I h c 1~ •1' ~II) "'l!!ro 10J9 10)9 !""I'" 1• lcstcd tit c cou resu t 1n I e c~~'d 111111 u N Horlr .. 1 l4 JO" NEW YOlllC (API • Mon.di, 1 ccimoltlt ~ ..... 1,11n 1 c 1 v 11 JJ 11 00 p,o Fund 10 If 10 IM Ntw Yor• Slodt l~U-11-orlet• nomNY t II IOSS ()f fl $10000 0f c:::lelnG l,Qj 161 Pro Po'11 101 1 11 S 1 CnttYI llG £I 000 000 plane a s col l:::l ~~ 1: U 1i ~ ~;:111"a ~ U t ~ tf.!t::1 ""~ LN ''"" ,;: !''l:,11e1°ti"~ :,. Co•• Ldr un lllJPru SIP 101• 11 IJ ~r E•1t tll lateral " cir, C111 u oo u n Putnom Funa• -A--~llM~115/,." Dt Cr11 WO Iv i Ill 4 '2 E<1Ull I 51 t JI AbtcutF lOil • 1 .. , 1"°" li•o Ch Pntu1 l lnsu1ed Aircraft T 1lltcrn w o 11 1 n1 1J G..,,. 10"1'uAl>IHLb 1 1u .oo .$1-1• »~ ~n-111och111r~c1 UP d•Vll~ IO lt /010 G•wt~ 10<11 1!11 ACF lncl ,<G !:ol i"• .S.O )• -1" ~1111 tl HW Serv1('e Inc , located 1n the o11t wo••G•ouo tnc:om 11••01 Acmcc r• i~ • ll'• 1». 1~+\ito Pull 114 Oft •• 1!01 1Jll lnv••t I Jt t J9 Ac111tMOt 'ID 110 511, ~l > 'j{>-'l ~'' Crtlt f AA co111ple.1 a t \\ 111 lloeers o...... n 1t ,, 6? v .,. • tt tu 111m•E• 160 3• IJ 1!"' 11 .. -• ~••"l•ll .., DtM• I ll au Vo1•• r a1 I JiAllMlll•I 7g II lJ l .. ll ~ 'h ~•Yllt IG f \eld 10 Oklahoma C 11 y DI• C•o ... I JC ll.IYI'• 1QU ll 6ll.dd•1H &,)Q 1'1 lll • l'i• Jl'lo -llO ~.,,1 .. wl 'DO<lf Co• 11 ..,ll "llnlr•t U?llj 15Adml••I oJ ti, ll'olo II -'A t M!o ftil II h o ti I• ll I• ii s11l1'r1 l SJ U "•1nt Lft 1 oO 4U ~ •2 12.\li .., .., nni&Jll I lO pres.en y serves more I an 0;:~1 fd 11 ,1 11'"' sc~uttr u •o "tJ At!noLt Dt 2 • <1 , •I , "'' -\\ nn GE 1 !II 2 000 financial lruill!Ullon.~ n1ak-O••vl Lv 11," n H ScLHldl<" l'11n<11 "flu rre Cft 11 !!,•, 11 1 1211 + ~ lnG fi" is El!onl.~OW•• In! Inv u 11 u J7 A "'" Inc I• <¥' ti n -'• ~n Int 1 1n11: loans :;ecured by aucraft eo11n 1011 •1oe s.-1 1'1ll•IJ :l~/;.M'1Jo"lrlo !~ H~: jf1~ ~"'-;'~c:v"'f~! !o"° h f h Grwlll 11 91U10 !!oll n IJ 11 IS ll IV lncl~tlnts t J>o 111 l •• IC•l•lnv po B? f e tnTI prepares t t' ma to...:om 111 •II Com S1 105llO J1 A~l""I 11 JOI fJ, •I'" 411.o -•,C11~ Sil• I f ft tit) cl SH cl • •• 10 11 So;;url!• Fund• Ai• Got 1 i. 1 It IS' l!' IC!a • Ea • <II Jon yo <11rcra tsear ies s• ... ~ ,,~11sJ• f.qut~ 1 11 •l•Af,!~1 rn1.,, 30 lJ•, ,": ,i;1 .. <~•~ 011 10 used by the lending and av1a E11.,1<11 u D• u li •n•"' 1 n •°'A rto< .J2 11 a. 27'• 2~1'1 11 ,, C••• 1 10 Ef rot GI IJDl lf \I Ul!rl ll• t'10Atitr1in1 >• ,. 17 IP •• 1) 1 levEllll l7• 11on 1nduslnes e11un l • I• II Sotld ,.,n 1ooc 10 ~1 Alc•n,.1um 1 6l ll'o 21 • ~l'" -, iorox 1l!I !mer S« 'll '1' Sii $111<S U •l 11 •S A~oS!on<> 10 •U 70<1 I 'lo :lll~I .., •o !uellP•1 90 By 1he 1isu11nce of First .,.,,. !l 11u11 ~nt Gth 1 u '6l A 1~nc1 .. Ja• l• ,, 1 1 21 -·~ "'' .,rn1 Jo h En!o"t '!'-I •1 \1n!•v F Ii l5 U II A IAmLI l~ 10 1! ', >' Ljl• -Ill NA l>f Al 10 Americans pol1c1es I roughfqu tv •0 1oi11011am Fd 1iHll lJ A!lt11 Co 10. 2t 1•, .,.. 111o -~ o-.i StG1• th d t t Equll GI~ •ll 1011Sh•lr AP JCt•Jl l• o\l~Lu<I 1.-10 6) J ""° J ~ 1"1 -\4o ltSGi oil Tf e un er11r11ng agreemen E 11 ,.,11 ,,1 111 11t1r inv 111111 21 A\1A'"" 1111 • h~ R i7Yo ocol:oi I Jf Insured A1rcrafl is ellpand1ng F:i'.1111 io.t.l 11 n ""'"' o 11 03 1•0J :1 ~h 111;, ,:~ J'J"-~ ~ ~ :"; ~1 r111...,:' form eu 1~1110 41 !Gt I'd 10 0l10 "" Mlln flt 1 :Ja l' 3™ ~ n DA Its titlt search func11on to 1n F1<1t!1tv G11» itm• ~uno• AU ,d .-, 1•!! 1.,,; 'i~ = " ••1 1...e elude tlllt insurance a.s well as ~~l:.. 1i I' l~TI f::~:, 1 ~ !~ l~ t~ :11 11 ...,!11.,;., 4G 31 11i; ",: J~ + ~ :lr.,!'Af:.• :Ji ~I nn of 0 Dtln~ Iii lrUll • ., '"•I.Ch llo 1~1 ,~ l~h r.·· }llnJ od ,~r o anct' es c r w Eu•~ i i rt 1J 11 s ... 11h 11 10 .a 10 MA lr lglAut * 34 \lo ~" + ..., 1>1on1 1 '°" serv1cesforc1 vlla1rcrlilft salts e~n1 u1'•4l1Sw lnY• •.11 10 01 A111oP c.,. 'Jl' j ! -1.t olo1n111 t iO f llftl 1& 7t 11 U Swtn (;! 1 AO I 00 Ale<>e l to \'O 5 '1'I -!% Oii Ind ! and rehnanctng 1\s prt:s1dent P11r11" 10 AO 11 JI 5o••• Inv 1; ~ 11 LI .l.MBAC st i. 1j14 • <>IT 111 ~" n MolUiew f; Kelly of San Tr91\d ?4 n " n Stl'rm 0 1 , ro 11t1 Am E• "'' • 1o1o • + "" Bl Pl 1 Airplane Insurance g.un of S86 246 111 U1e n<Hoad fund $60 fi02 1n the no-load fund 160 502 1n the load fund ':-=====~-=====~i$~l7 859 1n !he sav1n~s account ~;;;;--.BECOME MORE EFFEC'~TliVV~E ~;;;; Sil•m s SJ • ~• 5,..,,,. Ill I 01 Arntt Et 1 ll I l! > 1•s t 4tal F I t led ,l ... f'Clll Pr1>11 5111t SI ot ll ii~ AmHtu 15d ltS U4i lm .... -i''f Olu G•1 11' ranc sco, s a D'l'l't• A l1 • ~ l1toom•n l'und• A~H r, JO n 1"47Vi 1 '4 1a · -~ ~o~,lct ~ The policies to be ~utd by 11'1d\1•1 i.•1 4 " Am '"" J .. 'u~'f~1' J:. ,.!JI ,.. t~~ :j: a"c~b~i1if' ln«lot'I S '' • U AtN F l JO I U AIU..-lk l I,.. 171.;, 11~ -'lo lmb'~n pf'! 1" first American I h r o u g h v .... , 1 l4' •, ''• , r 1dvc, ~ ", 111 A ••Mi i ,. tJ ~ ..,\> .cs\I .... ~· .,..1~1~ ,0 t d A f ) _,_ 't''' VI 11flt1 leln 00 • Amectc1! I 10 SI 1]\., 'j"' -11' oml I pf 'O nsure 1rcr1 t lnC Uuor: ln· '" '"~"''" Bol•n xt 41 20 •...,,, C•n 2 20 1t 3 v. 'i\~ J 1. omw 1 x 11 INCREASE YOUR INCOME ' DALE CARNEGIE• COURSE 1~ •!IK! vo r1mn11t11l(1h1"' u lf-<•nllllltl>C:t ""' ~u"''" ••l•H•"t Phon• Totlay -(714) 633.-4191 '·---••-•·-••-·---•-•.--P••-'" br J•lln•• At-•otu ·---••-••-•._ _ _._.,. ___ "'1,L/ , I I See by Today's Want Ads • TflAOF:tl'.:: r \It \111~r PECR r·\llON l \:-.\[)'''' -.;r11r l1k1 r1('1 ~ 11rKI Be!1dt111: \\ 11111 TD• ulllrr 11 1r!(' "I 111 11~ l)!e 1rrin~ fn1 11 00 , 'lllll) e Tiu~ 6, XK~; .f' Bl11rk 1• •rt ., ,,..,.1~ \l1M1.hn~ ,\,\! ~ \1 r&dKI ""ill put mort fun ln lo yt'IU r hlto e HQ\\ A AOU r "Cllnf 11 l~t I\ ll!!rd l\pp\111nCf', \\'Ash ,.r .-~f1 "n< tl'fr111f'rAIDf'l', )'OU r'/ltl I Ito Wtofll{ ] dOCSOmC'!' fOC !C pll T 111 e Ol~e ltt 10 ",, Ct P O ,",,',,'.'1 A Cf~ Ptl I~ I 'I, 1 • 2 '• -'• O>lllwEd wt '' Grwth • 1' 1 St0<k • Am Ct ""nl 14 ~ "" \f cml! pit 4t ""Vtrage of eno1ne5 Ind pro-Stoel< ''3 10 'I SuPt•vlsf l"v A C~1ln 1 60 l 2 u .... ~~,_. -+ \t om! pfl 11 .. v " '" MUii IAI t 1 c;1wr~ I JI •lCA(tYS\111 ••• I ",, 13 -•4 om pf1 ,, peller.'!a~wellasa1rframes "''NII 111 1u s~mH 1•11J11ofACY•n 1 :.1 >11 J)\•]) l.>\•-'' Mlw 011 ~o f I f ''I Slort un•••!I Tech 114 •"Am 01,1111 I IJ It 1171 IT'• -I' Como otl 11 Rolatton O engne.s or,.ttt Fnd SJI s vnc: G1~ iou1~tlAOl11111 ;io., 1 .. ft'J. ~ +1~ com.,.1 sci h I t I ~nd Glh 4 n S 21 tMlll Ao• 1J ,. 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Hs I t I -• I tan~I" Ct<ll/ll T\ldr Hid 111)1 1• 21 A G11l n ofl llO 11 .Mlh .Mi.to J<IVI + ~con Fii DU'° reslrr.1ons pa .. ~ on arge DNTC 1 1sttttwne G1 J111t l 1'1.111Ko111 .o 1• 1u , 111-' i111o °"F'"M 1 &lrCrBft engine$ the.re.by p\&C ~r~h 11 : ;: l n i!~i h-:C 1: ~ 1~~ ~:=,I J: ~ ::. ~~ ~ + ~ :::Hllt&°Jrla rng added 1mportanct' on assur 1t>tom J 12 ill vn11 Mut 11., 11 t:1 Amlnvll JS. 2i U 14 14 - It on~~"~ , us Go• ,G.1'11UVnUund JOllll lAA Mldletl 'j U JllU. Jl'llo '1'1l -'li on AJO 1ng clear ti lit to these engines ,.a, o.o io u 1t u uni"" S•c Or• A Mttrlc• .1 u Dl4 J IM 11t11 -'ll on ~,,. h I r .I.I ,u.-d 1,.. Gr• l rOOll UM 1' A !lo\ll(bt 1.... .. ~ :n :n .-\It '" It n at t e tmt 0 owner...,up comm t.1.211s1 t.r.t1 In• 1" •Ol AM!iCll!"' • tN '' ti !:{C•" M t I fin I K JI 1 ....... , tll lt1 u C•• 11 2112 Am~· •w ~ ·~ •"'91 I 1n of'1" ran1er or re Rncng, e Y Ind 1,, 1t.t1 1•• wto1e11 11..J111...aAN• 'l" ~ :aeo.a ~ coo a u~alned P11e1 '" 111 u.,utd fund• Alt.. '!• ~ '° -'Ill ont1c°'"i?," f n<lf Am • • tlol .Vcm 1'2 1.U...,,, hit .n 1 ,. lt -t' iC. of, to FAA Rtcords Ctnltr o11......, t1111" C6'1 IO• 11 1111.ti .vr. M11it.-~·" Sn 11 + ~ 11t1Ml1tt 1• ~ Gtf\ .\eC t 74 t.T• C6'1 In< II $] U .. A l""I" I '8 ll '°"' 241A. + II Oft IO itlfil maintains rtglstrat1on rC"COn\"G"r•nr 1o;i 11 tflCo"' uliUJ'IAl'l'lkA" ,. mt •"* + 11o :;:'18:' ;o• JI ft I ' UI ,_ $e< Scion 1 H I a Alf! Iii"' •• 1JI ~ 2Ho T 1 M -0na a1rcra eng:nt:S O\tr.,., ""A l:I' ,,, v 1,,. t1110 Al111•t47J '1 1<o ,,,,._"on !!0 hoNepower ror which till• and 1011~ 1 " • 11 u ,.-11 c 1" •1' • A,,, s .. r11 _. 16 'I" "•• :b':r 111/~ C~ SI lljU~•Vt lut LIM II '-1•T wl m ::n! ·i flnancln11; agreements 1r eG•f!\Pd "' 1 , .. v11 Ll •1• 1 11 ,.m T'"TtM 10 ~" ""' ·~ OOlll " Grttl '"' ,1 i1 n ln<om J 1t J If Am TT pt !"I, ~ iJ'4 a.. -... 1 1.4' recorded tt the rtque!lt or 4""'' M H ,. 1111 sn s,. 1 °' AW•l'Ml f• al 1no ,,,. 1.t'4I + 4t .,., ~·" f ,.__ Momlll"" tl4 l..vtll'f " AWW J" :ll 1* lf"' 1Mt I .... ~ners or mon111a:or1 o un: ,., ",..t • u '11 •ndtbl 1 °' 1 ;t Aw "'"' 1 ..-i• u. .. u -1.11 • ena\nff, H~::~ :J '~ ="lM ,::,f ::.'.:'.J.O '1: ft\!! jfli ff"..,.'."' 11' Flf1t Amt:rlun TI l 1 f! H•C Fd lJ UlJ.J.IV•• r .. ,. • 11 l ...,...,.. ... 1• ir· 1~ ,, .. -,,, IJ JOe Hl-C LW 11Ol1111 111.1111 11' '1 AMP troc M s olO'i IOI.lo ...,... -1 {,~ Insurance Company withs"' Got 111\0Vl ll 111$1 Q l J ••Aml•c IO )N ~" -· ... ,,!IJ,", f -• 000 000 tl:llt 11 ti lltJ 111\ M 1 It 14.. AM~ lllC 1o1 lf :E c..J\.\ -~ ''l: a111t:ls 1n ~cea o -, • ..-u1• 1 u 1 111 Im"''" orovio ""'•'"" 111 4 \• _... + i' ~'1:1" ~ h b h b ldt I d or Mon 11J111 tr wf'(r Ntl21'1A/n:r. Coro '' 1 Vo I 11''o -• •• TMC' es IU 9 RT es an ICM ,,,,I I 01 I., tv~•' ., JO 1' 0) Ami .. 1 ,,, JS ,,~ t'o ~ -It ;~!it1 Li .. affl\lltl!I! \n 14 WtSltm ltalt~ ISi Orou•• MOtl 11 K II •J AO'l'llollt ..... 0 1 u!-~ _m ililt\I + \\ t00t;l'.l1m1 ! , Glwtll 4 !I I 7 "°CllV 1 lt A/nllod l.lf ..,.. .., • ~Oii t" Ind Guam Throu1h th P. 1rocom • :io • 1•1n• ,, ,. Ii l•m1.i -" I 1"' .,.. ' • ,_ c.,,. ''"' 11\ 12 te 11 .. 11 w.rt•I 1 2, J Aflll(-· 1 11 U1" u 1, 1 \\ -,, .-1111 1 70 parent firm. The P' I r st 1•ut 1111 1 1r w.rnn 11u 11111Anc11 Hot.~ • 11 :W!11 lt • ~ ... ~ rl C01r 11> A I F cl I Co '"'" C•,. 1e 10 11 .. Wfn4 t .. 11 N All(or~ .. b ..... l""' 11 . .. u hY pl1;£ mt:r t.ln 1n1n a rpora 1 ..... Gift 1" 11) 111 Ind •OI 'J'IAl'll Cl1Y 170 1 Q\I u·~ .cri~-• 1111111•11 !Ion It trlttt lta orio ln to 1889 no;' .,,.. 1••11 Nlnc• F• ,,, s11 AMcheC1 -'' t 111~ ,,_ 1,,.,1 -; ~ -i" 19 In(' lltl I 04 l"I lnfltl~ • lf I °' .llMeO 1 ,.j JO tt•o 7tl1 I v~" OIV<I RS an 1n~rtor ()f lltlt: PrD-!l't<!V"N S10 ~$ Ille Fd •1' f ;llAPKOCD lt ,. 1;, 11·~ Hl4 -'"1 vrtl .. W•I NIGN tll •o •• "'""~ )'II i n••PL Co•~ ! 11 . ,,,, 11·~ Curt11'Wr ... 1ccl1on to re;al property. (1 11 11 u 01 ••, •• uno•o11 AP•ill'd Mot '" '''• n• .. U't C.u><1•M r 1n -----·--~-. --~----~-. ------ ) ---~ ·---..----- ' July 1971 5 DAILY l'ILOT Monday ·s Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ... N•b '>CO 2 10 N1 to Ch 10 !'l& co Sc 60 N&jhv•CP 4 N• I n 101> NA~• 1~/,g Na C1n •s N (1n pf §0 "" '"'""' n Nn Cllem JO N1 C yt 9'0 N• D•I fO NOS1Dl<lJ N• Fu~ 61 f.Jo Gf<' ~ N ~ GYo OS N& Korn~• N• rnlot1 Na nd 1>1 00 Nanlfot U N P •1 Oo N~S<n~ N• S •nlf 15 NaSo<hll• N~S •e?so N~ Te~ It) N• UnE ?td Na om•• l! Nep!une •O Ne•P""" l l• N•wtie y N-b o J1' NEn1EI 1~ NE TT ? }Ii N •W~I '.JO Nowrnnt O• NYHonll °" NY\ EG 701 NY5EI 1>!9 10 N•oMP 0 No M "' 11! N•Mol •a5 N aQSh / '" NL nl'I No loll, W ! No nCo &g No II "d N• Coo loll NoA M ~9g No•rn Ph 1 Nnllrn llO 110 No,o.1111; o •ii No.lll'I~ of l5 .. ~ .. u ,, No C•nG• I<> No Con lly N~ llG&1 11 No G•oMl'O No!nP!> 1 32 NoNGo• 1 6(1 No NC, 0141 Nos 1Pw 1 10 NS Pw ollO NQS 1Pwpl No hi • 501 No hop No1nool0 Nw• • •5 Nw1S~n< «I Nows n~ N'WI n~ W NwndoA! Nw ln<t pl(! Nw• n of( 10 Nw• nMut lf No ton so NO! !rnon No S c!I 61) Nw! StW 1 ?0 NVI' Co Cl~• e ., 0•• t Plf Ott n Po Ore """ p I OcedP PJl>O Ot<<IP pl 6 01<1en Cn P 09<1•n o I *I O~oE<I • !ii Onf~D •<O O•• GE 7• 0~ •NG• " 0 n C• p II Orne • n •l! One <f•l o o... •• 1 g ~ni•: ,, , 0" bcl M~ Ou e Co6S 0~• T en• o ... e n (nQ ! O-n )5 0 d "" 61'1 P•<Gf. "' I'•< nE•<> I~ r •(lC 61'1 "" "" .>.:>. "• l>w " l'•r Sw ~ P• 1&1 "XI ... l & " • "•c 1 n ~ ... ""~'" 15 P nA""S 20P l'•n"'"' WA """~ E" PiO "·~ Ml P• QO• ! "• c• " l !• "~ ""' •n 'II "'~""60 l'•nn C1n Pnn D>• """" " u l'>o~n• JC 1 PemwtCe o r.Pwl 6~ "• PL ell /Ml P• Pl! e!< ~ """""' :l!l Ptnw nl! tll l'enn1un ~ P•nJ U "f )1 l'oo~O 0 !O "~·· '°' Pl!QI Co b! en7' 1 {t P! !n( nl "• "•" M "e "' 1 "• " l• lill• """"!D ll~ ""•E 16• ._ ; 11f9 IS rn DI? IS Pn I E pl I P n!E <>!i ll l>nEn •OO r n e n•l IO "" .~ub 1 70 Pn MQ 110 "" " ml 4 "" """ 1 "" "• l ](\ Pn V>I •C I> l!dNG• 1 l'O " 11:>urv u " ""NGtl AO :1:~~-~ ~ r dD" t<ll> " 111 lturt n P eutvL lJ "r'lv!"l "". 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' • • " . • " .. • ••• " • • • • " ,, W•b II pt• 10 WotllCI> 10 Wo<MI • t 'Wago~ 'W•' 1G• Wo 6u1F 00 W• Mu v rilJ 1 W• M~ Q ..,w11 wo 11 Co o WI OLIO W• ~ F<>O<;l W• n~~o Al> Wol•m\10 " ' • • • l , " • " • ·~ ·~ '"' ' " ~ ~ .. • ' ' • ,, • '" ' ,. ' ' • " •• • .. ~ '" " ""' ,. '" '" . ' " •• ' " " " • .. • ,. • , .. " .. " "" y 000 101 ~­'" ... 1!\lo , .. .. " • • ' ' •• Hi.! '"' " .. " " . • " . u " ' " " ' . " ,.. • ''° " •• ,, " ' ... , ~ ... ~ 1' • -t • • ,, . '~·­.. - •• • )I," -•• •I• -• 1S" -> .,_ '""' -.... '" " '" ., . "' " ' , •• ' . o•~ ' • ~ " '" 1• I -,, • .. ' .. "' ~ ~ " . ).,,. ~ • •• i. • l• JI Ji jj •• .., • •• 11 1? • , . ,. Complete Closing Prices -A111erica11 Stocli Exchange List I ' ' .. " ' " ' 1 " • ' ' • ' • " ' ,. lllS .. • '" '" "' ,. ,,. • • " '" " •• • ,. ' " '" •• .. '" "" ~~" 19 s .. • •• ' .. n n • " .. •l l ,. I l!Yo . " 11 ,, • ' " ,, " I 1)\) • • • .. •• • '" • "" • ' " " , ' l • .. " • " ' .. " ' ' ' ' " ,. ' n .. ' " ' , " " ' ' • .. " '" .. ". 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' " "" "" '' " '" ,J ' ~ ,._ __ " " '~'· .. ,i •• ' 16~ ~ fil..., • ) " ]~~ 1-'; ' \" ' ... - --- fllft Met (11111 l Hltll lft CloH Clll ' ' ' .. ' '" .. ' ' " • .. ... .. ' '" '' 30» • 1' ~ 16 ;tt 19'> l ,. lt 1 '" • 1• 10 0 • 0 ~ )I)>.. '.JO • XI l JI l ~ l l lf • 1'4 I HO 11 o I 1!,,_ •• , , • " • , > .. 11 . 1 ,. , . " . . , t>t • l ~ , • • • l ...... n ~ • '• l 1 J\. I l l•• . . ., ,. ~ 4 ...... I~ l 1o -EG- 1 ••• , JJ • • • ' "" ' .. ... • .. ., ' " ' " " .. '" n 1.,, ' .. '" " • .. ,., » li:v. ., • .. " ' " • " • ,. " , ' ' " • I • ' "' ' ' ' " ' " ,,. '" • ' ,: ,l ' " • , •• " " " • .. " , ' , " " ' • ,,l " i l "' "" " " ,., •• '" •• • "" '" "" .. ,.. .. H•• , • .. • " ... ' . : ,.. '" .. 11 l~ •• .. " ,,. '" ' '" .. '' • iri'I ' '" '" " ' " • "" ,/ ' " ' •• .. -..--It - $11.. H1I (Ml l Hltll Lt W CIOll Cll .. ' ' " ' ,. ,. ' . ' '" ,, 1 ~~ 1 s ~ " , ]~ .. 11 • )l'I. .... " , 1>1. ,,_, " • " 11~. .. 61\o 6' + .. ' • " 10. lil~-· ... ' • ' " ,. 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" • " .. ' • ' • 1 I & ,_ " . " 15 15 '> . '" .. ' ' • , ~ .. ' ·~ ' ' " .. ' •• ' ' , ~ '" • ' • , ' ,, . 1• ~ -'" " • Wall Street Chatter ~ ---~···~· J-1;;1rd\ & Co .. ,. .. -' I~ a nr v profit picture in t~ fl lure and says a rranpnu of the 1ndtL~trial averages needed The company sa1 lllost gr \ups should pArllc1p~ 1n thr. profit increase \\ h;i e stated mMy time~ 11 we expect the Dow Jon< averages to rea ch the I OC m:ir;< nl'xt year (and) \1 might add thnt S()me analys expect rl sooner Hardy say " ,. " " " " ,. 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G v O•ndl -1'1 II n 1tn<• dvr n ': lf70 ., m• Id <••h volu1 on tt-dlv dtri " or t •..t 1 ' bul~n !lll• ~ f-St ft Ill 111!1 .... c 6--Ct lltd •-1:1! dlvldl!'<f Y-IE• div' ~ d-1nl! ti•• In f\111 t~..r •-IE~ dl•!r \0 but en ••-E• r tML ltW-W l'ltlul Wt ... •n • ww-W II wt rttl!l1 ...,,_WIWn d I • N td ,. -wn111 luutd. no-,..tri ,. Of •• ¥ •I-In 1>1n• ~ t• or •t<tlvt"~ e t l>t ~• '" ••ft fi! u11111r nt ll•nkruer1; .. t ft J~tU '' llWmt<I Dy I ti\ !;011'1 0111 •• •l-E• !~II 11! t i-Ct Ill ~llti • 1 -S am111d 1-0 11 t 11 t 1r :r-Mtfll•., t!<lftd• "''0 •& v "'"" ,.,, ~. /1'11'11'11\' • nd-No! GI Y ~· ••• ,. Xilf-1'( ... n .11i. , l"IUI 11l1on 111 --.~----------------- DAll V flllOf CHECKING •UP• Boyhood D1·ea1ns -A Seco11d Looi{ CUSTOfl.t l!:R SERVICE : Q. "] .say chicken noodle is !he best-selling soup. Whal do you i;ay, pops?" A. Understand mushroom is No. I. The next four, in order, are said to be tomato. chicken n o o d 1 e . \'egelable beef and bean ... Q, "ls there an~ thing in the world that will quiet squeaking bedsprings?" A. Try a rubdown with a cake or wet snap., .Q. "How long does it take to cremate a human bod y?")·,, Three hour s, cbout. At 2,700 degrees F. LOOKING JNWAllD: The mediocre years or 1niddlc age are high upon us, friend. And aren't lhev greal! I hang a print of Remington on Sunday aftemoon. Veed the Siamese figh!ing fish. Mix iced tea, orTiit lhe sug <.:.r. Turn down the cool a nolch. Doze fitfull y tlll dinner steak. And contempta:e th!!' purhase of striped shirts, To bed. Back on the farm , as a gid· rly lad y,•llh he.ppy teeth and melancholy eyes. 60 percent gong and 40 percent sob, feet beneath the cow and head elsewhere, toy,·arrl the loft. unencumbered by 1nlellcct <1nd doubt, I dreamed some. Of growing up. Or at least sideways. Of drinking a scotch in uniform v:here Hemingway drew blood. Of sailing mos l unloncly through J o s e p h Conrad"s seas. or spying 1vith the fel!nw spies in leather mini-pants on Gern1an cub· blestones. Of rattlini;: ?.round t h e Bowery like some 0 d d ~1clntyre 1vaif. or hitch hiking across Oklahoma to r..1on - terrev y,•here Steinbeck settled dust.· Of pretending to !he chrome throne of the coc ktail king in Miami. Of chattering into a European news microphone like a little late floyd Gib- bons. Or springing through the bodies to a thou:sa n d t<'lephones. one of Ben Hech t's unbe lievable crisp boys, snar; ping. ·'Give me the city desk'" Of addressing some benel'olence to the hungry girls of Rome. Of sitting soulful. pencil poised. in a F'leet Street pub. Of smoking pot in Reynosa. Of singing •·San Francisc?'' ;n Kun Tong's Shanghai Lil. Berlin, I knew, I'd call my own, and Oslo, Paris and Lucerne. Wilh a buc;ket or warm milk between my knees. and an in· finite assembly or files . '!'his came to pass, all of it. Whal a rness o f un- momentous memories! But they are svmewhere else now. l waded oul of them. clumsily enough for they were knee· deep, and lefl them lay, hke mismatched film on a culling· room floor. They are no more a. part of now than the :,isses of v.J Day when everybody bay,· Jed. We're most all alike, I lhink, we middle-aged men. Except maybe I ta!k more than I ougllt, in this writing dodge . But nobody kno .... •s the alien in- cidents each graying man .survives, the dreams turned real . then dreamed again, nobody, and nobody cares, not even the mw himself anymore. Goodbye and God Bless. My feet are closer now lo the white lime of the old barn floor than to all the dust and decks and cobblestones that were, since. Ancl it is time !.o water the monkev plan! on 1he patio. then go ·pick up the ladyfriend at Sears. Your queslio-ns n11ri cnn1- 1nrnf.s ore toe/to1ned nurl uii/l be used i n CHECl(/NG UP wlterevtr poss i bl t , Please address your letters tn L. M. Boyd. P.O. Box 1875, 1're1vport Beach, Ca/1- f ornui 92660. Science Know-how Nixori Will Discover Reds No Bunipkins \\'ASl11N(ITON (UPl l Onr of the first things the l\rhen Prcsidrnt Nixon gncs !o Chi nese Communi st rulers did "'a:<. to inaugurate ln 19~0 a na· China next yr:ir, he 11'ill be l!noal c:i mpaign for. ;is the visi ling a nation far rnnre direrlnrv put~ it. "eradication 11 op hisllca1erl ,,ri<'nt1f1cally nf supCrslition.~ in the in· ~han a lot of \\'estrrnen:; sup-1crprcra11on of n al u r al posr. phennm rna" E\'erybody knn~s. of cour"c, SomC\\herr alon g the way that f\1ai n1And China hao: mfldf' the,1· go t ba('k as many as they nucl('ar y,·rapons and !h(' could Clf thnsr Chi n c :<. r mi ssiles v.·11h y,·h1ch tn drl1vrr .!\C"1rnlis1s 1\·h1) had received thrm. \hr1r gn1duatc deg rees in Bu! thf' notion n(•1·r>rthrlrss \\'ro:lrrn nations So if Western persists 1n l'ul11<' t·:.pilal1~t S('l('nt'e 1~ good . so is the circles th:it b i ~ (1Hn;i 1 ~ an stirnr·r nr C0n1:11unist China , unorgan1 1cd t'ongl11n1rr111e in ! -------------ii which su1x>rslll1on rule~ 111•er .r r<'asnn , Nixon and his staff n1i~ht do LET'S BE fRIENOl Y wnrnc '" !hcic P'"'''" ""'". ming lhan tn stu dy a rerco lly publishrd dire<'!nry nf sclcclcd ~ien!ific i n ~ t \ t u I i on s in !\iainland China. Jt y,•as pr<'pared b,Y lhl' Survey~ ;inrl R e~arch Corp nf Washington. D.C., lnr lhe Na· tional Science Founda11on and published by lhe Hoover I nsti· tu tion Press. It runs !n 4119 pages and reports in detail tht' makeup or 490 Chinese s ci l' n l l f i c rcse11rch and de1•elopmcnt in- ~titulions lhrough 1967. It you ha\·r n•·1•' 11 cli;::hhor:i; or knn1v of ROY011t' mnvioi;:: to our arra, please tell lll'i "n that \\"r may ('~\l'nd a "rricndly '''cicomr and hrlr the-in to bl-.-omc 11.cQuRiotNI in thrir nrw ~urr.1undingi;. So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 494-9361 Harbor Visitor 646-0174 COAST SUPER MARKET EVERYTHING FOR YOUR PICNIC e Hot Dot• e Ctlo~o•I e Chi,_ & SMCb __ __,.,_.., • No,tlh1t e 111• lerio11 e S•11GI.....- HOME DELIVERY (•II ''°' ~"""" t A U •.m .. •l~UI .. ' '• s ,_... .. --.. -. ·-,r~ .. -.. ·-·--··---. ~ ---- wherever summertime travel takes you enjoy Edwards Dacron®-double Jcni!S • • t THE VACATION KNITS . ' Travel anywhere. Loaf somepla<?e. Enjoy your Jelsllre In '"'*let wiry strflais-fancy. ' . . . Indulge yourselfln a set of coorqinates by Edwaitlsof Califbaiia. - NI machine washable Du Poot Dacron• polyester. Lush colors like burgundy, azure, brown. Smashing.wom togelher o r1mixed v,,iith your other sportswear. From our new vacation selection: a. zip-front Dacron" shirt in mixed tones, M-XL 12.00 b. doub le kni t pant of Dacron• polyester, 32-40 23.00 c. moc~turtle shirt, medium to extra-large 11.00 d. card igan ~ter, n1edium to extra-large 18.00 e. striped Dacron• ~·with 4-button placloe(, M·XL 12.llO rmy ~men'~ spot1Swear fwnish~ 84-- m1y co . .outh co11t pl•1•, t•n ddl.,o fwy. at brlstol, cost• m•t•; .54'-'321 thop monc:l•y thru ••turd1y 10 •.m, to 9:30 p.m., sund•y noon 'tll J p.m. ------------"""'"""""'"---~ ----· I .. M.AVCO -------------t Ship to shore action's secure , when Sandi Morris, 17 , wears a powder blue coverup with fl ocked flowers I left }. Cindee Lubbock, 17, delights in sea breezes as s he sheds a dotted swiss coverup. --·-· • I I l • t. r I • BEA ANDERSON, Editor "'" , ... . " I BURNS BEACHED Sunworshipers Take Cover Finding sh elt e r from the sun under he r floppy hat a nd long jumpsuit is Mrs . Vincent Lica ri of Westminster. Dally Piiot Photos by Gr•9 Sclin•ider f • .. ,' '\. t • ! ;. •,A_•;.· ,~4-..i .,.), ..... ;. ~ '"1111 · " J ... . . Toes Strapped to Tell Story .. ... - By MARIAN CllRISTY NEW YORK -ShOf's are made for talking. Example: Boots, which prac- tically every fa shionable owns. can express contradictory feelings. Alice Regensburg, Na t ion a I Footwear lnslilute director. defines boot wearers as "liberated' \lo'Omen or sex kitttns. ''Boots represent an eman- C'ipation symbol," she says. "But the boot.ro wom11n whn ad opli, "Hhat Is basically a male <1ccessnry is projecting a sense of r11ua li1v. Stimetimcs it's a totally un- con11cious move.'' On the nther h;ind . the booted l\'nm::in who wears minis nr hot pan!s with those boots cnuld be .i;ubtly enticing the male. Her im· Age is that of being man's mate, not his compelitor. Boots cnver IC'J.!S Ru! ""'llh ex- posed thighs il's a different story : '"The most eroJ,!enous znn P of the leg Is· the thigh," says Mrs. Regensburg. "It's body lang uage that speaks of fearlessness of sexual en· counter)-" Higher heels are h:lck on the •cf!ne again. ()(>signers say they arf! ;ibsolule "muslS" with longer skirts. But the fact is that durin g the mini years millions nf womf!n didn"t ditch their high heels. Why? ''Because certain women want to be head lllld shoulders above thf! crowd," ~ayi; Mrs. Regensburg. "Being on high pr nj e el !I superiority, su p r em a c y . Emo· tlonally il means hitting top level.'' PSYCHIC BOOST The psychic boost Is nothing new. "Height Is a psychological ploy.'' says Mrs. Regensburg, who sees platform 801es. brought into focus by Yves Saint Laurent, as another w11y to be noli::ed. "They yearn for recognition frnm the adult world ,'' ~frs . Rege;nsburg maint.aini;. "And they use fashion as a way to get it." There·s a counterpart lo I.tie high-heel and platform-sole syn· drome. Highe r heels certainly Im- prove thf! appearance or the legs. Most men prefer the look of high hed1. "There'g 11 sexual oonnolation l!lnd appeal to high heels that need• nn ex ph1na!ion." Toeless shoes al so are making • comeback Why? Toele5sncss to shoes is what bralessness is tn clothes. It's a sign of being unbound . Uns hackled. Of going against the grain of "ac- cepted" fem ale dress. "~1ost women want to be sex ol>- jecls, ., says r-.1r1. Regensburg. "Thev dress to be lionized by other won1fn but they undress for men. "And . by undressing their feet .. thry havf' ;r.nother tool by which to magnet ize m11les." Coco Ch11ncl's famou~ ~atin !l)t , sling-back shoe -a long-time fashion classic -is in the forefront of fa ll-win1er fa shion. It doesn't bare the toe~. But the shoe is back less and quarterlesi;. "l l's like wearing a veil instead of going naked,'' says Mrs. Regensburg. "The wom.:in who chooses !hi ll shoe is sex-oril'!nted. Bui. she 's like- ly to hold a man al arms length Rftcr attracti ng him ." SNAPPY, STRAPPY Strappy sandal& are in too. Both sexe& are wea ring them - es~ially for leisu re hours. Do they reprl'!sent a fashion gesture tha t Indicates an acceptance of the unisex or monosex? "There are men who have • decided preference for independent women who want lo be treated as equals." believes Mr&. Regensburg. ''The &hoes 11re a sign of this male· female Identification." In juxtapo&ition to the quest for equality ts the woman who wears femme-fatale shoes . Typical are the sandal1 or pumps which lace ballerlna·slyle hal fway up the leg -alrilOflt to the knee. Mrs. Regensburg : "The feTJ)al e who wea rs laced shoes probably sacrifices not one iota of her NomanHness. She still yearns. for men to open doors, pot her on a pedestal and treat her with gen· tility. ,, Part of being 11 woman Is to use feminlne wiles. Including &hoes. ""rhe 'modem wOman iii baller1na shoes could be silently announcing that &he can't Lake a five-mile hike wilh her man," says M r 1 . Regenapurg. "And. If It rains, the m1tn will have tn carry her because 1he can 't 11et her tootsies wet." !l's all part of the langu age of ~hoe~. • • Becky Gorrott, 14, conceals ~•r biU. nied body under 1 yellow eoverup. Lonq 9own1 for short suits •1"9 ii'\. • ·····--= -........ ---·~~' ~-~-·~~·~~----~--~·~--~--------·~~--::-:-::··:·:·:::::::::;::::::::::-:::::::::::....:::;l -----·-·-----------·---·--------:ta'"·-----...wr ... _ ... ··=---w~~~-s:-oc••WWWU>UC *'' 31 :. ... ~ ---.,,. '~ ~-.-_ __......,_.-~-.....,____ .. - L. r Horseles s Carriage Goes Ship-shape Limbering up the old scrubbing arm are Donna Rothwell, 15. (l eft} and Laura Thornburgh. 16, members of Keynoles, Junior AuxUiary to Harbor Key, Child Guidance Center of Orange County. A car wash will take place Saturday, Aug. 7, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. al Mariners School. Ne\11port Beach. Married Guaranty Not Good for Life DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wife and I wert so pleased y,•he n you reprinted your Twelve Rules for Rearing Children. We woo!d be grateful if ytiu_ would run ,ooce again you r "Helpful Hints on HO'W to Bring Up Delinquents.'' We have kept a copy of that column wbich appeared JD years ago s f!d every word of it is as true now as it was then. Thank you, -MID- DLEVILLE, MICH. DEAR ~I. M.: Thanks fnr asking. Ilere II Is : I. Be1ln with infancy to give the child everything he wants. He will then grow up to believe lhe world owes him 1 living. :!. When be picks up bad wotda, laugh at him. He will think he is cute. It will tncourage him to thl11k up "cuter" words and phrases that wOI blow off the top o( your head lat.er. 3. Never give him aoy •piritual tralnin(. When he 11 !I let him decide for himself what he wanl1 lo be. \Don't be 1urprl~d If he decides to be "nothing.") "· Avoid the word "wrong." It might develop a guilt complex. A few year• later, wben be is arrt11.ed for 1teallng a car, be will feel that society Is against him end that he is being persecuted. 5. Pick up after him. This means °""el towel~. book~. shots and clothing. Do everything for him. He will then become 1 experienced In evading responsibility and inC'apable of finishing any 1ssk. 6. IA!l him 1ff ev@rytblng, hear everything and read everything 1mutty he can get his hands on. Make 1ure the atlverware aod drinking 1la11e1 are 1terUlzed but lei his mlod feed oa garha1e. 1. U you have 1 1erlou1 conflict In opin- ion will! your 1poo1e, fl1bt It out In front of the children. 11'1 good for youngster• to view their parents as human be1Jlg1 who es:pre11 themselves freely and openly. Later, if you get divorced, they'll know what caused II. 3. Give your childrrn all tbe spending money tbey want. Alter all, one of the reasol'll you have worked '° hard all your l!fe is to make life easier for your children. Why should they have It as rough as you did? 9. Sati1fy his every craving for food, drink and comfort. See that his every desire is satisfied . Dtnlal mlghl lead to harmful frustration. 10. Take your cblld'1 part against neighbors, teacher• and friends. This wlll prepare you to take his part again1t the police. II. \\'hen he get1 Into 11erlous lrtluble, apologlu for yourself by saying, "I can't under!tand w·hy he turned out like this. We gave him EVERYTHING." 1%. Prepare for a life of grief. You are apt too have It. DEAR ANN LANDERS: In.ste1d of playing bridge Jut night we played "'AM Landers," whlch I invented. I we11t over a stack of newspapers and clipped your col- limn. I pa sted the best questiorui and answers on separate cards with matching numbers to identify them as mates. The men challenged the women and the 11ide that came up with the answer.s cloet5l to yours won. I was Ann Landers and l kept your answer hidden until everyone had his say. Then I read it aloud. You 'd be surprised at how many limes the men did not agree with women! It "'as a great evening, Ann, a truly novel way to get people to open up. Some of their answers were hilarious ~ I hope you don't mind. -D. C. MOUNT DORA. FLA. DEAR OORA : Not at all! Be my guesl! Do you feel ill at ease. _ . out of il'.' 11 everybody having a good time but ynu1 \Vrite for Ann Landers' booklet "The Key to Popularity," enclosing with your re· riuest 35 cents in coin and a !on&. iself·ad- dressed, stamped envelope In care of tht DAILY PILOT. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Taurus: Emphasize Originality WEDNESOA Y require further development. projects. Spread your message VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): via publicity, advertising. JULY 28 Expenditure! re.quired for AQUARI US Jan. 2!J..Feb. By SYDNEY OMA.RR health, recrealion may balloon 18): Unusual and humorous ARIES (March 21-April 19): out of ;:roportlon. Acee pl C"On· message is h i g h 1 i g h t e d . Sudden breaks and beginnings structive changes. Another Concerns one who is inventive, are featured in special rela-Virgo tells stories a b o u t unorthodox and determined to t.ionships. Friend 1nay attempt Gemini associate. Separate influe nce your thoughts, ac- to involve. you in legal tangle. fa ct from me.re rumor . tions. !\.1aintain sense o f TA URUS (April 20-May 201: LIBRA (Sept. 2J·Oct. 22 ): balance. \\/('!come change but rF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY recent period of emotional harassment fade1 into mere memory. Be grateful: stnve now to place harrier between yoorsef and situation which is debiliAting. You are a creative, dynamic individual. ~tany claim you set too fast a pace. Howe\"et. thi~ can be chalked up lo envy. One in position of au thority You can assuage ru ff!e.d feel-be farnili;ir 1l'ith odds. observes work methods. Strive ings. Applies srecifically to PISCES !Feb. 19·!\.1an:h 20): Tor,~~ ou1 "'h"" iuc~v 10, ~0.., '" for original approach. Stress members of opposite sex. One ~c<"ret maneuver.~ draw your ;:,~~;1 •7.~t1g::,· "~~;, $~:~•vM~;;"·~~J .ibility to be uninue in ex-who means much to you ;:ittcnt.ion. Utili1.e lnti;itive in-wo,.,,t~ ·· S•..a 1>1rthd•T• 1n<1 15 c•"'' ., !O Om•rr A•l•OIDQY S-ee<e!I, the OAIL y p res s i n g idcris. Some deserves special consideration. !rllect. Be flnaly ti ca l where l'ILOT. Bo• lU~. Gr•"d t t nrr11 31•- d 11Dn. Ntw Y~r~. N Y, lOOll. rlepcndC'nts may feel they Purchase of luxury itern is hunches are concrrne . lnner,-----~-----­ dcserve more attPntion -and fa vored. Lunar <·ycle high: voice serves as reliable guide. monl'y. lake initi<iti ve. Net>detl funds "'ill be C.Er.11NI 1rvt;iy 21-June 20): SCORPIO tOct. 23-r..'ov. 21 ): ;ivail11blc. ,,;::==== Friend who Fascinates you Dreams fulfillrd only if you IP"...;;;;;._ ______ ..;; jewels by joseph sesrches for jewels THE Do._,,_,.,.," llooMoOlo• .... a.•< August Date Set n1ay alsri cre11te aura of Cfln-are ultra·p ractical. One who Fusion. f:ivt> full pl ay lo in-attempts to persuade you lelleclual curiosity. ask ques-otherwise is misinformed. Ap- tions -obtain ans .... ·ers. lJave. plies especially to property. run \~'ilhout going lo added ex-Avoid Ion g -range com- C••Y•rt 11nw•n•l'd l•w•lry !a lmme<rl- •to <:••• Dy s•lt to • h<m w•o•e ~ntwltcl9t, ••1M<li1t, •r.d inlt'.g roly 1u11ro you <•rolul •Yl l1111!on II !O· d•Y• m1t~•t ~•lu• . We wil! bo ploo•ed ta t••mint vo11r t •m• •nd oav"t •"9••din9 l~tlr dos· poul. RED BALLOON LTD. ---.. Judi Zilnik or Laguna Beach pcnse. Nol necessary to buy milmenl<; which lie up funds. .and ~1ark Baird of San Juan your \\•ay . SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Capistrano were married hy CANCt:lt Clune 21-July 22): 'Oft'. 21 \: Emotions n1n cfcep : the Rev. Charles Smith in Funds set aside for proverbial say wha t you mean, 1ncan C'l .. ary Chapel Sa"la Ana . r ainy day may have to be us-what you say. Son1e \Yho n1ake Ba<·k, ,, .·<hool To avoid d.isappo1ntment, prospective brides are reminded to have 'I.heir 'vcdding stories \i:ith black and white ~lossy pholo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT \I/omen's De- partment one week before the \Vedding. • " C1lt Mr. Je1011h tr Mr. Fenr .11! J!O. ~ The bride's sister. Janet Zit-ed. Key is to determine what promises now arc Ji~tening on-,l)M. An Aug. 21 wedding is be ing pl11:nned by Claudia Denise Wayne and William McNeal Moore. nik and Randy Smith attended Is best for futu re security. Be ly lo sound of their own 11hoppina: the couple. C'omFortable without being ex-voices. Respond accordingly, Is fun st Parents of the newlyweds travagant. Study Gem In i Take Jong·range view. lgnore n 1·1 I · ·1· · hh Thr RF:D BALl~OON are Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Zi t-mes.'l'a_l'.(e. r.>C versa 1 e. nqu1s1 1ve nr.1~ or. The ceremony wi!l take place ln the Newport Beach home or the hride~lecr.c. parents Dr. and Mrs. Ellis R. \\layne. PArents nf the pro- spective bridegroom are f\1r. fi nd f\1rs. Terrence Moore of Paradise Valley. Pictures received after that time \Vil! not be used. nik and Mr."and Mrs. Warner LEO (,July 23·Aug. 22i: CAPRICORN ([)er. 22-Jan. -~- Baird. 'frying to ovi>rwhclm neighbor 19): Monry and position ;ire ll•r ,,,n,, ,l'"li~htf,.11y uuu•ud Both gradu:::itrs of Laguna or relative will not work. Best e ni p h as i i ed . A d rl e d diil,lrf"n·~ .iurt-;,. rht-oouthl .. uf 1 1 now to y,•in your wa y rather responsibility will b r in I? Scuth Co~•• Pla•a 16877 Alaonau\n St. For engagement announcem ents it is imperative that the S'lory, also a ccompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the \VCdding date. If deadline is not met, on ly a story V.'ill be used. Beach High Schoo. the C'OUp e Iha" lo ,,1 ·,1·,,, r 0 r c ,· 0. t d Ohla"n va1 · 1 Brioicl ~+ ih. s.n Dio90 ,.,. (Ju•I of! W•rn•r will make their firsl home a nd " grea rr rrwar · 1 11 HUNTINGTON •EAC H n1<'!hods. Accent continues on hint fron1 Sat i l I 11 r I us Co1i1 Mt•a 5<10·90611 (714) &46-1666 attend college in S an I a ~'~h~o~rt~j§'"~'§"§'§Y'§·§'d~e§'§'§w§h§lc§h~~m§e§'§"§g§e§. §S~l~r§ir§e§lo§c§o§rn~p~le~t~e~~~~§§§§§§~~§~;;;§§§~~~~ Barbara. !f ----_ I llA1'5'M'T GOT A) EWSl'Am V Miss Wayne graduAlrd from Newport Ha rbor High School and presently is studying at Immaculate Heart College, Hollywood. fter f1ance is al- lending lhe University of Colorado. To help fill r equirements on both "'ed- ding and engagement storie s, forms are avail able in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further qu estions will be ans,vered by \Vomen's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. "~ ' dictL ~erno1TS Officers Take Duties semi-annual clearance sale N,.w off1cer5 of organiza- tions slill are being tallied and \Y i\lian1 A. Rothwell. R R. danrr hl):-.led by the Coin Hillgren, Joseph C. Hu1n-\\'i1·e~ Cli1b. w11tc1lff pl111 annoonctd. phries, .J ack Nemelh, Jrihn - --=.------1 Harbor Key Vi!1rup and Richard Parrish . :t KWIZ 1480 AM RADIO• ALL THE GOOD SONGS BY All-THE • Other~ are the Mmes . Vari C > ~~eu~i~~ies~fn~a~~lrl~e\}.011~ ~elie~~k1~h~a~~~.~~~~h G;~~ t; WIN FREEi IT'S EASY ~ aus:iliary to !he Chi Id Chester GiHnrd. 0 i • : Guidancf!! Center of OranRe ... c°"n1y. Mrs. w,111.m H. Ind ian Maidens ~ 1971 Austi"n Ameri"ca 8.,, \\'eaver ac~pted the ga vel. 8 Serving with her will be the. J\1rs. Robert Pecha now g ~I J\lmrs. Norman Cirkle, Ben· holds the ti lie flf pnncP~!I for ""' CASH ( l f f "f) !i! jam in c. Brown, A r 1 h u r the Fountain V11lley lndi11n ~ 0 $ 0 I § 1 1 Gra\•es Jr .. James Evans. f.iaidens, Nation of Peaceful ._ ~=y ::~~ t~~i~~ a\'~C~ w~\~:; new 0H1cer5 are the ! Hundreds of other prizes i presidenl..s: John F.. Dickey Mmes, Glenn Collins. \Vil!i;im 2 and J tan Miller. secte\;iries; Drake, Arthur W(")lller, Jerrv 9 S d d h hod Krrmit r.. Kvicn. tre11surer Fou5L Victor Heckman. Car01 021 en a po.Stear ,ort eottae couponwlth and A!lAn T. Heims, Lanti and Dale. Edwards. :1 your name, address a nd zip code, including ~ · , parliame.nlarian. oC h b i!I :· Directors appointed include COIN Wives ! P one num er fo: KWIZ, Santa Ana, Calif-~!!I i the Mmes. S. Roy Ho"''ell, PartiC"i panl" of the in· _ ornia, 92703. i EvAn Prichard. MAdeleine corporation drive for !he City t::! : W1lhe\ml, Walter King, Frank of Irvine. were entertained at A • ONI INTIT Hl PPJOPf ,. I :. : Pendleton, Frank S e b r Ing ·'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO, Ii< c Windows Shaded THINK SALE 11 r------------------1 a1 ~ ! KWIZ DREAM WHEEL l i i 11 I NAM I ,1 ~ I I I w I ADDRESS I g l ~ l CITY I ~ till MtM'? H""' CAN I t:::ILL 1-!IMf ( . .). ) AND MAKE lT THE DAILY PILOT JlJSf CALL 642·4321 FOR HOME DEU'lRY Jn tGd1y'1 trend toward , clearer color, Tontine Pt.ru- 1· vian Stripe -1 hardy 11a.ss- f1btr based window shade c:lot.h -m1ke1 1 brilliant ne"': .· ~ I ZIP I ~' ~ IPHON I :i!' g I ~ I -...,, L--------------------.J i dec()rative 11t11tement. The room-darkener, in :::i ric h. matlf:·fini&htd tes:turl'.1 offer1tot1l involvemenl1 because of lt1 1bility io mix or malcb with other fabrics and wall covering1 in th r 1 ell brilliant colorways. ~-- i ~ listen for your name !!! the air · ~ jt.QJn (nl'J ~ 1480 ON THE AM DIAL ;j ; Westcllff Pin• Only I: ICWIZ 1410 AM UOIO •All THI GOOD SONGS BY AU THI!:\'=:===================================~ ---__ ,, ____ ,_ J)'--·.-.-.... -·~· ..... ' ..... _,,.. r ·-···-__ , -. ~ .. , .• ~.,.t--~-----=-;JI ___ .,..,_ .-..i..-r--... ~ ---=---.~ --~-=------• -- TUMBLEWEEDS ... S A 5.l!C:OND fiPLDSION llOoCS "nll! DEVASTA~D AREA- 'N T ~. "fHA1'S A LAU&H! IMAGINE YOU, WHO CAN'T E:VEN SPl!AI( WANTIN&W TAKE SINGIN& WSONSJ HA!HA!HAJ • W\IY mR'fllHNG YOO WAmA SAY HAS 10 llE l'RINTW ON PAPE:R! t . MUTI AND JEFF •A MONGOOSE WILL DESTROY RATS AND SNAKES AND KEEP THEM OUTOF'>OUR GARDEN• .._ __ _ ---'' ---·~ ....... FIGMENTS PLAIN JANE , . ~-""" ··--~-·. I />!..WAYS LIKED OUO<S AND GEESE· I 'LL SEND RlRA COUPLE- . . .. c;;"'t..:..' ••••••• ~· •• ·vtr: . . •. ,,. .. .·• :-'::§"""":9<.~:-;,..1' .. '--:· .. I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by. A. POWfR I ACROSS 44 AVt>r39~ ~5 Group ol 1 l:lild oath seven 5 Ballroom 47 Containing lco dancr much sugar : 10 Otc!arr 2 wcxds positively SD Is in poS!.l!S• 14 britalt sion of lS Gai r ly 51 Sri ol steps ]Ii Occurring ovtr a frnct infrrqlll'nllV 52 r1ash1ngton or 17 Forag11"19 Ottavia, r.9. an1t11~I: Sb S11eaked 2 words bO -Shtf!"'rd ]q F1nr !;:iov•er bl lnsi11cer r 20 Trral w11h <1111e~mtn!: i!lltl!JilOt 2 "''OfdS ind1lft1tnc r: €.~ YeMn 2 words liS Willow 21 M a~rs a formal bb Italian 1etrac tion ot commun ity a s!alemrnt bl Animal · ~3 Kind ol poet ;ipprnrlagts 21' ~ttio11 of b8 Col01s griSS<OVtrrd h'J Ceast do1n~ surlacr: soi( 27 Nul·i.-odutmg trtt: Var. DO'NN JO f ollowrd \ht 1 CGS Ul'li!s COUfSt or 34 Soci1l lnstds 35 Ar.tor - N011arro 37 Eiist Jg Rrgrrl JC! Cr irr~ 2 Enci rtlrd } Wing·likr f)afl5 -4 Tyr.rn{s 5 Abounding in htauliful 'll it ws 7 '27·71 9 Ont who tat.es 33 Wartho11st ;motlier into Jh Forqrl--- r115lody 2 wc:td,_ 10 Fire! of 39 Important warships Ca11ad1a11 11 Futil,. l''KflOrl gn1in 12 Formerly ~O Is 111our· 13 Soak~ lo mand: J words softrn by ~4 T11rns iH1de pMt1al totl1ng from a stra(~;·• 18 C~rbooa!J;d {Ol!l'St bevr1a9r 4!. h1an1n1atr 22 Prrserves 001ect~ 24 Cut into small •g lubricator:. partitl ts ~9 Pass ovtr 2S K1tchto light!y utensi l!. 52 C.ry out 27 P11~r 53 l i1i.lttoi5 plant of Troy: 54 SWdtn frr l1m" Gr. llyth. 55 Attrrsl Vtroa 18 M1kr usrd to somtthmo S7 Pre'Ssed 'rl•!h I ~ ' . . " . PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH ly Chester Gould ly Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith ~--\\I \ '.;\l.£..':\<11--- By Dale Hale By Frank Baginski Ll'L ABNER SAUY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS SOMETIMES, i ;:rosr llCill'l" UllDS<sTAND t.Wlt<l~D· IQ,o/ 50, l~\..1'-? W!;U. ... Ti<Eclf:E 'Sl)l'POSED 10 BE fHf .-OST /~~r c.ReAT\J~ES OIJ 'THIS E ARn1- By Harold Le Doux ves, TM,t,NK<:.'. wor ex .-.cn v'. I 'M..,.. .t..fi 'l'OtJ A FflEND 0.: auss SPENCE~ lo\EMBE~ OF .. AMP t DO SOM.I< WOIC'IC -n-.E SPENC ER: FOR HER •• PORC.MA..SI W6 ~M.llY ?' ,i.6fNT roll: THE !'.=ARMS! IS ~TMIN6 W~? ;J,- 1" ..,, By Mell ~l St unaware ol lmmint11t dang« f. E~tl~ma1i011 of triumph !IUlft">ilablt 29 Neddy Iii!!>: Arc1'1.11r SS Outer: Prt l1x .511 Obscure ,A.~Hl.JR ~ ill'VlNG TO CAl..L HIS HOME ? YES, M tS5 PEACH , ~UT HE SA'fS ~ TeL.EPHONE COMfW<Y t50UT AR.THU~, 'IOU ME.AN THE TELEPHOHf tSOUTOF o.:tDER ! NO, I MEAN THE< TELEP~E COMFl>\N'I ISOUT C2 lndignati cm .. J Wore: 2 wards • " " " " 7 C•mt togt tht'I' 8 Brewery pr odutl ' • 1 " perpendicular Jl Kay~\: 32 Delrie • • t.2. T1ansJ.( 63 Congt~I 12 ll -··-. ...,..... ·-- --i '----~ --,,... OF Ol'DE<i< • OF QltOE1'. - PERKINS By John Mi'-' ··-..... ·--•ti I ~-·--. -~ -=--'1r ~ -·--~~~ .. , .... :::• ----~ --..... -__ , ·-- OAIL V PILOT JS By Charles lanotti -AllD '1£1', Toe.> WASTE '1HE l'ffCI0\)5 ~CES, ~~A.GE AIJD POl.1..UT'E1HE. E~VIROJME~l" AND flAVE ocsnw <JED o:E A~J01HER VJ11\l <iC~E~ESS WARS I 51/.lCE 11-lE 5TOIJE />hf. · ... WHq IS Ti<Ar ? ·· - ~ 7-17 By Gus Arriala By Ferd :.Johnson By Roger Bollen :r Bl.MIE. I 'THE P.Al:E/>IT'S. "I'll ha\'e the diet lun ch with bean soup instead of Lhe con - ~o mme. roast pork in place or the fish and French Irle1 In· ~lead of the grttn beans.•• DENNIS THE MENACE ---- • '· I • f • • ---~ .. . -.. Hartack Apologize s; Blanda Set • PHILADELPHIA -Four-time national riding champion Bill H1rtack was apok>IJetlc Monday followinlJ an iocident Saturday in which he threw a cup Of water on a fan 'A'ho was badgering him for losing with a favorite tn the seco'rld rade at Liberty Bell race track. "We had him tHartack\ in for a talk this morning:· said Alex Stokes, steward representing the Pennsylvania Horse Racing Commission. "He was apologetic and wt plan to have another talk ""·ith hio1. We haven't deckled yet v.•ha! action "'e'\1 take. But 'A'e did tell him if it ever happens again he's in trouble ." e BlaHdu fte ad11 SiANTA ROSA, Cal if. -George Blanda, lhe Oakland Raiders' 44-year..old quarler- back-placekicker, stayed late to practice fi eld goal kicking after other players half his age called it a day. ",I just have lo kiek enough to get my leg sore," Blanda said Monday after his first workout of the summer . "Once it gets so re, then you can work ii into a;hape.'" Blanda, who had been given pennisslon lo teport to the training camp late, v.•ork- ed up a sweal during the regular practice "·hen he took part in passing drills. With No. I quarterback Daryle 1,,amonlca staying away in a contract dispute, Blanda could stt considerable playing time at quarterback. said coach J ohn Madden. e 'l'et11ais lt'l1111 e r s QUEBEC -Bob Lutz of Los Angele~ beaL his fellow Californian, Roy Barth of Sari Diego, 4-i, 6-4, 6-4 in the first round of the Quebec International Tennis Open Monday. Frew McMillan of South Africa played 11 gruelllng tw0-hour n1atch w i t h AuSlralian John Alexander before win- ning 7-5, 7-6. In other matches Charles Pasarell or Puetto Rieo ueteated Hoger Taylor. Bri· lain, 7-6. 7-6: Owen Davidson. Australia, beat Brian }o'airlie, New Zealand, 6-l, 6-2 and Allan Stone, Australia, put out Ismail 1:::1 Shafei. Egypt. 6-4, 6-2. e Ram• C111 1'he Los Angeles Rams cul 111·0 rooki e free agents to reduce !heir squad to 65 n•hlle working out twict r..londay for Saturday's preseason opener against llouston in Canion. Onio. Heleased "'ere Larry Bolton. a tight .. ,d from North Carolina A&T . and r-.lural l,"hite, a cornerback from Tex a s Southern . Roger Williams. a rookie tornerbai.:k fron1 Grambling, left camp betause hi~ 11ster died of rheumalic fever but he "'Ill rejoin the club in Canton. e .K 11111 011 Top KITZBUEHEL. Austria -Billie Jean King of Long Beach. "'o n the won1en ·s liingles title of the Austrian lnternalional Tennis Championships Monday, defeating I~allra Roussow of South Africa 6-2. ~-6, 7- i. Vellone Suffers Malady, Out For Ca111pai g11 !\IANKATO . r-.11nn. !APJ -The r-.1111· nrsota Vikings we111 about lhclr National t'oo1hall 1R11gue tran11ng camp work lo- r1av . tryin11, to fill a gaping hole lef1 in thdr ofrrns11·e line by lht loss of Jin1 "\iellonr Thr rlub announced Monday night that \rellone. a starting left guard for most or the last five season~. would not be 11v•ilable ror the 1971 season and it ,vas indicated the 26-year..old"s career mighL be finished. ··~1edicat studies have demonstrated a condition requ iring extensil'e care over a long tenn ptrlod." said Dr. Donald R. tannin. ttam physician. "Jim \\•ill retum to his home and wlll under10 tre1tmtnt there.·· Vellooe showed · up one week 11go 2S poµnd s underweight and with no appttile. nit Vikings , keeping Vellone away from tht openini drills. sent hun through ex· te6sive tests that completed ~1onday wilh exploratory surgery. Vellone's ailment 1vas not disclosed, but lhe Vikings said he will receive treatn1ent 11t the UCLA Medical Center in Los Atlgeles. His absence v.·ill leave the Viking~ with nnly two veteran guards, ~Ult Sunde and F..d White, and two rookie candidates, Mik e Carroll and Chris Morris. Pele, Mates l<'a cc . . Mexican T ean1 • Los ANGEL.ES fAP) -The Jahsco teim from Guadalajara, r.texico ""'ill tubltltute for • Colombian team Wed- noWly nlCht (a.15) •rllnst Santos of Bra.iii tn au inlemational aoccer match at Memorial Colaleum , officials said Mon- ~ Colombian team. Oeportiva Cali. f!q(:ountfrtd vi.la proble.nu, according to prpmottt T007 Morejon. Bant.ot ls &ad by Pele. who earns $60.000 • mmth It the world "s highest paid athlete. .• 'lo ""'" . T~sd.ay, July 27, lq7t Is Quarry Next Stop for Clay Express? U~I Ttlt~h•ltl• CASSIU S CLAY SLAMS A LEFT TO THE MOUTH OF JIMMY ELLIS ON WAY TO TKO. -----------~ ------------- Sudd e11 Sa111, Wright Cla sh At Cl eveland CLEVELAN D (AP) -The California Angels, launching the second half of the season as they were expected to begin the first. go ror their eigh!h victory tonight in 12 games s1nt·e the All-Star break. Clyde \Vright , 9·9. p11ct1c~ fnr !he J\nge!s against sudden Sain 1'1cDo"•ell, Jul• l1 Jvi. ll Jul• l• Jul• ll ,t11ge l S I.Rf " All Gtmt• on KM~C H\O\ An~~ll 1t Cle•fl•ncl Ang1<1 11 Cll•ol•nd "n~el\ ti Cle•elAr>d Angfh •! OeltO•I • •O om. •·•D ~ "'-\ •O D m. 11. ID • m, or SLevr Dunning , 1·7. of 1he Indians in the opener 01 the three-garne series. Tht Angels, onlv 42-f>O beforr the All· Star game. opened their current road trip by taking two of three from the \\'Ur!d chatnpion Ballin1orr Orioles. including a doubleheader s1vel.'p on Sunda~. They were idk• ~1onday. Counting a 2-0f-:I series victory 111'rr !he Oakland A's just brfore the hrrak. !he Angels have won 9 of 14. and the ~ohd pil· C'h1ng of Andy ~1e!>~ers1n1th and Edd ie Fisher has figurl'tl pror111nentl~· !\1essersmith has 1\•on t\1ree uf hls i,.,l four starts. including a p;11r or shutouts, to boost his rC'cord \(1 10·!1 Vrten1n knockleb;1ller F1•h1·r 8·4. 11;i• roughed up by the ()rHilf's fnr fo11r runs 1n Sundays ni~htt·ap 11 (11i hv !!)(• A11~C'h 111 13 innings. But Lilt·~ wrrr lhr f1r~t n1ns hr ~ur­ rendert'd s1ni:r June 26 -al n10~1 a 1nnn1h or relier pitching Angel hitters have ron1r ;il11r , h~• Sandv Alomar. 1hc l11llr ~cconcl baseman . has a n1ne-gan1e hitting streak , outrielder Tonv r.on1a lrz has hit his last nine games, 1nrluding l11·e hits 1n !"o games against Ballunore. third basf'rnan Ken McMullen has hit sa fely 111 11 of the last 12 gilmes. and first bascrnan .Jun Spencer has a fi1·e-gan1e ~ke 1n After Cleveland. the Angels n1ovt on lo Detroit for a weekrrid series starting t'ri- day night. Tht'y rt"lurn to Anahein1 i\lon· day lo open a week-long ho1nr-sta nd 11gainsl 1'11l"·aukrr, C.hn:ago an1t 1'1111- nesota. Long tin1 c Umpire In PCL Di e!S LYN\\'000, Cah r. -Cornrhus ··,Jack·' Powell. who rel1red in 1954 as the Pacific Coast League's chief un1pire, and ended a 44-year baseball t•arecr, i~ dead al the age of 85. CLAY 'S RIG HT IS COCK ED AND READY FOR ANOTHER SALV O. --------------- Lcvias Spe,v s Ho stility A f te1· Ti·a(l e to Cl1a1·gers KEHHVILLE:. Tl'\" ( t\P l -''They 'rl' going to rcgrrl i1." Jerry Le i 1as or the tlouslon Oilers said :'llonday "'hen he \1•as infonned he had bl'('ll traded lo !he San i)ICAO ("h~rHf'rS "\\'c"rc ('011\lllg tu llouslon thi s scar,'' 11ren·1 11•r ."' lR v1as askrd. 11 as rnade on the basis of ncC'd. ' l\'e're getting two players 11·c think can hrlp us in areas we have to iron out.·• Hughe~ l'a1d . "We ha ve soine good :inn., 111 l·a111p and 11·e want In do f'VCr~lhing we can to make sure those arn1s get 11 chance to \11ro1v the ball ." "lf 1 could've gotten these players snn1c other 11·11y." Hughes said, "I'd have d1\nc 11 Jerry is a good little receiver and l..1c\.: 1·c111rn<'r . but to get what \l'e wanted 11r h;id to ghe up something in return. Griffith Gets Ke y Victor y Over Cohen J\'t:\V YORK (AP 1 -... rhere v.·as a lot of pressure on n1e lo v.·in this fight.' said E1nile Griffith. But the for1ncr five-t11T1e 1vorld cham· pion can1e through to chalk up his 10th consecutive triumph by com pletely out· classing Nessin1 "f\1ax'' Cohen of France li-1onday night at i\ladison Square r.arden in a JO-round middleweight fight. ''There was lots of pressure," said the J.1-ycar-o!d Griffith, 1\•ho had already signed for a tiL!e fight against n1id· dlc1l'ei~hl chan1pion Carlo~ Monzon in Buenos Aires, Sepl. 18 -but he had to beat Cohen. ··t knew I had a thance to try aga\n and I v.·anled the opportunity lo win the title again." said Griffith. "Cohen is a good strong fighter but I really couldn "t fight my fig ht against him because I wRs afraid of getting butted. "Thafs all I neetled. A serious cut and the Monzon fight would ha\'e been oH." said the former holder of the "·eltcr1\•eight ti!le three times and the middleweight throne twice . The fight. the li1·c rnain attriction liefore !he 13.500 f:in ~ 1vho paid ;154 .071, s<1w .\1uhainmad Ali dcfrat JimrTiy Ellis !11 a heavyweigh! thr<llCr·lelcvision bout ;ifLC!'W<lrds. <:riffith. !he No. 1 eontender b~· the \\"orld Boxing Assoriallon increased hi~ tareer record to 71 \·ictories in 81 outings. Cohen. a 29-year-old Moroccan- bom boxer, is now 20-8-5. The French charnpion and the No. 8 rated middleweight. acquired a sligh t cut under his right eye in the opening round and ano ther cut under his left eye in the fifth round. while absorbing a decisive defeat The Associated Press scored It 7·2·1 for Griffith. Judges Jack Gordon and Artie Aidela had il 6-4 and 9-1 v.·hile referee Jimmy Devlin scored it 7-3. all for Grif- fith . Cohen's Am er I can representative Geor11:e Kanter claimed Griffith was but- ting throughout the bout but it was Cohen \\'ho "'as warned C(lntinua lly by Devlin. "The referee ignored me when I told 111111 ," said Kanter. "So 1 told my lighter to bu tt.'" Griffith ho1\·e,·er. denied that he 1\•as using his head illegell y. "I couldn"l fi ght my fight," said Grif· fith . "Because of the butting I was afraid t(I move inside for fear of gelling cut. Then v.·here would n1y title chances be ?" Clay Faster Than in March, Claims Ellis HOUSTON (AP) -Muhamm1d ~All surprised even himself with glimp1es or the past Monday nlaht but hla 1i1ht1 ar• on the future today and the future is Joe Fraz.ier. "I'm still in training right now ." All said. "I'll bt rt1ht.in& again in six weeks," he added . only minutes after he battered Jimmy Ellis helplessly into the ropes for a technical knockout in the 121.h round of their heavyweight 12-round bout in the Astrodome. "I can't Jet up now," Ali said. •·ru be running four miles again tomorrow." Ali certainly proved he was ready for phase two or tils plan for a rematch "'ith heavyweight chaiiipion ·Frazier. J{t wanted three fights before the rematch, and he danced a step closer Jn def~atlng Ellis. Ali would nol say who his next fiaht \\'ill be against but possibilities mentioned are Jerry Quarry, his first vlclim aft.er returning from his 3 lf.J year exile, or European heavyweight champion Joe Bugner, with whom AU sparn:d two rounds in preparation for the fight with Ellis. But the big one is Frazier. He's looking for two more partners, to help him aet the old step back -but he"s saving the last dance for Frazier. NEEDS WORK "The man is an athlete,'' Ellis i;aid. "He takes care of himself. All he needs is work. You can't lose 31,\1 years and have an easy time coming back.' Before a live audience of 31,947 and almost a million more on cl~ circuit television, Ali danced the famed Ali Shuf· fie throughout the 12 rounds. "I can't explain the footwork," Ali said. "! v.•as feeling strong at the end Of the fight ., Ali also said he "'asn't bothered by hil v.•eight of 220 ~! for lhe fight, lilt he·avinl of his carttr. ··1t might have slov.•ed me down l littlt . but in the long run it didn 'l hurt me," All said. "I danced all the rounds and I don·t feel tired no11·." Ali said it was all a matter of his men· tal preparation C(lnceming the difference in his approaches in fia:hUnf Elita •nd Frazier. "l didn 't plan to dance a&ainst Frazier," Ali said. "But tonight. I was thinking about dancin11 ." ELLIS REELING A barrage of lefts and riiihts by Ali In the final round sent Ellis reeling around the ring, and he almost went dov.•n (\\'ice. Ellis was helple1s on the ropes when referee Jay Edson stopped the flaht at 2: 10 of the 12th round. Ali stood over Ellis several seconds before Edson stop- ped it, with Ell is dangling . "He could have been critically hurt." All said. "I knew they"d stop tht fight when a man is that helpless, I couhtn'' take a chance on hurting him for life. "l can see in a man's eyes when ~ is out," Ali said. "He's got a wife and kids. All it v.·ould have taken "'as just llu"et more times, barn, barn , barn," Ali said. Ali also sent Ellis re-eling in the fourth and 10th rounds but each tlme Ellis managed to get through lht rounds. The bout \\'as fairly even unlil Ellis got in trouble in the fourth and it was Ali the rest of the \\'av. Ali speared Elli~ repeatedly with wick- ed left Jabs and put on his best boxinf and da ncinc exhibition since he returned to the rlng after a 311: year layoH becau.se of a draft evasion. 'I'he conviction \~as ol"erturned by the U.S. Supreme Court June 23. t'LA Y AHEAD Edson and both judges had Ali ahead after II rounds . Ed!Mln scored it 110.93. Judge Earl Keel had it 108-10:2 •nd Ernlt -Taylor scored it 107-104. Edson said he i;topped the fight btcawt 1'his eyes "·ere bleary. There Wll no question in my mind he was hurt. Ancei. Dundee was ready to con1e into the rl!Jg." Ali said he didn 't play around with Ellis like he did in the light against Frazit.r. "I was feeling hiin out,'' Ali said of the first three round1. "He's in the besl shape or his life and T had to he careful not lo get desperate. Moslly T had lo "'ail until he ran out of energy." It was Ali's 32nd victory and 26th knockout of his career. Ht was guaranteed $450.000 or 45 J'!tr tent or aJI income, including closed c I r cu I t television. Ellis lost for the seventh lime in 27 pro fights ancf for the zecond timt u a heavyweight. Ht rtctlved a 10 pt~t guarantee of all income. Powell died Sund ay 1n a hospital after a series of stroke.~. After 12 year~ a.~ a player, Po11ell started umpiring 1n 1921 1or the old Michigan-Ontario Leagur, and he was called up to !ht National League during the ne:a:t seaaon. The Oilt'rs traded Levias. their nun1ber one pa ss tatchf'r for the past 11\0 years hf San Di1:go for Hon Billingsley, a 6·8 225·JXJUnd defensive t;i eklc who "':i~ 11 f'haq~er ~1oldout 1h1s year and Gene l-'1 ·rgu~on. a 6·8 JOO-pound defcns11"c (~ckle Houslnn 1\anl s to play 011 otfrns11e Le\ 1as was a second-round drall choiee "Hh !h(' Oilers in 1969 after break in~ l'lo:ik \\1alkcr 's receiving records \l'hile attending Southern Methodist University. Ga1·vey Ba~k f 01· Bu~ Series Powell said in a 1939 interview lh at his self-restraint durmg a run-tn 'A'lth Ne\Y York Giants', manager John J ~l cGra1\' n1ay have cost hhn In~ job a~ a tnajor lea gue. arbiter. "I think I still \\'Quid hair bt·rn 111 111e National League if Id gonr 1hrol1gh with 11n impulse I oner h;id to i;tive John McGraw Rn open-h;1ndrr on tht F1trr.'' l'o1vcll ~111r! U1lllngsley was San Diego's No. I draft l'hoiee in 1967 and has been the team 's :-olarting defensive right tickle . Ferguson 1~ in his third ye11r of pro ball and oplnyed hoth orren.~ive anr1 defensive tackle for tliP CharJ:ers. "All I t lln say is those 1wo gu~s thrv lratli•d rnf' for better make th1~ learn. It would bt an insult for one of them lo get r11! ·• IJl'!'l(I i-11;1lh Er! H11µhcs ~11111 1hc 1rAr!r . , ....... .-~ - LOS ANGELES (AP) -Steve Gar\'ey, the third baseman who under"·ent hand surgl'ry June 22, is off the disabled list - and the problem now Is whether Ule Los An!!f'le s Dodgers can bench a hot-hilting ou!l 1c!dcr 10 keep Rich Allen playing . (";flrvty w&s reinsteted Monday and flt11f111 ldt!r Bob Darwin. "·ho had playerl sparingly, "'11S dispa tched to Spok;1ne of the Pacific Coast League to make roon1 on 1he ro~lf'r 1\-la11agcr \\'nH A!s1on t'ould .~h1[I Allt'n back to the outfield from third bait, which would help lht team's inner defense. .<lien, who leads the club In home runs and runs balled In, he1 dif- ficulty throwing because of an old hand injury. But if Allen returns to the outfield, one of t\10 young Dodger~ 'A'ho've bet:n hitting v.rll-\VHlle Cra"A·ford and Bill Buck rl(r- v.·ould play a reserve role. G11rvey. who WR~ hitting 231 \\1th four hon1c run~. nl:iy be the leas! of Alston·~ problems tonla:ht. The Plttabur1h Plr1tea, ruMWay lea.,. in the NaUonal l.Aal'Jt Eut, are In towa for three 11mt1. Al Downin&. IU, pltchu for U. Dodgers against Pirates' ace Deck Ellis. IW, In lht aeries o~r. Both te1m1 were Idle Monday. ff the Plr11te1 were becomln1 non- chelanl about it all, they should be )tid• awake OO\v. 1'1'!,y lost a doubleheader Sunday to the NL \\fears last-place team, San Diego. ·:~-·-• -;-......... .)t-1 :n:.• •\-i-i.--.. -·--·-------·-----•N ·· --4 ....... ,._ .. >>~· ---~~ -.....-·.,:...---...,._ .. -', ~~· ._,,. --~ ______ ... ____ _ , .... ~--·· -'"' -~•~w•wwwwww ',,._ Wingerd K's 14 CdM Wins ,2-1 ; Mesa Triumphs Pit.cbers Bob Palmer and Dan Grigsby combined to four- hit Fountain Valley h1ondav night as host Corona del Maf. eked out a 2-1 Costa Mesa· Hunllngton Beach sun1n1er recreation baseball victory. Jn other action Costa Mesa exploded r 0 r back-to-back three-run innings en route to a 9--5 conquest over host Edison High. And in a night eneountrr, Newport Harbor s:iiled by Huntington Beacb, 6-0, behind the nifty pitching of Bruce Wingerd. Wingerd turned back Hun- tington Beach on two infield single.'! by Steve Deeter and a;truck our 14 batters. Corona de! Ma r's offensh·e Mustangs Fall, 88-87 To Tustin Tustin opened up a 12-point margin through three qu2.rlers of play, then held on for an 88- 87 Foothill League summer basketball victory Monday night over Costa M e s a ' s Mustangs. And host Foothill came from behind to whip Santiago, 56-51, while league leading Newport Harbor captured it.s nint.h win of lhe campaign via the forfeiture route over Universi· ty. The Jaller WM busy corn· peting in the Laguna Beach tournament. attu-k wasn't exact l y overpowering, but the Sea Kings got a pair of runs in the first frame and the mound corps of Palmer and Grigi!Oy made it stand up. . Brad Baker opened up for Corona with a double and eventually scored on a double steal. Later 1n the inning it ,,., . .,s Palmer (.'()ming acrOM with a theft of home when Heed Johnson missed an al· tempted squeeu bunt. Alan Zimmer scored Foun· tau1 Valley's marker in the f1flh inning. Mike Caldwell spa r k e d Costa Mesa to its !l-5 conquest, hitting safely three times and scoring three. Edison's Jerry Lopez and Rich Thompson each had a pair of safeties in a losing cause. (IM~. :lb (•l~-11. ~j (.~"1rm1n, le Fo"· I! GIO•PI•, t Frf'9<,.i, 1b s~arp, u [NH•, ., Pelt,;~n, Tl H«~man. p 1011•• • ' • ' ' ' • ' • IE<li11>" Ul .. lo<•"· 1b Wf'lnll!'r9et. :Ill Tec~lno, ll> H1I!. I> Hi...,., ct Olljflela, lb p.,~ ... lb Zlrlll'I. ti T~ornpoon, < wonr. II co .. t lle, If Nio•oen, " 10111• ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~ lcort OJ IMln'' ' ' ' ' ' • • • ' • ' • ' ' • • ' • • • • ' • ' ' ' . "' ' ' ' . ' • • • • ' ' • ' ' ' • • • ' ' 11 rbl ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' • • • • • • • ' • • • • ' • • ' • . " . 1¢) lCI 1-9 ! 1 000 001 :l-S I • '°"""'" v,n., 111 .. ' • • ' . ' . ' " ' . 11 rbl ' ' . ' • • • • • • • • ~~~:-~i OAll't' PllOT Sl•ll Photo TuMCI.&)', July 27, 1971 Olswangs Aplenty Asthnia Victims ·Beat Each Other Ry PllTL ROSS ot 1~t o.utr 1'1111 111tt Skipping along acro.'>S the Adan1s Street bridge leading fron1 Costa Mesa into Hun· lington Beach. Or perhaps negotiating 1 curvy path in the vicinity or Santa Ana Country Club or the adjact'nt Orange Co u n t y Airport. These are just a few of the nur11erous locales frequented by the run.happy Olswang family of Costa Mesa. The motto of father Patrick Peyton's famous c rusade , "The Fan1ily That Prays Together, Stays 'fogethtr", could well apµly to the Olswangs, in a looser L'Qnlext, however. Jn regard lo the ram· bunctious running c I a o , though, Lhe axiom could readi· ly read something like "the family that runs together has fun logether." Of the nine Olswang offspr· Ing, six are boys and rive of the half-001.('n lads participate In competitive running of one form or another. 'fhe standard·bearers in the !ilia! assortment are IS-year· old twins John and Tom, one of the guttiest pairs of 5·5. 95-- pound distance aces to have ever traversed Orange Coast area cros.~ country courses and cinder paths . lfaving helped pace coach Joe Fisher's Mesa lligh cross country squad to the Irvine League title last fall, the twins rnore often than not had lo take a back seat to teammates Doug MacLean and Bob Gol!nick . DANNY OLSWANG comp1ishments o{ the younger Olswang sprouts . Next in line is sister Kathy, v.·ho'll be a freshman al ~1esa in the rail. Fisher says of Kathy. "I im· agine she'll probably be in· volved inf.AA 1Girls Athletic Assoc iation) this com i n g year." DAILY PILOT '1 7 Marina .). Gridders Praised Phil Brown must reel like • n111n trying lo pul all of t~ pieces back together again even though nothing has really fallen aparl. The shattercd btl!I and pieces in this case signify a three-year dry spell since the last time the South all.stars prevailed in the Orange Coun- ty North·South all.star football classic -a 19·6 victory back in 1967. ln Brown 's mind, the pulling back together process began Monday as the Rebel stars who he'll be <'oaching in the 12th renewal of the dream game Aug. 12 at Orange Coast College began their drills. I • And the head coach from Estancia High t the locatioriJ where the South squad is going through ill! practice paces) figures he'll find out whether all has been put together or not come game night. "The South hasn't won In so m any years that we 're gearing everything toward that goal," B rown says. "We'll be working on basic conditioning and "'ill have to be weJl.disciplined in lime for the game," he adds. "This is the first time I've ever gotten , to coach in an all·slar game, so we'll be trying to make the best of the practice setup . Since r-.1onday was the first ,, day or Rebel drills, tile I Eagles' head mentor (and his entire Estancia staff couldn'• really find out too much abou~ his 33-nian roster. · Costa Mesa's quintet got lo within one point of Tustin with 11lne seconds to go but was unable 00 get possession after that. 1t15it'. lb C•rroll. 7f> E~•le•. u Coloman, lb e Nnard, cf·< Z•mmer. Ir Lcl>denb<ll<~. rl ' ' ' . ' . . ' ' . ' . ' ' ~TWIN JOHN OLSWANG (RIGHT) MOVES ALONG IN OCC ALL-COMERS MILE And the twins constantlv serrn to forget the fact thiil asth1na victims (which they are) aren't supposed to do what they do in terms of th('ir competitiveness. The oldest Olswang child on the distaff side was a cheerlea~r for the Newporl- Mesa Chargers, champions of the local Jr, All·American youlh football program. and brothers Arthur and Danny played on the team. AHhough it was loo early to really tell. Brown w a ! evidently impressed w 11 h Marina coach Leon Wheeler's inrluence since two of the • players praised rollowing the '' drills were 220·pound Viki n~ tackle Dave Jackson (the big· gest Rebel) and ex·Marin~ mate Steve Monahan. The Jal· ter was a quarterback his senior year as a Viking but i1 currently working as a wide receiver and defensive back. Jack Archer was high point man for the Mesans with 28 points white mates Scott Endsley \ 16), Frank Roldan (15), Rick Browning (11 ) and Jeff lforst (hi) gave the Mustangs five players in dou· hie figures. Foothill's Rob Tuvell and Dennis Murphy combined for 34 points in leading lhe Knighl3 to their eighth win. The conquest enabled Foothill lo slay a game back of pace.selling Newport w i t h three games left in the sum· mer loop. Hor> I l rown•"P "'-'<~· Plc~tns N111lll• e..0111~ 1t~•d1n To111 1 C•uml1v Gold1l0<!1 °""''" Orm.ot1 D1nl1lt Nie""" Trontr To11l1 Cotti Miii CU I II II pt Ip ' 0 • 10 l J I l • " • • " ru1!1n (NI ' ' " . . ' ' ' ' ' I l~ J 0 !I IJ \J ., I• II pf Ip l 0 j !t ' . . l 1 • t) ' . ' l 0 l 10 ' ' " " 1<&1"9 ty 0111•ttr> • " " . " 6 " Ill CM!• MUI U )! 10 1? 11 Tu1•ln ll tl JO 11 -u Au•lin, t Flnckl••· ti Jo""'· " Ha<k:lcw, I> lot.ii Bu~ .. cl C!l•Ho, ct Pa•~•'• It P•lrn•'• P·•I Et<<.k'>On, c ~"""""'' lb ..... 1 ..... , )I> 5••~g•, n Spar•, rl Gfi9'ol>Y. ti Nl•l•on. ,..lb M&ll. lb OiM!U•, 11> Tololt " ' CdM Ul .. ' • ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " • • ' • • • • • • • • • ' Seo,.. by lnnln'' • • ' • • • • • ' h rb! ' . • • ' . ' • ' ' • ' • ' • • • . " . • • • • • • • • • • • founl&ln Vall•w 000 010 0-1 I Corono <l•I Mir :xio 000 ~-2 J Hun!ln•I"" Ir•<~ (If VAnAmer.<!on, n K•nf\•d>, lb ()oocl••· ( AIMcrd, ct Sl&~•o, d ·n 8•00~'' II Hn•nval, )(> s:!lltO, lb (&onon, lb Moll, p 1o!Pl1 .. ' ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . • • • ' " . 11 •DI " • ' • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • N1w•&r! H•rbo• (0 ~.,, •• , tr H'1betn. rt•lt ll()Wm~n. •• W01.vor. <·'I Wln...,rd, o W~ltt, Ir·< MatMrm~n. '.lb ~ ........ " G•ll. lb M~u•~. 10 c~.,d. rl·l! "'"'' " 1->u.,11n~10., Newi;o•I .. ' ' . , . ' ' ' • • • • • . '" • • ' . ' 0 ' . ' . ' • ' • ' ' • ,. ' • ' • ' , • ' '". 0000000-0?l 103 000 ~-6 10 0 Mi ssion Viejo Glides Over U11iversity, 66-55 Laguna Beach and Estancia ~·ill battle Wedne sday night for lhe right lo meet. Mission Viejo for th(' Laguna Beach summer league tournament championship following those three quintet" first round vie· tories Monday. Mission Viejo gained a ~e· cond round bye after turning back University, 66·55. Laguna Beach, meanwhile. overcame an early lead by Fountain Valley and went on to post a S&.38 triumph. And Estancia had five starters in double figures as the Eagles swept by San Clemente, 74·63. Mission Viejo'!! win was led by the ('l<:Oring antics of Gil Normandie, who tallied 21 point.!I. Pat Wilkenson and Mike Bowen aided the "'in- ner's cause with 15 and 10 poinl3. Fountain Valley seemed to have things going its way until the Artists of l..aguna Besch resorted lo full court pressure tactics in the third quarter. That maneaver tu r n t d things around as tht Artists '\ outscored lheir opponenl! by a 24-2 mar~n in the third t.an1..a. Fountain Valley bad led by eight at the half but the se- cond half tactics turned it into • Lagun• rouL John Harbold led all scorers with 17 for Laguna. Hank Moor~ was Estancia's leading scoret with 17 whtle mate Craig Hays was a couple noict.es behlnrl Al It Moor~ f'O«I Con!or G1•nor M•v• '"' l<1nto~ D Conttr Tol•lo llltncl1 (10 It J! '' to 6 s J " t I 1 11 J l II l t I IO 1 0 0 l o I 0 0 ) 0 0 3 0 1 l 0 1 7t 11 Ii II S1• C!tmtnlt IUl Rto7rll1 Do"' I Int Gu~n••on W"!l1Arl!1 llt11Pr W•I+< R11llt "" 5•t1 .... .,., Tor1I• ,. " "' '• ' ' ' ' " . ' • • ' • ' • ' ' . ' ' • • ' ' ' ' ' " I I !! 1S JJ 11 •1 $(1 ..... , o •• ,,, .. Etllt'cl1 1l lt,111 1J -71 S..11 Cl•m•nlf n 10 10 1•-61 \.ti~ ... lll(h uu M <C1ll1 W~iln1~ N1l110n Kltuelr.tt~ H1rt>old s ........ , Fhet!1 Corw'n 8tt•ll Tollll It ft t i to 1 t 1 J ' . ' • • • • 1 1 ' 16 I I !1 ~ I ) I n o o ft J 0 0 I ] J 1 ' 1• I n ~ '""nl1!ft Ytllt• 0 1 1 Lodtno!@in StoUlvldl •elMr To1111 It ft t i to I 0 ' 1 3 & J • ~ e I ft ' ) , u l 0 J ' l J I! 16 • ,, ll s~ .... ., Oll••lln llllll'tl 8tl(~ II II )I 11 -M '011ftl1I• Y1llt• II U 2 1 -ll ll111t"1 fo\wlllnl• ,,_ ... ·-· L1ur!li: ""' Te1111 N.,.,..•.ic!I• 81•~~ ... 8owtn '•'•uJ.('IO' Willotn~ ltu~••tll To••I• Uflt"'"llY /UJ ,, " ,, t. ' ' ) !l ' ' ' . ' " . " ' ' • • • • • • • • ' ,, 11 ' . " Miu*' VIiiot 164) hrt•fl• " ' ' ' • ' " ' 3 11 ' ' . 0 j 10 ' ' ' J J 1$ ' ' ' ~ I) M San Diego, S.P.M. Na b Hoop Wins San Diego and S . P . M , recorded Costa Mesa open summer league basketball vie· lories J\olonday night a t Southern California C.:ollege. San Diego turned back Laemn1!e, 5549. while S.P.i\1. did in Grant's, 74·70. The l;itter issue was 11 foul plagued g;ime that saw t.he losers with only three players on the court after personal fouls had benched the other 11110 starters. In all there \Vere 46 fouls assessed the two teams. Dennis Dickens led all scorers wilh 32 before fouling oul fur Grant's. S.P i\1 's Steve Ch1dlcy had '11 1n leading his malts to !he "'IA. 81!1 Clappcrlon ( ISJ and Gary Schneider 117\ "'Cr!' high fnr San Diego in rts victory 01•1>r Lae1nmlf'. P•n•I•• "'ulm•" Tot911 l••mrn\! (") 1, 11 pf to I I I~ ' ' , ' ' . ' . • " 11 51~ Olt" UU ' ' " ll •9 lt fl •' '• Fonl•UI • l l 1 t C11"°"r'on • & 11 ll1>•u1mo 1 J lomoi.on O o W~•ntr ! 1 i I ~,~ .. &i~r • ' l ti T~t-II It lo tt H•lff,mt• Sin OIHO Jl, L1emm1< 11, Ftl<""'' M1•11n D!c~tn• l'tdlmon!t G~ran,. To1111 C~ldllY "~cum L'"" Murr1t c~r•lu Grov""' fDlllJ l11Utimt. Or1"1•1 (Ill •• " ti .. ' , " II 1G ,, " o o i n 1 I i j 11 1• 11 IO t .l'.M. 00 lt ff•lt. 101•11 ,,PM l J IS ' . ' ' . ' . ,. n ' ' ' " ' " • • ll I< July 28 S liowdowri For OCC, A1 1tecit ers Orange Coast College and UC Irvine's Anteaters will bat· tie it out Wednesday night j7) for the Orange Coast summer league b as k et b a 11 cham· pionship after finishing one- two in regular scheduled con- tes!s. The Pirates of Orange Const swept through their six1h straight opponent ~1 on d a y night with a 110·79 conquest nf the Bu{'caroo-. 1vhile the Anteaters were bu.c;y senling for second place v•ilh t1n easy 92-6:> rout of the Gaucho~. The other test resullcd in the Chargers edging the Aue· cancers, 70·68, on a L1p1n with two seconds lo go by Dana Karcher. The Pirate.~ ht1d 1hin~s rasy with Sk1p \\11lliams leading the way 11ie former Est11nru1 I ltJ':h Ne''"'"°'' V1IO•• F•llon Holm ~ctoulll Koloo..- llrown Crum••v ... ,,,,,.11 P"<• TolM• E">n'11n M•"t••on Vn~no M<l•or Gr.,•o•I ro••I• SNJll>w><k "~'~·· w.1"~"'' ~~~mcur i.;.,. ... ~, l 1th0t 0''"" \•• ,~., M~~·< TOI•'• h h ( I (r•m••v "'' rz. v.·1t one year :u a O<Jao"o~· Polv ISLOl under his ~ll. V•tn•• ,;pp. led th"' nf'ts ror 29 po1ntc; c0~1• ' f'""'' ., G1u<ho• IU ) 19 " • • ' . ' . , ' O! IP ' . • ' ' ' • • " ' • " ' ' ' '" An!11l1" (II) ' • • ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' " . ' n " '' It pl lo a • 1 n • 0 0 16 1~ ' 0 11 ' ' ' • • ' • ' . " ' . ' ' j 1 1 • ]~7710'1 P>r1ttt Pl~! " ' ' " ~· 11' ' " . ' ' . !I 3 1'I ) 0 1t l l 11 l D H 0 0 10 • J I J! n I 1 1 Ml lC \0 HO l u<c•ro>ol fl•l " ' " " .. .. ' ' ' o ' n • ' on nine field .l{oals and 1 I ~""'" • " ' 1 ' lG ' " ' ' t•harit.v to~se~ 11·hile male N~ '"'"~0•· 1 n, "~"'" n John Seymour ad1!cd 19 to !hf' RM>•"'' ~ t':Jl/~('. ~;::.: ~ Thf' winners had six pla\'crs R•nwn o ' ' !o••>I l• 11 1n dnublc f1gt1rcs and !11·0 _ _ ___ _ n1ore with nine pn1n!s i!p1ccr. " • ' ' • ' l• 19 Howrvcr. the times posted hy Jnhn and Tom seem to present a contrasting ap- pearance in regard lo pubtici- 1y meted out to them and !heir apparent lack or physical stature. John lourrd Corona de! Mar'!! Eastbluff course in nine minutes and nine seeonds tu tt1ke loo individual honor.<i in the 1970 Irvine loop cross eountry derby v.·hile h i :11 faithru! !ikenrss wa.<i third in the same raCc fn 9· J9. In !he just·eoneluded tr;ick season, the juniors twins also contribuled their fair share of blood. sweat and lf'ar.'I. John posted a 9:3.1.9 two- mile best an1! ran a 4:.15 leg on Mesa's 18: 18 four.mile relay f'ffort at Mt. Slln Antonio H.elays with brother Tom zip· ping around eight laps in 9:46 .2 11nd turning in a 4.38 four·lap oHering on the same baton squad 11! ~11 SAC As Fisher puts it, "\Yha! It amounts In is th1H tht< twin~ ju.~t take turns in beating each othrr. "The whole ramlly Is that w11y -one does one thing bet· ter and anothPr turn."I and doe., i;nmf'1hing bctlf'r in ano!her thing" And Fisher i.~ sn t i~ht. Jn. deed, fnr one ha., merr!:v !o )!r01du;il\v pro~ress down !hf' l1~t lo · 1:11zr ;it the .itc· Jn addition to their gridiron exploits, seventh g rad e r Arthur and sixth grader Oan~ ny have been following older siblings John, Tom and Kevi n (a prospective Mesa sophomore\ ove:r to I h e OranRe Coasl College triick as of late for lhe weekly all ·rom- crs ineets. Thus rar, Arthur has been victorious in the elernentary division cross country com· petition with a best of 2.1 n1inutes nat while D11nny ha.<1 clocked bests of 1. l7 (44ri) and 2·:>3 1680) in capturing first plal'e honor!! in his elementary di vision events. The short('r d I st a ncel- specia\ist of the clan, Kevin lrttered as a Mustang Cee by 111nning the spring~. hurdles }Ind mixing in a little pole vaulting. Sitting al home are fourth izrader Gary. first grader Patricia and litlte l\iaria, v.•ho's slated to lake -hM" initial pluni;::1> into the scholastic 1>1>'orid in September. A final w a r n In ~ to automobi!(' driver~. b Ike riders and the like : when driv·I Ing through Costa l\fesa. CK · C"rcise caution: your'e bnund / to bump iritn an Qlswang almost. anywhere. All of the Sou1h coachef1 registered first.day r a v ~ notices about Mater D e I linebacker Bob dcl..ancellotti,' a Newport Beach resident. Brown t•la1ms that the alf~ · Im portant quarterbackinR . dut ies won't be decided upo~ until almost Lhe contest·; opening kickoff with riverboat , gamblers such as Edison'S Jerry Hinojosa. N e w po r l . Harbor's Alvin White and Brown 's cx·Estancia ace Curt Thomas all C'l 1peting for starting signal.calling honors. 1fo "It's awfully early right now bu! the idea in the end is to gd "'ith one quar!erb11ck," con~ eludes the Rebel head man. SUMMER FESTIVAL (.;: CADILLACS l'll'A.JI' CA.LL 1.._•1H Jerry Maras 1271 anrl D1J1•e Brtkcr !221 don11na1f'd holh ends of the court for !he Antealrrs a.~ thP. t'(' Irvin<' outfit jumped 1n a 22·pni11t margin al the half. Ba.seball Standings IT!Of YIQITIAI c~~·· \••!o" °"""'' o ....... Con"'" :Sovmou• T t YIO• K~•m•• Tot•ll MU,.•v NttwfY B••••t•'< K••t~tt l'rt ndlvlllr HumQ~rl11 lluDt Fl1n1t1" s:!ilc~.1 """"!tr Smit• lll<<•n••ro (&ll It II ot I• 0 ' .I , ' ' ' ' " " ' ' • ' • ·' . " ' ' ' J 0 1 ' I 7 I • )! 1• IS .. (ftlr•tn {II! It II 11 Ip ' ' ' ' . ' ' , ' ' ' " . . ' • • • • ' ' . . ' ' . ' . ' ' ' . • • ' " ' " ' • • n ll l7 10 l ur• )6, C~8''"' J7, ,'\ilATIOF\AL LEAf.~UE Pi!t.sburgh Chicago SL Louis New York Phil:'ldelphia i\lontrcat East Division w J, fiS :lfi 54 46 55 47 .'ii 47 44 58 ~o 62 West f)ivision San Francisco fi2 41 l.>odger5 5.1 49 AtlAnla ~.1 52 Houston · 50 5[) Cincinnati 4A Sfi San Diego Jli fi7 Mondi~·· ltt•ul!• M lnul• •. N•w Yer~ O C•lu.1on ~. Mo01tr•o1 1 Prt. .644 .540 .:>39 .520 .4:11 ,J92 602 ,520 .5115 500 .462 350 1-<oul!o" /, Phll•d1loftl1 J, I! lnninv• Onl~ e1m11 1chlld~ll'tl. TtlllY't Cl m•• GB 1 () ''2 101'1 121.ii 21 1'2 2.l'n 8'• 10 JO i.i, 141-'i " Ai\1ER ICAN LEAGUE Ba!timorP Roston Detroit New York Cleveland Washington Oakland Kansas City An«el~ Chicago l\tinnesola Miiwaukee East Division w I. li-0 38 57 41 51 48 51 51 41 59 40 58 Yi'est lllvision fi.1 35 52 45 " " 45 M 45 " ~o ~1 1Mn<111'1 tth111!1 Ml""""°t1 t. llot!(lll I Dnll' '""'' u~edull'tl. TMl•'l Olm•• P ct. ,612 .5112 .:'115 .500 .410 .403 .643 .536 .476 .4:'15 .45.1 .412 GB ' ,,, II 20 20 0111!l1nd /Hun!tr I?·' 1<!0 '~ul ,,., •I 81111. fYIOO't (Ootloon IJ.6 •<!Cl leo11h1ra l.O o< J•<-1<'11'1 l •lJ, t, lwl·nlt hl ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS '71 COROLLA IPECIAL $1777 ~ Sii THI ALL Ml!W TOYOTA CELICA Sl"T. C,I, --~-··~·-·-·-··~'-·-·~·-'·'·~·-·-· ...... ~ VOLVO Lions Trimnph, 58-46 ~ou•lon 181.,1nv1m~ .. ~ •'Id 01•~·· !I 4) •I P~ll•d<!l>l'"I ('•wmfn ~-l Ind ~·~MIO' J.)), 1, twl "!o~I ~t l01.tl1 (Z1rll1fV J·•l 11 N~w Yorio n If, rolahr 800!"" (Lonbott •·• 1ne Culp 11-ll •I Mllw111to" ILOC.k-.. , 1..ci ,.., ... n •• n), 1. IWl•nlthl All .. lt !Wrlthl t ·f ! 11 (lo¥•1•t'ld IMcOowlll t. 101. nlthl 1(1n\l1 Cllv ff-IHl11"11 14) t i O•lrOl! !LOii(~ \}.I), ~ltM • • 11'.'!ljjjji'l"lill'""'l'Oilq,, ~ _.. ... ~n,.:., ""'" , .. , . . . ' ··'·"' LONG BEACH Westminster High'i; basketball contingent finished up in a tie for J1econd place in the Long Beach Wilson sunvner baskrt- ball league Monday night after throttling Warren. 58--46. The Lions finish up play next Monday with a tourne- menl gamf! against host Long Beach Wilson (7:30 ). Verbum Del captured the Ii· Ue and Bellrlower tied for se· cond with Westminster with a 5-2 mark Trrry i\1cisenheimer was tht Jead in,I! i;cnrer f or Westminster Monday with 19 points while males Gordon Blakeley and Glenn Lantaff chipped in with a dozen each. Jay Johnson wa3 also Jn double Ogure!I with I I marker!!. Wn""ln1ll1' Utt ....... -.!"!•' -l•"'"" w1i.• 1 1•~•1•¥ (••• To1•11 tt II ii '" f J I If 1 G II j 0 11 • • ' . ' ' . . " ' " • • t<•tt bv 01r1r!1t• W"1!ml"''" 11 In 11 1' lll1•ra<1 \) I< I IJ . • • ... ~-...... -------- C•!c~oo 111Blltm8n I -Ill II Montre•I 0 1 Gt M<An1!!¥ 1·11. f\\OM Cl,,<>11,,tU (McGll>lttlln l-1) 1! Sin {l'hQo,lloJ• ).10), nl•M N .... Yori! (51ottlt mv'f lt.U II (hlCIM IMln""' J.1), nl1M W11ftl""ton lll.-.r1 1JI o! Ml,,,...90t1 Cl ue!>. boor t.JJ. n••M lSTH ANNIVERSARY SALEll BIGGEST & BEST YETI DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Modern & Complete Service & Pa rt• Dept. Modern Body Shop for All Cers 646-9303 540·9468 Orange County's l..Jlr gest and Most Mod ern Toyota and Volvo Dealer ow1as1AS OILIVl•T ,,ICIALISTS • ' ... _ .. ""!!I"!!'"''"''''' 1971 DEMO $4098 164 SEDAN Aufom1 lic, R1di1, H •1lt r •1171 USID CAI S,ICIAL ~ $995 1,,, TOTOTA co•ONA H.T. lt•dle. ~ •• 1 .. , 'IDOtcl. (VT,. on1- -.,,._.. ·• .. ·-~ -= --~--~~_ .. ..--cs -•. i-~ '._ ... , ':l!o'O>!::-~'-----· .... 1'1 )~.;....,_ ... ___ -.#"I"-.:' ..,..,, -·--r, r ~-------...... .-. . . ,_. '3 OAILV PILOT Alamitos Racing Entries SIXTH RACE. }.II v1rd•. 3 vel• old> & 110. AllCWltlCli. PurM Sf lOD. Thl O•tW CIYD ~Meil!, Chu (hu l ob 2 !Perri.r) 1Gvo F•e IWrlchTI Mr. Aul1rn1n tOr1vul Mlrk It Now (C1rll<l11) ltl1> N Rovll !1~1n~1l C~!ch Of-ck ILiphl ml Miu Gold P1rk1 IBt lculfl..o) tl'U•I (h1ra1r (Adl lt) Poc~et Roe~•' IW1rdl Glllv Glrlv !81llert1 AIM l"llllblt '" "' "' "' '" ". '" '" "' "' Pl'~"' 8 111 {W1T1on) lit .1;!~··.!";:r~L(I;~'!"~'() ~:: ,J.,, C1vid (Cro•~ 1B : SIEVEHTM lt4C!. ~ Vl '<I! 3 veer (lldl & up. (1111 brH , AliDWl f><:I•. p,,,., JlOO. lh• A""h•lm 1re1 11lJllof\ ••"4 '"'"'en!km b111n11. OIYldend'• Bi r IAd1ld Bid Who IM1r!l N lttv Note (S .... lth) Ml rble Mon lPe•nerl M<>0l1h D<1mond ("111\llnl ~I'"' Guln!vore IW111(><ll D1vld J1n1 l~tr~u••I Go A M'1t !C1r<1ot•I Qlc1'1 Gold (81nk•l "' ... " , "' "' '" ", , " "' IU)HTM ltACE. <(JC lll'dl l voir 1 1,0:,, & ... ~~51:~1<1w1nc~• _ Pur~e l.lOO(I_ Tho UnCI• Chit~ (lhn~,1 111 $h1oow Mon lAOl l•I 111 Su<lt r J!ock•T IW>l>Ofl) qi l)oublo Alon" ISmllhl 111 Jloollo '1e1lm (HlrH 111 Orlll l.t.llloonl 111 Air T11 MIU ILIDh.oml 116 NI NTM ll"Cl. 3J.0 118fd>. ) '""' Did• Cl1lm lr>0. Pu•11 '2100, (111,.,lr.o nrl(• =~ M1cK1v l(•rC<lU) 111 &err"" llid (Slrtuu ) !H FINI l(!n<i Worn (P101I 117 Sn .. -11 T11~y !LID~t"'I 111 Rim Dede ID••"•) !11 N ii i "In•• /Smllh) 111 Re1rtl• !W&l$Onl 111 .Jlnool•I (Croibvl 11<1 !!old S.ollv IA~•l•I IH •cered II•" !P,•ntrl "' :i.ito f:I 11•11 "~Odv w1 .. (Mt•tl 11 i L•"l 'I M••-IAlllJon\ Ill Go The Llmll (Sml!h l 111 R~r+no R0<~11 (W1!1onl 117 Mesa PoW.ists Down CdM , 8-7· Cage Win Mater Dei 's Monarchs swept to an easy 49-31 victory over Santa Ana Valley Monday night al Santa Ana College in Santa Ana summer basketba ll · ho~tilities. George llerold led the wa y with 15 poinls while mates Dave Nanry and Greg f;reen Followed with nine apiece in a balanced attack. The Mon11rchs return tn l'IC- lion Wednesday night against Santa Ana with tiroff slated for 8 o'clock. IC"lffl~ Hf•O•d Nonrv Gr•tn E. PoeJ!Qtn J. llotllOt n Cuculi( To•1T1 H1i!!IMt Mlltr Dtl lltf " ' • ' , • " M tltr O•• n, ft "' '" , ' , l ' ,, , ' . , , . • • • I n J 1 ~ .~I ~A \/11it y IJ. The best. .. ,_ ............... . .· A laniitos S umniaries Mon411. J\111 11, U11 c1 .. r ""••t lllllST llACI -JSO Vl •O• M.ol~en, ~"' olds (l•lmlr.o Puri• Jll'OO ordlM>n IPerner) 000 l fll l &O htrOf''• B••' tLlnn1""I 10 I~ O.~ ovol Go Go (.>,~Ison) ~.1(1 Tomt -,II 1110. 't"r~~1~0.1.,~;n 0r1vln ~;~:~dtrbl: "a';,: K•c~ov ll:fbtl. Tom'• Coov, "'""'" Sc,o•tned -Bo!!ln1 MMn, (nit• ~ldo 1, A,11 N"' Lo,..~ SEC01'o"D ltA CI -~ Vo"\' l ve•r e4d! &. vg. Cii!..,lnQ llu•1• tl'OIXI S""''' Nlon! Ou1 !Bt n,,)o.00 J(lll l &"J Lor~ G•t nd (Wtrd) j ,(IO • 00 St,.~ln O.r-IHt rll I IO r 1,,,. -111110. Al•O '"" -Mui In v...,, Ev•. Throo Loe~,, "'"''"'' O•. ~.,1 Oo•n. C>ln IM'' v~"dY ~1 l lV "10•11, fhr Dl •id <rr~!thttl -("u C~u 8 ob, Prlnt•n l'a•~•· Bl• ~ • ..,. Fish Report u.ii•c SILlfCTletic 1971 CAPRI wlT!! .,,,... ,,..,.., 20lllte f'fmport Car of tJiC Y far" ~~ ... IOU'ra M U VllY 4U•IDIN GIOVI -~·MHC:UIT ~ " ..,..'""'' """" ... TO'\ M,1n lt1•t!\ J.lG ),Ill 1'r! 11! Mr IWflqM) I 10 TIMt -, .. 1110, AIMI t i n -SK'f1 Gln911. N•>I Movt. Pi>o•um "It , U t!lt LICI. Mt~n ~·11~. Nt l(rt tcf> .. , "0U11Tt1 ltlC;-::-J~ V1td1. 1 vtt• 01~ ml lOtnt. B<I<! +" c1111 P"''" 11~00 0..pt 'I Oflrio (l,_IC~IM I J.10 1.<0 ) 61 c~'<• D<l Moro•" is'''""l J . .o i10 Ro~bi• R~r 81r !.t.111,on! t fl'I T•mr -\ •'10 Ari o , .... -C•nO• IC•O B•n . IC"IO~I A•loi,, 111'"' T~t llld. °'" G1v S~1>1ro1>rHI Ind. II• .Suro (~le. Scrl•(hl(I -"<hl •oer, F l~ .. old, 01!~1~T~o ltc~;1~1,:;o i1i,.~·;~Jor. J ~""' O'Ar(v Kl • IKll""i S.00 J ilo )M Gonnt \/VI" (W1rOI 6 &O ; l)(l 1110 Sp~ l"na1'1 l •0 Tim• -M f,10 •l•o ·~~ Fo,w.o•~ ll•t!t"• 1'!""" c~.,.e, '"''o'' L ... , c~ .. o••• co~• Fir.JI ~uturitv Nt •uUc~ ... Summer Boat Show f••• 1J,..;u;o" to Hunt:"'to" C1"'•~'1 •"d•11d .,;,,C,.,ftd1+iontd ""•II 11 l1 1t~ 11 .. c1 . I S1" o .• ,. f /w•y. o.:lv +hr11 S11nd1v, Aw~. I. --. Th is steel belted Rad ial Tire carries the Michelin Warranty• for 40 ,000 miles of tread wear. (Many owners get much more .) Pun cture re si stant Michelins stop faster, corn er better, give more traction on wet surfaces . Yet they cost less per mile of driving than any tire you can buy. Now there are Michel ins for all domestic cars. Why not stop in and select "the best" today for yours . • NOTICE: 'X'e carry a IRt.R C invc ntorr of Domestic & f ortiitn auto & truck tir e~. Please dro p in &'st« o ur fine sc lecllon of i\1ichclin 1ires. includin,11: ma.ny btrd to ~et ~ilr~. Such Ai The ZX, XAS & VR Series M,ch•I."'' W1 "1"!Y fo, X ~1<fl1I Ho1hw1y 1\Jbllt•l Whl!1w1ll Tirt t~OWft ~ ... <e••"• 10.000 "'''I lro•!I l1f1. de!•t h •n wor~m lftl~•n 1"d "11ll rtl !I '"d ""'m •! re10 ~•U•IJ• l••""d'"I no11'1blo ptmctu•o•l w~on '"' 11 lltt' •~J !lnm••l>< 0•\11"1•• v•~or l•1 1n 1>o•m1I "'">Ct 1n c~n!ln1n111 Unilt d S1 1to1. C<•~·~ ~· '"'""!! rH "1,r ~fl,n"• OPl•<>nl .. ·~uo! '" t>,\,in11 rM"l DU•CIU•• '"'' mul!•ploon nv 00cren11t• o! "'"""t•~ mil~••• ftOt "'"en '"'· ICHELIN ~ "FOR SAFETY 'S SAKE" SANTA ANA 209 luah SI. 547°5615 NO. I ON THE COAST Yeur Homelown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT ' -·----'•-~-­~- --· , ___ _ ' ' . . ' . . I See by Today's Want Ads • TlUDE'A.S PAP.Aortt .•. RECREATION LAND~!:! Ne1.r take. rh••rs. and Reddlnf . Wanr TD'1, or~r f!'ll.dt or any !'Wt' lf.mta tor $4500 tqlllty, • Thi• ·es XK.F; <1.2 Black, Wirt Whtt11. Mlchlit11, .lM rlt.t' radlo wUJ P"' ftlttt: tun Into )'Otlr Utt. e HOW A IOUT te.M allfht· ty Uttd appUa.nett. W14h. ert, drytrJ, rtfriler1tort, )'Otl can't ro wrcn1~1 -~-.. ~·---· LEGAL NOTICE , ".,. Pl(TITIOllS 'UllHISI H.l.MI I TATIMIMf tolllwlnt "''°" fl '61"' 111111....., LEG AL NOTICE l'IUll f'ICTITICUS I USIN.IS ILIAMI I TATIMllfY TM lolltwln11 ptrJtn II Otl/19 lluil- i!t: it1E5£ l!N01Nl!£Jl;IN(O (I),, 11,.1 ML &•ldy (lttl1, FM)nllln V11l1y, C"ll, n~ Jlotle.-1 &t1n1ev ll:ltu, 11:161 1.lnlt Ludo St,. ~ouM1ln V1!11v. Ct lll, '111111 T~1 1 bu1ln111 11 bllnt tonOu.:tM br 1n 1""1vlOu11. Ra,,.r1 I , 1t11,• Thil f18temt n! lllNI wH~ t111 C6llniY C!tr~ of Ore"" C~uni. an' J11lv 17. ltll, Bv B1vtrlv J. M16dOX, Ot Pu!v Coun!Y CI.,~. P1•~IT1htd 0•1• C6e1! Otlly 11111!!, Julv l~. )1 •nd •~;"" J. 10. 1911 1"6-11 LEGAL NOT ICE , llltl l"tCTITIOUI &USllol ESI "II.Ml Sll.Tl MEMT lo>lowlnt oer1.., II <1oJn1 h111ln1u 1"111'1 llJC TITIOUI I Ul!MllS MAMI STATIMIMT Tll~ tol!twln1 1>1rl0t11 trt t.in1 ~l!MI\ •I (RE"TJVE U~HOl.SllitV, 1 311 ltri1n. CMIA Me ... (111!. IC1nn•ttl M. •••'16rd, tU7 Sanllt M O<lv~, "lt w .. rt &t1c.l'I, (t ill. JM-G. \/li d, Ul!l W,..,11111!1, W11lmln1!tr. (t lll. T1111 bu11.,.u 11 bt lnt cW !lci.c ~v 1 ''"'''' """"'''"lfl. ICln"iTll H. 8Mlti•d Tlllt 1t111m•n! ll!M w\111 1111 (eon!)' (!.,.~ ef Ortn" Covntv on: J!llY II, 1111. 8Y l •Yt •ly J . Mffllfll, otJvtr ¢eonty Cltrl<. 11u11111llod O•tntt (Olll CllllV JIBt l, Jv1v JC. 11 l r>d ""'~" J, 10, 11n l"J-11 LEGAL NOTICE -"J'lltP ·-_,. ... ~ JJ .i ~·--,. 1L~ lnau1urat n • •1ec\l,s.s. corrupt T uesdoy 1dm1n1str1tion, t1estined tor 1¥ent- 1u1 f11turt. Evening gi u. 9-tJ dt 'tr•ll'illo JULY 27 (E)Nhrt 1:00 IJ l lf Mews Jtrry Dunphy. 1:30 IJ (fl Cl1111rron Strip (R) Stuart Wllitman '' Mushtl Jim C1own Is [IJUC,..... Reuontr/Smit~. jolntd by Rich1rd Boone, playln11 B ~N!IC N ... Tom Silyd«. Bill Disher, 1 bi1, brawlint 1nny D Yir1lnl1 li11ll1111 S.-sergeant w~ose rouirh-hnust antir.s f) Sb O'Cltck Merrit: (C) (to) ''flio inlurlttt !ht Ioctl c1tl1emy. lflVO" Coilelu*n (west1f;,;:: .... ~-""ih.,,;. .llltft Show JoliQ Wayne. DNn Mutin, Ricky Ne! 0 Cl) C!J ffi ABC Moowlt ti tht TV R evietve r Hooked, but Do esn't Like to Admit I t Dy RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD ~ll Pl l -We all have tclev1s1on shows that then1 . I also like the easygoin g lone of the show. l know a news editor who says he watches ''Mighty Mouse" all the time. Well, "Mighty Mouse" isn't exactly my all tin1e favorite, but, alas, I do have a weakness for any old 1'om and Jerry cartoon that may come on while I an1 doing my stationary runnin~ exercise in the bcdroon1. All the running and chasing in the <'8rloon seeni~ to fit in JU~t r1ne with V.'hat I am doing at the lime. There's a Japanese ca rtoon, dubbed in English. entitled •·Speed Hacel"." and m)' daughter is hooked on it. I don't exactly order her tn please turn 11 off as quickl y as J demand that she switch off those painful reruns of '"The Addams Family," If you want lo know lavorl~ video !turf that I'm as.hamed to admit I enjoy. it 's those pieced-together I a t e - night movie! made up of con- secutl'le cpi!!Odeg or old movie theatre serials. Boy, these are JUSl terriric. There 's always a costumed, hooded e'lil guy in a spaceship fron1 a not her planet, plot~!ng to take over America. He has all these great futuristic weapons, but for some reason he aJways depends or, a couple of cheap hoods w i l h double-breasted pinstripe suits and wide-brim- tned fedoras to carry out his big jobs, They carry plain gals. If '"Famil y Affa ir" comes on, 1 usuallv lea ve it on because l thi n-k Brian Keith is lops at aln1ost any acting job he takes :>n. and I like Sebastian Cabot as the valet , and the two small kids :If do •uwP'OH l lA(M -•• t+.. •• ,,._ le lo-•lo•• Ll~o hlo -·C t l -t Jlll 11!!1. An1"' Dickinson. Wftl: (C) (90) "'Rivtr of Cold" (ad-m Tllt Flintlto!le:I Yenture) '7G-Ray Milland, Su1anne 1~~~~---~~..,.~~ EN DS TONIGHT "MAD DOGS AND ENGLISHMEN" 4th SMASH WEEK m St.u Tr1' P!uhette, Dack Rtmbo, Roger DI· fD Art .lid .. T• vis. A :rlory of intririie and iomance al Noticilto l4 b!tins when two youn1 tdventuiers, M!eln1 the 'lllOl'id from tht deck of m De~ YllltJ· DI~ ttieir 40-lool: boat, spot 1 1olden- (D 1+"11 .lirn H•wtllornt. h1lrtd firi dropplnt: in!o th1 biy from 1 lielitopt1r. 1:10 rn ..... em Huddy. m 0n1nat (I) T11tll tr CIMtq11tncas ED I SflCL\1 I W111r9 Jiit Bild1 f17 Cl) CBS Jllen Willer Cron~ilt. Document1ry , on ttit 12th Wof1d ~ Jlll C Jlltw1 D1~id Brinkley. Glidint: Cti1mpio111hip held durin1 m Tiit FlJ'in1 NMR June, 1970 •I Marti, Ttll$. fE Hod11pod11 Lod11 ll) La Coli llll1•d1 m 1111 Dtstrt ltport 9:00 0 @m NIC TUHd1y Movie: ('C) CB El Adof1bl1 P'l"ol. Aldao (lh1) "A fu11111 Thinr H1ppu1td OR aJ MIC Nnn tht W11 to tilt fOfurn" (comedJ) 7:IXI 0 CIS N•ws Willer Cronkilt. 0 @D NBC Nrws David Brinkley. IJ WIM Stretll Tht•trt: (90) "Ho111t ol fNr." ClJ To TtU tht T11rt!t 0 Whlf1 My Unt? (1gJ Dltk Yin DJkt m I LDW lllCY ® (I) Dr11n1t fD Co!Nenationl With I Ps}Uit· trilt Dr. E.dw11d St1inbrock. f.D An~Utos M-cio1 (E Movit GarM '66-Ztro Mostel, Phit S1lvus. A collllivln1 l11v1 in indent Rome plob to obtain hi$ freedom by !md· lna; 1 sweetl\Mrt lor h11 m1s1er'1 ~·-m fllon1 Squid CiE) Rows p1r1 V1ronit.1 9:30 O larttr Wtr<I "'" ffi T1Ni11.Jr1 EID Artiru in Am•rit.1 °'Jule~ Fei!- lu." Prnfrle (If t modern political/ iOCll] Yli1isl. al La Cruz dt Mari511 Crutei 10:00 1J I i•IC'r.1.1 I AAd MostlJ fb" Sin1 Outstandin1 colle1•11e talent p!!r· lorm a tr1dition1I form of music, 1uthtnHc °' t1hnic folk music, which i1 1n honest, simp\1 form spawned br tilt American wor~in1 class. PEGGY LEE July 26 thru August 1 Two Shows Per Night B p.m. and Midnight • COMING PAUL ANKA plus CORBETT MONICA August 2 thru 8 -.merlc a's &rt1test YltJtion Buy. Fer Rese rvations c1tll; ZEnith 9-9924 0' Kings Castle l ake Tahoe/Nevada (7021831-111 1 Abo Tio• teotf .. "GI MME SHELTER" STARTS WEDNI SDAY FIRST RUN "BigJakc" I\ Cl\lMA CTNJE~ fl.MS Jlilf!i.Nl,.,TO>I •te......:oc::t" w~· m e.. """''CNN"""""'-Kl~~llUA!l WN<EROF 2 ACADEMY A\IARDSI IO!fR]" M1CH.M "~s Daughter" ~C»•• • 'lolGM SPECIAL MATINEE WED., at 2 p.m. l'r1ml11r1 1Rtlll911'1•Rf URll11r 1 i M.,.1t b11 with p1r~t 111111 Tho '"''"'' ""°'• rite }'OU'"J lotfN'U • • • tt" lddnopplRt th•t b.com11 a 1,.,. story . J:lO 0 (jJ ll'IWfy Hillbillie1 (R) Grin nr ind Jane, dis11uiwd 11 llo1r11st u rvin1 1!1b, r.aid tM C11mpett m1n- 9I011 In th• CILIM of worntn'I ~b. 0 ®} m 8111 Colt!J (R) '10 Ct ch Accotdint to His Appetilt.M T11cher Chtl Kincaid finds himself In the role Ill ..-bltrato1 when ltudanl pro lesh erupt 11 Holmts Hi11h. O Jllnn Knin Sanders. _ _:::. ___ ::::::::_ _ _:.=._~ll\l!l\llll\lllllllllllllllllllllllll~ll 0 @(I) CE Marcus WtlbJ, M.D. (RJ "'[II&)' for a Mad Oog.'0 Dr. Wtlby 11 bitten by a rabid lkll be· loo111n11 tn a 1eta1ded patient. "THI GRISSOM GANG" kim Otrbv-Seott Wil10P'I Con.,;, s1,v1n1-l1en1 Oail\I 0 rn 00 m Tiit Miid Sqllld {R) "A lime of Hy1cinth1."' Julie bt· comas inl'Olved .,.ith 1 mysterious 1tr1n1er, John W1ll1 (Vlncent Price). b&tieved to hive di!'d 20 ytlf$ 110 O!her 11uests 1r1 Ch1r1es McGiaw, W1rren S1av1n1 and Cyn1hia Hull. O Miiiion S Movie: (2111) MMurde1, Int." (m~ery\ '60-S!uart Whit tna~. M1y Britt Ptlllf Fa lt .lht thillin1 del1il1 of the moit eiplo 1ivt clime trl (n h1S1<11'"J when the 1yndlt.1t1 dilhtd olil mu1der on con \ tr1ct. Cl) rt I Rtpc:rrb O Movi1: (2hr) "On 111• 811ch~ {dra1111) '!t9 -Gre1ory Fee~. Av1 Girdner. W Nl'WI Putn1m /fi}hm1n. @M a ~tr ap Monlan Mo1eland au es ts. EID Thi Advout11 (RJ ""Should th• ftderal Government prnv1d1 t 11uaranleed minimum inc~me IOI every .-.me1it.1n?"" m lrutlr tr Con1eq1>11u1 10:30 1J (t CBS N1W1 Sptc.ill 'The Mys ffi t 1PIC1,Al l Clrt~t P11mi.rt Cov· tery o1 P11n ... A loo~ al !.Orne com t1111 Boll Burrud tnd Hobo Kelly mnn 1Lne1 1nd p11ns (nat UH1td be Jlnsl 1 bac-st11e lou r ol lhe R1n1 e~ioly iehe~ed. fin1 Brns. i nd Ba rnum ind Buie~ O MoYlt : ••Lart Oulflolt°' {ad~en- C1rcus. A tour throu11h Clown Alley ture) ·3~•ry Glim(, Claude R)on1 lntef'Mwl "'1!h the stirs. •nd hlmed @ News Bill Jolms. 1e1m!nt~ h1ahhah1 the pro1r1m. U";) fanftrt '"Americ1n Ody~se•r The Midni1 M !.0&t11I "" Song~ 1mmor11I m El 011110 d• Decenll lz1n1 !he men who 10111M and lound 11 :00 EJ f_fj €IJ Ntw1 tdverrtur1 on !ht r•ils tre re atured 0 ~ rn ,. .... I[) Esptebtulos 1:00 O C1u n Autt (R) l 11a p,1rt1 "'It~ 1 hM tn~~11em!nt 1ln~ ~o promo1e lovt"s dre1m~ W~!n (b de(1des to) m11ry. (~) Dt1th ~atlty D1y1 0 llJ tI) Ne"' W D1~1d frost Siio• William Holden and Ry1n 0 Neal 1ues1. 0 crOl @n M1k1 Your O.n ~nd ot Mutit HM! s111s 11• Richud i nd EID l ltd .lollf~ll "S.mm1 In~•• lf.k Karen Carpen!!! 1nd Al H1r1 Jack l l:30 i) [!)Mm 4iriHh• Jones (Ut$h. The Doodletown P11H!r1 1nd M1rk Lindsay 11t re1ul1n. 0 ~ @D .lohnny CalSOll ([)Al luu1 0 (1) (I) (D Qid Cavett ®) KOCiiO M1W1 m 1ir11Mt: 121111 M-11 1111 11111,. ID Mcwit: "Tht Awen1115~ (advtn· ture) "$0---Jo.hn Canoll. Adele Mira MllR (dram•) ·~Brod,rltk Crt"ll' 12 :00 O Thi Gtlltr, fold . John lrt ltnd. Jo1nne Dru, Mir· cl!M1 MLC1mb1id1e. John Derek. W Mll'li1: us.ult ol Con~ci La\t~ Slltppird Slrudwkk. Anne Seymour ("ll'tslern) 'Si-Glenn Ford, [tl'lel StO!Y of f Sou!htrn ptrnor "ll'ho B1rrymor1. W ednesda y DAYTIME MOVIES t :DO m (C) "f1t1 0¥11 A!rlct" \tdv1n ti.Jrel '~-Maureen O"H1r1, Mac donald Ctrey. t :l00 "041K1" (drama) ·50 -Mn• Jllearle. lr,vor Howtrd. O 0'1tn11 Gou te toll1111" (com edy) "52-Maurtt~ O'S11!l+v111, £d rnund Gwenn D '1"H D1111ntd Don't try" (drt ~•) ·.so -.loan Crtwlord. D1~d 8ri1n. Slew Cochran. I 0:00 I]) "Ytnkw 1'11h•~ (•dventure) '54 -JeH Ch tndle•. Rhonda fl em1n1. l :OO m (C) "Black S1bb1th" (horror) "M-6ori~ llulorl. M1rk Otmon. 2:00 O ''The Wront Mtn" {dr1m1) "!tl -He nry rond1, Ve rt M1le 1. ~n1hony Ouiyle. 3:00 {_IJ 0'Th• ll11nni"2 M111R ldrama) "6l -Let Rtmick, A!in B'les. l 1urence ~1rv1r. 4:30 iJ (C) "llide !ht Hip Wind" ~dra m1) "66 -Dutt" McGav1n, M1111 Pusehy. (lJ S.1111 a1 IOAM Nt!f"I· 5:00 D "Tht Mttnilictnt Sevtft" (Id v1ntur1) "&Q.-'ful Brynnu , l l• W1( Itch. FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEt<ENDER PHONE 642 -4321 SEE/ , , • THE ONLY MAJO R FLO' •-GARDEN /IN iE l!N ( ..... ORNIA! SEE/ ••• • PA CKED WITH THE LATEST FEATURES FOR BETTER LIVING! • IT Fitts THE ENTIRE CONVENTION CENTER! • ECOLOGY EXHIBITS ANO DISPLAYS! •THE LATEST IN MOB ILE HOME & VACAT ION l JVING! SHOW HOURS: -ALSO !'LAYING- Alll1talr MocleaR't "WHIN llGHT l l LLl TOLL" OHN 6:11 J M I . 111\N a.1tooe l"trtirltul• INn\ TONIGHT "AIRPORT" "THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE" STARTS WfDNESDAY 881J8 D8V1S t OlDll ~· lrlf 11<4Sl"NT ">.DD->. 'QOM." llNf!AfA!lfl r NfU DOME HOUSE ••• ., ,.., .... ...; •• 1 ....... 1., J,~•• l<O'"" .. ""''"'° S 11 P·"'· W•eldoy• t<oo"· l 1 P·"'· !oa•~•d<1y1 Noon«1 p "'· s~ndoy• • 101111111•1 ·a-ny I .,.......~ MEET/ ••• TOP DESIGNERS IN THEii! FULL-SI ZE DECORATOR ROOMS llDULTS •••• $2.00 JUNIORS .• $1.00 IC~il~•-v""-< ll fl(( w;t~ _.,..,, SAVE 50c Sro.<•11 o .. cou"' T<l•'' •v•:l•blt or Vo·••"'"'"" •IP~~ en~ "~'-1;1 1tt•111v ORlK. S!Oll-IUl'<A PA~( (! .. Tr• -Ull11£0 (Al.If. BAN~ 01 OU.NG( (0UNTY '"BLUE WATER, WHITE DEATH~ INCLUDES SOME OF THE MOST SMASHING MAN-AGAINST· BEAST FOOTAGE EVER FILMED I "ABSOLUTELY BR EATH· TAKING, GA SP-PRODU CI NG!" -Ju1H1> Ctt~1. NBC Tcc!A~ S"'1'" "tjLLJE WATER, WH ITE DEATH" The hunt for the Great White Shark • C14:""' CDIU• '' "'5 -M'~IATIO'I .,,_ .. lotl'l:tll'~l Dot0<1N 1>yl'f1(• Glolll[l ...iJl ... l l""'°"'I !U:t<MCOlOll° ~ .. "1IQll.Al (l(H(IUI. l'IC;ltlflllt llflfAst g. I "" "T11t11AwA11A11s~ ontinuous Showing Daily ... Oflk • o,.,., 7:1j ,... I I lMOW 5t1rts •:.:::.. '. ~~~~t!'!!~--~ _,, ... ...,.. . ' ~"""°"' *11••• "''" "''' .,._,.~'''I DI - ...... ..... ... .... "'""' •• ,. ..... o .... ALSO Wutheriqg Heig~ts ANNA ©! CALDER MARSHALL TIMOTHY DAU ON ( \ Tut\d~y. J1.1ly 27, l'j71 I DAILY PILOT I {) "'BLUE W R, WHITE DEATH; INCLUDES SOME OF THE MOST SMASHING MAN·AGAINST·BEAST FOOTAGE EVER FILMED BY ANYONE ANYWHERE AT ANY TIME! The film Is superbly realized!" -Vincent Canby, New Ye<k Times "CAPTIVATI NG !" -S1t1an Kant•r, time M3gJi·n• "TRULY REMARKABLE " -Vm~enl C•ritiy, N•"' Vo•~ 1,,n.,.1 "SPECTACULAR ! FASCINATING!" -Stu11l Kle1n, Melrome<11a "EXCITING! TERRIFYING!" -Bot> S&lm1ggl, Group W Nt\fl'O<- PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT EDWARDS A CNEMA CENTER FLMS Pf£SENV.TIOt4 · TEaNCOlOA • A NATIONALGENERALAC:TlMESflfl fASE I ; I CONTINUOUS DAil Y FROM 1:30 P.M.p SPECIAL MID-NIGHT A 2 A udrey Hepburn NTIL DARK" NOW AT BOTH THEATRES OPENS AT 7:00 P.M. SHOW STARTS AT DUSK PREMIERE 'Orange County ENGAGEMENT In everyone's life there's a SUMMER OF '42 A Rebert MulligarilRichard A Rolh Production JENNIFER O'NEILL• GARY GRIMES JERRY HOUSER• OLIVER CONANT .,..,;""""' "'-'""' HERMAN AAUCHEA RICH.I.RO A. ROTK °'"" ... , ""''""' ROBERT MULllGA N MICHEL LEGRAND =~~~·:::;•< ........ _ !Rl--.;;.~i:::---1 .....,..,,,,__ . • •-• A ....... l-.o- John Milli + Hol•\I Mlilo "THIFAMILYW HllD OVlll -llTH Wf EIC EDWARDS HARBOR ,.~":·:.1 .... -l\VD aT •••I D" 11 toll• 1111• 1•1 0,,1 MICHAEL CRICHTON , Rosrn1 w1sf rROOUCTIO" ~NDROJ.EDA SlltAIN A UNr.'(R5AL PIClURE. · TlCHNICOLOR' PANAVISION' ~C> 2ND EXCLUSIVE HIT · Pet., O 'Toole io "MURPHY'S WAR" (GP) ES FROM 1 P.M. ·ILL NEW FROM WALT DI SN t(" c.E: .. t£ot EGGstravaganzal wu, .. ·,.~•ro n"dGOIDf,. wl~• "I "'l ""~·•••' ~•n•~{.•Cv1 • !>,.011rArw•1. 1,1 .... , ,r'V'""V'' 2ND TOP WALT DISNEY HIT • 0 0 Q Kurt Ru~sell ·Jae flynn JVU~';.,)l.,;,11,:.if;l..;:A,_ "THE BAREfOOT EXECU TIVE" "Sl.000.000 DUCK" Al10 At lECHNtCOl..OR" (dwarih Ciot•m• Viejo OOSn JONES saoOYDUNCAN JOO FlYNN Tomi ROBERTS James Mi11i11R Vi•i•. ;ttm~ t;~·-·~~ i.,i::iriorllSOll ·;;;o;r ll<!YilTY, TECHNJCOl.Ofr 130-6ft0 ~i:l'litl'ilR lso·Kirk Douglos-~o nny C .. ' ... ' . . . ,1 .f .: 1' .• "' ..... . .. : ... ·i·: . . ' ' "A GUNFIGHI"' GI"' ' '..0.."" ! ~~P11n..11ll• "" - • . . ....... .-... R ,... --·----···-··---~ .. ~ ,.., ....... _________ _ ----·-------------..... -•••~•~••••sn==~••==~••j.J•l ~ ________ _, I Ii " . - . ,_, • !WlY PILOT T~, July 27, 14)71 'Greasepaint' Readied Garden 0.-'1 produ<tlon " .. ,,.. -of !ht ~ tbe smen or th< Qoowd ls ent.erln1 tta lut pillle of r<htorsab, and ls ftl41llli fO< jJs opening OD Aue. S. II wlil ploy Thllrsdoys, rride~ and Saturday• on Aue. H-7 and If· ll · 14. ReservaUons may be made by callJng 892-321•. Ticketl IA' 12.00 for adult.. 'lbla .-. who.w nwnherl Include "On a Woodtrful oar Ul<e Today, Who can I Turn To." "Fetling Good." "'nM: Joker," and "Where Would You Be Without Me?'' is a musical entertainment about man 'a follies and foibles. STARTS WED. . :I JULY 28 'I 1 MATINEES DAILY o ~.':.:..i"':0,::.-;i:•:.;_::o,;:.~ (STARTS WED., AUG. 4 AT IDWAIDS HARBOR # 1) NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES J the webloot wonder with ~ the 24 lc1r1t layaway plant _.....,.~µ,,,_ "EVEL KNIEVEL" IGPI SEE EVEL KNIEVEL'S MOTORCYCLE DISPLAYED AT PLAZA II THEATRE ONLY . THE LAST OF THE AREDEVILS/ !'°''6'0W"''''- 'GEORGE HAMILTON ·~ SUE I LYON .. .,_.. --,_.. • ..... fl'lll f,_111. Q'.llPOPAMI Ric~~....... 2ND ACTION lllT "Tl!..DISllTll" (OP) "HELL'S ANGELS '69" ~= Opens 7:15 e-,:::.~ Starts at Dusk ~ .......... ...... , .. _ ~JI 111! Where your n1&htm1rt1 Ind ... WILLlll bell ... -e NOWI ___ ,....,., __ POUNTAIN VALLmY ....... l'OllNfAJlll 'f.t.ll.IT--.1o1u CO.Hr "llOUU FHAI -D aLOQ1t' fU) .._..,.,..._......,..,tll1NI ..... c ... ~1o<o.-........ 10.1J•,. M. \oi:\Oi."'Wli.Yir&lll'ffA"lllillat t ............... lolo• l?.mMle.; .... IDWM"---HUNTINQTON CIN•MA M~llACH ,, ..... __ ..,_ C~ D.U f lt(Hij UICI PM Jl'tClt.t.,_SHOWOHNl,l ""' S•lly B•nan•s Re•lly Is ... Bananas, That Is . ' .. . . . . . . . . . .. " I Chnnnel 28 to Air 'Prodigal' 'Fiddler's' Tickets Go Fast A 1.....UOO gap ol 2.500 yura q:o between a "hawk" father and bis "dove•• son is tbe lllbj<cl ol "'lb• Prodigal," Jack JlidlardaolJ'I prize.Win· nin1 dn..ml which will be. re· telecast on NET Playhouse thil Thursday •t 8:30 p.m. on Cllaonel 211. Baaed oo the Greek lea:end of Oreata. ''The Prodlaal." tella the •torr (Jf a peace-l(Jv- Jng prince and his relationahlp to his warrior father . It recounts the haunUngly con- temporary tragedy (Jf a young man who rejeclS the bloody John Heffern1n, currently ,... Everybody 'f'anls to aee Ucktt aalu have b • t n affairs (Jf his elders bul who is pearina: on Bro1dwiy 1'~ "Fiddler on the Roof." especl&lly buvy, acbool of. caught ln lhe tangle of his "Purlle," as Aq:lsthu.s. Oran1e {:olsl Coll_tge of. flclall uld, but many &ood .uta remal.I! for W~y deaUny and I.he prt5'Ufes (Jf The YOUlll Orestes iJ play~ ficials aald today thll more and Thursday eve.ni.llp. hi! 1ocitty. by Peter Gahnan, who ,.,.on than 1,000 orden have been nae Auditorium boi office A l'Oll~r of distio.guishtd national attention for his recelvtd for adv1nce Uc.Hts wlll be oPtn for u1u July 28" Amerlcan actors appears Jn portrayal of Arlie In the CBS fOf' the Aug. 4-7 ahow. "Fid-30 from II a.m. to 2 p.m., Utlll 91}-minute play, fifit Playhouse production ol "The dler" will be a:llged in the e :M-a :~ p.m.; July 31from 11 telecast In IM9. Heading the People Neit Door." Roy Poole OCC Auditorium 1t 1:15 p.m. a.m. to 2 p.m.; Aug. s.J from cul are Academy Award·wln-appears as Agamemnon . Admls1kln ii $2 and all seats 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 1:»8:30 ner Kim Hunter as "The Prodi11!" will be are reserved . p.m., and on performance Clyt.emneiitra; veteran stage 1_,~•~pe;a:ted=S=•l::"'::d::'Y::•::l::I::O ::p.:m:. =:F:ri:da:y=;and;:;S.;;,:lur;d~a~y~n~il~h;l :;;nl~gh;;t.:;;f"':m~l~:~:::'.::'.15~p=.m~.S: and film actr~ss A I i n e MacMahon as Pe ne I ope ; cavada Humphrey ("Dear Liar") as Cassandra. and VTH!' Its .~ scrumd'idi/yumptious! h E. Levine presents a Mike Nichols Film starring Jock Nlctlolaon ~ "1IDNt'.lU1l'. IOJ=.~=t [)I.I!) l \\WEA'-APAAll.ll.t/T F<:1L11 .llliiiliti:. DAILY MATINEES~~:~~(~'. * STARTS WED. JULY 28 * ... ._ ... Clllll IN HAJl&Oll IHO""JtG, Catnlt ·~ Ann-Margret J Jack Nicholson I I ~ p i} tandice Bergen . <\Arthur G~jnnkel~ , t ~ CARNAL KNOwLEDGE'' lltl ' 0 ~ (THE A.l.C.'1 of SEX ) •. iaonpoid aA11noax3 . J&U••; so1nr ,(q ueuuM • µoct1As pJ e4011:1 Jeul!!UO IOI OfflCI 1117111, • Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers • All THE GOOD SONGS BY All THE SUPERSTARS KWIZ 1480 AM RADIO • ALL THE GOOD SONGS BY All THE SUPERSTARS KWIZ 1480 AM RADIO e ALL THE e· "' "' ... .... .,, "' It: "' "' w i: -~ >-"' "' ~ 0 "' <> 0 0 <:> w ::c .... --... .• 0 iS ~ ::E ... C> .. "' -N ~ "' .. "' .... "' "' It: :::> "' w ::c .... --<( >-... "' ... z 0 "' Q 0 0 ... w i: --"' • 0 Ci ;:! ::IE "' ~ -N ~ >-• "' !I 0 .,, § ~ .... ::1 "' ' 1 71 AUTOMOBILE RUD THiii SIMPU RULll On ce each liour KWIZ announces a name on. the ai.r and that person ~pin s the Dream \Vlleel for a cha.nee 111 a 1971 Au stin An1cric a an(l hundred! of other valuable prizes. Send a postcard, or tile atta ched coupon (v.ith your nam e, addr~ss and zip code, in· eluding phone numbe r) to KW!Z, SanU. Ana, Cal· ifornia, 92703. ONE ENTRY PER PERSON PLUSE r·-----------·----------~1 I KWIZ DREAM WHllL I I NAME I • ADDRESS • I I I CITY I I ZIP I L:~~~-----~---~~-~~ Listen for Your Name On The Alrl IZ1480 ON THE AM RADIO DIAL > s:: i i I ~ > s:: i I ~ i I KWIZ 1480 AM RADIO • All THE e, • ALL THE GOOD SONGS BY All THE SUPERSTARS KWIZ 1480 AM RAD!O ~ AllJ~E GOOD SONGS BY All THE SUPERSTARS ---=-· --:-.t,.-·---· ..... -~-... ------··----· .. -------·-i l· -· ... I ' .. . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . ... -._ "' .. ~ .... ,., ....... , ....... . .. ... .-................................ ,; ........... _ ...... _ AMONG ··· THE GREAT .ONES. ... SANOMAT .•. .._ ----·" ..,,, .N-VollversammlUJJg trltt · Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world, is an old friend. The DAILY PILOT looks as much.at home on this international newspaper rack as it does at the front door of thou sands of 0 range Coa st a rec homes where it is dropped daily. That should tell you something. It should t_ell you that a "home- town newspaper" can be soph is ticated and still not lose touch with what's hap- pening at city hall. Whether it 's news from around the w or Id or down the block, the DAILY PILOT packages it best for you. And the simple fact is that, because the DAILY PILOT emphasizes local coverage, you 'll find a lot of stories in it you can 't find in any other newspaper in the world. On this international news rack, it's among the great ones of the world. But at home, it 's the great- est one in the world (for local news). 1 l·~~· .. OAGBLADET l , -... _ . . •o • •MiFwt1.u.11'f . DIE~'i\TELT .-...., I . ~ DAILY PILOT • -· 1..--...>.r .-••tul'' • ~+··.· .~·· •.... .. ZZ DAil V PILOf Tut W1•1. Jul) 27. 19/l Everyone H .. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It , Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad Someth in g Th al Someone Else Wants The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results 546-8640 2629 H11 rbur, C: r.1. Thinking of SELLING? IOR[\l E OL,O\ "' 11 £,lf l.TO R S OPEN 1 DAYS A \VEEK I ACRE RANCH COLONIAL 4 +DEN + 4 BA "HORSES" WALK TO LAKE BACK BAY AREA ]~[ ...... ,s .. I~ I -lsSM General WHAT'S IN A NAME? When it's just a n ordinary nan1e like PETE l~ARR E'Ii' n:F:AL'f'i1 , you know the service has to be extraordinary t'J gel satisfied clic ntele . LIVE ON BROADWAY Beauulul wide tr re lined SI. w ilh choice provt-n neighhors. Large t h r ee b ed r oom hun1e wllh l n't'plai:e, HARD \.\'OO D FLOOH.S, carpets a n d rlra1ws. 2 ('1tr garage on pa1Pd a lll'y, Jarw,. r tar yard "It h trr~s. Prope rty vacant 111u nr1hnte possess ion. Don'! pa:..~ up tht.!I buy 111 $29,000. I~ General Gener ii * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. DOVER SHORES WATERFRONT New Stone/brick e xlerior "European Style" enha nces lhis 6 BR home. Private front court- yard plus lge waterfrt. patio surrounding pool. P ier/slip. . . . ........ $175,000 ·•our 26th Year" But \vhe n the nan1es lhal are associated ''-'ilh this extraordinary realty business are out of ord inary, i t becorn es a super-extraordinary group of ex pe rts. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton ii"''-' I 2111 ~an Joaquin Hills Road 1..£"1 us h<'!p. \If.' ><ill Uuy your house today for its full vahil', The only ed- ditionil! ('hArl!f.' is I "O nf the s"lllng 11n1·,-. !\o ad· 1 d1t.in1111l "-"!"'n~r W• n.-d hou1e1I 11 tlor~n·t en~! i111y1hlni:! tn ••all anrl find out--ynu 1ni;ht even sa vl'!~ UP GOES THE CURTAIN On Our House Of The Week 3 Roomy bed rooms, 20' x 30' so larium, 3 baths. 2 fireplaces, huge covered patio. Don 'l 1niss out on seeing this UPPE R BACK BAY BEAUTY. You 'll love it at $59,500. Unbf'llf'vablr~ Quiet trre lined St. to !his gori::e· ous "old \Vorld 1·har1n- er." •I nia~sil'f' liedrooms + huge panf'll'd fan1ily roon1! :!5' pic ture \,·in. do11· in lh·ing roo1n \.\'ith t1nif111r f ircpla1:e. Larg:e 250 sq. ft. drf'an1 ki trh- r n. \Vall or glass 0111•11s \,/J f'l evRll'<i pa tio •1,ith S[X'!'tacular vil'll'. Zonf'd f or hol":'lf'S. Tr uly a show· p!aC't'. Great a rr.a for childrC'n. J\.1ust sell quick. Nan1es li ke BF~R'fULEl'f. I/OLLIS. JJFI S.. TER, OT llAL, NEWT, BELOUS, DINWID· DI~~ take so1nc getting used to! But once you n1 aster the pronunciation . you have a master- ful reallor a t your ser vice. 'fhen for tho.~e \\'ho haven't the tin1e nor the desire t.o call on a spcl·!a! nan1£', \1•e have a fe\v nice easy 11an1es ~ nan1 e.~ like BENTS, BEN1'S (two of then1), Jl:'.1\N, RI CK. JERRY, r-.1 !KE. and, of co urse. Pt:TI!: -al l \Vilh spe- cialties in a variety of really fields. 1220 E. 17th -~:vcnin,l:'s <'<Lll &-16-t~7!l Estate Size Lot In Newport NEWPORT CENTER 644-1910 General General -Waterfront - Corona del Mar GET WHY RENT? 5181.00 TOTAL PMT. And l"<"lU 011 n I his :1 Bf'drrri 2 B.1th l1•nn" in C11~IR r.1~·~R \'t'I')' cl"lln &. nr81. Srr it ~ ACTION EAST SIDE BARGAIN Tl'rrif1c ·1 Bt't1rn1., 2 Beth "llh firf'plllcf'. dbl. l:fll"ill!f'. 11r 11 c·11r· 11'f't. """" p11nr>!111.i:. 1111'· 1~h \11ndscapini:;. 11sking $27.900. FASTER 4 BEDROOMS 2V2 BATHS $29,000 Ou t~1 a nclir1~ \'Rlur in Norl h c .. s t 11 ,,,,~11. M <JV I' 1n l"nnd 111nn. ~rA1 lorfl!ion -nffrr-. rd fnr ~Rlr nt. ~ brd- ro<1m prif'r Yn11 c<·I 4111 bcdrm. f rl'e. Hur ry~ FROM 12050 ,00 DOWN l •n 1 h1~ 1111" .1 1..-.dr .. nrn. 1 h;11h \lll h l1<111t -111 k11' hf'Jl II• \11111 l•l'l1'r d 111 ~20.:ifll"I "111~· ~ )•·ar~ nld -l•l•rl '\ ),1 ~1 : FARROW SKINNY DIPPIN' Tl ME ! \\'''"? ( 111h· '.!Ii ',(~I f,,1 II ;\ h+'fir"P<>ITI 'J h;ll h f'n mp!"t" "1111 •p11rkl- 1 nc f"lf\I F.· 11111111 -~t·r thb; fnr ~!:11'. ON THE WATER S42,500 Br 111111r111. 11• 11 I(, 111 """'"f lofl tll(' l!I \1'\• l"'r! R••n. II ·I 11< r!1n1 f1rf'1•l~1·r• 1111111 -111, 1, ,.: riri1· f111111h IH•l!lo ". i.:1•·;o t rnr r nt•" 'a 1r1111,._,,,1" l'r 11n ,·1•1t"-~1·l1 1 11" 1 .. 1•1\\· 11u r•·h11 "" 1•n1" - "'Rll'r fr,.n! Thi~ l>JI•• "·ill ~,-.ll fa,\~ 2629 Harbor Blvd. 546-8640 OPEN EYES. 71Ll 8:30 ONE MILE FROM BEACH 1&-2 Bedroom, 11h baths, very des irable units, situated on a generous 180' x 132' lot. All electric kitchens, ceiling radiant heal, in- dividual hot water heaters, garbage disposal. Priced right at $250,000. ITU STEAL YOUR HEART 1\ delight to show this almost new split le vel 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, huge game roo1r1, farnil y roon1, 3 car garage, 3-ton refrigeration, ankle deep shag thruout, cuslorn draperies, fa bll· lous drop lights. Professional landscaping & sprinklers. Assurne 7'10 VA Joan. Owner anx- ious! . . . . . . . . . .. $42,650. TRIPLE THREAT 3 Deluxe units, 1·3 bedroon1 , J-2 bedroom. I-I. bedroom. 'fhis is v,ihat you've been 1.vaiting for. OWNER'S PJ .. USJ·I 3 bedroom. 2 baths, bltin kitc hen, fireplace, heavy shag. Other 2 units unusuall y.roo1ny, sharp and loaded .,..,ith appeal. Don't hesitate on this one. $55,500. CIRCLE ME I need you, I'n1 a 2-story. va cant, ready and anxious lor your fan1ily to enjoy 1ny 5 super bedroorn s. 2V2 baths, fan1 ily room, formal dining roon1, 2 fireplaces. I'll go for a low, low down. Sacrifice sa le at ......... $43,950. TAX SHELTER 52 BR . .o\ND NEW garden-type apartme nt s. Check on the 200% depreciation. A-LA-DE- LUXE UNITS featuring indoor-outdoor kit- chens . private patios, built-in range aud oven, dish-washer. rec reation hall, heated and filtered POOL, Bar·B·Q units, billiard table, shuffle board areas, a card ·roon1 a nd lush landscaping. Very des irable rental area. con· venient to shopping and recreation areas. 1;'1nancing is excellent. INVF:STORS. you'l l be deligh1c<l at the return on th is inve.<i tm ent l'riced right a t $827 .000. RE ALTORS DIAL 64S.0303 "SPANISH" Reduced to Sell QUICK IN F()r!ECLOSURF. I ! VACANT ~~ Bank \.\'anis a fas t srll. 3 big bed- l"••1•ms. Extra larg~ fnnl· ily ronm. S h;irp a nd t·l,-.rin :l )'"fir old hom,-.. C11rp1•1s iind drap•'.~ in· ..:l11drd. Co1n1ilr!f'ly lA11d. ~··apl'd. I rui::r -hui:e all f1·1H·f'd in yard. E.'<:islini;: til\,.•: loan can bf' as• l'\lmrt1 111th )ow do11 n. Also -t .~c,..llcnt !"f'fi- n11nci ng a1•11il11 blr. Don't Of' la y DIAL 64S.0303 FORl~T E OLSON <N< ~£;ALrORS 2299 IIarbor, Costa M"sR APPLE PIE CONDITION Sparldi11~ <'Iran dl."Srribe~ thi~ 3 BR, 2 BA home 11'1th n1any TREES! CorTil'r lol. room fflr boat or 1railrr. \\'alk 10 shopping .. \i.":'lun1e iow 111tPrE':>! rHlf' Jo.1n. S~~.:oo. Cal l 5 15-8~2-I /\sk !or G1111l_\'. <DPF.N EVENINGSJ \outh"' (~ oast ------~--- Newport Shores ·I hr dronn1, l h;i!h -lY'SI rlHnr plan in ;-;tJi'lrf':<i. f·:.,1r11 larcr hv1n1: • l"lflln f'lr r n- IC'rta intng. (\111u11u11l t) pool i.· t1•11n1s eu111·1.~. J.~!l.~.CJO, C;oll b-16-'i lll ~.,-\THE REAL . 'ESTATERS ' OPfN UNTIL Q PM Offil:e Open Saturdays & Sundays PETE BARREIT REAL TY 1605 Westcliff Dr .. N.B. 642-5200 ®:~Wl®.~®:~lt General General PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Shown By Appointment 12 Linda Ille Drive J.:legant new 5 BR. 4112 ba. home w/formal din. rm .. farn. rm., \\.:et bar. Impressive en- try court w/16 fl. mahog. doo rs .... $179,500 For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please Call : BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR NEW LOCATION 341 At entrance to Linda Isl• Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N .B. 67S.6161 General PRIME LOCATION Quality CUST0~1 three bdrrn. l\\'O b11th hon1e with Din/rin k Step S11v111g Kllchl'n. L,;;rgl' rr11 r J.v/rn1. \V/frp),·. 11 /\HD \\IOQD FLOOR!' & carpt·t.~ 1hru·nu(. Dbl GRr., Jrg rrll r yf!rd \\11rruu lr•'Ps. fl f's I 1-~asi side l0!01l I ion. cul- r1 ... -s;u· St , near nlodf'rn \\'ESTCLJ~·r SllOPPINt i r~:N'fEH. A n1u.~1 ~C'e RI s:u\,;tlfl with 10 ', v 11. 1·:11'111ni::~ r1111 i>11 -i00l E X E(UTIVE H OME General WEST CLIFF POOL HOME {d('11! location for this lovr!y 3 t~·droon1 hon1r "'11 h pool. Lois al rlN.:k•ni; 11 nd large p111io n1ake f•)r g(lll{J fan1ily r njo,yml'nl. J~caut 1 fully a r- '"untrrl lll!l'l"IOr "'•th (Jo11hl1' s l<ollr r•rrrilal'<'. Ali ,\'OU!'.~ for $<!~,;~~/ COATS & WALLACE I REALTORS -546--41<1-I (Open Evenings) I Macnab-Irvine Ril!ht 11011 ' lhf' Slrr~t fl'Olll ll big l'O' 11ly !)Ht"k llnd s11 1111 1 'J1lis beHutiru\ hun1<' i,. lut'<1lcd on a quiet cul-dP-s11!! srreet. Lo1s of custon1 . hr1(·k in a pro- frssionally \andscaprd front yard. 3 bedroorns, 2 baths, fa mily room. formal dining room & gourmrt kitchrn I~ast large fee parcel on Ne\vport Harbor. Approx. 1 acre -I 70 ft. on water, with 3300 sq. ft. beach home and dock. Will sell aU ot part. Priced under con1parable "'alerfront properties. Phone: 642-2171 or see your brokai- wi1h sel!·cleaning o v e n. General \Yhat more roult1 you ask for $42,800. Call 673-.SS:il. I General * * * Calvin Cotton 18526 Santa Tomas Cir. NEED SOME ELBOW ROOM Fountain Valley J-l'rr-e's a great family horr.e Yoo a re lhe winner ol \\'ith 3 huge bedrooms-, 2 2 tickets to the barhs, ovrrsizrd family end -~.· ' -Southland st•parate utili!y room•, -.J Home & Garden shake roof and large double PROBATE SALE Show bric k f1n•plat'e, located (In Harbor II i g h l 8 11 d ~, 3 al the quirt IN'f' lined cut-de-sac, brdroonis, 2 barhs, 11&~· ANAHEIM only onP block to J r. Hi. anrl pool & elrc tnc i<:iira gr CONVENTION Gradc> Sdlool. Vacant 11.nd opr11cr. Cl1Jsl' lo schools &· CENTER reii.dy lnr Immediate occu- n1ajor shopping. NPrds Int.~ July 30-Aug. g ~a 11cy. PriC'f'd 1'0 sell. Call of ll"O!"k but pnrr d ar ' f'IC':1.~e call 6-12-:itiiS, ext. 314 546-;,8/!Q (oprn ('Ves.) rord1ngly. Fix up your~l'tr & I hc111 ecn 9 <1nrl l pin 10 f;ji~fl'~j'i;1i.iiITTi~l rr;ip th(' profirs, on t y «l<11n1 your 11cke1s. 4!\'.or1h LJ·p HERITAGl S29.9:-.0. CALI. 67:....49:.0. I County toll-frre numb('r is , <: llAl 1nin • COLES'WORTHY&CQ. ~0-12'201 J-_ _ __ _ REALTORS • • * I EXECUTIVE HOME ._,M.llCll ~·•'" nH ----------In pres rige area of Newpor1 -Meredith Gorden$ VIEW LOT ""'"'· Loi HM22. "''""' $39.900 WESTSIDE BLUFFS .~· carpt>r.~ like nt'w, built.-in \'acuurn unit, imprei;si\'e en-(0ce;in & Mountains• Quret \\'HA T 11. rri re oppor1t111ity tn try, rlcctric garage door, 4 0"·11 11 h••11ur1ful .o;pl1l·!r vr l cu)-Oe-sac ::;tre<'I.. l 16·500· huge bf'drooms. 3 1tep-<iown hfJnlP In ,..,,•r!lrnl , prrsuge "' lcrms. bath~. AND the 011.·ner i~ nP1ghborhooi'!' r .. 111urrs ~.MESA VERDE 2·slory a nx!()us. Call now and m ake hf'd roon1s, 21 1 halh\ hu,ee · 4 Br!rm ,1:,,. dC'n , 2'~ bath, y()Ur orfer. 1•AlolJ1-ranr1r r1 tan111y 1no111 fircpl, blti11s, ~'Ov ·o patio, Walker & Lee \.\ 1!11 pat.is v+'rcfes !'tonf' shake roof. hid & fltrd l11C'pl11c1., l..i!l"I:<' forn1a! r11n-• POOL •. aulo garagl' i11i:: r<JOn1. All this 1rn 11 f.0 x dotJr opl'nrr, roon1 for boa t 120 ri . lnl. Q,vn<'r vrry 1111x-or ea n1pcr or 1railr r $•17,!XJO. ious 10 sr !l. ~o Hurry! For I Roy McCardle Realtor n1orr infn. Phonr :~16--2:11:\. 1810 Nrwport Blvd., C.~1. 548-7729 "me$n\Terbe -LEASES- l -1 n .. 1troorn hon1r~ !ur 11 .i~,.. s:::.n -s.:!l.i-5100. ri·r 111•>'llh. 1'h,.<r ;q·(• tlH f' hnr111·,, n ·1Hh for •!UI• I< f\•·•·upatH',\". Conja1•1 - 2().13 Wcs!cl if'I Drive 1116-771 1 Oprn '!1! 9 PM Lido 1S1e estata I On] braut1fully lnclscpd. ln!s ar Lido"s 1-.:a.~t cnrl, we olfrr ll 7 bdl'lll ' 6 b11t h, ~ gq fl. hn111e \l'll h pool, pnced at s1,.;o.ooo. 644-7270 2828 EAST COAST HI GHWAY CORONA DEL MAR , CALIF . 1-THE-P 0 INT !11 .'\r11p .. r1 Hf'.t<ll 'ln Fran \ 1•1·<1 J !!' \ !11ll'I !•) ""' Cu•l"fll ~Hli:I•• '~•fV lifl!llP 111111 1~ ln1l,1 "\('f'l'l t••11;1I \!11,11·1 h<111n "hni.;r• 11111! ~ 1•n ·.1 I il••''•IPI~ an•:t ,( pl I l>.,1h ~·(\nn;,I I "n r111 ,r;, ;i l{l'Jllv ('ur11 p1n1) Cliffha ven Co ttage Mountain View l1nn1111•ul,1tl' .'I Hfl·:! l•,d li ,.,,1 !.\L'1• \\ 'llll<i•·i•k. •''I "I 1•d J'·l- Lath,nmy~r · · Realtor A pl;11 ho11~,, v. 11h 11 Tahuian fl'1'1I 1u·t 1 1>1oi:·k~ !o rh<o Ra~ "n n r;u11't ··ul-f\r-«ar ~ BR 11!11~ 11 f1n 1~h"d pl11.v ITT"lm in 11o» j.!.d ,li;!P l.1«l('fl ;it $~!!.~ i1 1ld lh,.. l /wnrr ""111 tr11dr ("';di ;.11>--2~1.1. Vener al "FAMOUS REPUBLIC" MESA VERDE ('!~11t·1· l•••'a!,on· C••fn•·r !•11 nn ;1 q111l't ~t f\•('I, l.u.~1ir·1n11" I !1 h('•lt~nrn, ~ h;11h, r;u11u1 r·~•111, ~!'l1ilr11tr <11n111g iu·•·a. and ;i 1!"ll1'11 1<·1u kilrhr11 J~ir h"' 100111 f.,r .1·nur hoal 111111 1ra1kr ;iod 1~~i1 t .1111a,t..- l1H1<lqc·Ap('1t ~!OtJrwl~ !I \!Ill hair ll Jnnir lan111\• 1l11s h<lllll' is l!:l"f'.:11 r .. r the kul ... Ont) 11~ . .".00. Cal! :~l&--2313. $16,500 FULL PRICE- \q I i+', CT<':ll lfl(•;oJ~\11 llO( 1110 r.11· !l'o•nl l!H• h<':J• h. l l11g1' General 3 s~~~0~. I :\'"'l~l!"I lll'1J.:IJ1 s/(']1ffh111 f'n,I 1~·.ir Cliff !Jr l~11,·ll1:n h)t n.~.I li.1111 11/tll•• fir, 1 -.1rpl't 1~. Jiii' fi r, H.11 k .IRl'd ht~I ('1lQugh for 11ddi1 1nn11I uni ! or <11 1111111111.i.: l"llll, J Bdrm. & Fam . Rm. 132,500 :-..•ar :-.,-.,1·r1ur1 lh'1.i.:h1s "" a ,·11 1 rt •. ~:.r ~'P"'1 . 3 RH ,~· h11n1!y I rn, 2 b11, 2 fll'C· p.:1t·f's . k111·hrn hlt n~ "uh Pl\". lh1n1 hl h1g rnru•h S!)lf' 111rh 1-hak(' mol Pr'IN'd ni::hr ! ' Sl'll CAI.I. (!) ••6 ·1•1• ~ Nt1 r Nt .. porl P o1 t f)tf lr r 1 ... 11·1 •1111 11 11h 1•.n1•1·r11111" 1210 Starboard, View do n l;o1r·I) Hlt•1J h;11J1 111lh S!'i\l"HlliS 1 hd1·n1., dl111ng ~<lllk•·ll lypi• l11h n 11 d I rni .>:: f11n11 ly nn. \<'l!h 2•, H1""l'I". S•'f'l>ir111 " l1H111d ry trn 111~. Chof ·" c·o1•nr r 11•ith 3 rn••111 lll1J;:,P )'flt'<! f,'\,lf.0, l car garai::i• VACANT. J,onn 11 I• Of r1~•in !n 1:rn11 S1ih-, r-an l"M> ;1,· ·111nNI 11! 6\.', tn1 1 1·our drh111 p~~ n1r111 j I 71 .. iOO. :dh'r 1 11~pf'rT~~n. Walker & Lee ~I \J.,,1 I.di 11"11• l-'"0. 1 ·•'l' I " -1 l•ll'tl\ ! h,1. f•1nn.<I ,!1n1nk:, /,!111 d l'<'.I ••fr h ,1, •i10· I\, ('o "" plri.,11 r• ·l'itJ"!l•'ll·•I, Jl»I I"" 111 • '• !. I .;11 ·.,•<I l"I "' l·.1\.'l'lll.I Fl-' S 1'1, ··ml " ''1'111,11 1'1 11111 l.•!>il, 11 1 ·r~ri y 1\1\11·111 \T!·: l'O . ..;!·~· S lil'I. r .11! :,1 ,~\1 1 ''•1~·11 t" !'' \ l lH l'rr11••· !11ll<1rll' lt>r 11/ 2 ON A LOT j 1,,' :.;1• 11.,.1 ~'I" .1 ,1 I'• I .l;l1;orp, n· ... h I•\ 11 \•1\f' In iii S.l\'1 . .(1, $23,000-0wner Bedroom House n 111·1111.: ['Ill T!11« !1n11 w I will help finance ! 1\I: lln« fn!' .~:: •. !~H I <"11•·· 2 •h• 'I ~ p1ulr· 'I """"''hl(I ,\;,f ~ll•l l I l l ~ 1>1'1 111'•111 h•"l~•' qn lr•>11\ , ... ,.. • I I ' ... ,\11(llh•·1" ,tl,llfl .1 hr>fl t~•\111 ----· -----(11•1 .. r 1r•l1 11111! ,, t•'.l•V r,~ 6428235 nrr.1nrln>"n•f.,r lll n r111~ .. n * • • * * .,,.11 1 ,.,1.,, ,,,1, \Ii· ,,,.,,.,,.~ -6 75-321 0 I 1;1!11 ln11:r l1111 ily 1'•11 n nn ·r1·~1 'II ;" ·rf' JI " fl ;:r•r,.j 111 S.Hli h Cou~1 l\r>bJ 1·~11111' I Ea~1"1'11• (••.~la ,\1'·"·1· ''11 hoii ' (';11) fi1f>-il T1 I Acre with 2 LUXURIOUS \outh ~(~oast ·.i, ~\~I NO v~~WN WT1•1 n1.~lk;j\,el.l.r•1 hl1&· Lee . 1 4\\"ll~~d~~l(~Hln~:;:·lr;;~~t r~~m~ I-Sparklin9 Clean! 3 ln\f'ly r .. 1,.111.\' r rn. \11t h \\-er C"'11h• 11 ~ A huc -~ llf'rl!o.,.1111, '2 TO YOU I 2tl1.1 \l'"·'lc·ldf l)rii·r 1 har. ii d!'l1i.:h1 to sho\\! DON'T MISS THIS ONE! \1 1\t;,\!~lll-.~T 1,-.,~·I 111'\0o'' s1!e h11.:h o n 11 11111 1n rh111r" \jpc;;i Vt•rdr 1-u rr<111nr1f'r1 hy ..:u<ito111 hn1111•s. s.;.,. lllP hath hHrnr , l11c ·alf'd t)rl II I P\I ----I A Id & fr d •1ul•·I <!r•'l't, h111 l'.1~1· 1!'•"•·~~ I I • I I "-"' $2< .'°'1 lull 111·1ec B1c, bl'11ul· i;;r,.771 1 flp<·ll 'Iii 9 ---rno eU 111 .. W'r 1·n1 r;111c11 .•11·1r. -CHANNEL FRONT .1R.~ t-. 17th, c \J. Mfi.77.).'i I" !';111 1~ /\n;o i.· """ )\n! I I ' ~ ~h:il..I' l'"••l.111 1'p!, )IU).:I' , .... \{ I ' .,-""" • --,'lf'11 porl l\f',•<'h I u11of'\ . .,,,~.. BAYS HORES * LOW TAXES* t l'l'l'I•;•~~ .~1 n1 .1 Ana 11.t- dl't·~~. Tt1,1 u1 ''hon! 1l1~tr:• I A~"Ullll' \'A l11:i11 h'1'• I T11lal pav111rnl nl $11:6 JH'T n11.n lh, Sl!•.ooo 11.1l11lll"<' 111•.i o!ll'rrrt al Jll~! S:l.l.~. C11ll flllh•~. 11 ;1lk In 11 J1 ~·hi~. < n " i'I' l :ro~~-1'1r r .... (\,!! ~ ~ •. s:~l.'•·-.o -l fl.Tl , 1a. 61\. , .. , llu1r\-CAIJ ,.l{l..l 1·i1 !(lrx•n F-up, 2 11<.11 11. n r.d ly l!f'al' Ch:irmna;, l11r;.:r :! hf'r!room I h11 r ky11rrl, fn111 I~. fan- S'i'l.:.00. hj"H'h !'<1!1;1i::t·. OJ'f'n hl'llm lil~l1r I>·'• 11 ssun111h!~ VA. Home Show Rea ltors 1·••11111-.:". <"•J11 ""'~t b111 1nni: *Patti Walker, Rlty.* "1\n111·h11 1r 1-l,)\hl'hllnltni.:'' f11f'(lla1·r S11ur:iky •"lf'1111_ 1617 Cr nt1nr-la L.A. rl'I'~ I 1·,:i.; t.. ('<1,1~t !111 ~ .. Cf\,\I 0 11n••r 11111 f1na1u·r. ('nl1·~-i '21.1t Tin.10111 675-7225 ""11hy ""·tu~11 P ... S:~-,,1100. !7\7\ Rr11rh Rh•d .. 11 .8, l•gll l~ ol llt1 1u 1111:tnn BP;11·h loih1) 6'lf.-'1 1il. -FINEST --LE-S~S THAN RENT h·••l••1 c,,,. 11 1•11"\a.v •il l) -M2·1 ·11~ ;in<I thr \!r~a \"t'rdc t:<llf ~· .. u1''" tro 111 1hr <"lil--<l<'-1-.1(' I l•>1·:1110m. T~·r111~ n1a1l;d1lf' Rt I $~1..:i:.o - BAYFRONT LOTS I COlES'WORlliY&CO.I 1-----TH~.s~. ~::-.·r,,1·r. ::;r z~. 1 ()Ts I $153 PER MONTH ·-,R~LT,2~~11 1111 1 ACRE ~A CANT RARE FIND * . h.1 11• n111in rnr f'OOI. tl'11111s t"l!l "Slll y r » 1111 ,-. rt. 4 '":r,\' I .vr, r1...,r111rt l11trrc~T + r••lll'I an1I ~r·1·•·r~J Y••~·hts _. ,11;u·1,,11.~ hrdr1>1•n1~. l'll l"l"'ls • 5 Bedrooms I ·I .1rs 1111"1""'1 n11ly, 11~k1ng A SPECIAL HOME j !lll!Hll<'.~finuiJr!ry '!li,•lin-1 :!;, lh"i1I""'· i•losf' '" lll1'!<'1l' \i!'I' of hn.I' lr nn1 !ipprr $1."1.flOO. Zn nr. R? L\lrs1~\1•1•rlr·ll n::-hl:i11d~·I Bf'1! t·~~ f}l'OpC'rly or11h1• 1111Hkrt. sh,~pp111 ~ 11nr! si·hnr,I ~ I s 11)1): ll!tns.: 2'2 h11th( PERRON REALTY Co. 100111s. 1. l~:11hs, larg,-. l•\'1111:' · . 1 . Hf'rHJt1fullv furn Sll;l 'l,,O I . 1 ~·11r Info _ l'n t hr~e Si u!hrr I 1\~su111<' lo" ~O\' t nnn oi , _, · _. . ". ' ni:l-177 1 A.'IYTIJ\.11~ -• larnoly 1·111, ilhl l11 1•1J a1·r, h (·111 n, 1·3663 61 r AA1'6 F 1·~ j){'l11tl~Ul11 p1'0JJ('l'I •·'~. f'a\i or ll.<f' \"{J\11' VA 1 ~· Fll1\ ,.,~ I ' . . . ... i---------- * ------TURTLE ROCK Rl"1'.'lt \1l~(·p1n", ~ha ke ronf · I i·in1t111·1 B•ll nr M11rc1a Bf'nls SW.~ill). Brokrr ,1:12-11.i.i flr 1 Br<"l;ulrnoor 1'11'11.111.1·. l hrft.I All H'n nl1 l1vail11hlr. 642 ··~ I -10--·140 NOW'S THE rnn111(, 1. halh.•. H••ltf'r 1h11n • .,. ~"-----""" ... ,,, "'·'IXl' PETE BARREn * TRIPLEX * 1 CORBIN I -REAL!Y_~-"n~cr:1~1i:; 1':~'<'::;'.·~y -~tn1lllllr1<·2 1 J!ME FOR T.~ llarho-.r Oll'd 11 t A1lam.~ ·.r .. 0-1i;.:, 0/lj•n '111 9 l'M . -"·'·'·~. < VALUE MINDED? I "''"""'''··''""""'"''" -BAYFRONT APTS-, I QMICK CASH MARTIN Cii.ll fU6·3~ E1·f'S. •'-;vu ~"lllf•I' (°d'fll"I 1"'!1 1111 arr a. \"i~l • l>-1 Li"-. i'IC' I Slip "•° CD00"4•• I J Hdra1~. 2 hll!h lll'lr11r pl11 ' h w I Ofl,-.rrt1 fnr $1!1,llOO •111 R\'a1 I Fm n1 $31, ~. f-lJ or I ~11r~t "Pl Lot ln11NI R-1 I ~ ,,. VETS Li J..0700 644-2430 REALTORS 644-7662 -P~~~~~~y-l~lf"AH'd ('011v,-.n1r nlly l1•~n 'MO~GAN REAL TY h·c;;·orge Williamson I THR"UGH A HERE IT IS! ----$.'lOfl. n1n1~ you \n llh•'!l " ,(. :;;rhool(. Xlnr ,.y 673-6642 675-6459 67~350 64S.1564 eves 'U I '!\1~~~~ ~~,~~; ~l~u r=. $150 TOTAL DOWN l !~:~·~~~~~1~r1·. lo qu3l1f1"'1 hu~··r. a1 $1i.:'7s.JOOO i--NE~;~!',!DS--i1rEN ~~~:~~r \\'t.F:I\-Dr. !l Y PILOT • •"" <Y • No VRr.° 1 Xi " Co<i SHERWOOD REAL TY C;11t !or "Horn"ot 1112--. ... -.11. Si'('(! nnd hurry SpA11i«h 3 lw-droon. I0\\71· w an .• I . R O'\LY $1i:iO lotnl tlo\\n fl.,r lil<;(l :>:r1\[)(Jrt Hl\·rl ' r \I ¥'r r!T AD r •ll "O 11 ·1 ~ ·, t 'I •· 'I-• 1-,1~-. f'''''''"° "'"' CALL 54"8555 1-'fl r L.vu1J;"·· )l11_t:11l111r I -" _.,., -·' 1,,1 ~-n I'\',...., lfl\!Y. ( ll'IWt r flun1 n1n "'" "'-n'" > '" " V-.10\lr 01111 hf'nr h l"Oilall_(' h!f; 1flJ'I ~,I P~ 1>:fi.;.i;1~ ·-'• r;jiii;;iii~~~Gil l \'II I 123 """ all .... \!n•~. t "11ll pri.r $'21.'.l"ifl ,._ l'\11t 1nn11 !1y f)\~tr1hu1rd1 1 1 . ;1 "V "'"R1•t.n . ,...,.1 J(l·l"(l;-.!'l·;!'SION lr!1r •f UI 1011r I 11 1111 k1 ~ \.\hv ,110rr -11 111 !hr n l!le .-. ,, _ H!RIT"! I! " '', 2 •· ll111T1' 1•n !Ill• 1111r Cidl ·11 , c· 1· 11 ' I 1·11 -I I' f42 - -""' i•·~~·.• ~ ·"•·' , 111111•11 >ri: O <>1 111•. · 111111'" · •"" "1;' '1'" l'r 1•hr11 ;i1111 c:tt1 111rn 11 11110 , .r.r-73 •!:=::..,:.::. ==·=·;;""=":':':"~ .'-!II th,-. nld •t11tr Hvy , t11r1 .">10·11:11 o01¥'11 "1'"' I IJl-.H!. lnln. \I ill< H!· .. ~1r, j j :,, -~1~-1 1 »1 nr ~.1ri ... ·,1 H1 ___ I n1n11"y tlirot1~h • O,\Jl.Y vU T/\CF: !1r;il ~.<l 11r r - ·I nP11 ~T11ff --... ----......... ~I C"';ill M2-:ii7~ Now! -----------' C;i!I f>12~'i67~ N1111 ! Pll ,(lT \Y11n1 Ad -----------Ji. . ~: --··r----~ ~---r .... r ' ·~-· ~---... ·---·---· ~. ··:.----•->--·~-~---• ... Tut1d11, July 11, 1971 r ....... l~ [ ........ l~ [ ....... J~ I .... ..,.. I~ I ........ I~ I ........ ~ t ___ ~_auc.a.__.·? Mesa del Mar· 4 e.droom, 2 bath, with bu~ pie 'haped lot. Sharp and clean. •nd O-"ntt reac1y t'l move Into ne'" hom! Nam!' yotlJ' tttm11. I $33,500 Newport at Fairview 646-8811 (11w t lm•) 1912 TERESITA LN-. OCEAN VIEW GraclOus Laguna Home adJacent to Emerald Bay w11h •weeping ocean View on quiet cul-<te-sac J Bedrooms & 3 Bat.hi Uvmg room With wh ite marbl.t !treplac-e p·ormal dining room Beaut!Cul grounclg $92.~ REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 Cost a Meta Huntington 9Mch Lide Isle Outstandl~location "Uvlng Is Great" -, ""'sR. ............ l .... Ba-.-60-x-90-.-•• -.sn-.soo- • hr, 2 ba. lge hen/dln'1 J bedroom 3 BR , rarruty rm., m baths area, U,,lc brick petto. home ......... ~~~-... IC~&"-4ix88 Lot ............ $94.500 trt!e5 corner houu w/skle · ~ .. ........, uuiu ,,. a y!!.rd 'for botlt or traJ.ler 2 llll. Move 1n a.nd 1tart llV· 4 R. • l b8tha, 70x80 Extra · Ing lashlonabl 1n betluti!ul Jae. lot w/pooi • • • .Sl.25,000 rninutf'I to m-Jor shop'g y LIDO REAL TY INC. centu, Lreeways, achoob, Fashion Shores . Bkr. 3.177 Vt& Udo 673.7300 SO acre p a r k. $31,500. 842.M'i ...,, COZY 2 Br, d<'n. 1 ba. Small ~Jo.%. rooms, 2 waUf'd court yarda. *MESAVEROE* Bli poltntial $44 ,000. 4 BR. 2 BA. Top cone!. In Own,.r 675-3913. EvM / WP location. Comer lot w I wknd~ mnt11tt trees. Owner AJ'lX· 4 BEDRM + 2 BA -M-------ious. Wtll sell helow appral· • 11• Verde sal. Aslong S29.90o W I Wi-$21 ,000 BY OWNER: 3 br-2 ba, lam down. 545-5946 or 545-4957. "Sparkling· clean, quality rm. 2 trplc, bhns, new SEL L OR TRADE carpets, "all the butlt-ins." cpl/dpa , fncd yrd 4 BR/2 Ba home • for ·4 1mm11cula1ely landscaped! Assumal:ile 5~ ~b Lo a n. uruts or 24'x60' moblle home Jt's VACANT! Owner must S29.900 673-5809 H B. or f V * 2 BR on st>ll now ••. submit a.II Mission Vlt -jo ___ _ Harbor Highlands-do~ to !!!!!l!!l~!!!!!!'!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! R·2 lot. S23.SOO. terms. Manners park & S<'hool D OVER SHOR ~ I Broker 641....,16 Call 847-1221 XLNT v1t-1Ao, 3 or 4 BR, 3 ba .. New carpeting-color cholt'e Fam Din. r 0 u n t a In • Waterfall $37.200. 837-5-191. .MUST BE SOLD Owners of 4 BR. ~ 4 BATHS BY ownPr, Sparusb stylt 3 SEYMOUR REAL TY this charming homr have At SRS,800 this is a "Best BR in the Golden Triangle. 1n41 Beach !31vd., Jltgn Bch adde<l , cfen and complrtely Buy". Goo<i vie\\S from 5 l'>7-65'1l hy appt only 0p<'n OJ 9 PM se-blt the kitchen With all rooms. Spanish interior, tlle O Sh ST/steel elec fixtures Incl .t. wrought Iron in tonnal over ores . Spanish Ele9ance! dlShwa.<>ht'r & t'ven a BBQ. dining rm. 3 Car garage. *BUILDERS OWN* for d1scrirruna1ing bu~-t>r! Wt believe this lo be lhf' Unique features & old "-Orld Super shsrp! 3 Bdrm, fam· best value in ·e\\opo rt I charm in tha cust. bit Lly rm. Atnum! Everythina Beach. Call Mr. Hams to • ae_ now. Priced reduced C kJwe SHOW HOME which could upgraded! Low interest 0 II, Banker not be replaced I o r loan! S~ . .500. Make your offu! ~110 COM, • .., • SIRO,OOl. Comp! privacy HAFFOAL REAL TY South Coast Real Estate w/water view from al-842-4405 Eve: Ml-2448 545-8424. mosl every room. 4 irplc, DELUXE OEN Up Up and Away 833-0700 644-2430 41i Ba, 4 car gar. Spacious BEACH w/ high cPilings. Trd dwn. 3 Bnrn;s: plus lgt. added den, with money worries when BARGAIN Onr 54S-7249. Magnilicenl lndscpg. Va- you buy lhis unique duplex. Beat:!. 3 BR., fa mily rm.. cant. ready to move in. One unit can eai;ily be con-bltns, 2 car gar. All this for 5 BR. 3 ha, 3-car garage. Honest price of $30,200. \'t rtC'd loa fivt room house only $29.500. outstanding ln dH png LEADERSHIP R. E. aod the good income !mm CAYWOOD REAL TY s1;;,ooo. Owner. 64~50!!6. 842-4466 847-1734 E v11. the other untts will make 6306 W, Coast Hwy., N.B. E t 81 ff Newport Beach 4 BDRM. Two Years New! Owners loss -your iain with this beautirutly appo111ted "Palermo" home in Harbor Virw hllls, localed on a spacious corner lot, (you own the land ). The owners really went "all-out" in up-grading! Love I y 4 hetlroom, <lining room and family room \\lib wel bar. A very special home for very special pl'oplr Call for an appointment wtlb charm. &16-nn. $59.900. Newport IMch SPECULATORS BARGAIN HUNTERS Income P....-rty 166 * NEW -UNDIR CONSTRUCTION - 10 UNIT APTS. 10 Delux 2 BR./2 BA. 2332 £den Av~. C.M. MU1t lfMI linbel1evable Buch lloubt to appredatel $17'5,000. bupina. Walk 1o ocean. 3 Owner. Evet M6-~ BR. 2 BA " din.Ina. ftrepl, HARBOR Hts, (2) 4-pJexe1, blnnii, dbl gar. FuU pri~ ~rfec:t cond, nr achoOla, $26,500, Ju&t listed, won'l twy, etc. (3) 2 BR. (1) 3 BR last t<ne! Ca!I 540.1151 <Open w/palio each bld1. Ooeed ev<'11. I g~. laundry nn, ~ yrs old, Principals o n I y , $Hl.950. 54> 7361, s.57·2878. (3) 2 8R/1 BA HOMES ~!1!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!11~!!!!!!!!!!! COMPLETELY * INVESTORS * REDONE Here It 1s -build your futu~. New crpta, new drps, new Vt1cant R-2 lot. Terrific du. tilt, new floor, new pa.lnt. pleic a~a. el~ to tht Huge lot. 2336 Elden Ave. ~ach. Good terrfls It. only CM $60,000. ~r. Eve~ STJ.000. 646·5302 MORGAN REAL TY :-1-+....,b,....,.lk:--to-be-ac-h-.-Srm_ho_ua.e_ 673-6642 675-6459 (2BR) iront, 2 apt.a rear. Ail Newpor t Heights 3 le&al rental unlla 011 2-R-2 lots. 3 i&raies. Owner. 2 ON LOT -107-409 Poppy, CdM MUST GOI 673-7n4. 8.utlMN Opportunity .. ;f THI PROOI' IS ~ block to beach 3 art 2 8A I THI PUDDING * Aui. datea avail. ...i.i ... DIS TRIBt.rroRSHIPS ap. ~..y polnted by the leadtr, _,0&,--via_&_al_IY_oo.._1000_. __ N E WP 0 RT fNTERNA-Costa Mesa TIONAL, e&n expect lucra· __ D_R_l __ V_E_B_Y __ tive e • r n 1 n r 1 wblle worklna only a tew hour& 1~74 Vlcaorta St. 2 bedroom p e r w te k re rt I ti n i home puually f\lnl1-hed. AUTOMATIC MER.CHAN· Shq ca.rpetini open beam DJSERS with n a t Ion-ally cfllln(, huae rear yard. C&I1 known ' 'PUDDING .t: 646.1394 or 673-0170 Avail· FRUIT CUP" Snacla, and able August bt. Chfidren « collectlna the money baxea. pe~ OK. What a.n euy way to make -E-L-EG_ANT ______ _ 3 Br. den. 2 aty. money! U you a.re reliable, Antique decor. $3SO mo. incl have a rood cu. and can gardener. 557-<KU. unmed tately 1nvut $800.00 to $2100.00. you may be Lido Isle ~lected to Join yoor succesa team. Drop us a note ahow· lng your aJncere lnte~•t. and we'll sbow you bow. ~nd name, address, and phone number To: Newport fr:tematlonal Dtttributlng Company Dept. No. 211A 3700 Newport B I v d . ; Newport Beach, Calif. 92660. WATERFRONT ' Br. %14 Via. Lido Nord. Cell (213) 934--0911 or (213) 27()...4547. Newport Beach BA YSHORES, winter rental. Sept. 11 to JUM 10. 2 BR, secluded patio. SJ)(). No pets 54S-3225. CIPan. 3 br homt + rf'ar 1 -::-P"'"R--IJ\-1E~p-ro_pe_r_ty_.-3-77-W-. say- br home on N. Newport 3t, C.M. Cu build 14 unit!, * * * Blvd.. nr Westminster. 2 older rented houses + Mrs. T imothy Deluca Lease. Luse Option BAYSHORES 4 br, 3 ba, Winttt rent.]. $325 & mo. Call SU-5211. Larg-e lot. ct zone. OUer $26 :l()() Call 213 661•3900 11 garages~ storage on 55x425 6182 Christy Drive · · · lot. Principals only, $37,900 Hunt ington 811ch 11m-l pm ot aft 6 pm, Bkr. 545-7361, 557-2876. · You a.re the winner ot San Juan Capistr ano BY owner, 2 houses, corner 2 tickets to the HILL TOP ACRE Jot. Downtown H.B. $1500 Southland 3 Bdrms., 2 baths. Family down, $300 income or live Home & Garden rm.. sep. util. rm. SWIM· rent free. 536--0438 eves. Show MING POOL. All Ll~cated on Industrial Property 168 ANaAtHthEe lM l.20 acre hilltop with &Teat ......,.,,,_...._ _____ _ valley view. Horse r; M-1 ZONED <Rli Bch) Of-CONVENTION welcome. Aslong $42,500. fices. i;torage yard. Ideal CENTER Newport Heightl 4 BR, 3 BA pool home. Consider ahort term lae. Refs. req'd. $450 incl pool ca.re, gardener. 646-2290. Houses Unfurn. 305 General your spirits soar: South ol 541-1 290 as u SELLING Balboa Island e EXCLUSIVE AGENTS e YOUR HOME? Call 49~1124, Realtor tor contractor or? Income July JG.Aui. 8 the highway. Do not delay but call today for deta.lls SALES -LEASES Ftee appraisal • We buy San Clemente $6600 yr. ~2.500 F.P. Will Plea~ caJ.l 642-5618, ~ .. 314 FREEll Land lords-Owners 67HSSO. \·0 ' THE REAL '" ESTATERS * SO. BAYF RONT * •. .;J equities. Personal attention. consider exchange 1 or between 9 and 1 pm to LITTLE ISLAND &. fi \~ 2S yrs. expeneoce. 2 ADJOINING delux triplex-larger Industrial or apt. claim your tickets. (North 3 BR. 3 ba. older beach • J'\,~ COLLINS & WATTS HARBOR VIEW HOMES on es. all bltns, incl intercom, 84ti-2769 or 842-1435. County toU-tree numbet' is hou~e: frplc & \'iew PLUS «Sf ~ 1' r " 96:-5523 Eves~ 642-0427 the park by the pool. alarm, v11c gystems, pvt Lott for Sale 170 5-l0-12201 l BR l b f 1 1 -"· Panoramic v1Pw from this patios. elec gates. frplc, .-..._ ........ _______ * * * ---.l~ • a. urn. l"f'n a over :1 COOL, COOL, WATER home. 5 br, 3 ba. ram & din. gar. door openers, Close to CHOICE lot. R-2. l00x135. BUY -LEASE nnl. gar. PLUS pier & dock. it._'."' .teaJty Lovely Pool (H & F ) AFFILIATE Get In on the , ,, tr, 1'. 11 , •rl OR LEASE OPTION Finest foe. & avail, first .,..,. Large den! 4 BR, 3 bath· 2 frpks, lush crpls & drp<;. heh & shpg. $7400 dwn per Paved alley. 348 E • lucr11tive end of machine EASTSIDE COSTA MESA nme Ill $140.000. Prlllcipals 2414 Vlsla Del Oro rooms! Many xtras! Priced 3-car garage. Owner "ill unit. 642-3490. Rochester St., Costa Mesa. sales. 14 state area. Active .... bed 2 only Bkr 642 01n hPl p finance. Leasf' hold Sent• An• Close to 17th St. 5hopplna or g·'ent. N!O cocn. u•rPe l"()(lm bath horn<' · . · . Newport Beach 644·1133 nght. • 11 i7<I0""""'1\ We will refer tenants {!) you FREE of c~ .. Many de.irable tenants on o u t waiting list. ALA Rentals • 64$.3900 e DARLING Oump·2 Br, encl pr, kid/pets ok. Avl today $125. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 WI.th t 17 ft 22 fl h S.17,900. 644-4960. Oppn this -.......... -..._....._ ................... ....__ area. $22.CXXl. 673~9509. ----------arge x Pam 4 HR, 2 BA, family rm, eltc. El Toro HAFFOAL REAL TY B i -...1 ceiling lamily room with kit w/panlry. Dining rm or 812-4405 Eve: 541-2446 wknrl. J900 Port WE'ybridge HOUSE FOR SALE LAGUNA Beach, small lot. UI neu Want.u 210 • COZY Cottare·2 Br, f/y!'d, loads of glass and other rx· ,;tudy. New carpel 5 • 3 BR, Lake Forest, 4 mos----------_P_l_.,_N_._B_. ------BY OWNER Ail util. $6,000. WANTED to buy utablished end rar. kids/pets. $130. lras. Double garage !IN'pl1tN', plltin deC'k & new. Ctpa, drps, elec ap. ~rvlnt BAYCREST. 1st week on 3 Br. 2 Ba. family-<lining rm. 774-2753 · ALA Rentals e 645-3900 I 11 ~-,;;miliiiiii;m;;; ____ ;.;;~ k t y 4 BR 11 BR rarpf't/rlr11pes S 2 3. 9 5 o ----------gardening route : Newport w a ey acCC'l's. Leasp at sprinkler!>. $32.900 w/ 103 phances. beamed t Plllllgs, • mar e · mmac liJ9-3143 2325 w. Lori Ln. Mount•ln, D111rt, Beach, Cost& Men area. • FINE LOC! 2 ....... _,,1 S275 month or ~1000 WILL on. 549-200;) for llpp't. front yd in, beach club WHAT'S YOUR • • • a studio) 21'°' b11. Fam rm, R 17.a .,., "-744 u . ..,, .... · ~11nta Ana •sort ~ •"'"""' · f/yd "'dll/ ..,50 :\iOVE YOU JN on $29,950 mtirshp. $35,500 830-9212 ... pleasure? Swimming. b1-Dm rm. sep brklst rm. llv 1ar. , "' peta. •• · with liberal terms. I Balboa Penin5ula cycling, golf or tennis. Walk rm w/hi-beam c e 111 n g. ()pen houllf' S..t & Sun 10 ACRES $1595 FP Money to Loan 240 ALA Rentals • 64~3900 Fountain Valley 2 5 pm ----...--~--""* to schools. churches & <lecorator drps, filah for · Nr new freeway & offramp. 1 4 BR d 3 b 1 t TD L • FR.E5HH It cltan-2 Br. nu . en. a. Nr. Racttuet RED TILE ROOF shop'g. 5 Bdrms .. famlly boat. lovely yarrt. Windward Unlversrty Puk Riverside County, dlrt s oan Cluh & bo11t ramp. S59,500 rm., a1r.ronrl., 2;, ba's. Fee Ln, :-,12% assum. loan, roads, acettalble. Betwn cpts, lrt yd, enel ~ar, _..-..._, Marshal Rrally 67~ land. S.J9,900. S59.500. 64ti-2027. 4 Br tnwnhouse. 21,, ba, 2 Jake & city, 10% dwn, EZ 7% INTEREST kids /pef.3. Sl?O. I Very, very Spanish 3 bed· i d h frplc1. Model home, .na.ny terms. For future invttt· 2 d TD L ALA Rentals• 645-3900 Corona del Mar room townhouses. choice . ·11 Harbor Hi9hlands P'<trai;. Xlnt 10 c a l i 0 n . n oa n .. WATERFRONT I ;;un~~~~~~:~.tJo~:~~ . • . ' re I $36, 9 50 ~~~~!( ~\s~~~ H::~lt~ ,::~:~1•11~!· kt Ar· Terms b&.ed en equJty. • fi;,s ~/D~hi,.1:;11; r: ell Broker 842 2535 REALTY 4 hr<lroom with f1repla.:I', for appt rowhrad, lot within 250· or 642-2171 545-061l pet ok. $175. Rrauti!ully redtcorated, 3 5 · • --hutlt-ms. hardwood floors iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lake & boat dock for sale or ALA Rentals • 645-3900 larSte bedrooms. 31~ baths, California livinCJ Univ Park Centrr, ll'Vlne and Jnvely p111lo. Walk to all trade. S29.500. 67~199 or Serving Harbor area 21 Yl"I· lt\•tng room. formal dining 3 hedroom, 1 i, bath town-•-i!C!!al!!!l !!!A!!!ln!!yr!!!im!l!e!!!!'!833!!!!!!"·08"!~~-~chools. Library. park and Rul Eatat.. ~ 213/246-4374. Sattler Mortgage Co. • 4 BR. + Den, nr kh. Evenmgs Call !"I 18-~~.;.; 00 YOU HAVE- 5 membe rs In your family?? It 80, ~e can Sf'll )OU th is great 4 hP<lmom home on rClOm. hreakfast room a I . sz_ -tennis cow·ts. Call 646-7l71.. General l'5 E. 17th Street Bltns, CID. huie yd. Kld1/ large gunny kllchen on the house. Buyer s choice o! 4 BR. 21,.. ba tOIA-'llhouM>, 2,400 Ranches, Farms, ~ts. $200. ba , 1 tud rnlor carpets. Under $23.000. sq ft, lrg tam rm, liv rm & Groves 180 c h F t f AL a. Rentals e .1..a1t3900 '. Pus a proper 6 y Good l'~ountam Vallty loca d I d $.,., 7""' • as as • "' -~ the "NEW " f . II . A Program for JU!".t Sl00.00 as I down payment. This home is ready lo o c c u p y • 1 carpets, drapf's, 2 lu.x· unous baths. Full pricP ts $23,900. CaU us now -wp'U s-how you the house and tx- plain the program Walker & Lee \\1th fireplace & wetbar All • · 10 rm, n scp. ...,, .AJ, this coupled with orr strePt t1rn. Broker 842.2535 Owntr 833-1337. Acreage for sele 1$0 GIANT houseful of near new gur~1 parkin~. space ror a Hunt ington Beach Laguna Beach 10 AC. ranch 111e. NO Medit furn. exllmple: 8' blk W T RF NT DOWN R ,_ LI j naug sofa & loveseat, nevl'r sw1mm1nit pool and a large EVE YTHfNG A E RO e1pon J.am Y ust d S -El · . R LARGE FAMILY? I k . S25 use 150. erant Spanish private p.:itiQ, makP this the a e over per mo. k' bd t H'd t j · l NEW' Charming Concfominium on t 960 1\11,7 mg-si rm SP • 1 e· h t & 2nd Tr ust Deeds FREE APPRAISALS Costa MtH lnv11tm1nt 548.7711 •nytlm• mos PXC' '1.llg o fertng of the • This Ill the home for you: the hay DelighJful view _ pymn 1· o-vv-t a-bed. 5' coffe,. table. 2 end yrar tor only $164,000. Call Owners have uprradP<l ••he ir 2700 % tr. on ~~ acre, pro-pool, pier & slq'l. BEAUT 2~~ acre mohile commodes. Very reason· LOANS! LOANS! LOANS! 673-8550 for detailB. h 11 fcss1onally landscape<l Pool home stleli. Trees & view. ablf'. n4 "''0 ""18. We give the moat. Private, ome and now must se . · · S7!l,500 ,.,..<rt" Beauhfut 3 henroom anti 3 tahlP liJZe family room with TEO HUBERT & ASSOC. ~~i~Z~~.s. Call owner at FINE !urn -Movin& •mailer dlifllfied. Buy, trade, sell. bath home. Bkr, 842-2535 fireplace, wtt bar & 11pac-3471 Via Lido. 675-Sj()() h om e q II I c k . d ts k ~ Away from downtown area. 1ous ocean view deck. Coun-2426 N rt Bl d * MUST SELL * Cemetery w/chatrs. Wall m 1 r ro r , ewpo v · try 5t·Ae kitt:hen Massive Co t p b k "-'" 1'02 :n BY O\VN Lots/Cry""'s 156 Vanity bnch, -rr tbl, ~rn•r as awn ro er .,.... " 2790 Harbor Blvd. st Ati&ms 111one ltreplace in living ER ,., ....... w • M5-04S7i Open .111 9 PM CORONA DEL MAR room. Dnuble g&r8.ie. .._ Beautitul Bluffs 2~00 aq ft HARBOR RPst Cemetery ~t tbl, !Able Imp, & more-ttak, Mortga911, WONDERFU L WEST CLIFF The encJo<;e<l r>ntry leads to a charmm1t 3 BE>droom, 2 bath wnh tompletely en· do~e~ lan111 - 1-Block I lnng \o 1ratf1c street - I Lo\t-ly lanrli.ra ping -nn~,. to a.JI sch<l(lf~. S.li' ,j()(), Pl10ne '73-85.;Q fnr a ppoin tmenf. HOME & APT. Bdrms .. 3 baths; laundry Cnndo. view of water &. ( 1 S200 w p 0 wlnt antq wht . St e 2734 T l'Ult Dttdl 260 --16' 28' FAMILY 1 h G Bel I F b or r.a P, . rite . ' r--->111aJ Dr CM """UH I ' I r 3 fr, choose irom. L~ 4 BR x room VaC'ant 8: available Jg Is. reE'n l oe. a • Box 525, Ptne Grove, Calif. L<U\.I ' • .no-..... NEED CASH tri·level homP + 1 BR ap1. ROOM no" HUOO. c..u _ ulou~ 26xl8 den. Redurni to 97l66j. R11I Estttt SlOOO OR MOPtE 10'; <In. Sll:l.~lOO. And everylhmg met to go S.J9.j()(} 64.J-1606 or 833-0173 Exchan"• 182 .. _ • Thrl f R •• Comm.rc·11 1 • 1 =" .. vco ft or a e ... PERRON REALTY co. \\IHI ti 3 BR. 2 BA 8.lld AO~an BAYSIDE Vlllll):f' 1 sr& "''2 7 d On! S24.,,,. Propertu 158 YOUR •qu1·1y c•n do mor• Estate loan. Upon approval .., ·l 71 · inin~ area Y ·"JV den, 2 ha :\ewly d,.coratert. • "' " "' th R I Es b I -• for you through a well use e money however :yuu Honeymoon ea tate Y REAL ESTATE ~~~~a~~wP~I~ ~~~c~:2~· INVESTMENTS desiaMd exchanre. No area ltkt-. Also ask a bout our C M VAY Wint "MAJOR" hmltallon. By appt, Mr. unsecured peMiOnaJ lot.n1. Otta9e c l 190 Glenrityre 51 Boat shp avatl No children S 0 494-9473 ~9-0316 nr pPls. lmmed occuriancy TENANTS-LEASEBA(l{S Stu le. 54&.M50. ~,, outh· f. The· 2 OFP'ICE t:NIQ\JE CONTFMPORARY S23,950 675-4995, 8~R-886. COMMERCI AL Real Estate Wanted 114 Hi9hway 893-8533 'iH-Q.l~ ~ BR. & dt'n or ;, BR. Beam * EASTBLUfF :. BR ... & APT BLD'GS . • TH•l"T Hnw ahou1 lh1a Jn Corona 522 950 Cf'lls . lgt frpl , kllch. <By ownPrl W. R. DUBOIS, INC. * CASH BUYER * 620 Newp8o;! ~~~ter Drive d,..J ~lar' A !;harp 2 hffimnm 1 "/bltn~ & Jam. rm. Patnted Lux urious txPc hnmt-Iormlll RE a ~ < . rQ,_kers ) 833-~5 "' 2 hath home only e 1hort 4 Bedrms, 2 Ba. bltm R/O, muralli hy famous Laguna Dini ng rm. 3 ba, Frplr ____ ....______ Don't list your hemt, r V1' pty wishes 2nd for 4 hr. REPOSSESSIONS w11ik to the hPach A sur-j dishwshr, fil m rm, lrg Iii• arll~t $36.950 -OH<'r 1fown I Woo<led, S49M firm. &14--0j30 Income Prtperty 166 1ell It to us. 3 ba/L1do Isle home. 10% Sparkling clean homPs, 110me pr1~1ng v11lue al only S42,500. I rm w fPI. !illdin.it <llXlrs '" Mf~SJON REALTY 494-0i.ll NWPT HGTS-2 lge br, l bi: e COSTA MESA Save time, save money. al 10 pl!> f\T.r2697. newly painter! & c11rpctcd. 2 Fnr ll ppninlmrnl to SPe call ' p11110, FA hi, o\oerslztri <lb) 1 IRVINE Cove res1dence-LgP l lge kit &. strv porch, rim Bamboo Village 12-2 BR lmmed. firm ofter. Broktr 3, 4 &. 5 bdrms. Some "'1th 67a-R.>:i0 ll'lflay. bar L~,. "4'drms. <"rJ)lt.. pool/patio. Prlnc1pals only. rm, di;( gar. Xlnl loc., Gsrflen Houses all w/att. • LEADERSHIP r>mls. FHA-VA conv. terms, rlrps. 61' x !19' !encd lot , Shown by ;ippt 494-S&ii S2!UOO. Owner 548-4321. gara(PS & patios. O n INVESTMENTS e -·--- .___H_""_"_f_or_R_en_t___,) I ~ ] _______ .. ___ _ e PR.I BCH. CdM. 2 Br/2 B1, f/yd. Child&: pet. m&. ALA Rentals e 64.S.3'00 e YOUR. Own Pool-3 !Sr + den, 2 Sa, trplc. chdrn ok. Pool &erv prtWided. $275. ALA Rtnt•ls e 64~3900 1999 Harbor 1'1vd, Q.f $140 -LAGUNA BEACH 2 Br Cotta.ie. trplc tncd yd, stove. &15-0lll SITO -SPACIOUS 4 Br, 2 Ba dbl ran~. l"aM.ily wtl- C0"1•· "5-0U 1 $135 -. 2 BR. home, I.ts ldtch, nice ya rt!. iarac. Cluld olf, 64>0lll JlOO -!5 BR. Stove, cpts, drps, far, fncd yd. Kids/ pets welcome. 64~0lll S130 -NlCE 2 Ir. 910ve, cpta, drpg, child/pet ok. from $20,000 to S.10,000. Jd1;i-pcf, 5 yr-; new Laguna N iguel * THE BLUFFS_•_ valu1ble 172x204 1 blk Ban.le 842-4466 & 540-5336 I COLLINS & WATIS INC If 3 BR, 2i.., ba, tamtly rm. nt America. 2 ml. ocea.n. 8843 Adams Ave. 962-j:>23 _ __ • MONARCH BAY I V1~" convenient to park Income Sl.940/mo. Good lr--------~ SANDPOINTE * SAVE-Call owner. 3 br, 2 962_...71 ( :.d .a J 3 BR. with viPw SB!l.500 shop~ing & schools. a; term.11. Gail Page owner. 545 Fmi nclel I • 2100 6i5-0111 HouHs Furnli htd I Dramauc +bedroom, 2'ti ball\ J h11 , R-2. CoM, So of hwy 4 BR k dl'n, 4 ba Sl8'J,500 owner. 644-5275 after 6 Bernard St, C.M. 64ti-44.SO. _ . two story stucco home 1n 67~2399· WATERF~ONT 4 Bdrms & For that Item under $50, New 27 Adult Apt Orange County's m(ISt con-CLEAN DUPLEX $750 TOTAL DOWN den, 5 ba 11• S2JO.OOO try the Penny Pincher S422·000 8u1ln111 * * * venient localJOn, Only one Two stparate umu _ 1 for rhi; 3 BR. 1,,, BA beauty Laguna N lgutl Realty House Hunti ng? Watch the Webb Broker (642-4905) Oppo,tunlty 200 Mic:hHI Schumecher year old but fully and b-droom, 1 bath llnO 2 :"Ion vet~ ran buy too with 83~5050 49'-5791 OPEN ROUSE calumn. Stll the old stuff 2086 Pomona Ave. beaubfully landsea~. near hedroom, 1 bath. Walking hmlll'lf down on P"HA 22102 llOUSt HunUng? Watch the A tood want ad i. a eood I Buy the new 1fuff PLASTfCS Costa Mt .. i1cbools, parks " p I a 1 di!.tanc,. lo all Corona del Call for det.&lla Won't last OPEN HOUSE column. , investznent Call 642-5678 Ir Saver * Manufacturing * You are the winner of grounds. 3 mmutes to 3 fret-~tar. Well maintained, low at $21.000. ' -;---..;;:t;l'V Exl'l&J\dinr manutactwini l ticket.I to the "'1.Y•, South Coast Plaza. mainftonance S42.500 _ Call co. rf!Qui.re. man to oper.\~ Southlan41 Sn&g carpeting, f1replace. 673-8550 ~see. u. s. AFFILIATED ~ am . plant. Producta art pre-Home & Garden $3",900. Owner selling prin-__ BROKERS __ ~ ffQ-0 ~ '-K. _ f)-C ~Q. • sold. Mu.st be able to 1u~r-Show r1paJs only. 557-31U. lfonnerly Brashear Rlty} P~ I." ~).. .., 'b 'P(,/" V Vise production, purehutn1. at the M d M 847-1507 The l'unfe with the Bu1°/"'./n Chuc'-!• shlppint( l recelvtna. $B,OOO A~AHlilM r. an rs. 1• //( inve1t. req'd, S300 per week CONVENTION Executive! Spanish Beauty! Q Rt0rt0nge lettt rt of 4h• to 5tart + protjta which CENTl!R C M four x rambled words b.. hould """' I ed 'ES, thl$ home 11 the very osta ... s.en looking for thal Med· low to form four simple wordt. 1 earn pa, OJ te ect July 3o.Au1. S fi ne«t and is loeattd in one • • itetTanean motif but couldn't $50,()(X) per year. Your mo,t Pleue call 64i·5678. e:l(t. 314 flf the very finest 8~8s In FOR aale by owner-4 br l'l11ord what you saw? SZS.990 W Y M H I S ti&±d 1n\leltl1atJon lnvjted, between 9 &lid l Pm to Newport Bay. It features 4 oome nr schools k ghpg. ts the price on this one. CAll l i 1 RM'a exl!hang~. Tor per-claim your t1cketa. C~ortb l&rfe bedrooms, r a m 1 I y S2S,OOO Aasumable FHA us. 8kr. 842-2535 IOllal interview, phone CclW'lty toll·tree numhr 11 room and N baths. The Loan •t 5~ 3 · 1115 Oonet 114l8m.5310 ~xt H. 540.1220) ,,, General $150 -2 ~R HOME w/.'f, It. fncd yard. Good lee.don. Chiltiren/~u ok. 64S-Olll BEACON * 645-0111 3 Ba 2 ba. unt. twJrne w/ pool at $300 month. CoUep Park, Coat& Mesa. 2 9~. house unf. $225. AvtU end Aue. N'pt Bch. ean: mal "2-22.Sl z.w.. associated Bf"•)l<(RS· IH 1\l i'Ok:. ?01~ W Bolb..,.., tll J6<>1 -$ Bed~. l bath. N;uatie ramUy rcom wHb tire~. Ju re bonu1 ?'Com aJ>ov. dlll cu aar• ... Ut5 per month. call ~ Atlt b' T•J"rY ~=~•~;":~,~.~ .~ •La~~~· ::~~·b<~':~: l?:fllilP N E T \A ' J TO BUY OR * * * really eompllmtnt• the lge yard. Sm oown or ~~ _ _. j SILL A IUSINOS S7S -~Giii'I~. l""1l ;;w ther beautiful decol'l tlng Haum~ S189/mo pymnu. VACANT t HOLLAND ll,fS. S~LIS ltwJu., compl tun. Pet olt. ;atures 1n thf' home. The S24.000. By owner 646-31.39. 3 J•ro~ b~drm~. 2 bath.~. ram· C E T A H '"The &-oker with £mpath1'' EACON * 645-0111 ..,._......,.... ____ ..,... __ _ ,, i 1716 ~"'-e Av• CM -tASTf£Dt' Cc>lfa ~ 3 11rge cover e ti pat.lo ASSUME my 6"0 GI loan. dy rm, COrTlflr Int tor a boat Confuefus soy: "Mon can-"" .... 1& •• • • ~ IllrCELY rum Ba h-M.rm 2 bltll ~ -.. .. t.. ,·erlooks 11 be11utlful ya.rd Total pymnt incl taxM & In-or <'&mper. SJl.jOO, Ynur • Je ho f f M5-otlf0; 5f0.0IOI aD1Umt -• c · • 6 #• .. AY ilh numerous fruit bearing snr Sl64. $0000 cash l"Pq'd. te-nna I not c rr1: wl • c f orty for We ne.4 -1e• peopl. T«logrt. ~~;..rttrir· UtU pd. ~!~'~:,.!!° .... ~.t.~~ tru -~"' ,_ Id 1 f p a T E T 0 I two-. . 1-tr ,... . .,.. -.... ~rv"" Ullvuu UD&. i !I tzwa ... ~ .. ell Ot' Take sm 2nd. ~. Real Estate by I\ 0 C,omplet• the chuckJe quettd Nlce ut1i! m 0 BEACO~ * "5-0111 ranit. oeimtr let wttlt 1~11;,:1·0::'~ t~rd~ 2 Br, 1sr11 1ar. fe~ .yd. MCVAY ~ I I .I · I I' ...... :!.:~f!. ~ t:1 a::. Art 1,ucry, tram.., 1m... ' 'LOS AL rtii ,, ~ ftne.d )'Ud. ~st at I* ced J11hl t $».!m close 10 achoola .l Ahoppmc. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,-... -.. .,.. ~ uud turftlture. Very Prich of Own.rahlp pu ITIOntb or ~don to i..w. 2313. & • ~~136.272 Cotta MtN St. • lPER"INfTRSNUM81N SEQUREOA•rs I' I' r r. r r I' ,. I attractive stert. low ttnl, Horn• Call Broacer ae.N9l. 54.~00« R93-3.'>3-, ~ - -[ -- . • -leod leue. um l"tQ'd Incl Family with teeM~ ell I TIMI FOR • 41:,R. :a~· c:;:~·· ~r:-. ~1~: BY owner. 3 l!R Huntln(tbn ! ~~:c:~:c~ lEtlf~ I . I I I I I r I I !;~7--&~ ~t~~s::~n !,.::; :,. Nth, l:u~t ~ QUICK CASH :w>-2.rn 751 Olympic C'ontlnental contkl w/alnk 1 CAfE, equipped. Jde&l for P'r mo. PP!o:t,"IU:.ach THROUGH A 'S A breeze .. M'llt your nY-oww-WP!otlil;-81Ur{3 ~ntrr $1500 dwn, T.O.P. orian1c: foods nr eatertni. Zl.3. 429-9551. DAILY PILOT ma with ease. UM! OallY I hr, Irr 11tlo, Ir& fl!nced yd. I 968-9641. eti-. Rua. Ml-l149. l'ut reaul1$ a.-. juat • phone tint 0As..<;lfled. 642-!i4i?A rn 950 fi11>-1132. l For best re~ull'' 642-5678_ SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 &-II tht' olct atuU call Away 612.-5678 WANT AD I 'I I ' •• -·.>, - -... . .. ' ¥ .... ': ,. ' .. ,J • • ,!Xa:t:.., r a: -- •• • I• ' < I " • , ' ff 11.'ll Y PllOT TuMday, July 27, 1971 ·~"" I~ ~[ _ ... _"" -~ HoUIM Unfum. 305 HouMt Unfum. :165 lop!. ~nfurn. :165 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. US Gueat Home ________ , Oener•I Irvine Costa Mesa t BDRM, 2 buN, nlct: lenc-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;1---------1 Just far Single Adults "'yon!'°'""''· N•• "''"' 2 BR. z b"'"' .......... .,., CASA de ORO SOUTH BAY CLUB and green sh&&: carpets 2 BR, 2 baths, den ...... pxi CASUAL C&.111. L.ivir.a 1n a APARTMENTS thruoul. Single garage. Rent j 3 BR, 2 b.'1., atnum .. SJ25 i.r.11.rm Medlterratiean t1lmot1· Newport Beach at $22!>.00 p<>r nll>, Call 3 BR., 2'~ Qa 's, Jam. r111 SJ2S pht>re Spaciou. a:ilor co-SM Irvine Ave. Broker ~~. 3 BR., 2 ba:~. OOnu,, rm S~ ordin.ited apl.l . de.sli:lll!!d & (Irvin~ :lJ1d 1611'!1 2 Br, complelely furn , nr Delaney's Year round l'IJll· ta!. Util pd. '2'.l5 n10. 67J.:m2 GOV 'T R.£POSSESSJON, low dn. Assume low u1t loan. Easy qualilying. B k r . 642-42-45 anyt101e. 3 br DOLl.HOUSE Fu!! shag rugs & hrdwd floon.. Occup Aug 1st. 42ft0. 714/933-127.11. Back Bay -I BR, conve11 den, 21 2 BA. din r m, fam rn1. cvd p<dlO, 4 BR., 2'-1 ba ., rr.ni. rn1 $345 furnished ior 1t)'le &: oon\-(714) 64S..OS50 3 BR., dt>n, 2\1 b.1's •• $365 fort • Hea~ed pool •_Klich· Corona d•I Mar 4 BR .. 2 baths, family room ('.I w/ lndtrect lighting •l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii,I in '!Urtle Rock ...... $350 Deluxe RIO. Adults. No pets:. I' \\'£HAVE OTHERS 1 BR.-f l75' turn. "!lob 11rllil .' -- -1lrn llor "SINCE 1946" Ls! \\'estem Bank Bldg. lini\·ersity Park Days 833-0101 Nights UTILITIES INCLUDED 361 \V. Wil90n 642-1971 *$35 WEEK & UP* Studio & 1 BR apts. SUNNY ACRES MOTEL l b~Y soolh ol Fairgrounds 2376 Ne14·port Blvd. 5-18-9735 o.C::,, ~:; ~~ ON TEN ACRES l A 2 BR. Furn. & Unturn. l''ireplaces I pr1v. paUoa. Pools Tennis Contnt'J Bk1s1. 900 Sea l...ane, CdM SH-2611 (MacArthur nr COASt Hwyl ..,,.,-.,,;~,=.:.:~.,,-~-I NE\\1-A gn-at place lo live REAL Value! Cpts, drps dshl4iir POOL 2 BR' ' the yrar round: V.'alk to • • • s. shops \\'alk lo beacti 2 Br 2 JXlOl. Bier &12-4Siij. Laguna Beach Balboa Peninsula 2 BR, den. view. nr pier, MOST desirable a rea on 1he i,tores. $260 mo. or lea.Sf'. point. 52)J f l. on the hay I~'=''='=' ~"="~,J~ly'=49+-0:.:.c=5119:::.... __ w/pier & noar for lge. boa!. Laguna Hills mod . Sl4;i. 1\fa1ure adt1lls only no B c. 1 p · · ""ls "-•" I .,,,..,. p . ,. a. ,. l'JJ c. flV patio. Kll. ,~ . ..,.u1e . '"'""J ac1 IC bit CJ . T f I A\·e. 54S-6878 or 642-4429. ns. ose in gar. ast~ u C.C.~~~::;:.:::.;:::,.;::::._I decor. 330-A !11argueri!e. * REDEC. Lrg I BR. 1.'<!n· 67!",...11\73. Cost• Mesa DELUXE APARTMENTS NOW AVAILABLE Costa M•s• l.RG 3 Br. 2 Ba, riew •ha.le cpl, $169/mo. Newly decor. Nr OCC. Carport. ;67-6151. Atr Cond . f'rplc'1 • 3 Swim-J BR, 2 B11, ne.,. drps, cpts. ming Pool~ • Health Spa • bltru, palio. S 16 5 Imo. Ttnni.s Crts • Ga.me & Bil-645-4647 or 548--0324. Han::! Roc-m. l BR cpts/drps $115 1 & 2 BEDROOM ' 642-mD Ffl.Ol'.'1 $140 MEDITERRANEAN 1 _E_•_••_Bl_u_ff ___ _ VILLAGE NEWPORT BEACH 2400 ll&rbor Blvd., C.flt. Villa Granoda Apts. (71<1) 557-8020 ~~our bedrooms with baJoon. 1'.ENTAL O~~flCE le'! above & lllelow. Graciou• _o_P_E_'_N_1_o_A_M_T_0_6:_P_M_ 1 living &: quiet Gln'Ollnding FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. for family with ~hUdn>n. Near Corona del Mar High School. Fireplace wet bar & built·ln kitchen a'ppliances. 835 AfUGOS WAY 644,.29'Jl 2 & 3 BR's ColciweU, Banker & Co. Private-patio. pool • lndlv. Managing Agent 541-5221 laundry fac. NE:\YL Y d('C()rated 2 Br-2 ba Near Orange Co. Airport & upstairs apt Bltins, crpls, UCI. AduJts 01Lly, drps, 2 carports, pool. l 20122 Santa Ana Ave. Child or pf'\ OK. S250 1110. fl.1gr, Mrs. Joachim, Apt J-A PHONE: 675-6050 CAN'T BE BEAT SJNG LE STORY Sou!h ~a Atmospt\ere 2 Bit • 2 BATH Carpets &. dfl>!I Air Condllioncd Private Pat1QtJ flEATED PO;s. Plenly of la Carpon & S1or11 hlDDEN V1LLAGE 2500 South Salta Santa Ana • 546-1525 J l-feate.<1 pools Large Clubhouse 'le. BBQ Child Care Center GNal new I 2 & 3 Bctrms SOUTH COAST VILLAS llOl MacArthur Blvd. Apts., Furn. General SJ6-11823 or Unfurn, 370 * PRIVATE ROOM tor ~lderly lady. Brighi - <"het-ry garden 5Utroundb1gs, Nutr1uous nit"a.!a, A\'ail Aug I. Catt 548-tT:i.l, DJ-:SK lp&.e@ avlillab.le $50 mo. WW prov\cM tumJtun at $5 mo. Anllwer\rw 9'rVf 1.vailahl~. 222 f'oreal A.w, Laguna Beai.:h. 494-9466 DELUXE OFF'TCES, ~rn prof h1.11ld1tli, l'rpls/drf'S STIJDIO garage a.pt-cl06e to air rorh'I, 1>1rupl• paridna:, NHYC & bey bearh. Sleeps Jlunting:ton Harbour uea. 2 2 or 3. Ava.it Aug 10 thru Units 750 1q. fl. Da,.y or Latiur Day. SlOO wk or f350 eves: 714/839-34U. Summer Rentals 420 for ·1 wkli. 673-0820. DESK apace av&lla.ble $50 7•-7B~A7LBO~~.--t's'~L-A_N_D7 mo. Will pl'O'\llde furniture JIOTEL. Apl.i;..Rooms. By at $5 mo. Answertnc lla'\rlee Day/Week or-Mo nt h . available.1787~Beach 8lvct 67S-J61J. llw1Ungton Beach. 642--C21 Nl::"'PORT on the. beach. Ju-PROFESSIONAL BJd&'. 6: Jy 31-Aui:. 1~; Sept. 4-11. 5Q ft . Air-cond, crpls, drpi:, Li;:r Allr. 646-4833. i;d parkifl&. Xlnt 1oc 350 E . J7th St. C.r-.1. PETE B.A.R.-LACL:NA Beach· 2 BR hill-RF:TT RLTY 6U-4JS3 i;1 de rot rage. S25o for last 2 1 ~=~--------1 wks 111 Aug_ 497.Jsl8. DES1\ space ava.ilable $50 mo. Will provide fumlture 2 Br nr Ba.y & Clubhouse. at $5 mo. Ansv.'Crin&' aervloe Lido lstr. $1j0/wk . available. 305 No. E l $<185/nio. Cal l 673-718.'>. C am ino Re al , Sa.o BALBOA Jslanrl, altr 2 hr, Clemente. 492-44~ line loc; nice patio. Owner: e 300 SQ. FT. S 6 5 /m o . 673-1503. Crpt'd, drp'ri, Cotta Mesa. •",'1 1,_1 Joc, 1 "°"111•351 carpo~t~ 3 BR, J'~b,-.-b~J-Ji-11s_:_3_y_c_o_Jd_. "' no pe s. rno. -JVV 1700 f I I J\1r-rond 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 car \V. Hamilton 6 4 6-416 0 l oy,·er dup ex unit. gar. h1d pool, ld5epd. 1 yr 545--0760 . ' \Valk to beach. !!hopping, * KIDS WELCOME Vecat:i.-n~R~e-n7t-a7fs--4~25 1 ~c_a_11_646-__ 2_JJO ____ ~~I ,;-;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jBJG BEAR LAKE, Business Rent•I PALM MESA APTS. evecy<hmg '"'" ""' ""'"" =-:-------1 546-6215 1'H,.,_u-n7ti~n-g71-on-8~o=ac~h,_.._ __ CO~PLE'I'EL Y ORLEANS APTS. lt>ase. :-O!atl!re •di!'. Ph, aft · i;chool. Gas, water, garden-0 ~ SPACIOUS I ly 1 & Z B t-1 VE JN 'fODA Y. Atlrar:-6pin (7141 S:ID--0787. ' ove r. Ing. Cp!s/drps inc!. Yr. -'---------Pool. rec rm. $160 lo $18[). l Lease. $300/mo. 509 Acacia. ADULTS ONLY t1ve 2 BR APT. $159. ALL Mission Viejo Br. uni Jl40. &15-55.10. 67:...1l'i6. AdulL'; PITl'cl. 2 &. 3 BR. Avail. Private pa-EX1'RAS. POOL, Pets ok . Bachelor llnfurn ..... · SIJ!"i. ru;;w~ii-:::C;:;;;c.:;:::;,,.-:-;!;:;;::::;'",c::'.'.'.'.'.'.:'~.'.:'._"c~-! tlo, pooJ. indiv. laundry fac. 1736'1-A h'.e<'lson Lo. 842-6235 Bachelor rurn ........ $1•15, J BP.. 2 ba . !x>aul. crp1'd & BUSINESS mens spec la I 2 BR. bllfls, relrig, utili1ies (Ni Orange Co. Airport; Tus. or 968-7510 1-BR unfurn ··•·· ..... Sl•IO. sl<'eps 7. SlOO 14.k for 4. SMALL SHOP w 11 Iv In I &14--08tl0. quarters suitable tor antique Rentals to Share 430 shop, office. elc. Pa1tly furn. 2656 Nt\\'pott BJvd., •I C.M . 548-2\,'\4 1 t Spac. USl'd brick !l'rr. planted ~[lowers & trees. 3 BR. tlen; e:it"tensive!y remod. & decor., 11"/mod, kit, qua!. carp., drapes & shutters. Sumrnerhouse in patio could be ofc., hobby rm. or 4th BR, Beginning Aug. 2nd, $950 per mo., yrly. lse., incl gardener & water. Owner 714: 83S-4l350. Corona del Mar drp'd. Central a1r/cond, wkly rates now offered lo included, newly pa inted. lln at 17th St; nr. \Vesicl iff). I~=~~~-----1-BR furn · ....... from $155. (ncd yard. Gardener , everyone. Lo as $,'l6 wk. S250mo.673-4452a!t6p.m. LGE 2 br. 2 ba Slt1rlio apt 2-BR unfurn .......... $160. RENTAL TO SHARE? $~'/mo r .. u 8'" '134 Sealark Mo!el, 2301 Npt ===~~~_c;:::..::_cc_:c_ 1 w/patio & ya.rd, all !Jllns. 2 BR l (ro 1175 We can he!p YOU! ATTRAC 11ton! & office , spaces $50 & up. Dwntwn (: ~°" . ....,. .;1.1'4. • Blvd 64&-7445. SPA~IOUS 4 BR, 2'·3 BA, all 1741 Tustin, Cos!a !'.'1~ !ndry facil. Vic Warner & • urn........ ni . NEED ROOMMATE? Newport Beach blt-1ns. Crp1s & drps. Encl Mgr. r.trs. Thompson 642-4€ 'l B h Bl d 1150 .,2 .,.9 • POOL SHORECLIFF SHARP l BR-$155 garage. Immac. 644_8799. eac v · · .,.. .,.,, · e SAUNA \\It can help YOU, too! 3 Bedroom, ba!h & ~~. dinlni; BEAUT mod. to"'·nhouse.. 3 FURN. Hid Pool. Adlls/no . . h'.IDS 14·elcome. Altrac 2 Br. e JACUZZI BEACON * 64S.011l room. fan1ily room. 12 to 18 Br, 21;, Da, trplc, pa.tio, Pels 2272 Maple SL or 1 br, beamed ceilings, shag ParkQ·Like Surrounding $159. Pool. All extras. 17362-1561 Mesa Dr. Santa Ana ';-;c==co---,...,---~ months lease. $<150 ""r pool , z ca r gM, all b\tns, .... ,,..., crpl. Prefer female aduJt or VIET • DELUXE A h'.eelson Ln, 842-6235. "'!!~~~~~~~~""I', "" .,.... ~ I S • l 2 3 BR PTS "" HON EST, emplyd man shr month including gardener. crpts, drapes_ Lea~ $295 . ./ AVL ~w. l & 2 BR furn, cp · 150. 67S-3096. n-. • & A 968-7510. AMAZING Adult L 1 vi n g lux 11 .B. apt w 1 ! a m e AUSTIN·S~ITH COR~IAN (1) 52J...4TIO or 84&-5991 eves * 3 Br. Newly derorated. l .-av patios * fltd Pools '""===~==~=~ Beaut. 1 & 2 BR furn or unf 1.~ '"I 30 m,·, bch. Ph. Pool, rec rm, gd location. Nr sbop'£: * AduJts only BEACHBLUFF APTS. ·Pll"'<N' and as:o;ociatt"s REALTORS. _h<cc_••_."_:.8-~30=o7•~·=·k7M='=·---I No children or p e 1 5• Blk to beach. $295. Family 2 & 3 BR, 2 BA, }XIOI, patio, Apts. Self clean. ovrn.\ Johnnie 962-1477 dys, 2828 East Coast High"'-ay. BEACH 64&-582~. preferred. 673--0m. Martinique Apts. dw. Nr shopping. 847.3957. D/\V (in 2 BrJ d1spls, i;hag San Juan Capistrano. nr m ission. 493--115..l SHOWROOM mfg. & office space. CJoge to Laguna loc. $95 To $Jj() Mo. 494--4653. Corona del Mar. 644-7270. TOWNHO S C lm cpts, drps, Jacuzzi &. i;auna $86.2'5 a piece 2 Br w/pool U E Y" 1 BR. Crpt:s, drp:s, b!Uls, 1 osta M&sa Sanla Ana Ave., C~1 2 BR, 2 ba studio. Newly ba!h.~. Huge pool. furn. uhl pd. Woman to 1 YR lease -Ca meo ONLY l'l75 YRLY LSE. di 32 ----------1 Mgr, Apt 113 646-5542 d-, -f•<g, hit ,·-. pvt pa. •I" "'"" .. -~1a I * COSTA MESA * • I SI Imo Y•ly G"''' TiiE BESf co ... ·~ • "~ Me•••'mac Woods ... re " rse. .>J" a I Hi<>hlands. 3 br, l•m cm JI h' : ' STS LESS $95 & $167 lh .., as everyt ing you wan~ avail O""n !louse 336 E I · b LARGE 2 BR. 2 BA. 110, nr bch. 847-8511. 41 5 ' P9r mon ' huge !iv rm & nias1er br, uid wood burning fireplace! 20th 51 642-8"20 ' · magale: wet ar, fireplace, APT UPSJ'AIH.S -5 Merrimac Way, C.~l. G. f Industrial units, read,v fot' lrg pnvate p11110, 3 priva1f' 51S 85.32 · 0 · beam ceilings, rough-hewn · * 2 BR . cloM'rl gar. Chilrl & 1 BR. close lo brach t.· i;hops, ar•ges o r Rent 435 oe<:upancy. 11~220 Power ,.,~-,. 47-c"' 1 ''"' --·-~·-------LRG 1 Br. walk in closets, paneling, big. private patio, OflLDR1'.."N \VELCO~IE sn1l J>f'I ok. $140/mo. Call * c. NA'~<ss RLTR * '""""' ""' UNIQUE 2 B 2 B I All l lr" GClld J\1 al . quiet at~a. Mature pf'rsons LOCKED DBL GARAGE -' ''~ Drive. Cdi\1. 675-4133. r, a, poo ' w/w, frplc, drps, 1 adult. 2BR-2 BATH, clubhouse, <' ec JC l'd hon 1142-836~. nnly. No .v<I•, please.. 230 E 311h C M ' bt'ach, frplr. No. 14 4 1138 v ._ kl!ch. 1 7~=----~--·-~ i;u itab!e for small boal , · · · · SPACIOUS 2 Bn.:--2-balh~ & Bayside. Village. Adult.s. no Imo yrly. Garage avail. pool, -11 .. ll. $185 inc!d:s gas 2466 Santa Ana Ave. * 2 BR, garage, ndry room, 494-140'19 atn-7 pm can1J)f'r or JK"rsona.I prop-1 "°'~=~"'-'-·-14~85'--~~1 bonus rn1. home. Cornplete pe1s. Yrly only. J260 (213) 642.--8b20. & \.\'tr. 387 W. Bay St. olher 642-1131 Afternoon stovf', child ok, rm pets. Huntington Beach er1y. 177 E. 22nd S1. CM. i\1-1 1280 sq. fl. new bldg 1j \\'/frnlc. & hl !ns. No ""''· 7,01161 2 BR. Trailer $120 + ulll , 2 ·RR's from $165. All ttdultl§, Stl5/rno. ( 11 527-31·1~. -,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; j w/office., lg• -•• dooc, 1787 1, .,. ,.. ,..,.... or see mgr. no pets SPACIOUS 1 & 2 B l ' * _. Sto1·11111t garages, $25 per '" no children. 3275 ~lo. on an-Mature people only. Phone · · r. ap !I'., 2-2 BR nr i;hop·g c.,., , ON Whi!tier St, C~I. Al.so ·~•" :I University Park BAY MEADOWS APTS h!d pool 1 t " • g · BEACH! monl!J. iutV nual 1(>8.se. Realtor 646-1809. • · ' Cl's, ' r P s • Newly de1.'0r. SlJ0-$135 Mo. Pho 642--63~1 ·il Logan St, CM. 1500 sq. ft. 675-3000 673-48-II Eves OLJ~;;;;;;i;~~a,;-M,:;;-l-_:*~C~a~l~I ~6"~&-00~~7~3~*~-d ~"''sh Pr a f l bl t n 8 · Realonomics Bkr. 675-6700 • ne . unt 6 p.m. 1195/mo. D•Y•, ••• ~'. Ii LEASE or Sale-4 Br, 21h Ba, S!:rS 1 Br eastside Costa Mesa $150--$170/rno all oiil inc.1~~~=------NE\V AP'TS Office Rental 440 .....,...,.,..., Costa Mesa honic. Unlv. Pk, Irvine. l1!' markets, Adults, no pet11. 307 Avocarlo Apl 9, CM . 2 BR 78.11 Sla!er Ave. S135 1 Bf' :From $2Z7 eves 646-0681. 1 11· >-1n1 cond. -499-352'5, 6+1-6406. 673-1497. weulisnu <»J 64:...-09lW. per lnn. Mgr, 847--0936 STORE or office. Newport & FOR LEASE 4800 sq 11. AVAIL. Sept 1sl 3 BR E-.a '111 6j O 5"' ~=o 2 BR Jo"rom Sil2 Ba C Side, crpls & drps, frplr: lgr Houses Furn. or VERY Nice I Br dplx. Quiet. New Beautiful Garden Apart-e REGENCY e wner .. ;,~"''"''' 3 BR F'rom $375 Y enter. 2052 Newport Carpeted ofcs, air cond, tile fncd yd, dbl car gar. 2 Unfurn. 310 Sep by garage!!:. Adults over ments. Private Patios, Pool. l'\'i!'o1A C, 2 BR. 1 Ba. Shag Laguna Beach F urniture Available Blvd, Clll. 525' Util pd. noors, nuoresacnt litf-5, kit. 2 i· h.1 30, no pets. 5-18--1021 . Sn.:>, Gorag<. L,x,,,.0,, , C t d ,. h 1 64&-1252. se.ls of baths. Beaut. bldg i'! c 1 dren sch! age. No peL~. Costa Mesa r-crpt g, sell clean. gas oven, NEAR RJ-:ACH-New ] & 2 arpc s-rapes....,is "'as ier for lilt mfg. 155.'l Placentia Call eves aft 7 pm. 5-18-9737. BACHELOR $ll5. Pool, laun-landscaping. Adulls, no pe1s. rlshwhr encl gu pali 3n hea!rd pool-saunas-1enn1.s 1670 SAi'l"TA ANA AVE, Cr-it • 1 drv rm. 2 BR • $180, 3 BR. $22'5 ' ' o. BR., 11.1. ba, pool. Adults, rec roorn-ocean virw, From 300 sq/ft. 3X i;q, Jt. Ave N.B. 645--0Tl-O. NEAT & CLEAN 3 BR home, l BR. 2 ba home. S225 mo. .., C•U &4"2181 \\. Wil,;oC· "· g No Pf'IS. Lse. 217~ S. Coast 1,_ I k 67S-2464 or 541-5032 M-1 ZONED JH•• Behl Of- witb fine crptll &. drps. Jl 'i; Lease. Best area, partJy v-all 54 ·3605 Hwy. 4!l-~4lll or ~i·1J. pa ..... -amp e par ing '->!'> '! the best at $235/mo. Comer furn. :.45-5851. I Br, beam Cl"il111g, gunny, 151 F.. 21 SI., C.:\I. f;.16-8'166 REDECOR,\T~D. lrg 2 hr, Li'do Isle Sccunty .11:uarrls. • XLNT OFFICE SPACE fices, i;torage, fncd yanf. I Id_,· Ad It HUNTINGTON now avail. Lido Blrlg, 3.355 Ideal for c o n tracto r . 01, firep!aee & b!lins. Call Townhou'e Unfurn. 335 sec u ""'• 1mmac. u s, no * * * new cp!s, dps, bltns, child ,-------,----846-2769 or S4l-l4J5. agt. -546-414!. petr;. 625 Shalimar Dr. OK, $150. 766 Shalimar SPACIOUS, lovely 2nd Uoor PACIFIC /la Lido, N.B. 673-4501. l i RENT M-l, 1125 sq fl,,$135 ij mo. Avail Au11: 18t. 1.t'il Huntington B ch LIKE LIVING IN &12--731.i. 11pt 3 br, 2 ha, bllns, GROUND noor execu1ive of-2 BDR:O.t, 111 Bath. B!t-1n •e Huntington Beach YOUR OWN HOME ••• 1 ._.~===~----I 711 OCEAN AV£ .. lt.B. \l."asher, dryer, oven stuvr, ~p, L ~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j2 B l " B f * BEAUTJfUL 1 & 2 BR dshwshr &. relrig. Crptd, t714) '"1'"7 f\cP spa1·e !or rcnl-Coa.st Hwy 111 N.B. 646-9647. Log"" No. 7, C.M. ·I ,. u • ea i; e : 2 Br. -r, 111 c-. Un urn. Cpt.s, · l pd 2 · S37" ..,,.,... ..., rel. Ne1v cpt & drps. P111. Townhous e b l t d P'S ncl t' Contempc.inuy Garden Apls, ( r . -car garage. ;i on Of<" open 10 an1~ pm D11i!y patio. 2 car garage $175 \~·asher/dryer, ~14-·im;;.sg La Quinta Hermosa W1LsON' ~~0R.oENS l'atios. f rplcs . pool. lse. Shown by app!. \VJLLJA~1 WALTERS CO. 642-3936 or 548-3085. pnol Sl7ZJ/nio. Call (7141 Apts I ,;1~15'l-"';:S~l~65~.~C~a~J~J ~54&-~".51~ffi~3._J,~'·~H~-20:::;J;~.-:cc:;::------I "'""""""~~~~""~ 5 BR, 3 BA. $275/mo. Cpts, 2'J6.--0442. San Diego. Spanish Country Estate Liv-Ph. 642-6811 aft 1 pm. DELUXF.' 2 Br/I'~ Ba, cpl s. Mesa Verde Parklike Bei:ch L1v1ni,: drps, dshwhr; nr. schls & Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Ing &: Spa.ciol.ls /1{:'ts. Ter-drps, slove, rlSh \\·hr, gar. Dl..X 2 & 3 BR 2 Ba encl for Adult~ i;hop'g. Avail Aug I . raced pool; suni<en ga.s BBQ ]~~,7~~~ld ok. Av! 8/1. Slj,j, g11.r, s1;io &-. up.' Rentai Ofc: Casa Del Sol 545-02'4. Newport Buch U"b<Uov.ble Livi"' -Only * Span1'sh Elegance ~-o~ 1 B f $1'"f $175 1-"'-C.::=--------1309:> Mace Ave. 546-1034. & 2 BR-/urn/uur. Pvt pa· l BR, patio, shag. garagf'. $~5 nlo. yrly. Upper 4 BR, 2 2 B~ unf Slj[ furn 1210 NICI-; unfurn 2 Br. npL 2 & 3 HR Units llO"-' ava1l11blr. tio, frplc in 2 BH. clevalors, quiet adul!s or retired. Sl:!S. B A. New r Pt i; "' un urn Ouiet Adult Living POOL. Oose lo ~hop's;:. $1·1.i. Newport Beach dshwshrs, ci·pts. <1rp.~. Pels 548-1098. lnq 2195 M1n'r No. redeeoraled. 1-; blk OCt"an. SpeA~ ~L INCLUD~D Shag cpr e drps e b!Lns 313 l'.:. 17th Pl. No. B. --'--------accrpted. From SI~~. 2. Avail Aug. 20. 117_B-3Jrd. c onus; a ' ver-BeauUtuJ Pool e AIJ UW Pd 54s--fij;l2. MARINER SQUARE 21661 Brookhurst s 1, JIB. r-.tESA VERDE 8.'l6-.'i738 or 63l-T:i30. plated candle i;nuffer ls 2 BR. $1i0 3 BR, 21~ ha studio, cpt'g, APARTMENTS * t7141 962-66.i.1 *' 3 br, 2 ha, S2G.'i. yours 11 yo~ .bring thls 1.d Adul1s only-no pets dri1s, b!tns. SJOO/mo. No lnr adults drsiring to !1~·e 4 br, 2 ba. s:n:i ""am•I••• O"· 1'PT Isle. wtr!rnt w pit"r when you v1s1t our models. 241 Avocado Si 64&-0979 pels 998 £. Cami no. admidst beauty by the sea Newport Beach r noal. 3 Br/2 B• r-1 4 blks S. of San Diego F"""' · Jy No _,, :. .• ,, "'~" • ·" · • .. ,, 546--04il 111 1he prestigious \Ves!chlf VISTA DEL MESA Ap•rlments · .,.. · .Mo--.,.,,.,,. sundeck. S375 yrly lsc. on Beach, l blk W. on Holt $145 -Lovely extra Jrg 2 sf -·--· · AVAIL. Aug 15th. $225. 3 BR, 67>.7672. to 16211 Parll'lide Lane. l'i Ra. ii;•wly r! e t:o r: 3 BR, 2 Ba, deluxe Bltns. area. FROM $llO 2 BA, {,need yd, ('fl\'l'red D I {714) 1'7·5441 Lndscpd enf'I v. ,,,, n••"""· Sha1: W I\\' t•pt , drps. frpl t", up exes , u ~ "'~ f L k t-tr Bu('kley, :-.1anaser h s d n t · pa!io, rrplc, crpls & drps F U f rial s rea. Childrt'n ok. No pa io, gar, 1 e ne w . 1111!! er -. !ove an r r11: ·I Call 545-8820 l'lr ~>-8139 urn. or n urn. 355 BA-CHELOR apl, !um, Ulil 962-'ll~. l:l44 l!'Vlll<' AV(', N.B. Sha~ f'l'J'lt "g-L~ Rf'l' l'f'Oll'r, pets. I guaran!ft' noth ing _ __ Call 645--0252 Rl"'.I:' 4 Br, 2 Ba, cpts, drp~. 11·a!k Newport Beech raid AdJolns vrry nice "ill t.'On1p1u"C J004 E l EAST ~11le 1 Bit. 1't'[n'1:.. ~· r Slart~ Sl:ii schls & i;hop'g Per nk. ~-"?me in a llf'tter tract. Camino. ~l&-57Q.1 I sloi·,-., c-rii~. drps, i:-Rr rn::r. PARK NEWPORT-Tu~tin & Me5a Drive 3028 Garliclrl. 5'l5-629l. BAY VJE\V · 2 Br, 2 ~a . (,aragt, P~! patio. Ne""" Nr --TllE GABLES fencrd ~d l\lali;rP ·adul!s. APARTMENTS * 545-4855 * \\"inter or yf'arly beach & 1'.d1son Hti;:h, llB. 1 Sl4;1• 612-:.~31 .'\Int IO<" Barh<"lor, I (Ir :! Bedrooms. --.-Nl(E-.--- 3 BR, 2 B'\. h1g f'nclo~ed • Call 67>-5l 2'J * Frer hi Aug lsl $140 n10 Lrg 2 Br. 1 2 Ba 11 /~ar. ----11nd Townhouses. Spa, pool,, I I yard, crpl~. drps. anrl r('ady 9AA-692;-, · · $J:i:1. Ariu!ls. Cpl~, clrn~. SPAC!Ot.:S 2 t;r, ::! ba , ~·pi, ,. 117_ Tie mo~! heaut1ful v1ew of · I II 1 d d d 1 k rl 1f'nn1s. ro1n :i, Aei oss !lir hay & OC'e:in 111 lhP to nio1·e-1n cond. 122.j/ ,\to. l ns, nr \'.'Ir 11 /p.11 ~, r p ·' . fl c e i; ;i r . h 1 1 & 2 BR. t'um. 1.o Unr. Dish- --• NEWPORT BEACH 675-3116. 200-'.'.00-500 II l~x: 2880 SQ. fl. commercial bldg Ph. i\tr. F.l>'in, 6;;,...16(11 ror leasP. C.M_ /\1-1 zoned , next To C-2 541\-5569 "\VEED lt & reap" .. clean out ll1e treasures & tra5h -STORAGE~i~i l Aug 1urn in!o eash thru a Daily l -Ne"-·port Bear:h. J6(). P ilot Clas~ified ad. 642-5678 646-1724 DA ILY PILOT !or action! 'A~,-ood~-w-,-,-t -a7d~i&-.---~I Call 642--5671! & Save'. lnveslmenr * * * * * Trader's Paradise lines times dollars * ApartmentsfarRt rrt ~ Ovcrlook1n1.: he11ut .11:11rrlf'n 630-ll20 :i:rj-,'tl.i!'I. horrr &· ~iln .!oaqu1n l!11ls 11pt.~. for lca.~r. &12-2202 '-------------------.11 I Ed Riddle PJt.r 646-SSIJ . ~ l Br. furn. S 1 3 5 Imo. 2~.".7 Orange · ,\ir Nn, c: I ll 11 r lo 0 r 1811 k f' r arra' ln1n1 r "S ~on J.~ and at ,ta.m· l!ahor 11.rca. 2 BR. 2 BA I r.fESA \7F:HDE-:1-Br.'Trr;il ,r,, 'Y patio & htrl pool . :\duh~. ------_ , , --lto.irl.~. 1i141 fi·l4-\9C1J fhariy. $250/mo + drposit. /"\\'a ll Aoi.>: 1. 10.l.i 12ih !'it NEWLY DECORATED 1 HACH l~Lt)ll Afl! .'I llrd1·onm -A N--W--T ~L~.--* • 20 l.!n1 t Professional 2 AA. C"pts/drps. 54!i-4225. 360 ll('ross froin Llrkr p11 rk. Charm1n!;l 113r duplex. Nrw , ;tp1 2 hrdr,.01n hr,11.~r. :n:\ . NW ay Bo ive i I II &:Il l Rlllg, 1qll IH'Cf'pl Tru~t 3 BR, Lgc fPncrd yard,--A~p_t_s._F_u_•_n_. -----536-2692. eprs, rlrf)!'; & flillnt . Wvri)' ~~· 21 ~1 ~r in ewport each . Reot,ls . ,-. Drrds or ? • to new loan. .fo G G I --park l1kr ~111-rni1ndin~. 2-RR-bl,--.,.,-OAKWOOD GARDEN .~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~--1 1 Broker -'>Verror, SL~~-enera I BR, ne;ir Ot"!'an SJ2.1 . "" · n~. '"1· nio. APARTMENTS • * :ll1 '2!!6-91'i:'i6 • * Comp. FiJrn. inc. l!til . 10 Qiu!'1, 1n<t!l1rp aduJ1s only. I Carpor!. !n111l•'rl f•l'('\IPilncy. _____ f,.1_•_1_®~---- ---Rent Beaul.ifuJ Furnitw-e '"''"' OK. $130. ~S-6~20 ~1 V;ilC'IW la 516-ti.\O:I. ()u lli!h S1rrr1 hl\\''1 Rooms 400 MESA Vrrde--, B,, 1 1. quirt adults. 1,·1•1nr 11"d Do•ec o,. 1i., a1Tr Spra"'1e Rive,, Oc-or as 1ttle as HARBOR G -----.,. I crpts/bltns. $2371 n10 1st & ONE MONTH 536--0414. REENS 2 .!:~ 3 Bl_\. Crp!s, IJrps, St3:1. (714) 642-8170 • * *' f'gon !ot. 13rA.ut entry-side. last tno. advance. [>\;,....2786. Newport Beach GARDEN & SI1.JD10 APTS Sl;JO. 76.1 Sh11i1n111r, 55i-6!14:i BR !:.ATllTAK!NG V 1 E \\' J•ck R. Alward No smog & few people. $1500 2 BR, S165 mo, \ childOK. ----Bech.. 1, 2, 3 BR's. !rom $110. ~,n_,_. -----4208 River Ave. eq for jr.14-·clf)•, car. hoBI, f 642-97&4. Also sleeping room complete with e WE _llAVE RENTALS! e 2700 Peterson WBy, C.M, 2 Br. J1 2 Ba studio. J.~nd $2iO. ll ui::-e 2 BR npl. High on Newport Beach, Calif, 11nt1quf'S or submit! 673-0802 for i;1ngle per.;on your 100°/o Winter and Yearly 546-0370 ll111 l\.l. End o! cul-de-sac Bark 8Ry Bluffs ..,,.12 pv! You are lhe 14-inll('r of • • .. * • • • lllf:VY Capnce car. 2 dr, J1111dPrl, very l1:QOd coodilinn to trade nn home or units. 3 Br+ I•am rm. F'ncd yd. Purch&S• Option ABBEY REALTY 6~2-3850vER Y NICE 2 Br. Duplrx. 339Cabl'1Ho. 6-12·3:\1. balconlrs, lrplc, heated 2 tickets to !he Cpts. drps, $215/nlo. 31,11n lod, Item se!ecUon. OCEANFRONT upJ>f'r 3 BR, St'i9.50--ll69.JO. !-'111\c. beam e CORSICAN pool, Jnads of close1s. 745 Southl•nd : "°"'" 210.l r ,.r1 .. ral ~-~9451 24 Hour Dely. 2 BA nr Newpt pier. Sin~les cell, patio. Arlults only, no o,-.luxe 1, 2. J BR's. nr Sout h Oomin~o Dr, tC.D.~1.11 .S.~ Home & Garden &l:!-4610 2 BR. cl,an. pvt yard, quiet CUSTOM OK. S-IOO mo/yrly lse. Bier. Jl('I.< Rrf's 2lJ.1 Santa Ana; Coasi Plaza. S.13-7321 Ca ll 645-1260. Show strt'Ct. Ava.LI /IOI\. $185 mo. Furnitur• Rental 642-4816.. . aft 6 call 548--0519. LGE deh1xe 1.f3r. 2 B~. llf'\\' * BRAND NEW* Jtt the \\'01 lradr R units 1n Costa 548-7916. ~j~9th., C.flt ~~= NewpoN Heights e QUIET! I e rpl.!1/drps. patio. s 165 . $l:t.'>. I BR. Frplr, illdoor/out ct::~NE,!~N .~lr.11a , l'hoice ll'IC'ahon. !or Fountain V•lley laHabra 694.J708 CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adulll5, 00 2 Br, flrpS, flt'\\' crp1·g. Baker &12-9996 or 6-12-161 1. k11 chcn, hratrrl pool. (l«ross CENTER lli un11s or niore. F.qu1ty 1 pel';. Lg kit. S125-Sl50. 2421 & !larhor shop J<. Lot'ked $16.~ADULTS oiily, qulf'I 2 from S.A. Coun1ry O ubl. $10.IXXI. Priocipals only. HUGE, deluxe home, fully _B_•_lboa __ P_•_n_i_n~s~u~I•:.___ E. ]61h SI. NB. 646-180l. gar. A_du~t.<, ro pets. f\45/ Br, llJ Ba . GE kit, 2 ear Set> at 2()4.12 Santa Ana Ave. Please ~~\j :i.~~8. R"·"!. 314 1 ----'~·~.:..:.~·=1 __ _ ma.int. s BR/ 3 BA. d!n'g, 2 Br. yearly, comp! turn, J\"o I ss;.~ntl.a;JAl.n~.;-------11 ;,m~o~. ~·~b~-3~'~"~0~'~"~ ... ~-~L"i~J·c.,,,_ gar. 240 E. 161h Pl. S.11\-64.\2. or call 557·.~'-"~'~· =---between 9 and l pm 10 boat .t ·camper prk 'g. pets, no children. $225/mo. BEAUTIFUi.. 2 Br, lh Ba * 1 Br. $1 3:1 irK·l~rit. • NOW OPEN • claim your ticke1 ll., (Nor!h Tr11de equity in C-1 property in Orangr !or late model .f.I OOrBdo or l.iflf'{)Jn Cont'I. Rent-lftl.se. oJ)l , $350/mo. Viii pd. 1401 \V. BBlboa Roy•I Suit•s Motel ~tudio, J'IC\\.' crpts & paint. Arlul!s, no pcls. 820 Center Z0.132 Sanl11 Ana Ave. Sp11c-County toll-frc-e nuinbt>r is 842-1063. Blvd, No. B. 673-1455. $4~ PER WK. UP Orps, bllns, c arpo rt . S1., C~. Call &12-5MS mus 2 BR, 2 BA 11•/lrplC', 5-J0-1220J 5.11-'Y:J21 Huntington il•ach • $35 \VK & UP -o" A--., Complete kH ch,n, linens, ph. SI60/n\(I, No pet11-l rhild _:.___ pri. patio. Loads or 1•[oscts. ~• "~. htd pool; TV & maid ok. 998 El Camino, 546-0451. 1 BR . w/w, flaliu, .l!M al· ll!d poot. I Across fmn1 S.A. Lovely Bachelors 1 BR. \ached, I adlt. 1 .!-n1I th1 ld Countrv Clubf $190. 5[)7.021 1 MEREDITH Gardens, braut. ~laid service. Pool, Util pd. lll'rv opt. 11\IMACULATE 1 BR, cp!s, ok. $132/mo yrly 642..S:l20. "J • __ _ 4 Br. 2~ ha . Lease e Call 675--8740 e STUDIO & 1 BR. rlrps. bltns. Quiet 4-plex. Nr , . . --SE,\CLIFF flfanor Apts. l ,i;, Ab~ Realty ·642-38.'l(I (6 m1lr.ll. 10 Npl Bch, 5 miles ff)'\\'~. No pets. ~1gr. 2868 * *: !=XThA l~e 2 Br, 1 Ba. 2 BR, Cpts, drps. bltns i:ur Pl..EASANT 2 br, drps, clo!i-Coron• del Mer to Dii;ney\ancll LaSallr. Apr l, Cf\.f . cpts, drps. J l5.i/n1u. 976 d l~pl. 1 ·~Ba . Pvt p11t10.' 1;,,r., ed garage. $145. 968-8392 or LRG Bachelor, 2 blks Big *' 531-3930 * 549-3524. i\Hsslon or &l6-8l.29. Plal'('n!i11 Avr. Asli' eboul 213/693-8945. Corona, $lj.1/mo, •,: r I y, ~-00-.;.J~So:.::_. ="='='"'='~· =S=.A=·~='-"SJ"IA7D=Y_..,G~A~R~O"E"N=S-~P~OO=L-2 BR HOUSE, f;/sldr. F'1rrrl . Qur d11'iCOunt. 548-76112. lrvlM Garage Avail. 1 Ad It, Apt. Unfurn. 365 1 It 2 BR., furn. & unfurn . Garage, Lg ya~ $160 In-\.\'F.ST'CLIFF' area 2-B~ &12-8520. ~-....,-------From $130 NA s s Au fant OK, no pets. 6'1S.~·-bl!, lrplr. rtlng. Adu11s ~n- '* UNlVERSrTY PARK * 3 BR. 2 ha. townhse •.•. $325 l BR. l be.tbs .......... U'\5 l mt. :m blths •••• -... S350 ' BR. 2 ba. houMJ ...... $365 • 2 BR furn. frplc. )'tarly, &i. ot H\\'y. Adul1a only, no pel~. $1$'.0/mQ, 67l-582'J. Costa Mesa Gener•I PAL.\fS. 2 chUdft'n ok. ./ 2 BR, 2 BA srLJDIO 115'1. ly. Freshly pa.int e d . VEN DOME in E. 22nd St, 642-3&15 Cp1:s, drps, patio, POOL. 1 $:itl0/mn. fi7j....1~2. DUPLEX-I Br, I r p I c bt:am8, tpls, patio, 1 adl!. lMi\-tACULAT& APTS! Sl38/mo yrly Gar. avail. • • • $15 PER "k up w/kil. $30 14•e.ek up. apls. MOTEL • 5'18-97,i5. 4 OR 8 Units. Xlnt income. ·rradr t'Qtuty for J BR. 1 BA mobi le homf'. or 3 BR llon1c. Will ln~e 2nd TO lo adj_ ('(jty. 962-4219. 1!11\1(' 40 aCT'l's reocreatioo 111.nd nr RNlding, l11ke11, r1v- ROOM f"OR genrleman. 155 en:. \Vant TD's. othet ll'Bdl! r-.lontevisla, j)a«la. ~fesa, or 11ny terms for S•I,';()) N'}. 64&-o96!1 Sl110 ~1f')'f'r 546-5880 5-49-1366 • BEA~UT=1ru=L~7V-.,-w-.-\\-' \!.'ill tr&.de 10 levrl. in-igal- block lo Ocean. S52 \\'k & Pd acrr.-" p/.l n-nta18 in up. 2500 St-aview, CdM, Hemet for Ora~P Co in-"'R~ .. -m-&~Bo~.~r~d.:=;.c:._4(1~5 I n,()()~I in CX(·hange for ya.rd 1.1"0rk. Ne11r O.C.C. S.1~1S43 come propeny, Call TI4/967-U1 8redhill l BR. Attach. gru-a,ge. Adull over 30. No Pf'll!. Reis. $130. 6f6....1224. ADULT a.ncl ()ptn House. 336 E. )Jth. F'A:-.111.Y Sec:uon &12-85JJ Closa to shopping, Perk I==~~~-~=~ child ok. &i6-.().l!l6 ,,..., -ALMOST-.R°"E~A"'D~Y~ LARGE spacioui; 2 BR Nel\r l BR. $150--2 BR S\85 Priv 8.11. Crpt~. Drps, Sto1·e ~ p11flo, h1Jlh1rd rm. htd pool reltig. $11'> mo. 67l-/1145. y,•/1acuiz1. 20102 Bircb St, e l BR. epts. drps, hltnr., NB. 64>-12ti0. CO~A :-0.f ESA, SJ.SO mo. HAVE 10 T!OtJSES. L.A . & I ~111turt' \\'l'mllln. quirt pl11cr Onlngr. Couniy inrl Bf'v, REALTY TO\\'NHOUSF. 2 Br. 111 ha, compl, furn. r r es n I y paln1erl. Pool. .$175, 64&-{)610. ... Sp11clou.! l BR's, 2 b11 SPAC. 2 t, 3 Br 11.pl $140 Up + s111m pool, f!Ul l gr<!Cn Hid flll'll P\11y ;,-11. (:pt~. thti~. llltr~. N1Hn Kids n\( * ri•pl, Jnrliv 'Lndry l;r.c: .. ls 1994 ~l11plr Nn 3 612-l.'\13 f'nt' gar. Adull:s, no pe1s. $2771/mo yrl.v. Clcf'an Vie w fnr l'f'~f. \Vri1~ Clai;siflt'd Ad <'1111 11lt 6:30 pn1 k \\kntl~. 11pt, 3 Br, 2 811 ]!"JI: sundeck, No 17~ c/o tht> Dally l'llot. Hills, ll0Uy11 .. ood, N<"Wpot1, 557-7407. \•rry clean. 645-18i8. PO Bo 1 C Cdi\I. Owntrs wi .. land, · · ·' 560, O!llt11 Mr~ un1!s, boo! nr? Skr . .,13-4144 * 2 BH. upper, h!ln~ir~. BAYF'RQ;">;'T AP'J'S. 2&.lhr Thti laa,Ps t dr11w ln ttwt West 2 BH, C2 'l(l!lr. Ml\R' RV , R11·. nr Tyler Mall. $28,500. rlr-. ror h~P (lr duplr.x •o $60.000 /"f.lll..~I 11rra, ownr/ ~gl. 2!11.1 I.a Vrntan~. S r . HA.vi' ·5;i ,\Tc.:R, rompl rMil~ r1f'w !np s, pain!, roll b11.r. 1'radr ror p.o .... ,.r boflt llJJJ)l'<l'( 17'. ' 646-9'1~ or 646-8666 S1.'1' 1!ation intC'l"('Om !y!l:- lrm, romplrte F'OR tihofW' :i nswerin£ ma<"hinr or wh11t h,ive you~ Call 64:..42115. .l&-1 16th Pl. AJ)I B. CM . Acrea.':eo n!'IU' Old Womlln Spr1r1~~. Cl!J. & lnr in i·lava- 1111 . Ari1, nr London Bridlt"' -want lor lo p;u·\( mobllt homP. Quint ani Rlt. 612-2991 Jaguar XK 126-C 1ype nxM head coupe. rebuill eng. nins good, clean body. rig. 01-rttl'! m11ch. w/cl1:'1, V11lur SHiil'! for TD Of' '! !"tJl-50..tl W11r1l SIO.!XXI ~I or Roll Royce. -I lave leftsed bldgw /.: lot 144' X JXJ' II! 21 llarbor -01arlt11 Quinllll'd ' Rea.llor 642·2!1.n llome shop •Mech-El!<'.) Radi<>-TV tubrs, lrrtf"I", paru .. workshnp hll.rrlw111rf: itrms. \V11ot 1970 lfond11 170- l':tO. 518-9832 llAV~ $14,00J roq. In r-.11. e~bin 111 Runnlrlli Sprlnwi. \~'ant buildabl' land or units in Onin1te C0t.rrty, f\Jller Rf'a.lty 5'16-0!ll4 1.0\'UY 3 br. 1 ~ bA, bR8r- ment. 8tuero, prime N Gteorial~ i;t. t·or quif't 3 br + Income. CUM 2'22 S('l('ncrr SI . Glcnd11lt !213 ~ 247-2121 Uni•. Part Center. Iiv!lJI! CaU All)'llmo 833~ 111ly Pilo! \VBnl bargain.~ rllklre. Ads ii.ave drps. no pcl~. Sl:t.i 1110. t:o68 crpts. rlfll.pe.!I k rel. $2S5. z.., I , , . a Deily P\lol ClUJl.fted * * * * * * DAILY PILDT-rm:-8ctimi! \~' \V1loon ;)-15--07611 11p 11gl G46--0732. Ari , (,.ll-567~ !!!!ll!!!ll!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!i!!l!!!!!!!!l!!!il!!!!!!!!!!!'!!ll 1845 An1helm A ve. C0.,1'A 1\lf.:SA 64 2_21l.2-1 2214 Co!lr,:r l\'o Ii 61 6-2287 • -.lll.:"' ____ ' " . '16£ -~-· ------· -,,,. _ -· ... -..... ~·-·-~ ----oP.. "---. I " I " " .1 ' " " ' ' ~ ': .. ' I Fo • .. fi Ron like i\lu avai PVT. Bl\. pn>X f'\.8 . ,. Pita "'"' <:I~ '\ p a • • I I • I a I a • I • I • I I .... -------------.. Real Estate School s ·chools • • • and Instr11ctions 1~ • • • 1'his variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • For further information re9erdin9 the Da ily Pilot Schools a nd lnstNdion Directory • • COSTA MESA PRE-SCHOOL 1797 Monrovia Avenue (Corner of 18th Street & Monrovia) Costa Mesa 642-4050 or 838-5237 Open 6:30 AM 'tll 6:00 PM SPECIAL SUMMER PROGRAM Full & Half Day Sessions • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :1 • • • • • CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 AgH 2 to 6 Years **Hot Lunchts & Snack~ **Creative Actlvitlts • ttMu1lc, Stories • PREPARE FOR STATa IXAM IN 4 WllKS Licensing P°reparatloo for : • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Building Contractors • Insurance • Day & Evenlng Classes California Department oi Education Approved-Master Charge and BankAmerica1d Accepted . You May Start At Anytime For lnformatlon-Brocht.·r._ FREE GUEST LECTURE Phone 646-3229 ANTHONY SCHOOLS OF NEWPORT BEACH 325 North Newport Blvd . Newport Beach • ~32Z~ Edmond F. Jackson . .. ,,, TOMORROW NIG T - A method for Living? There IS a scientific step.by-step procedure E)(PERIENCING greater vitality, more will- power & inner peace. Bbarati (left) & Kalidas of the Yoga Center, 445 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa, invite you to a demonstration of Halha & Raja Yoga. Come As You Are! DAILY "1.0f U Help Want9d, M & F 110 l.Aseml> cr1 ELECTRONIC AS~EMHLE~S Vanan Data Mach1ne&, Jocat,. ed tn I.he Irvine lndui1rlal Coruplc>., near the IW'port. has several openings on lt. l:ll .shill \7: 30 AM-4 PM). Openil'li;s are fo'r indJv1dllaia with 3 to 6 monttis electron- ic exper1ent-e and knowledge of bw>1c elcctroruc compoo. ents. Good starung pay and frinae benefit program 1nduding 12 days vacation during the fU'St year or employment and a ~lock purcbast: pro- gram • VARIAN DATA MACHINES FREE DEMONSTRATION tomorrow Wed. at 8 PM. If mornings preferred, classes start to- morrow morning at 9:30 AM. ~8281. Morn· a Varian St1bsJd1ary f il111111111111111111111P ~-•~IL•_ l_~I 1 • •_l ~I • 1 • .. ing or night start the benefits now ! zm ilJICHEI..SON DRIVE !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~;;;;;;&ii;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiii I CSAN DI EGO FREEWAY) I AT JA..vt.BOREE OFF-RAMP AIRLINE AND TRAVEL CAREERS FOR MEN AND 'A'OMEN e Travel Agent • Reservations • Ticket Salet • Air Freight Cargo e Communication• •Operations Agent "DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES'' ACCRIDITID: Netio"el A11od •tion Trede l Techni· eel Scho6la • Approved for Vtl•ran1. Eligible institu- tio1t under the Federelly ln1urtd Slud•nt Lun Pro9r•m. Airline Schools Pacific 610 East 17th St., Santa Ana 714-543-6596 L-~~~'_"_''_'' ____ ..J)!,,Sl ~( ____ ,,._,_•o_"_''_' __ __i Rentals Wanted 460 Personals" SEW-KNITS SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS e nd LINGERIE All Brandi Stretch Patterns Vogue & Butterlck Patterns Original Knit Fabric Store In The Harbor Area With Finest Selection Of Knit Fabrics On Orange Coast. 2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD COSTA MESA 540-3268 STRETCH SEWING CLASSES Morning-Afternoon ~nd Evening Newport Air Associates Flight School & F~ing Club LEARN TO FLY $500. CH .. cl .. AYOlloble) * FAA APPROVED * Course Includes: 3S Hours flillht time in Ceune 150'1 with 20 hours dual instruction. Club membership. 3 Month's fru dues. lnd ivi-dual instruction, tailored to YOUR ebili ty. 10 AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY LHrn to fly now - -•nd hav• fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada * Special RatH for Commercial or Instrument Students. For Complete Oetalls Call NOW 673-0313 -·------- 530 Found (frH ads) 550 Lost 555 Cup~t Service Gardening . . ........ ----------1youNG female dog -LOST: Gray Schnauzer. Vic. Diamond Carpet Oeanini GEN. YARD STEADY employed female needs 1 BR hoUJe or apt, C.M. or N.B. area. Would like small yard or patio. Max. $90 mo. Good ref's avail. Please call 540-8308 BRUCE BROWN ·FILi\IS Whit i esh , many blk WestrliU Shopng CLr. Avg size room S8 CLEAN-UP AND CINEMA 5: YOUR markilli"S. some tan, vie Florida tag. A~wtrs lo Repairing le in.staUat~ons Trees. shrubs. ivy. Shapi!d, NEW MOVIE '"ON ANY Santa Isabel, CM. Plse Truffles. Reward. 1215 Free Est. 64:>-1317 resha~d or remov~. New PVT. Plll'IY will lease mod. 4 BR. home w/pool for ap- prox. $300. mo. C.M., F.V .. N.B. or H.B. 839-5746 aft 5 pm. COUPLE w/ 3 chldrn desire to manage apt units. 2 yrs exp. Ref's. Call anytime, 642-7958. ------- SUN DAY ' ' IS THE pick-up a t 1n Cecil Pl., Pembroke Ln. 646-9134. Carpenter lawn11, sprtnlders installed. FINEST, M 0 ST EX. C.M. 645-2762. ---·...------Rototilllng, bed ~In~. CITING, TRUE, THRILi., CARPENTRY Cw1post, dirt, gravel de· ING COLORFUL FILM FOUND -cute yns; grey S..· f ]~MINOR REPAIRS. No Job livered. 645-3433. MOToRCYCLlNG AS A white cal v1c Labrador & Servlcet IM Rtplirl Too Small. Cabinet 1n gar. --- Samoa Mesa Verde Call . CHILD care, infant to 4 yrs. SPORT WE HA VE EVER · ' · ages & o t h e r cablnell. SEEN. SIGNED: HARRY 54~ 5(5.8175 11 no answer leave Large home & yard. Have 3 OXLEY. PS: AND FND: LllUe Beagle puppy, 2 Auto Waxing msg. at &a&-2372. H. o. ~~%/M~~~on c ~iieJO~ d • areEal. T H A N K S FOR THF. collars. Brn, wht. b I k Anderson. • BEAUTIFUL SHOTS OF lemale. Vic: Fino Station, Skeeters Wash N Wax ---------------8:!0-4370. S PEEDWAY MOTORCY· 19th St, C.M. 642-8826. Compact..<> $7.25 Standards THlNGS by Moose· Lt. elect., --A-L-'S_G_A_RD_F.N_IN_..GL-.- CLE RACING AT THE Blk Labl'cidor pup. grn, roUar $9.25 Quick Serv. Campers plumb, fence . tile • Inatlns. tor gardenlne It • m • J l 0 R ANGE C 0 UN Ty Vic ol Brookhurst & Adams & Mobile serv. avail. Your Carpe.ntry -pa.int etc. landacapl'lg '4m'ices, call FAIRGROUNDS STADIU~l ll.B. 962.8.)!13 home or pkk up. Reas. _St.J_-._as20_.______ 54(}..5198. Serving Newport, ]~ ON FRIDAY NIGHTS. Clean-up & re&. main!. CARPENTRY by DurkRn Ct!M, Costa Mesa., Dover AMouncement& d -, f'OUND a boys bike 1n 645-2550. Jones. Custom woodwork, ~s. Westcli.tt. •. * FULLY LICEN~ED * Xe\1 port Brach call to iden· F t R d ------'-------------' Renowned Hindu Sp1rituahst bfy 642-0091 Babysitting ormica, e c. esi • comm. Professional Gardener AnMUncements Advice cm all ma tiers. _646-__ 5_168_· ------------Tree work, pr u n I ng, 500 l..o\"e, Marriage, Business FOUJ\D. Parakeet in West * * * EXPER. rem ode 11 n i:. Apnnklcrs, clean up jobs, Readtngs given 7 da>s a J\ewport. Cd.JI & Iden Illy. Paul Collini cabinets, repairs, matnt. No I a n d !I cap i n r . Ge<>rge * * * Ola Arrington 406 E. Bay Ave. Ba lboa You are the winner of 2 11ck~ts to the Southland Home & Garden Show 1.t thf' ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Ju1y 30-Aug. 8 Pluff call 642-567i. t X1. 3H between 9 Md 1 pm to d aim your be~. (North Col.lnlY 10ll·fn.e number is ~1110) * Auf• traneportati.,, 525 CAA P~: Nw;l-dntwn LA. oWc:iit lu1, summer, 7 &fll.-4:30; winter, 7 am -6 pm any or all da)'t. ~---·---·----·-- ____ .,_ \\ef'k, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. 675-40i3. l 106 Sandpiper Or· J<lb too small. Re as. 646-.1893. 312 ",'. El Cammo Real, Lost 555 Corona del Mar, Cal. 646-4224. ,, SPENCER'S lawn Service "'.-n Clemente Yoo are the winner ot _C ____ C _____ _ '"' emtnt, oncrete 1-"N'r r~t Lawn car e . ·192-<1.136, 492-0070 \\'HITE German Sht>phmi in 2 t 1ckets to the d C'lranup~ fl t a1ona b le . --------VIC. or Si:lnta Ana llghti:. Southlan PATJO Specialists. Add EXPERIF:NCF:D Honie 1. d dress 10101 Home & Garden distinction to your home 714~~'21 3·-------- llouse-i;itleri1 svail Cypre....... Santa Ana Hgl~. Show with a custom pal10 design-EXP. Japane~ Gardener. Prolr>l"l your home & prop. Approx 100 lb~. l-la~ rhokrr Ill the r.d especially lor your home. Know how. ur,-keep, plant C111 rent !oral ref's diam "llh Hunl inglon A1'h ANAHEIM Quality. Exp er I enc e . JlE'lll. I rimming, clean-up. lfClr hoard onlyl tag AnswPr!I to "Sam", CONVENTION Sa tisfaction. Eason & Sons !l68-J.JR6 ____ ~_,.._>-_:n_i;, Rr"'arrl ;";~CHJ821 Mike 01 CENTER Construction. 548--0769. AL'S Landace.pmg. Tree re- s IN(; 1. ES. Don't be 673-4.)30 Diane aft 6 for both July 30-Aug. 3 QUALITY Cement work.L;i mova.I. Yard l'emodeling. lonrly-dancr lC'~sons. no numbers. T h ,,._ 1· I t I #V'on•-cts. 534-2221 a.II. 6 CHILDnEN SAD, L 0 S T Please caJJ 642·3678, ul. 314 George do it. L1c'd. bonded. ru ,,..u tng, o c eanup. w u "' .,. between 9 and 1 pm to 64:>--16'5. Rcpsir 11pri11klcn;. 673-1166. pm.__________ SMAU.. WHT ruzzy PQO. c!aim your tickftts. (No~h _R_ES_ID ___ C_o_n-cre-te--Spe--c-ia_Ji_sf_s. J AC r< &: Sv n I.awn Social Clubs 535 OLE TYPE, F E l\l ALE County toU·free number u Father 1 Son Te am. !'iervice-Mowing, e d g I ng, -------1--DOG. RED COLLAR & 540-122*0) * * 53,_9456 anytime. vacuuming &: clean -up . Swinging Coup ~s FLEA COLLAR, V I C : Free e11l. 968-9929. 714~;~~0;;.~ M VPRT HTS, 7 I 2 J. COSTA MESA PATIOS, walka, drive, ln1tall EXPERIENCED Japanese REWARD, PLEASE CALL PRE-SCHOOL new laW111, saw, break, Gardener. :\1:lintenance & 646-9011. a......· Su o-.-remove. 543-8668 for ut. .,.,.. .. 1al mmer • •Vfj•o-m clean up. ;;37-31174. [ 117)1 DESERT turtle, pink, gold, l8lt l· Monrovia, 1tJ day + CEMENT WORK, no job too COMPLE.'TE lawn • 1arden. Leet end Fowd . l.J.J n-ct & l\1rquo11•t spots on lull day .eW<>111. Planned small, ttasonable. Fr e c shell. V1r; White Salls, proeram, hot lunches. Ages Estim. H. Stufllck, 543-8615. lng ser:ii~. S48-G40S --------·I c.dM. Please caJJ me l1 you U, hrs; 6:30 AM -6 PM. PATIOS & WALKS Found <frH eds) 550 find him. $18 wk.COMPARE! 642-4()j() Frte estlm. ~26 LAWN Malnt. H~in1. new Sl·g~d Robbi•· 644-1:..,., Iawn8, d ean•up, pruntni. •-.... ... ....,.,. VACATION MOTHER Contractor rND: Rabbit, Fullerton .. F'rte est. Call 54&-7379. Costa Mesa St. I d e n t i f y $1~ _reward for black male Wiii take care of your _ _ __ I'·,. J~ 54g...2761 mm1ature poodle. Lost in childreninyourhomewhileADDITIONS to vC om 'l , DICK'SGAROEN~NG · S.A. Hl3 area, around July you vacation. Own Complete Service, plans, "Restdential.C.Ommrr1;1lll Penanafa YOUNG female do& -10. Answs to "SAM". Flea car r f' I i ab 1 e-r'tl~nces. ~stimatea. Joe R.owe. Gen. & Clean.Ups_ Ph. 642-0473 i...-.-.. ____ _. whitish, many blk tnark· collar only. 6 4 6-9 9 2 8, 645-0574. Contr. ~2-5997/646-9203. EXPER.. Haw11ilan Gardener lngs. some tan, vie. Santa 546-2166. p t I 510 Jaabel, C.M. else pick-up at LOVING can, 21ii--5 )'Tl. My MY We;y, quality home Oomplefe Gu(!ening Ser· e ~-1 177 Cecil Pl c.M. 64~1762. LOST: Blond Alghan, black homf'. Hsve nice yard. Good ttmod. WIJCa, mllnc, floors vice, Kamala"!, 6*-4616. P~NM? Ad; pt to n: ·• mil.Ilk, 8 mo'11. Vic: Anaheim meals, 3 yr old 10n fol' CO!ll· elc. No job too small. Fteullng a•doa. v a• e cl om 1 \v.:E.IMA.RANER. vie. new St · , C · M . 0 W NE R pe.nion. 63&--0354. 547--0036, 24 hr ans. aerv. I lnl Uo Grant's stol'f! on Estrella HEARTBROKEN PLEASE . . -YARD, lllrall', ~ \na It orma n. SC/Capo Bch. 496-9179. RE TU RN • f 8 -5 6 l 3 DA y ca Te, my 'home. Vic Additions * Remodeling Remove Inell, 6'i-443i. .,.ound • Y•Uow strt'ped kit· 646-7290 • ~ • Adam!'i k Brookf'lurst. Love C.rwick " Son, Lie. s k I p Io ad t r • Pli<n'OGRAPH a beautilul r '" · tnfsnt1; It toddlen. 961-2145. 673-6041 * 56-2170 847_2666_ cleanuJS. d irt, Ivy, backhoe ntoatl. Sonia's Studio 1725 ten wtflea collar vie Mar· sµN. Spaulding tennis rar. Carpet Service El•ctrtcal W. Chapmnn, Orange. 1-7 111er'1 Park. 646-5586 qu~. vie N1gu<"l R10'0wn TRASH It Garaae clean-up . pm, 67J....U66. GR~ Parakttt, vie Santa Valley P!Ny, r r w a rd . JOHN'S Carpet tr Uphols1er')' EL E crRICIAN, UceMed, 7 dayii. $10 a loed. Tree eat. •'LCPHOLICS Anonymous, Ana I: Colleen PL, CM. ~290. Cluners. Extra Dr1 • bonded. Sm&ll Jobt. mal.nt. _A_n~y_tl_m_e_. 548-313 __ ·_1. ___ _ Phone 542-7217 or write 64&-2622. LOST-lrisb S.-tttr, 9 mo, Shmpoo free Scotchguard It ftpain. 543--5203. MOVING, ga~e cte~ .. P .Q. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. Found Iriah S.ttn-puppy. female. vie Monrovia I: Na-( S o I I Re t • T d • n t I ) • G rd i lite haullni. ~uona~ :\IAWOE a ftl&Jdl\I et· male, ln H.B am. 14'·$533 tionaJ. ~w&J'd. ~n. Dl-JUtut'J"I A all color _•_ ... e ... " .... "'------f'rff e~llmates. 16-1802. pe~ 1~ 0 BolA Pl11 tdmttty. r LOST~Sm ftmale ~alpoint MghleM1'11 A 10 mlnute L A N D s OOlNG-Prunl"I-TRASH Hau.llng. o..tqc I. Chb JU, H.B. Mf-5222. MALE Slameiie vie Bolsa Siamese vie Balboa Blvd & ~e!chyo!~r in:~...,~~~ Clea!Mlp. S ' r I n k I er• Yard O ean---up. Reas. Small m 01... ... ,,.. .. 1,.. .... , H.B. 213 Avocado. 6'15-H6~. "" ~w, "T _...... repaired. Fr'ft t~t. 557-0070. job11 welcothe, ~. .1AJ(\Jl\j· ttM MailclA.n -,, '" ...... , ... "' mt extrit trips. w1u .:le.in _:..___ ______ _ heut 6f l'l'la.ci~ fat chll.drena ~Z4. MA.LE Cock-&-t1tl, IO&t vie. llvillJl rm dlnlns rm a hall ~r. Japaneae G~ner CLEANUP, rarQe & ylll'd part~11 $$. 4~3669. YNG m~t !1'bby c&l found 19th .tr lrvl~. Reward. Sl!i, Any rm $7.J(), coucb Comph1~ yd "rvX;~ .. ~:~ Lttr ht11dln1 A-r11rdtnlnit. GfJitL, 2.1, 5·1. 10;; lh,.. would vie 22nd St, N.B. 642-40~. 646-29TT_. ___ $)0. rl.air $5. 15 yr&. exp. 11 &: ~Jta. Fttt ••t. .. ,_.,.,, * * Call !°)4~9'7a5 ** like ltl meet genL r. o. r.ox Turn thOse White EleplWllA i/22 MAL.AMUTE dog liaht what count~. no, melhod. I &mplete Gard•nini Tho fllSIHI draw In the Wu 109~ Santa Ama. Into eiuh fhni a Dsl1Y POot nuffy fl'm11Ie "Foxy" Bch l'k• W".'ll'k myself. Good ref. ~rvice •• a Dally Pilot Clua1fied -Dtm'"'-•-li--..111 arr1t r.-1"ard. 6:19-fl6 I~ :,31.0101 . Fret E1t1matf'11 873-1166 Ad 64s..1171 .Je'll help you -ell! 64~71 ~ ''"' .., . t -- -... --. .... "'_._I Anna's Pre • School -2nd Grade ANNOUNCES A Fun Program For Summer e SWIMMING • ROLLER SKA TING • READING Many More Fun Filled Activities 2110 Thurln Ave., Costa M111 Ph: "'-1444 @~ e.®<B>et1»~ -·--~-:.~-- ( S.rvlc11 1nd R•Plira ) ~ { ~oynnt )[[I] Hou11clunln9 Job Wanted, Mile 700 . . Housecleantnr By Day • * • ... Own Transportation Mr1. Sverre Eng. Call 836-0648 19012 Racine Mesa Oeanlng Service I rvlne, Calif. Carpets, Windows, Flcor etc. You are t~ winner of Resld. & Commc'l. 548-4111 2 tickets to Hie Bay & Beach Janltnrial Southland Crpts, wlndowR, iloors etc. Home & Garden Res. "&: Comm'I. 646-1401. Show Ironing a t the ANAHEIM IRONING done in my home CONVENTION St.~ an hr C~NTER * * 645-0326 * * July »Aug. 8 Movrng Please caU 642-se78, ext. 314 between 9 Md 1 pm to MOVING -For your local or datm your tic~s. (North long distance moviJli, call County toU·tree number is OK Van Ii Storage, ~ur ~1220} local allied agent. Palletlud * * ... storage also avail. 831--0400 SCRAM-LETS Painting & Paperhen9in9 ANSWERS . l':o Wasting * WALLPAPER * Whimsy -Taken -f:ntact When you call "Mac"' :H&-14-H 646-JTl 1 -Teapot -TWENTIES. PRO!-', paint111g ext/mt, neat Conrucius aay: "Man can- no. change w1fc ot forty for work. AC'Cous r e 11 1 n g g , two 1WENTIES." airless !\praying. Re t 1. 847-13:-,S. SKIPPER OR CREW lNT & E111cr. Painting. job, Much experience. Z1 & can travel. Dennla (n3} Lic'd, ins. Free esl. JO yrs 4-M>-2538. exper. Chuck, local ref1. PRO~JOl'(AL Ba.rtel1CNr 645-0809. VlNYL paperhanging avaUable far home parties, 1peclaliat, work guaranteed, 673-3657. free est, Dan Schwartz Joi> W•nted, F•m•le 70! 547-5846 or 846-2182. -PROFESSIONAL Paintlnr -LADY wanta hou&edftning, inler/exte1·. Honest work. exper., own trans., $3.:!0 per Llc. & in.I. 54~2759, 645-5350 . hr. 847-3637 a..fter 6 p.m. PAINTING : Honest, AIDES lot' Convaleaoence, guaranl.Hd work. Llc'd. elderly e&re or family ca.re. Any size job. Call 61r5740. Hcmemakera, 547-6681. PA l N TING/paperiJll, 18 Help W•nt..t, M &. F 710 Yrs. in Harbor area. Lie .\ .. ... AdminiatnUve Trainee bonded. R~f's turn. 642-2356. AD MAN APPRENTICE PAINTING, lic'd Ins. Free Part Time estim. Quality mat'l, depen-$1.l8 per week. l:xper helpf\11, dable. 24 hrs. 847-4128. but not ne~ry. Plai ter, Patch, Rt;>elr 1~5701 penomttl • ATTRACT. WAITRESS * PATCH PLASTEftlNG All t:ype11. Free eatlmatea JC~. Ncl unde-r 21. NO Call 54~ PHONJ: CALL$. Apply 1n penon Surf ~ Slrloln, 5930 Plumbing W. Cout Hwy, NB. t' :r •• TAKAS & Sona Pllln\blna ALTEftATION lady " lic'd, bonded, re pipe ul•al&dy or combination remodel nt'w con.at. Free a It er a t Ion I a a lulady. eal. 646-8340 ~5333. -PLUMBING REPAIR BABtsrr your horite, boy 8 No jolt too lmall yrs Gld. Vie. Golden • ~2·31J8 • WeaVHeU. &f7-2311 alt 6 I COLE PLUMJINO pm. 24 hr. aervkle. 60-1181 BAlt MAID W&nted: Apply Sewing/ A1terttl0f't days. VUOO'S Loung e , ' 179H~ Newport Blvd, C . .M. Alteratlons -64~5141 ~9242 Neat, accurate, ~)"ears qp. hRiD ol DMac Oij rurrututt T Tiit lt'a ruilJ not that hard to "C:· Juat watch the CERAMIC tU. new • tw'lli • m1.MltDa.neout Temodel. Frtt eat. • SmaU ~urnnt tn the Oa.al1'Jtd Jobs welcome. ~l426. Stotiolt. l BLOCK SOtn'H OF MlCHELSON DR. IRVINE, CAL.IF. 9~ Equal opportunity employer BARMAID£.Exp'd. Apply in p e r s o n btwn 1·2 pm, '.\ton-Fri al the Green Lantern, 1930 Placentia. C.M. BARMltlD -Single, attract. No costume. The Escapade noom, 1664 Newport Blvd, C.M. BEAUTY Opr. exper. f/l.Jme. Take over cllentele in busy H.B. !llllon. Present opr. moving out ot state. ~o. 542--0452, Eves. 545-3440. -----------· BECOME A DISTRIBUTOR. lm.-ome Xlnt after training comp1eted. Unmatched op. porlunity. Phone 54~. BOAT CARPENTERS Wi th cxper. building la.rite custom yachts. Willard Boat Works, 1300 Logan Ave. C.M. Bkkpr (Fte Paid) Thru T.B. Front ofc. appea.r. ance. Flexible 1o be train- ee; in companies procedures. S.'l50. Fee po~itlons also. RUTH RYAN AGENCY 17!!3 !\t11port, C;\l 646-4354 l79JL BPach. HB 347.9617 Bhl<PR. One "ho has 'NOrk· cd w/CPA olc. "Exper. in poslmg lo JOUrnaJs & Ken"l ledger. payroll. Se n d rl'~ume to P.O. Box 2203, NR . BOYS 1~14 to deliver papers in the San Clemente, San Juan <:apls- trano and Capistrano Beach area. DAILY PILOT 492-4420 CASHIER-Car Wash Full or pt time. 64'4-4450 CASHTER-RECEPT Exper. Thrift or finance co. to work in thrift olc. located in World hdqtrs of Avco Financial Services. Xln't salary. Many co. benefil:tl. Apply m person, Avco Thr1f1. 620 j'\l'Wflort Center Dr. S111lr-101. N B. -----------· cm·:r· or cook, part hme. Cellar Restaurant, 2 20 Forr-;t, Laguna Beach. CLERK Rou1e invoices for delivery. Must k now So. Calif. area. 6 PM-2: 30 AM. $500. RUTH RYAN AGENCY 1793 NPwpo1 l, CM 646-4854 17931 Beach, IIB 847-9617 COOK-RELIEF SHIFT BEAUTIFUL NE \VP 0 RT VILLA 2 Days 7 am.J: 30 pm. 2 days 10: 30 am-7 pm. 2 days off. Some knowledge or restricted diet helptul. All nf'w lotchen &: equip. Call l>etwn 8 am-5 pm b' Appl. 6-12-5861, N.B. COOK-EX PER. Must be over Zl. Apply tn person, Surf & Sirloin, 5930 W. Coa~t Hwy, NB. o:>OKJNG & food prepara· hon Ship Ahoy Laguna Beach 4!H.:l()j() Male must have clean appearance I! aood work habits. COOK, quick ordel' try cook. Steady employment. Mesa Lanes, 1703 Superior, CM. COSMETICIAN D r ug Clerk. Fully ~P only. Downtown H . B . Call 536-2701 COUNSRING Wanted a t PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Two Profea:lonal M~mori&I Counst"1lors, • I ncemlve Proerams • C.Omp;iey Benctii. • High Earnlnp Call Peggy To Arrange Appt. 644.0212 _,,.. ... , ... .,. ~ r ,. -. -' ·'-- r • 1 ,1 ,, I I DI.IL V PILOT T~1. Jult 27, 1971 SEE IT FREE Find Your Name Everything For Your Home Only Jtfajor Flower Show in Southern California This Year! ff y~r name I• ll1t.d In • •pecial ad -it CCMJld appear under •ny cla111flc•tion, so look at them all -phone 642..U71, Extension 314. betwHn 9 a .m . and 1 p.m. t o meke ar'r•n9tments to pick up your ticlcet1 at any convenient DAILY PILOT office. Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT J[ll] :;;;I ~~I Halp Wanted, M & F 710 /Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 l-------;_ _____ ;__:;__;;;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::=i \;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;; I~ ~I --~!~~~, UNTER ~p. full oc liOUSEKEEPER needed, to ~ DOORS OPEN Appliance• 802 Garage Sale 812 Miscellaneous 118 p/time. Apply Chow ~ll, Exec.Sec'y $TOO carefor2boysagesland2. · Weekenda -12 Noon Kenmort Ga1 Stove PATIO SALE 257C N""PClrt Blvd., C\I. For dynamu:: young pm. Live-in or ouL ~Iettnce& ft1 r!IU C:ONV•NTION CLEARANCE, Wh''' •. 0---~lu! ~ "---J '-"U " ~/ln'Cl!NTER "' T1•.'n1 tlC1J spnn-. f•mp, DO:"<lLILI u1cs1u•::ncdts .,..... essential, ~. fDr ap-Woekdays 5 •-CPL TO manage 18 U motrl ,..,.. -. + · p.m . COIOt"'S Singte &. double l'k>thing and misc. ilrrn~, u.v, typing '" • pointmcnt. Red · tn C.M .• s:D1 mo.+ 1 BR. Sec'y /Engr $SSO l °'SK==~~~---~-I &00 West Katella, Ana~h~a~i~m~,~C~a~li~fo~r~n~l~o~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l ·$~ns-ucuon up 10 \P'-,'.d:.. 9 ,:',.:1_;,,'J. Pat. :llJl Dukt turn .. pt. Ir util 55i-l242, .fa:.1 accur cypi.ng far busy H PRS Emplyr pays fee. 1"" ~.,. '".:>. * Cust. Sen. $JOO · Goorge Allen Byland Agen-Kenmore Dishwasher -~l-OV ING-toc"'A7"-,~,ral-cci-,~M=u=ST= Supprvisot'-m 1akt-N"Sponst· F/c~kkpr -$650 ~7 "~B E. 16th. S.A. I ll iJI IL ______ J11 1•J ] CLEARANCE of 1970 SELL all household llems bility for lillpervision ol Cxinstr. O!' archrtectural bck-.... -""' Employment (qlkl1rtW1t Employment 1'.lodeii'i ruu lille poi1a-no rt'asonab!e (l({fr refu~ed: sales ordtt derks/e:qiedit-gmd pref'd. HOUSEKl.""EPER live 1n,I ~;;;;;;~;;;:;;;;I ;:;;;;;;;;~~~I ~;;;;;;;;~~~I bles priced ai'i lo a~ $RS. 1019 B-An1encan Pi., Cosl.a ing o1 orders/M-rv. to C\J!i-Clerk Typist $425 + wile deceased, 2 children,11 Sears, Roebuck & Co. i\lcs.1 . &12-~38. tomn-s.. PrevlDU:S related <'X-E.xJl('r. w/ligures, Variety of a~i:' 9 -14• 646-3056 or Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Adams: at Magnolia, 11 D. ~1-A-,-Y-V\V p.i.rt<o _ 12v. 2 ,,,... ~.. 1• surlbo;.1 cl~. h r a s s chan--. ,-·d. .,,,,-,,. 055~1-<~J6~1~•~·~"~"~w~k<~nd~'-i..•l;;;;;;;;::~~--~;;;;:;;;;;;;;I ·~==P~ho=n~o ~962-"--7""181 Fee paid/Abo Ice jo~ B/0 Med Aist $400 MATURE Babysitter, 41,~ hrs SALES -Men KENl\.iOllE auto 1va5hl'r $6j, lk•llt't", t•1r. 81~ Sonorc1. Rd, ~rv~ Center A~ncy \Vill train, must have lite INSTRUCTIONAL INSTALLMENT per day, oivn trans. H,B. STOfllf Norge auto \\'asher $5.l. Both C!\1 ~(}-t.'ill. 500 Newport ~nter Dr., NB typing. MATERIALS LOAN CLERK area, .i children, $40 \\'k, ••• xlnt rond, late model~. guar ~-~ -- SUite 535 644-49.111 CENTER --United --8-17-5578 LOOKING & ACT & delivered. 5•16-86 7 2 , GAfL\GJ..: Sale ~Ilse. items AUDl ~VISUAL California Bank 847~115 Honda i\lini ' Tl'all. 1932 DENTAL ASSISTANT NEWPORT ...,,... ,\tATIJRE oook-hour.ekecper, Sales minded pi:-rson. see forl;c;-;-;;=·~~~---Maple, No. A, c .M. CHAIRSIDE _ Bllsy oilice, Personnel Agency ASSISTANT 3141 E. Coast Hwy. S day v•k. for elderly couple. yollt"5elf. a tea.I career op-CALORIC 11elf-clean1ng gas Househol-d G-ood-,-~~ Sa urd Fr. 833 D D Distriblltes a1Jd10-visual Corona de'! Mar c rt ·ty XI f ra"'•e d 2 Id 814 s0me t ay's. 1nge over r., N.B. 6 .M. 646-9041. po uni , nt uture for ..... avoca o, yrs o , bfonefits, llunt. Och.. area. 642·3870 equipment, aa;ists in layout 73-9240 r ighl man. Earnings com-cost new $500, asking $'l50. 60 YARDS sculptured carpl- ting, nc1vly clt'.'aned, 2 yrs old $'l. 837-2532 Ph: 84&-3540 s am-6 pm. & de:o,ign oI audio EYStems. $35. $175 PER DAY mence immediately i;hould 511 Santa Ana A11e,_ N.B. EXPER R. E. Salesman for Supervises operation & Equal Oppor_ Employer be in excess of $250, per wk. &1~1679. DRAPERY Sales woman-EX· · I f · t ll~~~~~~~~~~ I 1=~--------fast growing w. O. C. Stiuut main enance 0 equipmen : ~1en, v.·omcn & children for No canvassing or soliciting. GE au tu 1va:;her S 3 o, -""'enced, to head up sales · •~ · •-• 1 · J ~· Really, 340ro Coast Hwy, ass1s~ ltlSwuC ors in use : eKIIa & bit part for non ntervlews by appointment Westinghouse elt>c dryer program on severaJ new Dana Point, 496-1811. maintains inventory; :a;upcr· J . W. ROBINSON'S union & commercials. (213) only 9-3 \\'eekdays. 835-Z771. $30. Bolh good rond. gu;ir & housing tracti; \\"e have un-vises personnel, NE\l'PO 161-JOCil. SALES <l r .... ""' cc72 der oontract. Excellent po--EXPERTt.:NCED-e RT BEACH e I ~.:_:,::::::________ i\lanager w/proven e 1vcn-u . ...........,., . 8-17-81 \.'>. tential 1crr high earnings. NURSES AIDES AUDIO VISUAL MEDICAL Assistant w/2 yrs door-ro-door exper to hea<l REFRlGERATORS, \\ashers J.J, KNICKERBOCKER All shift!!. Fl.di Time, OPERATOR llM immed1ate exp. fur OB-CYN. Back of-up Orange Cnty sales force, $35 & up_ Guarantttd. Dis- Carprt O:impany Huntington Beach Set up, operates, monJtDr!, opening for lice & lab d\Jtiez. 2.>-30 yrs $20,00'.) yr & up. Apply 225 count if casll &. carry. !Town & C:OUntry Cntrl Convalescent Hosp. adjust variety of aud10-v1s-o! age. Call 638-1220, So. State College Blvd, Char-Rons 646-7820 BETTER Anaheim. . 18582 Beach Blvd, H.B. 18811 F lorida Ave. ual equipment, i.e. over-MOTHER"S helper 17 or over Wt.:DGE\\:ooo gas Ph. 962-3351. H.B. 847-3515 he 1 ad projecto•'" 1~ro ~:~:STWSW0MEAERN help w/children & househld GoodSECRETARY Good cond. $9.l. ~love, M achinery 816 i\10DEL H 1''armalJ trartor \V/ 8' ta.nclcn1 disc & 1:i· :l section loolh harrow. 5-15-71:).1. Miscellaneous * GIGANTIC • FLEA MARKET! 818 July :l!lth, 3()1h, 12·9 p.m. July 3ls1 , 12-6 p . ni. Anu-DENTAL RECEPT. F /C Bkkpr $550 P ayers, rcror era., s: lui:: or chores Balboa Peninsula un-skills, xln't co. Call 675-&96 11.rt ti Desk only. Dental exper. Thru Trial Ba.Janee film proJectors: operates, ti! Aug 14th. L i ve .i n Call Lora.lne HO'fPOlNT re!rii;eralor good concl. $70. necesii. Some Salli. Salary Call Lorai~ monitors & adjusts equip· • }'uJJ or p/time, exper pre-preferably. Call 673-827;). \Vestclill open, fringe bell('flls. J-1.B. \\'ei>tclilf ment for rear &ereen pro-ferred, xln't oo. benetits. MUSICIANS_ Bass & drum-PerfiOnnel Agency ·-•·Ph. 8 .. , "=•o 8AM "P•'I jecnon on closed circuit 20-l3 \Yestdiff Dr., 1''8 5·19-2573 m qll€'s . Boutique-CoUecubles- Dolls a Gourmet fOOd-Rum- magt'. Y.\\".C.A .. 1111 N. ...... ~~....., ""' " 2013 \Vestcliff Dr., NB A I · mer to form trio \\'/piano DENTAL Assistant, exp. Pen;onll('\ Agt!Dcy television, 16mm &. select-PP Y in person 10·5 p.m. player. Modern, nol rock. jj.j:).mo • .1\1AYTAG repair man has chairslde, 2 dayi; per wk 645-zno O.mat.ic slide projectors: # 2 Fashion Isl., N.B. 646-1843. SECRETARY, good t·lerical ~·asher :xln! col'ld, delv w/90 I perlorms routine malnten-Equal opportunity employer skills. Day•, r It i m,. day guar. $.j(). 531.$37 eadiflt' to full time. Sl6--0697 FHA-VA LOAN Processor f · t NEWPORTER Inn needs ance o equ1pmen. Personnel <lcpt. lloag H°'P· OLDER HOTPOINT DISHWASHER 3 yrs ex"'fl in packaging &. I'"!!!!!!!!""'""'""'""'""'""'""'" middle aged or older male Must ~clean &: neat, over fundg. Lrg corp w/xlnt co GRAPHICS LAB KITCHEN & C'.ounter helper gardener !or pennaiw.nl NB. i"e'frig. ldeal for garagl", Brsl 2L Apply in person, Surf & _be_.,._f_its_._962_-5c__OJ_5 ____ TECHNICIAN for Jtalian deli, l'Xper. 1B514 po.~itiion. No ph calls pis. SERVICE Station Salesman offer, 642-7~2. Sirloin, 5930 W. Coast Hwy, FISHING TACKLE Operates slide reproduc· &ach Blvd, H.B. Apply in pen><>n, ask for J\.tr. Fu!! lim£, graveyard Ex-WASHER, Frigidaire, rll"lux(' NB tion camera; handles g & LEGAL SEC'Y Ellis (Head Gardener) 1107 per, neat Apply in person. jct action, 2 yrs old r xrcl 1-----------Sales & service. Good oppor-JamborC'e Rd NB 2.>90 Newport Blvd, C.111. l'Olld. ;;Jb. fll' offrr. ;;:i&-1 12b. Broadway, S.A. B1\RGAJNS GALORE~ JOHN'S BIKES New * Used R epa irs 2340 Ne"·port Blvd. Open 6-10 \Vkday:s Sllt k Sun '.l-6 645-4720 -\Viii lake Trade.Ins-DlS'I'RlBlITORS wanted. sell tunity for asgressive yng 16mm sHll _camera: pro-3 Yri1 recent Calif. eXper. I~====-·~·-·-·~-- Ba!!IC H Protein man \\'/gro11.·ing company. ~uces micro[iche; cartoons, Know'I of probate. SH 80. NE\VSPAPER morning auto SEWING mach opera~r. Furniture 810 ii·ai;h i n.1; Vitamin. 646-4523 Good knowledge of !ialt v.·a-11Jusu·atea and letten;; pre-Type 70 & use sterorette. To routC'. Approx hrs. 4~ am hourly rate, good pay for1::--:---------n1ach1nr ,t!J, 1/ryrr S7.), FOR SALE. DRAPERY work room girl. ler fishing & mech ability Pal'e!i transparencies, in-1$6()(). 1-<lays \\'k. Excel pt tin1e neat rxp ope rator. 61.'>-7!Jj2. STUNNING, L'Onremporary d r r ~sf r 1 ni irror 1 & nl!e ~xp oaly. (l)IT DRAPERY req'd.Sendresume&!ialacy c:lUd1ng use of color; over-RUTH RYAN AGENCY income for responsible, SOILS TECH. furn. \Vhitc, 10 1 ~· <'-Ouch & stand, S!.i, clc~k $IO, inany SERVICE, 1702 Newport requirement to Classified sees production of all graph-1'1'9'3 Ne11.-port CM ~t>1 n11UTied man over 30 yrs. Exper. 11·/rompaction test inatching ;-)' loveM>at & 01-othf'r ltCnl:". J\fl JZ noon Blvd. C.M. A<... #195, Daily Pilot, P.O. ics material3 relaled to in-17931 Beach, 'i-ra 847-9617 Cali 8-11 a .m., 541)...3006. earth fills in field, Offices lohm~n, tabfk S&/S4 dirt•c1or:s 1650 Riverside Dr. Cl\f. ' ll60 CM""""" &truction. 1~-.---~-----I NURSES ._, ! Woodland Hills & Irvine. c aU'S 0 chron1e, * DRIVERS * ' -· "~· LEGAL Sec'y wanted neea""' or pvt 121 31 3-l6--0565. glass, plastic: & iv h i tc WATCH Repair Summe r FOOD & Co?<tail Waitn>ss OFFSET Criminal exper. Call Pam, duly, AU Type&-all 'hilts -----------' leatht'r. blk & u·hitt' arra :-lpcc:1al! $4 .50 Clean, adjust, No Expen·ence ,~,, P/tim,. co u 1 d 54• .-.o_ Rel. nee. Lescoulie Nurses Sl\1ALL md"·•n•I p 1--t 1 h d n1 d~;lop into fl!ime. Day PRESS OPERATOR _..........,_ Registry, 351 Hospital Rd .• ~ecdsalert;f,1 megaJ t~do rugs. Thayer Cogan blk ,~· !::i;.' s~~1~~ ;~:~;ient&• Necessary! &hift, Rancho San Joaquin Halt-time po15itlon swing MATURE Saleslady, no ex-N.B. Call &12-99j,.} any hour. gen'! n(c & lab work. i\Just '''hire cocklail tablr, 4· Jt'welry, 2-12£ New p" f • Must have clean Caht drlv. Go!! Course, 18021 Culver s:hirt, 4pn1 lo 9pm_ l\londay pe_r necess. Jntervws only IntcN hrs 9a-5p, ~J-f_ be gd typist. Call !vtrs. ~i~~~.i\tust i ae r i J ice 612-8-Kl2. Ing ~ord. Not under 25. Rd. IN!ne, Near U.C.J. Ask thru Thursday. Operates off-12·3G:°5 Pl\i. Show-OU, 22 ORNAMENTAL JRON-Tully, .:.46-415J. ~====~- YELLOW CAB CO, for Wayne 833--0U2. set and direct impreuion Fash10n Island. N.B. \YO RKER expl'rienced SUMl\1ER Ei\tPWYMLNT: 6-D1•a,,·rr rhl·st k t·ha1 r :s1:1: WATERBEDS 186 E. 16th St .• C.M. GENERAL OFFICE duplicating ('(JU1pmenl; pre-M * ** 494-S.376 * ** Collegr students-are you ~!esk &h chair s1:1; cl 1nl'tle & All sizes S13.9j. Package ruv parrs ncgat11•es and plales: anagement 1 k 1 I "' c aws $J j ; 1n '!'!a J rll'a!. p,1dded naugahyd-. D EWAY salesmen, ex· Good typing &kills . d p~rklng oo ing or part fime or Jul '--k 1. 1 •· opaquing an masking; "" •NV ca~e · ,1, ramed 011 /ritme, 1~9.~l.i. w.1,, .. "-,·- p er. w/lu be ex pee. ~·t •--.,·-SALES LEAD CASHIER t1n1e work? Adverlisin"" Co. 2 .. ,_, .... ,., '-""' .....,., '"' maintains inventor-u·, oper-b painting S .) f.. up I 7 Overtime al time It. 11, W-"ff 'J has 5 management """'llions ; ~e 11111'· S .:iQ. 838-5587. )l ""'u.:11 ates photocopier, blndin", Seek indtvidua1 lo ~upervise .~~ 1ur SI D; many 111 or r BO~X~-------- Boyd'1 Arco, 49:1 E. 17th St.. Pt'rronnel Agency col!atini;, jot:ging, cuttl;g MANAGER parking o Pe r at \ on al open. Must be ll('at in ap-bargains. J666 N r w fl or 1 ~prJngs, mattresses, CM. 2043 Westcliff Dr., NB and paper drilling ,quip-Newport CC'nter. Requil"!s pearanc<', demons!Talc Blvd Ci\! &12-'MS \\·ork b~·nl'l1. Vise, 0111irs, &15-TnO $25,000.$50,000 · leadership ability. Up 10 ' 1 .:..___·_' -· re\·ord d1a11gl'I', c 11 st rn Experienced GENERAL ~us<"-k • ment. min. Z yri; related cxper., $600. n10, Apply 225 So. MUST ~ell living n n ~-den ni.id£' tnd ('hai r. !IG:l-7994, ,..., .-.v. ..,. including some lii.U,...,rvision. t ' · J I t f TELLERS ,,.... Staie College B 1 v d., 11 n. inc vr VC' so a ,r.,_ 202,'lS i\1a~no11a, I\B. rooking Mu&t have rtl's. Scnrl Resume Class1tied Ad WE ARE LOOKING FOR Per rn anent position lnve:.r<1t 101 I * • • Mrs. S. Fisher 1245 Catalina Laguna Beach You are the winner ol ~ ticke ts 10 the Southland Homa & Garden Show at Ille ANAHEIM CONVENTION CE NTER July 30-Aug. I Plea..-c call 6~2·::..0111, ext. Jl4 bet\\"et'n 9 and l pm to claim your tu::keb. (North County toll-free number i.11 5-I0· 1220 )_ * * * *AUCTION* l'inc rurnitur• & ApplJallCf'S Auctium1 Friday, 7.00 p.rn. Windy's Auction Barn 207:l'n: Ne11por1, CM 646-8686 Behind Tony's Bldg 11a1'1 1' contemporary couch, $30: 450 pwr tclcscOJ"I{', IS30; lawn n1ower, $60; Hearth E.arthenv•are, S50; Wrought uun dining room 5Ct, best olfl"r. Cali 5J7-165& a.ft 5 p.m. 3i\f "009" copy paper type &ti. Jn 01•1g1nal cartons. 2.000 shrets 8~i X 14" Md 3,000 shcels si-;. x 11". S urplus fro m tri al demonstration. Price i 100. Cllll 642-4321, exl 277. Miscellaneous Wanted 120 1 CASH PAID FOR fin<> furntturr, appliances, ..Jn!1qul's. One piece or houseflll. Call day or night, .,i:l-?.!-11 or ~17-773:,:, Office-Furniture/ Equip. 124 COi\IPLETE Pitney Bmws addre!.SOgraph equipment. Takr over lease payment of $+1.i.'i per n10. Call 675-&'.l50. Pianos/Organs 126 SUl\l~!ER CLE AR A NCE SAL!.'; K..1\va1. Sle1n\\·ay, Baldwin, \VurhtZt'r, Kln1baU, Lowrey, Conn. Ailen, Etc. $295 & up. RENTALS. PLAYERS. l'l"il'ndly telephone inlor, FIELD'S PJANO CO. 18.\3 Newport Blvd. Co~\a l\1csa 714/645-3250 WOULD Y OU BELI EVE U you're bright, like talking Live-in. 673-8775. #J!J.l, Daily Pilot. P.O. Box THE YOUNG THINKING, benefits. Ir qualified, call Ana he im. i"lcrculo~ Sf'l.s, Ga~;; P1~i'. SOf:T&J.Ocktng l'hair, 12~1!! 10 people, have 11. good fig-GENERAL Ofc. Telephont 1.J60, Cosla Mesa, Calif. CAREER MINDED IND!-l\lr. Erickson, 6 4 4-2 O 2 O TAX ACCOUNTANT Vacuum rlrancr etc.. X!nt ~rrrn shag rug 1>/un-. •-1 """'""' VIDU \LS \VlTH TIIE DE b<f'"""n 8am & 5pm. For busy CPA oh:. in coastal ''"-d 64_ oo~" · df'rn11d. 2 tolo-•"l ,-~ l'P.El': ORGAN LESSONS Ure aptltuu.::, 11. P <"ill!ant per-personality. \Viii tr a 1 n . """"'· 1 •• "'"~" "" ;:i-.,., ,. "" •M• I tik N nallly le. b · I ;:::::::z::;~:;:::::I SIRE TO START A PRO city. lleavy individual, ('()r-... · · · · !11hlt•s. m i~c i\C'ms. 6-15--0:\1\ as ong as you C! o rei-80 u:sull!'M exper. &14-0065 betwn 4:30 J!.m. & 7 I, FESSIONAL CARE E ~ PERSONNEL P 0 r a I(', p 11. rt n er ship EJ\RLY American turn, Like ------~ 1straL1on. No obhgation. Ju.st (pretenbly as• bank lf'J\ ... p.m. DIRECTOR prcparatJQn. AJro, la x new; K1nR"-~Z bedrm set, CO.\IPJ.l:.:TF: bdr1n set Si:>; Come. i\Iondays 7:30 pm er! you cou1d qualify for 1 -G=E~N=E~R~A~L~C=L=E~R~K--\Vfffi DIGNITY & PRES-Deg°rtt, Experienced research. Call 547-7061 for Soft1. &. lovesrat. Jtock1ng maptt-cl1n1nt: rm :;rt $j(); COAST MUSIC one of our bank tel.Jer open. If . . TIGE. Call J\1rs. Schmidt chair Coffre & C'nd ' IJ! boy!> to~·s 2X-$1 . i2J SL EH2-2S51 inp. you enxry US"lng your mind t1ppt. or send resume to 1 ' V 1 a l!S , Janlr~ Rrl. N, B. &l6-lS91. & have run a IO-key afldi ng ''OU'LL LEARN. HO\\' \\"cstd1U P.O. Box 539, Orange. Ca. anlps. €'lc. ery o pr!ced . HA.t\11\'IOND, S I• In w 11. y, Apply BANK OF AMERICA 1016 Irvine Avenue Newport Beach EquaJ Oppor_ Emi;loyeT" EXP'D bookkeeper !of N.rf. ~porting goo<'k gto~. G<xoit starting Miiary. Prelf'r person acquein!ed 11•/rrlai] S11le11. Permanent position. Xlnt 1,1,-orkin1t cond in con- genial aurroundings. 1147-5006. Now·s THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642°5678 machine, \\'e have an open-YOUR O'iVN TALE'"NTS & :~crsonnel Agency 92669. 714/548-4918. ::00'-l x 12--3, 9, 16 fl. St-t1:S Y11.m;,iha. New & u.ied ing tor :t1J1J ln our H.B. ABIL!Tll';.'\ CAN BE CHAN· 2().13 \\'c~cliN Dr., NB TRAINEE RECEPTIONIST: llOUSEFULL of tiirn 1nrl. pr. 2 x 12..$1' ,o.t 12,.. l·~~rl. pianos of m0st makes. Best -· d" t X" t k TO ,,. mo (')ran. ·102 Costa '.\lc."i! Sl B-.-., g ,p. ''" v.w 1ng ]'1.'ELED \\"A RDS TiiE ____ .,._ J-Local ofc. of largr nation;il :1tf'rro l'qu1p, hranrl 111•1v buys 1n N:>. Calif, a! Schmidt cond & benefits. HEIGH TS OF FTNAN-P ersor1nel-Clerk ro. Loans 01 pubhc rontart. sr1v1ng n111rh1nl'. i\lu~1 ~"II, :l1 ~7::9~. I Illu.,1,; Co., 1901 N. Main. Call Pen;onnel Cl AL T:\:"'D£PE'.':DENCF. To $..)20 Hct1.\."Y f'lnplOY''f' Lite iyplng, phones. No rul fo"u~ more info c·all :,111--=->flS l Cfll.LF.Cr(H~S l·li1n<ln1aflr .S;1111a Ana. 847.7751 ~NE PER.SONNEL THROUGH OliP. C0!\1-i:ro11p Ill&. & "'"l'ktnens hl'rf'~ S:HJ. \.1-~RY. \'f'ry l"l'/l~Onali)r ltitll:on ac~·orrll'on s11:.; al!<ou nr ... Fl.'loll SllE~O~U~P~R~l-G_H_T Uni~ard Jnsurance Group SER.VJCES*AGENCY T'AN\"S t'ORi\IAL TP.ACN-•·inii p. Lr~ Jrvinc area t'O., Coll i\lary Lt'f', ~..W-60:i.1. 8' CO~T-F.\lP-off -ii liitl' 11n;;-;-; han<! 1·111, lr_arl L·tyi;1al -•h1 11"li Pl.\'.0 -Good rond. Equal opportunity employer JNC PROGR.J\~l. J:f\lll'lh ro SJ t 1 on. XJnt COASTAL ACEi'i"C,. t'Ouc-h, Joo~" cushi .. ns, $."ii _rl •'filnlrir $1.lO. li"il-<!i:D2_. _ $1 :/.'i .,. * * ~•10-.1!)'.15. J'ELP -F1"N' & Fee Positions , ~ v:;intrd in Jlf'l i;hop. t>1•nc,f1ts Call Jl.l1ss L.iura, 27lXl !!arbor Bl at Adams L1lirary s!eps, 11·mui::ht iron ANTJQ!'~~ )'.<il'nrr $.~J n 11 TV Rd'HF No exper ner, "'ill train. AfP Cl€'rk to $.'JOO e Ct1.rl1\lac Car f'111.n .'"!.)i-612Z, ,\l:111:a1l Ab hot t \vAI TRESS, experienct>ft. w/walnut ,;!<"'p~ 5lll-:1~27_1 ro_:i1ngs _ hv 1·r11011·nd At"!'..~r· s'ter:O to, i i, 836 Female only.113 Bro:irlwav, Acc1n.:. f'XpC'r. Gd tvnini.r : L;bera~l'~ringe Bcneflt& Prr!'{lnnrl A,l!;ency, 2JO W. fu!I t1 n1r. Benlon's C"lf"i:' BR set ~15, 2 n1flplr l;in1ps ~~$12.>. l!nr:.1. ior,,lor J·111! ~---:------...:.:.: C. i'>f. No phone c-a.ll!'i pleal'i~. Grn'l Olfirr ...,,. $390 • ~t:~~ I~~c;'d"131rly \\\orlll'f, Suite 211, S. J\, ~hop, 13.1 s. Coa..~I Hwy. $2J f'ach. pa id S!2,). 1 nuiplr. l ~11 h·r ~\O(l, >i,,!J...l0.1.. ST~:REO, 1911 unclaimed HOM E~1AKER for pl<'asanl . .,., T G o l'llO~!:: SOL ICITORS ... Your Laguna Bch. 494-4 8!)8. .;,1ngll'. box i;pc. & m"lll"'"" Cll ,\lllS, ~.,l:i. IJl"d. l:in1f"· li'ly • a11·a.v. G t1. r rB rd -~' yplng. . . f'Xp!'r " ''""' 11 hon1e. \\"oman rap:lhlt ()f Scc'y/J\lktng $.:X.O DAVID B. LOOl\lJ~r.. hon1e, you r hou1·s. \Ve pro-* •\\'-ATTRESS \VANTED fi.12-4t!17 aft 4. <1 qua r I iJ m ~, p 1 a n n, 1 urnt11 l "· A:-.T/Fl\1 stereo, ('ar1ng for 2 children • Lrte Sll, fast typins LArjD. 1--rNA:'i"CJAI, JN· vidr ll'ad~. lflCa l calls Qnly rvenin~ ~hifl. Good, shor; CO\lPLETI:: 1 or h<1nkcil~"~" dP'k~, ,. t,... 1"iu!10 & L:1pe player. Air OOtne. !\fo!hrt Ill All dutiei;. AIR BkL-..r Sj,,j() VEST:'llE~T A/l:ALYST, n Et $-10 d.1y. J\pply, 275 Stair. hrs. 61.~2().'Jl .. ' 1 111 '°.11~ !'>I c ;,10-:,;1;i;1. I ~ P •' 11 k e r lli wlcross-011er 1'1ui;t drive & do marketing. ~,, ""'" UJllcge Bl1•d, A11a hf'im or "1rni urr. ··'11 S l , .. -,~ --s_,,1('111. Si1ll hrand new 548- 3154 or 5t8-\5.1 4 . J\/R f'XJl('r. in insu~ E. BROKF:R \VTLL BE 635--1.Jj(}. FIVE \\\)nien Neerled to NewpQ r\ Brach. 67,'>.-J\.)!I l i~Hl.E; 1><111' l!i , U11•1~ S.-:-ul•I fnr $:t19 ll'/l\Drranty: !rt<;Urance $.300 REVlE\\'JNG APPl.!CA-U11rn &. teal'h profrs!.ioal SPANISH bar, 2 t11 hack ~~:l!s,,.l h P· ni•itor, SlOO. Pny oft balance of $1'10 or * * * * * * * ~r 8!11 a.Yt. to pcrr.onal TIONS I:'>t~tEDIATEJ.,Y. PROt'ESSIONAL phone ma.kc-up. F/Ume, p/time. stools,bestoflcr.Xln!rond. _:1•1 '.:!)i~ small paymrnl3. C redi t HOUSEKEEPER under 35 lines Undt'l'\\Ti1er. T~. TIIROUGlf COi\li\1ISS IONS soi1citor • Dana T'oint, San Exec:. Jmition avail. Call 54>-3:,SS. 1!17 1 ~rn1lh \.nrona •Cnronf't) <!epl, ~ift.'H).lOI. N-autiful bay!~nt home,' & SERVICE FEES YOUR Oemcntc, Capistram area. v· · \Vood nf "-•metic• le t bl 1 I ' w ------< ·-E ivii1 ne a ...., • KfNGSJZE "-d Ro f-R I ,. r por <1 c )'JX'iin er '*"J. 21" "'-lor TV f 195 private quarters. $300. mo. ''°" . 17th (al ltv1ne) C.l>f. J-TRST YEA R EAR!~JNGS Work in your own home_ ""~JA..C·• • '"' , ya cs . 67~ 2,2-I ......, · sacri l~ • 673.8356, 641-1470 J\{AY BE $25,000-S50,f.OO. Segt deal 1n area. Phone ,,...,.... "'"" ijjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjil :Z mos old. 20 yr. guar. $175. ..-~ .l. J9" ~r1able S2:>. 21" tablf' * * * * 835-1465 bct\l'Cen 9:00 a .m. Twin 11iu-bM $3'1. 5'1 1-396 1. f'OR Sate: Ou1ettc set-:--Pro nv'Klt'I Sal. All are in xlnt '-,,=..-=~~~·--•~-*-For that Ite m under $50 CALL NOW and noon. Ii~! Tho 1 I d ..... W ~lot car tack, 1ron1r.g board, cond, :1:"17-8()8'.2. <'DAILY PJWT ! Uo • ~· '· as est rnw 1n ''"' f'SI r. '6-""l · or ac n! try the Penny Pincher 558-0444 RECEPTIONIST _ •• a Imily Piiot Classified jot ·""' • l!OUSE llunting? \Valcb 1be I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::.;:;.~1 Ad. 642-5678 Call 642--5078 Now! OPEN HOUSE column. Newport Bcarh !inn liif!f'kS I 1 A sk for Mr. Metz: MANAGEMENT X·MlLITARY OFFICERS BE'IWEEN AGES 25-30. IF' YOU HAVE RECENT- LY RETURNED F ROM VrETNAi\t WE l lAVE A JOB THAT YOUR LEAI).. ERSHJP QUALITY \VJ.LL FTr RIGHT INTO. YOU \\'lLL ACT AS A RECRUIT· ER FOR A LARGE 1.J\ND INVESTMENT ('(}_ INTER- VIEW PEOPLE \VHO RE- SPON'O TO OUR ADS. CAN'T BE AFRAID TO l>IEEI' OBJECTIONS. • Sll.lary + Bonu, Plan • P'lusb Offices • Fringe Beneflt1 • Start Immedlat~ly CALL NOW Mr. 547-6771 Atk for Kent Adams rccep1.ion1s1 wi1h n1in1mum Antiques 800 Antique1 800 Antiques 800 Antiq ue1 IOO or 2 yr.. l'Xpl'r1Cn('(". Plea.S- an· pc1~nallly &. ability 10 han<llc busy desk, v.•hich ln- clude11 use of d ictaphone &. hl'llVY lyptng. Xlnt working 1·ondiuon~ & Co. bem?lits, Call: 6-14-32:)8 Btw: 8 a1n It noon. Resident Mana9er ror nc"'· 27 unit 11clult a1)11J'"t- n1e11\ 1n Cm!a Mrsa. Rf"ply stating eXpc!"ienc~. n1ari1al t1lah1lli, lncon1c rcq111ren1cnl.ll flrk\ harkgi'(lund_ \V r 1 t e : 01ls51 lif'rl ad #96, Dllily Pi- lot. P.O. Box 156<1, O>sta !''::'8·-~11. --~---SALES girl for boutique shop N. B. area. Pr.rm. J)O!ltion. A~ 21 -30. Mu11t be thoroughly exJ)l"r. Send resume, CIM~lf!f'd 1ul No. 19:l, D1tlly Pih:>!, P. 0 . Box J:-ffi. Cott:ra t.1esa, Calif. !l2626. "\VBE=·o~J-t -,~,,,-.,-.~ .. -.-,~,,-.,.­ our the l~tisuns & trlll'lh • t11m Into ('11..\h thru 11 Dally Pilot C\11.~~!fiM 11d. '>42-5678 lO'X:t OF'F WITII ntlS AD Harfleld AntiqUf'I, 813 E . Balboa Blvd, Ba I bo a, \\'f'd-Sat, 12~ pm .~o RESULTS you can D&- pcnd on, Call the S\ll'Jl!'I" .:, a I es men .. De.Uy PUo! Clu1UtM 642.-56'7ll -place your ad A char-re II! CLIFT'S ANTIQUES ! QUITS !! 4-DAY LIQUIDATION AUCTION I AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: Largest antique inventory ever offered at public: auction in Southern Calif. OVER 3000 ITEMS -APPROX. $200,000 EVALUATION 14,000 SO. FT. OF FINE ANTIQU ES MUST BE SOLD NOTE: Office equip.&. fixtures (':\nnot be removed until sale is completed. SALE CONDUCTED ON PREMISES BY WESTERN LIQUIDATORS AND ASSOC. SITE -CLIFT'S ANTIQUES -10802 BEACH BLVD .. STANTON DATE -THURSDAY' July 29, 1,00 P.M. FRIDAY I July 30, 1,ooP.M. SATURDAY I July JI , 1,00 P.M. TERMS -2s•1. Deposit at time of sale -Verified INSPECTION -3 d1ys prior to s•le 9 to S - AUCTIONEER: G. L. G1rdn•r SUNDAY Aug. 1st 1,00 P.M. -·--o-·-__ -:-. ___,,,,, " • -t i:.~~ .. -., .• , ....... • --,,,.,. .... 1 -_.., __ -. , , IJJ-U '7<' ' ----~ ... ' i; .. TV, Radio, totlFI, SterM O..ner•I 900 Bo.ta, Sllpa/Docka 910 Moblle Hom•• Ml Autos, lmpof"Nd 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, I~ t70 l9T1 ZENJ'Mi A Admiral eJoae-<>ot l&Je Lo w e 1 t prlcu . 3 yr pkture tubt. 1 yr parts It .ervl~. Antenna inst&lled w/all c:on80lH. ABC color TV. 9021 Allan!Jl, H.B. 9fi8..3329. __ F,..._to_vo_u _]IS 3 Linn,~ Times, $2,00 * * * Kent Goh .. n 26116 San Roqu• Mission Vleio You are~ winner of 2 ncket! to the Southland Home & Guden Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER July ~Aui. S 2 YEAR old B row n 1 s h Pll'Ue call 642-5678, eirt. 314 poodle. Found near 22nd & bl'tween 9 and 1 pm to Newport. etill uncl&lme<I, claim your tlcketa. (North musl find good ho m e . 1 County toU-~ num~r u 548-1369. 540-1220) * * * KlrrENS -Slark. RTey. --------- malt & rtmalt 2111)..(: CAPTAIN A C Unhmtrl'd IJ~nse -any gross Orange ve , . ~I . ~2.l. tons. 30 Years experience sail & power. Profe551onal f'REF.: 1.mall s1u puppy, gpon fishing gu1rle; Mexican '"'e've aJltrgy problt-msl & Central America & Pacif- F t' ma 1 e , Love ktds. 1c Coast waters -lnstrUc- 847-13~. non in boat handling, sea- L OVA BL E dog x 1 n t mansh1p, DR & n>lestlal w/chldm & gd watrh dog. nav1gat1on. PICK UP & :-;etds lrg yrd. All shots & OF.LIVERY ANYWHERE: Uc. 5'IB-0053. <'llpta1n available for ex- FriPndl_y_B-la_c_k__ tPnnPrl rru1sing. Extt-nsh'!! MalP Rabbit al!m1nistrat1ve experien~. 548-5289. 646-2977. FRIENDLY hound, 1 w/ch1ldren. 557~297. Blue-Tick yr, good All shots. 20' DOUBLE enrler w/trai!Pr, :i cyl engine, rorwarn & reverse. Call (213) 963-2451!. WANTED -private or com-CONTIMPO. mercla.I allp for 30' catch LAGUNA HILLS Nwpt ana Ml 2-~ or Ml 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DJl. S-1242. (Celmer of M°'-'1ton Pkwy) PRIVATE moonn& for u.le, Pre.U,e adult comnu.alty ad· 4tb of July Cove. D-12, ac· Jacent to Le~ World oomodates 45'. 7141544-3578. Beautitul l'UmM,llld.inp. all BOAT &lip aVllil, July ht, for luxury appo1ntmenta, Thu· 60'-70'. Wide allp. apeuUc pool Sauhaa, exer- 673-Wl6 C1&.s l)'ID. • billiard tab!~. much much morel SLIP SPACE AVAU. 2.5'-30' SAILBOATS * 573-6606 * See beaut. turn m.odelt 1n park-like aett:lnr. CALL 83()..3900 or 830-7900 Boats, Sp .. d & Ski 911 '59 FLAMINGO de I rn mobile home. New I y SKI or !uhing boat + trlr, furnished, a1r cond, patio glass on wood hule, neu cov'd. Xlnt cond, $3000. Call new Chrsysler '55 Hsp. ror appt, 548-5608. R_uns like a drum • $550 Motor HomH 557-3683. CLASSIC Mahogany 16' Mere inboard. '64 Ch r y s I e r CONDOR Marine 6. ~to apprtt1att' ~ yacht that's not 1 boat Best otler o\er $1,000. BILL CORWIN FORD 968-4691. Oranp County' a O>odor Dls- 14' GLASPAR, 40 hp Johnson tnbutor, 230 S. Main St.. + trailer, xln't cond. $800. Orange, CIO&e to three ma- 67;>--0327. jar frttw~s. 639-1850 Or '70 Boston Whaler w/40 hp _Ki_7_-_044_4_. _____ _ eng. Best oUer over $1000 35' MACK Bus. Completely 6#-1195. st-If containt-d. Xlnt runnini iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil cond. See & make ofter. 548--0022 anytimt-. TranspOrtltion ]jrtt] Trailers, Travel 945 VACATION 1n snug 14' ••••••••• Crown. Full gjde tent Campers, Sale/Rent 920 w/alum poles. All only BEAUTtrUL re i 1 s le red male wht standard poocllt' 642--0945. 6 f'T. dinghy, 3 HP Johnson ...... _._.,.__.. ......... .,.__.. ___ , $490. 54!>-7784, days. 2 ADORABLE all-black kit- tens. shorthair. 8 \\ks. 673-3121 . Large male dose. abl 4 yrs old, free to izoori home. MS-2893 4 AOORABLE klltPn!'i. 2 ''hilt>. 2 black & white. Fret-. 963-2344. Coll 1~ 1Shep. Rearly 712.i. Goon homes w/lge yards. 642-1835. WEIMARANER pU'PJ>Y about 6 mo. Llkes kids, nf'e<is yard. 54~142 ADORABLE male kitten~ f~e 968-7913. 10021 Cl1H Or, H.B. FrH Gray Kittens 847-0100 '---Pet_' anct_Suppl_il•__,JI ~I Complete $125. Will sell ~parately. 544--0268 eves. Boats, Maint./ Service 902 FIBERGLAS.S REPAIR-ALL TYPES. Bi~ or small-insho~ outshop. 20 yrs exp. n4 I 5-1&-fi646. 213/43>5419. I Boats, Power 906 18' SOUTH COAST utility. I hail tank, S/S radio. good eng. Transterre<l, mU!.i sell. lsl $800 lakP!I (213) fi66-4948. 24' CHRIS Craft Cabin Cn.HS<'r. 185hp V8 marine eng Top running cond. Make ofr. 644-644S. 24' M11raudf'r, rtybridge, 3 mo old. 700 HP. ~fRny ex- tral'!. $15.500. Da_ys 546-7781; ('VI'S R37-2461. 32' TOLLY BY Owner. 1966 TS • F .B . 0 1'---.lf7'51'19 YWCamper Rentals $75 a week~c • mrr. Mac Horua~b AUTO l TRUCK lEASINI: 124 No. Harbor at Bolsa NIMROD hrdtp tent tratler. SIJH;, tablt-, atove, irf! box $795. Pvt Pty: 548-4156. Auto Service, Puts 949 5 Spoke mllg wheels. Will fit Cougar, Mustang or most American can. Size 14x6. $85. ~99 TR-3 parts: 2 carburetors UO ea, distributor $10, gt>nt-rator & starter $5 f"a. Coil $2. 2381 Carlton Pl. CM. Santa Ans-531 0607 ~~~~~~~~~~jBRAND new VW tire incl '59 Dodge lf2 Ton PU nm, Still has ruarantee, 1h ton, 8':h tt. overhead camp-$~. 64!>-3423. er, sleeps 4 w/range. lee iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim box, oven, w1rerl, etc., vei; 1 11 A J clean. Call 557-9792. Autos for Sale FACTORY d Ire c t dt>aler, ------- Majorway & Hall P1nl, tro1.1!•••••••••• $795 869 W. 18th SI, C.~1. Antiques/CIHsics 953 DANA 36" Shell top, full 1925 Lincoln 4-<loor sedan. boot. $22.'i. n...-. d °' """ 2lJi~2-2SlT ,_.., ~· mint con . ,,,,,....,., mj. E'Xcf'llent running cond. extras. lmmar. Bf>st offer Cycles, Bikes, Custom body. $3.250. Call over $13.000 548-5098 Scooters 925 li.'36-2.188 alt. fi pm. Pets, General 17' 1969 CHRYSLER 155 Hp ----................ _.. .................... 1928 Modt'I A -coupe. Early 850 1/0, marine rarlio, full THINK mocfPI unrestorl'd orig. coon. ('O\ er. Xlnt cond. $2895. HONDA Body in mint cond. s~. ll MO. old sulphur breal'll'rl 67J-2.~19. 63&.2388 att. 6 pm. TOUCAN w/large cage. BOSTON WHALER 13 -1""195-:--7-N_O_M_A_D_,-th_e_re_l_s _no_ $65. (7141 495-5016. \\/33 Ev1nnine Ski !Will. $795. •'fRIEDLANDEJr' clP,.rK'r; a.II onginal A TALKING Mynah Bird w1lh il:>.R-3210 or 673-R325. stock. $1750. 557~25. $125 ,.. lllACll CtfW'\', ., • DODGE D200 1968 ~Ton Pidrup, V-3, auto- matic. X1ra Oun, low mileqe, R.una lJkie ,.,,.,, ANNIVERSARY •SO <90161.8). PINTO W/AUTO. S21t5 Trana.115 day, 5c mile. M.a , THEOPORE cHoward ROBINS FORD ~ or SJl--0608 m HAltBOR BLVD. Ccrmr lit & Harbor COST A MESA 642-0010 Santa Ana Auto., Imported 970 ''64 Chevy Yan g cyJ. engirlf', complete over- haul, new dutch It brakes. 6 month or 6,000 mile euar- anty COS #943Sl. $1495 %100 Harbor Blvd. 64>G466 GMC Carry-All ,_.._ • 'QI Pl:>nche 912 • 1960 Por?che lfiOO Surer sharp. e '64 VW Bur e '69 VW Oel~e Wagon • ·g9 VW F•tbk auto/air • • 7 0 Dabrun 2000 e '9> Sunbeam Tl&er MANY MORE TO OiOOSE FROM! HOUSE OF IMPORTS (1) 523-7250 BENTLEY 1968 327, V-8, 2 Sea.ts. Xtra -------......... --Clean, almost llke drlvina 1952 &ntlt-y. Very good a new car. cond. Runs good, S6000 or only ~st otter. 546-3778 wknds $1995 only. ---------Mac Howard BMW SJS.~ or 531-0608 Automotive Excellence Corntt 1st & Harbor & Santa Ana "'68 FORD F-100 Piclrup truck. VB, automatic. ROY CARVER Inc long bed, new patnt (241-2925 Harbor Blv'd. • 08.At. Costa Mesa 5464444 $ 1795 CORTINA llJM~-·~~ .. ~ -------,~ '68 COR.TINA GT. $1495 2100 Harbor Blvd, 64~ Ab60lutely classic condition! '46 FORD 1ii ton pick-up, '59 Red w/chrome wheels -on- Olds V8 hydromatic traru & ly 21.000 mi. -4 speed. Pvt. Olds ttar ~nd. Body needs party Call evt-s. only - work. A-1 mecb cond. $500 646-7891. cash. 847-3100. 17601 S.'-.6-7_CO_R_T_l_N_A_De_l_wc_e_au_t_o-2- Newland, HS. dr ~an. Good cond, New MUST it-II '59 Dodge 3/4 ton btts. $695. 536-llJl. Van. !'>tosUy good cond. --------- $400. or best offer. 548-9682. DATSUN 9-5. '65 Econo Van: 6plys. lo m1, New '71 Pickup gr! rond $850. 548-6478. Big engine radio ~ speed dlr. 497-1084 . Camper 6 ply ti?'e!, Many e-xtras. Sacnf1ce. Take small down or W11l tmance private PllrtY. ~r. • 84692 • 546-8736 or 494-6811. '65 CHEVY Van: lo mi, new ures. gd cond $945 548-6478, 497-1084. 1953 CHEV 1" ton pick-up w/"~ eng. Good cond. $375. 832-7680. '62 STIJDEBAKER pickup V-8. automatic $250 or bHt oHt-r. 732 W. 18th SI , C.M. Apt A DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. Hwi~on Beach 842-7781 or ~0-0«2 051 Ford P.U. Lookll, run~ '67 DATSUN PICKUP great, SIJO or bf.st otter. 53~7672. 1963 CHEVY Van-Showrn. 4 spd. dJr. R&H. 1 own~r cond. New tlttll. $350. 87~ Take foreign cu or small Hummingblrd A v e, F.V. down <ZCJ8'7Sl C'l.lJ 546-8736 962-3032. • 494-6111]. ---~----~- ._.... ________________ __ DATSUN '71 DATSUN 4 Dl SEDAN [.,oy.t mil ea~, tact, W&mlJ'I ty 4 spd, dlr. RAH, was $%186, now $1886 C639CAX). Small down or to~tin car wttJ tJn. pvt. ply. Call KM Sffl-8736 -494-6811. '67 DATSUN SEDAN Rare 3 spd. dlr. R. Excellent rondition thru out. Old car or mlall down can fin pvt. pty. Plt!ase alt 9 am 54&8736 494-6811. DATSUN 200> convt 1970. Less than 8.000 ml. Like new. $2100. 544-5633. FERRARI FERRARI AUTiiORIZED SAL~ • SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS . 3100 W. Coast Hwy, Newport Beach FIAT • Complete Stock of §BSD n1111 s.. "FRIEDLANDER" U750 HACH ILYD. (Hwy. 391 893-IJ66 e 537-M24 '68 FIAT Sedan, new clutch. brakes, eng. Xlnt conn . $900/Best offer! 968-9878 aft 6. '70 Fiat 124 Spyder AM/FM, $2800. ** 833-1038 •• JAGUAR '65 XKE 4.2 bl w /w M1chelins $2.095. amltm 4-9&-3048 34966 C a m I n o Cap1.11trano. JENSEN JENSEN AUTHORIZED SALES ••. SERVICE 9 .H Dally Ptlot W11:it Ads have Turn unused ttem1 tnto quick Autos Wanted ._ be.rgain!I galo'!'t'. cash, call 642-5678 LOTUS LOTUS At.1TH01UZED SALES A: SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 1100 W. Oo&&t Hwy. Newport Beach MER~EDES BENZ 01.111'.J<' Coun•y's L.uqe'>t 5,.i.·ct1011 r-J"w & U!>ed MNct:des Benz Jim Slemo~s Imps. W.11nN & Main St Santa An a 546-.+114 PORSCHE WE BUY USID Porsches DON BURNS PRESTIGE PORSCHE, AUDI 136.11 Harbor Blvd., G.G. <Jmt S. of G.G. F'rwy.) 636-2333 . •n POR.sCHE 914 Leis than 5,000 ml. N1cut In town. 646-236.1 or 835-1631, uk for Earl. 1966 PORSCHE 912, lo mi'a, red blk intu, $2950. Alt 7· 842-86.12. e '55 nl GuUwing e '62 190 1964 PORSCHE SC, rebwlt SL • '68 250 SL • '69 280 elli, new shoclcg, ~11. bat- SL e '70 250 Cpe e '70 280 tery. 675-5546 or 523-f7'JS. S E '67 230 S '68 250 S. MANY MORE! '60 Porsche, Xlnt oond, Must Authorized Dealt-r r.ee, $1500 or best olfer. HOUSE OF NPORTS , _6_r~_L22_.-.,-..,,-,,-~-=- (1) 523-7250 * '70 POR. 911 T. Ph. 544-191J MG TOYOTA MG AtmlORIZED DEAN LEWIS SALES Ii SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coaat Hwy. Newport &acl: ~ THINK -"~" \'FRIEDLANDER"· 1J7SO HACH (HWY. 191 893-7566 • 537.s824 ·sa MGA Coupe New punt &: mtenor. Must see. Sharp! CQUA746). ~~ ZlOO Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 '63 MG MIDGET $.l2S. Call 548-3164 PORSCHE '68 PORSCHE 912; Blue-blk. Ym-Sw, tinted aass, tn.3.P. Sempirils, coro mats. ex- haust, 1 owner. :19,000 actual mi. $3700 548-6478 497-1084. QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD TOYOTA 19n Toyota Demo •5991 $1777 No Down Payment $65.31 mo.• 36 mos Deferred ~ price $235tl6 or c.alb price $1895.85 Incl Tax & Uc. APll H .55%. •on approved credit. Factory Direct~ Service &: Parl3. 1966 Harbor Blvd .• Cogta Mesa, 646-9.303. '70 Toyota Corona Automatic, Xtra Ce&n, 12,000 miles, (98.l.ASP). $1795 Mac Howard ~ or Sll--Oai Omltt lit&: Harbor Santa Ana 1969 TOYCYJ'A Corolla. low mileqe. Xlnt cond. Must sell. Cn4) 644-6097. TRIUMPH TiiE TRIUMPH VI STAG NOW ON DISPLAY Come in tor a test drt..,.i FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTIR TUI E. 1st St., S.A. 547-0'l'M Open dally S.9: closed Sun4ay care. · MUST sPll, 25' Owens Ex-537-{)824 • ~3-7566 A rare find 'M Chrysler: * 64!>-2927 * prf'~~ Cruiser. good cond. black, 2 dr 11t-dan. Gd cond. WE PAY TOP Autos, New 980 Autos, N•w 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Cata 852 orrer. Eve. 642-8062. *Show Chopper S400. 536-a6.'i.1. S .... I .... A_M .... E .... S ... E ....... k1 ... tl .... f'n_s .... , .... 3...-........ 1... 17' STARLTNE.. 55 HP 1969 HARLEY DAVTSON Oun• Buggiea 956 $lS ear h. ma es , Ev1nnirle & cover. Good 1zyLH. Lots ot rhromf" .......... _ ........ ______ _ * * 968-1337 * ._ conn. SS95. 675-4~2. Must see to appredate. Call • n:-CllRTS CRAFT cabin ~6 anytime. IH. Dogs 854 ................................................................. .....,_. cruiser. T. W. Head & '69 Yv\!'vtAHA 250 1'..n<lum. i-oDDLES AKC w h 1 t t' galll'y, etc. R37~957. 21" tirf'~mpressmn re- st.and , 6 mos : whltl' to:v~ 2 least'. Excellent cond. $475 RECREATION CENTER mM ; 111'11 or leasl'. St11rl ~ Rent/Chart'r 908 63.J-.290'2 nr 6-12-0769. ROY CARVER, Inc. Sf"TVICP 11U colors & Siles Cal 25 + Catlina 27 WANTED 2925 Harbor Blvd. 830-547R Guarantee the lowest rates in Honda TJ0-305 Srrambler. Costa Mesa 546-4444 AT STUD So. Calil "Catlin<t cruis-Runnmg_ or not. Wul buy '64 INT. SCOUT P.U. AKC SamoyPrl, Champion lng club". Location l:ewport parts. 557-930'.'i. stred show dog, $100.00 tee Harbor 714 968·4840 for info. :\tOLD~D i4 F'IU.Ml:.-$300 or 2 \\'D, dlr. Good run~ 892-2970. 36' Fl,YBRlDGE Cru1Sf'r, brst off Pr C11U ~trong heart, take small SHELTIES. AKC. males-re-I Sips 6. f ully f'qpd inc skip 673-1118'.? down. Call alt. 10:00 546-8736 ma!~ Shots Champ back· $1 35/d a y , $700/v.k. e 1Cl6q YA\fAffA DT-1. OU't -194-6.'lll c\VBJR7!ll. ground. Rea!';. 536-9409 aft 6 fi.16-!lOOO nad.>-S~!l:i. 1968 MEYERS MANX -New pm. Boats, Sail 909 Call 54S-2962 eng, big bon . Amf'r mags, NEW obf'dienre d M!I st11rt. 1 14, Fiberglass 1967 HONDA 450 Stat:~ block.-;. Meke otfe.r. NoVlce Obtod . Training. July Runabout Very good cond. $500. Call _51_&-_w:wi_2 ______ _ 271h 9 30 am. M&rtincrt'!ll Excf'llPnt ronn111on: 646-4754. Trucks 962 Kennt-L~. 54&--09$t9 ____ ------Tnrh1r!r~ .'rlhp. \frmJry 350. '71 SUZUKI TS-185. Like new MUST SELL 2 IR Is H s,. t t ,. rs . Tradrr .. lifp r11.sh1ons. fll"t! I 2500 ml. Must aeU, ~st '1(· '65 Chi' VR, Utll btri t., malf'/lrmale, 5 mos & 9 P'<hn11:111~hrr, 1;irp. $700 or ff'r. 675-1801 Bill tnn. "'";;paint. Eng & nres mns. fi42.2frf.l I _ Brst ofrPr' f>lfi_:~OIR ·69 YAMAllA 250rr. Street 1n jtOori cond $850 or best __________ 1 30' AVX rru1s1ng slflOp, SrramhlPr ~a.I CI I' an! otter. 549-24~. MTDWA Y KENNELS -RPrently rPturned r r om Gt'<ld condition. $ 3 -o I • " ' '57 G.'-'C ton ''2 v•" -·ck German Shf'phern~. Pt-t I: rn11~1n£ Gulr. Ownrr must 1135-1492 ··• ""' "" show stock Board s 11 i:f'll, ss;.,oo cai;h firm. Eves: . . \\-/hynm ty gaff'. rebuilt brcerl~. 893-5549. 642-29R2 ~ 6~ TRJUMPll rhoppn f'l\I?, $550 or twos! offer. Call ,. HOLIDAY 24 yawl. 5 Sailt;, fi.b-27J;J . CASH tor used can 8t truckl, ju.It call us far tree estimates. GROTH CHEVROLET A&k for Sales Mans1er 1.8Zll Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach SfT.6087 KI 9-3331 ANNIVERSARY •50 AUTOS WANTED Top d oUa.r for dean used ars. See Andy Brown. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA 642-0010 \'v'E PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS U your car 1.5 extra clean, see \J11 b~t BAvER BUICK 23'1 E, 17th St. Cost.a Mesa 548-7765 IMPORTS WANTED Orange Counties TOP$ BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 &ach Blvd. H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 BEAGLFA<;, Ch11mn1nn blood ' I ~cel _~nt cond. ArtPr 5 pm. 548-722.3 or 968-57fi0 to gee. line maJPs k fl'm11lr~. Inboard f'n.IC 6lps 4 =-=-~~~,,..------195.'i FORD PICK-UP $100. it** 1137-2431 **tr . ' · RALEIGH ~corr! Ill spd ~s trans work. SeU idle Items now! •4s~v~rl. Mint <' 0 n d · hikP lmmac. Mnd, $70. 540-0133 Call 642-.5678 Is &.ve! GERMAN Shorthair. 16 mo!i. '"~''IQ'Q 6424)80. tntel11aen1. itenUe. obf'd1t-nt. 17' Nation~ One Desi-w/ ---.,.,,,,----------Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported • ~· ·m TRIUMPH 500 1~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;jm;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;i:i;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;i:i;;;;;;;;;;;;~ $45. ~3769 trlr Trade for VW 1n good CLEAN * MUST SELL II POODLES AKC, Tt-acup -cond or l~e m otorcycle. 53&-947:1 AFT 6PM Toys. rups/ Adults. all col fi73-9525 -on. Stud serv. 893-9719. _Sal_f"_or--tra-~-.-J-sl_a_nd_er--24-. '59 Norton modt-1 99, 600cc $105. GREAT Darlt' pups btaullf11l. sailboat. inboard motor, * * 646-1352 * * Golden fawn, alllO vtlvel. good sh&J>I'. 642-5106. Blark Giant ~A.S 557-7480. 1969 14· INTERNATIONAL fETMARANE R pup p I e 1 420 Xlnt col'lfl. with gpi~ ~KC "'1· 6 mo old. $100. nakn ~50. M6-1604. 644-7433 WANTED: KITE saUbo<lt. In JIJE\VFOUNDLAND lR m(')!!, goorl cond. Must ~ undf!r '-KC M"g. $150 or ~t oHtr. $400. 673-3574. '4~19. 23' Coronado 6loop sleeps 4 WESTJE Terrif"rs, A KC, like new loadtd with equip. ~ha.mp slttd. male It fem. 11acrlfice m-7941. 1970 YAMAHA 200rc twin. eX· eel cond. All elec. $50, $450. 64:Z.4rol. HONDA 150 cc -$150. 292g2 Via San Sehastl3n, South Laguna. 968-L).10, e '70 PENTON. Top cond, Konili, $575. A n x I o u s • 673-3048. 1969 HONDA 90, $450 540-3258 f hots. 644-472.~. 16' O'DAY day u1le-r ind 3 AJ<t Gtrman Shepbmi pup-h.p. Seagull o.b. Good 93.S ties 3 females. 10 wks old. ~haJ>f', must sell quick! Call Mobile Homes sho~. 837-1540 Bud et 67~1393. FOR. just Sl0.500 )'Oil ran '6ooLE, AKC. fem a I e , UDO 14 A ll'llller. xlnt cond. own a 20'xSS' mobUe home h1te toy. Sell or lease. Sail No. 7194. $850. {213) on s. golf course et the ) wka. 8JO-S.473 4.24-2041, LB. beach. Hu lante 8CJ'Hned SH Setters AKC. Champ HOBIE 14. U mo. old. f'rtt room "-ft~rl patio. Park , Vivf'ly' littlf' lsdln, Be.I Isle mooring tM mo or he.a sll Lact.littH. !>36-in9. rn May 24. SJG-16.l'I. AlJI. $950. ~7806. CLEAN AfR, CLE AN t:: S1oo h d WATER, THE GOOD LITE 11or1ea &56 24' FBGL p. ta • -r: SIS. Extru. Ltke new. on. low budset. l BR. 2 ba. ~~ES Boardf'd S.O ptr Scott 673--4949. mob1le bom~ on the ~ In ,.tio. l'eed inclu~. Larite FLIPPER. $265 Newport ~ach. Pr1v. ~"<"h ;rtn. n.iu. Western w:I-.\ all rec.rtatlonal t.cilltltt. li!,_~c ~. m--0625. 8' d!nrh.y. 968-7667 Adults only. No pt!J, Come * ALCORT SUnti&b sailboat look. Ba.yllde Vlllqe. 300 £ •YR. oJd Morran , Arabi"" N'd,. fi~rtlu•. <'Ar roof C.OS•t H11o'Y .. N.B. ~are wHh hart!blck pad ca.mer. $32.5. 557-5339. '66 Gt-Ht Lakes 2hc50', faml- tN br1dJe SJSO. 637-6843. INTERNATIONAL 14 l)' puk. SS.~. Call att 11 * U~.2!15. $150. 548-6944 3 m , 847~7. .... _,,, B. J. Sportscar Center Inc. SPORTS CARS Vacation Special COMPLETE LUBE JOB OIL CHANGE Ir REPLACE OIL FILTER. PACK FRONT WHEEL BEARINGS PRECISION FRONT END ALIGNMENT. BALANCE ALL 4 WHEELS. REGULAR PRICE $49.95 ALL FOR s29 95* ONLY • M ......... THIS AD AND SAVI SIOI •4 ,,1 .. Sporl1 Cera o"'" BILL JONES' 8. J. Sporlscar Center Inc. 2133 Hubor, C.M. 54CM491 ~oocl th111 July lO-Op111 Mon. thr11 Fricl1y. 71JO le I p.M. Opell T'lurtcley nit• 'til t p.m. 'Thia b ~ t U IV hH Aulomftl•c Trorumlt· 11on, Power 51M r1110. F•clnry Air Condi· fl0<1l~o. ll t d Io f, H .. llr, (VIU 23') ONLY $1788 Thia 1 O!>or, Herd too hu Au!1>m811c Tr1ns0 .,.,1u 1on. Power S•ter• Ing, Power l,.kes. "" Condlllonlng, llo dlo " H.ater. (WQO 4'11 ONLY $1797 ' < '69 Wildcat 4 dr H T Aulomt · tic, full DOWer, loc- lory atr (llY~l4'l. ONLY $1188 '65 Olds CUTLASS ' dr Aut0"'411c, llQWtr llM tl"O· lee· lory •Ir. l•l•ACO). ONLY $899 PURCHASE WITH CONFIDENCE 100% MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Used c., Purchased From Oa~!t~o~:~r:ntiac. 41 Hour GuarantH to You ffPffd, po,..r tl"rlnt. llOW.f ltrtlc•, vinyl rOOf , LIClnH (ZXX :IJtl $2388 '69 GRAND PRIX Wfltl vlnYI top I nd 1lr condlltonl119, l'OWtf' •IMff~ I nd pOWtr ltr1ket, ,,.,.., WfnclOWI. IYWT OS31 $2999 '70 CHEVY LHI Than 4,000 Mii•• 4 tl'Md tr1n1mlNloll. r.clle 6 Meter. ,,. CIM) Only $2188 '69 FORD CUSTOM ' !Joor 114111•"· \II, 1u10.. flll(IWlr at .. rlno. (Ml ULI $1299 '66 MUSTANG lhdlo • 11 .. iw, AUIOfl'MllG T,.n.mtuhwi, AJr C~ltfonfnt. (SAY ll)) $995 • ~c._~-------....... _ ,..... ____ ......,_ '69 Chevy lmp•I• Cu1tom 7 t1r H T VI, power ''"ring, vlnyl root, lt clory •Ir ( YOX· 107). ONLY $2389 '68 Chrysler 2 Door Hi rd• AutorNllc Trt naml .. ''°"· Power SIM~ Ina. Power l!rt ket. Air Condlllonfnf, " .. dlo '-H .. ltr. (VJV US) ONLY $2099 '69 PONTIAC Catatln•. t ~ Hel'dmo. bdt. 6 M .. t.,.. AutorM!le Tren•mfulOn, l"Ower 511tf'l11f. ,_, l nik•, Afr CondltlOnfnt. (IAJ IXO) $1997 '70 MERCURY . COLONY PAJlK WAGON l'ulf ~. fK!Or/ 11r, lklt -· 111ly IJ.COO mllH. 111. ""rr1nty tte~Nn'Mleo. Muet -· Mtlll clttr. l i ,... ____ _ .-...-..-..... - + • I ' DAIL V l'ILOT ---I~ ,I __ •• _,,_.·_'~_ ... _. __ "' I •A•.1o-.. •u•*---•,,.,• \ :A;;•;tot.•v...iiiiiiil;iim~"°~r,"1 ---. 1§11 -. .. -l§J I· -·-l§J I .____ ... _ .. ,.._ ... ___,!§) t .......... l~ I '7Q AutOJ, Imported 970 Autos, UNd P90 Autos, UNd '90 Autos, u ... 990 Autos~ Uled 11tlUMPH VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO CADILLAC CADILLAC MERCURY PQNJTAC 1Hllll Lorgut S.lectlon CADILLAC 1966 1969 MARK Ill ?O~o;'d1)~·~~1• MUST Kil, cl•gant mo '"' PONTfAC OTO FORD CONTINENTAL e •· •1116t 1M Xlnt coat Wirt wbl.. lo ml. 'm.QCi aft 6 '69 YW BUG 'VOL OF LUXURIOUS Pawder Blue with dark blue MUST SELL :.fercury Marqu:i1,•Lo mi'a, MUsr SUJ.. - VO' CADIL SEDAN DE VILLE Interior and l.Andau. All BeautifW Ugfit Ivy Sold lully e<iuip'd, &nk blue Populer Green f.1\s! mmaJ..lk I VOUCSWAGEN """""'-< 'JXI. d!r. Valoocia "FRIED' HIDER" L'ONDCTCONING Watranty, '"· (ZIJW471 Oa<k browo lamla' roo<.1 .:...,_,.::...:~!86~·===~-1""''" """· & .....,,, La# mileage exoellent cond. lA,CS FACIOR.Y AIR accl'S'!I., Xtra nict, Facrocy ttn1sb. with ioUf lnlttior Ill book $4200. Make oUer, eqenot witb. dark 'IJ'Hlil l' red, take old car or amall Uln In Or•ng• County FULL LEATHER INTERJOR $5495 Equipped Yiltb au10 tnns, MUSTANG Landau roof, aulo trans. * "/t.. * down can fin. pvt. pty. (330-111• a .. c11 o:·.n, •i 1963 thru 1970'1 Vmyl papped top, full pcrNer JW:tio, Heater, Power Stttr-----------RadJO, Heater, Power Steer. VOL SW GEN 9 a.m. AutoJ, Uted 990 'ia.I tire& &. many other de-tractive Car rel'le~ excel-U5 GrHJ Air Cond, Styled aleel ~ SS· BQK) 546-8136 -49oi-68ll alt __ ..,. _____ •_53_7-68>1__ ·~B~RS ~io.na, A!\1/Jo'M radio, rad-Macffoward Ing. ractory Air. 'I'hu1 a1-'69 M t ing, Power Brakes, Factory K A '69 YW BUG tuxe xtl"u. See to apprec. 839-9600 or 531--0608 Jent Car, aik Jor denion-V-8, Power Steenog, Powl'r wheeis, CIC. CXTG92J). Sale ·~~on~i$..50~64~~ • '69 Sports Fury c.onvt, full iale, (SLY8<li 517 1. 77 Cornl';,,~: ~~arbor slration. (395AUH) sms. ~~;:ede!:.~~'6s:i .Cond, 1 ~ced~,~~~ JC:~~~= j b wl mar whtth. dlr. (l'XU· pwr, fac war r. e · 6 8 2Ei()O HARBOR BL., Johnson & Son, ~26 ilarbor $2295 r.f'l'Sa. 54()..56."8. ' _ twn 4 & 7 pm. 7'7) im; foll J>rioe. c.n L<MoM Cpe • '68 F<n'blrd COSTA MESA NABERS Cadi'lla• COUGAR Bl><!., Costa M..,,, 5'I0·'630. M H d PONTIAC t~ '69 VOl..KS -white/red ml 49'-7744, Con v t I a i r • '6 8 GTO 540 9100 Q Sund"' -JEEP I =~=~---~-· pen ..., •trrHon1zEo oEAL~n ac owar I Low mileage, 1unroof, air.• '70 Maverick • '70 Lo 1970 COUGAR · '69 LeMansCoupe IZUDTIOl. ... AM-FM rad)O, excel!enr ·~~lac~'xJna'tm/!:i: Chc\'y Caprice. :\iANY '69 Cpe DeYille ~!_a,rboMr Bl~'d., 2 DOOR H.T . JEEP 1966 l!JS.~ or 531--0608 1'69Ca1allnaCoupelYUf'S63). "' condiUon. Quick sale Sl250. 1-tORE! Full Power, Factory Air, ......,., a · esa Co 1 & H S1595. Call 6 7 5-8 2 3 7, Call .4().9lOO Ope S nday PRICED FOR QUICK SALE rntt s1 arbor Bo1t1 have V-8, Power Stett-j 66-1982 or 557-3683. 671--2096. HOUSE OF IMPORTS Dwr Lockt;, Landau, 29,IXXI , ;>. n u . A:trac:ive medium gold me· 4 WHEEL DRIVE ___ Sa~~'.:'na 1ng, Power Brake11, Factmy '69 VW Bus-B~n l n ' '·69~s=u~G~. ~a=,-.,,-. -A=-=,-m-<e=h-.' ____ (l_l_5_23-_7_250___ 11 Iles tYXR964). 70 Cad1UaC', full power. vmyl tallic with black high back 32"1V8 v.·11h automa11c trans 1970 MUSTANG Air Cond, Landau Top. f~ properly. i\lust 5elt tins cond. S1395. Call after 6 pm, BUICK $4495 ~~.'. \~~~~m.,.,,.:.':.::;. = ~~kct H seats, ;u1~ trans. air cond1hnn1n~. radio. hr-a;: SUPER SPORT $2295 .. =~ ~yc!~~~2.1l to 644-1285. ......-• MacHoward 830-0381. 1~· eater, o .... erStee~-er, free y,hr:eling hubic., ('US· Brauhful Royal Blue fllf'tal-MacHoward • '66 vw. Am/Fm. sunroof. 69 Burck Electra 1 830 _ ----------1 Ing, .Facrory Au: Cond~ Po.,.,. 1om cab. clc., ,\Just he sttn !Ir "·11h white, %. landau, ~ '69 Bug ff\f/ A.J.\f rad10, vinyl . """'-"'U or 531-0608 QUICK SALE, '66 Cad Convt . er Brakes, exetpOonally 10 apprcc1atrd. rr:ll}j/l f. auro tr..ins, radio. heater, I 8J9...960() or 531-0008 ~ top. /.!any X'tras. $1050 Good condition. ST;:iO. m, f'ull Power, Factory All', Corner 1st & Harbor All 11cre~s. $1375. 64&--0770 or nice throughout, 4 Brand NABERS c d'lla Po .... '<'r 1!\l'erin~. Factory Corner lsl k Harbor "· -ad•. ""2'9'. Call 646--4041. LaW ndau, cle(•YRXn .,.,ith Factory 1 Sa·ia An~ aft 6: 5"1>{;996 New tire~. f'lc. See and G I C A -.. ""'<>""" .. ·-tr cond. :see & drrvr 1hls Santa A'na I' VOLVO arranty, 439J I .66 CAD Brougham. PvL ply Dri\'eTocl<iy /172AZHl S2875. AUTHORIZED DEALER 1 Be ut tod 049ADG '56 VW V'" 1200 $3395 CADILLAC 1969 Joh"'°" & Soo. 2626 H•mor ""1 ""''"'" Bl'•d.. '" ' Y •Y. • '68 G J-0 C r!'bl " RUNS! Days; s 4 8-1610' ·--:-:::-:~:---o--""',.-must sell. ex. cond. Sl7j(). c $1115. John.son & Son, 2ti26 • • • onve I e I E 0 M H d CPE. DE VILLE see at 400 N. Np! Blvd. Rob-Blvd., Costa i\1esa. 54(1.563(}. osta ~rsa Harhor Blvd., Costa l\1esa. "" hl-I07'. DEAN LEWIS ac owar Coll "4(1.9100 Op<" s"""'' '.' o.~'" • '61 VW fastback, reblt JUST 18.£00 MILES hie 6!2-7000. CORVAIR ----·.""~~iii-"'=~--~~ I Au1omalir, power sleeting, E 1 VOLVO 8J9...96Q'.] (Jr 531-0008 FACTORY AIR CONDITION· 1970 BLACK El Dorado -1----------1 '65 Cus!oni Jeep \\'agonecr, ;69 !\tUSTANG, p\ver disc. power brake5, air rond. ~ ng. owner, gd cond. ,.._ l , H .__ .<'"> ,._ .. autom trans. power st-. Sh -f !!SO &l:!-:H2o O ...... ,ner st "" ar,,.,. rNG. Full power, ri!t ~teer-16,000 mi. Loaded w/extras. '"" •-.orvarr. 2 ur. Nu painL • ., brakes, A.C. DeLuxe lnL a.rp! lVZ..,.,:r.1), DEM SALE Santa Ana ing, door tocks, tn1nk open-$200) & assume bal of Good condition. $225. 2390 bi"ks, posltrac1inn, new over. Vinyl top. P<'rfect cond. $17;5 VW '69 \V ES T PH AL I A -,6-9_B_U-IC-K RIVIE R.A rr, stereo tape, AM /FM nt·' ~p~y~m;"~''~·~&\;5-<l~· ;350;:·~---1-w-"~'~m~l",,',,"n'.,· ~C-;;M~·=-;;c--I size tires, 5!1,000 mi. SI675. $219;, nr twst otrer. ~7-91!ll ., • Cen1per, Orig o"·rwr. all 1• 4941163 """---~--*-'-'.. Ol i;erv records. PERFECT! $2998 Yac!ory air, fuU PD"'er, am/ dio, etc. etc. & still show-19&'1 CADILLAC * '6J CORVAIR VAN !--·--·-------0"~'~6~1-:1-73_11.I_. =~---=I #'~ I~ ·~ Ph. 675-0600. 19n Vol\'O 144 Sed. Im :orerro, tilt t11leering, Ian-rNooAmBf""E·Rh.S{XCYUJd~)l.la Coup!' <le Ville. Pr!v11.le Par-* St::.D * MERCURY '65 Mustang 2·2, 4 ~pd. excel 2100 Jlarbor Blvd. &4>-0466 • .65 V\V, Clean appearance, Demo # 7360 dau roof. ~;~2. a I C ty S700. 675-1564. 64:?--0612 cond. $900 or hesl offer 1969 F'ir('hirfl, vinyl rop, air , ~ Good mech cond. S6i5 or .J.> ,\UTHORTiED DEALER CADILLAC 196B DODGE 1969 MERCURY !:i:M>-6974. J.iO c/i, au10, low mL Bei;: /II $309B ""'""""' 91,d,, CONVERTIBLE MAVERICK •"''· ... ,,-'" '· ' Harbor American 646-0161 best offer. Days: 5-1~1SJ2, C CPE DE VILLE 1---------1 SUPER SPORTY -.rt.;r-.,., " Eves: 5-18-1610. 1971 Volvo 142 Sed os!a Mesa • * .69 .DOIX>L Super Bee. LOW MILES Demo a 3268 Call 510.9100 Open Sund<iy t"ACTORY AJR CONDITION-283 -}'actory Stereo. Cal! Beau tiful Sea foam Grrcn '63 SEDAN 0£ VILLE ING. Pa~ ~op .. cloth "-64a.I086 aftrr 7:00 P.~1. .... ith Black lop &. in1rrior. () VW '65. New clutch, good 1969 HAR!OR. COSTA MESA' !ires. Clean. $695. Call '70 Riviera, F:ull power, fac 847-63&4. $4098 air, Tilt wheel, Yellow VW SEDAN, 1970. LI grey. 1971 Volvo 164 Sed w/hlk vinyl lop, New tire!i. Stlck !ihift, fully equipped. AJ\.1/F?>i slereo, $38 95. Nice car. Askin&; Sl750. Call F'actory Direct Saleti. Service ~74&5, 837...94!i0. NPw paint. Nice interior. Special! llB1'9-t2J, $695 ~~ 495-5737. & Parts. 1946 Harbor Blvd., '63 Le Sahn? Buick. blue, e '68 BUG -f i\1 /A i\1 , C.M. 646-9303 good condition, po.,.,·er S/B, sunroof, lo mi. SJ050 or best I ~~cc-~,..c.~~~--1 radio, 4 door. 5J6-.8443. 2100 Harbo!' Blvd. 6-l;;.-046!i leattw:r 1ntenor. 'flit wheel. '63 Dodge Dart, good cond. extra clean lhroLJghciul, A?>l/Jol\1, etc. 1282-BLPJ. $300 equipped with auto tran.~. $2888 64&--3184 radio, Heater, Power Steer. NABERS Cadillac '&7 DODGE Van , Al08, 3 spd, i~. Power Br&kes, Faclory auto, new tires, t11hocks, Air Cond, 4 Brand new P;11nl & hrakes. 546-2612. tin""s, plu.!I much n10re. See 2600 Harbor-Blvd., A Dri __, (YQDR71\ C .68 Dodg,, ,.._., ""~d. $!.'<V'I nd ve ,.,,.;1y osra l\1esa .,uuu '-'"' .,.,., S227':i. Johnwn & Son. 2626 AUTHORIZED DEALER 1970 Maverick 2 Dr RAMBLER SALE PRICED ----------1' 14,000 MILES 'j.q RA:'>tBLER Ai.\tERICAN, .. Smart CompetHion yello1v as is Sll. witb bl.ack Stripe. 3 Speed I Ca.II 646-5.141 T-BIRD '56 T-BIRD Call S·lfl.9\flO O/lf'n Sund11y or T 0 P Call aft 6 wkdys H l '67 CadlUac Coupe rle Villr.1 _•_1l_d_~~Y-· '~;·='"~d~'=· ~5-l.1--'--35~·_21_. __ '1 ~'r{~:c·8~'='-··_c_"'_"_'_'""_· "'"'· Tcad• . .,..,.,.. '68 144S Sedon i --C~A~D~IL~LA~C-1 '71 COUPE DE-Vl-LLr l o1~963~~vw=--o5~u~s-. ~v~.=,,:-c-~good= Al'-1/F'M $95 over wholesale cond. Camper. no25 or Blue Book. $l49S Ml price I ·.-69-C_A_D_C-.,.,-.-D-, -V-,-,,-.-F-,-11 Tram, Radio, Heattr, 4 Brand· nl'w tires, attractive ln1PrJOT. See and dri\'e a ba.rgazn. t273 ASVl Sl74S. Johnson & Son, 2625 Harbor Blvd., Costa "-1rsa. 5-l!J.Ci630 ------ OLDSMOBILE- Autnrnanc, ~recn ~·ith ~·hlfe , lanrlati top, great ladies car (i\~U~l. • trad'. 67-.· 7252. (AS70Wl. all dl Xl ,,.. pwr. x. extras. nt '&i vw SQuarebck. 55.000 Marquis Motors cond. Orig. o~·ner must mi's, xtnt cond in It ou t. 900 So. Cst. Higtiv}y, L. Bch. sacrificP for Imme d I ate $900. 496-3702. 494-T;:iOJ • 540-3100 sale~ S4200. 6#--01J7. Loaded, l'lnly .J .000 mile:;. Corporation presidents' wifes' private car. Like new in every respect. Call Ken t Allen &42-4435 for ciemon. Nearly prrfect , $27:0 Jes~ FORD --,69 M erc ury lhan "'his!. 64f;...2365 or ----------1 Monterey 2 Dr HT '6,11 OLDS 442 eoovt-Xlnt 835-1631, ask for Earl. 1969 LTD VERY CLEAN-ronrl. :vlu~l sell immcrl. $1995 ~~ CA MARO C t $ g1 MUST SE:LL SJjOO nr besl offer, Call SELLING Your bOat? "Ll~t" $15()..'59 Volvo, runs good. with us .. sell tt last. Dally Dtlferent! Pilo' Classified. &42-.5678 * Ph. 536-6646 * 980 OUft fY \' q re Award .,.,·inning Marqui~ Sly!-5S7-6972 i;if1 ~. '70 EL Dorado blk wlvinyl stration i;ippointrnenl, 1967 SS Camarn, auto P/S, 10 Pass Station ~a~n, Full ing~ Popular British Green '6,llCUTLASSConvt-X l nt lop. All t>xtr11t11, S 6500·1 Fast results are just a phone p1vr di~ brks, fac. air. New Power, Factory Air, Top metallic finish with ,gold lan. row!. Air, P/5, P/b. mags, 644-4727 or 67J.-2942 eves. call away. 642-5678 red painl. Radials. Orig. Rl:ck, etc. lot9 of factory rlau roof, Equipped l\'ith lo mi. Offrr. 962...fi()92. Autos, New 980 Autos, Ne w 980 01vnrr. $1550. 675-2226. Warranry (SlODLT ), A1Hn Trans, Rar!in, Hc-111rr, 1 ---'-~~-,-,~='-- PINTO 2100 J.iarhor Blvd, M5-M66 , '69 T-BIRD 4 Dr. Vinyl top, full pwr., Al\!/t"M stetto. Tilt sreer. wheel, air. Under 111arranty. S.iOO Under mk!. al $2600. 494-9473 SPECIALIZING IN QUALITY JUST 5 REMAINING 1971 DEMONSTRATORS LEFT!! • ALL HAVE REMAINING FACTORY WARRANTIES & FULLY EQUIPPED. • ELECTRA * BUICK SPORT WAGON * RIVIERA * LE SABRE * * OPEL WAGON * '70 BUICK LE SABRE Custom coup•. Automatic, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, factory a ir conditioning, vinyl roof, WSW, tinted gla1s. F•do'y won$3 1598 '70 RIVIERA Full power equipment plus factory a ir con- ditioning, AM-FM stereo radio, vinyl roof. This o n• Is ju1t beautiful. (720AEBI '70 BUICK. WAGON 9 passeng•r. Fac.tory a ir condition- lng, pow•r 1teering, pow•r window1, power 1teenn9, powtr seats, roof rack. Mu1t sae. I006AETJ $4685 '69 BUICK LE SABRE Custom 2 Door hardtop. VS , a utometic, ra- dio, hsalar, power 1+eerin9, power bra k e~. factory air conditioriing. F•ctory w4rr.tnty too. (ZSV534 l $2883 '68 BUICK RIVIERA Full power equipped includin g factory a ir conditioning, AM-FM rad io, vinyl roof. You wilt have to 1ee this o ne and t ake it for • tail drive. IVSFJ08 1 $2795 '69 BUICK ELECTRA Custom 4 Door hardtop. Full power and fac· tory a ir conditioning , AM-FM radio, vinyl roof, power door loc ks, cruise control, etc. Factory warranty. IYCL2571 $3590 BUICK in COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA 548-7765 r '· I - 1'68 .CAMARO, xlnt conrl, lo ..... MacHoward Powf'r Steering, Power 1---;·5=5-=r "'."1 "1R=D--1 ' m1l<'t11. $1600. Ph. .l••k•'• Brakes, Air Conrli1innini?. '71 PINTO -;\1u.~! sell 613--/!050 nr 6-12-5321 evP•. 839-96()) or 531--0608 rlr. Salt> PriCt'rl IZZJ 051l 1 Jl.'ttds lillle v.·ork. Lfl m1. -'l;1.gs '-''Jth 5:o00. •67 CAMARO 396 Comer 1st & HarOOr fl2t'i. Johnson & Son. 2626 Phone 675-2697 Y<'ars. R/H, tl nte{! s:!11~· l =~==o---,,=---o-I 4-spd. Very fast, Sl800. Call Sanla Ane ~.ai0·:,;,. Blvd., Cotsta '.\iesa. fl ip out '1 1ndo.,.,•s, ALL ex. '58 T-BIRD. Xlnt. mech. 61 ..... 1244 '69 FORD WaCJOn ~"-----'-~------·' tras!! $4::.D. ·" takP o\ler oond. Dama11:ed beak. Seti '68 Merr Monlclair 4-dr paymE"nttl or $2350. 645-26.ll for bird-iiet"d S75. M&-9632:. • 1970 CA.\1ARO X:il. Air cond, Country Squire. 9 Pass, Fa~-hrdtp vinyl top. atr xini 3-sprl Auto. Xln! cnnd. S~. tory Air Conditioning, V·S, ronr!,' $1350. 673--0136. ' -'-"_6_· P_,_t. P~Y-=c""'~--VALIANT 847-9954 evrs k "'knd!. Auto., Power Steering, Po.,.,·-1-'--'-'="-'-'-'-':.C.--PONTIAC k L k ME:RCUP..Y '63 srdan, Autn '70 CAf.tARO-A.Jr, sport in-er Br11 es, uggage Rae: , I trrior. 12,f.OO mi, S2895. Low MLlt'!. ISKG412l trans, _PIS , Riii, Au-, Ong l!l&l ConvcrL .l..eMans 547-1141. $AYE fl"·ner, 644-0245. :\2fi V!L $125 '64 VALIANT 4-dr, a.ir rond, R&J-1. l o"'nl."r car. DrlYt!n only 3.'>.000 ml. Body lntack. hr<'!I nr11 . Call fi4&--0Hl6. CHEVROLET Harbor American 64~·021>1 We'll help you sell! 64.2-5678 e 842-3'1~ e lcA-'--""u'='-'.:..:.:=...:.=.;990:_.,:l c,--,.-=:,;c_:_.;.cc.:....::_~~I utos, sed Autos, Used 990 Autos,. Used 191>9 HAR80R C05lA MESA '70 CHEVY, K in gs wood .Estaie, ~pa.v; .sin wagon. VII , llyrlro PIS, P/W, Tilt 1969 Ford LTD 2 Dr HT i;!f'rring 11'herl, s1ereo, air, BEAlIT!FUL aulo door locks, luggage BUT MUST SELL r11ck. Lrss than 24.000 mi'F. Autumn RuS'l Finish 111irh Fae warranty for 2.'i.000 "hile Landau roof, Au10 n1(lrP n1 ilr s, :\1u~t ~l'II no\\. Trans, Radio, Heater, f'tiw. D11.y~: 61.µjJJO, F. v e ~: er Steering, Power Brakes, ~3J~R29J. 1''ac1ory Air Cond, and '66 :\ial1hu. V.'hi T<'/blur in-JTin rc, ,S..p and Drive To- trr., bucktt:;, aufo, R&H day. tKNJ871! Sale Priced :Xln't runnin~ c<'lnd. Lo .... · 12475. Johrt150n & Son, ~26 hook S1050. 54R-513.'i. Harhor Blvd., Costa !'o1esa. '63 otEvY If NO\la Super Sport. 6 cyt. auin, n;..,.,, pa int. $300. Call alter 6. 541)...5630. '64 GALAXIE 500 fiTHJ..'l2. 2 Door ;i u1omar1c rarl10. ht"af- '67 CHEV. Van Rehl! r nc I Pr, V", nr'v paint' 1QZ:\!- NPw t1rr~ 1.· ma~.~ Rt>sl of-3211. fer: 96R-911iR 1111~~\l __ j S69S 'fi;:l CHE\'. Impala 2 Dr. Ne" "1U---·•A lfl'Ui _ _,, __ • 327 Pflg. P11r. ~lf'f.'r. & ,~ ,~ brakrs. Au to Braut \n . 2100 Harhor Blvrt. &l::i.-0166 1f'nor Si25. ll:\.1-:\!l!fi. . 'il PINTO · :!\hist 1'ell- '57 DEL REY 2 ri r. $150 (lr lP m1. !\l11.g8 . '''i!h cnn.1 hP~I nffcr. Run5 good. yrar~. R/H. tinier! .t:las~. !>4!1-2!1.'li!. ll1r nut 1v1ndO\\'S, ALL f'X·I tra~:' $450. & take 01·f'r , 1X>!l CllEVELLE ~lal1h11. ra.i'ments or S2l'i). 61;).-26331 11t1ro, pl~. r/h. J,l'oorl 1ran~. Afl 6. s:'ltl l1rm. %~:1 1~. ---------1 -----------!GET !he bet-I ~f'rnnd car CHRYSLER Sl.000 ran buy-1'167 G11l11-:1e l in mint conrlirion. Rad io, 1968 CHRYSLER 300 ht>fltr r, factory air. 3901 2 DOOR H.T . rng1ne with aulo. trans.1 SALE PRICED Tn1er1or., pa int a. borly AN' Attractive Gold :\'.l ist l\1etallic perfect Good tires. 644--7201 Finish w11h Black Bucket eves. Seats & Landau Roof, Equ1p.1-FO-R--SAL--E--.,-,--f-o_r_d ped with au10 trans. Radio, Fatrli!.nt', v..g ~ll<'k , runs Healer, Po11l.'r Stee.rin~. ~ood. nt'"'' hrake~. anrl tires. Power Brakes, t'IC. Clean h«'l y rii:C'f"llrnr. S.\'lQ or be-511 Throughout tZ:\'V201 Sl79:;. nffcr. re'I ;'i.~2. Johnson &. Son. J626 llarbor· 1-------'---- Blvd., Cmi1a Mesa. 540.5630 'GR FORD Wagon, good cnnrl , '7() T &· C \\'AGON ,,_ Nrw fire~. po .... ·er. F:vl rarl1n, . .,.-pas~. S1700 &\2-9371. Air, 16.000 n11,, Pwr i;!, d!5C'l---·-------- br. lu,;: rack (;ill (Ti4 l ·59 FORD Raochem w/'68 n&--~ dy~. 546-0379. 289 crui1'o. Very ~O(lr! cond, new tires. $.')j(). 646-6781. COMET '62 ECONOLJN E -Rl'tilt '64 COMET Calienle 4-spd ens:, new tires, whls & V-8. E.T. mag~.· l\tUsT paint BP..~t offer. 6j:\..!l403. SAC. Hus wknd. l\!11.ke oiler. 19.'l& FORD PlCK-UPs100. Al1rr 6 pm :'i.i7-2319, needs IJ'an~. "'Ork. 1960 Con1et, new battcry.1 ~~==s~. '~"~"~"~'~--­needs tran.~. work. i:ood '62 ECONOLJNE Van, Gnod tires. 540-QI. oond. Goori tires. Some JJ8neliog. s~. 11~~ CONTINENTAL ·m Ford Cu:<.lom ~pas~ VRn 1970 MARK Ill ~yr v.·1rr11nty. BP~l 1>1fer Pcrfttt! full k complelely 1 ____ •_6_1_>->0_._,,_* __ _ ll1Xury equipped locally uwn- K & hh ht-en w.rvi('P(f by Au thorized L.i.ncoln de&Jer. 20,001 wrli maintained milt's, Tht~ luxury car \1 t111wlt'5S &· must be seen & drtvtn to be appreciated 11 Ii;. JJriC't'd ror 11 qt11C'k ~le at Sf1.r.(). Phnrit 673-8811. 117 Vis Ko1'"0Tl, ·Lido fllle. QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-567B . ' 'lf.~J.J:-,.. "' ,,.,, - . CLOSE-OUT OF ALL REMAINING '71 MERCURYS BRAND NEW 197.1 COUGAR S1ltt! 1liif1 w~il9 ,...11,, 11ow~r d•,ri nq. '1"'011 control I.It ~n"d "''"'"• AM rad io, tint10 ~l a11. di~ ..,.f11. cov1.,, I IF91 H55.l 799 ) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ANY BRAND NEW 1971 MERCURY MONTEGO IN STOCK-WE WILL SELL FOR 3% OVER DEALER INVOICE! OUR SELECTION OF 1971 MERCURY$ HAS NEVER BEEN BETTER. IT'S TIME FOR YOU TO MAKE OUTSTANDING SAVINGS RIGHT NOW AT ••• _, ' , .(...._,_ .. ___ . ___ ... -------;IE>;" .... ______ _ 1t --:--· -· -.,. )""' -------.,,_ -.~ .. ..._ _r,•;:...1"1 • I ._,,,_._~ -------- _.J,9. •• \