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1970-05-25 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
Costa · Mesa Yoar Bometo..,.. Dally .-aper -·- VOL 63, NO. 124, l Sf CTI ONS, 34 PAGE S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 25, 1970 fEN CENTS 'HIS PICKUP TRUCK WAS REDUCED TO ABOUT ONE FOOT IN HEIGHT ,' SAYS RESCUE WIJRKER Man Di•• Under Tons of Rubble as New freeway Offramp Bridge Collap11s During Rush Hour Planners Face Apartment Parking Ruling A proposed cit y ordinance toughe11ing parking requirements for aparlment builders a nd one easing !he cost of re-applying for zOllf exception permits go before the Costa ~1e:!a Plarui ing Com- mission tonight. The proposed measures 11o·ould amend txisting ordinances on those mallers. Planners Y.'ill consider the city council- requested ordinance amendments und.:'r ne1\' business alter the 7:30 p.m. meeting convenes. Off-street parkina rc<1uircments on new multiple unil residential projects are currently imposed on ll sliding scale of both closed ga rages and open parking spaces. 'f11e basic ordinance calls for one garrige per unit. As env isio ned , lhey would b@. augmented by one additional off-sUecl parking space ror up to 30 units, dropping to 75 ()rf-strecl spaces for up lo 100 units and 50 spaces per 100 units above that. Holders of zone exception permit s v.·h1ch are terminated' for various reasons by the city -then considered again afl<'r rcapplicauon -would get a fee hrrak on lhc second ;imendnient l'Ool· s11lercd. Spec1f1cally cl!cd are pcr~ns who mu.,t rcripply annu ally lo get n~\V perm!!~ Jor home occupations, usually al $2j c>ach ti1nc. The reapp!ic11tion fee would be redut-ed to a certai n percen tage of the original filing cost A number of zone exception permns are al.so to be consi dered tonight by the planning commission. One which Is expected to be postponed for further study and plan revision is A request by Sidney Sher and David Ross Pontiac agency for a dealership Al 2480 }!arbor Blvd., adjacent io a la rge new apartment complex. Plonning specialist! say traffic pat- terns and a number of other inter·relaled matters in conn~Uon v.•1th the com· mercial-residential area must bf' con - sidered. "' Freeway Bridge Cave-in Cruslies Triick, [(ills One BALD\V!N PAHK \U PI ) -A new $300,000 concrete and steel bridge linking the San Bernardino and 605 freeway s collapsed toda y and millions of pounds of rubble fell on another ramp below . A pickup truck was flattened by lhe ehunks Gf concrete and its driver v.·ai; killed. lt took rescue workers several hours to reach the vehicle. The last concrete in the lflG.fool bridge \Vas poured lasl Thursday and was not ve t "cured.'' Francis Fresner, an assis· lant bridge engineer for the California n1vts1on of High1vays . said the coll apse co uld have been caused by a flaw in une or the ''ertical steel posts used lo support the structure while it dried out. Fressncr estimated more th~n four mil lion pounds of steel and conc rete fell to the roadway. The collapse OC· <.'urred at 7:40 a.n1. during the morning rush hour and the California H.igh way Patrol said it was a fluke th at only one car v.•as passing below at the time. Judge's D1·aft Ruling May Mean Ma ss Dischru·ge SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -A federal judge tod ay opened the way for the possible discharge of 6,000 anned forcei; draftees by ruling that men inducied Bandit Chased B y Market Clerk -With Cig ars A rour-ILngered bandit robbed a Cost;i '.\\es11 market with a knife taken from !he kllchenv.·are~ department over \hi· 11•cekend, only to be chased out by lh~· 1·1clln1 under a barrage of cigars. He got away with $123 , police said. L;i1Ty Rothenburger, P,mploycd at 1h Tic Toe Market, 1914 Pomona Ave., said th e bandit -a frequent customer up to Fri day night -browsed around and finally selected h.is weape>n. The cle rk said he was ordered to pul all the cash into a paper sack and , anger~ when the bandit demanded more, hurled a cigar display at the knife-wielder and raced after him a~ he fled , • Rothemburger ..sald he lost t h c moustached young 1Dan, aboul 20 years old, behind the B~I Towers retirement skyscraper and walked back to the store to call police. When lasl seen, the bandit was wearing _a yellow ..ihirt and P:BnUng. from lhe chase. by speeded-up processes were in the service illegally. However . lhe judge granted a slay nr execution pendin g appeal by the government to a higher court . U.S. Dis trict Judge Allon.so J . Zirpoli 1nade tht'" ruing by saying UlC Gutknecht <lec:ision should be applied retroactively. That case in volved David F. Gutncckt. 22, or Gaylord, r..finn., ind uc ted out of ilrder because he had burned his draft t:ard . On .Jan. 19. 1970. the Supreme C11url or tl1c United States held that a man <ould 001 bt> inducted "out of his normal orde r of call"' be"ause he had burned his draft ca rd or fail ed Lo inform his raft board of his address. The government said approiumatcly 6.000 1nen had been drafted as dclin- r,11enl.s and would be arfected by the re troactive ruling. ··This court cannot accept an argument I hat the possible disc harge of 6,000 men 1n the armed forces is Gf su ch a com- !)f\ling national interest so as to override !hf' porposes of Gutknecht ," Zirpoli rul~d. "Furthermore. since delinquency 1n- rluction was not authorized , Lhe petitioner i.c; in the Army illegally ... viewing the case la w of retroactivity, !he court finds no substanllal reason why the decision 1n Gutknecht should not be given retroac- tive applica tion.·• Zirpoli said the purpose or the rule in thf' r.utknecht case "''as Lo ensure 1ha1 men would be drafte<I based on the !acts v;hich would properly pla ce them within the legal category of l·A. The fac t that a man burned his draft card or fa iled to inform I.hf' board of his ad dress is not one of the criteria esta blish~ by _congress IJPOn wtti_ch a ma n can be drafted, the judge said. Pullout Affirmed Cambodia Plea Won't Deter Nixon ' WASHINGTON (UPI I -'llle White }louse reaffi rmed today President Nix· on·s pledge lo pull out all U.S. troops f rom Cambodia by June 30. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler g1:1ve ! he assuran~ wheh asked about a slate· n1ent by Cambodia's foreign minister that his· government \vould request Nixon 10 keep Gls In Cambodia until •'the end of the war." Ziegler said no such request had been received from Phnom Penh officials but "if we do receive such a request from them, we would make them aware of our policy." That policy, he said, is the same as Nixon enunciated previously: Stock Market Report Out, Wires Fail NE\V YORK -\\'1th the stock mar- ket suffering one or its wildest and shar prst losses, automatic wire trans- mission facilities broke down today, mak- ing il impossible for th e DAILY PILOT to pu blish its normal stock report pages. The DAILY PlLOT regret~ lhls incon- ven ience to readers which is due to tech- nical difficulties between New Yor k and the West Coast. The market today suffered one of it.s ·NE\.V YORK (AP) -Dow Jonc1 1·Jos111g stoc koverage s: .Jo fn~'"·'ri~b.PfJ.36 .20.11 20 Transportation! 133.9! ·.S.J2 15 Utilittes. 98.73 -1.79 fiS Stocks 211.87 ·6.72 sharpest losses since the assassi nation of President John r~. Kennedy on Nov. 2Z, 1963 . The Dow Jones 11verage of 30 ind us- trials fell 20.81 to 641.36. When Kennedy was assassinated, the Dow fell 21.16 points. Monday's closing Dow level was the lowest since Dec. Ill, 1962, "''hen the av· crage ended at 640.14. The Dow average fell more l.han 11 points during the first hour, drifted frac- lionall y lower in midsession, then startetJ falling sharply again late in the day. Vol- ume picked up toward the close. with !hf' ta pe running two minutes late at the hfo!I. 2 OCC Students H u1t in Crash Of Motorcycles A pair of young Orange Coast College studenl'I were injured Sunday afternoon "''hen their motorcycles ti)llided in the nei ghborhoOO where they live , spilling both to the pa vement. RichArd J. Parks. 21 , of 29116 Country Clu b Drive. \.\'AS li sted in satisfactory condilion at Hoag Memorial H~pital toady, following surgery for a fractured foot. Robert A. flippert. 11!, or 2952 Pemba Drive, was treated al home for abrasions -On the hands and arms following the accident on Mesa Verde Drive south of Baker Street. Police said both cyclists were riding north when Hippert started to make a left turn and Parks -unseen a11 he approached from the rear -crashed in!O h.im while trying-to pass. Neither youth was cited. that all America11s would be withdrawn from Cambodia by end of next rii onlh. On Capitol Hill, Assistant Senate Democratic Leade r Edward M. Kennedy .:;;lid recent statement.'! by administration offi ci als had indicated "some v.·affl ing'" on the pledge for a con1plete ·pullout by June 30. Kennedy said there no1v scenied lo be son1e questi on \vhether American air support and advisers wou ld be available to South Vietnamese for ces who have sai d they plan to remai11. in Cambodia indefini tely. Senate Democratic Leader ~1 i k e Mansfield said ''if the South Vietnamese stay, it mea11~ we will t>. Invol ved in a ·cute' way.' " At the Whit e Hou se, Zeigler di d not clear up the question of whether U.S. iur action \\'OU!d con ti nue after Gis left or w·hether loglst1cal support -and possibl y some_ American advisers _. 1•;ould be provided the South Vietnamese, \V. Averell Harrl.n1a n, a top diplomatic troubl eshooter in the Ken nedy and Johnso n admin istrallons, accused the ad· ministration o{ basing Vietnam policy on a "delusion" that military presrure cou ld force the Communists to negQtlate peace. Mesa~s Midwife~ Sergeant Delivers Baby Boy Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Bob Goode came lhrough in an emergency situation today .and delivered the goods. Actually, he delivered the Wilkinson~'. P1:1trolmrn Pat Alexander and To m Boylan were dispatched to 2190 College Ave. a little alter 5 a.m., where they !ound fl1 rs. Marcell a Wilkinson, 19. in pain. Every minute -on I.he dot -she was in pain. ~ummoning more experienced help, the officers comforted the i m m i n e n t I y mother-to-be until ahe was raced lo nearby Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital by ambulance. She made it -but not. quite to the 111aternity ward -and Sgt. Goode played stand·in for her obstetri cian, with the aid of a nurse. Nurses sa id the wife of Ronald \Vil kinson <ind their hefty new young ~on \.\'er~ both d?ing fine this morning after being admitted to the maternity ward, Mrs. Wilk inson and her newborn in· rant .were transferred to Orange County flfed1cal Center after h.is premature ar· riva l moments after reaching the local bOtSpital. Cambodia Wants U.S. Men To Stay U11til War's Over PHNOM Pl::N H !UPI ) -Foretrn Minister Yem Sambaur sald today be 1vi!I ask Pre~ident Nixon to keep American troops in Cambodia along with South Vietn amese soldiers "until the e11d of the war." llis remarks were made in an airport news conference before leaving for Sa i- gon for the flrsl visit lhere by a high Cambodian official since Prince Norodom Sihanouk \Vas deposed March JI!. President Nixon has said he will have American grou lld forces out of Cambodia hy JuilC 30, with the South Vi etnamese leadership pledging to keep its men !here un til the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese ar(' bc<ilcn. ··1 am going to ask President Ni xon lo keep the Arnericans in Cambodia until the en d of the war,"' Yem Sambau r st11d The reque st apparently has not y•·l been made. A.~ For the Soulh Vietnamese, he said, they ca n stay ··as long as the war lasts. Then v.·e wil l a.~k them t-0 leave.'' Ttie purpose or his trip to Saigon \•:as to discuss the reeslabl l.shme1t of di plomatic relations Detwee n the two nations and to protest what was descrilr ed only as "'misbehavior'' by South Viel· aamese troops in Cambodia. Reports from Phnom Penh said Cam - ~Jaa troops captured Tonie Bet, 50 miles northeast of Saigon, Sundar. after \'irtually destroyi ng it with artil ery to rout lhe Commun i!it troops who had he ld it for .a week. Casualties were oot reported. Yem Sambaur told newsmen in SM1on .11fter his arrival that hi' visit wO\lld ··inaugurate a new era of fertile coopei°a· lion for the fu ture of our two COUil· tries ..• " Diplomatic relatio"s bf!tween thll!I tw tt ri~tions were broken off In J96S after S1hanou~ charged_ allied troops from Viet- nam v.•1th crossing into Cambodia in p~rsuit of the Viet Cong and North Vretnamese. The Cambodian foreign min ister said in Saigon he thought the "mi sun- derstandi ngs·· abou t the treatment o( Vietnamese in CambOO ia could be resolv· ed In his discussions with Saigon officials. Yam Samba ur·s departure from Phnom Penh for Saigon coincided with that of the last remain ing Viet Cone North Vietnamese, North Korean a"d Communist Chin ese diplomat& in Can1· bodia , They fle w to Peking. Picke ting Continues At the same time South Vietnam said several thousand of its troops withdrew from Cambodia today, with about 13 ,000 OAKLAND !U PI) -fl.fembe rs of the others reported battling their way up Tean1sters union continued Selectivf!. the r..1ekong River lo link up with Cam-wildca t picketing today against truc k bo<l ian soldiers who captured lhe town fi rms opcr.:t1ng betv.·cen Los Angele• of Tonie Be l. and c1t1es up and down the coast Som• The 13,QOG.ma" column of South Viet--_picke ti·,1g was also reported iii San Fran- namese pushing up the Meko ng Ri ver Ctst>o. Mo.~1 m a i o r transcontinental loward Tonle Bel reported killing a total trucker.' \I.ere operating. of 128 ~mmunist soldiers 111 weekend fighting, most of it in the Chup rubber plantation. the biggest In Indochina. Sa igon a"nouncemen t said the. govern- ment troqp~ in addition captw:ed 180 tons of rice. Their loS8e.!i wert pl.aced at seven dead and 45 wounded in pwhlng the column lo wi thin three miles tf Tonle Bet. Orange Weather Coast • Check Cashing Brings. Arres t Of 2 Suspects Traclng a forged ~k cashed 1t 1 Fullerton blnk, Orange Couniy sheriff'! deputin have arrested two young suspect& In the burglary of a Harbor Area enl!lneerlng plant a week ago. Freed--Not Cured Mesa Musicians Slate Concert Tonig ht at OCC The weatherman '11 in a rut, 1nd Tuesday's forecast 11Jhape3 up pret· ty much like today'~ -wll.h low morning clouds and hazy sun- ghlne holding temperatures in the middle &O's loca lly. John. W. MOM, and Steven Young, hot.h 1J. and both or 13112 Sandra St .. Garden drove, were booke<t into Orange COunty Jail oo charges of burglary and forfel"Y. . Sheriff-. Capt J im Broadbell said moi'e thin AOD ln 1oot w~ rec<lvered. The youths are suspected or breakiot: Into Lelmlr\.i Engineering C<l., 1533 Monrovia ·Ava.. In cOontY' territory between Costa Me&a and Newport Beach last Tueedly. A number or guns, blnoculats ind busineM check11 w~ taiken. with one 1urning up cashed al a Fu llerton bank l.1!il week. Using a description or lhe su~pecl~. ..ieputies trRced lhem to lhe Garden r:rove 11ddrt!s. wherr thty were arrester! Friday. Ser ves Term for Bigamy, Wants to Marry Again MESSINA, Sicily CAP) -Aldo Carlo Donati. who just can 't JIUbt a )\'eddlng, walked out of jall a the man and a bachelor today after servh1g six years for marrying five women. The first tni ng he plans to do is gtt married again. OonaU, called "the super-bigamist" by Italian 11ewspapers was arrested at lhe door of the Church of San Clemente Oct. 10, 1964, as he was abou t to marry a sixth wife . "I made five women hai:tiy," he pro- ll'sted when chargged with flve cases fl( bigamy and various counlc; of fraud , F:tlsific.ation of doc um en ts 11 nd misrcpre!enlalifl'l'L .. But v.·hile he W!l! setving his sentence, he suddenly found himself a single man. His flrst marriaj~ to DiaaM Frlr.rl :i t P.1ilan in 1149 was annuUed because IL was neve r consummated.. His second marriage to Leobijde} )>ace t11 Milan ;, 1954 al!d his llL~d P, GUda Gab1\\UI in Merano in lillll ..1were ruled Invalid because he was already married. ~lls fourth marriage to Maria Paiol• J>etrelli in Palll'lla.. in 19" w~ annulll!d hecause <lf difference. oC r~Dgk>n, and his fift.h to Gabrl..U..Maria ·.Oallaa in Pie.ve di Castelf~. ene'to M 1964 "'iilil held invalid bec;ai,JM' of an a1retment not to have chlldren •. • . ' lie might hav P gotten away with a sixlh marriage, to Sicilian schoolteacher r..1aria Peluso, but he made up too fancy a story about being fl NA TO in tel\lgeoc:e agenl. The girl's father asktd police to check up because II seemed strange that an intelligence aacnt wou ldn't know how to drive a car. "Matrhnooy excite• me," Donati aa\d al the tttne. "lt'11 like • chill of. exultatlot dltflcult to explain." _ Now 48, he stlll llkes the 1de1. ~e pl1n:1 to. marry 1 Rome worn• wlth whbm flll!I had a correspondence romanc• wbile 1n prison. • Instrumenta l and vocaJ student8 from Costa Mesa High School will present their spring concert tonight at 7:30 Jn the Orange Coast College auditorium . The prQiram. teaturin& lhe concert band, stage band, concert choir and 80-vOict Bel C.9nt0 sing era . wOI run the muBica\ gamut from John· Philip Sousa' marches to the Beatie$' Hey J ude. · The concert, ·berte(ltl•g lhe hJih JC)IOOI music department's acOOlarshlp pro1ram. l'I open Lo the public, .with tlcktta .11vailable ai.. lbc door for it for.adult.I and $0 cents for :students. INSIDE TODAY TV/rat'.~ thf' ltardest port f)f r11t111i1tg a nuclear plou t~ ft could be convincing Htt: s11r· rounding citizenry ther£'s 110 clanger involved. See tlt.t sior u o/ San Ono/r£ 011 Paue J, 2 DAILY PILOT C Grand Jury Asks Report 011BaySwap By TOM BARLEY 01 "'-~;r, r r"'' St•ll The Orange C-Ounty Grand Jury Friday opposed tlle Upper N~ Bay land exchange in a r~ calling for a "full feasibllity and plannin&: atudy • • • 1n· volving Orange County, the Irvine Company, the state and other eoocerned gmlj)5." The.re should be no further ad.loo or decisions in the controYerslal bact bay 1wap. the investigative panel warns, •·until flood control problems. the f'CO!ogical. pollution and related en- vironmental problems, the legal issues (including a dectsion on prescriplive r ight! by the California Supreme Court). the financial aspects and the public at~ titudei ~e more clearly studied and considtred and a master land and water use plan is developed." Noting that "the public is in a position to demand the removal or the Irvine Jslandl for flood control and to claim llhore access along the bay by virtue o{ esiatlng public "'""'·.. lhe grand jury discusses at length in its n;wxt the possibility of "a decision to let riature take its course." Such a deciakm, "aided by sound chan- t1el q:tneemg moves and the poai.ble drtdgbw """y of Island< for adequaCe flood ionCn>I ....,;i help preserve tile ecological balance of wild life and leave the upper . tidal flats as a 'lung' to hel p oxgyenate and purify lower bay waters," the report states. "If a natural t?2ltuary is to be preserv· NI, a trade is meaningless," the jury r eport notes. And the paneJ concedes that "money must then be found to compensate the Irvine Company as the courts may decid~. "Much of the debate over the Upper Bay land exchange and most of the recrimination," the report goes on, "has resulted from faifure to dist.in guil!h clear· ly the consequences of two very different uses of the area. "If tile ordinary building developmenta ere permitted," the grand jury at.ates, "'assessed land values are high: if a riatural estuary is retained, saleable land values may be negligible. "This buic decision should be made." t he Grand Jury warm:, "before any quar· re.l.hlg over acreage and .asaemnent of land in a proposed swap or even over oivnether one U called for ." It is known that the jury Investigation Into the Upper Bay land exchange pro-- duced cllvisions in the panel and that Is a maUer of public rtc:Of'd 1n the fonn Of a minority report attadled to today's re10luUon. Friday's majority raolutlon was ham- mered out by a grand jury which was, 1 110UrCe close to the jury room com· mented, "really up tight about this Upper Bay issue." And it is known that a great deal o{ time was spent io preparing 1 report that was acceptable to the majority of the grand jury. The resolution is the reault of the grand jury's full Inquiry into the Upper Bay issue and the taking of testimony from county supervisors, key county of. licials experts in engineering and en- "ironment.al fields, representatJves ol the Irvine Company and many private citi.tens who asked to be aUowed to contribute lo !ht debate. "The present mood of tht pubUc and It!! concem with preservation of the environment would seem to preclude development of the Upper Bay entirely for real estate &nd yadrt.ing," the report filates. It goes on to poinl lo the possibility Qf ;'80me partial development along these lines, uy up to the narrows, without r;acrificing the mai n goall of beaches 11nd recreation, Oood control. wild life preser"ation and pollution minimization . '"This," the report states "would allow lhe present public lands to rise in value ~·hil e still retaining most of the private ones." DAILY PILOT 0 .. loHQ.E COAST l>Ullll>llN~ COM~ANY ~olitrt N. Weo.i P•n"'Mt •1111 Put>!,._. J1c~ '-· Cwrlty l~o ... •• K•••il E-•llH" lloa"'•' A. M ••p~i n• M-"'91-IHll" c: ......... Offll• Jl O W,.t a,, si..,1 111,rl!nt A.ttlr1n 1 ,,0. &a• I s•o. •1•1• °"'"'om-.,......, 9otKlll: '111 'Nnt l1lb01 l "ll'W•rill ~1 ... 11:m ~'" M11ntio.-l•r;tl: 1111J ~ l•lft-•'11 a.n c....-Je: >OJ N-I I c.MllM 11. .. 1 The Village Stnithiess Linda Clark 18. a student at Sacramento's Casa Roble Hiih School. is one of 15 'students who'll graduate with a certificate ln horseshoe· ing. Linda and her classmates will embark on careers as black· smiths. Keeps 'Em Laughing Hicks Discusses Drugs, Nudityin Campaign Talk By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... ~ !"lift lltff Nudity, narcotics and campus dissent were key topics as electioneering Orange Coonty District Attorney Cecl1 A. JUcks discussed law and order before the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. Rev1ewin1 the ram\ficatlons of each -eapecia11y iitudent activism -the YOUR&'. DA fighUng his first electk>" cam- paign following appoinlment in 1966 had Chamber members in stitches at times. Drug abuse wam't so fWlny. But Hicks, whose job will be at make June 2 when Orange County voters go to the polls, sparked gal es of laughter Thursday in discussing UC Irvine and Cal State Fullerton on protest fa ctions. He displayed copies of a Magazine Production student's final credit work -for those who cared to look closely -wi th an lllu.strallon of 22 nude and hairy persons waving individual fingers hi the air. The cover co11.tains an e :x p I I c l t message. • 'Som e th ing~r-0ther you. Gov. Sheriff Hopeful Blasts Error On Ballot Order A clerical trror has deprived Orange County sheriff's candidate Marshall Nor- ris or ~'hat he describes as "a fair ~hake" in his bid for Sheriff James 1\.fusic k's off ice. but there isn't, says County Clerk William E. St John • .a ttlini;i: Lhat can be done about it, Elect.ion codes call for the -rotation of the names of both cancUdates for the recent ly created post of sheriff-cor. oner oo tile head of all Oranee County ballots and Norris, by arrangement, should have been listed al the lop of ballots circulated in the second and fourth distrids. "The inconsistency has come to our attention." St John conceded today. "Howevtr; tbere"""1s no tlme lo Tepr"lnt the bailo(.s. >JI I can suggest is t h a l voters in the second and fourth dislricL., pay particular aUen tion to this situ•· tion." "And my suggest ion is thAt Orange County voters should watch the progres! nf 8 lawguit that is about to be filed," Norris added. "l am very dissatisfied with this situation and r blame St John for this oversight." 'War' Hits Home As Dozen8 'Die' HOU.YWOOD CAP) -Dozens or !IOldiers and clvillaM l11y dead on Hollywood Boulevard, nonnally a bu sy thorougfare, as bombs burst In tilt backgroond.. Startling as t.he scene mu~t have bttn ~ la~rislng Tesldentt on the boulevard, ll w111 not a disaster -only • dre11m-wl'r sequence shot by MGM studios Sund11y for the movie "Alex in Wonderland." MGM t1ald It was lhe first time polirt had f)'rmi11rd the a:lrtel to be clo&ed for i1Jmmaktng. Reagan," explained the District Attorney, "Use your imagination a litUe, folks." "'There are some funny-looking people ln that picture," he remarked. ''Tbty definitely need clothes." Several female militants, close perusal seems kl suggest. are ift<!eed unsullied by the YMCA Slim 'n Trim ola.ss or the Weight Watchers' diel regimen. "It's ~nou.gh to turn a man queer," he obse rved, l1icks conceded the magazine prepared and published for credit by CSF student Bruce Bagno li was professionally done work, while Bagnoli claims the nude part \.\o'as done \.\o'lthout his knowleda:e or coll.Sent by others. "He got a" A on it," the ad said. Bagnoli claims the publication showing the history of recent radical movemen~ at CSF was emblaroned with the Naked 22 by miUtants after the original edition v .. a.s printed. "You have to disag ree v.ith the philosophy , but it "'as pretty ~·ell done," Hicks told Chamber member.~ in 1he general meeting at I.he f.lesa Verde Cou11- try Club. l!icks also told a drbate involvi11g h1mi;clf and ac!lvisl s(udent..c; from UC Jr\'in e in a fon1m chaired by ct1n· tro versiaJ former campus SOS leader Tllichael Krisman, no1\' a p a id ad· minisLration coord inator. ''I said -ill words 1o this erfert ~ that r didn't see ~·hat academ ic freedom or free speec h had to do wlth breaking wiJldows, writing dirty words on the wall," he explai ned. He also asked bow they could justlry the fact one UC employe had his hands hlown off by a bomb and another was killed as a result of di~nt. Hicks quoted the. reply : "Why should we care, ~·hen there are unpaved roads in Texas?" "I didn't kno~· whether to laugh or cry," he said. "The point I'm trying lo make is lhat they must u11dern&nd \\'e can'l ha ve t~·o sets or laws, one for c11mpuM!~ and ooe for off -campus . . . one for students and one. for non-students. "I think we have to make a point .;;:... nol by crackirig heaCs,'' 40Jstrict Al- lorney Hicks conti1ued. Sherwood Forest Figure to Face Trial in July A Newport Beach underground newspa per figure charged wilh sollcitlng lo commit grand theft and burglary fa ces Jury trial In early July. following hi5 plea of innocent to five counll Friday. The American Civil Libe rties Union (ACLU} is expected to join in the defense of Don Elder, 23, who enlcred his plea in Harbor Judicial Olm.rict Court . He is accused of the authorship and publication of an article In I he wmellmc:Htppeartng "From Oul or Sherwood Forest," durlna: last Christmas holidays. The article assertedly urgtd youne pc<iple to s~al rrom large, corporate merchandiser~. justifying the Robin Hood-style larceny for Chrl~tmA:. 1Jlvlng, basM on their huge se11~nal profits . • ,· --.+ . Bay Club Seeks Buyer A~ks 1Highways Unit to Purchase Property • By THOMAS l"ORTIJNE OI tM O.U, P lllll Sl•ll The Balboa Bay Club js asking tl1e state Division or Highways to buy its property on the inland side of Coast Highway and get the proposed Pacific C-Oast Freeway route lower on the bluff, it WU learned today. Richard Stevena, Bay Club executive vice preskient, says the deal would be benefklal both lo lhe B_ay Club and lo the .we. Jn Ste'Vens• fllltimaUon : -The Bay Club bu become something of a bardsblp cue ~ voter defeat i" January ol an e:rtension on the e1ty- lease property occupied by the Bay Club. The properly across the highway is now £UrJ)l u.s In Uie Bay Club's plan for celling retu rn on its investn1enl by the lease expiration in 1998. -The state presumably could save money by not having to bulkhead so much lo build the freeway , and by eliminating "these walls" a J so dramatically improve the freeway a~ pearance. The Division of Highways has not yet ansv.·ered stevens' letter lo regional head highway engineer Haig Aya111an. The. land !he Bay Club seeks to sell Is a 3,0IXI loot strip of commerci.ally· developed higliway lront.age, 150 lo JiS feet deep, fron1 the bend U\ the highway west of the Ha y Clu b to Dover Dr1vt. The Bay Club purchased 11 from the Irvine Company only last J une l for ''slightly under $2 million." The 65 lots t\lat comprise the property total eight acres. 11ie Bay Club lt5elf is located on 13-arres of dty-ownec:t bayfront land. Huntington Man Escapes Injury as Bomb Rips Car In his ielter, copies of which were sent to Newport Beach city Official!!, Stevens refers to an "earli~r discussion'' about re.localing Pacific Coast Highway. He goes on to say that since the lease exten.!.ion defeat the management has concluded is not suitable lime in the 28 years of the lease. remaining to develop the Bay Clu b holdings oo both sides of thr highway and a:et the money out. (A 90-unit apartment project, involving high-rise towers, is being pro-- posed for the east end of the Bay Club city-lease property.) A 39-year-o\d Huntington 8 eac h ~ngineer miraculously escaped serious injury early this morning when he was apparently blasted from his automobile by a bomb. "I went to a:et into the car. sat down on the seat and didn't even get the key into the Ignition when 1 was blown through the door of thr car,'' said Emanuel A. Senor. "TI1e next t.hing I remember was hav. ing my nose on the ..,,•hite line in the slrctl." The blast totally destroyed Senor's Cadil lac, a 1967 convertible. valued al SJ,500. He suffered a bruised elbow and burned leg, he said. Senor said the explosion occurred ;it 12:30 a.m. in front of his home at 217 11th St. An engineer for McDonnell Douglas lie said he had no known enemies, but has rectived threatening phone calls for lhe past two months. "J slopped paying attention _lo th~nl after a while. They were things bke Cloudy Weather 'Empties' Beaches Newport Beach lifeguards today al· tri buted poor weather conditions to the drop in beach .attendance over the weekend. Approximately 40,000 visitors \\'ere recorded al the beaches Saturday and SUnday, with seven rescues each day. LHeguartls said the rescues ~·ere up a IHtle as wat.er temperature! stayed in the low 60s and the surf pic ked up slightly. A total of 20 first aids were listed during the weekend as the jellyfish count continued lo drop. Summer lifeguards completed their trainlna: this weekend and will add 82 llfeguards to the force when they start "'Ork in June. Meeting Slated On Farm School Harbor Area parents who are in· lereS1ed in sendlng their children to the Farm School at UC Jrvine nexl fall 11re invited to attend two meetings to he held at the campes. Films 1-1·ill be shown of the non-graded school for children ages five to 12. The ~chool. which began operation this fall i~ n1n by the department of social sc iences. The first meeling will be held 'I'uesday In room UH of the physical sciences build ing at 7:30 p.m. Another meeting will be he!d at the 5ame time and place on Sunday. Parents wishing further information may call 64~1976 or 8JS-63.'14 . John F. Gonnan Mesa Rites Set Rosary will be recited \Vedne&day at 7 p.m. in St. Jachims Catholic Church for lone-time Costa Mesa resident John - F, Got-man who died Saturday at the age of 83. He had lived in Costa Mesa foe 26 years. 11.lr. r.orman is survived by his wi fe, Ro."le, of the family home, 17$8 Anahe i1n Ave.: a daua:hter Mrs. Martha Grif!t. of Oran.ge ; a son, RQger Guiowftki or Phoenix, Ariz., and t"·o grandchildren, Requiem Mass "''iii be celebrated Thurs-- day .at 9 a.m. at St, Joachims. School Employes Week Proclaimed School board members of lhe Newport. 11.fesa School Dlstrltt have joined (',overnor .Rta11n tn declarina: the week of May M to to Classified School Employes Week. Bof;rd members expttssed thNr ap. prelclatlon of the unheralded and un· noticed work done by classified employN and their "contrlbuUons to the tduca· tlona l effort.. In this communHy." Classinl!d employes iserve .11s bus drivers. cui;todians, t 11. rd t n ' r ~, &ei:retaries .and food service w()rkcrs. 'don't worry friend, sleep light,'" Senor said. "I love everybody. I'm a bachelor, 1 don't see how anybody could hale me ,'' Senor said. He said he had just rented another automobile and would be back on the job Tuesday. Police are investigating. Murder Victim Sa id Hitching To Huntington After spending a fruitless v.·eeJ.iend searching for clues lo the murder of a 20-ye;ir old Arn1y private, tlunt ington B<'ach clctecl1vcs 11ow believe that the vi t tirn 111ay hare been picked up al Fl. Lew is, Washington by a .straight· through trucker while hitchhiking t.o Hun- lington Beach. Sgt. Monty f..1cKennon said an ad- \•ertisement containing a biographical sketch and pi cture, or David L. 11.1cCorry has ~n placed in a i eams1er's Union magazine in the hope of uncovering new leads. "There may be some reluctance for ln1ck dri vers to ad mit taking him along. since they are usually prohibited from givinJ: ride!!. Bul 1he union has assu red us Uial the man would not be ftred if he identifies himself ," McKennon said. t>.1rCorry, who was attached to the 339th Engineering Battal\lon, al Ft. Lewis, \Vashiogton. was found sl<11n by two .32 caliber bullets May 17 1n a G<ilden West College parking ot. lnves ligators believe l:le was A\VOL fron1 the base and niay have be.en hil('h· hiking lo Orange County to visit h is falher and girlfriend in Garden Grove. "Everything ind.icatcs he was a very considerate young man -almost beyond belief. lie was a hell of a goocl kid, all.hough maybe a bit naive,'' Sgt. f.f cKennon said. '"Going al that distance, he should hare had a small military travel hag \\"ith him, \\·hich \\'e ha ve been unable to find . lt"s possible that he may h<l\"e left il 50mewhere or that the killers tonk ii,'' !he rieleclivc said. He added lhal hi.~ men have not dis· {"O\tn!cd 1he possibility that someone saw r.1cCorry·.~ body bein~ dumped on the. campus early Sunday May 17. "JI ~·as prelty fog gy that morn ing but il's just possible that somebody migh~ htn·e seen !be kill er." said r.lcKennon. "lf an~·body did, J l'iure wish they'd call us."' -JI 1fi1·ed Up Wolf Stevens, in his letter, said tile Bay Club's audited statement or Sept. 30, 1969 showed an operational ca rry forward Joss of $1.9 mill ion. He says the property "coold possibly be used in the besl interests of the slate and the city in the proposed align· inent of Pacifi c Coasl J<'rceway" and remarks on probable construction saving.s and improved appearance. Stevens writes that the Bay Club has frozen !he property for the past 60 days and slopped negotiations for bulk sale of the property "with two interested parties." He conc ludes, ''Hov.•evcr, we are no! In the cash position lo carry the property alone even though we th ink it is in the best interests of all concerned.'' Not All Students Costly-Some Save Money Taxpayers take note: no l all student.s cost you money . A group or youngsters al Cost.a f..tesa'1 Bear Stre et School have in fact, reported t" city officials that they saved $329 in taxpayrr funds during a recent Earth Day observance. They cleaned up their campus. '"\\le sa ved the 1a-.:p;.iyrrs $329 and \1·r. collected 940 pirces or lrash,'' !heir lrt!er states. "If we. counted the bugs, lhls figure would be rven bigger" Bugs, howe ver, don ·1 coun t as litter. Cleanup chairman v:as Brent Rusick and hls letter v.·as signed by Nick Suttora, fllike Jones. Jimmy Gourney, Ca therine \\'Hliams, Kelly 1\.foore. Kevin Kipp, Ton~·a Talle.\', ~f ikk f Young and Todd S;ilis b;irry . Others were Lenny Long. t\-11chelle ~l cClinlon, Willie Ranier. Chad Hartt", Patty Pirtlr, \Vendv Stoner, Trav13 H. and Donna r.lcGregOr Architec t ~11 cc11111hs WASHINGTON (AP) -J. George Stewart, an ex·pol1 t1c1an once charged with 1ry111g tri ''make !hf" aritol inlo <t king-sized Howard .Johnson's," ha~ <l ied, ending 11 ~tormy J&-~·ear career 11~ the Caritol architect. A vounR v:ol f cub is wired for sound \'ilh a hiotelemetrv "~an~ arn pllficd attached to Its body so voung~tl'r:;. can hear its ~oat on a louds peaker at lhc children·_., sccllen o( the SL Louis Zoo. ' ' • I I I ( • r I Saddlehaek EDITION VOL 63, NO. 124, l SECTIONS , 14 PAG ES DAI L 'I ,.IP.OT U1fl ,.h1t1 TWO DIED WHEN THIS COMPACT CAR HIT POLE Cir Bursts Into Flames After Laguna Canyon Crash Flaming Crash J(ills Two On Lagiina Canyon Road Two men \Vere killed ea rly Su n<.l<•Y 11•hcn th eir car. apparently travelmg a! higll speed. left La guna Ca nyon Road at the treacherous Big Bend Curve, slam- med into a utility pole and burst into flames. The Orange County Coroner's of(ice lf'ntative\y identified the Victim'.'i, y;ho were burned beyond recognillon •. as Ernest Wetzel, 32, and Steven Paul Bcvek. 21 , both of Whittier. Identification was made I h r o u g h reglstration or the vehicl e, a 1962 American-made mode! with engine in the rear. Relatives of the men said they were driving together Saturday nigh!, but positive idenlificalion may have to await an au topsy and dental (·heck today, lhe coroner's offi cer said. Laguna Beach police and a Fve Department un1l were called to the scene at 12:50 a.n1., but "'ere unable "ftt ~trol the flame s th at engulfed the car w•n the gas tan k exploded. Impact of ttle crash wrapped a heavy guard rail around lhe car and police sa..id. it would hav;r. befJs impogsible !or the men to have escaped the blazing vehicle. A witness tGld police the ctir had passed him moment s bekl rr. the accident, traveling east al a high speed and mov- 111g erratically. On Sunday evening at 9:30, a Leisure \\'orld resident drove into the same util ity pole on the Big Bend curve, but escaped w1 !hout injury. Dr iver in the second crash \V as Kathryne Melander, 60. 6388 Ave. Sevilla. San Clen1ente Cot1ncilE yes Building, Plan11it1g Bt1dget tly .JOHN \'ALTEHZA 01 lh• D•i!• r'llOI S!1f! The public safrty and build ing and pla nning seg ments or San C\erncn te's riroposrd $3.7·mill iol'I budget arc on t<ip for cily couricil sludy tonight stci rlln& Bt 7 o'c lock. City ~·1 anagcr Ken C<irr s:iid thC' rxaC'I ortJer of dclibe ral1ons IS up tO the discrc· tion or councilmen. but heads or the police. lifeguard. firl' and build ing.pla n· 1ung departments will attend 10 take parl i" the budget studies. The council will carry through the week of meetings with a te11tative fonnat showing worlt Tuesd ay night on budget items relating lo engineering . water, i;treels and parks and recreation. A specific time for addresses by lhe city employe organizations has not bee• ~el , Carr sakl . The employes are expected lo appear 11t invitatiofl or the council lo discuss salary raOO which have not yet been plugged into ltlt: proposM budget which - shows an increase of $400,000 over last year and a minor drop in property taxes. creases for salaries and a new o~·crt 1mr· :;landby allo"'ance, but.a $900 drop u\ supphe.<; ant.I equipn1f'nl. -Thr police department's budgl't also :;ho1\'S an increase in the salary anti 1n:Inj)011er SC'gmcnts. but about <ill l)f thi.' rises in expe nses should be coverC'il by the f1rsl of three federal cri1nr cori lrol grants. The tlepartmenl 's personnel and salary budget thi.'> current year 1 ~ estimated at $377,347. which is prop<>scd lo increase to $-487,020 next fiscal year. Th e federal grant almost reached $100 ,000. Equipme11t e'.lt:penses are ex· peeled lo rise from $135,347 to $18 1,822, plus $3,836 for capital outlay. -The lifeguard budget shows a nominal inrrea~ in salaries fro m $129,966 to $14.1,973, but, again. Ille in· creases are, doe to a midyear raise approved earlier in this Ciscal year. No ~ew raises are included. The departmen t is proposed tor $10,000 more In fu nds for materials, supplies and servlces1 but no funds rar capital outlay. -The city-golf course-budget which show s aboul a $4.2,000 cut in expe111dilures also may be scanned tonight. ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 25, '1970 TEN CENT'.> Cambodia Will Asl{ U.S. Remain Until War Ends Bridge Falls On F1·eeway; One l{illed BALDWIN PARK (UP ll -A ne1v $300,000 concrete and steel bridge !Inking the San Bernardino and 605 freeways 1'ol111psed today and mi llions of pcll1nds Of ru bble fell on anotil er ra1np below. A pic kup truck was flattened by the chunks of concrete and its driver wa!I" killed. It took rescue workers several hours to reach the vehicle. The last concrete in the ISO-fool bridge \\'<IS poured last Thursday and 'vas not. vet ''cured." Francis Fresner . an assis· ianl bridge engineer for ihc California l)1visioo of Highways, said th e collapse t•ould have been caused by a flaw in une of the verllcal steel posts used to su pport the structure while it dried oul. Fressner estimated more than four million pounds of steel aod concrete fell Lo the roadwa y. The collapse oc- curred at 1: 40 a.m. during the morning rush hour and the ~rnia Hlghway Patrol said it was a nuke that only one car was passing below at the time. Marine Guilty Of Killing Buddy, Gets 21 Years A ?-.1arine court martial al Camp Pend leton has convicted 2J ·year-old tlecorated Marine Pfc. flfichael Galklway t() 21 years in prison in the New Year's Eve murder of a buddy. Gallo\vay, v:ho also received a dishonorable discharge, v>'as convicted late last week of uJJpremed itated murder of Pvl. Ste11en \Voolfolk in the vicin ity ur the Camp Las Pulga s enlisted men 's C'lub on De c. 31 . The cou rt also founrl Ga lloway guilty of violation of a lavdul order, assault \\•ith a dangerous \\'Capon. carryin~ a concea led weapon and communicating a 1hrcal . Thl' ~L·ntcncc 11,·tll v,•ill undergo review by the commanrtcr Of Gall oway's unit, lhr 5th t-.f arinc Exp<.'{!1tionary 13ngadr. 13ng. G!'n. Ross D"•yer 11,•i\J re v1e1v the senlrnce handed down and can elthcr approve it as it stands or reduce 11. After the generars revi ew the sentence will go to Navy superiors i" \Vashinglon, D.C. for their evaluation. r.alloway , v.·ho is a veteran of the Vietnam War and the Mlder of several decorations for pl!rforrnance there, will be confined in a Marine Corps detentio" fa cility, base spokesmen said. Solo!) Says Innocent \\'ASHIN GTON (AP ) -Former Sen. Danie l B, Brewster (O.Md ), pleaded innocent today lo eharges of accepting a bribe to influence his vote on postal rate legislation. a N11rse First Male in County Program By BARBARA KREJBJCH 01 I~ OaJIY !'!191 Sl•H The new nurse on the 3 to II p.m. shift in Medical East at South Co a s I Communi ty Hospital had to take time off fro1n his duties last week to attend a graduation ceremony in Anaheim. The pronoun is correct. The ne w nurse is Fred Sherv.·ood. fi rst male studenl 10 graduate as a practical nurse from Nurses' Training Institute of Orange County. The 22 other nurses in Fred·s graduatin g class were all female, and, like Fred, they found a ready market for their skills. Fred. in fact. v.'as already working lit South Coast when the fonnal gradua- tion date rolled around and he thinks it's "great." \I/omen patients. he says, are •·sometimes a little surprised to fi nd their nurse is male. bu t they always believe me:' Men don't seem to care one "'ay or the other, he adds. Fred 's hospital e);pe.rience be g a n shortly after he finished hi gh school, with jobs in Park Avenue Hospital and Genesee Hospital in Rochester, New York, and a stint at fl1ount Sinai in . Florida . But he found many doors closed to him without formal medical training and decided to do something about it after he move4 to Saa Clemente two yeara ago. Enrolling al the Nurses Training Institute, wb.ich is affiliated with West A n a h e i 1n Community Hospital, he plunged into classroom studies reviewing procedures of acute nursing care and learning the language of med icine. This was followed by in·service training in the Anahei m hospital, c ove r i n g a!l tlepartments; medical. s u r g i c a I , pediatrics. maternity , lab(}r and delivery, OAll l' l"ILOl lll H !'Mii ON DUTY AT HOSPITAL Male Nurae Sherwood central supply, rec overy room and the int.ensive care uni~ Moving to fult time work 1n the ho.pi .. !. h• ~~duloo ... a week and finally was a:ra&ia~ with !'lecond highest achievement honort in his class. Fred 's duties at the hospital cover 11all the things a nurse is aupposed lo do."' And, perhaps picking up a clue from his fellow workers. he declines to reveal his age to the press. Laguna Council Will Seek Method to Save Bus Line Lagu na Beach city counci lmen 1,~1il! try lQ find a way to shore up the Art Colony's fin ancially distressed bus li ne in a second study session on the subject Tuesda y al 7:30 p.m. In cit y hall council chambers. Ad vised Iha! Laguna Transit. operal or or the local bus, may have to discontinue il.~ service, the. council has been pon. dering the altematlves of subsidizing or buying the bus line in order to 1naintain what they agree is a needed l'Ommunity service. f inancial details of both proposed solu- tions will be studied at the Tuesday session. Alson on the agenda for the sludy meet is an initial examination of the prelminary city budget for 1973-71. Coun cilmen will examine the tentative $3.6 million budget prepared by City Manager James D. Wheaton in the light of earlier proposals to increase police department personnel and make other changes in city functions relative to Mayor Richard Goldberg's severrpoint program. The "hold lhe line " budget pr_r9ented lo the council does not include these additional costs and would pennit a 5.S.cent reduction In the property tax rate . Gold berg has said he does not see any possibility of such a decrease if Jus program to upgrade Lagu na 's image is to be carried out eUective!y. Clyde I. Kegeris Succumbs at 74; Services Tuesday F'uneral service! will be held at 10 .11.m. Tucsay in Shefrer Laguna Beach Mtlrtuary Chapel for C I y d e Irvloe Kegcris, Joogtime Laguna resident who died Saturday in South Coast Community llos pital at the age or 74, The Rev. Dallas R. Turner of the Community Presbyterian Church will of· fi ciate at runeral rites conducted by San Clemente Elks Lodge 2068. Private entombment in Hollywood Memorial Park will follow, • ··~ South Viets Pull Oi1t Thousands PHNO~f PEN~l (UPI ) -Forei gn Minister Yem Sambaur sai d today he will ask President Nixon to keep American troops in Cambodia alon g with South Vietnamese soldiers "until the eRd of the war." His remarks were made in an airport news conference before leaving for Sai· gon for the first visit there by a high Cambodian official since Prince Norodom Sihanouk was deposed March 18. President Nixon has said he will have An1erican ground forces out of Cambodia by June 30, with the South Vietnamese leadership pledging to kee p its men there until the Viel Cong and North Vietnamese are beaten. "I am going to ask Preside nt Ni xon to keep the Americans in Cambodia until the end of lhe war.'' Yem Sambaur !aid. The request apparently has not ye t been made . As for the South Vietnamese, he said, they ca-n slay "as long as the \var lasts. 'I'ben we will ask them to leave." Tbe pu~pose of his trip to Saigon was to dl.SCU&S the reestablishmeat of dipiunaUc relations between U'8 two nations and lo protest what was desc rib- ed onJy as "misbehavior" by South Viet· Aamese lroops in Cambodia. At the same lime South Vietnam said several thousand of its troops withdrew from Cambodia tod uy, with about 13,000 others reported bBttling their way up the Mekong River to link up with Cam· bodian soldiers who captured the town of Tonie Bet. The 13,000-mall column of South Viel· namese pushing up the Mekong Ri ver toward Tonle Bet reported ~illing a tot.al o_f I~ Communist soldiers la weekend f1ghtin~, most of it in the Chu p rubber plan~Uon, the biqeat in Indochina. Saigon announcemeat uid the govern- ment trO?ps in ~ captured 1M tons of rice . Their losse:i were placed at seven de1d and 45 wounded in pushing the column to within three miles of Tunle Bet. ~ports from Pb.i om Penh said Cam- to?tan troops captured Tonie Bel. 50 n:iiles northeast of Saigon, Sunday arter virtually deslroying it with artillery lo rout !he Communist troops v.•ho had held it for a wee k. Casualties were not reported. Yem ~amba_ur told newsmen in Saigon ~.~ter his arrival that his visit would _inaugurate a new era of fertile coopera· ll~n for the fu1ure of our 1wo coun- tries ... •· D.ipJomatic r!!latiOJ'lli between the t"'O tll~tlOlls were broken off in 1965 afler Sihanouk charged allied troops from Viet- nam _with crossing into Cambodia H1 ~rsu1t of the Viel Cong and North Vietnamese . The _Cambodian foreign minis ter sai<I Jn Saig on he thought the "misun· d~rstandings'' abou t the treatment o! Vietnamese in Cambodi a could be resoh·· ed in bis discussions wilh Saigon officials. Orang~ Coast "'ealher Depending on the smoothness of the meetings, the budget studies might wind up Wednesday or Thursday iiight. follow · ed by the annua l public hearing on the revised docu1nent at the Junr. 3 city council meeting. Freed--Not Cured Mr. Kegerill, one of the early com. mander.!I of American Legion Post 222, was known a-nd loved in the community a!j organizer and guiding lisht at lhe Legion's annual Easter ega hunt for 5ma \I children. The weatherman'li in a rut. and 1'uesday 's forecast 1hapes up pret- ty much like today's -with low morning clouds and ha zy sun- shine holding lemperatures in !he middle 60's locally. Ton ight's departments a11d a synopsis or their budgets are as follows: -BUl.lding and plan11.ing shows an RllocaUoll in budget year 1970-'71 O[ $11,999. or about $3,000 more than this year'a buda:et. The Increase is nearly totaJly In nonnal upward salary ad- justmtnt.!I. -The Fire departmears budget. Show· Ing a huse jump because. of proposals 10 spend $1 70,000 for 1 new fire station hea<lquart~rs, also shows $6,000 h• in- Stock Markell Nli;\V YORK (A P) -The stoc k m11rkrt r ontlnucd to drifl lov.•er this arternoon after a sharp lall in c;i rly trading. Trading was moderate ISce quolallon~ r age!'i 18·191. •• • Serves Term for Biga1ny, Wants to Marry Again MESSINA, Sicily CAP) -Aldo Carlo Donati, who just can't resist a wedding. walked out of jail a frtt maa and .a bachelor today afte.r serving six years tor marrying five women . The first thing he plans to do ls get married again. Donati, called "the super bigamist" by Italian newspapers was arrested at the <loor of the Church or San Clemente Oct. 10, 1964, as he was about to ma rry a sixth wife. "I made rive women h3fr,y," he prr.- lested whe n chRrgged with rive cases of bigamy and various counlS of fraud. falsification of do c u m c n l ~ and m1 srepresentatll1ll. But while he was serving his sentence, he sudden ly found himself a single man. His first marriage to Diaann FriuJ at Milan in l9U was aMulled because it was never consummated. His sccon<I marriage lo Letinilde Pace tn t<'lllan ln 1954 and his third to Gilda Gab1\~lli in Merano in 1962 we.re ruled invalid because he was already marrletl. His fourth marriage to 1'1a ria Paola Petrelli in Parl'QJI in 1964 was annulled because of difference of religion. alld his fifth t() Gabriella Mar \1 Ballan in Pieve di Castelfranco Venelo in 1964 was held in valid because of an agreement not lo h"vc childrtn. He might have gotten away with 1 alxlh marriage, to Sicilian schooJttacher Miria Peluso, but he. made up too fancy a story about being a NATO Intelligence agent. The 1ir\'s father asked police to check up bec1t.use it set.med strange that an lntelllgence agent wouldn't know how lo drive a car. "Matrimony excites rne," Donati llald Al the time. "It's like a chill of exultati on difficu lt to explain." Now 48. he stlll likes the ide11 . lie plans to marry a Ron1e woman with whom he harl a corrcspondt!nec rotru1nce wblle In prison. He also was a past exalted ruler or La1una Beach Elks Lodge 1724 and for many years wu manager of the old A Ir P Market at the corne.r of Forest Avenue and Glenneyre Street in Laiuna. Mr. Kegeris Is aurvived by his widow, Verda,_ of the home, Mt Th.11lla SL : a bl'O\htr, Ray of Hermosa Beach : and 1 ste.pt0n, James E. Myers o! Glendale . Picketing Continues OAKLAND (UPI) -Members of the Teamsters union continued .selective wildcat picketing today against truck firms operating between Los Anaeles a nd cltie11 up and down Ule. coast. Some picketing was also reported in San Fran- <:l~o. ~fost m a· j .o r trall!Continental truckers were oper1Un1 . . . ' ( INSmE TODAY \Vhat's tht hardest porl of running a nuclear plont7 It could be convinci11g the sur· rounding cltiunr~ there's 110 danger involved. Se e tilt stor11 of San Onofre on Page 3. eutlftt n <•II~• I <*•1 ... U• ' CllttUIM lt->t Cfflilo H C,..ll_tl H ~ l'ltllc_, I OM•~•• I ... tlrll l '"' ' lllflrtl lf!m..,1 11 l'llteflc• ''"" ....,.1-C_ ,, •1111 "''""'' II ,_.llM• ' Mtft ... •-le• u """"'"" I Mtvltt 11 1'1•1111111 .... , •.• Ott""' (tvntY I l ,IVll r'ff!U II 1""11 11·1• ltw.• Mll~lll II-If T•lf'llf"'° tr Tiletl•r1 11 ......... ~ ""'·-·· f'lllWt 1).1' WWlll Newt .. j ' z DAJLY PILOT SC Still lune 30 Uniform Nixon Reaffirms Law Downed Troop-Pullout ByTopCourt WASH INGTON (UPI) -The White House reaffirmed today Pmildent Nir- on's pledge to pull out all U.S. 1.roops from Cambodia by June 30. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler gave the assurancr v.•hen asked about a state- ment by Cambodia's foreign mini.sler that his government "'ould request Nixon to kN'p Gls i111 Cambodia until ''the end of the 1,1•ar.'' Ziegler said no such request .h".'-d been received from Phnom Penh of!ic1a\s but "If we det receive such a request from them . we would make them aware of our policy.'' That policy, he said, is the same as Nixon enunciated previously : that all Americans would be withdrawn from Cambodia by end of next month. On Capitol liill. Assistant Senate Democratic Leader Edward M. Kennedy said recent statements by administration officials had in dicated ''some waffling" on the pledge for a complete pullout by June 30. Kennedy said there now seemed to be some question whether American air 5upport and advisers would be available to South Vietnamese forces who have said they plan to rem.aiR in C4mbodia indefinitely. Senate Democratic Leader ?i-1 i k e Mansfield said "if the South Vietnamese atay. it me.11ns we v.·ill be involved in a 'cute' way.' " At the White House, Zeigler did oot clear up the question of whether U.S. air action would conti11ue after Gls left or whether logistical support -and possi bly some American advisers - would be provided the Sooth Vietnamese. w. Averell Harri.man, a top diplomatic troubleshooter in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, accused the ad- ministration of basing Vietnam policy on a "delusion" that military pressure could force the Communists to negotiate peace. '"The simple truth is that there is no way of achieving our political ob- jectives in Vietnam through military ac- tion," Harriman said. The 78-year'{]ld ex-diplomat, whose negotiating experience spanned a period of nearly 30 years. testified before the House Foreign Affairs Committee at hearings on "U.S. foreign policy for the 70s." He predicted that North Vietnam and the Viet Cong would join ln "serious negotiations" if these steps were taken: -'Ibe Ni.J:oo administration compelled South Vietnamete President ndell to take into his government individuals who want a negotiated settlement. -Thieu aent a ne1otiating team to $700 in Wallet Taken in Laguna By 'Customer' An unchained wallet cont.ainlng $700 in cash wa.s picktd up Saturday by a customer at the Ball and Chain, mod clothing shop at 646 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, police report. After selecting a pair o[ boots, the owner told police, the customer asked for change of a $50 bill, which was produced from lhe wallet, kept on a shelf. He paid for the boots with a $20 bill fr om lhe change and departed. After rearranging some shoe boxes on a shelf, the owner realized thal the "'·allet alc;o had departed, presumably with the light-ringe red boot buyer. Another fashion-wise Art Colony thief m tered a home at 648 Griffith We y Saturday evening by reachin g through a pet door to turn a11 lnslde door knob, police said, Rifling a bureau , the visitor selected an assortment of cuff links, lie bars and 15 pairs of n'ICn'! socks, then picked up l\\'O bottles of champagne and three bottles of ~·hite wine to add to his !ool, the irate househo lder complained. DAllY PllOT ,.,..,.,. •••t L..-... d11 C.u.M- f)ll.AKGE CO.UT PUllL1!Hll'IG (QMl'AHY ltob 1rt N . w.,4 l'rlJ>tifftl l'ld P11bll1Mr Joclr I . Cw•lov • Vin! Prfi:<>Wll .,.., G-•.i M1~'"' Tho"''' l<11vil E<lllw Tho"'•' A. M11rphi"t MMtglng Edilor lti~h1rd '· N1tl !.oil!~ Ot'l "llt CO<rn1J td1"' Offl<M Ce1t1 Mn.: Uf W11t lhV ~lrftl fjtwparl Bt lcl>: 2211 W•I .,...,, ........ , ... Li .....-81..:~: ID 1'0< .. t A~ ... lle 1o1~11n111.., •"'"' 1n11 ••tc~ ,,,.,...,...., ~n C....,.,1111t: Al~~ 11 CtmV.. awl __ _L. 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Paris thal was willing and capable or reaching a compromise peact: setUement. -President Nilton named • "high- level" U.S. negotiator to llUCceed Henry Cabot Lodge who resigned last fall. Jfarriman said thal until a top-level Lodge successor is named, "it is hard for people around the ·world to believe (Nixon) is really Interested in ncgot1a- tions.'' Boy Drowns In 'Last Dive' Off Catalina A Bel Air teenager -tired after several descents In 45 feet of water off Catalina lsland's Arrow Point - went down Sunday for what he said was his last dive. His body was recovered later off the bottom. George B. Pullman. 17, drowned while on the tinal trip of a skhxliving trip with friends: on the west side of Emerald Bay, according to sheriffs deputies A companion, Al Widen, 17, of West Los Angeles, said Pullman failed to re-surface when he ahould have and the hunt was begun. The victim '11 body was found about 25 yard! offshan: near the spot where he and his friend had anchored their boal Investigators said the boys were diving with snorkel gear, not UJing acuba equip- ment when the tragedy took yoo.ng Pullman's life. MS Drive Opens In Laguna Beach, Lagunan 0. W. Price, member of the board of trustees of the nc1,1·Jy formed Orange County chapter for the Nation.a I ?t1ultiple Scle:ro!is Fund Drive, has an- nounced the opening of the annual cam- paign to raise funds for multiple sclerosis resean:h. Pritt". whose 10a,.a young Commander 1n the'Navy, was a victim of the dise-ase, says there are 3,000 persons In the C<l'Unty suffering from multiple sclerosis and related diseases. A chronic disease or the central nervous system, MS usually strikes young adults between the ages of 20 and 40 and frequently results in crippling paralysis. Ftmds donated to the 1970 MS Hope Chest will support research and provide: services for county MS victims and their families. Architect Succumbs \YASHINGTON (AP) -J. George Stewart, an ex-politician once charged with trying to "make the Capltol inlG a king-sized Howard Johnson's,'' has died. ending a stormy !&-year care€r as the Capitol architect. OAIL 'I l>IL01 'llff 1>11111 ltidonesiot• Presidetat Visits President Suharto of Indonesia ~reels well wishers ing as they changed planes en route to Washington, \Vho got up early this morning to \Velcome the D.C. for state visit. Among those greeting the Jn. Asi an leader upon his 7:06 a.m. a rrival at El Toro donesian leader \Vere Albert (right) and Niki Nel- Marine Corps Air Station. Jlresid ent and !Vlrs. \\'a n (da rk hats, grey suits at fence)~ young sons Suharto stopped at El Toro for an hour this morn-of rvtr . and Mrs. Tony Nelwan, Costa Mesa. --------------'----'-------- Aide to Reagan Missing Witl1 Family in Sierras SONORA (UPI) -Edward B. Hut- chinson. Gov. Ronald Reagan's ap- pointments secretary, was reported miss- ing with his wife and three young children today on a baekpacking trip into the High Sierra. Hutchinson, 40, a fonner Palo Alto rea l estate developer, drove to the DardaneUe area in the Sonora Pass on Highway 108 Friday night. lie "'as to baekpack into the rugged Sword Lake region. and return Sunday night. A daugbter, Susanne, 17, who remained San Clementean Faces Charges A 53-year-old San Clemente man faces charges includi ng resisting arrest after he allegedly kicked a patrolman in the face Sunday during a traffic stop in- volv ing Lhe arrested man's wife. Police said Chester Spurgeon Clemens, 2711 Via Bandita , was booked on charges of drunkenness. malicious n1ischief and resisting arrest after the incidents at El Camino Real and Avenida Esca\ones. Officers said they stopped a car driven by Clemens' wife at 12 :49 a.m. Sunday, and as they were tal king to the woman Clemens allegedl y approached th e patrolmen and became abusive. As he v.·as being placed into a police car he kic ked !he face of one pa!romnn, reports said . t.lrs. Clemens \\'as not held. in Sacramento during the outing, reported the family missing Sunday mid- night. Missing were Hutchinson: his wlfe, Kirsten ; and three children , Nora. IO: Mary Jean, 8. and Jack, 6. The fam ily dog also was along . Hutchinson 1,1·as described by associates in the g<iveroor 's office as an experienced backpacker. The family's destination was only ap- proximately fi ve miles by trail off a rorest service road. The 11utchinson sta- tion wagon was found this morning nea r Dardanelle Cone on Fence Creek road at approximately the 8,000 foot level. The Tuolumne Cou nty Sheriff's office planned an air search this afternoon. Drug Work Told By Sma1·teens Smarleen5, a group fro1n Marco Forster Junior lllgh in San Juan Capis!rano, will describe Lheir drug preven!ion program at a special PTA meeting Tuesda y. A pot luck at 6·30 p.m. at the Triton Center at San Clemente High School will begin the last meeting of the year for the Capistrano Unified Council of l'T ,\. 'fhe group will vote (Jl1 a by-J aw change \1•hich v.:ill enable high school students 10 become full voting members and 1,1•ill install new PTA officers. New presidents included Mrs. Donald l!olt . Coneorrlia: f..1rs. ~!even Spell man. J)a.na : 1'.1rs. Lawrence Thayer. Forster : J\trs. Thomas Wer1, Hanso n: !ltrs. \V iii Karns, Las 1-'almas: tl1rs. !'ell Hubbard, Palisades, ~lrs. 1-:ugene Kaster. Sa11 (;Jctnen te ll igh. and l\1rs. Kenn eth Bloon1, council president. Cool W eather Mars Weekend Cool v.•ealher and heavy ove rcast kept beachgoers home 1n droves over lhe weekend, Laguna Beach Ii f e g u a rd s report . lns1ead of crowds Jn excess of 20,000 that htt~I Jan1111rd beaches only last v.•eckend, lhe unfavorable we a I he r brought ouL only 6.000 persons on Satur- day and a scant 5,000 on Sunday . Surf was ca lm and both \vater anrl air temperatures stayed around 65 degrees. Lifeguards logged "no in- ddents." Judy Fay Risley Rites on Tuesday Graveside se rvices will be he ld at 2 p.m. Tuesday in El Toro Cemetery for Judy Fay Risley, 28, of 24 181 Ankerton Drive. El Toro, who died Satur- day at South Coast Communlty llospital. Mrs. Ri sley Is su rvi ved by her parent!, Mr. and Mrs. \Valdo Peters of El Toro: 11 sti n, Joshua Risley of the home: and by a sister. Jlofrs. Gazella Wike of Los Altos, Calif. Sheffer Laguna Beach ?-.tortuary were directors. How's That Again? 'Monster' Sparks Bedroom Blaze I 11 Sa.n Clemente A San Clemenre youth's fondness for ltlumlnated monster models proved cos- tly over the weekend· when one of the con!ri vances caughl his bedroom ablaze, causing S8,000 in darnag e. Fire Chief !\1ert Hack('I[ said a lighted candle left unattended behi nd a plaslic model caused the fire at 2909 Via San Gorgonio S.1turday at 2 l l p rn. He sai d l!arvey Higgs Jr., IJ, had lighted the candle and placed it beh ind· a model which he had buil t, then he lefl the room. A few moments later the youth return- ed and opened lhe bedroom door to find the entire room ablaze. Fi~men sounded a general alarm and within a half hour had finished working the blaze, v.·hich ate throogh the roof after gutting the bedroom. Hackett said damage to the shake-roof ho1ne was $6,000 to the structure and ;2,000 to the contents. 'The fire caused srnoke and heat damage to three (}!her bedrooms .and a hallway, but lefl the rest of the house untouched . Firemen worked hard to keep the blaze from spreaDing fu rther through the att ic and roof. Hackett said. Vandals W reek Pier Res troon1 s \\'eekend vandals nea r the Sa n Clemenle Pier blasted sC\·eral \\'all- ino1.1nled ceramic fl )(tures in the men's rest room to rubble, police reported . The incidents 1,1·ere discovered by mninte,.ance crews Su nday morning. f1ccrs said. The vandals, usi ng m i 11 ta r y firecrackers, apparently dropped the e)(- plos 1l'es in lhe fixtures sometime aftl'r last Friday night. The Village S1nithiess Wired U J• lf olf WASl-IJ NGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional today a federal law that prohibited wearing of • U.S. military uniform in a state or screen pe:r(ormance if the character wearing It tended to discredit the armed forces. A unanimous decision written by J llStice Hugo Black declared that th' statute violated the First Amendmenl guarantee of free speech. nie court reversed the conviction of Daniel Jay Schact, who wore a burlesque military costume at an antiwar de.moostratlon in 1967 in Houston. The govermnent prosecuted Schachl on grounds he was wearing a uniform without authority. He contended he was appearing in a theatrical production con- sisting of a street skit as part . of the Houston protest. The law Ctlntained a provision that a unifo1m could be worn in a theatrical performance only if its use did not discredit the armed forces. It was that provision which the court struck down. Black wrote that a law "which leaves Americans free to praise the wa r in Vietnam but can send persons like Schacht to prison for opposi ng it, cannot survive in a country that has the First Amendment." In other actiorus. the cow1 : -Dismissed without comment a challenge lo the constitutionality of a Phi ladelphia antiriot ordinance used to prosecute three persons after the assassination O{ Dr. Martin Luther King in April, 19S8. The ordinance pennits the mayor to declare a state of emer- gency in such instances and to restrict the movement of people in publ ic places. -Overturned by unanimous vote the robbery conviction of a Florida man because th e state waited eight years to . bring h.im to trial. The opinion by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger said the delay in the case of Robert Dean Dickey \Vas an "intolerable" violation (}f his right lo speedy lrial. -Rejected an appeal by a group head- ed by Spani sh-A1nerica leader Re i s Lopez Tijerina challenging New 1'.lexico·s education lav.·s lhey claim'd v,•ere un- favorable lo Spanish speaking children in the state. Oemente Police Raid Pot Farm; Two Women Held ''Grass'' -of the illegal variety - gnrw!ng in the back yard of a San Clemente residence c.aught the eye of San Clemente police over the v.•eekend. v.·ho seized 50 marijuana seedlings .and arrested two young wo1nen on charges of grov.·ing the v.·ecd. Narcotics detettives said thev heard a telephone tip Friday describing lhe garden in the yard behind 217 8 La Paloma. The officers said they perred over a fence to verify the rrports, the n return- ed to obta in 1,1•arr ants. On their second tri p they arrested one young v.•oman at the apartment, Aida Louise Howar th. !8. Later that tlay they arrested a second 18-ycar'{]ld young woman in La~una Be:ich .. Joen<' (icntile, who gave ~ sa1ne La !'alom::i res idence address. Both v.·ere booked on <"h<11·ges of cultivating ma riiuana. Pol ice claim they seized several gallon-s11.cd conta1ner5 with flouri shing. foot-hi gh plants, pl us a lug box containing abou t 45 lJny seedl- ings. Linda Clark, 18. a st11dent at Sacramento's Casa Roble fll ~h School. is one of 15 studenl!i who'll graduate y,•lth a ccrti(icate in horseshoe· in~. Linda and her ..:lassrnates v.'ill embark on careers as black- s n1 iths. P HILADELPHIA (AP ) -Jlotrs. Ray- mond Broderick. wife of the GOP gubernatorial candidate, says so1ne funny thing!! happen on campaigns : "like being inlroduced recently at a meeting a~ 'th<' nc1,1· gover11or '5 next wife.' " Her hus· band i~ the current lieutenant go\•ernor of Pennsylvania. A young wolf cub is wired for sound \v ith a bio tclcn1ctrv receiver fin d an1 pl ifi cd :J11 achrd tn it s b?dv ~o youn_g!(;ters cnn hear i1s hcnrl brat on a loud ~pcaker at the ch1 lclre11 's st.'Ction of the St. Lotus Zoo. { \ ( 7 I Laguna Beaeh VOL 63, NO. 12•. l SECTIONS, l • PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 25, 1970 TEN CENTS Cambodia Will Asl( U.S. Remain Until War Ends DAIL l PIL.01 Sit" Ptwt. TWO DIED WHEN THIS COMPACT CAR HIT POLE Car Bursts Into Flames After Laguna Ci1 nyon Crash Flaming Crash /(ills Two On Laguna Canyon Road 1\~·o n1en were killed early Sunday \\·he n their car, apparently trave ling at high speed, Je(t Laguna Canyon Road at the treache rous Big Bend Cu rve, slam- n1ed in to a utilHy pole and burst 1nlo fl ames. The Orang e County Coroner's o!rict tenta tively identified the victims, who were burned beyond recognition. as t:rnest \'Ve!zel. .32, itnd Steven Pau l Bevck, 21, both of Whittler. ldenlification was made I h r o u g h registration of the vehicle, a J962 Arncrlcan-1nade n1odc l with engine in the rea r. Relatives of the me n said they \.\'ere dri ving together Saturday 11ight, but posilive identification may have lo await an autopsy and dental che<:k today , the coroner's officer said. Laguna Beach police and a Fire Department unit were called to the scene at 12:50 a.m., but were unable to control the flames thal engulfed the car when the gas fank exploded. Impact of the crash wrapped a heavy guard rail around the c~r and police said it woukl harJ betn 1mpos.sible for the men to haYf ·etea'pe11 ·Ute blazing vehicle. A witness told police the car had passed him momen ts before the accident, traveling eas t at a high speed and mov- lng erratically. On Sunday evening at 9:;10, a Leisure World resident drove into the sarne utility pole on the Big Bend curve, bu~ escaped 1vithout injury. Driver in the second crash \Vas Kathryne t.1elander. 60 , 6J8B Ave. Sevilla. Sa11 Cleme11teCouncilEyes Bi1ilding, Pla11ning Budget By .IOIJN \'Al.TERZA 0 1 tho O••IW '°Hot St•!! The public safely an d buildin g and ~\anning segments or San Clemcnte ·s rrupo.,cd $.l7-mil\ion buc.lgct arc on lap tor c1 !.v C'ounc1 I :-Italy tonighl starting <1 ( 7 o"tlock. City ~1:1n;1ger 1\1•11 Curr ~<11d !lie e-;act nrUe r of t1cltbcrat1ons is up !o the d1scre· I ton of cou ncilmen, but heads o{ the police. lifeguard , fire and buildin g-plan- 111ng dcparl1ncnts wi ll attend to take part iA the budget studies. The council will carry throu gh the week of meetings with a tentative format showing work Tuesday night on budget Items relating to engineering, water, i>lreet.s and parks and recreation. A specific time for addresses by the l'ily employe organ izations has nol beea i;ct, Carr said. Tlie employes are expected lo appear al invilatio1 or the council to discuss t;alary raises which have not yet been pluggcd into the proposed budget whtch ~hov.•s an incrcase of $400,000 over last .~ear and a minor drop in proper!¥ laxes. 1.:reases for salaries and a new over11me· standby allowance, but a $900 drop in ::.uppl1cs and equipment. -The police departme nt's budgrt ;i lso shows <in incrC'aSc in the salary anti m3npv111er segn1ents, bul 01bout all or 1hc rises in cxpcnscs should b(' cnvrrcd by the first of three fede ral crime COJltrol grants. The departmenl's personnel and salary budget this curre nt yPar is estimated at $377.347, which is proposed to increase to $487 ,020 next fiscal year. The federal grant almost reached $100.000. Equipment expenses are ex · peeled to rise fram $135,3-47 to $181,822. plus $3,836 for capital ouflaf, -The lifeguard budget shows a nominal increase in salaries from $129.966 to $141 ,973, but, again , the i11· creases are, due to • midyear raise approved earlier in this fiscal year. Nn ~ew raises are included, The department is proposed for $10,000 mare in luod:ri for materi.als, supplies and services, but no !~s fcrr capita] oub.y. -The city golf ~· budget which shows about a $42,000 .' t in expenditures also may be scanned. isbt. ~ Bridge Falls On F1·eeway; One l(illed BALD\VIN PARK (UPI ) - A new 5300,000 concrete ancl steel bridge linking Uie San Bernardino and 605 fr ee ways eollapsed loday a nd millions of pounds of rubble fell on another ramp be low, A pickup truck v.·as rlattened by the chunks of concl'th: and ils driver \\'a~ -~;il!ed. It took rl'scu e wo rkers several hours to reach the vehicle. The last concrete in the l~O·foot bridgC' \\•as poured last Thursday and v.•as not yet "cured." F'rancis F'resner, an assis- ta"! bridge eogineer for the California Division of H.ighways, said the collap se could have been caused by a flaw !n nnc of the \'ertical steel posl.s tts cd to support the structure \\'hi\e it dried out. F'ressner estimated more tha n four million pounds of steel and concrete fe ll to the roadway. The collapse oc- curred at 7:40 a.m. during the morni ng rush hour and the Ca)ifornia Highway Pat rol said it was' a nuke that only one car was passing below at the limr. Mllrin e Guilty Of Killing Buddy, Gets 21 Y ears A Marine court martial al Cam p Pendleton has convicted 21-year-old decorated Marine Pfc, ~tichael Galloway 10 21 years in prison in the New Year's J~ve murder or a buddy. Gallo way, v.·ho also received a dishono rable discharge, v.'as conv icted late las;. v.•ee.k o{ u11premedilaled murder of p.,.1. Steven WooUolk in the vicini ty or the Camp Las Pulgas enlisted mcn·s rlub on Dec. J I. The court also found Galloway guilt y of v1olatloo of a lav.·ful ordr.r. assault with a dangerous v.'eti pon, carrying a 1:oncealcd v.'eapon and communicating a lhrea1. The s<·nlence \\'1lt \\'ill uAdergo rrvirw l1v 1he c,;o n1n1ander of Gallowa) ':; unit, 1i1c !ilh :\1 arine Expeditionary Br1g<1d!'· Brig. Gen. Ross J)wyer 11•ill review lhc SC'r)lence handed do..,,•n and can ei ther approVC' it as it stand s or re.duce 1l. Alter the ge neral's rt>\'iew the sentence \1·ill go to Navy superiors in \\'a sl1inglon, D.C. for their evaluation . Gallowa y, who is a ve tt>ran of the Vietnam \Var and the holder or several decorations for performance there, will be confined in a r>.1arine Corps dctentloR facility, base spokesmen said. Solon Says Innocent WASHINGTON (AP) -r~ormer Sen. Daniel B. Brewster (D-Md. ), pleadcd innocent today to ch arges of accepting a brlbe to influence his \"ote on postal rate legislation. a Nurse First Male in County Prog ram By BARBARA KREIBICll Of lh• Ollrw ,.1i.t 11111 The new nurse on the 3 to l I p.m. shift in r>.fedical East at South C o a s t Com111uni ty Hospital had to ta ke tiine off from his duties last week to attend a graduation ceremony in Anaheim. The pronoun is correct. The new nurse is F'Ted Sherwood, first male student t6 graduate as a practical nurse from Nurses' Training Institute of Orange County. The 22 other nurses in Fred's graduating class were all female, and, like Fred. they found a llll6dy market !or their skills. Fred. in fuel, \Vas already working ;ii South Coast v.'he n tht forinal gradua- Hon d11le rolled around and he thinks it's "great." Women patients, he says, are •·son1etimes a little surprised to find the ir nurse is n1ale. but Lhcy al ways believe me ." Men don't seem !o care one way or the other, he adds. Fred 's hospit al experience. b t' g a n shortly arter he fin ished high school, \\'ith jobs in Park Ave nue Hospital and Ge nesee Hospital in Rochester, New York. and a stint al r-.tount Sinai in l•lorida. But he found many doors closed to him v.•ithoul for1nal medical training and decided to do something about it after he moved to San Cleinerite two yur1 ago. Enroll ing at the Nu rses Training Insti tute , which is affiliated with West An ah e I m Community Hospital, he plunged inlo classroom studies reviewi ng procedures o( acute nu rsing care and learning the language .of medicine. This 111as foll owed by in-sf"l"\.•ice I.raining in the Anahe im hospital, cove r i n g all departments: medical, s u r g i ca I , pediatrics, ma ternity, labor and delivery, I DAii 'I ,.llOl SUll "'-'• ON DUTY AT HOSPITAL Ma le Nurs• She rwood <'entral supply , recov rry room and the intensive C{lre unit, Moving to" full time WOfk In the hospital, he continued wllh clapes once a week and finally wii graduated with second highest ac hievement honors in his class. Fred's duties at the hospital cover "all the things a nurse is ."lupposed to do." And, perhaps picking up a clue ff(tnl his fe!lo111 workers, he declines to reveal his age to the press. Laguna Council Will Seel{ Metl1od to Save Bu s Li11e l,aguna Beach c1!y councilmen wr11 lry to fin d a '"'ay lo shore up the Art Colony's financial!y distressed bus line in a second study session on the .subject Tues!lay al 7.30 p.m. in city llall council chambers. Advised thal Laguna Transit. ope rator of the local bus, may have lo discontinue its servi ce, the council has been pon- dering the <1lternat1ve s of subsidizing or bu ying the bus line in order to rnainta1n what they agree is a needed cornmun ity scr\'iCe. F'inancial details of bath proposed so lu- tions will be studied at the Tuesday session. Alson on the agenda for the stu dy meet is an in itial examination of the prct minary cily budget for 1970-71. Councilmen will examine the tentative $3 .6 million budget prepared by City ~•anager James D. Wheaton in the light of earlier praposals to increase police department personnel and make other changes in city fun ctions relative to Mayor Richard Goldberg's seveo-point program. The "hold the line" budget presented lo the council does not Include lhese additional costs and would permit a ~ 8-cent reduc tion in the property tax rate.. Goldbe rg has said he does not see. any possibility of such a decrease if his progra m to upgrade Laguna's image 1.~ to be carried out eHecti ... ely. Cl yde I. Kegeris Succu1nh s at 74; Services Tuesday Funeral services will be held at JO a.m. Tuesay in Sheffer Laguna Beat h Mortuary Chapel for CI y d e Irvine Kegeris, longtime Laguna resident who died Saturday in South Coast Communi ty Hospital at the age of 74. The Rev . Dallas R. Turner of the Community Presbyte rian Church will of- ficiate at fu neral rites conducted by San Clemente Elks Lodge 2068. Prtvate entombment in Hollywood Memorial Park will follow. Depending on thr smoothness of the meetings. the budget studies might wind tip Wednesda y or Thursday 1dght, follow. ud by the annual public hearing on lhc revised document al the June l r ity council meeting. Freed--Not Cured t.1r. Kegeris, one of the early com- manders of American Legion f;>o.'it 222, was known and loved in the community as organizer and guiding light at the Legion's annual Easter egg hunt for i;mall children . Tonight's departments aRd a synopsis 11r their budgets are as follows; -Building and planning Shows an fl llocatlon in budget year 1970-'71 of $18,989, 1 or about $3.000 more than this )'ear's budget. nie. increase is nearly totally in norma1 upward salary ad- justmen~. -1be Fire departmerit's budget, show- ing a huge jump because of proposals lo spend 5170.000 for a new fitt ·station tieadquarlers, •lso shows $6.000 111 in· Stork Markets Nl:~\V YOflK I AP) -The stock market ('on1ln11ed lo (!rift lower l hi~ afternoon ;iflcr a sharp fal l in enrly tradin,R. 'fradinit 1 ... as moderate. (See qu otations l'agcs J8-lgJ. Serves Term for Bigamy, W llnts to Marry Again MESSINA. SicHy CAP) -Afdo -<:atlo Donati, who just can't rtsi1t a.wedding, walked oot of jail -> ·free man and a bacheior today after sirvh'lg stx years for marrying five women. The first thing he plans to do is get married again. Donati, ca!Jed "the .supe r bilamlst" by Italian newspapers was arrested at the door of tM Churclt of Sa n Clemente Oct. 10, 1954, as he wtt about lo marry JJ sixth wife. "I 'made five women• half,}'." he pro- le$1ed wh en ch argged with five cases or bigamy and various count,, or fraucl, falsification of d c>c..u m c n t ~ and misrepresentation . Bui while he was serving his senteoce, he suddenly found himself a single ma'n. His first marriage lo Diaann Friz.zl at ti111an in UH9 was annuUed because it V>'a~ ne ver consun1mated. His second marriage to Leonilde Pace m Milan In 19'"J4 and his th ird to Gilda Gab1\~lli in Merano in 1962 werr. ru led invalid because he was already married. His fourth marriage to Maria Pao la Petrelli Jn Parma in 1964 was annulled because of difference of religio n, and his fifth to Gabriella Maria Bal!an in Picvc di Castelfranco Vtneto in 1964 was held invalid because of an agreement not to have children. He mlght have gotten away with 11 sixth marriage, to Sicilian schoolteacher Marla Peluso, but he made up too fancy a story about being ;i NA TO intelligence agent. The alrl's father asked police to check up becauJe It seemed strainge that an intellia:ence agent wouldn't know how to drive a car. "Matrimony excites me ." Donati said at Lhe lime. "lt':i like a chill of exultation dlfrlcult to explaln." Now 48. he .still likes the Idea. tie plans to marry a Ron1e \\'Oman with whom he had a correspondence romance while in prison. He also was a past exalted ruler of Laguna Beach Elks Lodge 1724 and for many years was manager of the old A & P Market at the comer of Forest Avenue and Glermeyre Strett in Laguna. Mr. Kegeris Is survived by his widow, Verda, ot the home, 869 Thalia St.: a brother, Ray of Hermosa Beach: and a stepson t James E. Myers of Glendale. Picketing Continues OAKLAND (UPI) --Members of the TeamBlerR union continued selective wildcat picketing today against truc.k fi rms o~atlng between l.o$ ..Angeles and c.ltles up and down the coast. Some pickcth1g was also reported in San Fran· cisco. Most major transcontinental \rockers were operatlnf. ( South Viets Pull Out Tl1oi1sands PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Foreign Minister Yem Sambaur s•id today he will ask President Ni1on to keep American troops in Cambodia along with South Vietnamese soldiers "until the end of the war.'' His remarks were made in an airport news conference before leaving lor Sai· gon for the firSt visit there by a high Can1bodian o£ficial sina Prince Norodom Sihanouk was de.posed Ma rch 18. President Nixon has said he will have American ground for ces out of Cambodia by June 30, with the South Vietnamese leadership pledging to kcep its men the.re until the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese are beaten. "r am going lo ask President Nixon lo keep the Americans in Cambodia Wllil the end of the war." Yem Sa mbaur said. The request apparently has not yet been made. As for the South Vietnamese , he said they can stay ''as king as the wal- la st.J. Then we will ask them to leave," Tht purpose of his trip to Saigon was to discUSR the reestablishmeat of diplbmatlc rel~Uons between the two naUons and Lo protest '"'hat was de.scrib- ed only as "misbehavior'' by South Viel- aamese !.roops in Can1bodia. At the same time South Vietnam said several thousand of il s troops withdrew from Cambod ia today, wi th abou t 13,000 others reported battl ing lheir way up !he Mekong River lo link up with Cam· bodian soldiers who captured the town of Tonie Bel. The 13,000-mari column of South Viet.- namese pushing up the Mekong River toward Tonie Bel reported killing a total o.r l~ Communist soldiers iri weekend figh ting, most of it in the Chu p rubber plan:Stlon, the biggest in Indochina. Saigon announcement sa id the govern- ment troops in addilion captured 180 lons of rice. Their losses were placed at seven dead and 45 wounded in pushing lhe column lo within three mile.s of Tonie Bel. R~porls from Ph11om Penh said earn. ~1a11 troops captured Tonie Bet, SO ~1.les northeast t;if Saigoo, Sunday after vu tua lly destroying it with arlillcry to root ~e Communisl troops "'ho had held 1t for a \llee k. Casualties were not reported. Yem Sambaur to!cl newsmen in Saigon ~.~li'.r his arriva l that his visi l would .inaugurate a new era of fertile coopc ra· t1~n for ~!le future of our t .... ·o coun- lnes ..• D_!plomatlc relatlons between the two ll~lions were broken orr in 1965 afte r Sihanouk charged allied troops from Viet- nam _wi th cross ing into Cambodia in p~rsui t of the Viet Cong and Nortb Vietnamese. . The ~ambodian foreign minister said in Saigon he thought the .. misun-d~rsuindings" about the trealmenl o[ Vie.tnamese in Cambodia could be resolv- ed rn his discussions with Saigon officials. Orange Coast Wenfl1er The weatherman's in a rut, and Tuesday's forecast ahapes up prcl~ ly much like today's -with low morni ng clouds and hazy sun- shine holding temperatures in the middle 60's !Ocally_ INSIDE TODA\' \Vhot'.s the hardest par! of rto1ni11g a nuclear plant? If co uld bt convincing thl! 1ur- rounding citizenry there's 110 danger involved. See thr. story o/ San Ono/re on Pag1: 3. ... , ... " Mtft NI "-"let " Ctl...,,.I• ' _,.,,,, • C"-Clli.. U• • Mewle1 " Cle1~ ,.~ Nl...,.I N .... ... C-IU n o, ..... CNftlJ • '~-n SrN .. ...... " .... Nttl(fl • SHrt1 11·14 Dl~1 • ..... Ml rl•fl lt ·lt lf~ ... 111 ,. ... • Ttltwlllfll " &-lllill-1 " T-lero " ,.lM'ICt l t-lt """""' • ..__." .. Wtllllol''t H .... l•t• A.., t.1Mt11 •• Ww• ·~ .. ,,.,.,,.. • ,1 ' ' • - Z DAILY PILOl SC Still June 30 Uniform Nixon Reaffirms Law Downed Troop Pullout By Top Court WASHINGTON IUPI ) -The \Vhile Jlouse reaflirmed today President Nix· on 's pledge to pull out all U.S. iroops frorn Cambodi<1 by J une 30. Press Secretary Honald L. Ziegler gave the assurance when asked about a state· m en! by Carn bod1a·s foreign minister thal his govt'rnmcnt "'ould _reques_t Nj:11.on to keep Gls i" Cambodia until the end of the v.·ar." Ziegler said no such request .~d been received from Phnom Penh offJc1als but "if we do receive such a request from them we would make them aware oE our Policy." That policy, he said, is the same as Ni10T1 enunciat.ed previously: that all Americans "·ould be withdrawn from Cambodia by end of next month. On Capitol J~ill. Assistant Senate Democratic Leader Edward M. Kennedy said recent statements by administration ()fficials had indicated "some waffling" on the pledge for a complete pullout by June :Kl. Kennedy said there now seemed to be some question whether American air support and advisers would be available to South Vietnamese forces who have said they plan tu remai11 in Cambodia indefinitely. Senate Democratic Leader M ik e Mansfield said "if the Soulh Vietnamese stay, it means we will be involved in a 'cute' way.' " At the White House, Zeigler did not clear up the question of whether U.S. air action would continue alter Gls left or v.•helher logistical support -and possibly 50me American advisen - would be provided the South Vietnamese. W. Averell Harriman, a top diplomatic troubleshooter In the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, accused the ad· ministration of basing Vietnam policy on a "delusion" th.at military pressure could force the Communists to negotiate peace. "The simple truth is that there is no way of achieving our political ob· jectives in Vietnam through military ac· Uon," Harriman said. The ?B-year-(lld ex-diplomat. Whose negotiating experieoce spanned a period of nearly 30 years. testi!ied before the lfouse Foreign Affairs Committee at hearings on "U.S. foreign policy for the 70s." He predicted that North Vietnam and the Viet Cong would join in "serious negotiations" if these steps were taken : -The Nixon administration compelled South Vietnamese Pre.!lident Thieu to take into his government individuals who want a negotiated settlement. -Thieu sent a negoUaUng team to $700 in Wallet Taken in Laguna By 'Customer' An unchained wallet. containing $700 in cash was picked up Saturday by a customer at the Ball and Chain, mod clothing shop at 646 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. police report. After selecting a pair of boots, the nwrwr told police, the customer asked for change of a $50 bill, which was produced from the wallet, kept on a shel f. He paid for the boots with a $20 bill from the change and departed. After rearranging some shoe. boxes on s shelf, the o~·ner realized that the wallet also had departed, presumably wilh U1e li ght-finge red boot buyer. Another fashion-wise Art Co lony th!er rntercd a home at 648 Griffith Way Saturday evening by reaching througll a pet door to turn att inside door knob, police said. Rifling a hureau. the visitor selected an assortment of cuff Jin ks. tie bar~ and JS pairs of men's socks. then picked up two bottles of champagne and three botUes of white wine lo add to his loot , the irate householder complained. DAILY PILOT """''" l•ocl. 1 ........ ~ c ..... """' H•lltl .... '-s• h11,.i, YtlW, s..c- OAAHGE CO.I.St PUllLISMIHG COMP.-.HY Robtrt N. w,,,J P•uklent i nd Pl>l>ll•llel" J •t\ II.. Cu•!ey \lk• ,,,,, o•n• •lld C-11 MIMg.ef TI>o,..11 Ke••il f"dllll~ Tlioll'11 A. Mu,plii111 M1nltlll9 (4111>1" R ic~1rd I'. N 111 S°"T~ Orl "!'C '°""'' Editor Olflcn Co11• Mn~: JJO wu1 l•v Strwl Nl'WJIO•i 8•1ch. 1111 wut ll1ll>o• lo..ltv•nrl l1fun1 ll1uh: 'n _.o•n• ,..,..,..,. .. .,.,,lno•on '"•ch: 11111 ll••<h '""'!•••"' S.n C-1•: XIS Hon~ El (am-.0 11 .. 1 tlAtlY Pll.OT • .-!!ti ••k.11 lo c..imblntd ..... Nt .... ·P•n1. lo """'*""" ~111y ••<"'I &,,... 11r lfl -r.~ tdll;o.. tor LI_. IO..th. N ........ 1 l •KIO. COi" Mnf, H ... tlno- ....0 -11'-llln v.n..,, •!l"f wl!~ ,_ r .. IOft.91 (1111-. Ot-CDU! Put>J~I ... ~"• ,..i,.,11,.. t>l•llh t r• 11 nir wnt IUl'lllt II""~ Hr,..parr lltteh, '"" la Wnl .. , 11<11111. <Mii M•••. ,.,.,.. .. 17141 ,.J-4321 CJ..Kl.4 A'-1111"' 64J 5671 S-ci.-,.._ All l>i:;.~1 , .. ..,~ 4fJ-44Jt (~••)tl!T, lt'11, o..,,... CNtl .... n.,..,,. ,_.,,, H• ,..,.., 1lo•ln , u1.,.ttl'I...,., rtllt.,101 ""''.,. .,. lt!ftl'!l..,....,11 ,,......, "'"' loll ,...,.,....... ""'"'°"' tPKlll ,..-. ... 1 ...... Ill uit••lfht _.,.,. ~ C"loU pOt.llf': Pll~ ., H~--· lfl(fl .,~ c .. ,. M"'· (11llor<1l• \llln«•P'loll IY c•,,.ltf not -ftthl•1 et -II H.• ,,_1111'1'1 "1111to,.., """ln••ll>n1, 51 Of '"""'~''· I Paris th at was willing and capable of reaching a compromise peace selllernent. -Preside nt Nixon named a "high· level" U.S. negotiator to succeed flenry Cabot Lodge who resigned last fall. Harriman said tha t until a top-le vrl Lodg@ succesS<lr is named. "it is hard for people around the world to believe j Nixon) is really interesled in negolia· tlons." Boy Drowns In 'Last Dive' Off Cata,linct A Bel Air teenager -tired a!ter several descents in 45 feel or water off Catalina Island's Arrow Point - went down Sunday for what he said was his last dive . His body was recovered later off the bottom. Goorge B. Pullman, 17, drowned while oo the final trip of a skindiving trip with friends on the west skte of Emerald Bay, according to sheriff's deputies A companion, AJ Widen, 17, of West Los Angeles, said Pullman failed to rHUTface when he should have and the bunt was begun. 'Ibe victim's body was found about 25 yards olfsh«e near the spot where he and his friend had anchored their boat. Investigators said ttle boys were diving with snorkel gear, not using scuba equip- ment when the tragedy took young Pullman's life. MS Drive Opens In Laguna Beach, Lagunan 0 . W. Price, member ol the board of truslees of the newly Formed Orange Coonty chapter for the National 1.1u!tiple Sclerosis Fund Drive, ha s an· nounced the opening of the annual cam- paign lo raise funds for multiple sclerosis research. Price. whose son, a young Com mander In the Navy, was a victim d the diseaSt, :;ays thC"Te are 3,000 persons in the county suffering from multiple sclerosis and related diseases. A chronic disease of the central nervous system , MS usually strik e-; young adults between the ages of 20 and 40 and frequently results in crippling paraly sis. Funds donated to the 1970 MS Jiope Chest will support research and provide 5ervices for county MS victims and their families. Architect Succuntl>s \VASHINGTON (AP) -J . George Stewart. an ex-politician once charged with trying to •·make the Capitol into a king·sized Howard J ohnson's," has died. ending a stormy 16-year career as the Capitol architeet. lndo11esia1i P1·eside1it Visits Prcsidenl Suharto of Indonesia ~reets well wishers \Vho got up early tlus 1norning to welcome the Asian leader upon his 7:06 a.in. arrival at El Toro J\1larine Corps Air Station. J>rcsident and l\1rs. Suharto stopped at El Toro for an hour this morn- ing as they changed p lanes en route to Washington, O.C. for state visit. Among those gr eeting the In· donesian leader were Albert (right) and Niki Nel- \Van (dark hats, grey suits at fence). young sons of Mr. and l\.1rs. Tony Nelwan, Costa Mesa. Aide to Reaga11 Missing Witl1 Family i11 Sierras SONORA (UPI) -Edv.'ard 8. Hut. chinson, Gov. Ronald Reagan's ap- pointments secreta ry, was reported miss- ing with his wife and three young children today on a backpacking trip into the High Sierra. Hutchinson, 40, a former Palo Aho real estate developer, drove lo the "Dardanelle area in the Sonora Pass on J1ighway 108 Friday night. He was to backpack into the rugged Sword Lake region, and return Sunday night. A daughter, Susanne, 17, who remained San Clementean Faces Charges A 53-year·old San Clemente man face~ charges including resisting arrest after he allegedly kicked a patrolman in the face Sunday during a traffic stop in- volving the arrested man·s wife. Police said Chester Spurgeon Clemens, 2711 Via Bandlta. wa s booked on charges of drunkenness, malicious mischief and resisting arrest after the lncidents at El Camino Real and Aven!da Escslones. Officers said they stopped a car driv@n by Clemens' wife at !2 :49 a .m. Sunday, and as they were talking to the "'oman Clemens allegedly approached the patrolmen and became abusiv@. As he was being placed int.o a police car he kirked the fa ce or one patroman, reports said. 1\-lrs. Clemens \Vas not held. in Sacramento during the outing, reported the family missing Sunday mid· night. l\1issing were Hutchinson: his v.·ife, Kirsten; and three children, Nora, HI; J\fary Jean, 8. and Jack, 6. The family dog also was along. Hutchinson was described by associates in tile governor's office as: an e1perienced backpacker. The family 's destination ~·as only ap- proximately !iv@ miles by lrail off a forest service road. The Hutchinson sta- lion wagon was found this morning near Dardanelle Cone on Fence Creek road al approximately the 8.000 foot level. The Tuolumne County Sheriff's office planned an air search this afternoon. Drug Work Tol(l By Smarteens Smarteens, a group from r.iarco r~orster Junior I~igh in San J uan Capistrano, will describe their dn1g preve.ntion program at a special PTA meeting Tuesday. A pot luck at 6:30 p.m. al lhe Triton Center at San Clemente High School v.·itl begin the last meeting of the year for the Capistrano Unified Council of PT1\ The group v.•ill vole O'I\ a by-law change \\•hich will enable high school students lo becoine full voting 1nembers and \\'ill install new PTA officers. New presiden!s included r.1r~. Donald lio!t, Concordia : f.1rs . Steven Spellman, J)ana ; f\1rs. L.1wrence Thayer. Forster: J\frs. Thomas \\1ert, }!anson; Mrs. Will Karns, Las Palmas; Mrs. Nell Hubbard. P alisades; 1\-lrs. Eugene Kaster, San Clemente High. and tl1r~. Kenneth Bloom. cou ncil president. Cool Weather Mars W eekencl Cool 1\·calher and heavy overcast kept beachgoers ho1ne in droves over 1he \\'~kend, Laguna Beach I i f e g u a rd s report. Instead of crowds in excess of 20,000 lhat ha9 jammed beaches only last weekend, lhe unfavorable we a th c r brought out only 6.000 persons on Satur- day and a scant 5,000 oo Sunday. Surf was calm and both water and air temperatures stayed around 65 degrees. Lifeguards Jogged "no in- cidents." Judy Fay Risley Rites on Tuesday Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in El Toro Cemetery for J udy F ay Risley, 28, of 24181 Ankerton Drive, El Toro, who died Satur. day al SouU1 Coast Commu nity Hospital. ~1rs. Rf5ley ls survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Peters of El Toro: a son, Joshua Risley or tile home ; and by a sister. ~1.rs. Gazella Wike of Los Altos, Calif. Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary were directors. 1-low's That Again? 'Monster' Sparks Bedroom Blaze l n San Clemente A San Cle1nen;e youth's fondness for illuminated n1onsler models proved cos- tly over the weekend when one of the contrivances caught his bedroom ablaze, t'.ausing $8,000 in dan1nge. F'ire Chief Merl Hackett said a lighted candle lcfl unattended behind a plastic model caused Uie fi re a t 2909 Via San Gorgonio Saturday at 2: II p.m. He said J-larvey Riggs Jr., 13. had lighted the candle and placed it behind• a model which he had built, then he left the room. A few momenls later the youth return- ed and opened the bedroom dOor to find the entire room ablaze. Firemen sounded a general alarm and within a half hour had finished working the blaze. which ate through the roof after gutting the bedrooni. lfackett said damage to the shake-roof home was $6,000 to the structure and $2,000 lo the contents, The fire caused smoke and heat damage to three other bedrooms and a hallway, but left the rest of the house untouched . Firemen worked hard to keep the blaze from spreading further through the attic and roof, Hackett said. Vandals Wreck Pier Res troo1n s \Veekend vandals near the Sa n Clemente Pier blasted several wall- mol1nted ceramic fixtures in I.he men's rest room to rubble, police reported _ The incidents were discovered by maintenance crews Sunday morning, fice rs sair1 . The vandals, using m i 11 la r y firecrackers, apparently dropped the ex· plosives in the fixtures sometime after last Friday night. The Village S1nithiess PHILADELP}llA (AP ) -Mn. Ray- mond Broderick, wi fe of the GOP gubernatorial candidate, says some. funny lhlngs happen on campaigns: "like be.inR: Wired lJp ll'olf WASJ-JING TON (UPI) -The Supremr Court ruled unconstitutional today :i federal Jaw that prohibited wea ring of a U.S. military uniform in a state or screen performance if the character weating ii tended lo discredit the armed forces. A unanimow decision written bv J ustice Hugo Black declared that th~ st.atule violated the F'irsl Amendment guarantee oI free speech. The coort reversed the conviction of Daniel Jay Scllact, who wure a burlesque military coetume at an antiwar demonstration in 1967 in Houston . The governmf!nt prosecuted Schacht on grounds he was wearing a unKonn without authority. He contended he was appearing in a theatrical production con- sisting of a street sklt as part of the Houston protest. "\ The law contained a provision that a uniform could be worn in a theatrical perfonnance only if its use did not disc redit the armed forces. It was that provision wflich the cou rt struck dowo. Black wrote that a l;11v .. which leaves Am ericans free to praise the war in Vietnam but can send persons like Schacht to prison for opposing it, cannot survive in a country that has the First Amendment." In other actions, the court : -Dismissed without comment a challenge to the constitutionality o( a Philadelphia antiriot ordinance used to prosecute. three persons after the ~ssassu:iation of Dr. Martin Luther King: 1n April, 1968. The ordil\ance permits lhe mayor to declare a state of emer- genc_y in such instances and to restrict lhe movement of people in public places. -Overturned by unanimous vote the r obbery conviction of a Florida n1an becau~e th_e state wailed eight years to . bring h_1m lo trial. 1'he opinion by Chief Justice \Varren E. Burger said th e delay in the ca~e of Robert Dean Dickey was an '"intolerable " violation of his right to speedy trial. -Rejected an appeal by a group head· ed by Spanish-America leader R e i s Lopez Tijerina challenging New Mexico's education la"'s they clai1ned "'ere un- favorable to Spanish speaking children in the state. Clemente Police RaidPot Farm· ' Two Women Held ,;Grass" -of the illegal \'ariely - growing in the back ya rd of a Sa n Clemente residence caught the eye of San Clemente police over the weekend, who seized 50 marijuana seedlings and arrested two young women on c/1arges of growing the \veed. Narcotics detectives said lhcy heard a telephone lip Fridily dc!'icribing thP. garden in the yard behind 217 B La Pa Ionia. The officers said they peered Q\'er a frn ce to \'erify 1he reports. then return- ed to obtain "'arr;in ts. On their SC'COnd trip lhey arrested one young woman at the apartment, Aida Louise Howarth. 18. Later that day they arrested a scconr1 l8-year-0ld ~·nung woinan in l.i!guna Beach. Joene Gentile . who ga,·e the ha111e La Paloma residence address. Both v:ere booked on charges of culti vating marijuana. Police claim they sei zed several gallon-si7.ed containers with flourishing, root-h il{h plants, plus a lug box containing about 4~ tiny seedl- ings. Linda Clark, 18. a student nt Sacramento's Casa Roble 11\J!:h School. !s one .of IS ~ludents \\'ho'll graduate v.'it.h a certificate in horseshoe· 1ng. Linda and her tlass n1atcs y,1jJl c1nb:1 rk on cnrrers a s blnck- s m 1ths . Introduced recently at a meeting a5 'lhc ne~· governor's next wife.'" Her h11s- hand is 1hc current hc.ulf'nrint governor of Penn!iylvania. A voun~ wotr cub is wired for sound 1ri1h a bio t.c lcn1etrv rccC'l vc·r llnd <1n1plified attached to il !'i bodv so \'oungi>lrrs ('an he:ir 1ls he;1f1IJl'.lt on a loudspeaker at lhe c h!ldrcn·s section of the. St. Lotus Zoo. ) •, I l 'I I ~ I Monaa:y, May 1', 1~70 DAILY PILOT :J N u~lear Plant Publi~ Relations To11gh • ID o ... 1LY PILOT P~tG bf rarrl<-O'D0n1>•ll SOMETHING OUT OF SCIENCE FICTION? NO , JUST SAN ONOFRE NUCLEAR PLANT UP CLOSE Plan to Pe int Reaction Sphere and Ca11 It th• "B•ach Bell " Wes Rejected by Ed ison Brass By JOUN VAL TERZA Ol 1M O•llY r 11111 St•" P.1arines were firing practic;e mortar rounds on Camp Pendleton when a housewife sauntered into the visitor building at the San Onofre nuclear ge11er11.llng plant. "Is your plant worki ng today~" "Yes, ma'am,," Oie h06t !aid. "I thought so," she said with great authority. "I can hear those atoms being split down there." The woman , of course, was confusing ~1a rine mortars with EdiS<>n atoms. Splitting atoms is easy for SOuthern California Edison Company. Convincing the public that its nuclear power plant Is safe, clean and bcne(icial isn't. Because ur the a1o1-·esome nature of the word •·nuclear," !he firm, along \\'ith San Ditgo Gas and Electric (which has a 2D-percenl stake in present and future plants; has run a busy visitor'i; center near old Pacific Coast Highway Behind Scenes TV Crew1nen Given Emn1ys 1101.LYWOOD (UPI) -The National Broadcasling Co. felched top honors dur· ing Uie 1o1-·eekend as Emmy awards v.·ere presented to the n1en behind the scenes of the television industry. The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. at banquets held sirnu\\aneously here and in New York Miami 'Cop-in' Retiring Tax collector ~r ,'~: i;~~~m~~~o~:~ ,~~~".'.,~:·.~~ crafts" of the indu stry. Creates DialOO"UC NBC rect"ived the most Emmys, 12, ~ with the Columbia Broadcasting System D . p I-, Not 'Pi"ckz"ng' Sitccessor followi ng with eight and the American Urlll g 0 p <est ~~::~~~:~gT;~;,;;,~~':;;,;~~~ 0~:Uonal 1'.1IAMI (AP) -Miami's /irst Cop-In Retiring Orange County Tax Collector director, and Joe R. Greene and Robert NBC's Kraft Musi<: llall's presentation put two-dozen patrolmen, eight rock Don s. Mozley has stated that he is L. Citron, both deputies in t11ozlcy's of "The Sound of Burton Bacharach·' b d d office. an s an 800 kids in the same basrball not making any endorsement for clln· took lhree awards. It v.•as cited for d. · I h 11· The inquiries to Tvlozley wf're bnsed infield , for the same three hours under 1dates running or t e o ice. outstandin"' <1chieve1nents in music di rec-on advertisements being placed in l'> the same threatening sky Sunday, i\lozley·s anoouncement f o 11 owed newspapers by Citron allei;ing en· lion or a varie!y musical or dram<itic lt was designed as a public rap session repeated inquiries as to his preference dor~ment by a "Mr. and Mrs. Charlf'S program. in vidf'O tape editing and in between youth and police. for successor to th e post he has held ~·1ozlcy." Charles !o.1ozley is the tax col· technical direction and eleclronic camera The policemen, all of them volunteers, for the past 30 years. let1or's brother. \i·nrk. slood in a semi-circle and, for the most Competing for the non-partisan office Candidate H.itchcock said !he brother's part. in silence, as the kids in bells, are David G. Hit chcock, county budget cndorseincnl could be misconstrued as The Huntley-Brinkley report v.·on tv.·o above the ball·shaped reactor building and the gel'lfrator complex. About 500,000 persons -many ol the students -have stopped by to view the facility's expen11ive displays showing how the controlled nuclear fission reac· lion products heat, which produces steam, which then turns Ute turbines, which produce elect ric po wer. If some of I.he visitors leave the exhibit still S()Jnewhat wary, a trip through thl' complex itself might help them lo belier understand the process. But the volume of visitors makes such lours unpoosible, center aides :s<1id. If you were to make a tour this is what it .. 11outd be like: The familiar dome itseU, equipped with vault-like doors, houses the plant's silent nuclear reactor filled with rods contain· ing mill ions of uranium oxide pellets. Few persons ever enter the reactor chamber itself because of the radiation, but the r adioaclive Jeve!s present are Tickets Ready For Pageant Pagant of the t-.lasters tickets will go on sale in Laguna Beach at the box office starting June l. Sa le hours will be Monday through Friday from 11) a.m. to :; p.m. and Saturdays from 10 l .ITI. to 5 p.m. During the run of the 1970 pageant, from July 17 through Aug. 30, the boJC offict: will be open daily from noon to 10 p.m, Several thousand pageant ticket mail orders have been filled, but good seals still will be available when the bo x office sale be.gins June 1, according to festival of· ficials. As in previous years. ll ticket lo the pageant will entitle the holder to free admission l.o the festival grounds to view the art exhibits. Laguna Groups To Put Flo,vers Aro1md Column beads and see-through grooved to the back in~ by the tax collector, "which for outstanding achievements 1 n electronic sounds up front. is crTiphal ically no! so," he added. cinernatography and film editing for RepreSE>n\.alives of some SO organiza. When the last numbl'r was finished. Deadlii-ie Nea rs FiJr his part, i\lozley said ... All th ree new~ :i nd documentary programming. t ions in the Laguna a rea will place so too were many of the kids. Abollt ~en conscientious empluyes for rnflny CRS Playhouse also took t1o1-·o awards floral tributes at the bate of the hair of them left as the microphones years. I've known Hitchcock as a lellov.· 1 1 ••. 1 . d" began to circulate !hrough lhe cro'>'•d For Abser·iteeS rlep.1rtment hear! and r m sure he could rir nntsl1tnd ng 8 L1•1evemen in art irec-Memorial Shaft In Ht:is ler Park during for the official start of the rap session. do lhe job equally well." tion or scenic design in its presentation traditional Memorial Day ceremooies on But those lhat stayed readily fired a j of "Shadovt' Game'' and for outstanding May 30. rew broadsides across t he COITI· Orange County Clerk \l/illiam St .John v.·1 la Pa 1·k Boy ;ichicvement in lighting directio'1 in "Ap-TI1e annual event, co-sponsored by munications gap. / rcininded voter"s today that applications -. p:ilnchian Autumn.'' American Legion Post 222 and Vf'W "Why arc police always bl'ating up for absentee ballots for lhe June 2 K"IJ } • C J ABC received no multiple awards but Post s861J, will feature an address by young people for nothing~" asked one primary and special 3Sth congressional I CC Ill J'aS 1 · d 1 t d. h. t · , was cite or outs an ing ac ievemen ·~ Lag""' B•ach at•·rncy w1·111·am w1·1cox·. boy. "I got beat Ufl and il 1o1-·as for dislricl election must be rec<'ived in ~ w •othi"ng.'' hi.• ofli·c· by T"••day. " 1 1 . E 1 1 in choreography for its "This ls Tom en. .. ,, '" ..... r ou r ecn year od DaVld _,,A lyn o · I "I'm 25 years old and l 'tn bl:ick," A letler from a voter stating hi~ Villa Park was killed Saturday when Jones" ~pecial, in music, yrics, and A program of music by the Thurston said anolher. "\Vhy do l\-1iami pollceiTien reasons why he cannot vote nt a poll the bicycle he v.·as riding collided v.·irh spcci;il n1atcrial for ''Love. AmericaJI Intermediate School band will precede call me boy? They used to cal! me and listing his local residence is sufficient 11 ('ar flriven by another teenager on Style," :ind in filn1 editing for news Ille ll a.m. program. nigger. Now thf'y call mt' boy " if received by lhe Orange County clerk Loma Street. nnd doc11menlary programming for "The Leslie G. Chatham, commander of Post Officer Jack Sullivan. who fielded mo~l by 5 p.m. The auto was driven by Nichola Desert Whales," "The Undersea World 222 wi\1 preside at the ceremonies and or the questions, said : "I know a l1)l Voters \l'ho are member!! of !hf' ar1Tiecl BuScaglio. 16, of Orange. Orange Couty of Jacques Cousteau.·· among others. the pledge of allegiance will be led (If you gel harassed and hassled be.cause forces. \vork in military in~ta!lations or sheriff's deputies sid the Buscaglio car NET received its Emmy ror outstan· by Boy Scout Troop 35. of your Jong hair. And I knov.· ifs are members of the diplomatic or Peace apparently hit a soil spot on the hilly, ding achicven1ents in childrcn ·s prcr The Rev. Henry Gerttard will deliver wrong." Corps have until May 28. two-lane road, crossed the roadway and gra1Tim1ng for "Sesame Street." the benediction and a salute by a firing "But r emember. you're jusl as pre· Questons wilt be answered by dialing collided with Allyn's bike. Buscaglio·s The regular Emmys will be awarded squad from USMC Ai r Station, El Tom, judiced as we are,'' he said. the clerk's office at 834·2244. auto overturned but he wasn't injured. rarly next month. followed by taps, will clooe the service. '---:.;--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii El Rancho has the hottest price in town! still beneath government "'a:ilings'', guides said. The reactor itself rests at de.ad ceater or the sphere. It Is oblong, and above it protrude dozens of large conlrol rod.s which reach inside into clusters or stainless steel tubes filled with the radioactive fue l. The reaction between the control rods and the fuel creates the heat which is captured by circulating purified water. That hot fluid turns to steam, then is forced into whininf!, hugh·pressure turbines. where standard electrical generating lakes plaef'. After the steam is spent, tt is ocoled, returning to water ready to begin the process again. The process is t.l1e subject of many misconceptions. "A lot of observer~ think the water is full of radiation and is dun1ped into the ocean after it turns the generators," a spokesman said. IS« ONOFRE, Page IZ) No Plane Sale Means Trouble Says Israeli WASiflNGTON (AP) -Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban Sl!lys refusal by the United States to slrcngthen Israel's air force v.·ould have disastrous in- lernational effects including the en- couragement of further Soviet involve- ment. But in Moscow, the Com munist Party newspaper Pravda, which usually echoes thinking among the Kremlin 's top policymakers, indicated granting the Israeli request for planes would bring more Russian involvement. Israel seeks 125 more jet.! from the U.S. and Eban said it was his impression from talks with President Nixon last week that the matter "is under very serious and intensive consideration." His comments were made in a pre. taped showing of ABC's "Issues and Answers," broadcast Sunday. Meanwhile, Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa .), said he'll urge P resident Nixon to 6ell the planes to Israel. The Senate Republican leader told a Philadel phia audience Nixon should sell the planes in the interest of world peace. Pravda predicted Isreal will get the planes, even though the White Hous• has said the decision hasn't been reached. It called Eban's Washington visit "a step leading to a new escalation o[ the 1o1-·ar in the Middle East." All.hough there was no direct statement that sale of the jets would bring increased Russian involvement in the 6itualion, Pravda re.minded the U.S. that "the Arab peoples have on their side tht: Soviet Union and other Socialist countries." Dim e Dip Dinner At Viejo High A dime a dip dinner wlll be hosled by the Anterican Field Service chapter at l<.fission Viejo High School on Tuesday. The fwid raising event will bci;::Jn at ~::W and end at 8:30 p.m. and will be held in the high school cafeteria. Foreign students from Sweden, Ollie, Brazil, South Africa, Germany and Greenland and Spain will be present to sample the food from around the world and tell about the Af'S program. SPRINGFIELD 12-0Z. CANS COLA • CHERRI COi.A • BLICK CHERRI • PUNCH • CREAM SODA • Glr+GER AU • GRAPE • _LOON LIM£ • ORANGE • ROOT BW Slock up on their favorite navors al El Rancho"s Jo,v, low price! \\'ith 11. h oliday ahead, you'll \\·ant plenty! Half-gallon sale in our liquor department! Canad!all Whiskei, ... SAVE !50 ... )" ~10.99 Beefeate.r's ........ s1vE 1.2\l •...• ~. C.in that's kno\vl1 'round the \\'(1rlcl! ~~gal. '13.69 1-.,.-- \Vindsor Supreme , .. light, smooth! 11~ i al. Vodka ...... cRowN RUSSE SAVE 41<. ••••• '8.88 Cutty Sark •••.•••• SAVE 1.76.. .• ·.-.. '16.49 Smooth mixer. for cooling (lrl11Ks'. ••• 1/2 gal. Scotch you're pr oud to pour! ••• 'h gal. Early Times •• . . SAVE 1.50 .... Gilbey Gin •••••••••• SAVE SOc •••••••••• '9.95 Straight v.·h iskey ••• so sippable ! ••. '12 ~I. Stock up on tonic, too! ... ~':? gallon Ancient Age ........ SAVE 2.00 ..• -··· '10.98 Light Rum .. HouoA1 TIME. .. SAVE 1.00 •• Straight whiskey .• , , quality you know ! '1~ gal. r·or r cfl'eshing tropical delights! ••• Yi gal. Main Course pleasure for mid-week meals! Steak ...... ~~~~:~~-.~~~~'. ~~~~~1~. ~~~: • • • • • • $1 ~b9 U.S.D.A. Choice berf ••• selected for quality ..• 11ged for tl'ndcrness anrl flavor! l-lc-rc is s uperb satisfa ction ? > Prices in rffect J\.fon., TnetJ., iVed., J1!ay 25, 26, 21. No sales ta dealers. ARCADIA: Sunset and Hunllniton Dr. (El Rancho Cenl•1) PASADENA: 320 W1$I Color1do Blvd. .SOUTH .PASADENA: Fremon t an~· Huntinflon Dr. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Wa rner and Altortqui n (Boardwalk c··"r) NEWPORT BEACH: 2721 Newport Blvd. and 2555E1>t~ull Dr. (C.stblull ~11111 Ccnlor) 4 DAILY PILOT -·- (( ........ W tM D•ltr Pl• Sle!U Rickey Kneifel, 19. of Kennewick \Vash., will water the fire station lawn here this summer the hard way by hand and \\'ith water car- ried in buckets from the Columbia River a quarter of a mile away. That plus a $300 fine, 'vas the :sen· t.~nce imposed by Justice Court Judge Albert Yencopal \Vhen Knei· fel was convicted of shoplifting. "He's got to learn that a man must make some contribution to soci- ety," the judge said. • James W. Ca rroll, 46, walked out of the Nevada State Prison a free man after completing a four-year term for burgla ry. He \Vas back in jail six hours later, charged with burglary in connection with pilfer- ing in state <4fice buildings. • . .,_,. ~-~r< Ke1111~th F. Crutchlow. 26, a British adventurer who bicycled from Los Angles to Mexico City cm a bet of two pints o/ beer, wa3 slightly injured near Houston, Te:tas when forced off the road and into a tree. The free · lance writer says he has done nathtng but travel for the past 5 years. He is on his way to Miami, Fla, • Nigel Giiboy, 8, of Swavesey, England thought it would be a good idea to take his mother's jewelry collection to school and share it with his classmates. After a round· up 12 pieces we re still missi ng. Said r.1rs. Joan Gilbey of her son, "'J-l e's a r eal terror." • A nosy dog, a loud yell and a sharp ax got Jean Ba ptiste Hudon, 60, of Quebec a new bearskin rug. Hudon "''as out cutting fire\vood when bis dog treed a bear cub. Mother bear crune char~ing out of woods at Hudon who was anned only with his ax. Hudon yelied. The bear stopped 'about five feet from me ..• and I let her have it right between the eyes." he said . • A s11roe11 on pill preference p11b· lislied i11 the British Afediool Journal today said patients who were de· pressed seemed to f"Cspond best to vc 1to111 pill.s while those with anxiety symptom did better wilh green one.~. l t said no one seemed to like red vnes 1nuch. • Mrs. Granville Hawke• of Cam· bridge, England ~·as 30 miles from her home beginning her vacation \~•hen she remembered she had left her electric blanket on. She cnl led Cambridge firemen to ask U they would turn it oU. They did. • Ill Debt Increase Ceiling Proposed \\1AS HINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon admini.strallon asked Congress today to increase the national debt ceiling by $18 billion -to a record $39S billion. Treasury Secreta ry David M. Ke nnedy and Budget Director .Robert P. Mayo said the tiitt: of the increase request v.·as ca used by deterioration in the €Overnment budget resulting from lower than expected tax revenues. It has been known for some time that an increase would be needed in the ceiling whicb. now is $377 billion, * * * N ixon Money Policies Hit B y Democrats WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon's economic policies came under increased attack by some Democrats in Congress today, with calls for wage· price guidelines and opposition to his proposal lo tax leaded gasoline . As the stock market resumed Its downward trend during the morning, S en a t e Democratic Leader Mike ~1ansfield and House Democratic Leader Carl Albert joined ill aJll unusual news conference to denounce administration policies. They accused Nixon or a "slavish put'suit of archsJc economic policies" which they said had brought on "the first recession since 1961. accompanied by the worst i"lf1alion in 20 years." ht their joint news conference, Mansfield and Albert said they were agaJnst the propo!'lal announced by Nixon last week to impose a lead gas on gasoline as a means of fighting pollution and also raising $1.6 billion to alleviate a budget deficit. Rep. John A. Blatnik (D-Minn.,) opened he arings by a House subcommittee nn "·age and price policies. with demands that the administralion J mp o s e guidelines_ Blatnik .said the administration had f:iiled to meet its pledges to curb inflation although the~conomy "has bogged down terribly," Rep. J1enry S. Reuss, (0.Wis.), testified that "Unless something is done immediately, the country is beaded for economic cha06," RetWI declared, "We should have an Immediate three-month freeze on wage and price fnetta!eS in order to give the government time to draft guidelines." Reuss i!'I sponsor of a bill to require presidential eocnamic advise.rs to recom- mend wage and price guidelines, with the President instructed to then intervene In cases or naLlon.111 interest \\'here price or wage increases exceeded lhe formula. eff~tl ve throu.gh June 30. U Congres,, failed to act be.fore J uly I to ra.tse the ceiling it would drop to its permanent level of $365 billkln -more than $8 billion less than the present actual debt of $373. 7 bilUon. The debt celling legislation is a hardy congres!ioaal perenniah, a bill which must bt passed each year to pennit lbe government to borrow enough to pay its bills. Kennedy told the lfoose Ways and Means Committee that much of the increase is needed "to restore a reasonable margin for contingencies and for adequare cash bala~s." Kennedy and Mayo also asked that the permanent ceiling on government borrowing be raised by $19 billion to $383 billion. President Nixon had forecast budget surpluse!'I of $1.S billion in fiscal 1970 and $l.3 billion in fiscal 1971. But they now say the budget will be in red ink by $1.S billion in fiscal 1970, Ylhich ends July 1, and by $1.3 billion in fiscal 1971, the next government bookkeeping year. Mayo gave as main reaSon.o; for the short fall a drop in expe<::ted government receipts from tax collections. 1'1ayo said there \\'ill be a $4.8 billion Increase in government spending in fiscal 1971 -but he stressed that none of that increase wa!'I attributable to U.S. military operations "either in Cambodia or elsewhere." Armstr ong Talks To Cosmonauts LENI NG RAD (AP) -U.S. Astronaut Neil Ann~rong spoke today about hls historic moon walk to Soviet cosmonauts and space experts. Armstrong toured Uninip-ad afterward and drew crowds of admiring Russians. The U.S. astronaut arrived here last night to take part ln an Internationa l space confer ence. He has fx>e1i given red carpet treatment. He will stay in the old Tsarist capital, then wind up his Soviet lour \\'ith three days in MoSC(lw. Armst rong \\'ent today to t h e Ta vrichesky Palace "'here he talked shop over coffee with Soviet cosmonauts r.eorgy Beregovoy and K o n ii: t a n t i n Feoktistov and tipace experts headed by a cademician A. A. Blaa:onravov. Amultrong described unusual lighting effect! on the moon arKI sensations rx· perienced waiting in its gravity. He was questioned eagerly about lunar con- ditions, "1•hich the Russian!'! know about Uirough unmanned landings and In- strument Information. The Soviet moon prowam, y,•hicfi tfiey once boasted would beat the American:i, was not metltione.d at the session. Negro Riot in Georgia Revolution or Ta1itrum? JACKSON', Ga. (UPT) -Mayor C. B. Brown .Jr. figured today that a destroct1ve rampage by 300 blacks was n1orc of a temper tantrum than the •·revolution" seen by Gov . Lester Mad- dox. "11.'s Just a minor, little ol' thing," Brown said of the rock-throwing. window-- smashing, fi re-setting melee that brought -40 riot-E!quipped state troopers tnto this n1idd!e Gt'Orgia to"'" Sunday night. Three troopers were slightly hurt by r0t·ks and three persons were arrested. The troopers, dispatched by Maddox to the lO\\'n of fl,000 about 50 mlle.oi ~th of Atlanta, fired their shotguns only twice -both tlmes into the air when they were pelted with l"'Ot'ks and boltlt"S. Order was restored within two hours. "We are in a revolution," Maddox 11aid in Atlanta. "Possibly 100 to XK1 revolutionaries and anarchists have bern running loose.'' Brown said no more than Ml persons v.·ere Involved in the incident, which \\'as touched off by an argument at a white-OWned service station. Twelve stcre:!I, irw:!uding the stalion. were damaged by rampaging blacks. Some fires were set. "In my opinion, ft was a sponlan-tous thing at the filling station," said Brown. "Those people were mad and a 9-year-0ld boy could have got them going." U.S. Weather Unsettled Hi g li Winds , Thunderswrms Plague Midsection Calltornls Tet11peratures AIW.111'""'9 Hl1ll Ltw "'!! .. n· ,l.tl1n•1 " .. 81k..-1ne111 .. u Lltl'il 1Dw clood• lP•N<l OVl't" ll'Ool fl !.ouri..r-n C•l•lornlo tnit ~Int (le-<idl'l!I t. wnnv •n!I werm~r wnr ~ tho mount1ln1 D1 "°""· Varl•l>I• cklll<h r...,11ne!I ..,,, "'' mout1ltlt1• trod - e.Os with •t11IT•red IP1un"'r11>ow1r1 lhrotXOPI Tlltl<ll V 11,m1ra; 80IH Bosron CMCfltO n " :i " ., " ,. .. .. I SOUTl4•1tN CALIFOllNIA-M""'lne ..... 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L.t~t Cllv " .. ·" Stn Olten .. • ~•n ~••n~l'l<:o " " S..n!o f11•bl"I " " !ttollll• " • SPdll"I " .. ,,,...,.,,, ~ .. W11hlt>1tl111! .. .. MEMORIAL DA.Y. SALE-A-THON Today thru Sunday, May 31st 12.4 CU. n. FREEZtK BUDGET PRICED! 2 full width fast-freeze shelves, 1 adjll!table ahelf, deep door storage. Stores 435 lbe. Mag~ netic 18.fety door gasket for safe door seal. Tht budget buy of them all! t t • ;, I 16 CU. n. REFRIGERATOR· FREEZER ROLLS ON CASTERS Stores more food than others of com,PUB.hl• size! Three full -width adjustable cantilever shelves. Twin crispers, spacious door shelves, li ft.out egg container. Frost free. White, Avocado. Automatic 2-cycle Washer and Matching Fu11 warr1ntv Free deliverv Can be purchased sepa rately 5-Yr. Wa rranty on Washer 2·Yr. on Dryer 23'' COLOR CONSOLES SAYE $105.00 YOUR CHOICE ···~~549.95 S·'l'lt. 'ICTURI! TUii! Willtll!ANTV. F"REE OELIVE 11¥. in a roman tic mooa •.. ornately carved arm accents • •• luxurious deep-puff quilting MATCHING LOVE SEAT ON SALE AT COMPARABLE LOW PRICE You could easily spend a lot mort, but why? ••• High style elegonce con be yours for le11 thon you 'd •xp.ct. Oi1tincti11• Spa nish Sofa boosh cath•drci l hi-rise cushions, carved rop• twi,t moldings and finial accents for that just-right de<:orotor look. Choose from 6 lush co lors, each deep puff-quilted &. Scolchgorded for long llfe, Foam con1lructio n lhruout •• , atl at an a lmo1t unbelleYable Special So le Price •. , ••• ii NOWI • 8 ~ sofa SALE $1 GRANTS PlAZA e BROOKHURST & ADAMS e HUNTINGTON BEACH ' '. 7 , I I 1 San Clemente • Ca 1sirano EDITION VOL 63 , NO. 124, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES DAIL 'f t'IL01 Sll f1 ,.IMN TWO DIED WHEN THIS COMPACT CAR HIT POLE Car Bursts Into Flames After Laguna Canyon Crash Flnming Crash /(ills Two On Laguna Canyon Road Two men \rcre ki lled eoi r!y Sunday "·hen U1eir car, apparently traveling at high speed, left Laguna Canyon Road at the treadierous Big Bend Curve, slam- med Into a utility pole and burst into flames. The Orange County Coroner 's office tentatively identified the victims. who ·were lrurned beyond recogn.it.ion, as Ernest Wetz.el, 32. and Steven Paul Bevek, 21 . bolh of Whittier. ldenltlication was made l hr o u g h registration 0£ the vehicle, a 1962 An1erican-made model with engine in I.he rear . Relatives of the men said they were driving together Saturday night, but positive identificalion may have to await an autopsy and dental check today, tbe coroner's officer said. Laguna Beach police and a Fire Department unit were called to the scene at 12:50 a.m .. but were unable to contro l the flames that engulfed the car when the gas tank exploded. Impact of the crash wrapped a heavy guard rail around the car and police said it would have been impossible for the men to have escaped the blazing: vehicle. A witness told police the car had pa!lsed him moments before the accident, traveling east at a high speed and mov. ing erratically. On Sund ay evening at 9:30, a l..eisure World resident drove into the sa me utility pole on the Big Bend curve, but escaped without inj ury. Driver in the second crash was Kathryne Melander, 60, 6338 Ave, Sevilla. San Cleme11te Cou11cilE yes Building, Planning BJidget By JOltN VALTERZA Ot tt>e Dtll• PIM! S!•lf The public safety and building and planning scgn1enlc; of San Clemente's propo.ied $3.7·millioJI budget are on tap for cily couflcil study tonight starling at 7 o'clock. City l\l;inagcr Ken Carr said the exact flrder of deliberations is up to the discre- tion of councilmen , but heads of the police, lifeguard, fire and building-plan- ning departments will alltnd to take part it the budget !ltudies. The council will carry through the week of meetings with a tealative format showing work Tuesday night on budget items relating to engineering, water, 11treets and parks and recreation. A !pe<:iflC time for addresses by the city employe organizations has not beew set, Carr said. The employes are ei:pected lo appear at invttatio9 or the cOUneil to diswss salary ta.Ila which have not yet l>eeft plugged into the proJfOSCd budget 1!hich shows an lnereaae-ef $489;000--over-l11t· year and 1 minof drcip in property taxes. creases for salaries and a new ol'ertimc- standby al\owani;e, but a $900 drop in supplies and equipment. -The police depa rln1ent's budget al~ shows an increase i• tl)e s<ilary and manpower seg1nents, but ;ibout all or lhe rises in expenses should be covered by the first of 1hree federal crime contro l grants. The deparlmen!'s p<!rsonnel and salary budget this currertt year 1s estimated at $377 ,347. which is proposed to increase to $487 ,020 next fiscal year. The federal grant almost reached $100,000. Equipmeal expen ioes are eX"- pect.ed to rise from $135.347 to $181,822. plus $3 ,836 for capital outlay. -The lifeguard budge t shows a nominal increa~ in salaries from $129,966 to $14.1,973, but, again, the iJI· creases are. due to a midyear rai11e approved earlier in this fiscal year. No new raises are included. The department is proposed for $10,000 more In funds for materials, supplies and services, but no funds for capital ouUay. -The city golf course budget wh.ich -shows·about-a $U;MIO cut in -expt!:11dlturcs also may be scanned toni1ht. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 25, 1970 TEN CENTS Cambodia Will Asli U.S. Remain Until War Ends Bridge Falls On Freeway; 011e l{illed BALDWIN PARK (UPI) -A new $300.000 concrete and steel bridge lin king the San &mardino and 605 freeways co llapsed today and millions of pounds of rubble fell on another ramp below. A pic kup truck was flattened by the chunks of concrete and its driver was killed. It took rescue workers several hours to reach the vehicle. The last concrete in the i:,0.fool bridge \Vas poured last Thursday and was not yet "cured." Francis Fresner, an assis- tant bridge engineer for the California Division o{ Highways, said the collapse could have been caused by a flaw in one of the vertical steel posts used lo support lhe structure while it dried out. Fressner estimated more than four million pounds of steel and concrete fell to the roadway. The collapse ~ cu rred at 7:40 a.m. during the momhlg rush hour and the California Hlibway Patrol said it waa a fluke \ha\ only one car was passing beloW al the time. Marine Guilty Of Killing Buddy, Gets 21 Years A Marine court martial al Camp Pendleton has convicted 2J -year-old decorated Marine Pfc. f\.tichael Galloway to 21 years in prison in the New Year·s Eve murder of a buddy. Ga lloway. ~·ho also recei ved a di.shonorabl~ discharge, was convicted \ale last week of UJ11premcditaled murder nf Pvt. Steven Woolfolk i• the vicinity of the Camp Las Pulgas enlisted men 's club on Dec. :11. 'The court also found Galloway guilty of viol ation of a lawful order, assault v.·ith a dangerous weapon, carrying a concealed weapon and communicating a threat. The se"tcnce 1o1•ill will u~dergo re \•ie'Y by the com1nander or Galloway '!! unit, th<' 5th r..1 arine Expeditionary Brigade Brig. Gen. Ross Dwyer will revie\v the senten ce handed down and can either approve it as it stands or reduce IL After the general's review I.he serit~nce will go to Navy su perior!! U. Washington, D.C. for their evaluation. Galloway. who is a veteran or lhe Vietnam V.'ar and the holder of several clecoratioos for performance there, will be confined in a Marine Corps detentioa facility, base spokesmen said. Solon Says Innocent WASHINGTON (AP) -Former Sen. Daniel B. Brev.·ster ([).Md .), pleaded innoce'*"mday to charges of accepting a br11:1e-to -1nnuenct his vote-on postal rate legislation. a Nurse First Male in County Program By BARBAR.A KREIBICH Of IM 0ettY ,.Ii.I Sid The new nurse on the 3 to 11 p.m. shi ft in f\.tedical East al South Coast Community Hospital had to take time off from his duties last y,•eek to atlerMi a graduation ceremony in Anaheim. The pronoun is correct. The ne..w nurse i!I Fred Sheno:ood, first male student to graduate as a practical nurse from Nurses· Training Institute of Orange County. The 22 other nurses in Fred's graduating class were all female, and, like Fred, they found a ready market for the ir skills. Fred, in fact, wa s already working at South Coast when the formal gradua- l~ date rolled around and he thinks it's •·great." Women patients, he says, are •·sometimes a little surprised to (ind their nurse is male, but they always believe me." r..fen don 't seem to care one way or the other. he adds. Fred 's hospi tal experience be g an shortly after he fini shed high school. \\•ith jobs in Park Avenue Hospital and Genesee llospital in Rochester, New York, and a st.int at f\.fount Sinai in Florida. But he round many <kxlni d osed to him wiU1out formal medical training and decided to do something about it after he moved to San Clemente two years Ii•· Enrolling at the. Nurses Training lnslit~llich is affiliated with West A n a h e I m Community HospltaJ, he plunged into clasaroom atudits revW:win1 procedures of acute nursing care and leaming the language of medicine. This \\·as followed by in-service training in the Anahei m hospital, cover i n g al! departments: medical, s u r g i ca I , pediatrics, maternity. labor and delivery, ' ~'-"t. . ·I "· ' . T El.l.ll l ,.IL01 11"4 ,.11911 ON DUTY AT HOSPITAL M•I• Nurse Sherwood central supply, recovery room and I.he intensive care unil- Movina: to full li~ ~ ~ lM hoopi"'1, he. conllnlled wltb c1.._ on« a 111·eek and finally was padual.ed -wiUI secood highest i.chievement honor. qt bis class. Fred's duties at the hospital cover "all the things a nurse is IUpposed to do." And, perhaps picking up a clue from his fellow workers, he declines to reveal his age to the press, Laguna Council Will Seek Method to Save Bus Line Laguna Beach city councilmen will try to find a way to shore up the Art Colony's financially distressed bus line in a serond study session on the subject Tuesday al 7:30 p.m. in city ha ll councll chambers. Advised that Laguna Transit, operator of the local bus , may have to discontinue its service. the COlllltil has been pon· de ring the alternativr:s of subsidizing or buying the bus line in order to maintain what they agree is a needed community service. Financial details of both proposed solu- tions ~·ill ht studied at the Tuesday session. Alson on the agenda for the study meet is an initial examination of the prelminary city budget for 1970-71. Councilmen will uamine the tentative Sl.6 million budget prepared by City ~anager James D. Wheaton ln the light of earlier proposals to increase police department pertom1el and make other change!! in city functions relative to Mayor Richard Goldberg's seven-point program. The "hold the line" budget presenled hr the mtmdl dou not tnctude-~-· additional cost.'I and would permit a 5.8-cen t reduc\Jon In the property tar rate. Goldberg has said he does not see any possibility of such. a decrease if his program to upgrade Laguna 's image is to be carried out effectively. Clyde I. Kegeris Succumbs at 7 4; Services Tuesd ay Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesay in Sheffer Laguna Be&Ch Mortoary Chapel for C I y d e Irvine Kegerl!, kmgtime Laauna resident who died Saturday In South Coast Qnnmunity Hospital at the age of 74 . The Rev. Dallas R. Turner oC the Community Presbyterian Church will of. flciate at funeral rites conducted by San Clemente EID Lodge 20M. Private entombment in Hollywood Memorial Park will follow. _ • . ·-- Soutl1 Viets Pull Out Tl1ousands PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Foreign Minister Yem Sambaur said today he will ask President Nixon to keep American troops in Cambodia along with South Vietnamese soldiers "until the eH of the war." His remarks were made in an airpart news conference before leaving for Sai· gon for the first visit there by a high Cambodian official since Prince Norodom Sihanouk was deposed March 18. President Nixon has !aid he will have American ground forces out of Cambodia by June 30, with the Soulh Vietnamese leadership pledging to keep ilc; men there Wllil the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese are beaten. "1 am going to ask President Nixon to keep the Americans in Cambodia witil the end of lhe war," Yem Sambaur' aaid. The request apparently has not yet been made. As for the South Vietnamese, he said, they can stay "as long as the war lasts. Then we will aslt them to leave." The purpose of his trip to Saigon was lit discun the reeallblisbmeaL of dlplOmaUt nlatiom bdween the two nation& .and to protest what was describ- ed only u "misbehavior" by South Viet- aamese troops in Cambodia. At the same ,time South Vletnam said several thousand of its troops withdrew from Cambodia today, with about 13 ooo others reported battl ing their way' up the Mekong River to link up with Cam- bodian soldiers who captured the town of Tonie Bet. The 13,000-maJI column of South Viet.- namese pushing up the Mekong River toward Tonie Bet reported killing a lotal o_f 128 Communist soldiers ia weekend hghling, Jl'IO!lt of it in the Chup rubber plantation, the biggr:sl in Indochina. Saigon unouncement said the govern- ment troops in addition captured J80 tons of rice. Their lo!leS were placed at seven dead and ~5 ~ounded in pushin,I? the column lo w1thm three miles of Tonie Bet. R.eports from Ph11om Penh said Cam- bodia11 troops captured Tonie Bet 50 n;iles northeast of Saigon, Sunday ~fter' virtually destroying It with artillery u, root the Communist troops who had held it for a week. Casualties were riot reported . Yem ~amba~r told newsmen in Saigon ~.t:'r his arrival that his visit would inaugurate a new era of fertile coopera· tion for the future or our two coun- tries .. _ " Diplomatic rel atio11s between the twn ll~tlons were broken off in JOOS after S1hanou~ charged allied lroops from Viet- nam with crossing Into Cambodia in ~suit of the Viel Cong and North Vietnamese. The ~ambodian foreign minister said In Sa1go• he thought the ''misun- derstandings" about the treatmeRt of Vle.tnai_n~ in Cambodia could be resolv· ed 10 his discussions with Saigon official~. Orange Coast Weather Dependlna: on the smoothness 0£ the meetinp. h budget studies might wind up Wedntlld1y or Thursday •ight, folloW· ed by the annual public hearing on the revised document at the June 3 city council meeting. Freed--Not Cured Mr. Kegerls, one ol Ule early com. manders of American Legion Post 222, was known and loved In the community as oraanlzer and guldlna liaht at the Legiori"s 1nnual Easter ea:a: hunt for small children. The weatherman 's in a rut, and Tuesday's forecast shapes up pret~ ty much like lod1y's -with low morning clouds and hazy sun- shine holding temperatures in the middJe &O's locaJly. TonJght's dcpartmenLo; aJKI a synopsi.1 or their budlets are as follows: -Building and planr.iing shows an 1Uoc.UOn in budget year 1970-'71 of $11,989, or about $3,000 more than thi.ii yar's budaet. The " increase i!ii nearly totally In normal upward salary ad· justments. -The Fire departmeat'I budget, show- ing 1 huge jump beclute of propooals to spend '17'0,000 for " new fire station headqu1rter1, also ~ws $6,000 iJI in- Stock Met"kel.• NE\V YORK (AP J -The stock markel continued to drlrt lower this afternoon artcr a i1harr fAll in t'arty trading. Tradin g 1o1·1!11 moderate. (See quotations Pnges 18-191. I Serves Term for Biga1ny, Wants to Marry Again MESSINA, Sicily (AP} -Aldo C£rlo Donati. who just can 'l resist a wedding. walked out of jail a. free mmi and a bachelor today after !ervtng six years for marrylllg five women. The first thing ht plans to do is get married a1ala. Donati, called "the super bigamist" by Italian newspapers wa!I arn!sted at tbe door of lhe Church of San Clemente. Oct. 10, 1*1 as he was about to marry a ·si rt.h wife . "I made fi ve women ha~>y," he pro- tested when t•hargged wiU1 fi ve tlll'ICS or bigamy 11.nd various counls of fra ud , f:ilsiftcation (lf do c um c JI Is and m igrepre!enta t ion. But wh.ile he was servin1 hi! sentenc'c , he suddenly found himself a s1n1 le man. His first marriage to DiaaM Friu.i at Milan in 1949 was annulled ~au1e it was ne\ler consumm ated. His second marriage to Leonilde Pace t.1 Milan in 19;,.t and his third to Gilda Gabt\·lll in t.-ierano in I~ wtre ru~ inv1Ud bec ause he wa!I already. ~rried His f~rth marrl~,&e . lo M~.ria PM»a 'Pet~lli in Parma m 19'4 was annullld becliuse of •dlffetenoe of reltgion.. afld l\i!I fifth to Gabriella ·Marta Ballan In Pieve di Cal!telfranco Vencto M 196~ \va s held invaUd because of an agrctment no\ to have c«Udren. lie might have 1ot1.en away wiUi 1 sli:th marrUi1e, to S~lian achoolteacher Marla Peluso, but be made up too fancy a story about beiDC a NATO inteJllgence agl?nt. The 1trl'1 father asked police to check up because lt teemed str1nae that an Jn1eru1..,... a&ent J"OUldn~ '.b6w bo,w 10· dr;tvi, a, cl;.. · ~ • / "MahirriOnr-uciits .me;'• Donati said at1tt\e ,1Jme. "ll'11Jke a chill of eiultation ill lieu It to e'xplaln." Now 48, he still li ke! the idel . He ph1ns to marry a Rome woma n with whom he had a corresj>on~nce romance while in prison. • -... ,~ .. , " 1 He also was a past e•alt.ed ruler of Laguna Beach Elks Lod1e 1724 and for many years wu manager of the old A & P Market at the comer of Forest Avenue and Glemeyre Street in Laguna . P.lr. Kqerts b survived by hit widow. Verda, of the home, • Thalia St.: a brother, Ray of Hermou Beach: and 1 !teJMIOJI, Jamea E. Myers ol Glendale.- Picketing Contin:ucs OAKLAND jUPJ)·-/ifemberi of .the Teamsters un\90 coatlft..d· Mlectlye wildcat pickec:lng today against tiuclr. Jirms operating between Los Angeles 1 and •clUes up and down, the ~. Sorlie pickctt.1g was al so reported in San Frin. cisco. M6st m,a.J or tran,,continentll 1 Lrucker1 were operating. INSIDE TODA. Y ivhal'.s the hardest part of runnhio a nuclear plant? It could bt convinci11g th.e sur· rounding citizenry th~e ·s no danger involved. Ste the s!O'l/ oJ Son Onofre on Page 3. Still .Jane 30 Uniform Nixon Reaffirms Law Downed Troop Pullout ByTopCourt \VASH INGTON (UPI ) -The \Vhile House reaffim1ed today President Nix- on's pledge to pull out all U.S. troops from Cambodia by June 30. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler gave the assurance when asked about a state- ment by Cambodia's foreign mini_ster that hi s go\'emment "'ould request Nixon to keep Gls i11 Cambodia until "the end or the v.·ar." Ziegler said no such request had bt>en received from Phnom Penh nfflcials but "If we do receive such a request from them. we would make them aware of our policy," That policy, he said, is the same as Nixon enunciated previously: that all Americans \1-'0uld be withdrawn from Cambodia by end oI ne:c.t month. On Capitol H.J ll. Assistant Senate tlemocralic Leader Edward M. Kennedy said recent !ilalements by administration officials had indicated "some waffl ing" on the pledge for a complele pullout by June 30. Kennedy said there now seemed to be so.me question whether America_n air support and advisers would be available to South Vietnamese forces who have said they plan to rtmab1 1n Cambodia indefinite1y. Senate Democratic Lead er M i k e Mansfi eld said "if th e South Vietnamese stay, it means y,·e wlll be involved in a •cute' way.' " At the White House, Zeigler did not d ear up the question of whether U.S. air action would continue after Gia left or whet.h er logistical support -and possibly some American advisers - would be provided the South Vietnamese. W. Averell Harriman, a top diplomatic troubleshooter in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, accused the ad- ministration of basing Vie tnam policy on a "delus ion" that military pressure could force Lhe Communists to negotiate peace. "The simple tru th Is that there is nc> way of achieving our politic.al ob- jectives In Vietnam through military ac- tion." Harriman said. The 78-year-old ex.diplomat, whose 11egotia tlng experience :spanned a period of nearl y :.> years, testil!ed before the House Foreign Affairs Committee at hearings on "U.S. foreign policy for th e 70s ." He predicted that North Vietnam and the Viet Cong would jo.in in "serious negotiations" if these step! were taken: -The Ni xon administration compelled South Vietnamese President Thieu to take into his government individuals who want a negotiated settlement. -Thieu sent a negoU.ating team to $700 in Wallet Taken in Laguna B y 'Customer' An unchained wallet containing $700 Jn cash was picked up Saturday by a customer at lhe BaU and Chain, moo clothing sh<Jp at 646 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, police report. Aller selecting a pair of boot,,, the owner told police, the customer asked for change of a $50 bill. which was producl'd from the wallet, kept on l shelf. He paid for the boots with a $20 bill from the change and departed. After rearranging some shoe bo xes on a shelf, the owner realized that the wallet also had departed, presumably v..·ilh the light-fingered boot buyer. Another fa shion·wise Art Colony thief entered a home at 648 Griffith Way Salurday evening hy reaching through a pct door to turn a11 inside door knob, police said, runing a bureau , the \•isitor selected an assort ment of cuff links. tie bars and IS pairs of men's socks, then picked up two bottles of champagne and thr~ botlles of white wine to add to his .loot. the irate householder complained. DAILY PILOT N__,..t l•wl: L..fii-a...~11 c .......... Robt •l N . W etd l"rUiOllftl '"6 l"vbll1- J1c~ II:. c~ .•• ., \lit• ,.,.,_ -~.1 ,..._,... l ho11u1 ICee•il Edllor Tlio11111 A. Mu•phin t Mt n1g1119 fdllor ll:i~h.,d r. Nill 3.oul~ Ort"llO COlllllY Editor Offi&H Co1I• Mnt~ J:IO W<J! 8t¥ 51, .. , HtwpG•I l •t<ll : 1211 WMI l•llool llO!il~,_ Lt~ l t l <ll: m ~O!"HI ... ..,,., ... 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Paris that v..·as wllling and capable of reaching a con1pron1ise peace selt!en1enl. -President Nixon named a "high· level " U.S. negoti<itor to succeed Henry Cabot Lodge y,·ho rl·signcd last fall. Harriman said that until a lop-level Lodge successor is named, "It is hard for people around the world to believe (Nixon) is really interested in negotia· tions." Boy Drow ns In 'Last Dive' Off Catalinci A Bel Air tct:nager -tired afte r several descents in 45 feet or water off Catalina Island 's Arrow Point - v..·ent down Sunday for what be said was his "last dive. His body was recovered later off the bottom. George B. Pullman, 17, drowned while on the final trip o( a skindiving trip with friends on the west side of Emerald Bay, according to she riff's deputies A companion , Al Widen , 17, of West Loe: Angele!, said Pullman failed to re-!W'face wtien he should have and the hunt was begun. The victim's body was found about 25 yards offshore near the wpot where he aod his friend had anchored their boat. Investigators sald the boys were diving with anorkel gear, not us ing scuba eq uip- ment when the tragedy took young Pullman's life. MS Drive Opens ln Laguna Beacli Lagu nan 0. W. Price, member or th!'; board of trustees of the newly rorn1C'd Orange County chapte.r for the National ?-.1ultiple Sclerosis Fund Drive. has an- nounced the opening of the annual cam· paign lo raise funds for multiple sclerosis research. Prict>. whose son, a young Comman<ler fn the Navy, was a victim ol the disease, says there are 3,000 PftrSons in the countv suffering from multiple sclerosis and related diseases. A chronic disease of the central nervous system, fi.1S usualty strikes young adults between the t1ges of 20 and 4-0 and frequently resulL~ in crippling paralysis. Funds donated to the 1970 MS }lope Chest wil! support research and provide services for county MS victin1s and their families. Architect Su cctnnhs WASHINGTON (AP) -J. George Stewart, an ex-politician once charged with tryi ng to "make the Capitol into a king.sized Howard John!JOn's," h:is died, ending a stormy JS.year caretr as the Capitol architect. DAIL 'I PILOT ,,.,. ....... lndo11esia11 President Visits President Suharto of Indonesia greets well wishers ing as they changed planes en route to Washington, 1vho got up early thi:1 1nornin~ to welco1ne U1e D.C. for state visit. Among those greeting the In· Asian leader upon hi s 7:06 a.in . arrival at El Toro donesian leader 1vere Al bert (right) and Niki Nel- i\1arine Corps Air Station. President and 1\1rs. \\'an (dark hats, grey suits at fence), young sons Suharto stoppe<l at El Toro for an hour this morn-of Mr . and Mrs. Tony Nelwan, Costa Mesa. ~~~~~~~~--=--~~-'--"-'.C::...:.::.:C:-'--~~- Aicle to Reagan Missing With Family i11 Sierras SONORA (UPI) -Edward B. llul4 chinson, Crl!v. Ronald Jleagan's ap- pointmenls secreta ry, was reported miss· ing Y.'it.h his wife and three young children today on a backpacking trip into tile High Sierra, llutc-h.inson, 40, a lonner Palo Alto real estate developer, drove to the Dardanelle area in the Sonora P<is.s on High way 108 ~"'riday night. lie \\'as to backpack into the rugged Sv:ord Lake region, and return Sunday night. A daughler, Susanne, 17, who re1naincd San Cl e m entean Face s Cliarges A SJ.year.old San Clemente man faces charges including resisting arrest after l'le a!ll'gcdly kicked a patrolman in the face Sunday during a traffic stop in· volving the arrested man·s wife. Police said Chesler ~purgeon Cll'mcns, 2711 Vta Band1t<1. v:as booked on thargcs or drunke'11ncss. n1alic1ottS rnischirf and resisting arrest after the 1n,·idenls at El Camino Real and Aven.ida Escalones. Officers st1id-they stopped a car driven by Clemens' \\"ifc :l.\ 12 .49 .1.m. Su11d<1y, and as they y,•ere talking lo the won1an Clemens allegedly approached t he patrolmen and became abusive. As he v1as bt'ing placed 1nto a pohcc cur he kicked the fa ce of onl' patron1:in, report.<; said . ?-.trs. Clen1cns \V:IS not held. In Sacramento during the outing, reported the family missing Sunday mid· night. f\.1issing were Hutchinson ; his wife, Kirsten: and three children. Nora, IO: r-.tary Jean, 8, and Jack, 6. The fami ly dog a!so v..·as along. Hutchinson was described by associates In the governor's orrice as an experie nced backpacker. The family's 'destination was onl~· ap. proximately five miles by tr:iil off a forest service road. The Hutchinson sta· tion wagon was found this morning near Dardanelle Cone on Fence Creek road at approximately the 8,000 fool le vel. The Tuolumne County Sheriff 's office planned an air search this afternoon. Dru g Work Told By S1narteens Smarteens, a group from Marco }"orstcr Junior }figh in San Juan Capistrano, will describe their drug prevention prog ram al a special PTA n1ccting Tuesday. A pol luck at 6:30 p.m. at the Trlton Center at San Clemente High School will begin the last meeting of the year for the Capistrano Unified Council or !'TA. ·rhc group y,·i\l vote on a by.Jaw change y,·hich will enable high school students to become full voting members and ·will install new PTA officers. Ne1•1 presidents ioc!uded r.frs. Donald Holt, Concordia: Mrs. Steven Spellman, Dana : r-.trs. Lawrence Thayer, Forster : r.·trs. Thom:is \\'ert. llanson : r-.frs. Will Karns, !..as Palmas; ~trs. Nell Hubbard, i~alisades; r-.trs. Eugene Kaster, San Cl~mente 1 ligh , :ind r-.lrs. Kenneth Bloom, council president. Co ol Weather Mars W eeken,(l Cool weather and heavy overcast kept beach.goers home in droves over the v..·eekend, Laguna Beach I i f e g u a r d s report. Instead of cro,vds in excess of 20,000 that ha~ jammed beaches only l<1st \l"l~kt'nd. the unfavorable \Ye a I her brought out only 6.000 persuns on Salur· day and a sca11t 5,000 on Sunday. Surf y,•as calm and both y,·ater ant.I 1ir temperatures stayed around 65 degrees. Ufeguards logged "no in· cidents." Judy Fay Risley Rites on Tuesday Graveside se rvices wHI be held ti t 2 p.m. Tuesday in El Toro Cemetery for Judy Fay Risley, 28, of 24 181 Ankerton Drive, El Toro, who died Satu r- day at Sout.h Coast Community Hospita l. Mn . Risley is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Peters of El Toro: l'l son, Joshua Risley of the home: and by a sister, Mrs. Gazella Wike of Los Altos, Calir. Sheffer Laguna Beach r-.1ortuary were directors. Jlow's Thal Again'! 'Monster' Sparks B edroo1n Blaze In San Clemente 1\ San Clcn1en1c youth's fondness for illuminated monster models proved cos-- tly over the weekend when one of the contrivunccs caught his bedroom ablaze, causing $8,000 in da1nage. Fire Chief 1\1crt Hackett said a lighted candle left unattended behind a plastic model caused the fire at 2909 Via San Gorgonio Satllrday at 2: l I p.m. He said Harvey Higgs Jr., 13, had lighted the candle a.nd placed it behind a model which he had built, then he left !he room. A few 1nomcnts later the youth return- ed and opened the bedroom door to find the entire room ablaze. Firemen sounded a general alarm and within a haH hour had finished working the blaze. which ate through I.he roof after gutting !he bedroom. Hac kett said damage to the shake.roof home was $6,000 lo the structu re and ;2.000 to the contents. The fire caused smoke and heat damage to three other bedrooms and a hallway, but left the rest of the house unlou ched. Firerne n worked hard to keep the blaze from spreading fu rther through the attic and roof, lfnckett said. Vandals W r eek Pier R es troon1 s \\'eekend vandals near the Sa n Clemente Pier blasled several y,•all· mounted ceramic fixtures in the men "s rest roorn lo rubble, police reported. The incidents were discovered by maintenance creY.'S Sunday morning, f1cers sa id . The vandals, using mi 11 ta r }' firrcrackers. apparcn!ly dropped the ex· plosivE's in the fixtures sometime after last Friday night. The Village Stttithiess Jfired Up Wolf WASHINGTON (UPll -The Supreme Court ruled uncorivitutional today a federal l1w tb11 pr&lbited wearing of a V .S. mili tary uniform In a state or SCtttn performan~ if the character wearing it tended to discredi t the armed forces. A unanimous decision written by JU!Uce Hu11> Black declared that the statute vlolattd the First Amendment guarantee of free speech . The court reversed the con viction of Daniel Jay Schact, who wore a burlesq ue military costume at an antiwar demoo.!tration in 19'7 in Houston. The government prosecuted Schacht on grounds he was wearing a unUonn without authority. He contended he was a ppearing in • theatrical production con· slstlng of a street skit as part of the Howton protest. The law contained a provision that. a uniform could be worn in a theatrical petiormance only if it.s use did not discredit the armed forces. It was th at provis ion which the court struck down. Black wrote that a law "which leaves Americans free to praise the war in Vietnam but can send persons like Schacht to prison for opposing it, cannot survive in a country that ha:oi the First Amendment." In other actions, the court: -Dismissed without comment Ji challenge to the coru;titutionality oC " Phlladelphia antiriot ordinance used to prosecute three persons afte r tfla assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King in April, 1968. The ordinance permits the mayor to declare a state of em er4 gency in such instances and to restrict lhe movement of people in public places. -Overturned by unan imous vote the robbery conviction of a f"Jorida man because the state wailed eight years to . bring h_im t.o trial. The opinion by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger said the delay in the case of Robert Dean Dickey was an "intolerable'' violation of his right to speedy trial. -Rejected an appeal by a group head- ed by Spanish-America leader R eis Lopez Tijerina challengi ng New Mexico's education laws they claimed were un· favorable to Spanish speaking children m t.he state. O emente Police RaidPot F arm; Two Women Held ''Grass" -of the illegal variety - grmving in the back ya rd of a San Clemente residence caught the eye of San Clemente pol ite over the weekend. who seized SO marijuana seedli ngs and arrested ty,·o young won1en on charges of growing the "'eed. Narcotics detectives said lhey heard a telephone tip Fr iday describing thP garden in the yard behind 217 8 La Paloma. The. officers said they peered over a fence to verify the reports, tJ1en return- ed to obtain "'arrants. On their second trip thl'y arrested one young ·wo1nan al the apartment, Aida Louise lfOY.'arth. 18. Later lhai day they arrested a second 18-year-old young woman in Laguna Beach. Joene Gentile. who gave the san1e La Paloma residence address. Both were. bookM on charges nr cultivating 1narijuana. Police claim they seized several gallon·sized container s Y:ith flourishing. foot·high plants. plus a Jug box containing about 45 tiny seedl· ings. Ul"I Tt!t~ ... ~ J .. inda Clark, 18, a student at Socramento's Cast1 Roble Jli.iz.h School. is one of IS 1'ludents who'll 12:raduotc \v\th a ccrLlficatc in horseshoe- ing. t .. inda and her classrnritcs IA'ill cn1bi1rk on carcrrs as bl<ick- St:Qtth s. PHILADELPHIA (AP ) -Mrs. Ray· mond Broderick, wife of the GOP gubernatorial candidate., says some funn y things happen on cAmpaigns: "like being Introduced recently at a meeting as 'the new governor's next wife.'" Her hus· h:inrl ls 1hc current lieultnant governor of Penn.sylvanin. A voun~ \'"ol f cub is wlred for sound ~·ilh a biotel cmctrv receiver nn d .<lmpl ificd a1lnched to i1s bodv so ~'Ollllt.!Sters can hear its heartbeat on a loudspcflker at the chi ldren's section of the St. Louis Zoo. ' • ·- \ • l I CHECKING •UP• Irish, Not Greeks Prove Best Lawyers By L. M. BOY D SO VOU"RE TllL'IK!NG about migrating IJ Australla, .are you'..' All right, but remember lhe v t n om o u s snakes there out.n un1ber the harnlles!I sMkes ..• TH AT THE GREEKS make excellent law yers is com1non knowledge . They are not. however, in the majority. Best of the la1vyers in this country now are of Irish extraction. it's said . A.:\10NG \VHALES with teeth, the male1 are bigger ll1an the femaleS", An10ng "'ha 1 e s '~ithot1l teeth, the females are bigger than the n1ales. Got that! BEARS -On any given night at the height of the summer season, you can fig- ure: about 30,000 citizens are sleeping around in Y e 11o11· - stone Park. Little \\'onder lh~ bears get shook. No flippancy Intended. Somclhing's going to have to go prett y soon. either the bears or the people there, count on that. STORES -Next time you ·walk into a department store, take a look at what bargains, if any, are offerEd on the right of the doorway. Those hidden-camera survey-tnkers have told the department store operators that 90 percent of the women shoppers promptly I.urn right after w a I k i n g through the front door. So that area j ust to the right of the door is generally regarded a~ the store's prime sales spot \\"hereat are placed llonor Given John T. Pickerlll, ?\1.0 ., :o;outh Laguna, has be e n elected lo aclil"e membership in the American Academy of General Practice, a natjonal association or more than 31 ,000 family doctors. The AAGP Is the Counlry"s 11econd largest na tional medical association. the most enticil1g products. CUSTO~tER SERVICE -Q. "11ow many cigarettes do the tobacco men get out of a pound of tobacco?" A. About 350 . . . Q. "Do any birds have eyebrO\\"S?"' A. Not a one. Some have eyelashes, though .. Q. "Hov.-long are asphalt sh!ng les supposed to last?" A. Eighteen years Is averag!". WoOde n shingles \\'ill go ll years average PLEASE OBSERVE -Ap- proximately 700 years ago in England, it wa~ the custom among genUemen of high 1tanding to hold hands as they strolled about in public, just as it is the custom to sheke hands upon meeting. J see a great deal of 13th Century thin king in the streets or llollywood these days, but 1 do not believe they are historians. OPEN QUES110N -\Vhat111 lhe most times any one woman has ever had her face lifted ? IN A SINGLE d a y ' s loreclosure actions, \1•hen 1vc were lads during the Great Depression, one-fourth of the entire state of 11.lississippi was !)())d, \Vho re1nembers U1at ? , .• OUR PLANET MAN says fel!ow11 born under the sign of Cancer are known to posse.!IS a terrific pcl\\'er of concentration and an ex· tre1nely stubborn will lo 'vin. GllEAT SP'£AKER -N<1 young man who thinks his voice i~ not deep enough should forget the fact that the silver-tongued orator of yesteryear. William Jennings Bryan, had no bas11 tone! in his voice at all. None. Radio techlticians discovered lhls od- dity while transcribing an old record onto tape. Y our question.t o.nd com· mcnt.J a.re welcomed and wilt be used in CHECKING UP wherever po1siblt. Ad· dress letters to L. M. Bovd, P.O. Box 1875, Ntwporl Beach, Calif., 92680. Summer'• coming! Get ready with a Sue-Cory Budget 'Feltlval Wave' Includes cut, shampoo and styling 8.95 Sci11or Wlzzard haircut, 1.88 W• .peciolit• lrl tfM ca,. of fatHon 'lrigl USE YOUR PENNEY CHARGE CARD - NO APPOINTMENT NECESSAlltY PULLl•TOft O<lr>Qt'hlr ('"'" i1111 t!aor, •11....i• ffU"'THll •fON •l.t.CH w ri-. m.nn O•.t.llGI 'Tffll tll'I'' fJt.JMl NlW"O•T 1 1.t.(ff "••hi'" ....... tNI ''"'· U.1111 • , D, - \ ' 1 J DAil Y PILOT fj Sweet and saucy swim looks for big 1 n 1 little dippers <'«·•' It'• Penneys very special collection. of bikinis and cage lock swim suits ••• all the styles ond trims a mer- maid of any age could wantl Bold plaids, demure dots, lean rib knits .•• a whirl of two and three piece styles, with a coverup ar two, just for good measure! So what are you waiting for? Head for Pen· neys, then head for the beach I A. 3-piece polyester/cotton voile cage set-cage attaches to bro top with Velcro• brand fastener. Sizes 5to15. •15 a. 3-piece over-blOUJe style in polyester/nylon. Colors blue and green. 1 14 C, Plaid bikini with bow trim, acry• lie. Sizes 5to13. •t 1 D. Sheer nylon coverup, white only. Small, Medium, Lorge, 4.50 f, Girl's acrylic biltini in and prints, Sizes 8 to 16. plaids •s F. Girl's shift set-polyester/cotton bikini and matching shift. 8 to 16. •7 G. H-back swim dress in polyester/ cotton prints. Sizes 4 to 6X, 14 LIKE IT.,. CHAlGI ITI AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE UPI lelepht l• Ca111bodia1i B11g? Poverty Stamp Ellglhlllty Italian Kids Say U.S. Best College S.tudents Could Get Aid WASHINGTON IAP) -A colltge student with a stove and a provable poverty level ROME (AP) -;.. nAlional income may be eligibJe for poll of youth shows that, ii food stamp!! al public expense, they had their choice, more no matter how much his Italian children would rather parents shell out for his tui· be American than any other lion, books and social life. nationality. Or. he may join i;everal As they grow older, to friends in a "household'' and university a ge, fewer v.·ould share food stamps to fend choose the United States and off the rising <.'Ost of higher more would preft-r swinging education. Britain -0r uninhibited Scafl-The fed er a J government dina\'ia. does nol mind at all as long Although one adult Italian as k>cat v•elfare official.s say in every four votes Com· the youths are eligible. 1nun1st, not three in 100 of While no one seems to know their children would like to how .,.,.idespread rood stamps be Russian. ha\•e become on campus, The nationality choice w11s federal and state officials part nf a national poll of guess that student parricipa· students on their views and tlon represents a very small aspirations. They were asked : percentage of the national pro- Jf you we re not Italian, in gram, \.11hich costs $610 million \\'hat other country would }'OU this fiscal year, prefer to have been born. But they adn1il food stamps Aniong gr ade school and could become mudl more at· high school students 19.2 per-tractive now that federal cent replied the United States, benefits have increased and the largest percentage that college costs continue to rise. \l'Cnt lo any country. "\Ve simply do not have turned up only a few f.xample1 of local officials who knew the extent o( college :student participation ln Uie stamp plan. Between 400 and 500 tire getting lhe <-"-Oupons in the Los Angeles area. In Chicago, E. J. i\!cBride, who heads lhe stamp progra1n for Cook County. said about 20 students were in the program, most of them married graduate studenl.!i. Only two cas'es \\' e re repor ted at San Antonio Junior College in Tt11:as, both in- volving married couples-one husband attending classes on the G.l. Bill. Under the government's new food slan1p schedule, a famil y of fou r can g('l $106 worth of coupons i11sread of $58 under the old syste1n and for no more lhan v.·as spent e ar lier. This liberalization ha ~ boosted food sta mp enrolln1!'11t from 3.8 million persons in January to 5 million in March. The college student issue i., expected to boil over again when Congress acts finally on food stamps for next fiscal year. At present. House action on a new food stamp bill is stall- ed in the Agriculture Con1· millee, along with an an1en d· ment by Rep. Wiley i\1ayue (R·lowa), cutting off food stamps to college studenls \\'ho are claimed by parents a s tax dependents. The House passed a similar restriction in 1968 but was overruled by Senate action. To qualify for food stamps, all a student has to do in niost sl<1tes is to certify thnt his income -aside fro1n CHILDREN'S ART !Choo! expe~s -does not exceed an adjusted amount each month. But the syslem v.erles w!de- ly among the slates, officials say. In Los An geles a single student can qualify if he has Jess than $! ,000 in 8SJel3 which are not marked for sdlOOI and an income of Jes~ th an $169 per month. Money spent for sctioo! is not included in computing incOme. The Agricultu re Department's definition of a "family" under the law is flexible. ''What most people re~er to as a 'family' beromes a 'household' under the Food Sla1np Program." s11ys an of- ficial department guide. "A food stamp household is any group of people who 5hare food costs and a comm on table." /\ GI exa1nines a \1olks\vagen found hidden near llighway 7 deep in lhe rncmy"• forn1er sanc tuary during oper ations in Ca1nbodia recently. 'fhe car \l'a~ laler destroyed. l\ \\'as n.:itural. perhaps, in any . statistics on co 11 e g e .fl country where so many participation," says Ja1nes E . COUHT'fWIDE PARTICIPATION IY ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOLS . KINDERGARTEN THRU lltlrl GRADE children have an 1:ncle who Springfield, head of food ~ lives happily in the United s!a1np operations for the ~OUfh pOlsf 'Dtaza MAY 20-29 !:ii ates. Agric u lture Department. cJ \.~ JI Safeguard Support ll also ma v ha\'e rcrlecled -~"iT~h=•c~•~h~·';'ibee;n~•o;m~e~co~n~c~e~rnl=:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=:==: 1he appeal Or A inert can bul .,.,.e don't keep track." n1ovies, comics and space ex.· An AsSO<·iatcd P ress stir\·ey ploits. But by college age that choice dropped to l:l.:l percent. Red China !Jfuy 'Accept' Nucleur ALtC1ck Serond choice among the ~·ounger school children was liritain. \\'ilh l4 .8 percent. But university age students put Britain up lo rirst place with WASHI NGTON lAP) -Two ranking Pentagon officials say nuclear re1aliation is not a reliable deterrent against a Red Chinese attack because there is no way to know ho\V much atomic destruction Pek- ing is willing to accept in return. Chinese citizens af'E being told ''they can accept an at· tack, survive it and grow."' the officia!!I said in con- gressional testimony released today. and U.S. retaliation against J,000 Chinese citic~ \\'OUld kill only 11 percent of lhe couiitry'!> population. The April 10 testirnony by Deputy D ! r ~ n· s e Sec.retary Oavid M. Packard and J)r. John S. Fosler. director ol rtefen!';e re~earch. came on bf!hatr or the N i x on ad· SC ])cans Li ot Ronald Fernandez of Costa r.1esa has ~en named to tht' dean's ti.'>1 at the Unh:ersily of Southern California for the 11•inter quarter. according !() university offit'ials. Fernandez mainl..ained a 4.0 grade point average during the q uarter. ministration's Safeguard an- tunissile system. They said 1t would be foolhardy lo rely on the U.S. nuclear deterrent when the Safeguard syste1n can stop any missile attack Co111rnunisl China can launch against this counLry lhis decade. They' told the Jlouse defense appropriations subcorntnitlee U.S. retaliation against 200 Chinese <-•ities would destroy up lo 90 perl'ent of !hat coun- !ry·s industrial c;ipaciTy l''hile killing aboul 9 [K!rcent of its population. It is unpossible lo assess "'hE>lher ChinE>se 1raders. "'ho ha1·e ··traditionally plated a r;1!hcr 1011• value on hurnan life:· would not accrpt that, Packard said. P;ickard and Fosler prn- v'1(!ed the subco1nn11ttcc a J().. m(nute Chinest·-made color fi )Jn described 1n l h f' lr<1nscript .a s s h ow 1 n @ ··Chi nese pre1)arations ror the nul'lcar tests held tu obser ve effects on their troops and gro11nd equipn1ent. "The striking fe<1turc of this fihn -at least to us,"' Foster said, "is the allitude that i! Vacation Money? Low-cost Traveloans Treat yourself to e great vacalioil' with a Morris Pfan Traveloan. On approval you can borrow up to $S,OOO or more. Easy payments scheduled the Wf!l'fYOU wa nt them-w1!h a money-back guarantee (if you find you can do better, return the money within 5 days at no cost to you). For vacat ion money, bill consolidation, any re ason -call us. We say ''yes" to 2,039 k>ans every week. Morris Plan 673-370 0 Newport Beach-3700 New port Boulevard seems lo be describi ng to tht people in Cl1ina -that they can accept an al\ack, :survive it, and gro\I'. "It is sin1ilar !o sonu• of tile early notions in this c0Ln1· try \\'hen \l'e fir.~! had atomic botTibs." i1e said·. "[ found iL very disquieting.'' Urging no Safeguard con- struction delays, Packard and F oster repealed the assess· ment that even present :«:hedules would not have the system built in time to counter the earliest possible Red Chinese nuclear threat. They said China could have 10 to 25 nuclear warhead· de!lvering 1nissiles by 19i5, although thal is not expected. The three Safeguard an· !imissile sites to go into opera· lion in late 1974 and 1975, !hey s11id, would provide only a p11 r!ial defPnse against the 20 percent. Prosperous Sv;it1,erlant1 and nearby France and Gcnnany h.'ld a following among the yn11ng students. Switicrland was chof;e n by 12.8 percenL l'rance by 8.8 .and Gerinany by 5.3. But <ll university level the students 1troppcd Switzerland to 10 .fi, France to 4.l and Germany to J.R. The Scandinavian countries, hy contrast. shot up from 8.9 1>ercenl ('ho1ce among the younger children lo a third place IJ.8 among tbe universi· ty set. ·The Soviet Union had a thin 1.5 pcn·ent among the children and onlv 2.4 percenl among 11uivers1iy students. Andy's Fun Ask any kid. "'Ask Alldy" Is fun. s,e it Saturclays I~ the DAILY PILOT. Ch1i1esc thre<11 .. _ ------'=:--:--'°'°,--~_:--,='I I A Father's Day is June 21 A ,g.~!!~n• ORDER THIS WEEK! .. father's D~Y deliver)' is d I still guarantee . Large, lovely 11x14 Father's Day Portrait that says "We love you!" only 5 88 Y• ••• o ntOgnff'iont 11 Xl .C Solon l'orftooft •••(MON thaft haft: th. •1n of this n.-spaper pooe) of )"OU ond both 'fO'll!I' childr~ ond the family petl A wor1111 ond wonderful gift for Dad on father's Day thot kHpJ on 1crying "We lo-re yoi.i" oll year long I Come in now ond ICIVe ••• ond r•met111b. you con charge it at '•nnty'i. 'ULL•lllO• o .. ..o•!•lr c..,,.,. ""' ti.-, 111·"'4 MUNTIN6T()N 11..1.(M H""!lnoto.. C•nl• ""' 11oo•, n ;.m 1 ()ll'AJ'tQ( "'TM£ CIT'I''' ~lt~I NIWl"OllT llACll F .. ~ ..... l•I•"" W lltl;lr, '"·U tl CAMERA SALE! (PlllCIS UflCl1Yt -SATURDAY) 1111 -- SAYE 19.D5 PENNCUST INSTANT LOAD 6 TO 1 POwtR ZOOM CAMERA Ya. COi\ sot gi•ing Hollywood some ~ tion with this reflex mOYie comero. Powerful 6-1 2:00l'l'I ~s, varloble speeds (12. 18, 32 fps), f 1..8 lem, outomolK: exposure neede with MOftUCf cweTTide. lllG. 129.00 .•.•••.•• NOW 109,95 SAVI $31 PENNCRIST INSTANT LOAD ILECTRIC EYE CAMERA OUTFIT Moke if easy on ~If with thb instant Soad- «.g outfit. Electric ere .,..ds e.11pos11re Pfoblerm. TakM srides CK print1. With color lilm, batteries.,. flo1hcube, wri1t 'Strop. llG. 19.88 .•••••••••••• NOW 16,88 SAVI 3.071.PINNCHST llANSISTORIZID INSTANT LOAD CAMlRA OUTFIT Trunsisklri.z.ed shutter plus CDS meter ptoduce e itposures in almost ony light. Ropid·wi nd flo sh- ~ubo-fitlli odvonce, Kif contains camera. c:o&cw ... ,,.,,,,.,..,., ba-wrid -"" UG. 29.95 •••••••••••• NOW 26.88 s.,.,. "'"""'•• fll• ... 11 •••••• 2.59 •M•1st1rfllm 12'112 •••••••••• 1.09 SAVE 19.96! PENNCREST SUPER 8 HOME MOVIE oumr Came ra features instant cartridge k>ocJ.. Mig, on electric eye for perfed expcll5Uf9, zoom lens for dromotk: effects. Projector hos a utomatic threading end simp~ ~ trol bor. With movie li ght, color movie, botte:~s, reel end con. RlG. T T9.9S, NOW 99 e 99 LIKE IT ••• CHARGE ITI NOW! THESE VALUES AT AN'~[ Of TH[S[ P(NN(' SlOA(S! CANOGA P.4.R'K. CAR\SBAD DOWNEY FUtlERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LUEWOOO MOHICLiJl NfWPOIT ltACH ORANGE "'JHE C!Ti-Vf NTUlA SHOP SUN DAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! .__ ____ _, I I I l ' I I • l I • LEGAL NOTICE CE•T"'ICATI 0, SUt tllll• l"ICTtflOUl fitA.lill LEGAL NOTICE Public A.dmlnl•t••tor ond •1 A.dmln!1lr~!or o! ••Id £"91~ ADltlAN ltU'l",.111 , COUllT'I' COUNll!.L 1n~ JOHN M. "A.TTEltSON, DE,.UT'I" I Y John M, "•ll1r1on AllorMY• fOt .. dm!nl1lrotw 1111 1!01! (hnlnul SlrHI 'S1nr. Ana, C•llfo,.11• n ru T•lt•fl'""' IM·lf7' Publl•hr<I O••r>v• Co.st D•ilv M•v ll, "' 15. lflD LEG AL NOTICE aA.11 un IU,.llllOlt COUil' 01' THIE STA.Tl OJI' CALl,.OltNIA. 'Oil THI COUNTY 0' o•AMOI ,,.., ....... , Pdo!, 'D1·10 l<IOllCI: 01' COMlllll'ATOl'I SALi! 0, llAL. ,llO'lllTT AT '111\'Atl SALi! In the Matter cl IM ConH rv•lo'lhlp o! tl'le Pet1on tnd E1!•lt o! (HA.llLE$ 0 .o.WSON SA THGA tE, (DnStrv•!.,.. NOTICE IS HEltEIV GIVEN tll•I lh• u""'11l1ntd, J am11 E. H<o!m, "ubtlc Ciu•rdl1n, 01 Con11'val0r Of the PerlO!I •nll E11011 of Cl\1rle1 Dow"°" 51111tl1•. Con,.rvt !H , w!!J 1111 11 ptl111te 1alt le 1111 hlghe1I and bo1I n.t blddl!•. t !lt r do<luct!on o! t nv <l<IUtlled brtkt,.t c1mml11I011, upan Ill• '""'' 1nd con-dition• 111r1ln1tler mtn11ontd. 1ubltcl "' c-.11rm•1;.,, bv lht 1bovt·t ntllltd Su~erlor (our!, on Ju~ 11, lt70. at th~ hov• of 11:00 o'clock NNn, or lll•reofl•r wl!l\ln 111• 11,.,, 1llow•ll b~ i.w. ar 1111 o!ll<t cf Ill• Public Guu dl1n, 11 ~1 Eaol (hu tnul S!rft1. 51nt1 A.n1, Coll lornl1, 1'101. 111 !I'll r~M. ll!lt , fn,.fl\1, l "d •l•Ut of 11 ld Ch1•lf1 01w•On 511ne•!e, Con1erv11••, In ond lo !ha! Ctt11ln ,.,1 pro119r!y dlttrlblcl •• fo11ow1, lo wl!; IU UNDIVIDED 0"1E·HILF' 1"1· 1EJl:I ST In P"Ollfrlt IO<tlt<I ot 'l'Ol.O KlltOn Drlv•. S1nl t .o.n1. (allfornl1. d•1trl1>o• t l !Ollo"'i: Ln! 11, Blot~ 1, Tfl C! No, S60, LEGAL NOTI CE Jl>ll" M. '1l1fro1n A.lltnHIYI l., A•ml"loltll., 1141 1!111 CM1tnvt llrHI l•~I• Ana, ca1Uornl1 n,_1 Tt111Mnt: l:l+U1' Puo111nf(t Or1ng• Con! Ot llv Mov 11. 1'. !J, 111g LEGAL NOTICE McF•OGon Hom. ,,,,, No, •• ••l ·-------------- ll@r map l~otlOI •tCO'cltd In 8 oolt u . Pig•• I 1nd 1 of Ml1ct ll1noou1 "-llP" "co<a1 of O••ngt County, CRlllorn;t , ara1 er 0111•1 1 rt 1~1111,<1 •or 1ald propOr!Y t nG "'ult bf ln wtll lf>O wnlch will M rt colvta 11 I~• olflce cf rtie P ubllc Gu1rdl1n, 11•1 IE•ll (Mtl/l~I S!••tl, St"'' A.no. Ct llfOO"nla. '2101, or "'"' ~ fllod with the Cl•rl< of ffte 11>0ve-ontlll•d Sv119rlor Cour! ti 1n1 llrfle l!lt• llrJI publlt•llon of thl! No!lct I ncl ~loro "'a-iNj 1aid Miit. TERMS OF SALE: C11n, l1wlul m()N'y of int Unlltd Sl1tt1. Ttn llt'•c•nl no•.1 LEGAL NOTICE Cl!ITlfllC•TI 01' SUSINISI, ,ICTITIOUS HAMI 1~t ur><11ro1011o<1 -• ce•lltv tllr• ••• <:onduttlne 1 b<11ln111 t i 1DG Etsl 81~. l•lbol, C1111<>rnla. u""9• !ht tlcllU..,. f irm "~mt o! .HllY'I T111 ltoem •"II 11\tl •t ld ll•m Is tM'IPOllCI ol , ... followln1 11eoom. wl!off "•"'" I" lull -plaltl of •t lkl•nc• t rt 11 lollow1· Ed•t•d Gro1v1nor, )Of G!bralt•r Avt .. Cotlt Mt-It. Ct111ornlt t16tl Mlf"t Grot>'tf!Of' 1111 Glbrt ttt r An., Cot!I Mt••· Ct lnornla 11611 Oolf'd Mt ¥ n. '''° Edw••<I G•otVI"'' M1rv GtCl~tf!Of' llt!I of C1lll0tnl1, O•tl'!lle Count~: On MtY 11, 1110, bl!o•e ll't , I llol.,¥ '111>11< rn ""' I•• s•ld !t8!•, """""•11• lllPll•ld £dwtrd Gr01v1"°r 11\d Mt ro 0...,..v~nor ~no ... n IO -I<> bo th• Mrton1 wf'>o!,r ntmc• ,,. 1utt1t •lllld IO lh• wl!htn ln•"11mt nl tnd 01knowlfd•· Id lher I Kt,\lllil !ht 1a1111. Mtrf I(. Non,.,, Nol'l'Y l"utillc C1lllt<~l1 PrlMl,-tC Ollk t !fl 0-•ntt Ct~My My c11 .. 1rntu11~ ••~I"' un 1"11btl•~td MIY ll 1..., Cot<I 0 111r •. u. 1110 Pl lM 9';•· ID U:GAL NOTICE "' "' ... !.0$ ,,, LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NCll'ICE t.IOTJ(E OF TIU5Tll'I SALi Nt. F-no On Tnur1<1••. Ju"" 1S. 1'70, •• ll•OO 1'..M , CALl~OIN IA LANO ol<NO IN· VESTMENT COMPANY. • cor1><>rat:on •~ Guh• •Pfl<>ln11d Tru"'" llflClto• """ pUrt11anl !G D•fd ol ''"'' <1•1•<1 St 1>- ltmbor 11. 1'6l t••<Ultd ~• T•ri.n Hom.>, Inc . • cOl'Dor•llo", •nd H••1•• O•Vt lopmon1 Co., • c0•111>,.•lo•" dolf>O bu!lneu •• Me•• DPI Mar Dtvt lOP"1•n1 Co., ' Join! Venlu<t •nd •t<O•<led Of;!obt• !I lt6l, •1 ln1lr No 1181S, ;n boo- 1116, Q•O• lf(I, of Otflcl•I ll•cord1 fn tn• olllce o! 111t. Count• l!t<Ord•• o! Oron•e Counrv, C•lllo•nl1. WI LL SELL ,lo T PUSLIC ,loUCTtON TO HIGHEST SlDDEI! FOii: c ... sH (Ol ••bl• I! !Im• of 1al1 111 l•wf\il "'""'' ol 1111 Unllr.r SIU.,) 11 !ne S0<i!n lr<>11t enlr•nco 10 I/It Old O•on;e Coun1v Cour1nou•1 on We>! $1h ST'lel, Cl1v of Soni• A.na, (II lfornid, all rlgh!. !Ille •n<I lnt..-t1t con. v1v'!'d •o ~nd n<lW 11•111 ~· It un<11r u Td D••d ol Tru1! In rne "'""'''• ol!u••t<l In me Cltv ot Colla Mou. \n 1a ld County •nd Slate a11crl"-d '" Loi J 01 Trau ~n. •• 11tr m11> •~COO"~d In b°"" 111 P•Q•• ll •o )! Of Ml1c1ll•nt ou1 Ml,,., In '"' o!!lc• ol 1nr coun!• rt cora•r cl ••Id counlv, Said ••I• will ~ m1do, bu! w lt...,ul co11tnan1 or w•"•""· ••l><'•n er lm~llo<I. reQardl"I! tltlf , pOHt nlon. or •n· cumbr1n<.e•, 10 PIY '"" •tmt lnif>O prln· f ;pal •u"' Of !M not• secured b• 1al<1 D~ 01 T•u1!, lo.wit: 113,Jll.H. will! ln!•r1J1 fr""' No\/omM< 1, lf i l, 8• In •aid n<llt i>rOVIOfd, t d111nCf&, II 1nv. undlr 11>1' ltrmo Of U lll Ot•d ol Trust, I""•· cll1r11•• •nd t•I»""' of ll'le Trut•~ 1nd ol rM !'wJt1 crt11td b• u ld Ol!O'l'.t Of Trul!. ll!O M noll<o1rv undtr ·••Id Dt•d of Tru11, bv ••••on ol 1 b•t•cl! or ti••1un In 11'1• D!)lla•lll"'• ••cu•td "'"l b• filrttolo•• •••cuttcl •"<I aellvtroo 10 th• und•r,lqnod • wrl!ltn Otcl••tllon o! D•10UI! and Otmand lor Sal•, 1nd wri!l•n none, ol h•••cn end ol oioctlon to tau" tll• ~nd•rloCn•d !O -.u '''" Q•opoorlY le '"'"ty '"'" obl,g1!oan•. 1na '""''"""'· °" Ftl>ro'"" ll. 1910. 1~r und•r1•11n•d <•u,.d <••d nohr• o• t>•r•c~ Ind d •lcr!loo 10 ~· •t co•dt d In 1>00'\ O)lo, 11<'11• •••• Cl 1old O!l·c••I flrco•ll• Dotto M•• 11. 0 10 C /\l lFO ~NIA L/\tlti A.N D INVE5!M£11T C.OMl'l 'IV ~•"Id Tou.to• Doro!ll• 1-1. Co owlo•d A.n l11tnt Stcr~I••• ,,., 2ltoll <'unl .. ntd 0'""11' Co1>1 0 111; Mo• 1~ •oa J\!no 1, ~. )9/Q HAL AlllSCHll HEARING AIDS Cnh"' Avrol Am,tlflc.tl191! MO t•LIESM•" 3409 &. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR ,., ... ,,.111t-...t 175-1131 Steer your gue11lA 10 \he Steak Houee Htslau· r1n1 for lhe famous Pioneer Stew or on e of the beal Steak. in Orange Counl)'! Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers LEGAL NOTICE Shop Sears Sundays 12 Noon to a p.m .•.. Monday tbru Saturda y 9:30 a.m . to 9:30 p.m. ( I / /. I I I . I I I ( I \ ; DAIL y PILOT I .11 42-GaHon Capacity Upright Water Healer ~rar~ I ,o ... ·, ~alt-Prii·e 7995 S2. t•llo• c:op.ciry •• • 1011011 c:opoc.lty 12 • 1011011 c:opac:lty ............ lt.9!1 ''·'' 1 at.ts ~-11,.( hr11lillit:-IJ ua l rl1•111P 11l~ pr.,,·idr 'f'hirk in~ulatio n 1tla~~ li11l'fl I an~·. lo11g Ii (~. Re9ular 69 .95 l l11tler l :outtlf:'I'" W'alrr fl c ulcr8 ~ale t•ri1·r1I 64118 •No pilot li1thl 10 "nrr) :ibuu1 • 4'.! llll L 1·apari1y • 1,,-,nii: lifr r-lr1n r nl ~ Sears \ -- \ / SUMMER SHIFTS Sears """'""''"'"''" .\sk ;\l)oul ~c.a r"' Co n\1en icnt Crrdlt Pl:in~ ..... " ..... ,,,,, .. " ... ~". '"" ,._ ...... ,. ... .. .,, ........ ,_.,,,,,, __ ............. .. _,., ......... .. ...... _ . .,. _,, ....... "" ....... , ............. _,.. ......... , .......... ' ,, ........... ,, ......... ... • I It's a long, hot summ er. but you 'll look cool 1:1nd refreshed in a summer shtft ... so pretty, so perky so practica l. • Mad e of cotton poplin, these sleevel ess 'hifl s are available in blu e, green and ye llow • Choose a shift that 's colorfully cmbro id· cred or acce nted with appliqu es • Sizes small lo large 399 Extra Sizes.... . . . . . ......•.. 4.99 ,\\;iil,1blr i11 thr "Lri ~11rrl:ind ·of the Lin t:t'ric Drpt. ............ "" .............. ''"" ~"-'""'" .. ................... .. -····"''"' ............ ............ , .. . ·~···· ·~ .......... . -.......................... ·-·· .... . ................... . .................. _ .. .. -. ..... .. . .. , ............. .. ... _ .... , .. . ·-. ·. ·.· : . .· : . .. . ' . SC 1• uAJLV Pll DT ~~---------- Ill Wgh Gear New Car Models Just 'Small Talk' By CARL CARSTENSEN Of -D1ll'f l'llfl S11H It setnis to be :;triclly "small talk" as plans are fonnulated for the 1971 models due in September. llenr y Ford 1o ld stockholders at the company's annual meeting ttlal Ford Motor Company will introduce lwo new Car Jines this fall. Ford said the completely new Pinto -smaller than an)' passenger car now offered by domestic manufacturers - will be introdu<:ed by Ford dealers and Lincoln !\1ercurv dealers will shov.· an all-neW <'Ompact car called t he Mercury Comet. ty required for cootinuing growth in our share of thi:ii expanding market.'' ''In the earlier years uf oor hi~'tory," he said, "~'e 1nel th.is demand (for et'onomical transportation ) by building one universal rar line. More recently. we have been first to develop nev.• van clie.s of .sm;:ill ca rs to meet the specia l demnnds of particular groups ol eustomers." As examples. F'ord 110\ed that t~ Mustang created a new market segment and .. 1s still the leader among small ~p ec ia ll y cars." The Maverick, he said. was design- ed for. and has :icluevcd, leadership in the fam ily com- pact car seginenr fn North America . -- TOP AWARD FOR CADILLAC MANAGER -Bob Rogalski. (2nd from right) service n1anager for Dick Nabers Cadillac in Cosla Mesa receives CadilJac Serv ice f\1 a nager 's l\\vard for Exce llence from Cadillac service representa- ti ve Clyde Goa de. Looking on is district ma na ~er Bob Millenbach lle ft ) and Dick Nabers. Rogalski has been manager at Nabe rs for three y ears and associated \Vi'th Cadilla c for 16. Ford sald the Pinto is "designed for leadership in tl1e market for s ma 1 l , economical, 111 u 11 l -purpost• cars -a n1arket scgn1ent that up to now has been oc- cupied only by in1por1ed sedans. .. The Capri:' he said. "wos designe<l ln l'.:urope to fill ..i he a1n1ed <i l 111ak111 g i! ~1 better previously untes ted dcniand car, and not JliSL diflerent for a low-priced s p o r t s -looking.". AUTO EXPO BEGINS FRIDAV Auto E xpo '70, A1nerica's biggesl import a uto shO\\'. featu ring more 1han 200 pro- tot ype and production sport s t a rs, nil'ing ma~hines and GT automobiles from all over the v.·orld opens this Friday for a !~day showing at the L.A. Sports Arena. CAMARO PRODUCTION STEPPED UP The re-designed I 9 7 O Can1aro i n t rod u c e d in Februa ry has reached 33,000 units in sales and the pace seems lo be continuing as J o h n DeLorean. Chevrolet division genera! manager has stepped up production to l lftO uni ls a day. De Lorean said Chev rolet will continue to ac- celerate production to keep pace with increasing dealer orders. ''The Pinto is a unique car -smaller than any other domeslic car no w in pro- duction or, as far ;is we knov.·. planned for prtxlucttoo." he said. "It is designed not only for low initial cost and ex cellent fuel t'Conomy, but also !or good performance combined Y.'ith minimum I i f e t i m e service and repair rosts. 1t is a simple car I.hat will re- quite little attention, and many owners will be a ble lo perfonn routine service opera- tions t.hemselves." Ford said the 1\.1ercury Cmnet -borrowing I.he narne of a previously highly suc- <:ess£ul Lincoln-Mercury entry in lhe con1pact segment - "will fill a demand for ;i small, economica l family car with a high level of styling . pe r fo rm anre and ron· venience.'' He !old shar eholder:-: that the Pinto and Comet are ''t11'0 more steps in your company's planned program to maint;iin leadership in the American small car ma rket." ''The 1971 model year." he said. "will bring greaUy in- creased competitloo in the American small car market, but we are confident that we will have both the product variety and the product quali- specia lty car st•al ed to Euro------------ pean sizr. It has been 11 runaway surcess in E uropl'. Since its introdu ction in the U.S. less than a 111onth ago. 1,inc.'Oln·Mercury dealers ha~'e been selling C3pris as fasl as we can bring them in ." f Qrd noted that thf' new Pinto na me has 11 "T" in it. and added · .. As far as J am concerned. the Pinto is the new Jl.1ode l ·r -bu t you c an get this one in a variety of colors, anything from Pinto gold lo Model 'T' bl ack. The fir:-;t !llodel T stood for sensible, s11n p!e motoring in n1y grandfather's day. But many peQp!e forget that it was also lively and easy to handle and fun to drive. This new version ol the Model T ~1.a nds for the same things. "When we started on lhe Pinto. l pointed out that thf' Tnarket needed the best lit11e c.1r dolla r for dollar and pou nd for pound that Pord has ever built. J told our people lhat l thought it should be simple, sensible. low-priced, I i g h I , li vely. durable and reliable. The Jl.1odel T lasted virtually wichanged for 19 years and with that in mind I felt "'e 8hould try to accomplish lhe same objective v.·ith the Pinto. Any changes in the Pinto v.•ill Appoi11ted N ewport National Bank's pres ident. G e or g e L. \Voodford has a nnounced the a ppoin t111ent of \Vi l- li am R. l leins to a vice p rrsidency. A Newport Beach r es ide n t, lieins 1s in c harge of commercial loans for the bank. lie is a n1cmber of the Newporl !{each Rota ry Club and the Balboa Bay Club. Your Money's Worth The collection or c a r :ii: represenl the fines! and most sought after products I rom n1 ~ufacturers in I ta t y . ~:ngland, France, Ger1nany. Sweden and Japan. Some of the attractions ioclude a pro- tutype Ferrari BerlineUa 512 S by Pinafa rina: !he unique, British.bu iH Zanda: t h c Bertone Runabout which is a combination Dune Bu g g y - Street Sportster and a sport Alfa 33. A full line of pro· ductions spor1slers wilt i:llso be represented. 11e credits I.he success of the Camaro to its "in- ternational .styling , improved ride and handling a n d favorable price position." The .Rally Sporl fronl end, dif- ferent from the reg u l a r Camaro bec::1use of a black grille .s·urrounded by a resi lient color-matched frame and split bumpers, is ac- coun ting for one out. of every foo r Ca1naro sales. Trailer Vacationland Opening in Anahei111 Vacationl a11d. Orange Coun· ry·s largest recreational vehi· f'le park, is now under con· slruction i111 Anaheim a nd is scheduled to opco in .June. Suhstitutio11 Ga1ne Boosti11g Basics Ope rated by Wrather Vaca· tionland. Inc., and adjaceF1t to the Disneyland Hotel. the park wilt provide hook.ups for !ravel trailers. motor homes. pick-up campers and lent trailers of every size. Firsl phase calls for 280 spaces on 10 acres, A second ten acres is available for r u r th er dev('lop111c nt. Vaca tlonland \Vii i be a delu xe, limited stay park. A 1nlnimun1 or lhr('e nights \VIII be required for a d v a • c e reservations. By SYLV IA J'OHTER ''Substituticril" :ilways hc1s been a key ~·capon you cou ld use to help c ut your t.'Ost of LEGAL NOTI CE SUl'ElllOll (OUllT OF THf )TATE OF (llllFOlll'llA 1'0 11 THE COUHTY 0 1' OllANOE No. A"'6111 NOTl(f 0 1' HEAll lNG 0 1' l'ETIT!ON 1'011 l'ROIAT E 01' Will AND 1'0 11 LETTEltS 0 I' A OMIN l~TllATION WI TM· T Hf ·WILL-I N>I EJC ED L>l•lr gf (llZ.f\BI: fl'l I"' CLOW •I·~ •"""'" •1 ELIZABET>i l"l:l f N CLOW. 0...:••""' NOTICC IS >i[ll.(BV GIVEN l "•lt D"lllf.N[ C. (AllP ENTf_I> "~' ! lP<J l!•r<ln • o•h!lon tor 01co~•• o• "'"I •r><I !gr L•tl•'> o! Aa"''""""''nn "'"~ ti>• Wlll·~ ..... 000 '•'"'""<" "' wno(I\ '' moot lo• ""'"•' 0•'11(~l~t •"O flt,ol !/\• •Im• """ nl•C• of ""'""q '"" ,~mr 110 """°" "' 16• J""" " Hla •! 9 JO • m "' In• '""'''""'" OI O oi>ertmonl No •·' '~'" • ''"' ·" 100 c, .. ,< C•nT., n•iv• ,~ "'• I " ol ~~n•• •~8. (.~Id"'"·~ 01t"" M11 11. 19/U W [ ~T JOll~l, Covn!v C•••~. SELIM S. l'llJ.NK llN, lOI ll!ul 11th 5rr•O!. Coit• Mt ,., c amornl• '101 Tel: 1714! 10 7111 ,..,..,....,, !or "ttltktnar Puhl"hod O••n~• CC><>" 0 1<1• <'•In! M•• 13, 71, JG. \tlll •1• l'D li ving -and sinee !lus in- flation spiral took off in 196ft. J. an1ong others, h a v 1' repe atedly reeommended ii policy of ''subst1tu1ion" f11r 1ncats and· other foods. for non-foods and s e r v i c e ~ \.\hcrever feasible . Bui nov.'. ironically although understandably. your adopt ion of this pohcy on a mass scale is driving up the prices of !hr popular substitutions morr r:1p1d ly than U1e original t11ghcr·pr1ced items. In short. ;1~ inflationary price inc rcasr-; rl r;un nur J)f)t kctbonks. 11e h;ivf' rf•wrr ;ind f('\.\'Cr \.\'a~~ t() rroh·rt n11rselv(•s. TO l'l'T IT ~ucc inctlv. wh1lr hainburgcr is a fine s~bs\1tu1r for steak , chersc and dried tw..ans are scarcely ~a!isfac· tory substitutes for ham- burger, \Vhen !hr prirr~ or 1he Your reliiiives have descended. And they need your car. Where does that leave you? CSoee to home with your Ford Rent-A-Car dealer, that's where! Rent a new Ford. Mustang, 0< Torino for ' day, week or month. l ow rates ... insurance included. FORD RENT·A·CAR SYSTEM THIO~DORE ROBINS FORD ltrMH.....,ltYtll.-J C....M .... C.i~ MJ.fll!,. .. WILSON FORD 11155 heclr lh·d. H1111tl1191011 '-<Ir, Calif. 141·•,l I ba.~ic.~ in foods. goods a'tl d Sl·rv1ce~ climb more r apidly lhan the prices t1f luxuries in these spheres, the danger signals are flyi ng very high. To illustrate, between the s-tarl or '69 and ·10, the cost tjf hamburger rose 11.9 per- < rr1 1 -more Lhan twice the S 8 percent rise for sir loin :-;teak . The average price or a pound of hatnburger was 6fi tents acrord1ng to latest 0Hic 1al nationwide Bureau of Labor !jtatisl1cs figu res. ALSO DURING this same 12·mflnth period. the price of ho1 dogs rose 13.6 percC'ill - nearly double the 6.8 percent nse for roast beef. Al latest official report. frankfurters cost an average of 83 cents a pound throughout Lhe U.S. Several times during "69. I underlined how big a bargain turkey was and how you could adapt turkey fo r year-round meals. Between January and January. though. po u 11 r y prices rose a full 9.6 percenl -\.\'ilh the key factor behind this iucrease a jump of nearly 14 percent for turkey. The BLS now reports lhe average price for turkey al 56 cents a J)(lllnd·. AN I) SO IT has gone. fresh and frozen fisb. prices rose l:l .3 percent from January to J iJnuary: pork (another tradi- tionally !nv.·er cost bee f substitute) rosr t7.2 percent overall : beef liver was up <.·lose to 12 percent; liverwurst was up nearl y Tl percent: sausage. 18: bololflla , 13 : eggs. 19 percent. /\s for bacoo. this ha.~ entered the category of gourmet. condilnenl foods. This is in direrl contrast to the trend in the previous couple or years. for then. you may rec.an. the big boosts \\•('re for sirloin steaks. roast lx:f'f . vea l cutlets. And it was 111 beat these increases and ~till get sufficient protein that 1nillions Qf Arrkrk:ans "traded flown " from hlg!)..priced cuts of beef to ha mburgers irod hot dogs. chicken and fish. And the same trend is evi · 1h·nt across !ht> bnard. Among vrgeutbles, such old standbys :is carrot s. cele1·y an d tom:i !oes all increased 19 per· t't'nt or more . AJ\IONC; H0~1E ownersh ip tosL~. prices arr rising rapidly for such necessities as repair of furnaces and washing rnachines. replacement of sinks, reshingling of roofs. Among t ranspo rtation costs. public transit fares are r ising n1ore rapidly than any other 1naJOr <'ategory. And trad1- !ionally bargain inter.cit y bu!\ fares arc climbing at a r:ite nearl.v four limes th at of nrw r ar prices. Aniong per::;onal care 1tcn1 ~. prices for d()>it·you rsel f hornr permanent refill<> ;ire 1n. <Teasing lastrr than price~ or t old wa ves pt'rfonned at the hairdresser. Among \l'Ollll!n·s :ipparel cosls, casual shoe prices are rising faster than evening shppers. A mo n g alcoholic beverages. w 1 n r pr ices are rising fou r 11mes as fast as 1.,.hiskey prices. Among helath costs, semi- private hospital room rate:-: are rising faster than private room rales. THIS 196 .. 71) era i s m u rder o u s : bu s r,1css recession, a stock market crash, climbing unemploy- ment. mounting bankruptcies and now an innation zeroing -in. on the basics. And the moot tragic aspect of all ls lhal at the heart of it is a v.•ar which everyone says musl be ended but which drags ell and on endlessly. Loa1is Total $1,333,230 The \.\'estern home office of the Prudential ~ranee Co. announced tod that real estate loans in ange Coun!y amounted to .SI , .230 du ring the fi rst three months of 1970. Robert F, Hayes, Orangr COOnty 1nvestment11 manager said that the entire amount was for metropolitan prop. erties. ln Califo rnia, r e a I estate Io a n disbursements amounted to $2$,149.31 4 with $25,072.814 for metropolltnn pu rposes and $76,500 for farm properties. The park's facilities will in- clude a large recreation ha !t with special television viewing area. billiard room. card playing area and lounge . A chi ldren's playground. heated and rilt ered pool, sa11.itation stations \.,.i!h sho w ers. restrooms and dre s s ing rooms. a11d a la rge lundery room with coin -operated washe rs and dryers will also be provided . -·-.. ~ ._,.. ~ --·-l . , I Fi.i1a11ce l B1·iefs J ANACONDA. J\·l o n t an a IUJ>iJ -Anaconda Co. said \Vedoesday il bas encountered high-grade copper mineraliza - tion on lands it owns about 20 miles southwest of Salt Lake City, Utah. C. Jay Parkinson, chairman, told shareholders at the an· nual rneeting the mineralized zones oceur at depths that would require underground mining. He said the company is conducting further ex- ploration to de t er m i n e whethc,r a large-scale i;nining operation is feasible. 'l'est drilling:; sho\\·ed ore grades of l 1h to 3 percent, he said. Anaocnda bas been stepping up its copper development programs in the United States since its two biggest Chilean properties were "nationalited by agreemerit" last year. High co pper prices and short sup- plies also are s purring development of new copper properties. WILMINGTON, Del. (UPI) -Du Pont Co. announced price increases ranging from Yi cent to 301'.z cents a pound on molding and extrusion grades of custom color lucite •crylic resins. ROCHESTER. N.Y. (UPT) -Bflusch &: Lomb announced plans to expand il s U.S. facilities for produ c ing 01ihthahnic lenses with con- slruc!lon of a 175 ,000 square foot 1>111111 <It Oakland, Md . lhat \viii cost f3 million. OIS Boss Dons Tie In Crisis GENEVA fUPll -Bernard Cornfeld ha.!1 made $ I O O million and l i v e s on Lake Geneva in a 20-room villa with a gold toilet. Yet things are not going well for him. Cornfeld, who in JO years built Investors 0 ver se a s Services ( IOS) from a one· room ope.ration in a Paris hotel to a billion dollar finan. cial complex. was forced to resign as chair1nan and chief executi\•e last week because the company was fa ltering. SINCE TILE.~ Lhe 42.year- old bachelor has been in seclusion in his Geneve villa . built for J osephine by Napoleon. Though he retained a posi - !IQn on !he 27-n1an board of direclors of !OS and bas many Qther Interests -f r o m girls tu racing horses -Cornfeld's career as perhaps the biggest influence on Europ e an capitalism is in at least tem- porary eclipse. It was outside inter ests thal Ma1~ket Delayecl In Transmission Stock market activity saw the Dnw J ones ln- dustrial average off more than 20 point.s near the fi nal bell today but transm ission facilities broke down a nd lhe DAILY PILOT was unable to publish its regualr stock market report, norma lly on 11.hjs page. The DAJLY PILOT regrets this inconvenience to readers The industrial average \v a s a t its lowest level today s ince December of 1962. Turnover \vas 1nod- er ately ac tive . Analysts said the market continued to be d o\.\'n by economic unce rtainty , Indochina, 1.he Middle East and the widespread negative p sy- chology stemming from the m arket's prolo nged £1id e. The clos ely wat ched DJIA was hovering around the 642 to 643 range, and con1pared with a closing of 640.14 on Dec. 18, 1962 . Volume f\.fonday was 12.66 milli<ln. c ompared v.'ith 12.17 million Friday. Declines led advances by 1.370 to 130. Analyst~ said this dis proportion indicated a lack of inter es l in buying. The New York Stock Exchange index of son1e in 200 ~ommon s tocks was off 1.24 at 38.20, lowest level s ince the week of Aug. 9, 1963. There were 911 new lows and no new high!i. • apparently led lo his downfall. ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:. ll E SEEl\1ED TO L 0 S E ~ interest in !he day-to-day af- fair~ of his company as it grew in size to a complex that included 18 mutual funds and &O companies Invol ved in insu rance, real estate and banking. "Bemie'' spent much or the past year roaming the world in his jet in the company of \'arious pretty gir·ts and personalities such as Playboy m:ignate Hugh Hefner. He affected a beard and \VOre Pierre Ca rdin sui ts and bright patterned scarves in- stead of conventional business suits and ties. Instead of an ove rcoat. he draped a cloak arou11d his shoulders. TllE FINANCJAL picture at !OS "''a.~ deteriorating and \\'hen CprnFeld came back to t<ikc the reins it was loo late ;u1d he \vas forced flU l. ··He put on a white shirt 11 ith lie. and a dark sui t,'' an associate remarked. ''That meant there was trouble." lOS assl1'.s now have fallen to <1bout $1.9 billion from a peak of $2.3 blll ion, !bough Ettropean financial e"perls fi nd 1\ difr1cult lo conceive that 11 could actually go under. 11 i~ dou blfu1. too, that Cornfeld is feeling a n y particular financial pin c h , since his perso na l assets are eslimed el more than $100 million. He has at least $:ID million in JOS stock. plus millions invested elsewhere. He has h\'O castles. v i 11 a s in Californ ia, M e x i co alld elsehwere, and a r a c i n g stable. ALL TlDS HAS b e e n assembled since 1958 when he fou nded JOS as a sort of super mutual fund that invested in other funds. The U . S. Securities and Exchange Co m- mission refused permission to sell tbc stock in the United States. so his business was restricted tn overseas. CORNFELO EJ\1PLOYED 14,000 s:ilesmen ~·ho fanned across the countryside and brought back money at a Fan- tastic rale. At one point. sales 1n \Vest Gern1 :i ny a lo ne a ve raged more than $1 n1illion a 1lay Cornfcld. 11 native of lstan· hul who grew up in Brooklyn. found it hard lo make fri ends \~ithin the staid 1'~uropean ban king establishment. Even the hiring of such men as J ames Roosevelt Jr., Erich Mende and Sir Eric Wyndham \Vhite did little to enhance lhr respectability of JOS. Now that Cornfeld has lost most of his power in the organization, IOS has changed. Its employes talk quietly, with none of the brassy boast ing of people who thought nothing could go wrong. There have been numerous dismissals to cut costs and no on e knows who will go next. L.iquida tion Considered NEW YORK (UPI) Hudson & Manhattan Corp. said \\'ednesday ii is con- sidering a partial liquidation of its assets. Walter T. Margells Jr., presiednt. told the annual shareholders meeti ng n o timetable could be fixed because the company Is still negotiating with the Jntemal Revenne Service for 1 ruling that it incurred 1 tax loss on the sale or il.!I p'roperties to the Port or New York Authority. The authority in co • de111na1ion proce edings seized ll & M's terminals and rRil line. in September 1962 , lriggcring litigation l hat wnsn •t sell led until October 1968. •• Who Reads the Stars For the Stars? ., ,, .... ~. ,_ ;.( ! .. • It's Sydney Omarr • ,. And now this articul ate writer who ha$ been called the "astrologer's astrologer'' reads the stars for you. Sydney Omorr, longtime personal ast rologer to many of Hollywood·s and the ti terory world 's most famou s stars, is o DAILY PILOT columnist. Omorr's record for accurac y of prediction s bosed on astrologica l analysis is omozing. Whether you reod astrologicol forecasts for fun or os a serious s·tudent of st or-gazing, you'll enjoy Sydney Omt!lrr's doily column in the DAILY PILOT ~l I t All 1,000 of u ~ Had a Busy Day Today We created and d elive red another fr esh edition of The DA IL Y PILOT TEAMWORK produces each day's all-new DAlLY PILOT. Often staffers, like Thomas Fortune (left), Ne\vport Beach city editors, work with a staff photographer like Palrick O'Donnell to gel the story ~th in wor?s and pictures. The staff shot 70,000 pictures last year to 11lustratc t.ne varied story of Orange Coast life. Nobody knO\\'S ho\v m<iny local stories we wrote. Nol even us. CREATIVITY helps advertisers tell their stories and sell their goods in the affluent market served by the DAILY PILOT. ?o.taury Gardner of dis· play advertising departn1enl loo ks ol'cr tayout wilh DAILY PILOT staff artists Anne Hamblin (left) and Charlolle Andresen. The ad they're di~· cussing will be ready to appear in the newspa per only hours after artists put final touch£"s on the layout and it is approvC'd by the advertiser. a l<r cal retail merchant. ~ ~· l f QUICK llA NOS pl<1cc lines o( type, ads and cuts (th e metal plates used to reprocluce pictures) into page forms ;1g 1hc day 's product begins to t<1ke shape. Compositor Arden J\·1:ilsb11 ry 1s unly one of a platoon of printers who "build" the news p;igcs under pressure of deadlines, \1•ork- ing against the clock to bring re<1dcrs thl' latC'st avail;iblc information in each edition during the day. ""P.-.... -----~--'' • DWVERY of the ne"'s paper is a speed event, too. Conveyor belts carry the papers lhrough the mailroom where they are automatically tied in bundles of 50 and tossed to \\'ailing circulation district managers {l ike Blaine Roberts. shown here, (right ) who speed them via a 40.vehicle neet to carriers for deli very. h·lailroom foreman George Arauz (left) and his crew can n16ve.' 20,000 newspapers an hour. VOLU!'ilE is the word at the Copy Desk. DAILY PfLOT Copy Desk Chief Norman Anderson (right) aided by Tom Titus (background) and other copyreaders every day sift s, checks and edits more wire reports from worldwide news services than the S\'erage weekly news magazine pub- lishes. Editors scan enough telephotos to wallpaper a living room every 24 hours. Speed, born of experience, helps them k~p it all fresh, too. TllE WORDS are r eady. Marjorie Jackson feeds them in to a $25,000 computer, a DAILY PILOT investment in speed and accuracy, which uses a logic system to hyphenate words as it reads characters at the rate of 1.000 a second and punches a new tape which will activale anolher machine for automatically setting type at high speed. The machines can set type al the rate of 6,000 lines per hour. PRESSURE here is both physical and mental. Charles J~aubrick, stereo- type foren1an, checks impression made by pa,l.(e full of l}'pe on a ma t squeezed by 1,800 pounds of pressure per squurc inch in the mat roller. h1al can be c11rvcd and used as a mold to form the curved pl;iLrs v.•hich fi t onto cyli ndrrs of high-s peed printing presses which print tl1C" DAILY PILOT. It'.~ pa rt of the quick ·paced daily pr0Cc$S nf reproducing 100,000 words for DAILY PILOT subscrlbers to rear!. ---'"""'="' ' .... "' .,.;.~;' ,,.,.. • '{ft W" :.....,, ~. ,,-~ •.ll ~- ~fOOERN equipment helps the accounting department keep up with the "today" pace at the DAlLY PILOT. Even as lhe day's newspaper is being sped lo its readers, Sunnie Chauvin begins feed ing figures into a desk model cornputer':i accounting con1ote. lt helps keep track of bllling:i for ads and subscriptions. The machine, one of several tied in to the main computer. helps handle 5,000 accounts a month . • RAPID communciation is the name of the game. Supervisor "Nita" Folsom and her crew of "ad·viscrs" handle 1,000 Lransactions a week by phone, resulting in publication of 5,000 classified ads -words which help people buy, sell, rent or I e a s e ... even find lost dogs. ht any of the DAILY PILOT'S ISO phone lines are plugged in here, lhe classified advertising de- partment, home of "Want Ads" and Dime-A-Lines. P ICI1JRES, too, get the benefit of skilled, eff icient handling by master craftamen who re-photograph lhe1n and then transfer the images to I .sens!Ured metal plates which are used to reproduce the photos as read- ers will see them in the newspaper. llcre, Chuck Ryan takes a r eally close look at a negative which '~ill be used to etch the image on the metal plate. FINISHED PRODUCT is checked by Elv;ood Anderson, press crew chief, even as high-speed presses continue to roar at 60,000 impressions per hour completing the day's run on press unlts \\'hich represent an investment of $3.5 million. Eleven-man press crew will feed into these machines the equivalent of a roll of paper one page wide and 110,000 n1ilcs lon g in printing the DAILY PILOT this year. AUt05T before the Ink is dry, the product of our busy day is to:ised ~eftly on your l~wn or porch by one of our 700 newspape:rboys who are important links 1n the cha in of people it lakes to bring you today's news and features .today in the DAILY P LLOT. And as our young independent merchants, like John h1eJton here. make thei r deli veries, we're gearing up for anothu busy day -all I,000 or us. The •Now' Newspaper for All The Communities Of Tl1e Growing Orange Coast ' H DAIL y PILOT Democrats Also Have K ey Worry WASHJ NGTON (UPI) Democrats cry a lot these days about two ma ju r ehort.ages: Casft to pay their bill~ and a "natural " opponent for Presiden t Nixon in 1972. 'There Is something else they don 't have, and it could be just as serious for !be future -1976 as .,.,·ell as 1972 . Tl is the absence or an opposition platform. a program of at lea.st genct:ll alternatives to the gro .... ·ing list of plans Nixon is offering as Ule Republican agenda for lhe 1970's. There is 2 th('(Jry that nn important advant.age of !he ''out" party is the fact that It does not have to take firm positions on specific issues, and indeed can do better by simply critit•izing the pt"Ople in power. TI1e <•rgument goes that Nixon won I.hilt v.•;1y in 19611 and that Goldwater lost in 1964 because he gaye the Den1ocrats a li ~t of issue "targets" to snipe al. The trouble v.·ilh that Lhoory as applied to the Democrats is that it assumes they are now in the same position as 1he Republicans ""'ere in 196Q. 68. There are two imn1ediately apparent flaws in this reason· ing. First, the Democrats arc not totally without power and the respon.5ibility that goes with it as the GOP was during the Kennedy.Johnson years. As Jong as the Democrats con- trol Congress, they cannot sit back and bl ame the Republicans for everything that goes wrong. A second difference is the advocacy role that t h e Democratic party fil led during the political era that began with Franklin D . Roosevelt. Perhaps FDR did not have a speeific program to deal witti the Depression when he came to office, but he ~nd his party quickly did becon1e associated with bot h a detailed set of proposals and an ac- ti vist philosophy of govern- ment to deal with national problems. H a r r y 'l'ruman won in 1948 by promising to carry on the war-interrupted Ne\\' Dea l. .John J<"'. Kcnncdv did it in 1960 \.\'ilh sornc arlditions to the old programs. but \.\'ith essentially lhe sa me ';makt things move" concep t of nationa l leadership. Both Truman and Kennedy won narrotl'ly and it certainly could be argued thal it was the herit<1gc of New Dea l Jssucs a n d governmental philo90Phy that turned the · trick for them. In any case. t.hc Democrats won seven (If tile ten presidential elections be tween 1932 and 1968. None of this is to suggest that the way back for the Democrats is lo resurrect the true fa ith or the Hooscvl'll years. For one thing , Kennedy and Johnson just ab o u l com pleted enact1nent of the New Deal. For another, the nation's problc1n s and con- cerns are vastly different. Ou t of fl o .,.,. r r. the De morrat s havr <in oppo rtunity !l'\JI\' In searc-h ou1 prograrns 1u 1lcc1l 11 1tl1 th•: nation"s new probl e1n~ anfl !n offer lhl'm :1s l'<1111pL•1i1hlll t!) the adn1111islr <1t1011 ·~ pn1i1•1S;tl.~. Although df'nicd tht• \\"l1ilc !louse, they havl' 1h1· 1IHH'.n·~· ~ion~il forun1 ln t·nn1111;111rl l•llb- lir at1cntion. <incl l'I •·n nl tht'ir offerings arc \'etncd. the prf)- cess of builrling a nr1~· issur- oricnlcd party follo.,.,·ing 111111 be under way. If they are going to embark on this course. U1e l)eITTQcrals y.•ill have In !iIB rt soon. Nixon ha.s begun to lead t h c ttepubl1cans inf() a prograrn commit.inent that co u Id pre-empt rnany Democratic cttcmatives. The President may already have seized the fields of pollu- t.ion-conlrol. w c l f a r c and draft.reform. and his revenue· sharing proposal could ""'Ork to isola te national Democrats from the minorities and the poor in the cilies '1•ho arc demanding more c i t i z c n participation in govern1nenl. Of COU NIC, the Democrats might a lso be able to "'i n without going through the hard work of committing themselves oo issues if the! Republicans completely botch the job and the voters lose ('Ollfidence in their leadership. Afler all, that kind of thing has happened before -19~2 and 1968 are the most recent examples. For Advertising In WEEKENDER . . • Phone 642-4321 Monday, May 25, 1970 SHOP SEARS SUNDAYS 12 Noon to 5 P.M. Monday thru Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M- • END-OF- MONTH Sears Heavier and Stronger Tire Body Extra- Wide Tread . ~· .. • ----:."'-"" .... ... -.• -. • ' 30Month G11a1·anteed 6 .50 xl3 T UBELES8 Blnckwallo Regular '19.95 rf r ade-In Prjce 95 P lus J.78 F.E.T. And Old T ire I UINA P•llt" TA 1-4400. Sll -4530 CA NOGA PAI.It 3'0-IW-61 l l MONTI 01 3~•11 OllNOAU CH 11-tOOC, Cl 4-4•11 MOLLTWOOO NO •·SHI IHGUWOOD 0 1. 1·2 521 COM'10H NI f ·!lti , Nl 2 -176t $EAU, a Ol!BllClt AND Ct), COVINA •K ·0611 Silent Guard · 2 Fiber Glass Belts PLUS4 Polyester Cor d Plies 4 0 Months Guaranteed " Extra- Deep Tread Regular '29.95 'J'rnde-Jn }>ri ce C78·13/6.50.d3 1.'nheles8 Blackwall l 'lu:;~.O~ 1:.~~.1'.AndUJd 'firc _.ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE 1 :uaranlr,.d Ai;a in.o.t: All rirc f.iilurcs from nonnal road h.izards or dl·lc:(.fS io matcrlat , •I ...,,,rkmanship. For How Lo11g: For rhc life of the original rrl~.1.L \\1bat !-'1•:i r~ \\ill JJo: I u cichange for the r1re, rt:place ir. char,i:::ing !Or 1he proportion <>l current sel I 1 o,;; price plus Federal Exci'c ·r.ix rh.1r rt•f'rc:scnts 1rcad used. Repair punctun:s af uo 1'.hari.:c. l : ",1r;111lf'('d ,\i;ai n~1: ·rrc:iJ Wt'<trnur. r,,,. 11,,w L••ni;: 'fhc nun1hrr of month;; ~!'l"~ it Jl"J. \\hat !"}o•ar.~ Will l)o: Jn cxdiangc tOr tl1c tirl·, rep!.ne ir. lhargin,i::: the current sell• i n,i.: pnre rlus J;edcral Excise "f ax less tht'" follov.·in,1: ,1!J1iwancc: ~!untidy Gu;irantf',. ! ~ 10 :" i .\Jfn"'"llDCC JO";, 2ur;, :") .. ;, H··~..,\:o.r Sale ~fZF. 1·.: .. 1 ... (11 Tr. .. l~-lu F.l::r. l'rir<• l'rio·,. Tl 1BEI .ESS 111:.AC!.;:W ~ Lf. ----f~78-t :{[h.51tx I :~ :_!1 ).9!} 22.1>!1 2.lt2 F78-14f?.7Sxl4_:!S.9:> ~8.9S 2.14 t.7R-l il/8.2~'{1 ·l :~8.95 ~l .')5 ~.60 ------- T lJ BELESS W l l LTEW.~LL ~~7R-l 4/7.3'ix I ·I .!( iJ-''I) 1,-., ., ... • I. ·~-...:.:...·•--:.:.=-·~ F7R.1 4/7.75x 14 :18.95 :!J .9:; _ _;!.4_!_ Ci8.J4/8.25x I 4 41.9.) ~:~}),:; 2.61) G78-l 5/8.15x l S 41 .CJ.; :tJ.9.) 2.60 H78-l 5/8.45xl 5 4 l.'J5 311,():) 2.Rn H78-l 4/8.55xl4 tJ..1.9;; ;j.l.9.) 2.80 TERRIFIC · VAL UES ! Siz" F.KT. .95x14 .35x14 2.f) 7.75xl4 2.1 7 .25xl4 2.H 7.75x l 5 2.19 YOUR CHOICE 1295 l ONO II.I.CH HI S..0121 OlT~C & SOTO AH 1·1 211 PAI ADrNA 61 1~11 1, J 51-4211 POMONA NA •·S1•1 l'ICO WI 1-42•2 Se a1·~ Low, Low Price! 95 6.5 0 xl3 Tube)e!'l.!C Blackwall Pins I . 78 F.E.T. AndOld T irr JOllTH COAST l"l..llA S~ TOl:IANCI IC2•1f 11 U'lANO 91J·l9:17 Shop Nlghls Mon, thrv Sat. 9130 A.M. to 9 130 P.M.., IUIMloy 1.l Noon te S P.M. "H ti1factlon GvGront"" er Your MoMY 8DCk" SANTA ANA kl J~.)7 1 J ANl"A n ll'IUNOI 94c.ll)l I J a.NTA MONl(A Ill 4•67 l f VAlllT l'O 3 ·M61, fM•llM VII.MONT n .. 1f11 I \ ' l I Mollday, MilY 25, 1970 s DAI L V PILO~ :J N u~lear Plant Pnbli~ Relations Tough • ID . ' J, I ' • , . By JOH~ VALTERZA or"" D•ll• Plltl Sltll t..!arines were firing practice n1ort:ir rounds on C!!mp l'cntllcton when a houscv.•i fe s:iunk'red into the 11sitor bu ilding at the San Onofre nuclear generating plant. "Is your ph1nl work ing today?" "Yes, rna'a1n," the host said. •·r lhoug'1t so," she said .,.,ith great authority.•·\ can hear those aloins being split down tl1ere ·· The wo111an, of course, v.·as confusing l\!;1nne 1nort...1rs with Edison a toin~. Splitting atoms is easy for Southern California Edison Cnmpany. Oinvincing the public th;H 11$ nuclear power plant is safe, clean ancl beneficial isn't. Hccause of the awe:-.01ne nature or thi.'" \l"Ofd •·nuclear.'' the flrrn, along v.·i!h San Diego Ga~ and f.leclnc (which has a 20·!)f'rcent stake 1n present and future plants; ha~ run a busy visitor's center near ol d Pacific Coast Highway 11bove the ball-shaped reactor building and the generator complex, About 500,000 per'$0ns -muny of the student:; -have stopped by to view the fa cility's expensive displays showuig how the controlled nuclear fission reac- tion produces heat, whlc~ produces ~teani. which then turns the turbines, which produce electric power. lf some of the visitors leave the exhibit stilt so1newhat wary, a trip through thf' complex it.9elf might help them to better Wlderstand the proces!I. But the volume of visitors makes such lours impossible, center aides said. If you were lo make a tour this is v:hat it v.·01.ild be like: Thf' familiar dome itself, equipped v.·ith vault-like doors, houses the plant's silent nurlear reactor filled with rods contain· 111g nullions of uranium oxide pellets. Fe1v persons ever enter the reactor chnn1bf'r itself because of the radiation, bul the r adioactive levels present are still beneath government "ceilings••, guides said. The reactor ilBe.U rest.s at dead center of the sphere. It Is ob long, and above it protrude dozens of large control rod.1 which reach inside into clusters of stainless steel tubes filled with the radioactive fuel. The reaction between the control rods and the fuel creates Ule heat which is captured by circulating purified wattr. That hot fluid turns to steam, ltltn is forced into whining, hugti..pressur11 t.urbines, where standard electrical generating take!; place. After the steam is spent. it is ocole<l, returning to water ready to begin the process again. The process is the subject oC many misconceptions. "A lot of observers think the water is lull of radiation and is dumped into the ocean alter it turns the generators," a spokesman said. !See ONOFRE, Page 11) Streets Expensive Problem $1.7 il1illion Neelletl to l1nprove Clemente Roads ~\. Dl'tades <1go S<1n Cle1nl'nle"s most vex- ing a nd coslly CBpita! irnprovement pro- blen1 was its 1niles of rutted, y.•eed-chok- l'd st reets. SOMETHING OUT OF SCIENCE FICTION? NO, JUST SAN ONOFRE NUCLEAR PLANT UP CLO SE Plan to Paint Reaction Sphere a nd Call It the "Beach Ball" Was Rejec ted by Edison Brass Today -minus n1ost of the 1\'ef'ds and rut s -the same streets, plus miles of ncy.• ones, are sti11 a municipal headache. City councilmen and staff alike in recent wreks have po!ldered the issue 11fter hearing endless complaints during the recent spring elections. Retiring Tax Collector Viejo Residents Start Ball Rolling For Youth Center To seek an ans wer, l\layor Walter r~vans' first announced goat as council heln1sman was to seek a definite, five- :year.policy governing street maintenarn::e ;ind construction in the ci1y, Not 'Picking' Siiccessor And an ensuing re-port from three rnt•mbcrs of the e1ty .staff proved predic- tably grim. ll v.•ould cost nearly $1.7 million to Retiring Orange County Tax Collec:tor Don S. Mozley has stated th;it he I!'\ not making any endorsen1cnt for can- d idates running for the office. l\1ozley's announce1nent f o 11 ow e d r epeated inquiries as to his preference for successor to the post he has held for the past 30 years. Compeling for the non-partisan offitr are David G. llitchcock, county budget Uirector. and Joe R. GrCf'ne and H.oberl L. Citron, both deputies in f..1ozley's office. The inquiries to !\-1ozlry wrrc baser! on a<lverliscn1ents being plarrd in newspapers by Citron allrging en- tlorsemcnl by 11 "f..1r. and Mrs. Charles Mozley." Charles Mozley is the lax col- lcctor·s brothPr. Candidate Hitchcock said the brother's cn<lorscn1Pnt rould be mistonstrurd ,1'.'; hacking Uy the !ax collector. ··which is rinphatically not so." he added . For his part. ~·lozlcy s;i1d. "All thrre been consc1ent1ous en1ployes for 111an.v years. I've linov.•n Hitchcock ;is a [clto1v department head <Ind I "m sure he cou ld do the Job equally well.'' Thel}e 'Velri cles' Don't Pollute Does the S:Jddleback V<.illey need a cto the JOb, or an increase of about ~uuth eentcr? 58 cents on the tax rate -a lel"y whi ch 1he law woul d not allow . ~1cmb<·r~ of lhe i\11s1>ion V i e j o As an addect throb to the he adache, llumeownt'rs Assoc1<1!k111 th ink so and City Engineer Phil Peter told councilmen arc lr)ing to do something about 1\. rl'Cenlly , that su1n would only pay for h repairs lasting five years, meaning tha t Al " fl"<:enl forun1 I t>.y sponsored as soon as the five-year program ends, 011 dr11g 11bl1Sl', youths present pointed the city v.·ould have to spend as much up the f;ict that young J)C'Ople have -or n1ore -to stait all over again. {1n!y "<'ho11l ar-livi1ics to occupy their The city's present program of repairing frl"c 1unc. streets wilh gas tax funds is ba rely keeping its nose <tbove water, Pete r Thi· llomeO\\'!l('rs have been hosting explained. id1·a.galhenng n)eetings to 1ry and work 1'hus far, the gas tax refund from 11111 s11tnl' \\'ay to bnng a regional youlh the State of California ha! helped pay ri nlcr Jnl o existence for Sad<llcb<ick for stree.l work in San Clemente with Chc\Ton's r,.:1 10 V.'On'\ rlo :1 d11rn 111111g an inroine or about $100,000 a year. f I II I \l;lllr.v\ 1l'rna"ers. or :-ornl' 1·rl11 c c~ in 1c 1lllc Urnn~c " \\li!h 1he city's current balance in Cn11n1y h.:in1 let of La l'alrnn. lln(' suf'11 rncc!ing v.•i l! l:ikr placr: the fund of $:JOO,OOO , about $1.3 million You need a bnH~n1 ;ind b11eli1·\ nr \\i,dnrsd.:iy, i\l:1y 'l.7 at 1 :10 p.in. 111 o.:ouldhc raised overthcncxtfiveyears. ~n oat a<lditivc such :is J\1aalox to cnrnh:it tlh· :.1issiun \icJn lligh Scho:.il nnrlli-llul ciry rin::1ncr dirrclor f;('r<'llr! thcir pollu t1un. Tenchnul said one single project -El Jnlc rna lio11 4:tl Foot] t 1ty Attornl'Y Hodgc r Howell h::i~ issut>d puqMisc rooin. C:1m1no ll.eal -could wipe the fund ;in opinion Thur~day to thf' cffert lhnt The sun1 of all the suggestions lrom out. Al Vi ejo AFS I\fec l horses are four-legged veh1clts and su b-previous rncPtings 1\:ill be presented and f'cter's suggestion f(ir raisi ng the ject to certain controls under the il i:-.cu ~sed. The meeting will b e ni nn1'y sk1r1 s the special assessment Foods from a round the \Vorld will California Vehicle Code. district 1ne1)}0(t of mrnding strcrts and he featured in a Dimr A Dip dinner The La Palma City Council then inodf'r.1ted by !\like Shearer. homeowners t•nibraC<!s 11 bond election. instead. lo be given by the Mission Viejo Chapter orr1ercd the police dcpar1rnenl to i.~s11e prl'sident. The assessment district \\"outctn·t v.·ork, of AmericaPI Fi('ld Service on TueSday, citations lo any c1l1zc11s nabbe1l n d111g Shearer hopes that the ideas v.·111 run he said. for these reasons: in the f\.1ission Viejo lligh School cal-their horS('S on the sidewalk of the !he gani ul from v.·hat is to be included. -The relalively short life span of f'tcria. rtt'.'dgling suburb. the street 11·ork, five years. v.·ould prn- Proceed! of the dinner 1\•ill go toward "You'd gel a lickPt if you flr1iv<' your '1·ay~ 10 finanrf'. and 3 preliminary pro· b~bly spur a loud public outcry desplte i;ponsoring a foreign student and Mission rar on 1he side11·alk," declared ;\la) or grarn ol <1c1iv1ties. \\•arnings of the short-term employ· Viejo High 11ext fall. Jake '\1estra. The public is inv itf'd. n1ents, ll would only !earl to charges ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~ El Rancho has the hottest price in town! SPRINGFIELD 12-0Z. CANS Stock up on their favorite flavors at El Rancho·s IO\\·, 101\' price! \\'ith a holi day nhead, )•ou'I\ \Vant plenty! _ Half-ga~lon_ sale in our liquor department! Canadian Whiskey. .... sAvE 1.50 ..•.. ~10.99 Beefeater's ........ sAvE 1.10 ......•• $13.69 Windsor Supreme .•. 1ighl, smooth! 1.~ gal. (~in lhal's kno,vn 'round the \1·orlc! ! 1 ~ gal. Vodka ...... CROWN Russ1 SAVE 41c ••.•• $8.88 Cutty Sark •••••... SAVE 176 .•.....• $16.<? Smooth mixer for cooli ng drinks! ••. ~~ g11l. Scotch you 're nl'oUd to pour! .• , V:: ga l. Early Times •••• SAVE 1.50 .... Gilbey Gin •••••.••.• SAVE SOc •••••.•••• $9.~5 Straight ~·hiskey .,. so sippab!e!,,. !~gal. Stock up on tonic, too~.,.~~ gallon that the city constructed inferior streets, even !hough the people were properly v.·arncd of the condition," he said. -The lengthy legal procedures for each special asst'Ssment district, in- cluding protest hearings, would take too Jong to get the job done. "It v.oold appear that the only other avenue would be a general obligalion bond . _ , thereby giving the city freedom lo start work on streets without time-con- :;uming proceedings," he said. The bond election would serve another purpose, he explained, in that it would settle tJie issue in the ballol box. "If the answer was yes, then we could proceed v.•ith the work ; if it was nn, then the desire of the people has heen expressed and we could drop back to assessment district proceedings," he said. Under projections of strcel needs in the next five years, councilmen learned that 4.5 million square feel of paving material would be needed, plus 156,124 feet of curbs and about 380,000 feet of gutters. Alleys needing about 529,000 square feet of paving also are included, plus extensive regrading and disposal costs. The entire bill would run $1.7 mlllioo, from v.·hich $871.000 in gas tax funds \1·ou!<l be contributed from cily coffers. Thus, the direct cost ooder a bond would drop to $1.25 million. Carr's policy recommendations on the financing of the plan would be that the construction of main arterial roads be made at tot.al city expense through the gas lax fund with requests for 51).per· cent help from the county. For the smaller collector street!, the policy recommends that it be a 50-50 split between city and property owner. On strictly local neigh borhood roadways the cost would be 100 percent on the owner through a special assess- m ent district. Alleys would be built on a 50-50 basi!I, too. While the entire report has been ac- cepted by the council, na specific com· ment has been forthcoming, CQuncilmen are expected to dig Into the matter deeper during their &erles of budget study sessions this week. But the looming problems of tmploye salary raises, other badly needed capital improvement projects, slumping building activity in the city a nd inflation must take their share of the attention, too. Fir111 •Reprieved!'> Toro Builder Gets Y ed r' s Lease /\ building n1aterials firm got a one-- year lease on life ln the El Toro area \Vedncsday despite testiinony that it is operated in viola tion of the orlginal permit granted two years ago which bars rclail sales. Attorney Dale Heinly, representing ov.•nrr Robert Fowler of FoJI'. Building t..1al crials, 2510! Front St, pleadt'.'d vainly with supervisors for a two.year or more extension of th(' va riance permit. i\1rs. Willcla Sanchez. a nearby resident at 2.1200 Olive SI., said "when the firm first moved in lwo years ago they said they would use the property for storage purposes only." She also object('(! to "cloud!! of dusl" from trucks visiting lhe materials firm. Hei nly said although the firm had no water connection. a neighbor's water was used to sprinkle the area daily. Supervisor !)avid L. Baker sair' ttti!ll made him wonder about sa.nitary facilities. He was told they use d1emical toilet.<; and then he wondered about the odor from such Installations. Baker admitted the firm needed time - to find another locaLion, "not just two or three days." Vote for the one.year permit extension was 3 to I with Supervisor Robert W. Ballin dissenting. ----- COIA • CHERRY COIA • BLICK CHERRI • PUNCH • CREAM SODA • Gll'fliER ~l£ • &RAPE • UMON LIME • ORANGE • ROOT BEER .. \ t :·JI i:"I -~. . . Ancient Age ........ sAvE 1.00 ...... $10.98 Light Rum .. HouoAT TIME. •. SAVE 1.00 .. P ,-icts in 1/frc t. !ofon., Tu1s., lVerl., Jlfay 25, :.16, '17. lilo iales to dealers. ARCADIA: Straight vlhlskcy •• , qunlity you kno,1•! 1. ~ g:i.1. For refreshi ng tropical d('lighls! ••. ~2 g:i.I. Main Course pleasure for mid-weelc meals! Steak ...... ~~~~:~~-.~~~~'. ~~~~~'~. ~~~: ...... $1 ~b9 U.S.D.A. Choice beef •. , :Sf'lectcrl for qualil.V ••. ngcd for tcnclcrncss and fl11vor! Jlf'rc ii; superb ~R.ti.-.faction l Sunset Ind Huntinzton Dr. ([I f. -• o C: ::r) PASADENA: 310 W"I Colondo Blvd. .SOUTH PASADENA: rremont 1nd·Huntiniton Dr. HUNTINGTON BEACH: W1rner ind Alzonquln {Soardwilk Cenl~r) NEWPORT BEACH: 2711 Newport Blvd. and 2555 wlblu/J Dr. (wlblul/ Yi/1111 C.n~r) ' .f DAILY f'IL.OT $18 B i lli o11 Boo•t • Ill Debt Increase .• Ceiling Proposed Rickey Kneifel, 19. of Kennewick \Vash., will water the fire station lawn here this summer the hard way by hand and \Vith water car- ried in buckets from the Columbia River a quarter of a mile a\vay. That plus a $300 fine, was the sen- t ence imposed by J11stice Court Judge Albert Yencopal v.1hen Knei· fel was convicted of s hoplifting. "He's got to learn that a m an must make some con tribution to soci- ety," t.he judge said. • J ames W. Carroll, 46, walked out \\'ASUJNGTON (UPt) -1'he Ni1on administration asked Congress today to increase the nalional debt ceiling by $18 billion -to a record $395 billion. Treasury Secretary David ~f. Kennedy and Budget Director Rohen P. Mayo said the size of the inerease request \j,'as caused by deterioration in the government budget resulting from lower than expected tax revenues. It has been known for some lime that an increase would be needed in the ceiling which now is $377 billion, * * * Nixon Mo1iey Policies Hit of the Nevada Sta te Prison a free J, D man alter compleling a four-year ·y emocrats te rm for burglary. He was back 1n jail six h ours later, charged 'vith burglary in connection with pilfer- . VA~HINGTO~ (U~I~ -President lng in state office buildings. ~1xon s economic pohc1es came under increased attack by some Democrats • in Congress today. with calls for wage-{..-!'' r a. ,i:.ifr ! price gu.idelines and opposition to his · ~ ~ . ' U..... ;.): \ proposal to tax leaded gasoline. , ~-~ 1 As the stock ma~ket resumed . its , '$., · .,¥~ 1 downward trend during the morning, ---. ,. S e n a t e Democratic Leader Mike II(; -.t ·. · Mansfield and House Democratic Leader Kenneth F. Crutchlow, 26, a British adventitrer who bicycled from Los Angles to ltfexico City on a be t of two pint$ of beer, was slighily injured 11ellr Jlouston, Texas when forced off llU! road and i nf.o a tree. The free· lance writer says he ll as done noth t.i g but travel for tl1e past 5 years. He is 01& his way to Jl.fiami, Fla. • ·Nigel Gllbey, 8, of Swavesey, England thought it ...,·ould be a good idea to take his mother's .)e\velry collection to school and share it v.rith his class1nates. After a round- up 12 pieces \Vere still missing. Said Mrs. J oan Gilbey of her son, "He's a real ter ror." • Carl Albert joined in a R. unusual news conference to denounce administration policies. They accused Nixon of a "slavish pursuit of archaic economic policies'' which they said had brought on "the first recession .!iince 1961 , accompanied by the worst i11f1 ation in 20 years." In their joint news co n ferenc e , Mansfield and Albert :.;aid thry were against the proposal announced by Nixon last week to i1npose a lead gas on gasoline as a means of fighting pollution and also rRising $1.6 billion lo alleviate a budget deficit. Rep. John A. Blatnik (0-ft.tinn.,) opened hearings by a House subcommittee on wage and price policies. with demands that the administration i mp o s e guidelines. Blatnik said the administration had failed to meet its pledges to curb inflation although the economy "has bogged do"'" terribly.'' Rep. Henry S. Rtuss. (0-\Vis.), testified that "Unless something is done immediatel y, the counLcy is headed for economic chaos." 'Reui.t' declared. "We should have an iinmedlatc three-month freeze. on wage and price increases in order to giVe the government time to draf~ gu idelines." Reuss is sponsor of a blll to rc<iuire presidential eocnornic advi~er~ to recom- mend wage and price guidelines, v.·ilh the President instructed to then intervene in cases of -national interest v.'here price Qr wage increases exceeded the formula. errective through June 30. Jf Congress failed to act before July I to raise the ceiling il would drop to ns permanent level of $365 billion -more than $8 billion less than the present actual deDt of $373. 7 billion. The debt ceiling legislation is a hardy congressional perenniah. a bill which must be passed each year to permit the government to borrow enough lo pay its bills. Kennedy told the House Ways and f\1eans Committee that much or the increase is needed ''to restore a reasonable n1argin for contingencies and foc adequate cash balances." Kennedy and f\.iayo also askccl that the permanent ceiling on government borrowing be raised by $!9 billion to $383 billion. President Nixon had forecast budget surpluses of $1.5 billion in fiscal 1970 and $1.3 billion in fiscal 1971. But they now say thr budget will be in red ink by $1.8 billion in fiscal 1970, which ends J uly I. and by $1.3 billion in fiscal 1971, the next government bookkeeping year. Mayo gave as main reasons for the short fall a drop in expected government receipts from tax collections. f\.1ayo said there ~·ill be a $4.S billion lncrease in government spending in fiscal 1971 -but he stressed that none of that in crease was attributable to U.S. military operations "eir.her in Cambodia or elsewhere." Armstrong Talks To Co smona uts LENI NGRAD (AP) -U.S. Astronaut Nei l Armstrong .spoke lorlay about his historic moon walk to Soviet cos1nonauts iiod space exper ts. Armstrong toured Leninl!rad afterward and drew crowds of admiring Russians. The U.S. astronaut arrived here last nigh t to take part ln an international space conference. He has been given red carpet trealmenl. lie will stay in the old Tsarist capital, then ~·ind up his Sovie t tour ~·ith three days in ?\1oscow. Annstrong went today lo th c 1'avrichesky Palace where he talked shop over cof!ee with Soviet cosmonauts Georgy Bcregovoy and K o n s t a n t i n F~tistoy and space expcr\.s headed by a ~mician A. A. BlaAonrayov. Armstrong described unusual lighting effects on the moon and sens<ilions ex- pcrieoccd walking in i1 s gravity. lie was questioned cagrrl.v nbout lunar con- <litions, which !he Russians know about through unmanned landings and in- strument information. The Soviet moon program. which they nnce boaster! would befit the Americans, was not mentioned at the session . A nosy dog, a loud yell and a sharp ax got J ean Bapt iste Hudon, 60, of Quebec a new bearskin rug. Hudon \Vas out cutt lng fire\\'ood v:hen his dog treed a bear cub. 1fl other bear came charging out of woods at Tl udon \Vho was armed only v.·ith his ax. Jludon yelled. The bear .stopped 'about five feet from me ... n nd T let her have it right betv.•een the eyes." he said . Negro Riot in Georgia ., A survr!I 011 pill pref erence ptib- lishcd in the British /o1edica/ Journal tl'l<la11 sar<l poiients ti:ho 1oere de· prcssc{l ~eemerl to respond best to !IC/1 010 p11/s tV/li/e lhose lVi!h anxiely ,;yrn plnns <lid bet te r 1vilh (lreen ones. Jt .~a1d no one see1ncd to like red Qll f'S 11/!lCli. • Mrs. Granville Hawkes of Cam- bridge. En~land was 30 miles from her home beginning her vacation \Vhen she remembered she had left her electric blanket on. She called Cambridge firemen to ask lf they would turn it off. They d id. R evolution or T a1itrum? J ACKSON, Ca. (UPI) -f\1ayor C. n. Brown .Jr. figured tod:iy !hat a dcstruc1ive ran1pflge by 300 blacks v.·as morr or a tcn1J)('r \anln1m than the "revo!utlon" seen by C'r0v. Lester Mad· dox. "!l's iu~t a niinnr. little ol' thing,'' Brown s;iid or thr roc k·throwin.i:. window- smashing, f1rr·sct1 1ng melre that brought 40 riot'"fqu1ppe1I ~late troopers into this m1drlle Grnrg la tow n Sundav night. Three troopers wrrf' slightly hurt by rorks and lhrl'f.' person" v.·ere arrestl'C! The troopers. dispatched by f\-ladrlox to 1he tov.'n of 5,000 about 50 miles SO\llh of Atlanta, fired lheir shotguns only l'A~ce -both times into the air when lhey \\"ere pelted \\"ilh rocks and boHles. Order was rf:'stnre<l with in two hou rs. "We are 111 a r<'Volut1on." r.1:iddolC said in AtlanL<i. ''Possibly 100 t1;l :ioo r evolutionarie!> and a11arch1s1 s h;11 c hecn runn ing loose." Brown said no more than 50 person.~ v.:rre involved in the incidf'n l. \\'hk'li was touched off bv an ;irg11 mcnt 11t a white-0~11ed service sta l1fl 11. Tv.•elvf' stores, includinJ;? the sta!1fln, ·were damaged by rampaging blac:!IX Some firt>s ~·ere ~e1 "In my opinion, ii was a spontaneous thing at the filling station," said Rrown. "Those people were mad and a 9-year-0ld lxiy coukl have got them goi ng ." U.S. Weather Unsettled Hi g h Winds, Thunderstorms Plague Midsection C•llfornl• Temperat ures Hl,h LGw Prtt AllilJQvtl"llUt "' " Allt"!t " .. l!•~···•l•ld " .. L!okl low CIOU!ll IO•INtd fNfT moil of !>ol!!l>e"' Cft ll!O•n'" !h•I motnon1 c1,..,1no ID Jllrlfl• and w1•m'r we1t of '"' m<Mmlt1M bv """"'· v .. 1ftble tl.....,.1 •tm•ined """" lkl mountain• "'"' dn. 1rl1 wltk Kllle•td l"un!lo~!\awltl l~rol!O .. TIHltdlV Ql..,.,•r<k e .. h~ &o1lo<> C~kft'O " " ·"I " " " ,. .. • ··1 §OUTHEll.H Cll!~OllNl,t,.--Morn,,,_ low <l"""I UMllT•I lt~•lo" Gl~ .... 1 .. t10r lht""9'11 TIK'>Ot y, Sh9MIV wat"'llll' "°"'" -"'"' 1>11r!oon1 Tue1cM •. L01 ANGELE~ AHO \ltCINtTY - MOf"nl.,. -CIC>udt bvl kftrV ..,.,.,,1,.. '" ,n.,_ M-•v 1nd Tundav. 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Ll9ht ,,..,1.i,1• wlno:11 nh1~1 -""""Inv """'" ti.- roml"'I wnl ID H>!,PTl'IW•SI ' IO u ~"'"' !" ••r•moons lod•v i ncl T~•\Orf. Hit~ IOCI•• 65. CN>IA1 l ..... _th,1<11 ••ntf It-JI fa u. 1,.lftncl ttr•u•t••'~••• '""" 1ron1 !1 lo 71. Wl!ff -.m-tlll'I M. S t111, Mnnn. Tides MONN'!" ......... 1·0.~ .... ,0 TUl!'SO•Y '1•11 kl1~ , l ll•rn. 11 ,1~11 tow ••e•"'· n1 ~(""".I h l~h • ~ Q "'· , • ~.--low •~•o "'. '1 1 s.u11 "'* t:'l •.m. s.tt 1·u ,, .... Ml)Oft """' 11.llt,m. Sth t ,QI 1.m. Hit~ WI,. --.oltllY I ..,,,_. - 1lrv<t lt1v"IOllCIY1llt. Ttll., S.U-Y. U1111ttled -""' con!lnutd lo tltflltl Th11""9tJ1orm •"" 1~ •cllvl!v OCCll"ld 111 ICt!ltrtd ttttf from lht Cllllttl tncl l<IUl-n ltoctcltl fCt001 lh• Gt .. ! P!~ln1 to !flt Mi<twftl. and l!.•1tw1•0 to 1111 ,t,.ll111!lc Coa•! lfld1v SDm• of !flt ft lllt wt•• tccomNnlld bY Wincll I ncl ... II. Goilblll 1119 htll ... 11e<1 II/Ch wlll••~ """Qtn! pllf"' •• Fromo11•. N"h ' Lut•'· 01>10, ~nd 11<1wntown W"'h·no· Ion, D C. ~uncl1y. H•~h .. lf1<11 llt"'•~•" a hoo.oM 111 z.,1n1l1, lowt , whlUI lt 119~1 m lltl MKt!h Of Ovbll<lut . Cl1>elt1~111 " " Clt•el•"" " " .1JI °"''"' " ~ 0.l>fllt .. • ·" "~'""" " " FO<"IWor!ll .. " ·" F rtl"D .. " Ht lf"I• " ~ M(l!Hlon " • k1n~•1 C•'~ "' " l.~1 Yt11•I • " L~ -'"gf ltl " • Mltml llt•t i'I • " ·" M•h•1•u~ .. n ~ .n Ml ........ 1>0111 " " •• ,_, ... Otl•ant " u Nt-w Yarll. ~ " ... 0 1-l•nd " • I 0...•h• " • .~,I Pt\<t lltOblH " ~ PMl~P!ll1 " • ·'" P<lllburtll " " ·" ""M"I~ " .. Po•t111\d • 4 Rtd 81ull " " ·-" " $•tt•mell!o " .. S• Loulo " .. S•I! L8~1 (lty n 4 ·" Sin Otl<IO .. " S•n Fr~nt+.10 " ., S11e•• Elo•b1•1 ., " S••"'' " .. ,_a"' " .. T ...... lflll " .. W11h1ne1"" .. .. MEMORIAL DAY SALE-A-THON 12.4 CU. n. FREEZtK BUDGET PRICED! 2 full width fast-freeze shelves, 1 adjustable sheU, deep d oor St()ragc. Stores ,135 lbs. rvtag- netic safety door gasket for safe door sea.I. Tho budget buy of them all! / ' 16 CU. n. REFRIGERATOR· FREEZER ROLLS ON CASTERS ~tores more food than others of comparable size! Three fult-~·idth Rdjustable cantilever ~helves. 'fv.·i~ l"rispers. spnciolls door shelves, lift.out egg container. Frost free. Whtte, Avocado. Automatic 2-cycle Washer and Matching 90-minute Dryer Full warranty Free delivery Can be purchaud separately 5-Yr. Warranty on Washer 2-Yr. on Dryer C O LOR C ONS OLES 23 " YOUR CHOICE SAVE $105.00 ·iii a ro11ian lic 1noocl •.. lVI , PICTVll' l UIE WAll~A NIV . FllE( DELIVEHV ornately carved arm accents • •• luxurious deep-puff quilting MATC HING LOVE SEAT ON SALE AT COMPARABLE LOW PRICE Yoo could eosily spend o lot more, but why? ••• High slyle elegonce con be yours for Je1s lhon you 'd expect, Distinctive Sponish 5ofo boosts colhed•ol hi·riut C\!Jhions, carved rope tw ist moldings ond finiol occents for thot jud -right decorotor look . Choose from 6 tush colors, eoch deep puff-quilted & 5co tchgc11 ded for long life. Foom conslruction lhruov t .•• olt ot Ort almost unbel ievable Speciol Sale Price ,., see it NOWf • 8 ft . sofa SALE$ GRANTS PLAZA e BROOKHURST & ADAMS e HUNTINGTON BEACH I I ' I ,. ·• • Vnwantea Politicos Listed ATLANTA. Ga. (AP) -The Rev, Ralph David Abernathy says a five-day, IW.mile pro- test march across Georgia was the beginning of a drive to ren1ove from political office "wrinkled old souls in posi- tioos of high trust" -in- cluding President Nixon and Vice President Spiro T , A,llnew , t f '"\\'hat WC net!d is SOJOC young 'soul power' lo driYc l11em ool of office. ror we 11rc Lired of old folks runn inJ: the country," Abernathy told a rally in Atlanta whi ch climaxed the protest n1arch Saturday. ~ ., ' .. Ke1at Girl Back Mary Vecchio, 14, eyes full of tears, is emb r~ce~ by her father Frank on her return to her M1a1n1 home. The runaway girl was found in Ind ianapolis and confirmed that it was s he who was sho"·n in a photo kneeling over the bod y of one of the sl.ain Kent State University students. She had been miss- ing s ince February. • Conservatives Attacking Nixon Welfare Reforms WASH INGTON (UPll President Nixon's We 1 fare t efonn plan, whid1 for the first time would offer govern- ment assistance to the "v.·ork- ing. poor'' who are unable to earn enough to sideslep pover· \. U~I TtltP"°i. A11thor Dies Joseph Wood Kn1tch. shown in 1955 photo, died in Tucson. Ariz., at the a~e of 76. Krutch, a former Ne'v York drama critic, was also a noted author and na- turalist. 2 Tornadoes Rip Texas; 34 Hurt ly, is under strong attack from conservaliYes in and out of Congress. The bill may be in st:'rious trouble in the Senate despite the CQnsiderab!e ease with which it passed the 11ouse on the Yotes of liberals y,•ho liked its philosophy and Republicans who sometimt:'s reluctantly stood by their President. California Gov . J{ on a 1 d Reagan , contending !hat under the measure one out of seven Californians could go on ·welfare, has broken y,·ith the 8<!mlnistration on the issutt and scnl senators a scathing allack on the bi!!. The generally conservative Senate Finance Commtttee, in an act of rebellion, sent the bill back to lleallh, Education and We lfare Secretary Robert 11. Finch on l\.1ay 1 with in- structions to give it a total 011erhaul. F'inch said he would do the job in "two or three day.<;" but the committee hasn't heard from him since. Primarily the conserYalive attack focused on these poinl.!I: -The contention that the number of welfare recipient<; could grow from the present 10 million to 25 million - one AITlt'rican in eight. "Today, \l'e arc marching against repression, and tomor- row v.·e art going to be registering lo vote a g a i n st repression, and the day alter we will be casting our votes lo sy,·eep out of office the racist politicians and political hustlers who have created the prcst'nl situation," he said. In his speech lo about 10,000 1vho attended the rally at ~1orehouse Co 11 e g e , Abet· nathy, president of the South- ern Christian Leaclersbi~ Con- ference, listed 10 officehold- ers he said are the org~niza.1 1ion·s '"Ten Most Unwanted Politicians." Abcrnalhy named Sen. John Stennis ((}.Miss)., as foremost on the list. SecoFid was Rep. Mendel Rivers (D-S .C.). Stenni s is chairman of the Senate Armed SerYices Com- mittee. Rivers is chairman of the House Arn1ed Services Committee. After that, Abemathy said, co1ne Rep. John McMillan (D- S.C,). Mayor Hu gh Addonizio or Newark, N.J ., and GOY . Lc.~ter ~1addox of Georgia. r..ladd ox is not eligible to succeet'.l himself as governor, hut is running for lieutenant f.(OYernor. Addonizio laces a Negro. Kenneth Gibson, in a June IS n1noff election. The other fi\'e men on the list, Abernathy said. are Nix · on. Agnev.·. Sen. George ~furphy 1R-Calif.). SeA. Strom 'fhurmond t R-.S.D. l. and Gov. H.onald Reagan of California. 111 Hei st Try C LARK S BUHG, W.Va. !UPI) -One of three would- be robbers was injured fatally and tv.·o policemen v.·ere woun- ded in a blazing gun battle early today at a grocery store. Two bandits who were. not injured. one of them a woman with short blonde hair, fled through a rear door, eluding police. Police launched an in- tensive manhunt for the ban- dits. -The belief that the bilrs cost estimate of $4.4 billion a year \Vas based on • n assun1plion that unemploy- ment would average 3.5 per- cent of the work force in coming years. \\'ilh unemploy· ment now al 4.8 percent, Sen. Herman E. Tahnadge ID· Ga. l. says, the price fag would hf> $9 hillion necessitating ;:i hPl!y lax irwreai::e ;it a lime when taxpayer rPsistance tn higher taxes is severe and worrisome. .lack Eugene Gillispie. 32. of Ra l"enna. Ohio, died en route to the \Vest Virginia University ?.1cdical Center in r..1Qrgantol'<'n In i;:uarded con- dition at t!ie hospital wa~ Clarksburg policcn1an SIC\'<' Torvak who ~uffered 11unshOI l\'ntinds of the right arm and ~ute Patrolman Ger a Id '"Jake·• Merrincr 11'as treated for a gun!'hot v.·011nd at a ZAPATA, Tex. (UPll lnc;it hospi!al ;ind released. Two tomadoes con11erged on ----------------------- this small 1\lex1ean border town Sunday and demolished 70 dwellings, injuring 34 peo- ple. Civil defense o Ir i cl a 1 s estimated damage at $400,000. All but six of the injured were released from area hospitals after treatment. A tornado two weeks ago Ji:illed 26 people in Lubbock, at the opposite end o{ Texas. The same number died in a e;eries of tornadoes five weks .ago in the noJ.cst part of the state. Robe.rt Skank. hose house tn.iler was des roycd in the storm. told how it relt at 12:20 a .m.: "The trailer sure danced around before the wind tore it apart. My vdfe got blown .-ight oul of jl standing on her feet . Things happened so eotton-pick.ing fasl you didn 't ti ave time to do much." Skank ran for cover behind • pickup truck and was covered with debris thrown by the wind. "It seemed like a year °'" two before I got out from undet that thing." he said. "I dldn 't bave anything oo bot my pants and it was real cold.'' There were 35 houses and 3.'i trailer homes ruined by lhe winds which swept the I.own of 2,200. The more damaging of the two t-Omadoes moved in from F'alcon Lake. an artificial lake that collects water From the Ri«> Grande River. The second torn11do ~t tled in the center of town ind ripped the roof~ from a motel and grocery store. Nn1acy Goes Midi Mrs. Ronald Reagan (left) wore a below·lhe-knee dress at a tea in her Sacramenlo home, noting that s he a nd governor are happy the mini-s kirt is on the way out. She added she thinks longer dresses ma ke women look "1aller and slimmer" and al-so make it easy "on women like me" who spend a great deal ol time oitting on podiums. Monday, May 25, 1970 DAIL V PILOT 5 Mafia Running St. Louis? SD,S Attack 011 U.S . Due? NE\V YORK (API -A statement 1~·•1r11ing of an "at- tack on a symbol or instllution of Alnerican justice'' ~·1th1n the next two y,·eeks l1as 1>urportedly been issued by the \\1ealhern1en, the revolu- tionary youth organization, the New York Times reported loday. The statement also claimed to have identified the th ird person killf'd in an explosion in a Greenwich Village townhouse last March as Ter· ry Robbins. a \\1eatherman 1vho 11·as a radical leader <1l Kent State University in 1968, the ncv.·spaper said. NEW YORK IUPIJ -Life Magazine Sunday accused Sl. Louis Mayor Alphon so J . CerYantes of ''business and personal ties with gangsters." Cervantes called the article "a bare faced lie ." The LHe article is titled "The Mayor, The ti.lob and The Lawyer" -the lawyer being Morris Shenker, called by the magazine "the foremost lawyer for the mob in the U.S." and "the mouthpiece for scores of notorious mobsters, gangsters and union bosses." The article also reported one of the closest men around the mayor as Tony Sansone. son· Jn.Jaw of "notorious gunman and gang leader" Jimn1y ~tichaels. "Ari~· real drive against organized crime in St. Louis could start with .a nurnber uf the 111 a yo r 's own aSS-OCia tes," sairl the article, ~·riten by Denny Walsh . Shanker. appointed by the mayor to head a commission on crime and law enforce1nenl said Sunday in St. Louis he was never interviewed by Life. He said he intended to sue the magazine "'lo hold them accountable for th is ir- r e sp on s i bl e, selfish journalism.'' Shenker described, his relalionsh1p ~·ith those he defended as "truly that of a law yer and ci!ent and no more." The article de sc ribed Sansone. a real estate and insurance dealer, as "the mayor's liaison V.'ith the two mobs that run the St. Louis underworld" -Mi c ha e Is' "Syrian mob" and ' ' t he Sicilian f\.1afia family -head- ed by Louis Giardino." Sansone, who branded the arlicle "absolute lies," said, ''I knew 115 years ago who Jimmy tMicliaels) was when I married his daughter bul it dldn•t matter because I lov- ed he r.'' Sansone said he bad had no business dealings with Michaels. · Lift accused Cervantes, 49. of having "sought and receiv- ed the counsel" of Michaels through Sansone. The article named two instances 1n 1964 and 1965 when Cervantes was running for mayor that the three met together "lo plan campaign strategy.·· Presidential Cornmission Will Probe l(ent Slayings \VASHINGTON (AP) -A high·level commission wilt be named by Presidcnt Nixon within a wetk to probe lhe deaths of four students in a confrontation with Ohio )~a tional Guardsmen at Kent State University. Nixon has been examining the incident closely, but will lcaYe conclusions up to the commission, said H er be rt Klein, White House director of communications. Klein was interviewed on the CBS television-rad io pro- gra1n ''Face lhe Nation.'' Klein sa id nothing about whether the panel will reach deeply into the problems of campus violence elsewhere, but he said the administration is v.•orking to find better meaos of communicati11g with the nalion's young, Eight of the you nger members of the White House staff have recently fanned out to seek new communication paths. He declined to !ay whether the commission w!ll specifically look into the deaths of two Negro studenls ;:it Jackson State in Mississip- pi. But in a related deYelop-- ment. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie ID-Maine), asked President Nixon to order a federal grand jury investigation of t h e shooting deat.hs. Klein said students could coutribute much to the coun- try, if they put their interest_, in "the environment, in volun- teer work and things like th is ... " The communieations direc- tor praised young people who are working to change policy through the system -an ap-- parent referenei! lo young lob- byists who have besieged the Capitol -but he said that gove.rnment policy should not be set by demonstrators such as those who "shouted from the Ellipse"," where a huge protest took place May 9. Judge a Mercedes-Benz over miles of twisting back roads. Not "once around the block in light traffic!' W F. BUILD our automobiles to perform under strtss. To la kc on roads that have pot· holes for paYcmcnt and elbows for curves. The kind of roads thal can be found in Germany's Black Forest where we test our cars. But you can probably find a road like that near you. And !hat's \Yherc you !'hould head if you really want to find out what a ~terccdcs·Bcnz is all about. Independent 1uspen1lon You'll find our fully independent racing·type i;uspension lets you fi- nesse your way through those tricky bends and switchbacks. Not plow through them. Our rear ax le is articulated. It llc~es so each rear wheel can move up and down independently of !he other-just as the front wheels do. Soaks up the bumps and dampens 1he bouncing. Taul sleerlng Our optional power steering is very polite.IJ lets you drive. It doesn't drive you. It's taut and responsive, withoui the usual inch or twc o f sloppy play. You can feel the wheels tracking, even at high speeds. Yet, when you're trying to squeeze into a tight parking spot, you can spin the wheel around, lock·to-lock, in lhrec turns effortlessly. Our engineers call this "pro11res· s ive assistance."The more power you need in the steering, the more you get. But we don't overdo it. You 'll never get the feeling that you're l\Yirling a telephone dial instead of steering a car. Four disc bra};es The brakes arc built to gi\•e you a controlled, straight s lop instead of rhal other kind. Even when you .!ilop short from high speed (a nice way to say "panic stop"). We put four massive disc brakes on every Mercedes-Benz. Slandard equipment. No options. Only one American car provides four disc brakes as s tandard-and !hat's a two passenger model, not a full·s1tcd sedan, Englne: fragile as a rock Our overhead cam engine can cruise at RPM levels that leave com· petilors floating their valves in di!>- belicf. Bearings are delicatel~ machined 10 wilhin 4/JO,IX.lOths of an inch. Pis· t,ons and connecting rods are pain· stakingly matched and balanced. And each engine is bench·tesled for al least 60 minutes. Cur dr Driver claims that a Mer- cedcs·Benz "\viii \\•his t le across coun- rry at average speeds simply beyond the realm of comprehension for the average American driver." lrdt•r•dtJ·Btttl l&f1 SE, o ~-,..JJ1111rr, /ud·lllJKlrlll. pcr/OfMIUKI 11111.#111. / I Wh ich doesn't surprise UI at all. We don't build caN for the "aver· age" American driver. Ask your dealer for a test drive. Judge for yourself. New brochures You can get a brochure that will give you more details about Me re& des-Benz automobiles. J ust send in this coupon. If you're planning a European trip, check the box to KC how much. you can save with our overseas de- livery plan. But the best thing you can do is visit one of our showrooms. Our representative will be glad to tell you about any of our sixteen models. And be sure to take lhat test drive. eo. ...... ~. lt10. 11 • .-.... ...... -~ •• -. r--------------1 I ~ Jim s 1.mon1 Import•, Inc. I 120 W. Wern« A¥•· I Senta Ana, Calif. t2707 I I Plase M!'Nf me your full-color bn:icbure ol I I !he Meradc1·Bell% motor c:ar1. I I a l'la.-e Include the Merce<k1·Bell% Gulde I to Europan Ddlvny. I I l N•me I ~ Addrc11 I I City 5111 I I Zip TclephoM I L--------------~ Jim SlemOrlS Imports, Inc. 120 w. Warner Avenue,San1a Ana, California 92101Phone:714-546-411' I, • • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE l ' Four Rate a Vote Thal bani-working group of publk·spirited Californ- ians known u the Conslilution Revision Commission took a rebuff at the polls in l968. Laboring lo convert the state's basic instrument of law into a true constitution from one of the ~·ordiest, most complex and out-of-d ate constitutions in the world, they put too much into one package for voters to swal· low. Now the commission, after eliminating a section related to the s tate Superirrtendent of Public Inslruc· lion, has s plit the originaJ proposal into four separate amendments lor voter consideration June 2, as follow s: Proposition 2: This reduces Article Xr from 10,000 words to 75i while retaining the article's hi storic pur· pose. It continues the principle of strong hom e rule, re- quires election of county supervisors, requires city an· nexations and consolidations to be voter -approved and permits cities of any size to adopt charters. These and other provisions provide more flexibility for. and con- tinues the strength of, local governments. The DAILY' PILOT joins the League of California Cities and the County Supervisors Association in urging a YES vote. Proposition l: This measure gives the Legislature greater control over Public Utilities Commission rate setting and regulatory actions. This presumably makes utility regulation more flexible in changing times and more responsive to the people through the Legislature. It also, however, can mean that utility regulation will be more subject to the lobbyists and more subject to political passions and horse trading. This proposition should be reconsidered. A NO vote is recommended. Propoiltion 4: This authoMzes the Legislature to provide for the establishment and government of all institutions for all persons convicted of felonies. Jt also removes constitutional provisions relating to public Statistics Can · Distort And Miskad Stau.tic:s ls probably the m o 1 t tracheroul fiekl for an amateur to wade into; and etpecially 80clal 1tatllties, where even tbe nperts ecmetimea -· What tile behavlorial llc!«ttiltl call 1•raw data'' can oftm diltut a atudy beJoDd ,.__ ff Ibey are not nf!JJ. <d end tntegrated with otller controlling facton. A recent. cluslcal case is the r~t on "high risk" of smaller automobiles, A SENATE subcommittee was told that, based on a University of North Carolina study list· ing auto models ex· perlencing the high- est and lowest death and injury rates, "larger c ars are associated with low· er incidence of ser· ious or fat.al drive.r Injury, and smaller cars wtth greater incidence." While these raw data may be wholly true, they leave cut of considera tion onf: of the most Important factors - the kinds of motorist.! who buy the kinds or can:, and the purpo..-.cs for whkh they buy them. THE SMAU..ER, cheaper, or sportier cars are bought by a high percwt.age of young J>MPle who are looking for economy, use of manipuiallon, or last getawayg, n.e large, expensive cars are bought ma.inly by older people who are looKlng for status and dignity. Since the a.ccidcnt rate among the under·2S group of drivers is from two Dear Gloomy Gus: U yo\J want aomethlng done about our environment. upset Soulheast A.ala some more and Red China will take care of tt. -J. J. D. ""'" """"' ""'*" ,...... ...... .... -"tr""""" fl ... ace 1111.·IGMI """ "' ,... ... ...., ... °"" ..... ' lo four times u lar,e u that amq older mot«ilta, it is only to be expected that the smaller, •per and sportier can would have an accident rite higher than average, while the bigger and more expensive models would be involved in fewer accldenls. ITlflS JS ESPECIALLY underlined by a caveat in the report that Lhe statistics dealt only with injuries resulting from accidents and not with automobile makes as a factor in the cause. of the crash.) I ha ppen to believe -based on three years' use ol txilh cars -that my com pact British a-ports model is f!ar saftr on the road · than my wife 's large, over·powered station wagon, which has one of the lowesl accident rates in the study. BUT THE KIND of people who buy my car are quite different from the kind who buy hers -and it is this pcrwnality fac tor tha1 accounts for the llighl'r rate of accirlen!s, rather than !he size of the car itself. Car.!I do not have accidenl.!I; people do; and the people who drive large Buicks, Oklsmobiles and Cadillacs are far more cautious, sedate an1l domesticRL<'d than those who buy Volkswagens. Must..angs or Jags. ln the same way, we still don't know whether smoking "causes" lung cancer, or ir a certain "predisposed" kind or person becomes an inveterate: smoker. Statistics clouds the scene ai. much as smoke does. Know Any 4-F Hermits? "lr any ~n e1eapes being a.r .. rected one way or another by the Propo1iUon 7 Issue on the June 2 ballot, he would have to be a 4--F, ch lidless hermit living in a cave bl the Mo jave delert and subsisting mostly on imported IQlt'I milt." That's the colorful way the Oakland Tribune pub It in one of the most comprehensive and persuasive ol Lbe many editorials th.al have been written urging a Ye.!I vote on 7. And while cokriul, it is not too far-fetc hed. As the Tribune explains-, the arguments urg. Bw George ---. Dear George: Do you th.ink slacks that flare at the cuff art l'lexy Of\ women? I woukl 11ke an opirtion from a true male, and you seem very ~ In good -looking girl! ... RED Dear Rod: You know, it's odd. but I didn't rt.Allie girls' trouM.Ts went all the way dolrn to the cuff. I'm going right outaide And Ck> ~c more ..... arch. (If ~ probiems are keep- ing you aw1te al nlght, 5t'nd them lo George and he wlll !·cir )CU count them. ff'-'• up aU night wor· ryinf~·· PROPOSITION 7, of course, ii the Legislature's proposal to com blt the ef- fects of a tight money market on the sale of California general obligation bonds needed lo finance such voter-ap-- proved projects a9 elementary and high school construct.ion, Cal.Vet home loans: beach, park and recrealion facillties; co 11 e g e and university classrooms: harbor improvement.!!; and the State Weter Project. The amendment would eliminate the ~le 's C()f')S!itulio nal limi l of 5 perrent payable on its general obliga tion bonds, substituting a realistically flexib le in· teresl limit of up to 7 percent. Passage or Proposition 7 wou ld unfrer.u: the bonds now going un"11cl, and permil con1plelfon of the projeclc; tl'K!-\•Olers al ready have approved. EXCEPT POSSIBLY to tho.st! 4·F hermit!, Proposition 7's mM"ll.• art, O!ll 1he Tribune says, "r>-0 apparent, a n d the alternative of fi scitl chaos 50 fr ighten· in11 , that voter approvii l u: the only tens.Ible, rtalislie. actlon." Calltoml• Futuri Strvlce lands and homesteads. Its main· virtue is that it takes verbiage out of the cona;titution that is vague and be- longs only in the statutes. A YES vote is recommended. . Proposition 5: The present Constitution provides for proposals of amendments and revisions but makes 110 provis ion pennitting the Legislature to withdraw or change its proposal after passage through both houses but prior to submission to the voters. Common sense dicta tes that the Legislature should have this power. In addition, Proposition 5, while continlling an exemplary civil service, would exempt the lieutenant ~overno.r's office and employes of certain policy-ma.k- 1n g bodies, thus permitting the bringing in of a ''new team" in a new administration. The i;:overnor's office is already exempt. A YES vote is recommended. Proposition 6: A few opponents of this measure dealing with free textbooks for public school pupils in grades 1 through 8 would like to go further and give all local school boards comple'le freedom in textbook selec· tion. But they approve it as far as it ~oes. As it stands, however, the measure is a major im· provement in a dAY when it is finally being recognized that statewide regimentation of pupil in struction by grade or age is unsound. Proposition 6 permits local . school boards to choose from a list of state·approved texts in six basic subjects, whereas now the state chooses and mandates the book . This recognizes the varying learning abilities of Jl:Upils, their diverse needs if they have a language di!· f1cult y. and their differing needs caused by a cultural disparity between districts. Vote YES on Proposition 6. ln Summary, YES on Propositions 1 a nd 7 discussed last Thursday, and YES on Propositions 2, 4. 5 and 6 di scussed today -but NO on Proposition 3. STO<K MARKET ;:~ ....... .. i • Secret Memorandum Revealed Reagan Opposes Nixon Reform Plan WASHINGTON -California's Gov. Ronald Reagan has denounced as "ridlculou9 " the assertion in this colum11 !hat a secret memorandum circulated among his staff assigns dut.ies for a plan by which the governor will "take the national leadership i11 opposing" Prc.sidcnt Nli:on's welfare reform. Reagan said his "first instlact was to comment in such a way that it would be unprintable." But he cahned hlwelf down long enough to make the 'ltrit edldo.. o1 w ... Coailt dames last W=Y·· • ~r Reapn .~ 10 lbotlted llll·"the· nc levcladon of what's going oft ln bis otJicf, he may be interested In more d<tiiJll IN EARLY APRIL of this year, Re agan agreed al a slaff meeting to host a c:on[erence of \Vestern governors. in Sacramento. The purpose o[ !he meeting Wa.!I to provide a platform for a national campaign agairuit the Nixon wel!are proposals. It WM determined for obvious reasons tha t, although Reagan should be host, the idea for the meeting should ~omc from another governor. That was \\'hy Reagan asked Gov. Tom McCall of Oregon to write the governors or Arizo~a. Alaska, Colorado, Nevada, Montana, New Mexico, Utah, Idaho, Washin gton a11d Wyom.111(, mentioning his concern with the Niion reform plan a11d sayi ng he "hoped" that they could meet in Sacramento on May 7 or B. · A 'WPY of McCall's letter reaC'hed the eyes of HEW Secretary Robert Finch, and It may have been !his leak - transmitted at once to the \Vh ile House -which caused Reagan to postpone the meetin g. F'OR THE GOVERr\OR'S information. the mee ting was Point r1 of the 5taff memorandum lo which this column refer· red, i.e., •·contact friendly govet11ors and point. out how this national welfare scheme will affect other major states." To be sure. as the column which so armoyed the governor was careful to point out, all sieps in the pla11 were "predicated on a decision to challenge the nationa l administration ." Some of the points outlined, hov>ever, l1ave been carried lhrough. For example, the governor did make a "major speech in California - ass igned to Russ Wa llon of staff," as Sllpulated in Point 10 of the secret memorandum , and his failure so far to emerge as a national hero in the fight against the plan may not have been Walton's fault. Perhaps there Y.'as a weakness i11 carrying through Point 14 : "Press strategy -Assigned lo Paul Beck of staJf." IN ANY EVENT, Reagan's opposition to the wel fare plan, v.·hich Is being pushed here by his former lieutenant t;ovc rno r, Roher! Finch. is stirring deep concern an1ong Calt fomia ns who have heen trying to deal with the state•s dreadful welfare burden. On May 8, Ell is P. Murphy , 1he direc· tor of the Los Angeles County Oeparl· menl of Public Socia l Services, wrote Los Angeles supervisors saying he was "extremely concerned" with Reagan 's opposition to the reform pa ckage, point- ing oul that county government in California simply cannot financially ar- ford any further delay." \\'hat bothered Murphy most -ln addillon to his belief th at "local govcr111nents are simply 11ol going to be able to finance the present \Velfare system" -was tbat Reagan was wron g on his [acts. REAGAN SAID THE Nixon bill in- cludes "substantial incentives for deser· Hon ." He said that under the bill to work-qualified head of a household need actuall y work. He called the President's plan "a g\iarantced iticome plan" and said it wou1d cost $15 billion yearly. None of these. assertions, Murphy pointed out, is true. But, as noted in a previous columti, Reagan·~ "direct contact ~'ith sympathe- tic GOP staff in Washi ngton (Lyn Nofziger. Harry Dent, et al.)'' as specified in Point ts of the secre t memorandum may out v.'eigh his disregard for facl. In a. squeeze behveen left a~cl right, ?-.Ir. Nixon has always turned right. His welfare plan would be an expensive sacrifice, but if it would keep California 's govt.rnor from a national platform it might have to do. By Frank l\1anklewir.z and Tom Braden Wants End to 'Spineless Decisions'· To the Editor : I am su re there are many others who feel the same \\·ay I do -we·ve all "had jt" with lhe. administrallons: ol our California colleges and universi- ties. My son is a student at Orange Coast Co llege and he tells me that those students who Nivc dec ided not to attend any more classes the rest of th is st?mester are now out on the "Free Speec h Arca·• throwing Frisbies all 1he time. F'or this the college is lo gi \'e them their credils for this semster. WffiLE UP AT UC Berke ley the faculty ha.'l just voted t.o eliminate cretlit for ROTC. In other words, ir you arc :1 good, cleao-<:ut student that wants lo take ROTC. you will get no credit for it. But if you are a dirty. straggly long hair and throwing f'ris bies is your thing, then we taxpayers have lo give thc1n credits they haven't earned. Whe1I arc these administrators going to--Wilellp th.al wr, the publit', are not going to stand for such spineless dtcisiorui any longer. S. KAY JOHNSON Et1t>lrot1111f!ntal Crisis To the FAitor : tn regard to Robert T. Robin.son's leller (Mailbox, ri.1ay I) concerning "Ear1h Day" coverage in the DAILY PILOT. l have a few comments to make about his pessimisti c outlook. First of all , anyone who lhinks of tooay's environmental cri9is as "trivia'' either hasn't been around loo long, or hasn't been out.side recently. Secondly, If there would even be one rtay 11 year like that of E!'rth Day. it shouldn 't be crlllclzed but praised and newspaper Quotes Georse McNutl, O&kland -"Every mnn must be granted hi~ full judlC'lal ~nd constitutional rights. but the rtefen· d:i nt .and his attorneys also have a rl'sponsibUity to observe. the dignity of the courL Otherwbe we soon ha\•e no ju!'ltiet." ' Muitlwx lt!!t'I Ira"' ro&Ol'rs ••I wolcomo. Nor,.,,1lly wrltu' 1nov1o! co..~'¥ 1n1lr rnu •••rt I" :JOO wv•d• or It", ,,... rlotil !O <o>l>d•n.r !1!11rs ID 111 .u>K I o< ,.,,,.,. ""'' ll Del 11 •t~~''<t<I ol ll lt lttr1 muu !~1.-"'0• nAtoJ•• 11\d m•H•no AddrP1>, ~.,, n~n>oll "'"~ 11' wl!titit ld on rtour1t If •~H•~ltnl r1uon 11 '"'°"'""! Poe!ry w ill ""' bl 1>t1bll1Md. room should be spent on it. After all there's noth.ing wrong with trying. Third. 1 know of groups composed entirely of teenagers who have devoted their own time enllre\y to helping cltan up their own part of the country. Teenagers aren 't all as he described lh~m: And as for aivf'fing things like this m the paper. I think more space lhan ever should tit: taken up for thil "triv ia ." JOHN McCANN Clean~ CampNS~ -- To the Editor: This Jetter is In answer to Robert 'T. Robinson's leHer (Mailbox , May I) regarding Earth Day. I feel he has golten his story mixtd up. He says that the DAILY PILOT should print more important artldes, that Earth Day has no significance, and he calls teenagers hypocrites. First of all. pollution is the world's .seeond most tragic problem. population being the first, which I th ink is Important enough to be printed. Second, Earth Day was set up by the government; if they think IL helped, why can't he St'e those facts? 'THTRD. l AM a student of Foumain Valley High and he stated that teenagers arc beck to driving their car!'! an<i lit· 1cring, but he left out the fac t that adults are doing the sam e, Since April 2.2, Earth Day. our high school campus has been cleaner than a t any other given time, I don't think even Mr. Robinson can argue against those facts . IL seems to me he doesll 't ca re enough about our environment IG arcert the idea that someone else cares enough. BOBBIE llOLM Bulk 1'1alllng To the Ed itor: \Vilh the U.S. Post Office losing money on a da1I~ ba sis, and the common cillz.cn faced walh an lncrea~e in rates for first class mail, I wonder ho w one o( the candidates n1nn1ng for the F ifth Supe rvisonal District can qua lify for bulk mailing rates: to send out his junk cam paign literature. Since when do we, the citizens, have to subsidize a can· didate? \VILLIAM D. CLARK 'Andersonmlle Tri«t' To the Editor: that It shouldn't happen lo a "sabaki" ldog1. ANO f DON'T see. any great exodus of dissident, "11il:"' c<1lli ng A1nericans rushlng into Russia, but I do rc::iri 1he lists of fon.>1i;:n dis:.idcnts n1shlng here from cveryv.11crc, There must bl' something here tha t everybody abroad wants, olherwise foreign ers would not he breaking thei r necks to gel here, wh!le some of the dissidents here a re breaking thei r backsides lo destroy what they've got. So muc h for one side o( the story. S. G. UNDINE Protect Marine Life To the Editor : After seeing Channel 28's presentation of the "AndenonvU)c Trial," ail 1 can The San Juan Rocks, to the north say is "BraVo!" 1'tt: highest praise is of the ri.farine Science Institute of Dana due the whole ca1t. This was truly Point •. is a game p~ese rve. There _is of the highest quality. Shatner, Wallace, no ~ r:osted to notify people of tJ"us. Buehlrt and Cassidy deserve awards On occasion l have seen ~p~e come ·r0r-the tr excetltnt performances. ---wl_tb bucltets....and remov~ w1ldhfe. from 1 this area . Most people thank one octopi1 ~ra~o for KCET and George C. Scott. ~ starfish won "t hurt. but if everyone This 1.s mor:e proof of how great Mr. 'who came there took only one anim al, Scott really JS ! the area would be depleted considerably. MRS. G. W. LEEK Should not the party respomiblc for Young Jackals To the Editor: Thett are two 1ide1 to every story (our 8'de and a wrmg side) bul for thi.!1 premise let me present only one side or a controversial subject: The young jackals who go about calllftl policemen "pip" arc quick to call the cops when they need free protecUon. J saw this happefl . A young hyena who roamed the. streets sttlllng tires, radios and anything tte <:ou\d get his hands on to sell to the black market, discovered that someone had stolen his blc.ycle. CA'TASTROPllEI End of the world! He. r.nuldn 't get to the phone fast enough lo call the police and yeU bloody murder ! See y,•hot 1 mean! Jackals and hye11a1 protected by the police.. But in Russ.la ll 's different. There, Ir you throw a rock at a cop &nd rall him "svina" tbt: penalty Is 50 severe lhi.! area post a sign and assume its rcspomlbility? OIERI WATSON ------ Monday, May 25, 1970 The tditorial page of th~ Dnil11 Pilot seek.~ fo inform ond stim· ulate Teat;1cr1 bJJ presenting Uti:i '14!'Wspaper'.t opinions and com- n1entnr11 011 topics of i11terc st an(l significance, by providing a /orion for lhe exprt.trion of our reoderi' opinions, ond by pTesenting tll.11 diverst vil!w- poin u of Informed observrr.t and JJ)Oke8men on topics of lhe da y. Robert N. Weed, PubUsher Finch Backs Murphy SACRAMENTO (A P) -1'hc man many guesse d might op- pose Sen. George J\1urphy for the Republican Senate nonl1- nat1on , Robert H'. F'nch. today tndorsed 1'.'lurphy s bid for re- election. QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl F'inch, forn1er ~ieutenant governor 1 called upon Califor- nia's Republ ic.a n' to join him in voting for Murphy rather than millionaire. industralist Norton Simon. whose record flf bipartisan support was as- sailed by party le:ider Jan1cs llalley earlier todav. "Sen. fi.1urphy ~ a tnistcd t;E;~~~:;:~::..;_J!;!:t.i=:::.:~::.=~!!::::!~~=:.J ally or President Nixon in ...1-: • •• 11' K' ,_ ~ i. .. ~.,,_ W..M...,.. _...... Washington and of Gov. Rea-••1 had Mr. Hmory en the Uoe, but the telephone gan in Sacrame11to," said comp~eoem1 to have lost him!" F' inch, U.S. satretary or health, education and welfare, ------------------------1 in an O[K'n lelter to "all Calif- ornians," released by an aide here. , "I hope that we wtp continue 1his teamwork and oominate Sen. f\furphy as our Rcpubli· can candidate on June 2 and re-elect him in N~r." Finch, now reCtiperating rrom a sudden illneslf, said he had observed ~turphy·s "keen understanding of our public affairs" and his '·earnest dedi- cation to his constituents,'' at at first hand in Washington. The man \\·ho oUt-polled Gov. Reagan v•hile running as his lieutenant governor candi- date in 1966, Finch noted all ~2 S e n a t e Republicans en- dorsed Murphy's re-elect.ion bid. The F i n c h endorsement came after J ames W. Halley, immediate pa.t chairman of the Republican State Central Committee. questioned the re. cord of Murphy's opponmt, millionaire food industralist Norton Simon, 63. * * * Sinton Raps Policies Of Opponent LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Industrialist Norton Simon, <.'andi<late for lhe Republican Nominallon for the U . S • Senate, said Sunday his op- ponent in the .June 2 primary, incumbent Sen. G e o r g e Murphy, espouses' I o r e i g 11 policy that is two decades old. Simon said f\1urphy made a speech in the Senate May 19 "full of cold ·war cliches, dark conspiracies, attacks on civilian control of the military and challenges lo t he American principle of checks and balances." In a statement issued from his headquarters. Simon said, "there was a United States Senator talking aboul our Southeast Asia foreign policy or loday and making com- parisons with the need tG homb bridges on the Yalu River du r i n g the Korean Wtir,'' "Al a time v.·hcn restraint on military <1cti vil y i n Southeast Asia is uppermost In the minds and hearts of the President and a 11 Americmis, Senator Murphy is criticizing restrictions on generals by civilians ando v.·or· ries about a no-win policy," he said. Simon said that if he wins the GOP nomination he will call a statewide meeting of all elements of California 's Republican Party to plan a gC'lleral election campaign 'Pat' Brown Proposes Splittjng California LOS ANGELES (AP) -For eight years, Edm'und G . Bro1•"n as governor struggled With the problenlS of runnh1g California, now the nation's most populous state. Nov.·, after being a\vay from the state capitol fo r four years, Brown proposes split- ting California Jnto two states because "it's almost im· possible to govern a state'' oC 20 million people. "I'm absolutely convinced now that the south and north should divicre into two states," Brown said Sunday. "1 thin k it would be more efficient. The people of Southern California would be happier and the people of Northern California would get v.·hat they \\'ant." Brown made the comment at a Democratic brunch in a friendly debate with his son. Edmund C. Brown J r. , Democratic candidate f o r secretary of state. 'T' he younger Brown disagreed with his father. "There may have been some justification for splitting the state 20 years ago, but now the old problems of the south· -like air pollution -can be 6 Teens Hurt In Crackup Of Cable Car HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Six teenage girls were using a private cable car to come down a steep slope from a luxurious home in t h e HoUywood hills after attending a.•birlbday party given by one of the gir ls. Suddenly, !he main sup- porting cab!C' sn11pped bccau sr of the girls' wei,l!;ht Saturday night, investiga1ors saHI, :ind the car crashed dri\\'n a 100· foot embankment 1nt11 a con- crete v.'all. The impact thre1v five of the gi rls from the car. but Susan Handel, 15, was pinned in lbe wreckage for 211 minutes before firemen could [ree her, officials said. f\f iss Handel V.'as reported in critical condition al a hospital, suffer ing fron1 a severe head injury, a possible pelvic fracture and fa cial cuts. The other girls 11·erc treated and released. The par- ty was given by Judy Malin at her home lo mark her 15th birthday. founlf in the north;" 11aid Brown J r. ·'and the old northern problems -like land u~e in urban areas -arc fou11d in the south." Prop. 8 Ads Get Reagan Into Court By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Reagan will send his attorney to court Tuesday to try to prevent Prop. 8 sponsors from using Reagan's own words and voice in an ad1 for the proposition which the governor opposes. Reagan said the ad "falsely implies that I support Prop. a·· v.•h.lch he \ermed a "frightening measure" 11·hich could mean a net tax boost of $200 a year for the average family or four. San1 Yorty, however , hlan1cs Reagan for failing to li ve up to 1966 campaign pro- mises to provide enough aid lo schools and calm the l11rbulcnt Cafifornia campuses. Bul Reagan·s predecessor, two tern1 Gov. Edmund G. Urown. has conc l uded CaH!ornla 1s JUSl p I a i n ungove rnable and 11·ould be bc.1\cr off split inlo two st.ates. "The pcnple of Southern C;ilifornia v.•ould be happier and the people or Northern California 11'ould ge t what they v.•ant," Brown told a campaign gathering for his son, Edmund J r., .,...ho 's running for secretary of slate. Reagan's attorney will ai>- pear in court tomorrow in Sacramento in the latest step to silence Prop. 8 ads the governor feels mis I ea d li steners into believing he sup- ports i1. Prop. 8 is the initiative pro- posal on the June 2 primary IJ<il lol !11 require the stat<' to pay half of all local school costs and !Ml percent of all w~lfare costs. Plane Retired ROBB INS AIR F 0 RC E BASE. Ga. ( 1\P\ -'The last XC·142A, a vertical take off aircraft which never got pasl the experimental stage has bl'en retired. The Air force said the four- Pngine aircraft will join other planes of the past al the Air Force Museum, Wright Pat- ter.son AFB, Ohio. FRIENDS OF NEWPORT BAY • FREE PUBLIC MEETING THURSDAY, MAY 28th, I P.M. IN THE LYCEUM· COSTA ..,ESA HIGH SCHOOL 2650 FAIRVIEW "ROAD, COSTA MESA SUPERVISOR DAVID IAICER WIU SPEAK ON THE UPPER BAY. Purpose: Put.lie 11 Invited Pro+•,+ th • publlc: i11!1•11t ;,.. the t«:l'e1•nch ef Upper Newpor+ lar. ln1u11 1d1qu1!1 pl11111l~ b1lor1 cl1 .. 1lopm1nl i1 1l1•!1d. Con111v1 t pen 1p1t1 1114 ft1 hrt1I \'l lufl. Prornot1 ''''''lion comp1tibl1 willi elh•• "•lu11. Prol•t t lh1 1utrou~di n9 ,,,;J1nt:11 1nvi•onm1nl, MEMBER SHIP DUES •••••••••••••••••.••••••••••• $ I.GO CONTRllUTION •••••••••••••••••••••"•······ ••• S Tot1I $ Join Us Today ••• SAVE NEWPORT BAY I P.O. BOX <4081 IRVINE STATION -92U4 INFORMATION: 525-1371 or 6-46-0154 DAILY mat 7 Rescued Hiker Relaws Week-long Ordeal GLENDORA CAP! -A 17· year~ld church youth leader with a heart condiUon who wa.'i rescued after spending a week lost in the wilderness near here says cold -not hunger -was his worst enemy. "I'm not-a wood sman. How a granite canyon 35 mUes do you build a fire without northeast of Glendora. matches?" "I was lying the~. trying The temperature in the rug• .,.. .... ·-... r @WI to get some sun." Snow said. cessful in shouting over the "And then l iaw these four sounds o! a stream to guys coming toward me. IL searchers within 150 feet o! ged area in the San Gabriel MOWltalns ranges from JOO degrees during the day to 30 below at night. Snow said he chewed four roots lo help him survl\'e. Flag Flies Over Paper's Page 1 was the happiest day of my lihimii. iiii, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii life." I The ci·ewcut, six-fool Sunday BEYITON school teacher and business NOW PA. YI "It's I.he cold that's 'A'orse," Paul Snow of Norco, said Sun- day from his bed at Glendora Community Hospital. "I didn't think I could su rvive another night," PAWTUCKET, R. I. {AP ) -The Pawtucket Times has added an American flag to its page one n1asthead . executive got lost May 16 after 5 v43 514\\ he felt ill and becam e ....... ~·-· A hospital spokesman said Snow was in good condition, was able to shave himsell , eat some food, and 11·as in "exctllenl spirits." separated from a youth group from the Norco Community Church during a hike. Snow. who v.•ore only a short-sleeve shirt. lrou3l'rS and boots during his ordeal, said ht didn't build a fire because he had no ma~s ; •·1 felt today would have been my last day," Snow told a four-man sheriff's re~ue team when they found bim •lyin g nur some bushes 1n TI1e Times began using !he flag \\'ednesday. Ves Sprague, t he newspaper's executive edi tor , said the flag alw ays has been the "rallying point in tin1es of stress." ... ,.~ .. . .. . ... ~ Snow said he wandered up and down the sa1ne canyon in a11 attempt to return to the campground where the group had been. lie said he waved vainly at ~arching helicopters and v.·asn 't suc· , Siz:es 3 to 6X Orig. $5to$6 • . ~ I I J NOW 2.44 . 0 . ' .: . ·., '. ''. '~' "'•' ::~·1:. '• '· -·'·. ' ·,.o '• ..._ ' • -, . ' .. '. : . ' ~ . Siz:es 7to14 Orig. •s 10'8 NOW 2.88 ' .. • • Scoop up the sovings and get set for summer with our fabulous collecti on of closeout dresses! We have all her favorite styles including drop waisted skimmers, self-belted shifts and carefree culottes! And mom will love the easy-care fabrics like polyester I cotton, nylon /polyester, Dacron ·~ polyester "whipped cream" ond all cotton •.. some Pe nn-Prest too! LIKE IT ••• CHARGE IT! ---•l'loo .. ---· h .. ;¥~< ... ----annon uvDfu -'°"" .. :-.co.--·---.. _. ·-,.,. __ _.., ... , " r I DAILY PILOT For the Meeti1tgs MONO•Y l•~lor c 111uro> to.o •' H.,nr•nv•on &o.,fl. p.,. •n<I M•<i•dl10n liv•"'"'~· 11m ""° Cir•n11e •I'"''' Hv"r111111on 8f•C~. IC I m Nl"'PO'I Ho•bc• S...noor C1!111n1 Club, ~~··•or (<1l1•n• CIUl>l>OOI ... !,111 51f~•I •' !tVl"O A•fllv•, NIWP<tfl lhet"- lC "m N•"'""'I Conot• ,..,,..n11 CJuD. 1110<><1 HOU>•. Funlon •• 1 .. roo. NfWl>O<C ll<•CI,. I~ '"'°" :O•••On•C loul"•l•I••• Calllofnl1 S••- •"9> onU I o•n1 Co1•• M"•· I um LW".,,.."''"" To••lln&>I«>, to<•! ll<•t 10>•~~ttnT, l6<.l HOrbcr 8 Jvd, Coil• Mr>• I ""' F•P'D••• ~'"""· lhl>COC~ llotlron•c" E•PIO•t• Po" va. l>alXOCJ, 1:1«- UGn•C\, J~I H••bl!I 111•0 , Co>I• ........ 1· ll u,., Cl••F~• (Oo>1 M•n1t1I •nd 1.•P•daN 5.Dc••l•. Ct.!• MO"o~. W~n•<<>"> (IUb. 1•0 W li'h SI , CO>I• /\\Ojo, I JO •• 1"001nlion V••lr• Jun•Ot ("•"'"" ot (.,...mu<• "'"G, r~o•• 1•1 1 Wo•""'"''"' ,.,. "°''"'"n'I"· ] ;iol om Loil• M•'• H•,mor>• I bd~• Nn ~. ()co I •llo"'> t1Alj. 1• • H•<'ll>lll1 Ell•<!. (Q,to M~>•. ' o ,,., ....,,,,,o~ v.~•• l••• c1~u, ""'"'on V•••o ~«•••'•Oii (tr''•'• M•h•VI V••oO, I II nl TUE~O.t.1 {O•O"• O•I M•t LA~h•"~' ('vi' JM•'• ll•"•Qtdnt, 11. £. (~·• .1 "'~""d>, {npn• oti M••· 'l""""' "-Ou~rol o! (""""''' Ne.,.pcut lt••Oclr. n·•••'· •' ••«•v• en"""''· ~on•11c1 Re• fl C•''••• .-•·IJ.OJ, 12 t><llln, Co>•~ Mtl ll E ><na"'i• Club, Cora! ~Cr! lluMuran!, lo•~ Hll1bcr 81•0, Co•M M .... n npOn . (o-.oa Mtt• lo•n•O• C1111en• Club, Com· munltr Rf(tfnllo" <.•n••" 0••""• C001nl¥ fllr~rovnas, Colt• Mn•, I I •.m. Cor0ono d•I Mar IO"'•n11 Club. VIII• ~wl'tl<n, J~l6 E Co•" Hlgn.,ov, C0<ono <Col Mff. 11 10 ~.m HvnTlngton ll••<n Klwanll C•uD, Hun- T1nv1on ~oacl1!1 Country CtuD, :ioco Peim AYe., Hvnting1on 8eoch, 1':1J •• N•NP<>•t ti••bcr OD!omhl C•vb. Viii• Mi1ln1, 10•1 Barl•O• o.,,,, Ne'"""'' lle1cn, 11 !l "m (o•I• ......... KiNlln<S Club. Co•!• M••• Goll llnof Coun1•v Club. !IOI Golf (O\/rl• O"""' COIT• Me.,, 11 15 •• 11uMlngt0n 8r1cn Ro•M• Cll>D No••!'I. ~our W•nd• llo•l•u••nl, !Jo.Ill Bol•• <.nic1 Ro..i. Hu11llnglon Be•cn, ll H .•. ,..unlonqton 8••<h llorTn L•O<l\ C l\Jb, MH CIO*I••• (ounuy Clue. 161•2 C.••l'l•m. ,.~n .. nQlon 8 .. ac!'I. 11 l\001'1 [oC!'l•nO• Cl•b of !•ut!'IO lntlo/ltfi;1I ComPloo, Siu!! Stll•I <l"l•ruan1, 11•1 w (WU H•9M••••, N•wl>O•t llt•c!'I, -·· Dissol1ition'S Of Marriage l"ITEll:LOCUTOll:Y Dl!Cltl!ES Mvnsoy, M•ry '°'"" -J•"'•• Root• C•c;~-:,;. John Thoma1 an<! J•covellne l.ot'ff..-1, y,.,11ne M•ry trod Htnrv D eath l\'ollces 8 11 1NOEllSON M•i. l.•111• 11. llrind•,uon . ..,9• 71, o' "o E. l~•n 5! .• Co•t• Me ... O••• or de11n. Mtv 11 Su•ulveot b• d•unn'"" 1~elm1 11. Fre.,.,, {OJI!• M"'"' b'"'""'· Mr 1'.. C. Swad " of Co~•• M•1•; on• oron<!(hll<" anot lh••• o•t•1 ·<>•~n<l'l'lil<I'"" Se,Ykn , tad••· Mon•••· I JO PM, 8•11 SrDA<lw•• Cl'l•<>tl. "'"" '"'~'"'""' at W"""'lr>tt~' M•moti11 P••• 8etl e ro•d· "'"' Morru•rY. Director• GORM.t."I John F. IGu1ow~l1 Go"""" l 1J.I .t.n•• h•im "'••. Coil• M••• 011• of <1ealh, M~• 7.1. Su•vlwed b• W•lt , 110$e E Go•- ,..,1n; ~uvhl•r, M,. Mi1rth1 Grine, Or-; ...,, llooe• Gv•ow~id, Pha.nio, ..,.,...,,.; 1M !"'0 t r•'ldChlldren. llo<a•v, W-sd•v, 1 PM 11....,:,,m M•"· Tflvt<· <llY.' •M, l!Olh •I 5•. J ... Ch•m• Catnol•C l'"f\urt!I Inter~•!, GOO<f She"""'" C•m- •••rv-1111!1 Co•I• MeH M0<lu1.,,, (II. rKtOn.. LILL "r ~!'lolpe E~w1nt lilly 1'00 Co•oM<ln N•"'· POrl II•"·~-Oa•• ol <le&lh, Mov 1~ RO\• orv, Tu••dl•, I PM. 11..,o,.um M""· W- n~"<I••· f llM. bo'h di Du• l•d• o! Mt c.,..,.,i C1lholic Chvr<h. !1•11 e roaaw1• M0ttu1ry. O"•cto" LYON Orvlll• lv°" ll? Orchid A•t., Co•""'° <i•I M••. D•!e of ,, •• in, M•Y 1l Su••l••O •• w•t•, V"1l•1 '""• ~ton•o'd Lvon, of N~w M0>e1co; !WO bro!heH: lou• ••l•tr1 ana ono 0•1Mlc!'lllO S""'"e" t11e1<1>v. 11 AM, Pe<lflc Vlow Ch1pe1. •n•e•rn•n•, P•clli~ "'""" Memo .. 11 P•r~. Ohoc1e<I ~y P1cdlc v;...., Mor!v1r1. QUIHt.IVEH '""· Lido! S Ou1nll•en. A~ to. of l~l ~In• Dr , Hun!lnoton 8e1<~. Date o• <!"'"!h. M•• :n Sv••lvt<I b• hv>b1n~, M•ttl'lew ~ Ovlnliven: 5"'1, J"'1n l : <!111111\trr, Mro Rnm1n1 Sm>lh: "''"" M•" flennl• Gibb•; tour 0•1n<!ohll<l ren •Ml ,..., •• 9••1!·0 .. n<k.hildt•n Ch•""I •~le"' 1rod ln!f'"'""' Tue•O•V· , JO P .... , Wesfm.n•le• M1morlel P1rl. Mor•u· • ,. .,.., c ........... S.t.M~~ON •te•tn I'. 5•mQ•O>n .t.Qt ti, o! 111~ Doi· P~'" l •"•(• Co•ona a•! M•• Dill• ol .,•tlh, Mtv l • Su•vovt(I IW nlf'(t. M,., ooi;oerl A 9t"'lfV, (o•one d•I M•r: n-~. Wlll•I.., K ~~"111\11", P~Cl'n••: O'i""·"•o"~"' All( ll~m .. ~ ot (OtMA r.(I M•f. Str•"'" I~•"'' 1D AM 811!: (<WC"" ~•I """' (n .. >el In'""''"' ,,,,. ~ ... 8111f M~rlu••Y (O•O"• C<I M••· ll"tC'<t" W.t.NTINli ,,o•• W~nh"• 1'9' E W•l•on fo-,. '-'tit. 041t o• Ottm. 1"•1 n ~UfVl~•O b1 "'''• Pilu' ol Lonv 8•AC~, tt•u•""' c;,.,<1• 8•0lorc, ~• COii• ,.,.,~ '"'o 0•1notth•l<l•tn, b•c•n•' .t.!b<o•I F•ltnt •. ~t l"•"'leroo. '"''• 'I ~• M•O<en. D•n· ...,.,~. P1<11111• O•••U•Ot >••Vitt• "''" r... "''<:C lvt'lle•, Pat" Vi•w M•onor!•I Por~. Olret•od b• P•(•"t v .• ., MOrll'•••· WM11E W•ll•"' N Wh•lt 1"ot 11 o! 1'~ f >ow.,. Co••• Mt>" Oa•t o• O••'"· Mo• '/J ;,,,, ~""" b¥ .,.<1,, 110•• • w ... 1. "'"""'"· Mn "'"" Flt!cht• Fl~t1n1 ''''"'· M" ~~''"" Ft•dlv, o1 '"' .. "''" 1 .. ,., o••nO· <~lld•en •nd tC)IO• """I o••narn>Jdr<n '>e••··~·· Weon .. <I•• I )) PM. 6••1 llri>•,,...•• tneo~1 . """ ·~•o"'!'"'•"' •' M•lr"'t Abt><•. 8•11 6<r·•Ow•v Mot!uo1>, O"K IO<"J. f\ RBUCKLE & SON WestcliH ~1ortuary 427 E. 17tb St., Costa ~1rsa 646-48M • Monday, Ma1 25, 1970 R ecord Helln<rl G-•· Jefil """ R-rl Gt>orvc JO'Truon, ""lfc• Jt•n 1no R<>11., P!!!ll>e C.•Pll~•I R~t~ "-• \f<lflM •nG M.1nvlt1 ,~. M'l.eo<l, H•ltn l.l>C:lll• .,>II 0\tn 11•¥ H•IU.I•. Sl\lrllll Il l.Ck lll'ld ll\Om•I Cl•t~ Or•l1, OoJOre• M•de •fld lloblfl S•I••· Jsnl• Evtl•n •"" Jonn f•1ni<lln H•"· Joon I.""" llOvd G. JQ!1n50n, S~aron LH 1fld P•l•lck GI· -ltilu. '°'lie• •n<I Dt~IO e vrcn, H•rrl•I 11. •no D•nlel ~. p3rte1'on. P•lf lCI• M •nd l.•"• C. F Ql~trt, Vlwlan -K•nr>clll 11001, K•lhryn Jt•n lroG GIN Glt"n O•d•n. Donn<> Mae •"" J•m•• (n., '"' En!tll.r., Lt•lle El•I"" lnG Fr1M1111 Mt .. lltt 1'let1now•, J1cQ,,.ll"" M. •nd C••I""' Jnom•• M>nfcn, S~n••·•nG (;0•11<! D"<:ni, C1ro1 0 . """'Gu~ J Pu•k Jl,(f'••tO H •n<I C.:•"''""''° J p • .,~. f rwe•l<:k L•·,.,, '"" J••~n~ "~r111n Pt110>t11. H"'"'""° C """ Tt<ll ( Vin<>. G•Cr itle E •"° llol>ul S Btrm.,. EllL"""'" C 1nd Na• K"• F1'<ntr. Elnel H. ~<><I~·• 0 . Tvtlf•. S•!!• M And .Jann 8 MVtl"'•n, R-tl l dnG Slf lll I . '""''"""dQ, l«>•~ 1no llot>o•I ~ 6Wfnc1, Gu• G«>tD• •nG G1il>orl1 M•tor Je~n"• w.ll1dm1. Oen»• l(.,mte•I• •nu ~n.,,11 ~ ..... " fld•( JeHf JOd!'lf\c •ntl He•D~ft S!•nlf• Du~•w••· M«h.lel ,,ng J•M M••·• T,..,,,,p$<1n, OOl"Olh• l. dn<I fdwo•<I ' Pan•••, Carol June •nll V!ncenl "' K•~m ... •bol01 ""° 1100.:tt Cl EC.C•1, want1• 1na W'lllern II . Re~~' Jo>11S S •nG F•• ttu1 Tron, Cl1110i• """' Cilclo• MolMI •, 1'.ugu•le ona Jdme> Nocho•~> F 10,.ntlr>0. Pam,I• and An!honv P C•,.enri. 8oat•lce and louh AQu•>D C~llet. Oline L. an<! Rowrr l . Nel>0n, Sheilah •nd Nor~I '°'· F1rrlmond, K•••" t.. •"" Go•<lon C. rnae11,, Etl"n Hann• •nd Cll!tor<I M. Ct'1$~cellor, Charl~ta E. •rKI Richer<! NT1~l<I•, Yof ln<I Kiehl•• Oomon, Viclfl K. u1d Sit~• '°'"°'e"'s G~•g• J. 1Ml Elv• E ~~~~ .... ~~~l~l~~lt:. ·;,,,:~.'-;"g·:.~t ~: 1-cowerd. Jf1n K. 1na Richard K Llnd,.V, SanGr1 Su" end Rothlrd Eaw••<I Ana .. rson, D•«<I N """ S/TOffY l. MOnll>Ottle••, K~nn~lh H •n<I C1tol ' Pear'>On. Max\nf "' 1roo Jo/Tn 11 BAY, Judllh An" •1'<1 Eld"n [ln•<r C•rnev. Eaw11a 8 . J1 •nd lo•" S~Hn, P•trlClll l . •n<I Jam ... IV. Na\t. 0\1nne E. •ncl Wllh•m J . ltoC!<er. C~rol •no Elr·d "-"" ~dm.1ag, WOnitre<t Ann ~na R.cn11a "'"'"°"' FIN.t,1._ OECllEEI J""~'n" J•n<I E. •nd Eugon• W>;;,!eY. llOOOrl M•• •ncl J!,\•« Wol>s.I!• McE!v...,y, PhYlli• J••n •nG ltl~nd ·~· Porker P i1"" (, 1NI GeOI'~• E. ,, . SToc~•1. Oelorn •n<I J"'1n F. J•. Bil'•. Pelricl• Ind E'""'' 8en..,,,, Fr•t>Ce• K. •nd C!lllold C. Hur~r. Barb•r• A. and FlovO L Fawler, walttr C11t11 .. •nG W•nd• '~ l<.ocnn, No.-m1 J. and JOSHI! W Moodv, 8••D..-• Jt•n 1<><1 Jore E. B•od<. S•l•I• Ann a nG J1mt1 Eaw1ra Could, Cnarle• •nd Ethol l,:".:,F;y~11'i:1cr;:;J• 'E":r1L•;~ w~!~;,'" Ao~·,.,,, Auror• l . O• •nd Jtlm1 ' ~\'fr~~~', f~f:',~-.~;"G~r".~\1 J'.1.n PhllliPI Robert W••ll!r •<><I Pon"• ,,, PiPuengor, 8e!!Y Jeen and J•ck 1"rl!'lu• Peri\, 5~•an .O.Jetla en<! Gltnn Alon GOOldltl. Flo1•nce •nO Alf••• E•Hld~ lroerrlon. llicnar<I H. ano Corrin1 Mir!• Cl'LOU .. hlln, Eli1abolh A. """ Mkh&el , Hf rrell, lorraln• M1rg•<•I ""° J1mei Mcntoe J1. 8eOr01o>1•0, S1tPf'l•n M. 1nd Oil"• ' Cart••· ClitlorO II 1nd V•lede A W••••r. llorDar• JO<tn •nd Lo•ll• ll<IGn w ... on. lOOli .. W. •nd [<!WlfO C W•ll•, .t.lo••nr:t•t J<. Intl Md"Ofl M . W•lt•i, Mlu r..., •<>G Don.old P. HiY ... Nlt>CY C. Ind J"'1~ M. 6e1!•n, ~v1n E. •nd J°"n F . b•Yont, J•ann•n• L. •nG J1mn w Rloou•, Jwn .t,g~ •n<I Ken,,.,lfl W•l•tr Oualll SanG•I S 1n<I Willar" C. cow:., Jowce L" •..a GMW"11t M. McMllltn. ThH1• L. •nG Hom•t J. ""lien, Suo1n c . """ 8..-r C. •.e11w, Cnatlf• ano .... ,.n M1rl• W<lgh!, Lind• C. lnG Willl1m Frint~• " Scnitnme" Emir/ R. •Ml WIWM fit . llo<l9en. R-rl '°'· .aM l...C• L $fwell, Merg•••t P. """ J1rnn H. C.111"'"'· Non• Je1n •nG C1lyin W•Yno ~C11ulm1n, ROl>e'1f Ann Ind Ea•I• M., ... , Sh••O>n L"• .,,., C.IOn L•l•nd CluMou<h•I, Made anG Rld\••O J. 6ucnanan, D<>ro1nv J. 1nG K1n.,.1n '· Howar<I. C. II. end Adtl• l•""· w;11,.m 5. and Lugene Sn•dtl, L•"•• R•• ""° llDCler! lvnn Irwin Joan Caroll""° Chari•• Ht•~•! Y..,no. L"I•• v and Jert• l. ~;:71~~·PJ•~~~1:· G'."'!:i~~'n J. OeWood•, JuOl!!'I .... nn 1nO C•.,Oll OOIJ"IA• "-•cv, MicnollO fll• 11<\CI Jame• 0110 Morrio, Jlldllh l anG JQ!'ln o . S~•k" 1'.nll• M••l• •n<I Slmon Curll• Andrew•. Jom•i F. •nd P•ui• M. POflff, JerrY '"" s.,,.,, .. MIU•t, Shirley II. •<><I Wiii Leon••<! Murph•. Patrlcl1 "'nn •'111 J1c• Pnilll• Mil!>, Jtm•• Don .or>d Helen Oolortl Garone•, Di•n• L•nn •n<I G«>•g• W••i<Y Sevm..,r, .Jun• llooeru end filon•ld E<lw••d l •••!Or. Hooe •"" Jotln L . '"°"'•" Nin• .:: •<><I Oonold E Mulllorn Ken.,t •n II. J•. •"" EvelYn Pnollio" (leua·~ E . •nG ROO<ft I Flnlfv. Gl•nd• Siu a.-.1 lloi>t•! P•lf•(~ F••••••· wal!t• F. and Ma11on Pn!lllP" Mffle E .,,., Can 0 8o•w•ll. Jun• "' """ Ro..altl 1 PhilhPS. Ponne J ana Ern••t R. ~fo":t P;•::f~" J,,:,",,q -:~lrJ;:.,. J•"'•' Oooa~. l~n''"· P•I•• •net Ctr-c•n••o Y Molfm1n. D••~··• Cl . •nn E""'" o ArnlllQ, Hal!' LCPUllf a"O JO\tO~ Jnnn 5liif~. C1rolf O·~"' ilMO Pau1 W••r • S•••ll M•nlO•. Gerlrll(lt •nd (llrro,n • k•l><'I. M•n•"• •n<I (••••, Flar>fq•'•• l'•tt1 JO'•on •"d l•o•lm• M•tl• 11 >(1>. Ltndi ~Uf 1n<I MOrrl\ Sh~a•td • 5•n•c•I. W1Unn 0 .. ono llt•n•l M V•n Ot rlow, l•lt Wllh•m 1nn 8art>•r • '"" B•un•on, V"qlnT• llo,. t na w111i.1n (a,.••d Ht'I~. LO•> M•e end M~•o•<I llo• D•""'t, M•rgi• 0 •no P•T•• J MMI'""'· M•'• (I••• t no T•l!'l•Ood c~r10, Fo•I••· Ctcl! J '"" E!!l•I L•t W•l,n•t MOf• Madll><>• •nO '""'" Eu~•n• llO\f, D•1nn• Hy~""' •nd fr>t l'ilft M•• \I (lf'doe S•f!O•• L•• •nd Ltnn1• ll•1<•n Raio. J•~n '""''"''"•no J•<-11,.~••0 8 i»d, Ro~I• "' •nd (•'•n O Jon,.,ton. Jer°"'• J••••O ,,,., /~•· • '~· Snlotn1n. 5,. ti•nr• •na Oolo"' M. G•l<li>ht•, S.001'1'• P. •!'Id lO~)! ,, Bro"''"· .t.Oo L. a<><! Robert l Sl110•. JMn .... E. •nd llobf•I M L+•.,..llvn. Lind• Ell•" 1nG Clon Glvnn M"ll· J&ntt l •nd Eld°" C. BALTZ 1'110RTIJARIES Corona dt.I 1'11ar OR l-9~5'1 11 ---L_E_G_A_L_N_'O_T_IC_E ___ I Cost. Mesa l\tl 6-Z4Zf • BELL BROADWAY MORTiiARY ltD Broadway, Co11ta f\1esa LI 11-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS lluntingtoo Vall t.y l\1ortuary 17911 Stach Rh·d. lluntin~ton ~atb 114!·77'11 • P/\ClFTC VlE\V F.tE~10RIAL PARK Cemetery • f\tortuary Chapel S511 Pad.fie View Dtivt Newport Be'.c11, California 144-mt • PEEK F AMR, V COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 Bol1• Ave. Westmlu~r ltl-35ZS • SHEFFER MORTUARY Lapna Btac• •t4·153S San Clemtnle 4ft.fl• • SAfl'I'm' MORTUARY U'I Milo Sl Hnlln .... Beocll - 1 ·JIOt SU"Ell•O• cou•T 0, 1MI SI.I.Tl OF CllL!FOllNIA ,0. THE COUNTY 0, Clll ... NO t: No. A· .. !11 I NOllCt: 0' Mf'.t.•ING 0' "ETITION FOii PROll ... TE 01' Will_ '°'"ID COOl(IL '°'ND 1'011 \.I l TI II S TESTAMENl ... llY Esl•le o• MtNl'llE (11.lOWFll. •150 •no"'h "' MINNI E S. ('°'LOWELL. •luo •.nown •• WILHELMINA 5 L '°' f E II C •I. D w E l l , ''"° •nown "' Wl~HElM!NA 5 C1"LOWE.ll. O•ce•>td tJOllCf IS HEll ESY (;IUEN tho! Pl(Ht,RO W, 8ULl1'.S •"d JUNE ~l(HL 'I ~ii•• t;1e<1 ~'"'" o oollllon +c.r o•,.h-1• ot "'"I •hd u>dl<ll •n<I In• "'"~"~• ol L•tlor• l•Jto,.,•nl•rv I 'o •~• oeht'""'"''· '"'"'""" to w~kn ·~ m~d• 1.,, ru"~•r oO•lltUl•n. •n<I •~•! 1h• llm• '"" ol•t • or he•rln• ·~~ '"~ h•• bo>-n ,,.., lo• '""" 11. 1910. •I • JO • "' • ln tht' ~ov.i•oom ot tl•P1"m•n1 ND. l ot ••kl courl. "' M c .. i. C•nTe• D•••• Weil, In '"' (:1tv or s.n11 •n1, <•lllornl1. O•tKI M•v l), !llO. W. E. ~l JOHN. Counl~ C lert J.t.MEt .t.. NICl{Ll"I '" Dirt• ll-5•• M.9t1ne. C••~lll• tll• T1I: Ull) ll).14Sli Al'"°'" ... Plll!lt_., l'ubll!Jlrod Clr•noo CWJI O•ltv ~ltol. Mt• U. )J. 30, lf10 tJS·Xf , Politi(,'fll N otes Citizens Sc l1ool Unit Forms\ Dy 0 . C. HUSTINGS Cl! 11\t Oal!V P!l91 itlff dent ()[ the Fountain Valley group said . pin .. Wednesday. The two ain·: testanls for lhe 3 fl t h I A non-profit organlialion * Co 11 g r e s s i on a I District designed to "act in beha lf or College instructor David Democratic nomination will ( 1795 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD LAGUNA BEACH MO RTUARY • 494-9415 • the taxpayers'' is being form· Hartman and former Marine debate for the benerit of the ed in Newport Beach al the 'I'om Lenhart will meet head-Tustin Meadows Democratic urging of four Orange County on at Tustin f\>leadows at 8 Club. The public Is invited . state legislators. I _:....:_:_:....::::::::::....::::::....::....::__::.:__:___::::::::__::::c:::::::_::..::::.:.:=--'=========================' Probation 0 ff it·er:s Plan Meet ANAHEIM -Or:u1i;c Coll11- 1y pr obn tio11 officers v.·ill joi n their colleagues f1'\.1111 n1any other Ca!irorniu cbuntic:; M:iy 27 through 29 at t h c the Disneyland Hotel for the annual rnectlng uf the California Probation. Parole and Correctional Ass{)('iation. Politics appears destined to creep into llie non-political g:ithcring \\11th si x c:indidatcs for !he JOb of Allornt·y General of California sched· uled tor the Wednesd;1y n1orn. 1ng session. On the agenti<i for that day are S1.<;1le Senator .J o h n llarmer (R-Glendalel, Drpuly Attorney General Ch a r J e ~ o·Brien, District Atto rney Evellt. J, Younger of Los Angeles County, Assemblym<in Grorge Deukmejian, (R-Long each), former Reagan advi· iser Spencer Williams and cal)- didate Robert \Venke. Wednesday's program \l'ill feature an address by Or. Robert \V. Corrigan, reccn\ly named pr('si denl (If t 11 c Collrgc of Arts Lhat is bt>1ng built and sponsored by granls from the \VCih 1) i s n e y o rganii:ition. Assemblyman Craig Biddle is the scheduled sptaker for lhe noon luncheon Thursday. SA 1-[o~pital Awarded Grant IRVJNE-The James Irvine Foundation has awarded a $25,000 grant to the Sanla Ana Community Hospital for the hospital's medical and hospital aid fund, accurding to Irvine officinl s. The foundation. 'vHh offices In San Francisco 1:1nd Newport Beach, makes grants to tax- exem pt charitable organi~.a· tions ope.ra tlng in the stale of California. Dubbed COUNSEL (Com- mittee On Undoing Se rious I<:tlucalional Loss), the ex· pressed purpose or I h e organization is lo insure lhat public schools and colleges wilt be used for lhe purpose !or which they were built. ln spite of lhc fact that the four legislators backing lhl.' organiza t ion are Hepublicans -Assemblymen Hobert E. Radham of Newport Heach , John Y. Briggs of Fullerton. Rohert Burke of l !untington Beach. and Slate Senator John G. Schmitz of Tustin -the organization sup- posedly is not tied to the llepublican party. "COUNSEL will brused to oppose some of the thi ngs hap- pening on our campuses," ac- cord ng to a :'iJXlkesman for Batlham. The Ne1vport Beach law firm of Duryea. Carpenter and Barnes will respresent thr organizuttun. Carpenter, of c.•ourse. 1s GOP slate CC'ntral Co1nm1\[ee Chariman Denni~ (';Jrpcnter. \l'hO also is a can .. ~lld;.ite fur the state Senate sc;1! Sch1n1t~. is vacallng to run for Congre:;..'i. * Carpenter, incidenta lly. says he is totally against Proposi- lion 8. The June 2 ballot pro. position, which is endorstd by the California Te ache r s Association 1vould have the state provide 50 eprcent of the operating cosl"i of public schools and 90 percent of \1·r.lfarc cosls from sources othC>r thfln propertv taxes. Carpenter says that, while rr·jc.·ction or the bill will hurt olcal schools. he t hi n k s µ11s~age ··would constitute a real tra1·csly and would lhrow the lax structure into a real mess * Teachers in the Fountain Valley School District have thrown their support be:hind Dr. \V ilson Riles, assistant su perintendent of p u b I i c l·ducation in California. v.·hQ is trying to unseat his bo);s r-.1ax Rafferty. Au oHlcial blessing y,·as given Riles' candidacy by lht Fountain Valley Education Association which represents n1orc than 400 of the district's teachers and administrators. "Hr 1s the one most qunlHied for lhe post having ~ervrd 12 years in the state Department or Education and having chaired President Nix- on's task force on urban education ,'' Don Sauler, presi- Spur geo11 Given Top Boy Scouti11g Awarll ORANGE \V11l1am I\ Spurgeon 111, executive 1·1lc president Q( Children·), llospital of Orange County, has received the N:.it1ont1l Council of the }3oy Scouts or America's highest award. the ~ilvcr Buffalo. Spurgeon, an Eagle !'>Nut anti volunteer leader. 1s \1·idrly known in scouting rnr hl:i developn1ent of th{' Spcci;il Int erest Explorer s1:011L <:(J11· rep! for high '>rhool a~t' .101 111~-:t.crs intcres!cd in 11 l'<1rccr sp1•ciaHy Thi' Silver Buff:1lo \\~Ii presented lo Spu rgcm1 by th1· Nauon:i1 Court of Honor at a rl'Cogn1t1on banquet in Denver . Colo. The a\.\·ard i;-; prcsenled a n n u a 11 y lor distingurshcd :s r r vi c r lo txiyhood on a national or 1n· tcrnaliCJ11<il level. Previous holders of tilt Boy Scout award include Prcsid{'n\s Tart, II o over , Roo sev e.lt. T r uman , Eisenhov.·cr and .John:son. \Vall ~-- GOOD SCOUT Award Winner Spurgeon Disney, Ati'mlral Byrrl, Irving Berlin, Generals r>.1acArthur and \Vcstmoreland also have received the Silver Buffalo ;nvard . Huntington Beach Office: Located at 91 Huntington Center at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd., adjoining the San Diego Freeway, in Huntington Beach. MAllll 0''1CI.! tlh l HHI, Lo9 Alloll .. • 8'3-1351 ·--•rllHllll °"'1CI: 3113.S wu11t1 .. 11.a. • 3118·1265 LA. CtvlO CDftlllt 2111S a 1to.an1• 1»1toZ TAAI.f.MAI 11711 V'111lll'll ~ • '4&'41114 al.NTA MOtOCA: 711 Wlllfll ........... -..oT41 a.lff l'IDM>! 10tn l PeGlr!O • 1114Mf WUTCO\llltk EMcl" ~Cir.• »1.:aot CLOSEOUT! Get great savings on Penncrest® gift ideas! Save 6 .07! 7 transistor AM personal size portable radio Features inc lude: J l/:z"' speaker, "arioble tone control, earphone jock, AC adaptor jock. Earp hone included. O ri g . 16.95 NOW lo.tr Save 6 .07! Penncrest' solid s tate full feature clock radio Feature-s include automatic wo ke·fo·muiic or olorm , 60 minute slumber, luminous tipped konds. A great clock radio. Orig. 24.95 NOW 18.88 Sa¥e 13.07! Penncrest' AM/FM wood grain clock radio ..• Clcxk features 60 minvht slumber sw itch, light clock face and rodio dial, s.weep second hand. A terrific value! Orig. 49.95 NOW 36.88 Sa¥e 13.071 Penncrest' AC /OC portable st.reo with AM radio . ; Features 1ncl~e; 2 full range 6V2 " spea kers., soli;.:J state omplifil'.!r, 7" lu rn- loble, S contrc:Hs, 3 spe-eds. Orig. 49.95 NOW 36.88 Ch•r1• th••• ••I••• •t ,._r P-"•Y 1t•r•: BUENA PARIC •BURBANK• CANOGA PARK• CARLSBAD• CHULA VISTA • COllEGE GROVE • COMPTON• CULVEI CITY• DOWNEY• fUl LERTON •GRANADA. HILLS • HUNTINGTON BEACH • • HUNTINGTON PARK• INGlEWOOO • LAKEWOOD• LONG BEACH • LOS AlTO$ • MONTCLAIR • NEWPORT BEACH • • NORTH HOLLYWOOD • ORANGE "'THE CITY'" • SAN FERNANDO • SANTA ANA• TORRANCE • VAN NUYS •VENTURA •WESTCHESTER• WEST COVINA• IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ••• Huntington Beach Office of Coast & Southern Federal Savings, where your account is SAFE • CONVENIENT• AYAIL•:BLE Market lluctuatiomi don't wony Cont & Southem savers. thair capHaJ is always filing In value. Highest earning• consistent with safety when you uve at Cout & Soothem. IMSURHCI TO $20,111 / IESOUICES OYU 1110 MILllDM ASK A80l1T THE INSIDERS CLUB A NEW WAY TO SAVE MONEY-A $2,500 BALANCE IN YOUR .ACCOUNT MAKES YOU ELIGIBLE. 11'.lffOIV.MA CITY: M ii \'WI Hll)'t l lvd.• "2•1171 •MtTA ANA LOM llllYJCa AOlllCY! 190& No. MaJ11 It.• CT14) 147..-T HIGHEST PREVAILING RATES 5.00%-5.13% P-NoMlnlmum. 5.25%-5.39% Thrw Month Certmcate; No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% On.Y .. rCertlncate; $1 ,000 Minimum. 8.00%-8.18% Two-Year Cert1nc1te; SS,000 Minimum. • CHECKING . ·up. I~ish, Not Greeks Prove Best Lawyers By L. M. 80'1'0 SO YOU'RE THINKJNG about 1nfgrat1ng to Australia, are you·! All r ight, bu\ remember t.he v en o rn o u ~ snakes there oulnu1nber the harn1lr~s sn.akes .. THA'I' THE GREEKS n1ake cxrellent la wyer s is co nlnion knowledge. They are not. however, lr1 the 1najority. Best ()f the !ay:yc rs in this country now are of Iri sh extraetlo11. il's said . • A."'10.'IJG \\'llALES 1.l'i!h teeth. the males arc bigger than 1hc !ema\es. AnlOng \V h a I c s '"'itlloul teeth, the females arc bigger thon the 1nalcs. (;01 that? BEARS -On any gi\'en night at the height of the sumn1cr season. you can fig. urc about 30.000 citizen-; are slet'ping around in V e 11 o 1v ~ stnne P:irk. Little l\'Ondcr lhc bears get shook. No f!ippanty Intended. So1ncthing's going to have to go prrny soon. t'ilher the bears or the people there. count on that, STORES -Next lime you v:alk into a departrnent store, take a look at v•hat bargai ns, i( any, .'.Ire offered on the right of the doorway. Those hidden-camera surV!!Yttakers have told the depart~i store opcrntors lhal 90 parcml of the \vomen shopper~ ~rdµtptly lurn right after 1v a 1 ling through the front door. So that area just to the right l'lf the doo r is geneJ'lally regarded as the store's prime sales spot whereat are placed lfouor Given John T. Pickerill, M.D .. South Lngun<1 . has be 1t1n elected to active n1embership in the American Academy of Gener::il Practice, a national association of rnore th an 31 ,000 family doctors. The AAGP is the country's .c;ccond largest national medical association. the most enticing products. CUSTO~fER SER\IJCE -Q, "Hov.· many cigareltes do th~ tobacco men get out of a pound of tobacco?" A. About 350 ... Q "Do any bird~ hn1·e eyebrov.·s'.'" A. Not a one. Son1e have eyelashes, though . Q. "Hov.· long are asphal l shingles supposed to Jasr:··· A. Eighteen years is averag(' \\looden shingles \V iii ijO 33 years average. PLEASE OBSERVE -Ap- proximately 700 years a.go in England, it \\'as tl1e custom nmong gentl emen or high standing to hold hands as they strolled about in pob\lc, just as it is the custo1n to shake hands upon meeting. I see a ~reat deal of 13th Century thinking in !hf streets l'lf l!ollywood these days. but I do not believe tht'y are historians. OPEN QUESTJON -\Vhat's lhe most limes any one \\'oma n has C\'Cr had her face lifted? IN A SlNGLE d a y ' s foreclosure actions. \\'hen \\'e v.·ere lads during the Great Depression, one-fourth or the entire slate of ~1ississippi was sold. \Vho reme1nbers that? • .. OUR PLANET MAN savs fellows born under the sign of Cancer are kno\vn lo possess a terrific pov.'er of conce11tration and an ex- tremely stubborn \\'ill to \\'in, GREAT SPt~AKElt -No young n1an who thinks his voice is not deep enough should forget the fact that the silver-tongued orator or yesteryear. William Jennings Bryan, had no bass tones in his voice at all. None. Radio technicians discovered this od- dity v.11.ile transcribing an old record onto tape. Yo11 r questions and com· mrnts are welcomed and will be used in CHECKING UP wherever possible. Ad- ch·ess letters to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. Summer's coming! Get ready with a Sue Cory Budget 'Festival Wave' includes cut, shampoo and styling 'IS.95 Scissor Wlzzard haircut, 1.88 W• 1pecioli1e In tne care oflalhion wig• USE YOUR PENNEY CHARGE CARD - NO APPOINTMENT NICES5AltY MUNTuwetoN ll!ACH : "'~~O•"T 11 ... CH ""~!11>9!0<> ,.,.,., '•lhllfl """" ,,... 11001', .., n 11 1nc1 11oQr, ,~ .. 1J11 O•ANGli 'THI (If'(' IH•)ff1 D. Monday M;iy 25 . 1970 DAILY PILOT 9 Sweet and saucy swim looks for big 1 n1 little dippers f ' ·~' . ' -'··· ~ . "'~ ()-(,1' DrL L '"'" /-..,v o ) 0 • It's Penneys very special collection . of bikinis and cage look swim suits ••• all the styles and trims a mer- maid of any age could want! Bold ploids, demure dots, Jeon rib knits .•• a whirl of two and three piece styles, with a coverup or two, just for good measure I So what ore you woif ing for? Head for Pen- neys, then head for the beach! A. 3-piece polyester/cotton wila cage set-cage attaches to bra top with Velcro• brand fastener. Sizes 5tol5. •15 B. 3-pieca over-blousa styfa in polyMter/nylon. Colors blua and green. •14 C. Plaid bikini with bow trim, acry- lic. Sizes 5 to 13. 1 11 D. Sheer nylon coverup, white only. Small, Medium, large, 4.50 £. Girl's a cryli c bikini in and prints. Sizes 8 to 16 • plaids •s F. Girl's shifi set-polyester/cotton bikini and matching shift. 8 to 16. 17 G. H-bock swi m dress in polyester/ cotton prints. Sizes 4 to 6X. •4 LIKE IT , •• CHARG! ITI I. AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE I UPI Teteo~Ot<I Italian Kids Say U.S. Best ROME (AP) -A national poll of youth shows that, if lhey had their choice, n1ore ltal.i::in children would rather be American than any other nationality, As they grow older, to university a~e. fewer \Oo'Ould choose the United ·states and niore \Oo'Ould preler SV.'111ging Britain or uninhibited Scan· d1navia. Although one adult ltahan in every four voles Com· munisl. nnt three in 100 nf their ch1!dre11 11·ou ld hke to be Hussian. The nationality choice was p<irt of a national pnll of students on their \•icws and aspirations. They were asked : If you were nol !tali-an. in what other country would you prefer to have been born. Ca111bodian Bug? A1nong grade school ~ind high school students 19.2 [>t.'r- cent replied the United States. the largest perccnt;-ige Iha! v.·enl to any country. \ GJ C!xam111cs a \'olks\vagen found hidden near ~ligh1vay 7 deep in the enemy'" forn1l'r sanc tuary during operations in Cambodia recently. The car \Vas later dr<>troycd. It was natural, perhaps. in a coun try \\•here su rnany 1·hildren ha1·e ;in t:nc\e 1\•hn !ivt•s happily in the United States. Safeguard Support IL ;ilso n1ay have reflt'eh•d the <ippeal of A 1n t' r 1 c a n n1nvics, co1111cs an1I sp;iec ex- ploits. But by college age that choice dropped to 15.5 percent. Red China May 'Acce pt' Nuclear Attack Second choice among the younger school children was Britain. with 14.6 percent. But university age students put Britain up to fir st pl ace \Vith 20 percent. \\IASHINGTON fAP ) -T\1·0 ra11k1ng Pentagon offici:ils s.1y 11uelcr1r rct11!i<1t1nn 1s nut a reliable dc1errc111 ag111ns! 11 Hcd Ctiinc~c t11ltlck ~c:H1 se lhcre 1s 110 way to know how rnuch aton1ic des1ruetion Pek- ing is v.!llu1g to t1Cct•p1 in ri'turn. Chinese e1t1lt'11~ ;1rf' bl•lng told •·thl'y ran at·Ct'Pl an at- tack, sur\l\C it a·nd gro11· ... 1he officials !<aid in con· gressional testimony relt>:i~E·d today. and U.S. relaliauon <Jgainst 1,000 Chinese t•1t1t•s would kill only ! I \X'r<:en1 11f Lhe country s population. TI1c Apnl 10 ll>Slimony b_v Ocput y p !! r l' n s I' SetTl'l<J! \. Oavu! !II l';ickard ;ind O:· ,John S. fos\l'r , d1reetor fl f dclrn~r r('~cart•h. 1•;u11e nn hchalf ci! th1' N i x o n ;1tJ. min1slrat101fs Safeguard an- l11n1ssllc system. seems lo be describing to the people in C.:hina -that they can accept an att::it k, survive Pros1>erous Switzerland and They said 11 \\'Ould be foolhardy lo rely on the U.~- 1111tlear dctcrrcnt \l'hen tl1e ne:1rby France and Gern1a11y ii, .:ind grow had a fol lowing arnon~ the "It is sitnilar to sotne of .vuu11g students. Switzerland Safeguard s.vs ten1 ciln slop 1va.s.· ehosen by 12.8 1iercent, i11e early notions in this l.'OU\1-<tn.1· 1nissile all111.:k C1i11111111n1.~t Franec by 11.8 and Germany Ch1n<1 1.·:1n ha1ncll ag:ii11s1 this lry \Oo'lil'n v.·e llrsl h<Jtl atomic by 5 J. eountr~· this dt·eade. bun1hs." ~.e s;ud1• ··1 found But ;it. university level the Tt1ey told the Hou se dt·fcnsr Jt \'Cry tl1squict111g." students dropped Switzerland a1)proprial1ons subcur11rn1ttee Urging 110 Safeguard con-l.o 10.6. France to 4.1 and lJ S. ret::ili.:it1on ;ig;irn~I 200 struction dela ys, Pal'kard anl! Gern1a11y to J,11. . Chinese cities would drstroy }~osier repeated the assess· The Scandinavian countr1cs, 111l 10 90 percent of that 1.·oun-inent that t'Yen pre s e 11 t bv contrast. shot up from 6.9 try's industrial capac11y 1,1 hile schedules would not have the pCrcent choice among the kil ling about 9 perccnl of ils system built in lime to ('Ounter ~·ounger children to a third popul<ition. lhe earliest possible Red place 13.8 a1nong the universi· Andy's Fun ty set 11 1s impossible to assess (.'hinese nuclear threat. The Soviet Union had 8 thin 11 hr>1h1·r Chinese leaders. lvho They said C.:hina could h;1ve 1.$ prrccnt ::imnng the children h.11 r ··1radit1onatly placed a 10 to 25 nuclear warhead-and on ly 2 4 percent an1ung ra\11rr lo\V value on hu1nan delivering 1n1ssiles by 19'i:i, universuv students. lift\· 11 1iulf~ no! aecepl that, although that is not cx?(!cted. 0-~--=---·----"=- J•:11·k:1rd ~aul The three Safeguard a n· l':'lc'k:ird ;ind Fo~ltT pro-timissile sites lo go lntn opera- 1 ule<l tht· s11b<:orn1nittec a JO-tion in \all' 1974 and 1975. Ask ~ny kid. ·'Ask Andy " !' fun. rn1nute Ch1ncse ·maLle eulnr they said, \rould provide only Set it Saturdays 111 t~ DAILY fili n described 111 1 h c ;1 1>arlial tlefC'nse against the PILOT, non;ild F!'rtltllltk•? of CO~l:'.l tr.'lnscrirt :I.~ s h Ow J\1 g Ch1.iese thrP<1L J\1t'~il hris bf>i>n n;ini<"ll l•l t!ie "Chinrsl' prl'paratiuns for ll1e ------- 1. , nuclear tests held to observe ft father's Day IS June 21 r!ran·s 1st al Ilic t..:1111'l·rs1!~ nf Southern California lor tlll' efft'l'!S on !heir lroops and ll'in1cr quar!rr. iltrnnlini.: 1o i;round equipment. university of11e1;il~ Ft'rn<1ndr 1. The striking fe:iturc 0! this enne~J maintainct! a 4 0 _grade po1n! !ihn -at least 1o u~:· Fosler ;iveragc during the riuarter. ~aid. "is !he a\!1ludf that 11 ALWAYS FIRST GUALITY ---ORDER THIS WEEK! Vacation Money? Low-cost Travelo:' ns Treat youfflelf lo a great vaca11on \\11th a Morris Plan Traveloan. On tlpproval you can borrow up 10 $5,000 or more. £a<;v payments scheduled the way you wan t lhe1n-l'o 11n a money-back guaranlee (if you find you can oo belter, return the money within ~ days at no cost to you). For vacation money, b1!1 consolidation, any rea son -call us. We say ''yes" to 2,039 loans every week. Morris Plan 673-3700 Newport Beach-3 70 0 Newport Boulevard OTher oHkes lhroughOut Calilornie father 's D?Y deliver)' is d I still guarantee . Large, lovely.11x14 Father's Day Portrait that says "We love you!'1 only 5 88 Yn , •• a magnific~t I 1xl" Satan Partrvil ••• lmor• tha n holf the size of this newspaper poge) of you and both your children and the fomily petl A worlTI ond wonderful oil! for Dad on Father's Day that keeps on soying "We love you" all yeor long! Come in now ond 1ov•, .. and rememt>.f' you can charge it at Penney's. O••r>O•l•l• C111lor '"" '-· 111·'1•) NUNTINOTaN ll:•Cll ~u~llno1'0!'> C•~"' :rN tlDllr. m.m1 NrWl>OllT l eACM Fl lhlool hllnf JM ·-· '" 1Jlt Pov«"rty Stamp Ellglhlllty College Stiidents Could Get Aid \VASH INGTON (APl -A turned up only a few examples earlier. school expenses -dot~ not college studenl \'.'1th a stove Qf local officials \'.'ho knew This hbf.'rallzatioo has exceed an adjusted am<>Wlt and a provable J)O\'erty lc\•e! the extent or col1e~e student boosted food stamp enrollment c.:cti month. income may be eligible for p::irticipation in tiie starnp from 3.6 million persons in But the svsltm varies wide· food stan1ps at pu1Jl1c expense, Jlll1n. January to~ million in f\-tarch. Jy anions ihe :!!lates, officia!J no 1naUl·r how niudi Ins Rctwcen 400 and 500 are The college s\l1dent issue 1s say. In Los Angeles a single parents s hell nut fqr his lui · getting Lhe coupon.~ in the L-Os expeeted tu boil over again student can qualify if he has IJDn. books <ind srn:i[il life. Angelt·s :ire a. In Chicago, E. y,•hen Congress acts f\na!lv on Jess than SI ,000 in assets Or. he rn::iv 10111 St\'eral J 1'.1cUride, 11hu heads the food starnps for nc~t fiscal 1,1•h1rh are not marked for rrie11ds 1n a "household'' and st;unp prol!ran1 for Cook )'ear. school and an income of les~ share food stan1vs tu fend C-Otnlty, s<11d <ibout 20 student-; AL present , House aclion on th;:in $169 per month. Money off l11e ri::.1ni:: cost uf lughl'r 1~·ere in tile program . mo~t a ne\Oo' food stamp bill is stall-~pent for school is nut included l'ducat1 on of thern n1arried gradur:te cd in the Agriculture Coni· 111 cornputing income. The f ed er a I go1·ernn1ent studt'nts. miller, aloni.: with an arnend-'I'll e Ag r i cull u r" does no! n1ind al all a~ l•ing Onl y two 1·aSl'') " P re 1nent by Re p. \\'lll'Y ,\layn" !)epartmcnl 's definition of a as local wrlf;ire nff1 r1als say rl'\JQrtcd at S:i n Antonio Junior 1 lt·lo11 aJ, <:ulung off food "f:unily " under the law IS the youth!> :ire l'lig1blr. C.:ollcgc 1n Tc~as. l>uth i11-~ta1r1ps lo eolll'ge s1udcul -; flc:<1ble. \Vhile no one seeins to koow volv111g 1natrit'd t(luplrs -one 1'.'ho ;:ire ehumetl by pan:nt~ "\\'hat most pe~)ple re:l'r to how "'1despread food st;imps husband atlentl1ng tlasses on as lax dcpendcnls. as a •farnilv' becomes a h<1ve beeon1e on can1pu". the G I 11tll. The Jlousf! pas!*tl a sunilar 'household' Wlder the Food fC:dl'r::il and state uffici;ils linder the governn1ent's new re~tric!1on in 1968 hut -nas Stamp Program," says an or- guess that student parti~·ip<.i-food sta1n1l schedule, a farnily u1crruled b.v Se11<1le action. f1ei:il department guide. "A 11011 represents a very sinall of four e;ui gel $106 \\'Orlh To 11uatify for fovd st;unps. f:iod stamp household is any perccnt;igc of the national pro-of coupon~ 1ns1eail of $fi8 all a student has to do in Aroup or people who share grani, which Costs $610 million under the old systern and fur most states is to certify that food co.sts and a common this fiscal year. no rnore than \\'<IS spent his in<..'Qme -a.side frorn table:' But they adrn1t food stampsq:================================== <..'Quid become n1uch niore at-1 tractive tlOl\I that federal benefits ha ve increased ::ind ('Ollci:;e co.sis continue h1 rise. "\Ve simp!y do not have ;iny statisti cs on c: o 11 e g e p:1rticipnt1on,'' says J<1rnes E. CHILDREN'S ART MAY 20-29 Springfield, head of food COUNTYWIDE PARTICIPATION IY O RANGE COUNTY SCHOOLS. IONDEllGARTEN THRU 1 Zth GRADE sl<irnp operations for the A g r i r u lture Department. "There ha3 been some concern hut we don 't keep track " 5outh Coast 'Plpa Ari A~~ol·ialed Press stu·vey CAMERA SALE! (PRICES EFFECTrv£ THRU SATURDAY) 1111 SAVI 19.05 PENNCREST INSTANT lOAD 6 TO 1 POWER ZOOM CAMERA You con ~tori giving Hollywood some competl· ti on with this re A ex movie camera. Powerful 6-J zoom lens, vorioble speeds (1 2, 18, 32 fps), f 1.8 lens, o ulomo tic e1CpOSUTC needle with manual override, REG. 129.00 ......... NOW 109.95 SAVE .S.3! PENNCREST INSTANT LOAD ELECTRIC EYE CAMERA OUTFIT Make it eo~y Qn yourself with 1his instant tood- ing ourfir. Electric eye ends exposure problems.. Tokes slides or prin ts. Wi!h color film. botteriMw flashct1be, wrist strop. REG. 19.88., ••••••••••• NOW 16.88 SAVE 3.07!. PENNCREST TRANSISTORlZID INSTANT LOAD CAMERA OUTFIT Tn:mis torimd shuttef pl~ COS melet produtW exposures in almost any light. Ropid·wind Aost.- ctJbe·fil m odvonce. Kit contains comera, ~ film, flcnhcube, bolleril!s, wrist •lrop. REG. 29.95 •••••••••••. NOW 26.83 Super I cartridge film roll ,,,, .. 2. 59 Kodarolorflllft 126/12 ••• •• , •••• 1 ,09 SAVE 19.96! PENNCREST SUPER 8 HOME MOVIE OUTFIT Camera features instant cartridge load· ing, on electric eye for perfect exposure. zoom lens for dromotic effects. Proiector has automatic threading and sim ple con- trol bar. With movie light, color movie, batteries, reel and con . REG.119.95,NOW 99.99 LIKE IT ••• CHARGE IT ! NOW ! THESE v .-_LU[S AT ANY ONE or THESE PENNEY STORES! CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY fUllfRTON HUNTIN GTON BEACH l.AllWOOO #IONTctALI NfW10tt HACH OIANGE --rHE CITY"' VfNTUltA SHOP SU NDAY, TOO 12 lo 5 P.M.! .._ ___ _. Coast Area Men in Service Speciali!t Flve MltbMI V. Hlw, 22. son (If Mr. and Mrs. R066 E. Hiser, m ~r St., COllta Meai Qlf., recenlly received die AlmY Commendation Meal wtdle serving wilh the Wtdl ~tation Company ll Camp Davies, near Sa1p, Vleloam. UWlner's ~1ate Se a m an Tbnothy Sw«:tlaad, 21, 300 or Mr. and Mrs. Thomas It. Sweetland of 2135 Iris Place in Costa Mesa, has served aboard the Long Beach-based destroyer USS Amold J. Isbell sul{'e October 196il. Na~ y Sean1an Apprentice Dell C. Stu vick, of 2441 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa. is serving aboard lhe USS lwo Jima, primary rerovery ~hip for Apollo 13, in the Pacific. Navy Petty Officer Second Class Jeffrty L. fttorrow of Laguna Beach, 1s serving aboa~d U1e fleet ballistic niissile submarine USS ~1ariano (;. Vallejo now at Charleston, S.C. \\'illiam V. Urone, son of ~Ir. ancl tl1rs. J)eter V. Urone of 17891 Gilhnan St.. lr~·inc. h.as bc<>n commissioned a second lietcn:int in the US. Air forre upon graduation from Officer Training School IO'l'S) at Lackland AFB , Tu. Miss KaUe I.AIU, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Lutz or 1920 Kewamtt, Corona del Mar, was one of 800 coeds who attended~ 15th National Angel Flight Conclave just concluded In Ahaheim. Army Specialist Five Ken· netb S. Kueback, 26, son of Mr. and f\.1rs. Sven Kaneback, 189 Del Mar. Coota Mesa. received his second award of the Air f\.1edal at Ft. Lewis, \\':ish. Navy Airman Robert D. lljorth, son of l\lr· and 1'.lrs. Hoy N. Hjorlh of 3175 \-ladeira St .. and husband of the former Mtss Lynda L. Carpenter of 900 Dogwood St.. all of Costa l\tcsa. is serving wilh Fighter ::it1u;idron Il l aboard the aircraft carrier USS Shangri- La now off the coast of Viet· nam. l\1iss Maureen J . Taylor. daughter of t.trs. James J . Taylor or 260 Villanova Jload. Costa Mesa. was one of 800 coeds who attended the 15th National Angel F I i g h 1 Conclave just concluded 1n 1\nahe1n1 . Jerry F. Horvat. son ol :'l!r!'. Glor ia J . Owens ot 1040 Valen. cia St., Costa Mesa, has been promoted to airman first class in the U.S. Air Force. Airman Jlorbat, an aircraft mechanic at Beale AFB , CaliL, is essigned lo the 456th 0 rganiz;ational Maintenance Squadron. ti.iiss Susan J. Dow n s , daughter of ?i.tr. andi Mr s. Roger H Downs of 187(U Sai1 Rufino, lr\•ine, was one of 800 coeds \j,'ho attended the 15th National Ang£'1 Flighl Concl ave JUSI concluded 111 Anaheim. Cahf George 0. Paul. son of ,\tr. and i\·lrs. Grorge F Paul. 495 £. !8th St., Costa Mesa, was among outstanding Air Force lleserve Officers Tr a in i n g Corps cadets who attmded the 22nd National Arnold Air Society (AAS) Conclave jusl con<:ludcd in Anaheim. ti.lichael N. i\1adrid . son of i\1r. and Mrs. Nick Madrid. 21851 Newland St .. 312 Hun. lington By·thc·Sea, Huntingt<.111 Ueach. was among outstan· ding Air Force Reserve or. £leers Training Corps cadels \j,'ho allended the 22nd Nation· al Arnold Air Society (Ai\S 1 Conclave just conclu~ ln Anaheim. Specialist 5 JoU C. Robltoa, recently received the Outstan- ding SoWier-SIL the Quarter ~-. Award at a special ctremon1 held at the U.S. Anny Chaplain S c h o o I , Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn. New York. Specialist Robison's parents ?i.lr. and Mrs. Morris W. Cusick live at 229 19th Street, Ne\j,'J)Of't Beam. Robert Yl. DourooI. son or i\lr and i\lrs. Robert E. Dourous of 30 Blue Lagoon, Laguna Beach, has been com- n11sstoned a second lieutenant 1n the U.S. Air Force upon graduation from 0 fr i ce r Training School (OTS) at Lackland AFB. Tex:. Specialist Four Erneet R. Orebard Jr., whose mother. l\1rs. Ruth Devine, lives at 794 \V. 18th St., Costa Mesa, v.·as featured March 30 -April 11 y,•ith the U.S. Army Dr ill Team in "Prelude to Tapi;,'' lhe U.S. Anny's salute to the National Cherr y B Io s so m Festival in Washington. D.C. Army Specia list Four Glynn \'an De \Valk.er, 20. son of \Ir. and l\1rs. J~arold L. Van the new kind of floor that says: ''DO NOT WAX ME'' DOWNEY 869-454 1 MONTC!AIR 621-381 1 ian® "'@mstrong A new kind of floor 1hat hates waxing as much os you do, •• a sunny name for o sunny floor thot shines without wo x ••• that's Solarian~! In fad, you cannot wa x this amazing floor, since most household waxes will not adhere to its high gloss Mirobond ® weor surfote. Penney's has Solarian® floor covering in 2 smart patterns and in 4 decorator colors for each pattern,,. suitable for kitchens, dining roo~. bedrooms, ond even recreation rooms. ONLY •• ,.rt '"•tolletion available ot Pen".ys COME IN OR PHONE FU LLERTON 871-4343 HUNTINGTON BEACH B92.m1 NEWPORT &EACH 833-0792 • LAKEWOOD 634-7000 ORANGE 'THE CITY' 634-5091 • ME MOR I ES -They are made of many experiences and souvenirs an d after nearly 27 years of service in r..1arine Corps avialion . !\1aster Sergeant Cha1n- bers ha s numerous fond nlemor1 es. De Walker, 539 1-lamilton St.. Costa Mesa, recently was assignrd lo the 1st Signal Brigade in Vietnam as a wheeled-v ehicle 1nechanic. Navy Petty Officer Third Class Johnny A. Johnston. son of ti.lr. and ,,_!rs. Eugene 1\1. Johnston of 7765 Ronald Boad, Huntington Beach. graduated from Electronk·s Technical School at Treasure Island in San FrancisC(). Mon day, Mar 25, 1970 DAILV PILOT ..i l Career Over Marine Se rgeant R etires '!'hroughout aviatioo history. men like f.1arlne Ma.!Stt'r Screeant Wilbur L. ''Corky .. Chambers have added colorful and impressive chapters to the flight records. MSgt. Chambers has retired frorn the Marine Corps after nearly 27 years of service with better than one of those yea rs u1 the air, /\ISgt. Chambt'-rs m o ~ t recently has servetl as ;in 111 structoc in El Toro"s KC-130 School was also a radio uperiltor and load n1asler rui U1e Mercules aircraft. flying. "Top" ctiambers has been a crew m~mber on uven different kinds 01 aJrcra!t, starting off as a tail gunner and radio oper ator on a B-25 and ending up as a radio operator and load master on the Hercules KC-130. In spare moments. MSgt. Chambers is busy as a Scout commissioner in Orange Coun- ty Occasionully. he and his wH£'. Carolyn, and their five children go camping for lhe weekend tn their camper· trader 1'hroughout his years 111 (;c1·111au Awa1·tJ ?o.larine aviation. "Top " Chan1- bers. better kno\j,·n to hi s To J-lcirboi· Bov friends as ' · Co rk y • ' ' ac· • cu1nu lated nearly 10,000 hours Jay C. Sull ivan, a senlir of flight time for better tluin at Ne"•port Harbor High {\j,'O million statute miles of School, has received a travel. During these years, he German scholarship to attend visited 26 nations and has seen Central College in Pella. Iowa. a<.1 ion in World War II, Korea, lie \1•ill enter the liberal arts U1e Cuban Crisis, a nd Viel· college in ·the fall. according nain. to Cent ral College off icials. In 1965, he set two i1n-Jay is the son of Mr. and pressive rerords. The first r-.1rs. Ho\j,·art1 Sullivan. lf>88 was 21 consecutive days of San Bernardino Place, Costa tlying in Vietnam on deploy-t.1esa. He is a n1ember of mcnt. The second \Vas 25 days lh£' German Club. Spanish of flying for a total of 236.7 Cluh. f'uture Teacher·s Club, hou rs and 74,307 miles ot Progressive Education Club travel. and is on 1he student congre5s In his nearly 11 years nr a! Newport Harbor. ~ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SALE ON FASHION MANOR DINETTES! OSI 'INN"S TIMI PAYMllf1' "-AH SAVI '1917 PC OYA!. DINITTt sn '7"W x s.t•L table extends \o 66~ 1"ilh 1 12. Jeof. Top hen le.11:tured pecon woodgroin firtt,h. Vil'}'! uphol~ery ;,, mos1 9reen oo gold bo::l.:grCJl.lrid. T oble legs hove decorotitt ~leeve. lt(G. t149 .•....... NOW SAVI $201 5 PC. OCTAGONAL OINETif SfT 'Mediterranean' styling . J.2"W x 42"L table e1t · tends to 54" to 66" wi~h 2 12" leaves. Top hos te1tlured oak woodgra in finish. Black bockround with gold de1igning on suppor1ed vinyl, RIG.$119 ••• -•••. NOW PRICfS EFFiCTIVI: THRU SATURDATt -· '· SAvt $191 S PC. DOUBLE PEDESTAL SET 'Modern· styling. 36" x 4lr ovol table extends to 6f:r with I 12~ le-of. Block 'rinyf channel thairs wi1h woodgrain 'finyt Otl bode Table top is black with !e;iclured walnut iNoy finish, REG . S139, •....... NOW ~Ii NOWt THE:Sl VAlUfS "'ANY ou t Of ~!~( 'f NNt Y STOl(SI CAM()GA rAll (AlllffAD ~"I' NUl""°" t1UN11N(.10M l f•CM SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 11 to 5 P.M.I t..l>llWOOO MONTCINt l«'WPOWT afAOI OU~[.,.._.[ Cl!"r VfNTU•• .. - J 2 DAILY PILOT NUCLEAR I'LAN1' • • • ~from Paa" Jl But I.ht only walt'r discharg- ed lnlo n1an's environment IS &ea water, whidi is used lo cool off the stean1 after it tipln.!1 lhe turbines. !luge. noii:y pumps, 'A'hich Rte about the c I o s c s l rnach1ncry to the sanely beach belOw the generating station. suck up tons of cool sea waler, then po111p il -10 dl•grees hotter than lt was -back through an uu1fall a hall-mile ou1 to seo. 'J'he St'il water tl1!>eharge process stirs yet another 1111.~cooceplli.Kr that v.·arrn ,v .. ier ruins n1arinc hie. Not so, :-;ay thf' firm's spokesmen. echoing v.·ha1 "'a:. rnade official late last yc;ir hefore the San Diego Hegional \Valer Quality Control Board. A year of rxhaus\11 r 1·x- ;un1nation by govcrnnH.•nt and utility experts proved lo the J~ed China 's Sa.tellite Alive for 5? <.;OLORADO S P H I NG S , Culo. ( Uf'l I -Ch1cun1 I - ihe s<1tell1lf' that put Hl'<I Ch1n;1 ulfic1ally 11110 the sp<1cl! ;1gf• Apnl 24 "'I ll c11n11nul! lu11p111g Ou· l'arlh l•lr al 11·•1:-.t lt1,• ~t·;ir:-. :in<l po'·'1h!.1 111urc 1h;1n 2U .1 1•:1rs. 1· ::i. spalT 1f!- J I• ials .':iut !ud;1,1 A spo kcsn1:tn 1 .. r lht \ur1h A11H.'rlt;1n Air Dt'l t·n.~1· t'urn- 111and ~aid tile Ch111l·~e sateJlttt> was 111 a stable orbit that ·would k••e p 11 <i!ivc for no less than live years. Officials <it Norad's 11n· derground space defense t·cntcr inside Cheyenne moun- la1n said the Chi nese satellite 11·a~ circlini,: th<' e<irlh every I I 4 lllllllllt•s. 11 is l,4B~ rni\t·s away lron1 <'<ll'lh at 11~ l;irthesl point and 276 1niles al \ht· thisesl. The 1lrh1t t1111e 1nay ch;ingt' onl.v :1 tcw sccnnds 01·1•r a l)t'nu<I ol wt•rks. ,\:nr;ul <1ff a:1:ils s:11d . Korad's curn11l11.::i tt·d t.•orn- pu\l'r ~.vslern LS ablt' lo lt•ll n1ueh ahou t tht· prt·<lirt«1t p:ith ur sat<'llltl's, bul 1·;1nno1 p111 down the lirn l' of re ... ·:1!ry 1[ it 1s bt:yond (11'e years. Somi; (lf the nt>;irly 1.800 man-111ade pie1·rs or 1netal 11ow orbiting Ml'rth r:ir oul in spaC"{' ni :iy. :-.l;i_v up fnr thousands of 1t•ar~, utfh·ials sa1ll. Spnkl'~llll'll lor \ +1,,d :i;i1d thl'r<' 11a ~ 1111 11111' o I d{'lrrrniruni: lio w lo11;i.: thr ( 'h1111·~r :-.:11rl11lf' 11'11l1hl 1·nn 111Hli> 111 ll"i111~1!ll1 11~ d;1!;1 illl\J 'l hi· Chilll"S{' Slill'llllP 11,\:0. !ht• 4.:\82nd llClll i"+1:11111:11<'d 1n 'p:u·r hy Norad ,'\(11·:1c1 ha~ l1Crn kreping tr::i('k •If 1na11- 111:u!r 1\erns in Slldl't' t'1"r!' '11u·r the Sovit't Union launch. rd SJllll.n1k I in 1957. !''lore Sil'k 'f lian Lo\ic llU'\nl.t Lll (,\1'1 '°In Au,tr»1l1,111 p:-1Th1tJtn~t ~a1s ·'llltH'tJ)I" \\ho IS llll't'Sll"k 111;.!\ hi• lllOfl' ~u·k 1h;111 Ill lfl\l'. , llr. (iL\lrJ!l' L, l'hn sue o( \1f'lt1Qu r111• .-.;ivs 111fatuation J1•:il ly 1~ · si! k falling in love." An uil:lluated person, he ex· pl;11n1·d. U$Ually looks pale and 11·un·1(·d and may show great an\1rt~ ;ind drprl'ssion. nn 1111· other hand. Chnst1<' h•ld !lu· Arnl'rit·a,1 Psyt·hiatrir '""~"-·1,1 1 11111 \\'edncsd;iy, a p1•rSQ11 tn1l1· 111 lor(' usuall>• h.15 <'nh;int t•d ph~·:.1ral health. l'roplr 111 luvl'. hr said. ''sh111• ;l JOYO US revival (If 11 .. 1t1r.11. ~ponlant'ous kind of Jenck'rncss ·· And :-.houlll this intense feel- ing bCJ,!ln to "'a'lie for the l111r rs. nostalgic 1noods can Ix r1'{:apturt'tl as they listen to "11ur -'vng·· or gaze at an old rhutograph. he sa1d. I 11fatu1111on pa ssf'S, ho~·e\'er. Chrisl11· nutt'i.L adding that the 1nan ur 11 n1nn n 1na) later CX · pla111 lu s or ht'r passiona\t' ~har1\1r ~·1lh ··1 rnu~t hair l>een 1nad " 8<'1ng 1n love m r an ~ part1c1pat1ng 1n one of the 111os1 intense and emotional t•:xperieoces possible for man. t~ psyc hiatrist said. Bul infatuation is charac- terized by "intense irrational preoccupation with the love object."' he said. And for r.ome- one \.l'ho is maladjustt'd lo btgin \.l'i th, infatuation can bnng out c!1sturbt'd behavW>r or psychological 1llne~. he ad· d•d Only One F1n•I stocks In •ti homt tdlt1on~. Tllat's • bi9 dtal' It is ;n Ot•ngc Count1. T"' OAILV PILOT 11 the only d.1Uy ~paper tJut dellw· tr\ Ult PJCU9t · board lb.at t~ µlant. If .anything. belp$ n u r I ti r ~ marme hfe. Local sporUishin g operators agree, adding that the outfall is a regular mop fot party boat runs year-round . Monitoring for radiation is a ceaseless project al Ule nuclear generating plant. A host of government agencies also act as watchdogs ex- pec1ally the At omic Energy Cnmrnission, "'hieh must pro- 1..'t'SS all apphcatlons fo r nuclear gent'rilting plants .an<l :-,els up every possible stan- d;i rd for Lht'Jr oper<1l1on. Plant ~esm en term tht• regulauons '-'OVering l h r plant's uSf' "conservative" \.l"h1dl is another way of saying the rules are incredibly stiff. A huge wall se11arales the react.or fro1n the sea -a 111all thick enough and "'ide enough to handle the 1nost vicious tidal w a v e if necessary. 1S wallow s. incidentally, have taken great fancy to Lhc leaden-gray wall and use it for a nesting area. l Geiger counters rest on _., perches throughout tht eorn· plex, and innumerable 1n- strurnirnls an plugged into in- tricate circuits which merge in a btfCe brain center filled with dials and switches and manned by a highly skilled reactor technician. 'Mlt t ec hni<'i an s, who generally have prior training in the nuclear submarine corps of the Navy, are trained U,,,der strict A EC supervision by Southern California Edison. lfhe technician·s job pays well , plant spokesmen say, but qualified applicants are dif- ficult to find. About the only similarity to the conventional smoke pro- ducing fossil-fuel plant at San Onolre seems to be the noisy turbines. com1noo rn any elec- trical generating operation. But the huge. lofty smokestacks and the open en- trails of the furnaces and generators of the ol<l-fashtt>ned f<1ci!lties are absent. Only one little stack pro- trudes from the San On(lfre cornplex and emits minute quantities of radioactive g<.1s. which, H breathed, would WITH .AEC LICENSE, HE WATCHES Jack Schram, Senior Reactor Operator FOREMOST" TIRE LIFE SAVER SPECIAL! When yOtJ're paying o good price for 1ires you have e'lery right to expect top n1ileoge. That's the idea behind the Tire l ife Saver Special •• , gettin g every bit of mileage po ~si blc fro111 your tir es. l ow pric e i nclude~: wheel ol ignn1!.'nt, ba la ncing 4 whe el s, broke odjusln1ent. 8.88 * DRIVI IN ,..CHARGE IT AVAILA8 l f AT ANY O NE OF 111f5f P ~NN['( A UIO ([N IER51 BUENA PARK HUNTINGTON BEACH SURROUNOED BY MONITORS, SWITCHES .ANO DIALS, OPERATOR KEEPS TABS ON THE NUCLEAR PL.ANT 'S NERV E CENTER cause no ill effects, spokesmen said. 'rhe regular \Vasi<' fro1n l11c $23 ni ilLion worth or ut'aniu111 v.•or king a\\':lY in the reactor's 6 rnillio11 stainless s t cc t Jacket.~ would fill only a thre1•- car garage afler 10 years ol operation. 'The waste which is prO<luced is gathered under strict stan- dards and shipped lo go\'ern- nient storage vats. The entire operation or t!H~ plant "'ill not be changed much by the t1vo new reactor- generator l.'Onlplexes 111hich <ire expected lo rise on 8:! acres imn1ediatcly downcoast from the San Onofre complt>X within seven years. Both new ones. each (If which v.·ill produce twice ;1~ much power as the existin g facility , will be a1most in- visible from the road. Their shape will be slightly altered. The huge reactor ball will be absent, and a tall cylinder 1vilh a dome on top will take its place. The ."!phere ~. plan1 ~pokesmen sa id. ar' too harc1 TRUCK TIRE CLOSEOUT FOIUMOST"' C.ARGOM.UTEJI SL Tobe typ• Size 670-1 S/6 6 50 -1 6/6 700-1 5/6 C>ng. 22.95 2 4 .95 29 .95 17.95 , ,_,s 24.•5 CLOSED COOLING SYSTEM 9.95 f.O. tax 2 .40 2.61 2.85 He lp.s e liminole overheoti11g . G e ts the hot a ir o ut o f your car's cooling system! Our giant wire circulati ng cus"ion for cooler, more comfortable driving. In 20:x36" .)i1e, Chorcoo l, red, b lue or green. 2 .89 42x41 " sir:t! basket carrier feature s zinc t ubing, oak roils, suci ion cups.. Gives yov that e•tra lugga g e spa ce you need for trips. 13.45 CALIFORNIAN AIR-CONDITIONER 199.95 Excl usive 'chill ' feature pre- cools your car thru3 lorge rectangular louvers and two rotating side vents. Expert installation available. to build. and C"ylinfier!) 111ou1d :.erve l.J contain thl· u1- grt'<l1enls il1S l as well 1f .in accident occurred. On e other 1tcn1 frn1n 1h1· "uld" design 11'hit.'h will br included in the new is the adn1ittedly ugly tr:1nsn1iss1.:i11 tenters. But they "'ill be sunken and screened frorn view. The ut ility also is con- sidering replacing t h c i r present, ugly trans1niss1on line s tanda r d s with new, modernistic ones. representaives are pessun 1sliC' about acceptancr for the next pair ol reactors. They rc1 ncrn- ber well the hc<1dnches nr building the fir st plants. i11l·:inwluh'. l·:di!'>on must fl'•h! lo bl11ld 1nun· fo.~sil furl pb111~ 111 their ll'.rr1tory while l;1r111g 111ou1111ng puUht• up· pos1l111n. But n11i; !altor 111 the ha~.~!r be l we r 11 1•cology-n1inded 1·itizens :ind ecology-rnind<'d Echsnn br;i~s r11ay prove 10 be strong nn11nu11ilion for the ut ility. Opposilion fro1n the South Coa~t -an<l throughout the n:it1on for ll1[1t n1altcr - spells sorne troubles ahea<l /or the pl;ints. Despite having passed 1hr "tpst 0£ timP ," 1-:fli .s nn Hearings are scheduled for the two new plants before the state Public Utilities Con1- mission this fall. followed by lengthy consideration a n cl public hearings by the At:C next spl'ing . The clos~st residence to the nuclear plant at San Onofrt belongs to the nation's number onr man. It 's the \Vc~tcrn Whilr Huu~c. Fiber glass belted tire closeout! 'El Tigre' with 2 belts of fiber glass on a 2 ply polyester cord body 36 MONTHS GUARANTEE WlTH 14 MONTHS l OOo/e ALLOWANCE re••mo\1 Prelt(l•on ,.,.,.,nlot '"Our /0<t<1•""I ,,,., pont...;lion ~II"" ""1'"• <.u•er'\ •ii l oreino't l>'l".leni:"' lor"'\ (-:•Cept o•u s~1a1 nigh.po·d or"'" ence !H,.$t "':~in~\ •" r<Wtd h•'•'d <>< orttct I"""'"~-YO" arP prolrcted '"' 111 .. ontue ~1dte<I 1nonlh$ ot 1u•••nl,.~. II J <>Ur llro 1.,,1~ """"2 t""' 11u.;1t.Jn!te P"Of>O<I, rl'tum ii to u~ and wt w otl, •l ou1 oPloon, "'P"" your 1••e. Of mak• "" 3llowance l>eS<.'<f on tile 0ti11or••I ou•- ~"•""' P•>CI', 1.-.c:IOOint epphc•bl .. foa t t •! [>Co~I' T., .. IO~fll !.,.. ;11J<C l>:O~,. ot • """' 1 ..... Wt '"" allow 100•. o• I~• orif'..nal P<Jtch11~e l>'•C•. mcltld•nll .,pp!" .. 01 .. I .. OP•al [•C•.., Tax, du.,nll 111~ JOO"• •llowartCP Po'cf'od fhProan~r, "" "'"I allow '.oO"o O< 25'° o! ti>• o•~ l!•"f l P"'""'"~"' P'" "• 1ncludonll •PP'"" •bit '"'de•a! l •t•~" l••· to,.1•d ti\• QUfCl\I""' ot • nf""' l '"· ('>re Ch .. ! l>~- 10"") tt,.,.., R.,.. you• 1u.,1n!•• wo•~~ r n1 •tf 1u1•1nt•• P"'•Od Jf> men!h• 100•. 1rlow1nc• por.od 1-11 m onlt>• '>0'• 111e .. 1nce 1>•J1gd 1 S 14 monll" JS' 1How1nce pe,.ed lS·l' mgnt~• W• hu•'d ""o ~··-.fore"""''""'"'" lr•t llO" .,d>C-110< .. Tl\• I '·~n•I ..... " YOUf ""' ~t><>ol<J M r•~idCl'<I. II VO<" l"e w~al~ o"1 !•••<:l'Ol !Of •t><Olf...._t alo;:n•n<!(>\) "'a ••II ma~r •" 1Hnw•11<• h;o...cl on In. .,..;~,n~I P"'""~I'! or•r •. o n~!ltdin~ ~ppnc~bl<-l "<.l!>•~I [,c ... • Tol <. tow•tfd tn• 11urcha, .. ol • """' ,,,e. W,. W••I "llow t • '1u,,n1: lh-!Lr,T "•II<><•; duron 11 lh,. '"'and NIU ot !I>• '1~fr(\ "'""'"' Of llU•l.1'1fOe In·~ ~..., ••• nt~• ·~ n<1! !•Al"'"'~t>I~ " ·~ on•y lo< P""'"'t P~~-~"~"" U•' ,,, FA''""RO.I ~l~l'IY' "'·tl:l'"'- NOW 25.44 plu1 led. toll' ond old 111e WHITEWALL TUBEL ESS SI Zl J EPUtClS O~IG. 700-13 ,.., -•.• ."l09S .•• ,1.9CI c11.1' •.•• '9s.1•, ... lo ts ... , 2.1s NOW 28.44 plvs fed. lox. a nd old l11c WHITEWA LL TUBELESS Sil£ i£PU.Cl·S O"G, l 71·1 4 •••• 7JS-14 .... J29S .... llS ~71-14 .... 715·14 ., •• 349S .... 7 Sli ,11-IS ,,,, 77S.1S •••• J 4 9S .... 761 NOW 31.44 plu~ fed. to~ ond old t.-e WHITEWALL lUBE t ESS S1 1£ G71-1 d •••• 82S·1• .... J69S , ... 167 G71-IS •.•• 11S.1S .. ,. 369S .... l7T NOW 34.44 plv1 led. tax and old ,;,,. WHITE WAll l UBELESS S!Zf REPLACES Ol!G HT l -1 4 •••• l )S.1 • ••••JI ~5 ...• ''ll i11.1• .,,, 115-1 • , ..• ~0.'IS ..•• 1 88 H1 .. 13 ,. •• 14S-1S .... 38'1S .... ''' 900.lS .... 40 9S .... l ,to AIR CONDITIONER CHECK & CHARGE Complete factory ai r-conditioner serv ice avail - a ble now ot Penneys Auto Cente r .•.•••••••• 12.95 CANOGA PARK MON TCLAIR CARL SBAD CHU LA VIS! DOWNEY FULLERTON VE:<TURA NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" 51'0!' ~UNDAY . 100 12•o 5 PM! ' ,. BARBARA DUART E, 494-946& MGM1r. Mer U. 1f7' I ~·" IJ A Way Up Full Load Airborne It's Up, Up and A\vay for niembers of San Clemente .Junior Woman's Club as they prepare to meet a busy 1970-71 club year under the influence of the fan1il iar slogan. Taking O\'e r the con trols is l\'lrs. t:erald J\lcDonald . president. \vho \Vas installed during: a dinner meeting earlier this n1 onth in Omar's rc~laurant. Officers elected to . serve \l'ith \he club leader in- clude the Mmes. Raymond Lynch. first vice president; Richa rd Breeden. second vice presi dent: Dennis Cleav· er, third vice president : Don Echelberger, recording secretary; David Anderson, corresponding secretary; Freeman Fow.Jer, treasurer, and Everett Ly ster, aud- itor. Mrs. McDonald, a fourth generation Californian, has worn a number of hats during her five years as a San Clemente junior. She has bee n chair1nan or .t\n1Pricanisn1, 1nember- ship. federation development and Guild a Beller (on1- n1unity. In add ition. she has held po::;ts <i s third vice president and first vice president. Active in Girl Scouts and Sunday school teachin~. s he also works part time for a mimeograph company. l\irs. ~1cDonald and her husband J erry are parents of two daughters and reside jn Rancho J\.1argarita. Juniors work toward building a better community \Vith attention Jast year turned to s upport of an 1ru:lian orphan, a rea girls and boys clubs and the San Cle- Jn ente ln*erfaith Servicemen's Center. JUNIORS GO UP ANO AWAY -J\.1embers o{ San Clem ente Jun~ ior Woman 's Club will set t heir sights skyward in preparation for the upcoming year. Taking over official duties 'this m onth are (lefit to r igh t) Mr s. Don Echelberger, r ecording secretary; Mrs. Gerald McDonaJd , president, a nd Mrs. Raymond Lynch, fi rst vice president a nd dean of chair m en. . ' '" a 'C · • ' -· Friendship Bright As Candles Ignite Light One Little Candle is the theme selected by Mrs. Edward Russell as she takes over leadership of El Camino Real Junior \Vom· an's club for 1970-71. .t\s part of a recent ins·lallation ceren1ony. outgoing president l\lrs. Leslie \Villiams \Velcomed guests . l\Jrs. Seymour Nutt and new coordinator. i\·1rs. Bruce l\1cLintock . .\lrs. \\"1ll1nrns reported tha t during her yc<ir 1n office. the club spent ~l.332 on co1nmunity service. She ::idded that. apart fron1 d is- bursing the treasury. 1the re<il treasures of her year 111 office \Vere five llC\V 1nc1nbers \\"ho added their narncs to the mcrnbcrsh1p roster. Al so cited for s pecial attention \vere husbands \vho \Vere thank· ed for baby-sitting and help \vith club projects. Outgoing f1 rsl vice president f\lrs. David LaRoche presented J\lrs. Charles llayden. heal th chairman. \vith a first place health award \\.'Oil b.Y the club at district convention in April. ~l rs. \Villiams received a gift for having contributed e xtra effort during her year in office. Receiving candles at a J\!lay installation ceremony in Ben Bro"1n's restaurant \Vere Mrs. Russell's ccr-workers. the /Vln1es. Jla v- den. first ~ice J_>rcsiden_t: Don O'Hearn. second vice president : 11 u~h Scallon, third v ice president. and Gary Johnson. tecording secretary. Also initia ted \Vere the iVfmcs. \\lilliams. -co rresponding secre- tary; f{onald Hamilton, treasurer; Robert Cm elak, auditor; Patrick llaycs. press. and LaRoche, fe deration d evelopment. As new officers and members li ghted candles a1 the ceremony they promised to put friendship foremost fo r the new year. ' LIGHT ONE LITTLE CANDLE -New officers of E l Camino Real J unior Woman's Club li ght" candles to signify friendship fo r the coming club year. Putting their best effort forth for philan- t hropy ar e (left to right) the Mmes. E dward Russell. newly elect- ed president; Ronald Hamilton. treasurer, a nd Charles 11ayden, first vice president. 'fhe installation was conducted this month. A major projec! of the club for t he past several years has been Project DAFFY (Dental Assistance F und for Youth). Many area youngsters have had necessary denta l work completed due to the club's fund-raising a bility. Office Girl Thinks It a Blessing Not Repeating Dressing DEAR ANN LANDERS: This Is a rldiculOO!I complaint and I know it but a situation e:rists in oor office that Js embarrassing to say the lea.st. A girl J work with has a fantastic wardrobf!. She could go for a monlh and a half without wearing lhe same dress twice. I'm su re she has a thing Rboul nol repeating outfits and in order lo show up in a different outfit every <lay she has tnken to wear ing her coeklail dresses. Son1e of these party numl:lf!rs 11re backless and slashed to the navel. When sh e bends down to put the mail 1n the bottom slots about 20 guys rush over to "help." Yesterday she wore 1 sequined mini ANN LANDERS U1al looked like a skaling costume. I'm surt it glo1vs at night. The offi ce errand runner iage 171 swallowed his chewing gun1 when he saw her. Several or us izirls think she is cheapening the offi ct. Should somebody i1ay something':' -SAV- ING IT FOB. MY HUSBA ND OEAR SAVI NG: The office manager i~ th e one who should ''fll)' tiomething'' but obviously he llkts wb1l ht 1tt1, and from your description. he sees plen- ty. It would do no good to speak to the girl . Shr kno'•l's what shr Is rloing and I~ enjoyin g it immr nstly. D1':AR AN N LA NDEft5: t can'l stop thinking about Iha\ Jillie boy who ac· cldentally shot his sister while playing with the father's gun. Let us pray the child's parent.'! don't make the same mistake my husband's p aren t s ma de un d er simila r circumstances. He, too, accidentaJly kill· eel Ws sister. l-Lis E:r ief-stricken mother and father did everything under the snn to lessen the boy's feelings of guilt. They showered hin1 with attention nnd gi ft s and catered lo his every whi1n. The results were disastrous. He grew up ta be selfish, inconsirlcra!c. 1vildly egocentric -co1npl etely wilh<>t1l concern for others. The death of a child is a tra~cdy. But the ruination of a beautiful, bright, promising youngster is equally tragic. The best way lo recover from a death in the family is lo emerge frorn the valley ol grief as rapidly as possible and do something construcUve for the living. Sometimes profes.s)onal guidance is needed . T hope the parents of the dead child will stop blaming Lhemselves and treat the survi ving youn g8ter just as they v.-·oulrl have had the tragedy not occurred. The inclination to bf! too pcnnissive or excessively over-protective can be disastrous. I koow bccau~ I am Jiving wit h fl -\VICHITA WIFE. IJE.\R REAUt:ll : Thank }'OU for an tX· cellent letter. And now may I add a word? Th t surviv ing chlld somet1me1 t t- lempts lo lake advantage ol 1~ving p1rent1. Pa~nlll should ht 11lert lo 1\tCb maneuverlnc and Ht permit it. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wUe ard I got Into a frank discussion with anot her couple last night. Today my wife isn't speaking to me. This quest.ion came up: Would any of us remarry if something should happen to our mates? The others all said they would not rem.ar- ry. I sai1t I would. rily wife claims I dun·l love her and lh:it I humiliated h1·r in front or our friend s. What do you say? -CE ILING Zl~RO UEAll ZF.RO : Wldow1 and whlowt rt who hnvt had happy marriages tend 10 re marry. It Is a compliment ralbt r than an Insult to Utt de«aRd partner. Your wile Pou.Id be flaUettd, DOt brs.. >, .. ' -j J [; .. ' ~ ~Minis Haven't Dropped, but Maxis Inch Onto Scene TENNIS LESSONS By JOAN 01'.:PPA LONDON { UPll I n Franc~. the n1nu-jupr ~1111 dr:iws ooh-111-las i>rl P <1nS Boulevards In ~I o s l' ow , rninyubkas turn heads Hl Rl'd Sqt1are. \Vhatever Euro1K"an ::. c;.ill ii. !he n1ini skirt 1·c n1a1 ns !heir ft1vonte hcrn length. c•\•en if the ma:i1.t·r!lid1 look 1s a hot topi<' of ctx:ktail party c·ou- troversy. A surve)' by United Press International correspondent s in Europe;1n c:iµ11al.~ of both East and \\lt'st -from London "'here both the 1nin1 and n1aJC1 first madl' tht'1r 1nark 10 Belgrade "'here Y u go s I a 1· beauties lea d lhl· Communist fa shion "·orld -shows that the new longer hen1!tnes ;ire having :in in1pact bi.JI riot ;1lways lh{' one designers had in mind. -In Hutlapc~t. a -~lale-nwn· f'd clothi ng factory du tifully turned out a line of the latest 1naxicoats, sent thern to Jtomanian stores and got then1 alt back several weeks later. Nine had sold. they escorted l.o wear short !>kirts. price -a sizable selection slick with the mini will be or long skirts can be found strong but sOOfler or la ter we l•"u't•r H•" I•'" A1•• -And in London , where f:ishiun trends and hemlines µroba b!y move faster than any :najor city in the world, a nHtJor clothing rnanufacturer polled its eustomers between 25 and 50 years of age and found most wanled skirts just knee high . That is where they \\'ill be for fall. the company announced. fo r about $JD each -th<it shall have to yield to th e e Un iqu• M.thod , \\·omen could afford to ex-caprices of fashton.." R .... 11. Gu•••nl•1i! perimcnl. But if l\1oscow women want • You p•v o11lv if v•u l111n I No Ginunlck1 l In Paris, where a $20 skirt tu yield to the maJCi·mini Try •'•" l.uoin _au .... is considered a b argai n , vogue, they wiU not find it htl•••n ... ,~ Ad,MC• women eannot and do not in the stores. Their pretty ,.0, lid•rtn•rio• gainb!c !he san)e way. comrades in Belgrade will and C•ll ,, .. 11191 64,-1,07 J(cta ill·rs nnd manufacturersl~do~·==========~~~'::'.::O:':::O:=::=:::'::"~ 111 that fashion capital ha ve -- But among the very young and very fashion cooscious, the mid i and maxi are cat- ching on harder \\'ith each successive season in the three rnain fashion capitals of Paris. London and Rome. ad1n11tcd pu blicly that the en- tire mini-maxi controversy has depressed sales. "\\'hat is more worrying Is that !he contagious hesitation about hemlines is overtaking all departinents of ready-to- 11e<1r," one business analyst s:i1tl ''Polo shirt.'!, for e:<· i\\l~IS STAY ON <1111 plc. 11·hich stores r<in out Few girls have given up of l<1~t year. are staying pded un the coun t er~ ·• their minis altogelher -as any tourist \\'ill note on a A gcnl'rally conservative at· brief stroll through t h'-' lil11dt· !n\.\·ards f;1shion right .~lrt'ct s. In fact, in Pa ris mosl ;1tr0ss the I-::uropean continent ~kirts seen1 to have become <1lso <1ppe<1r.s to be holdi ng shorter over the last year _ b;1ck the 1na.-:i-n11di tren d. except for a scattering: of In l ;ermany, ;1 relatively n1idis and n1axis amon g :.n1all nu1nbcr of younger girls )'ounger mademoise lles. -mostly unde r 20 -have Shops in Rome seem to be started \\'caring cloth and selling more longer dresses le<1ther tn<1xi<0ats over mini- lhan anywhere .else. "We're skirts during the past winter, selli ng half and half, mini and one of !he toughest the coun- midi, right now to Eirl s of 1ry had known in years. Only all heights," said saleswoman a sn1all prOJXlrtion of longer Unusual offer. LI ~ STILL AROUND -Miniskirts haven't exited the fashion scene yel. ns cvidenc- ,• ed by this scene in Rome near the fam ous Spanish S·rc ps. Shops in Rome are selling more longer dresses tha n anywhere else, bu t still are selling half n1 in1. -In France, even the rt?fin- cd models turned out by Paris high fashion designers failed lo persuade most Frenchmen to accept the long look A public op inion poll shuwe<t 84 percent wanted the women Dolores Di Nunno in a looks 11'cre sho11•n in shop \.\'in- 1\·omen's store near t h e Ile)\.\'~ for spring although fan1ous Spanish steps. SCl'eral stores said they plan In the Santo Agostino chain lo g;_imblc next fall. Stock up on First National City Travelers Checks at pre-v aca tion ~avings-up to $5,0 00 worth, fo r a fee of just $2 QQ store, clerks sai d mini skirts Your Horoscope Tomorro w represented only about 20 per-EAST ELiHOPE cent of sales and the rest In Easlcrn Europe. the story were midi and maxi even to is lhe san1e but with in- •·older \\.'Ome n". lerest1ng variations. Capricorn: Make Discovery But on the streel'i, only an News of the midi-tna:<i loo~ es timated one-fo urth of the C'aine lo Hussia last r..1a rch girls arc wearing the lo nger 8, \Vorncn·s Day th roughout skirL'i _changing hem lengths the Communist world, when is a serious thing in a coontry the Soviel Union's most prom- During May only. TUESDAY MAY 26 By SYDNEY OftfARR The GemiDI child bas more: questJons to ask tb11.o does June Ballot His Topic Proposilio•s on the J une ballot will be discusS('d by Mathew Weyuker during a Costa Mesa Re p ublican Women·s C l u b. Fede ratcd meeting on Thursday. i\1ay 28. al Jft a.rn. in the h()rne nf i\1rs. Herbert ( i. \\ j•1ek uf Costa Mesa. We y u k e r is ;in 11d- n1i nlstrativc ass1 ~tanl In Jloberl ll. li urkr. <1ssemblyrnaN for t he 79111 district. lie has b cc n ;1 member of lhe Westminster Elementary School b oa rd ~1nce !965 ,ind also 1 s chairman or tile l lun tington Beach ll igh School board of trustees. \Vcyukcr 1s a 1ncmbcr of the Republican Stale Central Committ ee. Following ~1 polluC'k lun- f'hcon. a fund-raising party u·11l tak~ plaCT. Tntercsted JX'N>Ol'IS mav call Mrs. J ohn Bf'nl()n al fi46 .8QR2 BE FREE ... OF FACIAi-HAIR FORCVEft. LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT IS TO "EMOV£ EXCESS HAIR WITH MOOERH EL£~ROLYS1S, MEDICALLY APPROVED •• • SAFE• f'AST, GENT LC , COl'ISULT WITti OU R LI CCNSEO TECHNI CIAll IN OUR BEAUTY SALON , ROBIN SO N'S NEWPORI the average youngster. The 8e children a re never snlii;fied to know that something oc- curred. 'fhey demand reasons. Ir you don't know. admil it. Gemini youngsters can st'e through preten1e. Their in· tellectual curiosity is inltnse. There are more l14'ins born unde r Gemini than under an y other zodiaca l sigh. Thrre art more left-handed (; e m i n i children. too. /I. Gemini child v.·111 challenge your alertness and help make life inlerrsting, to say not.bing of perplexing. ARIES (March 21-April 191: Some friends are enthusiastic ;;ibout spending your money. K1'\I 1s to be reusonable :111cl la1i-. but ;ilso flr111 . Dc\;.11 \-. req1iirc your persona l at- tention. TAURUS (April 20-l\1 :iy 20): Ile rc;1dv for c 11 a n ~r s. S11rpr1~c S1aLcn1cnts rl'gard1n~ your d11tics, rcspnns1billl1t·$ arc is~ucd. i\1:11ntain balance-. Avoid rxtremes. Prestige rises if \OU react well under prcs:-.ure-you can. (;E~llNI (i\1ay 21-J une 20 ): \'nu may require additiona l in fo rmation before embarkini:: nn journey, r..1oney situation needs to be checked. Family n1en1ber also de>scrve<: at- lention and courtesy of con- sult<o1t1on . CANC F.R !,Jun{' 21 -Ju!v '.!2 !' A10 1d sclf-dcccpt1on. T:.ikc off rose-colored glassrs. S f' r persons, situations as th ey ac- tually exist. Accent o n responsibilily created by pro- 1nisc rnadc Jn pasL LEO iJuly 23-Aug. 22J· Although you may have been guaranteed a certain amount of backing. take the cash and l('t Ille prornisc" gu Ht• uJtrapracticaJ. Your ser\'lccs :ire valuable. r.et proper com- pensati on for tht.·rn. VJR(;O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22: Be \Vi lling to let go. ltcal1ze that, 1n actuality. yuu eannot 111.\'n anyon~·. ftf'leasl' tensions :.inti !he 1tuv-and yo ti r llfe-\\'111 bt• better for vou. LIBHA !Sf'p!. 2J·Ckt. 22 1 bt· crca1 il'r 111 st•nse th;ll vo11 t;ikc :1 ri~k. thal }Oil pul \'011r n!JJ('tli\·Ps {)J1 tht· hnf'. F;11ti1 111 lessons you lii!\'l' 11nµartcd tu voun~ p!'rs1Jn I'-' lf.<:!C'rl . l\1c:i111ni..:l11I 1[;1 ,\ ~.v111 1 II' I I! r1·n111n1tll'r 1! ~COHl'lll IO<·t 'L:~-~01 211 · •rry to rl·rn:un 1n b;iekgro11111I. Your hunches :1rc t.•orrl•ct Bill this is not UJ(• 1i111e fnr 1lirt'l"t ;1tl11)n . Ca111 1nchcated if ·'nu ;irt• suhllc, L1gl1t tnurh ll'1ns 1odav Otherw1sl'. \VU ;1rr due fur ;l·tback. · SAGIT'TA!tlLS 1 "\11 1 ""· Oc1'. 21 ): Obtain t11nl fron1 Srorpio 1n f's ~ :.. g l' . H•· 1!1plClmat1c . 1!1<:\)l.11· :0-l'r\~~· ur hurnnr. Don't ~ry · 111 l'h:1nt;P !he 11·orld o\'t.'rn1gh t. rflu ha\(' n1uch to cu11tr1butc lhll doll· it nut SonH• can't lakl' lil';ll 1 rnonth end sto re wide doses . ""'here a bilingua l clerk or incnl desig ner, Vyachcs lav CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. a legal secretary ls luc ky tu Z:il!se1', paraded his coin- 19): You are able to n1nke rnake 15,000 tire ($24 ) a week rndely 1nnde!s on television di scovery whic h adds up to ;ind where clothes are top iii ~lie longer skirts. profit. Key ls to read bet\vCcJI quality but expensive. · rransilion \\'ii! be gradual , lbc lines an d study fine print. Jn London, where readv-tO· not before autumn, .'.lnd thro You arc able to discern hidden \1·e;.i r 1s so cheap and &oor1 you \.\•Jl l ~till ~ec plenly of c!auses which rn<ikcs vou a 1hrit the cily has becoine <• n1inyubkas ( 111 in is k i r t s) hero. Congratulations. · shoµpi n.I( haven ror women tog(•!hcr w i th max1co.1ts."' Al!UAR IUS (Jan. 2tl·Feb. !rorn all over Europe, the Z;11tse>v told Lhen1 . ·'But don't \8 1 Not so fvsl Pern11l longer skirts repre~cnt ti gc! al:lrrncd vet.'' dt'.'velopment.~ lo l.'.lke n;.itur;1I sizable ininorily but st>ldorn Leading fv Shion houses such (·ourse. Contac1 you 1nade 1s a majority of the stock in ns D()rn ~1odcly showed plent~· in1portant. Bu t you clo n()l rnost stores. of short dresses v.·ith long have> to iump at first offer. eo;i ts for spring, \\'h;it you posses~ i.~ of valur T llE f\.1AXI 1N BRITAIN "\\fe shall resist lowering Kno1\' th1$ and "c t a<:-The maxi caught on so our hemline here tonger than <'ord1ngl}. quickly Jn Britain partly our sisters in the west,"' a 9 CONVENIENT OFFICES SERVING ORANGE COUNTY Airport Ollict/MithelS(]n at MicAr1hu1/833·31 11 l•f'id• Oflia/Barsidt al Ji mbor«/&42-i t• t Colltt• Park Olliet /Nutwood al Commanwealth/87 l 2900 l 'run1 Hill1 OUict/leisure Wort~. L11un1 Hills/830·3200 St•I lt1cll Offict/leisur1 Wo11d, ~•I eerth/~96-271 1 SvllllJ H!Rs 0Hic./H1rbor It 81e1/B71-7290 SMptrior Olliu/Superior 11 Pl1ttnti1/642·95l l Uni¥1rsity Oflict /E1st Chapman at S!at1 Collt ge/87'l -4UO Wutditf Ottict/Westdi ll 1t Omr/&42·311 l PISCES (Feb. l!l-l\larth 20 1: beC'ause manufacturers could pretty <:ht'1nistry !>iudent said. Diplomatic approach is best. r~p:c:od:u~c~•...:"'...;'~•;c..:su~c:h...:a~l:ow::..~"~A:od~~o~u:c~d:et~e:nn:in~a~li:011:'.,;~':'.;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:=~:~~. Somf' fn etors h;1ve yrt lo bt'l ---- rt•\c:ilr-11.You 1nust IJ,1.,1· :tt· t1on:-; on 11ha! yot1 knu11, nnt , 11·hal yo11 think 1~ 1·orrct·1 , Later in day .1ou gr t 1 ~ 11 r pr 1 ~ f' -;1 n d ;11 ll!tnk· r11:J11i-;1·~ I IF ·ruDA y lS YOL H Bl nTllDA\' yoti h;ive natural ! cxecu th'e ability. Sorne <eo1n- plain that your 1neth0tls arc , hcavyhandcd. But \.\'hen you believe yo11 arc right. yo u go l' all out . Nothing hallway. Snc ial pace has picked up ; but don"! forget rl'solulions concerning rest. diet anrl 1 health in general. lo lil>d 0.,1 ...,.,.,., •~<~" n• "°" 111 "'OM> ~n<! ~v•. o•<!t• 5•<1"t' 0"'•"'1 boc••I 'S!'C•~! lhMI lo• '-'•~ •~o Wom•~ ' •,."~ 11•"~<1••• •"II ~ t•n" 10 o ... ~., 11 ·1 ·~•00• 5'<••h , th• 0.0.llV <'l~tl! f\n o "JI'> G'•nO (•rlla( 51ahon, 1;1,., Y~·\, N 'I '00' T. ---------· FINE HOME FURNISHINGS INTERIOR DESIGN -. ( ~- CLEARANCE SALE 1/3 1/2 6 Q % off large group of spring and summer merchandi se including: coats, suits, dresses, sportsw ear, swimsuits and beach togs -- Cabinet with showcase ideas Regular $315 ••• SPECIAL $269 ;\ war111 anr1 r ich-looking cabinet to gi,·c a roon1 that \'r ry ~pcr ial £C"eling. Softly di slrc~1rJ 'inl a_1t.t fini •h in w11rrn brown pt:can vrnrl"r& a rh ievr ~ 11 1111 iq11 cly hand-rar\ rd r ffcct. Nn 1!1 1.t 11roli!f'111 hr rr . f'it l11·r -;!Ill•" r111·l11·r1I 1\ith l\\O rir11d y 1·l11•ing <ln or~ 111nke ii nn Ope n 11 r1d ~11111 1·11~r ;ii 1hi.; pr i1·r .. "tand5 i i'" high.'\:\ .. 11itl r. J.i'' dc('p. ·rru ly <i n uu1~1 11 n 1l i n g liuy ... ;111d i r ·~ !l fll~' fralu rrd Pl all thrrr J, II. U ig~ur •lurt'!'. • SANTA ANA, Main at Eleventh 547-1621 Sa nta An• Store Open Monday Evenin g ~ PASADENA -POMONA -SANTA ANA - 1 ; 13 • Raymond Elliott Claims Bride Raymond S. Elliott Ill, son ()f Mr. and Mrs. Raymond S. Elliott Jr. of N e w p o rt Beach, claimed S t e p h a n I e Baker as his bride during rites perronned by the Hev. Donald Caughey i n the V i I I a gt' Presbyterian Church. The bride, daughter ol ~1rs. Stevens Baker of Rancho San- ta Fe, was attended by her cousin, ~1rs. John \\', Dougltl.') Jr_ of New York City as 1natron of honor. Other attendants were the f\.tmes. Charles Hansen, Elliott Johnston, the bridegroom 's sister, Robert Leonard and Brice Tondre. Virginia Mason Johnston, the bridegroom's niece, was the nower girl. Attending as best man was Kirk Si n c la i r Elliott. the bridegroom's cousin, an d ushers were Gary ll. Dittmar, Edwin L. Barker, Jim Flan- nigan and Gernld A. Smith. The bride is a gradua te of Priint Loma High School in San Diego and Lhc University of Arizona. lier husband is MRS. e'tLIO IT Recites Vows an alulnnus nf Mira Cosl;l High School, Manhattan Beach and atlended Orange Coast College.. Award Dreams Fulfilled During State Gathering LEADING BETHEL 313 Miss Karen Robinette A galaxy of awards v.•as presented to Junior clubs fron1 throughoul California during the annual state convention of the Califom ia Federation of \Vomen's Clubs, Junior Y..1embership in the Disneyland 1-lotel. \\'inners "'ere na1ncd in small, medium and large club categories and a group (lf spC"cial award s v.·ere pre· sent ed. Karen Robinette Honored Queen A banquet, themed a Celebration or F u I f i I I e d Dreams, pre-ceded the presen. tation of awards by Mrs. Thomas Christensen, first vice president. The J unior Vi'-oman's Club -of Huntington Beach received thirds in Americanism, con- servaton and health; the Seal Beach Junior Women's Club was winner of firsts in con- servation and build a better community. Miss Karen Robinette is tbe new honored queen of Job's Daughters, Bl!the! 313, Nev.•- port Beach. Her theme Cod Lights 11 Candle in the ll<'arts of f\1rn \1•as carried out in song and yellow decorations. Seafaring ~1asonic Temple wa s the even- ing setting for the installation of officers and choir members. Others installed "'"'ere \h(' Misses Leslie Al len. senior princess; Linda 1''rench, junior princess: Susan Culp, guide, and Gayle flilcs, marshal. •. More officrrs arc lhe Misses · Gail McKincly, ch a p I a in; · .Jenell J ean cs , treasurer; Lianne Schroeder and Offibic Herbert . j:luarr!s: Hr: id i Shellr.nhargcr. r e c n r ct e r ; Karen Miles and Lori Botts, Albertson, Debbie Prochaska. Laura Thornburg and Mary Slade. !'.1iss Robinette, claughler of f\1arine Corps Capt. (ret.) and i\trs. Jan1es A. Robinette. wa s assisled in the cercn1ony by the f\1i sses LaRoycc Alleu. Cathy f\1cKinl ey. Pa u I a Hobertson. Patricia J u n e , Leslie Short, Christie Schlciter and Sandy French, retiring queen. Leslie C. Robinette, past master of Cedar Grove Lodge, Shreveport, La. was master of ceremonies. The new honored queen is a graduate of Costa Mesa J1igh School and hopes to en1 cr the nursing profession after graduating from Cy pre s s College. Nuptial Rites Set for July ln a candlelight ceremony in Grace Lutheran Church on Ju)y 10 Pan1ela Tis\er and Stevan Ray will exchange nup- tial vows. Parents of the betrothed are ?llr. aod !11rs. George Tisler and Mr. and Mrs. John Ray1 all o( Huntinglon Beach. h-fiss Tisler is a graduate of Marina lligh School and now is attending a beauty col· lege, l~er fian<:e , also an alum- nus of Marina, has served ll'ith the Navy. Second places \vere won by the South Coast J u n i o r \V:iman's Club in you I h . education and safetv and a third place in menl<il health. The Junior Ebell Club of Ne"·port Beach won a HW('Cpstakes award in youth. a second m education and thirds in fine arts and health. The Orange District receiv- ed the outstanding district chairman award and third place in the district category. Laguna Group American Le gion Auxiliary of Laguna Beach gathers lhe second and fou rth Thursday evenings in the Legion Hall. custodians: .lanclle \Valton ,li""""""""""-;;-;;-~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,-;;;-.-;;.;;;;;-;.. ___ ,_...;;;;, ___ ...;;.. ___________ 11 musician, a n d Lianne Botts, ' i ' . ' ' • • ' • . librarian. Messengers arc Laurie McKi nley, the Misses Debbie Las Olas Costumed Costumed members of Las Olas Toastm1strc$s Club of lluntington Beach will 1ft • t.roduce the characters they are portraying when the group meets al 7.30 p.ni. \lied· nci;dav. May 27. 111 the ' -, Mercury Savings and Lo a n building. Oral bingraphii·al rPport..c; will be givc1t by flfiss f\.1arge Dewey and the M m e s . Clarence Double , Mary Ann Gravely. Charles Marshall allld , Zo!tan Smith. Toastmistress : will be Mrs. Ralph Almgren and Mrs. Calvin Olcott. Coun- cil Six chairman, will serve as evaluator. All interested women arc invited to atten~ the progi.am and further i11formation may be obtained by calling f\.1rs. Douglas Woodburn. first vice president and p r o g r a m : chainnan, 847·9596, or Mrs. Almgren, hospitality chair- : man. 847-7337. ' ' ! ·Jacket Shapes 7he suit for spring has a free and easy suppleness stressing the midi length. Great variety is found In jacket shape -tubular tops with round necklines anti straight sleeves are worn with tube s kirts and trousers. Can you eat all day and still lose weight? WBGHT@. ~WATCHERS. " ·""' . JI' • '" Sornt ta1k~ng, some li~ttni n~ i nd , " pr09ram tn•t works. '" : s Fltf( ltl:OCHURl-CAll 135-5505 Gloomy Gus I• Your Kinda Guy CrownTng Glory beauty salons SPECIAL-HAIR STYLES He'll love the newest fashions at marvelous savings .•• SHAMPOO· SET HAIRCUT Hi Style SHAMPOO.SET HAIRCUT $15 WONDER CURL PERM $9,95 OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY CROWNING GLORY 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA Phont 548-9919 Mon.• Tue1.-Wed. '2.45 •1.so $2.95 $2.00 $20 MAGIC CURL PERM L•t•r WHk '2.95 s2.oo $3.95 All Week $12.50 OPEN EVENINGS CROWNING GLORY lt.rrMrly C•prl~• Coift11rnl SOUTH COAST PLAZA l•w..-l .. 1tl -Nort to S.Orw Phont 546-7186 Appofntn1tnts 1JJelcomt but not always necessary. ' J Peering MISS HOU. Y Murray, a senior Ge'nnan major at the University of Red.lands, has been elected to Delta Alpha honorary scholastic societ y. Miss Murray is the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. J.L. ti.iurray of Huntington Beach. SELECTED lo Join the Susie Stephetl!l Modeling Squad at Stephens College, Columbia, Officers Ins ta I led Around Mo. was Miss Victoria Lynn Cox, daughter ()f Mr. and Mrs. Mathew A. Cox of Corona de! Mar. To be eligible fo r the squad, girls niust have completed courses in per so nal ap- pearance. fashion modeling and possess a certain grade averaRe. Members participate in college fashion shows and model in nearby cities. Romance Talk Includes Art Art dealer llarry Lawrence A salad luAcheon will follow will speak on the Romance of a n installation of officers of Chinese Art for members of the Eastbluff Philharmonic Chapter OA of PEO on Wed· Associates on \Vednesday, nesday, May 27, in the La· t-.1av 27, at II a .m. in the guna ll('ach hon1c of Mrs. M. h0ri1(' of Mrs. J <.ick R. Curley. 0. King Jr. J\.lrs. frank A. Cooney will Assisling the hostess will be be chairn1an of the group, the r-.tmes. Mary De Bus, a 'ft'0111en's commiltee of the Arthur E. Briggs and Phillip Orange County Philharmonic 11. Norris. Society. lo;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;-..;;;;---.1 Other offi~rs include the f.lmes. Rodney Jones, vice chairm.11111; John Toeker and John E. Losee, secretaries; llichard Grabow. treasurer, and David C. Durr, parliamen· tarian . J & J UPHOLSTERY MEANS! QUALITY, IJfTLEOltlTY, SERVICE, CRAl'TSMANSMIP. W~ LllC I! I EAUTll'UL l'UJl.NITUlt• WE ACCEl'T CHALLRHOIE5 642-5876 646-8058 Sffkltlt • -· •~c.ttn.t ~r? n..,. r •• ttltkM .. ,, .. , ., tr••• MEDICAL AND DENTAL ASSISTANTS Short, ;~'•"Ii•• co"'"'• l~lly ·eiwlify )'OU o• o!\ .-..,.;,,.,"' it1 tfte ort;ce o l a 'hy1;cio11 0t O~"'i•t. 4 moftlh ptog•o"' lot Deftlo! At. ... toM or ""•d1<ol ou;c• ••••plOoniol. 1 "'on•I> prog•o'" for M•dlcol Au i1lont. Doy or •••fting doue1. lifali"'• plO<•lll•nl auO•IOftCt ot ftO oddi1:onol t1>1!. Southern Calilorni1 College of Medicol and Dental Assistants (form1rly Los Ang1IH '411191) ;, ljj@@1]~0JN[W by the Accrediting Commiuion of lh1 Nil's. /\!511. of Trd. and Techntcal Schls. Wrlto or Phone for Fro• lrochvro 1717 South Brookhurst Anaheim Phone 635-3450 DAILY Pl LOT J $ ,_, • MondJY , May 25, l "r •" J 8 DAil Y PILOT Sick Marriages Can Be Cured Thfs gay summer d ress has drawstring tics at the back of the neck and at the side -perfect in soft fabrics. 70410 Misses sizes 8-16. Size 12 requires 2 518 yards of 45" fabric. This precut. pr('perforated Spadea Designer Pattern produces a better flt or money back. Order 70410: give size, nan1e. address and zip. EACl l pattern S1.!l0 postpaid. Address Spadea Box N Dept. CX-15. 1\1ilford, N.J . 08843. NE\V BOOK: To1norrow ·s Look Tod3y! Spadea's collection or 1\1idis and 1\laxis -the Longuette Dook - $1 postpaid. Junior Progress Palhv.•:iys lo Progre, co rr e spending secretary; Mrs. Eugene J\ovach's lh c Helen Br;innen, treasurer: for her ensuein,g term s Lione l DaSilva, auditor, and president of the Ne11·po }'rank l/ughcs. parlia1nen· J unio r Ebells. tarian. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories \Vith bl ack and white ¢lossy r.hoto- graphs to the DAILY P ILOT Womens De- partment one we~k before t_he wedding .. Pictures rece1ved following the wedding \\'ill not be used. For engagement announcements it. is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy p icture, be s~b n1itted six weeks or m ore before the wedding da te. If deadline is not met, only a story \Yill be used. To help {iU r equirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories. forms are available in all of 'I.he DAILY PILOT offices. J<'urther questions will be answered by \\'omen's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. Pen Women Meet Ark Search Described Ken Purcell of Anaheim, a rncmbcr of the speaker's bureau of the Search Foun- cla!ior., will be guest speaker when the Orange County Branch, NationaJ League of American Pen \\'omen, Inc. rncets. The luncheon gathering v.•i ll lake place on \Vednesday, May 27. in l·lov.·ard Johnson"s restaurant, Anaheim. Purcell. also on the slaH of Melodyland Ch ri st i an Center, Anaheim, currently is involved with the upcoming project aimed at recovering what may be the ruins of Noah's Ark from Mt. Ararat 1n eastern Turkey. A producer of radio pro- grams, author, poet and Bible teacher. Purcell has titled his talk Halls of Learning. Reservations for the lun- chCQn may be made by calling f-.1rs. Helen Wilbur. president, 744-7241. VISTA Volunteers Couple Wed • East By PATRIClA l\tc:CORM ACK NE\\' YORK (UPI) -You and hubby cohabit, go to church together, occasionally shop as a twosome and otherwise put a congenial face forward in public. But you don't talk much, preferring one syllable words to communicate -when yo u can't get by with a grunt or nod during a situation that used to be a springboard for ronversation. Whether you realize it or not, your marriage is in serious trouble even if you never fling skillets, swing the roll ing pin or engage in fisticuffs over family disputes. Lee M. Shulman, a flying psychologist and m a r i t a I counselor who praclices in Detroit and New York . described the symptoms of the sick marriage. lie estimates thal more than half of all married couples have reached the nearly silen t stage. He b.'.lses the estim:He on 21 years' experience at marital fi rst aid. The next most common sympto1n of an ailing marrige n<'Xt to no-talk: money in· c:ompatibilities. 11usband and wile cannot agree on goals and va\uC's in the financial arena. Third on Shuhnan·s !isl of causes of disturbed n1ar~ riages: sex troubles. The once happy tv.·oson1e opt for separate beds, s e p a r a I c. bedrooms or one is banished to the living room couch. Shuln1an, who flies his own plane between New York and Detroit to keep up with his practice in each city, said Valley Women Seat Officers Me1nbers and guests of the Sadd\eback Business and The \Vedding of Jacqueline Her husband, son of tllr. Professional Women's Club r.larie Fregeau, daughter of and r.1rs. Soloman Kushner v.·il1 seal ne\\' officers during Mr. ;ind f\·lr~. Donald Fregeau of Bala Cyn'"·yd, Pa .. is a a 7:30 installation dinner in of Fou ntain Valley, and James graduate of the Uni ve rsity of Ben Brown"s restaurant at Ala n Kushner has been an-f\1iarni and received his Jaw 1:aguna Beach Country Club noun('{'d by the bride 's degree fr o1n the Univ!'rsity on Thursday, May 28. parents. of Mar}•land before entering Busintssv.·omen and their il is mosl difficult to mend know about marriage failure . for the sake of the children a marriage after a com· Between them they have six is something Shulman doesn't municatlon breakdown. children from the previous believe in. "Bu t it can be done," lie marriages. Keep i 11 g an "It is an injustice Lo selr said ... I have seen some mend unpleasalll. marriage together and children," he said. through group therapy over;F======"==''==i===========j the years. The communlcatior. breakdown starts, I think, a~ part of a failure of each participant to think out stan- dards -fo r themselves and their n1arriages." Shulman and Joan Kennedy Taylor, wife of playwright David J . Dawson, have put some tips for troubled mar- riages in a new book, "When to See a Psychologist" (Nash Publishing Corp.). "Businesses ra il If lhe own - ers don't v.·ork to make lhem succeed," he said. "Tile same may be said of n1arriage. You rnusl v.·ork al it. l\.1osl peQplc in troubled marriages don't work at it·• The prescription Shulman follov.·s in his marraige : once a month annivcrsariGS. l1e recommends the same to oLhers wishing to ke~p their n1arriages away from the rocks. He and his wife review '''hal's good about their n1ar· riag<', \\-"hat's bad about iL They rethink their goals and even renew their marital con- tract. ··\\'e look on marriage as a renewable contract," he said. The marriage in which Shulman introduced t hes e monthly anniversaries 1s his seconct. It also is the second! for his present v.·ife. So they WE KNOW OUR STUFF THE Knl!!lnt 11 Dur !hint. W• h•v• •II tho lngredl..,1• •nd t on help "(OU ID ~· ~n l>PlrT. Como In! KNIT WIT South Coast Pl aia LOWEil MALL Act.,., rrom wootworrh" COSTA ME~A Pn $<1~1111 / Why not pamper yourself with an Elizabeth Arden face treatment You 're a woman of the '7 0's. On the go. Involved. And, when you do have time to relax .,. make that time count. Visit our Elizabeth Arde n Red Door Treatment Room. Let our'expert give your skin a wonderfully refreshing treatment •.• and a new make-up. You'll not on ly look your very best ••• you'll feel marve lous! Complete treatment with make-up, 10.00 The Sluft Shirl restaurant 1vill be U1e sc111ng ror her installation nn Thursdav. Mav 28, at 11 :JO a.in. Officiating will be Mrs. Terry Thomas, past president of the Orange District, California Federation or W o m c. n ' s Clubs, Junior Membership. Chairm;in to be installed in- ~lude the Mmes, Larry f\fitchell, 11·ays and means; Keith J\cpplcr, n1cmhcrship ; Da1•id Sno1v. press: 0 :111 i\1cSwreney and Fred Fry, fine ;1rts: J0h11 'l'ribol<'\, bullrtin: Jtichard B cc h I e I, youlh ; Bichard l'rciss, heallh: The couple, \\'ho exchanged VlSTA. f ol lo,ving a visit to escorts are invited lo attend, their wedding vows in Fountain Valley in July. the Reservations may be made Philadel phia. met while serv-newlyweds v.·ill makr the ir by calling ti.1rs. Clarence Jean, ing \1•1th VISTA. -~ho~m~e~io~K~' a~ns~a~s~C~i~lY'.:_· ~M~o;_. --~8J~7~-7~lM~4~.::_ ______ _J".:~~::'".'.'.'~::'~~~ The new f\lrs. Kushner is a graduate of Huntington Beach High Schoo! v.·here she was yell leader and attencled Goldeu \\lest College before entering VISTA. She is a past president of the Fountain Vrilh.'Y \Voman's Club J unior Beauty Studio Auxiliary. Vice president s includr the r.1 1nes. .James J\1urnr. Len J\·li ller and A. L. Hast111g:s Olher officers are ! h 1· !11mes . Garry Short. recording secretary; Roger Shcnnan. J larlow ltichardson. luncheon: .J<icob Dutcher, reservations. flradlev f\Jorton , progran1 \Varren T-'ix, education. :Jn<! Jl1chard Hochschild . h1s!.11rian. GtiesLs include the 1'.1rncs. Wedding Attire Salad Served A salad lun ch will be scrl'ed to members of the \Von1('n °.'i Socrely of Chris!lan Service 1n the United J\!ethod i s t '1111rch, Sout h Lagun3, tomor- row at 12:30 p.m. Tickl'ts lor the annual luncheon ;ind :r. special antique show may be purchased from J\lrs r :1r! lla11k.ins. -19-1-6450, or ~n 1he <·hutch 0H1Ci', 499-3088. T. IL t-.fcBride, irnn1ediate p:isl presid<'nl of the Ebell Cluh: Ray Nielsen. prcsiden1. :ind Floyd \Vay a nd Frank Kov;ich, the i n c o m i n g president's mother a n d 11101.hcr· i n·la11·. The new coordina!or is r.1rs. J _ L. Jenks, assisted by ti.frs. Thornas Baun1e. Betrothal Ring Cer!'n1onies for t hos e ~r:iduating into the Ebell Club \1111 bf' C'Onductcd by r.1rs. /l ll(·n t;oody and fl1r s. {;ary The betrothal or ~ledge ring has its origin in part from I he pledge of the bridegroom's t;ood intentions -made in the days when a bride v.·as lt1t1nr,s. HRWR~~XJHr PR11ITT§ SEW YOUR OWN-:::YHING in bo ld, mod designs, hot colors, all on a little iron, fa bric of t he Is lands. For fun 'n sun 'n patio 36" wide 100°/o Cotton Guar. Wash•ble • 0 0 0 TERRY PRINTS yd. Summ er's favorit e for beach or lake or pool! Colorful , colorful pr ints! 36" wide Gu•r Wa1h. too~. Cotton (SOLID COLORS $1 .19 YD.) ,--- yd. purchased. ,. .• a•• *C -~-.., • v I .. 'ff<~· ... , I " .. • ' . . <rme o-' _1 YARDAGE "NOTIONS 'O'R'A'PE'R IE 5' • " SOUTH COAST PLAZA-<OSTA MESA HUNTINGTON CENTER- • I I r I S DI , 1 -545 1516 HUNTINGTON BEACH r • o I an ego rcew Y • £d ln,1r at l1ath loul1v1rd-197-101J Opt:R MDttdoy thtu Frldoy 10 'tll 9 -Saturday 'tll 6 -Sunday 11-5 --......--~ 1 ... _-___ '_ .--- CHILDREN'S ART COUNTYWIDE PARTICIPATION I Y ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOLS. KINDERGARTEN THRU 12111 GRADE South Coast 'j>tua GLORIA MARSHALL SAYS: Coll us for a Free courtesy v isit. A c tua lly use the exclusive machines d esigned for quick safe effortless reducing. Priva te playroom fac ilitie~ for smoll children. Manicures • Pedicures • Facials • Elec!rolysis Buff urns· How Will You Look in a Bathing Suit this Summer? RESULTS ·uANTJi9~ ... :;~ • • , . 1 in Writing "Tell us the dress size you want to wear, and wt1 11 tell you how many vi sits it will take and a:uarantee in writinc that you will reach your g:o1I. In fact, so positive 1r1 w1, that we will even let you have FREE OF CHARGE any and 111 --!vrfher VllllS' Until you do. NO DISl!OltNG -WE ARE NOT' A GYM. Comt in oomlort1blt 011u1t clothes. VERY SPECIAL (T.imitNl 1"im r llu/_•) s {Regordless o f how little yov netid to lose on ony program) . .. ;,-,, 0 1\L Y DON'T MISS OUT! IT'S LESS THAN 1/2 OUR REG. LOW PRICE Wtrld'1 l1r1e1t Own1o' lftd Oprra!rd Chain ... 121 location1 in Califo rni1 altu) FIGURE CONTROL SALONS • Dlllf l ·I, Si i. l ·I • IAlllU1U•1ti•o. U•H•tCAll 1u11i1 .,.. lllAllll CMlllC WILCD•f AlSO IN 430 PACIFIC COAST HWY. 642-3630 A11olri+i1'1, Co•ht11, Cre11d1e1w, Do w,,.y, Gle11dol1, leltwood, L .. V.qcrs, lo119 hecll, Ntwport h o,h, H. Hollywo•d, 0 11torl1, P••· 4•110, So11 Dl .. o, Sa1110 An11, So11t11 l orb11ro, S1111la1d, l•tte.,., To1r1M1Ce; Whlttlirr. (2 Bl ocks East of Balboa IJay Cl ubi 1840 W. 17th STREET 543.9457 SANTA ANA I re) Copµr1uht 1970 Gloria !>1atslioll r.J ut. c;o. Inc. LEGAL NOTICE Cfl Tll'l(&ffi 01' I VltNfill FICTlfiOUt N.f.Mf l M ul\<ltr•IQr.e• Ollo u r1t" ""-¥ ••• -1!"1 t bu1lnt1J ol 21-IJI !le1c1' l l•d .. l-h1nll"i1IQ11 8eetl>. C1hla.nl1, unde1 0" loClllfo<J• llrrn M"'f" ol Fll"lM.O STEllS E NlEAPlllSES 11'111 IMJ •Old lltm I\ • ...,_d of It. 1.i1ow1r.o ~'"""'· W~QU "•me• (n 11111 •NI •Ioctl el •tll~M• t r••• fol1owo: Mon•r:. E. lloynd" l .OC1 1ummor!l•1d Ln .• 11unllnglo" 8r 1c,., C1lll. l"•o E Har),,, ol11 Holt~"'· Huro• Hnglon lletc~. c1 11r. D1ted Mow 7, 1910 M"""'' e llouhll• l hH E. H"ke< STATE OF CALIFORNIA. O AANGI! COUNT'!': °" Moy 1. 1'10. belor• mr .• NOIOI"/ l'ubHC In 1n4 la. 11.d S!llr, """onollv 1ppeored Mll'I'"" E. l ouNI• 1na Tnto E. Hot~., kn.own lo me to bt Int Po"""' WllO~ n1rne1 orr •U'bw:dbed •• rnt W•lftin on1·1•u1T1Pf'! 11'111 otlnow""ag.. •• I~•~ eArculrd tllo .. me. tOlllCll l ~•II Jron L. J-t t.io•M"Y Publ•c • COlllC11n•1 P1IMl119I Ofl\u In O• •f>9e Coun!W My C~rnlHl.., Elplrr• ,,,,.,, .. l. ltll SIONl'I' ""'LECIC. Anw noy 11 .. \.fAIOftl 1.¥•. l'~llorttn, Cfl. '2UI P~bli•"tO Or•"'ll• Co••I MIY II, II. 7\. JuM I, 191G OO•IY LEGAL NOTICE Pllol 11 .. 10 LEGAL NOTICE .... "" \Ul'•ltOI CCMJIT 01' 'THlf STATI Of' CA.Lll'OINI& ,01 TMlf COUMTT 0 1' Oi i.MOE N•.A..- lolQT tCe 01' CONl•IVAlOll'I S.OL lf OF lll:AL 1'10,1!.l fY "'' l'lll tv .. r• I I.Li: LEG AL NOTIC~ Notlco I• norothr 1lvefl l'hot "'" llooro or lru•lt•• ol tM O••l'IO• Co.ti J1m•o• Coll"9• Ol•ltlU, l\ttOl<1<1fl•• "'trrrrO IO •• mo '"Owr.e•" wlll <KO•v• ~P 10, II«! ool lo lot lfloll }·00 Pm , l ueS£1••· J...,o 9, lflO. oulocl blcl• lo• tile ~..,,,.,, or !flt conlroCI tor torwl1toP1"" 01 1~0 llol<>C•t•DI• O 111 ' I c I Aamo(ll•itohon llulldlnu lo<oto<I OI lll'O AOl m' Avr <1Ue. Cai•• Mt••· Ot•1>11• '"""'"· Coll!ornlo. SIK~ bld1 •1>•11 l>t rt<rlvH on Tl>~ ol'llco ot !lie Purcn~•fn11 A II • n I • Admlnl1lrotlon Oulldlnv. lltll l'olr•l•w A,..d. Co110 Me••• Or~ng• (Oun•v. C..ll!ornl1. oNI 11101! t>r ~,..nf'd ond PllOllClv •o•d olc..O '" tll1 llO<ltd lloom cl 1M Aomln"t<o!I"" 811lldl"" or Ill• obovo 1tolod time. TM -~ con•I"• of lrt19ohcn, wu prop•r•tlon •n<t 1>l•n!on9. Ali bid• ••t 10 IH !n •cc:1uooncr wltl> 1>lon1. Wl'fClllco!•On' •n<I other perjlMnl c1111trou dOcumen!s. CoPI•• ot Ille COtllr•<• 0ocum4'nli or• now on !lie olld -" to public lnoPKllon 1 .. ,,,. >•Id oltico ot lhe Ownot. or><J ol' L•nt ' WOQd, Londl<IPe AtellllKIS. lU.O Flr11 Avenue, !loull> Le911no, Co!il ond "'•¥ 0. Obl•iM<I II U10 olll<t 01 It'll Afcl\\Mcl o< P11•ch1,lnt Oe1>•rt• monl OI , ... Ownt< by deDOllUIHj l lSOO kif ••<I> lt1 of qen•"•I pion• •nd WKlllu !lo .... TM• dtP.,..11 wlll De <tl\lnd· .a II IM M1S o•o '''"'""' ce.mpl~!o 1rod In 11ood condition woltun hve d•v> .,,., IM blo oP.,.lna. E•<I\ blo '11•11 bP mad• 0111 on l!>e '"Form al PrOP01•r' OOund !" eech ff"! ol ~P~llicUIOtlo E•cl> bid 1h1i! bP •<COmPlnled I>• • ct •lllll"rl or Cllhlrt'• Chf<~ P•Y•bl• to lf>e Owno" o< •~1.,lictorv ll•<t B""<t In i.vcr ot lht Owner, t >KU•ed "" the l!ldder •• p•lncl1>a l •"d a ,1!isl1clorv su•t1v comoenY •• '"'~'•· In &<1 1rnouolt nol l<!n tn1n '"" ne1cen1 (10"0! ol Int bid. Th• cllec~ or bl<t b(>n<t •h•ll be 9iY"' ., • 9V•••nlfe tnot tne bid-lie• will ••ttul• lhf! Con1t1ct ii Ir bP owerd..a to him In conlormity w111> IM C01>ltftl Documonl• arod win orovlae lht 1ure11 bond ~· bol>CI~ •• •P•d fled tnereln wl,..ln Ion doy1 afl•• nollllcaBon ol !ho ow1rd of !ht C:on!r•<1 10 me biOde<. l ht Owner •••••ve1 !nr prlvlltt• ot •of•C11"11 ony 1nd oll bla1 or lo wolve on• lrrrtulari 1~1 or iMo•mali!le1 in on, bid or In Th• bldOlng Pu"'""' to the L•bor COdt of 1n• S!o1e of C•lltornio, SoutP>ern C•!ifornl• Building ona Con>!tuctlon Tra<teJ coun· ell•, Bu!ldl"ll ond ConJln.oction lr&d•• Council ol O•Al'l<Jt Counlv. ttie •••O Boord ot l •1t•ltts I>•• ucerlilr\Od Ill• orMrll O•••ol!lng '''" cl oer dl•m weots lo• t l<1' t••ll or !Yer ot wgrO.m•" ntodod to ••ttulr "'• con!r&t t wni<n .,.Ill be 1w1rdt<1 . lht 1ucc•"lu1 bl<1<10t. •n<t these '"""111•"5' ••I•• .,. conraint<I In ••Id soe-clfic1rl°"1 .oaoo!H I>• Jht 81>1rd, 1rod ••• 01 llSlr<I AnY cloullk•Hon nor 1n1iclo>a!od a<>d ll1tf'd >hall t>r .,~Id 11 me cu•r•<>I Wiit ••It• •or ..... AOPli<1bl• ,, • .,.. I n<! CIAU•llca r.on In •11•<1 W•'" "'" oD<lvo lbltd lrode1 Counc•I•. It ony rotlS lllleO are no! cu••en! or •1• rrvl•td bw lit)o< •t•etmonl' d11fin1 !hO blddln<J lime 01 con•l•<K!lon l•me. '"'" rovlsTon1 shall b<t c1111•ld•••d 1 p1rt of Int ll!lr<I ro!e1. HOU llLT A.I.ff. 5.SJ . " ... . " --HOfltE OF TIUSfl!l!"S 1.ll l! He. 1'·1111 0<1 lnu,.d••. JV"'" 15. 19/G. •! n ca AM • CAL!FOANIA LANO At.ID IN VE.SlMENT COMPANY, • corpmO!oon a• 11utw ""l>PD•n!•a l<u•t•• un<t,. "'"" l><l''u•M lo Ou a of Tru" aoi~a S•P. t•mbor JS. l~ol e••cu•ed bw T1rtan I-lo,.,.,, Inc. • corPot1Hon. •nd He1•u Oe~o\oi>me"t Co., • cC111>1>r111on, dol"ii l>u>Jnen "' Mt•• D•I Mar O•v•lo11menr (Q . ~ Join! Venlure and "'o"'"" Oc!o~' II , lt6l, •• 1 .. ,1, No llllS. in llo<>~ 6156. lll llt 1'10. Cl OUotll l A•<Of<I> In '~"' Ollie• o• '"'° Covntw ll•coraor o! Or•n~e Counly. C1ll!Otnlo, WILL SELL Al PUBLIC AUC TION TO HIGHEST 8100[;11 FOii (ASH lPIYlblP ot !fon• of •Al• rn l•wl\11 mo""' 01 !~t un.t•n St•leJI a l lhe Soot" ftonl .. .,!r1nc• 1~ I~• oln 011nue covn1y Cour1nouu "" We11_ 6tll Street, Cltv of S•n'• .O n•, tOI l!ornoa, all r1~"1. !Ill• •nd if'lerHI con. ~e>'ed lo A<ld noyv htld b• 1t """" t11n _Deed o• Tru11 Jn !he "'°""'I' '""•1..:t '" 1"" CU• ot Co-s"• Me ... In u ld Counl• '"" Stole ll~crlD•d •• LOI l ol Trocl 50ll. •• Ill'• rn1n recorded In book 117 POP•• l! lo lll ol Mio<:e llt ntOV• M•110. In I~• olll<• ot tho countv ro<o•der 01 ••Id Cll\lll!Y. S•l<I 111• will t>r rnaat, b>i! .,.,,,....,, cowno_nt ot wau 1"'"' ''"''"or +mplf•d. ·~••d<ng ti!~, .,.,,........... o< '" ~mbr•nces. to ~v 11>1> <em a lflln(I II''"· co ... 1 '""' of lh• now '"cu,.d ~· ••Id ~•d of TruJI. IO-W•I· UJ,S1l.1J, Wll~ lnttrt U from NoYembor I. 1•6•. •• In U ld n~I~ PrO\l•~d. odvon,•1. I• onv. ur><tt• 1r.. '""'" 01 •••G O••G ol Tru•!, I••" <~••O•' ••d ''"""''' el i ... ''"""" •"~ of tne lru1h c•o11ea bv •••d Oe•a or ''"" Tho bo-not<rla ry un<t•• •A l~ O••d ,., Tru>!. ,,., ·~~ion ol • t>'e•<n o• (!ot1~11 r" l~e obl<o~nn"• •e<u•ed lbrrebv l>•rototo,. r<'<u!•d •nd <t•ll•tr•d •a Ille .,nd•'11gn•d • w•l!tt <> 0.<lo•Allon ot o,••u•! ann D•rnonn for ~"'· •na "'"!l•n noter~ ~! ~ro•oc.~ And or •l•tl>Q~ •o c~u·.• In~ u<>d•'11Q<>•d 10 >•II ~•'~ ~·Pr"'''• lo "·'"''Y \4•~ o~l·~~t·nn' •no '"''""""' on ~""'""" ll, lt/O thf un<:1•«1gn~~ ~•u '"n ,.,a noH<• nt ~·•ocn And ~! •10<1,on 1;. no-rototd•~ I~ l>Oll• 911 ~. P•)Qe •t!. ~' ••15 Oll1c1•1 ll•<OCd> Doled IA&• 1$, 1910 (Al l~OllNIA LAil!'! -'"Hl INV E5 11AE r.JT (.OMl>AllV •• •l td l•U:t•• Oo•cm• k C<awl~•d 41 ... llan! ~ct•IArv SI'S lfflll l'uQh>h•d 0•8ftQ• C:<>111! M1v l5 and Jun• I, I. 1910 ..... - St~r )OUr guMlll lo U1e Sieak 11ouae Restau• rant for 1he famous Pion~r Stew or one of I.he be&t S1calt1 in Orangr. Count )! Nearly Everyone Li stens to Landers LECAL NOTICE Satisfaction Guaranteed 0.AILV PILOT _;7 42-Gallon Capacity Upright Water Healer ~tar• 1 .• 1 .... , ~sle P ri1·r. 52 • qatton '' • qallo n 12 · 9olton 7995 coptcity cop11ci1y capocity 19.f~ 99.95 109.95 I· a·! 11 •'.tl iui:.. l>ua l rlrlU l"!ll • pr"' iii~~ ·ri.i,•I.. i11 •11la1 in 11 i:.la·• li 11,.d 1.111 1.. •. lo ng li(t. Regular 69.95 l l11tl1•r ( '.01111tf'r ''' a t1·r •lralcrs ~ale l'ri<"rd 6488 e \,, pllol li,t:l1 1 \() "•lff\ ahour • I:! i.::11. 1•J1pa1·ity • l.uuii !if,. ('lrrnrr•I~ or Your Mon ey Back Shop Monday thra Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. \Sears I ••u• aosiua .uio co. SuadlJI IZ Noa• 11 S P.lf. Shop Sea rs Sunda ys 11 Noon lo j p.m .... Monday thru Saturda y 9: 30 a . m. lo 9: 30 p. m. SUMMER SHIFTS Sears ................ ,, /\5k i\houl Sr.i r, ConvrnicnL ('rr1l11 l 'l.1r.~ ......... " ..... "' .... .. -........... . ...... _ .. ,.,., .. ,, ... ···~· ... ""' "_.,. ... , ',. .. . . .. . " ' . ......... -... .. _,,._ ..... .. _,.,...., -.......... ,...tot 1'11•.00.ool ti t'"·'''"' t i Olooo ,. Io-. I • . . Sears \ I " \ I II » ii long. hot su mme r. but )·ou · 11 tocik coo 1 ~i nd rrfrc~h ed in a sun11n cr shift ... so rrel\y, so rerky so pratllca l. • :\Lide of 1..:ntlon popli n. these f'lccvclcss :-111 f1 s i1 re <lVa ilabl c in blu e, gre en and ~·ellO\\I • Choose" shif t that°s colorfullv cmbroid · creel or accente d \Vi th appliqu.es • Sizes small to large 399 I, o· ·~xlra ,,11.cs ...•..... , ........• f .99 .. ............. . ., ............. !>, ~ .. -........ . ....... "' "" ... ''" .. ........ "" .,. -·. "" .......... -.... "" ........ ,._,_ ............. -..... . ..... -. ....... . ..................... ... ............ . ·~"' ... , ........ . _ ..... .. II D .. ILY PILOT s In High Gear New Car Models Just 'S mall Talk' By CARL CARSTENSEN Of ,., D•llY "'"'' ~i.tt ~ Tt seems to be strictly t "small talk" .HS pluns are fonnuJated for the 1971 n1odl'IS due in Sep1embt11". ll e n r~· Ford tuld storkholdt>rs at !hi' 1·on1p;ln~ \, annual meetn1g ll1<1t Fonl i\lotor Compan.~ v.•tll 1n1rodul'1' lwo new l'ar luu1s Hus !;111. Ford said tlu• t'Ornple!f•ly 1u•11· Pinto -sn1al ll·r than any passenger c<1r nuw offered !Jy domestit m,1nufa r turrrs IY rt'qui red for continuing growth frl ou r share or thi.s expanding market." "In the earlier yea rs or our hi,.tory ." hl' :w.ud. "we met llus deinan<l rror econo mical 1ranSP'->rtat1onJ by build!ng on~· universa l car line. i\1or~ r('Cl'nllv. \\'l' hi1\'e bC't'll first lo th·v"elop 111'11' va nelies of snu1JI c:lrs Lo rnt'f'I 1he spe-cial dc111;.i11tis of p;1rliculu r groups ur c.;uSlomers " v>'ill be int roduced bv Ford .1ealers and Lincoln r.1t•rcurv deal ers v.·ill shov.' an :.ill-ne v.· compaet ear calll·d t hr :'\lertury Con1C'I. Ford saul Ille P1n111 j., "designed fr1 r lt."<uJi•r,,J11p HI the rnarkt•! lnr s m ~1 I I , rconornical. 111 u I t i -purpo~i· C'ars -a 111:irkl•\ ~f'gml'n1. !hat up tu now has been oc· cup 1ed only hy ln1 porltd sedans_ A.~ exarnph•s. }'or·d noted 1h;I! the f..luslang created a nrw market segrncn t and "i~ ~111! Lhc leader arnong small :< p (' r i ;1 I l y t•ars." The \lnverick. hr said. 11·3" desi gn· 1•d for. ;ind h11..; <1chieved, 11,ad1:r!'hip 111 !be lam1ly con1· pact t:ir ~ci;1ncnt in North An1er1ca, TOP. AWARD FOR CADILLAC MANAGER -Bob Rogalski. (2nd from right) service m anager for Dick Na be rs Cadillac in Costa Mesa receives Cad.ilia<: ~rvice Manager's A\~a rd fo r Excellence from Cadillac service representa- tive Clyde Goade. Looking on is disi rict manager Bob i\1 illenbach (left ) and Dick Nabers. Rogalski has been manager a! Nabers for lhree years and associ<1 ted \Vilh Cad illac for 16. "The Pinto is a uniqul' car - smaller than an) other domestic car now in prrr duction or , as far as we kno11', planned for produ ct1::>n. '' he said. "It i.~ designed not only for low initial cosl anrl f•X('C'll1•nt fuel econon1.v. bul ;il sn for· good pe rfon11 anc1· r111nh1 11cd w1!h 1nini1nun1 I i f t' I i 111 t' scrvicr and repair costs. 1t is a s.imple c;ir that ""Ill r('· quire little attention. and many ov.11ers ·will be able to perfonn routine service opera· lions themselves." :· Ford said the !i.1ercury :: Comet -borrowing the na1n c . of ll previously highly suc· :: . eessful Lincoln-Mercu ry entry :··in the compact segment - •· "will fill a de1nand for a small. cconon1ical fami!} car with a high lc\•el ul styling. p erf o rm ance rind l'(ll!· \'eniencc.'' He told ~h<trt·hol dcrs 1h:1t the Pinto and Corncl ;•re "1110 more steps in your comp;1n~ \ planned prograrn to rn ;unlu 111 leadership in the Anlcl'll'<jn i;mall car mar krL ·• ''The 1971 model year," he said, "will bring greatly in- creased competition in the American small car market, but we ere confident that v.·e will have both Ule J>roduct variety and the product qua!i- "The \;apri,'' hr ~;.iid, "wus designed 111 Eurt)pc to fill n be aimed at niaking it a belier pre1'iously untested dcn1and car, and not just dlfferenL for a low-priced s p o rt s· looking ." .. spe-cialty car scaled to Euro----=--------- pl'.'an size. It has been a runa1vay success in Europe. Since it.~ introduction in the US. !es~ than a month ago, Lincoln-!11ercur\' deale rs have been selling Capr is a.~ fast :1s \\'fl c;n1 bring the rn in.·• Ford noted lha1 thr 11e1r P111!0 na1ne h;is a "T" in it. ;u1d addrd : .. A.;; far as I .'.I m conccrnt'd. the Pin10 1s lhc ncv.· Mod el T -but you can get this on!' in a vanety of colors, anything from P.into gold to ?l!ode/ T black. 'The first i\fodt>I 'I' stood for sensible, :;in1ple inotoring in my grandfather's day. But many people forget that it \Vas alsll live ly and easy to handle and fun io drive. Thi s new version ot !he l\1odc l 'f :.tands fo r tlif' ~:iinc things. "\\'hen 11·e started on the J•1nlO. I poin1ed Olll Iha \ th~· n1;1 rke1 ncrded the best little rar dollar !Jr dollar and pound fu1· priund that Ford has evt'r t:tnlt. ! lo ld our people th at I lhoug t11 11 should bl· s1rnple, srnsi b!r. Jo\1'·pnccd. 1 i g h t , lively. dur.'.tb le :ind rel inble. 'fhe Jl,todcl T la.sled virtually unchanged for 19 years and \\'ith that in mind I fel t we should try to accomplish the same objective with the Pinto. Any changes in the P.into will A1•poi111 e d Nev,.port National Bank's president. G co r g e l,, \Voodford has announced the appointn1cn1 of Wil- liam R. 1-leins to a vice presidency. A Ne\vport .Beach resident, 1-l eins is in charge of commercial loans for the bank. He is a member of the Newport Beach Rotary Club and the Balboa Bay Club. :: You•· Motaey's ll'ortli AUTO EXPO BEGINS FRIDAY Auto Expo '70. America's big gest import auto shov.·, featuring more than 200 pro- totype and production sports cars, racing machines and GT automobiles from all over lhe world opens th is Friday ror a 10-day showi ng al the L.A. Sports Areni'l. The collection of c a r s represent the finest anc! most sought after products f ron1 m:inufacturers in I ta J y , England, France. Germany, Sv.·eden and Japan , Some o[ the attraction s Include a pro- totype Ferrari Berlinetta 512 S by Pinafarina; the unique, British-built Zan<ia; t h e Bertone Runabout which is a combination Dune Buggy - Street Sportster and a sport Alfa 33. A full line of pro- ductions sportsters 11·ill also be rtprescnted, CA1\1ARO PROD UCTION STEPPED UP Tbe re-designed I 9 7 o Camaro intr o duc e d in February has reached 33,000 unils in sales and the pace seems to be continuing as J oh n DeLorean, Chevrolet div isioo general manager bas stepped up production 10 11 50 units a day . DcLorean said Chevrolet wil l continue to <1e- celerate producLioo to keeµ pace wilh increasing dealer orders. He credits the success of the Can1aro lo its "in- te rnationa l styling, improved ride and handling a n d i.avorable price position ." The Rally Sport front end, dif- ferent from the reg u I a r Camaro because of a black grille surrounded by a resilient color-matched frame and spl it bumpers, is ac· counting for one oul of every f.our Camaro sales. Trailer Vacatio11land Opening in Anaheim Vac ationla111d. Orange Coun· ty's la rgest recreational vehi- cle park, ls now under con- struction i111 Anaheim and is scheduled lo open in J une . . ' . Sul}stit11tio11 G~111e Boosti11g Basics Operated by \Vralher Vaca- tionland, In('., and adjaceRt to the Disneyland Hotel, the park will provide hook -ups for travel trailers. motor homes, pick-up campers and tent trailers of every size. First phaSf' calls for 280 spaces on 10 acres. A second ten acres is available for fu r th e r development . Vaci'ltionland 1~·111 be a deluxe, limited stay park. A rn inin1um of three nights will be required for a d v a 111 c e reservalions. .-, ·' .· By SYL\"I A PORTEil "Subs11tutio11·• alv.·a~·s h;i'\ been a key weapon yol1 ('ould use to help cut your tost of LEGAL NOTICE ~U,.ERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CA LIFORN IA FDR. Tt!E COUttTY DF ORANGE No, .t.-...lll :·tiOTICE OF HEARING OF P ETITION , FDlt l'A;O&ATE OF Will AND FOR '-LETTERS 0 F l OM 1N1S TllATION l WITH·TttE•WILl •.t.NN EM EO '-E•l•I• of Elt/Alj(Ttt H (LOW RI·~ : •.-own "' (LllABET•l HCLEN CLO...-• "De<•1'"d ~ NOTICE !~ llFllFS'( \.lvrN 1~~· • tlARlENE C ll\'!PENT (I> "~' ,, . ..,, I)"'"°" o tl•1<!;1,~ lo' "'""•I• ~f "'" , .aric' "1• lei!•" ~· """''"' "" "'' "',.. "'""""'ll·•nn•>"<I . 1•••'""'" ·~ "'~'{" ; ~:<le,,~~; 1~,~~""',,i!,'::1''.,~'~'~ •• ,','~'~ n;;:. ••mo ~~' b~r~ '"' I(" Ji!~•· t: l?lr ~T 9 10 ~ ll', "' '"" "lV"'~""' C• O•p1•!m•M N~ ) < r ""'' ,, ,,,1 •' 100 c,.,, C•n••• {"),., . ., ·~ "'" I ·•t ol Son•o Ano, ColJfo"'·• Da•!'(l MOY ll. 191n w. r ~1 Jo .. •1. Cou••v ('""· 'l!lllll J , Flt.t.NKl lN, 111 l'IOI 11!" SlrH 1, c,..11 111,...,, t1ht0tn•• •1•H Tll: !1111 Ul·:t:IS1 ,t.1-v 1or PttiH""•' Pu~"'"...i 0•1n~· Co••' O•·I• r ••t . •).I.iv 11, 1S, .)(I. H it. ... tO " . . • living -and since Hus in· rJation ~pira) look Off Ill 1965, I. <imong others, h a v e repeatedly r eco mmended a policy or "substitu tion'' for n1eats and other food s. fu r non-foods and s c r v ie (' s \1•herever feasi ble. But now. iron1C'ally although untll·rstandably. your adoption of !his policy 011 a mas" st·alc i.~ dn\'1 ng up th<' pncrs of thl' poput:ir subsl1t11!1ons mo re r;1p1dly 1h;1n thr onginal tugher~pric·l'd i1rms. ln short, .1\ 111fl:i11on'1ry prit'r u1rrl·:i~r" 1lra1n <Jur f10!'kl·1book~. \l'f' h;.ivr !r.11'\'r ;111d fewer wa.Y" !f> pr o!e<'I <luf'.'l'ilr~. TO l'l.:'f IT sut:t lnC'll~., \l'hllc l1<1mburgl'r 1~ a fine !>Uhstitutr lor steak, cher!-r and dried be<ins ;i re sc;1rrelv ~<1l 1sfar- 1ory subst11u1es ·fur h;,m- burgcr. \\'hen lhr pri(·('~ nf th r ;: ·: Your relatives have descended. And they need your car. '.Where does that leave you? Oo9e to home with your Ford Rent-A-Car dealer, that's whe re! Rent a new Ford, Mu stang, or Torino tor a day, week or month. Low rates ••• insuran ce Included. FORD RENT·A·CAR SYSTEM ~ .• THEOROORE ROBINS FORD 2160 """ ll•d. W ILSON FORO 1125~ a.ac.h ll•d, H1111tl1111011 hoch, Coll'. 1-41·••11 C..,_ M-.C .. lf. '4J.Mll basics in food s. goods a,1d services cl imb more rapidly th.'ln the prices or lux uries In these spheres. the danger si gnals are flying ve ry high. To illustrate. between. the !i lart of '69 and '70, the cost of hamburger rose 11.9 per- cent -n1orc than twice the 5.8 percent rise for s irloi n steak. The average price of <1 pound of hamburger "'as ti6 tents according to latest official nation"1ide Bureau of L<ibor Sta11st1cs fig ures. ALSO DURING this same 12-mon th period, the price o[ hot dogs rose 1 J.6 perce-.it - nearly double the 6.3 percent rise for roast beef. At latest off ic ial report, frankfurters cost an average of 8J cents a pou nd th rou ghout th e U.S. Several times during '69, T underlined how big a bargain lurkey wa s and how you could adapt 1urkey for year-round inf!al s. Bl'twecn J anuary and January, though. poultr y prices rose a full 9.6 percent -"'ilh the key factor behind this n1crease a jump of nearly 14 percen t for turkey. The BLS now reports the average price for turkey al 56 cents a pound'. AND SO IT has gone. fresh lllld frozen fish prices rose t:l J percent from January to January; pork (a nother tradi- tionJ\ly lower cost bee f substitu1e ) rosr 17.2 percent overall : beel hvcr was up clu~e to 12 pe rcent : liverwurst 11as up ne11rt~· 11 percent: s:iu:>.'.tgi:. 18. bolo,·1a. 13: eggs, 19 perci·nL As for ba c0t1, ltl is has l'nlered the ca1egory of gourinct. t.'<lndimenl foods. TI11s is 1n direct contrast lo (he trend in the previous couple or yea rs, (or then, you n1ay ret:aH. the big boosts were for sirloin steaks, roast beef, veal cutlets. And it was to beat these increases and still gt'I .~ulficient protein th al 1 1nilhnns (If Americans "tr11ded <l•H111" f rrhn h1,::h-priccd cut ~ 111 ht'l'f lu harnbLirgl'r~ a·,1d h111 dn~~. ('l\h·~f'n ;ind n~h. Anil !hr ~11lll•' 11·cr1d 1s evi- 1lrnl ,11·r11.~~ tht bo:trd. Arnvng Vt·~ctahlc~. ~tit'h old stnndbys :r\ carr()l ~. Ct'lr ry an d lon1atoes all increiJS('d 19 per· c:cnt or more. Af..fONG HOr.1E ov.·nership costs. prices are rising rapidly for such necessities as repair of furnaces and "''ashing machines, replacement o f sinks, reshingling of roofs. Among transportation costs. pub lic transit fares are rising more rapidly than any other maJOr category. And tradi- r1onally bargain lnle r-ci ty bus fares are climbing at a r<l tc nearly four 1iines lh<i1 or new c:ir prices Among pcrscrnal care 11en1s, prn;cs for t!o-1t-yoursclf hon1c permanent rl'.fills arc in- crea sing laster than prices of cold v.•av es perfonned al the ha1 rdrrsscr. Among v.·on1cn's apparel coslS. casual shoe prices are rising faster U1an evening sli ppers. A mo n g alcoholic beverages, w·i n e ]>rices are rising four timrs as fa st as whiskey prices. A111ong helath costs, semi· private hospital room rates are rising faster than private room rates. THIS 1969-70 era i s murderou s: bu s iness recession. a stock market crash, climbing unemp}Oy- ment, mounting bankruptcies and now an innation zeroing in on the basics. And lhe mo..~t tragic aspect of all i.~ that al the heart of il is a war which everyone says must be ended but which drags ~1 and on endlessly. Loans T otcil $1,333,230 Th~ v.·estern home office of the Prudential Insurance Co. announced today that real estate loans in Orange County amounted to $1 ,333.230 during lhe first three months of l970. Robert F' Hayes, Orange County invesln1ents mnnagrr .~:11d that the cn!irc t11nount \\.is for nietrupotitan prop- f'r11 PS. In r aliforniH, r r. a r estate 1 o " n dlsbur5ements ;unounted 10 $2!),149,314 1\'ilh $25.072.Rl4 for metropoli ta n purposes and $76,500 for fa rn1 properties. The park's facilities will in· elude a large recreation hall with special television viewing area. billiard room . card play ing area and lounge. A children's playground, heated and filtered pool. sallitation stations "·ith s h ow e r s, restroorns and d res s i n g room s, al'ld a large lundcry ' room v.·ith C'Oin -operated washers ::ind dryers will also be provided . --· ---~--1 Fii1a11ce ~ Bi~iefs ' ~ AN ACONDA. i\~ o n t a n a tUPJ ) -AnaCTJnda Co. said \\ledncsday il has encountered high-grade copper mineraliza· tion on lands it owns abo ut 20 miles southwest of Sall Lake Cit y, Utah. C. Jay Parkirlson. chairman, told shareholders at the an- nual meeting the mineralized zones occur at depths that woukt require underground mining. ifc said -the company is conducting further ex- ploration to determine whether a large-scale mining operation is feasible. Test drillings showed ore grades of l*h to 3 percent, he said. Anaocnda has bee n ste pping up its copper develop rnent 11rogra1ns in the United States sincr its lwo biggesl Chi lean properties \\'ere "nationalized by agrec1nent " ls:-:t year. High copper prices and short sup- plies also :i re s p u r r i n g development of new copper properties. WILM INGTON, Del. (UPTl -Du Pont Co. announced price increases ranging from \'.!: cent t.o J0 1k cents a pound on molding and exlru~ion grade~ of rusltlm color lucitc acry lic ft'sin~. H O<.:'HF.:~TE:lt N.Y. (l'P!l .l. H:i usrh &. Lo1nb announ<'cd plans tu expanrl i t~ L: S facilities ft'lr pr o d u f i n b ophthnlm1l' lenses with c .. n. struclion ur a 175,000 squ;_1re root pl11nt at Oakland, ~id. that "'ill cost $J million. • OIS Boss Dons Tie In Crisis GENEVA (UPI ) -Bernard Cornfeld has made $ J O O million and I iv es on Lake ' Geneva in a 20-rt¥Jm villa wit h a l!Old toilet. Yet things art riot going \\'ell for him. Cornfeld . v.•ho ill JO years• built lnv l·sto1·s 0 ver s e a s' Services (JOSI Irorn a one-I room uperatlon in a Parls hotel to a billion dollar fl nan- c:ial co n1plex, was forced to resign <JS chairman and chief execut ive lasl week because the eornpany was faltering. SINCE Tll ES the 42-year- old bachtlor has been in sec lusion in his Ceneve vi lla, bui!t for J ose phine b yl Napolcun. Though he relained a pot;i- tion on the 27-man board ofl directors of IDS and has many other inte rests -fr om girls to raci ng horses -Cornfeld 's career as pe rhaps the biggest influence on E u r o pe an capitalism is in at least tem- porary eclipse. It was ouLside in terests that apparently led to his downfall. !IE SEEJ\1ED TO L 0 S E interest in the day-to-day af- fairs of his company as ii grew in size lo a co1nplcx Lhat inc luded !8 mut ual funds and 80 compan ies involved in insurance. real est<ile and banking. "Bernie" spent much of the past year roaming the world in his jet in the company of various pretty girls and personalities such as Playboy magnate Hugh Hefner. J1e arfecled a beard and wore Pierre Cardin suits and bright patterned scarves in- stead of conventional business suits and ties. Instead of an overcoat. he draped a cloak arou nd his shoulders. THE FINA NCIAL picture a~ lOS \1•as (lcteriorating and 11•hcn Cornfcld came back tn 1:1kf: the reins it v.•as too late and he 1vas forced out. "I-le put on a wh ite shirt with tie, and a nark suit," an associate remarked. "That n1eant there was trouble." IOS assets now have fallen lo about $1.9 billion from a peak 0( $2.3 billion, though European fi nancial experts fi nd it difficult to conceive lhal it could actuall y go under. It is doubtfu l, too. that Cornreld is reeling a n y part icula r financi;,il p i n c h , since his perso na l a~set s arc es!in1cd .-.1 more than $100 million. /Ii' has at least $30 mill ion in !OS stock , plus millions investerl elsewhere. He has tv.·o castles. v i I t a s in Ca lifornia . M e x i co and f'lseh"•ere. and a r a c i n g stable. ALL Tins llAS !) e e n assrrnblcct since 1958 whea he founded !OS <ls a sort of super mutual fund that invested in ot her fun ds. The U . S . Securities ::ind Exc hange Com- mi ssion refused permission to !'CH the stoc k in the United Slates. so his business was restncte<I lo o\•erse11~. CORNFELO Ei\IPLO\'Ell 1t000 s:ilesmen 11.'hO fannrd :icross lhc r0untrysidc :tntl brou ~ht b;ick money al a f;1n- tasl ic r:i te. Al one P<li nt. sales in \\lcsr Gcrn1nny a I n n c <ive ragcd rnore th<in SI tnillion a ttav. cornfeld. a native of l!i\an- bul who grew up in Brooklyn. roun d il hard to make fr iends vdth1n the staid European banking cstahlishmenl. Even the hiring of such men as J ames Roosevelt Jr .• Erich l\.1ende and Sir Eri c \Vyndham White did little to enhance the resiw.c1abil1ty ot JOS. Now 1hal Cornfeld has lost most of hi s power in the orga nization, !OS has changed . Its employes talk quietly, with non e of the brassy boasting of people who thought nothing could go wrong. There have been numerous dismissals to cut cosLs and no one knows who will go next. LifJuidation Considered NEW YORK (UPI ) lludson & Manhatt an Co rp. said Wednesday it is con- sidering a partial liquidation of its assets. Walter 'f. Margetts Jr., presiednt, told the annual shareholders meeting n o timetable could be rixed because the company is still negotiating with the Internal Revenue Service for a ruling that il incurred a tax los~ on the salc of ils properties ! 10 the Port of New York t\11lhor11y. The H1llhorit y i n c o n rlcrn nation proceedings ~ei1.ert H & M's lermi nals and r.1 d line in Se ptember 191\2, triggering litigation t h a I wnsn't settled until October 1968 . ' .• Who Reads the Stars For tlie Stars? (~ .. T ....... ~. \ ' It's Sydney Omarr And now t his articulate writer who has been coiled the "astrologer's astrologer"' reads the stars for you. Sydney Omarr_. long time personal a strologer to many of Hollywood·s a nd the literary wo rld's most famous stars, is a DAILY PILOT column ;st. Omarr's record fo r accu racy of predict ions based on astrological analysis is amazi ng. Whether you read astrologica l for ece sts for fun or as a serious student of star-gazing, you 'll enjoy Sydney Omorr's doily column in the DAILY PILOT I 1 ' I ' All 1,.000 of Us Had a Busy -Day Today We created and delivered another fresh edition of The DAILY PILOT I TEAMWORK produces each day's all-new DAILY PILOT. Often sta.ffers, like Thomas r~ortune (left), Nev•port Beach. city editors, work \\'Ith a staff pholOgrapher like Patrick O'Donnell to get the story both in words and pictures. The staff shot 70,000 pictures last year to illustrate t_he varied story of Orange Co;1st life. Nobody knows ho11• many loc;i l stories \l'C wrote. Not even us. --""-( CH.EATIVITY helps advertisers !ell their stories and sell their goods in the affluent market served by the DAILY PILOT. ~1aury Gardner of dis- pl ay advertising department looks O\'Cf layout with DAILY PILOT staff artists Anne Hamblin I left) nnd Charlotte Andre!'len. The ad they 're dis- cussing will be ready lo ~ppcar in the newspaper only hours after artists put fina l touches on the layout and 1t is approved by the adver!isc.r, a lo-- cal retail merchant. QUICK lfA NDS place linrs of typr, ads and ruts (the metal plates used to rl'produce pictures) u1lo p:1gc for n1s ns lllr day's product begins to take shape. Con1positor Arden J\'labbury is only one of a platoon of printers who "build" tht' ne1\'S pagr.s undrr pressure of deadlines, \\'Ork· ing against the clock to hrini,: rr:1drr~ rht' latrsl available information ln each edition during the day . ..,. ................................ ,. DELIVERY of the newspaper ls a speed event, too, Cooveyor belts carry the papers through lhe mailroom where they are automatically lied in bundles or 50 and tossed to wa iting circulaUon district managers (like Blaine Roberts, shown hert', (right) who speed them via a 40-vehicle ncet to carriers for delivery. l\lailroom foreman George Arauz (left) and his crew can move 20,000 newspapers an hour. ' VOLUME is the word at the Copy Desk. DAILY PILOT Copy Desk Chief Norman Anderson (right) aided by Tom Titus (background) and other copyreaders every day sifts, check! and edits more wire reports from worldwide news services than the average weekly news magatine pu~ lishcs. Editors scan enough telephotos to Y:allpaper a living room every 24. hours. Speed, born of e...-perience, helps them keep it all fresh, too. THE WORDS are ready. Marjorie Jackson feeds them into ;l $25,000 computer, a DAILY PILOT investment in speed and accuracy, which uses a logic system to hyphenate words as it reads characters at the rate of 1,000 a second and punches a new tape which will activate another machine for automatically setting type at high speed. The machines can set type at lhe rate of 6,000 li nes per hour. PRESSURE here is both physical and mental. Charles Haubrick, stereo- ty pe foreman. checks irnpression made by p<igc full of type on a mat squeezed by 1,800 pounds of pressu re per square inch in the m:it rolle r. l\fat can be rur\'Cd and used as a mold to form the curved plates wluch fit onto cylinders of high-speed printing presses which print the IJAILY PILOT. !l's p;irt of lhc quick-paced dai ly procc.<>s of reproducing 100,000 words for DAILY PILOT subscribers to read I ' l "~ ... 't ...... •• ~ J,.. ,...... ·• MODERN equipment helps Ute aei:ounling department keep up wltb the "today" pace at the DAILY PlLOT. Even as the day's newspaper is being sped lo its readers, Sunnie Chauvin begins feeding figures into a rlcsk model computer's aei:ounting coruiole. It helps keep track of billings for ads and subscriptions. The machine, one of several tied in to lhe main computer. helps handle S,000 accounts a month. I I ' ' J ' • fl . -· RAPID communciation Is the name of the game. Su pervisor "Nita" Folsom and her crew of "ad-visors" handle 1,000 transactions a week by phone, resulting in publication of 5,000 classified ads -words which help people buy, sell, rent or I ease ... even find lost dogs. Many of the DAILY PILOT'S 150 phone lines are plugged in here, the classified advertising d& partment, home of "Want Ads" and Dime-A-Lines. PICTURES, too, get the benefit of skilled, efficient handling by ma11tet craftsmen who re-photograph them and then transfer the images to a .sensitized metal plates which are used to reproduce the photos as read- ers will see them in the newspaper. Here, Chuck Ryan takes a really close look at a negative which will be used to elch the image on the metal plate. FINISJIED PRODUCT is chec ked by Elwood Anderson, press crew chief, even as high.speed presses continue to roar at 60,000 impressions per hour completing the day's run on press uni!s which represent an inves!ment of $3.5 million. Eleven-man press crew \\'ill feed into these machines the equivalent of a roll of paper one page wide and 110,000 mile! long in printing the DAILY PILOT th is year. · ALMOST before the Ink is dry, the product o( our busy day ls tossed deftly on your lawn or porch by one of our 700 newspaperboys who are important links in the chain of people it takelll to bring you today's news and features today ln the DAILY PILOT. And as our young independent merchant!, like John Melton here, make their deliveries, we're Ju.ring up for another busy day -all l ,000 of us. The "N ow' Newspaper for All The Communities Of The Growi11g Orange Coast I ff DAILY PILOT Democrats Also Have Ke y Worry WASlllNGTON IUPI) Den1ocrals cry & lol these days about two m a j or m<irtages: Cash to pay their bills and a "natural'' opponent for President Nixon in 1972. There is son1ething else they don 't have. and it Nuld be just a~ serious for the future -1976 as welt as 1972, It is the absence of an oppru;ition plaUonn. a program of at least general allcrnatives to the i.;rov.·uig h:.i of plans Nixon i:;; offering as the Republican agenda for the 1970's. There is 2 lheory that an important advantage of the "out" party is the fact that II does not have to take firm posi tions on specific issues. and indet'd can do better by ~imply criticizing 1he people in 1>011·er. 'l'he argurncnt goes that Nixon v.•on that \vay in 19611 and th;it Goldwater los t in 19&4 because he gave the Democra1 s a list of issue "t.argcts" to snipe al. The trouble with that theory as applied to the Democrats is that it assumes they are now in the same position as the Republ icans "'e re in 1960- 68. Th ere ;ire t11•0 immediately apparent flaw s in this reason- ing. First, the Ocm0t·rals :1rc not 101:1\!y withou l pov.•cr and the responsibility that goes 'll'ith it as I.he GOP was during the Kenned y-Johnson years. As long as the Democrats con- trol Congress, I.hey cannot sit back and bl ame the Republicans for everything that goes wron g. A second difference is the advocacy role that the Democrallc party filled during the politica l era that began v.·ith Franklin D. Roosevelt. J>erhaps FDR did not have a specific program lo deal v.·ilh !he Depression when he came lo office. but he and his party quickly did become associated '1:ith both a detailed set of proposals and jln ac- tivist philosophy of govern- ment lo deal with national problems. ll a r r y Truman \\"On in 1948 by prnmising lo carry on the war-interrupted New Deal. .John F. Kennedy di d ii in 1960 v.·ith !'.fl•ne additions to th<' old prograrns, but \.\'Ith essentially the same "make things n1ovl'" t n 11 c e p I of national lea(lcrshi p. Both Trurn;tn and Kennedy won narrnwly and ii certainly could Ix> argued that it was th!' heritage of Ne\v Deal l.~Sll ('~ a n d governmental ph1l nsophy that turned the trick fnr the rn . In any case. the Democrats \\'Oil seven (If the ten prcsidenlial elections between 1932 and 1968. None of this is to suggest tha t the \\ay back for the Df>mocrats is to resurrt.>Ct the true faith of the Roosevelt years. For Qnc thing. Kf'nnedy ;ind Johnson just ah o 11 t romplt>tro cnactn1en! ot 1hr New IK':1t Fnr another. th r r111!inn·s prnhlcn1<; and cnn. cerns arl' vao;;ll\' d1tf(•1enl Out of po v.·" r , lhr n en1ocr;its h;t\'(' <111 opp11rtu111ly r)(l\\' 111 M':lrrh 0111 program~ 111 d11:1l v. 11h lhc nat ion 's n\•1v prnhlt·tns ~ind 1n n!fer 1lier11 ;is (.'l11111x·1 1\1nn !O t h1' admin1s\r;111nn·.s prop()~;1 I~ Alth!)Ugh dt1n1rd lhi' \\'hi tc ltou.~1" 11lev ha\{' 111(' (·on).(n.'~· slon:il fnr11rn t~• ('1Jn1111;111d 11uh. he allcnl1on . ;111d 1•1••t1 uf their offerings are v~·toerl, thr prn· ccss nf building :1 ne11· ISSUC· oricnlcd party follo\\·1ng \\'1ll IX' under wa\'. If lhry arc' going In cn1bark nn th1 <; course, the J)('n}(\('rats v.·111 have II) start soon. Nixon has bel!un to lc;,d t h c Jlepubhcans into a prograrn Commitment that co u 1 d pre-empt 111any Ikmocratic al!rmatives. 'J'he President may already have seized the fi('l ds of pollu· I.ion-control. w P. I fa re and draft reform . and his revenuc- :i;h,11ring proposal could 1\'nrk to isolate nationa l Oe1nocr;i\~ from the minorities <ind tht' JXM)r In the ci!ics \\'hn art: demanding 1norc c i I i z c n participation in governm~nl. Of course. the Democra1~ might also be able to v.·in without going through the hard work or c ommit ting themselves on issues if the Republicam completely botch the job and the voters lose confidence in thei r leadership. Alter al~ that kind of thinit has happened before -1952 and 1968 are the most recent eiamples. For Advertising In WEEKENDER . . Phone &42-4321 Monday, tllay 25. 1970 SHOP SE~RS SUNDAYS 12 Noon to 5 P.M. Monday thru Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M- END-OF- MONTH Sears Heavier and Stronger Tire Body fl.!.:JO~]-~~1:;_ l:i.9:0 _.__l.~H i .3:;x I t :!:l.1l.i 1 B.'J.i :!J~~ --------· ·lj •l:i 'lO fJ'l ., 17 -·' -.. _ --· H.:?:i, 14 2H.'J:i 22.9:J :!.1'.\ Extra- Wide Tread 30Month G11aranteed 6.50xl:~ TUBELESS Blnckwnlls Rc!(ular'19.9 Trafle-111 l.,r' c _TIJBELE>iS WHITEWAl.I. 6.!i<h: 1":1'-+'2~~~.'~J;,c -t.-""~·~9·~'-J....!~ l~t;)J~r/-1,~/ i.:l'.'1x 1.J 2fi.•):i 21.95 5 i .i:ix l4 :?8.Q:i 23.95 11.2;),J .~ 11.95 Z.'l.9:i R.~lj.!.!.'.!...._ 14.Q5 26.9:i R..:..J_;}lR.::?:lxJ;, 11.ll:i 2~.95 K,4:;/H.:i:i x 15 :i.t 95 26. 9:; St'ars COVINA 911·0111 Plus l .78 F.E.T. And Old Tir e Jl MONTI 01 l ·lfl 1 OUNOAU CH J -1004, (I 4_.111 HOUTWOOO HO •·St41 INOllWOOlll Git l .'1521 ·"" • Silent Guard ' 2 Fiber Glass Belts PLUS4 Polyester Cord Plies 40 Months G11aranteed Extra- Deep Tread Regular '29.95 Trade-In Price C'IR-13/6.SOxlJ TnbeleM Blackwall l'lu; ~.02 F. E.T. And Old Tire ~.LLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE Cuarateed Again!'ltt All tirefallatttkom norm21 road haz:irds or defeas in material or-workmanship. For llow f,ong: for the life of rheorigirutl tread. \li·h:11 ~•'ar" \\ill l)n: Jn e:rchan,;c for the ti re, rcpL1ct• i r, l h11r>'1ng for rhc prllpnrc inu or l urrc111 ~c l r in~ price plus Fcdt·ra! EX ti ~c ·r.oi: 1h.1t T('prcst'nt' trt·:.1J useJ. Repair punrn1rt'\ ;H n• • (b .• ri;e. I: ua ra11r•···d \i;a i 11~1: ·r rt«1J v.Taruur. Fur 11 .. ,v J,oui:;: 'l'hc 11 urnber of mon1h~ ·'l"-'l it1(·J. \\ hal :"'r.1rs \\ill J)o: In CXl hangc for the 11rc, rcpl.1tc ic. c::harAin,c: the C'urrcnt scll- inr: price rlu~ fcJcral .Ex,ise 'I.a: less 1hc follov.·ing allowanc<.•: ?lfonlhly (;11araote(: 18 rn21f :!.7 1n j'} •o . .\llo"'aoce ]0"h 20:-;; ::!'ir;, . °Rf'g11i•r" Sale SIZE ·j'raolo-lu Tra<lr>Ia P.E.T. l'rirti l'rier. TUBELESS llLACKWALL (;ii;.1:i[f1.!"iOx I ;~ :!'J.();} 22.9:i 2.112 f<'78-l4/7.7:)x 14~:;.9~ :!3.95 2.44 ('-8 l ·t/ '·I;'" ·I~ ''8')-' 1 1':'. -'-' -· 8 .-.IX _.J ._.~l .J.l 2.61) TL B !-:LE'S w H 1 ·n~w .\LL E-B 14/-r · 14 'If 9• .,9 9-., .,-I ·I •. .lX , I. ,) -• ,) -·-·> ----------~'78-14(i .7:;x J 1~ :~8.IJ:i :~ 1.9.l :!.44 G78-14/8.25xM irl.95 :~:J. ~)5 2.60 G78-l 5/8.l 5xl:. 41.95 :B.95 2.60 H78-15/8.45xl5 44.95 :!4.95 2.80 H78-14/8.55xl4 44.95 34.95 2.80 . TERRIFIC · VALUES! Sears Low, Low Price! • . . ' , ~i zt' .95x 14 7.35x14 2.( 7.75x.14 2.17 .25x14 2.:!3 7.75xl5 2.19 95 1295 tOHO l lACH HI J •Ol,I OlTM"'C. Soto AN l •.1111 •.UAOlNA 611·3211, lSl-4111 POMONA NA •·SllT "co w• ,_.., .. , 6.50x13: TubeJe8S Blackwall Pim 1.78 F.E.T.: And Old Tur SOUfH COAIT .Ul.A J40·»J.I fOllANCI: at:ll•1111 uPlAN• el .. 1ft7 Shop Nllhl1 Mon. thr• Sot, 9:30 A.II. to t :iO P.M.., Sndot 12 Noon t• S P.M. "kTbfoc1lo11 Guor ...... 111 .,. Your MoMy a.ck" SANTA AHA II J'.JJ11 t •N'IA fl ININOI ..... 101 I SANTA MOHltA Ill 4•1711 \IAUIT l'O J -M6t, ......,... ¥11MOWI'"' f.1•11 I Monday, r.1;iy lS, 11f70 OAIL V PILOT 21 Lefty Excited? My No, He Always Loses Tooth By GLENN .WHITE Of 1M Deity Pllel ll•ll ~11NNEAPOLlS -Except for ooe or two give aways, Harold "Lefty" Phillips might have been convincing in his al· tempt to conceal enthusiasm Sunday following hls .Angels' 6·5 conquest of Western Division leader Minnesota before 27.526 at Melropolilan Stadium. Phillips said. "this serles could be called the biggest win since I've been managtt. Then ii we beat Oakland this wefk lhal'~ be th, biggest, and then later if we beat someone else that'll be the biggest, etc., etc., etc.,'' trying to shrug oU lhe big win as anyUi.ing super. And, he was cmiing up with too many witty quips -definilely not !ilandard equipment. Then when someone brought out the Stars Atte1npt To Tie Series Tonight in LA LOS ANGELES (AP) -The LoJ Angeles Stars, running out or time - and apparently running out of Los Angeles a s we!l -are counting on their running game against the Indiana Pacers in tonight's sixth game of the American Basketball Association cham- pionship at the LA Sports Arena. The Pacers need one more victory to clinch their first ABA crown. A )'ear ago th~y lost to Oakland's Oaks In the finals. Everything the Stars do is a ''first" for them. They've never made the playoffs, much less the finals. But now, facing eUmlnation, they must win tonight to send the series back to Indianapolis f'or a seventh and deciding game Tues- day night. Tonight's ganle, however . appears 11 be 3 ''last" for the Cinderella club -their last game in Los Angeles. General l\fanager J im ltardy says ne\v fl\vner ~1e! Daniels has decided to move lhe club either to nearby Anaheim or Salt Lake City next season. Tr they win the championship, then move, it will keep alive what seems to have become an ABA tradition. D'he Pitt.sburgh Pipers won the first A&\ title twu years ago, then moved to' Minnesota. Last year the Oah cap- ttlred th~ crown, then became th1 Vh:shington Caps. The Stars depended heavily on their rqfming game -triggered by little s peed- i:;ter ~1 a ck Calvin -io get. then1 info post-season play and past Dallas and Denver in the Western Division pf.syoff!l. But thev tried lo outthink rather than r·•~run thf Pacers. runaway winners in the East. Suddenly U1ey found themselves down three games to one. ·'1We knew that Indiana would be laying (Gt Mack," coach Bill Sharman said. "'We also knew that, in quick, strong Bill Keller, they had a guard who could ~t the pressure on M-ack all aver the cOtJrt. ... 1So we decided to have either Bobby \V'arren or the other guard bring the hall up because "''e knew they would not be pressured as much,'' Sharman rxplained. Ma ybe. I tried to use loo n1uch strate,gy." Qn Saturday they reverted to their r••,ning game and won the natiQnally 1rlevised conlC$t I 17-113 in overtime. Calvin scorf'<f 33 points an<! the Stars got 23 n1ore fro1n Cf'nter Crail! Raymond .t 22 from forward George Stone. 0"The game was more like the wa:; ":e played when we were winning," Sharman said. "Everybody took turns leading a spurt ," falu tooth be left in Ule shower, you knew Lefty was somewhat e:1cited about becomJng U1e first American League manager to capture a series from the Twins this season. Regarding Ult! ninth inning scare when the Twins had the tying run at second base and the wininng tally at fir.st with two out , dangerous Leo Cardenas at lhe plate and rookie hurler Steve Kealey making his !M!ason debut for the Halos -Lefty simply said: "Me worried? Nol He's here to pitch, that's \\'hat he's paid to do.'' Then he added, "They're all laughers when you're in the clubhouse." Kealey, who struck out Cardenas to end the 190-minute duel , admitted being shaky. "I got shakier after the first two pitches," he said. "I was confident In my mind but my body was reaJly lrembllng. ''I knew it was a matter of me getUr.g- him aut or hlln h1tt1ng 3nd I'm JUSt glad J woo. 'J'he pitch I got him on was a high fast ball. "I've been waiting to make my debut M1~ )~ Moy ll MIY H Moy" Angel Slale AH .,..,.. .., llMPC Cll•) "ngeis vi. Oe~l•tlCI A~geit ••· 061(!1f\d A.,,.011 ••· ou.11...i A""el1 "'· 111norno .. 1.J}Pm 7,JPm. /:li p.m. 1.li1.m. but I never expected ll to be anvthing like that." Phillips was looking forward lo today's off-day to recoup what he termed his "roughed-up bullpen." Reviewing the 6-4 road trip just COOl· pleted, the Angels manager said: ··1 hatt to be hoggish, but T can think or a couple others we shauld have won." He was referring to the 6-5 IO-in- ning loss at Oakl<ind when his Haloo blew a 5-2 lead and a 3:2 defeat at Clucago when !he latter scored all or its runs in the last of the ninth. Asked wh ich is the team to beat in !he divisional race, Lt-fty replied: "Min- nesota and Oakland_" "What about the Angels?," replied the v.:riter. "That's for someone else to say,'' responded Lefty. Sunday's show was the fourth slraighl or.e-run verdict between the Twins and Cherubs and tbe latter has won three. The last one was frantic as the Angels watched a 5-1 lead melt into a 5-5 Lie after eight innings. 1-lowever, Sandy Alomar came through FINALLY QUALIFIES -It took Lloyd Ruby si:.: 'turbocharged Offenhauser engines at $20,000 each but he finally qualified Saturday for the Indiana· polis 50()..mile race. The veteran driver ran three laps at 169-plui; 1nph. then cooled it lo 167 mph for his final lap to avoid another engine failure. He takes checkered flag (left) and then looks pleased afterwards. Field Set for 54th Indy 500 Three Area Drivers • 33-cnr Lineup Ut tNDlANAPOLIS, Ind. 1 AP) -Thrrr former winners w!U lead one ol 1he best-balanced fields in history into Saturday's 54th 500-mile auto race al the Indianapolis Motor Speedv.,ay. Tbe 3.kar lineup rounded ol"f the final 10..mile qualifications Sunday averaged a record 167.139 miles per hour. The old mark was 166.295 last year. The qualifying speeds ranged from 170.221 by Al Unser, who won the pole position l\1ay 16, to 165.373 by slowest oualifier Sammy Sessions. The 1969 field's :-pread was 170.5611to160.851. Unser is not a former \\'inner but the favorite of many Speedway veterans in his fifth attempt. Al"s brother Bobby. U1e 1968 winner, also 1s in the lineup along \Yith three-time winner. A.J . Foyt .Jr .. and last year's v.·inner, f\1ario Andretti, "''hO set the race record of 156 .867. Three area drivers will compcle: in the race. Dan Gurney of Costa Mesa will st11rt in the four\11 row, Laguna Beach's fuck J\1uther is a starter in the fifth row and Ronnie Bucknum or Capistrano Beach will go from the ninth row. Veterans almost crowded newcomers out oC ilie field. Only faur rookies make the program, the smallest number si~ 1960. foyt, with 12 Indianapolis starts behind him. is approached in Speedway ex- perience only by Lloyd Ruby, starting for the lltll timC', and Gurnev. Jim MeElreath and Roger McCluskCy, fnr !he ninth time, Bobby Unser \\"ill starl for the eighth time. No really exotic cars rnacte the 11r().. gram. althou~h there arr innovations In the British-built Brabharns and McLarens and the madr·in·Gern1any f\lc.Namara. Eighteen of the cars are ll<lwered by turbocharged four-cy!inctcr Offenhausers. l;J by turbocharged eighl- l'Yli ndcr Fords. l'1• ""•I loneup lor lhr J<ln S00 m1•• •·~fl M•v JO •I IM• l"<li•n•<>Oll' Mo)Of Sl>l!e<lw•v .... "' c~• 1nd quornvltlll •i>e•d•. l'h•I IUw -'1 Vn>1r, -'l~ue1quo, N M_, C:oU·Fotd, 110 n m~ Jollnnv llumerlo•d. Fo•1 Wot!ll, 1••·• [~gl•· ou .... n~un·r, 110;11 A. J. FPVI J r., l'loutton, Tu .• (OY!>Te-FDrd, 110 001 $9'..,.. lltW llogrr Mc(lu11i.ey, TuuDf!, Arir., J.torpion.Ford, llt."lll MArk ~Ill. Mtalt. Pt ., lO(A·FOtd, 16.l-'ll -'•I Foll1rd, Mtalotd, Ott., Kl"9·011tnh•u-, 161 J9S llobtly Un11r. ""lb<rqucrquc, NM., Etgi.Ford, \ ... JIM M1do ... .,.. •• 111, N~••r•in. "'·· STP-M,~•mo••· Ford, IU 109 Jim Mollay, Oenv(<, Cola . Gornord!•O•lffl· h8U">t•·· !Ol.19~ •ourlh ""'" c;,orgt Snvde•, e~i.u 111t10 Covole-Fo"'· 161 OllQ r .. n Gurntv. (1111 MO••· t•1l1·0tt1n~~.,,.,, ltt.UO M••• Ma,lev, Spef(l<11v C•IJ. !"", W••~onOI ltnhlu>e•. !14 1~1 '•llh 110<1 L•< llov y.,~•ouyh, C:olu•TI~••· s ( E•g•• r o1n, IM 55~ ll•uCf Wll~up, SI_ Paul, l"d, Mon1100•1-0f. t1nn8uSe1. 114 •59 RI(~ Mu!ll••, L•eun• l t•cll, l r•D'l•m·O!ton 111u1tr, U!.tJ• 1!•111 ...... P"or "''"'an, New Yo•~. Mcl-.en·OH~n~•v••'• 161.9fl Gordon Jot>r>eOck, MoUf11 P.,.oAnl, Mien, (;er. ll1rc1t-Oll•nlltu1•r, 111.C!l Fox Succeeds King Rubv end J ack Brabham, natve of 1'ustr3.lia and three-time world road rac· ing champion, ra ted among the top con- tenders qualified over the weekend, along with the second Bill Vukovich. who:se father won the big race tv.·lce. J"' L..,...rd, 1•~ Jo1t. Colt·Fo•~. 114 '" ,, .. ..,,~ ...... C1rl Wllllom1, Ken"' Cl!y, Mo,, MC~••tn-01· lonneu1er, 16' m ~;A Great Opportunity, ' .. · .. ii~: Says New SF Manager .·. ·:·. ~ FRANCISCO (AP) -New San . • clseo Gluts' Manager Charlie Fox .tltribed his new job u "• great ap- ~unity -w.e've gol to improl{e" before taking over In Sunday's doubleheader with lhe San Diego Padres. manager who'll take a wait.and-see at. t.itude bef~ CMtemplat.ing any c.huges. "I believe in letting the perso•nel adjust it UseU," offered Fox, "I 'll let ~ playtts do things until they prove to me they can't Then I'll slop them. Vukovich. unable lo get his original J-:dmunds-Offenhauser up lo competitive speed, jumped into a Brabham-Offy and made the line-up with_ spet>d to spare. Ruby also qualified solidly after a string of six straight engine failures in the last three "''eeks. McElreath was the only driver able to "bump'' an earlier qualifier and squeeze into the line-up in Sunday's fir.al ses-sion.. He joined Foyt.'s four-ear team, averaged l66.8'll in his Coyote-Ford, a:-.d eliminated rookie Kevin Bartlett o( Australia. McElreath himself had been bumped by Brabham Saturday, G1•y Bttlltt>l\IUltn. Tlnley Pt•k. 111 .. c;.,h1ra1. Offenht1t1tr, JM •JI GtorU• Folmer, Arctdlt , STP-~•wl<.·Ford, 166 051 Elthtrl l'I.,. Mel Ktn\'Of', leb.lnon. tnci .• (Ol'(ll• Ford. 16~.~ OOnnle "'Ill'°"' N119ylo•n, Al•, E•11••·Ford. li!.6'1 W1llr Oll!enb-lch. Ell! ll•UlllW•tk. N J , E•o1e- Oflwttll1t1er, 11.5.601 Nlotl!I llt• llo)'<ll Rub"(, Wk:ll/11 F•i~. TtA , MOt>Qoooe-01· ,..,...,.,,er. "'·"' Jlcti Br•bhllm, S.,.s....,, A111trtllt , Bt•bht m-Oftentwluttr, 16'.Jfl 11-'9 l <Mk-. C1j111lr---~. lU.1.14 T.,111 lltw Grte w.ici, l~onc:1, Mo., Gt:rl">erdl,O!fen- ht\lt9<', 16',111 Jerry Gr1rtl, St.lttlt. W11h .. E1Q!•OffM1111111r, 1'5.fl.1 11111 Vllk•~ldt, fr.,.., lnibh-Ott..,,,•111tr, l1S.1$l •In--l'llW Olck Sll'llln1 Sitt L1~1 City, Ut1ll, Vo!llO!dt• Ford, 11s.s-11 51Pri"" SeufoM. Nnllvlllr, Mlc:ft., f:•Ol•Fo...,,, 115 JI) Jim MeE1r.,.!ll. it.rll"ll!D", 11~ .. (0~01 .. Ford, 16'.!11. with his third hH ar ~ game ln the ninth lo drive in JarvlS Tatum 1•,.1th the dec1d1ng score. "I lold Alomar belor~ the gan1e he was going to be. the hero." Phillips rt."<.'alle<I . Then Paul J)oyle and Kealey conib111cd 11.1lents Lo bring il to a clu.~t' afte r Doyle I.ad walked two rncn with twn out to set up the tense finish. It was a wnd one with each s1dt· using Ill players. The Angels called On six pitchers, the Twins four. And 1n a move rarely seen, Josing managl·r Bill Rigney put in a pinch-runner for a pinch-runner. Other than that, it was strictly rout ine [or the Angl'ls who fa re Oakland in three big games starting Tuesday night at the Big A. ~1oeller Shines Dodgers CALl"Ol'lftlA MIHNl.iO'A .. ' ... ·~·~•ti Aiom.r. ,. ' ' ' ' lov•r. " ' ' • F11111Q>0. " ' • ' I c ..... '" • ' • A.""''· " ' ' ' ' t<;!lltu1fw • .. ' ' ' ' ... Jonn'°'~ " • ' • N •!II" "' • • , • Jot11111a"•· " • • " • Ou<l•c• "' • ' • • ~PO!"''' '" • • • 0 1 ..... " ' • ' ' MCMu!lt!I, ~ • ' • AIVc•. " ' , ' • ¥DH, " ' ' • Pt"•n9,l.I, ' • • ' " ... ,.,., .. ' ' ' • A ll.-o~. " ' • • • ' I Mum. "' • ' • • .. '""' ~ ' • • • (_(j•"'· ' • • • • S •Iii+•"'"'' • • , • • ' • .. ~1 • ' • • • 110,,, " ' • • ' l ""~f' " • • • • (. .tcl.,."hlc, .. ' ' ' • .. '·'~"· • • • • • M 111erw•10. ' • ' ' Oov•r ' • • • • s o .... .-11. • , , • • 11~ .. ••• , ' • • r Ko!I, , ' • • • c~ .. e·i " • • • , M•rKIOt•, " ' • • , " '" • • • • • ·~·!"''· • , • • • Ntt••, " , • • • In•·•" " • " lo!•!\ • "' c '"'o·~·· , . ... 001 -• M.nn• -o•• ·~ "' 110 -J O• -t •WOtnoo '· "'""'''"'"' ' "' -(1+! lo•n•• •• M1ni>e1011, " " l u~~·. Fr'901I. M " ,.,,.,a1<1. K"letlflN " ............. 1a " -lttpol !II. M"IO•WdiQ Of. " "l<lm•• ' --.. flu•/ 5"••• K~~1ev "'" " • M" IAlvHI, ... -..... , .. ''"'• -l •D . A!lerKllnt r -J),51'. • Relief, 8-1 Ut • Ill SF For 3-game Set LOS ANGELES (AP) -Joe Moeller 1\'a11ts to be a s\;.i rting pi!cher -but he's pitching ~o wrll u1 relief these 1\a~·s h<' n1ay n<'vt•r get thl' ch;111ce. Sunday, when Los Angeles riddled Atlanta. 8-1. to earn a split in the fuur gi.lmes with the Bra\'es, J\10f'ilU worked 21.J innings of spotless relief to preserve the victory for Alan Foster, who v.·on his first game in five Wet'ks. "I won't be satisfied until I'm a starter," said Moeller. a Do<.lger si nce 1962. "But at least this time I wasn't just a rnop--up guy." J\1oeller entered in thr st•vtJnth when thr Dodgers had only " 4·1 lt'nd and the Braves were. threatening with runners at first and third \\'Ith ll\"U uul Big Joe got ll cnry Aan1n tu fly 0111 . then stormed through thr eighth :ind ninth innings to earn his Sct·onrl save of the season. The triumph pushed the Dodgers back into second place in the National League's Western Division, half a game in front ot AUanta but still a distant 61h games short or flrst-place Cincinnati. Los Angeles. idle today. opens a 13- game road trip Tuesday night in San Francisco. Atlanta opens an 11-game home stand Tuesday night wHh Hoos.on. Claude Osteen, 5-4. \\"ho owns a four-hit, compelete game victory over San Fran- cisco in his only start ;igainst the GiHnts, ls sla ted to open the 1hr<'e-game series aµ.1inst Hich Hnbert.~<Hl , 4-:l llortg{'r rookie .Sand.v Vance. 4-2. i~ "r:hedult'fl to fa ce .Juan 1\1arichal, I:!, Wednesday night anrl Don Sutton. 5,~i 11·111 prohably oppose the Giantl'i' CaylorrJ Perry. 5-5, in Thursday's finale. ''I'm completely !latisfied with the w:iy Moeller is pitching,'• praised Dodger 1\-lanager Walter Alston . noting that big Joe hasn't allowed a run in 162 1 inn1ngs of relief. "But he's pitching so good. T'm hesitant to lake him out o( the bullpen,'' Alston atlded. "He might be or more value to us where he is right oow ." Alston said hr plans nn changes In the ·starting rotation so Moeller. v.·ho 11idn'I e\'Cn joll't into a g11mc until May 2 bill has made sevl'n strong appearances «incc then. will ren1ain in the bullpen for the t1rne begin~ \\'t1ile i\10f'!ler ro11!1n11cd hil'i impressive \\'Ork. lhe [)odger~ ni;unta1nt!d ti11•1r rpmnrkahle Sun<!ay punch. \V 11h lhl' rornp OVl'I' Atlanta, Lo~ .A I"( * ~{ ATLAMT• LOS .l."IGILO •• ' '~· •b thr'l Mll!1!'1, " ' ' ' • Joon.,., " ' ' ' ' Lum, ct • • ' • Will•. ,. ' ' ' ' H.,.,.,..,n, " ' • ' ' W Otvl•, " ' ' ' , C•t1y. " ' • ' • W.l't•~~r. " ' • • ' c~•. " • • • Gr•IHI•-'wl•t ,lll • ' ' ' C.Bover, ~ • ' • C•l-•d. " ' ' ' • Tlllmtn, ' • ' • Lettlhtro, " • ' ' ' GtrrlCla, " • • ' • Hiiier, ' ' ' ' ' PtPIWt• . • , • • • Fo1ter, • ' '" ' c;,,., '" ' • • • M01ll1r. , ' • • • J1.ior . • • • • • W llht lm. • • • • • ... -.. • • • • • Nt lll<>ut•. 1> • • • • Gan1~1.,. pft ' • • • Tol•l1 " "' ' To!tl\ • . " • Alllnlt ®' ... ,.._, '" Af'IOl\IS •• '" Cl>'-• ' -'"""'· •• '" AnGtles '· coo -Alltnl• •• Lm ~!HI. " -•0111•, Wlll1. " -JothlHI. " -•. 0.•11 " Gr11H1rktWl1l. " - H. Nron, H1H1r. " • • •• .. • • Fl-1 (L,l·JI • • • • • , J olltf • ' ' ' • • Wlflltlm '" ' ' ' • ' P riddy ,,, ' • • ' ' Nelbuttr. ' ' • • • . - Footer IW,).51 '"4/J " ' ' ·-' Moollff" ,.1/J • • • ' • h .. -Ml<Cllltr Tl"11 -1:JI. •tltnd•<><• -1t.d5, Angeles now Sho\\'S :i 6-1 record for Sunday games. Moreover, the [)oclgers ·vc out-scored the opposition 55-6 on Sunday and. as a learn, are slugging .313. •·u hasn"t always been that wa~." said Al.st~n. ··i,i,•c used lo have lo call meetings and tell the guys to kick themselves a liu!c harder. Bul we haven't had lo do that this year." The Dodgers laced five Atlanta pitche~ for 15 hits, five of them in the sevcn~tl \\'hen they poured over four runs. 811! Grabarkewitz, hitting a lusty .398, sin- gled ho1ne two of the seventh-inning runs Aaro11 Ref11ses To Ga1nllle, Wins Tourney. ATLANTA IAPJ -Tommy Aaron re- fused to gamble on the 18th green SUnday but. afte.r some 30 minutes as a nervous spectator, still cashed in the big chi~ in the $125,000 Allanta Golf Classic: aoct broke ;i 10-year victory drought on the p(;A tour. "I \1·anl1•d lu ~h•;o\ .<tl the green b11! l \\)IS !OO f;1r Oll[ tll)oul 24~ yilnl~ J gt1t"·,~, ·• ~.lHI A11ron. <I drawlinl! c:eor~1 .. 111 ll"ho c..irltt'r has !!P()lled the field l\1·0 s troke.~ with a self-irnposcd pcnu!ly on Nu. l.J, •·So I r lected to Lily up ," he added with a smile, "and now I'm glad 1 <lid." Aaron concluded his final round will\ a 69 and a 72-hole score of 275, 13-under- par over the 7,052·yard Atlanta Count ry Club coorse. He then v.·atched as his challengers wilted on the closing holes under a hot Georgia sun. Tom Weis kopf. who carried a one: shot ·lead into the final round, offered the last anct greatest threa t. but fl·ll into a deacl!ock for third place with a 277 when he dro\'e into the water on No. lit then hit into a tra p and ltnlllly 11111.rputtctl fur ;J double bogey seven Dan Stkrs ll1:1l rhl•d Aaron's closlni.! 1;9 and !{l(lk ~t·<'nnd plllce at. 2711. Joini'ng Weiskopf ~t 277 were Arnold l'almcr. Sooth Afritan Ga ry Playf·r and Berl Yance. the 1969 Atlanta ctiampion. Aaron, a native of Gainc~~lle, Ga., 50 miles nortn of here. buil~ 11 thrre stroke lead with birdies on Nos. It and t2. But then came !he 14th , where he took a two.stroke penalty and lf'ft lhe way open In a half-dozen l'hatlengers . Fln•l H O•t• •nd "'°"'Y Ille Atl1nt• Goll C11 .. 1c • Tommy •~'on. ~15.000 Dan SI~~•. \16.JOO Arf!Ola Palmer, u .Oll G&ry Pl.Oyer, '6.l)j!l l om W•itl.QPI .... ott Berl Y1nc1y, U ,Olll l'lome•o Bl•n(••· ll,s.i& C!\udi: Courl.,.y, 1.J,S... Sob l unn, 1.J,j.41, J•dt H!Cltllu1, IJ,J.ii Fr1n11 &"rd, '1,:1«1 l" Elder, 11.100 11"1 Gr""'• SJ.SCI Tammy J1cobs, 1),5-1(1 Bob Sl•nton, 17.J.IO Lou Gl"1h1 .... $!.Ill - Goorot Knlld•an, ",111 J•clt McGow•n, 11 ,111 Oouo S•ft(l~rt, 11,IU ...... /(1.69 115 lt-1).11·•'-"' 1t.;>O.I0-66-ll I ......... 11-111 ~ll·ll-lll l l·l'0-7'-I0-11, 1).7-·10-"llt 11-ll·ll·ll-111 , ..... IJ.ff-"lll ,, .. ..,,..n -111 ... 11-11.1i--m lo. ...... 7"l-119 17·11-if-11-11• 11·11·"''1-llt ,,..,,....n--21t JO.ff.1"71-190 , .... , .... ,,_"° /)./0-16-1,_JIO ''·'°'11.10-1111 Fox, 48 , was named as Clyde King's s~ssor momenL, after the Giants 17-6 loss to the Padres in a If>..minute rn,rathon Saturday. King said he already has r eceived offers from four other major league clubs. "I'm flexible." said Fox, w ho ha.'I scouted, coached or managed in the Gianls' system since 1947. "I can be stern i( Jtecessary. But these are men, not bays. "What can you say i1 a guy makt's a physical error? I always make it a point. •ever to say anylhlng to a player following a game. I always wait (ii the next day, when we'~ both cooled oft" Fox. who ' a>aehed under Fnlnk.s from 1965 through 1968, 18id he was surprised by the sudden promotion, but admitted, 11Jt was a mam C(ll1lt true. Jackson May Be Sent Back to Minors The 11ew skipper, a member af the Gfants' organization since 1942, arrived in' San Francisco Sunday morning after managing Phoenix to a Pacific Coast League victory at Portland Saturday n!ghL That victory gave Phoenl~ a 30-IS r ecord and a 7\.i·game lead la the PCL's Western Division. Fo:r had expecled to succeed Henna11 Franks after Franks resigned as Giants' manager following lhe 1968 season. lns.tead. c I u b President II or ace Mieham named King, who galrled the c lt1b to a 90-72 record and .sccond place. Follnwing Sa!urday's loss, however, lhe. (:ianls were 19-23 and 12 games behi11rl dlvi.~ion-leading Cincinnati. "We're l'MJl that bad a ball club." Aaid Fa1, de:icribing himself aa a lleribl• "I honestJy had nat been following the club that closely wbllc at Phoenix," he pointed out. "Oh, I'd loot at a box score once in a while, but tbat':i about it." Fox had ~ closed-door meeting with Giants' roachei; Ozzie Vlrgll, Wes \Vestrum and Larry Jansen Sunday morning, then had another meeling with lhe players. ''I didn't mRkc any rules," he snirl or the meeti11g v.·ith lhe players. "1 let the players set up cu rfew regul!lllloo s:, but I want lhem to adhere ta them.'' CHICAGO (AP) -:. Slugger Reggie Jackso., who bit 47 t.>me runs for Oaklud last year, Is facing ~ threat or being shipped to the minor leagues. .M owner Charles 0. Fln~y 18.ld Stm-- day between games of a ~I. ~2. doublt.header 5'\ftleP over the Chicago White So x that if Jackson, a holdout most of lhe spring, doesn't slart pro- duclnJ soon he might be sent back to the mioors lo get hi s !!Wing back in the groove. ''It 's All a joke to me, I cnn't make any nU1er comment." said Jackson who was benched In the first game against 11t1uthpaw Tommy John but st.arted in the second game against right-hander Bert Johnson alld picked up ·orie hil -a siaglc. Admitting tbat the lack of spring traini111g ''hurt a liUle but that's not It," Jacbon indica~ there are other reall()nS for his prolonged .slump. He had produced only m homt runs and is batting below .200. "I know what It is and I can put my finger on the reason but I can't tell •l\Ybody," said Jackson. "No, the reason is not physical." The matt.er could be. personal bely.·ecn Finley and Jackson. Jackson was thr only member of the team who did not show up for Finley's steak party at hi s LaPorte, Ind., (arm S~turday night. "Let's say 1 don't likl! steak or 1 wa., 11ick or I was out with my family," xaid Jackso11 . "Look, forget it. I can'l say any more, I can't get Jn to anything with the man lFinley). Ir I do. I'm the loser, Reggie Jackson, the loser." Asked Ir he thought Finley was lryJ.n& t'4. shake him up, Jackson shot back, :~~ play evtry day the same way. I do the hest J can. Nobody can shake me up or jack me up. When J'm playing badly. that's just me. Reggie Jackson." Finley's explano!\on: .. We hnd pla ye d 41 .~ainc!I and found oursel ve~ nint games behind in the loss column. 'fhc staff anti I got to1otcther and decided one nf the main reasons wai; J<Jckson. He hasn't produced the way we thought he. wou ld and the wa y he himself ex - pected. "•IC has been ~trugsllng i1nd we hove stuck with him. So we decided !() platoon him by not playing Reggie against Seft- ha.nders. We hope this helps him 1et back his swing. ··rr he staru hitting right·handers. then we will gradually work him back against left-handers and hope he can regain his form. "\Ve hope it isn 'I necessary bul lr he doesn't sta rt hitting the r1ght·h:tndcr~. we just m1ghl ho ve ro .send hin1 lo the rninors. Again , such 11 n1ovc woulrl he to help Hcggir gc~ hll"nsclf bac~ in the groove," said F'inley. "It wouldn 't be Lhe first 1imr Mickey Mantlr w111 once .sent down . .1 lhink a ·101 Qf Heggie'1 problems are lieca11se hl' missed prac- ti cally all of spring t.ra.inins.'' f! DAILY PILO I ; Sports In Brief Cal Relay s " 15 Area Spike Entries Bowling Tourney Launches • • ' ' • ' ! Allison Captures World 600 Race CHARLOTTE . NC -J·\iri.l driver Donnie Alhson 111lh relier driving help fron1 1.~··· Roy Yarbrough, U\Jl ran misrortu ne and a ho~! of ;,w1f\ s tock cars Sund:1v to""' 1hc World 600 :it 1tif' Ch:irlulle Motor S~way. Allison"s v.·1nn1ng spe<>d for the 600 1nile racl' "'aS 129.680 mph. lie won $39,600 fnr the first place f1n1sh . Alli.St1n's ford Talladt.•g.1 ;ind another ford dri\en bv !)avid Pearso n or Srartanllu;g. SC .. \\'ere locked in a duel for First plucr !3tl' in lhP r:itr \\•hen PC'arson eainr 10 !h'· pil s for a f111<Jl ~Lup Pe;i rson 's sleek Fu!' d i;creeched to a .stop on l;1p Base ball 's Top Ten AMERIClAN LE AGUE "l1Jer, Chill G .. • " re•. (lr~w. Min " "' ~ Q ·"' '· ll:oolnocro, '" ~ '" " .. .)11 .. Alou, ,,., " , .. " " ·"" A. J"'""°"· Col ,, "' " " ·'" Plnl,111, " " •m " " .)~ w~11,. " " '" " " m 011~1. Min ~ '" " ,, ·"' Pont<><>, ,. " "' " " .Jll K•ll1'b<ew, N.m ~ '" " .. m Klh,,.., '" • '" ~ " ,J/t Home Rwn1 J p.,...,il, 8•111"'°'~• ll: F. HO...-dtd, W••h lng•on, IJ; i<•!lf'tortw, M.nn•"''"· 11; Mlntt>•" 0.klon<I, ll. Yo.irie"""" ll<»•on, ID, 11un• 1•11 .. In Ollv1, Mln<>tto11. ]6; J Po,,ell. 801· 11,,...,tf, l!; WM1•. New Y<>t~. )). ColOr, N•w Ya<~. lJ: Klll..c>r"" M•nnrwua, " Pi!c n!nt s 01<l1lo<11 l1n n1. M.nner.oln. :..o. 1 \IOO: K ~•I, Mlnnt10!6. ,.,, .800: R. H~OI. Bolio· •nore. •·l. ~' Mc:Na ll•, e~1timore. 1·1, .111; Wr lgM. Calll<>tnia. 6·7 •. 15'1. P•lmer. 81lllmoro, •1 .. HO; F. Petrr· ""*' New York, 6·7, .I~. NA TIONAL LE AGUE Plt•ltt, Clwti G Al R H Pt!. (an¥, AU •1 IH )I 62 .o'1 Gt•t>flrk.,..llt LA J9 113 11 •5 .:101 Pe--01, (11' •l Ill JI 61 31• Money, Pfll 17 119 19 •? >)b Menk e, •••n •• !66 71 ~• l•• Olfll, 5F .>6 13) )0 '6 .:;<~ c1...-1e, Pv~ l l ill u •• .)•} l-1Md!t1on, SF 04 119 •O ST .JH 5t>•m•k¥. NV 31 110 16 l7 T.,!, H . Aron. ATI :10 ISi )6 ,, •• 1~ HOm• Run• Ric~ Allen, 51. LOUii, la: H Al ton, A!l•nl1. ll. P~re1. C1nc!nn1li. 16, Mc (0¥1•. S.n ft•l>Cllco. 1~. (ol~t l, ~an 01-, 14; I Will••m>, C:1>oc1go, I•. R""• '"""" '" P&rn. (lnc1nn1u. •o; H, A••on. ,0,1. lo n!1, ll, McCovt¥. San Ft•"'"'"n. •11 8. Wl+llam1, (Mu to, O•: O!eri, San Fr•ntl1ca, )I P!!c~ln• S Otcl1lon• ''m""°", (,rl(t'ln•I•. 6 I, .~' G. Slone, Atl~n!1, 5·1 .. IJJ; N•'h All•n•~. 5·1. M.,.rltt, Cl1>C1nn•••. •-l. ,Ill , li&ndl, (hlCIOCI· I 1, 11~ ;l{;I . 1110 laps <thead or ;\Jhson's Ford. whi<'h had losl ground on lap 355 during a lengthy pit stop and the ex- change or drivrr!I, • U~!AG, Yugoslavia -To Nino Brnvenutl il "'as de.:;tiny. It was also power "It was destiny."' the Ita lian ~\lid Saturday night afler deft'nding his world rn1J - dle.,..·e1ght ehamr1Qnship hy knoc.•king ou! 1'0111 1 "The Bomb'"\ Bethe;i or Npw York in lhe e1ghH1 round -t1 1c ~;;nle round Bcthe;1 had stop· pcd Bcnvenu!i in a r1ont1\l1· fight in Australia. Tl1e knockout blow was a right hand . one or the hardesl punches hl' ever t h r t'w , Uenvenuti said. • LOS ANGELES -The Lns Angeles Dodgers "'ill acti va!l' relief pitcher Pete Mikke!sc11 Monda y and return outfielder Gary Moore to Albuquerque of the Texas League, the Na · lional League club annount'ed Sunday. Mikkelsen. :io. has been on the disabled list since being stricken with inf ectious hepatitis du ring s pr in g trai,ung at Vero Beach. Fla. • Spain nnd France. each ll'ith impressive viC!()ries behind lhern; have rnovrd inlo the next round of the F:uropc<in GnJ11 f> A Davis Cur tennis n1i1 tthes. Spain oomplt!Led a 5-0 Sl\'t'CP over Bulgaria and France harnmered Austria $-0 with singles victori es Su nday. 'file ....·inner~ \\·ill com!J('!C against each other June 12-14. CIF Pairings IC~lmP!<H'l~!~l AAA.A La'"'""" ¥1 N"'!ll Ton •""• •I Bl1ir f,eia '"""'" al Arto~o Ch•!leY VI 8"1-Amol 1! GtlV'" Po•~ !Otllo•iol We1tern 11 Vml~ra ••• C ~~rift Oa~ ., LomPOC LO\ Al8m"o' 11 81n~t Dom•~n al El 5e<iunao An101ooe V•ll•• a! M111>•oomtrv • ~t (;~leve v• (•ho•I "• ot r"""' Por•. '~ ... e.,1del Matk 1\1 Cu1tom IOi To~oia I SC Faces Sa11ta Clara In Playoff By PlllL ROSS a heat in back of Morn ing.side 10.l, l . J~n~on 1 M~!•l. 10;; fltd ""•Tl 01 mt Dally P•IO I S!UI ' BO) d Lo "· I I -! Nr•cJt:r lflOnl!al. 10 !, J_ 8rDOI<• I •f011f'S1'0 oAI'' lolo •o f, I · an ng oeac 1 Poy ~Mgrn1n.,.><111, •O.l; 1. M•ll~• •M•· A field of 120 of Soul lCrn •• .. -' Fifteen hopefuls remain to (1 l8 9/. rliw>. 101 C I I I I I lh 0 ,. " California's leading bowlers ar os ias \ll fl goa s -o repre"t'n! t: rangl' ,,,.oast Nrwixir t .shol puller J\.iark ito -lhllle•111 Smlth•B~rrO"UQh•l I I . CJF South Scct'o u o 1. M••ID• 1M•rln•1 11 • l """ begin 1>lay in lhc 10th annual earn ~Onle 1noney nr 11~ ;il•'OJ 111 cm ' 1 11 Stcvt.•fls uncorked a srasonal M11~" 1c~n1e"n1.11 11 • i1na ne.11 f;imily and 10 g<Jill :.CJlr> tr:1\"k :ind field wars for 1970. and career best of 57_8 lo &•"'*• 1Mo•nlnv11oe) 111 1. s ... "' West Co:ist Match Garn £' Of th<it nun1bcr carri·inu the cw~•1 Cov1"'1 11·1 1· E<h••rd• 1"""'" · I · 11 t K l)()Ssesslon ol a world spnnt e. q"alily for the fi"na!s in the AMI 11.2 ll"' r-u 1. l"""""• <S•~ elin1inallons orug I a ona arciJ IJ;inn1·r 111 Thursday's .. Bt'n.,alnol 11_1 1. 5w•ve" tEI Mo· d II G Lane!! in Costa Mesa. recor . tinals ;i\ Norwalk's Cerritos varsity stet>! lla event .,..,,., 11.l J, H"'"'n cG•ra.n '"''' r 3 11.1 The tournamenl begins .!!It AIU1ough Ca rlos. 6-oot-and College, six are varsily The area qualified only w _ 01, i-.io 1. H•-"'•""• 210-pound.s . has ne\er rlaycd athletl·s. thr t·e iJfe Bees and lhrL--e finalists in the Bee •~·mu 1.n.• 1. C•rntotie-u \N ... ln•• 9 . , 1 t:JJ.1 3. M••• 1Ar.0'1'<11 1.n .•-C7n<I A 1. . ih l 'II co college football. he expects 10 si x are Cee llna 1slS. dl\•ision. neoe11 1. MOO•• 0100¥.,, 1 1i.• 1. R""-c 1011 1n e even WI n- reach his inonetary goal by 1'he sale area spiker who Westn1i nster's Jim Keathley ;'~~:C..l"'~;;;i ,~nn~!,1 P~.""14,\~~ tinuc every l\londay for the 1n;i naged a fir st in his heal 1A111 .. 1 1 ·2~1 1. v.1111,,... CAl!Ol.l••l next 114 weeks with the eham-askin g SI million fron1 llu• 111 Friday·s ~rn zfinals .,..·as placed third in his 660 heat 1 1s.1 1. B•••• tNetti 1 1s.1. I · o I h M pionship mate/1 scheduled for ~h1ladelph1a r.ag cs, ~· •l E.~tancta sprintt-:r Dave in 1.ZJA and l\larin;1"s ~tall c.:.%°i,J ,::~~/·~~.;;;ti!·"A~~ ~v;: drafted hirn !2th. J <1hnsun. He t.ook his va rsity Peasley zip.......i to a 13.2 th ird 101l. ;·u.9; l . Go<>••I•• ,.....,,,1e1>e1101, Aug . 31. . ? r I"''-' ) !2.5, Una heel) -1. Mar.i>al! t~ed-The winnl'r of the Cost.i Carlos. 1\ho has l)('e!l tuld 220 hc;it 1,1 _l 8. ahe;1d O pl.1ct-clocking in hi.~ 120 low 1.nn•>. 1.111; i &a"'le• 1sud>ono1. lly the Eagles he can I C)(pctl Cul1•cr City s Doug Gregory hurdles heat. ;~·o·,,;~1)sc~ c,~"1 :,;'"~"'!~.!~~50~: i\lesa tourney 1\•ill then !arr lh $12 000 I . :Hid All-Clf grid star Kermit Th-' lo••e "·asl ar•a 0 _A l:i3.1, 1. s.1<ll(I (St!•vur ), 1·1•.l• J. the victor or 11 sunilar tourna-rnore an , o s1g n. Jo•h"'O" of Blao·r. ,_ '-"' ,_ ~ cnl1Pullo cE1 _....), 3 I•'· d h · S "" " I · · Ed' ment held in Sa n Francisco. Do111i11ated lri CIF Finals Thztrsday By Car lo s dominate I e~nnts ;itur-. h field event inallsl is 1son 120 1-hurdi.io _ 1i.1 he~n ,_ l••-~s1;;nc1a·s Hie Wood moved b D k d day in the C<!h orn1a Hrlays shot putter Brian Bayless. a 1or <M•rln•J 1J.s 1. Jonn..on 1Mmnh1Y· OVlT !he L<l or HY wee en · H.1 The Assot.'iat1•d Press fro1n fifth lo second in his 11111"1 IJ.Y J. L•~• 1~•0 Mt•a1 1• 1 . but failed in bids for recot"ds h r h k Cee finalist ln 1969 . He lofted tl"ll h~•!I I. Jon•• (Pola. Ve,ae. p l E\'ery par·ticipan! ln the h "l l bt: Southern Ca\iforni<1 l'e bree'."d I" a 20 .6·~utooorl 180 lows e;it a ter a c ec s) 1. Lnr1e iFonlon•l 13 6 l p..,~, • ... v ~,_ f th h to H t. d the IG-pound sphere 51-4 1/z Fri-field "'ill roll £our garnes ear.h of the Pat1fic-8 Con ference victory in !hl' 220 ilftcr \.\"tn-0 eo p 0 s. e was une day to earn a fin<ils berth. :~i;:,~,.::,\ 1 ~3'.61~.d ~:"":/";me~~:~'. •. 10,,,1·,oy. After 28 "anics, tile h · th ](JO t ' · j ltt HI. • M C T I lngoldo! 13.6 3. S<lli\ (A~la!lon) ll !. " b ai;ainst S;inl:i Cl11ra of I e ning e inc crs 111 ii \.\'Ill(-Fountain Valley's Steve arina's e.ne ay or '"° •elot -!h1 hta•1 1, ,o,,1a1oc" fie!ct is pare<! to 60, then to "-ao·ded 10 '-. onrl.~ flnt , a tenth establ,·~ed h·,rnself as the '' i ' ·'o \Vl'~t l"o:ist Alllletic vvn-"""" ·' Christiano and 1·unior Nick '"' ... , 1 san1a An• • . , ~on1a,.. .... of a second off the 100 n1cter favorite m the Cee lows with nrn1 M•tl 1. MOrntnos1d• u,6 1.' ,.... 16 after 36 games. Ference Friday 11nd Saturday ma,·k of 9.9 i·o,·nily h"ld by Rose of Corona de! ~far each 3 5 k . hi .,,,. .... 1 l. c.onti BH(h Por. ~i 1 ll•d Defendi·iig champ.'"'' ,·,, ih" ,_ I d h" d · 880 h a victorious I . mar in s nNI) 1. San eer1111rdlno •• • 1. M•lll· ., .. in 1he hattlc for the Western Jim Hines, Ro11nie Ra y Smtih Pace l ir in eats. seinis heat while teammate kin "·' 1· o ..... ,,, "·'· tourney is Lan1ar Keck ol h . 1 C II W Id and Charli·e Gcecne. Ch ristiano turned in a I :55.7 1 d Long tumo -1. J1me• tR lll'lchc Al• d ti bert 1n I 1e o ege or behind Whittier 's Bob Franek Preston Campbe I was secon m 11.,.l 21·• 1. ll•vl•" !san1a Fe ) ~r-s Hcscda. "•ho ha s capture ie ~ · '"I thoug ht I could do 9.8,'' · 660 heal fl 238) ). Wal~er IO•n•rdl 11·•'1 •. """11•111 e"enl f"r the past two years, .,rr1es. t\:55.1) and Glen Harmatz in a : · · ~5•n1• ,..,,,., '11·? s. C1J1hoert 1oomln· • " Carl os said afterward, "but •1 · Cee spe""sler John , _,, • , --r• -G ""'' anrl h•s al00 wnn the state USC"s Troi·ans easily won lt·.55.4) "I Lakewood while 1' anna ""' gu•• .... · o....,.no;1 •·~·0 r• ""' I knew any record would be " 1 h ted r \ pot :io.lG'" 1, o idl.,...,... cco"'p'"" l'G-9'• 11 ff tt st two times the Pac-8 playoff, Saturday, d•.SC""ni-·' bec"'se of the Hose blazed to a 1:54.7 in Ma tby arves ina s s s '· 5mllh !'lurrawh11 »V'•· roP-0asl "chla"'mp1·ons of , lhe vu cu .... in the 100 and 180 while an· ~"°' PUt -1. Her nanue• !Pac11.:1 drubbing visiling UCLA. 7-1, w•·nd." the same race with Upland's ,. 440 1 s:i.1 0\<> 2. s11v1tu !S•Ma F .. l SO.Tl• l. l"orney 1·,iclode·. S · 53 l d choring the Vi 1ng reay " bl l 519.., Bod u ;_i\ Bovard Field, the site or The breer.e was measured ~tickey enior (I: ·4 an team lO the same distinction. f;,~1P'•~ s1'1v. ~. Ga;c•a ~S.n1~' ... "':~ 1 9 6 1 -Bob Ra m ir e l'. be r h at 6.9 miles per hour for Simon Langer (1 :54 .1) of H si.J"li " Do""' o"11"'''""", 51-~ 1· [Anaheim): 1961-Bill Buyett this ll'eekend 's st-o -I ree Beverly Hills. Estancia's Craig a Yes wrrblck (L• Pue~1 .. w11..,n1 ~.11• •. Carlos' JOO-meter victory, f:ir d ·1 1 the Cee pole "aolt 1-11011 lurnP -W•lker io .... ,d1, A,,,.. rLos Angeles); 1963 -Barry SCrlt!S. over the allowable 4.46 ni .p.h. Christiano also anchored the ma e 1 0 ~ tin ILB Pol•l. &are<1 1exc .. 1 .. on. Ber· Asher \Santa Ana ): 1964 - I S I Cl II B "'S B ·1 I f et finals. nora !Chino), s-111 Par~• 1c11f\ed'faU. I' I h n ·an ii ar:i. Je ron ... ., Carlos. asked about his aron m1 e re ay oursom 0 wouorcl fllellllowl!r), llau<:h•m 1Mor »-Ramirez : 1965 -\a P took two straighl from Cal negotiations with the Eagles. thei r fa stest time or the year c"" 1"Q1i<1•>· w11111m1 <E1 Modena1, :..10. 11,\cBee (\Vcslminster): 1966 -· 3 21 0 II I ·• ·1h Ph "! JOG -11'1 ~ ... o -1. Moll!d IMll ll-Pole v1ull ~ Ha•von 1!.<lnl• MOn1ca1. ) l9'l Stall' 1 Long Oeachl. edging said bluntly. '"You"ll have lu 1n : · · · e eamcu Wl 1 ••nl, 10.1: 1. McMUltn tc...,11nn1•ll, cwrl'lln !CrMPI), H<iyes 1e.i.r.c1111, 11· Bob Knipple (Compton ; ask" Pappy Gault (his advisor) J\1aas, Ed Aoderson and Gary 101. l. sw.vel)o !Et M...,,....), 10.1: 1: e"""' rr..verl¥ Hills), scnul•r u ... _Hoy \1/ilso n /Costa J\.1esa); the 49crs, 4-3, on Saturday. Valbuena to pick up third in l'lnd he11> -1. lf'Klm•• !S..n ,,,.,.,._ g1ewooc11, saun<1er1 !Mu~J, ,o,naer"'n l!/68 -Keck·, 1969 _Keck. then routing them. 12--4, Sun-1 ••a•oo•"•'-'h·'·'·.'·' -------------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii0';;;'0®;;'0· 0";;·';;'0'~·0';;';;•;;•;;";;'0';;~;;"0";;;'0"";;'0' .. ,;;";i~i;;;,;;,'·0';;'~.;;. .. ;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'f day to \\"HJ the N c A AJ~ District R p!:1y1Jff 111e Col lege \Vorld Series is sci for .June B-l:l in Om aha, Nell. Southern C:il ls a five- timc winner. 'f hP closest Santa Clara ha s conic is second. when 1he Droncos lost, 5--4 , in 15 innings lo J\1ichigan in 1962. 'Trojan right fielder Dave Kingman, sidelined n1osl of the season ~·ith injuries, clos-j cd out the Pac-R tourney in spt'"Ctacular fashion. The big jw1ior unlNtded a two run horner in the first inning to give p1tt·her J irn Ha rr all the runs he needed K1ngm.1n linlshl'd lhc playoffs "'ith three doubles and t"·o hon1ers to capture the mo.st valuable player crown . Barr wenl all the ~·av in the fina le, holding the Brti1n ba1.~ to just six hits Hnd striking out seven. j I JOO tit Anniver.raJJJ · BUY AND THE NEW, WIDE SILVERTOWN CUSTOM BFG's great 4-ply nylon cord tire • 20% belier mileage plus bener handling and stability • Deeper tread lor quicker stops on any road -wet or dry • Comparisons based on our 1969 New Car Tue 2tor•44 2tor•&D 2tor•&D SIZES· I 00 1 l t 18 1 • C 18 I• SIZES r 78 1' (;18·11 ·f 71·1!> (; 78-15 Sll,S: H 78-15 J 71·15 H 71·14 fl t PLACES 1 ~s !• & 9~ t• R£Pl AC£S 1 IS.1• 1 2s.11 7 JS.15 125~15 fl{P'LACES 8.55-15 I 95.15 8.5~14 ''"'" ~ bllickw•n ~.,. Jtd.,•I r.,,..., T•• of •1.96 lo 12,111P«1w .. d1pe<Mfill'jl °",.,.,with Nlde-1"' Wl'h1e,..ell• IJ Ml m0<t per Urt. BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE USE OUR RAIN CHECK PR()GRAM. 111e1w,. 01 •~ .,,1c1..i ""'"" d1fr1111<1 ,.,.. - I"• ~·w w1do Sil•.,town Cu1tom llr!~ .,. m1• '"" out or tomt 11105 ~uri"I lfth on1r, bul •• "''" b• ~•~Pl In nrdt• your .,,. !111 •I lht 1a•1•ll!td pritt '"d lt•ut )'OU • 1tln cll.ock lot lulu•r dell'"' ol tne .. -. .. ~1nmv. Opel, Toyola , Renault, Datsun, Volvo. BMW -you name 11-lhere·s a Mark IV Heat Beater especially designed lo cool each of the popular imports.,. betler. Beat the heat this summer wi!h the air conditioning brand that each year proves it can outcool Th e one lhat's backed by w1Hranty service good al 5.000 Mark IV Serv1c.e Genlers from coast to coast. 40,000 MILE BRAKE RELINE .. Olhet" Uni!' As Low As the compe1111on -fac1o ry air included -in tes!s supervised by the U.S. $169.95 plus 1nslallJ t•on EAS Y TEAMS AVAILABLE Auto Club. (MAl'tK IV) A O.VISKIN Of JOHNl MITCHIU. COMMNY S•• one ol our air conditioning speciali•I• loday: Hl,INl lN(;,T()N l l lCH ..... , o .... ,., '"" •it•1 B•1C~ lll•n • EXPERT WORKMANSHIP • QUALITY REPLACEMENT PAm • SPECIAL LOW PRICES GU•~AMTll !lot 11>11!!1 ~1111 llnl11.11 ln1l1ll.i! on rov1 tor tll flloltt•I"' flN ,OOll 11!11•• "" .. •• '" non.comm.,e>•I p1ntt1111 cu llfY co. Sl'toold 1a1 llnl•p 1111 or .. ,., ovt tlllflnl t11i. 119/lod l/leJ wlU l>t' <>~locrd 1! ""cn1111 lor tnt l!nln1 1nG Olll1 I 1m1U ,enlCt ,h•ll• IOI" lllt .. lll!IOll. W1rnM}' llMllN !e d•l'er O• 1toft •tr1omlnc 01111n1t ••,..IC•. JONES TIRE SERVICE ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS HONORED 2049 HARBOR BLVD, !At Bayl COSTA MESA PHONE 646-4421 • 54 0-4343 •• THE RADIAL TIRE PEOPLE AA9·12 r rn '" al " " •I 0- !lt" TI· . , ,, " .a· :o. L ho rh hi.: to he ol lie :s, ,,, ho ? 1. "' TY > h ~7 1); Co11111etes Area Spo1·ts In Brief Two national srnior records were set by Otis Chandl er Saturd:iy in a seniors d ual \rack and fif'I 'n1ee1 at Corona dt"l Mar High. The host Corona seniors squ<id defeated the L-OnJ: Beach Seniors ClulJ. 117~7. as Chandler set stand ards in the shot put and rtiscus . Chandler's ~hcit mark of 46- 7~~ b<.·Hert'd the ol<t rnark or 45-9' ~ v.•hi!e hi$ discus effort or 150-10\:: was far beyond the 148-0 set IJy Corona 's Fortune Gordien last year. He also was victnriou~ in !hi· hamn1er throw (112-0l. Oihcr w 1 n n er s "'Crf• Corona ·s Bob lliC'han!s In thl' pole vault 111 -6) :ind high jump 15-4) :ind Long Hl'aeh'~ Willis Kleinsasser (~~,3) in lh(' 440. • Edison High School's spring sports ;iwards banquet is :\el for Tu1·~d:1y evening at !hf' school cafeteria_ Festivi1ies get under y,·av st 6:30 \vi th the nan1ing cir the At hlete of the Year top- ping the list. Captains anti most valuable players for the spring sports teams will also be announced. • :-01embers o! lhr Orange Coast College basebntL track ;ind tennis tean1s will be honored Tues;day night in the ()CC student center. The third in a series of banquets for Piratl' athletes \viii get under \1·:1y at 6.30. Kerr~ O'llric~ of Au stralia. one of the 1vor!d's great distance ~t a r s, \I'll! con1- pcte in the third an nual Orange County Invitatio nal track and field n1eel Sat- urday. Jun e 20 at F'red Kel ly Stadiun1 in Orange. O'Brien ha s the best \vor!d times 1his year in the six mile {27 :47.3) and the 3000 metl!r steeplechase 18 :32.0 ). For the Aquanaut ·. in your life... .. ' ~ 0 "" OMEGA Oile1·s Stress Techniques, Searc1-i for Quarterback fer .1 liftli1111 11 prlM4 p1ssissi11 The rnu!d111g or a f]uarll'rhack or j\1·11 ruuplrd 1vllh 11·ork on 1t:l·h111qucs nnd !undarncnt;ils :1rf' lhe orders of the da.v al ll11ntinglon Beach 1 li,i.:h S1 huul where 1·oach l\c11 :\ln,1Ls and his Oilers rire undergoing spring football dril!s. Last year's offensive lc;id('r, quarterback (:;irth Vl1~c. is penciled in :.t lhc san1e posi- tion by i\loats hut he says he nl'eds \'1 !;1t backup fnr him -and it's no s!'crct that the Oilers ·would like very 1nueh to use \Vise .:it the tail back pos1l1on pro1'iri1ng !he adequate replacen1cnL can be found. At the moment it is .Inn 1'111rti11 and Bill J-larbrn th;1t tile Oil('r eoacJung st:iff 1s ""orking V.'ilh. jl.lartin V.'111 be " juni(lr in lhe rail wl11h• l larbin is a snphonrorr comr 11cx1 sca ~on. use the platOQn system like 11·c did last year," s:-iys ~1oa1 :;. ~loaL~ rates his squad of 1111 (for varsity and junior var~1- 1y J on a par v"ilh Ja~I. year·., group -with this year's unit given a shade or t1vo :id- vantag(•. "I thin k v.·e hav(' bc!1cr d<')llh and tremendous f'n- thusiasin, 1-\'hich has carried over froin last year." sn~·s 1969'.~ Sunset League co:ich-01- the-year. The Oilers posted a htghly respectable 7-2 for the campaign. Of the 8(1 candidates. eight arc returning varsity Jrt- tcr1nf.'\1 -led by \Vise and a pair of fullback <'and10att·s They are Ken Bro1vn (5-9. Prep Golf Svn\~I L••g~• F;n~" J7:il and nod flluniz (5-7, !GO) -A couple of g11od si1e l111cnu·n ;1rl' 1n llH' picture 1 11'1lh Bill Twigg (6-0. 195l nl ' t:.H'kli• ;ind (;;:ill'n (;1lliland (6- 1. 190! <il gu~1rd. Tonv C1~1rrll1 (6-ll, J80). Arnold Ruiz !5-8. t:l5l and , ilcfcnsivc gu:.ird (;11 C.:crd~ !:l-1 8. 1601 round out tht' J1~t nf n1onogr;i 1n w111nt·r~ I ,. .. .. ,,, .. S~lf win •Ill!" """m~st•r l\1oaT~ Ji~ts h15 b1ggcsr prob-,.,, d••P ,.a d•ve•s. a~1• 1e1i.nii lenl ;it the n1om1•nt 111 lhr <l•~1 r> •11••0 1•me b•z•I. s1~.,,. 1.,, •l••I c~,e. Ad1u<!ebl• 111lcri1)r J1nf' Y.hcrc a pair of b••<~•·· ...... 11 so.oo openings rx1~1. Also I h r ( defensive hnebaekinR and J k secondary needs shoring up , i • al'con.hng to !\-\oats. I ~ I Y The Oilers \\'ill f1n1.~l1 their J J spnn~ drills lt-nt:.it 11 t•ly .!Lui!' _ fi fi 11 1l h the <innual \ii!Hll g.lilli' C'YJ ewuelb 3~a1n.~! gradua1111g J..c111ors . I """' 19i!I Sc:ht'duh· Sept. IR .1t La lf;ihr,1 Harbor Se "t 2ii SI l'~1u l Shoppinq ,. C:en!et ()Cl. :i Luara :.II 1.:1 l';1ln111 2300 Harbo• Hv11t111qto11 Cenler l each & "\Ve're working rrat hnrd (l!l U1eir t hrow1n~~ gn1ne. And \\'f''rr. !rying IO !1r1n up tv.·o lcilms. \\'I' 111ant to develop some depth now so v.e c;ni J, 1om r"""'"• !!1""''"~1"" fh~ro·I 11, 1 i;~,,.. 1-1..,,,w l\','0>fP•n1 r, J Dull• t~o; ll'M"'"' ,.,.ti l'ot> 'J.orl n IM~rlfl•I I~ ' Ilic• M.wc. "'"'"'""" 1-<•rl>NI ~"" J('t i!t>OI 1~•n•~ .On•I 0~1. Iii \\ 1'-l•'nl Bl~d . Oct. lfi :It S;1nt,1 i\n.i Ce>,10 Me"' ()1·1 ;:;! \I L''-l!ll!ll•tf'l' 54 .~·94&5 EdinlJer Hu11ti11qto11 Beach 892-S~Ol Ul'l. :lo .\l:1nnn Ope., M 0"' .. Thwn., Fri. 'til 9 pm " r Jo~ hvr n~al<IV lor Ct<" ln~.v<luol '.'Joi·. 7 :it An:ihl'•Jll l(,.~--8 of A -M .. •t•• Ch~r9 e Nov JJ ;ii :-.ii'v.·porl J[;11 'bnr ._-----~-----oll t·n•i• Jun~ j •I Jvfll"" (oontr~ (Jyb) Major Lecigue Sta11dings NATIONAL LEAG UF. East Oi,·iskln w L Chlrago 21 17 St. Lo111s 20 " Nc1v Ynrk 20 " PillJ>burgh 20 " f\lnn1rcnl 16 24 l)htl::idc!ph1.1 16 l5 \\'esl T>lvisletn C1ncin11ali " 12 l)od~crs 2•1 IR All nnt;;i 2.1 18 S11n Francisro 21 2.1 llouston 20 24 Snn Dirgo 19 27 S~"flY'I tllMVlh C"ir~Oll l 1. N~w Yorll 1 l Piii'~'""'° ~ M""''~~I ~ Pct. .5!'l3 .513 .488 A(\.') AOO 390 .721 .57 1 .!"Jill .477 .45,') ,413 Ph!ll~PIP,,11 6, ~! LOUii f, 10 11111;1'191 Doc!M" 8. All•nl~ 1 Hou11on 10, C1.,clnn11ll 1 S•n Fro...;lsco 6·1. S•n 0<~ 1-' T...i•Y'I GI"'" GB '" 2' ~ :'l •i ' ti•.,._ I]', 7 1n 1: 11 1,~ I JI~ (ln<lnn•ll IM,Glothlln !-11 •• 11n Olt•o l"'ob- .,.,, ' n. ""'"' ()f!IY ••m• ochedYl!'d. Tuud•J'• G•"'"' ""11•.;l,ln"I• ~t MO"IT~al, n,oht ~I l 111»\ •' l<•w Vark, 1119M r .t'•bll•a" ~' (•,.u•eo li~~.ron ~1 AtlaM~, n•oM ~t•• •I 5•n Fr•Mllca, nhtM C•n<•n'lllr •I $11n OIPVO, 2. two .... loM DEAN Ail-IERICAN LEAGUE Easl Olvi,lon w L na111mor(· " " New ''ork 2.'I " l)Ctroit 18 20 \\'ashington " 2! Hoslon 17 22 Clrve1'1nd " " \\'csl llh·ision ~·!inricsola " 12 An_itrls 27 " {J;;ikland 22 20 Knnsas City 16 24 Chicago 16 " Milwaukee 13 " tu.,.•~·i ltts;it11 11 oltlmor• 1-i, lloiton 1 • T'r l. li!KI .Sf.Ill .474 .450 .-l:lfi .378 684 .fl.'i9 .. 12·1 .400 . :100 .33:1 GB ~Ii ' IO 101-:. 12',z ·~ ' II 111 ~ JJ''i N•w Vork 6-1. CleYtl•l!d l-7, 11\d v•rne~ 11 lnn•no' w~~lnaton '· D•"on • •""'' t. M•n,.....,r. S O~l•n<I s s. Chi<-t I to.nn••• (II~ t. ,o,111,..~.,.~· ~ 10 .nn•no• T•d•~'• O•m•" 1:,1w~u~ff !toc-woon 0-0) •• 1.1.n.,.so•• fT,Anl i-0 or Zf't>I> 1-ll!, M<1~t ('l·<~"Xc"~" 1 oi •I l(•n•~\ City !Mo•~n•HI I II. "'~"' ..... Vo I ll,~~·~" l •l .. D•l•OI! !C •·n ,n. "'~'" (l•v~l•n<I /1,'111•~ 111 •t llM•,.r>Or~ IM<N~lly 7-Jl. nl~M W~•hlnotcwo !llo•m•n l ll •I Bo''"" llet 1-Jl OnlY g•m•• ""edtJ!fll LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Service and Parts for All Imported C1rs Modern Body Shop for All C1r1 Or ange Conn ty's Largest and Most Modern Toyo ta and Volvo Dealer DEAN LEWIS MAY SPECIALS [!)~[Y]Pf[@ COROLLA 1970 0~11 \ $1697 +Tax & Lie . All Other Mod•l1 h1 St•clr Marl! II-Hilu-.: l'klrwp- lalld Cruisen--C•'-• VOLVO 1970 DEMO $2759 14? 1 d r., ••dia, h••l•t, •·•P••d. !Ser. #4740) USE D CAii: Sl'(CIAL 1967 TOYOTA Corana Sool•11 ltlMlfO, ~t•!tr, 1~1r,, ltltl !In~. Lk:. fl'l U AVV St09S l.londay May 2'i. 1q70 DAIL V PILOT 23 SAVE $20 Sears Tn and Auto Center 8 Track Stereo Prices Effective thru Tuesday, May 26th! • Tape Player witl1 2 Speakers Reg ular $69.95 • Starts Jllaying aulo1naticall.v \\·hen t;i.pe cart- ridge i~ in~erterl, ~tO}l~ '''hen it's rcn1ovcd • Changes progran1.-: :1utnn1aticall_v n1· nianually • Dual-channel solid-r-;t;1le :1n11>l if il'r Expt<rl ln~t!llla.tion A,·ailablf' 95 Hcgular $29.99 Ti111i111! Li gl1t 1-Pi ccc Engin e Tes ting Set SAVE 810! 1999 ~upc r Value 999 • ,~,.I. 6 to l ~·\'\>lt SY!-.tc1ni; 4-Pr. Mt lnrludes: • ( 'l1 ron1r pla f!·rl h<l<ly , , , ttl.'!'.2'"•· '-W1ti !1 nl- !ows lube tu fl;i!'li onl.v "h••n 111 •Pil<'d • ·r1n1i ng LJgl1t • \::1ruu1n Fuel Pump l'estrr • I 'on1pres:-1or 1'e~Lr-r • S()lid ~1.:t\f' r1r1·111t. • l:en101P ::;L;irter S 1,·1tfh ll U HRY VOH TllESE AIJTO~IOTlVE VALUES! TclTJ' Seat Cover ~l"IOT& l.,o\" Prh·f'! 4 ,,4 -1 7 F:ll.J<Y l11-.oolip-f)n f rir "-i;nui:: 11·ri11kl~-rrte fil. t.arge choirc of color~. Large Se'''" Cha mois Buy l"ow~ 99c C1e1'n up y o 11 r rllr w1!h thli!! 1<1.reak -rree. chlllt!Ols, 16" x 2Q" l!liie. T,,·in·Front l;-loor ~lats Rri,"11111.r 4.11.> 3.66 P.lr f<'ltll 11!1 A m ,rif'.;llft f'a r11- J•:n~v tn •·l~an. Tr 8 n ~ -p;i1·~nt \'Ill.YI. Station ffl'l{"l•l•r $11 .99 Wagon Pad 8.97 N <h \'lnvl f'ovrrecl pnd. J 1~-lnr.h lh1rk ... 44x75-lnch 1\tf. For cft.r, btnch, home, Air-Cooled Cushion Si:i~r V•luf'.: 99c Inner ('OU altw:I .'lpring~. Por- ous ml!~h fibe r f.Ovtrinf. 1>1ulU-i:o1or pattern. 9.99 A uw Bar Carrier SAVI: $3! 6. 99 Pair 60-ln. Icing 1tefl Top B11r Ca!"Tltr (or luj!!gni,:e 11djust~ ln flt 11\l f'nr• 1vllh r11.in gutter1. Sears --l•-.111 ... _ •-••-U --•Ml tl __ ... _ -·-· 1 -· .. R--1 -Grl--fl -11 --·----.. -----_ ... , ...... ,_.,,.. _._......... ----··---·-----11 ,._..,-..OO_'l:'-""' ... _ .. ,, --1.IUI ___ ,, .. _.. _ .. _ _.... -.. ---.................. _____ -·-· ........... ~ ............ f;MULMfM,A....,t'l ...... tMl. • . - .. D.t.ll Y PI LOT ;Sailo1·s' ~~~A~™e~ ~ ' • ~~ohn so11 SLIDE KNEES TD LEFT AT START OF DOW NSWIKG Pleased Golfers can compensate for a great many ea rlier swing .faults by !>tar ting the downswing properly. By checking the illustrations, Spring football dri\!s arc , you will note that my fi~st m?"e· well under way at Ne"·port ment of the downswing lS a Hari>or High School where the lateral sliding ot the knees to Sailm's. are toiling wider new the left. The hips and shoulders roach Ernie John50n. must NOT slide. Anotheressen· t1al of this movement rs avoid· Jobri3oo ~ys he's please<! · t"ff I ft k · wiOt what he's seen Sh far ing a 5 1 e nee. · · Starting the downswing 1n · in a quick eva luation or his this manner is important. It will '. 100 sophomore and junior ran-help offset any premature club· : di dates. head speed due to "hittfng fro~ ''I'm really 111r11led 11'11h the the top." Such a move also : caliber of kids \\'f' have here. helps you keep the shoulder '. Obviously somebody has done aligned. Th is aHows the clu b· : a good job arotuxt here and head to return lo the ball by ifs probably slarted with good moving from 1ns1de to the Jar · : family training plus ~01ne I'~-get lin e. : cellent work by the !lchool II the downswing starts with : and coaches. the hands or upper body, the . ''I just wish we ('ould play hands will rele;lse too Qutckly . : about five games this stun-Furthermore you will tend to ·mer. What \re need is field throw your ri8ht shoulder"cwe·r :. ~ime to really get things <klv"n the ball.'' Then youl' clubh~ad t moves ·outside the target hne. ,a"Any coaching ch a n g e A pull te the left Of a pull· means the players are slice to the: right will be ihe momentary losers. lt pl.aces likely result. Lbem at a disadvantage bul L-.:_------------------' I they are just going to ha ve to suck it up and make up the gap," says J ohnson. a perennial winner al El Ra ncho C:IF Tennis ~figh School. Presently lfle Sai lors arc un- dergoing or ien tati on of .Johmoo's syslen1 with e~ posure to all the drills, in- rlividual and unit, that can be done on !heir own durin g !he summer mon1hs. Newport Harbor Faces Normans Johnson and his aides have been busy looking for tht> .specialist required for winning football -the kids that can throw, snap the b.111 to the punters and the ones capablt' of catching forward passes. "We're also busy trying lo expose out players to the en· tire offensive and defensive sys tems. \Ve \\"ant them to know every facet so that the.v t an see ho"' each of lhP1r individual 11·ork coinplelc<i the total picture," sa~·s J ohnson Johnson"s offens11•f• St'1 ~ in - volve th e ba sic full-t1nusc T formation 11·ith t>1'n spl11 ends. F'rom that 1he SJtlors will use a sprinl.riiut I y p e quarterback \\'ith shifts lo slots. flankers and wings from the basic formation. Leading the group of r ;ln- didates are nine returning varsity lettermen. some "'ith ei:ce\lent sizc Terry A!brittoo i6·2. 2101. C:rant Gelker (S...11, 215) ;inti .Jim s~:ick (6-0, 200) ;ire lhret• o{ the more notablt'S \1·il11 their size along 1~·ilh 1'.1 ike ~lors, Buddy Owens. Scott Schaeffer, Roo Tri pp, Taras Young and Alvin White. Tile quarterback picture - ~till In U!e experimentation stages -involves While and fl1ors. The Tars art' scheduled to <·ontinuc their drills unt il early . lune. Johnson i~ not sure n[ the final day of prart1cC'. 1970 Schetlulr Sept. 18 Co rona t.Jel r-.1ar Sept. 26 Co!lla ~lrsa Oct. 2 A na he11n Oct. 8 :it \\·e~tn1ins1er !7 1 Oct. 17 ~l <1 nna Oct. 24 Lo:ira ::t i L.1 l'ahn;i Oct. 30 \\'estern Nov. 7 <ii Sanr;i Ana Nov. \J H ur1\1n~o11 l:IC'al h Ce . r r 1 l.o s Cerritos Cullrgc ""r<1 p\ll.!d up 1.he state 1ur11or r o 11 e J.: e baseball t1llt' Saturday 1\ll h an 8-1 \•ictor.v ov er C-Ollr~c of the Sequoias on the wi n· ners' diamond . Tt:;e victory ran Cerrilo~· final season record to 40-1. with the only loss coming lo San Di ego City College in South Coast Conference ac:- llon. It was the second time Cer- ritos had woo the slate crown. In 1966, the Falcons wen t ~. A second CIF' large schools tennis champio1•shi1> is in the making for Newport llarbor Schoors netlers anti to do i1 tlley mlJst complete their 22·0 season with three more \.\'ins. First in line with a crack at Nev.·port is Brvcrly Hills. lhe Pioneer League champion which upset Jr\'1nc \.eagur kingpin Loera Friday. 1~~1 In )21 I i"o:tf'l1 l'.1t \\'1lsn11 's S1 111"t·I l.1~ague 111 !1~1 cont1ni;:ent 1s 1ht• ho1ne ll'ain for Tucsda_v's cruL"ial with the starting tin1e set at 2 p.m. The DAILY PILOT dopt' sheet says Newport llarbor wins it. 20 -8, but conversati<in "'ilh opposing roaches adrls: ,;i couple 1nore 1·1cws. Beverly Hill!! 1nentnr Harold Siehling cla1n1s his lads will he hard·pressc1l In score :;;tx point" on the Ne1l'port jug. J;crnaut, claiming we a I.. 1loubles s!rength :t~ onr u( his chief concerns. \Vifson, however, sees lhr Nonnans ns a srrious threat. "Jr Beverly Hills can bf;lt Loara it can certainly give us au we want. •· Anotller \\'orry fur 11" is lhat if their Nn. I singles player l~tike r.1argohn. a JUnfor southp;nv ) run win fnur points on Loara , he must ha ve the capability of 1vinning :it !C',ist lhree :1gainsl our ~1 ngl C's,'" sa.vs \Vilsnn. One of Beverly II i 11 s ' L11nents has been t h(' !a1'k ,,f rx('(>Jlrnl ru111pcli1 ion in league play . The t<·;un 1s n1ndt> 11p l'11t1rrly nf Juniors <'ln1 I sopho1nores. The Normans sll'ept through Pioneer Leagul' comprt1 t1on "'ilh hardlv a hitch, lns ing only lo singles standou t P:iu l Nt1\·;1chek of Avi;1t1on. 01hr r tl1<1n 1h::il. therr \\:-t<; t111lr 1n U1c "'3.Y of compet1t1on 10 kt'1'p thi:: Normans' cla\vs bh:irpened. They have chspla yed decent Bt•orh l1•1l• lnal•w""" " 1n~1e·NOOI! " • "lotl" l orron(• ' ' S•n•~ MQnl< • ' " S.•nM Mani<• " • Av••hon ' ( ,..,,~1•1!f " L.,,o>C>• ' ' £1 $-oundo ' • A .. M~n ' ' Mir~l~to • ' L•n11<1• • , El $f'g1U\dO • • "vlo!1on ' ' Mlro le•'"' ' , El s~~ut>d• • 11'1 LI>..,.• ,,., SOFT SELL SAM -By Marvin Myen Cck'TA1Ls " 'l <lepth In lhe s1nglex depart- ment , especial ly at the No. 4 position . It was Mark \Veinslcin, ~ub hing for injured Keith Stein- baum, that turned the Loara verdict around hy winning three or his four singles 1na1ehes. Sit>h ling-says, "l1·c; lough to play off 1u see 11 ho ~oes 1n tile guillollnc ."· 1\.' 1 t h i\'t"1~·1J0rt Harbor !he nexl [Qt'. "'ilson, ho1rr1'tr'. sal's ht· isn't buying lhal l111t· · Leading Ne11•port's ag- gregation are singl es standouts Bob Ogle and Hobbie Cun- ningham along with all-rnunU performer Glenn Cripe, who's ablr to "'In at any spot Area Girls Qualify For }~i11al s Only a pair ot S\\'in1n1ers in the Frosh·Soph U1v1s1on <'I nd two varsity relay s<p1:ul s lrun1 lhC' Orange Co;ist a r f' a ciualifiecl fnr the final~ 111 lhl' CIF girls s11'1111 prclin,inu nc~ Satu rdny at T11su11 ·s Foothill l[1gh. 'T11e co1nb1ncd girls ~11•1111- n1ing ttnd 11 i 1• i n R Ch<Jm· pionships 11·111 1ak e place Fri- day night at Rrverly lhll.t Nat:iloriurn . Starting rime 1~ 7 p.111 . J\tarina 's i\largaret Ann~trong took fifth in the !'l(J 1':trd backstroke-in the FroSh.Soph ca1egory 11·11h ;i 3:! 5 tlock1n g v~'"" 700 mfdi•v ••I•• 1. P,ilo• Ve•d•• ''Oll.l 7. r."olllk&I\ 1 01 • J. '• ~·n M"' cc• 7011 I l•~·-~C/Q l Mat>"I 7 al.! I . c;.,.,11 Me .. 1 01 !. 1(l(l frtt -l. Pt1lst,.., \l S!; 01 j 1 Simmon• tMlll) 1 D'1 4 l ••<111•• !Woll ] OJ 6 • l • .. •I (SM) 'n1 I }. Sl~lld~n IA.rd '0)9 e. r.!MIY (F:'l~r!:' !· l T;t !.W'IW!'OI\ J<>t\n,on IFoon n s ~no Tvttlf n~·1en11 J\ 'I l EJh• !PV) 2S I 4. r,>\o'" ()I"" V~ll Jt O S. S<n••d•r (~to 1• • • P•l111<1H !0.,,..1111 6 "lCO Inda I A!w<>C'd !Mil<\ l 11 1 ? Ad1lr tlco 1111 1 11.e l. Wall 11.~I•) t:u.o • llr..CM 1Pio) '?I~ S. Kiddle (Wll) l 1t 1 II, G8n.1tJI (~;'"~17 '".!· l. Ellh \PV1 l.OJ $ 1 Tit berwe~n L!r•fl ll~wd) •~~ H11bb4irt (All'l•m! I o• 0 •. P•!•P<>ll (Dowl l :O<l.4 S ""t~tt1mtYf' IS M•r~ool 1.06.l •· Hu!ln~1 1FDOIJ 1 '?~ "frw -l . JOh"'on IFmll 5),7 7. Tit •oner>• Ad•lr (Lff All, Ml•"' !Al>P Vi l! i nd !><~rader (SH\ Sli ~ s. G•nat•I I Buen•! S7 l 6, 1-i•nltV !Su~···~~~t1 '~·~·. Tut!lt 1e11e,.l I 02.• ' Al>¥00d (Mill ) 1.0l.• J, Hubberl (A!n•ml l:OS.O •. Frtn(lo (Ll Wd) 1 Ol l ). c;,,,.,.1 n111~n•) l:Oll.S '· R••O !$ Miorlnol t:n ,r. <IQO Ftff -I Pl1•1ttd fl~\ 4·177 ' Simmon• 1M11t1 <:lJ.6 l. L1..,1s IS M•rl..O) t :ll t I. W811 ("vi~! •.lt.O S. S!undtn /Arri 1,20,1 6. GtH t (C~l ~;.!~.1i _ 1. lie bt!ween Scl\Mn• !ltlO it! etld llr•~M (Pio\ 1:11.1 ) Wood• (511 ) 1:13.6 I. Al ~V !PV l ·l~.6 S. M<.ln!v•~ (AAl l'.!\t 6 Folill"" !Mltl 1 l~.1. JO(I Frte r•l•v -!. R11'n! 3:1!0 • 1 S11nnv Hlll1 l SS.7 J. fool!\ 11 • 00 t • tt Semi •·07.7 S. ll:t..Cho ,_ltm!los • 11.0 t. St~ Mt rh"' I 16 ), All-I rvine T ennis T ca111 ,\11-lrvlnt Lt1•11• Flrll , ..... Gaucho Pair Place High in Finals Saddleback College's Hub Ste1·ens and Paul Coit c1111 eluded the 1970 junior t'Oi!ei.:c season Saturday \\'ith a pair of brilliant pcrfurrnanc r.s .11 lhe state met'I :.ii M l)(l~tu Junior Colll'gl'. Stevens plrtli"·d fi fth 1n llie 880 with a time of 1 :52~. JUSI a second behind the win- ner, Lee Marshall of \\'est Jli!ls (1 :5l.4). Ricco Sanchez of f.1oorpark finished seeood in I :51.9, Clay Lowrey of American River "'as third in I :52.0 and Al Baker or Merr ill was fourt h in I :52.J. . Cox , cornpeUng in the non scoring javelin event, finish1'<I tourlh w11/1 a toss of 19'J-I. l'clc Jones of San Diego fl1esa won 11 1111 ;1 lhruw of 232·6. St·t'O!ld w.1~ Beu 1\ti11c1 uf :'Ill :>an Antonio l205-7) ::ind third was Tony Griswold of San JJle,e:o ;\1csa 1204-0). ,l\lcrr1tt College of Oakland won the state title, capturing the final event. lhc mile relay, lo <lo it. l.ACC's Lance Babb set a reeord in !he 440 intermediate hllrdlrs \.\ ith a time of 52 ,5, rras1ng !ht! old n1ark of 52.8. •·rough 'fufsyo rubber Jor ~trr.nglh and long mil1•aR·~ •. 551 14 •More lh11n 6.000 Rripping edi:i;cs give good traction to Start·Slnr -ra in or !Shine lJ5£ OUlt ltA!H CHCCM, P'AOOA.\M• Bec-111se or ,., e•pe cl•d l'le•Y1 a em1nd lo~ GOO<ly~r ,;,...~. ~ m1y 111n 0 11! o t some 5llt5 dut1n1t this 011~•. bl.JI w~ """! be htl>P1 !o o•dfr you• ~;ze at l~e 3dv~•T•~<'<l ll••C~ ~nM "'"" you •rain (heck !Or tuiure del<Y<Hy o1 the "1e•Ch•n<l•Se • 5 50 i lS 7.7S I IS ---· 1 25 J IS --- a.55 11s ---· ns.as S!i.00 170.15 $1165 -- $25.15 ,71.55 $?i.1S $57.00 122.)0 ~,,, S14.0S $10.95 $26 95 171.55 s2g,1s 1 17 4 s 41h 11 .. ,_([ --- t 66 90 41h Tire f~(( $ 77 l S 41~ Tiro IRC( --- $ 80.15 4th l l11 f~ff $ 17.45 •1~ r;,. ,,,l YOU GET THIS TIRE FREE! GOODfYEAR THE ONLY MAKER ~POLYGLAS0 BRANO TIRES Ask about our easy pay plan • Free Mounting Yau save *4PB! Nylon co..i tire for penela, :>ick-up., vans and campers. "RIB Hl ·MILER"TIR ES 95 WA s•z5oo Hurry-Sale Priced only through Wedne!fday Night! NEW "S itfi " ...... R ire •~ BATTERY rfTS MANY l"()l'UL,U: CAlt$ • •. htcl la!aft 'M-'14: ci.-0111 'il·'M I. tfl. 327 ""'409; ford "S&·'lo't [tM:IPI :7W ""I· 7" ""f· •!d.) Metcv,., 'S6·"M Ill tld.; ...... !lloc U-16 ... l lHI """' .•• $15~~-" ~ ... , Price Break Special SPAULDING GOLF BALLS 3 lo• s1 aa Liquid Center "GO-FLITE" Ll..,it Ml <ti i. • cu•'•""' •I mi. ,.-k,, (11<1lflllftl ..... dltUM• ••d ., ..... ocv. l•tll"t '•"'" <•••• ll•l•h. '!n1111 A!lll~ R<l'lt1ll . E.111ncl1 It•" M&I~, to•r1 !Iii! 511l1dofl, lM•~ ,_l•l Polltncl, tO<I•• ,,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ • . ,.., ...... .. 1·1 • ~ ..... ~ ... ... ~f POPULATION EXPLOSION HAS RfArnfD A CRITICAL STAGE"! 11!Eff'.s N9 ROOM AT 71f f!li?./ 11 I • Jim ll••wt,..1. Founte\n \lt llf'I' DOublt• • ~1..,t t,...,,. 1t>d S"_.. Mi iiott. E•t•r><•• • I("~ O•tf>Ooll •" dl(ont 011ho(ld, E•lt(I" • (11•1\. lo.tr• l(tl!~ 0 •1hood, Edl111<1 tf~I. (dllCl'I Mlllt•, l'~!llft \'•llf~ J<I~~~;, (Of"otll Of'I M1r ""''* • • • • Oontltt • ..., ~r1111. Le•u•, ' '•• • lt•m" •"II l-lollmM, ~ • ,. v-;:~~.. ff 11\t V~•r -11.0Hl!I, ' • t \ll n(ll I YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. INC. COSTA MESA LAGUNA BEACH 1596 NEWPORT BLVD . • Phone 548-9383 482 OCEAN AYE . • Phon• 494 ·6666 ALSO THEODORE ROBINS FORD-2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ft • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .~ r -+ -.. . . ' . _ ... ,.. -YACHTS ON DRESS PARADE -Power yachts of i he Shark Jsland Yacht Club lead gala Opening l)ay parade past the Balboa P eninsul<i as part of th e .. ' ~ I • • I ~ ,1 • .. • celebration of season opening ceremonies held by six Ne\vport Area yacht cl ubs. f.1on<1.ir. May 25, 1970 Ya~ht Clubs Open Gala Cere1nonies Held Around Harbor Vilan Couch's I.-36 sloop Jezebel was the overall winner Saturday in Balboa Yach Club's annual y a c h l in- spection, 11. featurr of the club's 46th Opening Day Ceremonies. Si~ y&cht clubs held Opt>n· ing Day rites Salurday with club office.rs presiding over traditional f I a g · raising ceremonies and inlroduction or flag off icers, st a ff com- n1odores and officers from visiting yacht clubs from the Southern California Yachting Association. Highlight of the day's events was a colorful parade of yachts sponsored by the Shark lsli.lnd Yacht Club. the area·s only all·po\verboat club . Pike presidf'd and introduced club offirf'rs and guests. Special trophies ror past racl.'s were presented by Anthon v D'Arcy, trophy chairman, an~! Robert llubbs ract conunillcc chalrn1a11 . raising rites at its cl ubhouse on Bayshore Drive, and Bah ta l Corinthian Yacht Club con-1 dueled its festivities at tcrn-1 porary club headquarters at I the former Villa Marina Jteslauranl . Com1nodore Don Franklin presided over the opening day fu nctions at BYC against a gala background of "dressed ships" 34. the club dock. Other inspection trophy v.·i n· ners at BYC were· OCEAN RACING -Jezebel, Vilan Couch. PHRF s kip Sumner. I PO\\'ER BOAT -Skol. Vice Cornn1odore Ed Steen. i\10RF' -Twinkle. Frank • \Vh ite. : CRU ISING AUXILIARY - Jade Ladv , Jnhn Dub:i . 1 1 ONE oE:srGN l\EEL BOAT -.Jubilee . 'l'on1 l\olerr is. ONE D ES I G N CEN· TEllBOAD -Beaucoup, Jim Nugenl. DAILY PILOT ~ SAFECO INSURANCE e BUSINESS e HOME e AUTO e BOAT e LIFE Bob Paley and Associates INSURANCE Phone 642-6500 474 E. 17th St. COSTA ME SA 21> Voyagers Yacht Club led off the day ·s activities with a breakfast at the club's head- quarters on Via Lido with of- fictrs of the U.S. Naval Reserve as special guests and acting as color guard. South Shore Sailing Club held ccre1nonies at the club headquarters on Co a s t llighway: Lido Isle Yacht Cl ub welcomed guests at its Lido Island clubhouse ; Shark Island Yarh! Club held flap: SABOT -Sea Runner. John r- Carl Granath. 9.. Th DAILY PILOT J\tusic for the program \\•as I •Y e VY C Commodore Daniel provided by the Marine Corp~ Just for 'Peanuts' Band from El Toro. Kohl11i£111 > '· Hurricane Race Taken By Ste,varl Wins Race ~nnelfJ DOUBLE WINNER -St aff Comn1odore Vitan Couch of Balboa 'i'acht Club receives trophy for bes\ n1c11nta 1ned yi:lch l in the I3YC nee! plu s a smooch from Betty South. one of the club's "Balettes'' wl1o helped \vith judging at club in - spection. Co1nmodore Don F ranklin, left. look on en viously. Seal Bcac·h Boat Pilot Badlv J-lurl Freestyle S a,ils Away; Witli 20-fcit1io11i Race Freestyle. a new Ericson-3~ rt>SuJl, c·o.skipperetl by Sainl Cice ro CLASS A -11 J Nr w:; Boy : S,\,\I Dli::t:O (Al'\ -Flat-and Bod Lippold of Balboa ~2 ) Prelude .. Jun Linderman, botlon1 boa1 p1lo1 Ho\1,1 rd <ind Ne\\'POft Harbor yacht HYC : (31 Encore , Dick Blat-1 Srnith of Seal Beath \\,1, erir-clubs. took advant;igc nf 1he 1crma11. BY('. ic ally injured Sund:iy when hi s light airs off Nc\.l.·port Be:il'h CLASS B -Ill Atari, John l <rafl fl ipped duruig lhc 1'lx1h Sunday and sailed away with Cazier. BY<.:: (2 ~ Firebra nd, annual lnlalldia Hotel Hcgaua Yacht Club's Hunt•n•ton 20-•t I l)o overall honors i.1 B;ilhoa e._:eorgl' \\'r.sl. NHYC : t3)1 ., :' e ee. n Ayres. J r . NH't'C , 1n \\i1 ss1on Bay. fath om r:icc. the third feature CLASS C -l l) Pleiadcs, Srn!lh. 36. ;ind ro-pilot ~I. of the 66 Series. R:indy Smy!h. HHYC : !21 Dalf' 1\100<1,\. 3t nt \Vh1llier, first !o f1n1sll and tile Clns..~ Sandcrli'r1g. l\1rk& Poole.BYC I 11f'rr 1h1rd in lhr Cr:11'kcrbos A 111nner 1\as J ack Ba1H1e·<; S: BCYf . !:H lmpertuous,I <·1r1~~ r:u·l' 011 Ill!' I 2 :1.1nilf' f'ic11.o;Bov from BVC_ Fin:d Ch:irlcs e._;J:isgo11·. BYC ---1 1)\11 1 t(H1r,,c 11he11. ,K'e<1rd1 ng .-___ . ___ ..,....,_.._._.;,. _____ ..,....,_.._.;;;;;~ I•• obsC'rvl•rs. tll('}' rnlt'rl'd ;1 lr 111rr1 Loo quickly. Thi' !;uJI. Or:111g<1lll:111g. ~pu11 n11t nf ct1nt1·nl, lh f'n h11 a , rn:-;s \Wt'll , 11 :1-. c:ita p11il t"I 0111 r•I tllr 11 <1 tt'r :1 nrt l:inil1·d 1111- 'ldl' dn11 n . !Jllil'r' rJ ri·r·, ;o.lop. 111'd ;111rt 11-.111•d lh1· two 1111·n lrrun 1111• 11 ;it1·1 50°/o DISCOUNT ·1~ d u~• buq9y bod•e• 'l" o~ ••I• lcd•v All 1tvlei. oil mt t •! !Id~~ ~~lo,, All .,.i .. Jlticed· 1qb7 bLgq~. ,+•e1 t .. edy, 1q;o b"9Qv, •Hee+ '""'dv, GI St<ll.tto p~•h ~~d ~<<•u o""'· ASTRO AUTO CENTER J01 E FIRST -SA NTA ANA -l"ho11r : 541-2942 OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY Sn111h, \\'ho .~111i1 l'l'd ~t'\ l'fl' 1 hf'ad 1111ur11·~. \1a~ 1.1k t•11 1oli~~;2~~~~2;~~;2~2:~~2'::::::::2'~~;2~ :'llerl'Y Hosp1t<1I. ,\l<'lo<l\l rt>-1 ___ _ 1·ei\l'.'d m1n1w 1111 unt'~ .ind 11a!> "''" hy hchcopicc"' '"'""' ~ DELTA SUPER QUALITY /losp1ta1 in La .Jolla ~-, In the only other aceutrnl inl \:~· Tires Cost Less the Ain cnean Powrrboa! Ass0- c1auon sanctioned evcnl, Rud Co,..plete Li~• of 1\lurphy of Whttlicr received a F.b er9l~11 Belled Ti••• A••>i•bl ~ minor shoulder injury when rrkes Start at $21.95 pl111 F.l .T. his runabout overhirnrt!. F1be r91.,. Wide 0 ... 1. -Supe r P•em·~m -R~d,~I -Sporh -s.~d Bu99y - Who C e res? No other ntw5paper in the world carts about your comm11n1ty li~e your co1nmun1ty daily newsp~per d~s. It 's tht DAILY PILOT. & •II Sittl Trut ~ Tire• BERG'S DELTA TIRES 141 E. 17th St .• Costa Mesa. 645-2010 B1~kAm1ric••d !Opposite lobs lit loy ) M•1let C~••9• 2001 WlST1 7th, $ANT.A ANA -541 ·,904 tiene Kohlman of Sequoia Roger Stev1arl's Chicken Yacht Cluh topped 29 com- Pluck~r fron1 Sa,1 Diego Yacht petitors Sunday lo lake the Club was the winner Sunday Californ.ia charnpionship in the in Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club's OK Dinghy Class at Alamitos annual Hurricane G u I c h U<iy Yacht Club . Regatta for the Snipe Class. 1'he best 5 out of 6 regatta The fleet was divided into was n1arked by light winds two classes v>'ith Charles !tan-both days. Final results: cock's Blueberry winning in j I) Gene Kohlman, Seq . YC~ the Class B division. 12f Hick Grajirena, ABYC : 13) ~1ary Griffith, LAYC; i4 ~ This year's regatta was Tom ~1cLaughlin. MBYC: (SJ someY.'hat or a m1snorner as Cary Carlin, Coral Reef. Fla. the strong \1•esterlies which YC. gave the area the "hurricane ::==========~! gulch'' tag fa ile d 10- materializt>. f'inal Results CLASS A -(I I Chicken Plucker, Roger SI t> wart . SOYC; (21 Easy Rider. Jeff Lenhart, 1\ffiYC: 131 J\.1ag1- cian, Dave Ullman, BYC: \4) Rampage, Danny Goodwin . J\1BY C: cfil Cambria. Bob Nash, ABYC. CLASS B -(l) Blueberry Chuck Haocock, CBYC: (2) Hu sh, Hugh Milligan. BCYC. --~ Make it a family affair! SEE THE -, C~fVROLET ·-._,- SHOW AT $-HARBOR CENTER* NOW Thru FRIDAY, MAY 29th The••• 1nl•<e1I •"d 1•cr!em•"t lot e•••v m•mb•r of lh• f•tnd~ •!th• 1910 Che•v SI.ow. pl•vrng now lh1ou9h Fri- d&y . M dv 29_ s.~ th ~ •bao•b•n<l Mente C ••lo cu!•w•y ••· hibi!. •n e•~lu<i\'t qlimp•• •i th o "•n1id1 1lo•y" .,f Mon!• C••I<> q.,.1 Iv •nd perform•nc o. Te•! your dr i••• .~;II, o~ • ••"•Iv of .,h;!i;h , •nd q ~t '" !ho ru nnin9 lo""'" • ... 0,,. dodul Jl '"• of ?00 9•11 0"' el 9dL 8""9 !ho whal e fom dy ond b~ pr ep••ed I" h••• fun :::REE 200 GALLONS OF GAS 5 LUC KY WINNERS (l ice nsed driv•rs only) NAMl ••••••••• , , •••••••••••••••••••• , , , •••• , , ••••••• ,,. AODAESS ••• ,.,, ••• ,,.,.,., ••••.•••••• ,,., •• , ••• ,, •••• , , l"HONl .1 •••..•••.•••••••• , .••.•••.•• ,,,, ,, •• , ••••• , •••• OlPOSIT AT SHOW-Oii.AWiNG Fill., MAY 19 2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA AUTO CaNT•" Major surgery or just an aspirin? There 's no guesswork at Penneys Auto Diagnostic Center. Either there is or there isn't something wrong with your car ... and we'll find out scientifically! "' ····· ... , <·"' u I•., .............. In le ss than one hour, we put your car through a series ot sci- entific tests (212 of them, to be ell:act) that pinpoint any existing problems-and warn of potential on es. Steering. Engine. Brakes. T1a nsmission. 'Electri cal and cooling and fue l l!lnd exhaust system s. EJ1pert l!lna lysis of everything from headl ighls lo 1ailpipe. You watch the results come ou1 on an elec tronic typewriter. A skilled diagnostician goes over the report with you . rr you wish, he'll give you an eslimal& of eny necessary repairs, You 'll be able to lake care of small problems now, before they d<1· \/elop inlo big problems cosling big money. And, if you wish, Penneys wil l make the repairs-quickly, 1c- curalely. economically. Repairs th.a t could prevent a needless highway breakdown. If you prefer, you can take the report anywhere you li~e. Th e cost? Only 9.88 Pretty reasonable for 1 doctor, these days, ' I 1 I I Penneys Auto Diagnostic Center The Scientific Troubleahooters LoJooOc;• '"' '"·'"a , ...... v. ' , •1(.~ ~.,,,-r;;•o~ .,,..., ~.c;v..rl •• ~ "-•:• 0'"~' ''< \'' -" .. .. ... . . . .. ... ,.. .. ..... ,,,,, .... ... ' ... , C stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor ~d~~7 youve never heard it so good • •• • MONDAY .... 21 ~ . !ll.'l:511J!-.r& .. .., r!t'-? ft) i ~ 4, wltich 4e1l1 with ~ prilOll I/Ml ....... 1111 .ctioM of · ti.. Slate CDMIJllll:ioft, is ••millld. ~};:• 11111 "'-(C) (60) .lerry DunphJ, om ....,_.._..., <ti <Jo1 • C.. '" 1., TM? (t) (lO) Wink Nartlnd1l1 hocl.L Panelists arw Slo Clllitm, &torte Gobel •nd MOfey Amst«d1111. 0 CHAR~ON HESTON! * "DIAMOND HEAD"-Clr 0 !b: O'Olc:k lllwW. (Cl "Dil- lllClnd thM" (dflma) '62--0arlton Heston, fr1nai Nuytn, Yvette Mi· m19llr, Geort• Ch1klrb. Jim• Dir. 11n. Jh1 M«! d 1 Ytll Htwtllln tst1h slrong!y opposes hit 5illt(~ de.lire 1o l!ltriy an isltnd boy. 0 Dit• V.11 O,U (30) 181'111 fli11~ (t) (JD) ID .stw TrH ft) (60) @Cl) UC E-1"1 Nws (C) {lO) flll Wlilt'1 MN! (C) (30) .. ... .... (C) (30) llfTY BfJdtn llost1. GUiits .btt1• M110n. Slt!Nlil Powtll 111d .lot flyn11 ccimpelt 1pillll: M11J TJlll' Moo1t, Gtorp C.rli1 111d llll'J Moor*. ID r. r• 1111 Trwtll (C) (30) Cl Wll1ll ,,_ (C) (60) CEh.._. (JO) 1:05 El!),..... TN ,.._ (2~) ""• t111 m ..,., ...., .., llDl (ii Cinillurnttt llUdl 11 LOCJ'a rood fritad--until thef c.o$pel1 i1 t belutf COlll1st fOJ MCftlllltL D z.111 Cnir 1lilW'I (30) "Wlr1.· llo,d Brid1ts 1uests. 0 @CI! G) o\IC W.-, Mo.it : (C) Wftlt Dndly ..... (lltlspllftll) '67-Suunn• L1i1h, franll flnlay, Guy Ooltmtn, CathwiM f1n11. An Entlish PGJJ tinpr ps to an i~ated 1own for 1 1.t 1nd bt· to!MI iiwolved Jn 1 mrslery ait1- ttrnin1 killw !left. m a...w Jte11. si.. tt> (90) t0 ammJ W~r Many! (C) (60) Becilelors. sinll• cir!&, lln·wtd COU· ple5 livi111 '°"''* ind h1ppil1 m11ried hutb•llds .,,.. ms will toin ultbritla, Bin lixby, Dl•n• 81-er, Chel-Bf'DWft 11M1 Pt!« Kistner ill 1n..n111 thil quatiorl. {[I (] Slllw • M1wldl Cana (C) (60) (E) Elhlln • Mll•i (C) (30) Ft111cy Meeti11g Y 011 He1·e Evening of One-acts Irvine Theater in Debut With Impressive Program By TOM TITUS Of TM Dlli1 'II" Sl1H A number of community I.heater groups have been born over the past several seasons in Orange County, some of which grew and prospered, some of which faltered and "AN lfVl!MUtO 01' OMlf·ACT l'L.1'1'1" Prnent..i bv ,,,. lrvlnt Community TPll•ltr. dlr-.;le<I by R. E11tmtn Oow •ncl Tom ThrN ll1<>ld • ....,All 1nd Hth!· 1"9 b'I' l(tllfl'I Prlftl;t, H•lorrn..i F•lllt'I •nd S•ru•a..v. MIV " ..... JO II me Coriw.t oel M•r Hlvh ~cllool llttlt lhff!t•, <:er....., Otl Mor, "OM TIU ! HAll.Mll'Ul.MlfSS 01' TO&ACCO'' Iv•~ lv1r>0vkn Nvu•nln llkft8rd °""' "HOW TALL 15 TO$CANINlt" Vinni• , . S/\t ron Tnrt•ooo!ll J°""nv . Jt rrY l.tltna "AlllA OA CAl'O'" Pltrral IHchtrd Dew Col um bin• , , . . .• . . Conni• luc-tr Colnurnus .. ...... . Cothu•nYi CatYOOn ...... Tom Tnr11<19<1ld Tnvrl•• .•.•. . • Juov Mtvtr disbanded. 1'he woods, as they say, have been full or thein. None. however, has arrived so impressively on the sc:ene as did the Irvine Community Theater over the weekend. Offering a widely varied and splendidly staged evening of of Tobacco" in which he com· from Judy Mayer in their mands the stage for a half scene, which Is quite 'the bt:l- hour as a doddering Russian ter or the two preeenticl professor ostensibly lecturing Sporting the comedy masks on the aforesaid subject, but are Dow (again) and Connit instead pouring forth his inner Zucker, who tend to overplay agonies to his audience. their role!! to near farcical This is a masterwork. an proportions, broedly under· outstanding piece of acting Oil scoring everr line and gesture. the part of the well-trained All combined, "Tobacco,'' Dow, who sustains not only "Toscanini" and "Aria da the Russian accent but the Capo'' offer a well balanced speech pattern of ~ elderly, theatrical potpourri designed tobacco-chewing character. to acquaint the playgoer with Intricately he b u i Ids his a rtpresentalion of stage diatribe to the breaking point. styles and techniques. then slips docilely back to Two more performances of fo rm and sh uffle s , theeveningofone-actswillbe pathetically, off lhe stage. given, Friday and Saturday Completing the evening is in the little thtater of Corona a staging of Edna St. Vincent del Mar High School. Mi!Jay ·s "Aria da Capo," one•;::::=========• of the more popular on~acts l. in festival competition. Tt too is impressive, though Jacking the dramatic bite o( its two pretlecessors. fl)ArutU (JO} l:SO~it~1."1p+. * s.p.n;., (CJ Tim Adams finds hi mself in the center of a triangle in this scene from the m T..tr. .. In Estrtllts (3{1) I t:OO IJ ~ (j) M•Jll•nr •.F.D. (C) Rancho Community Players' comedy "Love in E¥1;'lal." opening Thursday. EE,. ... iii tat ... rw1 <ti 1601 !~~~!' c~:1 ~.{~ ~ i;e~: _B_ri~g~h_te_m_·n~g:_l_h_e~p~i_ct_u_r_e_a_r_e_L_in_d_a_R~y~a_n_1_1_e_rt_l_a_nd_J_ud~y:_D_e_t1_e_n_r_e_id_e_r_. ___ _ IS (j) tlS ..... (C) (30) one-acl plays -including the Irvine entry in the Riverside Tom Threadgold, Mlo also directs, is excellent in the guise of one of the two characters playing tragedy, and he receives fine support festival "How Tait is ~wn :we•:•.,.• T')S('anini?" which captured ~ ...,.. every prize possible -this embryo organization exhibitsi!llil:lmitilll:ilibdl j .... _ PETER O'TOOU "BEST ACTOR OF !ME TEAR!" --· ----·- ... t t t l • l l ' l • • • . • . • •' ·' ·: l • l ::SO D KUC N~ (C} (60) OtJI to be • Judo apert. 0 ._ Al ... Shew IC) ('90J As· 0 ID CI! m lllC MMGIJ Mll'lil: troo1ut Col. Don fislfY, Jayne (C) '"I'll Tile SWIOt!!" (comed~) M11dow!, VidOf Buono, arid tM '65-: 8ob Hope, Tllb:lay Wrld, comedy team fl Cliir and Mc· f1.1nhie A¥11ofi .. .llrtmY Slate. A M1hon run. I w1dowtr t1U$ h11 le-ge dlUQhter lo Sweden to bru• up her ro-0 n. '-'-(C) (JO) .lm m1J1C1 witfl 1 jolil• )'IMllll IMn. Mcl<rell hoU June LOIS!l•rt. P1t1 Bunr1m Rot11 Ba1r.tt 111nt 0 f..allM Fill'I (C) (60) ~· ' · f'errr LM Show.~ Jin 1ult11i.st OJ Mr F...,.. Mmilit (C) (JO) '1oot1" Thielem1ns 1ut'I~. mi (]) hi!TJ ...... (60) ED llKk '-"" (C) (60) RtPOrt' @ (I) H..ct.,.arlll"9J (C) (30) on the politiul, ICOl!Omic 1nd JO· c11I developm111ts !n Kenya 1rtd l 1nz1ni1 since their irwlepel'ldtoct. fD OR ti.,.. (C) (30) "Soiree!" Student t1lent performs !Of 1 slU· den! audience 11 LQY1)11 University. to1 .\n1eles.. ~ [))TIM Mlhtln (30) &I Neticilr9 l4 (C) (60) m Klllllt a..t hport (C) ClO) m Di .. 11 ..., {30) m w.,Mc cw• m clO> a,;) N1taclu (60) t :JO IJ ,S ([) Dofil O.r IC) (JO) (R) Ooris 1ilKl1 lleratlf 6odri111 punch· inr bags ind eatinf kelp .51l1d wheft W's riven thti auirnment ol pttin1 the pub!isllln1 rirhts lo 1 he1lth addict's ~ 0 "-(t) (30) BU!tr Ward, Q) "--~ ~ l lll JDfln!l. J:• I) CIS £'1'11M( ..... ft) (30) W1tte1 Cl'Olllil.1. IE ........ _..., {30) ' 0 ..... ., ""'' (<) (30) f """ tJ Qjj ril .... - -(C) m I l l ' -. (MJ) (R)8artMr1 feldoit •nd mn "' lltf ...,, , Rivm pat m 1ttt "-Chc:l (C) (Jo) ·• · 0 m .._ ctl {60) !ft Li l Mondl1 ... (C) {2 hr) 0 I s,, (C) (60) '1ht Ghost and Mr. Chick""." Do nl Knoth. Joan Slaley. I W l11acy (30) "'Bunini.~ Ro· '"'" Catholicism b comb inld .,..11hl 1rt1~t Giovanni lorlf\Zo Btrnini's1 1en1u1 to c1e11e tn Hllh1tk 1t1nd·I m f"'lriq l111t (CJ (60) "fdUCAlion I/\ lht Sou1h." tt)Rlllll (30) ••d tor Rome. CE> r•ci ..... .\IJtfltino (2 Mf) OJ ({I Trvtli _. CM.!mMel {C) lt.30 Q (j}) CIJ (lJ NI" ( C ) ( 3 0) m IMa.1'1 W•ld CC) (30) I ~wom1n·1 . Ub~ratlon." Marl ene 1 S1nd1u 11'1191'¥-s ll'ltmbtu ol EI.iJ s;.pllM...tl MQ (55) lf'OUPI 'llPftM!ltinr a wide r1n11 (E Tlllt Clrl (C) (lO) ot P ll lo tlll!lif!t lht icleolo1ies. proffll!U Ind ob1.::ttv. of molt ':JO 0 ~ (j) ,.,... (t) f6Cl'l (R) 111111111 tctmsts.. "Strytef." lh1 forl!llf Dod11 City IEl ... (30) 11\trshtl 1eturnt an. 15 )'Mn: Ill tlfllOt'I •int ...,...ra 111in1111:11DIJIB (])lllNWll [C) his ~. MOfPn WOOd'lnrd -m -1uesls.. Andy Devil'lt mallet 1 D -l!!l u:.> ..._ ('C) t ameo 1ppe1111'Q. 0 0... ..., ..,_ om•,"""" ......... " o imrn a""" <t1 H {C) (30) (R) "Maid in t.onnecfi· cut." Durint his wih's Y•ctlion, .lohn Monroe i1 lefl 'll'ilh 1 m11d •ho t11rs lllOdein 1ppl11nus, Outt· n11 Sml!.h 1u1sts. 0 @ (3) aJ It T1M1 1 T11itl' (CJ (liO) (Ill .. floweq From o\lv:•nder "I o\I MYndr he-tpi SIA courier lo111e J1mes on 1 mission •hife purwed e n.n t: -vw r~ .,.. I~ (drama) '62-Ril Y1Uont. M1ur-St1ptlllon. m Morit: "CMn1 C1t1" (dr1m1l '57-G&n• Bury, .4nrie Dickinson. Q) HI $1icl, Sht 1;.rid [Cj ED W"1cl ,,.," (C) {R) by armed enemy l ftfl!S. Sl!nt1 11:151)1!(])Ci11•• $tw111tt1n (C) Ber1e1 t nd N11el P1lr1d 1ue1I. "Sw•nitl'S' f'1 r•d11oe." ON~lion $hie: (C) "CIJ '-'i l1:3011~00 Mtn &1itfi11 (C) H11191" (c:omll.I)') '61--Glen~ Ford.I Mymhl Umeli;i. A N1vy t Gmbtt 0 @ @ ffi .lotl111!f CarMll {CJ pholoe111l'h1 le1'" 1n Jtp1n 1,h up Delli Atew 11111 She!le'I Bermt n. 1tmfll)flty l1~onf qu1rter1 in 1 0 Mont: "WickM • 711'1 C.•• 1e1ih1 house. I (d11m.1) '57-Arlene Dahl, Ptoit m Trutli • Coituq-ctt fC) 130) ~~. Htrbtrt M1'1htn. m l"lnJ •-(60') I O CD Diet CMCI !CJ Dtan Jone1 I lUtstJ. m rrwc• Qlf (30) "!NI! ll0tst m Mwie: "11111'1)' .. Apln• Birds." Julit Cllild 1'tmor1slr1tu (CO!l'l9dy) ·~3-.111.n. WilJOll, Rob· one al t111 dusk FnillC.h 1111fhods ert Cvm111ln1L 1or sel'l'inl' "f\llb. 111111 he11, 111r· tr11l1e. quill, dcM 11111 900dcoct. 1:00 II Ntwlt: "OftrcM ~._.... .. (Id· YHrluu) ·~1-Joh• [ricJOn, Lola Albri1hL 00,.._IC) m-"' , m,._., 1301 f 7:55 a::i c..n.. • _.... ! ~ l I 1:00 o m ~" tcJ cllO) (II) o.. 111 lll)'t llllttl II G...,,. ()rm. p/lby's t1t11tr, 1 dMrf, u w.,. pre!• •111' •n old ntdnnakw. TUESDAY • DAYTIME MOVIES ~ LJO Q ...... , ...... (dBl!ll) '5l-r Robert Ttyl«. A1i1 Gtritlltf, All· e 1~ QvlM. I~ t:•ll "ft bell Hit ht" ( .. S I) 'li--Oliwia dt Hrtitlml. Jdi11 ltllld. t:lO........ Milllm" (llfwlltwt) ~ 'Ji-)DH Apr, ROM11111ie low. OJ o\diMt n-tre: "Sin Frt ricia SWJ"' 1•111111 ·sz--.. Meer-. ,_ 0. Cll'lo. l:JO II tis 1 n, Wit! ""'4 (C) 2:JO 1111..,.f Cilfe .. ntl hJ (C) m {C) "Wildcttt tn lht lttchH (dr•"\•) '62 -.\lb•rto Sordi, Rl!1 Cini. 1 :•8"R~ Ill tilt llwlir" (lllU• llcll) 't0--llin1 Cfolby, Mtf)' M•· tin, ·-,_.. (<-) '60--Y ul Bfyltntr, M ltzl G IJ'llOI'. 2:tm 0 1c1 'VJ Fl1IM ftil" (dr•m•l ·~ Mc:Oowlll, Ritt John. -':00 II""-,_.,. _, 111r. ..,... illorrot) '(l-5plftc« Trtcy, l1111 Tum., lnrrld 8trp.IA. l1n Hurilft. I e JOB PRINTING ' e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPER~ 9!e1;ty Printin9 tncf O•p•nci1bl1 S•,..ic• f.,. ..,. thtn • quarter of • c•nfury. Guitarists To P erforn1 At Fullerton Two Smash Musicltls Will Keep Grey Bus)' a sure-footedness rarely evi- dent among new groups still battling the pangs of labor. Moreover, at least in the ex- ceUent "Toscanini" segment, the Irvine theater is suc· ceeding with untapped resources. Ne.ither of the play's two cast members has trod the Jillie theater boards heretofore. yet each brought back an acting trophy from Riverside. LtZA MINNELLI WENDELL BURTON -~ fvlu sic department faculty a nd students will present a concert of guitar m us i c 1onight in the California State Cvl lcge, Fullerton Jl e t: 1 t 3 l liall. The free concert, which will begin at 11:30 p.m., is open 1& the public. fOtJr b:~roque duos for guitars will be µerfonned by faculty Cornell E. lmry and Christopher Gaynor as lhe opening selec- ILons. A lhird faculty memher. Andrew F'. Oharlton. wl!l (ollow \\'ith ''Sonata in A rninor" by Loeillet on the a11o recorder and the second half of the program v.•i\1 commPnce 11•ith "Concerto in A n1ajor" by V11•:.ild1 pcrfnrmr•d by s1udenls Kathi(• I-' r e n t· Ii • guitar, Hulli K~1y, \'i<ilin. 1Javt1J Rurh. viola. <ind John llosn:.i, (·ello. Also planned for th<' pro- grnrn are guitar solos written 1hroughout the centunes and performed by lmry a n d tiaynor and three haroque pieces played by the CSCF' guitar Ensemble. Opera l\1ovic l!OLl~V\\1000 t t;Pl 1 Stacy Keach and \':incssa Redgra\'e w l 1 1 ca..~tar 1n ''Beatrice :ind Ren('chl'k," a dram<itizcd \rrsinn {I( !he Hector Berlio7, npcr;i • By JACK GAVER NE\V YO RK IU PI i -,JOI'! Crey will be "living off his fat " this sumrner. That's career, nol physit·al. rat. The all·round star has Lhe silhouene of a yardstick viewed edgtv.•ise. (";rcy ls one of the few headliners fortunate enough to have had two back-to-back Broadway successes, t he musicals "Cabaret" a n d "George :f.1!" lie will draw on them for his summer's work. "f didn't finish the national lour or 'George r-.·I!' until last Noven1ber." the pixie-like d<in-, cer-singer-actor said in talking about his plans. "ll was a little late to get anything new for this Bro;1dway season. al1hough I did have a number of scripts offered as .~oon as I was free. ''None of them appe;iled ln me. Some of these shows sincl'. have been produced. I didn ·t 1n1ss a thing. Besides. 1 need- ed a rest. anri I had a number or guest star appearances scheduled for tclevlsiott shows. "Now that they are out of the way, I'm concentrating on my summer plans for 'Cabaret' and 'George M ~" Grey again will perform in his original roles in the two shows for five wt'eks in sum- n1er theater~ in th(' r-.1idwesL Hr :ilso will direct \he pro- du("t1ons. v.•hich means he is i;ou1g 10 be m1gh1y hu.~y with • • . ' ····· • ••••••••••••• •••••• May 29-30 • 9p.m.-1a.m. STARRtNG uonel Ha1DDl1 ! woody ·Herman vauuhn Monroe s BuddY Rich E~~~:c08g~ Sarah Vaughan Special daytime entertainment • ... l··- It'• another Disneyland extra et regular prices Open 9 AM -1 AM both days ·---- casting and other production deta ils fron1 OO\V on. "Cabaret" will make the rounds of the rich John Kenley circui t in Ohio -June 9 in Wa rren. June 6 in Columbus and June 2.l in Dayton a week in each city. ,,.,.. v ~~.~} T~hnicclor ~ Jot.11 WayN • , • 111 hi• Oscar Wl1111htt rarfonJtaKe "TRUE GRIT" Al.SO .... • ..... l'rllm_. - ' llQlll llil ) swiru . llDll ~ 11111 .- Grey follow s this with a week·s en g a gem en t in "Cabaret'' in Indianapolis, beginning July 13. And , as is quite clear when the show is presented, small wonder. Novices they may be , but Jerry Leland and Sharon Threadgold perform I i k e l~~~~~~~~~~~~ seasoned veterans in this most ); difficult and physically taxing work -a sort of "Who 's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" in a cold water flat. The pace is excruciating, and only when the play's progress slows a nd the dialogue flows in normal tones is !here any indication that lhe playtrs <ire Jacking i'11 experie nce. I "After that I 'll put togeUter 'George t\1 ! ', which will play the week of August 10 at the St. Lou.is Mun icip al Opera." the actor said. "There won ·t be any time for a rest anywhere along the line. Arte r St. Louis. I'll have to decide what to Jo next What. I'd really like lo do is to go lo Engl and and play some .Shakespeare v.·ith one of the f<1n1ou.~ companies there. LAST 2 DAYS NOW -ALL THE susrENSl .. n:CITEMENT IS IN ENG-LISH E:<CLUStVE "FOUR STARS* * * * HtGHEST RA!tNG ..• A GRATtFYtMG ACHtEVEM ENT." -ll'a~ H•lt, N,Y. O•ily Niws ''EPtC 91ffiE OF THE SUES." -Vinc ent Canby. N.Y. Times "I suppose some will think It funny -a SQllg-and-dance m<1n thinking about 11laying Shakespeare. \\'ell, l wouldn 't be tht' first by any means. And 1nost don't know that l v.·as playing Shakespearean roles when I was a kid with the Cleveland Playhouse." • • • Lel<1nd and Mi ss Threaclgold 1>0rlray a pair of unernployed l actors, each salving his or her ov.•n ego, primarily at thel expense of tilt• o 1 h c r · s .1 Alternately lh<'Y ;ire ad-1 \'ersaries and lovers, shihlng -and stripping -l'molional gears with Ilic speed and flair of th()S(' well practiced in U1e game of one-upmanship. This is imperative to theirl'-~-i§§§§~§====~ll psychological well being. forJr suc:h verbal fireworks keeps the actor's mind honed to a fine edge. Yet sometimes such sparring gets out o! hand, and Leland and M is s Threadgold skillfully depict the consequences when this Kenneth Nelson, who was so good in the original cast of "The Boys in the Band" has bern signed for the role of Saklni , the interpreter. in the musical versK>n of "The Tcahou~e of the A u g u st ,\1uon .'' Producer I! er man Levin puts the show. In be rrillf'd ··Lovelv Ladif's. Kind r.rntlrmen." ·into re.hrarsa! her(' 1n .Ju ly It \1'ill play Phil,1delph ia first. then have .in eight-week engagement in Los Angeles as part of !he t1v1c Lig ht Opera subscription occurs. A large share of credit for the sucrcss of "Toscanini'' must be given 1o director Richard J)O\\', under whose ef- ficient lu!('lage there is not a dull nioment on stage. Dow moves his ca.~t 1hrough its pace~ with v.·hiplash precision, capitalizing on 1h(' n1any op-* • • portunities [or physical effect. Tim \Voo:I. current and 11110-Dow 's diverse tater;!~ arc time world figurf' skating 111ore amply un veiled 1n the Open 6:45 7'0t I . l1lkl lall»OI ltmlllAft Now tliru Tuesday lf\UE GRIT JOHN WAYNE ,iiliiiii<, :TECHNl~OLOR i!IG'!'r.~ RICHARD BURTON GENEYIEVE BUJOLD champ, ha~ lurr.cd pro by opening se~ment of the even· Porl7ft0Uf'llP~~~ I ~:;!~~s'' 11 ~1.:t ra_:_:~~-'"-'_·,_·. _ 1 _'_' __ ~~-~_il_ted_•_ ... o_c_~-~-~:_·_~_._~_00_ru_01t_~_~·-'~-I/ PbiJ~ fie HAL wALUS PllOOOCTION U'l1111t'ef tf;, 11/ou.sarz~ Ders Stam Wed. May 27 1!1511 l!l .. Rlllt!R-••• ,. l!l• St•rts Wed. Moy 27 ~ v """""""'A ~PU-o-•IOO'-t Pict...-e !je •.-! .... "t".o!·-lf·~-·~CJI> MON. THA.U SAT. "ANNE" S)l-:iwn •I 7 t"d ,:)0 Conli nout Swnd•1 From 2 • . .ii P•ogram Roted (GP) ttl"'I EXCLUStVE SHOWING TIFITJI . ~ 673:1210 For. lriform1lton Phdn• 2905 E<nt Coo" Hwy. 673·6260 Corona del Mar ALSO PLAYING MOST IXrLOSIYI ,,. STORY o• THIS CINTUIT ...... tftttkMll'I "TOPAr' : I \ • ' ' DAANCll! CDl.NTV'• All NEW COM,lETE AMUSEMENT CENTER I tlowr A11 •m11 .. rn111I complell wh•r• you c111 Ul<e you• plcl< ol lhl top cun111• 1Hr1c •lonL ConvtnM11lly loc•l•d 111 tilt ht1rt ol Or111p Countw Oopo•lt• lh• A11tel'• Sl11:11um. NOW OPEN EVERY DAY LAST WEEKS! • POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY • Mill!l Ins beea left oat ol"Tbe Adnnluren" ·-l'CIO.H_ .IOlllPll E.LEVINE ~ Tim LS'WllGUIEITFILMOF THE ADVENTURERS 8-;I GR ....... -iK: MJllE!fn.ffRS-IJr IWl)l) IUB«i ,_...., CHAILES AZNAVOI e AUN IA.DEL e CANDICE IEIGEtt THOMMT IEIGREN e DELIA IOCCARDO e EIHESt IOIGNIHE e IOSSAHO 111.t.ZZI e OLIVIA deHAVILUND l(IUM FEHMIU e ANNA MOFFO e LEIGH TATLOlt0 TOUNli • Starts Wednesday, May 27 • ''An important movie. You will laugh until you cry!" -Cosmopolitan Spend d marve6 """1ing 'Mth eight ci the boy-;, lv1art Crowley's ··11-11:~ l'lil Tl-II' .~[) .. " is not d rrusioil "****HIGHEST RATING! A thriller of human interest, humor and suspense galore!" -Wrinrla Hale, N .Y. Daily NewJ "BLOCK-BUSTING ... A SURE-FIRE HIT!" IUllT l.lWC.lSTlR -Dorrilhy Mrinners, L.A. Hera/d.f11aminer TKE #1 NOVEL OF THE YEAR-NOW A MOTION PICTURE! AIRPORT ~-·· BURT LANCASTER • DEAN MARTIN JEAN SEBERG JACQUELINE BISSET GEORGE KENNEDY HELEN HAYES YAN HEFLIN MAUREEN STAPLETON BARRY NELSON LLOYD NOLAN ~--·~'" l"llll!11tllQ01llr lilmDlrooi.l('O(l.•Lvmctlflrr "!00\JCll"' At.fRED NEWMAN • ART HUR HAIL£Y •G(OflGE.SEA TON • ROSS HUN I ER " 1-'UVfJ:SN. ric:ruat 0 n""'1cmor • ~ 1111• fOllD.Ml" r-1 """ ........... . r.-=~~~-~=== ~-""""""°"" I _,_..._ .. <1Uo,...,00D1<;e1,111cow 1 .@ _ ........ .., •.•. "''•""C-0..'- THB YDR'S MOST AWAITED FILM * STARTS THURSDAY, MAY 28 * "G" Rated -It's for Everybody ! fASHION ISlAND * NEWPORT CENTER • • •••• ... ~. • BEST The DAI LY PILOT aHt•t 1ome of th, btll ft•ll1111, by tclu•I turot y of ft•dt•t, t Ytil•bl1 in •ny "tw1ptptr ;~ lht 11 t t:on. ltJOl\d.lJ, M.v 25, 1970 DAILY PILOT 27 'Baby' Big BomhonBroaclway By Wl.LLlAJ\I GLOVER NE\\' YORK (APl -Ethnic comedy takes an in terracial t"·ist, sugarcoating liumbug 1,1•1th pla!Jtudes, in · · ·r h e Engagement Baby," TI1ursday night's arrival al lhe Helen Hayes Theater. Barry Nelson, a Broadw ay slal"•art 11t arniable mirth, deserves a n1edal for enduring one of the season's sloppiest, nios t dubious roles. and giving it enough slrt'ngth to kef'p the whole yock-yock, yu k-yu k cha rade afloat Gi\'t> an assist for decent effort to Clifton Davis. In the story by Stanley Shapiro, a Hollywood scripter who won an Oscar for "Pillow Tal k" and here making his f'irsl stuU i1l slagt! writing. Ne!;,ion t'nacts a middl e-aged Jewish executive suddenly confronted with Davis, the offspring or his undergraduate liaison with a beautiful black gir t. For quite a while, Shapiro dodgrs around his theme of potential satire with dlscurslve asides about maril.31 fr igidity , pot-smoking, and the clicl1e momma who hasn'l forgiven son Nelson for the blonde (.ien- POSITIVELY ENOS ... . .. . . . . ................ . WEDNESDAY • C4.0U ~WY. n l .. C••'""~ ~lVO. o •l•l'Ua'T ... , ... ··~ (l/t.0 BOb "THE -& YEAR'S Gird BEST o,-COMEDY!" Ted -... -. ~,~ 10th and Final Week 2nd Top Feature HELO OVER I B1rry N•wman In '&--I , ... N .. OW1Cl4 Al .... ootJCTlOH ii-on f Ofl COl.UWlll ~ iltU.lA$( @ao Premier• Orange County Engagement Starts Thursday, May 28 ·llCliS llllfl[R __ _ AIRPORT I BURT LANCASTER· DW llRTIM ~ · JUN SEBERG ·JACQUELINE BISSET }, I ~~ l'!Cllm. • l!OlllUJlt<O • pllioaioj • 1C9 Ml• i ~ '"t-":':'!"@!) \ l\ lEN LEIGH LESLIE no";\]{[) OLIV1\1lc!IAVJJ,LAND ~ &1.ll!ic,I: K/l['ll:IJIOi~l NCIUI'" ·\~~II 0! I, •j]i1; .•,:;;,~;,J'. fllflim'i;:j (!,:,,;;~\If~ 11:·~':"'...:.. r. r(~N~1it!l)'tOIC~lil nn.tn'l 0 ...,,, ~~-= STARTS WEDNESDAY, MAY 27 BARBRA STRIISllND WALTER MATIHAU , ' r I ""'!!,~~~!JON wm.SMITlf EJ1Q~~ ----... " -·-··--·'•U!ll ·••~tlll *"COi.CM' -MIOllllll)olOll.--..VOOQ•!-·-w.,,llQil-lf•.,._.,llMUI~~ ----.. :"'"""' __ ...,_., __ _, __ Co-H1t "KILL Thi:..11·1 ALL AND COM E BAC K ALONE" • .,. '~···~· ... , ...... l :to . 11 :4J 1 1LL TKl!M ALL" , ... _ •! 11:• .................... •• 1.:t •• 11:1>11 '·"'· tilt he ultimately 1,1·ed. Just aboLrt. every worn gag warmed 1nuC'h of the audience to hilarity, even unto a line about how the youUi "isn't black, nlore \\'h;1t intrno1· decorators call hi c k o r v bronze." Other 1terns <ire fa-r cruder. Lul'king \Vithin tht> 5'>p0roric wit, of cou rse, the re even· tually unfo lds a smug morality about hypocrisy, the punish· ment Esl.abli.shmcnt society rnelcs out to mavericks, and I he b3dgered s i r e ' s ap- prer1at1011 of his ji\ 111g boy's real "orth. Constance Towl'rs serves a Nel:-on·s statuesque !opou.~e: Henderson Forsythe is !he ultra-realist corporate <·hirf who provides the essenllal villuiny. Nine other playrr~ corne and go briefly 111 evidence of the author's in- lt'edtli11g A·O·Kaye e x per i enc e 1vlth stagl' /I.rte Jol111 ~o n (right) asks th e father of th e bride (guest star Danny Kaye) ror l'COoon1ies. th e h<ind ol Ruth 13uzzi in 1narriage as she keeps pron1ise not to listen. It's The directing by t;cn~ all p:ir1 nl the Z[l niness on flO\l'a n and Martin's Laugh-In tonight al 8 on NBC, F'rankel seen1s n1ostly de~1g11· Channel ~. eil to keep his forces fron1 -------------------------------- J:C\Ung trapped amid the syn- copated revolvin g slide ~<'ls by B.obin \V agncr. "'The Engagement Baby'' classi fie s in tl1at in1errnedi;1 lf' echelon of facile amusement bc!wcen the disrnissible and the !olt'rable. 'S o11g of Democracy' at OCC !'RESENTED IN STEREO,HOHIC SOUND An epic drama of adventure and exploration! Howard ll anson's ''Song of !) e 111 o c ra cy ' ' an (! solo p erformanC'C S by key members nf !he Orange Cu<1~t College Syn1h[)()ny Orchestra \\'Ill be featurl'cl June 7 <ts the orchestra joins hands with the Community Chorale fo r .'.\r, ~I i',. -. ,,1 ,\" \, 1 I"" I' I ,, .,1 .. I'•· ·Ii ~ 1 ""' its Jasl concert of the 1969-iO season. ll.lusie director J ose ph Pcarhnan wilt tuke the baton fnr the 8 p.m. concert and C'horal dirtctor Les Van Dvke 1,1·ill be at the head of ·his singers. Concert master Adrianne Geiger, violin, and Hannah Skupcn, viola, will pcrforrn ll.1 oz a r t 's Sy 111 p ho n i e Konzcrlanle. Carita Conratl, the orchest ra's first horn. 11·ill be the soloist in Hosetti's I-lorn Cont'crto. Othc·r \\"ork s on the program include lhl' Hoc-Down fron1 Aaron Copland's Jtodeo suite, l\ielntyrc's Pa n I at on i c Serenade for string orchestra and Prelude and Liebestocl from nichard \V a g n e r 's Tristan and Isolde. Preceding the program wilt be the prcsentatilln of the DAILY PILOT 'S "Euterpe'' trophy to i\1rs. Geiger. She wa~ reccntl.v nan1ed as the woman v•ho has contributed most 111 Oran~(· Coast music during thl' 1%9-70 season. Peter O'Toole Petula Clark Co11cert at CSF T11esday Goodbye, Mr. Chips" s;~·Mi~h;ei Red 1r1,e l '.an~'"""'' r;;i •od M~lr<~Y>I•...-~~ 2nd "G" Roted feature "THE IMPOSSIBLE YEARS " ~-· Ml IROCOtOR f,IGM llugh ll.1. Ellison \.\'ill conduct the College Chorus o[ California State College, Fullerton Tuesd:.iy in its an- nu;il spring coll<'ert. The free concert is open to the public and begins at 12 noon in the Lill!e Tht'aler or the 1'.·'usic-.Spt•cch-Dr;1ma liudding Numbering n1orr than M \'01ccs, the t'hoir dra\\!> its 1Tic111bcrshi p fron1 the physical l'duc;ition. English. Lhe;itcr. art, socio logy and n1 11thl'n1aties drpa rlmen l~ :1s Newspapers are the primary advertising medium 1949 fM ill1ons of Dollars} 1969 TELEVISION " .-" .-" .-" .-" .-" .-" ,,'" MAGAZINES ,, .... ~:---~~ ..... --......... RADIO ··;,,_.~ •• OUTDOOR .............................................................................. \Veil as the niusic department. J>arlicipants range fro m freshmen through graduate students . 'Jl ci"hts' 1970 0 JIOLLY\\'000 ( UPll England 's Tin1othy Dalton and Anna Calder-1'.larshall w i 11 s\<1r 111 the roles o( 1-\cathclJff :ind C;i!hrrinr 1n American 1111crnal1orHrl's 197fl version ol ··11·111hrring Heights'' Total advertising fig ures are in for 1969 and, as the chart above shows, newspapers continue to be the nation's number one sal esman . The only other medium showing any dramatic growth in the chart is television and -did you notice -the increase in newspaper advertising investments since TV came on the scene is more than the cur. rent total television advertising volume. Shouldn't you "hire" the nation's most power· fo l salesman 7 You can start todoy by colli ng 6'42-'1321, tho -DAILY PILOT DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS '«llJCAU. T\115,.. UN~ By Chester Gould °™'5 UNIFOOV.I LL RE0.JCE m.JCE INJURJE'S 90 !iilc,_:.:....,~ By Tom K. Ryan ~----.:-- DW 'IOU COME OOT WEST JUSTlO GET A HUS~AN P, AUNT HILPEc;.;R[7? OF CCIJRSE NOT, PEARIEI THERE ARE LO'B OF OTHER ATTRACTIONS OUT HERE FOR A LAW !lESl!IES MfN ! 'I j~ ,, ' ' ., THERE MUST BE! MUn AND JEFF . "' . ' " "'' ..... w, ...... ~ .. .. ............... ,_ ......... . JUDGE PARKER H .6.VI J.16 FIN.6.LLV FOUNP ABSEV'S TENANl; S.6."-PRIVE ~ SUBDUES HIM _BUT NOT W1TH- THERE'S OIJE TI-llN6 -'&OUT VOil, l=-RIEND.- l'M LE.6.R:t.llNG A WMOLE NEW \.'OCASULARY! OUT T.t.IC1'JG (0 t.IS!PEli1:-'&LE VE~.t.L -'ISUSE ! PLAIN JANE ·r DAIL v cRosswoRD ... by , • POWER 1 ACROSS 1 G •f t (If----- • To ~ma1t q Si"grr~ 14 Go"e b,. 15 Player HI r hildrer1's game l!. Mohtll•l,.>~ 17 Metallic P!f''H'rli ]q Wr 1\rr". 20 . ! ·~· ,\,,1 1 I'" 7: H ~ I ! I '/ Z2 Kr r! .1 "~r1.i11t~ .. 1\ ]\Mtt•o" ?4 I~ rr 2o c ... ~"Irr· r Mr" Ai>h', 29 U~.I\'. 11•1qhbg-: .A ht•. 31 Fr atu1~ of ~Omf' chee se ~ 32 Metal bt~m; 2 words )) Bt presen t lb Insect )B 1nstrumen!; ln form~I , )~Conta iners j 41Madra I IHjUid \Ollnrl : 43 Ar.1b1 an ' 9armP11: 44 Stu~rl 11·,•··, 1 4& Texas l•tr I , l " "' ' ,, " .. !l -" " 1l . ·-- I" ,. --I . 47 Cain and Abt I 49 Tool 50 Fac•a! tratu1 r 51 l nn~el''prr 52 "Rob Roy" author 54 lmolemrnt 5B Cribbage 1)111 bO R•Y1rr d s~~'"" l:il V .:~I iy ,,z (,,,,., n .tr Ir! ! !ir ~ Ii~ ~rq.1"" 11,,n, ~IP'>-<t'l<I' ...... ,.rt, ht.Cri:,,., c ''"'"""' . f Jl•O"S h7 C.oo~r genu .. b8 'Nherr Toronto is: Abbi, t,q Bar 70 In dire want JI Recent: ' Prefix DOWN 1 More courageous 2 Crn111ry plaut 3 Studlrd h~rd 4 c~r1i.lQI.' 5 Ml'lal • , ' ,, ... " ~ " ' . JO -a: .. ,. .. ., •• ' " " . .. Salurday's Pu7ile Solv r d· ' • ' ' • • . • ' ' ' ' " ' ' • " ' " " ' ' ' • • ' ' ' ' ' ' • • ' • '" " . ' ' • ~ ... 0 .. [ .. (l Cl 0 ~ " ' ' ' ' ' "" " ' • ' " 1' { ' I l • ' ' . • . • Nll;' " ' " ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' " ' ' ' . ' ' ' " ' ' • l l' •I • • ' " ' • ' • ' • ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' . " • ' ' ' . ' • ' ' ' . ' ' • ' " " ' ' ' . ' ' b ~'.•11r'«"I r' • ;, 1 Ill'• (' ] f •It "I ' 'I' "'°'II "' S rlrllo or ,11011,1 9 Prr -~-lg, Spidt r or fly 11 E nt1arKr cour.l 12 Macaw 13 E11tlosurr 18 Kind of rrta ller 24 Ev•rl1stlng 25 Shoulder ornamt nt 27 Gol lt1\"eJ rt ady lo '"'" 28 Confession of fa i!h JO A lre~h JJ Put to sh~",' 34 Banned on moral ground • ' . )' . ~' " " ,. '" • ,, 71 ··~ IO . . ' " ' ,·. J " ' :1 H ,,1,j" I '" I •I f JJ ,. .. '10' ~~ "1!,111;fl a11rt ·-·-·" ~5 Ot '"''0 \.Dior s/iJdr'> 48 Homr '"1uke bo~" 5J W1!h 1!0 wastrJ words 55 Mr . Wtllrs 56 Rrlalln9 to shel'µ 57 In a sfo¥t lllolnner 5q So1111d of su1pn~r bl Oi rfr r 62 Re verl!'ncr 63 US e11l 1'>:<>!1 "1~r1 liS M,•o's l\Jll!fO " " ,, .\ "~ " " J2 ~ J1 " .. ., .. "' ' ' ,, " " ,. ,, J " .. ' tt•·1" , 1zs 10 • By Al Smith By Frank Baginski PERKINS • ... ,. • I•• •-J (").J;v, J •J. ,. , .. o\O ' -- MISS PEACH AN -UH -E.¥ PTY 90X FO~ MY 61RTHC'AY :· STEVE ROPER -- PEANUTS liC:~:i -;-h:; ll\l\:.o 1ti.\:;: r ~ ... 'i1\e• ALE W,.\._.,1r-..:. 1.\li 1J' <0 THC Ai~~c THERE-IS NO MR. NOM.\~fM)' DAPS NA,ME IS NOVAKf/'.1.\ ,\tlt-E! H.5 F,\11\Ftt NIU-1,\'>l r~ 1:. .......... r,r-.,;;. .. . ,, 5 PE..l,KIN ' Of' N1'A~E5.K•r .\v.;A,f DOE.$\[~·'' ,·o.J T~o\l (.(~r ... r · , ~ ·' ,,._~ Ll'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS GORDO 111J1I$ 1(1,~wr, roi:.' 7/.ltcli'~ WE«E .s.~~li',l<I. ~rLL ICN MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ............. -.... YES, M.(. 6 RIM MIS. YOU'R:E THE MAN WHO HAS EVERYTl-41~G. By John Miles _,:111 ~ -··' ~ WHAT WE'VE GIVEN 'YOU 15 WHAT YOU DON'T HAV£ ••• By Mell -NA.MeLY, NOTHING-••. '"' J r ... / ""L .. ... .. -,_,,. By Saunden and Overgard By Charles M. Schulz ~ERE.'5 PUST ON MV rt..ANE ! 7/.lio"~lfU. l'Stlo.JC' ~1COL &fi.A.N6Lt! .:51,IDS NDWf 7"E'l'E: ME./<J !UH/RED T~., C.LsAlt UP -'Ol<liS LIKE \I 'TMAT1RE IN J.--..1 PltET·TY CRUMMY TASTE! l"f STlAHGl WOltlD ' i , . By Al Capp By Charles Barsotti l'JJ-/~E.! rrls evvo ro .. """" llo.i "TH/!!. .SIVIA.I Ae-A 11<J,f By Gus Arriola OID/'J1T RE.AL1:E. 6ACTERIA HAD PROBJ.£AIS1 TOO,DIO YA! By Ferd , Johnson BliSIDES, ALLTMEYDo 15 GIVli US BRAIN SURGEONS -----i A BAD NA o, \,;;i By Roger Bollen ~C.f?ITCJI ! ""~:.I 1'Cl:ITCH ! 'SC~rfCH/ 5C"1"CMi ~)) " MR, MUMI---=== DENNIS THE MENACE I i -f~ . ..pr-...., I S-'ZS ,. • • 'WE SURE WERE. LUCKY! WE GOT TO 1HE 1llJMP EAr<l.'{ !If~ EVERmlNS W>IS PIC1<£0 Mlt 1 • • Mo!Klay, May 25, 1970 DAILY PILO T HOUSES FOR S AL E HO USES FOR SALE HOUSES roR SALE General I OUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUS~ FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSE~_FOR SALE IOOOGeneral 1000 Qene r a l 1000 Gen1ra l 1000 General 1000 Gene ral 1000 Costa Mesa 1100 Dover Shorts 1227 Genera l 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;:;::~~:;:;;;;;;;~1;~==:;;;;;;;;;~1~~==~~==~-1000 LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS 320 LIDO NORD Great New Listing . cf, J. 3 ~ ,~141¥1~'.F MESA vERoE-*uN1ouE.scEN1c* ••-,,. COUNTRY CLUB OR. UnrlvalL~I V1t•w uf B11y & tn a j e Con1. lot , SparioU!'; 3 br, 2 1.llrur. \\'/pM\'111'Y. Spal'loUS, LIDO ISLE ha, Ca111 n11, furn1al din rm, near!)' 111.•w "Ohl \\'orld" \ lla111lso111P 5 Rf'llrn1 f11m1I) PRESTIGE WA TERFRQNT HOMES 1 lrplt·'s. By Ownr 5-11}-4'."171 , Contrrnpnrory w/ rotH'I ,t, hOllH' ou1 \11do• s1rN>t r.1 NEW LISTINGS BY OWNER4 BR-iltriurn. :, Br's r.~palltlahlc. I NOW Reduced to $175,000. Xlnt terms 6 Beauti_ful un1ls. 6 Car garages & utility ro_om, \1·1th 80 ft.-fronlJng on excellenl S\\1n1- n1mg beach. Units are 1JC\1'Jy furnished. BILL G RUNDY, R E ALTOR 833 Dover D r ., S uit1 3, Newpor t Beach 642-4620 ~!ri•t-1 101 [.fl!"!' h:u·k )'31'1.I CUSTOM 4 TO 7 BEDROOM HOMES HUGE: 5 B1.~!r111 1·ustu111, O\'· ""'' 5000 sq Cl, -i1, ba, hi-«'il· " 3;'50 fl f l hu Spal'1ous 1:11.•i, l !ilt•il ba"s. \\1lli 1••un for J.IOOI )llld dov FROM $1 35,000 TO $500,000 t'r -· si1 " anu Y mt\ lni,:s. ~ c:i r ~ar-$178,000 ,,.A v.·alk lo Ciiuntrv. Club, "'lOI , J-'an1, 1•l1·r. kit, lu~h 1·rpl, 11,, •. ll'•'ll I •ki• ''''"" hoo•·· i 1i111 .~ Car 1-:ar Vuocl pru-1.· '" " u ~ u ~ and !t·rrns. C:ill K<'n Brit. PRIME BUILDING LOTS tcnius I.: £nit.. Br-J.l1•1 11~·11·. 2 paOo.~. Bi•:iut lnllsrpo.'. Rin. or vacant land arl'a. Q\\.·fM'r F ROM 'JS~ TO $175 Niii rr'all,v i~.ini.v :111LI o""n 1111 fn)' boal . S.l2,!l:J0._54G-K37ti •.·••-n•g. l 111~han1 lur d1'!a1b . ., ,uvv ,uvv '" .,.. '' ~1ay Sunday, J(H9 Jav;1 P..t., 1 l\DH\\, \\,•i;::i Vrrllt> ;o.;orth. --~~-~c-- Bl L FLo,GARpUpoN;0ntYm,eRntECAaLITf ,OR ~lt•sa Ven!,·. Asking-S79,9:.0 $10.000 lr1an. ;issunuiblc at jin~:~ \~,r~~r111~~rn~~~~~~ ::~; 11·Jlh l!1 ~'" f111ancu1g. ;,~ .. ·;., Ll\ndscuprd patio · 5chools & shopping. G11'tn 833 Dov er Or,, Suite 3, N .B. 642--4620 CLF.\IElt· :; B<:'(h"0<1n1 \\'ith 11r11, nwrn ·r's full 11r1r-•' Bt•ll Ctlinrnu!)lty »/[l(ll)ls, PETE BARRETT Gene_,_•_I ____ _.:lc:OOO:.:: I Gen~:I 1000 Genera l 1000 General 1"'!~!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!""====~~==:=::"'!: 1•nlattNI "1!orrn" for 3 beds. ~l~ . ."i11\ ·'1·':".iflt! tc•nnis l'Ourls. tot Jots, etc. 1 tCIOO 1'11111'.'lh:d \!v1ni; riu.. shal! ;,~.' f FHA 3 RH. 2 RA . s:~.500 ::1!1-0i:JTG crpls, l'lli~il·nl kilch('n nr11! 1Tpt<. d1·p~ \\":1lk tu n!I "" !.~~I~;~, l ttEW,0 11.T I f.A.CH ,,,J $6000 CAN YOU AFFORD IT? $31,350 A KING & 9UEEN 1_....,64_2·_52_00 ..... ,._'·•_•_1 ABDICATE * ls !ht> pri<.'r AND !11(' V.A. THE THRONE! TAYLOR """""'"'" No ""'""' hecel L.argl' la111 ily hon1e \1'i!h up. ··~1·1! 111,v SfKHllSIJ •·ai;ttc r1r:1r !h(· ~t·a~" ... -aln10~1 nr11, WESTCLIFF 11 llh llS 4 !'jlaClOlJS b.•d. '-"' I IKI ., b h I 21 h 1 r ;:-.pnr • nn, .• a1 10111('. 11~"J\<i, , a l 1.~, f lllltl.I! Quu•l !01·. Pvol ~1z1• \an;L l'(.Hu11 kn· ivvul lr:i~1s hu~l' , . .:, -I'Ont T'\!'l.J·· I OO •I . L.'1.L nt•ll'ly p;11nlf'd, $:1~,j()(). •.•• { ;\I "1 .1 80 LINDA ISLE -------·----large C\JV!'!"Cd p.:11]11, Eao;.1' h\"lll~·I~. :-:.0.•(• "' Hl))lrCT! FOREST E . 111\Jk 10 L'll'n11•nl:i1)' ,t· ,lr It' a' 111 g slalt'. S19,!l00. 0 L S 0 N lli-Sch110ls. Offt'rl'd ;d S:'.7,7:,() :11.~-~i:lli 11 Ith no do11·n 1·r1 f1nancu1g ~~-~~=-c Sl'f)TLES:; Trihs~". :i BR. 21 ~ ava1 lahl!'. BA, all 1•1••r 1~>1 , ;q1pl. Inc. Rcaltvl'1; Spanish Villa $28,500 •)tleid\irbc'.J\caft~ 546-5990 ' HH', :1•, ·. 1'ia11 $2~,:)(J() IJwncr ."d:.'\--~037. ------HY 0\VNER , Tr:ins.frlT('d Ea~t s1d(' cul-de-~ur . 3 Br, l ''• 1\:1, $2;>,JOO. 6-lG-H29 M esa Verde lllO University Park 1237 I -·---------· TAKE OVER •.• Tnsuranre loan at nld inlrr- ••st rHlt· nu ll11s sp:<<". 4 BfL, 1 2'~ ba. hnn\r 111 .1 IX'<LUT Sl"llll\1:'. 41h Bil. 111.tk(·~ ;ti\ I ldt'al nflll"•' i)t' lll1h'.'.'\11ay d<'ll, l'ri!·1•d fvr 11t11t·k 1'al1•. $:'.1..',00, • Red Hill Rea lty l't1il'. Park C1•11h•r, Jr.·ulC Call Anytin1(' R.1.1-0820 '-Farr"" · ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BOULEVARD 546-8640 Open Evenln91 till 8:3() 3 Bedroom Horse Ranch $24,950 113 1,1( an iltrc in Costa l\lcsa. An Exco•p linnally nicl' 3 ht•d1'1HH1l, "/. hath ho111r 11·i'h fluot' In t't'il· Lu:<ury 1s11'1 i'll\'llp 11111 ~1uu· 11101~·.v c,111'1 lilly llll>l'•· 1h;or1 11/);11 I'> j•f10•1'1'd Ill tl11s I"\· 1·<'pl1oual 1•'\t'i'U!11l' (11\llH". Thn·•· ~1·and h••iln~un~. 111.1s. Irr has d1~·~s111:.: alMl\'•' find p1·1vatc sun li••<'k h:ih (>ll.1 Thr('f' bl1ths. 111).!li ('C1l1nL: l1\·int; ronn1 \\'Ith IJrcplru::i.'. Forn1al din111J::: roorn. Jlui.;r pool side fan11ly 1\)()111 1111h wet bar. Kftchc-1)(!11(', 01•t•1·. looking lovely heated IJO•il. Vi1•1v of h'«'s and h·11·;-N•d gan.Jeri fro1n all roon1s. Pu. tio and portiro .,..·11h bu1l1-in 17 ft. Bar-B-Q scrvn1g table a1'CI clc1:tric grill. Spat'r pro- hibits the 1nl'n11on of llt1' loving care extras addt•d at no consideration of cost. Qv. er 3000 rt•et of gracious !iv. lng-. s;i'i.000. T•'l'rns uf rourS<'. For appo1nl11u•n! h1 S('C', Ask fo1· KL'l1 l {f'!!S 962-2121 . spor11n' kin,::, and a sc·~1ralc fa znlly roon1 ror all the l1!- t1P ~ulJJects. Elegant break- 1:.i'>I an•a ,I:, kitchen (11·irh irnpo1·1t·d tile\ for prepara- 11un <Jf 1111•"1•11ly 1linn1•rs ... in :dl--0\'l:::R 3000 SQUARf: 6 Bdnn .. ;-, b;1. lge gan1C' rn1. + fam. nn. Facing: J:ii::oon . Cprn daily 1-~• Slii~J.300 "Our 25th Yea r " WESLEY N. proi.·. 2D X 2Q FA~!l L Y i B.00:0.1 L'i)n1plele 11·i1h 11"el I.Jar anr! bath. 3 spacious. (·:•r[ll'tl'd bt•U1oon1s and 2 n1ore b;_i1hs, BUJLT -JN k1l t"h<'n, FIHEPLACE and L'OVEltED PATIO. i"our rhoiC'f.' of V1\ Ol" l1-fA fill· flneing or t11kc subj('('! to existing FllA Joan at 51'.'if. annual r.itr! lil'avy 11·1tlll>d Sp1;1.n1sh mao.1- erpil'cr. 3 giant l>Cdrooms. hl'avy till'd b.aths, rorrnal rl1nini::. ('nlcrtain<'r'~ de11 . Dreani kitchen 11,ith lat<'sl bu1H-ins, unique f1t'f'ph11~ 11·11h a \\·all of slonr. j5Q ft. 101 of grt'en, lO\\'C'r1ng !l'ecs_ NcsllC'd un1ong o1hcr Span- ish hon1rs of n1uch hiKher valu!'. Fantastic low pril.'f' or S28.500. Nan1c your terrns! Call 110\1 ! Mom Doesn't Need .•. "THE EXTRA CAR" GREAT FAMILY •-=·~-~-~-"!~:':~~=~~'I I i11g n11·k tirt•pla1·r, built· -In k1t ch1•n, ull nr1v car- Irvine 1238 DICK BERG REAL TY Assumable Loan Just Listed Gttal family hon1e in rhoirr Ne\\·port HeaC'h area. :, Bl'd- r1ns, 31 ~ Balhs, \\"l'I har. 3<XXl sq ft of l1\'i11g l>pac•·. large lot. l lon1r 1«1n br pur- rhas<'d subject to :in rx1o;1. 1n,::-Jo1v 1nll'l'C'SI r1th•, l11~h halanc.·. 1n.,u1·1Hll"I' ll"t.'u1 Call for dct:1lls. Full 111'1L'<' s:1:1,!:r.o. ONLY $25,950 I Brdt'00111, .~ ha1l1 ho111r rm huge 1:<J1'nC'r 1<11. l'l'l!)lll f•)r bo11.1 <JI' trailer•. Gnrar.l· slr('S.Sf'rl for Sf'Ci!lll1 srory. Convenirntly l0t".11t'll 1o :<hop. ping. This JS a lot of hon1r for lhl' mnnry, Pleasr rail 0011• !his 011(' 11·i]\ sell lasr. Nichols Real Estate 546-9521 I -J. • -~'"'"' VIEW ,,r,rl POOL [11 !~110!,\ ['n1'1>111 d,I '.!:ir OPEN SAT. & S UN. 1 to S 1100 SEA LANE B(•dnJonis -.: h.11h:. J11rc1·rr nnrl 1•11•r 11.•11· FOJ: PL- TAIL:' -S.ll".-71 71 WATERFRONT 4 BR.+ SLIP Enjoy your bo:ll nt your door. fin<' swimming, Mindy beach. Lov1·ly homt' w/3 00.ths. 3 car ~fir, & lgr-. bay. sidC' p11tio. s~~.T:ol) ~ Coklwell, Banker ~ 833-0700 644-2430 DOLL HOUSE JN NE\VPORT BEAOI Charming li!UC' hon1r in gre11t localion on beautiful ln.'C- Jincd S11::nal Rd. lrteitl fOf' couple or 11mall family. Pro- fl.L'tion of planti::, shrubs & flo~n:. f1e:<ible terms, price-d ® $30,500. S.C&-5BSO (near clnerN lhaf!t) LLEGE REALTY l!"JCXI Adami 1ttlartlof,c.M --SMALL HOME In rll!ht nrP!I • wr1lk lo C'\'t>ry. 1hing' :.! UR, hl!-1n Birch lotrhen. lt-2 In!, n11)111 fur !lf'C'Oll(I un11 nr tro11r•r. ~.:i1~1 161h Sl Only SlQ,;.QO CALL TO SEP. S~i-7414 FAREL WALKER, R1alto r TAYLOR CO. Realtors NF:\\'PORT C~:.J\/TER WE SELL A HOME EVERY JI MINUTES Walker & Lee WALK To Schools WALK To The Market WALK To The Y .M .C.A. FEE'r ol gracious l1v1ng. tl!Ol'l!'~I prico· of S&t!l~.O IN- CLUDES TH£ LA ND & I P :!111 San .Jn1111uin Hills Hoa!! 20.13 \\'••l•f,·11 niany cuson1 (':<tras. fl1~ 644-4910 '"'- P1·ivatl' 1'11\l'I' lo shin1ml'rini::: ll&F' pool. ·Ov<'r~i1.rd livin>~ roo1'n, L'Olorful kilchcn. l;im- ily room, 4 bt'dl'OOITIS, ~ h.-ith1; PLUS srparatc p!a~ yard arf'.1 1or lots. ~c~i~~~~~;th'~'"/-,iiPftM1"''!!l'!!!•!lfiJRiii!.Pi,P,ijijj 1--M-o'-"'o~·-~-~'-~'-;~c:~:...:..~~N.:.'c..1 -645-0303 at Harbor Ccnl!'r 2Z!l9 \l:i rbor Dl\'rl., C.:O.f. OPEN SUN-1 to 5 1706 IRVINE AVE. or C11 \I 67'.\-8.'ij() & Co. SPANISH POOL HE,\LTOH N1•11·r<il"t Bench Offir!' IU2S Baysidl' Dn1·1· (;7;-,...4930 MOVE 9UICK! (}.111l'r )lu\·inl'.: 0 111 of S1:i11• ()n Junr 11th "\'reds A('l1on :\001v S;1:1 r i..,us Condo1111niu1n ;: [~·drf'lln1~. '..''~ ba!h<: Fa111JI~ 1•K>n1. EnvlflSo.-d yanl Co1·11t•r Lqt f:<'rluC'1'd lo S~"9.911! Heallors "Our 25th Yea r" 673-4400 DON'T MISS THIS POO L UNDER ROOF <'11str•m hu1I! ·1 lir. /ll>mr ~Ur· r"lln(l1ni: ;1 frN>·fn1·111 •'fl\ •'r- 1'•1 f"IOJ. All !'IJ<lms •>JX'll :ind 111·rrlnok !JO<Jl. din. rm , f:un- 11_\ 1 ni. 11 1,·,.1 bar. '\/ca1· pri· l'alr \Je~a \'t•rtll' Cn. Club. -, Bl'drn1 sl)l11 Jrvcl that b11(·ks 10 Hl!• rrres & f::N'rr1s of 1!11• ~\lt>sa Vet'rl!• Cul111try Club. 1~11-g!' fan1ily rn1, l\'l'I ba r, nr<'hl'rl l1rrplal'r l<• bl'11mrtl C'C'tl1ni;?:s. Prict'd \\'C'll within !hi• 'nuu•kct at $69,!,:iO. "lnucfYirbc'.Rcaftr 546°5990 BAYFRONT ~:1nrly h/>;irh, pr11"atr flo;1f. ;,:1 41> 1"1 '1 ol Bay fro111a ,:r 0\1 nrr 11·!11 finanl'<' to riu:1l1- fi1'1i hu.vl'r, :;,()(JO sq. rt. in this lovo•ly honit• in orH' nf Nr11ll0r1s' n1ost l'Xl.'lus11·1' ar,•as. Sl ~.'9.~100. Macnab-Irvine HEALTY C0.\1f'ANY (714) 642-8235 i:; i11 1h!• bae~c yard of 1h1s 4 Bedroo111. 3 Ra1h lr1-l('v1•I hom1• in .'.\JC';:a Verde. L:irgP ~'('po.r:11(' Farnily roorn, J.'or- n1H I DininJ.: Roo1n. Hreak- ras! :.rro :ind n1uch mu<'h n1,)1"('. Call N•Jll"' 150,750 ;,1ii.2:n:i "MESA VERDE SPECIAL" I Deluxe 4-Plex 1 $1900 DOWN I NEW LISTING r.Todern liv~ng ~t n10flc~~ eost.l IRVINE TERRACE ll You can !1vr in onr unit and 1,,.,.,,,,1"1' 11 ith a f•1m1 '"" ll"r r•an ):!!'! yOll H Joan OI ··' • . " "' S•l5 600 f'llA rrnns L'! the /111111ly 11·il\ t.ncl this 4 Tll!. tl'n~nts hr-Ip ~·nu ·huilcl an n1n1rnfffflr.n1 l!l \1 ~1 :\1 '.\!\1 p<;lalC', \\'llY \VAIT 1 :i Br. ho1111• 1u an 11!1•a! c..'Or· BUY l\'O\\'! lll'L" l()(•atlnn. Only :1 ,.:hnr1 $47 .SOO d1~HHIC'<' 10 b1·.4 sehuols, m;1rkels & i-hvp::: :11'C'1. s:1'.1.~,oo Newport •• f•irview ;~ 646-8811. I (anytime) Coldwell, Banker Clo~ by ~1.V. Coun!ry Cluh. I and pncrrl !o 11101·1• 1111meth- atrly_ Sr!lcr transferred ou!: nr .1r('a .. roretrl !•)sell. F!-\1\ I and t;r T1•r111s avail:ihle. ll uJ.'.t' 4 bC'dn.>0r11 ho1nc -im-~~~~~~~~~~~ lll:tf'llla!(' lh1'0ughou1. Gorg-1= OWNER 833-0700 644-2430 EASTSIOE C.M. .. uus c•ornrr lnc~!1on 11·11h lu~h la11d.~1·up111i; Pri('rd at OFF TO $l2.0fll\ -LET'S TRADE, W lk & L OREGON JUST a er ee ) u ,ge nt Need To So ll! fl('1 lo·vn1'<1lf'rl thl'U·PUI ;: IK)rn1, :! bath, rl1nc!Tc homl• 111111 1 l'\24' ('OVt•n•d p,1tm. Ohl 1:11r:1g1• eornc.•r lnl , roo1n low IKial "r t1•11ill'r st.,ragr, ()n!_r $2G.000. \\'\II '-I'll Fl!A V ,\, M . M. L a BORDE, Rltr. LISTED Rraltors .. Pri1 ·1' f(~IH"/•r! s~.1l~l. \II-'.".\ \'l:ROJ: 110111<' 1hal 2790 Jla rhor Blvd. a1 Ada1n~ • fifj'; in!<'IT'~t avail:tl>li•. ~h1111~ hko· 11 n1r>dr!1 ~ J'.1•!! 5 1~0-lfi.I 0[11'11 '111 9 Pl\-1 * \Viii !1•i,.;,• '111110!1 S2:.0 !Kl I I ;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1 inonrh. 1•111111 .. 1 Bath. tr1·lr1·rL 1!11.! 1 I "n ll11· hill i111h a V!E\\I S23,95Q * ·: nw1· ~11,. 1 .. ~troo1n ~ • (.'l1•c" 10 P.ac•k 811,v J1~· i;hnrp 8: ··l••an. Sl6.~l)O ~~1G-:l::1:i • SJ!.:i110. 10'" •h111·n. FHA-VA "1 "' 171 NO DOWN VETERANS t'our l1dn11.~. and ~·;1111. 1<111. II +111 BIN k1ll'ht•11. Dra["l!'rf. nr\\• r p!s lh111 oul, Spri11k- lrn, fronl and r <'."ll', Pric•'ll Sparkling' :t BNlrn1 horn<' • ''' i<l'll at VA apnr:i1.o;..-il flf S/¥..Of''l 546-231 J 646-717 1 10oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"";iii-i,;-~~iiii-i,, fn•shly painted insulc &.: out only $26.9;(), humrchate I' f'l11s nr1v c:irp('li1JJ.: • nit'1• 1,-,ROOM-TO-SPRE AD Pos~rssion. ll11:n.t1on Cal! ~IJ--.8421 616.Q:,:t, F:1·rs !"11S .. 177:1 Ba ck Bay V iew Home F11hulnu~ '.!!IO" \'1r11• nr pm- posrd UC! l'!"ll\11\J: C'uUfS\', fa1111Jy rm. l'nn1I' 1-'.astsilll' I OUT" M . M . LaBORDE, R ltr. · Nn Down 10 (;l's on th1!< :, --. • n1nun!a1n!< ,{· llu• Univcrs1!y. l>f'rlrnn111 BEAlTTY . 5 Vf'.11"!; I S.A. 1-lrighl!'; Usi• ~<OUl' li I. l..1111·0•0:1 rn1·•·d 4 & family \'flU111!. 1 ~ h\t}('k 111 r11:;1'kP!~ on 1lu~. J BP .. , $2~.~1(1 LJ'" S ........ nn 111 1-:'"lsth!uff. ;11 lovrtv "'.\l,·~.1 D1•J l\l:or·· I .vd. '.! r .• r cnr_ h tri~nari! . RF :'11! ·l :Z?'r' I '11'<' 1 1\•'I\' dr•'P p1lr l"al"· ·· ' ----- BU IL T ~ 546511110 ;1f'l~.-011nrr h.i~ 111·11· t•111il·1-MESA-VERDE- fnearcinema111tml 1===========1 111~ f:o1i'i;!:o'noi<: f1n•pl:1n• CU STOM LLEGE REALTY 3 BR 3 BATHS I 1111 ,0, :.! ~101'\ prw•·d 111 l .. •l'j!O' ~. l:o •1l1·111 ,\• l.11n1ly !'Ill 1500 Adams1tl1J1bo1,GM I • -• -. POOL ' ~.l .. :1 .rt ,,,,,, .. 1·1,,, ''"" ,, '""""' ======== vr Ew-LusK HOME Walker & Lee •11"1'', 111·11.·~1 ,\ i llo I !•11 111 In !1:-trl"'' ,.,.II 11111, l'1•1 f ~1 1• i.0•0 :-'11 .1 ... 1, .. 1, 1"0 1-VA 6~~ Percentage 1i .. 1-r11t1 .• t11 11H!n; 11r11 $38,950 l1r1·pl.w<', o·,,1·:., lnl \\llli 1h 1·11· ~11 nn lhr <ll'i·k .\ 1·~;1 1 ~--:1 h • ,r n1.11lw1lr<'d !:ind. ,\~,1n11;1.,11 ° C'p11• ;111<! ;-:l'"ll : 11 li<'h 111" ~.11ll~>H1<: 1.:u hv "'111111.i: f·ull pr·1,·0· s:::1.:oo I'.!•' r;1: ~. ~· 11111 1:.\ ~.Ir\ 1111 1~1·,1 1 .... s·i9.!lf•l. l~1·:1l lnr~ 27'.lO I larl>or Bll"d, a! ,\d:in1~ ~ ;,r .. 111:11 Uprn '111 q l'\t llu L~l,111d111:: B:11 ·k Bay luc;1. , 1~"1:-'(\ l:un rnl . frpl!·. hlrn~. l1>1n. (':di :rl!!-11:11 fnr all d•·· (lv••rlo•ol1 u1::: 11 kulru•y-~h:1p1"1! fl'lOI, n('1\· (':11"['1'1~ & •lrap·s ~ GOV'T REPO l.11 '~" !11 •d1r>o1n~ "'rci1.tl• f.1n11ly r"nn1. 11 nd !11111 11 • 1'>1)111. It's 1111· hl>sl fnr ,:,nl11' l!HllU'\' •. It's ~hnrp' C:dl END YOUR SEARCH HERE! Exclusive -jusl listed sharp :i Ddrn1. & 1ft•n or 1 1,;r1rn1. - Lr1rgr 1•nvrrr1! p:it1''-()\\':-;. ER \\'ILi. ~1-:IJ ... Fll,\. $21."~.n \r1''rr P.P:.dy -filfi-7171 Loehenmyer Rltr. Coldvvell,Banker l•C•o•]l .. f,•1&•39:!!!!!2'! ... E.-,~"·'·· ."' ........... 91 ~ $25,950 833-0700 644-2430 Owner desperate! I:-=====~ Alnrost nn 1tt>\\TI GT. fir NO DOWN PAYMENT F.11.A . l_,;1ri;t:' roonL~ throu~h-$23,SOO Full Price 11ut, l'!llt'Y h11ll, hng•• ?.'i font Roon1 for hn11J. lraik•r. rainp· ni11~1rr hl'tlnn. '.1l 1001 ('0\'. r r. Neal J R1•r!rn1s & dining rrrd 11ali(1. p;u k IU(r y:1rd. an•:i, l>o•11utifuJ bn('k y1tNI, .i 111,17~~ r1u!in. V•·ts -d<ni'! drl:iy. I TARBELL 29S5 Har bor Others_ IH1l'l)', toU: 4 HR. J B.\ + p11111ll'!" 1"(11)111. (nta1,inema Theaht) -NEW !VAN WE LCS'-~ "'"'" I ~·n1·111111 <1111 rn1. l11rn rn1 11" LLEGE REALTY ! '"''I li"r .C-11'1•!1·. L11.~urln•1.~ l500 Adams a1Harbol,CM. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;...;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;~;;;, / 1y 1·1•p1d. S111ll'rh l'lrll'. PrM11,,. .. .-------.... .-1 2 SEPARATE HOUSES in land ... rnpl'!I courtynrd. 1-0F-A-KINO !lo~· .r. \Vp rrl Rrnllor 1-1'.l<I Colonial 4 bdrn1, 011 dbl. lot , l.alaxy Dr. 646-15~. Open Nrw kitch .• n<'IV t.:lll"I', nr-11• O~ ONF.. I.OT. 2 Bcdroon):;; Daily. h<'llting, shuuer~. 2•, car rrH·h v.11h g11r:1_gt>s. haril-$1150 DOWN gar11g(' "'/drrss. roorns. W(lf>d floors, blhn<:, $28,:iixJ . . J1ho11·('r 1-Blk 1 beach Be 11·11h low 1nlC'f'C'St assumable i..8MtE' J bdnn, Bcnuhfol · • · 0 -I011n kitchen c:abineis \vilh tih'l'.I the first lo St'e this ne1v, Spnrious 5 Brr!1m, 2 ~rory, locRlrrl 1n cxerllenl area f(lr schools & shopping. Nc\\•ly recondi!ioll('d CI rcposscs-1 -..=o===~~~c==== sion \\'ith $1700 dov.'fl, an}·one NEWPORT HEIGHTS can buy, F'ull priet' $31,450, Arlornble 3 Br, 2 ba. Fpl. For deloil!I c:nll Jack llnm-J-"orn1ul din_ rm. Unusually monrl, ~~I0-1151. urtr. lndscpg, & patio. FHA ·VA Buy the sharpest 4- Bedroom, 2-Bath h o m e in Costa Mes11. Beauti- ful shag carpeting, big bedrooms, huge lot. Call now for showing. Only $15,500. W1'r1 R•ady -54'-2313. Only $31.000 • Xlnt tc<rrns! CAYWOOD REAL TY 6306 \\". Coast lhvy, NB • 548-1290 • Costa Mes a 1100 Tra nsferred Owner r-;, . .,,. \\'ps!rllff, qunlily J JlprJ. n11 . r1111 wnl! frplr 111 hue» Iii" rn1.. l~BQ in f:1n1ity l'lMlll\, Xln1 shag 1'!'111 1!. Loiul.~ of c]flSt'tS &_ storai:r. 21 ~ Car gar. Prestige ad. dreas. SJ!J,500. BOB OLSON REAL TOR l#-55'0 HOME ·I Erdrnl')n1. st•paralr d1n1n~. huge fa1111ly nn + 20:ic40 JIOvl . T•1 st't' rail Jean Smith, Realtor 400 E. 17th St .. Cl)S!a 646-3255 BY 011·NER • 3 Ur. 2 r.n. hug,· f•11nily r111, cx1rn h.:i:: •1t'il'1' 11·1 did i::nr. B11ck yard sprinklers. Existing ti', lnan. &e & 1n11kc u!frr. 5-Hi-IJ 1 ll! I -~-~~~~ BY Ow1wr: Tri-k·vcl '1 Br.- :~ H1\. Jri.: fain rn1. forn11<l din r111 . 2!i.~O SfJ. It. l::]('c ~pr111kl,·r~. l\lany (','<1ras. Xlnl 1"tu1d lil."1--Jil\S. ------BY ()\\"NEil-$29,!JOO. 3 Hr, 2 n:i. !lh! fr~'" new rrp1~. l1w1I yard. ;,< 1 •; ICMn. Cash 1n lo.HI. !iiJ--:.'1.1\'.l Newport Beach 1200 LEASE OPTION $295 PER MONTH Sh:irp, tnor!rrn "A" F"r:in1I'; 3 h•·dt•"111111", ~ h:ilh~. ~'l!l.E l'J.1\CI·:. 1,11111.111 klll·t1r11 . NO yard 1\'"t'k .Ju.~! 2 hlocks lo th" BEAf'!I. VA(' ANT, CLr·:.\:-.O, n•urly lo cn1v)'. Walker & Lee :ll~1:l \\'r~tclHf Dr. !iHi-771! 11rrn 'I ii 9:00 Piii ----c;nal W a te rfront DOCK FOR BOAT 5 Bed rooms, 2 B a th s Or 11~., a~ 2 .~. 3 BR, dupli"< lnr C:'~"t 1n1·1•-:rn1!'nl ,I;,-111- ""I!\•• j11 ~1•;1 :o;hlll'fl f'Olldi- 11•1!1. S71;11')!) Anx1nu.~. rnakt• ull1•r. VII.Li\ nY TIU·: SEA Your nwn Ir~. Hifltl sq. 11 2nd fir .. p1 11/nr·f':-1n v1c11. ~ r1 tr(im !i111· hrh, 4 g!', :• )\.1, Ir.:; k1lcl1r11 ,~· 111· 1111 1~1 fir. 2 !Ir. !'.· 11:1 Ill\'" p,111n In h11!ii !'•'Ill \1\1 ,~~ r r11lt•d :01·r • .\I 1. ., •11 (l\1 o'o I' I :nHd i•~;:-:''J'.I! l1•nn ~. lly -N EWPO RT DR E AM ;: Bl ~. i 1.,1 . r111~ . l!r:or•t'~ \\'alk lu ~111111 ··h1h or 111•11\•h. l'n,·o d t" .'('II :-11 S2:>:.~!{)(l. ('all llS f!!I' 1h•l:1d~. ,.CAL TO" C ORlllN-MARTINjl L=:==l1i · 1512==:.J:J P ARK LIDO 2 Br. 2 ba. Tuwnhou~ l\fust sell all nfrs considered 644J'>4R::I ./ BA YSllOltES -By Owner :t 13r{, 2 Rnths, dininj! nn, 2 p:.!10~. ('ornl'r lot. Gil&-5619 ------• BLUFFS Hrs! Corn. Vw. Joi ~ Br, 2 ha, 1 ll'v. Cust xtras. $2!1,!Kl(I. 64·1-126:-i -----STE AL ~·01t CA~ll! 2 BR, 2'·1 HA t:nn<lo. \\lcstcliff nr"ll ~lyrr~. 67 3--67:"1 N1wp~~~.00_ht_• __ 1_21_0 NJ.:;\\'PURT Mr.ht~. ramllllnJ: ranrh s!ylr 3 bctlrm, ~!1nkc n)llf, rrplc. $2 8,950. Kinga11rd R.E. J!.11 2-2222 flSS U:\TE 6',i-VA Joan, 2 Br. w/ inirst hou.!le. N!1V shag rrptg. frr~hly painter!, $28.0CO. By owfl<'r. 6<16-0347 ~ SECLUDED CUL-DE-SAC A l)('aut1ful ne1v ho1n(' In f':O..l'lllsll'P T11rllr Rock Hills tu .... 11ry honie L'Omn1unily, {;1,--.:.r privacy and ~eclus ion. (";111 lw• purchn5l'd for $3:1,~00 ll'i lh 10 per cent do1vn. Lan<l.~c11ping allo\\'· uncl' 1nclurll'd. \Vall to wall cu11x·1ini.: rlu"Oughout. Ther- 111at10r barbecue ~iddle 11.nd grill ttnd tiuill-in range. 111\'nnadur :o:e!f -cleaning u1·1•n Formica fared hard- 11nod c:ihint'1!;. Po1no11a l'f'r;1111ir• tile roun1ers and full splush. and n1any, niany otht'r quali!y f('atur. t•s Your O\\'n live-acl"t" tcn- ni~ ri nd S\\'in1 rtul>. /\ home for t•nnchni(•nt of your liv- 1ni.:. TELEPHONE, 833-110_2 1 Corona d e l Mar 12SO Stop The World Jump Off And Look At 2 !1•\ll~":; on 2 R-2 lnl~. !'"Ol "TH 11~· TllE Jiii.ii. \\l,\Y !:1i.: 1rrcs, l11'f'plat:l'S and t hn1·n1 s:~5.~oo r .111 No11· •••• 67~·S.l50 *TAYLOR O U PLEX-157,900 So of 1111 ,1 3 Bdr111., 2 Aa.1 f1·1 .t· ·: 111l nn .. 2 ha rear. l'rid•• .. r uw1wrshrp, ''Ou r 25th Y ear" W E SL EY N . TAYLOR CO. R ealtors Nl-:\VPOHT CF:NTER 2111 &in .Jo11•1u111 Hills Ro.ad 644--4910 PANORAMIC VIEW 2fl01 nay~1dc Dr. Beaut shake roof 1-sty. 3 Br. 4 ba. walt-rfront home, xlnt Sl''im· min~ beach. Newly re<lccor. $175.000 S!IOWN BY APPT. Bill Grundy, Realtor 833 Dover Dr .• N.8, 642-4620 CORONA HIGHLANDS 3 Bdrms., 1% baths. Large liv. rm. w/frplc. Pools!2e lot. Xlnt f\nanci11g. MORGAN REAL TY 31!1 E. Coast 1-lwy., Cdr..t j 67:1-li(';-12 67.""i-6<159 1 CAiXEo HIGHLANDS A1-rlt ACT. SPACIOUS J B!1. 2 B1\, lrg Jlv rn1. s!'p.1r11!0' din nn. i;:lnss 1'111'1 lan111, pool S7. 1111. ln11111u·. Ju &. Out $·1.-1,000. s1;,.;;,107 CAMEO SHORES. Bcaul. villa lype home, 2 BR. 2 BA. d<'n. newly cpt'd & decorated. E11pa..ltered gar. d('n11. Call owner: 675-56911 1-0'THE REAL ~ £;~'.f ATE.~S ' 1 N exclusive offl'T'ing. _ ---W 1 lls-McCa rdle, Rltrs. ?2"1"r ops. riv Cl'l"3..fllic H I p · h ' & A ESTATE SM.E. Cozy cot-Baycrest 1223 Lido Isle 11110 Nc'>l·port Bh·d C !'II hie In bflth. Rrcently rleror· a inc tn ssoc. l11gr . Flxrr upper -to he 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I 1351 ~is..n2!1 I:""' ··&H·..(irM rr t<'d .... Nl'1v cpts. Own!>r REALTORS * OCEANFRONT * 101; In "all i.~ .. c:onrhtion. ---------- .}' · ~ves. moving. Pricrd ar only J!X)(] F:. Coast H"')" 6i~H392 DUPLEX 8 1!.ck 811.y nr('a. good siierl BEST BUY DECORATOR'S S~l .:rifl. $29,SQQ 'F'l!!h, ~urf & ~win1 nt )1.>ur \oL 3 LHrge Bcdroomll. 2 In Baycrest. 4 IJOOronm, 2~ HOME SACRIFICE! r.~f:~~-L a Bo,',.~s.~' ,R, .• ,!~r,,",., Owner Abandoned door ! rJv.·~;.:1 fln11ncc. baths, hrdv.·ri fl oors, carP"Ht~ bath, scparatt-dining room. 8;:~1~f,ul~.do~~t ~.t!:i;m~ 5 n.-•dnw1n1~. nii·n,.r !r:\ns-_·· •_· __ _ ... " & ~avy ~hake rool. I-' A great f:in1Uy rm iv/fireplace r ... iiv·il ~-11,, n~svin:ihl•• lio.-1n. LIVE ON BROADWAY A ssume 5l/,.•/o loa n • George W illiamson nr VA 1rrrnll avail. Cnll nnr! rnrlrw nrea In kltcht>n. s~l 4J fl . 101. I I. "I I • I 'Annual '/.-rate lfl11n, I'll!!')' Rf.AL TOR 54~R·l21 Sourh Coa~t Rral Je•n Sm1'th, Realtor :S,,.500 s:.fl'Yl rl1>iin. AprA'flini;:., )Inn r t>nv.·1th 67J'lSO '"'·1564 Evo1 E•t"t•' re LIDO REALTY INC PERRON 642-1771 h:1n:lwood flnor~. cpl!;. 11n'1 hrrl1. •I h<"-drn1., hu~c f:inill.v ..., ~ -" . ----------·! rl!"ll"°!I Dbl. 1,·fll'llr,C'. fflir l~IOni. l>inir1~ rn1, hni• -A SSuME-6o/. LOAN--*-$35,950-0WN E R *-'Ill)•: 3337 Via 1.lclo 673-7300 ,~ " .-_ 17th S! , Costa Mc1111 Tllt~]J of thn! old lunii!t11"P9 ~l1rd Jnr. 1in1-.,f nllr.v 11t quall!y hul11-inll, n.11ural / IA)vt'ly ~RR. 2 11A, C.1111 , 1·m. M11• del Mar 64,3255 1 ~1 , •1,1-on or-BUSIEST m11 rkctplnf't' In J r.~ rp:!ll,1' nor lluil l•OC•I r'ral" '.'Jrnr 171h Sl1'f'1'! ;ind 11'(!1)1 ra., tll' ll. ·' •~ · + i;porklln1.: pool ~ ~!'pr :1 81\ fn1n rn1 .. 1 hu. rrpt .~ I TARBELL 2955 H b !awn Thi' DAlLY P II.01' petin1-: thr•1Ul:'h<l1Lt , 11<'\I"• Jy pnintrod 1nsid1'. dnu· bh~ gar:ig•". covered pa- tio. No du11·n to \'C'lS or minin1un1 do1vn l"llA. Se(' H, it"ll srll rast ! Costa Mesa Best Buy! 3 bedrooms. $20,500. \'"11 111u~t see I his to ~ li1•v" 11. Th\• full price is rr;illy nnl.v $20,500 f,.,. 11 :1 h1•drnnm home in Co~ta ,\lrsa. $600 will n1u\'•• y .. u in if you're a 1'•'1 ,.,. \<.1\1', lo1v down to a11yllody. J11 1rry -Open cvl'nin~s until B:JO. 1 I 3 Acre-Horses 4 bedrooms, 2 baths $26,000 011·nr"1' nff(•rini.: F'H,\ or VA ti•rin,, Tl11s hon1e i~ loi:alt·rl in a rral coun- t ry sf'!1lnt: in Costa V.lt•s.-i . ·I l:u·i:1· h1•rlrnorns, 2 l)11lhs. h1•autift1lly ta11d~l';1 pl•rl nntl it's zon- l'rl f,.r h•>rS•'~. f'ina ni:::ln~ fllTllllf!•·i..I 111 .~!Ill your h11rlt;e! Call no\v, You'll I<>\ i• Jt. EASTSIDE 4 bed· room $25,950 Locntr d in a very popu- lnr Eas tsidl' CostR Mesa nrt'il. This ln\'t•ly 4 be<l- rnnin hon11· is a wife's tl1·1i~ht. Great nrra for t•hildrl'n. Lot i~ 135 [e('t dL•rp. double car i.:arni;:e, 2 lnrr r lmths, r nnvcni· enr•• ki1clu•n. Financing R1"ad11hl<'. Closing collts onlv '" l'rts, l!m&ll d111i n tn a!l. (h1•ner anx-- ivtis. ,\!akl' offer. Wife Saver Pocket book builder ,\ 1•·r1 i111nln111m lnves1 - mrnl 0f :'111 111nv1• Yolt inlo thb •!1 .. 11111 t1u1r-1•. It h11.~ ~ ni•',. .-.11.1•\I hPdruon1.~. 1 111 li!tlh~. Tl''O Clll" g8· ra1.;r. l.'.ood Costa !\lrsa l n1·11l 1on, clo~c to sch1Jols. f'.a1•P )'Ollr mon· cy. 01\·npr 11.sklng $23,· 500 and i i '.~ ,1·orth every penny. No11•! Dial 546-8640 Exciting Tr~level Plus separate fami~ room Thi.~ i;; n hon1r fur lhC' 11rnud cxrcutivc \vho wnn1 -: his 11·ifP In Jipcnd hrr 1imr• in fl JuxuriouR ntn11•~1•l1Pre tn a prcs- 111~0· n1•ighuorhoo(I. !<'en- ttu·ino.: 4 kini;: sb:c bed- roo1n~. 2 1 ~ balhs, for· mnl dininc: room , three 11'\'•·ls of cnn1rortable livlnc-lnl11lln~ 2300 sq. ft. All this for s.36,500. Askin!'.! prict, only 2 yenr!l old. See It, you'll wanl it! -rarr"" · ORANCOI COUNTY'S LARGUT 2629 HARBOR BOULEVARD 546-8640 t!"l r.-•Jll1<!''' .lu.~I \\'Hl.;<h rri ... \1'1•stcl1H ~ll'lpping Crnh•r. a r Or i rr•lC'f'rlpl11y yd Nt·1vlypn1nl-1lrps, 27'.\:1 San Ju1111 t.n. IT'S Hriu·h hou~ !lm;-Jtig--Cla~sHii•t! !Cctlon. S ;i.v., lurnHur•· l<· n11SC1'\ln11('0u~ Plir"d '" qr·ll 111~1 ;1! S~1.fl.">() HORSE PROPERTY-•'ll . Own"r ;,..1n.2'11i1 C11JI :.1~1001 .=o=-==~ g-r•st .~rlrc1 1on tver! Ser rhe mOnl'y, hme & rrfort by I mlun111~ In !hfl Cl11ulrif'd M . M . La8orde, R llr. ''t Al' 3 Or 2 hn fl!lol :\1;1y 1n1 1 -J·11F; QlJiCKEft""YOU CALI., TIIE SUN NEVF:R SET., on DAJ I~\" I'll.OT Clas!illcd 11 h 0 pp In a: from Yo'Jr Op~~l l::~J· ~1·1111n 6-lli..(r,;i, E\'r~ &1ti-4~i!1 011nr Agt r.:11.76:\ll, G42.:iooo, 'nlE QUlCKER YOU s~~LL I DAILY_P_1_LOT __ 11_'A_N_T_A_o_s_• -'-'-'.'-~-"-""_w_! ______ :..._'c"" . .:c.'c"c'c''c... ______ _:•!!!!!!!!!!""""""""""""""""~ I . ' • ' ·I I ,. .. . • . . . 38 DA.I LY PILOT lr1onda1. Mi11 t~. l '"' Alfwwt._... m.y plau their H1 lty telephone Phones Are Open 8:00 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. 9 to Noon S•turd•y -Closed Sund•y DIAL DIRECT ••• 642 -5678 WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220 Huntington Beach: 540·1220 San Clemente: ... -.. L•gufte tse•ch: 49'+-9466 492-4420 Hours-Regulations-Deadlines HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS Housu Unfurnished Apts. Furnished AptL Furni1Md Houses Furnl1hed Huntington 8e•ch 1400 1---------- Gan•r•I 2000 Newport Beech 3"200 Costa Meta 4100Costa M e 5a 4100 $6SO DOWN $ZOO -3 BR. 2 BA Home, NO GIMMICKS Buck Bay. Child OK. Spacious collage ncstlC'd Blllt' Bl'at'tln, 645-0111 Bkr . among lov.'i'ring Shude tn:•e!I. SllO -UlG Dach. lwr duplex. Thrre large. masfer litld· Uul pd. Avail oow. Sml roon1s, hartl\\ood Ooors, OV-pet (lk. flkr. 5.~H980 ERSIZED LOT on cul.dc·sur I ~========== lane. See to Bcl1eve! $21,llOO R 1 I to Shar• 2005 FULL PR ICE. en a 1 Walker & Lee l--S-llA-RE_A_l_IO,-I E- \l'orkinl-!" i:1rls, pr lv_ patio, <'OncN:'le fr·nced yd. Con1pl ReaJ tors 7682 Edtnger 8474455 540-5140 furn. 11.B. <irea. S3U \\"k. 53G-3000 or ll·lti--'117'.1 JRVINE TERRACE Year lease, 3 bdrms. 2 balh5 . bll-lnS, Wf\V Ir. drape11; In· eludes ~ardener. ln1n1ed. occupancy-$35(1 tlfon1h "C" THOMAS, REALTOR 12-t \V. Coast Hwy s.JS-~1;,n TOWN•IOUSE: aBn~21 ; * NEW-PLUSH * 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED APTS. BA, frp!c, patio, pool. 2 ADULTS ONLY NO PETS "'' "'· •II bltns. "'"· 1 drps. Lse .$275 1no. 8i1-88ll or 642-2497 eves or wknds. • , BR. "'" "'""· "" 2035 Fullerton, Costa Mesa pets. Year lease S 2 2 5 , RENTALS Apts. Furnished Huntington Beach 4400 "'SOLTEROS APTS. B<1rht•lor & l BJl."s, Pool Adlll!s. nu pel!t. 1'Tum $,'140 up. 17301 Keel.son Ln. l f.B j ~;al~i~k1 ~~i::~Jx. &ach, on, '.! Ult. 1\du!1s only, Ulil pd. Be<iu l. -Quif'1. 17!il(i Ca1r.t·ron, S.1~·6111 Laguna Beach 4705 SINGLE ADULTS! ERROl:S: MvartlMn should check t ... lr lld1 dally and rtport lmm•1Uat•ly •rrort or mlKlaulflcatlona. THE DA.Ill' PILOT auuma1 llabllity for arn1r1 only to tha extent of publl1hlng th• adw.rtlMmant correctly on1 time. DEADLINE FOR COPY AND KILLS : 5:30 P.M. th• a • ., before publlcatlon, except forMond•y Edition when deadline 11 Saturday, 12 noon. TRANSFERRED ~~--c-n F: t' l NE O lady to sh11re hona.• in lhl' Bl urfs, ND. J ust lisled. sharp 4 BcdtWn\ All privll intl"d. 64+-0369 Sol Vista wi1h 40' pool. 1'1 w-=='-======== !ll()nthly sz:io. 557-MllO ! '-!!!~!!!!!'!!!!!!1~~11111~!1!!!11111111111111111111111111111111111~~11111-!-I * 3 BR.+ lanai.'.!!~ Ha 4200 $35 WK. VILLAGE INN Tv.nh!r . pool, $11:i 1110. * General 4000 Newport Beac h YOU MUST HAVE Kill NUMBER! When killing an ad becaUM of quick rnu!tt, be 1ura to make • record of the klll number given 1011 by your ad taker a1 verification of yo1i.1r c11!1. l!.-ary effort 11 mMI• to klll Of' correct • ntw •d ttl•t ha• been ordtred, not gu•r•nt" to do 10 until th• •d h11 .11pp111red In the P•fMr. but we can- DIME-A-LINE Ads are 1trlctly cash In adv•nc• by m•ll or at any NO phon• orders. on• or our offlc••· Th• DAILY PILOT rnervu tlM right to c.l•sslfy, edit, c.1n1or or tium•nt, •nd to c.h•nge lta r•t•• and ngulatlona without refuse •ny adver- prlor notlc1. M1li Addrtu: lox 1175, NIWJ»Ort l••ch, C111lfornla CLASSIFIEO COUNTERS Ire locatlcl' aa follow1: COSTA MESA 330 W . BAY HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH 2211 W. BALBOA LAGUNA BEACH 17875 BEACH BLVD. 222 FOREST AVE. SAN CLEMENTE -30S N . EL CAMINO REAL Daily Pilot Classified CLASSIFIED INDEX HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS CEMENT, Ctfl(A'ho CHILD CARE, Llceiu ... CONTJtACTOlllS" OINl!IAL t•t1 101· rast sale ~t S2!l,'.Xl0. Costa Mesa 2100 nnly S.'i700 down & take 0\"4·r ___ ------- ~1. •: l>I loan. Better hurry 2 BH , gar.. pa ho. Quiel o n ttus orw. tropic:il selling for adults. MUTUAL REAL TY s.11(1, a 1~i l3ol. ':'!4·f -IH:J2, 842-1418 Anytim e GARDEN-COTTAGE-Newpo .. t Beach 2200 ------\\'alk to park or lx•aeh un CANAL WA TERFllONT tref'·sharl.-cl slret.•! lron1 llus \\lith beach. f"urn. or uni, SllA1lP l ~!room bunga. Very !HCC 3 Br. :.! Ba, $100 low_ P)'tlfess!o1u11 l:indsc11 p. f\lo, Yr.[.~('. Boat dork a vail. Jng on ovr r.:1zed and rcnco'd Crahain Hr ally &lf>...2·11·1 yard, Alley entrance. to 00\I· hie gara).!c , LO\V 00\VN N Sh 2220 F'.J l.A. Or NO DO\\IN C.f. ewport o_r_•_• __ _ h•rnt.<: 11 vai!ablc. $2·1,!lOO JUNE 1hn 1 I..11bor Day. t.loc1· FUU. PRICE. el·n 3 BH, 2 B/\ house. .t Walker & Lee bfk O<'N "" d"b fa O, (213) HO i-.1200 \Vkdays. Hrflllo1·~ 7bS:.! l'.:du1ger Corona def Mar 2250 511}.514(1 847-4·l~l5 7 BR furn., So. of 1-lv.<y. Assume GI Loan 43512 Ca rnation. $165 le'.lSe. O\VNEn NE EDS QUICK No gar. !'i·IS-0213· SALE ~ Anyon!' can qualify. LGF.'.. 3 BR, <lrn, 2 baths. 3 Bedrm~. J ' .. baths. sre at: 311 Goldrnrod. Sat upgraded erpls. drps, Large 10.;;, Sun 11·3. S200. r nclosed pa lio. Like nev.'. g.17-8~7 E\'e~: &12.0~27 Balboa 1--------2300 PENINSULA Bayfronl. 5 BR Rkr. &12-5,ijJ 3 Bil . 21 ~ ha. tOv.'n horn!' S\\'lm ming pool. S2Sj r.1on\h Hal P inchin Realtor 67J-.l:l!l2 :: BR, d in rm, 11,. ba .• '\Int NJ nd. Rltns. SZ::l() rnonlhly IPas<'. l--11 2-;£90 NO. BLUFt•S; v·•;c:,c:,..c. ~,;--;:,c,, tam. e rea, 21; ba. Sehl~. pools, lf'nn1s. $395. &M--0275 HuntingfDn Beach 3400 l Bedroorns an1I 2 ba ll\s • newer. aurac liv(' hornc rlt'"it tar from Coasr l ligh\\'ay Jn Jluntington Ilcach &1'Cll m)\ !:tr from Ne1vport Ilcar.h. Enclosed p111io a nd yard - al! built-in fratures. Adul!s only, no p<>!s pl~•ase. 12::i0 m onth. Call (>\'i'nings or v.·eekends 673-65G8 FOR Lse--2 s ly 101\·nhou.se, 2 Br, 2 Ba , crpt, drps. frpl, b!tns, fnd patin, at- tached carport. $175. 962--!12t2. l BR. J-1.se + lanai. n10. ]st & last m o's. Call ! I \ 639-3924 Sl•lO COSTA ME!A , .. "" "" 1\U Apts.. Furnished Gl!NElllAL tlM COSTA Ml!SA •100 ... , .. ,, ....... ..,. m· ·l-·": I h1ijl' CAAl'ET LAYING & lllEPA!lt Ul• "l-_l • .... - .... tlU M• 3410 + 1na1ds qtrs. P ie r, Call Fountain Valley !\lr.~. S1apll'!S i21 3 ~ 79~7575, 1 -------~-- or 1213) 799-1&12 e ves. 4 BR, large 2 stnry, ":aTr r MESA OIL MAR MESA Vl"ID" COLLEOI P,t.RIC NEWl'OAT IEU:N NEWl'ORT f(I! IGHTS IP.LaOA COVEi NEWl'OllT SHOltlS 1.1.l'CllEST l!P.l'SHORES OO'I ER SHOll!I WISTCLIFI' HARIOR Ml0f(U.NOS UMIYERStTY PAlllK Ill.VINE &ACK a•Y EASTaLUl'f' El Tott IR'llNE Tl!Rll.ACE COIONA OIL MA.It IALllOA PENINSULA IE.I.CON 1.1.l' LINOA ISLE a•Y ISLANDS LIDO ISLll 11H "" l1U llU •m "" "" '"' "" ,,. •m "" ·~ "" "" "" "" ·-•m ... MESA \IERDI tlH f(l!Wl'Oll ll!ACl'i •2'11 Nl'WPORT lfEIOf(TI •IU NEWPOIT IH()IES 411~ Wl'STCLIFP 41ll UNIVIRllTT ".l.llllt •117 SACK a.1..y tUI EAST ILUlll' 4141 CORONA OEL M.&1 415t SALIOA 4JOO e•Y ISL.loNOS •no LIDO ISLli 4!&1 IAL•O• ISLAND 4155 HUNTINGTON SEACk 411M !FOUNTAIN VALLIT ..-11 SEAL SE.I.CM .. 5f LONO •EACH 4J.IM OR.I.NOii COUNTY '"° OP.ROEN GRO'IE 4'11 WESTMINSTER. 4'U MIDW•Y CITT olfl' SANTA ANA 4'1t SANTA ANA HlllMTI "6>t TUSTIN - Ol!P.Pl:NIE' MlO • t U.Ul! OEMOL ITION .. l! 11 f)D 6~T!NO s•1v1c1 MJ7 ---============ ORYWALL .. JI * BY 0 \VNI::R -~1· GT i.1,.1:1,.r11.it.AL .... l.oan. 3 Br, lamily nn, 2 Su~_r_ Re~t~!._!9~ t;CUIPMENT •ENTALI •HO ~f~~~°' "'' l1ath. 22 101 Cnp1strano Ln, SUMMER RENTAL ;:u11 NP.CI!! 1tEPA111,. ,1, :,: 111'· Brookhui'.~t &· I OI . On 1hl' Uay tl.ittlc Jsl11 nd) 2 FURNITURE lllE5TOlt!NO S2S,fi{){), $:1500 dn, 2nd 1'0, Hti f · n Specially GAll~=~~~=l$H!NO :::: ·l!,2-.12S3 pri~~~· fill" ~r-:'a; OENEllAL SElll'llCEJ .. ., :.! llOUSI:::S on R·J Lot. .July -S50U Aui::-ust -S5;,IJ GlllAOING. DISCING •us 1, .\lill' 10 heat h Call 67~ ;I()()() • Bl'!trr hurry ! GU.SS tdO _,. GREEN THUMI ''" Fortin Co. H!tr. &12.:JOOO Bay & Beach Rlty, ln_c. GUN SHOP t ilt HEAi.TH CLUIS •nt r.lATURF \\'Oto.TAN E:">!- HAULING tilt ~u~!!!n_Valley~I~ POY~:o· BY ORAN G f: HOUSECLl:ANJNCI t ill ---------~----·- INTl!ltlOill DECOllAT INO •111 GI NO DOWN CO. for 3 yrs \\'!shrs to INCOME TAX ti~ h f J IRON, On!•mmt1t, ••c.. '"' 5 Brdrm, 2 st<iry, full price rrnt oinr ron1 un f' lltONING tin $3(1,25(} (ltl !!Uit•l l'U l·d('-S1lC tith·S<opt. 6th. 67J.91().I afl pnld, new p a111 t, S27,'l. JlaH<lal Really Coastal vacant. 3700 NF.VER Livrd in -fi r a n <l nr1v, 4 Rrn1 , 2 Halh, \\"r·t har , !anrli;1·1xl, crp!d, drpd . Vie1v. Privacy. $270 n10. Avail Junr. Rr fs. RU--0714. Laguna Beach 3705 Just For Single South Bay Club Apartments _ •• Adults Newport Beach l'rrsllg<' L1vrng. :'11a 1d !Wr. llOOI. .'ih'flS berH:h. 4!H-943f.i ANAl l ~;J \I 1r.r.1 •1d 01X'n1111:' 177 :-:. Brofikhursl ~I. ~I l1lk S. of l.u11~1ln 1 •71 •h i72-4:l(l(l NE\\'l'OHT Bf:/\Clf ROO l rVllll' /l.Vf'. 1 lrvint• al '16111) !71•11 &1:;.0.-,:~) f;Alll>E • .1'1 LiROVI·: 13100 Chrt1l1nan A1 "· l•I I.ilks \V. S:tn1r1 At1a Vr..,1•y) iiOLlO,\Y PLAZA DELUXE, Spitrious l Bdrm F urn <l pt $13:i plus utiL llra1erl pool, a n1 ple parking. No ehil1tren -no pets. lOO:i P1.1mon.1, C.NL Costa Mesa 4100 * \V EEKLY * Lovely npt, Bache lors or rpls. F urnishings eompl K1tchcneHes. S33 1vk-0<1~".~ all. ~ El Camioo -Dr. 5..JG-Q.1:11 Fur nished Apts. VILLA POMONA from $140. ADULTS ONL'". NO PF.T~ ALL J\10Dl~HN AlllEN ITIES 1700 Pn1t1nna, Co.~!a l\lesa \V. of N\\•pt, IJO'!I\· 171h & lSlll $30 WEEK & UP STUUIO & I BElJH00 1\.lS TV & K1tChl'llP!ti.'s incl. Linens ,t, n1a1d s1•r av;i1J Childrt•ns X-pr ! srctinn 2376 NEWPORT BLVD. 548-9755 GRAND OPENING IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Luxury ga rden apartments offc.rin~ com plete prira('Y, bea utiful ltlndscaping & u nparalleled recreational facilities in a count!'y club a lmosphc1·r, No1v leasing in Ne1\'{)(J1't Beach. lli oclels orcn 10 am t o 8 pm Rents J.rom Sl3;).$310 Furnished or unfurnished Oakwood Garden Apartments 1700 16th Stree t 714: 642 -8170 l nr 2 Bf{ f'u r11. (Ir unfuro Unu!'uul ren!al~ again 11.va1J \'1'arly rd1E'S. 8 l' au! 1 I u I Playa Lagwia Ap!'.'i. 1~001, 1 blk .~hopg ll(~;in ,I; pnrk f ruu1 SJ75. ltetu-e forever ·lfl-1-l·J1(1j ---~= ~1,iJH.ET luxurious 1 BR, l•l<i.·k bl'iK'h, Ju11•" -Sl'pt , ;\[attu·p won11u1. llr fs. $350 1no. Bos 1'-71U Da ily Pilot, L~1.i.: Bi•h K.1·N TALS Apts. Unfurnished General 5000 EL CORDOVA !'~E\V ,\DU LT APTS AVAIL J..i1rge 1 & 2 Bl~ Uni1s Cn!or coorrlina tcrl kitchens fratur ing-d t:;posal & deluxe dishwa~hcr. Designer drap. l'ry ,I; car pclin,t:. Com11l<'le rf'c Cl"ntf'r 1v/ pool 1i1b1(', large S\Vin1ming pool .~ .. ou!lloor bbq Priv garni:-c included. Rents from Sl45. 2077 Charlc, C.i\1. fl hlk \V. of llar hor Blvd & l!an1iltnnl. Cnll &lfi-Zl1 8. * APARTtllENTS * F urn ,i;, Unfurn -fn;11n Si5. Ultu.' Bl'~t(Xlll. 6-lj.0111 Bkr, BAYCLI FF MOT EL Cosio Me•• 5100 ==.:..;;=----1 * LO\\' \\'EEJ\l .Y RAT!·;s * ' Klll'la•11, TV's, 111a 1d S('l'Vh.:C. il(·<.1tl•d J~ool. i;11; .. 1~.-. ,.-_cllcllc_~rlu-·rc•l"X . I -~Bclk--.-oc--e-,,-,, .~· hay, ~t.J(J Yrly, inl'I. urd. $21~1 \[o, ~un1n1rr, Av11 1!. J un!.' H)th. 6~2-l'!i2. STf:PS h> b1·:if'h, YI ly . 2 Br, brnn1r•I ee1l!ng, 1\dul1s S220. 6·1:Z...J.190 Lr,.:. lt·pl. BAY !'ll F:ADO\V APTS. l'\c 1~ cxc1t111g-l Bil. St.JO. ~ BP., Slli~1. Benni ceilings. \r11nd p<1n"I;.:, sh.1:: crplg, priv, p;1!111, some \\'/ rrph'S. !'oo!, .s;1nd vcilley ball c rt, rec bldg, pool t.1blcs. pu!· 11ni:; J;reen. Adul ts, !Kl pets. 31\7 \\1• O:ty. 0tK"n Housf' 12.7 pm da:ly. 64&-0073, 673-i62'.J llP.LIOP. ISLAND HUNTINCITON aEACH NUWTINOTON H.t.RIOUlt FOUNTAIN VALi.ET Sl!olJ.. IE.I.CH '"' '"' '"' '* "" uu IN ~t•L.loTINCI t lU 8 J'i\1 INSURANCE •11• stree t. F:xC"i'Jlent Cil rflCIS ,I; l-,-;c'-,,· "'"""""'"''""II!!~ 1NvE.STIGP.Tn10, C•l1(flv1 •1,'° d rapi.·s. Gi:1nt kitchen. big I \\"ATERFRONT _ COAST•L 41M L.loOUNA IE.I.CH 41'tl L.loGUNA NIGUEL 4101 *FOR LEASE * Spacious J bdr m . horn~. lo- caled on 3 lots. Jge deck w/ ocean v it'Y.'. fil't'plat-e, B/I kitchen, J car garage, $285 J\lon•h --... ~M~o=TEL-A~P~T~S~. $32.50 11k. & Up. Kits., htrl j)(){)I. a ir.rond, <llll'Cn bl."'lls. pt-.. S('rv. Daily & \\'kly rair s. 2080 Nc1vport Blvtl, 111 21 sl. ,/ 1\CAPULCO APTS. A!- tra<". Pool. U11I 1~1. C.;1n!r n Li\!111.! Adult~. n•• p• !~. 1 BR. s 1:,.-, '.: !<I~ $17.1. i·'ro \\'ttlJ:li"<' 1\11•. C\l ----1 BDR:"\l up1. Close In b.1y FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. SUNl•T ll!ACN GAii.DEN GRGV• LOMG IEACN LAKEWOOO ORANGI COUNTT OUT OF COUNTT OUT 01' STP.TE STA ... TOl<I WEITMINSTl!ll MIDWAY CITY SANTA ,t.NP. SANTA .1.1'1.I. HGTI. Olt ANGI TUSTIN MOITH TUSTI .. lMAHEIM SILVfRP.DO CANYON HAVASU LAKE LAGUNA HILLS LAGUN.\ "'EACH LAGUNA f(llJUEL MISSION VIEJO ~AN CLfMl!NTE" SAN JUAN CP.PUT•ANO CAPISTRANO lfiACH DA NA l'OIMT OC EP.NSIDE SAN OIEOO IUVl!RSIOI! COUNTY HOUll"I TO aE MOVED CONDOMINIUM OUl'Ll~ES l'OR SP.LI" Af'AllTMENl S •Ot IALE RENTALS Houses Furnished GE l!ER•L REMTALS TO SHAii COSTA MESA MESP. DEL MAI lo\ESP. VEll OE COLLE GE PA~K NEWPOllT IEACN NEWPORT HOTS. NEWPORT SHOll ES IP.YSflORES OOYE• Sl'OltES Nl!STCLll'IF UNIVl!RSITY PARK lllVlf(E BP.CK l,f,Y (.l,ST ILUrl' El Tot• IR'IH'IE TERllACf COll ONA DEL MAit I ALIOA IP.Y ISLANDI LIDO ISLE IALIOP. tSL•1'10 HUMTtNGTON IE.I.CH FOUNTP.IN 'IALLEY SEAL !!EACH LONG llP.CH ORANGE COU NTY l»ITA AMP. WESTM INSTER lo\IOWAY CITY SANTA ANA Hl'IOHTI COASTAL L.loOUNP. IEACH LAGUNA NIGUIL MISSION 'Il a.JO IAN CLEMENTE U• JU,t.N CAl'llTltANO CAl'llTllANO ll'ACH DANA POINT lllVl•SIOI" COUNTY VACATION •INT.I.LS CONDOMINIUM OUPLEXIS l'URN.. RENTALS •m ,., 1471 ·-... '* ·~ ·~ 1•11 l•lJ 111• ... ... Ul' ... ... lUI '"' ,,,, .... "" "" "" nu HU ... ,,. "" Ul5 .... ·~ '"' "" "" -'~ "" "M 1111 11\S ,, .. JIU 1l1t 111! m• "" l1ll ,,. "" ,,., l)U 114S 11Jt "" "" Jtsl nn "" J41t JISI ... '* 1110 .,, "" •• "" "" '"' ... 1111 21ll "" ,,. ·--~ .. .,, Hou1e1 Unfurnished Ol!Nllll.AL COIT.I. MESA MIS.I. O'EL MA• Ml'SA \llllOE COLLEGI" PA•K Nl'Wl'OllT a1ACH Nl"WPOllT HOTS. NEWPOltT IHOlllll aAYSHOllllS OOVl!lt SNOlllS WlllTCLll'I' UHl\lllllTY PAii!': l•Vl"'E UCIC aAY EAIT aLUl'P 111 T-1av1Na T•1t:a,1.c• COllOMA OEL MIJt ......... UY ....... DI Ll0015U .............. .....,..., WIST KUlfTl .. GTOl<f SIA(llf JifllJfT"l .. GTotl "AaaO"la llOUNTA IN VALL.IT llAL ll,l.CN IMll.Dll'"' GltOV9 U) .. 0 II.I.CM Oll..,..E COUMTY JANT& AJllA WIJ1MlfllSTE• MIDWAY CITY 'Al'ITA ANA 1'1ll0'"1 CO.UTA!. LAGUNA 81ACN U.OUNA .. I.Ullo MISSIOtf Vl&IO tAN Cl l!M•..i1• •IAN JU,t.N (At"ISTIMIO c.&r11t•••O •IAO<I OAl'A POIJfT" ~INltlM tUftL.IXll llllt,\11, .. "" "" JllS JHt llU "" "" "" "" '"' "" IUJ -"" '"' n• ,,. "" --"" ... "" --.,. -"" "" .. •• .,, '"' •• -,,., ''" .. "" "" "" ,,. -.... MISSION VIEJO 4IOI SA"I CLEME"TE 4111 SAN JUP.N CAl"ISTRANO 4JU CAPISTlllP.HO IE.I.CH •7JO DANA POI NT 4Ut TRIPI.EX, .. c. •tM CONDOMINIUM .,,_ HOTELS ·····-······-·-······•· 4tlJ RENTALS Apt1. Unfurnished OENl!RAL Htl COSTA MESA 11111 ME SA VEii.DE 1111 NEWPOIT IEIC!t jl-09 HEWPOlllT HEIGHTS SIU f(EWPORT SHORES j!lO WESTCLIFI' !!H UNIYERSITl' t"Alll !!JI II.I.CK llAY sat EAST ILUllll' SlO COROf(p. OIL MAit JJJt !!ALSOP. !.IOI IAY ISLANOI Slst LIDO ISLE IHI HUHTIMGTON IE.I.CM 5400 FOUNT.I.If( 'IAlLI Y 141' 1-t.IO& ISL,t.NO SJ!J SI.I.I.. SEACf( S4'9 LONG llE,t.CH UM ORANGE COUNTY 5600 GAllOE H GROV I Ult Wl!STMIMSTER !'11 MIOWAY CITT HU S~TA ANA Ult S.\NTA Af(A HEIGlfTJ '"' TUSTIN HIO COASTAL flOI LAGUNA IE,t.CH SI~ LAGUl!A i'fl(";.UEL !701 MI SSION VIEJO flOI S~.N CLEMENTE 1110 SP.N JUAN CAl'l~TllANO ,77! CAPISTllANO 19EACH JIJO DANP. POINT 1740 REAL ESTATE, General tRIPLE)I, tl<.. COMDOMINIUM RENTALS w-.NTED ROOMS FOR RENT ROOM a SOARD MOl ELS, 11!1.ll ll COUITS GVE~T HOMES MISC. IENTP.LS 1"4COME 1'11.0l'l!llTY 8U51NES1 l'ROPEIT'I Tll•JLEll PAllKS 8USll!ESJ RENTAL OFFICE RENTAL INDUSTlt ll.l l'ROl'EltTY COMMEllC IAL INOUSlRIAL RENTAL. LOTS RP.f(CHES CITllUS GIOVE' ACltEACE L.UCE ELJ!NOllE RESORT PROl'E I TY 011.P.NCE CO. PROt"EltT' OUT OIF STATI! l'ROI'. MOUNTAIN & OE\llllT SUllOIVISION LANO REAL f.STATE SllVICI II.I!. EXCHAHCI It. E. WANTED BUSINES!t end FINANCIAL IUSINESI '#P.NTEO INVESTMENT 01111tr'hlllln., &USINl!'SS Ol'POllTUN•Tll'I INVl!5TMEf(T WANTID MONIY TO LO•.N Pl!ltlONP.L LQANS JEWELllY LOANS COLL.loTEllAL LOANI RE•L lSlATE LOANI MOlllTC .. GES, Tr""I C-1 MONIY WANTED ANNOUNCEMENTS and NOTICES ·~ '"' .... 5t•s ''" '"1 •m '"' ••• ••• •on ••• •Oit fOIO ••• ••• ... "" •HS ·~ .. , ... '"' ... 4llt 4l U tJU ... ... .... 4)1 0 ... tlU •m '"' ... 'Jl! ... ,,., ••• l'OUN(I Cf'rM Aft) t4M LOST t4'1 l'ERSONAL, 6411 P.NNOUHCEMINT1 '411 llllllTK$ '411 l'UNIEltALS '4U PAIO OllltlAl!Y MU FUN•1t.t.L OlllECTOtl$ 6414 FLOllSYS '415 U.ltD 01' THANKS ... u IN MIMOllAM ... u CEMl'TEllT LOTS t!U CEMETl'ill:T (ltTPTI '4lt C•l!lioU.TOlllll t41't MEMORIAL PAllllCS iM11 AVCTIONS MM A'llA110N Slll\llCa ..-JJ TllA'll'L ..-u Allt TltANSl'OIT.ITM>N -AUTO 11.1.NSPO•TATIO• '4'1 LIGAl MOTICIS '4~t TUTOllNO '4N SERVICE DIRECTORY JANITORIAL 'to U!Wl!LRT llEPAlt. lie. ..oci l iv1n~ rm, xlnl location• In:: Du1llrx. NP\1·ror1 Isl. 1.AN DSCAPlf(O •110,1, ronv; tx1.1t rlock, 673-7IS61 LOCMSMITH 111~ (S()" \ 6~~-SJ~·\ MP.ID SERVICE ........... ".-1s or ·' I '. ~~;~;~'& 6s~~:•oE !~:1962°4471 ( :-;:~) 546-8103 N°E\\'POHT-1 ~1 ·•'.lc,,c,e-r01-co-,-,, PAl'-ITINO, "•~••ll•ntln• •Ut ·I BH. Jur11 Plf'r & 11 .. 111 . l'AINTINO. 111111 •t11 TF:AC!-!F:R SELLING -Ii ': A1•a1l 6/21-~/I $600. PtT!OS ... o . PHOTOGllP.l'M'I Hit a~sumat-.Jr 101111, $1'.12 TIJO. bi':l.-22~,(; PLP.STElt'NG, P•lclL 111•••11 •no 3 and lam1ly mom. Cr1!1)('1. Lfa·.: l HH. pa rtly furn. , :, PLUMll lNO •,•,..o ilraf)•·~. f1r1·11l.1rr. w;ilr r PET GROOMlf(til hlk Ill hc11!'h. $12:i 11 eek. POOL SEllV tCE 0 10 .~of!l'nf'r. \'()\Trt'1I fl a 11 ll. POWElll sw1l!P1No ,'~',1 $?6.200 total \\'llh $l~i00 cash. Rr~Prv:1 l1ons-6i:>-:i:iS:J PUMP SEllVI Cf ., NTAL ROOFING ''" %8·7069 RE ) RP.D10, R•~lr1, 11(, ••:io Houses Unfurnished illEMOOO:LIN O & Rl ,,Alll •HO REMOOl!LINO, KITCHENS "'! Scllwin 5111...,. ''" SEWING '"O Low Interest Loa n! ·"PANTSJI Of.COB SEWING MP.CHINE REPAIRS"': 4 f\f>dt'n l & ramily rm. f\!. General 3000 5 MIN. TO OCEAN SEl'JIC l .. 10(.li, Sl"tn, lie. .W! f TAILORING '"o r iun1'. llug" Spon1~h II'•'· Sl Ui • ';.! BH. Y;i rtl. Patin. TERMITI!. CONTltOL ••n plac('. V,\-F\l,\ !1'1"11\.S nl<:•). f{ 0 \\', v.·, tlrps, Srr1l lfl1S TILE, Cw1mlc •f1t HAFFDAL REALTY t tLE. Llno1..,m • M•rtil• "" f.i pc•I nk. Snr.lb also. Active, TREE 5El'llCI! tJM 842-4405 llkr. :~l·!.(i!J~O TELIO'llS10N, 11.tPl lrl. l"lc. •ti! -UPHOLSTERY •'90 BEAC H-AREA wELC •NO •ff! Dana Point 1740 Sl 1~ •• 'l llll, _vrd ,, ... ar, RI O. WINDOW CLl!AMINO --• -lffl ------------' JOBS & EMPLOYMENT l l\11LE So. of n1ar1tJ:t . Cstm 7 Rn1 l-3 Baths + 2nd kilehn. S36,:i00. ·1%-11i7. JOI WANTED, -JOI! WP.NT ED, WO<n•R JOI W•IOTED, -,.. MEN & WOMEN 7119 SCHOOLS I. INSTll UCTION 7•01 J08 PREPP.RATION 1l00 Tf(Eo\TAICAL 1Ut M >RCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE FURNIT URE OFFICE FURNITURE OFFICE EO UIPME"'T STORE EOUlftMl5NT CAFE, llESTP.Ull-IOT 4.1.R EOUIPMENT HOUSE HOLO GO<IDI GARP.GE SALE FUllf(ITUllE AUCTION .\PPL IANCES ~..NJ IQUES Sl!W INO MACHINll MUSICP.L IHSTRUMENl l'IANOS & ORG•NS RAOIO TELE¥1Sl0f( lll·fl & STEltEO TAPll Rf.COROERI CAMERP.I & fO UtPMIHT HQl l Y SUPl'LtES SPORTI NG G0001 llNOCUU.RS, SCOP•S MISCELLA.NEOUS MISC. WANTED MP.CHINERY. •1c.. LUM8Elt STOlllAGE !!UILDlf(O M,t.TERIALI SW.I.I'S -"" "" "" "" "" "" "" •• ... t11 0 "" "" 11l0 •• •• llH Hl~ t lOO •• •• Hl~ •• "" ... "" mr .. ,. ~ PETS •nd LIVESTOCK l'ElS, o• .. lllAL. C•TS 0001 HOllSES LIVISTOCll -m• ... •• n• CALIFORNIA Ll~ING NURllRllS SWIMMING POOLS PATIOS AWHIN01 'l,t..CATIONS TRANSPORTATION !!OATS & TA:HTS SP.ILIOATS POWIR CRUISERS Sl'El!O--Slt:I !!OATS llO•T TltAltl!•S IO•T MAINTl!N,f,NC• aOP.T U.UNCHINO ~RINI' EQUll'. IOAT SL ll', MnOllNC 90.IT IEl'llCES l OAT llllNTAL\ IOAT CHP.ltTlll IFISHINO SO•TI .... ~ .. "" •• ... -ttll "" ... ... "" ~· ... •• ... "" ... - SA\'E f~ASH! NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 IOP.T MOYINO IOAT ITOltAOI t O•TI WANTEO AlllC•o\•T ............ ~~ """ FLl'INO LESSONS MOBILE i'OO .. t:S MOTOR: HOMll llCYCLES ELlCTR IC CARS MINI l lltE S MOlOllC TCLEI MOTOR•coor r.•s AUTO Sl!llVICES & PAllTJ AUTO TOOLS & EOUIP, .... .... _._, "" "" ... "" ... "'' "" "" ,,~. ""''~··········· tt1•1 11· "". clrp.s, Avail 6'1. r hild- n•n !..· 1>rt ok_ Ac!11·r, Bkr. :.13.1.6~""° LOTS nl rrntal.~ Jn nur bt>ok. \\'hr nnl rlr•11i ltJ and bl'O\I S" thmucl1 11. \\·,.·r,. 111 \\',\IJ\FR k..· l.EF:. n r :1l!Or!< :.i;!"il 11arh .. r R!vd $131~ C"U"J"t' "l Br, Jisr~. !t11"d fnr kids ,r,, 1>1'1 Bl11r H1·;i1·1111. 1;1:~011 1 Hkr Slfil -"} r.r... Y.1 n !. P./O . f(f'fnc H.J111• Ok. A!"!!l"r., Hkr. ,11 !--1,:1~(1 l l'~I -~ l',IL 2 B . .\. f"['1~. 11wf' .\!I. f",i rn1!1rs 11rl1-01nP. Hli1t• f\(•af'nn. fi.l:~Ol 11 Bkr. Costa Mesa 3100 v i-:nr r1.F.,\N ht,111,. with ~ \./\llGE BJ::DRi\IS k l./\HC.E h.1ck yartl, Plnsh rrp1~/custnn1 1lrps tun' VA. CA!\T X:. !-illAHI'. $~1()0 jll't n1<1n1b takes 1t. Call Aben! j.1&-41-11 :-:::-=-=-;,--~ 2 Bit i:11r. pal111. r rpts, rirps, .sluvr. n •lric. Qu1PI 1mp1raJ .~r1t1ng, arlults nnl.v. 1 hlk shops. $li0. ~·1 -1·0 ~:>2, r~vi. 11.14 -~-~---~ 110 1'.1E For lr as C', 2 Rcrtroon1 , <l1n1nc r oom . patio. c!o~r In IH·;ich, only s r'° 111n1111t. A~1 . 5 11>-~521. 2 H l~ll~r. unr:-;rpts /drps. ,vrd, p11l 10 g11r. i\lll lUl'e CJ)I. lnq 3,'(•11, E:. 16th ~!, 1 Bll 11·/w. drp~ll,t-tt•frir; Pa1 10 r ph• or n•11rl'd. Bcls. lnq, 2!!1:, i\Tini•r Nn. 2 C~T 1-BR~Diijilrx. Smnll-;>iTd. 1'\r. .sh11p'.1: SOO. Ulder rp! prPf'd . 6~6-7700 2 BR. II~. Bf'nn1 f'('illngs. frplr. prv patio. Adu.ll'I", no pets. $148. &ll-A520 Me1a Verde 3110 . 1 BR.. 2 BA rompl rtcond. Pntio ,(· lan1f s c 11pi n 1>::. sprinklcr.r;, !)It-ins. 2 car 1.:a r . fr nr~fl )Tel. S2f~') mo. ny 11ppt on!y ~1~20i12. ACCOUNTl~O ANSWl5R1Nti Sl'•'l1Ca Al'PLl.llffE Mll'P.111., Pt"9 Al'PllAISINO ,,.. lltAILl!ll, flt.1.Yf.L UOS fltAILEllS, U!llth •It~ f•UCKI "" ... '"' '"' ... Ill~ S'I~ 1111\'S! 3200 f.tll ll EPS •Ut CAMl'l!•S ASPHA LJ. 011• AllCHITECTUlllAL AU 10 lt~f'•l ll) Sl'll\1 1(1 t UJ CP.Ml'ER ll ENTA l S tHt OUN& I UOO!fl AUTO, Swt ltlh, ltPt, "All,Sll llNO ao.1.T MAINll N.ljrj(I •ltcK, MAJQfrjRY, tl'-aUSIN•SS s11v1c•• IUILOElllS l!k. '''O •MPORl <kU •11 101 6$ Sl'O•T CAllS d U ANltQU ll S, Cl,t.SllCI ut4I llACI C,t.RI, 11005 u.n AUTO EVENT S CA1'EllNO ................. . "111 AUTOS WA NTli D tlll lollW CARS ua1NITMAltlNO CAIU"tNTlltlNO U'9 •»TO Ll!P.SIN• i.tN USf tl CARI "" "" ... "" ''" .. ,. ~ ~1l~~=~·~r~~~-~~:!I -1 RR , 2 BA. hrau!. tu~. 7200 lifl ft. 2 Sl'f'. /rplc.!', p11nld 1lr'n. forn1I ~ i11fnnl 1!1n·i::-Sprnk !t·1·~. t';ar rlnr ,v,, "''Ir fMI. ~32:1 n1n. lrJsr. 291!! PllJ!l'r L11. lil2.2ti~7 Uh -2-111\nhT1"-c"c,~-.-"-, ponl, f1rpl, 1 Tp!~. rt rp~. lrJ: p11!!11, ST{). AJ.?! fi lf,.07.12 MISSION REAL TY 494-0731 S:l7:i D!x Brau!1ful :t Br. 2 Ba ru~tnn1 Bl.'an1rd, lrplr, ,"•12-42~7. RENTALS lrn1na<' Spani.~h \'IC' II'. Apts. Furnished General 4000 P..E:'ITARKA.BL\' UNBELIEVABLY EXTRAORDINARILY BI::AU'n f UL Val D 'isere Garden Apts Putting J;rccn, waterfall & stream, flowers ever;·v.'hc.re, 4~· poriJ. rec. room, billiards. RBQ's, Sauna, furn.-unfurn, 1 t.· 2 n r. also Singles fro1n .$1;\;i. S.-e it ~ 2000 !'arsons Hit . G-12 .. 'tt17r). Brllvf'r1 1 llnr- ho1· ,I; N('\\'p()l't -2 Blk N. J!ll h RENT FURNITURE 1 Rooms fn>m S.l!l !G r.tunlh !f) mo nl h ftrntal11 \\"1de St·lr.ctlon HJ0'/0 PURCITASE OPTION 2~ hr. Dclivl•ry Custo1n }'urnlture Rrntal . ·.17 \I'. J'lth, Ci\I. 51~·.'\4.~1 l::.GR \\I Lincoln. Anhm 7ll·:.!~l)(J ODMP-!J-LIBT Apartment Rentals Listing Service NOW ACCEPTING LISTINGS Phone fi.1 2-41:i:J(i -NEAR PIER .$8:i-Util pd, Oaeht•lnr. Avail 611. Sngls ok. Active, Bkr. 534-6.!)80 Turn those \Vhile Elepha nts lnlo cash thru a Daily P1lot Dime-a-line ad~~ N1,:;:;-B~h•·lor,-11''/"j ~! ni t'C' 111:11 11rr ;ilttl l1. Sl(llJ 11 ut1 I -t s:in (' ,~. B. 'l'.lO r.101111• \,"1.~la . i;.\Ulfil i\ NICELY Ftll'ri-:-I -BIL ;ipt. ( ;:irb. d1;.pl l;ar. 1'•~11 pn1 11. Arlul! i::1•ntlo•1n;1n pN•l'd. 2311 Eldt•t1 /\1'!'. 1\pl C. l nr.. ("'l r;i n, A!!r.ic. Furn. s110. Lc:1.•r. nrr~. Cpl. in· f:111! ok. 2:,:lS Ne11·port Blvd , C:\I. -,c-;;r,"r=,.,c:,-,_ Po<·I c"~,,~,_- p;11d ,\dul!<; nr. Jlf'l'i. r-.·r .~h·lP'J!. S!~O inn. ~rl~-.\'1 1!! nr 1)7j-1!~!0 -SUSC ASITAS-- 1-'urn. l fl!{ Apr~. Arlulls only. no JX'1S. 2110 Nc11 port n1vfl. C:\I. i;,12.9w, "* 1 ,I',, 2 81c._-,,,.c,,c,-,,-. cAc0c1c,-. - !'OOL 1 i7 :!2nd St. N AS1'1\U P ,\1.:'ll S. r.1 2-::r.r 1 BH, f';E\\', l1"(lU T f11rn. :\1i>. l•I 11111 i\rllT~ nnly. :!'.':!Ii l·:l.lo•t1 f,\t", 9~7S r1·"· $1.'l • 1-l :r~ 1•lu 1n. <1u 1••t, G~•r ll•»•Ut lurr1. l\r. 1nkl ;-.," P"I'. 1 ~·12~-I_. \\':dlar't'. C:'ll. * S:'o.IAJ.I, I Br. /I ll 11111 pd, /\d11lh, till fl•'I" :'i l ~I) n1,, 6·1'!-.~111, •rr :)1:)...tl2!11. I-Br~ Furn:-Crrt~.-A11lil1~ [\(I pf'1'<. 1'11 !11} l\;1\" ('.!\.i~ •lli~l~S~i!). all Ii G12-Gi !2. U:i.1·h··lur !\'!·:\\"until p1I, SI 111 Rf-'.FS. 'l.l ~r. :'ll1111·r Apt '· blk \\'_ nl 1!;1rhnr .~· \\'il~nn . -Co1.y I lilt f11r ~ ni: 1n.u·r 111t.I 1'6u11le. ne11r F.11 ri.:1v unlb . lnf:u1t o k .i 12:; felf,...Rt.ffi $12~1 -NR. OCC'llll 1-Bll Upfll'r. A\·ail ,June l Ar.liv!', Bkr. ;l.1-1--6~11,1) Dial &1'~,,.~,.=78~.~,~.~H~E~S~u=L~T=sc & brai'h. Fur11 or unfurn. 6<~ .... i871i. -1~Jl-!l lil Rnb1n.,nn e \I'! X"TF:R-H l·.:-.'T .-\I .Se ,\B!~l~Y nE.\l.TY ei: l::!-::~~.O• 2 Bf!, :.! B.1 , \\·C' .. tcl tH at't'(I S1\·1111. fX•nl. $"!.?It 1 ~ ,\!us Suh !.~r. (';ill ,,.1s •. ~1;71 Ql lfl-:T R1ch,.l•,r Li11il Pr 1\~ i.:~r. /1 1!uH onl.1·. $1l:i 11111 111{·1. Ca ll :i1il-U:i:1·I Prl\·alC' patio, pnol • lndiv. 1.111t1rl ry l.1r 1\<·:ir Or<i ngc r n. ,\lrport & CCI. Adults only. 20122 Sa ntri /I na Avr . l\J;'.!r. :\!rs. nrur" 51~~J.~!l t • MARTINIQUE • Newport tlgts. 4210 1 P a rk.Like Surroundings DELUXE 1·2 ~-:l BR APTS. 1\L~O FURN BACHELOR CJ.~:1\N 1 & :? nH. J.rg kif. Adu!!-;, no JX'\s. s1:1~1-S lj(J. 21'.'1 E .1!ith SI .. fi l&-lhl)l Prv patios • l llrl Pools Nr ~hnr(r! • AduHs nnly Corona del Mar 1777 S.1n1.1 An.1 fi ve., CM 4250 J\li::-r Apt 11:! e 6'16-5."142 LOVELY 2 Br Ap!, A1tul 1~ oo!y, nn prls, Fu1 n 1\/ll11l. Bv 1nonth {lf sun111lt"'I' only. 67::-iffj~, B a lboa 4300 1 nt'. ru111 apt. • ! hlk tn VILLA MESA APTS • 2 UR. l'r1v pa11u. lltd pool. Z <'a r rncl"d ).!:I r. Chlldren \\"f lcor11r, no l""s pl<'ase : $lti:"> 1110. 119 \V. \VJ.son. &IG-12."11 $170 h• h. F"r .lt1'1•' .~· Jul\• Slb, :: r.r 1 '~ J"\<1 , 11.11111. hJl-in~. n1n. or ~Tl.> lsr. (ij; .... :i.'..;oi I •·111•~. 1h·p~. A~k :ohn11 t our ~~~-~~~~--=~ i1 1~n1ur11 Jllan, &~U t:enlcl' B a lboa Isla nd 4355 ~1 lil~.)!~111. ------~~-- "'"" "'' ·' , BB. l "' HARBOR GREENS i::;i.1ci!!•' 11)11 ~:111 \l<J ~.rl} C/\l{[)J::,'l f..· STUDIO AP1'S n1 S t11n 111,, ~t1 111rn•·r ! i.:!'ll·h I."!. 3 Bit's. from .$\JO l~1 ll < .run•h l ~r il1•11 f,\~-1 r,~ I Qjlli) I 'L•li 1 ~11 11 \Va.\', C.tlt ~-~ ~-. -:111;.() .70 H un~n_!!t_on Beach C400 ! .1 JI I: V!C"TI Jl;.\,\,\I l..\JtC!: ~ B•'d ·2 h:1!11. ~1••11 :\rw. ~ /~!: 1\/ C!.1ra~e S l ~:iO ''"'~li"n 1 l·lh tu ~. 1• .. 111!" /ld1il ls nn!~. t'rp1'<, 11111~. ~r.,rr~. ~1~0 <02 l l·:U 1~. Op\•n hlt ll\, fn1·d y;-i r.I \\/ pa.110. .1.,i1v 1:r o·afl 1•111\•'I', r;I"'. :t.!'i::: \\ t.: p•!. i.:11 nlnr. 61i7 V1c!ort11 . I SI r.::1;.. !I JO S TO NEHENGE A PTS~ -~--- :! Br, 2 1::1 lnl,1111 nk. Sl/l.., :!:l'lO F!nr1d;i. ;,:u:.2i~O t 'l'lt'I !<111al1 1 B1'. lilil pd, $7:"1 1110. I hlk tn plr r. Call for appl. 6 1~ .... ~520 JT'S\\"ONDERF.~U~L-c,oh-, many buys in applinrn:'<'s you find 1n lhc Cl:i.s~1f1e<I Ads Check !hem no1v! 2 u i:. 1·nfur11. i\!•wly dee. N1•1v rrp!.~ .t drp.s. Spar ,c:'l'Dumb . Adib<. no pP1s. SI 10 mo. 2'J)il Fuunt:11n \ray E. ll!1rhnr !11rn \\'.on \\'ilson). \\'1lson Carden.'> Apls . -------- General 2000 Genaral 2000General 2000 DF:LUXE I ,i:, 2 RR. Bltn i;1nvr & 11i ~h•\h r, prrot, r nt l gar<l).!f'. nll util pd. From 51:1.1-SliO. Childre n \\rlromr . 211 \V. \\'1lson. Arit 5, Ctll. ~11.~7~0~) $©\\dtllA-~£2rSe The Pullie with the Built-In Chuckle 0 l!earrangci let!arJ or •h· laur Krom bl.d word~ be-- tow 10 form four sirnplci words. • r~B-rEL~A-rC-r-r..-11 f s I I I I' "' A riddle : "'V/hal's a smell _ _ _ . do g suffering from chilli?" I LIRPEF I A">WN> "A -." S-1> ~.,-,c1;-,,,,c-T1--1,-,1--i () Cample!ci 1h• <huc~I., quc•ed by l1ilil"lg ir1 1he m.1s111i;t wo,.j ~ou dell11loo from 1Teo No 3 below, ~ ~~!f:tt""°'I I I I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 -------* DELUXE * 1.rg I Br. apt. u nlurn. Ne1v r1·pt.g, nrw drps 1hn1out. l1[1ns, !:Pp, d in rin. 998 El f'11n1111n Or. :.ir,...01-1( * 111-:LUXI·: & :.! BR {i;1rde11 /\ptR Blr-111s, priv. p:i.lio. h<':J1<'d pool. f1·pJ c. Adult~. Sl ~:i n111. ;11t;.-;,1s.1 711C1D. 2 Hr, a ll t•lrr, cpts, d ill"· (jE kll. pine ITl'('S. f'll1·lrl ~ar, nr hus $110 Adu l1s. i\h;r. ,1211fll h St. 2 Bil 1lr!ux~Adu!ts. Crpts. drps, bltn'<, .l:'llr. Pl'1 v. patio. ~19-0.l:U. S\65 lllfl. ,/ SPACJOt.:S 2 Rr. 1 \• Ba. Pool Nr, 1chls. $160 mo. 61f ... 2'."i-17 LRG. 3 Br. crp!.~. rl~. 2 kids nk. s1ri0 + fl r p, 221-1 Co11rJ::'e A1•e. lilr.-0627 NI! -n1•w 2 Hr, 1 1 ~ Ra. Cf111s, dru.~. :<Ill\"('. <1~111\hr. gar. 7fili I\' 1r1 1~1n r.12-7:r,s i\l\l'.H th.011 n111~t .--l .1! 1-H-;\ p.v il. nr li'll1 ,f, Sa11l:i Arn i, SI 111. l ~t/111~1 .r1,~.10·1.1:! * I.Hi; 2 .t-. J Hf:. 2 fl~ frpl1·. hlr n... 1·1p1 " r!rp!;.: 1::11cl i;.~r , pa1in :.u;...10,0,1 J.Jtr. rl1•n-;-2-11r lllln~. 1 ·1pl~. r1•11111 Ii! c .. r, rf'~p. /l()Ull~ SI ~ I '>l\-1.'l .f, ) 1 ., • Elegant Living ... "Or•J'lf• Co11nty'• Moi l Ba•u· tllul Ap•tlm•,.h" -Prorel'lor.&t 8~Ud•ta M11111lot • EXECUTIVE TYPE Summer R.,,t•I W•nttd For Mo. Of. Auguitt Or Mott PREFER L ido, On Be•ch, B•r Or Back B•y C•ll W•ltah Cl•rk ~ merr1mac woods NICE fully furn. 3 or 4 BR. hSe or apt. Ne.,.,-port, Cl.f aN>a on yrly leue. Have own business in a r e a. , 673-8870 Lu1h land1eapin9 w~ 35' Pin• trees, sparkling waterfell1, bubbling streams & serene ponds make Merrimac Woods the place to liv e. The1e 1. & 2 BR, 2 BA, furn. or unfurn . .tpts feature ••r.cond, self.cleaning ovens, beam ceilings di1h:-v•1hers , priv. 9•r•g• w/stora9e, elevi11tor1: 108 therapeutic pool, 1wim pool, BBQ'1, S•unas & a lovely clubhou$O w/social activities. Adults plea1e. From $140. \VANTED: Lease or rent, Exec desires 3 or 4 bdrm, furn home, Laguna Bch to Hunting1on Bcb, to $550. 714: 540-8453 YOUNG mllr?'ied cpl rlesire sml hse -w/ gar. unlum. NB, C~I area. Max. $130 mo. 646-8693 3 BR. 2 BA, nicely furnished h0n1e \Vantl.'d fol' n1onth of J uly & Aug. Beach area. Costa Mesa 5100 Corona diel Mar 5250 Call 492-9947 aft 7 pn1. BACHELOR. Stove, refrig. Rffponsible adlt. no pets. $100 util's pd. 54&-2540 alt 6 pm/&IS.5969 bet 2 pn1 . NEW Dix l & 2 _Br. Shg crpl, drps, bltns, imn1ed. occp, From $150. 540-1973; 545-2321 N•wport Beach 5200 LIDO. ocean front or Balboa iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Penn. 3 BR unfurn. house.. reliable family, ye a r I y lease. 675-8992 e LANDLORDS e FREE P.ENTAL SERVICE ON TEN ACRES Broker 534-6982 1 a: 2 BR. Furn il Untunl WANTED: apartment for $60 Fireplaces I priv, patics I in Laguna Beach. Pools. Tennis. Contnt'l Bkfst. 4~-7845 900 Sea Lane~ CdAI 644-:?bU (MacArthur C -fl H 1 NEED clean 1 Br. turn. apt.. nr. <»> wy J urK' 27-Se pt. 7th for male e NOW RENTING e e NOW leasing, new 2 BR. Beaut. new 2 Br. 2 bath units & 3 BR. uHls. Cpts., drapes, w/qual. cpts, ~ drps. Plan· blt·ins, frplc, Open Daily ned for privacy plus outside .316-318 MARGUERITE Jiv. areas, pool & rec. facil, Don Franklin Realtor 67J..2222 doml'stic. 675-2101 agt. Rental &rvicc Free to Landlords Blue Beacon. 645-018.l Cil! 59'5 Dbl. garages. In the heart Room1 for R•nt of Npt. Sch. w/easy access Huntington Beach 54001---------- to shopping, beach, frwys.1----------$15 PER wk up w/kitchen $250 lo $300 WALK 3 blks to beach. $30 wk up apts. BOYD REAL TY Atmost rww lrg 3 Br apt, Motel. 54S-97S5 644-1617 675--5930 dbl gar, lrjJlc, w/\Y crpts, FURN Rm. CM. Ideal for V BA YFRONT drps. dwhr, 2 ha. $225 mo, student, close to OCC. $55 2 BR, 2 BA Luxury Apts. Chldrn ok. No pets. 536-1711 m.o. 642-8520. Priv. terrace, eleva tors, suh. LOVELY NEW APTS ROOAf & Board r or single terranean pk'g. All elec. N~ar ocean & 1;-8kr. Park. person in our home. Reas. Pool. soft Y•ater, docks. 3Ul dishwashr.r, patios, 1 & 2 References. 96~. V C I' N bdrms 709 Palin 8·l7-3Y.i7 \ . oast ,\vy, e1vport. · · · BACH. !urn, CM. Girl only. 642-2202 NE~R Huntington Harbour . Ideal for student or ? $tiJ. DELUXE 1 BR. \.Vestclilf Tnplexcs. ,Quiet area. Lrg Call for appt. 642-8520 Joe. Pool & b!tns. Adults. 1 BR .. d1sh1vashcr. S140. :~rti; childrrn ok. (213) P~IV .. Home near -~aker & $16J mo-oo lse. 642-6274 ~~2_2623 (jl<!) 846-3~_9 Fan-v1e,v. C'.\1. Qut;1de entr. ANNUAL. 11,i B!k. to ocean. · ·' ;;~. 545-3298 btwn 4-7 pm. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Fpl. Dshwr, Santa Ana 5620 LARGE. Pleasant; pr i v . cpts. drps. $260. 673-2067 bath. Working man only. 2 BR. 2!;S ba. 2 Car gar. I ~~~;:;;~~;:;:~~=:·Lc§M~•~"':'_'~·~6o]&.~~7~""4,;::. ::::___::: Condo. Pool privil. $240 l\!o. VILLA MARSEILLES NICE room for "-'Ork'ing Fortin Co. 642-SIXXl BRAND NEW man. w/ or wilhout kitch. Newport Heights 5210 $165. 2 BR. Crpts, <ltps, bltns. Pool. Adults, no pets. • 642-2S14 East Bluff 5242 PRESTIGE LOCATION For lease. deluxe 1888 sq. ft. 4 BR, 2\~ BA apt. Frplc, drapes, crpts, wet bar, pri balconies, dbl gar of! kitr.hcn dshwhr, dbl oven. Pool. Conv to shop'g schls & recreation. Only $350 mo. SPACIOUS privll. E..cM. 642-0:m 1 & 'l Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Room & Board 59'6 Furn. & Unfurn. Dishwa!'lher. color coon.Hnat-SR. Cl!izen care. my home, ed appliances -plush shag C.l'IL Temp. or Perm. l'tt ake carpet • choice of 2 color my home yours. ~8-ti955 schemes -2 baths -stall - showers -mirrored wani· Guett Homes 5998 robe doors -indirect li;::ht. 1 _________ _ ing in ki tchen .• breakfast PRJV. room ~II' a vail in bar. • liuge private fe.ncecl licensed gue$il home for am· pat_10 • plush lw1.1scap1ng -· . . b '•k B· BQ' ,Q,..,,. h t bula!ory, senior c1 t 1t.e11. ric ar· · s • .... 1.e ea· Lovely yard & patio. Good ed PQO!s & Jana!· food. congenial atmosphl're, 3101 So. Br11tol St. CM area. 548-5225 (YI Mi. N. of So. Coast Plaza> I-"========= 305 No. El C•mino San Clernente 492-4420 Re•I DESK SPACE 222 Fore st Avenue leJgun~ Bea ch .,...,.. * OFFICE SUITE Foi' lease 2600 sq, ft . Ideal loc11tion, downto111n Laguna Beach. Crptd, alr • cond. • * * * * """ Whoddye Went? Wheddye Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spo<lel Rote s Llneo-5 11 ..... -s """"' llULat -AD MUl'I IMCLUbl ~ ............. tf-. ~ 'CMf ..,., "' .... >--YOU• --.. a!Mller -.. •..S .,.., M .............. ._NOTHING l"OA S .. LI -Tll .. OIEI QNL'l'I To Plac• Your Trider'• P1r1dl" Ad PHONE 642-11671 SERVICE DIRECTORY -·-- Beby1IHl!!f 6554 CHILD care tor mothen who have-to work &: don't W8.1'1t to leave their children just anywhere. 646-8862. When You Want it done right ••• Call one ol the experts listed below!/ SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY !'.·~~~9 ____ 6660= Moving A Stor0te 6840 REDWOOD & chaln link fences, Ucensed contrr.ctor, ~ est. Wt 1e rv ic e. ,,,....,,. Gardening LOCAL & long dill fllOYillc. Reas. storage. Free Eat. 131-0401, OJ{. Van Ir Sto~. Janitor. Util. Priv dual rest. A·Frante cabin, Big Bear. rm fac. 494-Mlll 3 Br, cpts, bl1ins, \'1e1v. TOP quality olfite i;pare , in trp\c, ss:JOO or more eq: For Crl~1. av11il al 45c pl.'r sq. sn1. units. hse. etc. CalJ no1v fl. Also Dental or l\ledical lei's deal . 96&-3597. LOVING ca.re your children my home. H.B. Day &for $7000 VALUF. nite. By hr-day-Wk. 96lki746 Painting, Paperhanglng 2Y, Acres Cle11.l' BAB AL'S GARDENlNG Flagstaff, Arizona YSI1"1'ING in my home, For Luxury Car Or ! 1enced yd, hot meals. Call lor Professional Gardening * PAINTING INT & EXT. * 644-64$8 * 642-0829 &: small I and 11 ca p in g Averg. 1 1ty $260. 2 sty services call 646-3629 after $350. lncl all material & suit<'. Elevator & janitor WILL TRADE 10 irrigated service. ~5 E. Coast Hwy, acres ln Heniet w/3 ren!als CdM . ~73-9131 for Orange County income '56 Che\( 283 reblt eng. 11ick3 Brick, MalOnry, 6 pm. Serving Newport, pteparaUon. $18. per nn + '63 ford P U .._spd ov loaded •fc 6560 CdM, Costa Mesa, Dover paint. Local refs. Call Jack sn1 antique uprife piano • Shores, WestcliU. 894-3895 or 837-6925 DESK SPACE ·17975 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach &t2-4321, Ext 276 properly. Call (714) 962-2561 Want furn. MQ..5589, 20061 * LANDSCAPING * CUSTO•f pai .. r. .. , • ·--Ling Dr s A Ht BUILD, Remodel, repair " ...... u.. iu•• · · · s. Brick, block, c 0 n c r e t e , New Lawns 17~c sq fl. f'ree Exterior·Interior Speclalliit" Mcintosh 240 an1p, MR65B 100 ac Mendocino Co., 100 carpentry, no job too gmall . designs. Do all or part )'OlU'· Realdential -Commercial. tuner, Cl pre-amp, Ampex mi north S.F., heavily treed Lie. Contr 962-6945 seH. Rototilling. Lie. t'On. No job too large or too 1200 tape rec, JBL 001 splmt stream. Trade tor house or 1rac.1or.. U yn local exp. small Ltc. Bond. Ins. Won't C-43 encl. $l;iJO val/boat apt8. Oear. B I S I 6562 536-1225. be underbid! 646-3679 INCO ME Ta.x otfice on Har. or '! 675-7689 4~2534 Ut ness •rv Cll NE Bl d CM "-.1 * J.IERRlNG'S Complete ED your yan:I revamped? v ' i naS space aval Sh 7•L• <>-il· di h 625 E SI lo HAVE "'-writer will h""" H for R.E .. ln.~urance. Mfgr's arp "' .-1ng ng Y: 3 . auaon Ave, t •.ry-• '""" Garden &rvlce ouse need a new coat! RPp, etc. For info call complete .. Tntd~ for 14 122'x120', 16,000 sp ft bldg, anything. By Job ot hr. H.B. EXPERT CLEAN-UP The Peninsula paint and &l2-0212 alum. &nu V itshing boat ine. lsd $8000. Clear. Ideal l =963-==n=l~6·======= Personalized \\-'Ork for yard desirners are on call with motor. tor deprec. $85,000 value. particular people. 962-4914 673-9954 ·ref. · OFFJCE & APT. combo. Call 551·6507 FOR prope-· 4~ -•4 Ceblnolmekln• 65IO l Reside & conduct business l~-~-~~-'--=c ''" """" .. ,,., · • NEW Lawns, re·seeding. STORY Stucco & overhang both. Only s145 mo. Crpts, lfave 40x40 Bldg. on 63~)x 160 ac Riverside. mobile Furniture &: Antiques Complete lawn care. Clean $99. 2 story stucco &: drps, 222.A 5th St , HB. 280 M·I lot. Want vacant 1 hOme, zoned, $3000 ac, Refini~hlng &: Restorina:. up by job or month. Free overhang $149. Ac1t c.eiltnr 536-l319, 673-1784. acre C·l or residence in OI.'· trade all or part. Only 3' * 645-0991 * estimates. For into call $13. per rm. Min. 3 rm.a ange Co. Ray Gault, Her1-mi center Rivenlde. FOR 897-2417 or 846-0932 ~n &: 637-6119 · OFFICE OR STORE R I E "'"1151 ~ _,, I:J x. 33• or 30 x 35. tage ra stalt', _,,_ other property. 4""".......,.. C•rpenfllrlng 6590 ROTOTILL ING No Wasting off st pking & util furn List ft here -tn Orange 2(1 Acres level land New lawns, landscap!ng. *WALLPAPER* Neivport & Bay Center, CM What do you heve to tradef, near Winnemuca, Nevada CARPENTRY Shrubs & trees removed. When )'OU call ''Mac" · 20:>2 Ne"-'J)(}rt Blvd 646-l25:J County's Jaritest read trad-Trade for camper. car, MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Free est. 543-174:J 548-1444 5fS-Of4.9 LOVELY N.B, Bldg has of. lna:post-aD'Jmabadnl. house with pool or?!? TIX' Sm-12. Cabinet In pr-AL'S Landscaping. Tree 2 College atudenta will -1-1 age1 I: o t h e r cabmets. _.., fice suites .& ground com· -l * ·* * * * removal. Yard remodeling. ~verage 3 BR ext. for $145., 54.5-8115, U no answer leavt .,._ h h u I cJ d' n1ercial space avail, 11as au ng, ot cleanup. in u ing labor & materlal.. me at "6-237l. lL o. n · rnkl 6 Cal Choice Location epa1r sp n . 73-11 66 I Steve, 548-4549 675-3355 REAL ESTATE BUSINESS •ncl Ande'J'!Oll NEAT & rellable, 30 yn; METICULOUS PAINT. Best Location in CdM General FINANCIAL QU~Y Woodcraft, sml exp. Complete yd ~erv. BLUE CHIP STAMPS. INS. ·~ 14 00 f n.l Off 1-..o;,:;;_o;_:;;... _____ , , _..:._:;..::.;:.:;;::..::::...---· lre.n 1 constr. & carpentry. Comml 642-4389 crew col. students In! -·I "'."'to sq. t. '":-:wee · R. E . Wanttd 6240 Buslne11 Free consultation & quote. · h • ~. ice Spaces. Avail l mmed. Opportunities 6300 CaL Ken &ls..-0044 S4S423S JAPANESE Ga rd en.i n g ouses. Exp. Docks. 675.5812 Phone Owner. 642·9950 Responsible Party A 1 C RPE ' Service. Neat work. CJeanup I WIU. paint a 3 bdrm ORT B h n.1 W 11 to Buy • A NTRY yd m•1nt 968-230.3 house •· .,= Incl NF.\VP eac ....., uxe an Small Job Speclali~t · 'I · wr ....,.,, trim, Off ice:;;. Air-con<l., heated. I-louse or income property FASTEST Call Gordon 847-6745 .$15 A MO. P.10W, EDGE, stucco. labor & materW. wt priv ba. 2400 \\'. Coast On or nelll' water REPAffiS * ALTERATIONS CLEANUP. Call aft 5 PM, Gene. 557·7543 or 54&9082. Hwy. For ~md~ymt GROWING FIELD * CABlNETS. Any size job 537-7973 PAINTING-Int. & Ext . DESK space Jor r en t : 25 yrs aper. S48-671l Jl!'tl'S Gardenlni & lawn Highest Quallt;y, Lowe&t Broadway, CM . Reas. can1 =~,....:C~•="='=6_7_S-8_c;5_7_5__ maintenance. Res. & CC(lffi· Prices, Fully exp. Ins. John incld. ph. Call mornings. BUSINESS and VENDING! Vending la: big GEN. repair, add., cab. merclal ,, 5404837 673-U66 646--03.13 FINANCIAL buslnesa! Vending the U.ll. Formica, paneling, marllte. m""TEoii;'-:::-;=~===-, Anything! Dick, 673-4-459. CLEAN-UP SPECIALISf R or Ext. PAINTING, OFFICE !>pace, healing & • way is sound and profitable Mowing, edging_ odd jnbs, IMMED. SERVICE. LoceJ air conditioning, plenty of Bu11ne1s • • business! Vending routefl are Reuonable. 548-695.5 ref. FREE est. 548.l627 parking, Adjacent to Secur-Opportunities 6300 alway11: established tor UJ .J. C•m•nt, Concrete 6600 distr!bulor llO you never have ./ YARD Care • reliable 30 DAY Special Int & Ext ity Pacific Bank. 188 E. AAA tn aell or solicit! CONCRETE. all types. Free College atude nt. Call aft 5 Free est Loe refs, llc'd l71h S1. C.i\1. 642-4210 CANDY SUPPL y estimate. Sawing. breaking, pm, * 540-9590 & ins. Call Chuck 645--0809 SHARE 250 sq ft. Furn & ROUTE VENDING! Vending requi?Ta hauling I: 1kII>lo11.d Ing · PROF. Gardener estbl lgr PAINTING. Ext.-lnt. 18 )Tll. U!il 's .. Alr, Music. \Veslcli11. (NO SELLlNG INVOLVED) that you have a serviceable ~ce Ir quality, 548-8668 rt. Reas.. ex p . d l exper. Ins. Lie, Free est $7:>. 642-3811 Plan one ........ $325.00 car! Vending the U.I.l. way knowledgeable-refs. 645-2754 Accoust Ceilings. 548-5325. vBAY LIDO BLDG. Plan two ········ $97:\.00 canbe doneevenlnp,week-*CONCRETE Work, JOHNSON'S GAaDENING YOU Supply Tbe Palnt. 3 .~i(K) Npt Blvd. NB. 675-2464 Plfln threP ...... $1625.00 ends. or 6 to 10 hours per Licensed. Patios I drvwys, Yard care. Clean-up•, Prun-Br, Liv R~f & Kitchen Industrial Pro1>9rty loqtll r" a t>ont all. -Excellent 11't!ek during day.time! etc. Phillipi Cement. p · 1 d ' e.•o "~'"' ing, planting. 962-2035 rune . S50. Call 557-8838. i11ron1e for a trw hours VENDING' v ndl I ~~~ . . e ng equ p. RETIRED Painter: 26 .,... 6080 \\'t-c kly 1vork. !Da:)'s & 1 d 1· t I CONCRETE work all .,,,.,.! G I ,.. men an supp 1es o star "'"" · enera Service• 6682 ex:per. Neat & honeaL Non Evcningsl. Refilling a n d in business can be obtained Sawing, breakinz, hauling. drinker. Call 5.36-680l ----------! collf'cf.ing money from coi n for as little u $500 to $2,SOO. Sklploading; Llc, Service & M·l. 5 RENTALS on Pla~n· operated dispensers in Ne10;. \rending protlts can grow 10 "Qu=al=lty~·-"'-=~l-01-0~---APT CLEANING -Painting * PAPERHANGING tla Ave, Cl\-L Small dO\vn . potl Beach and su1wund ing in exce5111 of $1,IXXI per DECORATIVE CONCRETE -Rug Shampooing & Lile & PAINTING. * 968-UlS 835 Amigos \Va y, NB Mgr. next door 86."J Amigos. 2 BR ., frpl. Pool. Adults . Sant• Ana PHONE: 551-8200 Income Pro,,.rty $69.~. C11!1 mornings arr.<1 . \\'e establish roufe. month. DRrvE~WAIJ(S.PATIO Repa irs . RE M ARC 6000 6·16--033~ (Jlandles nan1e brand candy CALL DON, 642-8514 SERVICES, 847~ and gnacksl. Fol' pcrliOnal VENDING! Vending route8 1000 BUSINESS cards $5.95 . Painting, Sig"• 6155 • ~Am"'"' w.~' """""""""""""""""""""llG-R-EA T BUYS CAN'T BE BEAT Coron• del Mar 5250 BEACH BLUFF APTS New 2 & 3 BR. patios, pool, view. dishwasher. 8231 EU ls. 842-8477 NE\V Upstairs 2 BR, sun- deck. fully l'rp!'rl &· drps, 3 blks beRrh 405 Slh SI $175 mo. 53&--.~592. Smgle Story South Sea At mosphere 2 Bedroom 2 Baths CarpEts & Drapes Air Conditioner! Private Palios NE\V, lg. 2 bdrm (\uplt>.x Jl r~ll'li Pool Jil hlk~. to bC>nch. Crp1 . rlrps., bll·Jn~. No pets. $J;J:i. l'lrnty of ll111·n C213J 4.:l!f..99j7 C11rpor1 & Storage AITRAC. 3 BR. Crpl!i . .-Irr~. gflr, kids nk. Sl 75. P ool. Jl!DDF:N" VILLAGE 968-7510 ur 847--0325. (;A R.DEN /\PTS * 4-PLEX . comer location pride of ownershi p . renc. ed patios -Out of town 01vner. Live in ol1f', le! rt'ntals pay exrensr i; . $59.950 -only $12,000 {!01rn. ~ !'> !"EP1\IlATE JIOUSES 111 Jo n lo.:a!lon ~ l11ron1e $76~ month . A rr.al bl1y al $fi9,500 • 0\l'IWr leaving town, 11·i l1 hclfl finance. &16-7171 \RTHEREAL ~ ~~r~t~.~? Business Prop•rty 6050 I I 2:..00 South &Ill a LARGE, c can ap!, em-'d FOR Sn.le hy o\\·ner, 7-unit '" I -"' E' Santa Ana + 546·1 ~2.I garA gP, '"'u IS, ~"'"' .ng-mod ern :"i;fEDTCAL DEN- land St_ ~3&120:'i TAI. CENTER. Go od $1:.0 • l.RG 2 BR. Studio • c~o~m:.;;.;m~•~r~c-la_l ____ 60l5_ i11tervie w in Newport Br.ach are assigned to people lrOm MORE Concrete patio !or d e I iv ere d . s i mulatad area, 5end name, address all walks of lite, 80 write less money. Artlatlc setting. engraving. FREE SAMPL- and phone number to giving reference• and phone Lie., call Max at 64f..0687. ES. 3 day service, 54Q..3924 MUL'l'l;,STATF. DISTRIBUT. numlx-r to U591!ry Indus-CEMENT WORK . no job too CALL THE HANDYMAN I NG, 1Nc. 1681 Broadway. tries, Inc. 1195 Empire (en. Small, reasonable. fue PRIME OCEANFRONT A11ahrit11, Calif. 92802 (714) tral, .Dallu. Texaa 75247. Estlm. H. Stunlck 548-8615 General J.lome Repair MARINA Jn New,.,,.,rt Belich 718.~" ' •-, # 1278 •. * fi7S-1341 * 4 furnished uni ts , zonl'tl com- rnerci al, 25x125, $69 ,500 , Owner : 673-2259, 644-5972 r--"""' n.-.. ~· DISl'li>...iUISHED Concrete w/high potenial S315,CMXl.I~'"==~·~"'=====~ "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•! d '·'TNGAARD RF. MI 2-2222 BUSINESS OPPQ.RTUNITY :; esign patios, walkll & "::.:_c:c_:-..._.:c,.='-.;.,:,c,c= IF you are. honest and willing d" G 49•1018 ,.. . • :'11 AN OP. \\'OMAN nvews ys. ary .. .- $1.10.()(1() ~TORE bu1ld1ng. Reli;iblP Pf!rson from th is to work, we have a Service ti8G-698 \\, l91h S!. Bethel area lo service and collect Stat ion for )'(Ill .In Orange To1vers area, 5:18-1768 Agt. from outoniatic dispeni;ers. County &:. Beach area.a. No experience needed .•. We-. Some financing with ap. Industrial Rental 6090 r~tabllsh accounts for yot1 . prover! credit. Blue chip C11.t , re!erenC(IS and $9S5 tn stamp help. Call any hour; $l,7SJ ca~h cap it al 53J..1379lorappointment. ""~f'~~ary. 4 10 12 hours CLEANING Service: 1111 v•eekly nets exc ellent e-qulp. avail .. new truck. n1011thly income. Full time Desire working partner ,,..\th 1~ Sq ft f0r mf)l:., all fl(IW Pr. 111 sm0g-frl'e Laguna Br11 rh. 4S4-4447 Lots -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';100;;; more. F'or local interv:ew, ~mall investment. Call col-• wri1e, include tel ~phon e leet: (714J 327-7180 Art. 5 number to PM. BAYCREST Contractors 6620 ROOM AD DITIONS. L. T. C o natruc tio n . Family rooms. single or 2 story. Esti mates, plan5, layout & financing. Call 847-1511. Additions * Remodelina: F'red H. Ger.vlck, Lie. 673-6041 • 549-2170 C•rpet Cleanlng 6625 Hauling 6730 AMBITIOUS College boy ha& truck: will haul. move. Ex. per, dep. 833-6075 for tree esL YARD/ Gar. Cleanup . Remo\•e trees, ivy, trash. Grade, backhoe, 962-8745 f.tOVING, garage clea_n..up & lite haulillg. Rea!!Onable. Free estimates, 64j..llifrl. LITE Hauling & rarage clean-up. _Mon thru Sal Free estimate 54S-5031 CUSTOM SIGNS -Indoor -Outdoor magnetic. Fleet &: quantity discounts. $5. to 110. m.3593 Pla1terln9, Patch, Repair 6llO * PATCH PLASTERING All types. Free estimates Call 540-6825 Plumbing Water heaters-dl5J'.IOSM'• Gen. repairs f7.50 per hr. &42-2755-642-05!'.6 PLUMBING REPAIR No job too small • 642-.3128 • Rernod•llng & Repair '"o Only a few like thb one JelL $26,:'".00, EAGLE INDUSTRIES ~938 Meadowbrook-RoAd Minneapolis, Minn 55426 5 STATION BEAUTY SALON l"or Let!e Or Sell For Information '>"°") ~ HAULING & Clean-up. *'mE REMODELERS• ~·~ ~~ Trees removed. R'asonable. Free ests -100% Financing Jean Smith, Realtor VENDING CARPET Free estimate. 548--174:J Kitchens _ garage1 _ carportl'I 2 BDRM, l he.th , Nr J-t.R. Arit. (Triplex). Fam\ly sizr retur n, goorl 1vr i t c -o ll , Jloi;pital, 2 sm. chilrlrf'n ok, ldlrh. w/ b!tns, crpts, flrps, Consider home or ? in TM) pets, $130 mo. 847-4349 lrplr .. encl gar. 1 (lf 2 1r1irlc. See 5911 He,. A1·r., 2 BR. Crpl. drps. oven. children ok. (Nr i::chls) No H.B. C1.!l nwncr (71 •11 nngt', no pl'.'tS, I chlld OK. flC'!S. 2230 S. Cr.111er SL, $46-3221 eves. 1213) 696-1810 400 E. 17th St., Costa Me!&. Sl.'ID. 842-1544 S.A. Nr Warner. 54;!--0989 <lays. 646-llSS MAN OR WOMAN PART OR f1JLL TIME CaJI 64Z-6.523 GREAT lood & malt shop operation for sale to rlaht party. UCI CampUs. Good buslneu now • tantutlc growth. $5000 cln. Contact Dan.833-2470 STEAM CLEANED HAULING $10 A LOAD Complete Remodeling. Qu..U. Clean up. Tree Se[V. Gen. ty Contractors. 642-.3660 lOc SQ. FT. Pruning 646-2528, 543.&043 Alao carpet Installation * IF )'OU need remodellng. 1~~=====~~~~~1=-=-~====1~~~~~1 Santa Ana 5620 Santa A"a 5620 Bu1ln111 R•nt•I 6060 l.fard boiled rgg vendors Loclttion proven "'5971 painting. or repairs. Call ._... Housecl•anlng 6735 Dick 642-1797 :::::::.::.::.::;;;..~~~;:.:c;;;..;o:;;;;;_;.;;c;;._~~--=.;.;; . ~~~~~_,::_6200 REMARC Service&. 3 room• j oo=========- S:Jl.50, Full guar&n. Credit JOE'S CLEAN SER·V. ~-''#.Ing Q60 No irellifll ....4pa.rlm•,.1~ S pa..Ulo Sty1-LPsrury J ~ J Be4r"°"" ,.,.,,,,hell ,.,.4 v .. ,.,,...,... ,.,.,, u''"' Q..,,.1 !Jlul• c.,.,,.._,,.11 r....a1,.. t•i!"U... '"'""°' om.,. F "'"-'" 1'•"1'7 • Clom Prifffe Deelr •""' 8.,t<1ny Air c,,nili1l<1nM EnJtt'I >'<1•r Q..,,. Prl~.u Sf. B .. 1..l ,.ool--€Dlf»r TY AnJ41nM Now Renting }•II Nnr1'-n/ ~"'" ((HUI Pl•• 1000 W. MacArihur Bl•d. J 11l0t:lr f:,.,, •I Rrla1"' S""la Ana 54-0-8497 HILLGREN SQUARE 2 stores avail. 1or lmmM. lea.!U! in ollf! or c!ty'a: bUl'llesl shopping centers. App. 850 t;q. fl. ea. 250 E. 17th St., Coi;ta Me~a Call Mr. Bram 12131OL1·?700 XLNT oppor. for arUst or <'raftsrnan, LaR Bch, J un. J ul, Aug • rca.~onablc. 1021) S. Coo~t . 494--GIWS a.m. •S'fORE -$110. 828 \V. 19th SL , CM. Avail June ht. 548-1768 Store or Ofc. 600 sq ft In C,M. • Owner. 646-2130 Office Rental DELUXE 1·2 or 3 rm. 1r11lte- nr. Orllnge County Airport It Irvine lndu1trlal Complex. Carpet, drapes, music, aiJ'..condlUonina: I: janitorial !l(!rvict. AVAILABLE NOW BOB PE1TIT, Realtor e 833--0lOl e NO. C,M. office. nice. Pror. Air.eon(!, rpt.'!, rip~. $79 ea. 64(,..4833; &.ft 5, M7~Th7 TIRED ol that old furniture? It'~ really not that h11.n1 to replace. Just watch the furnirure l m ~Cf'llaneo111 co!umrt.1 In the Claultled Secfkm .. 5 AC, level w/ ,:Int view. 1 o( lo.,vest prked pal'cels in area. Nr. Roy Roger's Inn $6500 terms. 673-ll66 Bia'. Let u1 prove ca.rdt OK. 847-6688. 646-1234 We do Everything • ~s. &: -- HOME &: APT Cleaninr Comm. Free E.1t. 519·3126 • Dressmaking. Altuatlom BY DIAMOND BAY & Beach Janitorial Designed to "Uit )'OU. High Weekly earnll'lgl INVESTIGATE BuslM11 Wanted 6305 1J7 21st St., Costa Mesa Carpets, wtndows, tloor.i, Call Jo * 646-MtS n4: 893-7410 NEWLY Uc. BrokeT will buy 645-1317 Frttest. etc. Res " Commc'l , Resort ProJ)9rtv 6205 ,...,~-~-=----eit. 1; .1 profitable R.E. STEAM Jet carpet cleaning. Mrrl401 A~t Operating Managera but H 1 B h Cla.rKare na t lon~wlde HOUSECLEANING LA/\_E ARRO\VllEAD ~8500 w anted for autom111ed s "'1111• un · c · • s.ervlce. Free est. &t2-4055 1nnves you into beautllul 4 childrens' 16 mm color ?vlidway or Westminster Exp. Reaa. ·Rer. 83&-064$ BR 3 B• t · 1 1 h area. f213 1 439-2823 {Long , " n· eve . · ome theaters in or near sOOpping D ft• S • 6627 WJNDO\V WASHING w/a.11 modern convenirnc:fl~, cenlers. l\.fuat have Jirm Beach) ~-~~ ervtc• COMMERCIAL I-TOME incl $5000 worth of new furn. financial -reapol'IJJiblllty. Call lnvestm•nt DRAfTING Se rv I ct C&ll Pete -492-1207 & drap<>a, AI MI dh;hwn..11her, or ~'rile Celebri tiei Intern&· 6310 Pn:-Hmlnary ot. flnlah work. I ~=;;:==;=:=~~= Tll•, Ceramic 6974 * Verne, Tbf! Ttle Mait * Cust. work. Inslall &: repal.n. No job too 1maJl. Pluter patio. Leakfne •howtt repair. 847.1957/IJ46.0206 •. disposal, bltn v acuum , tional 213: 461-4111 Suite Opportunities By job/hr H.B. 968-nl6. Iron Ina 6755 A.\t/FM inter-com in ea. 106. ' 1800 N, Highland, ----------NOW'S THE ....x TrH S.rvlc• rm. Call 540-1867 or Hollywood, Cal.if. 00028. e HORSE LOVERS e IRONING In my home, J1 5'1~703, evei;. COIN LAUNDRIES Jnvest r.,w tn beaut1ru1 !!!;_~~ ' altera-TftEE SERVICE AD types - BEAUTIFUL Northern Calif.. FrJgldalr• comm.'l atable to be built In TIME FOR Li.le & Ina. FrH Eattma• acreage In Moda.c NaU. From $6500 to $31500 Santa Ana Hts. Use permit Janlterlal 6790 8U-S584 Fore1t, California Pinet . • BueM Park • ~ e allows 24 box 8talla, bull I '-=~""''----= TREEs. Hedps, trbn. cut. Musi sell. ~ down $35 Cypress • Westmtna:ter e PfU. rkllna arena & gpecll.· CLEAR. Vu Maintenance. \Ve itumps, remOved. hauled. 30 month. 646-1587 aJtu 6:00 Huntington Btach • Garden I :o""o::'"::=;":;,•:.,· ,:,en.::=""":=:==::. I QUICK CASH do everything! SpeclAJlzlnc yn exp. l'ully Ins. 80-«>30 P.M. C-ruve e Orange e Santa Ir apt cleanup, Free est. M PERRON'S TREE SER., Ana • Coll!& Meu • Ana. Money N LOln 6320 hr serv. 646-2898 Ornamental Prunl- Out of Stat• Prop. 6208 helm • THROUGH A .... $29SFULL PRICE CALL CHARLIE 525-1333 1 t TD L an !:!,nc(•eepln' 68JO 25 ,.,.. .... ...- % Aert Pine Tree Cove~* Local Opportunity* S 0 DAILY Pl 0 LICENS!D landscape con-Upholstery "90 Cabin SHc \V/Road . Sho11 &mployment A,e,,cy, melnl.y 1% INTEREST L T tractor. Complete scrv\ca. \\'lllk to 2 lake.~. SutTot!nded AQlaried po11lllons. E1t&b. 20 2 d TD L 968-1928 or 646-8247 C'lYKOSKl'S cu~tom. Uphol. hy Nat'l Forest, So. Oregon. yra .• low over head, profit. nT-• b•"'' •• _ou;a1y.n WANT AD TTRED ol lh81 old furniture! European Craf'tlmanabJp 011l,)> 3 Avail. 644-4185, a ble. Can train. I~sllgata "" '" ~., Jri really not that Mrd 1007.. tin! 642·1tS4 HOUSP. on Pt'n!n, 4 hr. 2 '-makf! offer._ Owner h.!I• 642 2171 545-06ll to repl.a~. Juat watch tne 18.11 Newport Blvd .• C.M. ha. FAmlly needs lmmed. <'I I he " interest&. Evei . • 642 5&ll furniture k miacellaneous DlM. d~t ~5678. CMrre """Sll~g!on. Priv. "h···. Call 673--0.172. Serving H11rbor atta 21 yrs. • -l"m-In the ~-··"'~ ~.. , .. ' S ttl Mo t C ... ., .. ... ~ your ad, then sit beck and dny &12-4910, clt1 373 Con-NO maf!er ·wtigt tt ii:, )"'OU a •r r gag• O.. Section. nelly. Eves 4 wk n d 8 can i;ell lt .,.,,ith e DAIL y_ 336 E. 17th Street ll.!ten h> thf: phone ring! -. ------------- ~~11.90 Pnm WANT ADI 842-~ Sltur"*7 -DfMF.,.A--LJNESl •· I DAii. Y PILOT INES~ •"" "NANCI AL Morft .. es, Trust Deeds 6345 ;ExC"ha11ge your Tn1st O.•f'd fur e1:1sh l1'.1!111y. Call T. D. C"nrl't', lnt:. 54:r.8381 Mone y Wanted 63SO Nt-:Ell $1.2.-1.000 ~url TD 1rr(J ~~0.000 nnw ti /1 /70, bal l11(l'l'J Si·t'•U'«d by Jill 11.C Jn L 111-:u n a J:1<·11~·1!. One • !\!11l1on \al 11ppff\\, $700:'1f f'q . \\'il l 11a~ ni:i~. a1!011. 1111. flO'•l Box j 2j ll ll. :.11~\31!1, 6il-171'1. ANNOUNCEMENTS~ and NOTICES Found (Free Ads) 6400 B!.1('\..1 .. 11 ·r,'n 11•r Poorllr. flo-,, '"U!il', n •rl 1·ullflr I' -.ii 1•·r i'o 1:111s. ,·u· r·111f ll1". .t Ht•1!'f>ll .':'I, ,"\ll, f>r1 llfil l\~1':0: f(llll!d Oil l'.>l:ll• h l'U 1 .. 11111,I ,(, B:ilbna. l11qu1rr al •"'"IUl\!1•r. [Ja il~' Plhl1, :!~II B.tlt)('l,1, N.R. f ~.~\I. \L j:; !>!1,-, ,-.,-,-,-,-.,-,1 lcl -,-,.,-,. h n111n <"ullar, l••lfl1'1 on ~an r 11ri,:,l F11.v. ti ll-21.1 ll ,'ihop :.1~-·n121 UAS~£T J lou11rl. n1al('. \ 1r K·.\1art. Call 67.'>-7.i r: or 218 ::Jrd SI • NB. ON E malr l"IO>;rr :1bo111 ,I yr.:;. old. Jlu n !i ni.:ton llarbour ;l t1'a. 8 16-:l~:Ml \\'lllTF. Pt'l"Sl.'l.11 C.'l1. vie !'(lfl B1k F.I Ca1n1no. C:O.t. Call :~ii-71i~;·, 1111 6 p.n1. \\'J\TCH J11 plal'l!l' co111arr11·r 11 /kr.1. Vn-. J-:dison ll.S. ~)611-40!11 Lost 6401 $2'1 RE\V. for rr111n1 nl 1!aught1'r 's \Vt' i n1 a r ii n r r ··oukr." Lo!<t J/21. Coron;1. L;::r. ~ray dog .'rll. & hlk. f'yt'S. 61-!-2~.J9; 5 4 7 -8 3 ·11 J\N"\'Tlr..1E. LO.c;T: ilf 1.'."Ml-Trrnrr puppy, 11!11lr, brown i:;po!i; & bead. ,,·his kcrrd fu cr. l\·rrrls mrrl. A ~t'n. Vu:. j\lor11U\'lit f..· Sunsr!, C.\I. Hr11·arr! fr12-26fl6. --~-~~-LOST: \lo'rl. :.t. r I u r r y, lir'011·n1~h rrn1alr dog. Alls. !u ··Pu11.lr." \·1r. \lr~a V<'rdr Cntry. Club. H1'w. ;):1i-R.ii."1 LOST : Yrl!ou• &· t;n•rn Parakrt'1, brnnlc I!';:: hanrl . \11('. f>I Calif. ,\· Orri::on $l, C\I. :.1~31~~. ~1~111 ----GEP .. \IAN Stwphrrd. mate. hl;1i:k k 1>1h·rr. hlur fl<"llOI 0 11 r110111. ''S lr 1ri er··. f,16-~'.7'.lS. --==~cccc=~ LOST: C:RJ::EN \\'ALLF:T !.· c-!1rrk hk. 1\ppro\. :".300 l•1k C'nasl !111·'" NB. l'.<'l'lard' C<ill ~\2-ll07l. LO~T: Fl'lll. Tnrln1~r <:hrll 1·a1, rar'r·. n1slirwt111• I.in • &· r y1•s. \'1". J\r11 land .\; Sl:i lPr. ltr11·;u·d! ;.:t7-JS.~!"1 'l\'li!TF: rnu.lc-flt•Jdlr. 1u· Glrnnryr l' ~· C r n 1 r r , J..;ii;u na . 1:f7-127·1. ·1!J.l-S~:i2 Bl.Li l::: Prrsinn Tu;:;;-c~ Vir. :!~r·d .~ Oranb"'l'. C .. \I. Plca:;r l"all Ii 12-0J IR Personals 640S *Alone? Yr<:, it 's }'llllr Jaull . t'Q r .. ,.... 1111'd1·1I m••s .. ni:•· tlial \\IU 1:ha ngl' )our hit., f":ill 11 F~ILLY LIC-1· '\'~Fn • Rr11,1\\'11<·d l!1nd11 sr11r11u:i\isl. Aiil 1!" '"'• all n1 .. t 1\'r~. l.111r-f.l;irnn:,:r. B11-.111r.;, 1'1·:1d1ni:~ ~11·0·11 7 11.•\i. ;1 \\<'•I;, :1t.;\J.;11';\1 :11:! \', 1.t C.11n1110 l:<'.+1, S.1n f'I• 111(•111r. t~2.1+1~r •. ,J'\211r1~r, :-.11UI\.' !11111 :-;p!'llll°' t'(l\'l'l.f-.S.;.:l('.l:LI S HAPPINESS IS I ~·011111 ·1·1~ 1]1,. )11 Cl'•>\\'d I ::>1ncJ•·<1. J)111 I>< !'~rl 1t·~ Ora11£:1' rn. 2.!I 1•rn. 111•1.2.11,0 "\E\V CLL B!!(ll :-;E fll'l-.i'! * Newporter Sauna * t·or 1\ll'n N \\'01n1•11 f'n1[ei,i,111n:1I F~·mi1ll' ::>tHrt Newporter Inn Hotel 1107 J<1111hrlr<-r f{{l, fl: ll. iiU.O!lflt A LCOllOLICS Anon}TIHJU~ Phon<' :tl2-i 2\i "r \\'tllt' 1o P .O. Box 12'13 Co~!a ;\lr~:t. Tutoring 6490 EXP. ·r, nrhrr. l"r 1•l1·rnrn. la1·y sh1dl'11 I,, Cn-1 .. \lr·"·'· S:'t l1r . Sun1n1rr ·,r>-:!\~.1 JOBS & EMPLO-YMOO Job Wanted, Women 7020 EXP'D. T<'liahlr 11''1n .1 n wants t:<'n'I. 0H1t1' 1in~111on 646--2134 eve. or Wt'(•kend. AIDES • for convai('SC'enC(', elderly ea.re or fAmily r.<ire. Jlomem11.keno;. 547-6681 DENTAL HYGIENI ST AYllil May JJ.26. !'A0-1<181 Jobs Men,. Wom, 7100 Advertising A9ency *SECRETARY * Newport Beach. E,lrp('rit•ncf'd F:Xt.'t'll. lyp1ng & shorthand. f;OffiC billlng, under JO. Pres. l'!Urc pace. Xlnt, beneflls. C3U !71~) 642-1910 DON'T JUST \t'ISJ I for Jurnl1hin1ts for your hnmi-, f1nd great buys in t.xlay'1 Cl1111lflerl Aris. Monda1, Mar 25 1970 JOBS A EMPLOYMENT JOBS A EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS A EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ----------Jobs--M.n,. Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Job........Me:n, Wom. 7100 Job~en, Wom. 7100 Job._,,Men, Wom. 7100 Jobt-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs.---Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs--Men, Wom. 7100 temporary personnel proud to be an • amer1can glad you 're a girl?? register with • amer1can girl invest your time & talent wisely & be your own boss! al • amer1can girl you will find exciting temporary positions to fit your schedule & needs. WE NEED TYPISTS KEYPUNCH OPRS. STENOS CLERK TYPISTS REPRO TYPISTS SECRETARIES GAL FRIDAY GEN'L. OFFICE PBX OPERATORS ASST. BKKPRS. ACCTG. CLERKS LITE FACTORY {Blue collar) NCR 482 (Proof operator) • amer1can girl needs YOU Call for Appt. or information. 833-3232 REGISTER NOW! 2172 Dupont, Suite 12 Newport Beach (Nr. Orange County Airport) I abilities ar:ilimiteo ager:ic,y Ba""'"" CREDIT CHECKER Experienced e i\PPLY IN PERSON e CLOTHING Pricl!'r, t'Xpcr preferred. Apply 410 E. -Ith St., S.A. COASTAL AGENCY EQUIPMENT MECHANIC -CITY OF- NEWPORT BEACH $6Sl to $791 per month 110L:SLK1--£J't:t{ U a ,1 :., Pa I 1u 1 r ,~\I Con\ <1h·,.·1•n1 llu ... p \~,/Jj;. Bl;1ckhlnl !')I , C:an!Pn C:1'ft\'1· X~7-::XU:\ l~~l ,\LW·:H • l:..\p'd 1·.u.!1,. g:irag~· door, 1111t•n·o111111. l>f'rv ! rl•p1111• I futi.111 .. 11ork \\'Jll 11·aul. I t ti ualificd. :J.IS--07".0 1.JVt: In ,\•,111tl'd f o r llvll~l'~•·rpu1g & Child Can;-. J-:,\JJ\'l ! rrfrr lll'('es,;. Xlnt lruul•' l'r11 br & ba i\1osr "knd-. vff Call (.12-::.JQ.'I lil•IUP noon Cl~ a1 :i P\I _ I l.\0 :.0 ':;;.1J 11 y~ .t P:'lt.1 I',, I 1111· r f' ~I C'o11\•1tlr-.rp11t Secretary COrlj.,:l'rlLal l:L'OUP. Ol'f!!Ul VICI\ ofl°s. Good skills. P leasant, co-0pcr11tivc !'tlllu{lc. BANK OF AMERICA :; 14-1 Via L)dCl Credit & Collcc:uon (0h•1'k t:1qi. required Uays, full llffi('. Persontlt'!I Departn1enr_ lloa): Hosp1hd , N•~·pt Bca!•h WE PLACE 1'£0Ptf->DIAGNOS.r( "~ ''F"' "' JANITOHl1\l.. :'.l;;lur~ \Jul<' ur Couple 11 .R. arl'11. '.I hr~ per nitc _ 536-8600 l IL"p 1::0'i.• llLH·k!i1 rtl SI I :11n:>'11 C ni1 ,. 11:\7-31!6:1 I Legal Secretary Ne1rport Bearh Ll1igarlon r xp, Sii, J'apJrl. 1-:QtJ11t op1:001·tu11iry cn1ployl'r ill'C. lypu~. Sf>cy lo Sr lllH"t. BA 11 :\! h J f) _ n i C h f !i ner, ~1AVt::HJCK. ]728 Ne"'·port J S Blvd .. C.\l. Apply 1tft 6 p.m. r. ecretary -- Sharp youni,: i;:irl 1'.'/~ood BEAUTY Operator. booth skill!>!, Lili 11 oik lr k,grd JS spat l' ror ;-ent , Cd:-.1. Heas. ok. Brauti!uJ Joe. oh:s. 673.-16•16, f'\'C ~2~111:1 BOOKKEEPE_R_ Per5onnel Clerk SECRETARY Prr<;onncl l''=P rcq'd + i::ood N('11'pOrt Beach. Good sr1·re. t)plng, 1ht•lupho11o.• No Sii. tar111I ~kills and kno\1·lr1li:r Clerk Typist Hravy phonf' work. :,,, l yp1n~. ~nn1r i.:rn'J Ofl· hki;nl. Loe. !11·111, i;uocl adl';1n(1·rnt•111. Gen'I Ofc & PR All Anli'l'll'flll ~l l'l !O fh'IV(' tfl. l'a l'.~ for !lt•l"'tt'I"!>. Phonci;. lypC' acr. ;l() w11111, ol <loulilc·r nn'}. Pt·C'~surr parr , uni\('r :IO. Xlnt l)("nt:·· fl1s. S.:.11(1 1•csun1e Box i\!.j97 Uarly Pilot -Bkkpr F /C-t-;-$60 0- :'\lnt beat:h c11y co. has i111- incd, Qp1:n1ng. JASON BEST l·~n1 p)Qym('nt A.t:e ncy 2207 SQ. J',!11111. Santa Ana !">46-:~110 BLUE DOLPHIN i\Jf~. f'XJ), J'C'flUlrl'(I. lO key WAITRESS. Exp'd. Over 25. adder. Lile l}'fllll!):. 3335 Via l.ido. N .B. A/ P Clerk PART TIME !2 11) 4. ~. rlays Fa~t arr. lyfi. in.c:. S<-11 s tarrrr. "Peoplr l..OV<'t''', La;.:una arra. TRISH HOPKINS •IS8 E, 17111, Suitr 224 C.l'>t 642-1470 Arcounling·Clrricnl RUTH RYAN AGENCY f::l:('r SrC')' •••••• -••• 1o $i00 Rrrl'pf. C:rn. or" ...... J,\2fl B1lli11go C!rrk •...•..... s~7;, Cl'n Ofc Trnr •••••••.•. s~:.ri HPcrpl1ot1 is1 •.•••••••••. $:t·.o Cl<'rk Typi.~t .••••••...•• $.~7'1 ~r<'y/Bkkpr •....... 111 St1.'.l BOYS CARRIERS WANTED Dana Poi n r, Cap1slrano Bl'ach. Ages 10-l•L CONV,CT JOHN HEIM 492.<1·120 BUSBOYS APPLY IN P ERSON REUBEN'S COCO'S 4647 tl1AC ARTIHJR NE\\'PORT BEACH Cost Ar·r ii:: ••.••...•. 10 Jf>:.0 Secy Par1 11111(' .•.. 10 $.~. h1· l----.B"o=yo~o-c1c0c_~1-4c-- Ji!"l.i J\'1·11·nort. C\1 hlG-4lC>4 li!l.11 o":u·h, J rn 1M7·9617 --A-GOOd Jobi-- GENERAL OFFICE $·100 Carrier Routes Open "" Laguna Beach. So. l.aJ:una DAILY PrLOT 642-4.'m Good applilu<lr lor learning. BU''ER F'or the Cap1s lraoo IYP<' accura1('ly1. • _ Unified Sehool Dis 1r 1 c i • RE:CEPTlONIST $3'1.1 JI.lust have experi('nl'e 111 Direl·I traHic & 1n;1kr new purchasing. Send lrttcr ol friPnds on this rroru spot. 11ppl 1calio11 to Direc;:tnr nr DENTAL RECE:PT $•100 Pcr.~nn11C'I, Cap 1s t ra n o EKP. "''i1 h 11a1ir111~. nice pro. Un1!1ed Si·hool D i ~ t r 1 r t . plr & su1-roundi11cs. :!6126 Vil' tori a Blvd. ~-INANC~: CASHIER $3~ifl C11pi~trann Beach. Cfll1I .• B11nk ur hnanl'I' CXP. Busy-92ti72 bcforf' J une J:i, lf!70. CAR WASH HELP deal \\•i!h proplr. BURROUGHS 13\(J{P Rf'sponsible m s, for i:i:11·t w/ Prnn. Po.~!11on. i\lo1ny nprn. Ui;urc npp!itudr. ings, :: Lora11011s On111i::r Cu. BKPR $:i00 '$.Y.O 2950 llarhor Hlvd., C.1\I. Ft~ll chg ah1!11y. \Vork under CARPET clrancr t,. helrier d!l'l'l't1nn, grl'a! f'O. _ \1an!cd. l:xp'd tir lpful , full SECY, r URCJIASINC r1n1c, Apply Stcnn1 1\!11,qrr Jn!l'rnallonal Cn. 1·harmini;: Carprt Cleaners. 147 E. 111 11 ofc. f"1 nr prnp!t• SL, C!ll Rt>ar nf D.vno Sho[J. TY PJST $·100 I;;------..,;;,;;_;, Likl' lo lypc lii;urrs .t· kl'cp l ' . C;1shirr • . . . . . . • . . . . . . O]ll~n busy? t-un Co. ~\Vil! , .... inl SECY $.J.-JO/S600 '" 0 Bookkcc-f)C'r •••.••• , , , Oprn En!!i11ccr1 ni::. hki;:nd. ppor· p I · 0 ICY T,vo1s! , • , , • • • • 0Jlf'n tun1ty plus -g1'00i·y. IDi<'laphotll'l ----COS..\t~TICS llow .\IUt'I•? Spal'<'!JllH', 11011• 01uch? $5 lo s·~ hrly. !low '.' Call now 893-:i!\42/894-1112. Luzi('r. A co or Bris!ot.t.Tyer **COOK APPLY IN PERSON REUBEN'S COCO'S <\Gil i\lf\C f\RTH UH NE\\'POJlT B~ACll C OOl\-~:xpl'r , nrc . I' 11 I n1 c r es I Cunvalcs1:£'lll J lospilc.l. 1 307~1 B!at:kbit•d St. Carden G11ll'I' 8:17-:1863 -**COOK TRAIN El::. i\fust he 18 . T ll E ZOO. ;>.1ac:i\rthur <it Coast Jhvy, N.13. Apply iu fX'rson only. ----COUNTER (;iris, Ii h 1 rt pressf'r. \\11JJ trair.. Apply in pc1·son: EXPERT CLEANEHS 333 E. l71h St., Cosla ~1C'~a . COUN-TE-:.lt~cGc. ,c,.,~~,,-,-cd~» ~·Jf·anini; plant. f\11ply 2200 !ladl01' Bl\'d., h -2. C :\1. ----C{JL'NTEll t.: I R L. t•Xr1'U pr('f'U. Part l1mr Pi\! hr~. Call 61 1-2J\2 CLO\VN CLEANt:n s DENTAL i\~~.S~1s=T7AN~,.-.,,.- cha1rside, orthodontir ofrire. Top salary, congenial en- vironment. De n t a t rx- pcrlence is r equired. Age 20--:lO. 642-2626 * DENTA.L ASSISTANT * Expcrirncccl, capable girl for In.i nt dr-~k job. Dental ex- [ll'r. n('.c. &-ac h 11rca. 1146-3:'10. bet 8Ai\1·9f'.\1 DI SH\VASl!~:n .• f'11Jo1ere~\ Cnnva!rsccnt , l!ospih1 l. 1:;-07j Bla{•kbirrl SI., Garden G1~J1'r. S37.:iR63. ----Df)NUT LADIF~S 11antcd, 2; .. 4;, r\n r\prr. nrc. :'<IR [l(INUT. t.1:i E. l11h. C.!\J. * DRIVERS * No Experience Necessary! ~fast have clellll Oi.lilomia driving reeon:l. Aop!y YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th St. Costa Mesa DRIVf~R P/l11nc, 11vr r :!1 Near <1pfll'ara nr•r . A[Jlly ~II' .~. ~:d~. •1!0 E. li th ~1.. L' . .\I e ESC ROW OFFICER e J'n~11 1nn ava1l11 hll• in riur f'osl11 ,\Jrsa 0H11;(' frq• fl''r· :;n1111hlC', \\'r ll.gronmrr!, 111a· turr 111111\'!rlual 1'!1n1 mun1 ;'\ ,\ r~. sa lr c-~rro11· and Jon n prr:l{'r~s1ng f[llUl'd Superior Agency C;111 G-l:l-7111 Nurses A1<!1• ........•. (l f)('n Xl .. !\T. FRJNl;E RE\:EFlTS 4\ViH train) Cashirr/Clcrk ....... , 0 1)1'n cl~S:·~"ccllo'-''c~-'·,. cc-C70_,_1o_,_1e~sa Secrclary •••.......•••• $600 i\DUl.T For h!c hoUSl'.\\"Ofk 1 F'e(' Pairt•, &-co111panion for 13 ~.,. old Credit l11!r 1"1·!r11·1·i· .... O]Y'n i::1 rl, 11kd11y~. 0 11•11 lransp. 1\\'1!1 rra1n 1 Call 9ii:!-03!l6 aft 6P~1 . Tf'llrr ................ (lpr11 --ASSISTANT ___ Cirri<; T,\ri:-1 ·•·•••••·· (l111'11 DOCK MASTER 1'li::rnn1 Tr.11n"r •....• n111'11 l'lra~1· M'nd rl'M1111r 11a·1. S<"t l. I ;i r,v rrq111 n •1n1•n1~ ru B11x ~1-7~., [):illy l'1lnl, NB ----~ (,\;SS'i'Sr1~~r HELPER ~:1·1·~ r,.!I) run, par! 11mr, \f:tlTll'rl f... dl'[)l'tl<l ahl(', ,\gt• ~lfl-::o. S:J2,'> hr. l<I sTa11 r .1 11 ,\1r V1111 !l:m-2.~11 ltls1rlr f flll<'<'ln r ' ••... n1~'n Trnc D1s11alrl1rr .•. , •. Opf'n ( l}Qnr!11 t1lr I Sal1>.~m 1111 •........... Gen'! ()fe .......... .. t \\'1ll Ira 111 \ Faclnry \Vork ........ Ofl'C'!l (\\"ill 1 l'iti!1 I INDEPENDENT PERSONNE L AGENCY 1716 Orantr Avr. ~u11r C C.111. &12-0026. !'¥l:..-0979 c• Also FN' & t"r('(' Jnh~l I -~~-A1'TRACT!Vt: 1;1rls ro r p/t1Jnr ,,·ork. ~lu.~t hr JS or O\'l'r. VQx NJ. Coast Pla7.ll Tl11•illn'. 3·110 So. Rri~!ol, C.\·l. Clerk Legal $4SO up -_ . 1-'l'r Ncgoliabl(' H/\ll' SIT rEn •. E."<po·r, nccd. No SJ-I. Xln! Q 1 for good Plr.1M·· c;1JI llflfl fnr a[Jpoin1n1cnt. fil2 17!1 -GLENDALE- FEDE RAL SAVINGS 1:>1..::: ('. ~'.\\ f'OnT Rt.\·u. ( ·11.-. T1\ \11•:!•"\ Earn $50-$400 Wk . Sr!11 111.: I hi ;.: hr~ a da.v 111.~11.\\'1111\0'!l 1.~ .t• 1111 ~.J.~.:1177 :i nd Bnn!lrr;,: /\11rh. W. O. SCHOCK CO. * Cle<k * Please apply in prr.:nn e SECRETARIAL e OFFICE • CLERICAL e SALES e ADMINISTRATlVE e TECHNICAL 540-6055 Le«;1ol Secy Good skil ls \V ]{•gal bkgrd a inlli.t. Pcr1na11en1 Xln1 . o ply fur r lghl JJf'l'Sun. \Vundt·rf11\ b1,~~. J11•a1·h :u·('<1. S tarl S.'iOO. Call Ge1·- ry \Vh1Lr. Escrow Officer Outs tanding opty for somr- o 11 e 1\'/fol101~·ing. Xlnl 1 ... orkio~ cond. Idea.I loC'. To $650. Call Gr. r r Y \Vh ilc. Front Office 1'rof('s~1nnal ml'l n d f'sir<'S ~il'I \1·/knu"·lcd).'.e of bk- kpg. typing, a bility 10 handlr l"'Qplr. t'aznihar \\ ,Sli'll(ffPtlr h <'Ip [II J . Conv. loe. Star! $330. Call Gerry \Vhitr Back Office Girl Busy Dr.'s offict'. /\lust br f'Jq1'd g ivin~ injl'ctions, E:l{G. l'lf'. J',faturc, capa· tllf'. St.art :SJ.')(l. C a 11 Gerry \Vhit('. Back Office F.x rrplional opty for bright gid in IJ\lS~' Dr ·s nh'. Cnnv. lu•' .. intrrr~tln~ JQ h. S la r t .'i:\50. Call Gi·n·y V.1hi1r. Xray Technicion /\lust l}f' !'Pt:islrrNI. Ou!- s11111dir1i.: opt ~·. Plr11sa n1 "orkini: t'nnds. S 1 :1 r l SJOO. Call Gerry \Vhitc. Colleqe Students 81' a ~nouprr. scoop('l' Un· d!'l'l'O\'f'r f!!!rnl. S I art ~2 ;""l{) l''"r hr. Call S,1IJy H arl. Transmis5ion Mon (.jrrol opty. TOI) flllY fnr ~killrd 1>rr~nn. S!,1r t ~1 7J. a 1,k, Call Sally Jlar1 , Solei Rep. Expandini::: ro. nrrds .\'nli. r-;rr a\ grrnl'lh pn trnlinl Jn1m1·d. 01J(·111ni::--Star1 ~500. Call .Sally Jlart. Colle<tion M«;1r. Gl'('Rf op1y for a ('31'rf'•· 111i11d rd rwrson. S 1nrl sr.oo t honus. Call Sal!y Jlart. Bookkeeper ldrl'll lor., brarh arra. As- ><\lmf' Tl'~J10J1:«!h1 l i1 ~·. Star·t $:'>00. Call Sally Ilarl. R ecept /Secy Tl1i~ i~ 11! 1,1\r ~!l. IH'f' tyfllllK (no1 a ~Pf'C{J.l'I , l'\fl 11nt !lf'<', G ril1l1'11 kc,v Jn l+'Cl\I f1r·lrl S 10!) up. c.11! (ilr.r1a f{~;. Le9ol Secy /11 rri\~•· •,kilh. "'I' In i.:rn'I p!'iH·11,·•· Tf'rril1t• , .-.ni:;1•11ial1ry i11 oife Yr.11 '11 n•'l'f'r 11ant I(• lr;l\'f' Jin" ;)\1n11I •, fl'r pair1" l1111lrl l .. · '''ur• Star t ~:J30 <..·111 1 Gl11i·i 11 l\.1). Keypunch & Coding Clk I.er f'fl. Ila~ oprninc: fnr a i.:rood \\'orker. 1\d\'Rllrr- n1Pnl oply \\'irle !lJ:>"TI ~tart SJ.Ji. Call Glor ia 1..:ay. I ••d lor S mos hah~· •. your !ypisl p y Drive-In liquor' h"mr, fl da~ 11•k, Cn:sta ~1c~ jASON BEST 7Dti OCEAN ,\VE. Receptionist ;1rf'a pro'! rl. Cal art fi lJU:-:TINCTON REACH I /lilG-O l72 Employment f\)(('ll('Y =~=~===~=~-I Bo~s sho11·ing door lo prr~· pni 1 · 2'207 So. i\1ain. San1a ,\na TIIF. SUN NY:VE!l SF.TS on cntonr. Nl'•·ds nP\\' i.:al Ri\BYSITTF:ll -iny hon1c. ~i:lli-5'.110 Oi\ILY P ILOT WANT ADS! nn11', lei!'! l\('lf' him £!<'! a 11 B. :1 1l;iy~ 11·k, J! 10 6 ===========""'==========-r:ood. 1·1·!iahll' rrpl.aC'r-pin \1on·f"rr. Ctill 968-;uoj b M W 7100 n1rnl. llr \1'ill 11irc you r ~ Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100Jo s-•n, om. no1\·. s tart S:12,). Cull "t " fl111· G!nr iR b:ay. nt.1 i,·s1·rrt:r-:. -,,-"--,,,-.~Ii I 1111rk :O:p.'1111~11 ()K. Cill. .·.1:.-fY,l~:i ,,1· :11~1-:li2~. I t;;\J3\',..;['f1'ER for Sal !.·Sun, ,, hr~ it t!;11 :\l,1• hon1c.' \fill fllCk lip (i.12--0.~~'!l B,\JWsrn·EH---1 1~. De!!prratr' P.m F.· Board SlOO mo. (C,:'11.I ,q3S-lfi67 Ban kin.it COLLECTION TELLER Experienced • Arr1.Y I~ PCllOON • BANK OF AMERICA .~Ill \'111 L11ln ~,.11 IY\rt IJl';11"h : J:r111:il CIPl>f•rl u1uly rn1plnyr r 1-*-Back-Ofc. Girl * lr•1 hu~y J)r ' flfc. ·r,•rri11(' 0111~· f..· pl<'/"~111! (lirroun<l. IPU!~, ~1111 I fl!)\\' J :rJO Call (,.·1 ry IVt11t1" ; .. 10.r.n:,:1 · COASTAL AGENCY 'i790 ll11r1,,.,r lllvd .• C i\t. A ssemblers Burroughs Corp. New Commercial Computer Plant MISSION VIEJO Has openings for ASSEMBLERS at our new pl ant in J\1ission \1iejo, Calif. Some experience preferred . Appl y 8 a .m. -4:30 p.m. J\·Iond ay through f'riday EMPLOYMENT OFFICE 1S72S Jeronimo Ro11d Mission Viejo, Calif. 830-3232 F~qu a1 opportunity en1ploycr ~1alc/Fcmale Escrow Officer \\.ill lra1n .1 "11 in n,.,,. a ('C I ~. L\',...rfl nor hr r1il! l'SlT OI\' of[it•r r. bllt'k Up c:irl i~ rinr. Golclf'n rlnor tn your n11·n h11 si nr.~~. 11·ill s lart you at s4;;;0, F'1thulou~ opty. C'llll GJori1t Kay. lack Ofc. M~lcal Girl Nl'f'dC'd no\\'. IJ y nu ran i;:lvr ioj('Clinn.~. yo(1 h11.vr " l('rririr-job "'/~horl hrs & full pay. Slart $400. Call Gloria Kay. •OTJIER F'RF.f. AND FEF. JOBS AVA!Lf\Bl.E 540-6055 2790 Harbor Blvd. 1nr1 ·h111ueal tleft'Cls of i;rri. l"ral auto111otive and dil'i.1'.l f'(j UlplllC!l\. fiEf.,/UIRl::i\IENTS: :i )'J's. i'f' • ('('Ill ('Xpcr , poSS('SSJ(l/l 01 C'!ass "A" liL'\.'nse ~smog 1'0n\rol dev1(:t•J valuJ Calif dri\'rrs license.' ' ASSIGNfl:IENT will be lo night and '''rrkrnrl i:h1f1 ll'i !h $12.00 bJ·l\'~kly pay dJffrrrn11al. QUALIFIED 11ppII1• a 11 t ~ s/MJuld ron1arr pi·ri.onnt>I offi('(', :1300 N!'11•1MJrt Blvd , !';r11 1xll'! 11'-;u·h, Ca li!. 9'l660 111.11 tn:i.i;v:;:i. * * FORf;,\tAN * * Expcr iC'n(·1•1 I, day ~hilt. C:1·1•gor Yad11 Corp. Plactnl111, C.,\I. :\\110· IG:!l ----- " YHY COOK • Sal & Su11. Uay $hir1 A ~k fnr \\'ay11r RANCHO S/\N JOAQUIN GOLV COURSE. J80ll Culver !load NC'wport Beach Orvin(' Bran1·h1 N1". UCJ. 833-0012 Junior Accountant Jfigh ~chool 11i ploma isnmr roltl'gc ·pri•1c1·rvd l, 111111 kr1nw1('dgr of acrountini::: or l'f'ltl\l'cl are;•~. t:x()('fll'nr- .. tJ in 1iay·1"Qll S.. t1111r k••c•p. 1ng proccdu1'('s S:· n1eth(l(ls. A11ply iu r11·rson ur c;all 171 41 546-8030 :::::\3 !l;Ul•>I' Bh.I Cos!a i11C'sa, Calif. Missile Systemi Div. ATLANTIC RESEARCH CORPORATION A r>1vis1on of !hr :llt•h 'I' ,\lalr1 METER MAID i Jl\dl\'ldU!ll IM'lltiPd 10 SUl'Jl'r• \ 1.'lt' parkin~ area for l1u·i:t• Nr\\port Brach Land De· v1•loprnr111 firm. tllusl h11.,,1· 1 }'('11r'.s e>.1)(lr1ence as mr. tl'r n1111d 01· sin11Jar ('XJX'fl· l'llC'~ 1n,·Ql\'ing public con· IHt.:1 Knowledgf' of n101or vN:h1clr 11't:ulat1ons a nrl lhr Opt'ra· 11011 nl thrC'l'·11hrt'lt•d molor scootrr r:;!>('Jillal. Pns1tion invohl'S light typini; & rrt· I ord kl'cp1ng. I l::xt~llr111 ll'Urking 1'0ndit1ons, 1·0111!!1.lllY l)l'nrfit~ unct slarL I 11u: saJ:iry Cull 6111-3:.!.',,11 :\Jo11il;1y tlll'U frrday fr vlll s.12 only, -'-'------oc ;\1.-\N 3:, yrs or uvrr 10o•i1h k1l011')oJdg1• 111 wood w•Qrkillg t.: cral1~ to in~lrucl youlh. &12-83?2 9-:1pn1. ~])pl y. Co!l<igc-Coffre Shop, t'RY COOK -E.~pc-r1c nced, I Susquehanna Corp. ,i(i2 \\'. 19th S!.. C.i\l. I::quaJ 1JJJ[JOr1uni1y ('n1ployrr -------- :VT/IN l icen s rrt C -27 L 11 n1J.~r.a[Ji11i:. Prrcenlage gro,vini; b11sit1ess. 644-4S60 ~li\IDS, Full oi· part timr, $1 .8j 11·a1n l n g . $2.00 Prrn1n nen1 . Paid vacat10ns. .\£1 1-8~·21. --~~~--,c!\·lf\J{!NE r.tcchan11': First class n1111·1 nr i.:as ('llglll(' n1r l'ha t11 1· 11·ith all . a1'0Ut1d ho.11 1·\fll'I '. ,\[usl ha ve k11011·. lrit::t-ol 1·lcctn e11y and lhc a bih1y 10 1nsrall l:cnr l'OIH- n1nn to yach1s Jn a p1'0fcs- s1011al 1nan11rr. Perma nent 11 qualified. Good PllY. gOOd be1K'fits, good working <:On· dil ions ,f.: paid vacauo11, Sec Scrvt('c J\lanai;:er F ULi. r l n1 r m;iintr11f!nC" 1nan. :l! An1lin;;:'s Nui·scry, N.B. Gll-2.i7'.: -------~--F ULL or 11.1rl I i 111 r , rl'S!aura11t. Qvrr 21. rcnut!e. ~1; .. JQ!6 he!, 1-'.°1 P,\1. •Gt.RDENF.R ·rnf\JNEF.• No expe1'. is OC'C. Xlnl opp. (7141 !1-16-!lOS:; GELCOAT REPA!RilfAN- day shirt 1 -3 P i\I. F.x· rcricnrrd. Apply, 1 Ii J ! Placrn!i11. c .,\L i\tae Gregor 'Yiit:ht Cot'[l. '~=-----(.:/lrtDJ::NEll -.!ap;;np~r Assis1anl lnr apt. <·01nplcx. C'AUSF.Y fot Rl-IODF.:S ·IOU Nrll'port Crn1rr !Jr. NP11·rw1rt Bf'ti.(·h . Gen'! Ofc Trainee SJSO I lnlr n•sl 1n~ var1c1y JOO, LOI !'. ly So. Sanra An;1 Ofl·~. l'lt•ai.. ;;nl c~•"1urkrr s. Top lx•nf.~. Call 111 1s~ Pat. ~~1·61 22. i\li1- i.:a1J /\hho! Prrsonnr l Ar;:rn- 1'1', 2.10 \\'. \\'arncr, Suiff' 21 1, Sanl a An;1. ,-,-'"-,-,.-;1 ll cr,c1p _____ _ Lt.nt.t:: 1·:.\pan1lor1g-Chnin needs lull .~· par! 11n1e ll£'1 p, h •nJfJ<l!'UJ'.V & pl'r1l1anrnt. 1\;.:c. 20·31. 6 nlQs. rrs, rr!1. ~fo6-2R70 J 1111 R.1·an -Gen•IOffice t;-$47S- Agr111·.v ff'<' n•1111b1a·sl'd. Jn. tt•J'1'Sl11n: Coi. VHnrod duties. JASON BEST Jo:11111l1.1y1net11 f\J.:f'IH'V 2207 Sn. ;vlain, S<1n!a Ana !'1•1li·~·ll rJ -Gen'l0fc ParlTi;;e To $3 Hr. Lfl,·rly Nr11•por1 JJra(•h Ofr . ]'ll'ot~<11ll l'<lt'lt'!y JOh, f!I'< llrx1hlr. ('a JI !\1 1ss P<i1, ~,jj.f,122, Ah1i,:r111 Abhut Prr. >-011nr l Ar:1•111·y, 2.iO \\' \\';1r- n1•r. ,..;unr 21 1, S.-i11111 ,\na. (.;1r1. AttJ·a..:111·r, 01·1•r 21. 11ork 10 Snack Rar al r ~-i· ).!'Una lhlls Gun Club. f\pply 1n J!C rson Xiill Val1•r1t·1a \~11.:unn ll11ls --~ • •Gl/lL ~-RIU:\Y • _,, for nf11cr. i\hlr to lr11rn .1llf'/UI h.1nh1 .u·r. Appl} ~ I:.! ll'lOn. 111ar Crf'~nr Yach! Coi•p. Hi.11 Pl<i rrntia, C .\1. r.JR !~f;:'tlCj-;1.;,-51 ns;l~ 1S-2i f111l 1.r p/t1n1r .. \1usf ha11(• 1·,1r Fnr <iJJpl. r<ill f>i.' ... ~11 1 ,di ~A.\!. (;!~1\V~:Yt.HJ) .~h1/1 11kno!~ on!.v. !11 l1:111a 1'11111!. Tl'lf" nprral•Jr, f~·111;iJr. l!'loi-4i70 GROUNDSMAN- GARDENER -CITY OF- NEWPORT BEACH $510 to $620 per month PERt'ORl\t routine i::anl<'n- 1ni:: 1uul mRinlcnanCP. ol p11t•ks and olhcr landscaped nrf'a.~. REQUIRE;\IENT:;· n10r1ths l'X[ll'r in nursery , i::anl•'n:n::: or i.:1'0unds ni:iin. !l'nllllf'f' l\'Ot'k, JIOSSt'S~lO/l uf Calif. drivf'rS ]1(·1•11sr . QUf\L IVll·:o II fl D 1 i {'an I .~ shn11ld o•nntl\i'I Prrsonni•I O! fll'f' hr forf' ;, pin Thurs. 1ln.v .. Ju nr •1111 .• al :1:ioo Nrw. fY!rl Bl\'d .• Nl'11•po1•t Brach, c a11r. ~12r.r.o. 111-1 1 67.l-6633. HAIR STYLIST Bra1Uy ,!(. \\lig-Salon has open.. in11: fllr pl'NMln wilh IKI~ lollo11•in.c::. Salary plus ro1nm ,l',i pa1rl vacation. ~IALLlf:·s !"~lS-3446 HSKPR.°' J.:01plyr pays [Ct' Grorgf' All('n Ayl;1nd Agency 106.n F.. 161h, ~.A, 5'17-0:t9S -----li0:\1t:\\'ORK~:R s \\"ANTE D ( Envrtorir Arldl'l'SSl'rsl. R11~11 s!an1 prc!. s c If · fl d- 1! r r~~r cl cn v rlnp l'. J.A N C:D O N \VOHLO Tf\ \l)F:HS, P 0. Bos 1127· f\21, Rf'r!Onr!o BCll\:h, Cn!ll !lf127S Class1f1rr!'~ 11r t1on )'){)"'rr ~·or 1111 ad lo SPll 11round lhr rlllt'k, rl111 I fiiZ...X.7~. Keypunch Trne $346.67 \\ltll rakr girl jus t flut of !\:. !' school. T\'rrHi·· Oply for ad. va111·c1n<'nt. Xlni t'O, Call i\1 iss El11.all('th, Jj(.fi1 22. Ab- •!('il ll i\bbot Prrsonnel Agcn. !')'. 2:)() \\'. \\'arncr, Suite 211, Santa ,\na * L:\Dlf:;:; * lll..GJ. sho1v ::>ARAI! COVENTRY Spring: & all season je\velry . /lbsolu1rly no invc~1·1nl. \V•· 1r<1i11. ~>31-8631 or x2-.·1088 LIBRARIAN II (Sr. Librarian) $736-$894 Month -CrTY OF - NEWPORT BEACH Oul ~!aodu1~ npporlun1ly for tll{' qualifircl appl1can1. Un. llf'r gr ricr1.1l SUJJ('l'VLSJ0/1 of the City L1hrarian. Pacific Marine Yachts 2731 IV. Coast Hwy. Ne1.,,por l Bea1'h MECHANIC USED CAR Top 11 ni;r~ for tnr1 1111111. Ex· !'l'!lrnt working cond11\ons, 1·at·a1 11 •11. ;;roup insurance 1•lan. C(jll Boh \In ~·. CONNELL CHEVROLET :i1G-l20il e '.\l t:N e JDC O~P~E~.N~'"IN~'G°'s· Fi\ST i\DV1\NCF.:'o·IF:NT ;.>o r xp.·r. n'QU!rt'd i\lorll111::: & Ev('n1ni:: Shills A1111ly 111 Person COf\S''f C1\TA111ARf\N Tlir Sl'lrctrd appHr:int 1rrll ::~012 Cn!lr Prrlrcto pl:1n and dirC't:I lhr ~l't'Vlt•'>; ~n .l u:ul Capistrano or our nr1•·r~I hl'an1·h 11· i ••----------••! lirary. Rrqu111•n1t'l1fS' 1111.S pins lhrcr yra1·~ rrro•nl r xp1•ri- 1•n1·r 11!.iny frtnl!r twne f11~_ /\pjJ l1ra1ion~ niul'h hr <oh· tn1nrd f1•«n1 Prrsonnrl, ;:.~()!) f\'c1q)flri Rl vd., i"r1q10rt Al'af·fl. Calif. ~26CO !711 1 1;7:;.nr.:::1 J111•T1'1r\\'s 11·il1 Ill' hrlr! in Junr ;i nd iippl if·:o nt~ 1nll h" no11t1rd ill arll'anrr uf l)w 1•xac1 t1n1(' a nd pla('f'. T J I 1.~:r us r)(') YO\ r~ SLLLCT!\'~; Sl-:,\l;C 'll Thf' !1111011 Ul'.; h ;i p:1rl 1,il 11~1 .,r flur 1011.; .i1'711li1l1l•' Expediter to S500 I 11' '''P '''l"·d1l111~; ,\ l>i•I· dlH'loroll o•OrHr0>I Credit Mg r Trnee 2 \T<:. (''IJI••:.:<". 111;\ft'lf'd, ~.ill'S '''I' , •lr;ofl r•\+'!11 1'1 ~Juy P'· l1.r,.1r . .$f.00 tn sl:irt e SILK SCREEN e FPr Pa111• M&M or Wade press to $3.50 Hand Table Oprs to SJ Xlnl . ('O. 1n nr\\' plant. Bkkpr $541 TI1ru T G .. quar!crly n::turns, alsn Nr.\l s. Medical Back Office E xp. injrc!inns & blood <'Oun!. Slah\c n1111·ricd "·t>- n1a n 11hn can \1·nrk under 11rr~~urr. Tn $100. Typist $400 Min. i\<'rds fa~I typist-n1rdif,:l'll t>'.ll p . 1u1·frn•rd l1ut 110~ n Secretary $592 Hi lr \•'1 1nh in hr111•h ;1 1'<' o :\lr;1 shar'p gal. ly[Jr l>ll. Sil " Housekeeper /Cook $300 + f'('(' ptJ.• \\'(' havl' i;ood li\'I'· in Jllh~ in hc11ch area. l\·lusl be highly r xp·d & n1nlur('. Solderers to $2 .. SO hr. F ai!'ly gflorl l'-'P. \\'ill pay &C<'flrrl in~ly. PBX $400 to St11rt Fast ron1 boitrd, tlQ tr ping, Hr:o;, I t(I 3·30. SELECTIVE S~ARCH EMPLOYMENT AGENCY 2120 So ,\lain. S.~n!a Ar111 55)-6055 • 4 Al •n Ir •' pos1!1<i11-~l \\'r hi\\'(' 2 f)1·an~·· r 1J11nly (Hfl•·rs I<• Sf'!"\"(' ~(\II miJJ !:xec Agency ror Career Girls Secretary ! i:\rl of•'. rnr 2 arrhitrc-1~. \',·ry 1·1•1)!.!•'ninl surround- 1111.;,. L11 C> bkkpi;: & Jl!r ~1[. Jr. Secretary \ yi· :;:t•n'I <:r!'Y r xp. In !n- lrrna1 ion11I d1•11L Vrry 111- l <'rl'~Ung & d11'r·1 sifird. PurchaMn9 Clerk \Vill 1rai11. Trpi n~. Jilin::. hravr phnnt-s. Beaulifu l [ll('ilil II'~. Glrl Frida y 2 t:irl nfr. ~II not ncr. Lilr hkkp~. 1; o o rl 1yr1st. J'hnurs. Bay rrnnt nJcs. Clerk Typist f ,,,,,rJ 1yp1~1 . llii:h ~rhnol ;:ra!I . !'l•·a~n11 1 alnlos- ph•'l'f' Tnp r o1111'8ll}. Accounts Poyable (',,q .. 11· l•k!.!ld 1'.l'\1\11::. 10 f,0·1 nrhl1111". :-,, \1 1 ~'·1 11 - 1 ... :. 1 ..... d111 ~ , 01111 a.,1,.1., Accounting Clerk /\o •t•o111nt 1111.: n nr11ln<!. Cn~1 ,1p•t1.;., A !' Fn1n1i1ll l' 11 • 1.1i1r•11 l•·1 11.•'d I• a 1 r n 11 T.~1 .111;; & Hl k•') add111:::. Errond Gir l I )l'I\ t' 1\ llf'\•' :\ll'l'l'<'clr~. ~i(I', r1't<1 nrl s, ~10';. fil in:.: TYl'lllJ: '."10 11 prn. 111\Jst br high r alibC'r }'ouni.: lady. Clerk Typist Jlrll\'Y t.1•11ing. lran!lrrlp· 1 ions. public conlll<'I. Very int. /, dif(r rr nl typr hu~i nr~~. i\lust IX' ablr IQ "''Ork ~hifts. · Secy /Part Time Pf'rson11 I ~l'Cy 10 n11 iovf'lt- tor. Typini;: & ~II lilr . Nol 11 prcssurr s i111n1i(ltl. Secy /Part Time \Vork in l'l'IB.llf'd & congrn. in l ~111"1"111111rl1ng.~. \,l)()d 1,111111!.; !:.· SI! !·:xirrmely 1n l •'l'l'~11n~ 111wk. General Offic • l'nr r1tl n.\0S nfr. Xrrn.On::, riltnl!. n 1nnini.: "!'ra nd.~. ll!r l)•pini; Rrat1tir111 ofci;. i\lusl bf' v.'1'11 l!TtrQn1rd. 410 W. Coast Hwy. Newport B•ac.h 646-3939 MOTELMAlD~ 1967 Nt>"'Pfll1 Blvrl. ('_M. i\10 111f.RS lll'lprr, m111urr "'·oninn, aftrrlliJ(l11~. ~chool A.Cf' rh1 lrlrl'1l, $2 hr . art 6, 8.13-31]9 i1usrc1A~'S n!'rr!rd 10 a.c-1 ('()1\1pn11) "llll:!Pr: l'iann nr l i;ullnr~ o ,., ... ?I. rli'an 1'111 . )j(I 111'11~~ Srllll l'!''l!IJ)f' ff> 111rs L .•11ur rl J1. 26~J2 H 11 rr~1d!· IJ1·, C•i!>IH i\lr11n, Cal !l21i27 DATl.Y f'Jl.()T .111'11" ~ 1.1:-0'[$ l'Olil )'QU )U.\t n 1r~ 11 till.Y -A I NO 11111ffl'J'-11'h11! \! r'-~ flf'll· 1•,111 ~rll 1! 1111!1 a D:\ILY rn.or \rANT 1in• ~12--.~7~ ~ INSPOllTATION "" TRANSi;()RTATION f TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Motwcyc.;.. iiiiO o... ....... ms 1 import;.., C.n M LIKE SAILING? m!LIKE THESE? • P9,ymmts. hl&h 'ntemlt, depftdatm, • I J p l"Otal, deaninC, inlurabee. e tc, PREJ'ER 1llESE ! e Law cost, no WORK lo CAR.EFg.E SA.JUNG! c.J Zi'Titt~ .. $14, ~, da,J Try Dur Club Platt NEWPORT SA ILING CLUB • 675-71.00 • LIMEY CtlOPl'ERS & MOTORCYCLE REPAIR Honest Price• Hone•t Work l17 Avocado, C.M. 646-7022 CAL 2S ''KI LO" '67 Triump 650 CC TR liR, CoMislf'nt Raa-winner $6.".0. Phil at lU 29th SI, LAl.ded w / exlnUI: Radio, Nc\vport Beach. boat bath., life ralt, aafety '68 Honda CL "5(), Excoellenl gear, cti:., eti:. ~·net' mus! Cond1tion. Cal I after S. Sac. Tom Butler. ~ 831-4198 lJOO 14. rigged for racing -.58----,.,,--o~,-v7;dro~n-,....,-,rull No. 2579. Asking $1115. No dreu. xl.nt colld. $'750. Aft ntle.r. 1ll: 59'J-57» s. 67J.-1352. days Si&S-9694. fO% DISCOUNT l5 Dune BUUY bodlel to ori .... ·--All ........ sll mf'tal flake colors. ALSO Ale priced: 1962 bui:· p, st.reel ready, l!JTO bu&IO', strfft read.)', A G Stiif'tlo, 1)1.l'b and acceasorle.111. AST RO AUTO CENTER 301 E, ht Street Sant& Ana r7J41 541-2942 OPEN SAT. & SUN. DUNE &UY Bodlea $85. B .. cket Seats $7. 2 Weoek5 Only. C&ll 510-1211) '69 DUNE Buggy. CUstom. Rebuilt engine. SHAH.Pl FIAT '69 FIAT 124 Spyder Rdatr. Dir, tadSo, heater. 5 •peed, will take trade Of' will fimlnoe. private party <YXV576) CaD 646-9303 or fl«>.9461. FIAT Largest Fial StlK'Uon O Salea 8 Parts e Service For the surround.inf area. Overseas delivery apedaJ. i1l1. Sales open Sunday, Set: Bob Autr•y I8li0 Long Be:ach BMJ., LS 713 • ~l..&721 '61 FIAT ISO Cp. Xtns. MUJI s.u_ 644-1396 or 49UJ08 Power Cruiser• * 644-4TI9 • RICKMAN Matige..Tri 500 w/Lucas mag, 21" lrnt whl. - Sharp! $895. 540--0466. import.cl Aut:...c.•:.....-"°°- 1962 Flat, new paint, aood rng. & trans, 42,000 ml's. Call 61~1TI6. 26' OYlENS '66, xlnt cond. Low l\r's, load~. cat.I OWTlf'r 11141 673.-1788 or &Jli-6581 v.'kda~. 3'.I' OWENS '64 Twin 125 Ba.It bank. Sw. s tep. hdtp. tmmac. $9950. 557.ms Trailer, Travel ALPINE 9425 21' Cabin Cruiser. Chrys. VACATION J\1arine f'ng 90, Good cond. TRAVEL CENTER s1100. 536-6238. Excel. -Golden F•lcon 1-"======== I Olympia -Alpine Speed-Ski Boats 9030 Apache. WhHI Cam par 15' ALL Gla5ll 0/Brd. '62 75 HP Johnson Electromatic A. Trlr. $800 or best oiler. Call 646--0352 ~irl~~-q~u_ip,_. __ 9035 BOAT & VARNISJI refinish ~ our specialty. ~aaonable rates. Quality v.·ork done al your &lip. e Boot Malntenance Co. e NEWPORT BEACJf 543-$52 worlds largest ~ com- plete RV vehicle ahoppl.ne center 835:.Z Garden Grove Blvd, GG 534-6686 O osed. Sat. Open Sunday 1969 ARISTROCRAT 15' low liner. Sleep£ 6, butane ref., stove w/oven, pre & sure water, toilet, surge brakes. Like new. Sacrif.ice for only ;1395. (GB27161 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 2S50 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9640 ALFA ROMEO JAGUAR ALFA Romeo ·52 Sport Conv, 1 ow~r. Beaut con<!. Only JAGUAR ~~i~ 5 ';:'.~: 11 "" ...._ 1369 HEADCj)UARTERS ========= The anly aulhorl.ttd J AGUAR AUSTIN AMERICA AUSTIN AMERICA Salea, ~. Parts Immediate Delive?J All Model.a J1rtuport 3l111porrs 3100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. W2-94<lli W. l '76C Authorized MG Dealer BMW ---AtmlORJZEO SALES, SERVICE dealer in the entire Harbor ""'" Comp! ... SALES SERVICE PARTS ""''' BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 11th street 548-1765 '63 XKE Raster. new muf- flen< & pipe:i. Radials. Good Shape! Priv. pty. $1500. 642-2'281 '61 JAGUAR Sed. Air, new tires, wires. P IS. &: brks. $1350. Call 549-4024 '.CARMANN GHIA • TRANSPDltATl014 TRANJP.QRJATION TltANSl'OlTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION '""I i.......... HOO Imp'• ... Auttlll ,.. Aute L;;~-: ,.""ji UMll C•r• tMO uMd-c;;:s-tlOO POUCHI YOUCSWA&IN ---:.:.~ '--------J'OIU> AU'niOIUZED '82 PO~r..0 Xklt o:Nld, 1 .--. a..-I -:.... --· ..,_ Ul.\SINC SYSTEM reblt ere. new paint, new w -· ..._ ....... _,,,, Arrwrl tJM, •per dft1I iri 6: out. mi, .fWl wani.nly •• $100, Cl'• .larpat kalfnc Prime party, &1~1912 or a1au:Jne. bal of i it~o. myatem lot ftna.OOI or net .re at DI Harl>or Blvd., 64rr-79.53. ieaatric Oil aD b7e' can a.nd ~~'----=~~--l!nt<b. C.M. 1964 VW Bua. >Ont oond. e Immediate deltmy f70l:D '67 912 4 Spd, fad air. ~·l lDedaa.alct.l C'Olld. Mov-Oft!' 300 can and frucb am/tm •lel'f:(), l'fd/blk ln-lng Eut • must aelll e Comi-titwe ntet te.r. Xh1L cond. Many xtraa. Private party, 3'2-«>0I e New car dWenhib Rrviol 530-461 1 or 646-6417 '62 VW Sf'd. Nevt paint, '68 e raD. "tradeln'' Tal119 for SUBARU * '70 SUBARU Hett Now • Jm~te Delivtr'J' • 90 MPH eapabUlty e l5 Miles Per <Allon e Beautltul Stylinz Test Drift Tod.t.y At Kustom Motors 845 Baker, C.M. 540-5915 SUNBEAM 1966 Sunbeam A lp t n e Roa.dater, very low mileage, hard &: !ICfl ·tops, new paint, xlnt cond. $1300. 673-3909. 1330cc eng, reblt tranl. ·,our present car Many x.tru. Jtln't cond . • .A.11 ~ iqalr.es avaJl. 548-9857 afttt 6. tlje · '67 VW Squattback, Oean, F• ComP,let. D!taih CaD 21,i'10 M" -Adult owntt, Malcom J'Wd change tabs. $1550. Td: ~aal,.-Man.au W-lMll . Theodore 1969 VW Bug. Clean, &harp. ROllNS FORD loilu.at tee. 7900 mi'• $1..700 Jll&G Harlq-BJvd.. Lady owner. 613-2519. ())Ila 'Mesa f.u.oolo '1' VW, A-l throughout. 1st 1325 W..L !KU """"'""'· ..... LEASE ..... N.B. '69 Cadillac. C:OU.pe De Ville, '69 VW, R.adial'tirn, chrome full powe.r, air, vlnyl roo l, rims, AM/Fj'f. J mm a c, am/tm •lf'reo, Ne1v white- Cond. $1,690. i75-02'll walls, tilt steering whl, $169 '68 V\V. Auto.· Clean, Low per nw. mu.,: $1400. SOUTH COAST • Ph. 5'5--6284. * CAR .LEA-SING '68 VW J<ombi bu!, Empl 300 W. CBt Hwy, NB. 64S.2182 TOYOTA exhaust &y!. Tape deck: &: ~ --------I 1•P'• 171""-64'-"5864 UMd Cars ~rk II Wagons HI l"" Pickups L•nd CrulMrs W•gon• DEAN LEWIS 196f' Harbor, C.M. BIILM~XEY !T!OIYIOJTIAJ '69 vw $15'5 * 644-6318 • IUICK 1969 Volkswagen Bm, 9 pass, 11 ooo · Xlnt nd i•ua:: '66 RIVIERA, a ir oond., • nu. 00 • .....,.,. AM/1"'M, pwl' wind's & _0M>-~ll39=-=~~~---1 seats, chrm whls. 64~133.i '66 VW, Excellent Condltton, 'da,ya/4!M-8892 eve Low tTlileage,_$1025. 614:-U52 · • '"· 5 pm CADILLAC VOLVO Best Stock cf VOLVOS in Orange County DEAN LEWIS lS66 Harbor, C.M. 1959 CADILLAC PARTS FUR QUICK SALE Battery \Vind.shield \Vipers Radio Whttls Tnu'IBlnissiDn 1965 Volvo, 4 Dr. Sedan. Air Conditioner &: Good condition. i95(1. Cali Healing Unit aft 6 pm, 64frfl651 And Many Other Jtems '69 ·VOLVO sta. Wag. Auto, SGJUO After 5 P .M. DODGE '61 Dell.IU Monaco, vinyl top, 440 cu enr. Air-<end. All pwr, .Lape ,deck. AU extru. 5 ba-.nd new titts. szroo . MT-9814 FALCON ---!!167 Falcon Wq:on V8, p.1., p.b., air, aood tires, Clean! $1%73 Tn-6643 Anaheim. FORD 1948 P'ord Pickup, new trans, runs good, Best oUer. 548--0ru '62 FORD FAfRLANE. ** $395.00 •• 6'6--3331 '61 Ford Wag., 10 passenger, all power. lo miles. $1695 or heal oUer 646-&t04 . '62 Foni Galaxy 500, R/JI, new seat covers $32.i 646-4121) aft 6 1960 FORD Station \Vagun. good transportation car, $j(l, 54.)..1319 1967 FORD Galaxie 500, air- cond, fully equip. 546-9913 '62 Ford Trude (Econoline) DUNTON FORD 2240 S. Main SANTA ANA 546-7076 '66 CUSTOM 2 Door. I> t.ytinlli•1, thift, r1dio, h11!1r, ,, l) $889 '61 SQUIRE W19on. F1c:torv •1•. Y.1, 11110., l'.S .. w-w, 11199191 ,,,,;,,_ IVCI{ 158) $2269 '66 MUSTANG ] Dr. H1rdlop. V-1, o111 lo. lt1•11 ., pow•• 1l11•in9, r1- dio, t.o~le•. C111lom inl1ri· or. jlBX 11.3) $1197 New eng.htr-good l i res.11 --------- Clean! 64:2-9899 '66 FUTURA Sprt Cp. v.s, '66 MUSTANG auto trans, air. p/s, p/b, Co1w1rltbl1. V-1, o1ufo. •. "~ 61 tr•n1 .. Med11nic:1 Spec:i•I. ~"""''"'=· ~==· ~5--0till7;;:~-==· II ! SV6 .... ). LINCOLN $997 1960 LINCOLN, Seri a J OYT4H"3411. Lie OFZ 051, '68 IMPALA Public Sale ]1 :00 AM , June ~'.•~i,on.~:!:';;.,l ~::~·,!:.~ 6, 1970. at 1027 Valencia, 1;011, pow•• 1111,;119, f•c:- _c:=':=''=='=='==''='==':;c· C=.i~i(.===· 11,0,.,. •ir, wliite w•U 1;,,,, -r1d io, h1•l•r. l ie:. (WfT MERCURY ---HOW about '65 Mercury Co\ony Park Sta, Wag 112, $2795 Boat Sllp Moor in_~_ 9036 SLIP Space Avail ln Nwpt Harbor. Applications being la.ken far slip rental&. Sail k pwr. Submit size &: dNcript .. Box P-72, Dally Pilot. 161h' KENSKILL • Nice. Travel or home. 1626 Newport Blvd. No. 37, C.M. 9500 '67 GHIA, European body, air,. 5000 mi's, like new. '.6f EL DORADO, fact air, A~f/FM, MiC:h X. + xtru. $3450/bnt offer. 546--3617 full pwr, tilt 8trng, am/lm, lllli ll~ACH Ill VD. Hunt. Beach 147-ISSS I ml 1(. tJf Oout nw,. _ • Bell '67 TOYOTA Corona., 4 Dr, a apd, just like. new? * CaU 641).3549 * w/air &. full pwr, $100. ~68 SQUIRE WGN. 96>-9989 Fo1c:torv o1ir. o1utom•f'' '69 280 SL, 2 tops, air, all tr.n1mi11 ion, 390 VI, pow• xtras, Mint. $7500. 644-15.53 or s*••rin9, pow1r br•~••· eve & wkends wliil1 wi ll tir11, ro1d;o, "••I· \V ANTED: Slip or dock for 28' :1.ailboal. Call eves. CTI4) !m-7821 Trucks GMC TRUCKS •83!>-9493• TRIUMPH full leather inter, vin. r1. -=-~--==-=-~-~-~-~==== I i9,';(;:;:;;-;;;;;;;"":;::;-:;:;:;-I ~A~ut~Ol~W~•~n~lad~-_:'7~00~ I Must f;ell 6Th-2398 aftns. Here now. Immediate Dellvery T &M MOTORS (Open Sundays) METROPOLITAN 1964 Trl"mph .. •""' cond., '6'1 CONV. Lo M;·,, All ,,,_.,_ hardtop, wire wheel1 . WE PAY TOP Tan leather inter;. Bronze. ""=='=======II··· IZVE 114) $2895 MUSTANG \VANTED. Boat r;l!p for 28' sloop. Call alter i PM. 673-0177 Mobil• Hom•s 9200 ---· -----* Newport Harbor * A few remaining mobile home space• in o:w: of Calif. '111 fast- est growing l'C90rl: areas. MOBILE HOMES are on di5play, the9e homes are fully equipped al prices you '\\'011'1 want to pus upl EXAMPLE: ' New Zlx4.fi w/awnlngs, &kirt, etc. $9180 complete incl. tax I: lie. Many ready for IM· MEDIATE OCCUPANCY! GREENLEAF PARK An adult private club 17!'() WhiUier Ave., Coslll MCAA Ph. 714/&12-1350 Take Harbor Blvd. to 19th St., lhen v.>csl to Whittier Ave. JOMICRA, INC. ORANGE COUNTY Exclusive Dealer For LA PAZ Custom Built Coach•• SEE IT TODAY ! + J\.iany Othtr Set Upm GuarantHd Sp•c•• Southern Orange County•1 only Authorized Gl\!C Dealer UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 28:.o Harbor Blvd. Co5ta Mesa 54-0-9640 '68 Chevy Sport• Von VS, auto, R ~ H. $1999.00 Yau'D like it (Uc. DlfJMB) Try it at ' Kustom Motors MS Baker, c.M. 540-S.915 '58 CHEVY Panel. Good Coll- dilion.. $30I) 54M09T •ft • ·~ CHEV. "-T. P. U. V-1. aulo. r/h. $595. Ca 11 6.fZ-5783 or 67~1085. 9510 JEEP '59 Sta. waa. Chevy 283 Eng. new tir'fl 6 ply Sl.500. call 615-4418. ltec:,.et'n Vehicles 9515 1969 CHEVROLET CUSTOM CAMPER 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. % Blk. E. of Beach Blvd. 534-2284 892-5551 BMW Largest Bt.1\V 5election • Sa.Jes • Parts • Service fol' the surrounding area. Ove.rsea:i delivery 11peciaJ. istJi. Salei; open Sunday. Bob Autr•y 18fiO Long Beach Blvd .• L.B. cru1 591-3721 CORTINA CORTINA Larzeat l911l Cortina Selec- tion. • Sales e Parts e Service. For the surround- ing area. OverMas dcllvtry specialists. Sale open Sun- day, See Bob Autr.y 1860 Long Beach Blvd., L.B. 213 -591·8771 67 CORTINA GT Rdy. tlret! R/ll. Good cond. $1000 or Best oller. 543-1891 I Ii DATSUN -~-- (2) METROPOLITANS, 1 con\.1. 1 hardtop. Both $100 or best otter. Call aft 12, .....-.11 MERCEDES BENZ •UH ZIO SEB, Sticlc 11ttn, red, eomplete new en,ine. $2008. Hi'.-4723 MG J~t tll Plll I .I\ Ill p Ll rl c· 3100 W. OU a., , MA HJ..!M(I; M0-175' Authorhed MC Dealer in Tustin Family & Adult TurbohydramaUc trammls-''Lea •'r ln The i...earb <.:1 .. .!1°' Park. Buy your coach from 1ion. 350 engine, po,.,w ateer. us and ~\'l' on factory di-ing. split rims. heavy duty reel prices. Over 100 mo-tu-es \\'[th OPEN ROAD ll1h dels lo choose from. ft. self contained camper. ZIMMERMAN ... MGA 1600. Good Cond. 2845 HARBOR BLVD. Runs \~\i ~224 540-6410 I ===========~ _D_O_T _D------ATSUN UNITED J\.10BILE H0f\1E SALES Full hath facilities lnt:luding 237 So. Tustin. Orange shower, sleeps 6, has every 633·2961 633-2974 536·1446 possible feature ynu would BAY HARBOR want. Cost originally sacoo, Mobil• Home Seles Now Only $5599 ALL NEW '70 MODELS UNIVERSITY NOW ON DISPLAY OLDSMOBILE 20· Wides as low as ss.qgs 2S50 Harbor Bl., CosfA Mesa 12' Wides to 34' l11dc1 540-8881 OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 1883.j Beach Blvd. Jluntlngton Beach 842-1781 OT 51!0-0442 '69 DATSUN Pa.Ml: S!Mlce. Available Big Sedan, overhead cam,.4 1425 Baker St .. Costa Mesa Campers '520 gpttd, AM/FM radio. Take lh bloc:k Ea.st of Harbor Blvd. gm&l.I down, wtll finance pri. Cmta Mesa (TI4l 540-9470 * SIX PACK * vate party CD4264) Call Phil 24x60' NEW MOON $795 dlr 540-3100 °" 494-1029_ Own.it Musi Sf>U By Jun!" '66 DATSUN Sta Wag. New lt!t. 2 Br & Den or 3 Br 2 FULL PR.ICE clutch. ball., tune-up. Xlnt Ba. $!1,750. ' Standard model 1ncludc5 2 cond. Call 67S-3045 Up to JO Yr's Financing burner stove. ict' box, tleluxt * 1966 DATSUN * A.M.S. 84:2.1939 9 81Tl-7 pm cabif1("1!1, cab over, butane llo heal& A lite, bell! val"" in Sia n wagon $800 OPEL LIM'i7 OPEL Kadett, xlnt rond, $1000. Phone 53&-1166 PORSCHE '63 PORSO-IE Su.per 90, new eng, new .clutch. ~lee . .1unrf. Rebll carbs. $ll00. 54.2-2458, 6-9PM. 1958 PORSCHE. Ne I'! d s Paint. $.1550. 6T.r5]10 after 6 PM '61 Porsche Conv. "'hite, blk lop, arn/fm. Very clean! Must sell. 673-:J624. M~ or 175-00aJ, CASH $.>200. 644-58j9 1962 TR-t, clean, 1966 CADILLAC Co upe '6.l ~1USfANCi auto, V·8, ne1v clutch & molor. deVil le. 1 owner. 289, P/s. p/b. air. 38,000 Call (1) MJ...6140 for used can&: trucks jusl f-====*='"==&-99=l:=3:=*=== miles. $8.)(). Cal! aft 4:30, 64 2-9438 '&I TRIUMPH TR 4. xlnt call Us for free estimate. =~~-~~--~ :':'.':", ;961~n~188New top. $1100. GROJH CHEVROLET CAMARO '66 l'otustang. Pv.T s1r, only ..._.... _ 32,000 miles. $1.340, 644--1313 or 673-5725 VOLKSWAGEN LARGE SELECTION of VV1 CAMPERS Harbour V.W. AtmlORIZED AALES & SERVICE 18711 BEACJ-1 BL., 142-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACll '65 VOLKSWAGEN R ~ a I Sharp. Radio and heater. Lie. No. TEH 032. $999. Jll\f SI.EMONS IMPORTS llJ W. Warner, 5&Ata Au. Open Eves. ol: SUn. M&-4125 WANTED I'D pay. tDp dOUar for yeur VOµcs'WAGEN todB.¥. Call and uk: b' Ralph_ 5t9-3'.l3l Ext. '56.67. m.ttioo. '67 VW Squattback. Must 8ell, aacrlfice! ri, 100 Ml. Sl,550. Verj dean! 642.-16:).'i ''4 VW GQOD COHO $635. 492-3113 aft 5 '56 W 1• '&I Trans &: engine, iood condition. 646.3798 * '60 VW BUS* 52.'>-8S77 '6l KARMANN Ghia, 70,000 mi's. Xlnt Cond. $!KX), Call 54G-1413 A!k far Sales Mana&ft' 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 847-6087 KI 9-3331 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNILI. CHIYJOLIT .... 11.-jllod. '67 CAMARO Loaded with a\llOm&tic trans- misrion, 327 VS. dlr, Full pric. $1495, Will take fore- ign car in trade. CJQR· 613) Call 546-4052 or 494-Sm aft 10 a.m. '71'.1 1\l ustang, auto, VS, air, vinyl top, p.s ., while side walls, $2895. ~2TI4 '63 MUSTANG, new tires, •letto, air~nd. $1100. • Sf6.9442 * CAMARO '68 Z-28, 4 apd, O S .,. -· io·mc xin·1-·1 __ L_D_M_O_B_ILE __ l2000 -536--85611. 1'71 OLDS CHEVROLET $PORT CPE. $2498 eo ... M• .. !W>I2'111 '66 CheYJ Wagon IMPOR'fS WANTED Bel Alr, dlr. Air con<!, VS, $77.6~ i\TONTHLY PAYt.lEN'I' 0.-.,...TOP I ~~ auto. radio,. heat•r. loaded. $299 is !he Iota! do1vn )ay-pu :i:Ln. ment. $17.69 is the total BILL ... ~ 10Y,_.. Mu.st &ell will take foreign , .. , "~'"" u~a · d mon1.1.uY paym~nt including 1!'81 •··-Bl' _.. car 1n tra e or finance prt. JI. __.. V1.1 -& vale party_ (NYM82lSl Call tue1, licen11e and a.II carcy- ne.cll. · ·Pb. Kl' 546-4052 or 494-9772 aJI 10 am I~ charres on approval of fi PAi' 'f&i IXJl..LAJl , 53 OIEVY Good .._______ Bank credit for 36 montbl. FOR TOJt USED CA1tS 1. N b ::'.:t"".''...-Or, If you would pnfer to If cu lm a:tra deu, IOfl. ew car ·• •"""' tires, pay C&l'lh, the full cash price your tint. runs great Hurry $75. 111% ls only $2661.90 in<:ludlnt; all Re ua POOJ..:!:. BUICK 25th St., N.B. taxes and 1970 license traJl5. 234 E. 17tll SL ~1°'"6"'""~S~P~O~R~T~S~V~A~N~-I fer. Nothing more to pay. ~ta Mesa ~ Good cond, Sll50, pvt pty. Deferred payment price is 546-l028 $3095.84 including Ill carry. New Ctn tlOO •s:z OiEVY Impala, 327 eng. ing charges, taxes aiid 1970 . license transfer. Fly lik• ·a bird in thl& ,:~r. P/b, Pl!. * 646.2865 ANNUAL PERCENTAGE canary-yellow '70 Mav-RATE IS ONLY ll S• eric.k th•t it. Auto., GRE.AT lnd Car. ·st CMv. UNIVERSITY PS, R & H, $l)99.00. Xln t Sha~. $300 or bst 1 Ow liq id olfer. 67>1641. OLDSMOBILE ner muat u •t•. 2Sj() JIE1rbor Bl.. Cos1a illesa 48 .ct. mil••· S.. it •I .-* MUST SELL! * -OPEN 1 DA\"S 39 Chevy. good trans ;2;:.o Kustom Moton or orter. 614--1006 CALL 540-9640 845 Baker, C.M. 540-5915 •62 OtEVY \Vag_ \°' K 167 Cullat!s with everything! Solita!n engage. rinr . .!\lake Low mileage. Low prict . offer, 545-8129 962-338-1 or 962-2811. '63 V2 TON Ford Pic:k~p. & cvli"d•r, I ft . bid. 111 10101 $897 '64 PLYMOUTH '4 Door l1lv1d1r1. Y-1, 1uto. tr•n1., pow1r 1f11,... in 9, r•dio, h1•t1r, (OMK· •••l. $789 '61 COMET "4 Dr. Auto. h•n1., t.1 .t1r. !lGZ "47 11 $449 r•dio, '67 GALAXIE 500 1 Dr. H1rdlop, V-8, •uio. l ••n1., power 1l1•rin9, ••· llio, h11t1r, wh11! co¥1r1. ITFB 4l I). S1479 '65 FORD XL 2 clr. H1rdtop, '1-1, t ufo. tr1n1 ., f1clory •ir c:ondi· tionint, pow•r 1f11rin9, c:~rom• ..,.i.,,1,, duel ••- h111tl, ..,.;cl, ov al ti••1· !POE 1411 $1269 "61 PLYMOUTH 4 Dr. 5 • d • n. 'r'-1. •uio. tr1n1 .• f1 ~tory 1ir <C1nd1· tioni~9 . pc""• r 1!1rrinQ, wh:1, ..... 11 '"''· !VWL 2171 $1483 063 COMET '67 VW Sqbck. Good cond. $14.'IO or bo.t otter. Call 64Z..988fJ OLDSMOBILE 1970 OLDSMOBILE ,. CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH 1 Dr .• o1 ulo. tr 1n1., ••dio, h•t+e•, 1conomv c:1r. I FWS '61 VW BUS 1500 eng. Xlnt. rond. l Owner. Mu5I 11!11. $1075 or off~. 541-M23 TOWN SEDAN Factory air rondltlonin.g, '69 CilRYSLER. l ·pass . automatic, ndlo (rear wagon. All eztras. Jo mi's, 1peaker), healer, paw-er 365 HP 440 &. 4 bry. Orig. 1teering. power~ brake&, owner. days 540-4058, eve! wheel covers. remo~ 'mlr· Mfr.5881 tor'. tinted gtJW, w-s-w. =========:I Serial NO. 3M690M27639l.. CORVAIR ------- ---------·II 121l '6 7 Plymouth G TX V8. 11.UIO, PS. PB, air con- diti<>ning. ~lust liquidate lhia 1veek. !Lil:. a TPL133) $1399 Kuitom Motors 845 Baker, C.J\1. ~915 $697 '63 RANCHERO Ford. R,.1 ,1. ... p. ftlG 51~) $693 I 1!64 COLUMBIA double e11· town. &1S-0361 pando, front porch & awn-Kustom Motors 1967 DATSUN 1600 TIME FOR Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT '68 VW CONVERT £.it. Cond . .Sl:OO Ms.6120 '63 VOLKSWAGEN, 8,000 miles, new motor. Best (Jf. fer. • 631-2156 '69 VW Bug. Xlnt cond. '6.5 Corvalr Convertiblt , 4 ·ss PlymouU! Station Wagon, I UNIVERSITY ;&";,;, F:U~J~ro;w:·;:: ~,~;,,.,Good Coot!., l»J. 1970 Demonstrator $4694 Ing , Cen t"r p o r c h ROADSTER. fll95 w/screened-in 11 w n Ing. 845 ~r. C.flf. 540-5915 e 968-2836 e """ "'· "'" .._ OO-<Ju Datnn Pickup lOxfiO Tustin AdJt Pk. 2 br, New 197tl Datsun Pick Up 2 ha, dness rm. cent air, with camper, dlr. Fully tac- elec kit, dl&tiwr, d~. tory equipped, great oppor- wuh/dryr, carint CCV. pat, lunllY. Wiii take trade or tm.eped, shed. 54.1.mD aft will finance private party. 10 AM. Full price ia $2099, Ser. • SHARP 10x60' (67798) Call MG-4052 or 2 Br I Den. Nr. Colla l\feM c<:_94:_:-9:;11"3'", =--,-,--- A H.B. area. Adult Pet Pk. '68 Chev. Van ()v.Tler Oesperatt! * CAMPER * Up to 10 y,., >"inanc;ng A.M.S. 842-3939 9 am-T pm REDUCED price! Viklnc Scandia. """°" ""---5 Star Adult Pk. MS-4142 ........ Mot.-_rq'C ... --"°° '69 l.JONDA ~ xlnt cond. $519. Call aft S. Ml-X170 OLD MslchleP A AJS engine • trans part; mlle. MC J>UU-c.JI 540-<ll<f 'i AMARA aJ dirt bike, reblt enc. Tri.all tire• n.". $l 10!blt orr. 96.W778 ( ENGLISH FORD WANT AD Low MU~.· Private perty. $1,650. Call 847·2042 DAILY Pll.DT WANT ADS! Dial &D--5i'71 I: charll! tt. OLDSMOBll& 673--111<-1-========ll 5 A L E 2850 -BL, 0osta M-'64 ·CHEVY eo"''"· ._,,..., PONTIAC OPEN' 7 DAYS !W0-9640 $21M. flnandrc av a 11. ---------11 All 1t71 Demonstraton '4>-lllllO, 22tlO Hubo• Blvd. '68 FIREllRD ·~ ......... t•-..... C.M. ''ChU<=k" or "Van" lc:• •t 11pprox. 6 O O O Loaded. Power ~ttring, l\fu8t mu ... Th..-1t10 '°"' 1965 CORVAIR, ntw heads, sell, Take trade or $mall h11vo had th • I r 600I good condltion, MAKE OF· down • low payments, \\'ill mllo check-up an4 •ro Fl!lft,. 54S-.Hl00 finance prlvall'! ""fly, dlr. rNdy for lmm..tlate d .. ,CORVETIE CORVETI'E 1966 1a.stback 4 speed, side eXhauiit. mags. 10 wide '!ires, new. Blue · pi'tnted 427 Jfl Pe.rt. 500 mh on engine. S.trltloe $l395. n_c: 141.:..2960 . « . 53i..t650 - ,... llvory. (\VQL 212) Call 5464052 or "494-9773 11.ft 10 am. ·57 Pontiac Sta!ion wagon body, lnterior Ir. trans, good condition. Needs starter lo; tune-up $45. 64;)..UJl 1968 LE MANS 4 Dr. Hrdtop $2295. Power · •. air cond. 0wnn: '73-2258 Eve a - All Mod1l1 To Choose From Mctat C1r1 P'ully lqulpp..t • T-llN1 e TerlMt e M•t•nt• e O.laaM e Pd LTD'• COUGAR '1..:::"'.:.!"· ,!"~ '68 COllC)GI' XR7 =""'·~11""~· ~~--'--~II DUNTON I 1962 Pontlac Le Mins. Good f"lcloty a I r condlUoftlng, condition. fl!'i'.I. ;; 5 1• 9 g 7 9 poW"er disc brakes. vtriyl afi.r SPM. lop, .... IOI• ol 1001H ... 1 ;=~==== FORD (YZZ05Sl, Will ..... """ T-BIRD l'.lr tint.nee prlvllte party. Call 54ti-4051 or 0494-9773 aft 10 a.m. '.).l T·BIRO. Sharo. $2200 Ca~h Or Trade * 8'16·3976 * '61 T-BIRO. All \\'hile Like new cond. S-150 Owntr 546--82.;.I PILOT WANT AD!t t;U...5678 ' 2240 S. Moln SANTA ANA 546-7076 I