HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-08 - Orange Coast Pilot•
• DI .ers
MONDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 8, 1973
VOl. ... NO ... I St:(TtOfllL M PAG•S
• • •
Allied Base
In San Onofre
~ ...
At Checkpoints
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ftM O.Hr PU• Sll ff
Three persons were killed instantly and
several o~rs severely injured in a hor-
rifying series of incidents Sunday evening
near the Border Palrol checkpoint at San
Onofre,
The death!, all In the crowded lanes cl
the San Diego Freeway, took place at the
2 Officers
Face Action
In Bar Dea-th-
height of a massive number or smuggling
incidents.
Two young women died before the eyes
of their love1." ones. Adother man was run
down as well .
Patrol spokesman Dale Swancutt said
the deaths occurred shortly after 5 p.m.
at Ute height or the intense wave of il-
legal immigrants.
"The first death! occurrod when a
carload pulled over ahead of the cbeck·
point and the smuggler told his
passengers to get out and cross the
freeway," he explained.
The first wave of passengers did as
ordered.
But Toribia Perez de Mejia , 18, of
Ensenada, Baja California, was struck
and killed by a car. -xfi ·µruQefilifie<l"riWC.....e-a~lso-was stnickJn
that crossing. He died at the scene.
Murder 8J)d ,85$8µ!t with a deadly "The wom.an's husbahd appareiltly saw
weapon complaints were being sought to-the whole ·thing. He told'-us he paid $150
day-against a.pair of JXllicemen involved each for the trip north arxl the smuggler
a..-'""' 1.nu..... ,., Marine rn~ _ -ordered them out of the car and told
_JD __ ~l.l,WJ6-Y..! ~ them-to-starrnmntng,••-SWifieut wa..
helicopter pilot Friday night in Tustin. Five minutes.. later, the horror was
A third bar patron also was soot and repeated.
w=ed~ In the shooting death of Yet another smuggler pulled over after
ha bee ooticlng the checkpoint In operation. C&pt. Steven Robinette, ~. ve n He, too, ordered his cargo to nee.
j!taced In spectal l~ lsolaqon to protect In that Oight across eight lanes of ,,._, them from prisoners who might seek ~--v ~, v eance because they are lawmen. '1-a::w:ay . ictoria. Orozco c:etvantes, 15, of
•
• • Ul Ill ? •
>
Ollicers Face Action
In Tustin Bar Death
• • • • • • • •
by U.S.
Hotel Sniper· Vieti111s
UPI T~
WOUNDED POLICEMAN COMFORTED BY FELLOW OFFICER IN NEW ORLEANS GUN BATT LE
Body Of Slain Patrolman Philip J. Colem1n Lin at Left, a Victim of Rooftop Sniper
Jets
Navigation
Error Cited
e
SAIGON (UPI) -Five American
fighter·bombers from the Air Poree,
Navy and Marines today mistakenly
bombed the sprawling Da Nang Air Base
in what military sources said was an air
parent navigational error.
Nine Americans and a Vietnamese
military guard were injured .. A UHl
Huey helicopter wa!I damaged and three
fuel stcrage tanks set afire.
A total of 34 of the 500-pound bomb!
were dropped by an Air Force F4 Phan·
tom, two Navy A7 C.Orsairs and two
Marine F4 Phantoms. All apaprenUy
landed tn the northwest portion of the
huge joint U.S.-Sooth Vietnamese base:.
UPI correspondent Kenneth F.
Englade, on the base st the time of the
accidental bombing, sald two American
soldiers, two American civilia!)S and t~
South Vietnamese guard were 1ajured hj'
the bombt.
F'our American airmen and another
U.S. civilian were inju. ed while fleeing
for cover from what v•as at first believed
to be a Communist rocket attack.
'Oie U.S. Command began an tm·
mediate investigation. Military !IOUrce!I
said the Air Fotce. ""·hich operates the
base housing 4,000 Amerit'an servicemen,
would be in charge of the probe.
"The Navy and Marines will be in on
it, too, since they had planes involved," a
source said.
Meanwhile, the air war over North
Vietnam entered Its IOLh month with 124
righter-bombers and about 45 BS2s hitting
below the country's 20th parallel in the M
hours ending at dawn today.
I
I
' "
(
urviving Siiipers
Firing Again at Hotel
WO
T1 spol<esman for Olief Deputy Dtstricl Purl!1caC100, Jali=, wu killed wben she
ttorney-Jamel G Enri&bt said lhi.'1. was hit by a f~-moving ear.
morning that complaints bad not yet to~erpa':..~~.~~-been issued against Cypr<9s Police Sgt, . , , n 8 are or = Thomas Baroldl and Garden Grove fatnµy s tnp oorth was '225 ~ch.. ra fiUAuthor
Facing Tests
U.S. Command spokesmen said ~
1'numerou&ll-t-rucks-were--deslroyedl..,.,...-i'---,-I
(See BOMBING, Page !) I
\, Narcotics ~VJ? Gary L. Gray. -~ay i;>a~lme~ .mv~ahng the
Baroidi 26 ·is bqoked on · SU!picion of acdidents said the vict.tms all were run
murder ~hll~ Grat, 28 ts charged with over repeetedJy ·
assault 'with a dea~ weapon' as a result In the first t_ragedy I cars driven by
of the Jl!teration at the Bachelors Ill Jose ~ _1!'"'• 24, of Lynwood and bar Raymond ....W. Barton, 23, of San Diego, cOOmctiog ·reports are that Sgt, were irlvolved. •
Jlanlldl ·and De.tectlv. Gray were "'"' In .the,oecond'1ncident, patrolmen said. NEW ORLEANS (AP ) -Heavily arm-building, and a police tank·like armored _ducting.a_~ inv~at!on and that · five separate cars ran over the ed ,POlicemen held their circle around a car was sent to the scene. Die IUdden ~ alimJned from -aii ~e<rvantes·gjrl be(ore-traffio·coald stop;: downtown-hotel· today-as two stlrYi'ring The-helicopter dr<w no fire on three
argwnent ovtr ~ woman. · Patrolmen. are still oot certain bow snipers opened fire again in a· marathon... ·early morning passes over the building,
The third v~ Sam Campise, 35, of (See ADENS, l'oge S) shooting .spree that lelt six dead and 17 including the third pus for the tear gas.
Tustin, li1,1.aetlousl1 wounded and taken . injund. Meanwhile, new gunfire was Police had reTi!ed their list of dead,
to TUsilft ~~oliq rill ..-;iMP , "'l*1od ln>a neor1>y buJlding, (See Pie-saying that one victim apparently was
cap1. R<biDelle;.oi.dled ....era1....., & · W Y' RESULTS ' brii.1'\iiiie•f · · --. ·. ' c:Wnted twice, leevi111 their •ffictal total
Iller. -• -· ----' -·It-was quiet-!rom dawn unlil "°"ly at slx. AJJ....,..·tdentified.
lnvtlllgaton claim Sgt. Baroid! shot WITH PILOT ADS -. but thell lllllper fire rang out from A Marine leutenant said one aortie IJJ. Capt. RablneUe anCl that Detective Gray • the Downtown Howard Johnson Hot.I, eluded d_.,p photograph• of the --•t.= -~ ~ __ a:-..._..... and Police marksmen, stationed in sur-bunker-like enclolurel used as cover by
A fourth man -who som w figures r ~N •-·rigbt-·to1iU1harjob1ly r;,;:maffii lilffilmgs wi!h lifgli'.powete<f tlie men-:-·--
Jn tbe cue -was involved bot Tustin put~g a DAILY ~ classified want ~' raked the hottl roof, where the The enclosures, five-Inch thick
police have to far declined to ldenUfy ad lD your employ. Heres how: men. were believed still ho~ up. fSee SNIPERS, Pqe ZJ
him or bis role, possibly that of a The gunsholl carn_e. a few minutes after
narcoUca Informant. Mature gal, PIT CM Ins. Of. • Marlno Corps heltoopter, with police
Due to the possibility of attacl: by fice. E'JI not nee. Filing/type sharpohooten at the reedy, hov.red a
.other • prisooers in . dormitory-type & abilily to communlcaJA • r... feet over the roof and blasted high·
cellblockl, Sci. Baroid! was booked into must. ~·-·U:U. ftlodl}' lMr ps at a stairwell. c..ta M.., City ~.a. while lle.tective Mlrm1es lale', po1Jce reported gUnfire
Gray 11 .lodgtd In J!leWp«'t Beocb, City Tbe..i.,..-IA>· this ad "" tit....,. cm a patrolman stationed at an m.
Jall • , dous. J:n.Pl"J· -.qnJek ~ts j<IUr loclts.lrom .. the.!1ot.L ~1"oicaU1'"'8&~ ~~-Au delermined thal lhe MW -,ae..:nm,,,...11 111ot1 ...... coming 1r11m • nem,1
,.
I ,
Ex-war Aide Di es
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Jorepb L. Strommei.8:! asslrtant -.ry of war In the Pr in D. Roocevtlt odlnlniltr ..
lion before World War II, died ben. He
IM!lpM-found Herlh-A-A-
Corp. and Severaky Aircraft, wbldl later
became Bell Aeroopace Corp,
In Churcl1 Spree
!\EW YORK (AP) - A psychiatric ex·
amination has been ordered for a man ac-
cused of scrawling illegible graffiti on the
big bronze doors to St. Patrick'!
Cathedral and denting them with a
sledge hammer.
A spokesman for the Roman Catholic
arcbidocese said 1~pair cost.a had not
been estimated but that the damage -10
dentt In the llJ-foot-hlgh doors -was not
consktered-extf!Mive,
Police subdued the suspect as be
allegedly wielded the sledge hammer late
Saturday night, wbtn the doors were
locked,
Police said Ella• Sanford, SI, or
Oakfaeld, N.~. was chi.rged-with criminal
mlsdllef, pubUe intoxication aod vola-
Uon of the sralllll law,
WOl lmtm I tUMJvtd-the blAU jlien
mortlnp !rem lhe door before llrli<a
in the Cathedral -,.
Or ange Coll!lt
Weather
1be weatnerlady says there's an
80 percent diance cl showers to-
night anQ Tuesday, clearing In the
afternoon on Tuelday. More rain
~ expected at the tlld of the week.
lllghs today SMO, Lows ~50.
INSIDE TODA 'Y
A nn . .,,,,,kmg flTO•p& oot cf!I'
arttte odl taktn off the air
wave!. NO'ID the tmaU-dgar in·
dultr11 ha.a .ia~Wu: with ..
cigar·puffing co1Dboy1 taktng the
rfi rl& awa11 from tM non.!moktrs.
Stt &tort1 on Page' 7.
... l.A!llMrt 11 -" ,,.,., ..... ,..... 4
er... ~rY " . ........... , .. ,, ,......_ ... ,,
,... INl'WI ... ll
T......._ ll -" -.-__. ........... --.
•
l(issing~r, Th~ Resume Talk·s
In Paris on Grim, Cold Note
PARIS (U PI! -Grim laced and
studiously avoldJng Cflch other In publi c,
U.S. presidential advi~r Henry A. Kiss·
inger and Nor1h Vl!!tna1nese fl('gotlator
~ Due Tho opened a new round of Viet·
nam peace talks today with a ~·h·hour
meeting. They agreed to meet again
TUesday.
A North Vietnamese spokesman said
Tuesday's mc:etin~ would start at 10 a.rn.
(l a.m. PST\ at a locaiion of the
Americans' choice.
COntrary to past practke, there were
no public handshakeJ either before ur
after today's session, the first of the 23rd
U,I T14"flol1
Break• Barrier
Rev. A. Paul Jones of Sacra-
mento is expected to be named
chaplain of tbe state Senate,
the first Negro In the 124-year
history of tbe state Legislature.
round of talks.
Neither side greeted nor waved the
other off as It did before lbe talks broke
down last month and President Nixon
ordered the bombing of 1-lanol.
The de1egat1ons arrived and Jett
separately, unsmiling. At no time were
the two sides seen together.
The atmosphere wa!I the coolest
neYismen had seen since KiS!linger and
Tho started meeting regularly in Paris
last October.
When Kissinger ltft the villa whtn the
talks took place . he did not wave u usual
to the wailing photographers.
No Big Wlreels
Frequently, leaden of the two delega-
tions have stroll~ together during a
lunch bnak and public handshakes
normally marked the opening and closing
o! 1he meeting.
Alter the meeting, Kissinger and Assls-
tnnt Secretary o[ State William H. ·
Sullivan strolled together In the garden
and then the American team le£t. Tho,
accompanied by Hanoi peace delegation
chief Xuan Thuy, left 10 minute! later.
The meeting, the first between Kiss-
inger and Tbo aiJ><o the 22nd round col·
lapsed '!l days ago, took place on a cold,
foggy day at a Communlst--0wned country
·· Watergate Trial
Witnesses Eyed
WASHINGTON (UPll -Several
present and fonner White House aides
wert: named today as prospective
government witnesses as the Watergate
bugging trial opened in U.S. District
Court.
But no high-level Administration of·
ficials were included in the list of &O
witnesses the prosecution said it might
call during the trial.
Death Makes
Charges
'Inevitable'
A Tustin potrolman'a death during the
Seven men -including two former
White House aides -are charged wilh
conspiracy, burglary and bugging of
Democratic National Committee head-
quarters at the Watergate hotel-apart·
ment complex JWte 17. The trial ls U:·
pected to last one to three montM.
Prosecutor John M. Silbert said that
Fred Fielding, Jeb Magl'\lder and Broce
J<ehrli would be among the witnesses the
government would call attempting to
prove its case.
Fielding is a Whit e House attomey
working iw·ith presidential cowisel John
Dean, who conducted an investigation of
the Watergate affair for President Nixon.
Magruder worked under \Vhile House
communications di.rector Herbert G.
Klein, was deputy director of the Com·
mittee to Re-Elect the President and is
t>xecutive director of the committee ar·
ranging the inaugural.
weekend makes it almost certain that
S Co t murder charges will be filed today
Kehrli is a White House staff secretary
working for H. R. "Bob" Haldeman, Nii:·
on's chief of staff.
boust In suburban Git 1ur Yvette.
Tho arrived lint wilh the head of the
Hanoi peace delegation, Xuan Thuy, and
went straight into tbe house. Shortly
before 11 a.m. (5 a.m. PST). Kissinger
drew up with SuUlv&n.
No one came to the door to greet the
Am ericans, who went i.ns.ide after ""liting
briefly. '
At 3:30 p.m .. the American team led
by K'mlnger left the villa and returned to
the U.S. Embassy residenu.
1bo uid on arrival in Paris Sllw'day
about the new round of talks : "The
decisive moment has arrived."
* * * BOMBING ..•
the port or Vinh, 137 miles north of 1he
Demilitarized Zone and "several" others
were hit near Dong Hoi, 38 miles north
of the DMZ.
At least one of the bombs that fell on
the Da Nang faclllty bit a huge
petroleum storage tank. touching off an
explosion that sprea d fires to two ot her
nearby tanks. military sources reported,
The erroneous bombing touched off
rumors the base had been attacked by
Soviet-bullt MIG jets from North Viel·
nam. whose nearest frontier i! 100 miles
away.
But none of Hanoi's MIGs bu ever
been known to attack anywhere in South
Vietnam. A few reconnai.!sanci Hights
have been reported, but never confirmed,
over the years.
Initial reports said the five planes were
cruising above a 2,500-foot solid cloud
cover on a so<alled "Sky Spat" mission ,
a strategic bombing attack guided only
by radar, radio beacons and a "IJtUe
blac k box" computer.
Somehow, the command said. the
aircraft veered off course and ended up
over Da Nang instead of the Communist
target they thought they were beading
for 62 miles away.
The lead pilot gave the signal and
ordered all planes to dump their bombs.
Princess Anne
Reported in Love upreme llr against his alleged assailanl. a District Altorneys for the seven defendants did
Auorney·s spok"'1WI sald !his morning. nol list any potenlial wilnessel as Jury· LONDON (AP) -Princess Anne and
D • p Chief Dpeuty Di!trlct Attc.rney James selection procedures began. Lt. Mark Phillips, 2:4, a member of the emes eyote Enright said his office is reviewing the Amoog others listed as prospective Queen's Dragoon Guards, are reported
UPIT .....
Obfector
Sgt. I. C. Ernest Pounder, high·
ly decorated Green Beret, told
newsmen Sunday he has be-
come a conscientious objeetor
because of "this insane war."
He returned 24 medaJ s and will
not wear his uniform.
f'rot11 Page 1
ALIENS ...
many ~r aliens may have been injured
in the dashes across the freeway.
"'Ibere must have been Uterally hun-
dreds or them who escaped because we
counted 2:4 abandoned can in the area
through the day. People just jumped out
of them and ran every which way,"
Swancutt said.
The patrolman speculated that scores
ot persons entered Camp Pendleton and
others succeeded in crossing the freeway
and headed up the beach around the
checkpoint.
Police in San Clemente reported many
alien arrests through the day . Swancutt
said that Marines at Camp Pendleton
were attempting to round up more today
on the ·large reservation.
•·it was one of those unbelievable
migrations and the only explanation we
have is that many of these people were
coming back to their jobs after the
holidays," the patrolman said.
The checkpcint operation Sunday yield·
ed nearly 300 aliens.
Woman Killed
f'nm P •g e 1
SNIPERS ...
concr<tHJab rooms at the end of the roof art covtrinp for the steep stajrs (ro~ the lath Cloor to the roor. Officials
saJd theft are lWO rlgllt·angie elboWI in
the llalrway, maklng It lrnpoulble to
stioot up add f*'lloUI to even cbeck out.
""1lc6 Aid iM)' did not -!bl ldln-lily of the Jhrte men who began their •Jee• from the hotel Sonday rnornJnc. A aharpohooltr, Wlttcblng lbe 111mm••>'1
movements with a »power telesoope,
d..cribed tbern as black men, at leul
one with a goalte IJld buJh haircut. '
In 1he dayup~ the chl)ll Ind pockJ rrom the tbouaands of roundl of hip.
powerecl amman!Uon were vJllble nn the race of the boildlng, eJPOclal!Y a! the
blclt of the bunker•.
At mi< place oould be seen the holes .
hammered out of sheer concrete by
persistent police firt. A three-foot open·
ing was t.orn in the side of the concrete
bunker used as a base by t • .e snipers. lt
came from repeated barrage.s by the
high·velocily weapoas aboard the
helicopter. Police used extreme caution, and did
not explain why there was ~ attempt to
use fire chemicals or explosives to force
the men out.
As the drama continued, most or the
city's business district was paralyzed,
with streets blockaded around the hotel.
Officials allowed no one through.
At midmorning there was only specula·
lion about what prompted ~e. shooting1.
Louisiana Atty. Gen. W1lllam Gusle
said he 'A'ould ask for a f~eral in-
vestigation. •·J am now co.nv1nced. ~hat
there is an underground national suicidal
group bent on creatin6 terror 1n
America.'' be charged.
From Pagel
PILOT ...
ty Jail facility built four years ago hasn't
a single cell designed for gpeclal max4
imum security protection.
Tustin Police and Orange CoWlly
District Attomey's Investigators are
handling Uie· case and remain extremely
tight·llpped about the multiple factors in·
volved. They hav e said that . both suspects
claim to have bee"' acting in the line or
duty during the gunp\ay at point-blank
range that left Capt. Robinette dead and
Campise wounded.
The dead man, a bachelor. lived ;:it
15742 Williams St., Tustin, and is surviv-
ed by his parents in Phoenix. Ariz., ac-
cording to El Toro Marina Corps Air Sta·
tion officials.
Complaints cha rging the two lawmen
-both suspended rrom duty pending
outcome of the proceedings -were ex-
pected to be issued later today.
They wouJd then be arraigned In Cen-
tral Orange County Judicial District
Court. ll---~l4'::c::--x:::-T'"=:===-----4fil~e;,.;;.o~n:'G~·Mci~W~ill;;iai:m~.~lo~bnsoieoin~,:--437i.;';.o~l~.£g;;;ov;;jernment witnesses were Michael by a LondoD Dewspaper to in love. I , on y roup the weekend ' ofllcerW1lclron Karp,l7. formerly represented several of 1he quoted an unidentified""'""' as saying c~·k R l d . t .. "n .... M•_-•·•·" ""'t •·[ nd ts • " ed ~ .... I '" t•·1 ... I --~·~ Ill __ ,,,,,Fl er-s--e eaS@ . -~ ,.u.; • ..,. ™l&L...lf.Hr uc e an ;...NJ.r ~w n-ua,-en--ex-11.11 -we-coup e can rev~ 11U1.W11g-1In --
emeter..x_
WASJUNG'IDN (UPI) -Tbe U.S. the initial charges against Jotwon of FBI agent who reportedly was involved the royaJ family gives the word. RlS~ON 1:-EZION, Israel IUPI ) EL CENTRO IAP ) -The 81 United
c.ourt loda d h assault wi th a deadly weaJ>OD on a police in the Watergate affair and who has Citing protocol, the Sun reported : "In -.Police sa.1d Sun~.Y !hat Rachel Farm Workers L'nion strikers arrested
Supreme y enied a earing to officer will be raised to murder level. turned state's eviden~: Hugh W. Sloan, this sort of unreal situaUor:, a romance Ohiyon,70, died of 1niur1es suffered while picketing in a broccoli field
a New Mexico religious group which Karp succumbed to stomach wounds former treasurer ol the Nb:on campaign, that would normally blossom into mar· ~hen a burlaJ society truck backed Saturday have been released on their
WMts lo be free of the government's ban just one month after he and a sheriff's and several police and FBl agents. rlage ls conducted In a gotdfish·bc>wl at· into her at a cemetery. recognizance and "'ill be tried during the
00 use of the hallucinogen peyote. deputy were shot in what police said was Chief Judge John J. Sirlca of U.S. [i~rn~os~pbere~~·~"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~ilii~n~ex~t~l~ewi;liw~ee~ks~. !ii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil In a brief order, the court left standing an .alleyway gun battle with Johnson. District Court warned the jurors they
a ruling against the group, known 85 1he Tustin C.Ornrnunily H"'pital officials would he sequesle!ed throughout . the ~·-b of the ~ woo earlier reported Karp as making a lengthy trial if chosen beca"'"" the -. ..... vuw"' AwakeDing, handed down "good recovery" from his woonds ex-.....,. ""'" ~
April 5 by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of plained today that the patrolman suf-had "reason to ~lieve there wiU be COO·
Appeals. fered a fatal relapse after further slderable publicity" about the case. CLEAN SWEEP
Peyote grows in small buttons on a surgery. The courtroom was packed with pro-Johnson Is held in Orange County spective jurors drawn from a list of 1,000 species of cactw: found in the Southmst. :P.tedical Center prison ward and is names.
When chewed or brewed into a tea, it reported by hospital ollicials there to be More than 100 reporters applied for
products hallucinations. rapidly rect1vering from wounds In the trial credentials but only a pool was
The Blll'eau of Narcotics and hand and knee. allowed in initially, wilh the balance to
Dangerous Drugs has restricted the use Police claim lhe suspect got those take their seats as juron were selected
of peyote since 1965, but exempted wounds Dec. 6 when ~arp and a fellow or dismissed.
religious ceremonies of the Native Tustin officer challenged him outside a The public will not be allowed tn until
American Church, composed of an Tustin home. after lhe jury bas been pie~.
estimated 300,000 Am ericaD Indians in A woman who said Johnson fired The incident has led to charges that
various Western tribes. Peyote use is several shots through her bathroom win-the Democrats had been vletlmlzed by
central to their religion. dow after sbe denied him entry, called widespread political espionage.
Tustin police for help. Her call was The Democrats hammered away at the
--=B=a!!_Qwsky in Running
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dr. William S.
BanoW!ky, president of Pepperdine
trrdverslty. s1rys he1s a c11ndidate to sue-
eted retiring Ca l State San Francisco
President S. I. Hayakawa. But he was
unsure he would take the job if it was 0£-
!erec!.
"
DAILY PILOT
answered by Karp and his colleague and Incident during the election carr.paign but
two sherifJ.J deputies who picked up the dld so without the spotlight of the trial
mesAge in their patrol cac. . which Sirica postponed until after the
Polite said Johnson whirled and fired Nov. 7 election.
from a high powered rifle as he was As the trial got under way, defense at·
challenged. Karp fell , wounded in the Wrney Henry B. Rothblatt representing
. stomach and his discliargmg revolver rour of-the accused, denied reports that
shot deputy Tim Stewart in th face. all involved would plead guilty to avoid
Officers opened fire on Johnson and 1h bli ., f full scale trial struck him In the hand and knee. Stewart e pu Cl Y 0 a · ·
was treated for his facial wounds and is
now back on duty.
Johnson bad earlier been ordered to
face trial Feb. 26 on the assault charges.
Court officials today said that date may
be cancelled if the murder complaint is
issued,
FEAR OF DEMO NS
KILLS BELIE VER
•
LOW
PRICES
ARE
TO yOUR T~it :01 LOADING
1'119 C>m!ge Ctul DAILY PILOT, wltll Mlld'I
k OWPlblnd tM "•-Pnu. .. PUbllllllcd by
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Frldlly, tor Costt Mu1, N-porl &etdl.
Hllnllfllllen 81tKh/Foun1111t\ V1ll1y, UQVl'I<'
lllKI!, lt"ll'ln1/SNdlcbtck •rid Sin Clt"""lel
$tn Ju1111 C1pl1tr1no. A 11"!11• r1K1~I
adlliol'I 11 PllbUsh«I kturll1y1 1nd S~y1.
l"lle prlnc:lp,tl PVOllShlr>a pl111t II 11 UI Wnt
lllY $Ir"!, Cotlt Mt11, C11lfornlot, tltlt.
-FisJrernnin-Hnnted-
STOKE. England (APl - A fe ar of
vampires caused the death of a 56-ycar-
-olcLPQUCI)'_\\m'.kct._.a car.nan's inq11est-1-1~:i-ll
was told today. 1
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FRESNO (AP) -A sea rch for three
young Fresno men. overdue on a fishing
trip in the High Sierra , <'nlered its second
day today. Fresno County sheriff's
rescue officers identified the men .e s
Douglas Warren . Ru ben Contrerns nnd
John FancluUo, all 19.
A physician testified that Poli sh-born l
Demetrius Myiciura died from chokin g
on a garlic clove which he left in his
mouth overnight to keep vampires away.
Police testified that Myiciura 's
bedroom was littered with salt, pepper
and garlic. all traditional antivampirc
precautions.
Moon Bonntl
Sov iets Launcli Luna Rocket
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviels today hurled an unmanned Luna 21 rocket
into space en route to the mooo, the Tass news agency said .
The first moon probe launched by the Sovlets in 11 months streaked Into
Mrttr 'orblt •r 9'SS-U!I; 00'.Sll>.m. PST-Slllldny), Tl:u •aid:
''TOE STATION WAS LAUNCHED to the moon from the orbit of an ar1.i·
ficlal satellite or the earth 'uld wa,, placed on a trajectory c:lose to the est.I·
mated Of'le," It sald .
• Tass said onty that the purpose of the probe was "in accordance with the
progtom ol spect studies " and gave no detllila of Ill mission.
TIIE SOVIETS RA VE ya 1o land men on the moM. but lwo robot mooo-
scoopers hive been sut'COSlful In returnln& lunar soil to eerth. The l1ltlt, Luna
20, returned WI February.
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School Panel Looms
Lagui.a Looking for New Superintendent
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
OI .. o.lly ,111111 Ii.ft Formation of a committee to assist the
Laguna Beach Board of &lucation in
selecting a new superintendent "ill be
discussed at a special meeting Tuesday
at 7:30 Jn the Laguna Beach High School"
cafeteria.
Tbe appolntmeni of such a committee
Is on the agenda at the rtquest of
William Thomas, board pruident, who
calltd for selection of such a body during
a stonny school board meeting last
-k.
" . . . Broad-based dtiiens partldpa·
tion is a must," said Thomas, "and ... 1
intend to have a committee appointed to
help us 9ttffn the applications which we
will receive for our adminislraUve pogi·
lions, and to make recommendations to
tbe board."
Both the diJtrlcl teachers and the high
school Associated Student Body have re-
quested representation on the committee.
1bomas has indicated both requests will
be given consideration.
'The teachers' request hos come to the
board level through oonnal meet and
confer channels, but has yet 'to be acted
upon.
1be ASB request for represeotaUon on
selection of a superintendent was ftnt
mode by Josh Brighi, high acbool student
pruldeat, Jan. l. BrJiht, bowtvtr,
amended the request 'lbunday, asking
I.be students be allowed a role In the se-
lection for two new usistant auperin-
lendonts. -
1be Ihm top lldminlstnUve po.u will
be vacant by June SI, followtnc action
Dec. ti by the board to lint Dr. William
1mom, diJtrid .Upertntendent, Dr.
CharltJ u.... uslstant superln~t
for business and Dr. Robert Reevts,
assistant superintendent for inslrucUon
and persoMtl.
1be board majority of tru!tees
Thomas, Patricia Gillette and CJ.raid
Linke,. have made it clear that in Ullom's
case be should leave the district u IOOD
as poaible, however.
11 Ullom accedes to the demands of the
majority bloc, several person! have
questioned how the dUlrict will make a
tran.sition to a new superintendent,
The best method for a trantltion,
Stanley McCJintlc. a fonner $Uperin-
tendent told the board last week, would
be to relain Ullom through the end or his
contract, June 30.
tf this is not agreeable to the board,
McClintic said, then it should elevate one
of the two assi!tant superintendents to
the position until a n!placement is found
lot' tmom.
McClintic urged the board contact both
the Oran&• County Department of
Education and Orange County eou ... 1
for M'ther diredion on legal
lecbnlcalllles Involved In the appointment
of an acting superintendent.
He warned the board not to appoint
both assistant superintendenLs as acting
superintendent, commenUng: "You have
to have ooe man in the leadership posi·
lion."
1be board thanked McCllntic lor his
guidance-, but took DO action on e.itber of
his suggestions.
Couple Claim
They've Got
Glwst PrQOf
Ullo••• to Reply
Superinwndent Responds Tuesday
LONDON (UPI) -George and Lynda
Heritage said they recorded the voice of
a ghost that came calling at their home
on Christmas night.
But the couple said the ghost is no
strictly seasonal spirit lill:e the ones
which visited Ebenezer Scrooge on
Christmas Eve.
"He's been such a frequent year-round
caller since we moved In two years ago
that we call him 'Fred'," Mrs. Heritage
said Sunday at her home near London.
Told by a spiritualist that t~e ap-
parition would visit them Ch?'~lmas
night at their 15-year-old mun1c1pally-
owned home, the Heritages set a tape
recorder running tn their living room
that evening and went to bed.
''The next morning we replayed the
tape and heard a voice say 'everything's
all right,' " Mrs. Heritage said. "The
tape abo recorded the dragging sounds,
clickJ and mutterings Fred always
makes."
The Heritages said they have appealed
to the Rev. John Purce HJggim. former
canon at Southwark Angelican cathedral,
Laguna Beach Superintendent or
Schools William Ullom, with legal
counsel at his side, will formally respond
Tuesday night to a demand that he leave
his pool by Wednesday.
_ Ullom . bas declined comment on the
nature of· his counter-proposal to be
made to the board in executive (closed
door) session, but informed sources say
he will press to remain at his desk
through June 30, the date his contract ex·
ptres. -
Ullom was served notict Dec. 18 that
through June 30, the date his contract ex-
piratioo. of his contract. He has served as
district superintendent since 1964.
Ullom, Thursday accepted receipt of a
proposal adopted by the board in a J.2
decision that he leave his position
Wednesday in return for one of the
following methods of pay :
-Accept a cash payoff of $15,625.96.
This amount relfects a total of $17,625.96
due tnlom, less fl,000. The latter amount
is a cuh discount to the district for the
lump-sum payoff.
-Accept a six-month consultantship
with the district at his establ.lsbed rate of
pay ol IZ,117.11 per month, plu.. $3,711.46
in vacation pay. His comulting services
"Fred doesn't frighten ua-we haven't board.
reques o
~-w.e_just hear him .... bi.at-be-troem-ba.s-tndieated-lre-does-not-a~e
does annoy us," Mrs. Heritage said
with the terms of the proposal and has
informed the board he will not relinquish
any of his rights to teacher tenure wjthin
the district.
The proposal to Ullom was adopted by
the board last week, over opposition from
trustees Jane Boyd and Norman Bro~11e,
who want Ullom to remain through June
30.
The adopted proposal dmen slighlly
·from a plan dralted by Trustee Patricia
Gillette, which demanded Ullom be out of
his office by the end of last week.
During the vote on the proposal ,
Browne noted that the board could have
acce pted another option -to retain
Ullom through June 30. Browne said,
however, it was an option that the board
majority would not have supported.
Tuesday's meeting will open at the
Laguna Beach High School School cafe-
teria with an exerutive ses.sion between
the board and Ullom.
Following that ses.sion, the board will
return to an open meeting and act on any
agreement that may be reached with the
outgoing superintendent.
1be only other item on the agenda is
appalotment of a Cllmmittee to assist the board In . a
t a spedal meeting, the board,
by J,lw, may Ollly comlder the two Ii.ms
o~-qe!ii!a-;-
"At first, George thought it was the
plumbing," she said. "'lben he pulled up
the floor boards and spent boon trying to
trace the noctwTial noises but there just
wasn't any explanation for them," she
said.
Robert Rendle, the district's muni cipal
housing manager, said:-.. U a house is oc-
cupied, it is rateable (Wable) and this
place sounds more than occupied, lf you
Laguna Library Slated
F1or Dedication Rites
ask me."
BIRTH CONTROL
BOOK HOT ITEM
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - A 49-page, il·
lustrated "Birth Control Haodbook" is
one of the hottest items at the Cleveland
State Unlvenity student center and it's
free In the (Uidance and coonsellng ol·
fice.
"It has pictures that would. make a
Playboy editor sit up and take notice,"
said Bud Weidenthal_, who covers local
colleges for the Cle~land Press.
Space Facllitie~
Orange County's newest and most im-
proved link in its chain of 2S branch.
libraries -the new Laguna Beach
Library will be dedicated Friday at IO
a.m.
The new structure ts located at 363
Glenneyre St It boasts 8,000 square feet
and bas a book collection of 35,000. In ad-
dition to the nonna1 stack areas, the
library will offer an adult reading lounge,
a children's reading room, study alcoves
and small conference rooms for use as
meeting halls.
The adult and childrens reading arens
will open «rto outside patio areas which
can be used for reading or relaxing.
Harry M. Rowe', Jr., coun"ty librarian
··-....
An experimental waste collection s)l1\em lJ being developed by Hamil·
~ton Standard for men and women passengers ol the space lhullle. It
operates wlthotil erully and bu separate rerept..cles for solid and
wute milter.
said more than rt ,000 has been donated
by the Friends of the Laguna Beach
Library for interior and exterior im·
provements. These additions would not
be possible without the donations.
The gifts include $2.500 from the Sorop.
tomists Club for furnishings in lhe
children's lounge; $1,750 from the Garden
Club for a reflecting pool ; $1 ,000 from
~1r.i. Robert Du Soe for outdoor benches
as a memorial to her late husband,
Cmdr. Robert Du Soe. USNR i ·sroOO
from the Na~tudy-GroUp for an ~l·
-door reOectiiJg pool.
$1.000 from the Dejong family: 1500
from the Ebel! Club for an interior kiosk:
$5,000 from the Altrusa Cluh for a
fireplace; $400 from individuals and
organizations in memory of Nila
Cannan; $100 from the Assisteens for
furnishings in the children's lounge, and
$100 from Barbara Rabinowitsh.
Wayne Criticizes
Senators Voting.
For War Cutoff
PINE MOUNTAIN, Ga. (AP) -Actor
John Wayne of Newport Beach says that
senators -·ho voted recently to cut off
U.S. funding of the Vietnam war were, in
effect, "giving aid and comfort to the
enemy.
'1They \\'Ollld have been tarred and
feathered ln the old days,'' Wayne said in
a weekend news conference at nearby
Callaway Gardens, where he addressed a
convention of the Georgia Cattlemen 's
AlsoclaUon .
1be antiwar senators, ht said, "didn't
fiod fault with (lbe late) President John
F. Kennedy when be startet.' it; they
didn't flnd llUlt with the gentleman from
Tuas (former Pmid<nt Lyndon B.
Jolmoon) wti.n he aent Ill the men over
there and theft didn't have the courage to
end Jt. II
Woyne said the opposlUon of the
...,.ton to President Nixon's Vietnam
_.)>l)licyJ1.purdy_poiltlcaL.
_"And I hate pollUcs," he said.
Actress Protests
NEW YORK (UPI) -Adms Melina
Mercourl 1'lolt part In a demonslratlon
S""'1ay In !root ol the G,..k consulai.
here. Tbo group sbouttd ato«ans and
tried to ~t 1 letter to the Greek v1ce
preml<r demanding the re1.... of
poUllCIJ prbonm In Grtett.
.. •
----
'
lta the L11rch
'J'he C'a b of a truck hangs tenuously above an overpass after smashing
tnrough a guard rail on a road on the ouL~kirts of JUo de Janeiro.
Lagu11a Nigi1el Residents
Will Vote 011 Lighting
Laguna Niguel residents will . vote
Tuesday in a special election to dec1dl' 1f
they \\'ant to sa\'e about $6 a yrar on
their outdoor light bill.
The polling place for the election is
Niguel Community Center, 31000 Cro~·n
Valley Parkway, Laguna Niguel. It 'A'lli
said. and a sm,111Jer $13 20 for lighting by
the larger d1str1ct .
That $6 difference has been fairl y con-
sistent, he added.
'The election effort began about a year
and a half ago when Laguna Niguel resi-
dent John Weirick di.!covered tbe tax dif·
s • DAIL V PILOT 3
Flood Talk
Invitation
Up i11 All ..
ll)' JACK CtlAPPF.LL
Of ,._ 0•11'1' P'Llll Steff
A prt'-Chri~tmtt~ lnvi!ntlon by L.1gun<1
U('ach Cit)' t"ounc1 I to the Orange County
FIM <..:ontrol 01.Str1ct request ing a
rrprt'senta11ve . ond an explanation of 1n-
trrnn flood control fn cilnies for Laguna
C<in)on has as yet r('C('1ved no RSVP.
Lagwu1 Uca1.:h ~tayor Charl1011 Boyd
said f't"Cf.'ntly , the c11y had rectivcd no
n·sponse to a formal resotu11on passed
Dec. 20 reque~tlnF; the flood control
spokesman.
That r('.o;.olution nlso a~kcd the Orangr
County Board of Supervisors to uuthor1ze
completion of plans and to provide fund,
ing for the nooc1 control facilities during
the fiscal year 1973-7<1.
The resolution notes plans for a chan-
nel bad been dra~·n up nt·arly 18 years
ago and a bond measure passed for fund-
ing In 1956.
The terse resolution states "significant
propcrty damage has occurred and wil l
continue lo occur during modcrale stonn
eonditions.''
The resolution 14'as ont more shot ln •
continuing battle tn\•olving the unln -
corporaled canyon area, the city of
Laguna Beach and county actions to ap-
ply flood plain zoning on canyon ter-
ritory .
Flood plain zoning ~ould require new
construction to be ··nooc1 proofed ," tha~
is. generally lilted above the highest
~·aters that could be expected in the
largest flood which could occur. That
flood is called the "Standard Project
Flood."
ApplicaUon of the flood plain zone to
the Laguna canyon area was passed by
the county Planning Commission in late
November. 14·ith a reaimmcndatlon for
approval by the Boa'rd or Supervi!IOrs.
The matter is scheduled for tbe Jan. 24
board meeting.
A storm of protests by residents or the
canyon created a flood of its own at the
planning commission hearings.
Typical were comments by Dr. G. R.
F.keberg that the zone would make any
development so expensive the application
would amount to inverse condemnalion of
priva te property.
Harry Hedges. a canyon resident since
the 1930s also appeared at the planning
commission sessions and protested the
application of the zone.
In an interview. fl edges said. he fell ii
14·as the responsibility of the Flood Con-
trol ist ·
A majority yes vote in the election
would dislolve -the amall-Laguna---1rt'iguel
Lighting District and have area service
by the larger Orange County · Street
Lighting Maintenance District Number
One.
.. · . nectssary to protect existing properties, Weirick, ~resented a petition of not lo foster zoning that would prob1bit
-r-ealdent,g tngnatures-eupportlng-.-lhe--ct1nsfffiCtion or Improvement of present c~geover to the board o.f supervisors, development.
which then called the el~t1on. , "Can all the zoning laws ln the world
The. ~guna Niguel Homeowners prevent flooding in areas that are
Both districts are administered by the
Orange County Road Qepartment. The
changeover, if approved by voters, would
involve 192 street lights in an area of
about 1,000 homes.
Association has endorsed the change. already Jong since developed? Jt woold
A road department nfficial said tod:iy
that absorbing area strett service into thf'
larger district would be no problem and
'Devil' Holds Up
Cliurch Members
might even save some administrative TA~1PA . f1a . fAP) -A gunman call-
work. The change would be immediate ing himself the devil and wearing a red
and involve paper work only. ski mask and red pants held the con·
Jn the tm.73 county budget, the tax gregalion of the Open Door Baptist
rate for the Laguna Niguel District 'A':tS Church at gunpoint during services Sun-
about 16-ctnts per $100 assessed valua-day night and took the men's wallets,
be wonderful If the legislators coold zone
out floods. or even prevent drought,"
Hedges said.
Hedges called application o[ Good r.on-
ing a "death sentence" for the canyon
lands.
Ni'\'.on Promises
Aid to Cambodia
tion and for the 1'taintenance District police said.
One Was about ll~n•· per $100 .... _ •• ~ , A ll l"ed In the f t d NEW YORK (AP ) -Cambodian Pres!. -.... ~ ~.. • gen eman wa .. ron oor d Lon N 1 the NI Val ... 11·0n, ~a .. •• o( a •--g-.-...,O)DaSe. ent o says xon _. un: -uar c1 •w..>o with a ski mask on , and he notified dmin'st · has mlsed h' The l."g"'~• . .-,,-~r--nf !he dislrict is 1 A 1 ration pro is em~ ~ --. ,.. n everybody to be sU I or someone was led "!' rt" •· .. nd" by Crown Valley Parkway on · be ho , 'd h K h batt government 1rm suppo .IN'i" t."\J g01ng to s t,' sa1 t e Rev. ennet · N rth v· tna " · " th e south, Vista de! Sol on the north, agS1nst o 1e mese aggression,
Pacific oCast Highway, west and Pacific Dean. the New York Times reported today.
Island Drive. east. 'The average home Maj. J ohn SaUa, o! the Hillsborough The Cambodian leader also said in
there ls worth $.10,000 and has an assess-County Sheriff's Department, said the written responses to questions ·submitted
ed \'alualion of $12.000, the road official robber told the congregation nf the hy the paper that he felt American
calculated. church near here to remain inside 20 bombs have so weakened North Vietnam
That homeowner in 1972-73 would pay minutes or "someone would be shot" as that it will be forced to negotiate a
$19.20 a year for the street lighting in he left with an undetennined amount or '·iust'' peace settlement and withdraw
Laguna Niguel District. the road official cash taken from 30 vietim,, Sella said. from Cambodian territory.
~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~-::-====== ~·_c_~~~
I
oo IYlllNY ' -GROUPS
"fUIS ANO OfH.C~ a<AU1'1FUI. ''~ANL{ )I 11
KING Sl'Z( GllOCl!>S
$ 300 qJ2 D\SCOUN\
TU.£':>., 1'URU., 5AT., ONLY.
QUAN IT/(. S l.IMIT.( 0.
BRING Tll/5 ~0 WITM '?OU.
ITlS IUORTll aNOTIKll •IOQflt ..,
•
mflGG/ COBP.'S
FURN.Ii UP.{:
t+aO 'SIVS'f. '73·1722
t«WPORT B<RC\\
I •
4 DAILY PILOT
A Hot Time
In Old Town
OF BLAZES A~ SUCH -Unlm it
v.·as a pretty duU January af1emocm, you
wouldn't expect too many Lagunaos to
get very e1nted if the old auto agency
out at 1150 South Coast Highway tried to
bum down.
For one thlng , tbe place was vacant ;
finally abandoned to cobwebs after bav·
ing been visited by a series o( automotive
operators OYer the years. Fw another,
the building appeared to be wrought or
solid concrete and thus an unlikely can-
didate for much of a fire.
Thlrdly, It was schedu1ed to be ripped
asunder by the Iron demolition ball to
make way for a shopping complex called
The Village Faire; that is, if the Faire
people can ever get all thelr vari~
screwid on right. But that's another
story.
MAINLY I TEU.. you all this so you
would know it would take a pretty dull
Saturday afternoon to get Laguna Beach
folks upset about ·this old buildlilg lf it
should catch afitt.
Well, last Saturday was pretty dull in
Laguna and lo and behold, tbe aging auto
building did go up in smoke. 'Thus lt
caused considerable commotion.
lnilial ..,,,....., had it that abruptly,
about 4:30 p.m., names began to belch
forth through the roof of tbe old pla<e.
Laguna flretrudcs mpoodlng from every
direction except the ocean. It was a
helluva exerctse -sirens, bright Ughts,
hoses all over the streets. It must have
been a dull Saturday for the firemen , too.
Anyway, they knocked down the names
in the old joint so fast that the crowd
hardJy had time to gather.
TUE SHOW WAS so good that one real
estate person just sat on hi1 front porch
in a chair and viewed the whole thing.
~, It all caused long·tim:e coastwatcher
Georie ''Peanuts" Zunmennan to
remark that if the United Nation! could
put out-fires that fast we'd have peace
pennanently.
It waa a stroke of good fortune for the
bored citizen!, however, that while the
blaze got knocked out quickly, the 1moke
did oot. Great billows of It filled the sky
assembly something to watch.
J!-~~-,.Adtual4\~thez:ewur..t ·one
along Coast Highway at the front o the
building and another "' U,, side street by
the Pottery Shack. They got two separate
shows.
111E BUNCH ON Coast Highway got
to see the firtmen up on the roof and the
one with the are. No fire Is complete
without at least one fireman with an axe.
-ThlC!nJookers on -the side;-meanwhile,
got to watch firemen don their breathing
apparatus and enter the smoke-filled in·
terior. The whole thing went so well that
even Laguna's acting fire chief Charley
Kuhn could smile.
Meanwhile, lbe traffic jam became im·
possible and this gave the police
something to do also. Sgt. Vic Sagan
guarded the firebose which crossed Glen-
neyre Street.
_ . ~'DO~ ..DRIVE .OVER the hose." ..,Sa·
gan roared at a longhair in a pickup
truck. 0 1 gotta get thrOugh," the loogtiair
.yelled back,
"Go up tfiat way and around." Sagan
demanded. The longhair departed in a
screech of angry tire!!. Sagan hesitated.
• perhaps tempted-to abandon the hose and
I go chase the screeching longhair. He
stayed with the hose.
"You wonder if he'd run over the hose
• 2nd bust it If it was his house on fire ,"
L Sagan--grumbled.
• Anyway, by now the smOke, crowd and
I traffic were all beginnln1 to thin . The 1 real estate man still rocked happily on ~ his froot porch.
To tell )'OU the truth, it wasn't really
f much oC a fire . But it was the best
Laguna Beach had on a dull Saturday
, afternoon .
MondaJ', .J......, IS, 1973
Israelis
TEL AV!V t AP) -1"""'U jell n<pt
into SyrU fwr tlmet today, lboolinc
down fi\-e MIGs and attacking (Uttrilla
bases and military Wtallatlool, tbe
hraell command reporied. It aid ao
artillery duel raged along tbe border.
No lJraeli plaott Wl!rt lost, the com-
mand said. Damascus radio admitted the
'
Launch Atfacks
'"TBE AEIUAL combat wu followed
by 6M:e shelling of five enemy po.sltJons
in tbe r.r.tli ocaipled Golan HetghtJ,"
tbe l)amalCUI broadcast said, adding
th>t "S)orlln-.itllleiy -~iQ!tet ........
It clalmod four Ind! taob Ind two
artillery batteries were destroJ!Cl
An i.r.eu spotHman WI tbe ex-
change began -'Y two lloun al1u
l1rael downed tbe MJGt In tbe ......i o1
the thm strikes.
The first two l.sndi
OD· Syrians
UPIT.-.....
-rr WAS mz llllh air altat:li .., IJrael
aplnst Syria In tbe 1111 two -ni.: o.. jell fJnel claimed It abot down ......
the .-alnce Nov. 11 whoo 1-1
cloimed It obo1 down ab< Syrian M!Gr. n.e 11n1 1 ..... u 1trlko 1oc1a1. lhl! 11raon command ma, -1111n1t •
Syrian army bue at N1w1, about 2S
mila east of tbe sea ot GeUlee; two
guerrilla basts near Dall, about a mllell
from lbe frootl<r and near El llUIC!lrlb,
and two anny outpoltl Ind an artllltr1
battery -"' Qumollr>. The lsneUa returned lettl tban -houri later lo bomb radai: llatlona at El
Kuwelyah and Slwtoh. In ""'tllmi
· Syria, tbe isn<ll """1IWtd aid.
"In tbe .,,._ of the raid, I docftcl!I
ensued with Syrian altorall," I com-
munlque reporled. "Five Syrian MIG21
planes were downed. 11
ANOJ1IER COMMUNIQUE I a 14
llraell plenel bombed military poeltlons
in the northern Medltemneon eoutal
town " Latal:la Dell' tbe 1'lrtbll -· Israel's state radio said the Golan
Heights wero closed lo c!Vlllan, traffic,
The radio aid ..w.n alone the'lmrtter
were in air raid shelten.
It added that ambulances wero lttD
moving through Sl'.!11n ta111et1, ap-
parently evacuating casualties from
earlier raids.
Damascus radio had .. id two Syrian
sokiiers were killed and ei&bt iWW'I
v.'OWlded in the Israeli air attacb.
Later Syria urg<d --....... tries to "Immediately ro Into batUe wllb
Israel and not let Syria llland alone lo
take the enemy'• heavy blows."
THREE NEW ORLEANS POLICEMEN LYING PRONE ON BUILDING NEAR HOTEL, WAIT-THEIR CHANCE TO FIRE ON SNIPERS
Six PorlOM Wore Killed Sundoy By Snlpon Holdod Up on Roof of Howard """'-'' Bulldl"t
In a message that seemed ·aimed at
Syria's !edera~ partners Ubya and
Egypt, tbe broadcast said "only tbe com-
bined dforll ol Arab COWltries cal!'1Wafn
an end to Imteli anoguce."
SNIPERS' LOCATION
New 0.IHnl Hot.I
. Supreme Court
Agrees to Rule
0Jt Nwf,e Dancing
WASHINGTON (APl -The SUpreme
Court today agreed to ru1e on the power
of Wisconsin officials to shut down bars
that feature nude dancer!.
A tJiree..judge court in :r.1ilwaukee last
August held state o((icials could not cl05e
the bars without giving the ov.-nen an
adversary hearing "to disprove tlamag·
.iog cl)arge. and dj!nonstrate that they
are deserving ot being llamscd-"
The state then appealed to the Supreme
Court, saying tavern ownen already had
"meaningful bearings" during which
they oould present evidence to support
their license requests.
On Dec. 5, in a C&Se from California.
the coort ruled.6 to 3 that the states can
shut down ban that reature nude dancers
and other "bacchanalian revelMes."
The Wiscclr1&n ruling involved bars in
Racine and Kenosba. The federal panel
in ~1ilwaukee ordered the llcenses ex·
tended and struck down the state regu-
lations as uncon..!titutional.
Tbe court 's taking of the Wisconsin
case indicates the justices will modify
the California ruling in some respects.
-
'
..,,_
·MARINE GUNSHIP FLIES OVER BURNING ·HOTEL ROOF
Copter Sharpshooters Soy They Hit Zig-za911i119 Sniper
Ban on ChiWren's TV
Ads Gets FCC Hearing
WASHINGTON IAPI - A demand by a
citizens' group for a complete federal
ban on commercials during children's
television programs comes up for hear·
ings today before the Federal . Com-
munications Commission.
The commiss ion has given no sign as to
ho"' it "·ill act on the knotty legal and
moral quesliorui raised by a petition filed
in February 1970 by Action for Children's
Television -ACT -a citizens' group
based in Newton Center, Mass.
Contract Dlsp11te
Philadelphia Teachers
Striking 280 Schools
PHii.ADELPHiA (AP) -Most of
Philadelphia's 280 pubUc schools were
either shut down or operating with
sk~eton staffs today after teachers walk·
ed off·lhe job in a c:ontract disj:Nte.
Some 260,000 pupils were affected.
Ofllcials of both tbe school district and
' ..
the uniOO. said they expected all 26. city
high schools and vocational schools to
close as a result of the strike, whlcb
paralyzed publk educaUon in the naLion'•
foortb largest city for the second time
since September.
e flulnts f'hte
quint~lels are "®tng fine and the fatblr
is calmin down "
Evanston Hmpl.tal.
Even Thomas Aileo, tbe fint t.am who
ha,d dev•IOped a mpiratory pn>bl...,
was being fed orally and was being gtvm
oxygen "just once in a wblle," the
spokesman said Sunday night.
The three girls and two boys wm bore
Friday to Mr. and Mrs. James Baer of Vietnamization
Complete, U.S.
Can Quit-Laird
-Northbrooko 'l'homas Allen, Elizabeth,
Douglas Edward, Les.Ile and Vlctle were
moved from Highland Part Hospital to
Evanston Hospital, a refernl center for
premature and high-risk babies.
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Secretary ol
Del...., Melvin R. Laird told Congress
toda.Y South Vietnam (., virtually ready
to take over its own tull defense if the
Paria peace tali:s fail
But Laird repeated l'nloldent Nixon's
stand the United States will stay in the
~w unUI American pri&onen are releas·
eel Md Hanoi accounta: for the ntiasing in
action.
"VIETNAllfiZATION ;,, virtually com-
plete," Laird told the House Anned. Ser-
vices Commillee. " ... There will be nO
reason for the United States to maintain
a role in logistics, air oc ground combat."
e lllrGo1lern BIUs
NEW YORK (API -Allllouc:.,;;s
presidential campaign cost Sen. e
McGovmi $.12 million, the deleated
Democratic candidate has Jess than
$4p0.000. in remaining debts, Newsweek
magaiine reports.
McGovern intends to pay tho -with comrnttted campoip pledgea, tbe
maga:zine's CWTent issue said, adding he
has pl~s to maintain a political
organization by selling his mailing Uit at
$25.000 • ·copy . alfd· by publlshJnc ••
newsletter.
euusp1u
HELENA, Ark. (AP) Tito
EnviJi?nment'.11 Protection Agency says
there ts relatively llUle it can do to clean
up a massive Mismsippi River Oil spill
spawned by four petroleum barges In a
river accident wbldl apparenUy. killed
two sailors Friday. .
Tho diesel oil early today lltfttdted
downstream . IS mll<s, Dear!J' lo tho
Louisiana state line.
: Cold Glaz~e -0-n ... 1--·&clS-East '
IN ADDmoN to a ban on com·
mercials, the petitk>n asked the FCC to
requlre a minimum of 14 hours' pro-
-·mm~<ror yam;oeopie, ana
programming for age groups: 2-5 years
old, 6-9, and 10..12.
But Laird repeated again at lb.It point
that regardless or Sooth Vittnam'a abil-
ity "there will be no complete U.S. with-
drawal until Ammcan )risonerl art re-
leased and Gia mlslng in enemy te!Tl-
tory an actoUDled·for."
Oialrman F. Edward llobo:rt, (0.La.).
in questioning Laird said be lnlerpret<d
lib !tltemem as blelning'tbe tey to Jtw:
negotiations In Pans revolv• around
American prlsoncn and tbe rntsalnc In
action.
e l..otleU 4'rits
SPACE CENTER, 11rus1m (UPI) -
James A.. '-IU...t.Jl!sill!L~rune tn SJIO"" llillielpec1 man undmlai.t
bis unlvme, tlis --............i bl1 retirement from tbe space _... to
enter private business. ' • ,
• I
Midwest Gets More Sno·w; Areas Still Lack Poiver For 2'h days commission mem.befs will
hear oral arguments from church.
women's, union and civic groups and
from representatives ·of the TV industry,
advertisers, including toy and rood
manufacturers, and others.
• ' Teinpernt11re•
Nltft .... "'· AtHny 11 ..S
• •111,,11 • )t .t i ••-Ck ·1 .,, Botloro ll ,.
• Bufl... I' i Ollt<iftlOll " ,, .] tc~ J:S20 .n ('*""" ,. 21 C~ M It .. Ckottl-' ti 14 .o.t °""" • • -.... . ~ " .. ... ._... ., ,..... .211
"" IC.-.. Cl'Y II ' .It
• ~ lltotk " ts ~ i.n.11 ~ " )6 .IJ
• MIMI! 12 " . ............. '' . Ml_...,. ... ,, l'tllf s.:J SI ,10 ,.._ 0,-. SJ SI .W
""" YOl'l 21 It 1---~!-~· 11 ... 1 -.. . ,,............ ,.. ''
,,.,.,. " :M ll'ltt~ II t
,.,...... OtL "' 2A ~'Mio. 11 •I ~City 0 •IJ M
IW~ 4' " It. '-°""' 2' It M "" ,,,l'ldlft . ,, '' ...
• Ult~O" lt""
-"n ••••• n • SHn, Moon, Titles
n.e.n the comm1ss1oners will wmtle
with the issue of what they can and
should do. '"Tbat's one of the questiOOs-
bow far we can go, or lf we can do
anything," an FCC spokesman aid.
IN 51" VOLUMES ol comment already
filed by tbe industry in oppagitlon lo. the
ACT petitloo, tbe netwwa and llatioos
argue that tbe basic cnmmunlcatloos act
does nol give the FCC authority to ban
commercialJ from childr<n'• -"""·
Tbe industry -these other ob-Jectlorts : Tho propoool would violate tbe
Finl Amelldment,-ft-"""1d nm"'counter
to long-<tandJni policy which mak" ~lo
tions re&J>OMilile for programmln' that
serves the public interest. 1t b
unworkable because It b Impossible to
define what ls t chil<ftn's program, and
It 11 telf-deleaUJll because It -.Id dry
up the IOW'Ces ol fundinc for StJCh pro-
grams.
kW 1ow .MOttoAv t:Jf .. ""' ""' On the other hand, lbe commission W
'!::: """ .~.~.~·11:,, '·"" ·,,, rectived mo~ than 11»,000 letten from ==·::::_::::.~ii::: ti =~dua~wF~A~S:
$111'1 •i... •:tt '·"" hh J:Ot "·'""' -.....bile in tbe I .... _ ~~ •• t :lt •·'"-)th •:I• 11.rt1. ,,... ' ..... -,..
' •
But Laird a:aid. "I do not want to make
any statement to in any way jeopardize
tho talk& in Paris."
HE SAID HE and Adm. Thomaa R.
A1oorer, chairman of the Joint Clliefs of
Staff, are ...ady to give tbe HOU!< Armed
Services and Appropriations c:omnUttees
complete lnfonnaUoo on the war In e:z.
ecuttve session Tlleoday.
In -clevolapmenll, Laird told °"'"
gr9 the Pmtap plmll to draft only
$.000 mm bel<>re Ibo IDductloa .-tr
·eapimnextJ-311.
1bb-II far below tb& 11ea tb1a 10,000"
figure ho -1111 Nonmber.
In bla flnll ._t to the -Anned
S..Vk:ea Cammlllee bef«e liWil up big
Cabinet poat, Laird Aid plans ""' to draft r-111ao l,5llO 1n 11att11 and an ...,.
age ol l,GOO In -ol the lollowtng thm mooths. No draft callt ...,.. lasued for
January Ind Fellnlary.
CAW FOR lt.M men were Issued
last y .. r and 41.ilOO were Inducted.
The wil1d-<lown d"'ft coils could btinJ
attempts by ~ ol ~n ... l<'•• to
delay that Induction poat the deadll-.
Drlfl olltclall expect m'uw to 11>1>••1 f<T
change el tbelr Al ~ ot 10< poat...,._
maitl. They -be dratted -IUC!l •ppeals .... pendlnc.
} \
Lovell made four space fllghta, in-
cluding two around the moon. No other
aatronaut Jogged as much time tn IPICf. •
e Q11ake Ride i
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI) -1llo
National Aa9embly and lbe rultor ti.-
man junta imposed new lalK>r manetary
and political ru1 .. "' NJcaral-.,.,
the weekend In mov .. dell(ned to .,...i
reainstnictloo ol Managua. -I~ days ago by an eartbquake,
DAl.T l'l..OT
DEIJVERY suva
......., "' .... °"" -·ij .........
............. ,...,! " -......... ,.... ~:•fl."'-'6" ....... ..., .. ~ ............ '-'"' --......,., .... ....,,.,.. .... ..... ,_....,..,, .. "'·~-· .. .. ~f• 4:111! -I ""' wit .. ...._ • ...,.c. ................ lt .....
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L. ltl. Bogd
Couples Create
Cooking Co-op
"Remember your vitamins, young lady." said tb.ts eo.
gaging dad in biddinc goodnJght to his daugl\ter. Ola' Love
and War man inquimt furtbe<. "What I meen," 88ld au.
sage, "is B-1 is belMlve and B-1% la be home by midnlal>t."
Quaint. •
IT RAS BEEN !<plrted that -cancel' occurs more frequaitly among y o u n g women in the biJher income
groups, Les8 widely known is !be fact more single women
than wj vee die ol breast cancer.
l>ID I TELL you approximately t,500 youngsters run
away from home naticnwide 8Vf:r'J day?
HERE'S A WRITER who 9eriously suggesta busy COU·
ples set up what can be caJled a cook·
ing roq>. Each wife is to make a
parti<:ularly sizable dinner once a
-1<, "'10llg!i for a dozen people. Thal
nlgbt, !be other couples drop by wilb
serving bowls ID help -ID
grub sufficient for their own crews.
Next night, next wife's tum, and ao
oo. Intererting. Might make a modem
film. What'll we call it? "Ken and
Pork Chops. Pete and Sausage?" Or
"Soup-Swapping?" Or "Alice Fixed it for Everybody?" No,
maybe not.
SAME AS SMim -Q. "What's the equivalent in
Russian of bur name Smith?"
A. Kumetzvo.
Q. "WHAT state gets the least sunshine?"
A. Alaska. Sun shines tbere aboot 31 percent of the
time.
Q. "BOW many o! the delinquents in this oo.mtry did
you say are immediately related by blood to other delin-
quents?"
A. About four.f1ftm of lbem, cousin.
Anti-VD
Strategy
Deplored
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Young people given the
straight and wunorali.zed tacts
about venereal disease are
more like1y to seek medical
care than those who receive
morality lectures. one doctor
told a Calilomia Medical
Association VD symposium.
Young people - and
homosexuals of all ages -are
"turned off" by doctors who ~
g ive them lecture s
"threatening to tell their
parents or to expose them in
some way," Dr. Harvey W.
Caplan, of the O.kland Plan,.
ned Parenthood teen clinic,
said at the Saturday meeting
here.
"The root of !be Vil prob-
lem is not with the young
people," said Caplan. "It's
with the medical profession
and the judgment.al attitudes
so many s ezually un--
dereducated doctors possess.''
People won't listen to
moralizing doctors and the
''epidemic grows ac·
cordingly." Caplan said, ad·
ding that patients who are
given frank infonnation about
the disease • tend to seek
tpedical attention.
· Dr. Mary Riggs. assistant
health otficer ol Santa Clara
County, told sym posium
participants that man y
misconceptions persist about
venereal disease d e s p i t e
widespread publicity.
She said some women still
believe birth control pills act
to counteract VD, aJthough
CALIFORNIA
Legislator
To Attack
Hair Rttle
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
llid the Clift Hotel doom Its
own hair policy by tumlng
away a state legislator with
hair extending sligbUy below
the collar?
State Assemblyman John
Burton (0-San Francisco)
says be ing kicked out of the
Clift last Friday "irritated me
so much that I'm going to
Man Dies
In Crash
Of Plane
LONG BEACH (AP ) -A
S2·ye8Mld pilot bas beee kill·
ed in the cmh of bis single-
engino biplane shortly alter
taldng off from Loog Beach
Mwtlclpal Airport.
Aulborilies sald his Star-
duster biplane I~ power
shortly after takeolf Sunday,
sliced through electric lines
and crashed into a vacant lot.
The victim was Gocdoo Ren·
froe, a veteran of World War
II Oyine. Renfroe was Pf'Si-
dent of the Fullerton chapl<r
of the E%J>Orimental Ain:raft
Association.
• Anthear Harry
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -
Joan Baei. l>aniel Ellsherg
and the Rev. Plllllp Berrigan
llll?ed a. crowd of 1.500 at an
ant iwar rall y Sunday to put
pressure on congressmen to
vote in favor or ("l.Jttlng orr
funds for the Vietnam \va r.
"\Ve ha\'C to start at some
prepare a bill that hair in ( J
itself is not a legitimate basis BRIEFS
for refusal by state liquor '----------'-licensees ."
But Clift manager Broce
Locken said ,Sunday the hotel 's
posh Redwood Room is a
"staid" establishment for a
"conservative well-groomed''
clientele.
GET IT RIGHT' Cootrary ID previous report Iha! the
poinsettia is poisooous, several botanists who should know
insist that's wrong, ju.st a myth started loog ago which
nobody oow dares to contraillct.
cllnlcal evideoce bas revealed .------------, that they may enhance
susceptibility by decreasing
acidity in female sez organs.
level to assure that the mur-
den will stop and the barbar-
ities cease in Southeast Asia.·'
said Berriizan, recen tly re leas-
ed from a federal pr isoo where
he served a ~tence for
breakini:t" into a draft board
and destrovin'!'. records. He
said the Nixon Administration
"hold., the public in utter con-
tempt."
PUBLICITY STUNT -It was in 1966 that an Ameri-
can dairy in a publicity stunt flew half a ton of 26 flavors
of ice cream to Paris, escorted by six attractive young
ladies. The bit flopped. Said ooe incisive Frenchman:
"Gentlement, you should ~t in six flavors with
28 attractive y0W1g ladies." Our love and War man under-
stands this French attitude.
IN THE DELIGHTFUL tropics, you canrd h.:>tfoot it
out to pick lunch off a banana tree. Won't work. Even tbe
bananas eaten there have to be picked green. Bugs and
bacteria just flat out won't Jet them get ripe without rot.
Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New·
port Beach, Coli/. 92660.
Textbook OK
BAKERSl'TELD (AP ) -A
controVersial Mexican·Amert-
can te.J:tbook reportedly con-
taining obscene language may
be used at Bakersfield Com-
munity College, says the Kem
County College District Board
of 'l'rusWes.
The trustees ruled Friday
that "the death of Artemio
Cruz" could be used as supple.
mentary reading in an English
class.
Nudw Sign
Stays Vp
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
-As the deadline for
nightclubs to remove
nudie signs n e a r e d
today, a new 1().foot neon
sign showing a topless
mermaid was conspicuous
at a North Beach
establishment.
Nightclub spokesman
Dave Rosenberg said the
$21,000 sign at the Barbary
Coast e~phasized the
fight a poUce order to
~ Trtnl F.nlflng
FAIRl'TELD IUPl l -The
Juan Corona mass murder
tri al enters its fi nal sta11es
r.-fondav after a prosecuti on
pn>senta tion ol three months
and a defense case of s i x
words.
Sometime during the wee k.
a JO-man. two-woman jurv is
exprcted to receive the case
of the farm labor contractor
accused of killins::-25 fi eld
hands and burying their bod-
ies almg tbe banks of !he
Feathet-River in northern
S Ii Y~--l-""'.""'"-.b)'J_1p.m.1Dday~-. t t 1 e displays depicting "the uspec · oug ar ~i~~a~.!:t'ii:'':~iidr;;
Fina1 pn1secution and de-
"119e 8t1111Jtdt1.iort:Mttt--to--be-
J?in Mondav, a nd Suoerlor
Court Judize Rirhard Patton
sairl he~ tfrnl. and his
instructions to the jury. to
take about three days . SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -plode a week after the letters cculd be Mohr, one o! them
,. To bis friends, Ronald Kauf-~ere received,· although ooe Kaubnan.
} man is known as a genUe, sen-had gone off prematurely, It developed that Kauf-
sitive.-man. T0-lhe. EBI,-he is -causing Dtlnor damage. man bad -enlisted the pr.e-vious.
a suspect in the planting of The letters said, "The Move-August as an Army private
bombs in safe deposit OOxes in ment in Amerika would do under the name of James FA-
San Francisco, New York end better to kidnap property and ward Jensen. At Ft. Polk, La.,
Chicago. offer it in exchange for the he underwent basic training
A year a g o he vanished freedom of ou r people." and did not engage in political
without a trace -oo Jan. 7, The boxes were rented in the discussion.
1972. If tound, he races indict-name of Christopher Charles On Jan. 3, 1972, he drew a
~ ments with maximum penal-Mohr at a Chicago address. travel advance at San F'Tan-
.ties ol several hundred years Mohr gave a Berkeley for-cisco's Presidio. He was sched-
in prison-warding address, and a check uled to repor1 Jan. 9 at Ft.
In a massiv.e effort~ tbe FBI there didn'l fl~ any~y us-Jackson. S.C., for overseas
has talked wtth about t,000 ing Mohr's name, but it did assignment but neVer appear-
peopl'e who knew Kaufman, suggest several people w h o _ ed.
even if o n ly in chtldhood.•--='-----'--'---~-~--------,1
Agents have even talked to the
poople wOO knew the people
who knew him.
Tbe FBI bas not captured its
man, but in the meantime no
Kau fman-style threats have
occurred, either. Kaufm an, 35.
is a paradox, a man of many
moods, and ti.gents admit to
being mystified about w h a t
may ·be detennlning hi s ac-
tions.
t /.-Ras ·Kaufman , like some
other radicals. rejected bcmb-~ ing as a political weapoo? Or
is be simply in hiding. waiting
for the right moment to strike?
seminude state. '1
"It's a free speech issue
that we'll take to the U.S.
Supreme Court if need
be," said Rosenberg,
organizer or the-newly-
formed Broadway Night
Club Association.
Rosenberg said that the
clubs have the same right
as department stores
whlch "use seminude
manikins to advertise
lingerie in the front win-
dows." And , he added, the
Barbary Coast will not
even feature nudie shows.
He said the mermaid ·sign·
was simply "in keeping
with the ship-shape decor
of the club."
f/4 ,..,.,.,,._.,"'"•PC
~A!'i-BP,RNAROTN() I AP\ -
1'he Mark B ~h:i"' Mnrtul'lrv
Co .• whlrh h:i" hart six ar:l'l"I
att1>c~ in th!'! l:tirt hvo mfV'lf....,
will clf'F-" """<A its lhN'<' clian..
e1-morlu1>fies .
RicMrrf Fil l'lnc Jr . ni-MI·
dent rl the firm . AAi(! Frirf 'l"
he had decided Ill clnsf' down
the rom nanv's ,ve-;:trnd r:i,..;1.
itv iri ~l'l n Beml'!rdioo. \vhlch
w<"c:. hit fi \'r <I the six timeoi
Filaoc beli eves the. fil"'!
were set by "~ebodv who
wanted our prniicular mortu-
;ii.rv in the west end out or bus·
lness."
SALE!
A VEAR AGO handprinted
letters to newspapers an-
nounced that "prototype"
~wooldJ>ejoimd la r specific deposit boxes.
The de.-. carefully made.
,. included a hatt-pound of black
powder, a low charg<l. They
•· had been placed six months
previously and were set to ez-
GIA.NADA Mill$ 1800 Chitts""1h St. l '!OllANCI Se1111l~tdJ ~nd l!Yrtbor11e •
WOODLAND Mil LS 2!500 ~lt\OIY 81~~ lAKIWOOO Clr100 St Mid Par.lrl'Clftl Blvd.
GREAT REDUCTIONS
·1-1'1-200/o-;50°~ ow--
'
.
' • l ~ ' • ~
f
!
I .
l
i
llVEISID£ JSZO Tyltr St. IUINA PAii 8tac~ J~ \X~i!llK>rJe
SANTA ANA 3900 So-Jtr. Bristol St OIANGI G•lltn Grovt 81\'ll !rid l1bnc11tsltf
o, .. wttkd•y• 9:30 lo 9:30 -Su11dayi 10 10 7.
THE STORE THAT BROUGHT LOWER PRICES
TO T HE BEACH AREA
PHARMACY
WE . QUOTE PRICES
OVER THE PHONE ... ANYTIME
-C:HICk ntnt SUPll SA.LI IPlCIAU-• .......... , ow • .,. ,._1
Vl-T-AMIN "C; .:1so ..... •100 --··-············· $1.}$ ,,, '
E:FFERDENT T1blots, 40't •. , •..•..•••• , , , • , ..••• $1:29 SI.Of
DESERT FLOWER locfy loti111, I ot. .,, ••••••••••• $1 .2! $1.0S
J 11!cf J SHEER IANDAIOS, V1lut P1clt • -•••••••••• $1.09 19t
... _
73<
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2700 l Coast Hil!hwav. at Fel'"'e'f. Corona del Mar
• 644-7575
J
ON
SUITS-SPORT COATS
KNIT SLACKS-DRESS SHIRTS
SPORT SHIRTS
WASH SLACKS
ALL DRESS SHIRTS
& TIES 40% Off
1447 V'9 LWo, Ntwport a.ch
6n-4$10
"
Monday, Januill')' 8, lCJ/l ti .. 1L Y PILOT 5
'73 Issues Leftovers
Partisa1i, V1id rnmatic Session See 1i
SACRA1'1:ENTO (AP) 21 vottos t-O rtplace him . But the 1973 session to ~ Jess
There are 16 new races in the the 3·2 Democratit" edge oo the dramallc than previous years
Califomla Legisla.ture that powerful Rules Committee, as the focus is 00 relining pr<r
convenes today . But many o! whlch tf!sulted rrom Ja:.t the lssues facing the 1973 year·s 21·19 Democratic ma-visions or tbt ma}or tax, Medi·
Legislature are leftovers from Cal. welfare and school
previous years, a survey of ( ) fi nance bills pas~ the last
party leaders reveals. CAPITOL two years.
Senate and As s em b I y "I don't see any major new
leaders said at lc11st two 1na-"---------' social issues _ not that we've
jor statewide health care jority, may be challenged by soh·ed lhf-m, but. v.·e'vc fac1..'d
plans and. a host of consumer Republicans. them. Now ts a period of a~ environment proposals In the lower ho u s e , rrflning. That won't Uc as
will be reintroduced this Ot!mocratic Ass('!TI.bly Speake r vola tlle, won't be as dyna inic.
session. Bob 'loretto' goes i·nto the n"w · be · " h ·d " "'" "'·on t as exc111ng . c sal . Republican Gov . Ronald year with a 50-29 edge over But Moretti says there wi ll
Reagan also plans to introduC"t Rrpublicans v.•ith one vacant be major proposals on hcal1h
a major income tax rcductl on seat. ca rt, ne>-fa ult auto insuranrt'.
proposal which he ~ed. One key R e p u b 11 c a n , consumer protection and col·
last Call . Assemblyman WUhani Bagley Jective bargaining for public
However, R<'agan still has of San Rafael. says he ellperts em ployes.
not revealed details of hi3 tax .,,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;..o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_,;;;;;;;;;;;; cut plan -or even the amount I~
-and one Democratic leader TRAIN to be •
says the 1973 Legislature may
end up passing a tax increase
bil.I Instead.
Two of the most pressi ng
legislative issues left over
from the old year. rea~
portionment and equalization
of school finances. are at least
temporarily out of the hands
of lhe Legislature.
AUTllOR I TY for leg-
islative an d CQngresisonal
redistricti ng returned to the
State Suprcn1c Court when the
Legislature ended 1972 without
passing a reapportionm ent
bi ll. The Superior Court trial
in the landmark Serrano-
Prlest school fina nC'e case
DENTAL TECHNICIAN
Six Months Intensive Training!
Enrollm•nt in CROWN and BRIDGE, •nd DENTURE
pro9r•ms now op•n for d•y and evening classes.
For infonnation, phone immediately
I 714 I 635-3450
A• eUtlW. lllltftvtl" 11 .... t"9 ,...,..,., i ... rff "'"'"' .._ ,,...,,...
Southern California College
of
l\ledical & Dental Careers
1717 S. BROOKHURST ST., ANAHEIM, CA 92B04
Mcr•lllld IN"*W, H1lleMI Auoclllltll 91 Tr• & T..cMlul Sdloe41.
opened last Dec. 2G in Losl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Angeles Collnty.
pne of the firs t issues mos t
lawmakers e x p e c t the
U!~slature to take up ls one
which will put Reagan and
Democratic leaders at odds
immediately -v.·hat to do
with an estimated $683 million
surplus iri the current state
budget.
That is the money 'Reagan ·
wan ts for hLS proposed inco me
tax cut. BUt OC'rnocratic
leaders say they want to hold
it in reserve for future school
needs or use it to cut taxes for
renters and horneov.ners.
THERE IS A FACTORY
AU THO RI ZED DEALER
FOR EVERY POPULAR
MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD
ON COSTA MESA'S Another partisan fight may
be over leadership jobs in the
Senate. where Republicans
and De mocrats will be locked
in a 19-19 standoff until two
vacant seats are filled in
speci al elections in th e coming
Harbar Baulevard
af Car•
LOOI FOi THE IMIUM AT
DAVE ROSS COSTA MESA
-DEMOCRATIC-s.e-n He!---
Pres!dent pro teni James
~1ills of San Diego v.ill retain
the top job unless someone
can put together a coaliti~Jn of
FABRIC-SAL
GROUP No. 1
SPORTSWEAR FABRICS e PRINTS e SOLIDS e NOVELTIES
Large selection of colors and designs for •It
your sportswear needs.
Values to $ l.69 yd. Save 70< yd.
Cottons/ Rayoas /Blends
45 " Wide
Washable 99:.
GROUP No. 2
BETTE'R FABRICS
lod,des SCARF PRINTS, SLINKY KNIT
PRINTS, SOLID COLOR CREPES AND
MANY MANY MORE.
Cottons /AayoM/ Blends
Valu es to 1.,8 yd.
Save 70c yd.
44"/45" Wide
Woshoble
KNITS & SUITINGS
GROUP No. 3
lo d,des POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS, BONO.
ED WOOL FLANNEL, BONDED NOVELTY
SUITINGS & COTION SUEl>E CLOTH.
Acetate Tri cot linings.
Wool/ Aerylle/Polyoster·
Aeetate/Bltftds
Volues to 3. 98 yd.
Save 1.10 yd.
54"/60" Wide l'' yd.
II HOUSE OF F&BRICS
always first quality fa·brics .
Sooftl C..., "'°9-l1itlol 1t Sen 0 1190 Fwy. H.., ,._ _ 11111 11 l rhtol
Co111 M111 -MJ..1116 Sonf1 Art• -IMJ·ISll ~ M•il -011119olherp1 •~ H11Mr ..... M C...--U Pol'"• 1t St111t111
fvtle.rto11 -12 .. 1114 l1o1•111 P11~ ~21-6)11
.... •r•ft-12111 l r•okhvrtt 1111 .. t to Vofl't ) -SJl•l'4l
Mttw,,1'41 .... -.... c...-E4i1191r 1t l111!r. ll'f'd., H.ilttfn9t011 a.,., .. _ "7 .. 0IJ
I
'
• DAU.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
'
Traffic Drive Scores ·
A\ tbe beginning of tbe recent holiday .ouson. Cali-
fornia Highway Patrol Conuni!Sioner Walter Pudln&ld
i.ssutd his warning:
"Mr. Drinking Driver, wo're out to get yoo!"
The commissioner put his money -a special Fed·
era! grant to cut holiday accidents -and his men,
where bJ.s mouth was. Patrols were doubled and even
CPH staff workers were assigned to overtime duty.
Over the Christmas and New Year weekends, CHP
oUicers working out of the Santa Ana offi~e alone a,r.
rested 494 drinking drivers. The average th previous
years had been below 2-00.
This added up to a pretty unhappy holiday for the
arrest~~. 139 or whom landed in the Oraoge County
jail in the 24-hour New Year's Eve period, about one-
th.ird more than the jail welcomed for New Year 1972.
But it also meant that on Christmas Eve, 1972, the
Santa Ana CHP office recorded no traffic deaths, no
traffic injuries and only six minor accidents. o~ z.iew
Year's Day, one traffic death and one motorcycle mJury
wore logged.
It would seem that Commissioner Pudinski's words
had been taken serlou&y by a fair number of hoUday
celebranta. And those wbo didn't listen were swiftly
plucked off tbe highways by the heeled-up patrol" .
Statewide the holiday traffic figures showed a s11ni·
lar trend. on 'christmas Eve, 1971, one of the bloodi .. t
on record 33 persons lost their lives in traffic accidents.
Over the 'entire' three-day Christmas weekend In 1972,
tbere were 42 traffic deaths in the state. slightly below
California's average year·round rate o! 15 traffic fatali-
ties a day. •
The concentrated drive to get death off the high·
ways durinJ the holidays was made by the federally
funded Holiday Accident Reduction Program (HARP),
which provided money far 2Q,000 extra CHP man hours.
The drive zeroed in" on the holiday season because
this is the time of year. when even normally sober driv·
en are apt to have one too many for the road. That one
too many bas been shown statistically to account for 20
percent of the n&tion's tnf!k fatllltles -2.8,000 cleatbJ
a ynr, attributed dinctly to drunken driven.
The highway officials don't know wbetber tbe HARP comi>aian will be repeated. But w!tbout It this yev, many
calltoriila families going happily about tbelr busln ...
today might "'~U have· been confronted witb costly med·
ical bills •. or even the tragic loa of a loved one In tbat
most futile of all deaths. tbe traffic accident.
Crime & P11nishment
Throµghout the country a number of judges have
been seeking alternatives to jali sentences for persona
convicted of minor crimes, and coming up with some
unique, and constructive "punbhments."
A Michigan teenager who shot a rare Poltsb mute
swan Wblle bunting was sentenced to spend two weeks
working at a state game preserve. A man found eullty
of exhlbltlng obscene movies in Seattle wu required
to contribute 100 hours of service to charity and to buy
$2,000 worth of educational films far area schools.
A Miami woman In whooe abandoned ~entor
a chlld was suffocated, wu ordered to l~e and re-
port 10 more illegally aba\ldoned Iceboxes. She found
15 and kept right on searching.
A judge in West Covina sentences about 15 percent
of defendants found l!Ullty of minor crimes to work In
schools, hospitals. or cnarity programs. rather than send·
ing them to jaiL
The idea of maldng the punishment fit Ute crime
seems a rational approach to justice. But apparently
the tnnd hasn't yet reached the courtroom of Los Ang·
eles Judge Charles Older, whooe own unique Idea of
"justice" was to impose an indefinl1" jail i..nn on news-
man Bill Farr, who had not violated any law nor been
charged wit:R. any crime and therefore could not seek
trial by a jury of his peers, much less rational tnat-
ment by a judge.
\
WHl'f AR'C VOU
POING ~
WAAT FOR?
601~ MR MV NEW
YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS.
LOOKING FOR
LOOPl-lOLES.
.. ' •Instant Nation . Rich Tourists
Suffer Pangs
In Paradise
Capital Gossips Mis• Mark
Makes Its Debut
Imagine a prooperous, industrialized
nation of 452,000 square miles and 189
million people. Overnight. both its let·
rltory and Ua population lncrtase by ooe-
third. Jts lnflue!ICil in world affairs grows
by at least as much.
THAT MYTHICAL nation ls the Euro-
pean Eccoomlc Olmrnunlty (Common
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
common medium· and long-range posi-
tions .... "
Tentative steps toward a coordinated
Romana, Dominican Republic
There's nothing quite like being a rich
American tourist in an impoverished
Latin American country. The pangs it
gives you.
We've been here six days nn'w, a sturdy
lltUe group of 30 tenn1J players. And one
by one, the pang•
have struck WI down.
No Nixon-Kissinger Rift
WASHINGTON-Having fawned upon
and toadied to Henry A. Kissinger, the
elite Georgetown set is now trying to pro-
mote the Idea that he Ls at oddJ with
President Nixon for having exceeded bis
authority aod bungled the Paris peace
talks.
This PoStu1ation starts from a false
premise and ends
with a mistaken con-
clUJlon. It ls Jmag·
in<d that Kissinger
oined with some
(rucHARD WILSO~
KUslnger's return from Paris and the
resumption of the bombing. Nixon still
enjoya his Intimate, family-type re1a·
lionahip with Kiasinger. There is no
evidence of any strain between them that
keeps them from breaking bread
together and talking well into the night.
case, the Nixon·Kissinger team with Its
impressive achievements in international
affairs would be degraded.
Tms IS ALL another chapter in what
Nixon has called the "oldest game in
Washington'' -an attempt to estrange
the President Crom his chlef associates.
He made the observation on the oc-.
casion of the wave ol reports that he
was sick of his vice-president, Spiro T.
Agnew, and would sack him, which was
anolher of the popular Georgetown
myths.
r Q
I
~
cig
rac
dui
cig
the ,
SUI
fe
tr
el
f~ •• ...
ci1
' he:
art . co n o y me ecu u o 1 .nine meinber states on New Year's Day. Earlier thla bear, the six E.E.C. coun-us lefl now, sitting 11'-~~~om-ii~-beglnn~K'°°~al~Q~•Un~omaia.1~1~ri~•~•~•~t~~m~iP~t*odl-l<tohr~eco«>111"~'~"<-llBa~n~g~I1Kde<leslh'---""DU11tlJihe...llllldoOL--..C
union in 1957, the Common Market has joinUy. Th ey failed to act bar at the (uxuri-
.-,. member> Ill "PP"'.
~-u-ri-g1-u-rl
bombing ol North
Vietnam and mining
of the harbors which
had cold feet except for Connally and
~--lihet-Nixon-wN-net ·..ery-weU-impressed
by his official family's performance. But
Nixon does not place Kissinger in that
category.
cock.tail parties. in the elite Georgetown _____ ~Sei,..
secbon of Washingtorrwenrthe~brttttantty-
elaborated tales of conflict between Kiss· De <YOlved Into a major economic, flllll& simultaneously, but Corelgn ministry ous Hotel Romana.
cial and political power. 'Mle enlarged rej>resentatives felt that coordination did watching the s u n
E.E.C., Willy 1.eller observed ln Swiss not require synchronization. Robert sinking into the Car· admittedly threatened the M0503w sum·
mlt. _ Review of World Affairs, "will have a McGeehan of the City University of New ibbean, setting the
population and an employment potential York, writing in European Community clouds ablar.e •ith
greater than those of either the United magaiine , wondered ii such efforts were ranging from •••
spectacular hues, Kissinger makes it abundantly clear
There iJ no evidence to support the
idea that Kissinger got beyond himself
and beyood the President ln stating in
October that "peace Is at hand" only to
have it vanish in b i t t e r misun· OemMalhg~Or were -liiS repeateO-
re!erences to what Nixon desired and
thought in bi1 November outline of what
States or the SOvlet Union." worthwhile. "Ultimately," be stated, Make that nine. There goes Joe.
A rune-man comm:on Market. ..two questions-must be re90Jved, as the
Zeller added, ''will be the world'1 larg~t international situation evolves in the THE FAVORITE tropicaJ drink of us
power in the realm of foreign trade. Wtth Seventies: Why should Europe speak rich American tourists, an oo-thHlpot
above-average growth, Its industrial P* with a single voice, and if It did , who survey shows, is 7-Up. followed clo,,eJy
duction capacity promlses to draw even would listen?" by Kaopectate neat and Pepto-Bismol
closer to that of America. It will have a BEFORE those questions can be over ice with a splash of soda.
weight in tbe sphere of monetary policy answered. however, the expanded Com· But we rich Americans certainly don't
which. .. wW have to be reckoned with in moo Market must decide what future It Jack for stimulating cocktail-time con.
all policy matters allecttng the in· envisions for itself. The choice, it is
tematiooa! economic scene. To the ex· sometimes said, is between a United
tent that poliUcal power depends on States of Europe or a united Europe of
ecmom.l.c power. the Community should states_ between a highly centralized or
f.113 be in a ~!Uon to become a power a loosely directedJederalion.. .
Center-WhlCh, on the-world economic as Some critics of the E.E.C. believe that ~~:r:~ypo~°:nk:~ts .. ~ serve as a the choice already has been made.
Ronald Sampson, a lecturer in politics at
AT A SUMMIT meeting In Paris, Oct. Britain's University of Bristol, recently
t§..20 the beads of government or state of wrote that "the very term 'Markel' ha11
The 'Nine affirmed ."~ir ·intention to been initial camoufiage to divert auen-
transform bt.fon the en<l pt·t'he,present tion from the creation or. a new federal
decade the whole complex Of their t'ela· continental state, possessed of full polltl~ .
( ART HOPPE J
versation. What 'We invariably talk about
are the relative merits of suHa, codeln,
Lomatil and Enteroviofonn.
lnltlally, codein was the most popular.
that he did not do so; instead, be
remonstrated with one ~an who
presentecfl.astmlnute ob~ to Nlz:.
on's imminent decision to bomb and
mine.
went wrong in Paris an indication of
FROM THIS point onward the postula· knuckling under Nixon's decision to sus-
tion imagines a dovish Kissinger trying pend the talking and resume lhe bomb-
lo calm a hawkish Nim> influenced by a ·
sole Cabinet member, then Secretary of 'ii would, of course, be beyond human
the Treasury John Connally, while the experience for Nixon and Kl~ioger to
rest of Nixon's Cabinet trembled. agree on everything, but the mischief in
Then the scene ahlfts to Paris where the Georretown gossip is evident. This
Kissinger is Judged to have misled the kind of talk is intended to convey the im·
President; or, if DIX _that, to have et·-presslon that the talented Metternich of
~ his authority and gotten into the administration, the s u pre m e
qu1ckaand . from which be had to be diplom:ati.st, will soon no longer abide
pulled bodily. Nixon's bullheadedness on Vietnam, and
None or th~. e&cept the mid-looted they will have to parl
Cabinet, comport> with the relationship Of, il not that, then that Klss!Jtl!er's
between Nixon and Kissinger which baa prominence has gone to his head and
been oblle~ on 11\ 1nt.imate basis since NI.r.on has had to tether him in. In either
•
WO inger and Secretary of State William P. ba
Rogers which would have to lead to the th€
departure of one or the othe r.
Nixon paid his respects to the j
Georgetown set in his e}ection interview, bel
and then made it clear he wanted both
Jili..s.i.rlge.r and _Rogeni: around for a long· re:
time.
FOR THOSE who are not familiar with
the Georgetown set. it is a generic term
to describe the community of socially
pretentious officials , former officials,
columnists, academics, I o b by I s t s •
hangers-on who are largely liberal
oriented and aspire to brilliant insights of
the real Washington, the true nature of
politics, and the state of the nation.
Kissinger has been a (avorite therein
because he disresembles Ntl:an and more
nearly fits the Kennedy image of
charismatic public service. However
much of a swinging intellectual he may
be. his thought processes are of the hard
kind which Nixon respects and seeing
them together leads to the conclusion
that the feeling continues to be mutual.
CO'
ex
lh•
co
cit
llO
sn
In
Sa
tions into a Europtan union." Their com· cal military and economic sovereignty."
munlque, calling for intensified co.n-Sarr.pson foresees the eventual disa~ sull#i~ on foreign policy matters, ~1d pearance of the Brlthsb royal family as
-1 .. :. of E E C ahons one consequence of E.E.C. membership. the foreign u ....... ters ' · · n Others retort that Europe's long heritage should henceforth meet four times rather lb.an lwo times • year to "deal with of linguistic and cultural diversity will
That .was because George, the only physi-
cian in our group and a very. good
Samaritan, c8fried a bunch of codein
pills around in his pocket, kindly dispens-
ing them to one and all -a pill
guaranteed to reUeve our _panp and
make you a new man.
Unfortunately, we haven't seen George
for the past couple ol clay!.
Tips for New Congressmen
be
do
wt
br
r~ se
ta
-1
(foreign policy) problems of current in· permit homogenization to proceed ao far
terest and, where possible, to lonnulate and no further. By DONALD S. PHILLIPS
BUT, WCKILY, the major business Ualted Pren laterutloml
enterprise in the nearby town o{ Romana W ASlllNG'n)N · _ For tlie Dew coo-appears to be farmacias. And you don't even bave to speak Spanish. You just gressman, aome good ntW'! and some bad
walk . in. clutch your stomach and the news.
lady hands you a package of Lomatll First the bad news. He, or she, will be ·
(GUEST REPORT J Armaments Cause War?
with a smile. last in line to ptck a suite of offices, may other office equipment for at least &O
l---.,;;=a:--:rir.ar:u;---------,.---------...-~ -Ws the same Jmila_the.-wait.et-givu..~"°-t ~a~~ lo mo~.in..l!!LtiLtbLI!J<l !lL. da)'!. Then lacements have to be Tboa a e: you when you order ?·Up. Whal kind of_ anuary 11 have to accept all the negotiated with the clerk. ..
I
No jeader or general has ever ad-SYDNEY J, HARRIS Good Neighbor Policy is that? furniture that was already Ihm, at I-Cash can't be used to pay for oUice
vocated war except "as a means of ~r other subject of discussion ls food. · ror a while. supplies, radk> and televisk>n tapes and
peace" -which is Al perverse a11 ad-The hot.cl offers a superb menu , ranging Now the good. He will have lhe same the I The
lh ke [ chance as anyone else for the free potted some 0 r term. congressman has vocatlng an epidemic for e .sa o !rom UUle shrimps in garUc sauce to pay by ~--• one ord •
I · 01 t I th plants. ~JC\;& or m y er or suir public health. The first casua ty 1n any con . c s e through lobster flambe to a delicious tract Jt from a pe1110nal accounL The
• • • truth, crushed by both sides in their prune pie. The favorite dish of us rich mOVSANDS of tips for congressman booklet doesn't aay why.
Speaking ol. that, 11 may be surprising ardor to proclaim their version of it. American tourists, ho\\·ever, is tea and _ new and old _ appear in 1 new 231•
to learn that even the cautious and ~ • • • soda crackers. page I o o s e 1 ea f booklet called "Co. THE BOUSE CLERK wUI provide wall
servaUve Calvin Ooolid«• proclaimed WHAT 18 psychologically wrong with Not alt or us. though. At the rates he's gresslonal Handbook," P"blisbed by the cala>dar>, the Natlooal Parlr. Service
that "Armaments eonsUtute ~ or the the Platonic notion ol the "philosopher-paying, Bert orders everything in sight J 0 l n t Committee 00 Congresskmal. scen!c photographs and the Geological
most daogeroua CC11lributln& cames of king" is that a king who became a because he wants "to live each day to the Operations. . Survey maps. 'Ibe NatlOOll Gallery 2f
lnternatiooal •UIJlidm and dtscord. and philosopher would rdinqutsh hlo crown. fullest .'' And be does. "Today, [or ex-. Some !Jt[ormaUon ts alttady well Art wtll loan copies o! masterpieces and
are calcullted eventually lo lead lo"''·" and a phil090pher who becam• king ampl•. I was up at three," he SI)'!, "and known. How much the congressman will the Botanical Garcleo will provide potted
• ..
Dear
Gloomy
The coavtcted c..ta M•IA burglar
cauaht in· &ecember with several
lhouoand dollars' worth of clothing
mUJt have 1otten only &o days In
caunty joll doo to the post-Otrl.lt-mu tea.ton ule. rnarkdoWM.
A.R.V. ,.. ....... """"' ,...,... ...... --11t .............. ... ..................... "" .....
I
would abdicate his philosophy. thr~y and roor and five .... " make: $41,500 a yeir, bow much fm stl· planta "on ttqUeSt only." F.ach member
• • • Uonery be can aet: 14.250. how many ts limited lo three small plants per
Our dilemma Is that we hala change All. HERE COMES our leador, the per-\slalf memben he can hi,. and bow much mooth including cadus and "'like plants
and love it at the aame time; what we sonable and herttofore healllzy, Jacque be ca.n pay lhem: tt at no more than a Jnd one large plant every two months.
''ally want is for 1ho ...... to remain lhe Grtgry, who looks mort Jike a middle _.. -A.... l.J&t ot 1157 --·..tt. ....... ~'"'·• 11 .. A hom in ~·t t bette_..., ltncbacker than the ercolltnt tenn~ pro--·-e~. or 1 -·-,_.,, •-~ -• to contact same, w ge , !· • fesstonal he is. Al the morntnl, OOwever, and whom he can't hire: no rtlatJves, not ffldtral ~ 1bout. constituent prol>
1 paOi dd1 eYa1 a bn>the~lJ>.law or ball-slsttt. lems; lpeda1 aervlc<s to COflBl'OISll1el
Ninety.-nine Americana outof JOO, when he looks ilte • 'd ml • -· ..... ~,, .. m,.-:~~.:;:---=.-:: · ---tndudlntl·tbo -maal .. ·eld-...il1ble-I""" :isked to define "IOClaUsm." wlU dHcribe "I rs notliing," ~he .. A.yS. ·•7fV;-betft. -,-1111o U!.AU aaa~r 00 Rll.!UiS up an the Ubrary or coagreu, including "
( [ ~-•· capltallsm dttJHU fishing and It wu """"' out oHlce in ooe ot the throe Howe office -• ~u•• oervi-·, and a•--~ e"ery 3 orm 0 awil'I:'• • • • ·~.""""--olussm"·ateach~~ bull••·-in'•cletall ~-to select ·~·-..-11 -""' "1 ~· ~ u~ • •-• ~· -~ ~ ... goes w on ~ lourln attnctlon when it Is Oj>l'll and
NOT ONLY ocboolchltdren, but most happily. an office: lllcumbento get !Int cboict 00 how much It oosti. ·
adults. are unaware of who named our srw' .t,,_;te It all, ·-~ had a vacant oflloe&, aecord1n& to aenlorlly, -tr the •·u lted s•·tes of America " "D-~•y• ••'" then new memberw oelect in on!er IN 11lE CHAPTER on setting up am-.. .,un Y ,n • ~ , · m•--lous time and I ha'· to •·ave. • " ~ ~ detortnloed by a drawlna. lllil how to ID1 l)'Stem, the booklet suqcsto a
January 1 ls the dumbe<I time for the ~ only thing that bothers me iJ that I order o([k:e neods from .Utionery to heading called "croclcpot mall." One o[
New Year to begin _ It ti 1 'A'hoily cant fttl more pangs of ecmpaMSon for replactment fumJtu.re. • the many electronlc devices a con·
Arbitrary elate. hearing no rtlallon to the the poor, threailliare Domlnlcans we l>llSI A ~ can )!au! In "11.. ~ 11111 onler br i.,.. ts a
acasons or to the natural cyde or the \on our way lo the courts or the bolCb. CUmlturo desired, like a family &ii or "apatun! machine." The boolllet p0thl1
'8rth's orbit; !hi! pagan or Jewish .... a .. ,,.., tncm. I try. n>ebr or liquor col>ltlft, bit' the llp the bolter paeldon of tho majority
year'• -In the lll<lrc or fall -make But comj)lred IO us rich Amer1can lrahman cunol Ce! Goftrnment ...., Domoaatlc party over the Republlcans.
mud> more -m 1W., way. tourlsll, they lool< .., damned healtl!y. fumltu,. until the eod o1 Jaouary ood It ~ the Dmnoc:rats mab the , \ •
patronage appointments oo the House
staff although the Republi cans make "a
few" appointments.
The House Democratic photographer,
in addition to photographs, will do
graphic layoot design for brocln.ires and
produce 16mm fllm. The Republican
photographer takes onii ho!9gra hs and
~or use. •
I
TO KEEP the etlmlc vote happy . the
booklet lists almost every national holi·
day or independence day for every na·
tionality with any representation in the
United States. But feminl!t.1 may be a
little upset. The Bull Elephants -a club
ma4e up of Republican staff members -
Is clearly labeled "men only." The
Democratic equl\ralent -the Burros
Club -has no such label.
OttANOa COAlt
DAILY PILOT
Robtri N. Wttd, Publi$h~r
Thomas Kecvl~ Editor
---B4rkto. X.rclbi
Edl1orit:il Page Editor
Tl"W' toditl'lrh1l lillltt' ,,f the 0.11y
Pilot ~kj. 11'1 !ntnnu 111nd tillmu·
lli.te l't'ftdtn fly 11rl"'l\'nllmt 1hls
r'll'\\!!plprr·~ opln;on, 11nrl com·
nwnt•I') •In tn11IC"!t nf lntrN'lll 111nd
~ii:nifit'11lK'1', by llf'fl\'ldlm:: a fnn1m
for thf' exortw1iun 'of our ~•dir!n'
optnionr.. and by Jlft.•St'nlhtit tho!•
tli''"™' vt~·1)1)\nt11 rof ln formt'd ob-
~'l'n-' •nd "1Uk1'5mf'l'l on topkl
or Ltit-cJtiy.
Monday, January a, 11173
1 t ... ,
'
I
1
' QIJEENIE
"I don 't think I'v~ qui le got the hang of it."
Ba•• Vp in Smoke?
S1nall Cigar Get s
Big Airing on TV
By PETER ARNETT
AP Special Cornspotllhnl
Prohibited from advertising
cigarettes "On -television -and
radio, the U.S. tobacco in-
dustry is vigorously promoting
cigarette-like little cigars on
the nation's air wa ves.
The selling campaign is so
successful that public interest
groups which helped forctl
• • • the campaign
feature s a cowboy•
type smoker • • •
effortlessly steal-
ing girls from non·
smokers.
cigarettes off the air for
"'-health reasons two years ago
are planning a IJlajor figh t to
little ci ar.
In Washingtorl last· Week ,
k Moss a . Utali
Democrat; announ at e
would introduce legislation to
ban broadcast ad'verti.sing Qf
the litlle cigars.
MARKET AN AL Y S T S
believe that little cigars
represent a potential $100-
mllliorr-in -annual-sales-that
could be reached ·quickly if the
product can be widely ad-
vertised.
'"1e out('(lme of the battle is
expected to affect significantly
the future n1arketing of t:ibac-
co products.
The ban on ?roadcast
cigarette advertising has ha"d
no noticeable effect oo the
smoking habits of Americans.
In 1971, tile highest total ever
-547 .2 billion -was sold.
Sales continued high last year.
Industry analysts. however,
believe there will be a
downward curve when youth,
who have not been exposed to
broadcast media advertising,
• .reach maturity. They .. say
several years elapsed in Bri-
tain before a cigarette ad-
vertising ban resulted In ob-
viously diminished smoking.
THE LnTLE-ci~ar was
niafketed fu A.Dierica fcio-50
years without controversy.
Then along came the modem
version: A product the sa"Tle
size and shape as a cigarette-,
often manufactured on the
sa'Tie machine, with a similar
cellulose filter and selling in
soft packs of 20.
A sookesman for R. J .
Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
11,anufactuN!r of the best-sell-
ing Winchester, said the wrap-
per of the little cigar 1~ made
mainly of reconstitute1 toUac-
co and is brown and the filler
is made entirely of cigar
tobaccos and air~ured tobac-
cos. The combination is
designed to produce a hard-to-
inhale alkaline smoke rather
than the acid smoke from flu-
cured cigarette tobaccos.
trant in the Utile cigar fi~ld. It
s been ro II the to py a nationwide television
campaign f~turing a cowboy·
tYpe smoker with a pencil·t'nin
mustache, effortlessly stealing
girls from nonsmokers.
Reynolds woo't discuss
boys' knits
2.29
3.60-4.50 values. Famous label group
of short sleeve knits. Cottons,
Wallace Beerys, ti -fronts. Sol;ds
an patterns, sizes 8-18.
Boys' Furn;sh;ngs, 26
figure~. but some market
researchers see Winchester Soon sellliig a potenlial-th~l-11------~--;,J~---J
billion units annually, based on ::-
test '1larketing. This is llnly a
fraction of the annual cigaret-
te sales, but it's three times
more than the current little
cigar consumption.
THE LIITLE cigar was tlle
cigar industry's big 1972 sales
growth item with a 20 percent
over-all gain. This was before
Reynolds launched its massive
national advertising can1·
paign.
The success of Wincheste; is
expected to bring newer
brands on the market. Cur·
rently, there are Il)ore than 20
brands, 11 selling well.
The big manufacturers in -
addition to Reynolds art!
Lorillard and American Cigar.
Entering the field with
television -campaigns a r e
Consolidated Cigars with
"Dutch Treat" aM -Genefiil
Cigars with ''Robert Burns."
"It's a bandwagon effect,"
said a. Justice Department of-
ficial, commenting on the pro-
liferation of the new product.
UTfLE CIGARS are taxed
only one-fifth the amount
levied on cigarettes.-The
packages and advertising neeil
bear no health warning labels.
Television and radio can be
(See CIGARS, Page I)
200 Britisli
W on1e1i Try
1 New 'Pill' 1
'
-I
4 _,;
•
double-knee Jeans .
·9.99-12.99
$17 -$20 values. Comfortable kn;ts
LONOO~ (UPI Two wear easy, never need ironing .
hundred British women have
agreei to try a ne\Y "morning Popular colors to choose from,
after" contraceptive pill, the -:ancy patterns in the group.
Family Planning Association Th P t Sh 94 reports. e an op,
·--Dr:~Jr1tl!mnwifliff." llil' ----· ·---·· --
asisociation's director of
research. sald the pill can be
tatl!n at the time of In·
tercoutse, up to five hour~
•
knits for guys
6.99
$9-$11 values. Super collect;on of
kn its include s skinny ribs in long
for guys end gals al;ke.
n;vers;ty S op, 53
boys' jackets
12.99-22.99
$16-$35 values. Keep the cold
weather out and the savings in
'
your poc ketbook ! Cotton corduroys,
nylon ,, assorted colors, styl~s.
Boy<' C'loth;ng, 98
. --····· ---··-----
Monday, January 8, 1CJ7J DAILY PILO! 7
men's soeks
89~
1.50-2.50 value;. Stock up on your
favor;te lengths ... anklet, m;d.celf,
colors. By Oleg Cassini and
o~hers. tretc
Men's 91
doobleknlt pants
2.99
4.50-5.50 val ues. Famous maker
permanent press jeans in stra ight
leg styles. Greet colors to choose
from.i)uroble fobr ;cs for long weer.
Bo··.' Clo;h;ng, 98
beforeliand or eight hoursl --------:::::~::::----"~"1'f1.9.~ 1'111n.... I1D
Veea t loia ;,_;~;-af~:ti the pill, prodllCed --------__ ...;. _____ ] ..... u, ([);u, uu.rm IPCID ... .J,._., ..... M...L
· by Ayerst Laboralbrles .>f New ~ .....
West German Chancel· York, bad been sooceos!ully
lor Willy Brandt-en·-ttledJn_QMJe and Mexico. ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINWTON IEACH OltANGf, MALL OF ORANGE CEltltlTOS
joys a donkey ride Briti8lilfii1"rWOD11d-1Jo-0
-tt" +--~ ... ,.;,,,i;,· "''~'"' ~ ...... ~.._ __ ........ 11 ... ,., ... (7.f41 644--1-l Ok-'INGE;--MAtt-GrOtAHeE 1'JOO M;-tvs-tm-S•···· 111 4l-9'1..f-).1-l--<•oo-l-Ce1rik• M•ILlUl) ..a•o 04~' ---~1
~c..n~a~~~-in ~~,.:he.~.firat is sue-Sliop 10 kM. t..f 1lO ,,M. MONDAY THROUQH FtllDAY. SATURDAY fO A.M. to 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to i P.M.
• ' ' I
I DAILY P!UlT
fltt Bil Keane
0 He's your dog JO I win by default." ...•
Pollution Panel
Relaxes Gas Ban
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Jn the face of objections from
labor, the oil industry and land
developers, the Bay Area Air
Pollution Conlrol Board has
backed off from a MQ,r-atorium
it imposed last fall on con-
struction of gasoline stations
in the nine counties in its
jurisdiction.
By a 13-1 vote, board
members relaxed the ban In
( ECOLOGY)
· ·response·to the protests that it
c"1·sed ecoJl()JTtic hardship and
did little lo reduce smog.
The board imposed the ban
because of hydrocarbons emit-
CIGARS ..•
(Continued From Page 1)
used for-promotion,-an in-
gredient absolutely necessary,
tobacco industry people say, to
introduce any l'.N'.w tobacco
The cigarette is
troJled by statute. And the
wording Is vague.
Bruce E. Wilson, a deputy
attorney general in the Justice
Department, testified at a
Senate inquiry last year that
the technical language of the
t ---.-;l';,;'":,i' S; few obstacles to any cco company w rcn
desires to develop a product
which will be taxed at a frac-
tion of cigarettes, does not re-
quire a warning label and can
utilize all of the mass media
for ita promotion If so
desired."
TIIE OPPONENTS of little
cigar marketing say that is
exactly what the tobacco lo-
dustry ts doing. -
"Winchester has loond a
loophole in the law and is
marching right through it,"
said John F. Banzhaf, of the
w~ atrtJ.smot-
ing organtzaUoa . "Actic:G lD
Smoking."
Helping lo keep that
ted from the 2,500 rilling sta-
tions operating in the Bay
Area.
Under the revised regu1a-
tlons adopted by directors,
permits for new stations will
be restricted to tho.se equipped
with a system to recover at
least 90 percent of fumes
emitted when underground
storage tanks are being filled.
eBARTGrows
OAKLAND (AP) -The Bay
Area Rapid Tran.sit Dtstrlct Is
set to ooen Its second stretch
111.te .. this morith. siivs General
Manager Bill St.okes.
Di .. ectors will be a!lked at a
meeti ng Thursday to set an
open in~ date for the 12-mile
stretch from Oakland to. Rich-
mond.
It will ' serve six stations, in·
elud ing Et Cerrito and
Berkeley.
Its trainJ will operate on
automatic controls but will re-
tain the manual system which
station agents now uw __ to
make certain the line Is clear
be lore dlsaptching trains,
Stokes said.
eAgeneyBft
LOS ANGELES (APl
Saying there is no reason for a
broa'rl condemnation of the Lo8
Angeles Air Pollution Control
District, 11 special panel of the
~t:ite Air ReSQurces Board has
iSSUed s e v e r a I recom-
mendations for Improved
performance by the agency.
The panel was appointed by
the ARB last March after
citizens' groups voiced rom-
plalnts.
In the report, the APCD was
criticized for its Interpretation
of the Trade Secrets Act to
withhold infonnatlon fro.m the
public about bow Industries
plan to control emissions from
plants about to be built.
It was also reoommended
that the APCD consider more
co.mprehensive ground-level
monitoring of h a r m f u I
pollutants, more selective ·
sampling of emissions in fac-
tory smokestacks, greater use
of abatement orders to gain
corripliance with air standards
and better coorrlination o.f en-
forcement practices.
loophole open, Banzhaf said, is
a trade wociatioo called
"The 'Little Cigar' Council,
Inc.", an industry-backed
trouble-shooting organization
based In Washington. e Dam Opposed
On the councirs staff as SACRAMENTO <AP) -Th~ field director is Edward C. New Melones Dam project Clifford, fonnerly chief of the should be blocked by In· tax branch of tbe Tobacco Alcohol and Flrearms Divisim junction pending appea l, Atty.
of lhe Internal Revenue Gen. Evel\e J . Younger says. Youn~er said in a letter to Se_rvice at 8 time whe.n. 8 the U.S. 9th District Court of
critically important ~cc1s10n Appeals that an Injunction
--~~as.. made...~o. .class.i!,y~wou!d'"':lssure full co.mp\iance Re~ ~· s Winchester as with the procedural re-
a. little cigar and not as 3 quirements" of the National
c1g_arettc .. 'I'he produc:t had Environmental Policy Act. tw1~e earlier been classified as In a statement. Younger
a cigarette. said construction or the dam,
THE REYNOLDS Company
is one of six tobacco producers
represented by the Little
Cigar Council. Clifford said in
a telephone interview that
there was "no connectioo.''
between his work with tbl.' IRS
and the council.
"I took voluntary retirement
lrom the IRS In tbe spring and
I joined up here in Sep-
tember," he said.
on the Stanislaus River.
"would destroy the most
heavilv used whitewater river
in California."
A federal District Court
made a decision allowing the
Anny Corps of En~ineers to
award the SM-million rontract
for a flood control and ir·
rigation dam on the river
before the requirements of the
federal environmental law
were fulfilled. Younger said .
C~l-tl
•
•
'
llN·lliOOK~
HARDWARE~ I.UMBER
HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY OILY!
TIO': ENSEMBLE p A "Su rlor Quality Patio furniture!"
• Complete ';;,c. Set includes 42" diameter table
& 4 chairs. 1 struction--<lurable snowy
• Sturdy, open mesh, stee. ~on
h·1 baked enamel l1n1Sh. W I e,
• folds-away for easy storage.
REG. $69.99
SAVE $30.001
5 39~.?.~.
TUES . & W1D. ONLYI
Galvanized Steel
WATER HEATER
ENCLOSURE -
Don't come home to a flood I
• Sturdy galvanize we s measure
deep x 24" wide x 76" tall-top end
bottom vents for added safety!
• fits all regular size water heelers.
REG. $29.95
SAVE $10.0011
TUES. & WED. ONLYI
Double L)IJht Deluxe
-Preflnlshed Spanish .
RECORD CABINET
' • Magnificent Spanish record cabinet is 46'flong x 21°'12"
high x 15 11'" deep--precision mode for easy as9emblyl
• Exclus.ive mar-proof Permaneer9 finish rtHists scratches,
mars and hot or cold gloss ringsl
• Sensational molded plastic doors have the·laok of rich,
hand-carved oak\
• Designed for records.-ideol as o Pose for the fomily
entertainment centerl
MADI TO
SIU FOR
$29.95 '
SAVE $15.0011 )!.,
-till.
-· Sturdy Metal ~OLDING CHAIRS
''The IHrlfft ,
card ••fro .. af' for dining, ~ ..... la'YiOf' ' ... -
--"-S!v .... ~ s " , ~easy srarage,-
• wr all metal c.'onsirucf
. finished in "tild')*4.~ •an-
. .,.., '
$299 REG. $5.99
SAVE $3.00I/
· TllfS. & WED, ONLYI
Complete 4 Pc. . ,.
FLOURESCENT
FIXTURES GARMENT BAG FIRE TOOL SET
• Shodow-f,..e lighting the easy woy with
this 4 ft., double tube fixture with reflector.
• Perfecl for all work & play oreas-U.L.
approved-modernize the economk:ol way!
REG. ffi.99 $7'99
SAVE $5.001
TUES. & WED, ONLYI
Cosco•
FOLDING ---~
• Ha,d•ame~~~~ STOOL~~
lubular aluminum frame
with foam -cushioned seat.
• 23" high, but folds to
5 Vi" flat quickly and
easily I
• Your choice of colors to
match your kitchen.
REG. $12.49 $799
SAVf $4.501
No. 11 -120
WOW!
TUES. & WlD. ONL YI
1
''Protect Your Seasonal Clothing ''°m Solllng,
· · · ·~,'Moths, ftc.'' ·
• large size bog for storing
plenty of clothing.
• front zipper for easy
cccessl
~DI TO SRL POI
$4.99
WOW/
TUES, & WED . ONLYt
Plastic
• Sturdy, flexible white plastic.
• fits ell standard siz e vents.
• Handsome, practical exterior
decoration for your home.
TUES. & WED, ONLYI
•
·''l~erytttlng To Tend rOui ,INplacel''
•All cast iron , beautiful satin
block finish.
• Complete Witk marching pcifer,
brush, shovel end stand.
REG. $4.99
SAVE $2.001
No. 118
• Includes boll, nyton
rope, 3 pc. pole ond
ground sleeve.
• Healthy entertain-
ment for the whole
fomil)'-<:ompoct-
1tores in secondsl
REG. $5.99
SAVE $399
$2.001
c.m,lflt
TUES. & WID. ONLYI
TUES. & WED. ONLY!
·' ..
•
•
Gran Opening!
Gre·at estern
Sav~tn
Comes to
fashion Isl an
Join Our Celebration! Now through January 13
We're bringing that good Great Western feeling into the Newport
area with the Grand Opening of our new office in Newport Center
at 80 Fashion Island. It's the newest iri Great Western's statewide
network of 66 full-service savings offices, California's largest
Ana we're celebrating-until January 13-with a special gift for you,
''GW" balloons for the children and refreshments for all.
'• So please come in soon. You'll find we've made saving money
just about as easy as it can be. We're open every Saturday from
10 to 4. Our drive-up teller window is open every weekday evening
until 7. And Great Western gives you the most. The highest rates
on insured savings. Many free financial services. The st rength of
assets over $4 Billion. And a record of complete safety, since 1887.
So get the Great Western feeling now. It's the fee ling that comes
from knowing you've put your savings in exactly the right place.
tMeetll.Ur..Mianager,.Ar:tb.ur_e._Moo re
Mr. Moore has almost 10 ye~rs
of service with Great We stern
. wtl1i1q Savings. He and his e~ti_re staff
· .;,., · · look forward to the pnvdege
of serving you •
-·
Our savings lobby features four
teller windows, convenient
New Accounts Desks where you
can talk with our sa vings
counselors, and a comfortable
lounge area.
GREAT VVESTERN SAVINGS
80 Fashion Island, Newport Center •Telephone 640-0333
1--__ Office -11urs.: Open Evecy--5a tur-day lQ-to-4-._We.e.kdays...9...to 4:30
Drive-up Teller Window Open 9 to 7 Weekdays
•
•
This famous
SwMet-Cook Book!
A brand new edition of Sunset's
best-se lling Dinner Party Cook
Book. It's yours for th e asking
at our special Grand Opening
Gift Tabl e. Fifty menus for
al I occasion s, over 500 recipe s.
All tes ted by the edi tors of
Sunset. Limit one to each adult,
please.
Earn the highest rates of interest
on insured savings and get all these
Free Financial Services with any
__ ..i!CJ:Ount..of $1000 or more:
FREE TRAVELERS CHECKS
FREE MONEY ORDERS
FREE NOTARY SERVICE
FREE TRU ST DEED I NOTE
CO LLECTION
FREE CHECK -A-MONTH PLANS
($5000 or more)
PLUS FREE SAVE-BY-MAIL SERVICE
DAil Y PILOT •
I
·-
J f DAILY PILOT s M~. Janiwy 8, 1973 •
Finance
Briefs
Dealers Make Plans,
!"' ' Wiuon Ford Opetts New Recvee Facilit y
e P ropert11 Sele
LOS ANGELES -AUantic
Richfield Co. says tt bas com-
pleted sale of ltl Rocky Mourr
tain and Mldcontlnent
Properties to Pasco, Inc., of
Wilmington, Del., {or about
$175 mill.loo aod wlll net an
after-lax extraor<l!nary credit
ol about 12 m1llfon to 15
mlUion frem the sale.
Pasco,_IJa_percenLowned
subsidiary of New York·based
Studebaker-Worthlngt.on Inc.,
agreed to purchase the pro-
perties last September.
By CARL CAl\STENSEN
Of ... D.ily """" .....
Dick Wllsoo, HwiUngton
Beach Ford dealer. has an-
nounced pl8115 to open new
recreational vehicle facllltles
early.next month in the Beach
city.
To be known as Sea and Sun
Recreational Vehicles, lnc.,
t be 75,000
aquare foot
RIV ct0ler
will be det-
voted enUr·
ely to the
sale and
sexvice of e R ed Ag reement recveea and
MOSCOW -Armand Ham-will feature
mer. head of 0 cc id en ta I a complete wiuoN
Petroleum Corp., announced line of mot.Qr homes, campers,
signature of an $80-mi!Uon travel tra,ilers and a full line
agreement with. the Soviet of ac:ce1SOrles.
Union. Wilson came l-0 Huntington
A statement released by Beach as a Ford dealer 5
Hammer said he would sell years ago and ls continually
metal·finlshing equipment to one of the top Ford producers
the Soviet Union and buy in Southern California.
Soviet nickel under a five-year · Currently the w o r I d · s
agreement with total turnover largest dealer for El Dorado
of $8 million. campers and mot-Or bonies be
hat also recenUy become a
doJer for Elcapede Motor
HOme!' and will offer the
Japanese iml>ort Subaru.
The new store will ~
located on Beach Blvd. south
of the San Diego freeway.
* A second geoeratlon
Pasadena eutomoUve dealer
and former Stanford Rose
Bowl end and football an·
OOWlOO", WWlam 8ymff of
Symes Cadillac, !'aJadena,
wi!J. head the Motor car
Dealen Association of
Southern
Ca I lfornla
for 1973. eoOtaM ...
Chevrolet
dealer Johll
Coaodl will
serve as sec-
ond ,vie~
1"'9ident ol
t be large
dealer body, CONHELL
In accepting his new post
Connell called for the dealers
to join together as a team in
solving the problems that face
the auto industry.
e S&:f, M erger
LOS ANGELES -United
Savings and Loan of Los
Angeles, a subsidiary o r
United Financial Corp., has
announced plans to merge
with Citizens Savings and
Loan AQoclation of San Fran-
cisco WKter an agreement ap-
proved by ahareholders of both
firms.
Tire Dangers Cited
Integration's Fine--
But Not With Radials
Spokesmen for the com-
panies said the stock transac--
tion would have an indicated
market value of about $53
million.
Board Cba.lrman Roderick
M. Hills attributed the
decrease in profits to a strike
at the Ublt Los Ani;:eles-based
firm's speclaltv steel pro-
ducing subsidiary, which since
h"s been settled.
WASHINGTOI (UPI) -
The automobile owner, who
long slnlggled lo master the
dau.llng array of make! and
models: of cars ls now facing a
mass style change in tires:
Radials are In.
Touted for tbelr long-lasting
ability about 40,000 miles and
increased ride stability, the
radial tire ls expected tu · · 1
wide share of the tire mark\.t
which is now running aboul
200 million tires a ycat .
THE RADIAL tire already
has captured abou t I!l percent
of . the market and In
De«mber, Goodyear, the
giant of the tire industry -
producer of about 30 percent
or the nation's tires -launclr
aiso were offered a3 option!!l
equJpment on many other
cars.
If Detroit decides to make
the radial standard equip-
ment, a mass switch is ex·
pected. Some aul-0 experts
predict radials will capture !O
percent of tbe new car tire
market within four years.
Bur IF TtlF consumer Is
getting longer-lasting t?res Ly
using radials he is als1 paying
more, and for safety's sake
has to learn how a radial l;re
differs from a convenlional
tire.
The first and m1Jst im·
portant thing for the tire
buyer to remember Is this:
"It Is up lo us In Iba local
communities to keep the
public informed of the in-
dustry's efforts to serve them
efficiently, to provide them
with safe vehicles, and to
CC111bat t h e DOOi>rofeaalonal
attempts to redesign, and
sometimes maintain, motor
vch.icles that will be bolh
uneconomical and e v en
hazardous," Connell said.
Also elected to a new tenn
on the Board of Directors
representing Orange County
was Theodore Robioll, Jr. of
Robins Ford.
* \Vestminster Pontiac dealer
Bob Longpre was recently in·
formed that he has been
selected as a candidate for the
coveted Pontiac Masters Club
for reaching hi s 1972 sales ob-
jective in eleven months. Can·
didates are picked on all·
around sales performance,
customer relations and overall
dealership operations.
* New vehicle sales in the U.S.
during the '73 model year
"could exceed 13.5 million
units and possibly reach the
area of 14 million," Rkhard
Gentenberg, General ~1otors
chairman, believes. H e
predicted car s~\es of ~1
million to 11.5 mUltw .. :ond said
truck sales over 2.5 million
are a reasonable prospect.
If realized, these figures
would make the 1973 model
year the best in U.S. auto
history and would give the in-
dustry 2 record years In sue·
cession. Gerstenberg said the
industry will benef' from the
well-balanced and broadly
based economic expansion
which is now evident.
Irvine Firm
Gets Orders
Computer Automation, Inc.
-0f Irvine. has announced
orders totaling over $3.3
million for its Naked Mini and
Alpha minicomputers frorh
five manufacturing com-
panies.
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Wall Street • Disney Aide
Helps Vets
Obtain Jobs
Karl Andrews, supervisor of
._ _ __.peratioos at-Dianeyland, has
ret urned to the "Magic
Kingdom" after a period of
service as a loaned executive
with the Orange County Metro
of the National Alliance of
Businessmen.
aU~ut campalgn-to--&eU
radials.
\Jp to now Goodyear had
held baclt from entering the
radlal market tn force, but the
push came from t h e
automabn, who began «1uip.
ping some 1973 model cars
such as the high priced
Mereurys, and Li nc(lln Con-
tinentals with radials. Radials
Don't ma rndlal tires with
conveuU01tal-tins.
The rta!Oll IJ that radiala
-and oonvenUonalJ -give-a car
dUferent lypet of JracUon.
MJxlog llie tires can make
driving dangerous.
President D. H. Methvin
said the new orders bring the :",,:'~~ .:itat,g;= ~·11-,--.,._f'"""1ft_e_e_n=--o-u_t_o·f -e_v_e_ry--=-1 -=oo=-A~m-e-r-cic-o-n_s_t_o~o-y_o_w_n--st_o_c'.-----lt-
over•-mttUon;--more-iJum -{
The National Alllan<e of
Businessmen Js a partnership
between lndUstry c.rd govern·
meat fonned in t 968 tw
presldenUal requesi fortthe
purpose of finding rultable
employment for the d1sad·
vantaged and (or returning
Vietnam veterans.
Andrews, ln his prui1tion 11..~
Job Procurement and Place
ment Represen~UvP with
NAB, deaf! with top ex·
e<uUves of Orange county
* * Tire Firm
Recalling
Whitewalls
busln..,.., enlisting their •·•P. WASHINGTOJ. (AP)
port of the NAB program Some 500 auto t1rt manufae
through pledges of Jvb open-lured by the Mansfield Tire &
inp in tbelr respective flnns. Rubber c.o. are belng recalled
He waa aingularly responslbte for failure l-0 meet federal
for ldenlllylng 1,611 Job -"stalldatas,'~ T1 fiisi;nllit\on
portuniUes in the business sec-Department has announced .
tor for veterans and !or disad-The departmeitt said the
vantaged persons who are firm agreed to recall the
unemployed. Power Falcon 4-ply whitewall
PERSONAL
RADIO PAGER
TONI or VOICE
LOW COST
MONTH to MONTH
RllffAL BASIS
OJl,\NGf COUNTY
RA ll lfl Tf If PHO.IE
\I fl\llCE INC
4tl ...... ,-,, S.llTI Allll
tires m:anolactllr!!il during lh•
last week of April and first
two weeks of May in 1972.
Six of M samples tested for
the department "failed to
meet the endurance test re-
quired" by federal reguJa.
tions. the department said .
For cuslomerl ttturulng the
defective tires by March %5,
the company will prcovtde frtt
replacements, mounting and
balancing, the department
said_. :?. --~ __ _
The recalled tfm are size
8.45 x 15 and bear the serial
numbers , WLPflVAf.4' 182,
WLPBVAF 192, and
WLPPBAF 202.
ERE ARE OVER
100 WAYS TO FINANCE YOUR
CAR ON COSTA MESA'S
-Mal!bal'-llaulevard
af Cara
LOOI l'Olt THI llllLlll AT
CONNELL \JOHNSON l SON
CH EVROLET . Lincol~rcury
-2121 2626 .
HARBOR BLVD HARBOR BLVD. ,,...,, c.. I ........
double the backlog at the We couldn't prove it, of course, but. it seems likely l8ine time last year. Annual
Tire experts say that a mix
of radial tlres on the front end
with some other tire on the
rear could produce what is
known as a breakaway, or a
spinout. This could leave the
driver with little control over
the car as the rear end lose.s
traction at a different rate
than the front end.
:'~~ ~ ~1~;: that the percentage is even greater here in the Or-
ended July 2, were 14.9 million
and for the first fiscal 1973 ange Coast area . . . and it's growing every day. quarter, the three months end·
AT LOW SPREDS. a car
with ra1lil tires on the fror.t
and conventional tires on the
rear has -v-·tendency l-0
oversteer -that Is, rrund a
cumo more sharply than
normal. 'lb.ls can lead w an
accident.
The problem of mizlng tires
ls growing as more dri\·er!'·
buy radials l-0 replace worn·
out convenUon11l tires on their
cars. A1:ciirdfbg to the tire Jn.
dustry, about 14 million
radials were purchased lllst
year as replacements.
ed October 1, 1972, were
$2,150,000.
Bank Signs
New Lease
Security Pacllic National
Bank announced It has signed
a lease lo ttlocate lls Lake
Forest Branch Into permanent
quarters wit.bj11 the same
shopping center on Ridge Route Drive In Lake For!SI.
The new quarterJ will ~
vide 5,400 square feet of bani«
ing area plus two drive-up
teller windows for customer
convenience.
Finishing To-IU!h .
An employe at WesUnghouse Electri c Corporation's
turbine p.lant In Charlotte, N.C. tou ches up a steam '
turbin .. generator'• blade shrouding prior to ship-
ment to an elecbic uWltr.. Such rolor shafts pro-
uce ro 1g energy under the Corce of steam,
Whloh expand> through the turbine blades.
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That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud , years ago ,
to be the first newspaper in Orange County_ to br ing
its readers "today's final stocks today" via super high
speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home-
del ivered edition and the service gets better all the time.
•
Woll -Street's computers "to lk to" c o-m p-u t er s in the
DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rote of
more than 1,000 words per minute. It tokes only 12
minutes to move the entire New York and American .,. ·
Stock Exchange reports from the canyons of . Woll
Street to the typesetting machines of the DAILY PILOT -' . ~ -----~ ~-~ ------
right here on the Orange Coast.
And when technology finds a way to beat that speed
record, the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the
first to use it to bring readers "today's action today."
When it comes to financial news, the one that means
business is the
'
DAILY PILOT
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JI OAILY PILOT
For The
Record
Dissolt1tions
Of Marriage
CaliforKla
BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
ConMla del !\far 173-9450
Costa l\leu 64&-Z-424 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
Ill Broadway, Cost.I Meiia
UWUI • M<CORMICK LAGUNA
BBACll -TUARV
1'1'1 I.opal ea.,,.. Rd. -• PACIFlC VIEW
MEMOIUAL PAllK c • ..., -..,
• Qapil '----Drift. ..
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Neo,_ t Beodt, Clllltrala -• l'EEll FAMILY
ootONJAL PUNEllAL
1IOMll:
•1 llolaA\'O. ""'*I 1', ... • llllllM•-WAltY '"_ ... ·-
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Probation Department Levee Planrers Sought
Good Home Needed (
SANTA ANA -Or1ncei
County Groenbelt Coonllnator
Rod Sackett has called lor
vOlimlters to plan! leeplanl on
levees ln the lower Santa Ana
River chonnel bordering Hun·
work grouP1 wlll be dlvlded In-will provide the euWnp In the
to teams of two, ooe IPICing levee area.
By JACK BROBACK
Of ... lhl. Plltt IJNff
SANTA ANA -Lila ii II
years old. Her father is an
aJocoholie and he has t..lteo
her. Her mother was recently
admitted to a mental ttosp!tal
because she could not cope
with her husband's drink\ng.
The young glrl ls withdrawn,
almost sullen. She feels she
has been cheated out or a
home and partnts who care
about her. She doeo not do well
in school and feels that sb:e
hu little to offer anyone.
Lisa needs a foster family
who would show patience and
understanding. It may take
her a long time to learn to
trust again.
Foster homes for Lisa and
olhers like her are desparately
needed, according to the
Orange County Probation
Department.
Nancy Boles of the pro-
bation department. and Bert
Knight, of the county Welfare
Deparbnent put it this wav:
'"Ibe final question and
ultimate responsibility for
theae children faces you now.
Do you have the Jove, pa-
tience , concern and un-
derstanding to open your heart
and your home to a Lisa"" .
They ask that you call for
more information regarding
foster bome licensing. 'Ibe
number is 532-74.11 or 134-43%1.
More than 900 Orange Coun-
ty children are now living in
foster homes, but more homes
are needed to meet the in-
creasing demands for
placemen!.
Qeryl and Tom, si.:>ter and
brother, aged 10 and 13 are
another example.
Retired
Officers
Elect
Seven Orang e Coas t
residents have beeo elected of-
ficers ol tbe Orange County
Cluipler of the Retired Of·
llcers Association.
Maj. Margaret M. Raney, of
San Juan Capistrano will be
aecond v!et president and LL
Ondr Edith E. Taylor of
Clemente will serve u .......,.,, --
And membe,. o! the group's
board of governors will in-
clude llaJ. lllarles A.
Krauchl , Maj. Marie L. Edson
and Capt R. M. Vernon, all of
Costa Mesa ; Maj. M. R. Ken·
ney of Corona del Mar, and
Col. Viel<r I. Coppad of
Laguna llllls.
Elected president was 1st
LL William E. Black o! Or-
ange.
Brea Unit
To-Study
Revenues
BREA -A lS..member com-
mlltee appointed by the !Choo!
boanl here. will meet Tuesday
to begin studying ways of fm·
ancing a 25 percent enrollment
increase projected for the next
six years.
The group-of-teachers, high
school students, p a r e n l s ,
homeowners and school board
members was selected by
Brea-Olinda Unified School
District trustees to gather in-
formation on possible sources
of revenue needed to ac-
commodate t b e additiona1
students.
District officials attribute
the enrollment rise to a rapid
population growtb throughout
the city.
Dinner Set
For Scouting
ANAHEIM -A recognltltn
dlnner is planned Jan. 31 to
celebrate the soth anniversary
of scouting in Orange County
and ro present 8COUling'•
highest awards, the Silver
Beaver and .SUver Fawn
awards.
The event wiU be held at the
Anaheim COovention Center.
Bids Accepted
WESl'MJNSTEll -OfOoo
applJeallo!JS Jtom .. hl&hJChofil '
graduates between the ages of
%1 and JI are now being ac-
cepted at the California
·Highway Pt1trol office here,
Ll200 Goldenwesl SI.
uotes
FDDBAY
In the llt1iijijll1ll
I
Chery! ls a pretty, shy,
likeable child. She Is well
behaved and doe• wen in
school. Her brolhtr ls not as
well behaved and will be more
of a challeqge to hla foster
parenb.
Cheryl and Tom.'1 mother
and stepfather are mentally
Ill. It It unlikely that they wlll
ever be able to provide a
home for these children.
111ey will want to vlalt from
tlme to time, but these visits
wlll be ,.gu1ated by the
chlldren's placement worker ORANGE COllOY
U118ton Beach.
The nrat planting period wlll
be from a a.m. to noon Jan. ts
on the west levee between
Atlanta and Hamilton
avenues.
and dlalni boles and the Parking for -w. wtJJ be
other planllng cuttings. · provided along tbe eu\ aldo of
All voluntetrl working on Broo.khunt Street near Atlan-
the projeel ohould be al lea!! ta.
12 yea.ra old with one aduJt to Persons Interested ':,~~ning
each.20 workers. Each team is in the activity are to
expedtd to plant 600 cuttings _e_•ll_Sa_c_ke_u __ ••_l34_.f_11_a_. __
or about 20 lee! of Jtvee.
Required equipment !n-
cludel a ganlen boo for dlg· Kids Like But Tom has parUctpated In
group and lndividyal therapy
for almost a yeer and has
abown atudy improvement.
In the county Proballon ...._ _______ , A NCOlld planting will be
held during the ...,. monilili
l!o<n Ju. JO. F« plant1n1
~~COii~ ,t"':.1,~ To Ask Andy DepartmeoL
ICEBERG
Lettuce L1r;e-Flrm 29¢ ...
Broccoli Fresh-Tender 29¢ lb.
ANJOU .
Pears SWHl.Julcy 29¢ lb.
CENTENNIAL
Yams Best Baking 19¢ I':'-
<JiJeliesf es-s-ef'l ,
WISCONSIN
Cheddar Cheese Aged Sh1rp 1.19 lb.
SCHIRMERS
All Beef Knackwurst 8 OL
aEESE
Champagne Cured Sauerkraut 20 •L
alCHAll.D'S OWN
Combination Bean Salad pitif
cfroee:rJ!J
Tide Detergent 49 OL
FLEISCHMANN'S
Regular Margarine 1 lb.
LIBBYS
Cream S le Corn 16~ ...
GOLDEN GRIDDLE
-Pancake S-yrup-
Pillsbury Pancake Mix
HUN6aY JACK
Mashed Potatoes
Kleenex Facial Tissue
DEL MONTE
Pudding or Fruit Cups
CAPE SWAYNE
Grapefruit Juice
Heinz Dill Pickles
NABISCO oaEO
Creme Sandwich Cookies
SCHILLING
Ground Black Pepper
Wishbone Italian Dressing
Libbys Orange Juice
SPll.IN6F1ELD
Leaf or Chopped Spinach
VAN ti• ICA.MftS
Enchilada's c11 ..... Oiick111, ot ... ,
llRDS EYE
• Cool 'n CreamyPUiTclings ·
Scrumpets
Ecology Health Bread
Custard Pie
Crispies
24 OL
2 II>,
I lb.
200 ct.
.. pk.
"' 01.
JJ OL
15 01.
4 OL
16 01..
• OL
10 01.
1'11 OL
I 7V1 or.
RICHARD'S PRJV ATE LABEL
IOTTlED IN SCOTLAND
Blended Scotch Whiskey
16 PROO,.
Kentucky Straight Bourbon
10 PaOOf
Windsor Conadian Whisky
39c
79c
69¢
39c
49c
4 for $1
49c
49c
49c
47c
49c
49c
5 for $1
lOc
3 for $1
39c
6 for 59c
65c
$1.59
2 for 37c
$7.67 qt.
$5.86 qt.
$5.59 qt
Couoty Flood trot DlstriCI
QUALITY '-VALUE -SERVICE --
Ill
DRESS IT, MAGNJFICENTLY-
and Richard's has more than 62 different dres,ings to help you do it! In Cali.
fomia, selads era a way of life. Ric hard's opens up whole new flavor horizons.
Besides, we have mixes, spices, herbs, imported oils and vinegars for you to
dream up your own dressings.
Seled Dressings is just one of the many reasons Richard's makes it hard to shop
anywhere else.
1/le<!lf
Richard's Top Of The Grade U.S.0.A. I Choice) Beef
7.,Bone Roast ,,_," Trhmned
Boneless
Stiorf RiDs L .. n and Tender
Ground Beef Prepare So Many Ways
Salisbury Steaks Our Own Special Seasoning
Stuffed Pork -Chops oven Ready 1.19,b.
Chicken a la Kiev Chive •nd Butter Sauce 1.39 each
F&lat of Flc ~~der Bake or Broil
Rainbow T ro~t Fresh from ~n:k'-.' River Idaho
MINIATURE
-
Starflowers Many Bright
Colors
1.29 bunch
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Ad Prices Good Thru Jan, 6th
12.~ LIOOCENTER J.UlVialklo,NewportBeach ~~~ HARBORVIEW 161iOMacArthur,NewportBeach
----ol'EN'OAltY"9=r,slJN. 9 -b 673'63001-------:----0PEN·OA1LY9=1l;-Sl:JN.~ -6 ~2'15
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llEA ANDERSON, Edilor ....... ~ .. .,,, .... Y's Goal Fostere
STOR~ By JO OLSON with change, We're planning ahead to see
01 "'-D••l r 'o" ,,.,. how we can gear our program to meet
"The YWCA 's one imperative: change."
eli minate racism."
This goa l is a surprise t"·lst to those
who thought the Y\\'CA "'as \l ) a place
to stay "'hen you 're t raveling~ (2) an
organization offering busy-\\·ork classes
or j3 \ something for youn'g matrons to
join.
Yes , the Y\VCA nationally is very in-
terested in the woman of the "third
world." who is any non-Caucasian
wom an.
In 1946 an inter-racial charter was
issued aft er members of the Y accused
themselves along with other institutes of
fostering racism.
"In !he last 2'h years even more has
been done to eliminate racism." said f\1il
June Hege r, executive director of the
South Orange County Branch.
Ho"' has the Y\VCA on a national and
local level changed sin ce its found ing
near)~· 50 y~ars ago?
"\\'e'rc a \\'Oman's movement," said
.\1rs. •leger. "\Ve'rc trying to keep up
Janie Valenti I left)
and Kathe
Pa tterson,
look-alike directors
supervise the
adult and youth
programs at
the YWCA.
''OUTll rNVOLVE.l\1ENT
Another )>rogram priority is the in-
volvement ol youth. "\Ve've served youth
in the past but they \\'ant to get in on the
11ction ," sakl Kathe Pattersoo. youth
director. "We have an 18-year-old on the
board of directors."
The working woman also will be served
in a program Janie Valenti, adult direc-
tor , hopes to start. This will be a ~
time discus.!ioo for those who work
near enough to drive or walk to the Y.
Janie and Kathe, redheads who are a
week apart in age, both have a great in-
terest in psychology and sociology and
both are enthusiastic about the new
priorities.
Kathe is a graduate of the College of
W006ter in Wooster. Ohio and did
graduate ....-ork at Oregon State Universi·
ty. Janie is studying for her masters
deg ree in community psychology al
Californ ia State University, Long Beach.
LOOK-ALIK ES
Since they have been at the YWCA only
a few months, staff members and
members sometimes are still confused
by the lwo because of their similar ap-
pearance. 1'1rs. Heger confided she didn't
realize she was hiring look-alikes when
the two were interviewed.
la the YWCA really a different
organ.ization than at Its beginning?
Mil June, Kathe and Janie don 't lhink
so. "lt:s the same type of program but it
has a diUerent fl avor," said f.lil JWle.
''We're ge tt ing more involved in aoclal
issues." said Janie.
\\;hat is in store for the female
residents of Southern Orange County who
become involved wilh lhe Y in the next
few months~
-A four-wee k discussion group led by
Dorothy Herbert, MSW, titled "!,
Woman." A new m ident of Orange
County. Mrs. Herbert is a counselor and
specialist in family relatlonshlps.
Sessions will begin at IO a.m. Wed·
,
it .. ; !:.\ a I 1.zed ~~~:~ f--~~.._,O-• -1-(;11-1~~--1~-1--1~--l!-ll--l-~J-~_.:'lllii..,-\,..l-lt~~-t-\;;;;ll-t--t'llll:ii-"lllii~-\;;iil~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---i;j!IO;ililalion fe.~11'1.";-bUy~a"""g~re~a~t:llL"'\'L..l"'\-~~-J
Mil June Heger '("I won't tell you what
'Mil' stands for ," she said) has seen t.be
YWCA from all angles: she's been a
voluntee r, clerical worker, professional
staffer and member.
Now exec utive director of the South
Orange County Branch of the YWCA,
Mrs. Heger directs a staff of t~'O pJ'C)>
fessionals, four clerical workers ~d 50
volunteers who serve a membership of
2,000.
The YWCA has brought memorable ex-
periences to Mrs. Heger, starting when
she was a teenager in Washington, D.C.
While serving as president of the Girl
Reserve Club (now the Y-Teens), she
met Eleanor Roosevelt "di.Iring. -the
organization's 50th anniversary celebra-
tion.
. Mrs. Heger. also mel the wife o1 vlco
president Henry Wallace and played
bridge with Margaret Truman through
the Y while living in the capital.
A native of Washington, D.C .• she at·
·tended the University of Maryland,.00
George Washington University and earn·
ed her bachelors degree in sociology.
Mrs. Heger served as Y-Teen director
in Mason City, Iowa, where she met her
-nusbaifd, Paul, an engineer. When they
returned to Washington to be near her
mother, she rejoinOO the Y as a clerical
employee and volunteer.
After moving to Baltimore and then
Calllomia. Mrs. Heger quit work to s~y
home with her sons, George and Martin ,
now 12 and 20, until they were both in
scMol.
1ben it was back: to the Y again, Ulls
time the San Pedro Branch o! the Harbor
Area YWCA. She was a volunteer then Y-
Teeo chairman.
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From the San Pedro Y, Mrs. Hegtt· --'rnove.rTo -the-orl<dMSlllP o1~-tb-.-_'Sooirth-----
0range county y which, she feels , ls-a
tremendous challenge.
"I would like to see the South Orange
(See EFFORT, Page HI
'I) I C··1·1·1 \ J ' .tr11•li ,,~
l?1 l .. , I{ 11,3tl)tl .. ~ ' I I \
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women.''
-Smart Consumers series beginning
Wednesday, Jan. 24. SessiOM will take
place fmm 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., presented
by the Orange County Consumers Affairs
Office.
-A child development center ("one of
the exciting programs we're work·
Ing on").
-The usual classes and some new «M!S
such as HiOOu Indian dancing, belly dan-
cing and professional tailoring.
(See WISE GOAL, Page II)
Mil June Heger,
executive director,
shows Y volunteers
how they can help
the organization gear
its program to me et
chahglllg 'social
emphases.
Armchair Quarterback Declines Penalties
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please, AM,
be fair. Tell .. ...., WODW1 who gripes
becaUle her husband watdlet "' much
foo!ball Cll TV lo l>lttoo her Up. It ao
happeos the games att played on
.......... weekfMS~anci...bolidaye and-that11 when
-
?4•4~ . .. .-· ,
husbaodl ar. home. Llndm! -A HUSBAND WHO DEAR ANN LANDERS : I hope you
How many of those housewives who WATCHES FOOTBALL AND COULD BE can come up with an answer. l am beside complaln m glued lo their sets during ed h the week, watching the doctor &bows? OUT DOING SOMETHING WORSE myself. My marri son as two
When I w .. sick witb the Du I couldn1 DEAR IIUSllAND: I aay yoo've ...,. children. One was born on Dec. 8, the
get my wife lo bring me a glass ol \'t)'ecl two majo< -c<' - -In your olh<r was born on Dec. 18. My son's
orange. juice. She ,was loo busy with lelt« and -la yow tlpa-. blrtbday happens to be Dec. 3.
G<oe<aJ H..,.ital, -Welby, M.D., no womea an p1q lo liott me 'but 1 My .... , wife docldcd that lhe
Police !;\qeon, The DQl:tors, Medical .,... wllk-,.._ IL.the .....t Wq-0 wUe J>J.nhdays are too close together, also
C<nttr and so on. -.., """" ... -nd b illat be they ""' too close to Qnistmas. She
1 !Ole "I.ti her Who ts wl-lln cast wa1<MI ._ ncll f_. oo TV, Ille bao claims It Is a lot of wort lo put on three
lfril stiiie."'"'What""drYOUh1111}1y,;-,AnnAimr--.1rl-11C1rwwwmn1••¥ .. :*"in-t-_:_---1bll'thl:t1Yl5fit ff wiUilillWO wects, Plus
• • l
. .
the fact the kids get cheated out of birth-DEAR GRANDMA : I think 1be shoold
day presents because relatives ignore the leave the kJdJ' birtbday1 aJooe. Bot I'll
birthdays and send only Christm a5 gifts bet she changes them. And when she
and say "Happy Birthday and r.terry dues. resolve C.O keep your moutb 1but
Xmas!" like a good mother-1.JMaw and go along
-~ly daughter-in-law wants to ce~ate with lt -· -
the older boy's birthday In October and DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband ts
the younger boy's in November. She says a very successful business man._Wc are
It Is only for the purpose of spacing the both past so. Our children are grown and
parties and she doesn't plan to mess we are in good health. So what's my prob.
around with the birth certificates . !em?
t am opposed to thi:ii idiotic . plan My husband has no Interest in anything
because l l>entve birthdays should ,be but making money. t a"'ffi ashamed to ren
celebrated on the. day of one's birlh. If you we have never been ou t of the United
this plan goes through I will never be St.ates. Not even to Canada. He's been
able to remembtr my grandchildren's promising me a trip to Europe for lour
blrthdays and neither will they. What do years. 1 buy the tickets, make the plans
)'ou tfilnk~""GMNDM1r--ilnd-,,t'"ttre-1ast minute tie his a big Cleal
and can't leave town. Will you j)leue 1t0
me what · to dot -MARRIED BUT
SINGLE
DEAR M. BUT S. : Boy the 11cb11,
make your plua lllld tell Mr. GttnUt H
...ht c._an't lf:m &own I• !Ul lllvlte a
friend, couta, niece or aut, IOmeaee
who coalda1 lllonl Ille trip -.rt...
Thtn do It -ud ltnd me a pool<ant.
Going lo a wedding! Giving ,...y Or
standing up In one? Even U you're
~lrucly married AM Landers' com-
pletely new "The Bride's Gulde" will
answer questions about today's Weddlnp,
For a copy, RSld a dollar bill~ plus a
loog, self·addressed, m mfled envtklpe
(16 cents poctaJlel lo Ann Lanckn, Box ®, Chlcaao:nt iOi5l
r
I'
" I
I
'
'
'
I "
•
DAlLV Pllltl
Global Program Supported
American Field Service, Irvine Chapter will host a benefit wine-tasting party al
7 p.m. Friday, Jan. 12, in·the CU!verdale ClubboUBe. Proceeds will he l p pay
tramportadOJ1 coatB for American and foreign students. The global program is
supported by (left lo right) the Mmes. George Huett!, Richard Bartkus and Fred
Muendirath.
I
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Libra: Leo's • Picture
TUESDAY
JANUARY 9
By SYDNEY OMARR
Scorpio "' o m e n are
magnetic. dynamic. capa ble of
overcoming odds to achieve
objectives. These women often
maff'Y younger men,
hnrmoaize with Capricorn.
Virgo, cancer and Pisc<o. She
is drawn to TaWU! but the
relationship can be rilled with
conflicts. The Scorpio woman
makes money with Saglttartus
but should exercise caution in
dealing with Aquarius and
Leo. These women know how
to wear the color grten. P..1en
find them easy to remember
and very dl!rlcult to rorgel.
ARIES (Mozcli 21-Aprtl 19):
Not so good ror attempting to
keep secrets. Best now to ride
with Ude. Means maintain
steady pace. Avoid making
any promlae which yoo may
not be able to fuUlll .
Aquarius, Scorpio persons are
in picture.
TAURUS (April ZO.May 2'J J:
Don't mix friendship and
money. Be analytical. Scme
now make promises they can-
not fUlfill. Know it and re.
pond accordingly. Accent Is on
being more realistic about
hopes, desires. Close bud1et
loophole.
OEMlNI (May !!.June 20 ):
What appears to be a clear
path actually haa obAtacles. dlacour8g<d by one who l1np purs a heavy burden no1ly II
Prepare accordln&ly. Don't be blueJ. tmlpor117. ~ It ond
discouraged by delay. S.t your S(JORPIO (Oct. 13-Nov. 21 ): colebrate.
own pace. TluaJ, Ubn ' Your fttllng of doubt, auspl· CAPRlOORN (Die. n.Jan.
per>0ns play Important roles. cion ahould be heeded. If you 11): Postpooe trip If poulble.
One In authority makes don't llnow what to do, do What you -could be cloee
special ,.queal Fulfill It. nothing. Walt and see. Obtain at hand. Relltlves oow are nol
CANCER (Juoe 21·July 22\:
Strive to understand one who
curmitly II brooding. Doo't
cast first stone. Plan for r11.ture. Build bridge . of
ffl!endshl p. Plleei Individual
plays key role. Heed Inner
vorce. You wlD know What to
do.
LEO (July 13-Aug. 22):
valid hint from Vtr10 apt to give aound advtoe.
meuace. One who tausbt yoo Break free, Be your ·own
1n past could make r'!lp-person. Strive for new ex·
pOaranc:e. Anal)'%O motive of • perleooes. Stop c a rr y l n g
one who writes to yoo. anolber'1 burd<n.
SAGmAIUUll (Nov. 22-AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
Dec. 21): You can rtoe ahove JI): Qwige now could prevent
cirevmstanoel. Key""" 11 to money ~gly.
gi.. ,..,,..u a chance. stop Young. penon.11 playing same
lmPoOIJW llmltallolll. Looi< old luDe. Draw line, Refuoe
bejond ihe Immediate. Olange to be lll8d by one who Is
routine. Soclallze. What ap-eynleal. You will undentand.
-llllflndlndw
Pl8Cl!8 (F•b. If.Mardi•>:
FrJend liom put -amendl for broken pn>mlse.
Be a arack)us winner. Tnrlt;
LAni perl(lrll could be jn-
volved. Strive for new start Jn
different direction. Someone
may be trylnJ to tell yOu bill
of goodl.
D' TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you will be ..,...
acltve thll yeor, tzavtllDc. ...
prell!nfI yooraelf. Then will
be many deallnp witli plrlODI
hom under Saglttlrtul. M>y
will be your IDOlll slplllcant
month of Im. In September,
!<mg journey 11 Indicated. Don't force issues. You · get
what you deserve. U you try
for more, the prioe escalates.
A c c e p t ........,.iblllty.
Rewanls can be creator than
you Imagine. Member of op-
posite am: ls serious. Don't Lectures Programmed
play gamea. .,
VIRGO (Aug. 13-s.pt. 22):
Lle low. Flnish rat.her than in-
itiate projects. Your judg-
ment, lntuitJon may be slightly
off target. Let otben, In-
cluding mate, partner, abow
their hands. You learn by
listening, observing. Legal
matter needs attenUon.
IJBRA (Sept. 13-0ct. 22):
111 g h 111 b t Independence,
origlnaltty. You make escltlng
c:mtacta ii reeeptive. IM
could be In ptcture. Your alllll-
ty to bnprinl penooa1 style Is
hlghligbted. lletuse to be
By Coast Organizations
Theta Alums
Kappa Alpha '!beta alumnae 1
will -plans for their benefit luncbeoo Feb. 22
aboard the ~ Mary when
they meet for luncheon and a
white eltplwlt sale at 11 a.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 10, In the
Mariner's Square Cubllouse,
Newport Beach.
Trotter was norrUnated for
an Emmy for "Play II Again,
Charlie Brown" and won an
Oscar nomination u co-c:om-
poeer of the score for the
feature itngth motion picture.
"A Boy Named Charlie
Brown."
IPM
Young Artists Draw Conclusions
Christian Women
Soutll Colll C h r 1111 a n
Women's Club will start the new year by leamJng the
special art of Olen:iae and
maasage.
Wbo are we and why ""' we
hen! will be esoiored during
an Jntn>duct«y lectw'e by na-
llaaal ieodel'I from the Inner Peace Movement. ·
'Ille lecture will begin al I
p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 10, In
the Royal Inn, Santa Ana.
By EDWARD 8. LECllTZIN
DETROIT (UPI) -There's
the white -mu s tached
Profeuor Clean. He 's a good
guy.
And there's Harry
Hydrocarbon, Charlie Carbon
Monoxide, Ollie Ozldt of
~ sun &!l!ur Ollde
and Pete Partlcuiate Matter.
Tbe)l're the bad guys.
That'• the cut ol characlera I In a hooklet enUUed, "Whal is
llA!r Pollution? -A story of
Alt Pollution and Carl."
dapper. bespectacled gen t in a
blue jump suit with a red
necktie who threads the
booklet together.
He also bears a stront;
resemblance, the kids say, to
Tom Macao. the GM technical
writer who prepared the text.
WbaL is air pollution? Ac·
cordJng to Proressor Clean,
lt'1 llOl!IOthlng like this:
Mrs. HUda Callender,
masseuse, will prtXnt a
demonstration after a I~
cheon in Ben Brown's
restaurant Tueaday, Jan. 9.
Speaker will be Ken Poure,
extension director of Hume
Lake. lie counsels and has
semlnan for families and
yooth. MtlSlc will be provided
by Mrs. Virginia Huntington,
sopnmo.
John Scott Trotter
Daugbten of the American
Revolutk>n on Wednesday,
Jan. 10. Annual awards for
good clll1en1hlp and
homemakllla will be made to
hlgb achoo! coeds.
DAR Tres Osos
Mrs. Lincoln Mcl.aughlin Tres <>sos Guild of Mission
IPM 11 an educational, non-
profit organization to "help
each lndlvtdual reaJIIe the
potential wllhln hlmoelf and to
use his psychic glfta In his
everyday life.."
Garden Club
Mrs. Dale Bauer, district
clirtdl>r, San Bernardino
Valley, will be the opeaker at
the meeting ol South Coast
Garden · Club al 2 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 10, in the
Three Arch Bay Clubhouse.
Her topic will be saving the
forests for friends to enjoy can
be fun.
o•
"The thiugs that make air
dirty are called pollutants.
Some pollutaats are easy to
see. Like soot and dust and
smote from chimneys. Other
pollutants are invi!ible. These
are called gases. Gases come
out ot the exbawlt pipes o
cars, for ill8tance."
will open her home for the Viejo will theme its Satwi:l.ay,
1:30 meeting of the San Feb. 10, Valenllne dance La
Cemonte Cbapler of the Noche do Amour. Alrporter ------~----r.m~iur'i..,,iiniiffn.TT.oii'r'iiie---,'ARonteClub~---1 ---I ..
pamill.
The colorful booklet which
1 ..,. DXlOI air polluUon la
I caused by the nve "pollution
~demons" is the idea of
!·General Moton Corp., the
"company with more can on
the rood -any other. But
many of tbe tboosbtl came
rrom children themaelve1 .
Students at two Detroit
schools were asked to draw
pictures of wbal they lhlnk
pollution ls or write ·a poem.
"We were afraid all we 'd
get -• lot ol black amol<e,"
said Gwen Small, a :U.year-old
GM arUst who coordinated the
iJlustralionl and layout. "We
let them use their im·
aglnations aad we went from
ther<.
When they asked 11-year-old
Carla Wilson what polluUon
was, they got this for an
answer :
"Pollution is here; pollution
is there. Wh~er you gu, It ls
alwa)"S there. PolluUon Is
there when you throw things
In tbe air. And that II why we
have pollution everywhere."
l"nm the poema and
drawings. MID Small began
work on the booklet, first
creatln& Professor Clean, a
-~Fr~o..vi. Page 13
Tb.-texhvarslmpllfied for
the grade achoo! child, but
Ihm II pleoly lo II for tbelr
pamits.
Professor Clean explalnS
that pollulanta come from
thlnga beiJll j>urned -oU and
coal, and gasoline and other
tue1s burned in engines to
make cars, trucks, boats and
airplanes go.
As a result, the "pollution
demons" appear. Harry
H ydrocarboo and some of his
friends escape being burned
while Ollie Oalde of Nitrogen
likes things hol
sarrrSu!IUr Oxide makes the
alr dirty when people bum
coal or fuel oil, Pete
P arliculato • lbtter comes In
different sbapeo ond too much
of Cl!arlie Carbon Monoxide ln
ooe location is not a good
thing.
Nine-year-old llel'lbel1 Belrs
red. green and brown car with
red tires serves to show where
the "polluUon demons" come
from in a car. The
aut.omaker's message to lhe
coming generation is that car
makers are ·working bard to
make cars give even less and
"" pollution. It's kind of an answer to this
thought from l~year-old Bren·
da Holliday : ''Flower 3 ,
Dowen, pretty and gay,
waiting for pollution to go
away."
• • • Wise Goal
"\\'e have a beautiful
heritage and a Io v e I y
building.'' said Mrs. t~eger.
"we need Wf>men to become
• involved and to care. We're
~.flexible. We're here."
I ·Garbage.
Solution
-.
Drawing of a boat by fifth grader
Leslie Reese (top photo) and of a car
by third gu.deJ .Pll'aiwJllio~U-ate
included in a new General Motors
booklet on air pollution.
-·
!WIT.....,_
-From Page 13
.. Effort
dinner and evening's en· Benefits From Space will be
tertainme . diSCussed at tlie anntlal
Mrs. Forrest D u n i v i n , luncheon honoring Amelia
cbaJnnan, has Heket m. E hart "' by th N......,..
formation ror the evest that H~ ·~: Clube at"'"r:;;;.;
will beoefit Cbildren's llospltal Thursday, Jan. 11, In the
of Orange Counly. clubhouse.
Speaker will be J. Shaffer
Couoty Y ...Uy bi-Ila Riviera Club Smith ..00 serves as a staff vobm~ at all lev-John Scott Trotter. well· writer on the Apallo and :· .!.i.w....t r..: =~ known composer, arranger, Skylab programa with Mcllon-
carry the y for another 50 pianist and conductor who also nell Douglas.
years. Is an antique dealer. will
present the program for the "The Y la Important to dlf-Riviera Club.
ferent people for differ-mt Members will gather at
reasons. It Ls a women's 11 -w-~--·-J
organizatkm nm by wtmen for 10:; ~:°Bai~tiub:
women. 11 la an opporttmlty a happy hllUr and luncheon.
for new ezperienoes and an Trotter will t.allt about his
a11ocl1tlon with the hlgheat world of music, hobbles,
caljba' ol women. • • travels and peopl~ be bas
''Tben Is a llmltlas op-known during bis Im& and
portunlty for becoming In-many-faceted career, and be
Art Affiliates
Alflllal.. or the Laguna
Beach MUleWI\ of Art will
llpODIOr a Dansant Cotllllon
for .chlldttn. . .
The 20-week session will
begin Thuraday, Jan. 11, for
third lhrollgh eighth graders.
Sessions will be conducted In
the museum.
volved In tbe YWCA, from the will display examples of his Mesa-Harbor local to the naUonal level" eztenatve collection of Chinese
Aflelo a loni clifie 'liom'e ·m. • oillOtt J>tll'Ctlm Mrs. MolUe Nici< ell wlll talk
the freeway to Lomita each Bis ~usical ca~ ~gan ~ about and display several
da)\ Mrs. Heger•s ecbed.ule a planl11 and arranger for the forms of crafts when she
doesn't leave much Ume tor Hal Kemp Orchestra. He was presents 1 program for the
reading, knitting, handiwork ~ music arranger foandr BTV!ng Mesa-Harbor Club.
or poUUcal involvement, but Crosby's films, radio The group will meet at 10:30
Mrs. Heeer takes It ln stride. shows and for the George a.m. Thursday, Jan. 11, In the
She u.., eadi dly to tbe-=Gobel==sho=w:s:. ==--~==:Co:sta=M:"'=:Couo=try==CJ=ub:;._ lulles~ uplalnlng lhat "my ,
goal ls to do the best job I can
on a d.ay-t.o-day bull."
A rather modeot llatemetrt
for a woman of not·»modut
accompllahmenta.
Tit•
LOSER'S CORNER
11 ... r.t. ..., .. °"' ..
DJETCONTROLCENTil.S
. .. OMI LOSll Whai've you got to lose?
JACKJE'S CHEESIER
CHEESECAKE
18 0.. Co....,. Cheeto
1/2 Tsp. Vanilla
2 ~· Sepvatt<I IT.fTsp: Cinnamon
l·l/2 Tsp.SWHu~r
FURTHER REDUCTIONS
Al1_>na_~lh th e pounJs aaJ iiiC~lf' coo!J sheirtitb1n:
that ha\'C' do~ed and
dn,icgrd )'OU do11o·n for )'C-..1.rJ.
Your $tamina is 1:1xed by
your uvt r·"·ci}l:ht and roo
tifl<'n lht' Jay is ,us1 too loni.:
Bt.>at all ingred~nn extC'pC'
c~ whites on hia:h undl
8mooth. Pold in 11iffiy bea~n.
l'AA whitt·s Place in 7 inch te-
non pie·p3n, Pl.Kt' on houom
ofbroilt'r for about 10 nt10-
utcsor unul bro11o·n. ChiJI &Dd
a.crvc.
SALE!
25-50% OFF
& MORE!
SOME MERCHANDISE
BELOW COST.
SWEATERS! PANTS!
MAXIS! BLOUSES!
If\ he c11rt'J "''lfh. Car-na ps
ari: ,i<rl"..1.1 tht'~ do~·da}1.s-for
n:l..1.xa1ion--no1 exhaustion.
Ri,dn now commn yourself.
ix· Ol:IE.lUll NEO. You c.aa
d11 1ny1 hin,c you wa.a1 co do. LUSCIOUS LUNCHEON
Ow Diet Control v~
ble Soup (Uolimired)
Slkco(Tout
Portion of Cbcc1«1ke
(YOIJ,r share: l/'4> ee-;..,...
Who could 11k for tn,.
thlq mort' 1
HANDBAGS! ACCESSORIES!
Ii. AQOJ JOUnd ri.uttitiooal
Jil·1 no1 only keep' you in
pxl hcahh, in ,kooJ spirits.
but in KooJ shape. The diet
cha[ is 1Jvoc1.1ed by rht
DIET CONTROL CEN·
TERS i1 btJed on HiAh-Pn>
tcin. The cncrg}' buildC't··-
Thc Sn . ...m-Getter-Up ptt-
Thc Waist-Slimmer.
Lookin1 forward to 1ttins
leu of you nai time,
'
JEWELR.Y
50 ~. OFF ... & MORE!
~~.
BIDTIQUE
How manf--l+n'lt'S baYt )'OU..--
lost-KaincJ back rhc los .. and
l.fl"AFAD
997-2611 , .... ,. more ? This rimc:·RenoYatt
your entint (ooJ cnncc:pt•fOC'
~· N1) pills, no •ttrvt1ion
no almmiclcs. TrC'llS when
y1>u want 1nJ nt:c J them.
Take: the cim~'to mike 1he
iOOifleiliat wUI ,pie™' your
ptlatc rtAUre ind mind. EYt'n
1hc sllm·Crowd will ~n ior
th11 plet1et an d you·11 fteo l
like your ia&ul1in3 ~x.tr••·
IAQADOfl! MOVJI
'°"' '"'
taAMI • Tlnlll
RIUPAll•SAITllQ
A•A•flM •W.AIAMllM
<tt•AMtU•C .. OIAt&MAI
•ll•TllttTOI lllCI • .....
llOVf
------------j-.-,,,_~---
WATCH ' fOR SPECIAL TUii
CIASSIS-
I
• l
DAILY PILOT
AMBLER
TUMllEWEEDS
MUTT AND JEFF
't W~H 1 COULD 00
SOMEOlllNG ABOUT
MY Al'PEiTl\E··
1 DON'T EAT!
FIGMENTS
NANCY
-· .i.-, 8, 1973
-
TODAY'S ,CIDSSIDID PUZZL~
ACROSS 49 The nighl
1 Chartered before
Accoun11nts: 50 ehlk11en•' S11urd1y1 Puzzle Solved:
. Abbr. , game
4 Personner 51 Cleaved
9 Show of 52 Rips
in1ention S4 Animal prod
14 Appendix: 58 Plus
Abbr. 60 "Bui -•r•
1~ his)rurrietit · """thoseff1'"'· .~ •• •
16 Parrot's 61 Punctuation
1'ickname
17 Displays of
courage
19 Appeered
10 Ship
21 Kind of proce
22 Orclei's
r.omp11ro1t
73 B.P.0.E.
24 Bog social
11ff1i1s
26 S1ones
29 Title of
re1pec1
31 Baseball stat.
32 Of 1 tim•
period
33 Agree
36 C1nc•nnati
1esm
38 Dessert
39 Watlntime
"1 81sebll!er1·
milieu
•J "100 S(!Uitlt
meters
.. Autocrat
•6 Pll'lces of .. ,
mairk
62 Nova Scotia
S!fililt
64 Tumult
66 Scad
67 Actor-
Romero
68 Three: Preli~
69 Butt1esses
70 P1eclode
71 DIV
DOWN
1 -TV
2 Time of year
3 Punish
-4 Evidence of
an injury
5 A Kennedy
6 UniQue
7 Swiller
8 Nurtured
9 °""' 10 An imais'
food
11 l<•nd of
cont&ine1
12 Elevations:
Abbr.
13 ca ... ~cl•an
wh.aky
:!;;f'B .l TlllO
II I> 11 A II A
N
18 Hotlow
utensil
24 Household
appli<lnce
25 Cruel people
27 New
Brunswict'1
·neighbor
28 Sleighs
JO P1111ining to
the id
33 Conlo-
34 Yvonne de
35 Kind ol sele
37 $p1nosh hall
4-0 Preserve
one's
prestige: 2
w ords
•2 Insect grub
•5 Fails to lollOw
1uit
-48 Kind of
mu1cle
!>3 Interlock
55 l eaves out
56 Love: ttaliln
57 Of 1
European
"""'"" 59 Specks
61 Fish
62 Ounce;.__
6J " .. • wts
saying ..
65 Truth:
Confucianism
by Doug Wildey
by Tom K. Ryan .
wi:u., rr IS A )...I')... PllfMAiURf,1
M 'rtll.JSE LITT OOf'JAIJ...MEAK
!.,_ by Al Smith
WHETTlt-16
YOUR
APPETrTE·
I
by Dole Hole
'
DOOLEY'S WORLD
-SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
•• !I •• Ii Ii
II rl MA'>' SJ.APoASll
.SUC>I
\l.EIZS/!£. As
MAk"S
C!C!T ICS
CtJ~,
l
I
J
' • j
j
f
UMTlllf,w,41"8 A
~TU· JS Uftl' A..sk.IN6
HOftMAH AQO(WW.
Tb U ltAll ~ fll'.,iUNr
Off HIS FAVOR~
"""'""
-
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
(i No, LET ,---:::==::::::::--, f,,1;:-1 ---;~~7 SUMM!ill'S
/AE ReTUl>N MAY l ONLY R>t.JR
MINE! S~ST ll MONTHSAWAY.
COMPROMISE !I
?
by Emie Bushmiller
~
ANIMAL CRACKERS
PEANUTS
!iO
PA'<
IJP ~
·JUDGE PARKER
•
Kt J...i..'f
$c.Hoo l-
1 Vf<~tnATo C
J $oGlfTy -A~i'iOAl..
f>L.A Y
"foPAY •
HAVE VOU HEARD ·~: n
WMAT HER CON DITIOM
IS, M.R. ORl'V'ER ? /::-::t::JJ
c
CJ
DICK TRACY
I
'
.. '
PO TME POLICr: SHE WM DRl't'tMG
KHOW WHAT AT AM EXCESSIVE
M4PPEH'ED ? SPE'ED ... COUL.DH'T
NE60TIAJ'E,.. TURN.1
IT WAS TH£
'foTAl..
fHlfAT!rlCAl..
exPli"11NCE !
"IOl.J H.A.VEM',. BEEN
DRINKINC;o H.Ololl! 'IOU,
NY_!'
CAT5 MAYE 'THE
Rl6HT IDEA !
I II
by Chester Gould
HUNTING ANO DRINKING
15 .. PANGP<lUS COMllO.
llETTI!R U! OOWN !Mr -··---·--'-.J._
,,
THE GIRLS
~ ••• and wkat witll the boUda.)'I Oftr tberf:'I just DO
pllOO to go llrll tim< of year bat, locklly, Cora go!
pne•moa.la."
DENNIS THE MENACE
f'CV· •
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Super Bowl Foes In
.. ~Countdown Begins
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Super Bowl
Vll's ...iknll9Cled 1<1on, the Miami Dol-
phins and Waoblngton J!nklm, are
standin& -.. .... .. ""' football
-Into Ille pioomble cl the lateot p""'
Rozdl~ spectacular.
Bolil -zipped lnlo Soulheni Cali· tomJa on a cool, breezy Sunday. George
_ All~ coach ol_!lie~)ins, Eld ii was
"ni<re to be bock" m I.Os Aqge!es. l>on
Staull of ~fiaml said ll's "n re e to be
back" in the Super BoY.i.
'Ibe betUe ol eoe;chlag egos is on.
"It cloesn 1 do any aood ID come ID the
Super Bowl ii )'<I01 doo't win," said Allen,
who r.. .,...,. made It thi5 far during a
unewbet UJustrious career with the Los
Ang .... llaml and Wa>blnjtm.
SbJla, I ""9-time -cl the big one wltil BaltimOro and the Dolph!M, says
be"I "imst prvud" ol M.1ami's unprece-
deoled lM record, bul adds, "it will ~
come a !allure if we dm't make it 17-0
with a world ct.mplonsblp.''
The -"' -two coad>lng muten will be painted on man,y m«lla
CllMI,.. during Ibo countdown to Sun-
day'• National Football League decider
at the U>s Angeles Coli>ewn.
So aJib, yet .. dllfer<nt.
Both are winners ~ of Sun-
day'• outcome. These .,. two ol the few
NFL ooadJlng glanU, men who have
the profeaiooal odor ol a Lombenli, a
Blown or a Halas.
Shula ii all bulinell, a shrewd assayer
ol -and bandier ol human beings.. l!n • dri-, I poriectlont.1. Thia 43-
~ onetime delenslvo beet bas
-I IJolplllm pandllng bag
Into. w-lepnd In --........ MJoml made It to SOper Bowl VJ In
New. Or!"°"" bul the Ilolpblnl bad the
loot· ol novlees Ila time • , • boys In a
....... -..rid. ,,,. llollas °"""'YI calmly
carved them up in a 24-3 massacre. sm.en to a row bas changed tilal
Miami'• tr'OOpl walk wffll the conlldent strut ol prol...rooats now, a team that
vowed to come back and win It Ill.
'lbe Dolpblns .....r t!trough a wann
Lcq Beach A!Ji>ort welcome Sunday
evening as cheering cllltens Wriled out
hy the hundreds to say hello to their
~lorthe~
Utile ~ wore Mloml joneys, ladles
polnled placanll and • ~ -pet -blared proudly .. though 80me
greol pcU!Ute WU getting oft that big --'lllen, there'• Alim and the Redskins.
Here's a man wm 11 called an "Elmer
Gantry type'' by •om e. He's an Ice
......,. Ml<r who moves llle Redstlns
:.--~~~-'--~~~~~~~--.
~ •
•
• • ..
•
Jockeying
Pays Off
For Girls
GRANTVIl.LE, Pa. (UPI) -
Patty Banon u...i w earn $1 an
hour tending bar. Now she pis up _
k> SSGO for an evening's wort at the
wlnnillgest female jockey In the na-
tion.
"I ca• rerqember ~ 1970 st.an.
ding at an airport with nothing but
a foot locker and a bird cage with a
dog in it," the shapely blonde said.
"Now I'm driving a new pickup;
I have two bowie trailers, and I'm
starting my own store. The tracks
have been good to me."
Miss Banon, 2', of Chester, W.
V., and nine othen who competed
in an all-women nee la.st week at
Pmn National Coone agreed they
...,.. lllftd Into tho pnlf""1oo by
money. But they admitted there
an aome drawt.cb.
In 1171, Mi• Banon bad 110 win-
ners.
Bui her hones have been alug-
g!sll Jaiety. She ended up In the
middle ol the pack whee she COM•
peted at Penn National.
loved by oome, haled by many out here.
Few a<e neutral on the lockerroom
evangtli>I who was fired by the Rams
three yean ago.
Oddly, Miami will be practicing at
Blair Field where Alien on<e drilled
his Rams. George put up -some rather
heavy security bloci:adee in U-doys
and ,_ M appeon die Dolphins will plot
their stratOl)I bolllod-tht wall• that Allen
built.
It's that kind ol chma and llle script
will be wriUen a miUkr\ ways belore
either Garo Yepremien ct Ori Kn.lght
nnally gets a chance to kick oil Super
Bowl VI I Sunday.
Wins LA Open ' •
Funseth Shakes
Supporting Role
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rod Funseth,
wb:> admits to SQme occasional negative
thinking, called bis wile Sandi after the
third round of the $1!5,000 Los Angeles
Open golf tournament.
"I've got a 17-stroke lead over last
place," the curly-halted, soft-spoken
Funsetb told ber.
Sandi, no negative thinker, promptly
put two bottles of champagne on ice.
She had the right Instincts.
Funseth, 'who has made a 13--year
career as a supportlng player to Uw: likes
of Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Lee
Trevino, scored a solid, methodical,
almost pedestrian three-stroke victory
Sunday in the event that opens a 12
months schedule on the pro tour .
"I'm so negative, if I had a 10-!rt.roke
lead, I'd be.atraid.J was going to fall and
break a leg," the 39-year-old Funseth
said. "Sandi's a lot different, just the o~
posjte. She g e ts so mad at me aome--·
·~-" ~ .....
Not this time .
Funseth .stroked irons to within almost
ta~ln d!Stance for consecutive birdies on
the eighth and ninth boles, parred the
last nine in routine fashion a1 be pumped
shot after shot to the middle of the green
and finished with a two-under-par 69 for
a 276 IDtll on the 7,028-yard Riviera
Country Club course.
lt was only the second career victory
-the other was in the 1965 Pboenh: open
-for Funseth, who bu collected a flock
of courie records only ID blow the ad-v-he collected llOll "I was really nervous on the first
hole," he said. ''1 pitched over the green
lNIC!iitlPei!DiiCk toiboilt aiilifch for Ille -
par. That really helped. I started feeling
confident after that. Really confident."
"'Ibe only other time I'd felt like that
was in the Greensboro open a couple of fean ago. I had a ~troke lead going
into the last round and finally lost in a
playoff, but that's the only other Ume I'd
felt confident at all ," Funaeth-admitted.
He bad plenty of cause this time. He
wasn't crowded after the consecutive
blrdJ on Nos. a and 9 as it developed into
a fight for second place.
'Ibat ended up in a four-way tie among
Don Bies -Funseth's loog·Ume room-
mate -Australian David Graham, Dave
mll and Tom Weiskopf, all at 279.
Grabanrhad a 71 -Hill, Wetsmpl and
Bies all at 69.
Bit!: had a chance for secood alone
before ~putting the lf.St green.
"Rod s a much better pl.ayer than he
thinks," Bits said. "He's a real good
putt« and chipper. He just needs coir
fidence."
Jack Nicklaus, v.•inner of .$.120,000 when
he took player of the year honors in 1972 ,
re~Uy dklrl't get it going as he three-
putted twice en route to a final 70 for
2l!O.
But he made one big challenge with a
near eagle. ''My caddy told me I needed
to make two on the last bole," Nicklaus
sakt. "1 almost got it."
He pushed his drive into the trees to
the right, then played a miracle shot out ,
a low fade that hit short of-the green and
began skipping toward the hole.
It hit the heart or the cup -but
somehow curled out and slipped four feet
pasl Nicklaus missed the putt. and
Funseth had the biggest check of his
career.
Arnold Palmer wasn't a factor. He had
his best round, a 69, in the mild , overcast
weather of the final day and finished with
a 286. Sixty-year-old Sam Snead, just one
stroke back starting the last round ,
bogeyed both of the par threes on the
front nine and faded back with a 7:J-281.
British Open champion Lee Trevino
failed to qualify for the final two rwnds.
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WILT CHAMBERLAIN GRABS A REBOUND FROM KAREEM JABBAR.
Lakers Defeated
When Going ls Tough.
Bucks Go to Jabbar
Pti!LWAUKEE (AP) -Lu<'ius Allen
unexpectedly found himself in the pres-
Bucks coach Larry Costello said Abdul4
Jabbar showed Chamberlain some new
sure role of playmaker Sunday, but he m?.~e:· "''as going to his right instead of
knew e1actly what to do: his left toward the basket and laid it in
Give the ball to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. there ori him two or three times,"
Abdul.Jabbar PQUred in 13 of his 37 CoStello sald.
points in the fourth quarter as the LH ~ '"' MllW•vll• '"1 ~1ilwaukee Bucks. with clutch help from Br!Oges ~ ,.'; 11 0ri~ ~ ~ ~
Allen and Bob Dandridge, polled ay,·ay in McM11111n n 2-2 n o.ne1riooe 10 1-l 21
the closing minutes for a 99-92 nationally-~-=1•i11 i ~ 1! !~=:r ~ ~ ;::
televised National Basketball Association wa1 10 "' 2' 1tllbllttSon o o.o o frk~.on I M 0 0.vb 0 M 0 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers. A11,y 2 1-1 s Md>IOCkllfl ' ,.... 11
Allen, who ran the Bucks' off~ after ;~ : ~ ;
Oscar Robertson left in the first quarter Toi.11 ::. 1..u n lot•'-· .e t-1J "
with a hatwtrhig injury, conbiboted 20 ~~ •• :::·• : ~! ~.;:·_:
points and Dandridge 21 · as the Bucks Fau1111 au• -,,._
def-·•·• "·Nn• -•·-nion• f•• ··'y4he---Tolll_f!:!!b -Lo, ..,"V,1~, 1s. M llw1u11;..!!. ~ ~lte-~Hr""'"--lit-VIP ... lfW'ndlrtC:• -\0.7'f. fourth lime in the series' last 14 games.
"It's a difficult role when you don't
have time to prepare, but that's why they
pay us," Allen said. "I made some
mistakes - a couple of ihots I should
have made and a couple of bad passes .
bot fortunately we got the breaks at the
end to win it."
Abdul.Jabbar scored 10 straight points
while Los Angeles went scoreless for 5: 10
late in the third quarter and early in the
fourth as Milwaukee assumed a n~
lead with 9:34 to go.
';I thought I played him fairly well un4
ti! late in the third quarter ." said Laker
center Wilt Chamberlain. v>'bo guarded
the 7·1ool·2 Abdul.Jabbar.
Long Beach Ends
UOP Wit1 String
STOCKTOil (AP ) -Filth-ranked Cal
State (Long Beach) employed a tight
zooe defense to defeat a stubborn
University of Pacific basketball team
Sunday 91-15, snapping the Tige~· 45-
game home court winning streak wbicb
extended back to 1969.
The 49en, furious after an upset 68-61
loss to San JOse-Slate l'r1C!aY, were fifed
up from the start. Glen McDonald hit bis
first three shots and Long Beach took an
11-3 lead iri' the first three minutes.
"Re was taking stiSls-he didn't really
want to take, but then he made some
really tough shots near the end of the
. third ,period and that gave them . the
momentum," Chaniberlain said. Pacft'ic tied the Pacific Coast Athletic
-~·-~~~~ game twice during the first hair, t the 49ers then outscored UOP
15-8 to take a 43-39 halftime margin.
Long Beach's All-American guard and
• 0lt'J11pian.~ Ratleff, scored 30 polnl5,
20 in the first half.
Redskins'
Brown Gains
New Honors
WASHINGTON (AP) -Larry Brown
feels he has ffMJly won oome ftCOIJll·
tion.
The Washington Redskins nmnlag back
has:
-Been nam«l to the Pro Bowl in eech
ol hlJ four yean In the National Football
League.
-Led the ...NE!. Ju l'.\IJIJ!oa bi.I
sophomore aeuoo, becoming the first
Redskin in history to gain more than
l ,llOll yards rushing In a single year.
-Became Ol>ty the thin! runner In NFL
history w =It f0< more than 4,llOll yards
ln tbei.r Ont four aeuons as a pro.
-Had the unique dlstlnctioo In l!'_Zf o1
being aelect<d 'llJe Al80clated Press Of.
lensive Player of the Week for two suc-
cessive weekL .
-Was a nm.away ·cbolce a!" the NFt.
Offensive Player or the Year ln The
Associated Pr<JS balloting. .
-Named easily to The AMoclaled
Press' All~Pro team.
-Was an overwhelming pick .as T1'e
Associated Press' Most Valuable Player
In the NFL.
"Now I feel that 1 have some type ot
national reeognition," Brown said when
informed of his seledion as MVP. "I
want to be recognized as a good rurming
back. not one that has a good year, then
fades away."
Actually, the Redskins' opponents bave
known about Larry Brown for quite some
time now. Yet, even thougb most teams
key on him, he sWI manages to pick up
vital yardage by going tltrouglt ..-arotmd
the defensive line.
When the ground game is shut off,
Brown, a 5-foot-11, 1116-l>Ollld former
blocking back at Kansas State, bea>mes
a dangerous receiver. 'M>e New York Jets
found that out this year when they held
Brown to only 48 yards on the ground,
but be caught three passes for 9& yards,
including an 89-yard touchdown .
"Larry Brown is the game's greatest
runner," Washington coach George Allen
said unashamedly. Brown. though, gives
a lot of credit to his teammates and to
Allen .
"From the time George Allen arrived
in Washington, I began thinking more as
a team rather lhan an indiridual,"
Brown said. ''1bat's the reason we've
been winning. We play together as a
family and not as individuals.
"ll's kind of a funny feeling. Just five
or six years ago, wbo would have ~ht
the R<dsitins would still be playing in
January," be said before the team
departed for Los AnJe_les wbert they will
meet tbe Miami Dtlpbin1 in Super Bow
VII.
_.:'._Here we_ a_t!: p~ctng in January.
Some teams have been out or it since
November."
Larry Brown can take a large dose of
f redit for the fact the Redskins are still
in the running for the world cham-
pionship. In the year of the running back.
Brown was supreme, finishing the year
with 1,216 yards on 285 carries to lead the
Natiooal Confmnco.
He would have won the NFL rushing
crown if be had not suffered a slight in·
jury late in the year. Allen benched
Brown for the regular season's two final
games so he could recuperate for the
playoffs.
The rest allowed Bulfalo's O. J.
Simpson to slip past Brown on>tbe last
day and win the tiUo with 1,251 yards,
j~t 35 more than the Redskins runner.
Brown garnered g; of the 75 votes cast
by the nationwide panel of pro football
Wl'.ilers to easily capture lbe MVP
award. Miami Dolphin quarterback Earl
Morrall was second with 10 votes.
Simpson finished in a three-way tie for
third as be, Miami running back Larry
Csonka and New York Jets quarterback
Joe Namath received four votes apiece.
Deserihlng Woody
A Driving lndivUlua~
But He's Not All Bad
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -Woody . Janowicz wu In Chicago at the 1ime
"All the girts talk about how good
they are lll!&led," she said; tu~g
at a stylish brown suede cap. 'Well
I know folkl are treating me gond .,._---t~Jm'l'>Otdotng·s<r-"'
welt When yoo're winning. they
won't give you the time of day."
Miss Barton, a divorced -mother
of three young children, has
numerous pulls. strains, and broken
bones from her work. But her
v.-orst Injury came during a post
parade.
k Hayes oruo ~S.te Univeraily's con-osu wg.. playing Northwest em.
troversial football coach, changes de-"Woody called Vic, had him join the
meanor like a chameleon changes colors. team for dinner and then on our bench
Hayes is a Ureless head football coach for the game," said Esco Sarll:kinen, who
• "My hone wu like a moote!y at
the end ol a leosh," she said. "We
parted company with me png
rl&ht OV<r her he>d. I landed on my
feet. but it pve me a football
knee."
A Spill in the Mof:e
Jockey R. Smith and his mount. Philip the Bold,
take a spill after clearing the fence in the Mole
u~11.....-
Handicap Steeplechase at Kempton Park, England.
who demands the same drive from his has coached under Hayes for 22 years.
assistants and players. "He took him back to Columbus on the
He frequently explodes ln exchanges team plane and had specialists attend
wllh sports writers and photographers him "
and the latest Incident happened before His wife of 30 years, Anne, is proudest
the R05e Bowl game when he was charg-or Hayes' trips to Vietnam and hls role in
ed with battery by Loi Angeles Times campus riots al the •rrawllng llcltool.
photographer Art &gen. "He came bock fl'Om Vietnam with
&gen bas charged that Ray .. shoved three or lour notebooks full or lll!lleS -
a camera back Into the photoorapher's per.ms, WMs, gtrl fri<tlds," Mrs. Rayes
face, causing double vlskin ml nollen said. "lie would go tltrouglt the whole
eyes. The case will be heard in a lial. II he ....idnl reach them by
.Pasadefta.....rt Jan. u. -le~ he -them."
Several times the llD-yHN>k\ coach'• During the campus -o!stiirboncts,
conduct bas gotten him Into trouble with 1:1oy,. ·-on !hot campus evriy day,
!chool and conference officials during hia every Dfghl, mU:tng speechtos ID the
23 yean u Ohio Slote coach. donns, •• hil· wife roWlecl. .
Omo votfnn Columbus sporll writer In hil rare pleuun houri, nay.,, an
said ol Raya: "He's very ..U<entered avid mountain cllmbing Ian, Ukel to :salt Lake Chances: 80 Percent -Good
I'! ~ SALT LAJCB CITY (AP) -A member
: ' of Salt Lite City'a Olympic Conunltloe
"fl the city bas an IO percent chance of
being """"""" by the lntomatlonal Olympic· Committ .. !or tho tl'll Winter
CXYmlllcl, If the ledenol ~cnunent
pRini... the t1tlmAted $30 nulliort JJeC<I.
ed.
"WlllloUI the fedonf ....,.,, .. """' ...., .,. Rcepl t1r11rnut1be we~11e1 •
17," llJd Deft Rom. .
, I
lllllt-relstes everything to hltmelf:-ttt'I·· ·-.tomp-orotmd a lann ht-...,,...111 elStUii
the hardest working man any prolession Ohio and he follows history cloocfy.
Rose was part of the group which Creating !acililies which will be extensive enviroruoo1taJ studies to has known. Hayes, who ~ In history ln t0I·
made a succeuf'ul bid to the U.S. Olym· permanent and a valunble AS5el to the detennine the . full Impact or the winter "He works ~ hours a day and expects lege, many Umes quoltl famous 1nr1ls
pie CorMilttee In New York Thursday. community. He aaid five main faclllties games on the Wasatch Front. everybody around him to do the same. and admlrall and their strategy at pres,,
He is marketing director for Snowbird will have to be bWlt -a speed ak11tlng Hamre called for establlstuncnt of a He'lt the most driving Individual in the eoofereoces. game today." The best way to describe J!ayes may Resort in Utlle Cottonwood Canyon, ovaJ, 70 and 9<kneter ski jumps, a luge site evaluation committee made up of However, there is another aide to be the way a.sailtant coach S.?tklnen
where some of the events would he held . coune, biathlon coune and crou-country rcpresentaUves from llle forest Service, Woody Hayes. . does :
"It ~II flis together quite nicely, mainly skiing courae. Utah Department of Natural ~. Perbapg the best example wu hia role "You don't d<lcribe him In one ~.
beeauoo "" atread,y have most ol what Meanwhile, Intennountain Rqional tho Utah Ski As>octatlon, Salt !Ake Cir.y in the tthahilltatlon of Vic JIDOwics one 1"1tellc9 or .,. -aph. Y«1
we'll..-lt ' R...-.ld. --Foreater....Ytm Hamre aaid lll<re ii a Mayor E. J. Garn and the local Olympic after the former Ohio Stalo All-American describe him with chapter allor dilp-
-aaid tbe main plannlni ii for IMIOd !or considerable tnronnatlOii arid----cM!mllllf:-. ------....:.....:. __ ,_ poralyied In.a.car wroct. ter."
• 1, •
•
'
•
COtmtf Top IO
Sea IGngs, FV
Maintain Ratings
·The Irvine Leagu• 's Big
ho, Corona dtl Mar and
Fountain V alloy, maintained
their llatus aa No. I and No. 2
In Orange County prep basket·
ball clrcles following the Urst found or circuit action.
1be ofUclal Ora"ge County
Top 10 aa selected by the DAI·
LY PlLOr gives Corona all
but one first place vote. The
SerK:mgs-managed'"·to Stay
unbeaten through 11 games
with a pair of one--point
decisions over norH:OUnty foe
Long Beach Jordan (ll0-591
and Irvine League opponent
Estancia (SS-52 In overtime).
Fountain Valley, meanwhile,
New Coach
At Indiana;
New Baby
siliashcd Edlaon ro.. lb 10th
&tnligbt win In aqeumulating a
I!-I overall mart. The only
blemlsh 15 a IWiS Joos to ..,,..
county foe Warren in townl·
ment play.
Corona del Mar and Foun·
tain V.allt!y meet Jan. 19 at
CdM.
The rest of the Top 10 was
shaken from It.I foundatJons 8.'J
upsets were common u_p and
do\ar·n the line.
Marina 's Vikings (No. 4)
were shoclced by HunllngtM
~ach, Lowell's No. 1 qu1ntet
lost twice, Orance1a sllth-
rated • .f>anthers were stopped
by Mission Viejo and No. 10 El
MOO.ena lost a pair of
Crestview League decisioos.
Cruclal lests Tuesday In-
volving -ranked tea.nis include
La Habra's No. .\ crew at
Buena Park and. Kennedy at
No . 7 Fullerton in Freeway ac-
tion; El Modena's 11-4
Vanguards at No. 9 Mission
ViejO and unbeaten Katella··
(IS--01 at No. 10 Orange in
Crestview League play.
DAILY ,II.OT Si.ff !"Mi.
IRVINE'S SUE MILLER ILEFT), MOTHER HOLD DIVING MEDALS.
MOl'lda)', January 8, 1'973 DAIL V PILOT f 1
Vida\Vants.1 __ r_u_eu_c _NOTI_CE~-
More$$$
For 1973
OAKLAND <AP I -Vida
Blue. who waged a lengthy
salary dispute last :1eason with
Oakland A's owner Charles 0.
Finley, said he will seek
another raise and added :
"I 'n1 not AOing to be the
easiest one he's golng to sign ,"
In a telephone lntertif'W
Saturday from his ~1amfield,
La.. home, the southpaw
pit('her ~aid hf> wou ld ffit"{'t
with Finley within two 'l\'etks I'll BIJC NOTICE
in Chicago to diS('USS his con· 1------------. ""' lrsct.
Blue, the 1971 l\1ost \1al uable
Player and Cy Young Award
winner. said, "I won't be
negotiating at $50.000." After a
long holdout last sea!!On, he
signed for a reported $50,000.
substantially less than the
$75.000 be asked.
"l want a raise for two
rea30IU," Blue said. "First, he
(Finley) made a statement
after the 1971 playoffs that
players deserve a raise for
championships .
"Second ," he said, ''I \ar'ant a
raise because I \\'ilS part of
the team and if they get a
raise I should get one . 1 lh ink
everyone on the team should
get a raise because we won
the world championship as a
team."
\U.l'l.R.101 COURT 01' THI
STATE Of' CALIFOINIA f'O•
THI. COUNTY 01' ORANGI!
H .. A·711•
NOTICI 01" Hl!ARINO o.-l'li'ITIOH
l'OR f'IOIATI! Of' HOLOO•Al'f'llC
WILL ANO !'OR Ll!TTIRI 01' AD-
#llNIST•ATIOM WITH WIL4 AH•
NEKl!O
E1!11e r1' EDWARD JC . IOGGS, ~'°
k_,, 10 E ll.. &OGGS, 0«11Md.
NOTICE IS HEA:EllY GfVEN tNI
llET'Y W"RHICK IOGGS h" IUfCI
!wreln I tllflllon !of' l"l'OCMI.. ol H<11oor10f'llc Wiii 1 tld 10' ll~MI al
1.*lfW1 ol Admln111r1llon Wltll wlll ""·
M•ld .. •r.. NII"-fl!...-....C:I to WlllCl'I
It ll\t4I fl)r, 1\!1'1Mr ~r!!C11lan, Ind '"'°' TM '1,;,. 1nd ptac• Cf h•1rtno lfol W"1•
1111 bt>etl WI for J111111•v 11, 1913. II '00
1 m • In !fll (0\111roo<l'I ol C>eP.artment Ne. ! 01 wld court. 11 10ll Clvi~ ,..,,., OrlYO
w.-.1, Jn'"~ c.11v ot >""'• ""'' t 1!llo>"n1•. 0.11111 J1n11••v ~. 1tn.
WJLl!AM E. 51 JOHN,
County Cltfk
GlfOROE OAllliONlR
n .. o Via Alr..""~f L ........ HIUt. C•lll, nuJ
T1I; 41HI ll7•U11
AllorM~ 19r , P.ilU-
P11llll511«1 O•lnQ~ Cotll 01!1v P llo!.
J1n111rv 1. t, u, ltll ~1 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
Blue said he would do his --------~---
his FICT1TIOUI •U51NISS own negotiations t season . NAME STATIMENT Los Angeles attorney Robert r,,. 1.e11ow1"ll -"""' ••• doi"V
LOUISVILLE -Officials at
the University of Louisville
SUnday began thinking in
term! of a new head rootball
coach SUnday, as coach Lee
Corso was named head foot·
ball coach at Indiana
Universit).
"" KINGSTON, Jamaica
Wednesday's slate features
No. 6 Huntington Beach at
Newport Harbor and No. 8
Marina at rival Westminster
in Suns.t League action ;
Corona del Mar at long-time
nemesis Los Alamitos and
Fountain ValJey at Estancia in
Irvine hostilities.
Estancia, unranked with a 4-
7 mark, has beaten La Habra
and had Corona del Mar 's
unbeaten powerhouse on the
ropes before suceumblng.
ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10
Pos. Team, Record Points
Irvine Gal's _Goal: Olympics
' bull"'"'• ••. Gerst represented Blue 111 last HE"'''"GwAvs. in MlrlM ........ • ti t' ... 81IDO• !1!1'1CI, ti!~ il.ch 92* years nego a K),..,. A:1'1C1111 H. J"""'-.. 2110 l•Y'IOI or .. If he ts not signed when the Coron• 11•1 M.lr f'WS
Club's ·~--na imrin" training """'"Finl..,, 111 On\'11. l11bol t1t1»d IU U.U ~r I" Tl'lll t>lll!f'eH II tll1"9 conctucNd by I cam p opens Feb. 24, Blue said, p1rt,..r111tp, R1nd11! H, JOllll'°"
Unbeaten George Foreman,
preparing for hls world
heavyweight tide fight against
champion Joe Frazier Jan. 22,
teamed that his wife, Adri·
enne1 gave birth to a six·
pound, seven-ounce girl Sun-
day night in Minne.apolis.
Foreman celehrated the oc-
casion by taking time oU from
hls training Monday.
Meanwhile, Frazier, also un-
defeated as a pro, worked four
rounds , two each with Pete
Williams and Mike Baseweu.
"" SYDNEY, Auslralia -Mal
Anderson, in his seventh bid
for the tlUe, and Margaret
Court won singles cham-
pionships Sunday at the $19,000
New 11\>Utb Wales OpOQ, teooi8
ont.
The 37-year-<>ld Anderson
deleated IDJHeedec! . !5 e n _
""RilsewaII,arellow Australian,
6-3, 6-4, 6-4, for the men's
crown while Mrs. Court
upended Evonne Goolagong in
a grueling two-hour all-
Australian women's final, 4-S,
f,.3, ll)jl.
SOIJTH BEND John
Shumate's late tip.in in
regulation and Dwight Clay's
three free throws in overtime
Jed Notre Dame past Kansas
66-64 ln non<enfettnce basket·
ball Sunday.
Sophomore Mike Fiddelke
put Kanaas ahead 61-59 with 11
seconds left in regulation play
with a pair of free throws, but
Shumate tied it for the Irish
with five seconds left when be
put Gary Brokaw's missi!d
shot back in.
"" TAMPA, Fla. -Nebraska
tight end Jerry List, who
caught the game-winning
touchdown in the American
Bowl Sunday, says the pass
play from Louisville
quarterback John Madeya
missed twice earlier in the
North-South game.
l. Corona del Mar (11-0) 59
2 .. Fountain Valley (12-1) 56
3. Lcwa (l!-2! 44
4. La Habra (11-3) 38
5. Tustin (10-4) 33
6. Huntington Beach (10-4)31
7. Fullerton (8-3) 'l:1
8. Marina (11-6) 23
9. Mission Viejo (8-4 ) 12
10. Orange (12-2) II
Otherso La Quinta (12-3), El
Dorado (~). El Modena (II·
4). Lowell (7-51.
Katella High not eligible for
consideration In l'OUDty poll
due to All·star staW acquired
through transfers.
w· -oung1ns
Mat Crown
Joe YOU!l( ol Foontaln Val-
ley tool< the 95 pound cham-
piooshlp at the Mira C06ta
lnvitational wresUing tourn-
ament recently to lead the
Barons to a third place finish
with 54 points in the 21-team
evient
Young also earned the
award for most pins in the
tournament, winning three
out of four matches by falls
indudlng the final match. Other FQUntain v a 11 e y
placers included Donald Stier-
walt who was Wrd In the 103
weight division with a 4-1 rec-
ord. and Mike Finklea who
finished second in the 175 class
with a 3-l mark.
At 191, Les Becher worked
his way into the semifinals
before being forced to forfeit
with an injury.
F.dgewood won the touma·
ment with 61 points. and !\Ura
Costa finished second with
60. Corona del Mar, the only
other Orange Coast area en.
trant scored 21 points in the
event.
Mesa Tennis Program
Uplifted at TeWinklc
COsta Mesa is joining the
tennis rush along the Orange
Coast and will help the sport
to Oourish with a new ap-
proach to recreational pro-
gramming this year.
Six lighted courts at
TeWinkle Park have been
leased to Bob Abbolt and
associates and the young ~
fesslonal plans a myriad of ac·
tivities to benellt the youtb as
well as older tennis players in
the area -and all wltboot
belonging to an exclusive rac-
quet club. .
"I aclually think Ws Is
going to be a fantastlc thing
for the city or Costa-Mesa-,"
Abbott told the DAILY
PILOT.
"There Isn't a city around
except La Jolla that has
--· --anything like-we.~ Jo
pr..ent at the city ""1rts."
Abbolt 15 plannlllg ID Install
a pro sbop with a fUll line of
teM!a equipment and clothing.
The group will •lso maintain
the arta and give both public
and private lessons.
Mlb Dunn and Rusty Moore
will bO his as&lst&nta at
TeWlnkle where the new
operalfon will be&ln fu11C-
tioning Feb. 1.
"By sunimer time , we will
have a \\'ell coordinated
teaching staff," Abbott con-
tinu es "''ith enthusiasm. "\Ile
"'ill all be teaching in the
same way in a much more
professional manner than is
found on most public courts.
''The private lessons will be
available in addition to the
recreational group lessons.
There will be a charge for the
private lessons OOt no high
monthly dues fees."
Abbott pllyed tennis at
Orange Coast College In 1965
when he was the No. 1 star of
the P:lraaes team. ·He later
playtd on the clay and grass
court circuit on the Eastern
teaboard for thn?e years
belort retumlng to this area.
or the put 4'h years he
bas been eptraUng the llarbor
Greens Tennis Club In Costa
Mesa and has a pro and
manager working under hlm
at that layout. lie also teaches
at the Balboa Boy Club.
Abbott ha! plans to eonduct
a city tournament and will
have a full ladder with
challenJ• matches """" tbe
operatlOn g<ts under way.
..
Sue Miller , 13, Poi1itin g for Se nior Nationals
By RANK WESCH
Of llM O•lll' '"'' Stt ff Experts in sociology will tell
you that the age of 13 is often
the mo st unsettled and
frustrating in a person's life.
When it comes to com-
petitive diving anyway. Sue
~1iller Is beginning to un-
derstand what the experts are
talking about.
l\tiss Miller, an Irvine resi-
dent , is halfway through her
13th year, and as the diving
season begins for 1973, she
finds herself on the verge of
leaving age group competition,
a level where she has had
many . past successes. and
graduating to the senior level.
How wen she pro gresses
along the line may have a
great affect· on her ultima1e
hopes of competing in the
Olympics in 1976.
"Her coaches want sue to
point to the Senior Nationals
next summer. but she may be
a year away," her mother
Mrs. Robert (Jeannette)
Miller says.
"We'll be happy if she
qualifies for the senior na-
tionals , but her best chances
may be in the International
Age Group championships and
the national Junior Olympics."
An eighth grader, Sue has
been diving since the age of
five. when she followed older
divers off the board at a
recreation club pool while the
family was residing in
Virginia.
Norma Chandler, a former
National Junlor women's
champion, was a member of
the same club and recom-
mended Sue pursue the sport
fullv . When the family moved
to California three years ago
she also recommended
coaches for the Millers to con-
sult.
The la ck of professional help
early left its mark on Sue, but
in three years of working with
hi~h calibre coaches such as
Glen and Pat McCormick of
Long Beach she has made
marked improvement.
Presently she is training for
two hours a day w i th the
McCormicks at Long Beach's
Belmont Plaza Pool. Mrs.
McCormick is a former Olym-
pic Gold Medalist, and her
busb1lnd a fol-mer--Olympic
coach.
"She's a linle young to
judge her potential for na-
tional competition and she's
never been to the meets where
they separate the girts from
the V.'Omen," Glenn McCor-
mick says.
"But she does have good
Fish Report
I
strength, good stretch and
good form so we're hopeful of
seeing her qualify for the na-
tionals next summer."
To date, Mis.s Miller's
greatest success came in the
Far Western championships
last fall when she finished first
in tower diving, second in the
three-meter springboan:I and
thirQ. on the one-meter spmg·
board in the girls 12-14 age
group division.
Other important victories
came in age group competition
at the California State team
championships and the San
Diego Southwest InvitationaJ.
Both were wins off the three-
meter board.
She's bad Iler S!iareo!
misfortune too, crashing Into
lht diVThg ooaro to irijuTe a
shoulder on one occasion and
withdrawing from another
competition after badly raj>
ping an ankle on the board.
Pro Cage,
Hockey ·
Standings
="' N.Y. R1111M" •vn•lt .......
T~~ .........
H ,Y,I~
''She seems to do better on
the higher boards, and we've
been told that her best poten·
tial may be in tower di ving,"
Mrs. '-1iner says. "It surprised
me , because I've got a great
fear of heights and T thought
she might have it too."
"I've had trouble on my
takeoffs off the springboard s.
but ifs more a natural jump
off the platform." Sue says.
A great asset for the young
diver is surprising personal
strength which she partly at-
tributes to inheritance from
her father and partly through
workouts with a leg lifting
machine.
"She's very stron_g for affal
her age arid they tell us t t
will really help her," Mrs.
"Miller potnts out. "It takes a
great deal of strength to do
the difficult dives, especially
from the lower boards. Many
girls aren't able to do them
because they're not strong
eoough."
~1cCormick says it's not un-
common for a )•oung diver to
do better off the tower and
says Sue's potential there
... :on 't be determine(!. until
later this yea r.
"She doesn't have a full list
of dives off the tower like she
does off the springboard, but
she should have by this sum-
mer." McCormick points out.
"She has a few of the
tougher dives to learn off the
springboard and she has to
improve her fundamentals -
takeoffs, entries, the things all
divers constantly work on.
"The big test will come 1n
'MiiCh-orso-----wiren sne goes to
the regional competition to
quality' for the-senior na•
tionals. There'll be 20 or more
top divers there and she'll
have to finish in the top six to
qualify."'
Alamitos Entries
MONOAY'S ENTRIE'
"l'm going home." TM• 1111eme'nt mild """" 1"" Counrv
His record Wl\S 24-8 in 1971, C1erll of 0'111. County on: J•I\. A, 1'73. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, (OUNlY then sank to 6-10 last season. c LeA:i.:, 11.,. 1 .. 1y J. 11•'11•' ... • Dl9v1v
Collegiate
Mat Res11lts
""" Publl•rwd Or•not Coat1 O.lly l"llo•. Jtnuerv I. IS, 21, 1', ltn U 71
, .. ..
PUHi.iC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAM• STATIMINT 1o11ow1nv .,..._, 11 doifllll bu\l"t\t
I
,
• •
DAILY PllOT -.-e.im
• 'Piaf Strindberg' ' NATIONAL GINIRAI.
THEATRES TODAY'S ··
TV IDGIIlJGHTS Top Trio ~ • ID SCR Show EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE COUNTY
•
NBC G 9:00 -''To Set This Town on Fire." A
newspal'"" publllber must decide a COW'te ·of action
when be develops ~bis aboul biJ ~ in ~
Ing a pollUdan to Jail for manslaughter. Chuck
Connon, cart BeU, Unda Day, Chari" R<>blnaon.
11)' TOM TITIJS Of t111' DMIW' Pl ... ••tH "PUY tTlllKDUll ...
Whatever the material or ~ ,.~~~ ~-=::;
nnt ~ Hil ablUty lo inC .January at the Thir<I Stap
unci<'l>l•Y lldlllui17 1erves blm Tbeater, 411%7 Newport Bl•d.,
well. and hll" tryttlni scene Costa Meaa.
ANTllDllY QUiii
UPllET IDIJD
KCET ID 11:00 -"An O«urenc~ at Owl Creek
Bridge." Thi& Oscar-wlnnln' short film (1963)
traces the thoughts of a Civil War military crim-
inal as he faCM death on the gallows.
the ... 1.. UI 1 ,_ ..., o~ "'Wt;;. *"'""' ., MtfOI~ •lY-. '"' • "a)'I uu-:s:\;.,•.,._..•~•w
mtnStJy refreahina in local """*" at I ~~I JM. -~ with Miu Patcli b a ltlp JF,::::;:=::;~===::;=jl
mark or hilarity'
CBS D 11 :SO -"The Five-Man Anny." Televi-
sion's series stars Peter {"Mission ImPoSSible"}
Graves and James ("Medical CenU!r") Daly star in
• this 1970 drama.
OOERTAINMENT theater •• ... tJte _, ~ II ,.lllr• lllp "'*-• 11:11 Ntwi»Ort w ~ r•-. •lwd.. C•'-MIN. JlMM¥•"-.,.._
work, and South Coast 1"" .,,.. CAST Repe .......... bas th.rte or )ti Allee .................. CNrle,.~ ~-•J CdlM' .i. ............. Htl ~J,. premier perfonners tntlled Kllrt ........................ DMTYCN
in tbe comedy·farce 0 'Pta)' lea a play than an Idea, a
Strindberg." IOW' statement on t b e
"Play Strlnih>erl.. I 1
dellcloUs satire clone with .,..,.
summate artistry by three of
South Coast e.ptrtory'a slal>
clout performers. II ""'Unues
Fridays tbroogh Sundays dur-
ABC fJ 11:30 -Jack Paar Tonight. A familiar
name in lat<! nil!ht television relllfllS U> the tube
felt this one-week-a-month chatter show, joined by
t co mediennt Peggy Ca&'!. ·-
'Other Hair
Debut Set
For Laguna
What "Rosencrantz and monotoQy or marriage, or at
Guildeostern are Dead" was l?St what marriage can
, to H·amlet, Frederich Dur-evolve lo to under the prOper,
renmatt's "Play Strindberg" o~ Improper, conditions. It ii
is-to -bert'• -pla)<od -..... ,-IJooed-iricJ.l
"Dance of Death" -an In-acale, .. l'OIB1Cb In a IO<:!al
geneous restruclurlng of an boxlni match, defying !ta ·•U-[w;eccm I C7 RfCMJJI I I I
earlier, more serious and die.nee to take any of tt 1too ••"9t<m1 u1.11s1•o.1wotu11oi ........ __ . ~,.... -
The Laguna Moulton ·Com-more verbose work into a ~_,.,y, A TrM Uh .w .......
slam-bang oomedy marked by Of the three cbaracten, Lan-,_ ,.. - -
munity Playhouse has an-
DOWJCed its cut £or ltJ Orange
County ,_ • Engillh oomedy
11How tne other Hall Loves."
unpretentious stagecraft and 1 don'• aging, pompoua army "V J hi
blatant, presentaUonal style ol. captaln'il the lllOll lngerelling an s DCJ TV DAILY . LOG acting. of lbe lo!. •An lne!!eclual, ael!-Wildemess" Olreelor David Emmes baa deluclln& cireer soldier wit!\ • 1
Playhouse ·managing direc-
tor Hap Graham 11 staging the
summonded his first team !or prppellllty. for blunt · speech SHOW 111111
• this peppery ~=lie In marl-ahd phony aeliures. Landon 1'llon-. "'· "-•-
lal bllsterlng, three of the C.O. lums this walking charade Into 1<00 -1M-'','°·
show and also will talce the
leading role, a pafl played r ...
three yean by Robert Morley
In the London Pl'O!luctlon. Cut
ta Meaa compeny'a tofHe<ded the moll believable !igure or SAT. & SUN.
talents who respond with com-the night with lltUe more than IJ·l-7·•
oppoelte Graham Is Jean
Koba, a ft!J known actress
and director In Orange Coun-
edlc gusto. Hal Landon Jr., sheer stubborn force ol Ii~~;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;: Cherie Patch and Don Tuche-performance. I
the nucleus of an earlier Miss Patch l! an equal
triumph In "A Streetcar Nam-match m every level as his
eel Desire" -comprise a shrewlab, stealthily CUMlng
superbly balanced team which wife. She craftily slinks about
Em.mes manipulates with the stage, cutting her mate
seemingly·effortlesa precision. down with polite invective and
M nda """"· "'· ... -Lucy .. • ty. 0 Y blkld Ill• •Id trits to d'llrm '* <>then in the Laguna cast of
Ev . wlttl JM, wrMS IN !'flt~ lot anet· the Alan Ayckbourn play will
•n1ng Htl'Clfds. be J~ule Moffett, Don
JANUAllY I D a ID ---' t<l Hinson, Llz Hughes and (bl') -Jt IM 11il 1 ... 11 fin" Walter Dudek. All have made
HJBDDlllm-<••> 72 -""""c.."""·c.it previous appearapcea oo the ma-""· ""'·°"·"""'-•·-··a "'··e.
occasionally slipping into a
"PLAY STRINDBERG" is spasm of intentional bad ac-
ting to prove what a great ac·
tress she might bav~ been. .-.,......... ·-... --.---..... n.t»4owhMJM~ dol&tl ''How the Other Hali Loves'' ~:.:'w.c 1bout llb patt hthl't'ln1ttnt1,. will open on Tuesday, Jan. 16, m11111 nitn.... ttidlll to 1tn tot .mWtS1•111l'btt1. and will nm fOr three weeks,
-.,. '"' D IJ) 00 !IJ ~ -"""' Tuesday~ through Saturdays, p;.,_._,., (CJ ti'!! -C.O -1 ... 1 at 9,30 m the playhouse, 606
Pl.,.,.........., ,..__ """"· ..i..rt """""' Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna er.'I ..-. lnpr StM111. Wtltn • strlftlll' lA 1 Beach. Reservations are being
PJ nin. ...._ poter PIM it ctufht d'IMtlnt. tM II taken at lhe box of rice 494-
Discussion
Of Tlieat.er
Due 01i TV
himi by tht othtt pltpn in tht 0743. ' •:• CiJ ......,, .,_ 11111t. Somt tlmt 1at1r, tht pl1,m A discussion of communjty D Mftll: (90) "C.tpbl• ·in tlf1t-11mt 1U bfllrt-~o bt found h t th' ·11 b (dr•) '45 _ Frtd MICMurnr. ~ dtld, Ollt br °"' and 111 horrlblt t ea er e 1cs w1 e
Rolan, Clwirltl &ldd'orC. PJ · S presented on Newpart Beach's
(.fl mJt ... Walt1rCronklt1 ;s-.... :(%k)"Sllld:T...-...f" ayers et cable television channel Ulis ~...,., tl'ffftll"" (dr•l '64-Stu.rt Wllltmt•. week, featuring an Orange
• ...., Mfttll m""' ·-p County drama critic and the
ID liolms --•ltttJ Ill.,_ rogram direcwr or a Newport theater
Bu!-" ID 11H<WI a.rt ra.s WMll group. .,....._C...Shllf a.ct ~ Alllrnttiolt altlf· The Ana-ModJ'eska Players Participating in the special m..... ..., •• Wm. he·ldloe llt' •. fast· will conduct their first general production will be James tPl Utlt ._. ptC9d hOllr ol film· trllb. On t1t1 membership meeting of 1973 Whitesides, drama critic for
7'11 ,_ rn DID-""''"' .,.,_.,-·~n "" in the new Anaheim CUiturai the Orange County Evening
0.............. ~~Ktrt.~~~lm." Arts Center, i..a Palma and News, and Richard
(l)Tnitl1tC1111'•----•CJJ""' ~ -~ Orlf. H Do-..1:_ ... ,_ ,,1 Pactllc CIJ....,. DMtlt ,.._ ~ -,....,. arbor Boulevards, Anaheim, ""• UUU.:lv• u. "Wlllt"I llJ IJM1 fltti ~ ai Mitdl Fol11r. tlib Wednesday at ?:30 p.m. Group Theater. The show will
a11i.-i.r •atoriol'1M°"""'4,1*m.•1"1" The program wtU feature a be hosted by William OJJlen
19 .._ .. ,_. q . ..c actM1'"'°°'· ... ·~ variety of theater exerciles in-~ V~~ Mailander .as part ol
TUCllE FUNcriONS as a
mild-ma Mered intermediary,
a distant cousin who, they
take pleasure in reminding
Introduced piem .In the
'Now, Aft1r 16 Aiotou1
W11k1 At P1clfic'1
Hlw1y ]9 Dri v1•IJ1 -
Y 011 C111 S11 It H1r1 I
Waody Allen'•
'"IYnnHIN• YOU
ALWAYS WANTID TO
INOW .UOUT SD'"
• Kt IT .•.. Mt'Oftll CIVIUZATION
~ITAWAV,"
....... I.II ..
110 AU.SJ!
"WHA rs UP DOC ?"
ltr•ll•l-4 O"MMI 1 -4 ll:M p.-.
...... ,... ....
l :JI p.a.
I ~~~-'~'·~·~
WORLD PREMIERE
ENGAGEMENT
--·-Ct#lDDMF JON,
... ~:;:r"..:li...i ---Ct#FOOME J/ ,\,
"""'~~~
.--'HICKEY a I06GS
\ J.20 StG ·l ·l0.1J
NOW • IXCLUSIVI
ORANGI COUllTT
OINI HACKMAH ....,, -1!0 BUTTONS
. .
, .. Ill
lY.-V
l!•dnlv• or-.. C:-ty' ltKll'Vllll S.t ,,,..,._,,
Ptllt' O'T•ll -........ I,...._
"MAH 01' LA M,lftCNAH
E•<lullYI l!llf .. lm.I
H"' NI l:ntn• SNtt · W•11111r ol J Ac•_,.., A••rCJ "'l'IDDLall Oft THI aOOI'"
Wilt 01-r'1 '"SNOWIALL ax, ••• , .. • ~:;;;====~-''THI lolltl!l'OOT EXl!C:U'TIVE"
"SOUNOl!a,. .,. -. -_,a-. ...
l:lcluiN Ham. "' ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;__"A MAN <A,L.LID HOl:H'"
"JUDG• llOY IEAN" .. SIAD/UM ·J :1:
.. .-.· • ......-.::ire:".,......
"THE lllVENGiaS"
----~=-· $!AO/UM ·J ·,
,. -:., :nr •:~
"l"ETI! 'M T·IUll" ...
''PLAY rT olOAIN, 'SAM'"
- ---.g, $ UOIU.'rl -I · .. _,_,.y .. ;~
• Fnt..... :,:'a o:' .C:::1" I liciltlwl eluding. physical and vocal the1t ~' 1 Happy Good I'-----==~ , .. ~°"::.,;i."Jlll:l---,R:!~~~=----~~r-::"·-woll!=u'-ihe Time Hour. AllM•tl•• ''"""' (1n I& Whfli "ii'-.., tm reading of selections ~rom -:>ow-and-whl~l~es-wtn
I----ciln flrtn(' fJ ,.._ -s--~--favortte_playa._Uodtt_the . dlSCUSS t~e quallftcations of a
"UP THE SANDBOX IS.A ./OYI"
.J!or.liiQ_Stteisari<l'.S.Sixth.~liii-is.llet:.Sixlh.Hil 1---
Howor.d Thompson New YOflr. Time•
-!!! !.~ ... n.---... _ Gil~. . directloO of Laurie Lambert, drtheamanew-cns mu.edi .. ando·nthethe..rleelstheate-of ~' ""--10:008([)"11111t:·Dtw.t,_Y_ opporturulles wtll be made . r
7·M lfllJ = .. -:.... ..... n. -TM ~ llptrl" available to participate in the d~~ the pi;ogram, which """ """ lfll ID ID Nin theater workshop. will air at 5 o clock oo Tues-
°"'Paul W11t11m1 l1Jllb. di Cl* ""*" 5"dll ptlta Further inf t' is day and Thursday evenings.
!"') llpli's"""' "' Obtrk:t AttofNJ )otlpti lu:dl available at ~:~ ion Singer Sherw~ Ball abo will
f.'I 1" lllw ~ h lalM 11111 ~·· JtroiM Wildlt. • be featured m another seg·
D ~ "" (2lol) -11'1-ment of the show . ....... fxl.fi\ '&9-aollra ... ms.c-tn11tta.
(JJTiTflltlitTr90I ....... ,...._ Matlllttl ~"'--0 -I -(2lol) """ hris to """ "" "'""' tf .. tlnllf"' (M) ~ 4utJ; Boris lmlS tell to tnlbt.
WI hktl, wt1o has 1.,.i to my It
lllltthU1R, Shtlllf et•n. MlthiM'1 filt wttr.1 ... b,fOlll. de·
lt1'i WIW.,..... cldls to set Clludt, Ill old frlhd-ln n.t Ckt w t11111 nnn 11t,..lf ill .,""' r1 IJll-flJ Q111•'"' luaull f!).J!tl.~ Q".......&lrdlel fm Ill~ 1111111 ... I
mn.. "'"•••• !:"99--l!!l ""· "'-~ .... -. ..., "'""''"' .... ..... (l)IJllAl'll'°OlrtllW ·~~~ .. irl Ntum lo Dodi' City bl 1hlt l!J U ,_
--_ ... ......, .. " -u.-1n!ID!lllD-
Doc •rid Kitti as ~-to lllSU ()) ([) a .....
thtlr ncm11 to Mulco. ii ht "" ..,...
D Ila Ill .. ,,..,, "" '""" Cil "'""' -runt& as a blm·pallb comic. • O MMe: (C) ,,.. lllll Clll'I"'
f1itll M1llf, and a himself, "Thi f~drl '64-lony Russall.
Suttin of Insult" Cflarllt Clllu m Td et CltU"llllCll
Millin MllMr Ind Ktnt MeConl m ""' Malt
also tlllS1. f!) 111111f T.C Ani1tN1c
0 NOW NEW TIME! fD t i!IC!l'! IKWnt It ht * SMASH ACTION HrT er.n Thouaf'lb of •.Chill W1r mlll· uTHE ROOKIES" t11y crlmlnal n tit facts duth Oii
D C'J 00 Fl Tiii ....._ "'''" 111t 11llows. t9'3 Acac11my t.1re
1bllld !dot" Winll Glllls' lffortl 19 wl1111tr'fot' best !hit·ICtioft short.
pt ~ed J'D\1111 Mid., flbllnl f'O') Dtd !'lllllSlll Dlw '° ,,.,~ .,., ... ,. ~lid ........ 11:1s m "'"" .....
111 b 1CCUSld.of the ll*tJ llillllll lt:JOl.l'(J}m i.tt lllntt: (C) '1111
ol' thl W • brother. ~Mn Anwf" <*'I 70 -Pttar !!!=~ C.mts,.lltMIDlly. ~· "" 0 II§ f!l) """' -11>••111 c..lft p fonri laltt
ll)!lriCWITillTi-.1'11tMtt, O (J)(l)Jld:,.., T ....... r..
ffMI 11111' Elolor'ln l)rtll'ldo and mtdilMI ~ Cm wtll Id It
Claudio Yitt ... aon 11.C • •rd! Jld: Pait'• Pll'trltl 111 1111dnllht con·
.. , f1lto ttlt Mllmll lvflllt wt1IHOll
the 111JSt11ious 1..C Wlf·liM ~ (It Tl t.I .. Tni$
AW• 1r1111. m Ja1lll el""'"""" m-m Mlpilit. YllM1 .... ll.1IO -Alf'" Hftdlcd ,,_. m MIM1 (!lw) .,,.. .-" °"' , ...
(COlil} ':ts--Oltvll deHrtilllnd, Pll • Wiit It........ -
O'B11t•. 12'JI ID_, ...... -( ... ) w
t:JO fl' Mlf'f 1tttft1 ... -llffltttl ctoddMd. m--m--llil-1.-ma CJJ-"°'a CJJ-· ..., °" -,,.,__
lutlta " Llilcll Hlnf• ... • .....
I
' '
Acting ln1port
HOLLYWOOD (UP[)
France's Dominque Sanda will
star oJ>IX)Site Paul Newman in
"The Mackintruh Man" at
Warner Bros.
•
~ .. -·~ ......... ~ ..... ~ fntlol • ..., .... ........ -..-.··""-··-........ ----,..
iinu@@at
,
LOOK IN ..
CHANNEL 30
Rod !tie Goel wlio ...... ,
UP ' 'IARIRA-Ttl~E STREI
II) IP.O
P\IS•UflM.llVIM
"""''''""'"' l'ofllMl CIT""
---· •
lr...!ii! ........ .....,. ..... w_..\ .,.....,_11( llmlllMMX111£ ...,a H0110N --·llD c.c. mw llXD rtDU. smu SJOOCS ffl1!Y lll1(1S .. -. JOI
-.AH Mll'lt Mllll llQJllU ·IX HA• l!li lll!lla Af"-9·1DU ..
........ Al.El · ..... ICIWDlll.ll( __.,11-.IUllllllJllltmll 116 ...... .,,,...liWJ) _.,Dl-.illll ' ._.. -·-----
··--a11-alltlM Ce:Hlt! .... ·-
"WAR DEVILS"
-------_ .. __
CO.NIT
JA(lllMMOlll
WAlllTWIEN
MIN&WOMIN
IATID("J -... _.,
CO-NIT
GENt HACKMA.N
PRIME CUT
Boat Shows Blossom For tl1e Reco1·d
J_.-y. ud l'ej)nlary an
bool l!W -tbn>u&bout the couctry -a Ume when
boat ...,,.,.. pthe< at the ...
tloo'• ISl*ltlon .,.. .... to ...
wlllll'I new llld, ~ -and
~t OWMJ1t f#artn to view Ibo <:/an U>oy .-day hope
toO'lll.
feature boa t.I wblch prtt<de
It.
'!ha San FranclJco Sport and
Boal Sbaw I.I .... In pro(f!IS.
Allhouch It leaturts boat.I of
i ll klndl. It elao lndwloa a
number ol other span. ........
tioo and outdoor equlpment
not as s ociat ed with
watercraft.
AOVANCI! REPORTS IJ>.
dicate the ll3nl National Boal
Show wUJ once again fill lbe
Coor l1oon of the I00,000
IQUl~foot Coliseum with I
comp<ebenslve u p • t o • t b •
m I n u t e and into-~rututt
dlsP,lay ol bpals, marine
eJ181ne., outboald moton ud
naullcal occmory ~
Some 15 million wwCb ol pt'Od-
ucts are e1pedld to be on
display.
Dlssolutlons
Of Jtla rrlage
'lbe Natlmaj -!loot Show.
blaelt and -prtStlgloos pulillc 'eXhlbltlon ol boats and
1111ull<al equlpmtn~ ope~
Jan. 1tl at the New York
COllJeum and kicks olf a hoc\
ol Others throughout the OOWI·
tty.
Second largest &how In the
U.S. la .tbe Los Angel<1 Boat
Show, • apomored by the
jQgthem ,Callfomla Marine
Assoclallon. It wW open Feb. 2
at tbe Los Angtlos CoovenUon
C.n1'r, overlapplllg the N"'
York.expoollloo by two days.
MANY .LOCAL boat buildm
and· eq~pmeol manufacturer.s
w!D be exhibiting at botb Che
New-York and Los Angeles -·· AltbolJlb the New York show claims to be the lirsl,
thett . an oUler 3JlOl1 and
recreation shows w h t c h
Thlrd mQOt lmporUnt all
boat IMw Is the Mlaml
lnltmatlonal Boat Sllow which
gets under way Feb. :13 and
runs thtougb the 21th.
THE NATIONAL Boil Show
&poo!Ond by Che National
Auoclallon of Engine and
Boll Manufacturers, I s
httatdinc several new changu
In lonnat tills yur, desl(ned
primarily for the benefll of
after.business.boun viewers.
The Uklay abow wW ttmaln
open until co p.m. dally for all
buc the Sunday achedules.
"We found It was dllllcull
for many alter-buJlnes>.boors
. visitors to sbop ell tbose aisles
before we closed the doors at 9
p.m. during last year's ...
perimental format," said
Frank Scalpone, managing
director.
SCV A reports the earliest
.. ii.uc of eshlblt 1poce In the
. )llstory or the Los Angeles >bow. All "40,000 tqUare feet In
the Los Angtl" Convention
c.ncer wen aold 1211 d>YS In
adv...,. of Che show opeolng.
STAN MllLER, s ho w
chairman, "1d there wue 105
boat manurac1urers 1n the 1m
show and tbac 101 ot them bad
1lgned qaln tbla year.
Despite the !let tbal SCMA •
also 1poneon an aU-Allboat
show, the big show will also
carry a large sectloo devoted
to sail.
The show will also have IM
booth exhibitors, re~Ung
nearly every kind of nautical
accessory maker.
UPIT .........
Get D elp
Pickell; at Milwaukee
Museum get an assist
from statue with sign
as strike by nearly 12,·
000 employes of rily.
and county s c ho o l
groups continues.
Buyers
:4.lkge
Fraud
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
SS.million class act.i on suit
alleging fraud in a Riverside
County land development proj.
ect bas been filed in Superior
Court against Grayco Land
Eacrow Lid., La Qulnca
Escaees Ud. and La Qutoca
~Club.
The Superior Court suit was
brought by Peter F. and
Brigette A. Hauber of
Burbank on behalf of all
(CONSUMER)
---.. - ---• · . pei:soos wbo bought lot. ac Che
fr~~ISTIJil~U>NG-= Gboot:J!-sailin!fllinghy is--dewlopment. 'l'be-Hau6ers
launched from a beach in light airs. The boat has contracted. for a $7,750 lot in
-BOAT SHOW QUEEN--
5.F.'1 Margot Low
Australian
Wins Heat
ADELAIDE, Australia (AP)
._ Brian Snowden or Australia
edged Wally G....,. of the
United States in · winning the
sixth and final heat of the
World .q<I sailing cham·
pionsbip today.
Gl'tene took. the early lead
and stayed ln f POnt until the
halfway pioint, before Snowden
moved ahead and held a slight
-advantage . to-the-finish. Ma:r Shea/fe, another Australian,
Wit t4ird-
been reaes;gnea-unn1lke-it roomier"and-easier to -the La Quinla-n....t Oub.
handle. ·rr·hu. a-beaching rudder and pivoting cen· The swt contends 9rayco,
terboard for beach launching. ba..d in Pasadena, lalsely . :r-and fraudulently and with the
Boot Manufacturer
To Move to County
Janus, Inc., '118.nufacturer n{
tbe Gbost-13 sailing dinghy; is
moving its plant from the Lf\s
Angeles InternatiOnal Airport
district In Inglewood to • 50
percenl larger plant in Sallls
Ana.
The new manufacturing
plant ..W be localed al 11108 N.
Fuller Ave. and wilt-feature a
17,500 square .food area .
When the nei¥ plant is ~ully
operational it vrill be pro-
ducing six of the daysailers
per day . 1be boats are sold
Lhrough 65 dealers from coast·
to-coast.
Administrative offices of the
firm will remain at 10909
,Inglewood Ave., Inglewood.
AT .THE SAME time, the
company . announced .it was
redesl~ing the Ghost-13 to
make it roomier and easier to
handle.
Seats along each side have
beeo lengthened to IV. fee l,
compared with five feet in the
original model. M a result , ll
people can sil side by side in
seats below the deck level.
The fool well bas been
widened by seven inches '° 25
iDcbe&, also contributing to.An--
creased comforL Because the
fool well has been widened
and eitended forward of the
mast, a crew mtmber can now move more easily rrom
side to side for tacking.
intent to deceive and defraud
prorm,ed buyen conveniences
that neVer materialized."
'!'be buyers purported! y
were told that a golf course. a
man-made lake rimmed wtth
trees and a private boat dock,
tennis courts and a shopping
ceoeer would be part of Che
development.
e Or ange S1dt
LOS ANGELES (AP)
xe:ros O>rp. owes.orange trees
to about 100,000 customers,
conte.nds a class actiOn civil
suit flied In SuperK>r Court
here.
Attorney Ernest R. Baldwin
and bis colleagues, who filed
the suit, '8ald they amwered a
sales promotion ~ure last
fall which stated they would
be given a free orange _tree,
valued at $10, for ordering a
carton of Xerox chemicals
worth about $58.
The chemicals arrived, but
the tree didn't, Baldwin said.
He estimated that about
100,000 other customers failed
to gft the trees. ·
• 7'/o EXtt11
Congress
Filmstrip
Available
Timed to coincide "'ith the
opening days of the 93rd
Congress' session, a ne1v
filmstrip entitled "Congress
Today'' is being made
available in SS public and
parochial school dassrooms
in\•olved in the ln-claMrOOm
news program co-sponsored by
the DAU. Y PILOT and tile
Irvine Company.
The filmstrip is one of a
series of monthl y in-depth
studies furnished by the DA·
lL Y Pnm, with financial
assistance of the Irv ine Com-
pany . The program produced
by Visual Education Con-
sulta nts IVEC) is designed to
keep students in the junior
high and high school levels
aware al world and national
events.
TH E PA RT!CIPATING
Orange Coast area schools
also receive weekly filmstrips
as part of the VEC program.
"Congress Today" and other
titles in the filmstrip series are
available on a free loan basis
to classroom teacher! not
partic!pating in the DAILY
P-IW!'.Irvine COmpany pro-
gram.
Tbes_e_ gin be obtained by_
contacting the DAILY PILOT
Public Service Dept. at 642-
4321, Ext. 774.
The congressional study is
new and up-to.date, viewing
the new OJngress as it is
today.
AL1110UGH PRESIOEl\'T
Nixon won rH lection by a
landslide in November. his
coattails proved too short to
give the Republican party an
edge in ei ther house of
Congress. The Democrats
managed to keep control of
both the Senale and the House.
as they"'Rave since 195f. and
once agatn Nixon will be work·
ing with a Congress controlled
by the oppos iUon party.
How did the elections
change the complexlon of the
93rd Congress? Students learn
from the ·fimstrip that tfle
Republicans gained more than
10 seats in the House of
Representati\'es, while the
Democrats gained t"·o Senate
seats.
There also vdll be more
women in this session of
Congress. Fourteen women
"'On se.ats in the House com·
pared to 12 in the previous
C.OOgrts!I. However, t h e
Sena te 's only woman member,
P.targaret Otase Smith of
P..fain, klSt in her reelection
bid.
There also will be more
blacks . with 16 having "'on
seats ln the House. compared
"ith 12 in 1970. The Senate's
on1y black member, Edw ard
Brooke of 1'.1assachusetts. won
reelection.
Oarsman
Gives Up
SACRAME1''TO (AP ) -A
aurvey of pesticide residue in
fresh produce for sale in SS
retail food stores in Northern
California showed none of the
158 samples had residq~ in .n -
cess of legal tolerances, the
State De partment of
Agricultun! says.
The department said it con·~--------------------,
,flqnors for Eagle
American Eag!Q, Ted Turner's converted 1 Z.meter
is pbotognphe1rtrom air u llM> bnezes toward first
to finish In rugged Sydney to Holle.rt (Tumanl1)
t'lce 1t year's end.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -o.nman Patrick Queonel, :13,
who rowed mono tban I ,CICIO
miles toward Hawaii from san
Francisco in a :zl.loOt dory,
bu cJven up and bitd>ed a
ride 1o SeaUle on a Cout
ducted the survey during
October and November.
Samples were taken in
11tores ranging from Stanislaus
COUnty OO<lh to the Oregoo
line. Cbe department said, and
Included apples,· Swiss chard
cauliOowtr, grapes. lettuce
and other prvchlco.
eE-l*Cltri
Gum! cutt«. LOS ANGELES CAP) -The
"Rt wu just tlred aod run-f(ll'IDS' uecuttve dlrtc1or of
ning abort ol supplltl f'riilay •" the Ea-Boys Club b
said a Coast G U I r d acbeduled to £ a C e I
spok<lman. ··~ _. in!~ hearing Peb. 15 '~ lllnrand be pt Oif cliil'Jl'S tbat lletook 15.84& decided to qui~" he added. In doaallo to the nonprofit
Quesnel left hon .l)cL S. orRBn111Uolt.
dctonnined to -3.4llO 'l'he district attorney'• omC.
miles to the illudl in tho dory Aid John George UrioltesuJ,
Hawall Kai, but the coast SS, ..., amlgDed oo l<\len
Guan! launched a ..arcb for COW!b of grand theft and
bim Dec. 11 alle< Che freed oo $1.llOll bail.
mad!anlmon Hooe Kone UriotteCW Is acculed o1
Hori>on rsdloed Chai ~esnel depositing dot\ailou to tbe
.......i to be bavlnl tough dub· In an cmaulhorblld blllt
gofJic a1alnat helvy aeas. · l<COUnl at leut ..... limes.
•
\
Bill Vetoed
PO W Kin Get Relief
llAl\RISBURG. Pa. tUPll -Gov. MllCoo J. -Sharp
1111 -a bill that would penaliZ< che wives of mlsslnjJ
-who renoarry before Cbeir bwbands are <Ic-
eland-· Tbe btI1 pbsed botb the sate House and s.n.c. at1<r
1Ellgthy dobale on It.I ""'1Slitulionalily. Ii. spon90rs rell
the gov..-would Jive ~ approval.
TH£..BILL WOULD HA VE-made the •1v .. Ineligible
for ICl'Vk::emen's benefits and their husblnd's estates.
It Ibo woukt have made children ineligible nine months
l!ter the mlastng M:rvioemen 's death.
"No one cao fail to be moved by the hmfshlp and
trauma wffered by our soldiers missing in action and by
1heir £amlllrs," Sharp said.
• BUT HE SAID THE l1w wa.t "estmncly vague and
panltlve" end did oot lllJOC~Y whether it would allect Cho<e
mu.Ing In lldlcm In ""' prior "' tilt Vietnam conflict .
,
•
OAIL V PILOT J f
Ge~r11 __ c.;_ __ _ ,Genertl
Bock Boy-$2'.SOO
Dnne a 1nop & n:IO\'t m: This
3 BR. ~ lcob gn\1l
ouUidC! • but dlny in1nde •
llou:M! ts vat"Rnl &: nt'l'f1s
l(lfTK' kl\'el Prit"t'd IG ~II
fasl ! Call ~ Carptt
Rea.lion, ~.
O\\rN ER trans., 4 bl.."Clrnis.,
dlnl~ rm. t>nlry hall,
hu\11-ln.1, custorn ('Pramu.'
kitchen 11.lr, brk, $-10.~.
.Mo.-173>,
O\VNER mui;.t 51;•lJ :'I ho--rlrrn~.
11ss1une 6•, loon, d1n1ni; rn1,
hri.•plRrt', huilt-1ns, brk .
s:n.250. &a0-1111
BY OWNER
Corona del Mar •
Home And Income
South of lht' hl.a:h11o;ay t.nd
JUlit a &.bort walk to llw
b;:-ach. O"'nC'" unit has 111>'0 .111~<'lou!I °l)e(l"'JOmll nod 1~'
bttlh" plus de111cht"d
bttch<·lor it'lt'flllu' uni L Just
"'Pllhlh><I 1hmu.:hnl11. MO\'\'
In l'ondHlon. E:xC<'llcnt ~n·
lal rel'Ol'tl. ~.900.
C. F. Colesworthy
640-0020
R-2 ZONE
Plo'nty Qt 1oon1 tu huild that
lllMltllf' UIUt Oll!U 1h1• n•flr (If
1!11~ :: bl'cln'IOm hon1~. Pri<'·
··~•t only $26.9:il. JIURR'''
J RR, 111 DA . Cpti. 1ir~.
1hshv.·a.shcr, Fla~ston1.• 1mll(I
v.·11h bu!ll·ln BBQ-Copp('!'
pl11n1bing, h.!lrrlv.'OOd fiOOI'~.
T~ hlfleka from iclion&-.
8lh grade. Cul-dE'·MC. ntA
or Conv. $26.500. Call for
~pp't t~. !i.i7~·--
~~ COATS c I, W WALLACE
REALTORS
-S44-4141-
(0pen Ev1nin95) 4 Bdrm., 2 Bath
Nt>\v eiu·pets 1hruout, 2 c11r
gua.gc. 1-Astsidt! Co!!t.a
~lcsa, $28.950.
Roy McC1rdle ,Realtor
1810 Nt"wpon Blvd .• c.r.t.
546-n2'
* 4 UNITS * Nt:nr To"'" & Country !n
Orangt>. Bis:' 3 BR. 2 hit.
O\\'rK'r's "'/frpl + 3 Bl~.
-GE.111M1--
1610 \\'.Coast Hv.·y., NB.
Rt.:ALTOllS 612-162."I
E1stttde Ranch Houle-
Cuaton1 3 Br, 2 Ba, bu ill 10
laat . Gas built-ins llug1•
6~170 Jot -f.1aSSI\'(' bMt'k
fireplace, dining area. laun-
dry rQOm, lot& ol C'xtras.
Call Rt.>d CarpL't R.calton., -· The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Mas:ketplace
[ ~rs~INDEXJ
-·· ... I~
Classification I 00-124
Mobil• Hornet: ]~
Classification 125-149
I &• [stale,
General ]~
Classification 150-184
I FNnc:ial ][i]
Classification 200-260
-...... !lie ]
Clai.tiflcation 300.J:iS
-............. J~
Classification 360-370 . [ . ., .. ,, I~
Classificati on 400-465
--. .. ]~
C la1sificotion 500-510 ........ I~
Classifi cation 525-513 l
I ~~·-l~
Classification 550 .r,55 I Wlro<t~o ]~ I
Classification 575-580 I
l-· .. ·-1~
Classification 600-699 I ..,..,_. ![Ill
Classification 700-710
-![§]
Classification 800-831:.
[ ---l~
Classif ication 850-858
[-~~]~
Classification 900-912
[ 1-M~ ][jj]
C~11ifi catlon 9 I 5-9'49 I ..... w. · 1§1
Cla11lfic.ation 950-990
•
NEWPORT DUPLEX
3 13dm1!'. clo\\n, :! up. Shu~
('arpi•l1n1:. frpll·. 111 jo\\'t•r.
Nl<'l'IY dt'('Or1ttNt u p 11 f' r
unl1. 1tish\1•ashr1· & buill-ins.
$66.lXKl.
C;11!: 67:1·3663 675-8886 Evrs.
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
ZOZS 'W lfllboo •11·)66)
SALESPEOPLE
NEEDED
Don· 1 ht-fooled by 1 Ix-..._
rallt'f! hij:gies! \V(' g11'f• "ur
AAlt'·s proplc p<'rso1111l help.
lair rornmiu1011 splil, lull
t1nu· and n1any more
hC'nclus. 1'r)' us, you'll like
u~. \\'.E. LACH.ENMYER
H~.:AJ. t.:STATt.:, 1860
Nr..,.·port lil\'d., C. ~1 .
646-:t!r.!8.
EXECUTIVES
Lov('ly spacious 4 br<lroon1,
3 hath, forn111 I dining 1'001TI,
\\'J!h pool . this is a !lpt'c tur·
ul<ir hon11• 10 pnler!ain in.
A large :\1HR SU\!(' m11kr
for t·om fortahlf' I 1 v 1 n g.
$85,000. It "on·t last.
Choice Waterfront1
Linda Isl£' Lagoon -5 BR ,
fan11ly, 2 \\'el 00~ -rK'\\.
S2H9,:il0. Lido Nord '4 BR. -
lge. family nn.; space .for
l;or~C' hoal. $265.fOO. Bolh
Wry !lj)l'Cllll pt'UJJCrties!
EilJ>Cn llud!IOn.
COLD\Vl::U •• BANKER
Rcnl1ors 644·2130. 8.\"l--0700
550 Ne<A•port Cerner Dr.
$32,950
COLLEGE-P ARK
3 bMrm., hug(' fanUly m1.,
entry hall, dining m1., xtm
<•u!lng area in kilchcn, 2
bu1lt·ins, 2 nalurRI brick fu't'places, brk, :,.ro-rno
TARBELL
2955 Harbor, Coiita ~1eaa
CAPRISTRANO
RANCH HOME
Room for 4 helnt!11; 5
h<'<lroom, lam. ho m r.
J>ri,·ar" rood. Coun!ry n1 -
n1ospl)('re -viC\\'!j. 36' J:>oot.
l:i J',l1n. IG airport. $78,950.
Call \.<'Of'J{e Grupe
COLO\\'El.L, RANh"ER
RPallors 644-2430, lt1J.{1700
550 Newport Crntrr Dr.
NEW LISTING
Easlsi<le O:>sta Mci;a: loveif
.1 b<lrrn,. 1 1 ~ b11's. Xlnt cond.
Quirk pos:.rss. Offcrcs;t (ol· s 21( ' t:VI .
·SHARP 3 BR.
J:\,. h;i1h hunu· nn (·holt.'f' ('OI'•
r\f'r luo. Hr1{'k frplt•., hlrn~ .•
nrv.· (1)ppC'r plumbing.
Yuu~ for S:'.1.500.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 67S-64S9
-Eastside R-2 $21 ,500
2 BR, frame hOusc on latg('
vnlunhlc R·2 lot · 7oned for
II !riplrox • huy MW • build
larrr rVl'ry cn1y, l1vt'11blrt.
Dill lt1...-J Carprt Rl·altnr.;.
;tm-~10.
Put a Hiiie "1001" 1n your
J_,i·v1s-~Pll lhosr bRubl~s for
"bu<'ks". Call Classified
642-5678.
The
DAI LY
PILOT
ORANGE
•
COA ST'S
leadi ng
Mar ketplace
•
•
l•
-·-
'
'
"
' ~·
i
l
Z0 DAILY PILOT MoodQ, Jll>u#J 8, 1973
,
Everyone +ie1
Sometliing That
Someo ne Else Wanh
DAILY .PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With 11 Want Ad ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 0642-5678 for · Fast Results
-----------" -------~~~~~ -"''* I~ I -"'.. I~ I -"'.. I~ I _..... l~ I _..,_ I~ I _ ... '* l~ I _ ..... _.., ..
* South of The Highway .. ,
• . • Corona del Mar
DOLI.HOUSE with new STRESSED garage
waitip.g for a unit! 2 bedroom house com·
pletely remodeled in perfect condition. Easi·
ly expandable. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $55,000.
* Value Conscious??
Buy this condo
-BACK BAY AREA -3 Bedroom, 2th balhi .!>~t·in kitchen , stone fireplace. FAM!·
LY nuvM, community pool & REC. ROOMS
including billiards. Fee land close to every·
thing. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . $34,500.
AUSTIN-SMITH, GofMAN & ASSOCIATES
REAL TORS M4'n7o
General
* * * * * * TAYLOR CO.
4 Uii/l()Ut li(),tt(
ABSOLUTE ELEGANCE
Top·of-the-line Dover Shores 3 bedroom with
gardens that will mesmerize you, a pool that
will relax yo u, a portico that makes you want
to entertain and catch this1 a sunny kitchen
that makes you want to linger over the
disl)es. Now that's absolute elegance! And
it's easy to see! And recognize the value at
$137.500!
BAYCREST BONANZA
4 BR., 3 BA., POOL
Ivan Wella ~story. on
huge "Fee Simple" lot.
~ b'ee-Uned lane In fliieit area. ownenrno--vlilg Ea.st. de5lre prompt aa.le.
Price just Muced to
$92,000. A spotless home In
outstanding nellhborhood!
(multiply listed byJ
!~ lPst ~~l~ .P.!urr'
.. ~ ...
2414 Vl!ta del Oro
NtrNJ>Ort Beach
644-1133 ANYTrME UNl9UI HOMU Of NIWPOIT IU.CH, 641-6500
A J .. tl., ., hrt Jecobsea MESA VERDE
U~l()Uf: t1()Mf:S ooe o< theV~t~pt home.
REAL TORS ln the area. 4 bedrooms, 2 l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!![!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!J!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I baths with a beautiful 1~ panoramic view of Mesa
General General Verde Country CI u b. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!I Beautiful drape~ and lush
11 carpels. Famlly room
paneled with rough cut
redwood, blerlding with
perfectly corinated flooring.
Corner lot with ample room
for camper or boat. Set-lhis
tDday ID!' $36,000. >46-2313.
OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUNT') BE NICE/
The Area's
Top Profes1lon1l1
Are 1t Your Service
[II
Macnab-Irvine"·
Oener•I Fount•ln V•Rey
4 - U "Zonod For" OWNER AnXloua. 3 bednna,
FANTASTIC COMMERCIAL ~= ~-'/,,~.J:i. ~~
TUmN -KENNEL-l30.!!i>. m4> 9GU865.
TWO HOUSES ON 1,i ACRE. OWNER \ leave1. Assume $64,000 f,p, Good Santa Ana Heights Jo. 6%% lo.:n, • bedrm, lamUy
$6400 DOWN '"'"'n. "'" price 139 m rm, '"""'" "'"'-' rm, bri<, Call now for deta.ll• .• ', $34,000. (TI4) 982--556G.
Netr Mci'~n & Nf!Wport FULLER Rl!Al-"TY "OWNER-must wll. Aaeume Freeway terrlnc locotion. _ 546-0814 _ 5~% loan, 2 story, balcony,
6" years treah. Gross Jn. 4 bedrms, ttunUY rm, brk,
come 7860 baaed upon 3 BalbcMI l1l1nd $39,900. cnt> MZ-2561.
-($210) 2 bed ($160) After fixed expenses and OLDER .l channlllg 3 Br., Huntington S..Ch
loan peyments $868. Sched-1~ ba., new crpt._, $71.500.1---------1
HunJlnefOn Buch ·•
DUTCH CLEAN
3 Bedroom. 1% Bath, builtlns
iocludina: (llAhwuhtr, w/v.•
crpb A: drpg. )llf'1C' l"Ul-de·
aac lot, only 1ttJll to a.
lovely park. 4 yrg new Ir;
all improvements in. Quick
_...ion. Full price only
129 ..... 962118Sl.
1111illt
BROKERS INC.
uled cash spendable which Owner, 67~l488. Spf al S f
"13.31 c.,h plua 8.34 equity Coron• d•I Mor r ta rcGH I •-------•I bµlld•p. Total return 21.TI. Hanl·t<><om .. by! You bet! Walk to Waves
All this and a swlmmin& 2 BR • Triplex "FnnclttCan Foun\a!rut by Spanlah trl·<evel, formal dht· pool, tool $ the Sea" 5 Bednn 4 family 1.... trl !lo --t O'.lNTACT 75,000 rm. 3 tile ba ..... °""' :ml ·~· • um pa • -~· • C ' I .J family rm w/wet bar. 3 RICHARD VAN WERT Here's your opportunity to sq t 11• super comfort, up-BR, 3 BA. huge cul-Oe·sac • 645-4048 owo lheae tine trlplexea In gnded tltruoul. Luge patio. )ol. Call 96H456.
Blue Ribbon Corona del prof ldlcp yards, fully
Elmore Company Mar. Two bedrooms, each sprinklered for low maint.
R/E Div, with private balconies Pritt only $53,900 with only
quality construction, wall'. 10% down. CALL 962-8851. Mission Yieio 10..watt carpets and drapes.
$41,500 You• mottey lnvtot<ll ln thla income property will return ·l BR. & FamUy YoU a sub1t1antlal dJvidend. 1!11i$it
BROKERS INC. Gorgeowi Miuion y I e j-o Call now for details and
area! A trl-levcl Deane showing. 613--8550.
home. Giant living room. OPENnLt•"'SFUNTDBE~I $28,. rr;:~71~::;~~ [11Bi11111 =·!~~ ~~
conditioner and dishwasher~ than ~t. Oiarmln& 3
Club lacilities include PCX>L l'M HAL bedrm near xlnt schools &
and TENNIS COURTS! Call BUY MY tthopplng. Anltle deep shag
la.ti -OWNER VERY ANX· carpets thruout Many
IOUS -645-0303. L11tinga on two rent.al prop.-decorator touches. Ca1l
erties. One l8 an older !Mi-4474. -......... "f
10111\I f 01 SO\
'" R£A,L TORS
duplex now reduced to Ontu
$50,950 and the other is a ~
triplex at 179,950 which ls -rimTf"2l $1,000 below what a -similar
property just sold for,
Call 67>-1125
17910 MAGNOLIA, F.v.
•• I
PARK
HUNTINGTON
Gatallna ! Model 4 and family
-room plus large oompleted bonUJ room. Fully im-
proved. Qulck -· Priced at only $52• Call
96Ul!SL
-t~·11.!!111s·1t
. BROKERS INC..
POOL TIME
Vacant 3 BR, 2 BA, $27,500.
Lg liv rm, kit/lam rm combo, all bltin appl's,
upgraded w/w crptJ &
drps, oversized dbl pr,
23'x38' pool. $1,400 dn
w/paymts less than rent.
NEED CASH?
8 24 HOUR SERVICE 8
CALL ua first -We will sell
your property or gUal'8Jltee
your equity ~fore moving
day. CALL tor irnmed. appt. -·
$23,950 · Condo. 4BR. 2 Ba.
$28,250 • Shm'p 4 BR. Jo.1
oond.
$29,000 • 3 BR + pool
$31,950 • 3 BR + pool, upgrd.
$39,500 - 3 BR, lg llvnn.
$47 ,500 -4 U11ib!:. 2 Br ea.
Inn• $49,900 -4 BR 3 c gar. Prestg
CALL 842-1418 •
•
,Arri • WAUCft
l&Al.utNI inn Beach Blvd., H.B.
\ 9 UNITS! WELL KEPT.
i, Units grossed ovt.r $1.3,0CO
per year and produce :i.
13.:M% return on your in-
wstmtnt. Good occupancy l>n1' $96,500.
UNIVERSITY PARK
Out1tanding ···vandi-rbllt"
rnode1; 4 BR, great family
rm. A kitchen. View Joe. A
tparkll"'f home • JUST
LJST'ED -$63,500 ... Oiuck"
U!W --.. ' COLOWEU. BANKER
Rtalton M+-:MJO -550 Newport Center OJ:·
S.11"1l>t-old"1rtU!I. _. Iii! '-'-'.;::.;.:;.... ____ __,_...,~~Jtulf""'.'------
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M~. J111Ull'/ 8. 1973 DAILY PILOT J.f. _ .... -~ I ~ l ~I ~ I~~[ -~-!;I ---I~ I ---l~I -"'-I~ -."'-~ l;';"'~-~~T~"'~';-~~~=·l ';cjoo~-=·~jmg~ln:l~um~;~•~;i;~.J;;~~~j~C~~on~"'°'~~~m~ln~Jum;;~•::~::;~·1 ;1t.~~·~li•fu~~~te~::::~:~~\:_;. ___ ii,_iiii,iiiiiiiiiiii;.:iiiii~ -Unlum. _ u ... ___ UnL·-. ..__ 1_ -. -~ T"" .. _ 305 Condominiums A....._ Fum
-.. ~ 160 for .... 111 Ix-.__. 112 , -"""""==!!!:lty:.L.._...:;~ "~= ___ "-_
1
-.1"---"-.....;c;.;. ~·-. ESCAPE NOWll = ,. = _ _ !!lrv~lno~~~~:::==:::l~~U~n~fv5r~n~-;!==~320~,Costa Meta ·•.IO 1 ~BR, 2 bL ...-b1o t:OMMEROAL ,,,_,.. A WHOLESALE ::' L NI uo1 SW .. Ti~~.,'"~ WALNUT SQUARE ~ -==-~ ~ DISTRIBUTORSHIP LANDLORDS! 2 BR. 2 BL A1'/amd ... !260 3 •:::, : a. hi Casa de Oro
ttof'8 fireplace, On a nee. MUii be l.C*I. U.vt Larse 0irp. ll8!ds depend-\\'e SpeclaJ.l2e ln Newport l BR. 2 Ba.. &it/rood •••. $280 l>tiaut v~ on ...!u -~· AU. UTILM'JES PAID
f&'xl(D' lot. All for ~.500. ~ to S2SO.OOO. Call aNe pt1'IOn to~ Com-Bffeh e Corona del Mu • 3 BR. 2 hi. •••••••••••••• $32$ "'All · 1 ' •:::: ._.._...... Compare belore ~ rtnt R~J;l~ BANKER CLOSEOUT SPECIAL =: &uwster R.& =~:=~E~ ~~~to~:t ~ 1 ~~~~~:.~.c~:.$375 ~~~~ZiTI~,ag crpt, ~~.!:"k~e~ea,;:~ ir=~~e~ , RNl &1tat9 Wanted JM BORN N~~s. ~J!V.Ew RENTALS ~:: ~·~: ::::::l: Newport S..ch e ~~::'~~~ atta
* ft.•lck c-L * (nvfttment required $2,496. 6T3-tl30 or $32411 Bl...lJFFS -Ba,ytront. OUlPcle e Home·like 1toraae
L-• a •• ch LAST CONDOMINIUMS -'I'• ----finandn& aJ. unit. 3 BR. 2.., BA. frpl, • Private potio. -·---Will bey ,..., .,......,. All IOwa rapid .......,...,. >"or 1 _a._c_k_Bo"""-'y_____ cutl. "":or, drpo, ""'"'· e Ck><cd 1,,.... w/'1°'""'
DISCOVER PHASE THREE c..n within 72. bn. Call Interview write lnclu&,.. 2 BDRM duplex, -i.. ·~I. pat,.. Nr. pool. '-"'· e Marble pullman • . • e N I 962-88Sl phont No. ....,.. 1525/mo. Y.Tttr Box 25.'i • Kiili.a Bdrms
••• the bt-Au1.y 4 ~acy of o C oslng Costs Dl.atrlbulor Div. l5.5 rar~ 4bpo51.I, bltl'l 510\le, Balboa. ls.larxl, 9aiti2. • Pool • Barbequts • #UI'-
'•"" blueho PaclUc, build a .• 1Fmr~-~11P!"~-... C•
1
rpo
00
1 i 1001 llowud A\lt. CSt41>: Sti-l!:DS~--"SfNCE" 1,..,,,... Townhouse Unfurn. 335 roundt.'d "·Ith pluah land· ~am rne on 1hla large m.u ... r-lor · j(llY.I.... San Mateo, C&lil. 9+101 •p11trano u..ch '700 scaptng,
lot, located In quiet. e $1000 Movn You In 11 .. Rlpklly irowlna Nal'I Corp. lsl Wt"tltem Bank Bldl:'. Newport Be1ch Adull 1l\'lrlf: al Its best peacelul area. Really a .,.,.ftb Incredible fll'w l'Ol'll'ept NEW 3 BR. Opts., double Uniwniity Park, lrvull' 1...ARGE l BR $1.SO ~ ~i,soo Ca~lck Santa Ana Fwy. to Culvert. right .about Yt. IROICERS INC. tor lndu.itry, 1eek1 in. gardg'e, appHancea " ~at Days 552·7000 Nights * Adults P referred * No Pell
mile to Walnut (1st road on Jif(), feli 1 mile RI pt,y wants older bomeo or dlvk1uala 10 own A ope.rat~ ~ A~v:'a,1~.Bch~ J,..Wt..,.2>.-ba•hll, bkne. ct1rpl 365 w. \Vtlll01l gu.1971
' ~~ to "Walnut Square"; or San Diego Fwy. to ttxer upper trom pn pl;)'. ~ha~~~ ~Sou~~ Nr..\V 3 BR. 2 BA home. Lagun• S..ch drps. Pool. 2 ca; gar. S300 WEEKLY-MONTHLY .,,,,,,,,,O/('Z'Z, Culver, left about 3 miles to Walnut. right to Can pa.y cash. Condder ~nt ot s 3, o o o cptd, .,.,., bltna. 496-1025, $160 • ut11 Pd. 1 HI'. So. fl.lo. !ilMr. 548-6966. Executive Sult•• REAL ESTA":TE "Walnut Square" or call 714/551-4041. duplex M. W .... ldt , .....,..,., oulatlnd'"" prot. wkdYS 6-9 PM or wknd.<. Logun~ P•too. ll"00<by Dupl .. ., Furn. 345 2080 Newport Blvd.
'"' S1&-3226 lta l mm rd I a I e I y as Corona del Mir setting. N Cotta Mesa
U90 Clenneyt"e St. CASH for your eq. BehJnd ln demonstrated by the ----------$110 · 2 Br. ap1. Jtui;t ,deck. ewport a.ch '42·2611 ~•. GNIFIC"NT549-<Xll6 ,-------~~:"° ~~ br!1nc~~ ~ta~:!: $250 Yrty, 2 Br. trpl, ~7'1!. oc&,~~svl~ni. ·2 OC~1''"RONT uppt'r 2 Br, STUDIOS & 1 BR'S """' ~ Broome, Newport M, 1 a Sands, National Services t stv/re:t., cpt. drps, pr, Jo"rplc's. 3 lillths. &nut. Av1ul to June 20th $200. mo. e f'REE Unens
OCEAN VIEW Rlty, 60-001. ~~Bl"' dExc~a.nae.
1
8733
2131
~~ Blk be.y il prk. Viev.·. E.xeept.)01\8.l! Adullll. (21.31 795-3018. e FREE Ulilllln
thll condomlhium +· .....,.,..., \I ·· .w.A. 1~-~~-----NU·VIEW RENTALS Duplexff Unfvm. 350 •Full Kltch~n
the belt beach ever + 3 BR, 657-3840. Costa MeN 61J.-4000 Qr "9-hT.?48 • e Heated Pool
3 BA, l1replace, pa.Uo, deck Newport 8Mch Moblle Homes lli Money to Loan 240 LEASE 2 J\R. 2 BA Balboa Penrn1ul1 e Lau"""-· Ji:'acllltiet. & CU.SlQm fumiluro. The --'--------AIMc:W e BRIGHT & Cheery! Spac ...... 3
directiOn of the alert buyer New Engla d For S.I. 125 1 t JD L E/side. 1 J'l('rson, sml pe1, l<M'flhoosc. · .Frplc, wlw 2 BR. den, 2 ba, 1~ blk bl'h & • TV & maid aerv V.\'all iio.ooo~ future! Asking Charm on ~ Motor Home Rentals ;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;;;iiii s oa ns AL~ ~:~~-1 .• 64S.3900 fa~~.~~·~·ck gy:~~ f>!i ~~ ~~:d~ly.A~~ f~ ::~=t~:ceadult• only. SANDCASTLE p • la Buslnus 6~% INTEREST & rec. facthllc~. $.1Ckl. nio. hlwn.'ltrs), 536·351S or Balconlt>t fireplaces beam·
en1nsu SALES & LEASING __ o_ppor1 ..... _un_i_.ty.__ __ 200.;_; 2nd TD Loans • SPREADING Room! 3 Br, ~~1 1';·~' + $100. security. 213/863-1008. Ni eeut,,V, wood ~nelin1 • .REAL ESTA TE \Valklng dist~ to Ocean lrg fncd yd, kids/pet. S200. -""=''-""'--~----I Corona del M i r carpeting, drapes. Recrea-, 494-IOJS and Bay Beachl!ii. A full ~ facll){y A ONE MAN ALA Rentals • 64S.3900 3 Bedroom!!. 1 ~;. bath:!, 11\·ing lk:ln building with pool.
!ipack>us 2.500 sq. ft. family Oarxnar Motor HlneS BUSINESS Lowell! rate• Omnl:'t' Co. TO\\.NO~tOUSE 3 Bdrm. 11.1 ~m. lumily room • l BP., drn. 2 BA, 2 levels, Furn & unturn. &cheiot .l
hon'le .,.,;th 4 large bed~ $2,000 INVESTMENT "WE BUY TO'S" Ba, 2 car garage, Gre<'nbelL f1n-pla~ and de,,, Kltchc>n cfld1 ""'P· 1'nlmnc('. $300. I hdnns. front S135. 140 \V. PRICED RIGHTI
Sig ocean view! 3 Bdrm.,
2 bath home "''ilh tx>autilul
view of ocean & hills. Lf:e.
living & family nn. w/lrplc.
Attached 2 car I'~· Nice
patio areas. Euy-care land·
acapin&:. A jewel at $49,950.
• $2800 *
oms, Including a h~e Sll •6BOO S Pool, nr, So est Plai.a. Yrly y,·i1h bui1tins, d1$h"•asher , 497-25Q, 4:94-0045. Y.'llAOn (Jus1 \\'est of Ne....'·
1naster suite with Ocean attler Mt9. Co. JcflS(". 552-Til2. .,.,•acer so!tcrl('r, 11pnnklel'$ in C 1 Me rri11 Bl\•d.I
View and Sun Deck, Fanlily (Can Start P1rt Time) 642·2171 S4S-0611 vard. S300 mo. Real E..~ta1e 1 .o.0;.;•,.•:..c..;,:_11;.;,_ _____ I
Room, Sheltt.'red Patio. Big CLEAN a COOL Sctvlna: Harbor ~a Z1 yn, 3 y~: H~~d~::tstc~ ri1ana1:en1('nt Co. 5574193. • • ? BR DUPLEX El Puerto Mesa
Country Kilchen. Enjoy the Huntington Beach. La I e ~JI,~~' a ;~ri;.AB~ Money Wanted 2SO S2lOJmo. lst & last mo's, On ~lajor gn_"Cn belt. yard. & garagt', near':~~~ 1 BR's -$130 & UP ~~fe. $84,500, Call :OOo:! ~~=:s 'rU:: BUSINESS SoerVicing local N>nl. Call 891-9361. llanoY(_ir model, 3 br, l~ $165 mo. 998-1146. Unfum. & Furn.
adult parka. Low spa« rent. stores, etc., wtth a NA· 1!~\l:°"'U:,:'ts~~; 1 'CLEAJ=~. ~N~2~B~R~.~Du~pl~ox-. -.,~ncd :::-&sor' Ca~~lral Sc~il. ·~ 2 BR, bl1-.in1, rfrig, C11>t1, All Utllltln Pakl
Xlnt priCj! __ & terms. TIONALl...Y FAMOUS 60 yard. Enc.·ICMed gar. Some 83J-lOlO a.,k for R._M can: drps, 1 child, no pets. Sl65, Pool &: RecntaUon
--t~~~ ~IO..llM 1..1(11,M, ~ ...;;;:;
~9110 YEAR OLD FOOD product Deeds, apl prox. S25,000each, rrpls. '. drps. StO\'l', SltS. 0 _, .. """·?Q')·<: · &'6-2350. 1959 Maple A~ .. CM whlfh b a HOUSEHOLD on singe family homes In 548-6680 non ...... --.... ""'-'l>Jo.'• • AIM gll11l&es fof' rent
WOkD JN AMERICA, is Costa 1-lesa. 7!1r to 8 pct. e Ocean VU, 4 BR. 2BA. 41,io BR, 2 b&, Uni\/ Park ofl Huntington Belch *30 WEEK & UP l...ACUNA Beach, beautiful
mobilehome by ocean, 2 Bl'
2 ba., xlnt cood., lvly park.
Must be seen to appr'!'Ciate.
No pets. 499-1813.
e 0 n sum e d by the int, Owners fmanclally elect kitch fam nn $390 Culver Dr. A\lad Jan. l. • Sud'
ntOUSANDS DAILY In this stahle. """ °""" •,,.,.,, ~1&1 '· GlS-9393 61 1$ wkdys: IMMED OCCUPANCY 1 '° 1 1 BR Apta. Roy McCardlt, Realtor ~ or .,._.... · 552-9314 Sal & Su • • TV & M!Ud Service AvaD.. "----~ Oce•n View • $31,900
l...arge 2-Sty. 4 BR & den on
l 'ii: lots. Sliding doors from
den to sundeck. Bltn., Island
I y p e kltch. Carpeting,
drapes. No better buy in
all the "village."
MISSION REAL TY 494.0731
WOODS COVE. C\ls.tom lge 2
BR, 2 BA home by owner.
l ~ blks to ocean, beam5,
view, deck. Huge lot.
$61,SOO. 'Zn Pearl, 494-6201.
OWN-YOUR-OWN APT. ,
north' end, level. $21,500.
\Vallace L. Neff, Realtor,
494-9318.
L•gun.o Niguel
JONES
REALTY INC.
(714) 673.&210
community, and E"l'\jo)'ll MESA Del Mar, 4 br, tam =c.=o.:..:=-=.::.· :::";:.·___ New 3 Br apts SZIO. mo. • Phone Service-Hid. Pool ~=~ REPEA T 1810 Neowport Bl\ld., C.~1. rm. crpt, drps. $275 n\O. Laguna Niguel Dbl garage, dshwshr e Children a: Pet Sectk>n
548-7729 ~·/xln't ophon. 549--0867. 331 0 l1Wego, H.B. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM $4911. Monarch &y. Brand _ 5364360 548.9756 or ~3967 NO SELLINGI 3 Br, 2 ba, cll"an, sharp. 3112 new 3 BR. Pri\late com· 1 "' I~ Coolidge Ave. $295. Call munlty. Guard i.:'. at l' 8 • 1 month & up
AS PRODUCT I BIGGEST .--. fer"9nt 11! Jim, 642-9411-Private aro?llf! to beach. Newport Beach l Bil, Furn, 2 lrg. closets,
NAME IN FOOD IN· I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili:;iijj-~ I AVAIL. no.,.,. 2 Br & 3 br, ll('Cn'aHon C1Ub. Inc. tennis, -queen size bed, pr-Iv dreu-DUSTRY) IS PRE·SOLD I bltns, yard. Sl~Slr>. h 'in1ming-, vollry ball, etc. N~.Y df'<'Or -3 BR, 2 ~· ing nn. xrra lrg rooms, encl
TIIRU EXTENSIVE AND Houses Furnished 300 rH&-0469, 5-1:>-9491. John. A\la il. ~lar. 8l}-36.17. s~cdish lrpl: 1 blk OC'f'an. gar wlstoragr. Adult1 only,
CONTINUOUS .~ , . Yearly. Chtld ok. S300 00 ,_tll.
AD-SZ50/li.10 . 3 BR. !gr. fenced 'l F-ARL'l lea~e. NE\V 2 Br, 2 fi..12-8520. 203~S F II Cu VERTISING ON TV, Costa Mes.a __, N Good •--Ba on Golf Course $300 U e rton. .m.. RADIO, MAG AZ INES, ya,... e.....· cpts. """· mo·. Call fiTh-20.10 ' NE\V Duplex, 3 br, 2 ba O Poi
NE\\'SPAPERS, ETC., 2 BR trier, furn, $130 mo. util Not~. Agt, 83().603(), 3-8-R-l2"~~=,~·-00--1 -t r~mm 1285-$310 Yrly. \Valk ~--"-'-----
ICOAWANY PR 0 DU CT incld. No childrclJ or pets. 3BR. 2BA. lrg yard, sto\le iD-• a. mo. st a a.•t. lo bch. Encl gar. 6-12-3188 or L
SALES IN EXCESS or l l,(._ ~!&:19 .... se-.~ eluded S2Z'> mo. plus cleaning fl'('. 642-7914 IVE in the "II new DaM .,, ,),,)<;>. 979-Sl27 49!Hl552 · Point Harbor at the
BIUJON OOLI.ARS AN· Laguni Buch · ----"'-"=----tOupl•xn , beautiful Marina Inn Motel,
NUALLY). OONSISTS or HOUSE . l BR. 2 ha., lrp!c. Lido Isl• Fum. or Unfvm. 3S5 34902 Del Obispo SL
COl...l...ECTING FOR IM<X:. Uttl. Pd. Ba .... _,.,. Nr Orani(e Coast College. <496-235:31 Kite"-"" f MERCHANDISE S 0 1... D ~ .... .~... S250 mo. ~. TOWNHOUSE -l Br & -. '""·-. ' • AND REPLENISHING IN· beach. Patio. Full cooking. study, 2ia be.. Yrly-$45() nio. Newport Be1ch ricienc~s & apartment$,
1 WEST N I NE CON·
OOMINIUM, 2 BR. 2 BA.
decorator tunUabinP op-1 Uonal. Eves/Wknds.
49&-2949.
RARE FtND
EASnWFF R $150 • Util Pd. 1 Br. So. 3 BDR~t. a\lailable imme· n --... , dJ ~~., ht-atro pool, dlttct dial VENT 0 Y • RE· L.aguna. Yard. Paho. diately. ....,...ponsinie a 11· '""""" · l Bdr + den. ~ish phones, television, sauna
QUIREMENTS: Oilld/pct. 5414097 Mesa Verdt fln!place, 11,io bath, $2'15. bath, laundry fa.cWUft,
' -·
Ulloli ..
-Lindal11i S.•u!Y
Large, gracefully decorated 4
bdrm., 51A: bath W/pier,
Jountain, hi cetllngs. pool
room. 2 wet ban. Many
built-In features. A pleuure
to show. $195,00>. Jim
Muller
OJLDWELL, BANKER
Realtors 6#-2430 811--0700
550 Newport Center Dr.
154
HOUSE zoned C-2. Will leue
w/opUon to buy, or seU.
I.ow down 646-5337'
CLEAN income prop, cent
C.M. By ovmer. $45,000. E-Z
trrrui. ~2020 or 64~.
Commercial
Property 151
3 STORES
Exce Uent locaUon near
Newport Post Office. Sharp
buUdingll, over 600> sq. ft
Could not be replaced for
the ·price. $89,500. No 2nds
or trades.
GRAHAM RLTY 646-2414
Condominiums
Harbor Vu Homes for sale 160 Beautiful home in very 1--'"-....;..;;.;;c....-.. __ ....;.;:.:
desirable area. So easy to Spacklu.! 2 story 2 BR, ·1 'ii
maintain. Sprinklen, self BA. Blt·lns. frplc. Separate
cleaning oven, much more! garage. Pm.I, recreation
R e al i s t i c a 11 y priced. room, laundry facUltle11 .
.,,. • ..L'n'M Quiet adults only. No ~,,,. children under 15. 2400
NEWPORT SHORES Elden, C.M. 963-2187.
Walk to beach. Lge, 3 BR. $21,!m.
2-Sty. 2'ii: bathJ. Bit-ins. OCEAN View Condos ln 1...a
Hove A Lorge l!Mt?
We ha\IC a home for it • Ul'
slip &: for you, an e\epnt 5
bdrm. home • spadous din-1.rv rm., maid'• room plus
man)' extra.a including a
4 spectacular view! Fee CAMUvwsr~~rA.~LTY eom. xin·· ··-...... Bill l..eon!ml, 66-m79. * 54t-1290 * Dupl1XH/Unlt1
l
$2'15,11'.KJ. Bill Bents
OJLDWEIL, BANKER
Reallm'S 644-2430 833--0700
560 Newport Center Dr.
~Vordo
TAKE OVER V.A. LOAN. 3
BR, 2 bath, den, formal din-
ing room, bt'autlful
landacaped yard1. double
&&DI&' .,.,.Ith built-i n
v.'Ol'bMp area. Completely
carpeted and dra~ each
room. Quiet neighborhood.
% block Adami Elem.
School Near shol>PiniJ and
SD treeway. Avalfable im-
mediately. 9 79-1614.
(°"""')_
Newport H1i911t1 ••le 162 ---e O<ARMJNG e
AUTHENTIC-01...D STYLE
4 Bedrm, 2 Bath House
Rooms &: More Rooms!
Pri<.'f!d to Sell al SlS.300
548-37';5 &16-1919
LOVELY,' custom bit 38R
home in Newport Heights.
Prof lndscped, Enclooed
patio wlgas frplc &r Bar-I>
que. Side yrd for boat
storage_. $42,900. 548-24ffi
CHARMING Randi Style 2
bdrm, ah&ke rool used
bricl< fin?pl. "''""°'led. 132,()CI). Owner. -1446
S•n Ju.n Caplstr•no
14 Units
7 Gold Medallion Duplexes
close to IOUth roast. Will
consider ll"U!t deech for
00....·n. $213,000. full price:.
Walker & Lee
ReaJlon:
54S.7131
NEW BEACH DUPLEXES
AU. new deluxe 4 bl' I 3 hr
each. Balboa Penln, N.B ..
Bal Iale &. 1..S br A: 4 br on
oceanfront. S.7414 or
&4CKll32 Doa lbom_. -· SUPER de\ux -scyle Duplex, Eut O>ul.a Mea, Newport -SJC Each 3 BR. • BA. ,., ....
Hubor View Homos Horse Co1111t1 'f crp<. All •lect ldtchm. -deoor. ~ 2 Bl + Den. Owmlna. pri-Su Juan ~ Iii acre Real Eltate, 6C-22Zl.
.. .., 1ow malnt. r .. -l&Dd . ......._ 10 -. Entin! Income P-rty 166
Form Din. + Nook, l..ush property la b tt I I d a b J e . ' ...,....
Lndlcpd. lmmed. Oc<up. Gentle ...... -..... "' '1'111-2 ·Br, ....., units
_s.._cr ph cfally-1..S, 202< .. lloy.-Thlo--· -w-. 141.>llL IHw down
Port Provence PL, t44-6249. property bu rliim kir 22 or trade up $10.000 eq. Call
1lR. i BA lo Harbor bomn and ' ru.dv for Jlm Bn>ome todl1. Ntwp(ll't
lll(llllantl& 2 blu """' bulldl..i or hold for .... M ... Rlty, 64H<U.
Manners Elem. »IC> Beryl. wstmenc. :t bedroom older 2 HOUSES. 1 lot· F.utskle
For apl'f. ~7U>. owner. =.eoo:nc~sOO. Priot Xlnt rentals, mR rtAr sin
Dullltxn ntar the ocean INVESTMENT D[VJSJON 1 BR hont, $145. tJrl yrds, Jrlbrt ~L. Realtor Dl'fN1K. t , (f1RM10 IJf NICLI Prine only, $31,500. ~'1361. * ,.,,..,.,, " ~ Loll fw Solo 170 D:~~ ~~T ~ lijl'ill u~:.~!~
Must upire to S125 • 1 Br. Frplc. P111t>o. F t 1 y II mo. Yearly 673-2912 meet!ni;i: room, cioae to San
INCO
ME OF Gara.re. Beaut. ocean vM!w oun a n a •Y 3 BR. 2 bath, den. fonnal Oemente and J...quna
. & k>c. , 4 BR 2~ Ba. Frplc DR, beautiful llll'Kbc§p~. :: ~ Beach. Come play ln our
$400-WE-E-K-UP--NUaVIEW RENTALS dihw~r. bio15:. S285/mG;-' _\Vatcr.~ aarch:ner l 1-~Rent-11::1 ·harbor · 1ur r 1n1 , 672-iQ30 or 494-3248 Call 968-3635 Near shopping, SD f'reey,.·a.y. _ . T sportstlshlng, ahopplng and
have serviceable car, START 1,) block Adams Eleni restaurant.a. $50 week and
IMMEDIATELY if aixepted Newport Btach Huntington BMch School. Olmplt:te-ly-aarpelcd up. Bring this ad and
•rxl HAVE the .........,.,,...., and drapct1. Ava.ii. lffimed. Apts. Furn. 360 receive $5 off on flnt ....... ~"~" WAl...K to water. $97 3 BR 2 BA el-R/0 FA ~,,,. c~·-k" $2,000 for Inventory NOW in • · ~... • "''1"" V>l'O'ner !. -wee s rent. tbr: bank. Bachelor. Sl25 duplex. 2 Br. ht, w/w crpts & dl'PIS, dbl Newport Beach Balboa lsl•nd HOUM'. J:!t.f', fncd. lndscpd. Xlnt Joe. Huntington 8ffch
Rent.A-House 979-1430 S735 mo. AGT: 962-44n or
We1trnin1ter 546--3I03. For local tntervtew, Include
year car. specific time
(during bw:lnesa hours)
NOW available to aervice 2·3 BR beaut furn. 2 BA.
account&, and p b o n e A/C, nr beach & CSLB.
number. Write Ouaifled Ad leMt' or rent. S260 furn/$223
No. 499, clo the Dally Pilot, unturn. 892-7853
2 BR, elec bltin RIO, FA ht,
w/w crpts & cl.rps, dbl gar,
ft'nced & landscaped. Xlnt
Joe. S200/mo. AG T :
962-4471 or 546-8100.
P.O. Box 15fi0, Costa Ptiesa. Houte1 Unfum. 305
PART TIME I:.;.;="'-'==""--""';.;. NOSELLING 1.Go;.;;;no;;;;..re~l-~~~~-
LEASE, 3BR. 21~hll. condo.
close to beach, $250 per mo,
.,.,•anlll to continue to be lov·
ed. 536-1173.
INCOME UNUMrrEo
4-10 hn wrekly. Euy &.
pleuanl. replacing mt'r·
chandise at company se·
cured retail st.ores. Work
lrom your.. home. Car nee·
essary. Not veDding. lnve&t·
ment of '9IXI. Full money
back guaranttt. Call MT.
lhml Mon thtu.-Fri.---COL-
LF.CT, (415) 467-1052.
NEWPORT BEACH
Marine O:>ntracting Firm
Finest equipment &
waterfront k>cation. s.; Yr.
old CQmpany. Space avail.
for boat saJes I repa.In.
BILL GRUNDY RLTR.
67W161
Gla.u .l acreen bus.
Furniture store • anxious
HOLLAND Bus. S.101
1TI6 Orange, CM M5-U70
(Salesman Needed)
HEALni Food Store, Oean.
Neat, Good busineu. Owner
hu other lnternta. Mu.t
sdl. Lo dwn paymnt. 12856
E. Chapman. Bet. Harbor
Blvd. A: Halter. 558-0242.
BEER, ....... food. pool. lkh
area. M/seU, bst oft,
terms. Van. 646-3811 Bkr.
JBR, I,_ ba, bltins, dbl car
gar, ·1g !enced yrd, frplc,
RINTALI laurxl room, SZ50 mo, Avail
lmml'd 842-4258.
HouHI * i,te. NO FEE-3BR. 2BA. near * 145•0111 * new City Parle. Hu1:eo lot, ,-14» Y.i th all bltins. $Z':IO/fn9.
W.11"'COITAMISA BKR: 962-5511.
These Arr JUAI Ii. Few Of 3 BR CopdQ, l~s BA, .wals~ patio, dbl gar, trpl, nr
Our MANY RENTAl.S. • • ocean. 536-1515 after 5 pm.
* $90 • CDr.1. Jo"'urnir;hed Bach. l'l;;r;;vi;;;"";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
w/kitcben. Garage, Pet ok. I•
* $120 -OLDER l Br. Alone on
kit. Kkl1/pets. welcome
* $150 • SUPER! 2 Br. Bltns.
Crpts, kid/pets/singles.
* Sl&a · \VON'T l...AS'l'! 3 Br., 2
Ba. Bltns. PaUo. Kids ok.
LANDLORDS I
FREE RENTAL SERVICE
BEACON RENTALS * ~111 * HARBOR View Hills, 'Cdltt. 3
BR., fam rm., vk!w, Lee.
view lot. $5()(1 1'.10.
BALBOA Ialand, 3 BR. 2 BA.
2 Car pr. s.ns !.to.
D. Franklin Rltr. 673-222'2
Cl.a.MUit'd Alk • . . 642-5678
3 BR. 2 ba. bonus-nn .,;. $400
2 BR. l ~~ ba, , ... S225
2BR. JLi ba. Air Cond. $265
2 BR. 2 Ba. • . • . . . .$300
3 BR. 2 ba. $325/360/375
4 BR. TurtJ('t'OCk . . . . . .$.3.'G
4 BR. 2 ba. fam rm $400
ired hill
REALTY
A Company With VUion
Univ. Parle Cent~. Irvine
call Anytime, S33-0S3J
Office houn S AM to 6 PM
Don't give up lhe lhlpl
"l...ist" II In claMlfted, Ship
to SAore Results! 64~.
<0@\\.Jti}.l-~r-ttws·
The Pun:le with the Built-In ChucHe
I HUSTOP I
11 I I I I _
I DOFOl 1 ~ ~-.;:....:;,..:...;..;;....t. ~ 01..-t.lsband,"'love .,_._j _._j _._j '_._I _, I• a beauflful 1hlng. 1r1 a
~------~ shame we hove to get mar .. I 1: y M C I S I ried and --.• •-•
'"_,.!I ...;I...;' .:..I;;..' .:;.I 1.:.._l -1 ° .c-,... .... '™"11' ........ by 11111"9 In the ll'llsilrl9 words . . "'°" d.#elop fJOfll ... p No. 3. beknor.
Sl60 . Rare 2 Br. llou8f". THIS iA a real dt'al! Ba.chi. Sl4S _ $lE'i5
Ntwport Hetg' his. Stove. apt./gar. SfOO mo. Yrly, BACHELOR • I BR ·~ Call owners 67l-2967 aft ,_1 • n'"' • pa ........ refrig. Crpts, gar. Yard 5·00 uy c II, p v. a:ararea -
$225 -2 Br. 2 Ba. horne Al · Dividrd be.th Ir: ~ of
beach. Huge yar d . lBR, Bayfrorit, pri patio, clOAets. Rec. ha.II, pool &
OilldfPf't. Vtew, parking, yearly or Lo pool !Ables, sauna bathJ.
$375 • New 3 -+ D<-n. Frplc. June 30. 400 So. Baytront. Sc-f.' !or younelf. 17301
r~e.0 _Vy~ew of ocean, 2 BDMtS. util _Pd, garage. Kec>bon Ln. (1 blk W. of
NU·Vl iW ·RENTALS Yrly ~m1>· ~~· Bl'ach, 1 ~~~t Slater>.
613-4030E~~LUF~248
Balboa Perunsula ~.2Ji~. =.~~d~:
Separate house, unusual BR AND New-Luxurioosly pool, utU pd._,.. Adults, no
largr 4 bedroom or l Ir: den. I u r n i s h e d Ba y v I e w pels. Nr H05p. $210 mo.
Family room plus large Bachek>r .. Private.' Beach. 17676 Cameron. sa-5192.
formal dining room . Dock avrul. $205. \'early BAOfELOR, pX>I, fU.5 per
Complete privacy ~·Ith Le~. 67J-Zl62. mo. Util pd. No pets. l'l'lnl
enclOM!d rear and front OCEAN view mod bach apt. Cameron, 842-5~.
yard11. Lovely garden. No BaJoony, pool, $165. inc I BR furn condo ~ car gar.
petA. S47:> per monlh. _ qtil's. 1510 W. Balboa Bl\ld. Nr. ·bch. JlBO' mo. 8151
Cnn 613-6568 or ~3S88 N.8. Pi'l.wtuckrl. 713/3$-03'18.
LUXURY Oceanfront-New & e $25 \\-'k &. Up On Ocean N•wport a..ch
Dramatic 4 BDRM. Dining Lovely Bach · 1 BR·Rooms 1 --~-------1
RM . $600/~10. Yearly. J\.taid Service · Pool · Ulll Pd $29.50 Per Week & Up, 1 BR,
Dave, 6T'.r1972 or 494-0615. • Call fiia-8740 • 2 Bll & b&chelon. Color~ TV.
3 'BA.. 2 BA . All fa rri iHCs 1 BR. 'ct~ to °'+an. S17S maid JK"tv., pool. The Mesa,
welcome. $2'l5. ' lnclud('S ulil. ~fo.' to 1'.fo. 415 N. N'ewpOrt B.lvd'., N.B.
RentaAaHouse 9794430 J\lake offer. 1213) 9"'3-:l!m. 64&-$81.
NEWPORT SHORES 2 BR, Coron1 del Mar 2 BR IO\lo't'r dupleox • 1 bUr: to
drn, 2 BA, pool & cluh privl. beach. Yrly or wlnttt $2%5
Nr. beach. $300. 64&-2'218. l BDRM garal!:'? apt. $200. or $250 mo. 130 46th St. Sitt ---~=~~---I mo or $225. w/garage. Nov 24-26 or p hone BEA\.M' vu goll crse, 2300 sq. 675--0182. 21312&>4215.
fl. 3 Br, 3 Ba model . Lease so . · $4S5. 891·l305, 557.9409, S~ · incl. utll. Bach for I .-.. f\Jmished w/utilltk!I ----~-----1 Smgle Male. No pets. No & attached g a r a g e •
BWFFS, bayironL ~ec. cooking. ~7. S190/mo. 603 Irvlnt' Aw.
One-level 2 BR., 2 ba., din. C 1 1.•---PH· 645-44&1 e::.'K M 644-M89 01 I ._. ' · rm . ......, o. · OCEANFRONT 3 BR 2 BA
4 BR, FIR, DIR , 2 Ba Pool L.ARGE 1 BR $145/mo. + fplc. Call 81ng, 'day~
p~v.. Harbor Vu Homes dep. carport & I au n dry 83&-1491 and evea. 675-2949
$450. AIAO a 3 Br. 833-3894. f!cll. Nr-. fN.•y & shop'11:. 998 BACH. $125, til June 23th.
2 & 3 BR .• $7151$300 El Camino, A11t 1, C.M. Util incl. 4 BR. JD)
Ye&rly. Walk to beach 54&-0451. ABBEY REALTY 642--lD:I
CaY'\'OOd Realty ~-1290 NE\V 1 & 2 BR 's fron1 Sl,o?(I to Apt Unfum 365
!{ARBOR Vit>W, 4 Br., 2 Ba. $ro.J. At1ul!1. Nr. beach & • •
hm. Big patio. oomin. pool. Jihop'g. 114 E. 201h St., C~f. Corona del Mir
Gonl'™''· $475. "'4·5598. l -:;is--0"~~$;c=~'c,· P~E~R~W~E=E~K~*~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
1.:.S•::.•c..C;;.l-'•;;m.:;e:.:nl.;;.;:• ____ 1 & U11. Pool & msiid service. -:;
G:OL" "-3 Kilchrnot avail. :O.lo!el Tahltl ~ ~ coun<" vu.~ ..._·aut. Mnwr Harbor & Vl\'toria. Br. 1 00. hl!C. Fam. nn .. ,C...'='-c~-7==~
Pneloscd alrium. Jllll"p dwn. 2 Bil . F'u111. Crpu , drps.
h\I nn. S300 mo. 492.2033 bltnA. Pool. Chllrlrtn ok. Sre ON TEN ACU:S
H F Mgr, 126 ?llonl ~ Vi&ta, No. A I ··-/·-··-• --OUMS -urn. or II C~I. p s ...................... ~
Unfurn. 310 utG. sunny 2 BR. partly F~a~{1 ~ti=
Newport Buch furn. bet.,., n OCC & UCI. 900 Sea Lan CdM M&-211111
.$150. Yng ma.rmd pref. tMacAttbur ha Coat fftr)'} 6'&-1!226. l...100 Sandi, 3 Bd, 2 BA,
ll'J)lc, Ira: ynt, nu crpts, FlJRN. 2 BR. Apt. Pool. NEW de.Jae 1 BR. • dlll,
drps, ctshwa.c.h, SMO yrl)I Ootw: to shops. Adults. no nr China Cove sa:io Mo..
leue. 5600 River Ave, NB. pets. S\60/mo. ~. l BR.., nr.' Cdll Wah
&16-75116, U.l Pomona. C.M. tn5. Avail. Now!
OCEANFROm' 2 BR. 8£Atn' F1JRN 2 BR Sl'l5 up Hal ?lnchln Rltr. 9'15-4392
$XJO/rno. Yearly. Util pd. lttd pool. Adl!A, DO l...GE. l BR. z ha. frpic,
Call 66-mlB ptlJ. 6G-95a'.l. c:rpta, drp&, bltna. a.., .tew.
C~mlnlumt Ilm..----n«> I fll'r. ~· S. Of ft~. t3?5/mo.
Unfum. '20 Adultt only. 19!13 Church Sl. ,.67>-4GIS-~7'----~~--I I :-::--:-==::--:--' 1~548-i633~~0,· =-.,-,--~~I 2 bedrooms ftlch. BUin., Huntlnvton S..ch SHARP! Bacbekw. utll pd. evpeta I: drapea eholQe :.;;:..;...;.;.:;.:.;;..;;.;=;_-I 114.1 mo. SOO cleantns 1... lncatlon. l.<111 biO pr.
FOR n-nl, lBR condo, l~t Nr. OCC It uct, 557-1768 month. c,11 &i3-E"i0 RLrn.
ri.. din nn. 2 11ty · 1iools, AVAIL. now 1 It 2 bdrm 2 BR lf$)lc new qitt A drpt.
patio. 21~ ,.r. blllns, ,..trig. API•. heated pool, f'f'C, Poot'. 1..ei.se $250. Near
crpts, drpA, nr ahopplng .Ir room. Adulta only. 645-0632. tM!Q'thin&. &'D-3850. ~hi!!.. Chikltt pets ok.1-'~=~~~,,:,.=.::::::: 7-,,:0:7-2"""'=~~=-I 96M739 e TROPICAL POOL e * CllEAT VIEW -t BR. * l Br ,...,, 1145. Gu A Wit pd. Frplc, bltna, w-pool
-C:~"SSIFIE A"DS ~__.,,._ ......... 3.Br..-2 . •-
64205671 ~=-J;;1 ~ w~-.;;~:::.Bal.:.:J!fr-::.;mi.c.:1.«=-'1.,,_0ttlllnl_11oo_'_~_-, __ SC_RA_M-_UTS __ A_N_SWER __ S_l_N_C_LJ_U_._Sl_Ft_C_A_Tl_O_N_9_00_
Put a little " ln )'OU 1~ E. 18th No. 9 54&-ll&ll. $!10 up.~ '75-35.U.
.. _... Call Ouslfled •ncl pr. Quiet. Adulll. "' patio, pr, . XI"' -: ~ubles for NJCEl...'L.Jum. -1ra. l JUL. ~._,
-..... -E'ltlen M&-:mil. 7llS A<acla.
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DAILY PILOT
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i-Office ltontal 440 ~..._.1. 530 8abyaltllnl 1:5::"=1nt:,;1;.;A.;;tt;,;•,;..ra;.;t;..l-"--·I "' &.. Unfvm. 365 Apt. Unfvm. 365 Apt. Unfum. S65 Aplt., Aplt.,
370
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1 /:..,.~··~;;.;;:;;.;;:;....,_......;=.;,,.;....,.o-_;....,___ Furn. Of' Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unlurn. OFFICE , ill'xtl', ...,.Md, ALCOHOLICS _,,....... Ltc.ntod 8abyaltttr Alterttlon--
GMeral O.ner1l l•guna Be•ch _...;;;.;;;-""...;;;....,;.;...;....,..;. __ -:-:-------1 window trontqt, w/w new Phone ~mt ar wrtto o., cu. I« 1 d\Ud. Inl&nt • Neat, accuratr.. J:> yan OP·
VILLA MARSEILLES
SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT.
Fumllhod & Unfvmllhod
Adult Living
Dlsbwasher color coordinated appllances •
PIUJh shag carpet . mlnvred wardrobe doors·
indJrect Ugbting in kitchen -breakfast bar • buge private fenced patio • plush landscaps fn1 • brick Bar,s.Ques • large heated pools
& lanai. Air condJUonlng.
3101 So. Brl1tol St., Santa Ana .157,noo
COLDWELL, BANKER & CO.
MANAGING AGENT
.. -1, .........i,, b&tll. P.O. Box tm. Coll& ill<aa. 4 yn. Full llme. F-.d Sl:n• UNIQUE Laguna CaaU. -~ I H t•:.::!',,;;;;...., ____ ~-1 Apia, Wide ocean vfMrl, lll*nty of Jllll'fdnc, ~'15. per Soclel Ctubt W r,an:t I: 2 P a.ymattt. o 1 •
ACl'H of sarden1. Oote to mo. Sherwood 5boppln& unch, madal. Vbta View SIGN PAINTING, Trude kt.
beach &: ahoppln8. 2 BR, 2 C.enter, t21 So. Brookhun:t. nNt> YOURSELF School Diltrk:C. f'V. Juat tert.rw, 1atI1 I a et l On
SUlte t (Brookhunl I: Ball) IN gJM!X)NE ELSE touth ot £dlnaf!f' oa M•K· suarantffd. 5'Mfl5&. ~~n~~~~~:: Call Mr. McNam~. 962-"'"71 DISCOVER nolla. Nr. 5a.n Dleco •"rw)'. Televlilon Repair
moaaic tile, shuttera. WiO or 5464lC1. DISCOVERY ,1,;'°:::';;...atll:::;;-,--;----1.;..,;. ___ ...... ..._ ___ I
Mu. partially '""" Al'° CORONA DEL MAR 71"83M8115 IU#l-3393 Ba!htvb repair COLOR 1V Cll~co
avaU, IOOn, other apta. $250 Approx. la)(I IQ. ft. Office Trevel 540 & refinishing ~-~..:..»th.Call .~. ~
to $6.'!iO Month. -&t-41.iM. •pact ta.lJored to )'CUr de· J .:;~.:;_ _____ :..;:l::::=:::::::-:--:"::'.'-:'.'-:::::J,J~~·~~~µ-~.!!!~~I
s p AC Io US 1 BR. 1 slim. Full aecurlty bldg. REFINISH in white or .ook>r Trff S.rvlu
w/penoramic view, t:pl, ... wlth ample paridna:. in your homl!' or b11s1ntu.1 .;.;---------1
drps. AdullJ. UUI. pd. $195 Ask for Christine SET SAIL 543-5"470 Tre. 1111:'.'. TREE TRJ.M.MINC
mo. 213: ~. BOYD REALTORS GTh-59)) TAHITI Carpenter Ranov11L Ornamental wic:dc.
lido Isle GREAT location on Bo\~ Grt1.nd J Ma.sled Sehoontt. Call Daw 673-Uli&
Chic:a at Warntr in fut c~·&guestsh .l'Mta. WOODWORK. panel ing .• --------
UJ)STAIRS 2 DR. 2 BA. growing area of H1.1ntlngton (213) 378-123' cablnie~, patlci&. Gen 111•------..,11111 l '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!m!!!!!!!!l!l~!!!!!!!~\ll!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!ll!!!!!J!~ I i·rpts, drpA, frplc. Arlll11, no f3(oactl. Slrftl level. uoo "''· rr~ .. ~pal~n.,i.Duke~~~Da;Dwi<~=·:· I biiii·~·7~~iii~~~I I= '"" ~·~• I ·' ·••-1--51J ;:• f 65 • t ·u 3cr. JJMs, ~ .... ~ .,,~ .. .-t .,. ..,._.__w .._. ap.M:4. Apt. Un um. ...p • n um. 1M N rt a. h Leu then 40c per sq fl. All ""'-• of
I-''---------ewpo ..-.1c Owner/agl!'nt -846-33TI. * CARP.,ENTRrY * 700 Coron1 del Mlir Costa Mesa Job Wanttid, Mlle liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii DESK space available $50 l[S] ~""""· -"'~""'"""· "s:J&s"'-1£'8""''--/::.;:;:.....;.;,_;...;. ___ _ ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bnth, OCEAN and mo. Will provide furniture u.t .. ,.... Carpet S.rvlc• SALES Mar • )lire tr. In
gniund floor. $350 pr. month HARBOR GREENS at S5 mo. Answering service . motivated .,.almln. develop pl<IS opaclou1 J ""'""'m HARBOR VIEW .. all•hl•. 222 r ....... ..... JOHN'S c..,.. •• Upho"1tty ..... mkt. H pm
upstain with private en-''Wh c 1 II Laguna Beach, 494-9466. nd (f ,, ) 550 Dri-stwnpoo tree Scot· 962-5M.l
trance. $200 pr month. Both Furnl1hed & e~rov'::f.1• s~~ a ty DESK apa~ available S50 !:!!._. r• -• chluard (Soll Reta.rdantl). ====i:-7.i'C;;;=;;;;:=
wdtl next to park • b!nnls, mo. Will provide fundture FND: Dec. 2.fth, Brwn & wht De&ftUen • all coior DRUMMER WANTS WORK. call Balley 673-8550 ~-Unfur nlah.cl Elegant apartment• desiened brightenen 1: .. 10 minute e:xperlenced.. with a Master' a, louch, llU• l"IMECAIEl('LIYll UI" TO"' MAMI . •• IH $5 mo. Answerina: service Beq:le type puppy, male. bleach for white carpetl. 842-9519
Costa Mesa p!rom $130 to $215 mo perb house security, excJu. o-•r ~ "-w 10 •tni•rM cN1t• 1 rNl!lno Mnlng. Wood ttvallabl.!. 17875 Beach Blvd. c&1l to kient.l(y, 54&-81& or Save your mOney by aavl.na; Job Wanted Female.702
slve Versailles Club and decU, two ps1lo. bring~. ~Oh Sl•nu Into ,our,_ 99.clou• llunttngton Beach. ·642--4321. 546-0909. me extnlf tripe. Will dean , Ap~ERLTUMXEENTS Bachelors e 1 Bdrm1 pool with unique Aquabar, 1• 0' 2-btdroom '''°'" •P•rtm.nt. Pool, ••unu.-).oum.•nd bU· 1617 WESTCLIFF FOUND SbeltJe-~ female Uvtng rm., di.nlng nn. A NEED belf..al home? we
M f · I 111rd9. Sm111 pet1 oi.. From lt65. F111n1tu1e 11o11U1b1e. Model1 OP" '""" • d ~ VI $ & hall 115 ""'" rm $7 50 2 Bd • • Bdrm ounlruns and onnlll gar· 411 UW" sq. ft. Cpt, rur con .• ""'"'' c. ower · ,.,.~. • · · have A , Nu r 1e1, Alt Cond • Frplc'1 • 3 Sv.·lrn-rma " · 1 dens. AU part Of lhe South t:OO '0 7:00. 2300 Filrvl•w Ad, In Co•t• Meu. Ptiorw: a ·2300· Ample pkg, utll, janitor. Harbor Blvd.I., Red collar, 1.:ouch $1D. Chair $5. 15 yrs. Housekeepers. Compankma.
mlne Pools · Health Spa • I 'h or 2 Full Baths Coast's t.lne11t aparlmtnl A ta Apts., Bawngardner •ICM. 541-Slm ~·&It S. em'etp.hodf•. 1whadot wo"°""rk ~· ..... if'. Homemakeni, up Job n, Tennill Court.11 -Game and communl'" p '' f 37 F · U Iv 370 "v-547 -1 M11stcr size bedrooms \v/ ~· Furn. or Un urn. 0 urn. or n rn. DESK SpaC<' Avail. $50 per FND. Blk ktflen fem. 4 mo. Good ref. 531-0101. ="-"=":.·~---.,.,~I suuara~m $160 high beam ceilings, largt' 1 Bedroom/studios from $195 mo. "'ill provide turn at S5 old. Rl"d collar • WarnC!r &: C Concrete YOUNG Japanese Adults
l·v1n / 2 Bedroom froin S305 Huntington Beach Huntington Buch mo. An• ••r avaU. 3~ No. ROS! H.B. 847-2-190 (F'nd. l· _ement, ___ .. hom• •. /Amer . l BR. A Oen From $185 1 g room w gas or Model8 open 9 AM tll dusk .... ,.,~ ..... MEDITERRANEAN wood buming fireplace. ~· Nev.•port Bl, N.B. 548-1192 2-73). CONCRETE Work. Patio.II, fa~!ly. Exch for i:iousetiold
Convenic:'f\t laundry area ~ AP 4 or 5 ofc suites S315. 01. f'OUND on E • 1 an c I er o remove blktop driveways. dutie~ -bab,Yaitt1ng. Ph: VILLAGE •II kltch'". Endo""' po· HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST flee 170. om space $40. Drive, Ml.-;on v;cjo, •Me Repo"' ;n con c re le . ~54_8-_25_19_._~==~I tlo5. 2 swimming pools, lo\' I k i I ch J b a 1 h . CM. Samoyed l)'pe dog on a-15-7630. HAVE ELECTR I C
2400 ~;;-:;ir55~~ C.M. Muna., ~eatkln facili· ON THE BLUFFS 979-3988. 113/73. 837-24-17. PATIOS.PLANTERS TYPE\VRITER. will type
RENTAL OFFICE ties. St-curity guard. No AT N, EWPORT Spanish Country Estate Living 2 ADJOINING OFF'tCES, FOUND large female buff All Conc1-ete worit. Bnck, ~~;u'~!'s ~i:i1 6~ri:r OPEN 9::.J AM to 5::.J PM pets. busy intersection C.M. $90. cok>rf'd dog Yr1th chain col· alumpstone lo\'k. 894-3533. ~ s,S7_2573 Models Open 10 tll 7 pm F'rom Newport Blvd., turn a! 2 Acres. Beautiful'.Jark-like surroundings. Util'a. lnc. 64H560. lar. Vicinity Newport Pier. s, ·
Park-like Surrounding Buslnou Rtntel 445 Call 675--1336. PbreATaklO.s. ~~·e""•..,,;.P~~ Help Wanttid, M & F 710 QUIET DELUXE 2700 Poter•-Way, CM llospltal Rood II block Sunken Pool. Spar ing S~anish Fountains. .......... ""' jag:' .... , above Pacific Coaat Hwyl to CARO CUt' w/mlrror Vic. concrete. 548-416138 for esL ~· ~t! ~RH~I ·, nr Harbor Blvd & entrance. 900 Cagney l...anc, • Spacious Rooms • parate Dining "TIIE Factory" has ah:lps Parking Lot Savo n • CUSTOM CEMENT WORK
Nr. Shop's * Adults only Adami ~:=1~--~~4ic~. • Hom:i:i~a~t~h~~~s&tscabinets ~~· i~~.mal~~ Westcliff, 675--0«M. Drives, WALKS, patio&. Ac~ounting Clert
Aho Furn Ba.ch. Apll Fu $lSS &moke shop, tropical f1!lh MALE cal WbUblk 4 wht Pool deck&. Don. 642-8514. ~~:1r,,v~~ 546-0370 PARK NEWPORT ~ ~g~~ .. i::::, .. ll~ Fu~: $2l5: ~';'£;,.~'ii..:.25~.St, ~ ... ~r:~~ ... ~:cc•r..;;act=•·----1
Ne mo TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, 112Ba., 1400 sq. It. OFFICE STORE FOUND Slameae cat, male, JACK Tatllane I Repair Mu Apt JU --APARTMENTS Unfurnished $200. Moaa Verde area. Call aod remod .. addit. >l yn. e>p. // /)/) -New Duplexes-How's Your Budget? on th• bay Newport & Bay Cente:r 2052 identJfy, 546-4478. Llc'd. My Way Co. 547-Cl036. J\el{'li ALL UTILITIES FREE Newport Blvd., CM. Uti1. • 2 Bdrm, 1 BA •••••• $&1. Grt>at, when you gel your Luxurv apartment living 0,. Walk I H ti gt C I pd. Pkng. 646-1252. AU.10ST tllmalayan cat .:>ratting • 3 Bdrm 2 BA 1295 · rth t 1h v . ., o un n OP en er round vlc. E. 17th st. Iden-'---~-----, • •• • · · · inoncy 8 lvo a e en· erlooklng the \\'a ' , Enjoy 2 STORES nr. N'pt PM! Qf. i · Beaut., 11pa.t·lows npts · dome. Handy location v.·lth SThO.OOO health , .11wim· Adults, No pets tice & Greyhound depot. 598 tify to claim. 645-13126. PLANS-Houses, Remo d •,
Fenced yards, patios nnd lots of nearby activities tor mlng poois, ; 111 ht ft 1165 &:: 300 ft $85 CAIRN Tt'rrler vlc Harbor Roon\ Additioru;. S50 up. quiet~?" Adults, no the 1kid.s .. 1. ~ua play and nls courts, PIUJ 1 of LA QUINTA HERMOSA c~-""· °' . .,._7· 724;;1:;4;.· :=::-::"'.-·-·=· & Baker, C.M. 'eau ~. :1:6' 557·~5 '¥:~hl~Y ~;~'=~'. ,?!~'·Fullerto~ St. lat 1:1 .... ) poo arel500a. ns e: f I bicycle trails, putting, shuf· Industrial Rental 450 FND Bk & whHe trru kitten _!.!:... enlng considered. Some typing
-....., • square ee Oeboard, croquet. Junk>r l's 16211 Parkside Lane, H.B. ----------vie Westclifl are:a, 642-ll29. BOB'S GARl>ENlNG pref'd. Xlnt earningi. ~
FOR SINGLE LADY •
3
Bedrooms from $174.50 monthly; also l 1300 sq fl M·l Space:. w-front Lost 555 & LANUSCAPING t er m tempor.ary as:sign· ~..a.11 .. ~ 2BR d""''ex, nr * Big livlng room with and 2·bedroom "'''"ls and 714 847 5441 I I door 1170 pl ....---fi t ~ •, • <> c, ge rear • mo. R·•sld•n"aJ & .Co•nn>•-lal ment. Immediate ace-H"-f:!k.1: Wntd.l.tl Cen· rep ace 2-stnrv town houses. Eltt· 1193 Wh' · St ~" REWARD -" " _... y fro 1195 _,, Htier ., 'l,..U!ita Irvine lnduatrta.I ment. b'I. 1 bl from Ralphs. ours, m • · · a new trlc kitchens, pr1vale pa. 'lS M-• •• ~ ·~ 1,'t ~M G /brown ,, A I I p •---·• Uf t Be ch ~ ..... ~ J.o.N ' • ,..nu. rey femaie German Comploxeo. pp y n eraon Ideal*· ~,...,., -..e. com· e a or balconies, c•-lng, dra· (4 blks So of San Diego ""-· on a im Whiltl c M El dr THE VENDO"E -~· · · • '"J· • mo er " · · Shophenl, MOTIIER OF 9 507-4299 alter Spm. 2061 Bu•lnou Ctr. Dr. plt!te prt'!~: ec. gar;....; M perles. SUbternnean park· 1 blk. W. on Hoit to 16211 Parkside Lane). ~Days, 64&-0081 Eve. PUPS. Lost'!' 12/30 . 111. STORM DAMAGE lrvl-
opener. ·.c.ooco;, range. _. 1M5 Anaheim A\ enue ing with elevators. Oplional I ~""~"'!'""""'"'""~~ READY FEB 1 1973 Bol.sa. A ..... Be h Bl ·-No pets or cblldren Sl&O mo. maid service. Juat oorth ofl ' • st, ve . ..,..., ac vd . Profesidonal Gardener Tree 133-1441
plus dep. 310 RochestCT Call Mn. Phillips 540-0781 Fashion Island at Jamboree Apt. Unfurn. 365 LAGUNA NIGUEL H.B. Desperate! 847·8618 Pruning, Bracing, Oe~ups.1 :====~=~~1 -••umoliBJllJ 01 aod San Joaquin HW. Road. N B ch M-1 ~er 5 pm .•< &12--021, E>I. Prune h'lllt trees now. ,.,...I' More Room-Less Money -.;;g ~ ~ TeJephone 1714) 644-1900 ewport ea "'"t* 1600 SQ. FT. &: UP. £JU, dormant spncy. George, Accounting Clerk
COKE .ee a real prdt'n TWO • 2 Bdrm .• • • • • · · $1.85. for renlal Information On San Diego Freeway SMALL shaaY greyish 646-5893. For ren'I le:dger. Exper.
t{>tl Like Hvlni: tn a home Beautiful apl!. w/P.rlvate * 2 WEEKS FREE* FOR LEASE Call 831·161Xl female w/&hort ean CCalrn EXP. Hawalian Gardener. voueher S}"llem It: a
for $140/mo. 2 lJR, 11iii BA. pa.Uot, garage, pool, .. IJ>&. -y;...., 'd I .. ~---Luxury 88,yfront Apts. Rooms· ·400 P'OR LEASE ·M---1 units UllO terr.) lost In~· Cotta Mesa Com_plete .I~ _1er v . seU starter. to $700
-pdra-plaees,-siriv patios-A-Lush.prden.setti.Qg-Adults,.. -l•tu-• -lftnU--i &-TBRr.$3SU"t0$SSCr /"""°"""'-----...,;.;;,; r~tt SAJ!ia--'---Alllr Alecrest~ ----'-Ill Ka ma I a n I •-"-6d616. ._Pa.id--....-
rec l\l'l!!all. Wlbon Gank>M, DO peta, 151 E. 21st, C.M. ADULT GARDEN HOMES G 'w·1r ROOM for reliable man Owner n4t9fli.31.96 3242· R . 642-1337. Payroll Clerk :
on wu.on St., W. ol Harbor * 64&1666 * IR~NE A.VE. ATM~ eorge 1
iamton S70 Pcr.monlliL m flower !'~~~~~~~· ~~ ~sr orang@ & white male Generat----5•rvlcu Vf!ion 11'PCl....tll,__tlill kl EDP. 646-2846 Move In w/d•po•il• only Realtor s c ... "1.16 Strl......r-cat ''Sam" Vice "-'lJ" -dutl H -* 548-6570 * l., osta f.lesa. O'fU"':I t"O" • • IU80 a-.-r. es. "'IHE GABLES" untlngton h 1 Br. S160 2 Bt. $200 UPSTAIRS furn, liv rm, BR 11'~) Brookhunt & Ellis, F.V. Captains Car Carel To $625 Fee Paid
2 Br, 1 BA. wlgar. Adlts. • '.... I b t Day&: ~ight Security, Pool, .,.,-=--:----& BA, sep entry, no cook· ~ Reward! 968-64-TI. We wash &: wax completely, A/P Clerk
,._. New ctri-. Bltns. !.ol.l,Jl.ury r ap • Fountains. Rec. Bldi. w/ San Clemente · •oor.1 -" ,.~ Ii~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ MANS diamond ring, Vic: cwitom & detail work. We Lite :Hing to $500 -Fncd~· ·-w/paUo. Wtr ..,. • Adult exercise rm, billiarda, col· ----------ing . ...,.. nio. ~.,....,.,. W llf •---d II Call A p & A/R Cl k ,,.,.,__.1~'" -e Dishwashers or TV. Ea. Apt. has dish· NR beach & town, 1 BR. & 2 DELUXE-Pvt entrance, ba, a::i:c )l CVP-1 ('-~Market ~~ & ~~l f er 24~39 '"--Ave. No. F .. $160 •Choice of 2 color schcn1cs washer, refriK, .shag cpt, &: maid service. No 11mokers. Auto Transportation 525 Ube e\ -~) .. ~~~~e) free r orte or To $525 50% Fee Relmb.
LOVELv•-y•• 2 n•-, W/W •. CJa"cs~~I cirpeting prt patio or deck. 545-4855 BR. lndcy, gar, storage, 675-ClllO or 548-7197. ra ttwaru .....,..,-U'I. es una · Dr. Ofc Fmt/Bck
PUJ.•n ...,... Cable TV, Sl50.-$l60., 310 NEED daily ride 10 Red Hill SMALL Yorkshire Terrier, Hauling Expet". Mu.st know ins .
crpt, wood floon, draP". e llcated pool Yaarly-Bayfront ;:-°':c1;,M="c:·.:SC=, ,::4""o:.c11=.19=.· __ WANT lady 65 or ovt for & McArthur from Laguna silver, blck &: tan. Vic Santa give injections. ;600
prage. No pets. Mature e ))('ad-boll locks 3 Lovely new untum. apta. Apts., lovelf. N.B. hm. Pvt ba, kil Stach. Share expense. Ana Ave, N.B. Ears just YARD cleanup ,ttte·ahaping Fee Reimbuned
Adultl. 2260 Placentia Ave. e Only $140 per mo. 3 & 2 BR., 2 ba. each. Pier furn. or Unfurn. 370 prlvi · $75 mo. ~288. 494-2996. clipped 646-1304. or removal. Weeding. trash Free &: Fee PoAitions ~ble BAHIA PUERTO &slip.l\tanyextnu.lmmed. Room & Board 405 ~~~~~~~~~I LOITT. Blk IYUl.le .Labrador hauling, bushes trimmed, NIGUEL
2 BR. Quiet Center St. loca-2810 17th St., H.B. occupancy. Costa Mtu ~ Retriewr, Ans to Oso. lawn maint. 961-8612. Personnel Agency
Uon. Near park I shop'g. 536-4815 or 53&9535 Ca.II: 673-3663 673-8086Eve&.1 ----------BOARD&: room or room o11-........... _ If •I Reward, (Eastside Costa SKIPLOADER & dump truek mm Forbes Rd. {Xpff, drpl, bltna. 1 story Under New ly in n~ce quiet home, Empl .... . Mt'M) ~. °"'Ork. Concre:te, asphalt, Laguna Niguel
bJd&. Sl45Jmo. 675-1573. OVER 62 ??? Management .~a.~"71.~54'0;,-0""'="'c_.M_. __ '"'l"'O 'i;;;;;;;;;;m:;~~ REWARD $50, Lost female sawing, breaking. 846-7UO. 831-14n
BJa. RETIRED ??? CASA V1CTORIA Hotels, Motels ~ • Afghan, fawn w/blk mask, \'ARD, garqe cleanups.l'=CC=======I
BACHELOR, 1 '-2 Br SOCIAL SECURITY ?? I&: 2 Br. Furn & Unlurn ROOMS 8 I kl Personals 530 Canyon Dr. area, CM. Remove trees, dirt, Ivy.]• • wt.tum. avail. Heated pooL Carpets, drapes, DI\\', TV $l wk up w t. c.;;.;;:,. ____ =· 612-~ Drlvewys, gradln&:. 847-26£,6. Accounting Oerlcal
$12> .l up AdW.ta. 1153 PENSION ??? ant. Pool etc. Come By & $32.50 wk up apts. Childrm • HINDU SPIRITUALisr * clean by Fee Paid
Center St ~ VILLA YORBA WESTCLIFF 2 BR, 1% BA, Inquire about our Move-In & pet secllon. 2376 Newport Let this ad change )'Ol.lr SMALL male bl~ck A: white HAULING & up c exp 1 Girl Ofc. to S500
Townhouse. Bltn.s, pvt Allowance. 525 Victoria St. Blvd. CM. 548-~. 645.3967. whole outlook on lif@ for the Japanese Spaniel. Reward college 1tudent, lae trk. Sec'y lllh !Kl) to $550 NEW l A 2 BR'• from $170 to 842-9622 patio&, adults only, no peta. 1 H ~-CM .,. ~ ~ H -.-15 better Prolc·~-na1 advt-for r@tum. 536-6035 H.B. 534-1146 or 534-71_ &t Gen'! .....,,..., ..,_,,1 ~-Nr be••h • ahop'g 1728 Bedford , -ir'J'IC a ar""'"·· . '"""""''o. uue1t ome .. ......, "'"' vu...... .,.,... ........ ' ..... • . l BR. • $123 '-. .., .. .-.. per on lite. Lie. Readings dail~. SMAU.. Ouiatma. Puppy GEN. Hauling. Tn!e/shrub Applicant Pay Fe@
Adults. 114 E. nb St., 0.l 2 BR.. $144 _s'-mo. 548-7533. 1 BR, pelio apt. part. furn. 10 AM·IO PM. 492-9136. black&: brown, Mesa Verde trim. G~-& yd. cleanup. Glerk Typlet $m
54Hl37. POQL • ALL ft.?~64PAJD" YF.8!! WE TAKE Pm"Sl.i ~:i·i~~~~:!~,$1~~ * ·492-9034, 3ll No: El Clm1no are:a. 545-7477. Eal. ~Dll. 557~. Ex~. S@c'y Bldcpr to $700
• TROPICAL a. ttpl 2 Weeks Free Rent too! call 9fi2..:8936. * Private Room Real, San Clemente. LOST, Lrg Blk Labrador, vie. Houaecltanlng Invent. Contrl Ork 21=~ ~.~.pd.~ * MOVE IN TODAY * t;oo~R.Rec~~1~18~~h$~·:· 1 BDR.f.1. S165. mo plus util, Ambulaloryf'Eady or M11n C•ptaina Car Carel G!t~& Tustin. RE\VARD! MESA Cleaning, caJ1Jt1.11, RUF_fH ~i°AN7~~'Ncv
E. 18th No. 9, 548-U68. $139 A MO. VISTA DEL MESA 545-4~ cnll 673-1674 after 5 pn1 Good, nutritious Food. We wa.sh & wax .completely. · windows, Ooora, etc. l'T9'J Newport CM 646-4854
Si.40 up 1pac 2 br/3 br l~·be Spac. 2 &: 3· Br. in 4-plex. RESJDEN'IlAL _ 2 sty. °"'kd9s or anytime "''lends. Nice, cheerful al.mosphere. c~stom &: detail. work. We LOITT: Male Siamese, brn & Resid / C(lmm'l 557-6742 17931 Beach HB 847-8617 pool, cpt/drp, bltn, pl)'ll'nd. Several avafl. ALL EX· garden apt. 1 BR. elegantly Huntington Beach * Call 548-4753 • ~2 ~r d~~jm ~: ~~«ri.ic. Mesa Verde, CA1 548.-4111. • • '
1996 Maple, No. l ••. 642-3813 TRAS. Pool, rec bldg. Kids decoratE'tl. Ma. I u re 111-free estimate. ~~~~~~~~~~! Dedicated Cleaning Accounting 2212 CoJtege, No. 5 ••• 646-4273 welcome. From S139. See depcndi!.nt woman. ~ utll BRAND NEW WE 00 EVERYTHING
Mgr. 17l71 l<eelson "B", 1 Incl 833-3732 QUO VADIS 111 LOVING care. Nutri. meals. ORANGE ~ * * -Coat Accounting LOVEt:Y 2 BR, 2. BA. nr b'" \\', of Beach Blvd. o!J · ~---,-~ p I / · N ho S ' ' C I I ] Refs. Free est. 646-28.19 F p id lcllls, shopping 4 trewy1, no U\ SEACLJFF Manor Apts. 2 Luxury Garden Apts. r v. scm1. ear 1 ps, w1ng1ng oup •s S.W:. and ftts*rt .~ a ... Strong exper.
pets .$1·6.'l· per mo. call Sla*ter. 968-FR15EISOHor 84A7s4IR260. BR Sl64. Pool, Crpls, drps, Bachrlor, l &t 2 BR's, park&: Hbr. Men & lo\'Om<'n. 11·ishing to met>! nN' friends. Ironing ln manuf. COil acctzv
919-0134 bltns, garb. displ. 1'i25 FROM $135 f,.11)-2562c,-:-,~,---~-7664 or 64.>6532. w/A/P & runnlng budg@1 .
$liiOmO 2BR l bl crpt1 Placentia Ave. Ask about IJtd J>ool.Jacuz:zi·Saunas LOVELY Guest House now PROBLEP.t Pregnam:y. Con-IRONL"G done in my home Ute Typing to $650
drpa A bltiM. 2'lsi Elcteil Walk 3 blocks to Beach our di!('(lunt. 548-2682. Re .reallon Room & More! O(K'n for rlderly. Pvt & acml fident, s y m P 8 Ihe 1 i c Babysitting n .25 an hr. Other Free/Fee Positions '
Ave CM, call tot appt, Lrg 2 &: 3 BR. Apts. Newly 2 BDRM l ~ blk Adult!! Only . No Pets pvt. 544--0756. pregnancy counseling. Abor-e 540-2241 e RUTH RYAN AGENCY
.,_ .....," decorated, w/w crpts, drps, Dup ex, to IMMEDIATE V'-';-ac-o"t°"lo"n-.R"o-n"ta"l'•--4°"2"'5 tion & do , .... _ .. rel AP BABYSMTER for 1 child, 6 Ma•-1'792 N~wport. CM 6;'6-4854
O'IU"'IUJ.4J. bltns, except re!rig. $161 & beach, furn or unturn. a p ....... ~ · · mo old, 8a.m·3:30pm, Mon· __,,ry 11931 Beach HB MT-961
7 LOVELY 1 Br Apt. Near =· No singles, no pel!. Frplc. beam clng, patio, lge OCCUPANCY CARE. 642-4436. Fri Xlnt child &ood picy S '
OCC I: UCJ. No pets. $135 536-17U. Garage, yard. Yrly or thru 18992 Florida St. BIG Bear 2 stry 2 rpl, 2BA. SWINGING SINGLES ~! oldtt, maiur@ woman: Brick=-tOM ADMINISTRATOR
mo. Call 979-0134. •11o=m::,l.=:no::rth::;:--:0:;,-;H;;:u::n::tl;:n::gto;::n "J="~"'="=·=61J~--~-·---C% blk. w. of }arfield ~~f ~p.Nrn~~J1· Lr or Call Jim,~ 8 p.m. Must have O'NT\ tn.naporta-Home Owners ~Uon. ~um apt. l w!pw._~. Beach. $140. 21 ~ .. W!~ SEACLIFF Manor Aplll. 1 anc.I Beach l\lvd.l Rentals to Share 430 COUPLES~ PARTIES !Ion. 646...8535 a.ft 3:30. Papintlngh& I Qranre Co. Reponslbl@ for
no pets, water • glll'(u:ntt apts. drps, poo, .._, y .. u. BR. $143.50 Pool, Crpta, 1 BR. Adults. l blk to beach. eau ·p 2 S PM THE Youngest School, agea aper •ng ng or&~ & coordlnadna:
furn $1.10/mo. 54U954. Lndry facil &. carports. Cpl. ~ce~:~n.s,A~b·~,~l~~ Shag crptg., drpe, No pets. 2 working girls 24 & 25, need ~~~ i 2~, open ~7:30pm. CUSTOM PAINTING rec reaUonal acUvtbes., 2 BR. Adults, no pets. BAY & 2 !lll11 children ok. No oor dllCOtlnt. S43-26.17. $135. 202 14th St., 536--0352. 3rd to share 3 BR. apt, 1 blk Prof. teachen. $20 wkly . 11up@f"Vi.aln&: ma.lnt. con-
M£AOOWS APT. 387 W. pets. Call 842-4664. lagune Beach from beAch. $l00/mo. + PALM &: CARD READINGS 646-3706 or 645-1051. lnter/E:xter. Untum. inttr. tracts &-admlnlsltrtng dal·
Be,y St. OII. 646-0073 NR. HUNT. HARBOR ~hy decorated,...._~-Br . .;..;.::..; _ _.;c,;_____ Util. Ph: 642-392.S eves. Tells Past, Pr9ent & Future \VJU.. BABYSIT IN MY spec. price. Free eoior con-ly bwlneu. MWlt have ~ d d h h ...... ac cotlagC'. \.KIMI to l-IEART of Laguna. Blk Bch, (2131 694-1350 Fully Ile. f\1ESA VERDE HOME ulting &: l's!. Llc. ln.s. prevklua exper. or edta· 2 BR. unfurn. ~,.,,,, rps, l BR, firepl, s ws r, gar-........ an & .__Y Yenr1" 1175 GIRi .. 25-30 to share 3 br · '\l'on't ~ od .... , .. "-A.,............ uo I "' •-·~ l b1tna, pool, children ok. 126 age , Quiet adults. """' ....,, . 1$• • 1 BR apt. $174. furn, S165 nol Nwpt Bch hon1e on °"-aler Iii A good \vant ad Is a iood ln· DAYS ""'u e111«.i. vu-vuw. na ...,Pt'-·-~ or
Mon!@ Vl.11ta No. tt, CM. (213) 434-3249. 675-49lt Bkr. Adlts, 497-10.11, 494-979-1. vestnient. 979-529-1 No Wasli~ same. enst" forward
3 BR. 2 BA Du11lex. ~bY•hr, N t a.ach 0J~"7'"=·=l=l>l_. _677>"1~'2-3. ~-1 -;.::::::::::::::::;_::::::::::::::::;;;;~1 * WALLPAPER * te!IUlllt' including Wary 2 BR, unfurn. CrpL11. drp1;, DELUXE 2 fkdrooni Apt. 1 1~ frpl c, oi.."Can view. $325 per ....;•.,.w.:po...;..r,;_-;_ ____ WANTED \\'t'.lrklng glr!, 1u·atl \~f'n )'OU call "Mac" requlrementl to 18226 San-
range/ove_!l..1..1'1!.fr!a. No pct.s. Bath private backy8.fd, n1o. 2(H', 33rd St. 642-2020 NE\V 2 Bel f ~tudcnt. Own rm. Nwpt 548-tf44 ~lm 111. Adel11 Cr, Fountain
$140/mo. l;llifl~lts6.. Raragf', close lo beach. Days: &HH)il 14 evt'S. siio rno .. 2 ~r!n ~~is~:J Pt-nln. 675--7544 art 6 pm. Trader's Parad·s PAINTING • Valley, Ca 97708.
LARGE 2 BR. crpls, clrpll, S:".'!&s'""1029"".""=.:-,-;::-;;-;:: " Br .. 2 ba, branct ne1v apt. s..uo mo. annu11I le:A!le. YOUNG fen111lt \\Ill share 3 I I e • I Advertising Sales
nr. EstanciK 111 !!Choo!. NJ.~ Bch rentals, 3 br, 2 br Yrly lease. S..175. 511 \V. Bay -NC\o\'P(>r! Rr. lltnne "' sanic. $100 n'IO. PAPERHANGING Fonner YeUow page or
Older --"'d. $135. 673-8145. & t hi':'. From $155 per mo. Call ~ ~·i llearh. Call .,..,.._~o.,,., ......... ~·"RO"" Inter & Exttr. Llc'd, In.s. magazl~ "Plltt exp ~., ··~~ I",' n Bemard~lnol ~0'0r .nu-,,,, , • Guam. Call Hanis. 64M558 Ma•·-male or 1--•~ • DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. Orn!e 426 21st Sl, H.B. 53&-Ql)2 or '''-' Ines •~< "'~ 84&-337l EASTBLUFF • 1 BR. Upper . DO.., ""A'l -·e"'"-· h!AN lo sh11rc new 3 br clplx INT A: EXT ..,.;ntina, paper Commlukm only. Call tor pr. BU.n&. Shag'1r.A~l. Nr. · B ACH All f' I " c t r I c . $180. Call ~ cw ·-oe~ nr ocean. Bal Pcnln. $1l9 Lil ...., __ ' ,.;-Nral-oe w
0 0
d appl 64&--0SJS.
So. O>ut Plua . ....S-2321. WALK TO E 641Hl34:9 for appt. • STEPS TO OCEAN * Junr ti ITTJ.-3036. ....iau• 7'!lm Vf.:Oi:Eioc-;;;;;;;;;;;:;-\,;\
2 BR. Blt41w, ~ ll'i New 1 & 2 Br, cpt/drpll. BEACll atta: 2. 3 &. 4 Br's. y~~JU.Y: 2 ~ B1i300pts· 2 l ;f;;;'E'°M""'AL°"E""~R;C'co".'o".:mC"m::-•-:t~e ti mes :~~. 91@ ~I A~ =~,: :A~Pl.~~~ or ~~iti'i.trpl. 316 16
.t h • A'{[lgyAl~~~ No S.::'38.io \\tlni~;.;~~~ 2 BR .. 1 wanted: share: 3 BR Beach too, lCOl'a Of vtn;yl samples. ~For lntm1Pw, CAll
llitbt. crpb. drpa, pr 2 BDRM del~ apt pooWde hll. S2SO (Furn.) Agt. Hoose, S75 + Utils. &U-J:M7 d 11 For borne appt. 5f7"'5846. , m -0.
• ~~ ~1·! -~ ~.-~ ' 1~·· $300 Per Mo. 3 Bl' """' 67"71972 6T;,--<013 w.,,, lady 10 ohr -HW>ls 0 ars EXT SPECIAL $1tt ·-You , ...,. For patio, ....,... mo. "" 711 e ........ n ........ .......-w w .. vM;. duplt:x, 2 bft. 1 Blk to bch. ington Beach home. $85 mo. IU G LUUIWI& Wnt 18th St. 6'B-mG aft$. Adults. $710. 84&-<12Se. Yrly rental. 67J..M17. VER\' nitt 2BR apt, year-536-l'l96 or s.16-t2S7. 3 Br. l.kt lns. ~
l Bdrm. 2 •tY"'N~ ~t 6: CLEAN 1BR. lilte nu. shag, 2 BDRM unturn apt. acrM~ round . ms. Pvt pty. Days 'G"a_r_a_go_•...,.lo-r""'R-on"'t,.-~"' PAPERHANGERS A H f•..,-?
d1'pn.. F'rplc. $DI/mo. dta.pn, biting, laundry, st. from beach. Ava.II yrly. ,ti4)..Q'£7fEvtt: .675-0041 435 TRADE $55,IXXJ cqly in 12 l BR+ 2 StmUo llpla, Palm Reduced retff tor the on ew UUAiri can.....,.,, SlXl. 847~. ~-~ NEW .storage garapa. 3 Un.ii• tor cql)' in 2, 3 or tl .iprinp, N" shopa It achla. RAllQn. ~-646-1«9......_ ms-mo. 1 BR. dbl llnk, 2 BR. Stueflo. PillO, yard, $~l:,,l!.'i5"l'=;Be,R.,...wa..,.,.-rtro""n"'•-CTJ>~,.,,,.. -I si.tt's, for mobUe home:s, Jnlti or ?!? Balboa Pen· S37,500, TRADE 26M @q1y. ""lll:.ter, Patch, R~1.lr 6 to JO PM Eves., KMp
dllpcml, prtclr1c P't'L 911 a:a.raae:. $150/mo. Infant ok, .d-,P.. aml dock, pri ~undck'. . bMls &: misc. 543-9766. U\.sula prclerrro. ror tnc. or hme. Oranie Co. your present lob while w. 19th St. 6T.MT29. no pe11. Avl. now. 842-4549. 3400 Finley.~. ~;;;;; •• ;;;::;~ 6#-1~1. (h,·ner 673-14!W &46-3928 Lachenmey•r Ritt. * PATOI Pu.sTERING you learn. Mr. ford
$11i0, , BR. frplc, crpta. $140-nice 2 Br In 4-plex, angl $1~ Mo. Yrly 2 Br, 1 blk ! '21"'1...,A"v"'oc=•=oo=.-c".°"M". "450""'SQ"' HAVE CUSTO~f TRI·PLEX ARROWHEAD ch a I@ t' All types. Free nttmates ~-· Encloeed yard. Sm.all dos sty, ~/drp, RIO, pr. No A-m -an. Rooms 400 F'J'. $50. CALL 64&-8811 OR C081a A-fl'M., Tr11llr for llemct Unit., S DI~ acn, Call St0-6825
IL "" -· ~0 T ~· Bea Pl bing ASSEMBLY Tnlnoeo , ot. 6'i'5-4t6'7. pe . C.ll 67!)....1971 "°"-4593 AGT. n.ist ..,.;,, .. s or cti Prop. Bev His vu lot for l&e 00.t. um Swing ~•hU'!. No exp. nee.
2 mt, c:r,rui, ctr,., bl'i:-z nr 2 BDRM. dupl~x downtown, OCEANFRONT lae 3 BR. 2 2 ROOf\-1$. ~.50 kt;° ptiv, 717 AVQ('llckl, nn 7. 4S() sq. fl. erty, 1-6.17-5978 £ve:i1' <>r Inc, mtr hm ot 1 Box 6341, G REP but havt:! gooct e.Yf! &lght A
Fatrvlew • Baker. Aault. catpela, ~ il sl0\11!'. No bl trplc bltM $32'\fmo ~·n\ &. :· $ eM_ ..J:wml· S50 nlO. wknds. San 01 921~ 222-2923. PW:SJN tQ() 1mJI1\. ftnpr dmt:TftJ'. A-pplt-tn ·~ on~. No pet!. 56-1& f)!!tl. $150 ~mo. 536-3501. yriy, 6M24. . . :s..~. O...:." ll.. 963-$l Ct::EA.A: 1..'0n1m . major cor-P\NSAPllONES, val SIS>. '70 * &Q..l12S * ptt10t1 bet. 9 I 3, at SAE (.
alR. crvtl. Ill~~ L-un1 8Mcll 2 BR Apt. SICPI to be11 ch ROOM w/kit ptivil. $al wk. Office Rental 440 ~· Tn:!~~Ifn ~~~ ~~ SL. '?1
1f:-~DRAINS uncJoa!d . $1 50 ~Mt'edh G ~JW, .,.:.!65 ii 'lQl Sllal.imar. ~ ....-., ,=! F"rplc. Crpts, b!trui. Je'10 Em '--~ 1.. N 19tl •. Pf'r, va . ~line to 1bO' • $15. • rant \l'f., .-....ta : S'lfll. Call_... OCEAN '°'"" )Mae • 2 • 3 Yearly. 6TS-f911 Bkr. Pov,. .. -... on'$;_ r 1 "' 4Ctl SQ FT Newport blvd. or S.D Count). Wiil partici. ford van, Stm eq. For prop. u!-· Ara.
-BR,...2.BA. New.JllUo..hcL Orangco. Cl\t Gi_ 1340. n!ntA' c.ta Meta. ea~ pa~ 0\\1U1r 96i..JN.. pbcM~. turn ort m.?m. ._ _ _. M 'EquafO p JI or l u n 1 t y ~~a pbOOI. $M1) up. ...... •2339• You'fl"find ii In Claullkod NM'd ti "PAd"'!' Place an Ad'. & A C. 642·"230. WU1 ad ftlldta •. , 6CUi6l'I , Empia,.r
I ' ~I
BM\\ -Bob c
Sal•
208
BAB1 OdM
chill
614-
BAir.
Mon
1129
Now -8Aiii
mllD
Ciii .. ~
BAB1 Wed ....
548-'
BAB!
hOI ...~ F.V.
iiAiii
own
oe&
Bl ol T .... ...
89H
liARi
Und•
artei
1830
BAR! -Bo.
MllSI
~
repa men,
YAll N~
BOOE
char
ol p .....
man
car
quar
Be•<
Sal•
BR,
A Cal
per.
man
w/" Pei a..
Dail· Costi
Ca•
Count
All
Worl
Call -a;
t:,J;
QUA
dlvtd defAl
613~
Cl.Eli
Typl
Mon-
P'!'I' Miss
COOM
Jar t
h'y
expe
Coor.
6lH
>•
DAILY PILOT 2:J
~l~-~-·.;;;;;;;l~~J1~i..-·1~-·1-;;'~~l~~J l 1~I -1 ··-,·-~l~~l ~l-~-·-.. ·~l~Hl~l --~"1-~l~~il~l ~~]~~H i~ ---~]~!~--~~
H:!!f! Wontwd, M & F 110 Help Wontld, M & , 110 Help Wont.d, M & , 710 Help Wonttd, M & F 710 Help Wontocl, M & F 710 H•lp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 7IO M ilcellanacu1
I· e,..., ...
Ill 818 Miscellaneous
AUTO · R t t E SERVICE 8'11iOon S&JHn1an,
SAWMAN EARLY Mom. Nf"IWll&PH JOBS )fEN wanted Utimu for es euran Xper . (/thn.: .-.,-e atiUt ,.lust hH.\<v PRJVATI:: p;Lrly n1 us l PRIVATE pany mu• t
auto route. HuntJ.natoa URGENTLY NEEDED varloua car wuh dud~ U Cubler. \Vaitrrs ~ \\'&.ii· lit~ intteb. kno~·ledr. Nt'at 1acrifil"t" llne llrt collt"<·rlon """·r!lh~ flnt· art ('flll•-ctinn
BMW A.rmeY, Produ c t
Jcnowlodio Implant. S..
Bob cnMor al
CREVll!R BMW
Sal .. ' -• Leutnc D W. Ut St., Santa Ana.
13Wl71
BA.BYSl'M'ER to lit in my
CdM b:.tme for 15 mo. old
ehlld. 1 or 2 days week. Pb.
&IH)64. Irvine
BABYSIT & lite housework,
Mon thru Fri 8 to 4. Begin Mln19er T r 1inee
1/29. Own trana. Ref.a. Inttrested in d<'allna: "'/!he
Newport Beach • a re a public? Strong dC?Sltt to glO'l
Ml-6106. aheEtd! Rt>sponcl to t)'lls
BABYSITI'ER for com· chaUenging position. Crow-m~ a-nter J)r(C!'l.ma, tng co. offl'rt xln't wages &: OfiiTha ·Ntgue1,· libcra fri~ An oppol'\--lo ad·
waptl. 494-9631. vance. 1-=o=.="=="''-.,.-,~~ tCall Bill Thomai .... 833-2'!00 BABYSJTT'ER wanted Mon, W~. Fri. My home. Own Travel Rep Tr1inee
trans. Call at 6 pm, Faraway places w/strange
548-7592. sounding names will be
BABYSl'rIER WANTED my familiar ground to friendly
ho m e • Mature .,.,'Oman, tndlvic;!ual in t~ super spot.
lot' 2 Children, MomU., Tenific benefits here.
f .V. -· Call Lee ........ " .. 83H100
BABYSITTER, "°"'<keeper,
own trans, hrs 3-7, 640-0166
o< 640-0227.
BAR MAIDS WANTED ·
at The Lotus Room. Exp.
necessary. Neat-in flp-
pe ar an c e . S 45-9882:
897~i:>.
BA.RMAIO.F'uU or part time.
Under 30. Will train. Apply
alter 2pm. Three Wheels,
1830 Newport Blvd, C.f.1.
BARMAID, age 21-l>. No -· Call 646-993.'l
BOAT REPAIRMEN
Must have waterfront boat
yard exp. inc l uding
haulCIUts, mechanical & hull
repairs. Good jobs for top
men. BLACKIE'S BOAT
Y ARD..1.... 24.J!. Newport Blvd.,
N.B. ti"f;H;!SJ4.
Customer Service
Knowing how to say "No" ao
-it soilnds Hke "Yes" im-
portant here! Key spot in
major . co. for bright in-
dividua1 \l.'ho wants
cha11enge, variety & fun.
Cali Tracy .......... 833-2700
File Cltrk Tr1inH
Excitl~ SWTOundings to
learn 1n! Beautiful of!ice &
location av.·alt sharp in-
dividual y,•ho seeks !Xlsitlon
offering growth & terrific benefits.
Call Barbara , , ....•. 833-2700
General Office
BUBBLE UPI
Establlsbed co. needs bright
bubbly person to add tin to
daily routine. Variety love.rt
will.
Call Kim •••••• ' ••••• 833-2700
Be&th. $225.. mo. aeprax. 2~ • Secn!tariet you are rdl.tble i lookina; ret..'Se& & But llelp. ~ t-.1111.' appearance. Apply A.\I 2:19() All lttnu 50".f. or l'-'llS ol op-und turni1ure. All lt(lml
lira per dl.y. Ml'..z:u> • Keypuch Olle'raton W att.'ady woril, apply ln t.t~·l.Aod aft • pm. Ben Newport Bl\'d., crit. prl\illt'd \'lllue. C' h ! n 1·'" 50' C. or l<'l!.b ot u1>1i.ra.UN!d
F.KG Tech. p/ttme Sw l1¥t e ~wlte wrap JlCf'90ft to manager, Li® D~·n'tt, 3Itt:s So. Coast SHARP GALS C'l.olt1Q1~ 12" dt't'p bro\\ n value, Ch.loc~· Cloiiionl'I(' ~hilt.. Ptnonnel ~. Haq • B11liDc Oerlc: Typb:t . Car Wa1h, 481 t:. 17th 81., Ht.\')'., .Laauna &h. t • $201 Japnn..-M· bro n ,1. <' 12" dt'C.'P bOv.·I $.2l.)(), Sklnty
llosp. N.B. l.rvitle ~ Costa f.ltA. RN relit!t nlahu 11_7.30 Lookll\i for perm poA1Uon in lil'tl.ll'd lad)' liu11p tn !or1n of 'l'ard M'UCAl)(' ll"xt:;" $100.
AN.helm 53.rm2 MOTEL Maid1 wantc'CI.. Ap· Be\'el'ly ~faoor' Co~'' boutique a&lc'$. Full & P lt1.n!t'rn. T!"ak bcl~<·· s:lXl l'tur ~i~rK'd Jnpwio"lio!• color
ELECTRONIC
ASSEMBLERS
AascmblrTS fM"f!dtd w/PC
board & soldering txpt<r . Perm. employment iD plea•
ant surroundings.
Call For Appt
Industrial Rdatk>ni
(7141 494-9401
-l'El()Nte--
INDUSTRIES
Laguna Beach
NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Pl.Y in person only. Colt.a !t~pllal, 496--5?86. ~iln~ poslt;o.n.• 11~·all. f.1r Piur ot #lgn.·d JapiineM> rol: pr111Ui Ji"x6" $75. \\lalnu1
Tempo T~mporary •lelp MHllnn,JXIS J-illrborBlvd, S LES CAR tXptr. pcoplr, or print• 14" x s·· $75. china c11b11lt't $115. \Valnut
JUNIOR Sale: men: 10-15. C?te" 1*10 YA Id " . El El R *THE LC.OOIJ fK.:ir AJ>P!· •• •soo B1dnt•y Yarrl .st'(lsr<1pr 11" :< <frt's..,.·r Sl(WJ. 2.., 1eltpnl ..,. __ •-•..,. ..... ...... 1 r o unanc1a lrrn 1~ -J"'•IOO •.. I II h.:1n"'"" liun"!" s1:.., or pau". ~ u .,..,.._ ..--•·-ge • Nt""'spa_per Caniers . · · ,) \ . ~rxc n1l"l t•n1 o .. .. ,, .. ling new customtt1 tor the BOYS & GIRLS t~k\.n~ 11.ppli('a!lon~ lor, Salct rooL t.fakc-r re 1 1 red IMlU1!h1i.: $125. f\h1n>' othC-"r \\'hltl' chair $25. Pl1111 rnany
01\ll.Y PILOT. Thia la not a I O&ifloru. N1"12""ooovl'L , ";'ablry ptu1ne. 3 hr~·duily. C;d\ ari rH1s..• i1t·n111 Of Clu!:;ortnt'. oth.·r n1!st Jle1ns of
newspaptt route and Uot-s DA!O mLY &POldlLOt'rT + l'Ontnt. . pt)S~I e. 4 pn1. :>42--2'\5.<'1. i..;lll?<Oll, ~J [\'t<r, I"!('. l\IUSI WC Clo1wnl'll'. .:11~""· l!ilV('r, not include colltttina: or Ill t.lust hli\'E' 2 yrx. collC'\::<' & • 10 llflfll'l'l'lfll•'· Call &t4-GG:ll. TO)s. I~· bik•· $10. C11ll
dcllvuini. Transporta.t1on is :sales h;:!~kR,, ~-unc1,,,,, t:XP 1~L;~~J6:;; n· * AUCTION *-Gl l-(.6:l _L _____ =, provided. Wt-wO:r1t four ~ !"'11 • '~. • • • Ol!!Er\TAJ. Ru:;: S:t\(', tor-4
hours alter IK'hool and 8 on Rout•S Open 835-l.54;}, t'XI. 2G3 • t>iJ-li900 • t~1ill' t'unulure ,,If thru J1u1u1u·y. \\'e have
S111urday. We have openings San Clemente Equt1l Oppor. Bniploycr • & AppluuK'i.'S rtn• l11rgr,;1 sf•l(:k In Orarij;e
for Fountain Valley & South m/( Typist Au('t1nn.~ F'nd11y, 7.30 p,tu. (\.1u111) E~p.·rr 1·ll'aninsc &
{1un1iQilnn Be~be -on--CaU-Mr.-lusby SALE-SMEN , Windy's Au·c-tion Barn l"t'pit11"int: nf !hf' !Chn~. Shop,
__ >",;hool"" bmy ust3 PMout 1°01 e e 492-4420 e e Crowing alarm t-ompa1zy ~. NEEDED 1-oi111"11r.• rh+•n1 11nrl ~t\'t' At ·-I I 2m:"i1 ~ Ncv.·n.1rt, C:l\f 64G-86.~ Sh'I 'N "hah •-So participate. Exrw>rience.; Q~ res C'Xpt'r enre<I oon1m('r-h ir • '' 1 ,, • &.\./"-~ •
boys gi\"ell prf;rlty Newspaper caniers e1al & Mme salesmen. 1-'ull IMMEDIATELY• B" Ind Tony's Blc1g. !\tart l\tu1n, Sanht Ana. 557-1212
968-9641. ' BOYS & GIRLS time baiils. All bcn<-tits. • S'rEn.FXJ. 1973 Garr a r <l or ~7~7:WO in Cd\f.
Equal Oppor. Em~r Journeyman Lino"""' Ma-IO )TS and oldt>r. TOP COMMISSIONS T.chnica l niodcJ. Sy!nt·mirro-il u 1 o MiKellantous
•h1'n•-N'~t ''.~,. .,., \\'. Nrwpon BE'ach are11. Plus Ba~ chMger, :.'DO "'"11 {lm/fni W•nted 820
FACTORY
Announcing ***
New Li!E' Industrial
Division For \\'omen
• i\olany assignmen111 in the
t-;<'V.'POrt Beacti, ltvine, San-
'" Ana· & Costa Mesa areas.
• Experienci?d & tralllC(' Po-
sitions. Excellent earnings.
Weekly paychecks.
2061 Business Ctr. Dr.
Irvine 833:1441
,,_ a.. ,... pos1 ton. .... Good C"il lo• •~lnlm••"I Repro n·{'l'IVC'.r. J c n !I en 111r , ----------h k Xl Co profits. Conta<.'t ~Ir, .. .-.-· k • ' ~· w · • nt mpany Ben-St-n 1J Pil 714-497-177U Sta t istic-.! su.~pcnst0n spea e~ ta1~· LUf)\\'IV rk)u\Jlr Bas~ Drun1 t>fits. Pa!d Medlc&J, Lile, a)'. a Y ot, C~t. G I Off' deck. Still hrand nt•w iu Unilorms, Credi! Union, etc. • 642-4.121 • SALESLADY for jewelry ener a iee box. \\'as left unclkhn<'il on st'!. l{Oj:.t'r' ehron1e ctyna .
DAl'L y PILOT NURSING store. Refemice!i req'd. ikyllv.·ay. Nov." SI:W. Ci'i.-dU >1tin1\' Snar•'. J 'J'orn T<Hns.
Ask r Lan')' iuu RN. nite shift, full or Cail 54S-3402. Xlnt earn11~!1 . Loog .~ ~hort dfopt. 1TI4l 1193-(601. ~-air1~:,11J;.~11 Cyn1h<<l~. sszs. .o~ • er p/tinK'. ~fR CxptY. Jl()f tt'11n tt•n1fl<lllo'.UY ass1~-BAR/roon1 dtv1drr. 2 stool!!, __ ,~_,---=-o-,-
req'd. SECRETARIES mcnts · va1'!1'fl & lnlcrt•st-C()f(l<e thl, rna!('h. l<tmp tbl, \\',V\TED: \!\V body 61-&t or
KEYPUNCH
OPERATOR
l\lin. I'~ yt'li. exper, on 029
keypunch & 059 varificr. Please Apply or CaU
ROYAL INDUSTRIES·
2040 E. Dyer .Rd., S.A.
5'J0..3ZlO
F.qua1 Oppar. Employer
KEYPUNCH Operator
!/time. Niles. Personnel
Dept, Hoag Hoep., NB.
KITCHEN helper, full time,
morning shUt. Xlnt fringe
bnfts. Beverly Manor C.Onv,
1-lospitaJ. 496-5786.
NURSES AIDES ing ,""Ot'k · l't\oo~· thr rolht\.\'llyll('{f,s1\Jvf'lrut·ker, con1pll.'tC V\\', running or-
T HE IRVINE CO. dny, hour & lO<'a!lnn n1n~t Philco t'{'frig., ningazinc not. J.~l·J.117. Day or nl!e shift. On rall to
~tart Exper. not recfd.
Nyloncl Home Jrlr D:-
C'Cpfiortal Childn-n, 9S61 \\'.
lHh St .. S.A. (off
Brookhurst, So. of
\\'estminster Avr. l
Nurses Needed
11-7 & Other Shifts
Top pvt. duty pay.
lmmed. pay for floor duty.
County·widt'. Need RN -
1. \1N ·• Aides. LcscouUe
Nl1l'S('S Registry, 35I tlos-
pital Rd., N.B. 11.obby Park
Lido Bldg.) 642-9955 or
540-,.,.,.,
Ila.~ in1m•'fliate Oflf'nings for 1'i'ln1·,..n1r11t l•Jl }fill. \\'f't•kly r1tt•k, Tn1m1)1't S·lO Old.~. Office Furnitur e/
the> f<'.lllOvo'lui,;:: P•'l)'<"hl><'k . nusr·. !lG'J-1~. 824
l"'O'.\'STftUCTTO'.\' SECRf:. Apply 1n Pc1~n I\' \\"N'"f'°'''°'30°'''°' -,.,,-1,,...----__ E_q,_u_l.;.p_. ------
TAJtiE:S y.c, min. 2 yrs rt· K II Ge I ' ' ' (Jn~ ~\\'f't~po:'T. e Y Ir .111C'Ob~n 8-1" rri-plt'x
lalf'<I t·~fX'r. \\'Ork!n>:: 11 n10~\'1'r, 5'xl·I' tandt'nl 11x!,.. a1~·h1tPCls, desig~l'l', nr 1~1uler, J((l ~al rnob!le spray r0r'OJ•~t n1anagt'rs. Ty1>1ni:; r1j!. 5-J!l-'.1114.
• 11 .p n1 Sh 90 w.p.ni. 3061 Business Ctr Dr L"'·i"ii"c·°'io"A"t"R"""· --.~--. • · ,. • .-_ wns er. <'Xlt':1
SP.CHE;T,\RIES 11.1nun 2 yrs Ir vine 833-1441 lg. tub, 9 tnos. old, S\~71. Lg
10 ~·1·:All n('I\'. 4X"x30" :'\!•'('!
ofl u·l' •k·~s. ·I dr\\'., rorn1lt·:i
r.1pi; S7:i t'a.
64~~iq34, \\'r'f'kdl\v~
THEll~IAFAX copy nun:hinc
$Th.
<19.l-S025, or 49-HJ092 exper. Typing 50 1v,p.m. Sh grn r&•l111l•r S Li. H•\I f'X ,
80 v.·.p.1n. Ability to 1le;1l TYPIST ron<~ !"1n llC"ft, L'llnip. S25. SF:C. ehr.i S.ll-S23. v.'OOd desks
v.·/public a necessity. Ex· Nt'Cdt'd to lype nddM'~. 7&1G--:-'""-;-",-· -,--..,--..,~-$'..'0-50. slor Nlb $40. 861 W.
cellent opportunity to 11'11.n1 t.Iust be' fast ,t, accuratr. (11 r.tember!lhtp Newport l!lth cr-.t. Pk'rt'f', 642-34M.
cntirt' ofrlcl' gervice fun<"-Apply Pennysaver, 1:~1:1 Harbor Athlf'lll' Ctuh. ":I GOOD ~mall metal oftief'
lions within a large co. Ex· Ne v.'POrt Blvd ., C.~I. Price. Crill BJs..&1&1 days. desk. $50. l'.18 E. 18th St.,
ceUl'nt ""1?rking cond iUous & l'\"PIST & Girl f'riday for Nite 83R-;:ii12. C.i\1. :i.t&-4483.
co. benefits. accou11tants ofc. Expcr. HEIRLOCM Class Bo.xr"S p· /0 826 NURSES Aides, all shifts, f/Time. 548-9544. mtg to you. ~fade to ordl!r. 1 _1_a_n_o•--•~9-•_•_• ____ 1 BCX>KKEEPER Fu 11
charge thru P&L. Capable
ot preparing f inancial
statements and o f f I c e
m~ment of multi-unit
car \\.'&Sh operation, head-
quartered in HunOngton
Beach. Houn Oexible,
Salary open. &42-4453.
f'LORIST needed FTD shop, PBX I/time, perm pos1tion. Top
Wh•l'1 My Lino? pay. Call bb'. l. 61H291.
L a b o ratory Reteptionist
w/insura.nce e.xper, Good
ofc skills. In Faahlon Island
Call Mr. Magarian ,
"""''· pref'd. Apply In Caft 644·3389 WaitresHI & Cook Ln•••l PTkea. W•" Coa.t *PIANOS.ORGANS t:v.n·H!~ti~lii°f n8:r~~~ l:z======== OWr 1!1 ' \Vood Spet"ialties, 893-1512· Going Out f'or Busines1
BRANCH MANAGER
A career 01;1portunity for ex-
per . saVUlgs & 1 o an
manager. Submit reswne
w/salary requirement to
Pe:r1o n ne.I Director,
Claalfied ad no. 567, c/o
Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560,
Costa Mesa, Cali!. 92626.
C•feterle Personnel
I! you can keep the cords e FRY COOK
straight Jn a friendly f'f· e WAITRESS
ficient manner this fine co.· e DISHWASHER &
wanls you for this k£'y posi-e BUSBOY
lion.
Call Lee ••••. ' •••••• 833-2700
Teletypo lo 5700
Fee Paid
Must be clean & neat. Over
JR. Apply in J>Cr!IOll, Surf
& Sirloin, 5930 \V. Coast
I.fwy. N.B.
FRY Cook & Dish'1.•ashc>r.
Apply in penon, 512 W. 19th
St., C.M.
L I S
SI., H.B. 847-3515. Se Carl'~ Jr. FEODGR .~e6-PO\VER1d 'f!!~f Best quality • prices . sen :, -S• ecretary Cr&tary 279 E. 17th St., C~f "--" mo o · ,.:.,., Ot l\av.·nl·Stelnv.•ny·BaldwlD, etc.
l\1ature, exper. to function as NUR-l:iES Aides 7·3 expcr. See !\tanager hf.st offer. Good cond. Player JSiano1 & Rolls pl'l':fd. LV 3-11, medica-64&-0.WI Scl 5CC'ytoattorneywholsalso lions. rt!~ \'erdc Conv. K II G. I WAITRESSES cc,c==~~---~ Rentals ....... \\le Buy-1
SE"("tetary treas. of Nat'I 11 ....... , 661 Center, C'!. e y Ir s ' I Sh'I TRAVELING B11sln~irs i)aily 10-6 sun 12-5 rorp. Xln't oppor. All fringe s48=.~. "' ' ig 11 1 t Cards . .\fagTl('llc Sil:'ns. SlO-FtF:LD'S PIA.i~OS benefits. Call 979-5.580. Apply in (X'rson $25 p.1ir. GIZ>-2"1'19. Cm!a r-.1esa (TI4) 64$.-3250
NURSING Aidei;, all shtf1s. Howar d 's Res taurant --USED BICYCLES 0 Xln~f~yLplnu~~AR.!,,d, xlnt fringe bnfta. Bevr rly . . 4001 \\', Cons! llv.y .. N.B. 1 1*1 PIAN01 S11f 11RGANS*
...,, ·~'t t lanor C.Onv. Hospital, r>;(•i'tli; \'i'lur skills'. \\ork 11, llTRESS.D H A I types * 642-1Z72 amnion(. ·~ur tur, many 80+ · Stenorette· t' x p" ·Ji·-yo' "e · 1 .. , inner ousc ex· th J 1 · · • · 49&-5786. 1\ ~... u t apprf'<'1a c•11 on t'd Zl 0 Prei1y \\'omnns "'ct suit $'?0 o en:. anuary C' t"nranC"P pref'd. 833-9031. long or shoM 1enn tern. per pre · or ver, Ap. Car b<'d S3 ' • on no~·! The best deals llt"l'
LYN-PART-TIME Nr.\1:~e~~e~1;J.P~!,:;.'Qn porary flSSJi.'flmcn!s. \\'ork ply in person only, 813 \V. 8-42-Rli!l'.t ntways at
Gl0-014-0.
3 Dots & A D11hl
And a small aide bet that a
friendly bright lndlvidual
v.111 love this super col
sharp penon will win this!
0 tt Sh'ft I · \\'/the top companlf'S in 19th, Cl\i. Wal/ichs Mu1'1c C1'ly FULL TIME LVN dA....,, 7-'7' I • App Y m pen;on, Cenler St, CM. 548-fli85. O C C IV "~ED I 0 -11 Idle lie-· -w• Call ~.. H · Be Co range o. hoose thl' days, ''"' • neat, peasant, """ _ ","' ·-· 3:30. xlnt fringe bnfts. witington ach nv. NurHI Aides hours & location most ron· reliable, e)(J>l'til'nced girl 612-5678 now. South Coa1t Plaza 54()..2830
Call Jo .••••...•••... ~2700
Counter & Cuhler people.
All hoUdaya & wknds off.
Working hrs. 6 am-2:30 pm.
Call-
Beverly Manor Conv. Hosp. Hosp. 18811 Florida St., Experienced 549-3061 f be I ijiiijjiiijiiijjiiijiiijji-..iijjjiiijiiijjj 496-5'786. H.B. 847-3515. venirnt for you. Exrf'llrn! f r ,,t!~0USt.'WOrk, partll
AOO Fee Jobs FU" tlm l al be! QFC. Manager/Full chg. earnings, v.·rekly payrhN·k-I ml'. <M\T"V;;r• •
...... e em e p, MACHlfllSJS Bookkeeper. Boat Let us start you \\'/yQur WELCOME WAGON Leg1I Sec'y Train" Apply Don's car Wash Dealership on Bay . best root forv.•ard. SUPERVISOR
· $600 5l0 Estrella, SC. Yachting A!aoc. Corp. 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. for Orange Cnty, CB.!'e'er
Chef, $1000 per month Fabulous oppor, for bright GENERAL Office, must Grinder 646-<15Sl. Irvine 833-1441 Oppty, Supervisory Exp
The Blue Beet. Individual who dE'sires a have gd, .typing skills & l\1ust be able to perform OPERATORS. single needle I '!:==:!=:=====~-:I req'd. Salary + Comm. In-673-9904 aft 4 pm cbance of a lifetime. figure aptitude to handle either ID, OD or thread overlock Zippenette:r Top I• tcrviewing Jan. 9, 10, 11.
I:E AN IN G ' ~ Beautiful beach office: orders &; billing .Of!.Ft1eden grinding. Must have owrt pay, ·~-·only. Rolf's Sec'y/Retept, ah · $550 Kalhlem Okel!, 778-1700. QUALiFIED7-~ in-411Matlon • • • • • • • • .833--noo mputer ~Will-train.-Small-tools. ----r-<ITg:;-865"----pffi]uC{Ioii Pl -Reeept/Medlcal !4~~ \Vl.fO WANTS TO \VORK?
vldual Is • In ofc. NB. • Payroll/Constr ,,......, di who pro1;'cient Pent•I A11t •·ralnM TAPMATJC CORP J' •---D VII I B•~teo tr .,,...__,.. DRIVE A CAB! ~ •• m~ • -n s borne -------_u ' IJ9 ,~• t 1 ORTHODONTIC F R O N T -""'..':!!'-mi ..,,,,., CHOOS"' you.. "'-··..., ""'•k 6~~-0 • ...:;;.,-;;;,.. -BRIDGE -THE-GA.Pl l85l"Ketteting, ffiilne r.lin a yrs. e ......... r. Will F/C Bookkeeper f100 f "' -11 ' ... ~ .......... Ynn.-1.1~•u • V1""'1JU 919--6080 ~.... ornCE Exp nee. .. _ I Bookk 1500 or )'OutSl' ' .....,. your own Land this spot & you will perform close tolerance & ~8 · eepcr bou, Men or v.-omen. Can ~CAL Help, p/time, have arrived Attractive GENER AL . maintenance prototypt' production on 9S2-24<6 Ret'ept/Gen'l Ole $455 be sllghlly handicapped.
Typlllg . a must. Hrs 8-l2, b~ght · .. •'vkfual. Ul be janitor, apply Bah i a laNc parts. Own tools Part-Time Gen'I Ofc General Offict' $450 Vis, retln'd. Age 21 to 70. Mon-Fri. Woman om 25 '' 1""1 w --7d R t/0 -Of G C •= ~ ... I'd. Call Mon. 0, w·•, taught all procedures in this Corinthian Yacht Club, lEm req • 2 Days a ~k C\.'C'p vo:n c., · · ~ Sui,>plement your inc..'Ome. ~ ~--~y ottl-G r eat Bayside Dr, CdM. CJOS('l:f Call Lorraine Tax Secretary $575 Drive a cab 6 hrs or mQre a
isl Romeiro 644-1230. ~~~. ...... Mon. Numerical Control Westcillf Sc('J'('tary f';,50 day. Apply In perM>n,
COOKS • lntel""'M\ving now Call Jo .............. ~2700 GENERAL Office, typing, La.Blond Tape Lal.he Personnel Agency Clerk Typl5! $425 Yellnv.' Cab Co., JR6 E. l6!h
for broiler, 2nd cook & pan-filing & phone, cxper. 1631 E. Edinger, S.A. Exec, Secretary $TOO St .. Coit!A Mella.
try man \\'/hotel or club CASHIER desired, 494-9431. Please Apoly Or CaU i ~lark Ill Center) NEWPORT \VO!ll\.ING n1anagcr for L~1f·
exper. Call Big Canyon Come to the blnquett GIRL FRIDAY ROYAL INDUSTRIES 542.a836 Personnel Agency frr. shop. Expl"r. Plr:1st' = Club for appt. Feast on terrific spot 1n T $615 F 2040 E. Dytr Rd., S.A. PART Ume jobs, Ideal ror 833 Dover Dr., N.B. s<-nd resume P. 0 . Box Hill
· branch office of major co. 0 · · · · · · · · · ret 540-J2lO students 17 & ovrr. I-Ir. 642-3870 Ne"'port Beach, 92660· e COOK e Friendly individual sought Young exec. of p~ive Equal Oppor. Employer wage. 15056 Jackson, f\,lid-.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,...,.., ~~
9ioman desired to run kit· to handle important clients. co. oeed.s attractive girl to "'ay City. YNG MAN neat ap ..... arir i::
Call by •.02700 "-·'le typ•-& lite payroll MA CJ-UN IST-Protot.,,.... & Sct'rrtinies ' · • ,,.. 1 • chen. Exp necessary. Deb .••••.•.•. (!.,),)'"' ,....,...., H... · """ ~oo-~--~~--LEGAL will train in Floor Covering:
M n.. 6~ 50ll NB Good phone pl"t80naiity. models, metal Capable of Pharmacy Assistant Linoleum. ,...,1 & tllr. Multi
r . ._.,r, •.i· · · RECEPTIONIST Also Ftt Positions tooling mfg. na well as pro. J\1ix husiness v.·/plcasure in SECRETARY hav<' o~'Tl~,. transp. J!un ·
COOK, exper. Also, food ser-poise .& Personility R~lA EMPLOYMENT totype. C.Omponent machln-an important part of mf'di . lington Bl'ach <irea pref'rd ..
ice workers. Beverly Manor W11l land this lovely spot tor AGENCY, INC. ing. Must have exper & own cinP: Great oppor. for :-;upt_•r SANTA ANA Stf't:tdy work. 842-2015 or Hft
Conv. Hosp, Laguna Hills, charming individual in ~Business Ctr Dr. Sle 290 tools. Top PAY & frlna:e pel'IOO&lity. Call h'.1m, Top finn needs exceUcnt sec· 6 & 1vknds JJ&.3al7.
837-4000. beautiful professional finn. I?c:;:,-Co, .~_.. ~~o ~ciliJli~q1 (:~m_A.J~f~.t.e Rl.1·2700. Dennis Ir Dennis retary tor sharp young at. ~ DELIVERY o( DA IL Y Call Pru ••••••.• , •.. 833-2700 · .. ~ ~"' _ Pel"llOnnel Agency"Clt Irvine, torney. Must havl:' Calif.
PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to HAIRDRESSER wanted, MACHINIST 2082 l\11 chelson Dr. legal background. Top pay. ,-------,
...,.,,...,. c=tera.ol .;, ~ion Legal S.Cr-etary Xlnt. opportunity, -Guarran Ceneiil 5 ~· eip_ PQWER Macltine 0Pftl'&tor Immediate o~nlni. I M~----11~-1
quires the U1e a ~at AI!IO Ftt Jobs + romm + 60% comm, ADVANCED K.INETICS needed, exper. desired. 1401 s.t.s. ~ V
\Vap. or Van. Contact Mr. Lots of trials, but no trl.bula-call O\\ncr. 4~3165. W&rehou8e Rd, CM :>15-5859. TEr>tPORARY SERVICE 1 'mmmmmiiiiiim~m~I
•tarry Seeley, 330 West Bay Hons! One of 0l"llllge C.OU~ HAIRS1'YLIST: get away C~t~ ~~:r1~~6S PRESSMEN l250W, Hamada J ~24 So, Grand, S.A. Si7·5736/1
St., Costa Mesa. ties tl.bnelst lnd!irmlvld' 1...U1 trom rollers. \Ve just cut 700, Itek. rttanage small SECRETARY Appli•nc•s 802 DENTAL ASSISTANT persona e ua or hair. Space for rent. Hair Eq. Oppty Employer -'-'---------
... ~• -5·4 key spot Great Attorney w 6.,., A ""' MAID wilh rclerencf's. 4 hrll ,.~'~"°,,•~· ~54(Hl68J=~~· ===~ Cro1\ing manuf. flrn1 llCE'ds Chau-. .. e, sit n. or , 833-Zroo est. ....... Iov. QUALITY CONTROL sharp 1ndlv. to be right hand OVE~ 200 \Vashen. drye~. over. Experienced. 5 days, 8 Call Barbara •••••• ,, HE-LP \\-Snt~.-Ovet"21. Full y,'t.'ekly, Newport Beach fo 2" mep k grwl V:P.'s ~!rl~ra.tors from· S39.95.
to r.saT&rY open:-640-0300-Secretary & part time. Apply l11. aft'a. 644--4021 eves. B n ck ground in com-trom home office. St\!Rry 10 -"~''Hl='-"'-·------
Newport Center. Reservationist person 410 East 17th St, 0.1. MAINTENANCE \Vo r k , municallon equipment. Abl-$606. I'c~ Paid/AJ90 Fee LATE mocl"l auto. 1\'flsher &
DENTAL SECTY. Join an exciring group! Firm llOUSEKEEPER, female, Elderly hlan tor PirlmP. ~ly met~h. %~~. e~~~ Position.<i. Call Jan P age, elec. dryer 1220) A-1 cond.
IN LAGUNA NIGUEL, ___ _.8 -spo•·ible ,__.,n Bayvjew Conv. Hosp., CM. 5 AFpphly 1 S1i~~rwoodNB s 4 5 1_1.,10_ , posltt·-6.,de of ~. Coastal Pel"!Onnel $45 ca. 646-5848.
belwn 22 "45 yrs. AT least ,,._..,,.. '" "'' !""""" o I · as ion s .., .... , · ~.~ · ·~ ar ... A-ncy """""" Harbo Bl d "" who is penple oriented! ay wk. App Y in person or transformers. Stan $150. ...~ • "'"" r " ' SSO 1 YR. guarn, del & ln-2 yn. exp. 6'T.HH95. Super location! call, 642--35Cfi, aak tor John-M A INT EN AN CE & Call Helen Hayes, 540-6055, c;M stall. Late mod. all cycle
OrnTAL As s l 8 ta 11 t , Call Marion , .•.•.. , .833-2'100 ni£'. Houseman Con1b1nation. Coastal Personnel Agency, e Bec')'s. variety 1., $800 Kl'nmore washer. 839-1778.
cbainkie, min. 6 rno's ·ex-HOUSEKEEPER needed for Ste ad Y Yr a r 0 Un cl 2790 ~larbor Blvd. • Oerk Typlats to $450 e DISHWASHERS v.·ashers
·per. Some Sats. Call MEDICAL convale11eent ho• Pit a I. employment. Apply In Real Est•tt Salts • Acctn& Clerks 10 $500 dryers rebll Ku.am & 89H033Donl•'~~=ptionlat Beauw!~9J'!0:1s~nd1y ~~'!,~=l;k-~ ~La ::.~~ ~ ~:;~ fRE£ * 100°/o FREE * delv'd.' 839-7620; ~218.
F staff seeks penona.b&e 340 Victoria, Costa Mesa. a:. ~u1. Liz R.einder's Agency Rent W•ahers/Dryers
•-rue MAN 45 t 50 f 4500 CamP\ls Dr. $2. \\'k. Full malnt. -r-'' .. '--~ ... '.. bright Individual. Will ...mt HOUSEKEEPER .. Child age o ' or Ll•enh Trolnl~ '·••2118 N Be h General dentlll:t looking tor doctor heft' woodv.'Orking, full time. 2952 "' -=-._. (".l.'port iic • ~1202 *
front ofc girl M~·1.1i!_ Yf'S19• Call Debby • : •••• ,., .83.Yzroo Uve-in. Must~ children. 2 Randolph, Costa ~fesa. Limited Time On y SECRETARY want ed. 2 Dr. \\'ht re!rlg. clean $85. Claii11lc rih!)e(I turtltnttk ta
n per. A&k for oa.<......,,. Boys l& 4 Ref MATURE PBX Operator, Famout Ucense coune now mtnimum 2 yn exp. Typing Ke nmore washer 2 epd m,. an all-year taihlon winntr.
)'TS exper. ln dental pro. BOOKKEEPER $300 Month.to s::inces req. Ans\1.:e ring service. After· available thru Tarbell Com· •peed 65 w.p.m. Shorthand $57-<»Zl. Kntl vrnutlill", rib!)t>d top, f~l_. F'ee ~o·ons 2 + 2 Is 5 N---" Beach 675-7718 noolll & eveit-including pany. Appllcant.1 fully re· detlrable. Law FI rm. F 1 8 , '1fT _, frorrt the turtleneck down, all ~ rv»• .. ~,_.., Full lmbursed upon quallllcatlon. Pleue contact R u'th, urn tur e 10 ~.,.... l'IMI.,.. [1n r1nt1 plcC('. u.., 1port yarn
RIVERIA EMPLOYMENT tf Y"'.'1 can see the E'rr'Or he~ HOUSEKEEPER ~ live-in. wkends. & part time. Nev.· or experlenced saJe11 557-833.1 LO"'REY mod I MS 1111 l~1slr or brig.ht rolol"!I to go AGENCY IN"C you re the type W«! need. Huntington Beach area. P\1 S42-UG4 I O · 'labl n ,. organ, E' 0 !I I' T th n.,. Pftttml -e .. inestCt~Dr .. Ste290 Bright individual, eager !O MATURE grand lhel poope. penlrlJll avat t'. SECRETAR\'. p/t!mir fflr 2 ll[l('akt"r!I $42'.i· 7. grre' ne pi('C1• dI't'!>s "'l!h thl' ~·11 ''t Y 1 . ..,. ~ne 833-9410 la nd wcu~ stable SIXJt in room. New townboule. Near type lady wanted ~r ~ Complete training J>t'ORI'&m. small dlwrsificd invrstnlcnl couth s:ci; Yl'llov.· pla1~ look or N\111 1xtnion !Ayers -17:?!!0: to;\ztiit 1()-16 tncllllit-d.
COl't"""' Co. Airport Area) good ro. v.·111 beach. 536--0709. cuional ovvrrtighl babysit· Future management oppor-busincs.~. 10-l ~i H r~ p..-r \1'k. <.'hair & m11tchi11~ ollnmrtn sn100U1tst \.\'RY ff) arhu·vl' I !'\f:Vf.::'lfTY.f1VF. ~
... ~ Call Pru , ........... 833-2700 HOUSEKEEPER. matum, tin~. must drive. 640-t"751. ~~!~~·. Call .l\1r. S\o&.n at Fll"xlblc v."Ork !K'h<'<iUl('. Sh. S.10: t'ru!f\\>'OOrl ,-orrcc !nh!I' El73'11 f11v11r1t!" look! Cl~·
1
tor ('flC'h P111ter11 -add 1i DENTAL See'y-Bookkeeper. Hve In Child Care. No cook· typing l"X{!Cr. prt'f'd. Jlrply $20: ~1agna\'OX ~r.·i'f.., ra.llo all , OrlC.' fallrlc or prlnl ·n· crn!11 f!"r 1•11ch J)ftttern for ~-or college. Call Secretary irlt. Pr! rm & board pllle MECHANIC wanted. Foreien JAR BELL to Cla11~dfit>rl l\d 5511 r.tri t-om b floor niodcl S'XJ 501id .. , . ,\11' Mo1l 11n<I Spcc1<1l Handl-
M&-3000. Plinning AAlary83l-1489 llrvine) cani. Costa hle$1l area. Dolly Pilot, P. o. Box l:iGO, Gl4-0i!n -· · · i'rir11f'<l l'~11l'rn 9111: sr.w In,; othi!rwiR thlrd-clM1t
DESIGNER-GRAPHICS Look bf'fore you leap'! JM.MED. Openings for lO-lS 64Hll3. R L O Co!lta l\TcMt, ('a 92626. . 1 • ~!AM·~· S11(\s S. in, 12, lt 16, de i~· v.·\ll take lhret
Establllhed Interior Design Person.,., ...... has ..........1 ~"'P ladle' rull or p/lime. Pald Mtdkal Recept Trne EA T RS s,\LE)f .i\1/\1 LJ.. roond 18 .• .;111• 12 lbosl '.141 takei> ~·eek~ or men. Send to ••• •-REAL ~ATE SECRETARY · Rl'Cl'ptlnnls1 IJ('de11tal rl1nlng tHhlr, 4 r•ap. 2 S 's y;ird~ 54.!ncil /abric All<.'(' 8t"f)()k~. Ull" DAILY F1nn In Newport Beach o/ 11ehcduling & enjoys Ing wkly. Earn xtra money or Each momlnr yotfll don a .....,, -for JP'l)v.•lna arch!twturnJ rau1t1 ch11lt&. 4 bar stu•)I~. . . , 1 , , ; PJLOT. JO:;, Nffdlecratt
&.n!a now In planl'l('(I rx· on top ot 1ltuaCons will love •tart a perm. catteT, For lovtly white uniform & SALESf\1EN • Why not work f'ngincerlng firm. Call for vlnyl wlnitbaek sofa lJkl' SE\ t ... ~l .,.,, t: Ct ... STS Dept Box \63 Old Chelee J>andon lll"eks deslgner. thl• lmportarif position in lntervw (all, ~ or ~t anlle when you !And hi th" hottert area Hunting. appt. Ma-8428. 11 ~· w . c 0 p 11 £" r \ <• 11 t' tor each pattern -o.dd 25 StatiO'n New 'York. N ../
):xp'd In d I m en 11 on• I n&tlonal co. 83&-7!2S. " thl1 1uper spot. 1-.. rlendly ton lkach/Fountain Valley. SECRETARY . k , rcfrlittratr.ir. n .. easonahl?. ff'Ml~ fnr Prich ~tlern tor ioou Print N me. A~ in.pbkl. ~nde.rtna. & Call Lee ............ Slr2700 INHALATION Tech -lndlv aouaht to grf't't pa. and let u11 ln.ln you! Call al 1,,· must I OO'A> Ph 64~ Air Ma.II and Special H.andl-,.1 'p Ito Na ~-archltecturaJ i nt et' f 0 r I• Swing shift, Fit rme·: tlent~ In beaut nelv ofc, Phil hlcNamee, vn.t.AGE gCMt'r O uct pnx~ \IN'll. • • Ing; Olhe1'\~·li;e lhird-Cl:t•., ., p, · ~ "' llfll.,_-. ~-. 250 Fite~. Costa Sain $9200 +Comm Penonnel Otpt. Hoai Call Pru, Jro.2700\ Dcltnli REAL ESI'ATE 96>-441l BkkPJC l"xp. hf'lpful . 1-nr In· CORJl/ER couch v.'·la hle~. dt'llVtt)' will take thm! NF. J.. 0L1: CRAFT "72! M p ttp,u. lntematlonal ----=="='~"'=' ""-='=;.;:....' te:rvle....· call IU341 IO l"XI M. nl{lkP.s tv.•!n bel'ls . ~laple w~kll or mort Send to Croch4!'1.. krut, ttc. Fret
DlSllW
esa • .1.Mn:"D Apply i.. ;~ractu:rer or com· ltosp., ~.B. & Dennis Peraonne A&ency RECEPTIONIST SF.CURJTY Guardi.. \Ve will Mtlf, Ma p I e Cobhlf"r·.~ M11.Mi\n Marttn, the DA.ll.Y dll'f'rUons, 50c.
i='."'
.rwn,..; Vl!fdf -~'. munication equip. oUen ~ Of lrvint, 2l82 Michel.Ion Or. $500 + train. All shifta. F/Umt. ht•nch A t'nd h1b!f's. 548-R221 PILOT, 442. Pattern Dl"pt.. l~bnt l\1acrame Boot.
Ora Co tl":n1tory tor JRVtNE DCD~.._trt MEDICAL ASSISTANT Phones + var1tty of ofc Penonnel Dt•pt, HMll: or 549-2842, 112 We11t 18th St., Nev.· Ras1c, tBncy lmollr, PAt-
lioq, __ ~ Center St. CM. ma::e wtll. gl'OOl'l"ltd ll!lf 1 U\,,7\Jl"'tl'"CCL, Exp•d Pftfa"d to tratn Sn dutiet. GN'at potential a co. lf08p .. N.B. ~IATCHJNG pr. "J l'('rl111rr-. Ynrk. l'-0.\'. 1011. Print tcrna. $1.()1.
;.&CHl&;:;.;;;;;;=.,,...,==,..,-;-"' I 1W'ter. Good manapmt:nt SERYICES•AGENCY &llt!'IY, 4"6 di¥ Wftk. no bet:ieU&. Min, 2 yn, tx· SEE OUR AD UNDER \\'/extra otf-01T1An!ilvin~ l SAME, AODRt:M with ln.t•nt O<oc-"'1 8oGk -
QQr.msTIC • EXP'D Uve-ln oppartunlt;y It Ill bentfttl, FEE PAID S.t'a. ~ perlence. BUSINESS C'OVl'.'rtd. Xlnt ('flnrl/rcrt11,·r•I ZIP, ~17.f: and STVlK. Learn by. pictures! Pat-
OOUplj W/loCt,l'"Htmncel. Ca . MER" wanted f/tlmet f()r RIVERIA EAfPLOYMENT OPPORTI.JNTTIES co S~ N , Pri.,..111"-nr.1·1~ ftf\JMBt:R. ltms.JLOO. -~ ~--•~7000~li!h.bSaltwn""s Cal{ sti~=· ... 833-2700 Exeie. Secretary CO S800 variout car wash dutlf'JI. It AGENCY. INC. "A ONE-MAN BUSl.NE.i;.t; 675-JTJL Comna drl )!~r-~F:F.: ~TORE Q u I ck -~0:1'°1~~·1~0t~ .,~ .. 714:!;,..u-Secretacy $600 )'t>\.I &ff rtllllhk'l A k>olclna ~ Busines1 Ctr Dr, Sle. 290 $2,000 INVEST~!ENT" '* ~1UST Sac:rlliCI'' Scf11 ,t., fu:h\ons at>d choQse ont $1 OO ....... -
a.m..--1 pm. CALL St-<:'y/Publ~Jnic lO $650 for ltfady work, apply ln lrvlnf' m-9410 tCAN START PART Tl~lEI IQ\'1"M'at. 4 mo's old . ('.Jll pAltem frt<t from our c~n~pff'~ AfP:t-n Boot -
•DRAPERY OPRS.. Bkkpr/Cirl Frk1ay $600 + IX'rtlOn to mtnattr. toun. tC>range Co. Abport Atta) SERVICE Sta. A~~t nll{I'. ~I . Sf!l~-Su1mmcr Cat-.loa. All $1.00 .
.. 'TABLER-ExP'rlf~. 2082 Mjlal.efson Dr. Stenos lttJ to $S50 taln VaUcy Car Wuh, 1001'\ RESIDENT MMag~ • Re--Pemi. f/timt, da.v ~hift • * .. $t)ff1. .. lov .......... 11.1. nf'\"r • 1Nnf~¥ ~ING'. BOOK 18 .tury Rue 8ookt . SOc.
a.ASSIC oRArERl£S Ml =·2'!"eon~ ~ Ellil Avtt., F.V. urro C"OOple to manaat s Must knrJW lul.°K' & flallv u~. Mth for Slfll, usually IW"W today .,,~ar tomorrow Book or It ri'bie Alctian. ml B1tth St., ~cwport -J ~ a111 11 in San CI em en t e. bookl. SIYlrt h&lrt·u1 f'f'Q, home, 96f1 .. 7910. lL , , !l()c, L:"'Af..1131 ~---•---~-~--~ J05ll1-~= --.....-...-,-.....,..-.., Job...,_n F.-b. 1, Unlklnn1, h-·lft nooll l 16 "'"ff-Mlle Glrl F"rl/Aectnr tom+ ''Wetd ft .. Rap" ~.l~ or ~·-vuu. Int A \'SC' provided, t~I. PflY DINING room JUI!(', ~&tom JN~~ FA s HI 0 N Mk" -..... .,..,_
Dlet.1.pbone Typill to UOO From trto'Ul.qW to trub R . E , TRAINEE tor &d . man, 32342 Gout dc.-igntd . COit $1300. Brst QOOK ... Hundn!da o I l\t~ q.ut "°°" t
-For an 1d In Wom1nrs World.
Call Mary Bath 6"2·5678, ext, 330
Fool· The-Eye ! Fashion Winner !
•
Free It Fee Po1UJ.ona tmn tblm into cub R. E, Broker A Otvtlop!!r, Hwy, So. La1tuna. otff'f. 962.-4'°2. fa1hlot. fl!Cll, SJ, ~. -
..£Jlt.b_C&l kvtnl)_Ql CALL DAILY PILOT' will ·lnil.n •-~-IM n.-futnt draw·tn ttm·Wnt NEW nlrrut Gitrm I:("!, f'm' thst Item-umtt $5:1, p qanq-nr-'hdll,y'I LMllC'.. +-~1470 CLASmJtED ••••• , ,NMf71 llcengc, Call~ 10 Am A: • ,, DllDy Piiot OulUied Dlnette tet. eoffH-& entl the Pthoy Pincher. 15 bM11tU\4J pe.tternt. 50c. j _________ , ~ ---------' 3 pm, ?t&-Lru. Ad. &0-6m. ~··~b~, .. ~, !.''~<:.: .. _:!14():84-12~~~·---'··----··············1 1
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DAILY l'IUIT ......,,.Mnuary,~l,~1)~~~~~~1 ~~~~~~~~1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 :~~~~~~~1:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1
;· .. , _,~~~~I ~~~ ---1§1 1 -·· ][~I -· .... 1§1 I -....... 1§1 I _ ...... J§J 1 · ........ 1§11 ---1§1
Pl-.10rtono 126 INll, ,,_ f06 Yant '63 Autos, Imported 9 70 Alllos, Imported 970 ulos, Usod 990 A lllao, Usod 990 Alllao, Now MO Autoo, Now 9IO
i:..;:;:.:;:0::.111'=111 ;.;;HO;._B_B...:Y -'!:."':72-~:J:i'::"' vw van. X111t -s. DATSUN TOYOTA BUICK COMET llMn troll. 125-Cbevy VI qtne Rebullt tnc!IW. Now tt...,,
Don't bt-1)' any c pn unw
.YOU Ct.n J)la)'I Non-pJayers
welcome to atttnd b'M work
-FOi' in!onn<t!on Contact: Tom Dtttuich
'42-2151
CNst Music 5arYIC9
Newport Blvtl. at Harbor
Coat& Me•
Store, Re1tavr•nt,
Bar 132
DELI llnd Reotsurant Equip.
ment for &ale. 1-"'or details
Call 496-3413.
TV, Rttdio, HIFI,
~6
STEREO ta> watt A..\ffFAf
atttea rtteiver with 8 track
6: quad input, with 2 Jen&0n
foam front air auapenslon
walnut cabinet speak~rs &
professional size turntable
with wood bue, dustcover,
neerlle & cartridge. Regular-
ly $368. inventory clearanc:e
price n99.95. USA Slt;l'l!O
Freight Llquklaton 179 E.
11th SL , Costa Mesa . ... 6'5-2442.
pU.,,, head, all carpeiecl'. clutch, -· lnnl. etc. '71 Datsun Pick Up. 8,350 TOYOTA'S •n Riviera • }'ou -~ 19111 °"""' VI. pd .,,..
Slip o..JJ. 19,960. OR will l900 !Inn. -all 5 Pl1I-mllft..~EJIY\ CLEAN!. I beilevl Ill But Jt'o tn. , di-• a..t -·
trade tor amaller boat. Autos Wanted 961 •---=-=-==--~ loaded compal\)' cw· ll,«» ~ e.tt t pm 11~CahlnQouloer,.,. REW. ARD FIAT '73's :i~ · r..== coNTINENTAL dlo Mlchet--lhlpe, twln eng. n · '71 Snvder. Perfect cond, N '72 p • I avalla"· Call •·k,...· • ,.,,. CONTJNENTAL. SUn ........ depth finder, lllll ~-h·:~ ' 3 ow at nces ' -· . ". ·-• w galley, many xtru, idet"pe 6 A .. a ..... op. yr euar on MANY MODE LS ~. m-o&U, d a'¥• ~· ::tfa'~· :/d!;. ~:;
in ooml<>tt. 1891'. 615-li5T1.:, WILL PAY OVER 4 oow tlttt. 11500' 963-40efl. & COLORS u partial ~·nt or bid1.
18 Ft. La-R"nabout K n 81 Book '69 Fiat ~der. Llw mil••· CA~ILLAC pr!. pty. 645-tnll. <lualc. 1955 C.ntury mod. e y ue Green. . Immediate -___ Ca11,,,,,_,,96J..<:::!ll6'l=--'61 Lincoln Continental Load· !3950. Sharp ,...._,.,.. For lato modo l, cloan, JAGUAR Delivery YOU NL Y .. XJnt '°""· "' mu ..
Boats, S.11 909 low mlleege domes-___ ...;.,...;.,____ AT FACTORY 837-391'1 •ft 6 wtcda)'I.
PURCHASING '""""°"' 197:1 tlc1, Imports, trucks or ,71 ,,..,.r V12 ,,.,., ed. See It . Yo"'U Buy It AUTHORIZED CORVAIR ~~ ,,~:;ts~KJ!~i c~~·~ for fhtyer ~er u=::'· :~~~ ~~~ CADILLAC ~~= ~~ -DAYE ROSS · ~~~ 1.,000 -a..Dwt!TOYOf.IDUt,•.
DaUy Pliot, P. O. Box 1$0 PONTIAC mi .' MU.t ...,.iliee. Qa.yso -ft Costa lo-fesa, 92626, Give 642-6667/Eves: 615--0641.
DUNE buaY bulldert, 1962
Upd. CorvaJr ......... "'"" 165. 846-Zi8'1.
CORVEttE ,
age, occupatlan, sailing . ,..,.... JAGU'" v•s. p.,1~ .... 1!:66 Harbor, C.M. exp phone no "-"•v ~ ,..., .,_ ""'' '63 Corvette 377, 3tO hp, 2
26:' ;· .... _ l6. ·Xlnt sails & 2408 H•rbor Blvd. !11.~~Ues;,J~~ Call '70 Marie II Wagon Xlnt Naben t()p!I, runs llroni. AM/FM, equ~xint n.Ctng ~.Cost• Mesa 546>-8017 ~~or -··w· ::1~,ta~~:~~~ Cadillac ~im~t!r ~ ~
OM< champ. 548--0844. WE PAY TOP MAZDA 66-<i699. 2'00 KARBOR BL. 845-<889
SABOT CASH TOYOTA 1911 Mark JI, 4 dill C'OSTA M&SA FALCON
THERE ARE OYER
2000 USED CARS
FOR SALE
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baul9Vard
~-,af-C-ar•
LOOI rot THI IMIUM AT
THEODORE j UNIVERSITY
ROBINS FORD OLDSMOBILE
-2850 HARBOR BLVD HARBOR BLVD.
1169 Diane, 675-6SllS * AT * auto tnnr, lo mU.1, l 54o.9100 Open Sunday SACRIF. ICE-Vici.-. 21, top owner. $1400. 6'5-0490. '72 CAD. Cpe de Ville, Gold l--al ___ dr.;_:...;.t...;.,_I ..,.3 '62 ~~ con 2 , au o1 6 cy, ::~~~l:s :0~~ ror Wied cars. trucks. jUJI ' VOLKSWAGEN ~~ ~~ w::n.~ .. nu ttre., lllneu-mWit ..eU. ~------~~--~~---~=I
ZENITH k RCA Tei""'ion' CORO.NAOO 27. I yr old, de-GROTH CHEVROLET •69 VW van. Sliding atde doof """· ' ·-· • FORD •• call ua for free esllmates. LAST ---------10 000 -n.... $6300 _,p::.ric.!:pt:<y.:...;:6'5-=1219=·---, ::.:.:.::::_::.:;:;:_ __ .,..:990~ Autos, UHd • • 990
at drutlc price reduction1. hn<e intr., fl'OO, &It 5 -window1 employer fUrnllh· Emerl!i"P" -· MERCURY OLDSMOBILE All models priced to clear TI4/682-7339 (R.lvendde). !Mg new' van for me. Must '11 EL DORADO .
during our end of year aaJe. Ask for Sales Manager sell, pr!. ply. $1,150. Will Fu11y eqp'd-Llke new-17,000 '67 FORD VAN
3 yr plctUtt tube, 1 yr pe.rts Boats, Sllpt/Dockt 910 18211 Beach Blvd. e e • aCCl'Pl o.lder car as partial miles Spec. f 1 rem Is t Campc.>r f.fodUied Deluxe MERCURY
'69 ~OUGAR
'62 OLDS Wgn, PIS. P IS.
A /C, R/·JI , P/W .
Everything works; Clean
$100. 962-4381.
I: service Wa.muJty, Ca&h 90 -t-funtlngton Beach AUTOMATIC payment. 645-1219. paint-AM/FM stereo tape Club \Vagon, Wood Paneled,
P1an or terms to 36 mo. DOCK FOR RENT 847-61)17 KI 9-3.331 Mu~ ,.ll 1~• vw Campe' $6850. 642--1?82. .. 1 Pu tio ~ • <J<N Sink ... Vat er mp, Ice· Sparkllng Original Inside & Hurry far full selec n. Call 675-2930 \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR ROTARYS w/tent. Just spent S682 on '70 Cad Cpe DtVU, gold box. Doubil' Bed, Overhead ow. Air Conditioning, .U1-'71 Olds Vbtu Cruiler 9
Antennas sold or installed at &o.h, Speed & Ski 911 FOR TOP USED CARS all nu lif'E."11 eng etc. ltt w/blk lcathr Inter. Blk top. !latch, ?\fag Wheels, Full FM Stereo Radio Oise Paucnger Station \Vagon.
cost with .ny color set ---'-------111 your car ls extra clean, IMMEDIATE $595 caAh lakes tt'. Ph days Loaded. Lo mi'.s. 1 Owner. Cw-tams, Radio. 929ASJ. Brakes New Belted Fire· $.1100. C714l 640-1824
purchued: ABC Color TV, FIBERGLASS inboord ski· ..c"' Iirst. DELIVERY >11'535.3, ""'' ........... lmmac. l<SOO firm, 54S-8240 $1595 """"·· 230AGV. PLYMOUTH 9021 Atlanta at Magnolia, by Ind and t..=°'c.:546-4895=-==------
Hunfuwton Beach, 96&-3.129. ~;r~for wsalvage. ~1:!t!r~~. HUNTINGTON BEACH 1~.~v~l1~.nt 0::! '72 EL ~o !lln~t. '73 f ]!!........,] $2195
STEREO trade-in-Your used 12254 Caladre SL. DoYmey Costa Mesa 979-2500 MAZDA must sell, Rea.sonable. Uc. Loaded! lmmac .. Take M-nffl'tt't Jtltll.t'lll\ LOW mileage 1968 Plymouth . :"'=:'"oi":,.""" ...,,! Phone 923-4495. Cash For Clean ••Hrn. trade. unc1er book. 84<-rui.~";s~.:;:o,=. ~-~..i.11-..-i ~. li."'.:.!\i~ ~~
..-.. rn In the at.ore. USA 17331 BEACH BLVD '65 VW Camper, new eng, '65 DeVille, new tires, full l,,,;.,::;::,,,,,,,,,,,,==:::::'.-@f""-1-::"~:t::!..., heater. :E:lccellent condition. .,_ '~.~. j~ Used Cars & · ""'· paint, '"""""· Tape po..,r, Am-Fm ......,., " --.stel"'l!O Ftetght .._IVV<>tof"I, r .... H ...... , .. INcll deck + more. lmmac. JlSOO, Make Otter. 962-8117. MECHANIC'S ~ Prl$1,099vate837party. • .• • price 179 E. 17th St,. Cbsta Mesa, l T••""'""tatilM . ml Trucks 11: Mlle ...,. of w ~.
L645-UJ)= ®'.Ible bus dnun Howard Chevr olet
1
,... 142°"" •rw ·~agen r act 0 r y ~ =.1~: '
73
platei, SPECIAL .1!!!_.~~~rc $200M ~i!,.u.1i;5~ ~~~~. Sra~ ~
.e• u ....-ch r ome C Sal /Rant920 Newport Beach ·n Mazda RX-2. 4-spd. 2-dr. Camper. New power. Many 673--0174 or 896-5165 '59 FORD 2-DR. ~~um.iu ""'"S, new ~ .. 1 .. t, fold down ~"~. 3 Tom ampers, e MacArthur Blvd ti Jambotte ~\e· ~~t c>.tlf· !!%:. eXtru! Super Clean. $1600. CA MARO ~-~!to~ ~r~t 6 b~~~ 847-(1982 ~'its. Prtc.:d' quick sale
Toma, 5ti!~~ ~~~-KING of the l"06d, 8' 1 yr old, 133-0555 6~13. G4!Hn2. good extra motor. You '69 Marquis 10 Pass. Wag, $1100., 49'1--0309.
$525 or t
0 er. · · uaed 3 timea. .. ~J' 9,2Stve. fMPORTS WANTED MERCEDES BENZ l~ ~ Supe~8ftle-J5·~ '68Camaro396Racingequlp. change. $1!"(1. tlrm. full pwr, rack, air, Aon-Fm, PONTIAC SANstn T11ner amp. & 2 pr. Ice box, ~. 31 4 Or:inge County's "!11. ag w s w ra Y Air 11.hocks, mags, new e 543-3691 e Pvt pty, U900. 536--6&41.
spkrs.DouTeac !:~.,,· Ken1·:ood WMestminster A~. Costa TOP S BUYER 50 USED .',!!;,e397; cxlr3s. Pvt pty. palnt. 675-7630. -,72-FO-R~O~C~a~~~.-'-8000~-m-!i.,-, i9ss-Merc. Colony-Prk· Sta . PONT '6.'l Ventura 2 dr hdt,
'""' • ~ ,,. BILL MAXF.Y rovoT· -· CHEVROLET ,... o s·= ' ' · " blue metallic, white Int. 2(0) Wagon. ne owner, ..,.,..... auto, PS, PB, Air, $800. or * WANTED * Cycles, Bikes, 18881 Beach Blv ·. MERCEDES ·71i, V\V Bus, ShOivroom •'"JOtV!. 1 541--0'li9 / 646-1044. "-o·t oUcr 557 "000 aft•r •030
S 925 H 0 -a h Ph 84-8555 cond Must sell, Best offer -cc eng. .,_,,.,. mmac. .,... --" ..
Sansul ~peakcrs cootart . Vt: c . ,. . ON DISPLAY over $2100. ph, 714--89H017. 1971 ~E~. No 350. c830-=.::2:168:::::.. ~-----pm.
Joh R I C I S Fc.r Junked or wre~ked auto, a1r cond1t10n, radio '70 FORD 500, vinyl hcltop. MUSTANG '72 GRAND PRIX, Low
n's ac ~ ye H autoe. . Sharp New Car '71 VW ,Squareback, auto, heater w/s. 31 ODO miles. All power. Alr-cond. Xlnt mileage, fully loaded. Priv ~ * BUL TA 0 * 494-1003, ext GM 24 hrs. Trad•int ai~ m~~;_., 22=.m~es, x.1nt S2.IDJ, 847--6389. ' cond $1100. 968-6818 I ·.-67-MU_Sf_AN_G--She-l-~-. GT Pty. 847-4452. _ _._ I l--: Expert service dept. New· Autos, Imported 970 Coming Jn Every Day co · ..,_,.,. · 'ti6 Chev El Camino. ·70 ~untry Scd. Xln:t cond. • "3 1969 Pontiac .Catalina. Atr, ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil::.i~I used ~cles • parts &. ac· '69 280SL (069GFXl .. $4850 '661600VW, Xlnt Running cond, A&lr/oo~,· .,P...,.IS la._nu,eng Lo mi's, $2300. Call 586-3174 ~ans~~ ~~th : low mileage. Immaculate.
ceuon... ALFA ROMEO ·70 250C Cpe (!l59El!Fl $5950 • pam · • a" pm an 6pm. Cobra kl < Spd H t ltalO. 644-8675. HONDA -YAMAHA 'Tl -~ •~an 64&-6728 aft 6:00 Merl.284. L • lll'1I 1'71-"'"-::..:::::tlac:c=Le'-.. -,_,----. TRIUMPK . ~ ~ bi bl 000 JEEP Mag wheeia. ~ air ·~· ~ -67 Alf •--· •-·d (642CRZl ·~ '68 Korn , ue, radio, 40, 1962 (bevy n Station Wagon. _,__,__ N · t 11-w 3 ,, PIS -~ Up lo 50% diaoount. _....._1 a u~'~.:!':bier ASK ABOUT .. """" mi's on new eng. Call $150. Xlnt transportation ~~":"-~~~~p· M ~. <w:.q. mi'L~~. r:.~o·,.:• GROOM Ir BOARD, 11 yn 2256 Harbor Blvd., C.M. ,.........., · "'""' """"'"'"' ... e, 968-l486 C.M. ,63 TOYOTA Land Cruiser, l».T'V.L"" tulot:r .. • · ..... ooo ~-...........,.,.
all breeda. Free pickup! 6464655 &: 646-2428 new motor, x!nt cond. OUR UNIQUE . car. 794 Scott.Pl. reblt engine 1: trans. $1250. '66 7-'Iuatang GT, lo mL Xlnt '72 GRAND PROC. tow
"Sheny'a," Poodle pups ·.::..='---'"'--===1n100 66-«60 Und Mercedes Lease '72 VW Van. 9 pus. Tape ·n Chev. Townsman wag. l271. cond. ALSO Jeep pickup, mileage, fully loaded. Priv
·-" 546--""MI B bohepower cba1o AW '12 Alla Sp'~ •• ml' !act deck, AM/FM, 5000 ml. Full pwr + air oond. Xln't 644-~.:i. ___._ ~'" -Pty 841-4452 a...... -· engine , mo 11 n t e d on llXI", iv
1• Plans Make offer. &H--8993. cond. Lo mi's. 673-JDlO. LINCOLN ·~ eng . ..,..,., ~ · ·
Pets, Gener1I ISO
can 852 Mlnlbib trame $40. 11tJnt ....,..,.,,. H f I rts ~~ .. ;.::.':::.· --~~~ T BIRD 1.;;.;""------= I great! -6'T-453T ouse 0 mpo •• '72 cl''"ow~;:: oond. CHRYSLER "ri Mumng Futbeck v..s 1---.;,."..:;..;=---I l~__:_-t~:::::·=-~zln~~~~=!"!·~~~A= ... ::;;:;1·· lll§6. g"C}A¥AHA.. AUDI Inc. MAKE ~ 6'1l-7482 ,.;,., ~--·-,_ ... ~ 11" ~~!1S...1~7\:11:""::"';.µ;;.!!!!l!1.~~~"' __,..11b la~ tnD sprocket ·6862 Mm! , ' ~«»:lnu.1 . ~ Alr cond Ml--0269/'!Wrl . m--2591.. ·
$75. SM-3C.1 '72 Audi 100 LS. Low on the Santa Ana Frwy S850 or bHf ofter MU8t 11'.!ll oWne.T, ' · · -""'.!:3i;;-;;;M;CiiO::==.J~~~~~~~~=I
l;:... __ J°';~og~s====-..;;154;.;_I· 2 HONDA 3!Xi &a!AMBERS mU ... c. Air. Al": F m 52:k7250 --O.<-6:.JO: • . & !Wly oqul p'd. Good .,,..i. -Don~ -olvo-up-tllo-ablp ----'l1!-jl()SS-JO:I ~
'
•
· .........w.-ilereo, -iiffiitiell. ~ , · , 1'-'Iiiit iell. 642=291 • "List" u In cWallied, Ship New ~-Must all. Sell the old stuff IXly the new DOG OBEDIENCE a.ASS -~ for ,both. 837-7891. 58 1'te~es. 180A, Collec-• '66 VW SUM'Xll • ?Ont Need a "Pad"? f'lace an ad! to Shore Resultal 642-5678. $1895. Call 64&'"'596 atutt. srARTJ.NG SAT. JAN. lSTJL 646--6M6 klrs item, Mechanically cond. Low ml. NeW tires. -==-------1
ENROU. NOW. a.ASS '71) Honda 350, new ttblt eng. AUSTIN HEALEY "'"nd Xlnt cond. Sim/offer. R•dio. $1tl5. Cail 644-5767. Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Jmported · 970 Auto•, Imported 970
SIZE LIMITED, PICA· Runa well. $3'15. 64JH922, 833z3824 VOLVO .
PET. 11))39 ADA.PtiS, HUN-640--0742. 1967 Austin Healey. Good MGB
TING'J'ON BEAOI 962-8tXXl ,69 BSA 650cc, mint rond. Cond. Eng not nmninJI.
OBEDIENCE clua to atart Best oiler. Make offer. 557-2934.
Wed. Jan. 31, 1:30 pm, in 96>-0J'J BMW
the Newport Beach/Irvine im OSSA ~ ~---, •· • ---------area. <>Pen to all dop OVPJ' .. 6'N c.~ • ...,.w,~
5 mo. old. 546-4928. =· Call after 6 pm, V\sll our new bomel
LABRADOR Retrievlir ,pupe n •-r-Dirt & 6 wka, AKC, X I n t ' Kawa .wu ""1 ""
show/pet/Male & fem. 81=·
Adorable. 830--4194 I -~=~=-::~---I
AKC, Chihuahuas, show quaJ-l.97G HONDA 450, great con-ROY CARVER I Uy, 6 wk> old. lmmed. d.. diOon, 5,000 miles. Asking , nc.
livery, 494-2742. $615. 644-1209. 234 E. 17tb SL
LONG Haired Da.chAhund YAMAHA 19711, 125 Enduro. Costa Meu "6-4f44 Nm~ AKC. with shots. 3 On1y 1400 mi, beautiful oon-_,t'""., dltlon. 492-0309. rno..637~ .==::::,..::::..::::=;~~--
'"' TRillMPB Sill DACHSHUNDS for sale, red Excdlent "cOnditiOn ,
Good selection ot
used BAfW's
'71 MGB Rdatr, Blaze xlnt
co n d . AM radio,
luggage/ski rack, chains
$2,XKI. 962-7925 afttt 5 pm.
'70 MOB/CT, tape d~ck.
PireWs. xlnt cond. $2.000.
Eves & wknda, '67r8931.
OPEL
'68 Opel Kadett Railey, 102
hp, sm. 64&-8186
PORSCHE
·n PORSCJIE 91{. xlnt cond.
with extras. Make offer.
VOLVO
'73's
HERE NOW!
Come in test Drive
TODAY!
Sec It • \'ou'll Buy It
m1nlature4 1 male, 1 tern. $825 '* ~ .U'> ca. 5)7-QBS all.5-.-
AKC German Shepherd pup-Motor Homes
pies, & Melal old. Sale/Rent
~t.u.ltmi&
W · VOLVO
96il-8l85
.:-~ 911 T. air , gd I :::1966="7''"'.,,"°:;.r,,_c".'-'M'-. ,.,.c64$.=.;9303=
cond w/xtras. $5250. Eves 'li&-122 Volvo. xlnt Cond
or wknds 835--9576. Rill. 1.{ake offer. New
27' TRAVCO CREVIER BMW ,66 Porsche Sl2. Good con-radials. 642-7246 eve/ Day
25' DISCOVERER Sa.Jes . Servll.'e • Leaa1ng dlUon. BEST OFFER. t ~""'=-'-1'~8-· -----20'-22' CONTINFNTALS 20:! W. lst St., Santa Ana * Call 541--0120 * '57 444 SHARP! New paint.
Horses 856
EXCELLENT BUVI
Gentle but spirited Sorftl,
qUarter &: thombred mare.
Tack & Saddle Included.
cau 546-9774 or 645-3284.
20' PRIDE & JOYS 135--3171 •n Porsche 914, xln't con-btam & hyd cyl., tires,
VAN CONVERSIJNs CAPRI dition. i-'""~· o_·~"~· _979-63<i6 __ .• ~=
-,,les • Service e Rentals l---------I Call 642-8601 Au tos, Used 990 * Dan mar Inc. * ·72 Capri. Bi"" ext/""l int --='-"'"-"-"----I::.:.:==::... __ _:..;:;.
1 yr reg. Arab geldl.A; Wstrn,
Engl, trail, jumps. Rames
1+-2". $1211. l;:f1-7158.
·53 Porsche, 356. sc 1000. BUICK 1380' Harbor Blvd., G.G. 2,00 auto, 8,CW ml. W1l' Runs perlect, needs paint, ---------
I~
Boats, Gener1I 900
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Upshot -f1uld -F1ood -
531-6800 6ean. $2,800. 830-2368. 493-6676 aft 4.
N.xt to G.G . Datsun DATSUN SAAB
1!112 ""'''"""' 28'. -.ctl--------1·--------condltion. Radlal ply tires. '69 DATSUN st. W&n .. new 72 DEMO All Extras! Better than new Radial tires am/fm rad.kl
rondltion. S19,SOJ. 644-1630 luggage ra~k. n cm. call CLEARANCE
evt'11 or 673-1636 days. 846-7852. ' '72 99E, AM/FM radio, vinyl
Rent A Motor H!H"e '91 Datsun, '73 tap, 5 new top. •7400.
for your Vacation tirea, R/H, 4 sp. Gd. ed. $2995 •••
~ 139-4301 . * -it'~ Aak. 16115. Alt ~
l>' PaceArrow '72 Self con-. \
talned llps 6, roof air, 5000 ·n 24QZ, Sharp. Lo ml, A/C,
watt ·gen Hitch & rack, Mftg!ll, FM/ AM stereo +
M&-5742, $8995. other xtras. $3935, ~
\Vant ad re!!ulb ... 642-!16'18
Mystic -SPOIL IT. l l§l Dl11enchantcd husband: A11101fors.te ~
"lnve ls a beau!lful tJilng. •-----~
Jt'a a Mame we ha\'(' to get •••••••••I married and SPOIL IT."
16' SPEED boat w/oulboarrl
$50. 25' ClallBIC Inboard
w/tnlller $1000. 28' Diesel
Character tugboat 11500. 14' Power Cat SlOO. 25' <n.'C!.111
$800. lS' _Oulbo&rd JJ!traile.r
$250. 3-16' ullbnata $25.
nclL 18' Cheyaler OutdriV.,
"'"' cond, l2SOO. Cali -kdaza -Boats, Main!./
Service
MARINE MAID SERVICE
By local exptr Jeneed
Ml--
Recreational
V•hiclos 956 -=="----'
'72 E 300 Ford Camper Van
Crula1ure La Jolla model
5, 700 mlieK. air cond.
Michelin tires, aYlfiliJi!i etc. <nt) &n-4618.
Truckt 962 ·-------1 1968 Ford % tM PU. -Top ...... r bed, 360 ...,.
-· Eve!: s:n.'"66 00! Dodge % T TnlCk.
l<SO
Call atr ~. 661510
llano
1:-.=:.::..:.'.;;0;;.".;;"';..-_..;906..0,: '69 Ford S"per Von, 0..t Int
''II DELTo\, IT Tri bull, Ul A map. 302 Stick, l2GI be!
ho Volvo q, IO, J.mmac 10 or aft 5 6G-88S9
cond. Will Mcril, 137-31114 '64 DODGE VAN panelled.
all I \NICday1. lltJnt ....S. ,.,o. lJUi Oller •
1• n. !ANm lid!! W/18'12 -all 4:30 Ii HP .......,,. U V • ....,. 1811 Fool van, loot! eonct.
Irle l1"0P p11lltt. $ID llml. c.root. CW'lalN. ""'-Short
-alt 5 • bloc'k im. 963zl&l8.
'61 SpeciaJ wgn, V-8, econo.
3 spd, no oil burning, xtras.
$175. 544.fl034.
PRI Ply, Assume lease '72
Skylark, 2 dr, Xlnt cond.
557-5498 aft 5:30.
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
UHA
Rn". JI J"'h.
ocf. ia~Y.!) .....
Start The NEW YEAR OFF RIGHT
In A DOT DATSUN
BRAND NEW
DATSUN
510 4-DR. SEDAN •
NEW '73 DATSUN
1200 2·DR. SEDAN
l'.L\.. __ 1~~~ ~~=--
.... ·coll NO# -53&-7VZ
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San t;Jemenie·
~apisirano -EDITION
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stocks
' VOL 06, NO. 8, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1973 TEN CENTS
U.S. Planes~Mistakenly B~mh Base at Da Nang
SAIGON (UPI) -Five American
fighter-bombers from the Air Force,
N'avy and lt1arines today mistakenly
bombed the sprawling Da Nang Air llilse
Jn what military sources said was an ap.
parent navigational error.
Nine Americans and a Vietnamese
military guard were injured. A UH!
Huey helicopter was damaged and three
fuel storage tanks set afire.
A total of 34 or•the 500-pound bombs
were dropped by an Air Force F4 Phan-
•
tom, two Navy A7 Corsaini and two
P.larine F4 Phantoms. AU apaprently
landed in the northwest portion of the
huge joint U.S.-South Vietnamese base.
UPI correspondent Kenneth F.
Englade , an the base at the time of the
accidental bombing, said tvto American
soldiers, two American civilians and the
Sooth Vietnamese guard were injured by
the bombs.
Four American ainnen and another
U.S. civilian were inju.ed while fleeing
1e
Jtfarathon Spree
/ 2 Hotel Snipers
Still Hold Forth
NEW ORLEANS {AP) -Heavily arm-
ed policemen held their circle around a
downtown hotel today as two surviving
snipers opened fire again in a marathon
shooting spree that left six dead and 17
injured. Meanwhile, new gunfire was
reported In a nearby building. (See Pic-
...
At one place CQuld be seen the holes,
hammered out of sheer concrete by
persistent police fire. A three-foot open·
(Se< SNIPERS, Par• !)
for cover from what was al first believed
to be a Communist rocket attack.
1be U.S. Command began an Im-
mediate investigation. Military aources
said the Air Force, which operates tbe
base housing 4,000 American servicemen,
would be in charge of the probe.
"The Navy and Marines will be in on
ii, too, sinCe they bad planes involved," a
source said. ..
Meanwhile, the air war over North
Vietnam entered Its 10th month with 124
•
.
fighter-bombers and about 45 852s hitting
below the country's IOth parallel In the H
hours ending-at dawn today.
U.S. Command apokesmen llld
"numerous" trucks were destroyed near
the port of Vlnh. 137 miles narth of the
Demilitarized Zone and "several'' ·otben
were bit Dear Dong Hoi, 38 miles· north
of tbe DMZ.
At least one of the bombs that fell on
the Oa Nang facility hit a huge
petroleum storage tank, touching off an
1en
explo!ioo that spread fires to two other
nearby tanb, military sources reported.
The m-oneous -bing touched off
rumon tbe base bad been attacked by
Soviet-built MIG jets from North Viet·
nam, whose nearest frontier ls I 00 miles
a\\.·ay.
But nooe of Hanoi's ~ncs-has ever
been known to attack anywhere in South
Vietnam. A few ~al.ssance flights
have been reported, but never con!irmed,
over the years.
lnltial reports said the five planes were
cruising above a 2.500-foot solid ck>ud
cover on a so-ealled ''Sky Spot" mission,
a strategic bombing attack guided only
bv radar. radio beacons and a ''lltUe
biack box" oomputer.
Somehow, the command '68id. the
aircraft veered off course and ended up
over Oa Nang instead of the Communl.sl
target they thought they \\."ere heading
for 62 miles a"11y.
The lead pilot gave the signal and
ordered au planes to dump their bombs ..
• Olll
Horrifying
Accidents
At Onofre
By JOHN VAL TERZA •
·l \
Three persons were killed instantly ind
several others severely injured in a bor·
rifying series of incidents Sunday evening
near the Border Patrol checkpoint at SaD.
Onofre.
The deal"', aD in the crowded I"!"" of
the San Diego Freeway, took place St the
height nf a massive number of smuggling
tures, Page 4) . T ,d DI d I~ w:t =t ~i;;:r ~~:~~__L_ar_ge.~1m •.'I...__
the Downtown Howard Johnson Hotel,
incidents. . . .
---"· woo_}'Ollll!l-women dlad-belM!4he-eye1--~-1
of their !ova· ones. Another man was rua
and..pollce marksmen,-statloned-ln ,..,. F . -r _
rounding buildings with high-powered acing 'l-tllpo rifles, raked the hotel roof, where tbe
men were believed sti11 holed up.
The gunshots came a few minutes .after s h l B d
a Marine Corps helicopter, with police c 00 oar
sharpshooters at the ready, hovered a
few feet over the roof and blasted higb-
velocity tear gas at a stairwell.
Minutes later, police reported gunfire
on a patroUnan stationed at an in-
tersection several blocks from the hotel.
AuthoriUes determined that the new
shots were coming from a nearby
building, and a police tank-like armored
car was sent to the scene.
The helicopter drew no i1re on three
early morning passes over the building,
including the third pass for lhe tear gas.
·· Police bad revised their list of dead,
aaying that one victim apparently was
counted twice, leaving their official total
at six. All were identified. ~ --
A Marine Jeutenant said one sortie in-
cluded close-up photographs or the
bunker-like enclosures used as co.,·er by
the men.
The enclosures, five-inch thick
concrete-slab rooma et the end of the
roof, are coverings for the steep stairs
lrom the 18th noor to the roof. Officials
said there are two right-angle elboWJ in
the stairway, making it impossible to
shoot up and perilous to even check out.
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified
School District face a whopping agenda
for their meeting tonight -a schedule of
items which has been stacking up
throughout the holiday period.
It will be the fll'St formal action
meeting for the board in nearly a month.
Among the major items scheduled is
the ret0lutlon calling for a trustee elec·
tion April 17 when the posts of Tntstets
Fred Newhart Jr., Robert Hurst and
Stephen Smith are up for el~lon.
Trustees also will be called upon to
decide on a program of education on
venereal disease for gradE:!. ~ven
through 12, as well as a movie to be used
for eigllth graden. The mm will foc.m: on
the VD problem.
other items on the elght-.page agenda
include:
-Detennlnation whether seniors at the
district's two high schools should have a
senior dJich day this year. Principals al
each school have recommended the
board approve the arv.1ual day off.
--Consider bids for tennis and handball
courts at Dana Hills High School. The
facilities will be bu.ill through funds
gathered from the disbict's community
recreation tax rate.
Ul'I T..._.e
WOUNDED POLICEMAN COMFORTED JIY FELLOW OFFICER IN NEW ORLEANS GUN BATTLE
Body Of Slain Pttrolmon Philip J. Colemtn LI" at L•ft, •Victim of Rooftop Sniper
Education Chief Quit,s,
-Cims 'Poor Relations'
•
Dr. Robert "Bruce" Sinclair, assistant
superintendent of the Orange County
Department of Educatioo, has resigned
his post effective June 30, citing the grim
prospects for a better relation.ship
between the cOunly department and local
school districts as the main reason.
Sinclair, 45. has been with the county
department for sit and a haH years and
has been assistant superintendent for
educatiooal service! ror three and a half
years.
In that posilton. Sinclair is number two
man in tbe department and the closest
aide to Superintendent Robert Peterson,
who was elected in 1966.
County trustees were presented with
Sinclair's resignatton last week but took
no action.
UCI Librarian
Says Measure
·~Posing Threa t
Library operaHons at UC Irvine would.
be "diminished" and "jeopardized'' by a
st.ate department of finance plan to con-
solidate California's research libraries at
Berkeley and Los Angeles, UCI head
librarian John Smith said today.
"I am surt the campus at Irvine will
take very strong ez.cepUon to any library
planning which prevents this campus
from affording library services In sup-
port of its academic program," Smith
said.
Police said they did not know the iden-
lity of the three men t1ho began their
siege from the hotel Sunday morning. A
sharpshooter, watching the gunmen 's
movements with a 2G-power telescope,
described them as black men, at least
one with a goatee and bush haircllt.
In the daylight, the chips and pocks
from the thousands of rounds of higb-
wwered ammunition were visible on the
face of the building, espe ... ially at the
3 Men Held in Stabbing
Peterson received Sinclair's submitted
resignation about two wee.ks ago and was
"flabbergasted" by it, Sinclair said Fn.
day.
Neither Sincla1r nor Petenon Wllt
available for comment on the issue tc>
day.
Smith sakl be had a copy of the confi·
dential report made by state auditors.
That plan was revealed by the Los
Angeles Times Friday.
Dael of the bunkers:
Orpge Coast
Weather
The weamerlady says there's an
80 percent chance of showers to-
night and TUesday; clearing in the
afternoon on Tuesday. ~1ore raln
i! eZpected at the end o! the week.
lllgbs today $-60. Lows 4>,IO. •
INSIDE TODAY
Anli-imoking groups got dQ·
orcttc odJ tok<n off th< air waou. NOtD tM rmail-cigar in·
d1Utf11 hol taken the mm with
oigar1"'ffing'WU'boJ/• takltlg-th•
. girll awav from tht: non.niiaokers.
See .srorw on Poge 7. --" LM. -• Cl,,..,.. ...
Clhtlfilif »M -.. 011 41 ,, o.t• Mlktf It .-...Nil ..... 1 ............. ,, ,,._ ... u
Ht ..... _., ti _...,,st.. l4
• I
Death of Young Marine Sinclair Saturday was quoted as saying
that "the relatiooship between the
Orange County Department qi Education
and the school districts of the county has
not been good, is not a:ood now and the
prospect of It getting bettei Is not very
great"
The stabbing death of a 17-year-old
Marine Corps private stationed at Camp
Pendleton wu under investigation today
by LagW18 Beach police who have in
custody two other Marines -one the
dead youth's brother -and a Laguna
Beach man.
PFC Ross Plljll Andrews o! 1499 Ter-
tm way, t>guna ·Jleadl .,..,--pn>-
oouoced dead oo anival at South t.oast
FEA R OF DEMO NS
KILLS BELIEVER
STOKE, England (AP) -A fear of
vamp -s ca~tth or a~y~
old poltory worker. a con101r'1 Inquest
was told today.
A physician testilled that Polill>bom
o.mttr1us M7lclura died lro01 chotlnl
on a garlic clove whlcb he le!! tn his
mouth ovemlgbt lo keep vampires •"'1·
Pl>lltt i.otllied that Myidunl'I
bedroom .... Uttered with salt, -and earllc, all tradltlooal antlvampl!e
-8llll!lnl.
' :..'
Community Hospital Saturday.
Harry Bruce Mades, 27, a florist, was
beld tn Laguna Beach City Jail on
charges of assault with intent to com.mll
murder and suspicion o( murder.
Jan Oliver Janise, 23. a Camp
Pendleton Marine. of 1422 Capistrano
Ave., Laguna Beach; and Robert Stuart
Aiiah:ws, 19, a """Marine and t6eOild
youth's. brother, of 1499 Terrace Way,
Laguna Beadl were held on cbargt1 o!
assault with inWll to do great bodily
hann and suspicion of murder. No ball
bid been ....
"I don't, u assistant superintendent,
have it in my controJ to overcome that
bask: riroblem," Sinclair 1&id. adding
that the situation led w his resignation.
More than 20 career educators have
lelrllie ~sin« Pttenon tool
office in 1966.
EMPLOY RESULTS
WITH PIWT ADS The death lnjurlts to the older
AndreWI ...,. alleged to have been lul·
!md tn • fight tnYOlvtng the lour men
and two wotD<t1 on 1 itarkened part of Find the right penon to fill that Job by 1iiiilia Ciiiyoa~noar"i:I T0n>"Road -putllilg aL>AJLYJ'ILO'l' clossifi<d woni
Friday. ad In )'OUr employ. H•"''' bow:
Polk:. set. Nell Pllrtell said the
._ uaod ia the bn"wt was 1 pock<l-
t,ype mll•-
Mallft pl, PIT CM Ins. Of-
fice, E>p DOI nee. Flllng/\}'pe
•. ·~Ulty, to «!nununle&tr. ~
lllUll: °'" ......... Purctll llld poll" Ont !tamed o! the
lncldo:ttt -a car WTYlnc Janise and ·
the Andmrs bnllben pulled lni. the
pallet -pil'klna lot. The ·-to lbls ad .... -Tb< older ·Andrews went to the duk, dous. Employ aome quick resulll o! your
and !!pOrlM Ille llt!llbln&. Polite ....,. -own. Dlal-41--IG«IL
( ~ .... l
Auditors are suggesting that the state's
Infrequently U!ed boob be placed In
"hub libraries" at UC Berkeley and
UCLA.
The state report also recommends that
a teletype communications system be set
up between the hub libraries and outlying
UC and state university libraries and a
busing plan be set up to bring students
from other areas to the hub research col-
lections.
Books would be trucked to the remote
(See UBRARY, Page %)
College Adding
Two Aqua Teams
Saddleblck COmm"111ly College will
have s'lrimming and water polo teams
begiMlng ne%( Fall, the boo~ o! trustees
bas decided.
Despite IOIOe ....... atlons about the
COCIJ involvtd, pool r<ntal of 13.1100 plus
transpOrtatJon to away sames and pro-
rated a.alary of a part.time coach,
ttustea aoctpled the plan .
Tnostee~VoC•l~inl•-ol
tbe plan, nollnc that I.oder high ICbools
to Saddleback bad bad highly ........ruJ
1wimmlnc teama durtng !lie )'Ur.
Vogd--akHtn Wit tbe l)pe of Spot I
thlt aboulll be tmpltallod by the college.
'
down as well ,
Patrol apokesman Dale Swancutt said
the deaths occurred shortly after 5 p.m.
at the height of the intense wave or it-.
legal immigrants.
''The first deaths occurred when I
carload pulled over ahead of the check·
point and the smuggler told his
passengers to get out and cross th1
freeway," he explained.
The first wave of passengers did at
ordered.
But Toribia Perez de Mejia , JS, of
Ensenada, Baja California, was struck
and killed by a car.
An unidentified male also was struck iii
that crossing. He died at the scene.
"The woman's husband apparently saw
the whole thing. He told us he paid $150
each for the trip north and the smuggler
ordered them out or the car and told
tl'em to slart running," Swancutt said .
Five minutes later, tbe horror was
repealed.
Vet another smuggler pulled over alter
ooticbtlf tbe checkpoint in pperalion.
l~e. too , ordered his carg'o to flee .
In that flight across eight lanes of busy ft~way Victoria Orozco Cervantes. 15. of
Purificacion, Jalisco, was killed when she
was hit by a fast-moving car.
Her father also saw the tragedy. He
told patrolmen that the "fare" for his
family's trip north was $225 each.
Highway patrolmen investigating the
acdidents: said the victims all were run
over repeatedly.
In the first tragedy, cars driv en hy
Jose Lopez Ruiz, Z4, of Lynwood and
Raymond Louis Barton, 23, of San Diego.
were involved.
In lhe second incident. patrolmen said,
five separate cars . ran O\'er lhl
Cervantes girl before traffic could stop.
Patrolmen are still not certain how
many other aliens may have been injured
in the dashes across thr freewav. .
"There must have befn Jiteially hun-
dreds of them who escaped because we
counted 24 abandoned cars in the area
through the day. People ju~t jumped out
of them and ran every which way,"
Swancutt said.
The patrolman speculated that &cores
of persons entered Canlp Pendleton and
others su~ed in croii~ing the freeway
and headed up lhe beach around tho
checkpoint.
Police in San flf'nl~nte reported many
alien arre.!Jl.s through the day. Swancutt
said that ~1ar111(1~ at Camp Pendleton
were attemptin g .to round up more today
on the large reservation .
"It was one of those unbellevable
migraUons and the only ex.planatklo -.re
have Is that many of these people were
coming back to their jobs after the
holidayi," the _patrolman said.._
The checltpolnt operation Sonday yield-
ed nearly 300 tUens .
Bus Driver Asleep?
SMITHFIELD. N.C. (UPI) -Tbe lf.C.
Highway Potrol sayd the driver ol ~
G~nd bus that car..ned oil
lntental• 15 and overtttrnf<I, kllllnl
thMll<ttOifs, apparailly lillliloep II
tbe WbeeJ.
j
' .
I
..
1 % DAILY PILOT SC
Fre1tta-.. e1
LIBRARY ...
llbrarlel on request.
"Neltber Ufe"1tbrartrur nor the faculry
1.r:t1 equipped to predict the usage of a
giveo vollune, • Smith aatd.
UC! currently If•• !O doctorate pro-
grcuns. a medical ptogran1, and ta
n:asler's degrees programs.
The Irvine library is not even at the
"proper strength" to support those pro-
grams, said Smith, adding that the
library also serves the surrounding non-
academic 1.'llmmunily.
About one out of every £Jve books
t-betked out of the library is to a non·UCI
person, he said.
Most librarians· are reluctant to speak
oy.t on the plan, Smith said, "for fear of
reprisals" from the state department of
finance.
Elsewhere in 1he--state-system, ooe
unidentified librarian said.
'l'J'hi.s would be disruptive to the educa-
tional process, to say the very least. lf
students and faculty members have to
wait for days, or go to another city for a
book for their research very often ...
there's going to be a severe breakdown."
The reccimmendatlons were made to
correct two major faults found by the
audito.rs in the University of California
and State University library procedures ·
-"inadequate sharing of nonduplicated
resources within a region" and
"dupllcatiori of infrequently used
materials."
UPI TeltPJl.olt
Objectt>r
Sgt. I. C. Ernest Pounder, high-
ly decorated Green Beret, told
newsmen Sunday he has be·
come a conscientious objector
because of "this insane war.'"
He returned 24 medals and \·Vill
not wear his uni.form.
No Big Wlaeeb
Watergate Trial
•
Witnesses Eyed
WASHINGTON (UPI) Several torney Jlenry. B. Rothblatt representing
present and former White J~ouse aides four of the accused, denied reports tha t
wert.-n<1nled today as prospective all Involved would plead guilty to avoid the publlclty of a full-scale trhll.
government witnesses as the Watergate "There's a lot of ruinors,'' he told
bugging trial opened in U.S. Di.strict reporters, "but there's no truth In it, not
Court. .. at" all."
But no high-level Administration of· Testimony is expected to bring to light
{icials were -included in the lisll' of 60 --new-detailll about-the incident. --
willlesses the prosecution said it might . However, Senate Democrats are plan·
ll · · 1 ning their own probe. Senate Democratic ca durmg the tria · Leader Mike ManSfield Gver the weekend
Seven men -including two former ked Se Sa J E · J (D-N C ) t as n. m . rvm r. . . , o
\Vhite House aides -are charged with undert.ake an investigation of the
conspiracy. burglary and bugging of Watergate affair and "other insidious
Democratic · National Committee head-campaign practices.''
John D. Ehrlichmnn, President NiJlon's quarters at the Watergate hotel-apart· domestic adviser, said during A television
ment complex Jwie 17. The trial is ex-interview Sunday that ~ full-scale FBI in·
pected to last one to three months. vestigation of the Watergate incident
Prosecutor John M. Silbert said that showed "no involvement by anyone in the
Administration in that particular in:
cident." Fred Fielding, Jeb Magruder and Bruce
Kehrli M'OUld be.among the witnesses the
government would call attempting to
Break• Barrie r
Rev. A. Paul Jones of Sacra-
mento is expected to be named
chaplain of the sfate Senate,
the first Negro in the 124-year
history of the state Legislature.
One state university official said,
''What they are trying to do is get us to
buy two copies of a new book instead of
28. That would be Cine if we knew in ad-
vance which books would be used the Two Officers
prov1 its case.
Fielding is a \Vhite House attorney
working with presidential counsel John
Dean , who conducted an investigation of
the Watergate affair for President Nixon.
Funeral Services Held
most but we don't." ·
Another librarian said the auditors'
recommendations are "absolutely devoid
of an understanding of how people
behave." Face Action
In Bar Deatli
Magruder worked under \Vhite House
C<lmmunications director Herbert G.
Kl ein, was deputy director of the Com·
miltee to Re-Elect the President and is
For Two Slain Officers
Th~rpe, Ahlman
Head Oemente,
Capo 'March'
executive director of the committee ar-By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ranging the inaugural. ot ._ o.ur t>J .. , 11.1H
Kchrli is a White House staff secretary Mourning family members and lawmen
Murder and assault with a deadly working IC1f H. R. "Bob" Haldeman, Nix-gathered this morning to pay tribute to a
on's chief of staff. palr of policemen cut down by sub-weapon complaints were being sought to-machine gun fire in., Midway City while
day against a pair of policemen involved Attorneys for the seven defendants did tr . to t d bl d u t not list any potential witnesses as jury· y1ng arres a ou e-mur er s spec .
in the killing of a Marine Corps selection procedures began. Meanwhile, an investigatior. is under
helicopter pilot Friday night in Tustin. Among others listed as prospective way into why a pair of Westminster
A third bar patron also was ~hot and govenµnent witnesses were Michael police officers dispatched to aid in the
San Juan Capistrano Mayor James wounded. Douglas Cabby, Washington attorney who planned capture were diverted moments
Thorpe and San Clemente Building and Both suspects In the shooting death of formerly represented several or the earlier by another law enforcement agen-
Planning Director Richard Ahlman have defendants; AUred C. Baldwin Ill, an ex· cy. been selected to head this year's March Capt. Steven Robinette, 25, have been Circumstances of the intended ap-FBI agent who reportedly was involved of Dimes campaign in their respective placed in special jail isolation to protect in the Watergate affair and who has prehenslon may not even have helped the
communities. them from prisoners who might seek turned state's evidence; Hugh w. Sloan, two Westminster officers prevent the
The annual fund-raising event is con-vengeance because they are lawmen. former treasurer of the Ni.Ion campaign, tragic killings but lawmen want to know
ducted to fight birth defects -the na· A spokesman for Chief Deputy District and several police and FBI agents. • when, why and by whom they were tion's number-one health problem. reassigned. 'lbe campaign will be conducted Attorney James G. Enright said this Chief Judge John J, Sirica of U.S. Cfrl Eckstrom, 23, of 82.51 F1ight Ave ..
through the month of Janliary throughout morning that complaints had not yet District Court warned the jurors they Midway City, was finally captured after
the South Coast. been issued against Cypress Police Sgt. would be sequestered throughout tbe being hit with a shotgun blast fired by an
One f be M lengthy trial if chosen because the court h ur d o t arch of Dimes' major Thomas Baroldi and Garden Grove had "reason to believe there will be con-Orange County s er s eputy. projects is tbe regular scheduling of ti G G Eckstrom, described as a quiet
about 10 miles away.
The murder sus~t is also charged
with critically wounding Miss Vasquez'
sister Cecilia, 17, who gave a dramatic
bedside interview to the DAILY PILOT
Friday.
She reportedly said the gunman who
cut dovm her sister, herself, and Jeffries
with a pistol before fleeing told them he
want~ to play with ther.: and that she
thought it was a toy gun until he opened
fire.
A bystander took down the getaway
car's license number which was traced to
Eckstrom's Midway City residence
where Sgt. Wilson and Detective
Schneider were murdered by multiple
gunshot ~\'OUnds.
Bank Offers Renewal
Of Auto Registration rubella (German measle) vaccination Narco cs Detective ary L. ray. siderable publicity" about the case. philosophy major at Cal State Long
clinics throughout the area. Baroldl, 26, is booked on suspicion of The courtroqm was packed with pr~ Beach, is held in the Orange County Orange Coast residents may reneY.'
One such clinic will take place al Our murder, while Gray, 7.8, is charged with spective Jurors drawn from a list of 1,000 Medical Center Jail ward, charged with their automobile registrations at United ~dy8-:~~&y~~s7:~~~~~:~~:~ ~::~·~~: n~M:! ~P•pbo .. -:Od .... .ulo><r-·-fo_,~.,.~':'~e~~ :m1:e°:.~if0rfned pol~~~;n,:,~1.:;:i~~r~r =l
through 12 can be vaccinated free at the bar.· trial credentJa1s Du t only a pool was in addition to families of Los Angeles of Motor Vehicles offices.
· · --Conflict.ing.......xeports -are-.thaL-Sgt. ~ow~ }Ji initially,_w_ltb_tbe.....balance to -County Sberirf'a-OffLCe Sgt. Carl E. Department (){fices are in Gosta Meaa,
Baroldi and Detective Gray were con~ take . th~1r seats as jurors were seJecled Wilson and Detective Donald W. 720 W. 19th St.; San Clemente, 106 W.
ducting a narcotics investigation and that or d1sm1s~. . . . Schneider, 40, turned out for their Canada: Santa Ana, 1330 E. First St.;
the sudden shooting stemmed from an The pubhc will not be allowed m until funerals today. and Westminster, 13700 Hoover.
argument over ... woman. after t~e ~ury has been plckec.;. Eckstrom is also accused of killing The deadline to register is Feb. 2.
The third victim , Sam Campise, 35, of The incident has led to ~~rg.es that Rosemary Vasquez. 22, and Michae1 Jef· Boat registrations will not be taken at
From Pagel
SNIPERS ...
' ' •
Two Envoys
_Grim, CoQl
In Paris
PARIS (UPI) -Grim faced and
studiously avoiding each other In public.
U.S. presidential adviser Henry A. Klss·
Inger and North Vietnamese negoUalor
Le Due Tho opened a new round of Viet-
nam peace talks today with a 41h--hoor
meeting . They agreed to mett again
Tuesday.
--i<:1ssJngel'llild"Tb15Wnnnec1 ai~a-..m.
(1 a.m. PST) at Saint Nom-la-Breteche.
a Western residential suburb, according
to their spokesmen.
The two delegations refused to discuss
questions of wtielher the two negotiations·
were nearing a breakthrough.
Contrary to past practice, there were
no public handshakes ..either before or
alter today's session, the first of the 23rd
round of talks.
Neither side greeted nor waved the
other off as it did be.fore the talks broke
doWn last month and President Nixon
ordered the bombing of Hanoi.
The deJegations arrived and left
separately, unsmiling. At no time were
the two sides seen together.
'Ille atmosphere was the coolest
newsmen had seen since Kjssinger and
Tho started meeting regularly in Paris
last October.
When Kissinger left the villa where the
talks took place, he did not wave as usual
to the waiting photographers.
FrequenUy, leaders of the two delega-
tions have strolled toge ther during a
lunch break and public handshakes
normally marked the opening and closing
of the meeting.
After the meeting, Kissinger: and Assis-
tant Secretary of State William H.
Sullivan strolled together in the garden
and then the American team left. Tho,
accompanied by ~Harloi peace delegation
chief Xuan Thuy, left 10 minutes later.
The meeting. the first between Kiss-
inger and Tho since the 22nd round col·
lapsed 27 days ago,-took place on a cold,
foggy day at a Communist-Owned country
house in suburban Gif sur Yvette.
Tho arrived first with the head of the
Hanoi peace delegation, Xuan Thuy, and
went straight into the house. Shortly
before ll a.m. (5 a.m. PSTJ, Kissinger
drew up with Sullivan.
No one came to the door to greet the
Americans, \vho went inside after waiting
brieny.
At 3:30 p.m .. the American team led
by Kissinger left the villa and returned to
the U.S. Embassy residence.
Tho said on arrival in Paris Saturday
about the new round of talks: '"The
·decisive· moment has arrived."
KiS!inger. whonew-1n1atesmrday,
said the talks were "one more maj<:!r e£-
-fort1L to resolvt>-the Vietnam-problem.
At 3 p.m. (6 a.m. PST), technical ex-
perts from both sides, who have been
meeting regularly since before the 22nd
round of talks broke up, got together
again at Saint-Nom-La-Breteche, outside
Ing was torn in the side of the concrete
bunker used as a base by Lie snipers. Jt
came from repeated barrages by the
high-velocity weapons aboard the
beucopter.
Tustin, was seriously wounded and taken th~ Democrats ~ad been v1cttmized by fires, 27, in a shopping center at Cerritos the bank windows.
t 0 Tus tin Comm uni t y Hosp i ta I along w i th Wl despread J>O II t1cal espl on a g e. I liiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil-ca pt. Robinette, who died several hours The Democrats hammered away at the I 1
Paris.
Police used extreme caution, and did
not explain why there was no attempt to
use fire chemicals or explosives to force
the men out.
As the drama continued, most of the
city's business district was paralyzed,
with streets blockaded around the hotel.
Officia1s allowed no one through.
At midmorning there was only specula·
tion about what prompted the shootings.
LQµisiana Atty. Geri. William Guste
sald' he would ask for a federal in·
vestigation. "I am now convinced that
thez:e .l.$ a.n undergro.und national suicid,al
group" belft on creatin6 ~ terror '·in
America," he charged.
Banowsky in Running
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Or. William S.
Banowsky, president 0£ Pepperdine
University, says he is a candidate to suc-
ceed retiring Cat State San Francisco
President S. l. Hayakawa.
Ob.NGI COAn
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later. incident during the election caJT.paign but
Investigators claim Sgt. Baroldi shot did so without the spotlight of the trial
capt. Robinette and that Detective Gray which Sirica postponed until after the
shot· Campise. Nov. 7 election.
A rourth man -who somehow figures As the trial got unde r way, defense at-
in the case -was involved but Tustio
police have so far declined to identify
him or his role , possibly that of a
narcotics informant.
From Pagel
STABBING ;,. Due to the possibility or attack by
other prisoners in dormitory-type
cellblocks, Sgt. Baroldi \\'as booked into
Costa Mesa City Jail, while Deteclive moned an ambulance and both men were
Gray is lodged in Newport Beach City taken to South Coast CommWlity
Jail. •lospital, where · the young Marine was
Ironically, the $6 million Orange Cour\.. pronounced dead.
ty Jail facility built four years agQ hasn't Just prpr. to the Andrews leaving ~or
a l!ingle cell designed for special max· the hospital, Macres came 16 the station
imutn·seculity proteclfon. · .-. ~·-to report the · fight. He was held in
Tustin Police and Orange County custody by orficers.
District Attorney's investigators are Janise and Andrews were arrested
handling the case and remain extremely r.bout six hours later after officers
tight·lipped about the multiple factors in-checked with the District Attorney's Of·
volved. flee.
E1iroll1ne1it Dip s
For Saddleback
Total \Yinter enrollment at Saddleback
Co1n munity College was 3,981. down
about eight percent from the fall enroll-
ment of 4.313, according to J.~red E.
Bremer, district superintendent and col·
Jege president. '
Dr. Bremer said this attrition rate is
"about normal'' and pointed out that lasl
year. the Mission Viejo campus had a
fall-off of about 9 percent between the
fa:! and winter classes.
\Vhile generally the futl·timr enroll-
ment is down Bremer said !he part·time
enrollment nf the college was up.
After investigation is completed the
district attorney will detennine what
charges may be brought against the
p .icipants. Purcell said.
Purcell said prior to the fight, Macres
&nd two young women had been at a
small market along Glenneyre Street.
Inside the market, Janise and Andrews
made some remarks about the girl, he
said.
She left. and along with another girl
and Macres drove of( in a small foreign
car en route to Santa Ana.
Macres told officers he' had been forced
to stop in the road at the scene of the
fight by -i l _ carrying the Marines.
The altercation involved all the oc-
cupan ts of both · cars including the
women. Andrews' death wound was
reportedly a stab to the heart area.
~tacres as well and the women were also
injured in the fight , Purcell said.
Moon Bound
Sov iets Lau 1ich Lu1ia Rocket
J\tOSCO\Y (UPI) -'Mle Soviets today hurled an unmanned Luna 21 rocket
Into space en route to the moon. the Tass news agency said.
The first moon probe launched by the Soviets in 11 months streaked into
earth orbit at 9:55 a.m. (10:55 p.m. rsr Sunday), Tass said.
"THE STATION WAS LAUNCHED to the moon from the orbit of an arti-
ficial satellite of the earth and was placed on a trajectory close to the esti·
mated one," it said ••
Tais said only that the purpose of the probe was "In accordance with the
program of space studies" and gave no dctalls of its mission.
'
THE SOVIETS HAVE yet to land wen on the moon, but two robot moon-
scoopers bavt bet.n :ruecesi.-ful in returning lunar soil to earth. The latest, Luna
~-retumed la91 February.
(
CLEAN SWEEP
LOW
PRICES
ARE
tO yoUll
1tOU. !a LOADING 1ABLE rv
pOR1ABlE
WASK£R
come in and
see this
on•
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f
NO ONR
SELLS
FOR
LESS
••• ANO
RAISED
ELSE-
WHERE
BIG SPACE
406 POUND !~ VIHG .,.£EZER
C . 90DAY
Member of
C•llfornf•'• largest CASH
Cooptr•tlw Buying W1l H AP'PlOYID
Group With The CllOIT
r a 1, AMMIAta 'owtr of 110 Stores 111•1Mtte• ~ Volume Buying m .................. ~
___'__1815 NEWPO.RJ_BLVll.Jawntown CllstaJtm · -fhone-548-17.88
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pen1ng!
estern
Gran
Great
sa~i11gs
Comes to
Fashion Island
Join Our.Celebration! Now through January 13
We're bringing that good Great Western feeling into the Newport
·area with the Grand Opening of our new office in Newport Center
at 80 Fashion Island. It's the newest in Great Western's statewide
network of 66 full-service savings offices, California's largest.
And we're celebrating-until January 13-with a special gift for you,
"GW" balloons for the children and refreshments for all.
So please come in soon. You'll find we've made saving money
just about as easy as it can be. We're open every Saturday from
10 to 4. Our drive-up teller window is open every weekday evening
until 7. And Great Western gives you the most. The highest rates
on insured savings. Many free financial services. The strength of:
assets over $4 Billion. And a record of complete safety, since 1887.
So get the Great Western feeling now. It's the feel ing that comes
from knowing you've put your savings in exactly the right place.
-
Our savings lobby features four
teller windows, convenient
New Accounts Desks where you
can talk with our savings
counselors, and a comfortable
lounge area .
GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS .
80 Fashion Island,. Newj>ort Center• Telephone 640-0333
Office Hours: Open Every~a~urday 10 to 4 • Weekdays 9 to fl() --
____ _,D=rive-up-1eller...Window Open 9 to 7 Weekdays . .
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This famous
SwMe:tCook Book!
A brand new edition of Sun sefs
best-selling Dinner Party Cook
Book. It's yours for the asking
at our special Grand Opening
Gift Table. Fifty menus for
all occasions, over 500 recipes.
All tested by the editors of
Sunset. Limit one to each adult,
please.
Earn the highest rates of interest
on insured savings and get all these
Free Financial Services with any
account of $1000 or more:
FREE. TRAVELERS CHECKS
FREE MONEY ORDERS
FREE NOTARY SEgVICE
FREE TRUST DEED I NOTE
COLLECTIOI'\.
FREE CHECK-A-MONTH PLANS
($5000 or more)
PLUS FREE SAVE-BY-MAIL SERVICE
DAIL V PILOT 9
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Fi11:··· · ·• Dealers Make Plans
I
e Propert!I Stile
LOS ANGELES -Atlantic
Rlchfltld CO. says It bu com·
pleted sale of itl Rocky Moun.-
taln and Mldcon,lnenl
PropeMles to Puco, Inc., of
Wilndngton, Dtl., lot about
$175 million and will net an
after-tu extraordinary credit
of about S:Z million to II
mllUoo from the aa1e..
Pasco, a 52: percent owned
subsldlary ol l'kw York-hued
.Studebaker-Worthington Inc.,
agreed ·14 purcb.,.11H!.pr<>
perUes last September.
e Red Agreement
~tOSCOW -Armand Ham-
mer, head of Occtden tal
Petrolewn Corp., announced
signature of an $80-mlllion
agreemenl with !he Soviet
Union. •
A statement released by
Hammer said he would ae.11
metal-finishing equlpmrnt to
the Soviet Union and buy
Soviet nlckel under a five-year
agreement with total turnover
of $8 million.
e S&:L Merger
LOS ANGELES -United
Savings and Loan of Los
Angeles, a subsidiary o f
United Financial Corp., has
announced plans to merge
with Citizens Savings and
Loan Association of San Fran-
cisco u:ider an agreement a~
b,~~ by shareholders of both
Spokesmen for the com·
paniH Aid the stock transac--
Uon woUld have an indicated
market value or about $.5.3
million.
Board Chairman Roderick
M. Hiiis attributed the
decrease in Qrofits to a strike
at the unJt Los Angel es-based
firm 's 1peclalty steel pro-
ducing sublldiary, which sin<:i!
has been settled .
Disney Aide
Helps Vets
Obtain Jobs
Karl Andrews. supe:rv.L>:<>r o!
l;-----op<•.,1Uonl at Di!neyland-:-t1111:!
returned to the "Magic
•
~after-...a period or
service as a loaned e:rttUtive
with the Orange County t.1etro
of the National Alliance of
Busineumen.
1
The National Allia.n'e l}f
Businessmen is a partnership
between industry 1,.;•d govern·
ment fonned in 1968 bv
preiiidenUal requ~~ fortth!"
purpose o( finding suittble
employment for lbe d1sad-
vanteged aod for :-etumlng
Vietnam veterans.
Andrews, in hit po1111tlon e::i
Job Procuremeni and Place
ment RepresentaUvr. with
NAB, dealt wi~ top e:r-
ec:ut1ve1 of Orange C.ountv
buslnt!l1e1, enlisting their t•IP-
port of tilt NAB program
through pledges of j<Jb open-
ings in their respectiv~ firms.
He was slnguJarly responsiblt'
for ldentlfyJoa 1.1194 job op·
portunlUu In the business sec-
tor for veCerlDI and for disad-
vantaged per:aons whu are
unemployed. •
PERSONAL
RADIO PAGER
TONE .. VOICE
N• QlllNcl hdi.11 U1f1
LOW COST
MONTH to MONTH
REN'IAL BASIS
ORAN(;[ COUNTY
R,\nlOTELEPHONE
SfHVJCE INC .. , ...... ,., """ ......
H5·330~
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WASHINGTOI. . (APl
Some 500 auto tire manufa('
tured by the P.1ansfield Tire &
Rubber Co. are being recalled
for failure to meet federal
standards, the TrADSportation
Department has announced.
The dej>artment "said the
firm agreed lo recall the
Powel' 'Falcon '4-ply whit.wall
tires manufactured during the
last -k of April and !lr!I
two weeks of May In 1972.
S1z of 34 samples tested for
the department "failed to
mee t the endurance test re-
qulred" by federal regula·
tlons, the department said.
For customers returning the
defective tires by March 25,
the company will pl"C'vlde free
replacements, mounting and
balancing, the departmt-..nt
said.
The recalled tires are size
8.43 x 15 and ~ar the serial
numbers WLP~VAF 182,
Wl.PBVAF 192, and
WLPPBAF 202 .
THERE ARE OVER
100 WAYS TO l'INANCE YOUR
CAR ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Boulevard
af Car•
LOOI fO• THI IMILIM AT
CONNELL J JOHNSON & SON
CH!VROLIT Llncolr>-MtrC\lry
2f2& 2626
.HARBOR BLVD HARBOR BLVD. ,,.....,, C....i111t, ......
L
Finishing Touch
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COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK ~T
!'tf"W YOA.K IUl'JJ -FOl'l•M "' r.wk• on 111t N.-von stoc.. ..c:~
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S! •• . , ., •• ~~ •• Nl NI Nl Nl
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-... _.., 8, 1973
Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Market Sluggish
Af te1~ Advances
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock ,market slogged
along ~;lb only minor ~rice changes Monday in Ille
aftermath of last week a vigorous advances.
'
Trading was fairly active, !bough It simmettd
down in the afternoon.
" '·. The Dow Jon"' oveug._..t 30 lndusmah bid
climbe<I in three or last week's four sessions for 1.
gain of 27.47 poin.ts and a new cloaing high Friday
at 1,047.49.
-... .... CMtl -.... W. Clll.
SC OAJLV PILOf JJ
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DAILY PILOT
For The
Record
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
...... .,.__. M
t(r.11.r. ,.,..lclt A. tl'od lttibtn E. ....,..., J~IM Mid J~
WUllMI.
ltr-'t, WIMI-It, end NarK'( G, Coltr, borlt E. •rocl H•rw.1 l .
C-"O. 11111111 end JOMOll I
Hlf'T*ll'I, S11e1111 It. Mod Pl<,ll L.
Mtdln., Y~ •rid ,.,..,. Mwttn.
Fl11119r. NMIC't' Ir-~ lot.r1 Frink.
• .,.... ... lrkflo L. •rid 11.kr..nt.
!.Mfn«, K.llhl"" o. •rid JCIMPh -·
Probation .Department
Good Home Needed
By JACK BROBACK
Of .... Dlltr , .... ,,.,.
SANTA ANA -Lisa ii 15
years old. Her rather 11 an
aiocobollc and be bar beaten
her. Her mother was rl!CenUy
admltted to a mental l\oa'pilal
because she could not cope
with her husband'a drlnktng.
Cheryl Is a pretty, 11\y,
likeable child. She II well
behaved and does well in
schcx>I. Her btolher Is not as
well behaved and will be more
of a challenge to hls foster
parents .
But Tom has participated in
group and lndlvidual therapy
for almost a year and has
!Wown steady improvement.
.,.._ __ H~, ~,.n:,~.:~#K.llW!nt.
1be young girl ill withdrawn,
almost sullen. She feel s she
has been cheated out of a
home and parents who care
about her. She -DOI do well in school and !eela lha1 she
lW liUJe Wollerli!l)lone.-
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H•rcllr!llMm. Sophi• ...., o..la. OllllolW, o.ioi'W M. end Kwnlt IC.
Teller. Artfftt II.~ C..-olool A... ,.Ol"MI", """'""' Aon-end Jl,llllM ......
Bellew, Ml•Hvn Sue •rid Thome•.
cwn11. hl'fko LtllllN •rid wn111m Aon.
·-· Mlnill ~ ..... end M¥L1n Hott, Mtt'll ltld ~ Lii. .... , EdWenl L i nd ll1rHr1 J.
l(tm, Jalhn ~. 9"11 ........,.,. 1(1y.
Ed'Hnh. Dlmlt II.av end C•rel Ami. Ytt.wn, e-.,. Antoni• ..-Id ,.,_ .._,
I,._., llMl!rf c. •rid e-'\' .\.
Gr'lfflltl, S.lil'I J. erld JI"*' W. Hlfdlc«tl, f\IMCJ' L .... Jahn H.
Slnl'Ct. CIM'I and Frank, • o~... LYtld& T.n-1 .lftd Frlllef'lck -.. Coltman, Patrldt lob9rl 1nd k•rt11
Mllrl•.
G()nglet, Johll A. arid Flcll'MICa A.
Kim, Dour11 t( 1rld 'rl'""-M. Tollft, Dor11 O. llld J1mt1 I . io-t, Undri Svt.n 1nC1 ,....,_ ........
Mc9f'ld9, M.lrlt'tn ltvtll Ind W!Jlle Jo..
Htr'Mndtr. Arnonto J, -Irma II.
Rldlllpll, Miry Alk1 .no Dlnnl1 G1•0!'.
HlttCM, MkhNI Deloe -Olllll LH. ........ Dlntttf' ..._ ... Jeny o..
DevlM, J\llCllth AIW\I lftd GHlllrt ·-· kfwclln, Slolf'tly A. Ind G.lf'( ll.
,,._, JoM lftd .. ~I Mc:NlfY, ~ IN.lnl't' L.ol1 Md Wall« -.. MltlliW, "°"""" M. Ind &:1..-i J. Al'llllrkaln. l.lnd9 SW Md J-J-..
$twill, ..... A. ... o\ln:J• 0 . ~ "T._ 1i... .Incl Si.Vet!
?-~ rv.,....,. Mlllf* .,.. Jolill
·l'llM D•o•-2' ..,,..., ~ • ., Md C.ltllr1nl
Ellralltttl,
ltoctw.11, lrtvla P'lonnc'9 and Douolat Clltf.
Wllk'"-'o WllU.m Rllblrt Ind &averly ..... Ura. ,._..,. s. lrld t-low1rd I . l;'&::t:J:il~'!t~'." .. ~~.;;~:~f;2:rt
.. ~ ...... T-... -.. H -<>nil:' Maril C. •1111 Jt1vcind 5.1/otu~ln.rtM and AllUl!dtr. ................ ~ ....... ,_ ~!!!"ldet. MlrHvn Tl!Mlll Ind .... 111 -.-1 Stndt°• L. and ~ • Glorll Sw.nn ..i W..,.... .
L.. and Shi"" s. d E. Md ,,,.,_rwt A. ~..L .Incl John v .
Llsa. needs a foster family
who would show patience and
understanding. It may take
her a loog time lo learn to
trust again.
Foster homes for Lisa and
others like ber are desparately
needed, accor<ling in the
Orange County Probation
Department.
Nancy Boles of the pnr
baUon . department and Bert
Knight, of the county We\£are
Department put it this wav:
"The final question and
ultimate responsibility f1>r
these children faces you now.
Do you have the love, pa-
tience, concern and Un·
derstandlng to _. your heart
and your borne to a Lisa".,
They ask that you call for
more Jnfonnation ~anting roster ~ licensing. The
number i.s 532-7411 or 834-4321 .
More than 900 Orange O>un·
ty children are now living ln
foster homes, but more homes
are needed to meet therln·
creasing demands for
placement.
Cheryl and Tom, sister and
brother, aged IO and 13 are
another example.
Retired
Officers
Elect ..... T.~11:. rfi!} H. ""' 'Wlmern H. ,..-!_ Md Oudl.iY IC.
• Mrttou_.iJtMo.w~A...81r1 Seven Orange Coast in:: l9ttv L. 11111 L°"''• ll. residents have been elected of-T=r.....,.,.. "-Ind R•vmond ficers of the Orange C.ounty
EdwNnfl. Dorllld '"'°' w Monr-. Obapter of the Retired Of-~~G." anc1 1tot1. ficers Association.
WI I.II\'\ trk.1• """". -..._.,. 11111 Maj. Margaret M. Raney, of
n. ~*I:°' Ind Junlw LM. San Juan Capistrano will be ....... Ollteft Anlla Ind H1rald
ICEBERG
Lettuce
Broccoli
ANJOU
·Pears
CENTENNIAL
Yams
Fresh-Tender
Sweet.Juicy
a .. 1 Baking .
29¢ ...
29¢ lb.
29¢ lb.
19¢ lb.
fJe:fie<!Ife:$$e:Pl
WISCONSIN
Cheddar Cheese Agod Sharp 1, 19 lb.
SCHI RMERS
All Beef Knackwurst I n.
REES E
Champagne Cured Sauerkraut 20 OL 39c
RICHARD'S OWN
Combination· Bean Salad ..... 79c
cf r eee:rf!j
Tide Detergent 49 01.
FLEISCHMANN'S
Regular Margarine 1 lb.
LIBBYS
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Levee Planrers Sought
work groupa wW be divided in-
to ttams of two, one spacing
and cUutnc boleo and the
other pJanUnc CIJ!Ungs.
All volunteert working oo
the project 1hould be at least
12 year1 old with one adult to
each 20 woritr1.-Each team-is
expected to plant 600 cuttings
or about 20 feet of levee.
Required eqwpment in-
will provide the cutUnp ln the
levee area.
Parldng !er worlun wW be
provld«I alon( Ille eut lkle ot
BrookhW'St Street near Atlan-
ta.
Persons lnterest.fld ln joining
In the actl~Uy are a&ked to
call Sackett at ~118.
Kids Like cludes a garden hoe for dig-·
ging boles aod a bucket !or
carrying cuttings. Tile Orange To Ask Andy
County Flood Control Distrjct
iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
QU~U·TY -VALUE -SERVICE
r
DRESS IT, MAGNIFICENTLY-
and Richard's hat. more then 62 different dre11in91 to hel p yo u do it! In Cali •
forn i1, saleds are a w•y of life, fi.icha rd'1 opens up whole new flavo r horizo ns.
Beside1, we hive mixes, spices, herbs, imported oils end vinegers for you to
dre•m up your own dressings .
S•lad Dressings is just one of the many reasons Richard's makes it hard to shop
enywher• else .
Jfle:<!If
Rich erd's To p Of The Grade U.S.D.A. (Choice I Beef
7 .,Bone Roast Properly Trimmed 89¢ 1b.
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. ' •.·~. • ""·'"' '""· ,.. '-·. second vice president and Lt. ,,....,':'. -cm·dr. Edith E-/Ta lor >f San • , ... :;: ~-!>,_.._---lCl~em!!!!!;en~te~"'='r"'serv=°'e~as
Mollll-. ll'ld A111!1 P ll1r.
II:--H•rlan. ,,,.,. INI Ama ROM. treasurer.
Crea~ Style Corn 16~ OL
1---soroEt<GRIDDLE
Pancake-5yrup
Pillsbury Pancake Mix
Chuck:-Roa~st ~Bo •• ~, ... --------101---9,-b. -11--+-"' " to _......_ YaUa.L And membef1 Of the-group's
Callfornfa
BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME c...... dd Mar r7U450
Cuta Me111 14&.U24 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
'111 Brudway, CoAtl Meu
U s.Jm • McCORMICK LAGUNA
llEACll MORTUARY
12'1 LapDI Canyoa Rd.
-t5 • PACIFIC YTEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Otnlday Mortuary
Cbpd
l$M Pldnc View Drive
Newpon ......_ Ca1Uornl1 -• PEEK FMllLV
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
'lltt 1111 .. A..,
tl'etlmlll..., 111 ISll
SMITlll' :i.iTUAaY-
117 llalll SI.
"-'----1--....... ----·-
j • ,.,
board of governors will in-
clude Maj. Charle! A.
Krauchl, Maj. Marie L. Edson
and Capt. R. M. Vernon, all of
Costa Mesa: Maj. M. R. Ken-
ney t f Corona del Mar, and
Col. Vict<>r I. Coppad of
Laguna Hilla ..
Elected president was lat
Lt. William E. Black ol Qr.
ange.
Brea Unit
To Study
R evenues
BREA -A 1rrmember com·
lhlttee appointed by the school
boanl here wW meet T\Jesday
to begin studying "8Y' ol fin-
ancing a 25 percent enrollment
increase projected ror the next
six years.
Tbe group of teachers, high
school students, p a r e n t s •
homeowners and school board
members was selected by
Brea-Olinda 1Joilied School
District trustees to gather in-
fonnation on possible sources
or revenue needed to ac-
commodate t b e additional
students.
District officials attribute
the enrollment rise to a rapid
population growth throughout
the city.
Dinner Set
For Scouting
ANAHEIM -A recognition
dinner Is planned Jan. 31 to
celebrate the 50th anniversary
of scouting in Orange County
and to present scouting's
highest awards, the Silver
Beaver and Silver Fawn
•wards.
The event will be held at the
Anaheim Conve.nUon Center.
Bids Accepted
WESTMINSTER -OffJCer
applications from high JChool
graduates between the ages of
21 and 31 are. now being ac-
cepted at the Cali fornia
ltighway Path>! office here,
lm> Goldenwest St
Pe -e Quotes
makes rntmAr-
24 OJ.
2 lb.
HUNGRY JACIC
Mashed Potatoes S1rv11 2 4 I lb.
Kl eenex Facial Tissue 200 ct,
DEL MONTE
Pudding or Fruit Cups
CAPE SWAYNE
Grapefruit Juice 46 OL
Heinz Dill Pickles ]] OL
NAllSCO OllEO
Creme Sandwich Cookies 15 OL
SCHILLING
Ground Black Pepper 4 n.
Wishbone Italian Dressing 16 OK,
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Libbys Orange· Juice 6 OL
SPRINGFIELD
Leaf or Chopped Spinach 10 OL
\IAN d1 !<AMPS
Enchilada's 71/1 01.
l lRDS EYE
Cool 'n Creamy Puddings 171/J OL
E<!Ifie:rI!J
Scrumpets
Ecology Hea lth Bread
Custard Pie
Crispies
RICHARD'S PRIVATE LABEL
BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND
Blended Scotch Whiskey
16 PllOOP
Kentucky Straight Boorbon
10 PROOF
Windsor Cc:nadian Whisky .·
39c
49c
4 for $1
49c
49c
49c
47c
49c
49c
5 for $1
lOc
3 for $1
39c
6 for 59c
6Sc
$1.59
2 for 37c
$7.6 7 qt.
$5.86 qt.
$5.59 qt.
Slrort-rli-bs LHn and Tender ' 69¢ lb.
Ground Beef Pr•p•ro So Many w ays 73~ 1b.
Salisbury Steaks Our Own Special Seasoning 98 ¢1b.
1.19 1b. Stuffed Pork Ch,ps Oven Ready
-Chicken ii la Kiev Chive and Butter Sauce .... 1. 3 9 each
Filet of Floender Bake or Broil
Rainbow T roagf Frosh from ~.:~ River Idaho
MINIATURE
Starflow~rs Many Bright
Colors 1.29 ' bunch
Ad Prices Good Thru Jin. 6th
-"£,~ UOOLERTER ~·Lido, Newport Beach
0PEN·EMILY 9-7,-SUN..9 -6 -6T.H>300
""£,~ . HARBQR VIEW 1.660 Mac Arthur, Newport Beach
OPl'N OAllY-9-8, SUN.11-6 673-,ll55
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Laguna Bea~h
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL 66, NO. 8, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1973 TEN CENTS
3 Die Coast ]Jorder_ Smuggling ln~ident
.J
• Ill
By JOHN VALTERZA of their love~: ones. Another man was run
Ot .. OMlr ~lt91 ,, ... down as well.
Tbne penom were killed instantly and
., Mveral others severely inJured in a bor·
rilyiDg teries of lncldenUI Sunday evening
near t.be Border Patrol checkpolnt at San
Onoltt.
Patroi spo kesman Dale SWancutt said
the deaths occurred shorUy after S p.m.
at the height of the lnlens6 wave of il-
legal immigrants.
,
The deaths, all In the crowd<d lanes of
the san Diego Freeway' toot place at the
height of a massive number o( smuggling
incidents.
Two young women died before the eyes
U.S. Bombs
Allied Base;
9 lnjured
SAIGON (Uf>I) -Five American
fighter-OOmbers from the Air Force,
Navy and Marines today mistakenly
bombed the sprawling Da Nang Air Base
in what military sources said was an ap.
parent navigational error.
Nine Americam aod a Vietnamese
military gwird were injured. A UHi
Huey helicopter was damaged and three
fuel slorage tanks set alll.:
A total of 34 of the ~ bombs
"The first death,, ocrurnd when a
carload pulled over ahead of the check·
point and the .smuggler told his
passengers to get out and cross the
frttway," he explained.
--,..re~ bY ,. Alt F'orce F4
tom, two Navy A7 Cortaln and two
-MariDe-Ff Pbmltoms.-tdhrpapreody
landed In the no-portloo of the
huge joint U.S . ..soutlt V1olnamese base.
UPI corr.spondent Kenneth F.
Englade, on the base at the time of the
accldeotal hombing, aald two American
soldiers, two American ctvillans and the
South Vietnamese gwird were injured by
the bombs.
Four American airmen ~and another
U.S. civilian were inju.ed while fleeing
for cover from what was at first believed to be a Communist. rocket attack. ThO U.S. Command began an im-
mediate investigation. Military sources
said the Air Force, whlcb operates the
base housing 4,CXXl Amerkan servicemen,
would be In charge of the probe.
"The Navy aoO Marines will be in on
It too since they bad planes involved," a . . . source said. Meanw~ the air war O'{er North
Vietnam entered its lOtb mooth with 124
righter-bomben and aboUt 45 Il52s liitting
below the country's 2llth parallel In the 24
boun ending at dawn today.
U.S. Command spokesmen said
"numerous" trucks were destroyed near
the port of Vlnh, 137 miles north of the
Demilitarized :1ooe !!"<I "several" othen
....,.. hit neM Dont Hol, 38 miles oorth
of ·the DMZ.
Doctor's Theft
Loss $31 ,60P
' Tbe theft of art objects and peraonal
effects valued at $31,600 was reported lo La-=' Beach police by Dr. Wesley Ross
1..oCbausen, 393 Lookout .Drive, Laguna
Beach. • ~jects taken Include a $1,500 silver
cl\ilmpagne bucket, a $500 rabbit fur
bedipread, and a valuable "Eucrl!t11
tinme cross with 50 small diamonds.
ruble> and emeralds Inset. aa well u
many other oriental objects of art. Dr. Lochausen told officers he had
-away from the residence from 'IW8dly through Saturday a n d
dl:lcoVered the loss upon his return.
-t;oll.e-ge -A.dding
Two Aq ~a Tea ms
Saddleback Community College wttl
ha,. swimmlnc Ind water polo teaml
Objector
Sgt. I. C. Ernest Pounder, high-
ly decorated Green Berel, told
newsmen Sunday he has J>e..
come a conscientious objector
because of "this insane war."
He returned 24 medals and will
not wear his uniform.
Police P r obing
Stabbing Death
Of Young 'Marine
The stabbing death of a 17-year.old
11-1arioe Corps private stationed at Camp
Pendleton was under investigation today
by Laguna Beach police who have In
custody two other Marines -one the
dead youth's brother -and a Laguna
Beach man.
PFC Ross Paul Andrews of 1499 Ter-
race Way, Laguna Beach was pro-
nounced dead on arrival at South Coast
Community Hospital ·Saturday.
Harry Bruce Macres, rt, a florist, was
held in Laguna Beach City Jail on
charges of aS!lault with intent to commit
murder and suspicion of murder.
Jan Oliver Janise, 23, a Camp
Pendleton Marine, of 14%2 Capistrano
Ave., Laguna Beach; and Robert Stuart
Andrews, 19, a Marine and the dead
youth's brother, of 1499 Terrace Way,
Laguna Beach were held on charges of
assault with intent to do great bodily
harm and suspicion of murder. No bail
had beeo set.
'Ibe death injuries to the older
Andrews were alleged to have been suf-
fered in a fight involving the four men
and two women on a darkeoed part of
Laguna Canyon Road near El Toro Road
Friday.
Police Sgt. Neil Pw<eil said the
weapon used in the brawl was a pocket-
type lmif<. ~
Purcell said police lint learned of lhe
incident wben a car carrying Janbe and
(See STABBING, Pqe I)
German Class Set
beginning nm FaO , the bollnl of trustees Cl.,... In beginning German will be
has decided. held starting at 7 p.m. Thursday aL Room
Despite oomo ,.......uons abollt the 33 In Laguna Beach !Dgh School u port
costa lnwlved, pool ttntal of 13,000 plus of the Laguna Beach AdltlL Educailoo
tnnspol'Ultion io away games &nd pro-propam.-Tbe course wW lnc:lUde coo-
vtrsallons necemary !or traft! In 'raltd aaJary of a part-time coach, Gcnnany, as well u .,.,,.,...r and
trusttes acetpled the plan. cultural informatloo~ _
Tnlst"' Hans Vogel spotce In favor of The Instructor II JdarOii Marino,° !tom
~ pl111, noting tbat feeder high lchools tbe Anaheim D!strtct. lludied ., tM
to Seddltbac:k bad bad highly SU<ttSS!ul Ulllvenlly of H ldelbei(; and ttcenUy
11Wlmmlog ttams durtna the )"!at. returned from a year's teodllDg In
Vcigel 'teld thlt was lt>e•typo of oport Germany "1>ett Ille taugbt at • G<nnu um itlOOld be empiiMlred·bJ'-the co111,...._-h;p--------
J • '
The first wave of' pusengers dkl as Ftve minutes later, the horror was
ordered. repeated.
But Torlbla Perez do Mtjla, 11. of YeL aoother smuggler pulled Oftt after
Ensenada, Baja Califumla. was atzuclt notidn8 the cbeckpolnt In oporatlon.
and killed by a car.· He, too, ordered his cargo to nee.
An unljleotllled male al.to was strucl: In In that Right ICl'05S eight lanes of busy
that crolSlng. He died at the sceoo. freeway Victoria <>moo CtnlllDlea, 15, of
"'Jbe woman'• husband appareoUy saw Purtficaclon, Ja.lbco, wu tilled when lhe
!he whole thing. He told· us be Pold 1150 was hit by• fast-moving car.
each for the trip north and the smuggler Her father also uw the tragedy. He
ordered them out of the car and told told patJoo!J:M:n that the "fare" for hil
ltiem to st.art running," Swancutt sakt. ~ famlly'1 trtp oorth was $22$ each.
. lllg2nr1y patrolmen lnveatiptlng the
acdJdeots sa1d the vtcttms all were run
oVer repiatedly.
In the first tragedy, cars dr1""1 by
Jose Lopez Ruiz, 24, of Lynwood and
Raymond Lools Barton, 23, of San Diego,
were lnvolved.
In the second incident, patrolmen sakf,
five separate can ran over the
Cervantes girl before traffic could stop.
Patrolmen art still oot tertain how
many other aliens may have been injured
in the dushes across the freeway .
"There must have been lit'!rally bun--
dreds of them who escaped because we
counted 24 abandoned cars in W>e atta
through the day. People just jumped out
of them and ran every which way,"
Swancutt said.
Th~ patrolman speculated that ICOrt!
of persons entered Camp Pendleton and
others succeeded ia crossing the freeway
and heacft'd up the beach around the
ISee ALIENS, Page Z)
una
Marathon Spree
2 Hotel Snipers
Still Hold Forth
BULLETIN
NEW ORLEANS I UPI) -Polite
stormed the roof of the Howard Jolluoa
Motor Lodge today. 1bey found the body
of one 1nJpcr a.Jed Sunday night but DO
trace of two others.
NEW ORLEANS (AP ) -Heavily arm-
ed policemen held their circle around a
downtown hotel today as two surviving
snipers-opened firt aga.in in a marathon
tmf)tmg spree tbit Jen stx dead IDd 17
----k -'k * ...
Death List
From S niper
Fir e Give n
NEW ORLEANS (UPI ) -A list of
known dead and some of the injured in
sniper atta~s al a New Orleans hotel.
TIIE DEAD
I. Phil Coleman. policeman, gunshot
wound in head.
2. Paul Persiga, 33, policeman, gunshot
wound in face.
3. Lou\s Sirgo, dej)Uty police
superintendent, gunshot wound in back.
4. Frank Schnelder, 62, hotel assistant
manager, shot at the 11th floor stairwell.
5. Dr. Robert B. Steagall Jr., 27.
Martinsville, Va .. gunshot wound In head
and ann, found on 18th floor hallway.
!. Elizabeth Steagall, 26, gunshot
wou_pd in ria:bt eye, found ne.s.t to. her
husband, She was Dr. Steagall's wife .
11lE INJURED
t . Kenneth Solis, 26, policeman,
shoulder wound, fair .
2. Emanuel Palmisano, 43, policeman,
ann woond , fair.
3, Chris Caton, 20, ambulance driver,
chest wound, fair.
4. Charles Arnold, 27, policeman, face
wound. serious.
5. Tim Ursin, 29, fireman, ann wound,
fair.
6. Walter Collins, about 50, hotel guest,
bullet wound. critical.
7. Robert Bemisb, 43, hotel guest, .tb-
domen wound, serious.
I. Larry Arthur, policeman, ~de
wound, fair.
9. Michael Burl, policeman, injured in
fall, good.
10. Joe Anderson, eo. fireman, ann
wound, fair.
11. Robert Reeves, 43, po~ceman, heart
(See VICTIMS, Page ZI
injured. Meanwhile, new gunf1te was
reported in a nearby building. (See Pic-
tures, Page 4)
It was quiet from dawn until nearly
noon, but then sniper fire rang out from
the Downtown Howard Johmon Hotel,
and police marksmen, stationed in SUT-
rounding buildings with high-powered
rifles, raked the boteJ roof, where the
men...nre belitved.StiU holed• Tho~Canie11ew ·--
• Marine Co1111 he!J<VJ>J«, 'With potlet. ~l'!"booters at the ready, hovered •
few feet over tbe roof and blasted hlgb-
veiocity tear Pl •t a atalnrell.
Minutes later, police reported gunfire
on a patrolman stationed at an in.
tersection several bklcks from tbe hotel.
Authorities detennined that the new
shots were coming from a nearby
building, and a police tank·like armortd
car was sent to lhe scene.
The helicopter drew no Ore on three
early morning passes over the OOilding,
including the third pus for u~ tear gas.
Police had revised their list of dead,
saying lbat one victim apparently was
counted twice, leaving their official total
at six. All were kientified.
A Marine leutenant u.id one sortie in-
cluded close-up photo(P'aphs of !he
bunker-like enclosures used u cover by
the men.
The enclosures, five-inch thick
concrete-tlab room1 at the end of the
roof, are coverings for lhe 1teep stairs
from the lBlh floor to the roof. Officials
said there are two right-angle elbowi tn
the It.airway, making it impossible to
shoot up and perilous to even cbeck out.
Police said they djd ool know lhe iden-
tity or the three men who beg!lll their
siege from the hotel Sunday morning. A
sharpshooter.,. watching the gunmen's
movements with a »power teleacope,
described them a1 black men. at least
one with a goatee and bush haircut.
In the daylight, the chips and pocks
from the thousands of rounds of high-
powered ammunition were visible on I.he
face of the building, espe..;ially at the
back of the bunkers.
At one place could be seen the holes,
hammertd out of Abeer concrete by
persistent police fire. A three-foot apen-
ing was torn In the side of the concrete
bunker uRd as a base by t.ue snipers. It
came from repeated barrages by the
high-velocity weapons aboard the
helicopter.
Pollce UiE!d extttme caution. and did
not explain why there' was no attempt to
use fire chemicals or explosives to force
the men out.
M. the drama continued, most of the
(See SNIPERS, Pap Z)
Moon Bound
Soviet,s Launcli Luna Rocket
MOSOOW (UPI) -Tbe SOVletl today hurled an wimanned Lima 21 rocket
lnto space en route to the: moon, the Tess news agency aakl.
Tbe Ont ._, probe launched by the SOViets In 11 mooths .-ked into
earth ori>tt II t :lt I.Ill. (10:5> p.m. PsT Stmday), Tasa said.
"TllB STATl()N lf.t.I ~ lo the moon from lhe--~R of an artl·
llclaJ aat<llile of jlle ..a. 1111 -pla...i on a ~ clooe to lhe at!.
ll\lted ooe," tt Ali..
Taaa Aid only .. lhe -of Ille probe WU "In occonlanco with the p-<I. -lllldles" Ind ga" no ctetalla of Its mlssl<n.
'fllll 80VIZTS RA VE yet to land Dllll on the tmon, but two n>bot mooo-
ICOOIJOl'I ha"' be<n """""1ul in rdllmlng lwiar .,u to earth. The laid, Luna
20, rt!ilmed lut F<bnllQ'. _
' • ,
DAllY~lttfff'tlf1t
COLLAPSES IN CHURCH
Lquni1 Greeter L•rMn
Laguna Greeter
Eiler Larsen
S11f f ers Attack •
2 P er sons
Fall From
211d Floor
By FREDERICK SCHOEME!ll.
Of ... 0.11'1' Ple.t ST•N
An explosion of undetermined origin
rocked a wing of the exclu.sive Surf and
Sand Hotel in Laguna Beach late this
morning , throwing two persons from a
second story apartment onto the street below.
The injured were tent.otively identified
as Yui Chum Wong and Kay H. Woo.
Quon and Woo were both rushed lo South
Coast Co mmunity Hospital in South La-
'guna foe emerjeooy-tr-eetmcnt.,-----
Wong and Woo both worked at the
Outr_!gger_Bestaurant adjacent to the
Suri and Sand complex.
Woog ls believed lo have suffered
massive head lnfuries when he was
thrown out or the apartment by the ex-
plosion.
"ft sounded like a big explosion, .. said
Outrigger manager Bill Simmons. "AD J
heard was lhis big sound and then a lot
of glass shattering on the sidewalk."
The explosion occurred shortly after 11
a.m. in a seco nd story apartment -the
oldest section of the Surf and Sand com-
plex.
Firemen on the scene were unable to
give the cause for the explosion and
Laguna Beach's famous greeter, Eiler subsequent fire. All units from the
Larsen, now 8.1 years old, was reported Laguna Beach Fire Department res:Pond·
in satlsfadory health today after col· ed at the scene. •
lapsing in church Sunday. Both Wong and Woo, SimmoM said,
Larsen was re tu med to the Laguna Were middle-aged. men and had served. as , . , cooks at the Outngger for a short period
Beach Nursmg Home foUowmg the Ill-of tITT!e. The ·apartment ·in which they
cideot at Community Presbyterian.,. Jive has been reserved for employes or
Church, 415 Forut Ave., Laguna Beach. tlie Surf and Sand and its restaurants.
Emergency medicaJ aid was ad· Traffic in the busy 1400 block of South
mlntstered io the octogener1an in the Coast Hi ghway was snarled as the resu1t
h rch b he La . ~See BtAST, Page 21 c u y t guna Beach Fire
Department and Dr. Robert RoJ\er of
Laguna Beach. He was taken by am·
bulance to the nursing home after
emergency care.
Beverly Arnold , acting administrator
of the nursing home said., Eiler had
rc ::ivcrc ~ by Sunday afternoon.
"We think be may have just gotten
short of oxygen. He tries to do way way
more than he can," Mrs. Arnold said.
"He feels this is his job, to be out
greeting people," she said.
She said he had recovered sufficiently
to be orf oxygen at about 2 p.m. Sunday.
"He wanted no more oxygen, no more
nurses ... " Mrs. Arnold said.
_ She said be was very mentally alert
ar:J was "a sweet doll."
Larsen, bom in Aarhus, Denmark, in
1~ came to Laguna Beach in 19'2 and
stat1ed greeting as well as working as a
g:1r e:.:t:. lie left for awhile, then return·
ed to Laguna.
He was officially pronounced the
Lagur. . Beach Greeter In 19&3.
Nationally famous. Larsen would stand
on street comers of the Art Cok>oy and
with a bull·bom voice call out to
passersby and motorisls: "Hellooo, How
are you?"
EMPLOY RESULTS
WITH PILOT A.DS -· Find the right penon to fill that job by
putting 1 DAILY Pttnr clusltied want
ad In your employ. He.re's how:
Mat'" gal, PIT CM Ins. Of-
fice. Exp not nee. Filing /type
& ability to cofnmunicatt a
must. Days m -n:n.
The re!pOrlSe to this ad wu tremen-
dous.. Employ IOD1e quick mults <>I your
...... llialcdlrect 1G41178.
,
FEAR OF DEMONS
KILLS BELIEVER
STOKE , England (AP ) - A rear of
vampires caused the death of a 58-year-
old pottery worker, a coroner 's inquest
was told today .
A physician testiCied that Polish--born
Demetrius Myiciura died from choking
on a ga rlic clove which he left in his
mouth overnight to keep vampires away.
Police testified that Myiciura 's
bedroom was littered with salt. pepper
aod garlic, all traditional antivamptre
precautions.
Orange Coast
Weather
The weatner\ady aay1 there's an
~SO percent chance of &bowen to-
night and Tuesday, clearing in the
afternoon on Tue!day. More rain
i~ txpttted at the end of tht Wet.k.
Highs today 55-60. Lows 45-50.
INSIDE TODA 'l'
Anti-rmoktng groups got dg·
orette ad! taken off the air
waves. Now th« imall.dgar ln-
dUJt'l has taken the reim with
cigar-pufftng cowboys taking the
girlJ away from the n°"""1:okert.
See ato"tl on Poge 7.
1
I
OAllt PtLOT lB
Coun_Jy's
Farms Have
Few Losses
Orange County t:ltrus and avocado
growers have gotten by real well with
very little damage to CIQPl}rom.. cold
weather, in contrast to heavy losses
elsewhere in the stat~ over the last
month, a spokesman ror the county
agricultural department 11id 1oday.
-• •
State Proposal
Slashes Possible
•
At UCI Library
Library operationa at UC Irvine would wait for days, or go to another city for a
be "dlmlnlshed" and 0 jeopardlzed" by a book for their research very often ...
at.ate department of finance plan to con-tbtre's going to be a severe breakdown."
aolldate California's research libraries at The recommendations were made to
Berkeley and U>s Ana:eles. UCI bead correct two major faults found by the
llbrarlall John Smith uld 1oday. auditors in Iba Unlveralty of Calllomia
"I am 111rt the campus at Irvine will and State University library procedures
take very strong ei:cepUon to any library -"ln!dequale sharing of nondupllcated
"As a whole for aU or the season, we've
had little damage," the county offlcial
aaid. "We've skinned by pretty good."
planning whlch prevents this campus resources within a region" and
_ ..Irom..aHordin llbrary lllla'icel ln l_U~ ~pUcal"!? of Infrequently used
port of its academic program," Smith malffiali.
Ofllcials at the U.S. Fruit Fro!!
Service at UC RJverslde Friday had
waroed growers In the San BernardJno.
Orange Cowlty area.s that sml!dge pota
mlghl be necessary to ward off cold over
the weekend.
'host Service-officials said today that
no frost damage ls expected this week
and· a beoeflclal rain Ls expected tonight
or Tuesday. Rain after a dry cold spell
helps reverse crop damage from ·
dehydration, a spokesman said.
'Ibe 1pokesman for Orangt County's
agric:u)tural office, which Is charged with
asseutng any crop damage, sald despite
the warning, county growers were
1-· UPI Tt'""'°'9
WOUNDED POLICEMAN COMFORTED BY FELLOW OFFICER IN NEW ORLEANS GUN BATTLE
Body Of Slain Patrolman Philip J. Coleman Lin et Left, a Victim of Rooftop Sniper
"lucky" lut wetkenct
Ellewbere tn the state, a survey · io--
dlcated that the top 35 citrus growers In n-County reported a loss of up to
thre&<!uarters of lbelr crop in
December's frtezing weather.
From Pqe J
SNIPERS ... Education Chief Quits,
Extenslve da~ge Is also expected lo
be recorded in Tulare ~ty and the San city's business district was paralyzed,
Joiquln Valley. · with streels blockaded around the hotel.
In "'-Counly, '8flcultunl com-Officials allowed no one through.
mJssloner'a office said the rea.nt cold At midmorning there was only specula·
Cites 'Poor Relations' ,
wave caused about $8 millioil damage. tion about what prompted lhe shootings.
No dollar estimate has been made by Louis! A t Gen Will' G
the Tulare County a-'culblral com· ana t 'I· . iam ust.e Dr. Robert "Bruce" Sinclair, assistant .. • said he would ask for a federal In-· d t f b O miaakJoer but assistant commis&loner supermten en o t e range CoWlty vesUgation. "I am now convinced that Clyde ChurchUI said surveys show more there is an underground national suicidal Department of Education, has resigned
than 50 percent of the navel orange crop group bent 00 creatini turor In his post effective June 30, citing the grim
was stllf on the tree1 ln December and at America,,, be charged. prospects for a better relationship
least 50 percent of all the valencla between the county department and local orange crop was damaged. ...>... ...>... ..A. A Tulare spokesman uld that based on l-i H l-' school districts as the main reason.
In that position, Sinclair is number two
man in the department and the closest
aide to Superintendent Robert Peterson,
who was elected in 1966.
County trustees were presente~ with
Sinclair's resignation last week but took
no action.
Peterson received Sinclair's submitted
said.
Smith said be had a copy of the confi-
dential report made by state auditors.
That plan was revealed by the Los
Angeles Times Friday.
• Auditors are suggesting that tbe state's
Infrequently used boolts be placed In
"hub libraries" at UC Berkeley and
UCLA.
The state report also recommends that
a teletype communications system be set
up between the bub libraries aryj outlying
UC and state wtlversity librarles and a
busing plan be set up to bring studenta
from other areas to the bub research col·
lections.
Books would be trucked to the remote
libraries on request.
"Neither the librarian nor the faculty
are equipped LO predict the usage of a
given volume," Smith said.
Uct currenUy has 20 doctorate pr~
grams, a medical program, and 18
rr.aster's degrees programs.
The Irvine library is not ·even at the
. "proper strength" to support those pro-
grams, said Smith, adding that the
llbrary also serves Iba surrounding non·
academic community.
About one out" of every five books
checked out of the library Ls to • non-UC!
person, he said.
Most librarians are reluctant to speak
out on the plan, Smith said, 0 for fear of
reprisals" from the state department of
finance.
Elsewhere In the state system, one
unldentlOed librarian said.
League Seeks
Laguna Okay
For Building
A package of permits and variances
permjtting construction of a new
, .Assistance League lodge at 547 Catalina
will be sought at 7:30 tonight at the
Laguna Beach Planning Commission.
The league .will ask: for a conditional
use pennit to construct the lodge In the
R-3 multi-family residence zone; a
variance to reduce front and side yard
setback requirements ; a variance to
waive parking requirements: and a
variance to allow backing of vehicles into
the street.
Other action.! before the planners are:
-A staff report on the acquisition of
the half acre Eucalyptus Grove property
along Laguna Canyon Road near the
Sawdust Festival site.
-Proposed street realignment and im·
provements along Glenneyre between
Calliope and Bluebird Canyon.
lart year's revenues, the losses there Pront Page l Sinclair, 45, has been with the county
should exceed $28.7 million. department for sir and a ball years and resignation about two weeks ago and was
About 11 percent of the navel orange VI CTJMS has been assistant superintendent for "flabbergasted" by it, Sinclair said Fri-
"This would be dlsrupUve to the educa·
tional process, to say the very least. If
students and. faculty members have to
Firemen Probe
Car Agency Blaze crop in TUlare County was picked before ii • • educational services for three and a hall . the eli)ltday lreeu dropped orchard day. tem~tures tnto the high teem aDd low attack, amous. years. Neither Sinclair nor Peterson wa1 Frona Page l
20I, th! apokesman said. 12. Robert Childress, about 30, available for comment on the issue to-1bt cause of a suspicious fire at the
TulU'9 County ls the state's leading policeman, smoke lnhalation, treated and d ALIENS old Allen automobile agency Saturday
dtnll growing area and the crop wu released. Prona Page l ay. • • • was lUlder investigation today by the eatimated to be worth $61 millloo before 13. Fred O'Sullivan, policeman, gunshot Sinclair Saturday was quoted as saying , Laguna Beach Fire Department.
the freae. wound ·in neck and hand. Satlsfactory. STABB JN G that ''the relationship betWeen the checkpoint. ..-The old garage and showroom struc-
Qzurchlll 11.ld an oructal loss estimate 14. Robert Buras, policeman. gunshot • • • Orange County Department of Education Police in San Clemente reported many ture at 1150 S. Coast Highway was
abou)d be available early nest week. He wound In sboltlder. Satisfactory. and the schoo~d.istricls of the county has: alien arrests through the day. Swancutt destined for demolition to make way for
ai!i! tM ~~ lndica\ed more .than . 15. Wafl!_e Galjour, -~!Iceman, wound ln the Andrews brothers pulled into the not been good, is not good now and the said that Marinet at Camp Pendleton a planned $1.5 million -shop complex,
15 perceot of ~ty·rfr;t-mllllon-lefLeaLSaUsfactarj., _______ _,,,;,11ce"--'1~ta7ti'!''on~pa~rldn~~g_,10..,t::..· ~~~~~-~prospect of it getting better is not very were attempting to round up more k>day Village Faire~ No estimate of dollar loss
lemon crop was lost. The older . Andrews went to the desk. great:" ·n1h-e-l'arge-reservation. · s-availabll•.~---------
Fl---'"CtiiittlilirDOted lou ettlmatet are at and....npq~ the stabbing. Police sum-''I don't, as assistant superintendent, "It wu one. o( those unbelievable Previously, vandals tiave started fires
beat oaly educated guesses. He said the Supreme Court maned an ambulance and both men were have it in my-control «••-overcome that migrations and-thf-only-explanatlon -we inside the structure. First units .on Jhe type of weather .the area geta in the next basic problem," Sinr.lair said, adding have is that many' of these people were scene reported Dames shooting through a
month will affect the degree of damage. taken to South Coast Community that the situation led to bis retlgnatlon. coming back to their jobs after the broken skylight in the building.
He said the survey was made on 10 D • p l llospltal, where the young Marine was 1'-fore than 20 career educators have holidays," the patrolman said. Most of the fire was contained in the
ptreenl of the county's 47,119 acres of emeS eyo C pronounced dead. left the department since Peterson took The checkpoint operation Sunday yleld· Ion and many records may have been
navel oranges. Just prior to the Andrews leaving for office in 1966. ed nearly 300 allena. lost, firemen said today.
Building Value .
Doubles in 1972
In Laguna Beach
Aggre1ate construction value in
t..apga Beach during 1972 was nearly doable that of 1w1, figures released by
the Laguna Beach ~partment of P"'!-_
n1ar and Development abow. 'fotil valuatloo of 538 bWldlng permits
issued in lt'/211 fl .9 million while in 197!,
the valuation of 532 pennita was '4
mlllloo.
In December, 43 permits were issued
w1tb a worth of $803,000, more than 10
times the value of SS December 1971
pennits assessed at $79,000.
Lest month's pennils included 14
issued for new single famil y dwellings,
one permit for a two-family home, and 13
permits for addi1ioos to dwellings. Other
building activity included commercial
and repair of fire damage.
OIWl•I COAST ..
DAILY PILOT
• t
use to G ro11p the hospital , Macres came lo the station \liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliii~iiiiiiliiiiii"i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiliiiiiiiiii~~iilii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
to report the fight. He was held in
CLEAN SWEEP WASHINGTON (UPI\ -The U.S.
Supreme Court today denied \heari,ngjo
a New Mexico rtllgious group which
wants to be free of the government's ban
on use of the hallucinogen peyote.
In a brief order, the court left standing
a.ruling against the group, known as the
Church of the Awakening, banded down
April 5 by the Ith U.S. Circuit Court or
Appeals.
Peyote grows in small buttons on a
species of cactus found ln lhe Southwest.
When chewed or brewed into a tea, it
produces hallucinations.
The Bureau of Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs has restricted the use
of peyote al.nee 1965, but exempted
religious ceremonies of the Native
American Church, composed of an
estimated 300,000 American Indians in
various Western tribes. Peyote use is
central to their religion.
The Chutth or the Awakening, founded
ln the early 1960s by John and Louisa
Aiken, now of Socorro, N.M., sought to
have the exemption ei:tended. But the
bureau denied the request and was
upheld by the circuit court.
E1irollment Dips
For Saddleback
Total winter enrollment at Saddleback
Community College was 3,981, down
about eight percent from the fall enroll·
ment ·of 4,313, according to fi'red E.
Bremer, district superintendent and col·
lege prtsidenl
Dr. Bremer said this attrition rate is
"about nonnal" and pointed out that hist
year, the Mission Vie}o campus had a
[alJ-o{f of about 9 percent between the
ra:I and winter classes.
While generaUy the full·lime enroll·
ment is down Bremer said the part·time
enrollment of the college was up.
From Page J
BLAST ...
(
custody by officers.
Janise and Andrews were arrested
i..bout six hours later alter officers
checked with the District Attorney 's Of·
fice. .A
After investigation is completed the
Wstrict attorney will determine what
charges may be brought against the
p . Jcipant.s, Purcell said.
Purcell said prior to the fight, Meer.es
and two young women had been at a
small market along Glenneyre Street.
Inside the market, Janise and Andrews
made some remarks about the girl, he
said.
She left, and along with another girl
and Macres drove off in a small foreign
car en route to Santa Ana.
Macres told officers he had been forced
to stop in the road at the scene of the
fight by ... ( . carrying the Marines.
The altercation involved all the re-
cupants of both cars including the
women. Andrews' death WOWld was
reportedly a stab to the heart area.
~!acres as well and the women were also
Injured In the fight, Purcell sald.
Stereo, Jewelry
Taken in Laguna
A complete stereo sound system and
jewelry valued at $660 were stolen during
the weekend by burglars \!.'ho broke into
the home of a South Laguna art dealer,
Orange County Sheriff's officers said.
Deputle~ sa id intruders at the home of
Richard Edward Oreaper, 3169l
Wildwood Road, slid open an unlocked
window to gain entry to the premises.
Dreaper, owner of Ancient Art, 860
Glenneyre St .. Laguna Beach, reported
the loss of his stereo system and three
gold rings. He was absent from the home
nt the time.
Thieves Ransack
Home at Beach
Burglars who apparently used 1
screwdriver to pry open sliding glua
doors carried orf a shotgun, clothing,
stereo t>pes and jewelry from a Monarch
Bay home during the weekend, Orange
County Sheriff's officers said.
Paul Herman Roeati o( 140 Monarch
· Bay valued the haul of lnb;jldert who
broke Into bis beachfront hom< at $580.
Offlom said Iba burllars ransacked
Herman'• home and used the vtcUm'1
sul-tc> cirry oU their loot. Hennan
wu'\bsent-trom bis home •t the time.
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I Saddlebaek Today's Finni
ED ITI ON N.Y. Stocks
VOL 66, NO. 8, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1973 TEN CENTS
Peters Lectures Court
By 'roM BARLEY
ot ... °""' , . .., ,, ...
Crippled Gig Peters today lectured an
Orange County Superio r Court Jury on
Jove, sex, the United Nations, the conflict
or communism and capitalism ,
a1coholism, wOrld religions, and the use
of LSD, while repeatedly urging the
Panel to reject any suggestion that he
wu inslne when be murdered bis
parents.
I.;eanlng forward in his wheelchair and
Upping Ills pencil on the microphone for
emphasis, the convicted killer reminded
the jury that sacrifices were common ln
the Old Testament and his own act of
sacrifice sbouJd not be regarded as so
very unusual .
''In those days, they often sacriticed
the first child of the family," he told the
jury in Judge Kenneth Williams'
courtroom. ':So why $hould anything I
had to offer ~ pretty far out?"
"I've been old that · my idea on the
Divine Plan that governs my actions
sounds pretty grandiose,'' Peters said.
"
"But anyone with any knowledge of the
Bible and God's work wouldn't expect a
Divine Plan to be unspectacular."
Peters, 24. is the last defense witness
in the sanity heating lhat followed the
same jury's verdict that be was guilty of
first degree murder when he stabbed
Charles Peters, 55. lhroogh tile heart agd
strangled bis mother Flora, 54, a teacher
at Lincobi School in Corona del Mar.
Prosecutor Pat Bryan, who bu sat
with his bac k toward Peter:s throughout
the defendant's tong, ram b I i n g
Ul"I Tl'""""'
WOUNDED POLICEMAN COMFORTED BY FELLOW OFFICER IN NEW ORLEANS GUN BATTLE
8ody0f Slain Patrolmtn Philip J. Coleman Lies at Left,a Victim of Rooftop Sniper
Two Surviving ~nipers
Firing Again at Hotel
BUILETIN
NEW ORLEANll (UPI) -Poli"'
stormed the roof of the Boward Johnson
Motor Lodge today.1'bey found Ille body
et ... sniper klllecl Sunday night but no
trace of two otlien:. , ' .
NEW ORLEANS (AP ) -Heavily arm-
ed policemen held their circle around a
downtown hotel today as two surviving
snipers opened fire again in a marathon
s~ting spree that left six dead and 17
1nr~ed.. Meanwhile, new gunfire was
rep0r!A!d in a nwty building. (See Pic-
lures, Page 4)
lt was quiet from dawn until nea rly
noon, but then sniper fire rang-out from
the Downtown Howard Johnson Hotel,
and police marksmen, stationed in sur· ~ng buildings with high·powered tines, raked the hotel roof, where the me'n were believed still boletl up. The gunshots came a few minutes after
a' h(arlne Corps helicopter, with P,01ice
sharpshooters at the ready, hovered a
few feet over the roof and blasled high·
velocity tear gas at a stalrwell.
.Minutes later, police reported gunfire
Orange Coast
on a patrolman stationed at an in·
tersection several blocks from the hotel.
Authorities determined that the new
shots were coming from a nearby
building. and a police tank·like armored
cali:-foYaS wit to the scene. ~ belicopter drew no .fire on tp;ee
early n1orning passes over the building,
including the th ird pa!! for the tear gas.
Police had re vised their list of dead,
saying that one victim apparently was
counted twice. leaving their official total
at six. All were identified .
A Marin e lieutenant said one sortie in·
(See SNIPERS, Paa:e ZJ
Five U.S. Planes
Bomb Own Base;
Nine Yanks Hurt
SAIGON (UPIJ -Five American
fighter-bombers from the Air Force,
Navy and Marines today mistakenly
bombed the sprawling Da Nang Air Base
.in what military sources said was an a~
parent navigational error.
Nine Americans and a Vietnamese
military guard were injured. A UHl
Huey helicopter was damag~ and three
fuel storage tanks set afire. Weatlaer A total of $4 of the 50().pound bombs
The weatnerlady says tbere'a an we:re dropped by an Air Force F4 Phan·
U Cl Libra rian
Says Measure
Posing Threat
Library operations at UC Irvine would
be "diminished" and "jeopardized" by a
state department of finance plan to con.
solid ate California's research libraries at
Berkeley and Los Angeles, UCI head
librarian John Smith said today.
"I am sure the campus·at Jrvine will
take· very stron·g exception lQ. ~!IY li~rary
planning which prevents this campus
from affording library services in sup-
JX)rt of its academic program," Smith
said.
Smith said he had a copy of the confi·
dential report made by state auditors.
That plan was revealed by the Los
Angeles Times Friday.
Auditors are suggesting that the state's
infrequently used books be placed in
"hub libraries" at UC Berkeley and
UCLA.
The state reJX)rt also recommends that
a teletype communications system be set
up between the hub libraries and outlying
UC and state university libraries and a
busing plan be set up to bring students
from other areas to tile hub research col-
lections.
Books would be trucked to the remote
(See ~RARY, Page%)
Scl1ool District
Hears Grievance
At Meet Tonigh~
-:-10-,...;a,,_, chance-ot-showen-~ tom . two-Navy AZ--Cor-aain-and two ........ ....... · · th Marine F4 Phantoms. AU apaprenlly An open hearing on a grievance filed
olgbt and TUesday' cleanng in e landed in the-oorthweat portion of the by 1'fission Viejo High School teacher
,aflmlOOD ott Tuesday. More r"\:" huge joint U.S.-i)oolll Vietnamese base. Jim Wehan will be held al 7:30 tonight by
Is expected at the end of the wee . UPI correspondent Keoneth F. Tustin., Union High School District
Ulgh$ todiY SMO. Lowa 4WO. Englade, on the base at the time of the trustees at Tustin High School, 1171
INSIDE TODAY accidental bombing. said two American Laguna Road.
-AntWrrtoktng_arqups got ga: soldiers, two American civilians ind the A grievance is a fonnal procedure by
arelU! ads taktn off th< air --SOU!h Vfo10ainese guarilwmlnjureaby WtilCh a-tcaClierCiiiask tbeboArd 'to
wavet. Now Jhe mu1ll-cigar itt· the bombs. publicly discuss penonnel matten , which
he · · h Four American airmeo and aMther usually are cohf!ned' to executive (do,,.
d"'lrl/ ha4 wk"' 1 rtim Wtt u.s. dvllian were lnju.ed while Oeeing ed) -· cf.oaf'1'ufflng cowboys taking the for cover from what was at first believed Weban, a Dana Point resident and
g!rll away from the no.,moker$. lo be a Communist t<lcket attack. . president a( the Tultln Secondary Se• storv on Page 7. Tile U.S. Command began an in>-Educaton Asoociation ('!'ZEA), Js , ob-
.... '' A• ........,,. ,, niediate invesligatloo. ¥ilitary ~. jecting to an allegedly. uncompllmentary ~~~ . ~ =:::. ... ~ ~ aald the_ Air FOIU; whk:h ORtl' . . ~-_.bwt wntteo bY. an ad-
clMIHIM »M ore-'"*" tt bast bouslni 4,000 American servicemen, mlniStratot a.nd placed In his file. C.,.. l~ ~a.-1:._~; would be in charge o( the probe. ~ letter, the hllh school math
.... """'" n ,,.. ,,,.,..... 1•11 •1The Na'"I' and Marines will be in on teacher contends, deals with bis ac-_....... P• • T...,,.... 11 • 'J th TSEA. ,_...,.._... '' Tlltl..,. '' u. too, since they bad planes -involved," a tiviUcs wi tw.ct 1 .. ll ... ..,. t t neef -...... u .. --tuae<f l.Q_ --·-· ,._ -·----+--.souice.. . .....-.................... Q --• .. M Wril ,..... • -Meao•bl~ the air war: over North dllcuss the Dllltef' until Weban filed t.be
(S.. BOMBING, Page II grlevaoce.
Claims He W a ·s Sane
'iest1mony, said today he will have "very
little " leitlmony following Pete's i;:mn.
men ts.
Both Bryan and Defense Attorney Bal'
<)' '11iriow believe .. tile issue will go to the
jury Wednesday.
Peten, crippled In bis lint trial wheo
be was sbol lhrough tbe spine as be tried
to escape from the courtroom, today told
the jury that "several policemen"' bad
congratulated him for his testimony last
Friday and assured him that h1s remaria
"wouJd send me to the funny fann."
He went into a rambling reconstruction
of tbat testfmony in what appeared to be
a move to convince the ·jury that no sane
person couJd ·condemn him as insane for
those earlier comments.
"I don't want you to take my word for
anything," Peters told the jury. "l just
want you to listen to me and judge for
yourself whether ar not I have a message
le< tile world."
Peters has told the jury that he is a
prophet of God. And he ru... te!ltllied that
his killing of hls J.oarents on April 21, 1971.
was part of Cod's plan for him and bls
parents.
He testifie-0 today that Or. Timothy
Leary y,·as right in many things when he
wrote on man's use of drugs and the
relationship of drug cultures to man 's
evolution. .
"Bld I came up with a few answers of
my own on lhe use of 1....50 .'' he said. ''I
decided that sex \\'hhout love in a bum·
mer. ~tan at that time is God and woman
is his goddess.''
Die • Ill Checks
Freeway Rush Tr1ggers Fatal Series
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of Ille DIM1 •p1 ... IMff
Three persons were killed iostanlly Ind
several others severely injured in a bor·
rifying series of lncidents Sunday evening
near the &>rdeT" Patrol clteckpoint at San
Onolrt.
The deaths, all in the crowded lanes of
the San Diego Freeway, took place at the
height of a maS!ive number of smuggling
incidents. ~.
Two young women died before the eyes
of the.Ir love~: ones. Another man was run
down as well .
Patrol spokesman Dale Swancutt said
the deaths occurred shortly after 5 p.m.
at the height of the intense wave of iJ.
legal immigrants.
Councilmen
-. . .
"The first deaths occurred when a
carload pulled over ahead of the check·
point and the smuggler told his
passengers to get out and cross the
freeway," he explained.
The first wave of passeogers did as
ordered .
But Toribia Perez de Mejia, 18, of
EnSenada, Baja California, was struck
and killed by a car.
An unidentified male aJso was struck in
that Cros.!ing. He died at the scene.
"The woman's husband apparently saw
the whole thing. He told us he paid $l50
each for lhe trip north and the smuggler
ordered them out of the car and told
trem to start running/' Swancutt said.
Five minutes later, the horror was
repeated.
Yet another smuggler pulled over after
noticing the checkpoint in operation.
He . too, ordered his cargo to fl ee.
In that flight across eight lanes of busy
freeway Victoria Orozco Cervantes, 15. of
Puriflcacion, Jalisco. was killed when she
was hil by a fast-moving car.
Her father also saw the tragedy. Ho
told patrolmen that the "fare " for his
family's trip north was $225 each.
Highway patrolmen investigating the
acdldents said the victims all were run
oVer repeatedly.
tn the first tragedy, cars dri ven by
Jose Lopez Ruiz, 24 , of Lynwood and
(See ALIENS, Page !)
Blast Rocks Lagm1a Hotel;
ToC'-oiis-'"-' r !I:! Thr O S .i-wo own n-to treet
Marsh Report By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL oldest section of the Suri and Sand com-
At least '""'o endangered species of bird
and one type of turtle would be virtually
homeless if Campus Drive were extended
across the San Joaquin Marsh in trvine,
according to a report to be discu ssed by
Irvine City CouDcilmen at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday in Irvine City Hall.
The City Council will conduct a public
hearing on the environmental impa ct
report (E IR) on the proposed extension
of Campus Drive from University Drive
across the marsh to carlson Avenue.
According to supplemental data for the
EIR submitted by planning consultant Ed
Haworth, the Golden Eagle, the Whlte-
tailed Kite and the Western Pond Turtle
all de~nd upon the marsh for survival.
Haworth's supplemental report, re-
'CjUested ' t)y the council · at. its ··Dec.-19
meeting, ·quotes Or. R. E. AiacMHlan.
chairman o( the UC Irvine Biological
&iences Department.
Dr. MacMillan said that the Golden
Eagle uses the marsh as a temporary
roosting area, whUe the White-tailed
Kite uses it as a year-round nesting area.
The Western Pond Turtle, while not of·
ficially on the list. should be oon.sidered
endangered , Dr. twlacMillan said . It, too,
nests in the marsh. '
The council Tuesday also will consider
a propasal by Mayor William Fischbach
that terms of all city commissioners and
appointed pasitions, including mayor, be
limited to one year. .
A proposed ordinance establishing
April 15 as the date by which all outdoor
advertising signs, or billboards, must be
removed from the city also is on
Tuesday's agenda .
The ordinance was first requested by
lbe council Dec. 12.
It states that billboards will oot be
permitted in the city. A report from the
city attorney oo other means to get rid of
non-conlonning signs accompany the
proposed ordinance at Tuesday's meeting
in city council chambers.
Other items on the agenda include:
-Discussion of installation of ttaffic
lighla---on-Culver Drive. at ~tou.ltoo
Parkway and Walnut Avenue.
-A report by James HarriJlilOO, ad-
ministrative service& director, on an
ordinance eatabllshlng a tmifonn fire
c . ln the dty.
-A report from 1 street-naming <..'00\"
mittee.
-A revised joint powers agreement
regarding t b e Intergovernmental
Coordinating Council of Orange County.
Aircraft Pilot Hurt
Of *' "'" Pl• 11.n plex.
An explosion of undetermined or1gln Firemen on the scene were unable to
rocked a wing of the exclusive Surf and give the cause for the explosion and
Sand Hotel In Laguna Beach late this subsequent fire. All units from lhe
morning, throwing two persons from a Laguna Beach Fi re Department resJX)nd·
second story apartment onto the street ed at the.scene .
below. Both Wong and Woo, Simmons said.
The injured were tentatively identified were middle·aged men and had served as
as Yui Chum Wong and Kay H. Woo. cooks at the Outrigger for a short period
Wong and Woo were both rushed to South of time. The apartment in which they
Coast Community Hospital in South La· live has been reserved for empl oyes of
guna for emergency treatment. the Surf and Sand and its restaurants.
Wong and Woo both worked at the Traffic in the busy 1400 block of South
Outrigger Restaurant adjacent to the Coast Highway was snarled as the result
Surf and Sand complex. of the laie morning explosion.
Wong is beHeved to have suffered Numerous witnesses said it appeared
massive head injuries when he was that Woo's injuries were not as seve re as
thrown out ol the apartment by the ex· \Vong's.
ploslon. to~ollowing the explosion flames spread
"Jt sounded like a big e1plosion," said through the upper story of the wing and
Outrigger manager Bill Simmons. "All I through a beaut:t.-;hoP located, below the
heard was this big sound and then a lot apartment.
of glass shattering on the sidewalk." ·Witnesses said that no •other 0 persorts
The explosion occurred shortly after 11 were believed to have been injured dur·
a.m. in a second story apartment -the ing the explosion.
Cheap Handgun W eapon
In Irvine Girl's Death
Police disclosed today that a cheap
''Saturday Night Special" revolver was
the weapon responsible for killing 12·
year-Old · Mary JoAnn Lux of Jrvine dur·
ing a tragic accident Saturday night.
Costa Mesa police Capt. Edward
Glasgow said the .22 caliber handgun was
purchased for protection on a cross<O\Ul-
try trip by the grandfather of the girl who
subseciuently pulled the trigger.
"Both girls came into the bedroom ta
change clothes. 1ben they were looking
around .for a hamster bottle when they
saw the gun in the t"p shelf of the clothes
closet," the investlgitor reported.
College Adding
Two Aqua Teams
Siddleback Community c.onege will
have swimming llnd water polo team~
beginning next Fall, the board of trusttes
has decided.
Despite some reservations about the
costs Involved, pool rental •I 13.000 plus
transportatton to away games and pro-
rated salary of a "part.time coach,
tn11tm a<ctpiec!'the plan.
'"The girl pointed it at her friend
because she thought it was a toy, She
pulled the trigger once and it misfired.
But just before the vicifm could say,
'Watch out, It's re.al!' she pulled Ille
trigger again and the gun fired a bullet
into her left breast."
Police, who have ruled the death aC'·
cidental, declined to reveal the name of
the 13-year-old girl who fired the fatal
shot at her best fr iend. Glasgow said that
the girl celebrated her 13th birthday on
Friday.
The 11;eapon had been purchnsed by her
grandfatber who had arrived from South
Dakota to spend a winter vstcation with
IS.. REVOLVER, Page II
EMPLOY RESUL TS
WITH PILOT ADS-
Find tbe right """°" lo fill that job by
putting a DAILY PILOT classified want
ad in your employ. Here's bow:
Mature gal. PIT CM Ins. QI.
lice. I!:"!> Mt nee. Ffiiog/t)'po
& obWtY to colDDllllliCate 1
RUql Days XXl·UXX.
Tbe reoponse to this ad was ftemoo.
I
I'
HAYWARD (AP) -A pilot was left in
critical oondlllOn alll< bis plane and
another onWI· aircraft colJided about 300
feet alXlve the Hayward Alr Terminal,
olnclals said. James ldattacblt of Uoion
Cljy W'l' taken l9..~H9'1piblber
alter the Sunday colllslon and wos
Trull,.. Hans Voeel opoke In favor of
the plan, llO!iog that feeder high ochools
to Saddleback had had highly SU<Ce1Sful
ll'llmnin&J<.' -Vogel said tbiJ wu tile type of r,,.rt
that should be empbaslztsl by the collea ..
cJous. Emplo)'!Omequ!«. mu!IU~lllL-'iVlr.DilirdliiOI ~
nported In critical condillon.
•
% DAILY PILOT IS
Co11~ty's
Farms Have •
Few Losses
Orange County citrus :ind avocado
growers have gotten by real well with.
very U1Ue damage to crops from cold
weather, in contrast to heavy losses
elsewhere 111 the state over !he last
month, a apoke~an tor the county
agricultural department &aid today.
"As ft whole for all of the seasoo,-we've
had lltlle damage," the county olficial
said. ''We've skinned by prett; good."
Officials at the U.S. Fruit Frost
Service at UC Rive rside Friday bad
warned growers in the San Bemardino-
Orange County areu that SfT\Cdge pots
mJght be necessary to ward off cold over
the weekend .•
t;'rost Service officials said today that
no frost damage Is expected this week
and a beneficial rain iJ expected tonight
or Tuesday. Raln after a dry cold spell
helps reverse crop damage from
dehydration. a spokesman said.
The .s119kesman for Oiangt County 's
agrie"11ural office, which is charged with
... assessing any crop damage. said despite
the warning, county growers were
"lucky" last weekend.
Ellewbere in the state, a survey in·
dlcated that the top ~ citrus growers ln
Fresoo County reported a Josa of up lo
three-quarters of their crop in
December's freezing weather.
Extensive damage ls also 'expected to
be recorded in Tulare ':ounly and lhe San
Joaquin Valley.
In Fresno County, agriculturaJ com-
missioner's office said the recent C1lld
wave caused about $8 million damage.
No dollar estimate has been made by
the Tulare CoJy agricuJturaJ com·
mlslltoner but slstant comml&sioner
Clyde Cburcbil d surveys show more
than so percent of the navel orange crop
was 1UU on the trees 1n December and at
teast 50 percent of all the valencla
orange crop was damaged.
A Tulare ,apokesman said that based on
last year's revenues, the losses there
should exceed $28.7 mllllon.
About 11 percent of the navel orange
crop In Tulare County was picked before
lhe elgblday freeze dropped orohard
temperatures inlO lhe high leeDI and low
205, the spokesman said.
Tulare County Is the sbllo'• leading
citrus growing area and the crop was
estimated lo be worth $61 mlllion before
the freeze. Owrchill said an official Joss estimate
lbou1d be available early next week. He
ntd the survey also indicated more than -----1$.-_,-..,-i:enLoLthe_county:s...17.t Ibllllon
lemon crop was lost.
CJ»tr.cbtl! noted Sou eslimates are at
best only educatedgu.,..s. He al~ tlie
type of weather the area gets in the next
month will affect the degree of damage.
He said the survey was made on JO
percent of the county's 47 ,219 acres of
navel orangei1.
From PllfJe J
BOMBING •..
Vietnam entered its lotb month with 12-1
fighter-bombers and about 45 BS2s hitting
below the C1luntry's 20th parallel in the 24
hours ending al dawn today.
U.S. Command spokesmen said
"numerous" tru<:U were destroyed near
tbe port of Vlnh, 137 miles north of lhe
Demilitarized 1Ame and "several" others
Were hit near Dong Hof, 38 miles north
of the DMZ.
At least one of the bombs that fe11 on
the Da Nang facility blt a l}uge
petroleum storage tank, touching off an ..
explosion that spread fires to two other
nearby tanks, rrlllitary sources re'ported. Ttie erroneou!'I bombing touched off
ni~rs the base had been attacked by
Sovit\..IJuilt MIG jets from North Viet·
nam,1whose nearest frontier is JOO miles
none of Hanoi's MIGs bas ever ·~ been own to attack anywhere ln South
Vietnam. A few reconnaissance flights
have been reported, but never confirmed,
over the years.
OIANlaoE COAST IS
DAILY PILOT
TIW Ol'lllllf CoQI DAIL V PILOT, wlltl wtllcll
k ~ ~ N._,.l"TT11, 11 Pllbl~ 9Y
ftle 0r•""9 CMll PYtllltl'llnv CllmtNftY. lfPll·
r11t M llloM 1r1 PllDlllllld, MO!'d1y fllrouof'I
Fr~r. IOI" Coste Mr1-t1, N"'1X!rl 8tacll,
111111,.nghlfl ae~clllFoun••ln V1U-v, l"llUN
llHCI!, lr¥111t'1Stdclltl»dc Ind S..n Cle,.,..,lt/
5'11 Juln C1p111r1n•. A 1!1>911 r1111oMI
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Pi.t. 1W Wiii aar111ttr
Driv~r Dies in -Wreck
Moon Bound
Soviets Launch LulUl Rocket
M.QllOOW <UPI> -ni ao.1et1 lodl1 hlltleil 111 Wl1!!l!llled U1J1a 21 n>c1ce1
Jnlo 1paco en roole lo the mooo, tbe Tua nows agency -.aid.
Tile nrst mooo ptObe launched by tbe Soviets in It months streaked inlo
earth orbit at i :M a.m. UO:M p.m. PST Sunday), Tass said.
"THE STATION WAS LAUNCHED lo the rDOOn from the orbll of an arti-
ficial satolllte of the earth and w11 placed·"' a trajeclOry c1.,.. IO the e!ll·
mated one," It sald.
Tass said only that the purpGAe of the probe was "In accordance with the
program of space studies" and gave no details of il.s mission.
THE SOVIETS BA VE yet to land men on the moon, but two robot moon-
acoopers have been successful in returning lunar aoU to earth. The latest, Luna
20, returned la.!t February.
Education Chief Quit,s,
Cites 'Poor Rekitions'.
'
left the department since Peterson took
office in 1966.
Fram Pagel
Francisco G. Romo, 37, of Santa Ana was crushed
fatally by the truck he was driving westbound on
Coyote Canyon Road , approaching the county dump
near Irvine · Saturday. The sanitation worker was
thrown fr'om the thr~axle garbage. vehicle as it
tumbled into the canyon after leaving the roadway.
Or. Robert "Bruce" Sfnclair, (ssistant
superintendent of the Orange County
Depar\ment of Education. has resigned
his post efreclive June 30, citing the grim
prospects for a better relationship
bet ween the county department and local
school d.l!tricts a1 the main reason.
Sinclair, 45, hu been with. the county
department for atx and a baU years and
has been assistant !UJ>erintendent for
educational services for three and a half
LIBRARY ...
libraries on request.
From Pagel
SNIPERS ...
eluded close-up photographs of the
bunker-like enclosures used as cover by
the men.
The enclosures, five-Inch thick
concrete-slab rooms at the end of the
roof, are coverings for the steep stairs
from the 18th floor to the roof. Officials
said there are two right-angle elbows in
the stairway, making It impossible to
shoot up and perilous to even check out.
Police said they did not know the Iden-
tity of the three men Ytho began their
siege from the hotel Sunday morning. A
sharpshooter, watching the gunmen's
movements with a 20-power telescope,
described them as black men, at least
one with a goatee and bush halreut.
fn the daylight, the chips and pock s
from the thoU!ands of rounds of bigh-
powertd ammunition were visible on the
face of the building, espt!\:laUy 'at the
back of the bunkers.
At oae place could be seen the holes,
hammered out of sheer concrete by
persistent police fire. A three-foot open-
ing was tom in the aide of the concrete
bunker used as a base by t.le snipers. Tl
came· fl'tlm repeated 1rarra_ges ~)' the
high-velocity weapons aboard t he
helicopter.
PoUce u~e caution, and -did
not explain why there was no attempt to
use fire chemicals or explosives to force
the men out
As the drama continued, most or the
city'S business district was paralyzed,
with streets blockaded around the hotel.
Officials allowed no one through.
At midmorning there was only specula·
lion about what prompted the shootings.
Louisiana Atty. Gen. William Guste
said he would ask for a federal \~
vesUgatioo, "I am now convinced that
there is an underground national suicida l
group bent on creatiJli terror in
America," be charged.
Area cdastline
Commission
To Meet Jan. 17
The first meeting of the South Coast
Regional Coastline Commission created
by Proposition 20 apparently will take
place Jan. 17 at 7:30 p.m. in Las Angeles
City Hall .
The newly created panel which will
overStt all coa11tal development in Los
Angeles and Orange counties is com·
prised of six members from Los Angeles
tdf!nty and five from Orange County.
The meeting was called by Los Angeles
City Councilman Louis Nowell who said
he took it upon himself to schedule the
session because he feels "it's important
just to get organir.ed."
He noted that there have been no pro-
cedures outlined for calling meetings of
the commission and he Isn't sure what
the response to his request is going to be.
Mrs. Joseph Rosen er of Newport
Beach, one of the local members, in-
dicated this morning she would attend
the meeting.
An aide to Nowell said he expects the
panel to select a chairman at the initial
meeting but he said he was unaware of
any candidates for the position.
Irvine District
Plans Outlined
What the Irvine Unified School District
must do between now and official take.
over July 1 will be outlined by
Superintendent Stan Corey at 7:30o'clock
tonight Jn the mulU·purpose room at
Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate School,
4861 ~Uchebon Rd., Irvine.
Corey will present "action prlorltles''
to trustees.
Irvine la one of three new unified
dl~tricts Which wut t11ke over schools In
the· area from the ootgoln# San Jooquln
Elmnentary and Tustin Union High
Dlstrlctl In July,.
Trust"' i.nl&hl aloo will dilCWI e
lilli Pl'OC<iilill confr1ct for Univenlty
Higb School and beor a fftoentallon by
arthilect J ... --
I
6 Persons Slain
In New Orlea1is
Sni ping Named
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) -A lisl of
known dead and !Orne or the injured in
sniper attacks at a New Orleans hotel.
THE DEAD
1. Phil Coleman, policeman, gunshot
wound in bead.
2. Paul Persiga,,33, policeman, gunshot
wound in face.
3. Louis Sirgo, deputy police
superintendent, gunshot woond ln back.
4. Frank Schneider, 62, hotel assistant
manager, shot at the 11th noor stairwell.
5. Dr. Rob9t B. Steagall Jr., %7.
Martinsville, Va.,,gunshol wound in head
and ann, found on 18th floor hallway.
6. Elizabeth Steagall. 2fi, gunshot
v:ound in right 1::ye1 found next to her
husband. She was Dr. Steagall's wile.
THE INJURED
I. Kenneth Solis, 261 policeman,
shoulder-wound;"""fa .
2. Emanuel Palmisano, 43, policeman,
arm -wound, fatr;--
3, Chris Cator:1, ·20, ·ambulance driver,
chest wound, falr.
4. Charles Arnold , 27, policeman , fa ce
y.•ound, serious.
5. Tim Ursin, 29, fireman, arm wound,
fair.
6. Walter Collins, about 50, hotel guest,
buUet wound, critical.
7. Robert Bemlsh, 43, hotel guest, ab-
domen wound, serious.
8. Larry Arthur, policeman, side
wound, fair.
9. Michael Burl, policeman, injured in
fall, good.
10. Joe Anderson, 60, flreman, arm
wound, fair.
11. Robert Reeves, 43, polfceman, heart
attack, serious.
12. Robert Childress, about 30,
policeman, smoke lnhalat.ion, treated and
released.
13. Fred O'Sullivan. poilwnan, gunshol
\.\1ound in neck and hand. Satisfactory.
1 f. Robert Buras,· policeman, gunshot
wound In shoulder. SatiSfaclory. •
15. Wa yne Galjour, policeman, wound in
left ear. Satisfactory.
Gig Peters Pens
Book 01i ·'Life'
Gig P.eters has written a book during
his long sojourn in the Orange· County
Jail. ~
He calls the SO-page treatise, replete
with his own psychedelic drawings,
"hfaklng Life Easy.''
Peters banded the first complimentary
copy of the work this morning to a DAI·
LY PlLOT reporter "with my very best
wishes."
"You can quote all you want from it,"
Peters said, autographing the volume.
"You might want to call it 'Gig's
Thoughts' but that's up to you."
The book ends with a comment on
Peters' views on "destrelessness.
"Life is action. Death ts stoi>-action.
There is oothing.-to lose, only to gain.
Deslrelessness, Fearlessness a l'1 d
Timelessness."
FromPqe J
REVOLVER. ••
FromPqeJ
ALIENS ... ·
"Neither the librarian nor the faculty
are equipped to predict the usage of a
given volume," Smith said.
UCI curreoUy bu 20 doctorate pro.
years. , gram&, a medical program, and 11
ln that position, Sinclair ls number two a.aster's degrees program&.
The lrvine library ls not even-at the man in the department and tbe cio.est "proper •-•"'h" IO rt tho Raymond Lou '• Barton, 23, oi San D•"ego, ·-s ....... -e. suppo se pro-... aide to Superintendent Robert Peterson, grams said Smith ddi that th were involved. ' • a ng e who wu elected ln 196&. library also serves the surrounding non.
In the second incident, patrolmen said, County trustees were presented with academic community.
five separate cars ran over the Sinclair's realgnatlon 1ast week but took About one out of every five books
Cervantes girl before traffic could stop. no action. checked out of the library ls"to a non-UC!
Patrolmen are still not certain bow Peterson received Sinclair's submitted pe=, 1~:::M are reluctant to speak
many other aliens may have been injured resignation about two weeks ago and was out on the plan, Smith sald, "for fear of
in the dashes across the freeway. "fl abbergasted" by it, Sinclair said Fri-reprisals" fro m the state department of
"There must have been literally bun-d fmance.
dreds of them who escaped because we aNye. t'lher Sinclair nor Pe•---wa1 Elsewhere In the state system, one
i.c:i""1.I unidentUied librarian said. counted 24 abandoned cars in the area available for comment on the issue b "This would be disruptive to the educa-
through the day. People just jumped out day. tiona1 process, to say the very least. lf
of them and ran every which way," Sinclair Saturday was quoted as saying students and faculty members have to
Swancutt said. that "the relationship between the wait for days, or go to another city for a
'I'll 1 -·' Iba book for their research very often •.. e patro man o~ ... ated t scores Orange County Department of Education there's going to be a severe breakdown."
of pertons entered Camp Pendleton and and the school diltrlcts of the county bas The recommendations were made to
others succeeded ln crossing the freeway not been good, Ls not good now and the correct two major faults found by the
and headed up the beach around the ~roapect of It getting better is not very auditors in the Unlveralty of California
checkpoint. great." and State University library procedures
"I don 't, as asslstant superintendent, -"inadequate sharing of nonduplicated Police in San Clemente reported many have It in my control to overcome that resources within a region" and
alien arrests through the day. Swancutt basic problem," Sint:lair said, adding "duplication of infrequently used
said that Marines at Camp Pendleton that the situation led to his resignation. materials."
w:e..tutterhpUngJQ~round_llJUDOU-ioda<yy-~M=o~ than 20 career_ educators , have _ilne___jtate _uni_verslty_oUlc1al &ald..-
on the large reservation. "What they are trying to do Is ge~us to
~y two C1l,e!~ of_a new boo_lt lnste_ad ot
"ii was one of those unbelievable Ba .. n.owsky in Run. n .. i_n .. g. 23. Tllat would be fine il we knew in ad· migrations and. the only explanation we . . vance .. wblch books would be used the
have is that many of these people were LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dr. William S. most but we don't.''
coming back to their jobs after the Banowsky, president of Pepperdine Another librarian said the auditors'
holidays," the patrolman said. University, says he Is a candidate to sue· recommendations are "absolutely devoid
The checkpoint operation Sunday yield· ceed retirlrtg Cal State San Francisco of an understanding of how people
ed nearly 300 al;ens. President S. I. Hayakawa. behave."
CLEAN SWEEP
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Huntington Bea~h
Fountain Valley
T oday's Fin al
VOL 66, NO. 8, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1973 TEN CENTS
Peters Lectures _ Court, Claims He W a·s Sane
By TOM BARLEY tapping his pencil on the microphone for
0t "" OtWy Pi. ,,... emphasis, the convicted tiller reminded
Crippled Gig Peters today lectured an the jury that sacriflcet were common in
Orange County Superior Colirt Jury on the Old Testament and his own act of
love, se1:, the United Nations, the oonfUct "\. sacrifice sbould not be regarded as ·so
of communism and c a p l t a I i s m , very unusual.
a!cohollsm, world reUgionJ, and the use "Jn those days, they often sacrificed
or LSD, while repeatedly urging the th~ firs\ chlld of the family," he told the
panel to reject-any suggestion that he fury in Judge Kenneth Williams'
was lnsane when he murdered his courtroom. "So why should anything I
parents. had to offer sound pretty far out?" •
Leaning forward in his wheelchair and "I've been old that my idea· on the
-ers
Peace Talks
Kissinger, Tho
Hold Grim Meet
PARIS (UPI) -.Grim faced and The two delegations refused to discuss
studiously avoiding each other in public, questions of whethf;:r the two negotiations
U.S. presidential adviser Henry A. Kiss-were nearing a breakthrough.
inger and North Vietnamese negotiator Contrary to past practice, there were
Le Due Tho opened a new round of Viet· no public handshakes either before or
nam peace talks today with a 4~~r after today's session, the first of the 23rd
meeting. 1bey agreed to meet agaut round of talks.
Divine Plan that governs my aclions
sounds pretty grandiose," Peters said.
"But anyone with any knowledge of the
Bible and God's work wouldn 't expect a
Divine Plan lo be unspectacular."
Peters, 14, is the last defense witness
in the sanity bearing that foUowed the
same iU!)''I verdict that be was guilty p_f
first degree murder when he stabbed
Charles Peters, SS, through the heart and
strangled his mother Flora, 54, a teacher
at Lincoln School in Corona de! Mar.
Prosecutor Pat Bryan, who has sat
with hts back toward Peters throughout
the defendant 's Jong, ram b Ii n g
testimony, said today he will have "very
lltUe" testimony following Pete's com·
menl!.
Both Bryan and Defense Attorney Bar·
i·y Tarlow believe the issue will go fo tile
jury Wednesday.
Peters, crippled in his first trial when
he was shot through the spine as he tried
to escape from the courtroom, today told
_ac
lhe jury that "several policemen" had
congratulated him for his testimony last
Friday and assured him that his remarks
"would send me to the funny farm ."
He went into a rambling reconstruction
of that testimony in what appeared to be
a move to convince the jury that no sane
person could condemn him as insane for
those earlier comments.
"I don't want you to take my word for
anything ," Pete rs told the jury. "I just
want you to ltsten to me and judge -for
•
yoursetr wheth~r or not I have a message
for the v.•orld "
Peters has told the jury that he ls a
prophet of God. And he has testified lhat
his killing of his parents on April 21, 1971,
was part of God's plan for him and his
parents.
He testified today that Dr. Ttmotby
Leary 'o\'as right in many things when be
wrote on man 's use of drugs and the
relationship of drug cultures to man's
IS.. PET!;RS, Page %1
n1pers
Big Shells
Hit Hotel
'Bunker s'
BULLETIN
NEW ORLEANS !UPI) -Police Su-
perintendent Clarence Giarrusso an·
nouneed this afternoon a 1eeood 1nlpe.r
haJ been 1poHed ht the hate.I air candl·
tion.lng 111tlt btlween lbe roof and IUD·
dttk on the middle level of the Howard
Johnson Hotel. "He's very muc h alive
and capable of 1hooUng,11 sahl Glarruno.
Tuesday. Neither side greeted oor waved the
Kiasqer and Tbo will meet at !~LID. other off. u It did bolore Ille talks broke
t--(,..1 Ta.~m:riP'"ST")na1tHSaln..,,.tt-llNo!omm-llt .. llTBreetedieled-., -cdukrwwinMlasosrt ,,11'10111011tlnmd~n
a Western resldeoUal .,murt>, accordll1g ordered the bombing of ilaDol.
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Police in
_ helicopttr gull!hlps ~achlnegun
fire and armor piercing shells into two
~•-atop a downtown hotel
today in an attempt to flush two"of three
black gunmen who killed six persons and
wounded 15 during two days of guerrilla
combat. 7
to-their spc>Wme.u. ---!Jbe-delepl.... ilrmed-and-··Je ft--
separately, unsmiling. At no time were
3 Persons Die
At Checkpoint
Near Onofre
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of .. 0Mtr "*f Steff
Three per80llS were killed lmlanlly and
several others severely injured Jn a ~
rifying series of incidents Stmday·evenmg
near the Border Patrol checkpoint at San
Onofre. The deaths, all Jn the crowded lane8 of
the San Diego Freeway, took place at the
height of a massive number of smugglmg
Incidents.
Two young women died beforJ tbe eyes
af thelr lovet.· ones. Another man was run
down as well. · Patrol spokesman Dale Swancutt said
the deaths oocurred shortly alter 5 p.m.
a\ the height of the intense wave of il-
legal immigrants.
... 1be first deaths occurred when a
carload pulled over ahead of the check·
point and the smuggler Iold bis
pa!sengers . to get, out-am:· cross the
freeway," he explained.
The first wave ot passecgers did as
ordered. r But Toribia Perez de Mejia, 1!, o
Ensenada. Baja California, was struck
and tilled by a car.
An unldentllled male abo wu struck In
that croasing. He died at the """"'·
the two sides. seen. 'together. .
The atmosphere was the coolest
Dewsmen had seen since Kissinger and
Tho started meeUng regularly in Pam
last October.
When Kissinger left the villa where the
talks took place, be did not wave as usual
lo the waiting photographer>.
Frequently, leaders of the two delega.
tions have strolled together during a
lunch break and public handshakes
normally marked the opening and closing
of the meeting.
After the meeting, Kissinger and Assis·
tant Secretary or Slllte William H.
Sulliv .. ~trolled together In the garden
and then the American team left. Tho,
accompanied by Haooi peace delegation
chief Xuan Thuy, left 10 m1nut .. 1ater.
, The meetfnj:, the ftrSt between Kiss-
inger and Tho since the 2Znd rourxi col-
lapsed 27 days ago, took place on a cold,
foggy day at a Communist~wned country
house in suburban Gil sur Yvette.
Tho arrived first with the head of the
Hanoi peace delegatkm, Xuan Thuy, and
went straight into the house. Shortly
before ll a.m. (5 a.m.. PST), Kissinger
drew up with Sullivan.
No one. came to the door to greet the
American,,, who went inside after waiting
briefly.
Al 3:30 p.m., the American tea m led
~ PEACE, Page ZI
Valley Public Invited
To School Meeting
Ul'IT.-.....
WOUNDED POLICEMAN COMFORTED BY FELLOW OFFICER !N NEW ORLEANS GUN BATTLE
Body Of Slein Petrolm•n Phili p J, Coltm•n Lies •t Le~,• Victim of Rooftop Sniper
Funeral Services Held
For Two Slain Officers
Ry ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. 0.llY l"llfl lt1H
1'.1ourning family members and lawmen
gathered this morning to pay tribute to a
pair of policemen cut down by su~
machine gun fire in lltidway City while
trying to arrest a double-murder suspect.
Meanwhile. an investigatior. is under
way into why a pair of Westminster
police officers dispatched to aid in the
planned capture were diverted momenl.J
earlier by aoother law enforcement agen·
cy.
~lidway City, was finally captured after
being hit with a shotgun blast fired by an
Orange County sheriffs deputy.
Eckstrom. described as 3 quiet
philosophy major at Cal State Long
Beach, is htld in the Orange County
Ao1edical Center Jail ward, charged with
four cowits of murder.
Scores of somber, .mifonned policemen
ln Sddition to families of Los Angel'5
County Shtriff's Office Sgt. Carl E.
Wilson and Detective Donald W.
Schneider, .40, turned out for their
funer als today .
8 Beacli Fireme1i
Begui -Traini1ig
As Paramedics
By TERRY COV ILLE
Of 11M Dally l"I .. Sllfl
Intensive training began today at
Orange County ll1edi cal Center for eight
Huntington Beach firemen who v.·ill
becoriie the city's first paramedics team.
The local firemen joined trainees from
L.:i Habra, Orange and the Orange Coun·
ty Fire Department for 290 hours of in·
st ruction at the medical center.
When the clwroom course ends, all of
the naw paramedics will be given field
training, operating their mobile intensive
care units from the medical tenter.
The snipers' partner lay macabrely
dead and unattended on the roo f of I.he
JS.story building -a symbol or the
warfare which invaded the center or one
of tbe nation's most popular tourist
cities.
Police said they were considering using
a flamethrower in an attack on the
gunmen.
"They are maniacal." said Louisiana
Attorney General Will iam J. Guste Jr."[
am convinced that there is an un-
derground, national suicidal group bent
on creating terror in America."
"We are fairly well convinced that they
are willing to die to carry out this
mission," said police spokesman Carol
Gomon.
Two heli copters swept over thC Howard
Johnson Hotel soon after sunrise to blast
the 5--by·20 foot concrete block fortresses
from wbicli the surviving gunmen yel1ed
obscenities and taunted pollce to "come
and get me."
The rooftop refuges normally house
air condilionl,ng and elevator machinery.
Neither of the snipers returned the
helicopter's fire during the ea rly morning
sweep but did open fire just before noon
at police marbmen stationed on aoother
building. Those ihots were the flrst from
either sniper in n>0re than six hours.
The drama began Sunday morning
when three gunmen set fi res on the upper
floors of lhe hotel and then began firing
at hotel guesl.J who fled the smoke and
policemen who answered the disturbance
call.
"1be woman'• husband apparenUx. saw
the whole thing. He told U1 he paid $150
each foe the trip north and the smuggler
ordered them out of the car and told
U-em to start running," Swancutt said.
Residents of the F0W1tllin Valley School
District are invited to attend a meeting
of the district's Community Cotmcil to-. ht. ~ meeting, which wl11 be held in the
district offices at 1 Lighthouse Lane, will
begin at 7:30 p.m. The public ls Invited lo
participate in advising the district on its
educational goals.
Circumstances of the intended ap-
prehensioil may not even have helped the
two Westminster officers prevent the
tragic killings but lawmen want lo know
when, why and by whom they ~were
reassigned.
Eckstrom i.s also accused of knling
Rosemary Vasquez, 22, and Michael Jef·
fires, 27, in a shopping center at Cerritos
about 10 miles away.
''They will be in the field for about two
to three months before shifting to Hun -
tington Beach." Fire Chief Ray Picard
explained today. "We expect to have our
A black maid, one of the first to nee
the scene Sunday, told police the gunmen
"appeared to be only shooting at whites.''
Among the dead were a Virginia couplf"
!See SNIPERS, Pa1e %) ,
'
Flve minutes later, the horror was
repealed.
Yet aoother smuggler pulled over after
ootlclni the checkpoint Jn operation.
He too ordered his cargo to Oee.
In ihat 011lgbt across eight lanes or busy
freeway Victoria Oroico Cervantes, 15, of
Purlflcacioo. Jal!Jco ..... tilled wben she
wu bit by a fiJt'IMflng car. '
lier fa!her abo saw the tragedY. He
(See ALIENS, Pqe %)
EMPLOY RESULTS
WITH PILOT A.DS
Find the ricbt person to !ID !bat Job by
~tlin& a DAILY PILOT clwllled want
ad ln your employ. He~'• boW:
Mature gal, PIT CM Jn&. or.
!Ice. E1p not oee. li'lllDcllypo
-1Llllllll mmunlcate -!.-
must. Days m-uu.
The~ tolhla .. --C!Ous. l:inplOy ...... qolcf iiiiiltfli(lW'
own.DWdlncttlUllL
,
Carl Eckstrom. 11, of 8251 Flight Ave .,
No One Seeks .Job
The murder suspect is also charged
!See SERVICES, Page!)
W a:µted: Board Applicants
'
By JOANNE RSYNOU>S ...................
1t would ·-nobqdy -lo be • achoo! board member in west Or111&<
C<Nnty.
Accordlng to the count¥ registrar or
voten, as of today, no one has Died for
the 11 upired terms on the m IChool
boards that cover -tlngton Beach.
Fountain VaUey, Seat Beach and w .............
A .,._.,. !At tbl ,..i.trar nolid
that candidllel have until Feb. IS to Illa
al the rqlltnr'1 of!l<o at 1119 E.
Cheltnul In -ADI. .
Al l!ike---iiillii Ajill 17 -...
--in 6ldt " n.. elomalWy clillllcla llld u.. -... u. l!llJlo
• tinglon Beech blgb -board· of -· So far, DDt even tbe lncumbentl have
Indicated wbdhet they'll be ... king ~
election.
In the Fountain Valley School Dillrfct
the IUll beld by board Pmldent \fll·
!lam Crane aod 'l'rusteel Qiella Meyers
and Roaer Belaen will be up for election.
Tbe tliree tnllteel lrom the HunUngton
lleoch Cltj lelemait.ary) Scllool D\>lrict w-lmlll e:qiire e.re~Jact
Clapp llld Steve lloldm. .
Tbe 1m11 ol R. JllllOI SbaUer, pttsl·
dmt ot HuntJaaton llelcll's Ocean View
ocliiiil~ uplre tllll'yuno lllll
-of Robert Xna and Gaqe Lagan.
In Ille Seal Bea -llbCricl, tho
atats hold by Trueteoo Jack .catrns, Ruth
Dully -and Gordon Powers will be up for
election.
'The terms o[ Weslml0$ler SChool
District Trustees Marion AguirTe, Ray
Schmllt and Neo~ia WUlmore all expire
thlt year. ·
And In the Huntlncton Beach Union
High School Dt.tnct, the seato h•id by
Trusttt1 Ralph Bauer, John Bentley and
Ray Schmitt wlll be at stake in the elcc-
tlon. -•
Elc<tlon olflclab pointed out that ther<
Is no char&• lo file for an elecllGn GnJ...
ruoc11lliU "ftflll to !live a prllil<il
llotement of q1llllflcatloM 1<11! lo Ille
"""' Jn bla -·
paramedics by the first of July .'' .
The city wiU have one mobile intensive
care unit, manned 24 hours by two
pitramedics. Six paramedics v.'ill trade
shifts on the unit.
An additional two paramedics are
being trained to fill in for the others for
vacallons or illness.
Picard said the paramedics team will
handle all types of field emergtncies,
with heart attack and accidenl victims
the lvr1> most common.
"We'll probably house our first
paramedics team at the Murdy Fire Sta-
tion," Picard said. "The team will
: •:;,·:er all emergency cal!s in north Hun.
tington Beach. but only acute emergency
calls in the 100them part of town."
A year from now. Picard ~s to start
an...lhcr six firemen In paramedics
trafnlng, to place a ~nd mobile in·
tensive care unit at the _Lake Street !t.8·
lion, covering the southern part or town .
Two unltt would be 11dequale tor all of
Huntington Beach, Picard sald.
The job ol the paramedics is to ado
mintaw medical attention in tbe !ield.
ltllbillzing Injured pel'90lls or heart attoct
victims before transpcn1ng them to a
1!ol!>lllL , Each mobile unit ii equipped with
(llM TIWNING, Pqt I)
Orru1 ge Coast
Weather
The weatnerlady aays there's an
80 percent chance of showers t1>
night aod Tuesday, clearing in the
afternoon oo Tuesday, More rain
ls ~ It the end of the week.
Highi' today 55-m. Lows "5-50,
INSm E TODAY
A nU.1mo1dftg group.t Qo& clQ-
aretU ads iaken o/J the ai.r
wovta. Now tht 1malkigar in-
diutr11 Ml taken the rein, with
ci_gar·puffing cowboys ta1cmo the
UJrll cnoa11 from the nonimoktr.r.
See ·~ on Page 7.
..... It ... ~ 11 L.M....... J. Mw... 11 '-""""• . ,......., ...... . c........ ..14 °'""' C..h' l1 ~ 11 ,.. .. ,..... ,, ~, CINiN••• If _.,... ,.._.,,
0..111 Ne4kM It TSIMt M1fbft iNt ·~ ..... 4 .......... 1t .......... 11 "'*'"" ,. ~ .... ,_..._, .
IW .. lldlnl H _,... .... ~M
.... 14 -..... •
•
,
I
,,
Fro-. Page 1
SNIPERS ...
on their seaind honeymoon and the sec-
ond in C'Ommand of the New Orleans
police force. ~ other vicUms were two
pol"-ucl the •lottut !tot.I
superintendent. 1"
The hotel was ln tho middle of a 50-
square blocl section of downtown Uu:il
was sealed of{ by police. The area im·
mediately around the hotel was littered
with debris, chunks of concrete broken
loose by gtmflre nnd shattered glass.
The tension was so great thll:t a simple
accident i.n wtlicb a woman fell on the
street was mushroomed oo the police
ra_dio into a ftcUUOUI sniper incident. An
annored car rushed to the SC£nc. Sil
blocks rrom the hotel, only to find there
had been no shooting.
llour afte r hour in Wlseasonably cold
and windy weather the gunmen held their
impregnable positions atop the hotel. The
snipe! who was killed by gunfire from a
helicopter Sunday night was slain only
after be dashed away from one of the
bonkers.
"I'm.here," one of the men yelled rrom
his lair late ln the morning.
Police within earshot calltd bacl at the
man. calling him by their o"'tl nickname
for him , "Leroy."
"We hear you, Leroy," the offi cers
yelled. "We want you. Come out where
we can see you.·•
The siege was conducted by 250
memben of the t ,t»man New Orleans
police force. The possibility of calling in
National Guardsrr.eo had been dismissed
by state officials.
Even before the crisis, the Louisiana
attorney general had asked U.S. Altorney
General Richard Kleindienst for a
.federal invest.i8ation into the murders.
* * * 6 Persons Slain
•
In New Orleans
Sniping Named
•
No B!f WJaeeb
Watergate Trial
Witnesses Eyed
/PreaP .. eJ
TRAINING ...
telemel«fr)J devtc:es • an individual 's
vital Wt alp can be transmitted to a
nearby bolpltal.
Tile plRIMdlcs maintain com-
munication with the hospital, where a
qualllled medical doc1or will monllor the
loeomfl1' Information.
The medical doctor actually tells the
paramedics what steps to take in each
-
J
I•'
2 Officers
Isolated
For Safety
situaUoo to 11ve a life. ,
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Several Al. the trial got under way, defense at· A paramedl~ tmlt, to be t!fecUve. Murder and us:n.Jlt Wllh • deadly
present and former While llouse aides torney Henry B. Rothblatt representing must be able to re.och a vlctlrit within weapon complaints were belng sought ro.
\.\'en named today as prospective four of lhe accused, denied reportJ that fi ve minutes. day against a pair or poUcemen involved
government witnesses as the Watergate all involved would plead guilty to avoid "If you can reach a heart attack victi1n In the killing of M Ma rine Corps tbe publicity or a ruU·ecale tri.kl . Jlhl f 1n •-"the · bugglag trial opened In U.S. District "The-'s 1 lot of rumors." he lold w n our m utes, IMlU Victims ca n helicopter pilot Friday night i,rl Tu3tln. Co ,., be saved," Plea.rd said. "Within fi ve A third bar patmn also was shot and urt. reporters, "but there's no troth in It. not minutes, 25 pucent can be saved. but wDuncled.
But no high-level ActqJnistration of; at all." after that, h: droprto·about-10-percent. --Both su:specU in tht shooting death of
ficials were included in the list of 60 Testimony is expected to bring to light Paramedics are not docton. They are Ci:pt. Steven~ Robinelte. %.\, have bttn
witnesses the pfosecu tion said it might new details about the incident. essentially trained to discover and relay placed in special jail iso lallon to protect
call during the trial. However, Senate Democrat! att plan· \'ital Information about a victlm to a !he m from prisoners who rnlght seek
Seven men _ Including two former ning their own probe. Senate Ot!mocratlc qualified doctor. vengeance because t~y are lawmen.
Leader MJte Mansfield c.ver the weekend Picard added that the paramedics will A spokesman for Chief Deputy Distrtct
White House itdes -are charged with asled Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), to not rompete with local ambulance Attorney JamM G. Enrig ht said this
conspiracy, burglary and bugging of undertake an Investigation of the servi~. DAILY PILOT'''",...... morning that complainLS had not yet
Democratic National Committee bead-\Yatergate affair and "other insidious "OUrJob will be to sabllize a patient in HEADED OVERSEAS been issued agalnit Cypreu Police Sgt.
quarters at the Watergate hotel-apart~ campaign practices." the fie! ,"he observed. "The paramedics Exchlll\ge Stucknt Robertson ThomaJ Baroldi and Garden Grove
meot complex JUJJe 17. The trial is el· John D. Ebrllchman, Presklent Nixon's will not tramport PalieQt3, That's still 'an Narcotics Qetectlve Gary L. Gray.
· domestic adviier, said during R television ambulance job." Barokll, 2$, is booked on SU!picion of
pected to last one to three months. interview Sunday that~ full«ale FBI in· The chief expects the Huntington murder, while Gray, 1.B, is charged with
Prosecutor John M. Silbert said that vesHgalion of the Watergate incident Beach paramedics team to answer 1300 Girl SeleC .. _ ..J assault with a deadly weaporl as a mult
Fred Fielding, Jeb Magruder and Bruce showed 1100 Involvement by anyone in the 10·1,400 em.ergency Calls each year, o~ce it!lt of the alterc8tion at the Bachelors 111
Kehrli would be among the witnesses the Administration in that particular in· the public full y understands the opera-bar. cide.nt." lion. F A f • T • Conflicting rtports are I hat Sgl. government would call attempting ~o The paramedics generally replace the Or ff.Cll Tlp Baroldi and Detective Gray were co n-
prove its case. · old fire departmenl rescue unit, though ducting a narcotics investigation and that
Fielding is a White House atton1cy c le Cla • one rescue uni t will be ke.Pt in reserve Phyllis Kay Robertson, a 17·year-old the sudden shooting stemmed from an
working with presidential counsel John oup im for such ~·ork as cutting people out of junior at Fountain Valley High School. argument over :.t woman.
Dean, who conducted an Investigation of c;.rs, digging out cave-ins, and similar. has been selected as an American Field The third victim. Sam Caml).ise, SS, of non·medical rescues. · Tustin, was seriously wounded and take n the Watergate atrair for President Nixon. Th ' G Service repreSentative to Transvaal, to Tustin Community Hospital along with
Magruder worled under White }louse . ey ve ot South Africa. Capt. Robinette. who Wed several hours
communications director llerbert G. .. From Page J Phyll is, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Ken-later.
Klein, w.as deputy director of the Com· neth Robertson, 17398 Santa Luci il, Foun-Investigators claim Sgt. Baro ldi shot
mittee to Re-Elect tbe President and is GJwst Proof SERVICES taln Valley, is president of the Baron Capt. &binette and that Detective Gray ."'
executive director of the committee ar· • • • American Field Service International shot Campise.
ranging the inaugural. Club. A fourth man -who somehow figure s
Kehd.i is a White House staff secretary LONDON (UPJ} _ George and Lynda ~"·ith critlcaUy wounding ~fiss Vasquez' She will leave for South Africa Jan. 21 in the case -wu involved but Tustin
working for H. R. "Bob" Haldeman, Nix· Heritage &aid they recorded the voice of slater Cecilla, 17, who gave a dramatic and spend one year there. Among the police have so far declined to identify
on's chief of staff. a ghost that came calling at their home bed&ide interview to lhe DAILY ponr classes she will take in ber adopted coun-him or his role, possibly that of a Friday. try will be Afrikaans, the orficial Ian-narcotics infonnant. Attorneys for the seven defendants did on Christm.u night. Sh guage or South Africa. Due to the possibility of attack by
not list any potential witnesses as Jury· But the rouple said the ghost ls no doe repartedJy saJd the gunman who other prisoners in donnitory·lype I-~• ~ be trl ti ----·' irl llk Jh cut wn her sister, herself, and Jeffn'es se e.;uon P•'"""~urea gan. s c y se-.mai sp t e e ones llh . cellblocks, Sgt. Baroldi was booked into
hi h vi lted Ebe ('_A w a pistol before neetng told them he Among others listed as prospective w c s nezer ou:uuge on ~..1 I!-pnne j Costa Meaa City Jail •. while Detective
Chrl I E wantcu to play with ther•t and that she • v .. • -.. government witnesses wtre Michael s mas ve . Gray is lodged in Newport Beach City
Douglas Cabby, Washington attorney who "He's been such a frequent year-round thought it was a toy gun until be opened ALIENS Jail.
formerly represented several of the caller since we moved in two years ago fir1 . b land took · • • • Ironically, the $6 million Orange Coun·
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) _ A list of defendants; Alfred C. Baldwin III, an ex· that we call him 'Fred'," Mrs. Heritage car's 1fcense ~umber~~:!~::=~~ ty Jail facility built four years ago hasn't
known dead and some or the injured in FBI agent who reportedly waa involved said Sunday at her home near London. Eckstrom 's Midway City residence told patrolmen that the i•fare" fiir his a single cell designed for special max·
sniper attacks at a New Orleans hotel. in the Watergate affair and wbo has Told by a spiritualist that the ap-where Sgt. Wilson and Detective famil y's trip north was $225 each. imum security protection.
turned state's evidence; Hugh W. Sloan, parition would visit them Chrisbnas Schnelder were murdered by multiple Highway patrolmen investi gating the Tustin Police and Orange County
THE DEAD ronner treasurer of the Nixon campaJgn, night at their lS-year~ld munlclpally-gunshot wounds. acdidents said the victims aJI were run District Attorney's investigators are
1. Phil Coleman, policeman, gunshot and several police and FBI aoont.s. owned home, the Heritaf:' set a tape 1 ti over repeatedly. handling the case and remain extremely ---• In bead a-nves gators -who said Eckstrom
WUlWU • Chief Judge John J . Slrica of U.S. recorder ruM.ing ln the living room recenUy gave a classroom speech urina In the first tragedy, cars driven by tight·lipped about the multiple factors in·
:I. Paul Penlg1, 33, pollceman, gunsliot District Court warned the juron they that eveoing and went to bed. 1 -~ Jose Lopez Ruiz, 24, ol Lynwood and volved. ---• In f gun contro -was wearing a military Th •-'d Iha both ~ ace. woold be aequester.d throoghout the "The nert morning we replayed the nak jacket for body protection when sbot Raymond I.oois Barion, 23, ol San Diego, ey ~ve ,., t suspects
3. Louis Sirgo, deputy police lengthy trial if chosen because the c:ourt tape and beard a voice say 'everyth.lng's by the deputy after the other two lawmen were involved. clairrf to have been acting in the line of
superintendent. gunshot .......i In beet. had "reason to believe there will be con-all right,' " Mn. Heritage said. "The we-slain. , duty during the gunplay at polo~blank
4. Frank Sclmeider. H botel assiltant siderable publicity". about the case. tape also recorded the dragging llOUllds, "' In the second incident, patrolmen said, range that lelt Capt. ll<>blnette dead and
---cli •-nd .~-rtng F-• al The Wet:lm.inster officers dispatched on fi ve separate cars ran over the Campise wounded. manager, •.hot at the_ U. th_ Door ~ell._;:_J_=':ra"irifriim:aa packed_ JlllwJOlth.IJlllO""" m:~. _ 1 • ID••K s •= w_ays a mutual aid call -then diverted ------. -- -f""::-. IUl.Cll_,, Cervantes girl before traffic could stop. 1be dead man, a bachelor, lived at lf--~....,,""-llollezl-B-Steagall-Jr,~ . • . ~~ r!li~'~the""'• lled were morted!l'.1<> hllve ·parted some · • · "'1" =1m ., "'••"• H• · · Ma.rtlnsville, Va., gunsbot 'Wound in head names. . 1ue ne ... -._.u ; ·-ve--appe distance away from Ecbtrom's borne. Patrolmen-are.~still-not--ftl!tain-bow-w _-..n.-.•ms~ .. ,_._.......,......,_auu..11.IW'VlY: 11--~.udJ11111, fo11nctm1JlthJloor.hallU,~ Mote than 100 reporter• _m>IJed , for to the Rev. Jolm Pearce !Dgglna, former They would Jhus have been nearby ii a many other allena may hllve been Injured eel by' bis parenta In Phoenix, Ariz., ac-
S. Elliabeth Steagall, 26, gunshot lMaf'citdeliillls bilt only a iioolwas '::".!"~ Angellcan-.:athedral. Siege of gunfire lilJib! erupf..-sgt. Inti daahes·acrosa·the t-.eway. ~~{':~ Ton>_ Marina Co!P8 Air $1&-
wound Jn ri&ht ~ye, found ne1t to her allowed in ini.Ually •. with the balance to "Fred doesn't frighten us_ we haven't Wll!IOD and Detective Schneider who bad "There must have been literally burr Complaints charging the two lawmen
husband. She was Dr. Steagall's wife. otarked'~-s_!'llls as Jurors were selected seen him, we j'ltear hlm ..:. but he parked In front of the home tried to take dreds of them who escaped because we -both suspended from duty pending uu~. ,. Her! the suspect into custody. ...... I the __ .,_ THE INJURED The public will not be allowed In until ~s annoy us, . tage said. IAle to the circumstances, even if they counted 24 abandoned cars in the area ou ... vme o prv• ... ~l.:uiugs -were ex·
1. Kenneth Solis, 26, policeman,
shoulder wowld, fair.
2. Emanuel Palmlsano, 43, policeman,
arm wound, falr.
3. Chris Caton, 20, ambulance driver,
chest wound, fair.
4. C'barles Arnold, '1:1 , policeman, face
wound, serious.
5. Tim Ursin , 29, fireman, arm wound,
fair.
6. Walter Collin!, about 50, hotel guest,
bullet """""· critical 7. Robert Bemtah, 43, hotel gu..i, ab-
domen """""· ser!owt. .
8. Larry Arthur, policeman, aide
wound, fair.
alter the jury ha s been plcke<. At first, George lhought It waa the had taken position as originally planned, lhrough the day. People just jumped out peeled lo be issued later loday. . The lncldent bu Jed to cru'i.rges that plumbing," she said ... Then he pulled up _ ,, They would then be arta1gned 1n Cen-the Democrat! had been victimlz.ed by Ult floor boards and ~nt houn trying to they might not have been able to save or tbem and ran every which way, tral Orange County Judicial District
'd d po1·t· al 1 trace the nocturnal notses but there just liiitheiiiibuiilliieiit-riildiidiiied~paiiliir.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii5iiwiia~ncuii;ijtt~sa~l~dii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiCourt~iiiii-iiiiiii!ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim w1 esprea i tc esp onage. wasn't any explanatioo fo them " sh 1be Democrats hammered away at the said r • e
i~cldent during the elecU?n carr.paign but RObert Reodle, the district's municipal
did. so W:i~t the spotlight of the tria1 housing manager, said: "If a house is OC·
which Siric~ postponed until after the cupied, it is rateable (taxable) and this
Nov. 7 election. place sounds more than occupied, if you
l'romPageJ
PETERS ...
evolution.
ask me."
lntervie~s Set
In Huntington
CLEAN SWEEP
LOW
ARE
BORN
• •• AND
RAISED
ELSE·
WHERI t. Micbael Burl, policeman, Injured In
!all, good. ~ 10. Joe · .. Aoderson, 60, ·fireiiian, arm
wound, fair.
"But I came up with a few answers of
my own on the use of LSD," he said. "I
d~ided that sex without love in a bum-
mer. Mao at that time is God and woman
is his goddess."
City councilmen will interview a dozen
applicants for the Huntingt"on Beach
Planning C.Ommission at 7 o'clock tonight
i11 the administrative &Mex.
I
11. Robert Reeves, 43, policeman, heart
attack, senous.
u . ll<>berl Childres•, about :»,
policeman, smoke inhalation, treated and
releued.
U. "Fred O'Sullivan, policeman, gunshot
wound In neck and hand. Satl!factory ..
lf, Robert Buras, policeman, gunshot
wound in shoulder. Satisfactory.
15. Wayne Galjour, policeman, wound in
left ear. Sat~raclory.
•
DAILY PILOT
Tll9 Or11t9t eo.tt OAILY ftlLOT, wt11t 111t11ct1
h ~ flle N-~r111. II P.lbl"'*' 1W
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rtl9 e(lltloflt trw P\lblt"'ed• Mandf., lhnlUllh
frtdty, "°'" Colli Mew. Newport Beech.
Mvnllnglan Buc:llfFOl,lnltln V•llfv, U.-
lttdl, lrvln•ISaddl11N~lt tnllll Stn C"""9n!U
Sen J111n C•1>lt1r-A 1!no1c ri111r-1
911111-1 IJ PllOlltMll Slltvn11y1 ard S11r>d<1,.._
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a.y S!Allll, C•I• .M.M, Ctlllomle, tlillo.
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* * * Gig Pewrs· Pens
Book on 'Life'
Gig Peters bas written a book during
his long sojourn in the Orange County
Jail.
He calls the ro.page treatise, replete
with his own psychedelic drav.•ings,
"Making Life Easy."'
Peters handed the first complimentary
copy of the work this momlng to a DAI·
LY PILOT reporter "with my very best
wishes."
"You can quote all you want rrom II,"
Peters said, autographing the volume.
"You might want to call it 'Gig's
Thoughts' but that's up to you."
The book ends with a comment on
Peters' views on "desirelessness.
"Life is action. Dea1h ls stop-action.
There is nothing to lose. only to gain.
Desirelessness, Fearlessnesa: a o d
Timelessness."
The council must pick one hopeful to
ri ll the seat vacated by Roger Slates
when b.e v.·as appointed to the Orange
County Planning (',om.mission last Apri l.
City Administrator David Rowlands
said he expects the council to name a
new planner at its regular meeting next
Monday.
From Page l '
PEACE ...
by Kissinjer tert the vWa and returned to
the U.S. Embassy residence.
Tho said on arrival in Paris Saturday
about the new round of talks: "The
decisive moment has arrived."
Kissinger, who new in ' late Sunday,
said the talks 'vere "one more major ef-
fort" to resolvf' the Vietnam problem.
At 3 p.m. (6 a.m. PST), technical ex·
perts from both •ides, who have been
mee ting regularly since before the 22nd
round of talks broke up, got together
agai n at Saint·Nom·La·Brcteche, outside
Paris.
Moon Bound
Soviets _ Launch Luna Rocket
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviets today hurled an wimanned Luna 21 rocket
Jnto space en routt to tht moon, the Tass news agency said.
The lim """"' probe l•unched by the Soviets In ti monihJ strealced lnlo
earih orbit at 9:65 1.m. (10:15 p.m. PST SUnday), Tass said.
"THE STATION WAS LAUNCHED to the moon from the orbit Ill an arJJ.
ficla1 11telllle or the earth and was placed on a trajtctory close to the est!·
mated one." It t.ald.
.Tass said ooly lh1t the purpo>e ol the probe wo4 "in IC<Ord~ \\'.Ith the
prorram ~f spaice studies" and gave no details of ita ml.s!IO('I.
THE SOVIETS HAVE Y•t to land men on the moon , but two robot moon-
9COOpefl """" beo;r1 wcmslt!I In retarnln1 hmar-.oil 1o ·earth. 1'he Lltest, 1>ma 20, returned l11t Fthniary. .
I >
OLL n TO YOUll
t!BLE FOil LOADING
pOllTABLE
WASHER
NO ON!
SELLS
FOR
LESS
m · Mtmbtt-ol 90 DA:! U C:11lf<lrnl1'1 urvo1t CASH
C:-ratlw Buyl"f WITH Amon•
&roup With Th• . CUDfT
... VOluml ll'uyTn1 ·
"iiluA--'••--110-St-!!J ~
ftt.WHt--. m
18lSlEWPOIT1LYD. lermtawn CW Mesa -P1tone 548-7788
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Monday, JAt1u1ry 8, 1~73 H DAIL V PILOT 3
Allied Base Bombed -by U.S. Jets
Two Persons Thrown
Explosion Rocks
Hotel • Ill
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHI.
Of ... Dell'Y , .... tl•ft
An explosion of undetennined origln
rocked a wing of lhe exclusive Surf and
Sand Hotel in Laguna Beach late this
morning. throwing two per!Ons from a
second atory apartment onto the . atreet
belQW. _
The injured w~ tentatively Identified
as Yul °'um Wong and Kay ff, Woo. •
Wong and Woo were both rushed to SOOtb
County Farms
'Get by Well'
During Cold
Laguna
Cout C.mmunlty Hoopital !n Sooth La-
guna for emergency treatment.
Woog and Woo both worlttd 1t the
Outriper lloltlurant odjacent to the
Surf and Sand complex.
Woog b bellevod to have sulfettd
massive head tnJwiea when be wu
thrown out .of the apartment by the tx·
ploslon.
"It aouoded like a big nploslon, 11 uJd
Outrigger manager Bill Simmons. "All I
heard was this big ·sound. aud then a lot
of glass shattering on the s\dewali:."
The explosion oc::curre(I sbOrtly after 11
a.m. in a second story apartment -the
oldest section of the ·Surf aM Sand cOm·
plex.
Firemen on the scene were unable to
give the cause for I.he explosion and
subsequent fire. All unit!: from the
Laguiia Beach Fire Department respond-
ed at the scene.
Both Wong and Woo, SimmoM said.
were middle-aged men and had served as
Orange County citrus and avocado cooks at the Outrigger for a short period •
growers have gotten by real well with of time. The apartment in which they
very li ttle damage to crops from cold live has been reserved for employes ol
weather, in contrast to heavy losses the Surf and Sand and its restaurants.
elsewhere in the st.at.: over the last Traffic in the buiy 1400 block of South
month, a spokesman for 'the county Coast IDgbway was snarled as the result
agricultural department said today. of the late morning explosion. Numerous witnesses said it appeared "As a whole for all of the season, we've that Woo's lnjuries were not as severe as
had little dama~e," the county official Wong's.
Break• Barrier
Rev. A. Paul· Jones o! Sacra-
mento is expected to be named
chaplain of the state Senate,
the fi rst Negro in the 124-year
history of the state Legislature.
Police Probing
Stabbing Death
Of Young Marine
said. "We've skinned by prett} good." Following the explosion flames spread
Officials at the U.S. Fruit Frost through the upper story of the wtng and The stabbing death of a 1 7-year~ld
Service at UC Riverside Friday had through a beauty shop located below the Marine corps private stationed at Camp
warfled growers in the San Bernardi.no-apartment. p di d Orange county areas that smLdge pots Witnesses said that no other persons en eton was un er investigatio~ today
might be necessary to ward off cold over v.•ere believed to have been injured dur-by Laguna Beach police v.·ho have in
the weekend . ing the explosion. custody two other Marines -one the
Frost Service officials said today that dead youth 's brother -and a Laguna
no frost damage Is expected this week Beach man.
and a beneficial rain is expected tonight County' S Cltief PFC Ross Paul Andrews of 1499 Ter·
or Tuesday. Rain after a dry cold spell race Way , Laguna Beach was pr ..
helps re verse crop damage from
dehydration, a spokesman said. Of Educatw' n nounced dead on arrival at South eoast
The spokesman for Orangt County's Community Hospital Saturday.
agricultural ollice, which is charged with Harry Bruce Macres, rr, a florist , was
assessing any crop damage, said despite ·s:ncla:r Qu:ts held in Laguoa BeacJi City Jail on
the warning, county growerJ were " " " ci. ..... es of assault wi·th Intent to conuru·t "lucky" last weekend. ._.&
VCI Hit$
L.ibrary
Unifying
Library operations at UC Irvine would
be "diminished" and "jeopardized" by a
state department of finance plan to co n·
solidate caiifomla's research libraries at
Berkeley and Los Angeles, UCJ head
librarian John Smith sald today.
"I am sure the campus at Irvine will
take very strong exce ption to any library
planning 'which pi'events this campu!I
~ from affording library setvices ln sup-
port of its academic program," Smith
said.
Smith said he had a copy or the confi·
dential report made by state auditors.
That plan "'as revealed by the Los
Angeles Times Friday.
Auditors are suggesting that the state's
infrequently used books be pl aced in
"hub libraries" at UC Berkeley and
UCLA .
The state report also recommends that
a teletype commun.ications system· be set
up between the hub libraries and outlying
UC 'and state university libraries and a
busing plan be set up to bring students
from other areas to the hub research col·
lections.
Books would be trucked W the remote
librari~s on req uest.
"Neither the librarian nor the faculty
are equipped to predict the U'.sage of a
given volume," Smith said.
UCI currently has 20 doctorate pro--
grams, a medical program, and 18
rr.aster's degrees programs.
O/Jjet'lor
Sgt. l. C. Ernest Pounder, high·
ly decorated Green Beret, told
newsmen Sunday he has be·
come a conscientious objector
because of "this insane \Var .''
I le returned 24 medals and \1:ill
not wear his uniform.
Teen Tho11ght
Gtu1 Was Toy;
Girl, 12, Dead
The Irvine library is oot even at the Police disclosed today that a cheap
"proper strength" to support those pro--"Saturday Night Special"' revolver was grams, said Smith. adding that the library also serves 1he surrounding non-the ;i,·eapon res ponsible for killing 12-
academic community. year-old Mary JoAnn Lux of Irvine dur-
About one out of every five books ing a tragic accident Saturday night.
checked out of the library is to a non-UCI Costa Mesa . police Capt. Edward
person, he said. Most librarians are reluctant to speak Glasgow said the .22 caliber handgun was
out on the plan, Smith said , "for fear Qf purchased for protection on a cross-coun-
reprisals" from the state department of try trip by the grandfather of the girl who finance. scbsequently pulled the trigger.
Elsewhere ln the state sy!ttm, one "Both girls came into the bedroom to
unidentified librarian said. change clothes. Then they were looking
"This would be disruptive to the educa· around for a hamster bottle when they
tiorral process, to say lhe vtry least. If saw the gun in the top shelf of the clothes
Navigation
Error Cited
111 Mistake
•
SAlr.ON 1L'Pl 1 -Five An1er1can
fighter-bombrrs from the Air -,Porre.
Navy and Marines today n1istakenty
bombed lh'I spra"ling Da N:ing Air Base
tn v.•h1H military sources said 11·as an ap-
parent navigational error.
Nine Americans and a Vletnamtse
n1ilitary guard "'<'rl' Injured. A UHt
lfue y heli copter ""as dan1uged and three
fuel storage tanks set afirt.
A total of 34 of the SOO.pound bombs
were dropped by an Air Force F4 Phan·
tom . two Navy A7 Corssir~ and two
~1arine F4 Phantoms. All apaprently
landed in t~e northwest port ion of the
huge joint U.S.-SQuth Vletnamese base.
UPI correspondent Kenneth f',
Englade. on lhe base at the time of the
accidental OOmbing. said two American
soldiers. lwo American civilians and the
South Vie tnamese guard \\'ere injured by
the bombs. ,
Four American airmen and another
U.S. civilian "·ere in ju. ed while fleeing
for cover from what was at first believed
to be a communist rocket attack.
The U.S. command began an irn·
n1ediate investigation. Military 30urces
said the Air Force. which operates the
base housing 4,000 American servicemen,
would be in charge of the probe.
"The Navy and Marines will be in on
ii , too, since they had planes involved," a
source said.
Meanwhile, the air war over North
Vietna m entered its 10th month w1tb~12-4
fighter-bombers and about 45 B52s bitting
below the country's 20th parallel in tbe 24
hours ending at dawn today.
U.S. Command spokesmen said
"nwnerous" trucks were destroyed near
the port of Vinh. 137 miles north of the
Denlililarized Zone and "several'' others
were hit near Dong Hoi, 38 miles north
of the DMZ.
At least one of the bombs that !ell on
the Da Nang facility hit a huge
petroleum storage tank, touching ort an
e:rplosion that spread fires to two other
nearby tanks, military sources reported .
The erroneous lx>mbing touched off
rumors the base had been attacked by
Soviet·built MIG jets from North Viet·
nam, whose nearest frontier is 100 miles
away.
-Elsew&ere-in-tbe-stale.,-&-mrYey_lwn-~-Dr.-~BnK:e" Sh>clair .. uslltant ~r and suspicion of murder.
dkated that the top 3S citrus growers in superintendent of the Oraoge -c;;;t~ --uirver-JiDlie,-z:J, a Camp -
_Fr.,.. .=ty re~ "-loss_of up 19 Department-of EclueaU--ba• .-..igned Pendleton Marine, of 1422 caplstraoo
Students filiafacuny members ha ve t-o -"{:!Oset:',_ttre invl'srigator reportl'd;--
wait for days .• or go to another city !or a "The girl pointed it at her friend
But none of Hanoi's MIGs has ever
been known Lo attack anywhere in South
Vietnam-;-A: few reconn:ats:sance flllbtr
have been reported, but never confirmed,
over the year-s. three-<iuarterB of their crop In _, Ave Laguoa Bea h d Robe Stu December's. freezing weather._ . _ his post effective June 30, citing the grim ·• c ; .an rt art
Extensive damage ts also expected to prospects for a better relationship Andrews, 19• a Manne and the dead
be recorded in Tu1are ':Aunty and the San octween the county department and local youth's brother, of 1499 Terrace Way,
Joaquin Valley. school districts as the main reason. Laguna Beach were held on charges of
In Fresno County, agricuJtural com· Sinclair 45 has been with the county assault with in.~t to do great bodily
missioner's office said the recent cold d rtm 't f , . d ball and harm and suspicion of murder. No bail
wave c2used about $8 million damage. epa en or &IX an a yean had been set.
No dollar estimate has been made by has been assistant superintendent for
the Tulare County agricultural com· educational services for 'thr~ and a halr
missioner but assistant commissioner
Clyde Churchill said surveys show more 1ears. than 50 percent of the navel orange crop In that posi tion, Sinclair ts number two
was still on the trees in December and at rr.an in the department and the closest
least 50 percent of all the valencia aide to Superintendent Robert Peterson ,
orange crop was damaged. who was elected in 1966.
A Tu1are spokesman said that based pn County trumees were presented with
last year's re venues, the losses there Sinclair's rtsignation last week but took
should exceed $26.7 million. no action.
About 18 percent of the navel orange Peterson rect.ived Slnclair'11 submitted
crop in Tulare County was picked before resignation about two week.! ago and was
the elghtday freeze dropped or<hanl "flabbergas\ed" by It, Sinclair said Fri-
tempcratures into the high teens and low day.
20s, tl}e spokesman said : . • Neither Sinclair nor Peterson was
Tulare County is the state's leading available for comment on the issUe t&
citrus growing area and the crop wa s day.
estimated to be worth $61 million before Sinclair Saturday was quoted as saying
the freeze. that "the relationship between the
Churchill said an official loss estimate Orange County Department of Education
should be available early-ne-d week. He and .the school districts of the county has
said the survey also indicated IMre than not been good, is not good now and the
75 percent or the county's $7.4 million i;rospect of it getting better is not very
lemon crop was l(lst. great."
Greeter •okay~
Larsen Collapses During Service
Laguna Beach's famous greeter, Eiler
Larsen, now 8.1 years old, was reported
in satisfactory health today after col·
lapsing in church Sunday.
Larsen was returned to the' Laguna
Beach Nursing Home following the in·
cident at Community Presbyterian
Church. 415 Forest Ave., Laglma Beach.
Emergency medical aid was ad-
ministered to the octogenerian in the
chureh by the Laguoa Beach Fire
Department and Dr. Robert Roper ol
-Laguna Beach. He was taMn by am·
bu.lance to the nuning home after
emergency care.
Beverly Arnold, 1cl!ng adm!nlstntor
of lbe nursing home said Eiler had
re ;.;verc:: by Sunday aftemooD-
0We think he may have just gotten
short of oxygen. He tries to do way 11ay
mori: than be can.~ M'rs. Arnold sold.
"He feels this Is his job, to he out
greeting people." she llld.
She said he had recovered sutficlently
to be off oxygen at about 2 p.m. Sunday.
"He wanted no more oxygen, no more
nurse~ ... " Mrs. Arnold said.
Sbe said be was v.ry mentally alert
ar. J W&.li ••1 t weet doll." COLLAPSES IN CHURCH
Ugun• GrNt•r Llrwn
The death injuries to the older
Andrews were alleged to have been suf-
fered in a fight involving the four men
and two women on a darkened part of
Laguna Canyon Road near El Toro Road
Friday.
Police Sgt. Neil Purcell said the
weapon used in the brawl was a pocket·
type knife.
Purcell said Police first lea rned or the
incident when a car carrying Janise and
the Andrews brothers pulled into the
police station parking lot.
Wayne Criticizes
Senators Voting
F 01· War Cutoff
.PINE MOUNTAIN, Ga. (APJ -Actor
John Wayne or Newport Beach says that
senators who voted recently to cut off
U.S. funding of the Vietnam war were, in
effect, "giving aid and comfort to the
enemy.
"They would have been tarred and
feathered in the old days ,'' Wayne said in
a weekend news conference at nearby
Callaway Gardens, whert:. he addressed a
convention of the Georgia Cattlemen's
Association.
The antiwar senators, he said, "didn't
find fauJt with (the late) President John
F. Kennedy when he starlet it; they
didn't find fault with the gentleman from
Texas (former President Lyndon B.
Johnson) when be sent all the men over
there and then didn't have the courage to
end it."
Wayne said the opposition of the
sew-tors to President N:11on's Vietnam
policy is purely political.
''And l hate politics," he said.
Rains May Peril
Homes in Canyon
A pttdicted rainstorm which may hit
Orange County Tueoday worried state
highway engineers who fought over the
wetl<eod to stabill2e a sliding hilllide in the Santa ,,,,. canyon.
Foor Anabelm-homea aro ~ndangertd
by the slippage which lelt a 25-foot wide
f11SUre. too feet long beck of residences
on Circle Haveo Road near the Newport
FT-lY· .
Notionally famous, Lanen would stand Bulldoiers ftlled tht huge n ..... Sun-
book ·fur their research-very-often _ . . ~ca.use she ·thought it-was--a-toy:-She
there's goin_g to be a.seve!e br:~kdo~." pulled the trigger once and it misfired.
The recommendations were 1nade to l:lul just beCore the victim could say,
con:ect t~o major . faul~ found ~y t~c '\\latch out, it's real!' she pulled the
auditors in ~e U~1ver.s1ty of California trigger again and !he gun fired a bullet
and State Uruvers1ty hbrary procedures into her left breast."
-"inadequat~ s~ring of no~du,~licated Poli ce, who have ruled the death ac-~,esou~ces. w1th1n . a region and cidental. dec lined to revea l the name of duph~all~~ of infrequentl y used the 13-year-old girl who fired the fata l
materials. shot at her best friend. Glasgow said that
the girl celeb rated her 13th birthday on
Nixon Promises
Aid to Cambodia
NEW YORK <AP) -Cambodian Presi-
dent Lon Nol says the Nixon
Administration has promised his em-
battled govern'iTient "firm support"
against North Vietnamese •·aggression,"
the New York Times reported today.
The Cambodian leader also said in
written responses to tjuestions submitted
by the paper that he felt American
bombs have so weakened North Vietnam
that lt will~ forced to negotiate a
"'just" P.,eace settlement and withdraw
from Cambodian territory.
f'riday.
The weapon had been purchased by her
grandfather who had arrived from South
Dakota to spend a winter vacation wi th
her parenls in Turlle Rock.
Meanwhile, funeral services for the
Lux girl have been set far Tuesday and
\\1cdnesday at O_ur Lady Queen of Angels
Catt:olic Church , 2046 Mar Vista Drive,
Newport Beach.
A rosary will be held at the church at 8
p.m. Tuesday and a requiem mass at 9
am. \\'ednesday. to be followed with in-
terment at Pacific View ~femorial Park.
The survl \·ors include the girl's
mother. Mrs. JoAnn Lux: brothers
Stephan , Mark and Bruce; and siste rs
Deborah and Victoria. All are residents
f 19521 Sierra Soto St .
Initial reports said tht rive planes were
cruising above a 2,500-foot so-lid cloud
cover on a so-called "Sky Spot" mission.
a strategic bombing attack guided onl y
by radar. radio beacons and a ''little
black box" computer. · ·
Somehow. the command said, the
aircraft vee red off course and ended up
over Da Nang instead of the Communist
target they thought they were heading
for 62 miles away.
The lead pilot gave the signal and
ordered all planes to dump their bombs.
BIRTH CONTROL
BOOK HOT ITEM
CLEVELAND (UPI) -A ~page, il-
lustrated "Birth Control Handbook" is
one of the hottest items at the C1eveland
State University student cen ter and it's
.free in the guidance and counseling of·
lice .
"ll has pictures that would make a
Playboy editor sit up and take notict'."
said Bud \Veidenthal, v.'ho covers local
coUeges for the Cleveland Press.
rnAGGi 's I
n 1'R.(. l . \J{( n .·.
• Wlll/ -roo mRNY -~{D Room GROUPS
"1'1/IS ANO OTH(.~ P,(AIJ'f//:Ul. ''S\ANL{ y II
ltlNG !\J( GROUPS
$ 300 Q!?' D\SCOUN\
TU.(S., "t'HRU.1 ~AT.1 ONLY.
QUAN IT/( S L.IMl"T'.( 0.
m\\GG/ COB~'S
FURNliVR.C
~o 11 ·~~,1~-1122 Lanen. bom Jn Aarhus, Denmark. in
lb~ came to Laguna Beach tn 1942 and
started grttting as well as working as a
gal'i!tnU. He-lelt ror awbDe, the1rretarn-
«!Jo La--He was----oll!ailly pl'ODCiiiiiCil the
Lqm; Beach O...W In 1961.
oo lill'i<I comers or the Ari C.li!l\t llRl----&f lllll lddltlonll--.nrt wu placed on
with 1 bufJ.bom •oloe call out to SanUago Rold 1t the buo of the slide
po-.bfancnnotonm: "Helloor,How -.......-Engtoeers --nid-~ elide -hod --
P.IUNG TlllS 1\0 W/Tl-t'"'c'OU ,
IT!S IUOltTH aNOTIUR $IQQ QI
""
NCWPORT B<Ac..\\
are )'OU!" stablliaed •
•
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4 OAIL V PILOT
with
Tom ur,r,hine
>a •.
•
A Hot Time
Jn--Old T_own
OF BLAZES AND SUClf -Unless it
was a preny dull January atternoon. you
wouldn't expect too many Lagunans to
get very excited if the old auto agency
out at 1150 South Coast Highway tried to
bum dOV<'n.
For one thing, the place was vacant :
finally abandoned to cobweb! after hav·
Jng been visited. by a series or automotive
operators over the years. For another.
the building appeared to be wrought . of
solld concrete and thus an unlikely can·
didate for much of a lire.
Thirdly, It was scheduled to be ripped
asunder by the iron demolition ball to
make way for a shopping complex called
~ Village Faire: that is, if. the F'aire
people can ever get all their variances
screwed on right. But that's another
story.
MAINLY I TELL you all this so you
would know it would take a pretty dull
Saturday afternoon to get Lagwia Beach
folks upeet about th~ old building il it
should catch afire.
Well, last Saturday was pretty dull in
Laguna and to and behold, the aging auto
building did go up in smoke. 'lbus it
ca~ considerable commotion.
Initial reports bad It that •broptly,
about 4:30 p.m., flames beg.an to belch
forth through the rool of the old pla"'-
Lagona firetruck!: responding from every
direction except the ocean. It was a
helluva exercise -sirens, brlgbl lights,
bases all over_ the .streets. 11 must ba.ve
been a dulJ Saturday for the firemen, too.
Anyway, they knocked down the flames
in the old joint so fast that the crowd
hardly had time to galh«!r.
mE SHOW WAS so good that one real
estate person just sat on his front porch
in a chair and viewed the whole thing.
It all caused long-lime coastwatcher
George "Peanuts" Zimmerman to
remark that if the United Nations could
put out fires lbat fast we'd have peace
permanently.
•
Israelis
TEL AVIV (AP) -Israeli Jets ,...pt
Into Syria four t1meJ today, stx>oling
down live MIG• and aU.cklnJ IU'rrilla
ba!t$ and mililuf lnstallatlolll, the
Isnooll command ,.Ported. It said an
arUU.ry dud raged 1lon1 the border.
No laraeU plants were lost, the com~
mand said. Damascw radio admitted the
•
Launch Attacks . on Syrians
loss ol three pl.... and claimed Syrian
pllols oho; d own four ol the Israeli
raiders.
''THE AERIAL combat WU followed
by fierce sbellJng ol five enemy poajUons
in the Istaell occupied Golan Heights,"
the . Damascus broadcast said, adding
that s,nan artillery scored 0 direct .. u
It clalmed lour Israeli tanil and twn
artWory batterlu were destroyed.
An lmlell ~ said the~ ...
chanao bepn neorly two houn llter
larael downed the MIG• in the .......i ol
the three strikes.
The lint two Iiraell air raids were
aplllll Syrian army and aumUJa posl-
tlom in ,.taliatlon for three border IJ>.
cldenta lJ1 the 14 boun preced1nr tbe at·
taco, the laraelt spokesman aald. A
Syrian radar alte wu hll
The tblrd atrtie waa agalnlt Syrian
anWery tb&t responded to the earlier
Israeli air raldl.
UPI T ........
rr WAS 'l1IE l1fth air al tock by Imel
against Syria ln the last two months. The.
five jets Im.I claimed It shot d<iWD were
the DIOlll llnce Nov. 2t when hreal
clolmed It shot down sl% Syrian MIGs.
The llrst Israeli atriio today, tbe
Israeli ccmmand aatd, waa apinal a
Syrian army base at Nawa, alioul 25
miles east ol the Sea ol Galileo: two
guerrtlla bases near Dell, about 20 miles
from the frontier aDd near El Mmelrlb,
and two anny outpasta and an artillery
battery soutlieaat ol Queoeltra.
Tbe Jsraelll returned Ses1i than thfff
hours later to bomb radar stattons at El
llWeljili ana-Sl!ll1Srl!i, in southern
Syria, tbe Israeli command said.
"!Jl tbe courae ol the raid, • dogfight
ensued with Syrian alrcraJt," a com.
munique reported. "Five Syrian MIG2t
planes were downed."
ANO'IBER COMMUNIQUE I I t d
Iara ell .planea bombed -military pooltlom
in the northern Mediterranean COIBlal
town of Latakia near the Turklah border.
Israel's state radio said the Golan
Heights were closed to civilian trlffic.
The radio said setUers along the frontier
were in air raid shelters.
It added that ambulances were seen
moving through Syrian ta~eu, ap-
parently evacuating casualties from
earlier raids. •
Damascus radio bad said two Syrian
soldiers were killed and eight wwre
wounded in the Israeli alr attacks.
Late!-Syria urged other Arab oowr
tries to "immediately go into batUe wHb
Israel and not let Syria ll8Dd alone to
take the enemy's heavy blows."
THR EE NEW ORLEANS POLICEMEN LYING PRONE ON BUILDING NEAR HOTEL, WAIT THEIR CHANCE TO FIRE ON SNIPERS
Six Persons We,. Killed Sundoy By Snipers Holdod Up "" Roof of Howord Johnoon Building
In a ~ge that seemed aimed at
Syria's federation partllers IJbya and
Egypt, the broadcast said "only the com-
bined efforts of Arab countries can begin
an end Jo IsraeJ.i arrogance,"
SNIPERS' LOCATION
New OrlNns Hotel
•
Contract Dispute
Philadelphia Teachers
Strilill1g 280 Schools
PHU.ADELPHIA (AP) -Mo<t of
Ph.iladelphia's 280 public schools were
eitber shut down or · operating with
skeletoo staffs today after teachers walk·
ed off lhe job in a contract dispute.
Some 2.60,000 pupils were ailected.
Officials of both the school district and
close as a result of the strike, which
paralyzed public education in the nation's
fourth largest city for tbe second time
since September.
e Quints F i ne
It wu a stroke of good foH.une for the
bored citizens, however, that while the
blaze got knocl<ed out quickly, the smoke
did nol Great billows of it filled the sky
for a long time. This gave the gathered
assembly ·90ftlethlng to watch.· -, ~we·~~~tw~o~cni~was~~,~..,.~-------------
EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) -The 113<1'
quintuplets are "doing fine and the lather
along Coos! Highway at the . front ol the C!u-pll'Dnte eo ...... l-'---;,rn1d!npnd·anothenm-!lde·streeti>y-.:J · ~..,,. -...,...., JN SHORT... Evanston Hospital. .
( . )---tt-calming-down;''-aayra1pokesman-at
Even-Thomas Allen,-lhe..f1rst bom who
had developed a respiratory problem,
..
the Potlery Shaci. They gol IWo separate
shows. ~.4 t R l THE BUNCH ON Coast Highway got 1:1.greeS 0 U e
to see the firemen up on the roof and the
one with the axe. No fire is complete
without at least one fireman witb an axe.
The ·oniooken on the side, meanwhile,
got to_watch firemen don their breathing
apparatus and enter the smoke-filled in·
terior. The whole thing went so well that
even Laguna's acting fire chief Charley
-Kuhn could smile .
Meanwhile, the traffic jam became im-
possible and this gave the police
something to do also. Sgt. Vic Sagan
guarded the firehose which croosed Glen·
neyre Street.
"DON'T DRIVE OVER the hose," Sa-
gan roared at a longhair in a pickup
truci. "I gotta get lhn>ogh," the looghtir
yelled baci.
"Go up that way and around," Sagan
demanded . The longhair departed in a
screech of angry tires. Sagan be$ilated.
perhaps tempted to abandon the hose and
go chase the screeching longhair. He
stayed with the hose.
;•You wonder if he'd run over the hose
2nd bust it if il was his house on fire,"
Sagan ·grumbled.
Anyway, by now the smoke, crowd and
traffic were all beginning to thin . The
real estate man still rocked happily on
his front porch.
To tell you the truth, it wasn't really
much or a fire. But it was the best
Laguna Beach had on a dull Saturday
afternoon. ' ...
On Nude Dan ci1ig
·WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court today agreed to role on the po"-er
or Wisconsin olricials to shut down bars
that feature nude dancers..
A three-judge court in lt1ilwaukee last
August held state officials could not cl06e
the bars without giving the owners an
adversary bearlng "to disprove damag-
ing charges and demonstrate that they
are deserving ol being lice!lled."
The state then appealed to the Supreme
Court, saying tavern owners already had
"meaningful hearings'' during which
they could present evidence to support
their liceme requests.
On Dec. 5, in a case rrom California,
lhe court .ruled 6 to 3 that lhe states can
shut down bars that feature nude dancers
and other ''bacchanalian revelries."
The W.isconsin ruling involved bars in
Racine and Kenosha. The federal panel
in h1ilwaukee ordered the licenses ex·
tended and struck down the state regu·
latiom as unconstitutional.
The court's taking of the \Visconsin
case indicates the justices wm modify
the caJUom.ia ruling in some respects.
MARINE GUNSHIP FLIES OVER BURNING HOTEt ROOF
Copter Sharpshooters Say They Hit Zig-zagging Sniper
Ban .on Children's TV
Ads Gets FCC Hearing
WASHINGTON (AP) -A demand by a
citizens' group for a complete federal
ban on commercials during children's
television programs comes up ror hear-
ings today before the Federal Com-
munications Commission.
Cold Glaze on Parts East
il1idwest Gets More Sit.ow; Areas Still Lack Powe r
I I I. ..
the union said they expected all 26 city was bein~,.fed orally ~d was be.ing,,giVen
high schools and vocational schools to oxygen JUSt once m a while, the spokesman said Sunday night.
Vietnamization
Complete, U.S.
Can Quit-Laird
WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of
lleleme Melvlq R. Laird IDld Congress
loday South Vietnam Is virtually ready
to take over Its own full defm;e if the
Parta J108CO talks iall ,·,
But Laird repeated President Nixon 's
stand the United States will stay in the
war until American prisoners are rel.eas-
ed and Hanoi accounb for the missing in
action.
The three girls and two boys were born
Friday to Mr. and Mrs. James Baer of
Northbrook, Thomas Allen, Elizabeth,
Douglas Edward, Leslie and Vickie were
moved froni Highland Park Hospital to
Evanston Hospital. a referral center for
premature and high-risk babies.
e lllcGovern Bills
NEW YORK (AP) -Althougb his
presidential campaign cost Sen. George
McGovern $32 million, tbe defeated
Democratic Candidate has less than
$400,000 in remaining debts, Newsweek
magazine n!ports.
McGovern inlendt to pay Ute debts
with com;"'itted campaign pledges, tho
magazme s current issue said, adding he
has pla~s to maintain a political
organlzahon by selling his mailing list at
$25,000 a copy and by publishing a
newsletter.
• Oil.Sp i ll
HELENA. Ark. (AP) The
Environmental Protection Agency says
there is relatively little it can do to clean
up a massive lt1ississlppi River Oil spill
spawned by four petroleum barges in a
river accident which apparently killed
t WO sailors Friday.
The diesel oil early loday strelcbed
downstream t5 milet, nearly to the
Louisiana state line.
e LotieU QNlts
SPACE CENTER, Houston {UPI) -
James A. Lovell Jr., hoping hiJ record
time in space has helped man lmderstand
his universe, this weekend announced his
retirement Crom the space program to
enter private business.
Lovell made lour space flights In-
cluding two aroWld the moon. No Other
astronaut logged as much time in space.
e Quake Rttfe '
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI) -. 'Ije
National Assembly and th< rullJll ~
man junta imposed new labor, ~
and political rules on Nicaraguam °'V
the weekend in mo ... designed to g>efd
reconstruction ol Managua , devastated 17
da)'3 ago by an earthquaie. ,
DAU. Y l'tl.OT •
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Orange Coast
EDITION
Todny's Finni
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL 66, NO. 8, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1q73 N TEN CENTS
Peters Lee.lures Court, Claims He Was Sane
By TOM BARI.KY
Of .. O.lly l'I ... ,..-
Cr!pp)e(f Gil Peten today lectured an
Orange Col..mty Superior Court Jury oo
love, sex, the Unlted Nalionl, the cooflict;
of oommuniam and capltall1m,
alcobolbm, world rellgloos, and the use
ol LSD, while repeatedly urging the
panel to reject any suggestion that he
was Insane when he murdered · biJ
parents.
Leaning forward in his wheelchair and
Two Envoys
Grim, Cool
In Paris
PARIS (U PIJ -Grim faced and
studiously avoiding each other in public,
U.S. presidential advber Henry A. Kiss·
Inger and North Vietnamese negotiator
1{I!! Due 'Ibo opened a new round of Viet-
nam peace talts today with a 41k-bour
meeting. 'Ibey •&reed lo meet again
Tuesday.
tapping his pencil oo the microphone for
emphasis, the convicted killer reminded
the jury that sacrifices were common in
the Old Testament and his own act of
sacrifice should not be regarded as so
very unusual
"In tbooe days, they often sacrificed
the first cblld of the family," be told the
jury in Judge Kenneth · Williams'
courtroom. "So why should anything I
had to offer sound pretty rar out?"
"I've been old, that my idea on the
ers
• Divine Plan that governs my actions
aouods pretty graodi~." Peters said.
"But anyme with any knowledge or the
Bible and God's work wouldn 't expect a
Divine Plan to be llf1Spect4cu.lar."
Peters, 24, ii the last defense witness
in the sanity bearing that followed the
same jury's verdict that be was guilty of fir:st degree murder ;when be stabbed
Chlrles P~ters •. 55, through the heart and
strangled hb mother Flora, 54, a teacper
at Lincoln School in Corona del Mar.
'
Proseculor Pat Bryan, who has sat
"'it h his bacll: toward Peters throughout
the defendant's long, r a m b Ii n g
testimony, said today he wiU nave "very
little" tesUmony following Pete's com-
menta.
Both Bryan and Defense Attorney Bar-
ry Tarlow believe the issue will" go to the
jury Wednesday.
Peters. crippled ln his firs t trial when
he was shot through the si)ine as he tried
to escape from the courtroom. today told
the 1ury that "several policemen'' hnd
congratulated him for his testimony last
Friday and assured hin1 that his remarks
""·ould send me to lhe furu1y Jann."
He went into a rambling reconstruction
of that testimony in \'Jhat appeared to be
a move to convince the jury that no sane
person could condemn him as insane for
those earher eomments.
"1· don't want' you to take my word for
anything." Peters iold the jury ... , just
"'ant you to ... hstcn to me and judge for
• Ill
your~lf "heth.·r or not I ha \'e a message
for the "'orlcl •·
P('tCrs has told the Jury that he is a
prophet of God. And ht• has testified that
his killing of his 1.arrn1s on April 21. 1971,
was part or c;oo·s plan for him and his
parents.
H.c ll'Sl1!icd today thll Dr. Timothy
Leary \\'aS r1~ht 111 n1any 1h1ngs "'hen he
n•rote on man's use . of ~rugs and the
relationshill of dn1g culture~ to man'!t
tSec PETERS, Pagi ?)
ers
Big She ll s
Hit Hotel
'Bmtl{ers'
BULLETIS
t
NE\\o' ORL Et\./'\S IUPI) -Police Su-
periotendent Clarence Giarrusso an-
nounced this afternoon a !leeC>nd 1nlper
has been spotted ln the hotel alt condi-
tioning unit betv11ttn the roof and nn-
deck: on the middle level of the Howard
Johnson Hotel . "He's very much aUve
and capable of shooting," said GlarntUf).
NEW ORLEANS (UPIJ -Police In
helicopter g~hips poured maebinegun Iasslnler and Tho w!ll meet 11 10 a.m. tra.m.1'm at ·Sajnt-fiom.lli.Bre~ a Western resideDHillWmb-;ircco'"· ... r--
fire and Armor piercing shells into two
'---e-::rete-bo nken atop -1 downtown hofl!·>--~..,
...... toda'y in an attempt to flush two or three
black gunmen-who killed six persons ·alld •
wounded 15 during two dajs of guerrilla
combat.
to their spokesmen.
'!be two delegaUCl!IJ refu!ed to·d!leu•
questions of whether .the two negouauons
were nearing a breakthrough.
Contrary to past practice, there were
no public handshakes either before or
after today's session, the first of the 23rd
round or talks.
Neither side greeted nor waved the
olher oU as it did before the talks broll:e
down last month and President Nb:on
ordered the bombing of HanoL
The delegations arrived and left
separately, unsmiling. At no time were
the two sides seen together.
The almospbere waa the coolest
newsmen had seen since Kissinger and
Tho started meeting regularly In Paris
last October. .
When Kissinger left the villa wbe"' the
(See PEACE, Pqe I)
.
3 Persons Die
In Checkpoint
Alien Incident
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ... o.ltf' ...... llaff
•
Three persons were killed instanUy and
several othen severely injured in a bor-
iilytng &odes ·or Incidents SUnday evening
near the 'll>rde,. Patrol checkpoint at Sao
Onofre.
The deaths, all In the crowded lanes of
the San Diego Freeway, toot place at the
height of a massive. number ct smuggling
incidents.
Two young women dted before the eyes
of their lovec: ones. Another man was run
down as well.
Patrol spokesman Dale Swancutt said
the deaths occurred shortly after 5 p.m.
1at the height of the intense wave of il-
legal Immigrants. .
"The first deaths occurred when a
carload pulled over ahead of lhe check-
point and the smuggler lold bis
passengers to get out and cross lbe
freeway," he explained.
The flrst .. wave ol passengen dld as -But Toribia Perez de Mejl1, 18, of
Enlenada, Baja C.IJ!ornla. WU 11nJc1t
(See AUENS, Pqe Z)
• EMPWY RESULTS
WITH PILOT ADS
Find the right penon lo fill that job by
putting a DAILY Ptl.OT clamf!<d want
ad ln your employ. Here's bow:
Mature gal, PIT cM Ina. Of·
flee. EIP not nee. FllinJlin>e , ____ u btUt lo communlcoi. a
mll&l. )'I IU•Dll.
The ruponH to this Id WIS lrtm<n·
dous. Employ ...., qotdl ruulla ol 10Uf
..... Dial diltd &C-il7L
;
DAILY f'ILOT ll•ff l"Mttl
'Bandit at 5 O'elom
It's not every day you see an airplane taxiing up Jamboree Road in
Newport Beach, lel alone. two, if you were up early this morning -
or out late -you might have caught this scene at the intersection of
Jamboree and Eastbluff Drive North. Planes from General Aviation
Flight Center at Orange County Airport were being moved to Fashion
Island for a special promotion being conducted at the shopping center.
Si nce there is no place to land at Fashion Island, the planes had to be
driven there with a police escort.
Last Fire Station to Go?
Use Permit Change May Dele_t.e Nort1i Newport Sire
Newport Beach councilmen tonight·ma y
give up the last -and onl>' -rue station
site in the northerly end of the city.
1be council will be considering t h e
planning commission recommendation to
"'euniinate firi staticb from the list of
permitted uses in the Emkay Develop-
ment Company's Newport Place complex
just sooth of Orange County Airport .
Fire Chief Leo Love said that would
effectively end the obligation of. Emkay
to prO"(ide the city with a site for a ~rth
end fire station that was also to serve as
the depannent's training facility .
councilmen had agreed to change the lo-
cation of the property the company was
to make available because the develo~
er felt smoke from the training tov.:e r
would disturb nearby office buildings.
The site was relocated to the northerly
industrial section on Spruce Street that
Love said would have been fine because
Lincoln School See ks
Aid for Quake Relief
that street was plannned to have access
under the planned Corona de! Mar Free-
way to the south.
Love . however, declined to criticize the
anticipeted action although he di~ say
"I'm not overwhelmed about the idea.
"We won't be able to offer the same
level of service in that part of the city."
he said. '·But it is the city fathers who
make the final determination."
He said the cily"s nearest fire station is
the new building on Jamboree Road near
Newport Center.
While City Manager Robert L. Wynn
said there will still be pleoly of land with·
in the Emby projecl if the city decides
in a year or so that it needs a statkm
there, Love said the action will probably
mean Newport Beach will have to go
through condemnation proceedings to get
another site there or elsewhere in the
north end.
He said It takes an engine about five to
six mlnute! to travel from there to the Flrst aid supplies, dehydrated or can-Emkay property.
ned foods and Oashlights with batteries Love did point out that Orange COunty
are being collected at Lincoln Middle operates a small station at Orange County
School In Corona del ~tar for earthquake Airport and the city does have a mutua l
survivor5 iri ManagUa, Nicaragua. aid agreement for that company to an-
The drive will continue through Jan 12. • swer alarms within the city limits.
The school is located at 3101 Pacific View It Is the concept of mutual aid !hat
Drive. For more information, call the \Vynn said Ne"''J)Ort Beach hopes to take
Acting on a request by Emkay last yea r school at 644-2$44. (Se~ El\1KA\', Page 2)
Nicoll (;ites 'Flaws'
All-year Plan Criticized
By W1LUAM SCHREIBER ii coocerned Is the stagger«! start ol
ot -"DeltT ..... ,..,. school for students.
Newport • Meso school Superintendent "This ...... that while 7' pettenl ol
Jolm N"ICOIJ tnday criUcl2'd the all-year the tkla ore In ciasl there ia always •-~
.c:!>ool coocept being u...r by ochoola in peroenl """p tbal Is not." Nia>ll aald.
Huntington Beach and I.rYtne. "Thll ii not right evei though It may be the ooJy wa1 lo prevent dolll>lt llCllions
But be did say there Is a pooslblllly a in overcrowded districts." .
form ol COl!linuous ocboohnay be ldopted Nicoll aaid Newport-Mesa has no prob-
at some Newport-Mesa llCbools this IW1I-1emt with over<mrdlng and any al~year
mer. ochocil plan will not only be optional but
"The llandard 4f>.15 all·year ICbool alao designed strictly aa an Innovation lo
plan that is being used at many over-· make education better.
crowded ochools lan't worth 1 damn," ''So far, no (l!m plan has been brought
• t 11111..,. --;--25 pmenl belcn the biiOiil of lrtlilees, but there
oCthelludenil are eztlud«I fronuchool." are 1tYttal being lllldfed and ·hashed
Under the standard 45-15 plan, 1tudtnts over," be said~
go to ldlool !or 1 45 day quart« and then Harper Scbool In Colla Mesa has been
~ 3 dayJ GIL Nicoll 111d the_ major~~~ on weodtd~pJ)tn that
Da"1n tbt-aTfar u ~iCOli Aid Ii ••very ----..
The Harper School plan being pnpared
for board acrutiny would provide 45 days
ol acbool and 15 days off all year, but
all the 1tuden" would be in school and an
vacation at the same time. ·
"There ls aome thought that this will
help Improve retention by eliminating
that long two-month delay over the sum-
mer," Nicoll said .
"It has nothlng to do at all with a
need to UJe all lhe buUdings all year to
save money because such a program
would actually cosl about tht': !Ulme,"
Nicoll aald. co.;;.. de! Mar High school ~ .iudr·
ing a aecood ronn ot 111-year school that
Nicoll calls a '1qulnquarttt" system.
.,This lnOIN thUtandard IUnuner ....
slon~ whlq, lt..hall.48.J JM ,.~ -u
(Sff ALL.YEAR. Pqe Z)
•
Freeway Stuck
In Costa Mesa
Till Late 1970s
It is unlikely that any construction on
the Newport Freeway extension through
Costa' ~1esa will begin un til 1977 or 1978,
City Engineering Director Norman K.
Spielman revealed today.
Even though early construction of the-
Route ~ 1s desirable to solve Costa
?-.lesa's strce1 traffic problems, Spielman
disclosed to members of the Freeway
Committee th.at construction money
'·simply Isn 't avai lable."
Jfe said the CalifDrnia Division of High-
ways is suffering from a •·revenue gap"
which manifests Itself m the statewide
delay o( construction timetables.
The freeway extension, which was or-
igiR11Uy programmed to be under con·
struction now , has a new timetable for
1976-77 for the section between Bristol
Street and Bay Boulevard, and 1977-78
for the stretch between Bay Boulevard
and the Newport Beach City Limits.
··11 could be shoved even further and
rm quite sure that these timetables "''ill
be rescheduled one year laler," Spielman
predicted.
This means that no constn1ction is like-
ly until four years from today.
It was lhe opinion of Freeway Com-
m1Ltee members that a tw1>-way frontage
road on the cast side of the proposed
exlension would greatly enhance acctss
to commercial properties eve n though
this feature would increase construction
cost by aome $5 million.
Following lengthy debate, members of
lhe committee decided to recommend to
the Costa Mesa City Council that the
concept of tWo-way traffic should be in-
cluded in the plans.
lf councilmen decide to back the com-
mittee's request, the State Division of
Highways then would be instructed to
develop the most feasible two-way route.
The tw1>-way concept Is beint pushed
by members of the EasLCilde Property
l)wnc.rs group who recently conducted a
survey. The survey dlsclC>Sed that al·
most 100 percent o( the bu~lneumen and
property owners were in (avor of the
,,ian.
Although the required IS million would
come from It.ate, rather Olan city fUnds .
Commlllttm>n N•tl Abrams oPJlO'td the
-W•Y l)'ltem becauoe he (•ii lhal II
did not cl<!ar!Y prove •llY ldv11D~
(Ste FREEWAY, Pip%)
The snipers' partner lay macabrely
dead and unattended on the roof of the
18-story building -a symbol of the
warfare which invaded the center of one
of the nation's niost popular tourist
cities. ...
Police said they were considering using
a flamethro~·er in an attack on the
gunmen.
"They are maniacal." said Louisiana
Attorney General \Vill1am J. Gu ste Jr."(
am convinced that there is an un·
derground, national suicidal group bent
on creating terror in America."
"We are fairly well convinced lha~ they
are willing to die to carry out this
mission," said police spokesman carol
Gomon.
Two helicopters swept over the Howard
.JohnSOn HOte l sOOn arter Sunrise to blast
the 5-by-20 foot <..'Oncreie block forlresse!J
from whi ch the su rviving gunmen ye lled
obscenities and taun ted 1>0lice to "como
and get m~."
The rooftop refuges normally house
air conditioning and elevator machinery.
Neither of the snipers returned the
helicopter's fire during the early morning
sweep but did open fire JUSt before noon
at police marksmen stationed on another
building. Those shots were the first from
either sniper in more than six hours.
Tbe drama began Sunday morning
"'hen three gunmen set fires on the upper
floors of the hotel and then began firing
at hot el guests "·ho Oed the smoke and
policemen "·ho answered the disturbance
call. '
A black maid, one of the fi~t to nee
the scene Sunday. told police the gunmen
"appeared to be only shooting at whites "
Among the dead were a Virginia couple
ISee SNIPERS, P~ge %)
Orange Coast
Weather
The weatnerlady says there 's a.n
80 percent chance of showers to-
nJght and TUe!day. clearing 1n the
afternoon on Tuesday. ~fore rain
~ expected at the end of the week.
Highs today 55-00. Lows 4~.
INSIDE TODAY
A nti-smokfng grottp3' aot do·
arette ad! token off the air
waue3'. NOVJ tht small-cigar in-
dUJtTll Ml takf'n tM Ttlf\I wlth
ciaar·puffino cowboys toking the
gi rU OWOfl from the nOtUm.OIU!t.s.
See •toru 011 Paue 7.
..
1 '
• •
H Mondl1, January 8, 1973
Shootout Probe Set •
Officers Diverted in Midway City Clash " '
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ""' Dellr l"ilfl lttff
11-tourning ramily members and lawmen
gathered this momlng to pay tribute to a
pair of poUcemeo cut down by sub-
machine gun fire in Midway City while
trying to. arrest a double-murder suspect.
Meanwhill!, an investigatior. is under
way into why a pair of Westminster
police officers dispatched to aid in the
planned capture were diverted moments
earlier by another Jaw entorce:men~ qen-
cy.
Circumstances of the Intended ap-
prehension may not even have helped tbe
two WestmJnster o!!lcer.s prevent the
tragic ki!Ungs but lawmen want to know
1,1,·hen, why and by whom they were
reassigned. ..
Carl Eckstrom, 23. of 8251 Flight Ave.,
~1 idway City, was finally captured after
being hit with a shotgun blast fired by an
Oranae County aherlll'• deputy.
Ecl'-.strom, de.scribed u · . a quiet
philosophy major at Cal Stale Long
Beach, !!I held In the Orange County
Medical Center Jail ward, charged with
four counts of murder.
Score!I of somber, .mifonned policemen
in addJtlon to families of Los Angeles
County Sherill's Office Sgt. Carl E.
Wilson and Detective Donald w.
Schnelder. 40, turned out for their
funerals today.
T wo Policemen ]ailed
Eekstrom---i! .also accu.sed--of--kiliing
Rosemary Vasquez, 22, and ~tichael Jef-
fircs, 27, in a &bopping center at Cerritos
about 10 miles away.
In S laying of Pilot
The murder suspect is also charged
with crltically wounding Aliss Vasquez'
sister Cecilla, 17, who gave a dramatic
bedside interview to the DAILY PILOT
Friday.
She reportedly said the gunm1n who
J:Ut down her sister, herself, 1nd Jeftries
wi\h a pistol before D¢ni told them he
want~ to play with ther11 and that she
thought it was a toy gun until be opened
fire .
Murder and assault with a deadly
weapon cOmplaint!I were being sought ti>
day against a pair of policemen Involved
in the killlng of a Marine Corps
helicopter pilot Friday night In Tustin.
A third bar patron also was shot and
wounded.
Both suspe cts in the shooting death of
Capt. Steven Robinette, 25, have been
placed in special jail isolation to protect
them from prisoners who might seek
vengeance because they are lawmen.
A spokesman for Chief Deputy Dl!ltrict
Attorney James G. Enright said this
morning that complaints had not yet
been issued llgalnst Cypress Police Sgt.
'lbomu Baroid.I and Garden Grove
NarcotiCll Detective Gary L. Gray.
Baroldi, 28, is booked OD suspicion o(
murder, while Gray, 28, Ls charged with
assault with a deadly weapon as a result
of the altercation at the Bachelors JII
bar.'-· ·
cOnllicting reportl are thal Sgt.
Baroldi and Detective Gray were con·
ducting a narcotics investigation and lhat
the sudden shooting stemmed from an
argument over ~ woman.
The third victim, Sam Camplse, 35, of
Tustin, was seriously wowxfed and taken
to Tustin Community Hospital along with
Capt. Robinette, who Wed several hours
later.
lnvesllgalora claim Sgt. Baroid! shot
Capt. Robinette and thal Detectlve Gray
shot Camplte.
' A fourth man -who somehow figures
Front Page J
PEACE •••
-k.llJICt. be llld~ave as usual
to Ille ""' pbota,.. . 1--,~ uenUy, leaders o the two delega. vemoniil-~ili!ilf'I
lunch break and poil>lle handshat.s
normally marked lbe opening and closing
of !he meeting.
Aller the meeting, Kissinger and Assis-
tant Secretary of Stale William H.
Sullivan strolled together In the garden
and then the American team left. Tho,
accbmpanied by Haool peace delegation
cbfef Xuan Thuy, left 10 minutes later.
~ meeUng, the first between Kiss-
lngq< and Tho since the l2nd roun<i col·
lapied 27 days ago, took place on a cold,
foggy day at• Communist-owned country
house ln suburban Glf sur Yvette.
Tho arrived first wllh the head or the
Hanoi peace delegation , Xuan 'Ibuy, and
went straight into the house. Shortly
before 11 a.m. (5 a.rn. PST), Kissinger
drew up with SUiliva n.
No ·one came to the door to greet the
.Americans, wbo went inside after waiting btj~n,... · ~ ....
At 3:30 p.m., the American team led
by Kissinger left the villa and returned to
the U.S. Emba~y residence.
11lo said on arrival in Pari!I Saturday
about the new round of talks: "The
decisive moment has arrived."
Kissinger, who flew in late Sunday.
said the talks were "one more major e!-
fort" to resol\'t> the Vietnam problem.
At 3 p.m. (6 a.m. PST), technical ex-
perts from both sides, who have been
meeting regularly since be.lore the 22nd
round of talks broke up, got together
again at Saiot-Nom·La·Breteclte, outside
Parill.
O•ANGI COAST •
DAILY PILOT
Tiit 0rll'lfl CoQt DAILY PILOT, wllfl wfll(tl
h CDmblMd ftt9 H ..... l"Tft1, h PVOlblled ~
.,_ Of"l1191 C..11 P¥Dlllhln9 C°"""""y· S~
1111• 9dltlol!t •r• put>li•hed. Mond•'t' lll~(lqh
Frld•Y, tw Cott• Mn11, H_..-1 8411(1\.
Hu"t1"91ori BINICll/fount•ln V'11tcy, L•ll"""
8•6dl, l"'lrt9JSaddll'b1ck •'111 ~n C'"'""'"te/
~... Ju11n C1p\Ur~no A 11r!9I~ ttQlcl!MI
fclltlo" ;, P\lbll•lltd S.lutd•I" •NI S111'1d~V•·
fh9 ,..lnc:llNI pWll&hinu plant 11 •I lll Wal
h'f Slr"I• Cotti Mnll, C11!fQr.111, 916».
Rob•rt N. w •• d
Pralll9nt Mid f'u&lli.her
J•elo: R. Curl•y
Yb "'81119111 Ind 0-11 MllNIW
Thom•• K•1¥1I
li!dltw
'Titofllef A. MwphiM ~llltllW
L P'•ter Krf91 M..,,.,., IMdl City tdltw ... ,., ... , °"*
lJl) Htwport lovln•rd
•
in the case -was involved but Tustin
police have so far declined to Identify
him or his role, possibly that of a
narcotics lnformant. ·
Due to the ~lbility of attack by
other prisoners in dormitory-type
cellblocks, Sgt. Baroid! was booked into
Costa Mesa City Jail. while Detective
Gray is lodged in Newport Beach City
Jail.
Ironically, the $6 million Orange Coun-
ty Jail facility buin four years ago hasn't
a single cell designed for special max-
imum security protection.
Tustin Police and Orange County
District Attorney'!! investigators are
handling the case and remain extremely
tight·lipped about the mulUple factors in-
• valved.
'Ibey have said that both suspects
claim to have been acting In the line of
duly during !he gunplay al point-blank
. range thal left Capt. Robin<lle dead and -
Campise wounded.
The dead man, a bachelor, lived at
15742 WUllams St., Tustin, and is survJv.
ed by hJ.s parents ln Phoenix, Ariz., ac--
cordlng to El Toro Marina Corps Air Sta-
tion officials.
Complaints charg\ng the two lawmen
-both BUSpeDded from duly pending
outcome of the proceedings -were e1-
pecled lo be issued later today.
They would then be arralped In .. Cen-
tral Orange County Judicial District
Coorl.
Front Page J
ALL-YEAR •.•
woWd be ,emoded to a full nln< -t
quarter-and fUD all day," Nlcoll said •.
'''llllll woulll"""eost:ll10re;-1>urii-would
gl~ lludenta an opportunity to go to
l!Cbool-all-year-ancM!nlah-ahe>d of time
U they -want to," he said.
"I think we are still a long way from
accepting ellher of these because we
A bystander . took down the get:Bway
car's license number which was tractd to
Eckstrom's Midway .. City residence
where Sgt. Wilson and Detective
Schneider were murdered by multiple
gunshot wounds.
Investigators -who said Eckstrom
recently gave a classroom speech uring
gun control -was wea~g a military
flak jacket for body protection when shot
by the deputy after the other t\\'O lawmen
were slain.
The Westminster officers dispatched on
a mutual aid call -then diverted -
were reportedly to have parked some
d1stanCe away from Eckstrom'• borne.
They would thus have been nearby il a
siege of gunfire might erupt as ·Sgt.
Wilson and Delecllve Schnelder who bad
parked Jn front of the home tried to take
the suspect into custody.
Due to the cifcurµstanced, even lf they
had taken poslUon as orlglnaUy planned,
they might not have been able to save .
the bullet-riddled pair.
F~11tPaflel
PETERS .•.
evolution. "But I came up with a fe'f. answers of
my own on the use of LSD," be said. "l
decided that sex without love in a bum-
mer. Man at that time Ls God and woman
is his goclde!IS."
Gig Pet,ers Pens
Book on 'Life'
bave to be sure they get ~1de acccp-Gig Peters has written a book during
tance," Nicoll said . "And the point st1ould his Jong sojourn in the Orange County
be stressed that the programs would be Jail.
optional." He calls the ~page treatise. replete
Nicoll said the sole purpose of studying wjth his own psychedelic drawings,
all-year school is to find ways of improv-·~king Life Easy."
ing the educational system. Peters handed the first l'Omplimentary
"Our space needs are more than met copy of the y,·ork this rnoming. to a DAJ-
ror at least the next fi\'e years and prob-,.LY PILOT reponer "with my very best
ably much looger," Nicoll said. "We wishes."
don't need the all-year concept because "You can quote all you want from it.·•
of any emergency." Pcte:n: said, autographing the volume.
Nicoll said he is keeping all opUons "You might want to cal\..-it 'Gig's
open as far as the possibility or starting Thoughts' but that's up to you."
such prgrams this summer. The book ends with a comment on
uwe will ask the trustee!! to adopt a Peters' views on "desirelessness.
summer school calendar Jan. 16 that win ''Life is action. Death is stop-action.
pennit us to hold classes and activities There is nothing lo lose, only to gain .
aJI year long," he said. "If Wi opt for the Desireles8Iless, Fearlessness and
all-year school, we will have the authority Timelessness.''
for it." ~
Nicoli sald specific plans , such as Har·
per's extetftled year, should be in the
board discussion stag e by February.
From Pagel
SNIPE RS ...
on their seeood honeymoon and the sec·
ond in command of the New Orleans
police force. The other \'ictims were l\\'O
policemen and the assistant hotel
superintendent.
The hotel was in the middle of a 5()-
square block section of downtown that
was sealed off by police. The area im-
mediately around the hotel was littered
with debris, chunks of concrete broken
It -~ by gunfire and shaUcrcd glass.
The tension \\"as so great that a simpl e
accident in which a woman fell on the
street "'as mushroomed on the pollce
radio into a fictitious sniper incident. An
al'JllQred car rushed to the sctne. six
blocks from the hotel , only to find there
had been no shooting.
Hour _after hour in unseasonably cold
and windy weather the gunmen be.Id their
impregnable positions atop the hotel. The
sniper who was killed by gunfire from a
helicopter Stmday night was slain only
after be dashed away from one of the
bunkers .
"I'm here," one of the men yelled from
From P agel
ALI ENS ...
and killed by a car.
An unidentified male also wa!I struck in
that croMing. He died at the scene.
"Tile woman 's husband apparently saw
the whole thing. He told us he paid $150
each for the trip north and the smuggler
ordered them out of the car and told
tt-em to start running," Swaocutt said.
Five minutes laterr the horror wa!I
repeated.
Yet another smuggler pulled over after
noticing the checkpoint in operation.
He, too, ordered bis cargo to nee.
In that fiigbt across eight lanes of busy
freeway Victoria Orozco Cervantes, 15, of
Puri£icacion, Jalisco, was killed wben she
was hit by a fast-moving car.
lier father also saw the tragedy. He
told patrolmen that the "fare:" for his
family's trip north was $225 each.·
Highway patrolmen investigating the
acdldents said the victims all were run
over repeatedly .
In the first tragedy, cars driven by
Jose Lopez Rutz, 24, of Lynwood and
Raymond Louis Barton, 23, of San Diego,
were involved.
l't'Olll Page J
EMKAY •••
M•tU.,A4cfm1r f',O, l ow 117S. t2'6l tis lair late In the morning.
0.... OMc:9 Police \lithin earshot called back at the
c:.t11 M ... : aw"•.., s.r.. man, calling him by their own nickname UOllM a.tdl1 m ,..,..., A-for him, "Leroy." """""'°"" .. 1Ctrt1 11111 1..0 IOl!lw9nl "W h .... t*'-'t: a1 ,..,... 11 cam1no 1 .. 1 e ear you, Leroy, 1' the offi cers
Toi-C714J '42 ... JZt yelled. "We want you. Come oul wh~ce we can ~ you,"
Cl_,,... AdWrtf""' 642·1671 The siege was conducte-d by 250
Cllmilll!. 1m. Or•• eo.t ,......_ be f the I ·~ N OTI • No 11twt ,..,.... 11tv1tm11M. mem rs o .._'TV\rma.n ew cans
l'Mtttr .,,. llhlrf'""'*'" ,..,. police force. The possibility of calling In =:.. ., ~ =.1 "*111 ,... National Guardsrr.en had been dismissed
..._.. ,.._ ....... "M M C.19 ~ by It.ate Offk:'laJS.
~ ~'°" .., <Mrlw tu1 Even .before the crisis, the Louisiana
j.:_ __ ll::~:::~::'":""':'"'"::•:.::.:~::..:.":•:"IMY::•:-:::::.J · =·~had11ked'U.S.Attorncy I -~KfeTnaTenat lor •
federal lnvmlpllan Into !he muni.t..
f -·
'·
Uf'I , • ...,.... '
NEW ORLEANS POLICEMEN WITH SCOP E-EQUIPP ED RIFL ES WATCH FOR SIGN OF SN IPERS
City Hill and f;ivic Pl1za Area Lie Beyond Howard John10n Motel Where Gunmen Barricaded
Newport' Council to Study 6 Persons Slai n
I 1i New Orleans
Sniping Na n1ed
-
Jasmin e Project, Traffic
Public bearings on the Jryine Com-
pany's proposed Jasmine Creek town-
houses and on a traffic plan to simplify
the Irvine Avenue-Dover Drive intersec-
tion will face Newport Beach COWlcilmen
when they meet tonight at 7:30 in City
Hall.
{rvine has been trying to get the 179-
unit condominium project in Corona del
Mar before councilmen since last fall but
has run into a ba1Tage of criticisms from
homeowner groups.
In an attempt to m~iate the dispute
-that has resulted in repeated delays
of the hearing -Councilman John Store
has drafted a !leries of compromises that
company officials said they were still re-
viewing this afternoon. .
Most of the opposition bas stemmed
from residents' fears that the height of
the project would block the view from
their bome!I higher in the bills.
Several Westcliff residents are e:xpec-
~lini WW~l.l<Lpro
test tbe Public Works Department's plan
to close the northerly Dover Drive inter-seetlon artmne AV'enue.
Although DPW Director Jooepb Devlin
says the closure would be only an experi-
ment, residents say it would make south-
erly Dover Orive a hazard to children
walking to the nearby library and school.
A scheduled public hearing on the con-
troversial Versailles Apartmenta In West
Newport is expected to be ·continued to
Jan. 22.
From Page J'
FREEWAY ..•
the city of Costa Mesa.
City Public Works Director Jim El-
dridge conceded that the tw1>way system
would lend to improve business on the
east.side because of better accesa but
said also that there are a few disad-
vantages.
"The disadvantages are that there
would be an increase in accidents be-
cause of vehicles turning left against
traffic. It would also take more land and
the traffic delay would be greater, al!lo
NEW ORLEANS (UPfl -A list of
known dead and some of the injured in
sniper attacks at a New Orleans hotel.
THE DEAD
1. Phil Coleman,· policeman, gunshot
wound in head.
2. Paul Persiga, 33 , policeman, gunshot
wound in face.
:t. Louis Sirgo, deputy police
superintendent, gunshot wound in back.
4. Frank Schneider. 62, hotel assistant
manager, shot at the 11th aoor stairwell.
S. Dr. Robert B. Steagall Jr., ?1,
Martinsville, Va., gunshot wound in head
and arm, found on 18th floor hallway.
6. Elizabeth Steagall, 261 gunshot
wound in right c::ye, found next to her
husband. She was Dr. Steagall's wife.
becaose of the left IWTlll," he ezplalned. THE INJURED
. Fllfl!>er toll)pllcallng ~ prob_ !em is a 1 K th So"· 26 I' le ·•--·'"' •-·""' ...... . enne . -· , . po iceman, possilL -en· ... -~·--oshh<ioa•l'lder W<>llDll•~. faiJ'r.-------
whlcb will be mandated by the sla~ U a 2. Emanuel Palmisano, 43, policeman, ~-"•Y~mlta~ted. arm-·~ fa ' Local freeway authoritJes believe that nvwn.1, Jr.
no statement ls required for the one-way 3. Chris Caton, 20, ambulance driver,
plan because It was adopted prior to the chest wound, fair.
1970 Environmental Quality Control Act. 4. Chai-Jes Arnold, 'll, policeman, face
If the plan is changed to accommodate wound, serious.
the tw1>way system, it would be requir· 5. Tim Ursln, 29, firima.rm wound,
ed . fair. t--
CLEAN SWEEP
LOW
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pORtABLE
WASHER
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ELSE·
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• -
Orange Coast , -
Today's Final
EDITIO!'I N./fi. Stocks
I VOL 60, NO. 8, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
1
ORANGE COUNTY, CALlfORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1973 c TEN CENTS
.
Peters Lectures Court, Claims w He Wa·s Sane
By TOM BARI.EV or .. Dll&ly ,.._.. Meff
Crippled Gig Peters today lectured an
Orange County Superior Court Jury on
love, sex, the United Nations, tbe conflict
of commWlism and ~apJtallsm,
alcoholism, world religions, and the use
ot • LSD, w~le repeatedly urging the
panel to reject any suggestion that he
, was . insane wben he murdered his
t' pcy-ents. ~ &eaning forward in his wheelchair and
tapping bb-;.,w on the microphone 1..,
emplluis, the coovlcled killer reminded
the jury that aaCri6ces were common ln
the Old Testam<nt and bis own act ol
sacrifice should not be regarded as so
veo unusual.
"In those days , they ofteo sacrificed
the first child ol tbe family," be told the
jury in Judge Kenneth Williams'
courtroom. "So why should anything I
ha<no offer sound pretty far out!"
"I've been old that my idea on the
Divine Plan thal govmu my actions
IOUDdJ pretty grandiose," Peters said.
"But anyone with any knowledge of the
,Bible and God's work wouldn't expect a
Divine Plan to be WISpeCtacular."
Peters, 24, is the last defense witness
in the sanity bearing Iha! followed the
same jury's verdict that be was guilty of
fint degree murder when he stabbed
Charles Pe\en, 55, through the bean and
strangled his mother Flora, 54, a teacher
at Lincoln School in Corona del Mar.
l ' -
Prosecutor PaL Bryan, who has sat
'IPilh hi.s back toward Peters thn;iu&hotn
the defeodant'a long, ram b 11 o -
testlmolly, aaid today he will have "very
little" testimony followina: P!:te 's com-
ments.
Both Bryan and Oefeme Attorney Bar-
ry Tarlow believe the issue will go to the
jury Wednesday.
Peters, ctipp&ed In his first trial 'lfhen
he was shot through the spine as he tri~
lo escape rrom the courtroom, today told
the jury that "sevtral PQ.licemen" bad
con.aratulated him (or his testimony last
Friday and assured him that bis remarks
'"would send me to the fUMy fann."
He went into a rambling recotUtruction
ol that testimony in what appeared to be
a move to convince the jury th.at no sane
person could condemn him as insane for
those earlier comments.
l<J don't want yau to take my word for
anything," Pelers told the jury. "l just
want you to listen to me and judge for
yourself \l'hether or not I have a message
for the v.·orld ."
Peters has told the jury that he I!!: a
prophet of God. And he has testified that
his killing of his i.arents on April 21. 1971,
Yl'as part of GOO's plan for him and his
parents.
~le testified tod;i.y that Dr, Timothy
Leary v.·as right in n1any tffings when be
Y.rrote On man ·s use of drugs and the
relationship of drug cultures to man's
(See PETERS, Pago 11
• orme 1cers
'
Jffesa ~neineer Sa9s ,
Route Unlikely
Until '77 or '78
It is unlikely that atiY construction on "simply isn't available."
the Newport Freeway extension through He said the California Division ol Higb-
Cosla Mesa will begin until 19Tl or 1978, ways is suffering from a "revenue gap"
City Engineering Direct« Norman K. whidi manifesto ltsell in the statewide
Spielman revealed today. delay of constructioo timetables.
Even though early construction of the The freeway extension, which wu or-
Rout< 55 Is desirable to ,.1ve Costa iginally programmed to be under .,...
Mesa'• street trallic problems, Splebnan otruction now bas a .. ,. timelable for
disclooed to members of the Freeway 1971-77 for tb. -between Bn..lol
committee that_ -~ -._,,..,_ --.lll<Lila1 --anl. and Jf/1-71.-1--~~~~~~~~~~~~-1::~·~-::::~::~~;-:~...i~fj: and the Newjlorl -City Llmltl. v__; "S;nger "11-oould be -ohovec1---and I\:~ " . ' I'm qui!< sure that llle5e timetables will
be rescheduled one year later," Spielman
Th H ld predicted. 0 0 This means that no CO!lSlructlon ls lik.,
ly until four years from today.
Grim Session
PARIS (UPI) -Grim faced and
studiously avoiding each other in public,
U.S. presidential adviser Henry A. Kiss-
inger and North Vietnamese negotiator
Le Due 1bo opened a new round of Viet-
nam peace talks today with a 4'i'rbour
me.ting. They agreed to meet agaln
Tuesday.
It was the opinion oC Freeway Com-
mittee members that a two-way frontage
road on the east side of the proposed
extension would greatly enhance access
to commercial properties even though
th.is feature would increase construction
cost by some 15 million.
Following lengthy debate, members of
NEW ORLEANS POLICEMEN WITH SCOPE.EQUIPPED RIFLES WATCH FOR SIGN OF SNIPERS
·City Hill and Civic Plu1 Aru Lie Beyond How•rd Johnson Motel Where Gunmen B•rricaded
Kissinger and Tho will meet at 10 a.m.
(1 a.m. PST) at Saint Nom·la-Breteche,
' Western residential suburb, according
to their spokesmen.
The two delegations refused to discuss
.qYesF of whe.ther the tw.~ negotiati_ons
were nearing a breakthrough.
C.Ontrary to past practice, there were
no public handshakes either before or
after today's session, the first of the 23rd
round of talks.
Neither side greeted nor waved the
other off as it did before the talks broke
down last month aod President Nixon
ordered the bombing of HanoL
The delegations arrived and left
Rparately, unsmiling. At no time were
the two sides seen together.
The atmosphere was the coolest
newsmen had seen since Kissinger and
Tho started meeting regularly in Paris
last October.
When Kissinger left the villa whert the
talks took place, he did not wave 3.'I usual
to the waitine photographers.
Frequently, leaders of the two delega·
tions have strolled together during a
lunch break and public handshake'.'!
normally marked the opening and closing
of the meeting.
After the meeting, Kissinger and Assis-
tant Secretary of State William H.
SUDJvan strolled logether in the gahlen
and then the American team left. Tho,
ICCOIDpanied by Hanoi peace delegation
cblel Xuan Thuy, lell 10 minutes later.
EMPLOY RESULTS
Wl'PH PILOT ADS
Find the right penon to fill llat job by
putting a DAILY PILOT classlfied want
ad ln your employ. Here's ho,..:
Mahm! pl, PIT CM l,nl. Of.
· lice. Exp not nee. l'lllng/lypa
& ability to communicate 1
must. 0A)'9 Jui:1.·xxn.
The ...._ to llU Id .... -doos. Employ ,.... qulc;k raultl of )'QUI'
own. Ota! dlrocl l4U81I.
• •
the committee decided to recommend to
the Costa Mesa City Council lhat the
coocept of ·two.way trallic sboold be In-
cluded in the plans.
U OOUDCilmen decide to back the com-
mittee's request, the State Dlvisioo of
Highways then woold be lnstrucl<d to
develop the most feasible two-way route.
The two.way coooepl ls being pushed
by memben of the Eastside Property
Owners group who recently conducted a
survey. The "!llrVey disclosed~ that al-
most 100 percent of thQ busin~en and
property ov.'ners were in favor of the
plan.
Although the requJred S5 million would
come from state. rather than city funds.
Committeeman Neil Abrams opposed the
two-way system because he felt that it
did not clearlv prove any · advantages to
(See FREEWAY, Page I)
Aircraft Pilot Hurt
HAYWARD (AP) -A pilot wu lelt in
critical condition after bis plane and
another small aircraft collided about 300
feet above the Hayward Air TerminaJ,
officials said. James Mattschie of uruon
City was taken to St. Rose H06pital here
after the Sunday collislon and was
reported in critical condition.
Two Policemen Jai"led
In Slaying of Pilot _
"' ... • Murder and assault wfth a~ deadly assault with a deadly weapon as a reSU1t
weapon complaints were being sought t~ of the altercation at the Bachelors Ill
day against a pair of policemen involved bar.
in the killing of a Marine Corps ConOict1ng reports are that Sgt.
helicopter pilot Friday night in Tustin. Baroid! and Detective Gray were con-
A third bar patron also was soot and ducting a narcotics investigation and that w~ed~ in the shooting death of the sudden shooting stemmed from an
Capt. Steven Robinette, 25, have been argument over .. woman.
placed in special jail isolation to protect The third victim, Sam Campise, 35, of
them from prisoners who might seek !See COMPLAINTS, Page ZI
vengeance because they are lawmen.
A spokesman for Chief Deputy District
Attorney James G. Enright said this
morning that complaints had not yet
been issued against Cypress Police Sgt .
Thomas Baroldi and Garden Gro\·e
Narcotics Detective Gary L. Gray.
Barold.i, 26, is booked on suspicion of
murder, while Gray, 28, is charged with
Mesa Panel Meets
Members of the Costa Mesa Bicerr
t-ennial Committee have scheduled a
meeting for a p.m. ~ay in the police
auditorium. 99 Fair Drive. Costa Mesa.
The public is invited.
Nicoll Cites 'F!ftws'
All-year Plan ·Criticized
II)' WllUAM SCHREIBER
.... Dlilr .........
Newport • Mesa ICbool SUperintenclent
John NICOii today alUd!ed the lll·)'W'
ICbool coocepl being ..... by -In
Huotlngtoo Beach and Irvine.
But he did 181 then Is a poulb!Uty a
form or continuous lldlool mO)' be adopted
at some Newport·Mesa acbools lhll sum-
mer. 1
"'Ibe iltandant 45-fl all·year IChool
plan that la being lllOd al many over·
~ ~ WQC'll\ • damn ..
NlCOU said. "At any ona Ume, 25 percent
ol the Sludmla are excluded f1om acbool."
Under lbe llalldard 4$-15 plan, lludenla
,. loodiool (Gr. u day quarter and then -u,ra11. Nlilolt-uJa the majOI'
Daw In tho plan 11 fir 11 Neoparu1e ..
/
la concerned Is the staggered start ol
llCboollorallldenl&.
'"l'bis means that while 75 percent of
the kids are in daaa Ibero ls alwaya 1 25
peroent croUJ> thai ls not," Nicoll Aid.
"That la not right even lbougb II may be
the oolJ way to pment double ...,1on1
tn overcrowded ctiltricts."
Nicoll said Newport-Meu hllS no prob-
l<ml with overerowdiag and any all·year
IChool plan wtJI not onlY be optional bol
~llo designed ltrlctly as an Innovation to ·
make educaUon better.
, "So lat,.no flrm.Jllan ~J!een._brought
before, the boon! of truo~. bot there
are oeverol bellt '"'""' and hashed
OVf!t /" be Aid.
1!-!11*: SClooal il'Ollla ~.llBIJ!!>en iitiiilj!iiji on Oitmdii! ,.... plan lhal
Nlcoll Aid 11 ""'7 ~"
Tbe Harper School plan being prepared
!Orlioml ocrutiny would provide 45 daya
of llCbool' ind ts daya oil all year, bot
Ill the lludentl wwld be in ocbool and on
vacation at the same time.
"There la IOl110 thotlgbl lhat this will
help improve retention by eliminatmg
that long lwo-month de.lay over the swn-
mer," Nicoll aaJd.
·11 bas nothing to do at all with a
need to use all the buildings all year lo
save mooey because such a program
would actually eo&t 1bout the same,"
.Nicoll said. -
Corona dtl Mar High School is study.
Ing a ICCOlld form of all·yo&r llChool thal
Nicoll ulla·a "quinquarter".l)'Slem.
"Tb)I ~ lbe llaodard~nnmer ~
aian, wblch II ball day for """' -u
(Seo .W..YEAll, .... II
'
3 Persons Die
In Checkpoint
Alien lnf ident
.. .,.. , ·v
By JOhN VALTER1.A
Of !ti• O.llY ,Ii.I St•ff
Three persons were killed instantly and
several others severely injured in a hor-
rifying series of incidents Sunday evening
near the Borde,. Patrol checkpoint at San
Onofre.
The deaths, all in the crowded lanes of
the San Diego Freeway, took place at the
height of a massive number of smuggling
incidents.
Two young women died before the eyes
of their loveic: ones. Another man was run
down as well.
Patrol spoketman Dale Swancutt said
the deaths occurred shortly after S p.m.
at the height of the intense wave of il-
legal immigrants.
"The first deaths occurred when a
ca rload pulled over ahead of the check·
point and the smuggl er told his
passengers to get out and cross the
freeway," he explained.
The first wave ol passe ngers did as
ordered.
But Toribia Perez de Mejia, 18, of
Ensenada, Baja California , was struck
and killed by a ear.
An unidentified male also was struck in
that crossing. He died al the scene.
''1'be woman's husband apparently aaw
the whole thing.Ji• told ua be paid 1150
eaclt ror the trip nonb and the· smuggler
ordered them out of the car and told
U-em to start running." SWancutt said.
Five minutes later, tht borTf)r was
repeated.
Yet another smuggler pulled over 111fter
noticing the checkpoint In operation.
He. too, ordered his cargo to Oee.
In that OiRht across eight lanea of busy
freeway Victoria Oroico Cervantes, 15. of
Purificaclon, Jali9CO, was killed Wht"n &he
waa hit by • fast-moving car.
Her father also saw the tra~edy. He
tokt patrohnefl that ~ "faret for-his
family's trip non.b was $225 each.
Highway patrolmen investig•tlng the
acdidmta smd the victims all were run
-G'itr._repelledly.
In Ille flnt lnlgody, cars drlV<ll by
<Seo AUENS, Pare II
2nd Sniper
Not Found
On Rooftop "
BULLETIN
NEW ORLEANS . (AP) -Heavily
armed police who ru1M:d a rooftop botel
bunker tbls afternoon la a search for
1nlpen found no trace o( a gunman ""'°
pcH1edly seen in an air-conditioning veat,
and spread tbeir ltarU into the botel.
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Police in lull
guerrilla warfare aear stormed onto the
roof of • downtown botd todly and open-
ed poinl-blanlr. rifle fire on the fortres:t-
il<e--hldeouts·of-two blaclrln!pen:\llll'
cen found no trace of the tetforiata,
.Poli.ce.J'US.bed two concrete-1tnictures
at either end of the 18-story Howard
Johnson Hotel. They poured gunfire in-
side and. then hacked open a large two-
story utility building in the cent.er of the
roof.
But they could not locale the terrorists
who, along with an already slain com-
panion, killed six persons and wounded IS
others during a night and day of bloody
lighting.
Three policemen were wounded ln the
rush. but it was believed they were in-
jured by ricocheting bullets fired by
fellow officers.
Potiee said there was a possibility that
there were not two ~nipers as they
believed. But they said It was posgible
that the terror~ls escaped to another
part (lf the building.
During the rush, police did recover tha
body of one or the gunmen -killed Sun·
day night in a five-minute stream of
machinegun blasts . The body had lain
unattended , face up for 17 hours.
An officer poured gunfire into one of
the-cubicles, normally used· to house air·
conditioniTig· and elevator machinery.
then peered inside. There was no gunman
inside.
Officers secured the two fortresses at
both ends of lhe block-long hotel. and
then hacked away with an ax at the
hatch of the ulility building in the middle. "-
The covering was lifted and police stood
crouched and ready to fire. No sniper
emerged.
The dramatic stonning of the rooftop
was broadcast live ()D national television ..
by CBS-TV from Its New Orlearui af-1
Ciliate. WWI,TV .
A hour after the police rush, the ranks
o~ the officers on the roof thinned. There
was no more shooting.
Officers then began ...a room·by-room
(See SNIPERS, Paa;e !)
.Orange Coast
' 'Ille weatherlady says there's an
80 percent chance o( showers I~
night and Tuesday, clearing in the
afternoon on Tuesday. More rain
Is expected at the end of the weet.
Highs today SMO. Lows ~.
INSWE TODA. Y
Anti-rmoking groups got ciQ-
arette odl laketl off the air
IDOW J. N01D '~ tmalkigor in-
du,rry haa taken tht rtin.i wi th
c1gar·pttffi-nQ co1obo11s ta.king the
girl.s awau from. rht nonsmokt'r1.
See storJI on PCQ t ?·
~ DAILY PILOT c
Nixon Men-
Watergate
Witnesses
WASHINGTON (UPI I Several
present ond former White House aides
were named , today as prospective
government witnesses as the Watergate
bugging trial opened in U.S. District
Court. ..
But DO high-level Admin istra1 ion of·
----~-cials wen: .in.eluded_ in ~Ji.st of jQ
witnesses the prosecution sald it might
call during tbe trial .
Seven men -including two former
While House aides -are c1)arged with
conspiracy, burglary and bugging of
Democratic National Committee head-
quarters at the Watergale hotel-apart-
ment comple.1 June 17. 1be trlal Is ex-
pected I~ last one to three mootbs. :
Prosecutor John M. Silbert said that
Fred Fielding, Jeb Magruder and Bruce
Kebrll would be among the witnesses the
government would call attempting to
prove its case.
Fielding is a Wh ite llouse attorney
working with presidential counsel John
Dean, who conducted an investigation of
tbe Watergate aflalr for President Nixon.
Magruder worked unde~ White House
communications director Herbert G.
Klein, W88 deputy director or the Com•
mittee to Re-Elect the President and is
executive director of the cxunm.ittee ar·
ranging tbe lnalJiUraL
Kebrll 15 I White HOU!e stalf !<Cttlary
working for H. R. "Bob" Haldeman, Nix·
on's chief or staff.
Attorneys for the seven defendants did
not list any potentw wlln..,.. as Jury·
selection procedures began.
Among others listed as prospective
government witnesses were Michael
Douglas Cabby, Washington attorney who
formerly represented several of the
delendants; Allred C. Baldwin lIJ, an ex·
FBI agent who reportedly was involved
in the Watergate affair and who bas
turned state's evidence; Hugh W. Sloan,
former tre.uum of tbe Nl%0n campaign,
and oeveral police and FBI agents.
FroMPqe l
SNIPERS •.•
---~-cl tbe building -batbroonul, ~ lilJe cellliip. "Tbel root 11 secure and there 15 -notbfn(i;P-tt>ere~a-rad1o-cammander
said.
':Where In the hell could he have
gone?" capt. Edward LaPorte asked.
"'Ibey were there at 4 o'clock this morn-
ing."
Officers seemed visibly confused at the
absehce of the sniper.
1be men gathered around the body of
the dead sniper, cut down by helicopter
fire the night before. Parts of his
powerful magnum weapon could be seen
lying next to tbe body.
Meanwhile, police sources close to the
investigation told The Associated Press
today that the snipers have been iden-
tified as the gunmen who wounded a
poUee officer as be answered a burglar
alarm New Year's Eve.
. 1be sources u.id that before beginning
their alege at the hotel Sunday the
gunmen killed a witness who could iden·
ti£y them as the police assailants.
The source, who dld not identify the
snipers by name, said they drove a stolen
car to the hotel after shooting a grocer lo
death. He said -ihey set fires on tl)e top
floon of the hotel to divert pOllCe at-
tention while they made their getaway.
However. he said, police chased them
back up a parking ramp when they came
down to retrieve their stolen aulo , which
police had staked out.
He said the Sllipen had been jailed in
neJghboring Jefferson Parish last week
and In Dallas, Tex. a few d.11)'8 earlier -
both times oo gun charges.
DAILY PILOT
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•
Monday. Jan111r7 8, 1973
'Bandit at 5 O'Clo ck'
It's not every day you see an airplane taxiing up Jamboree Road in
Newport Beach, let alone, two, if you were up early"this morning -
or out late -you might have caught this scene at the intersection of
Jamboree and Eastbluff Drive North. Planes from General· Aviation
Death List
Fro m Sniper
Fire Give11
NEW . ORLEANS (UPI I - A list of
known dead and some of the injured in
-sniper attacks at a New Orleans hotel.
THE DEAD
1. Phil Coleman, policeman, gunshot
wound In bead.
2. Paul Persig.B, 33, policeman, gunshot
wound in face.
3. Louis Slrgo, deputy police
superintendent, gunshot wound in back.
4. Frank Schnelder, 62, hotel assistant
manager, shot at the 11th floor stalrwell.
5. Dr. Robert B. Steagall . Jr .. 27.
Martinsville, Va., gunshot wound in head
and arm, found on 18th floor haUway.
6. Elizabeth Steagall, 26, gunshot
wound in right ~ye, found next to her
husband. She was Dr. Steagall's wife.
THE INJURED
t. Kenneth Solis, 26, policeman,
sbouliler wound, lair.
2. Elllanuel Palmisano, 43, policeman,
ann wound, fair.
3. Cbria caton, 20J ambulance driver,
cbes\ woonc!, fair. I
4. -.aw,~ :i,-poilceman,-IM•
wound, serious. ,
. S. Tim Urstn,.lt,...fireman,-ann wound,
fair.
6. Walter Collins, about 50, hotel guest,
bullet wound, critical.
7. Robert Bemish, 43, hotel guest, ab-
domen wound, serious.
8. Latry Arthur, policeman. side
wound, fair.
9. Michael Burl, policeman, injured 1n
fall , good.
10. Joe Anderson, 60, fireman , arm
wound, fair.
11. Robert Reeve!, 43, policeman, heart
attack, serious.
12. Robert Childress, about 30,
policeman, smoke inhalation , treated and
released,
13. Fred O'Sullivan, policeman, gunshot
WOWld in neck and hand. Satisfactory.
14. Robert Buras, policeman, gunshot
wound in shoulder. Satlsfa·ctory.
15. Wayne Galjour , policeman, wound in
left ear. Satisfactory.
-f'ro1n Page 1
FREEWAY ...
the city or Costa Mesa.
City Public Works Director Jim El-
dridge conceded that the t""t>-way S;rStem
would lend to improve business on the
eastside because or better access but
said also that there are a few disad-
vantages.
''The disadvantages are that there
would be an increase in accidents be-
cause of vehicles turning left against
traific. It would also take more land and
the traffic delay would be greater, also
because of the left tums.'' he explained.
F'urther complicating the problem is a
possible environmental impact study
\1·hich will be mandated by the stale if a
lwt>-way system is adopted .
Local rree .... •ay authorit ies believe that
no statemtnl is rp.quired for the one-,vay
plan be<:ause it \\'as adopted prior to the
1970 Environmental Quality Control Act.
1r the plan is changed to accommodate
~he two-\vay system, it would be requir-
e<J.
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA PLANNING COM·
~1JSSION -Regular meeting, City Hall,
6:30 p.m.
UCI LECTURE -"Residentia1 Income
Appraisal Techniques,'' Burleigh O.
Bursham, 161 Humanities Hall, 7-9:30
p.m. Admission $6.
SPORTS AND VACATION SROW -
Anaheim Convention Center, continuing
through Jan. 14.
TUESDAY, JAN. 9
MORNING MUSIC CONCERT
~tichael Sanders, pianist Crom UCI, OCC
1ttusie· Studio No. 1. 11 a.m.
UCJ LECTURES -"Anatomy and
Emb"ryology," first of series on Your
Heart and Circulatory S y s t e m •
Sophomore Lecture Hall. 7·10 p.m.
Admission $5. "The Emerging Homosex-
uality," first of series on "Morality:
Twilight Zone of Law." Science Lecture
Hall, 7-10 p.m. Admission $5.50.
WRESTLING -OCC vs. Rio Hondo,
OCC Gym, 7:30 p.m.
_Gig Pt!t.ers Pens
Book on 'Life'
Gig Peters has written a book during
his long sojourn in the Orange County
Jail. .
lie calls the SO.page treatise, replete
with hi s own psychedelic drawings,
"Making Life Easy."
Peters handed the first complimentary
copy of the work this morning to a DAI·
LY PILOT reporter ""'ith my very best
wishes."
''You can quote all you want from it,"
Peters said, autographing tbe volume.
"You might want to call it 'Gig's
Thoughts' but that's up to you."
The book ends with a comment on
Peters' views on "desin!leSsness.
"Life is action. Death is stop-action .
There is nothing to lose, only to gain .
Desirelessness. Fearlessness and
Timelessne ss."
From Page l
PETERS ...
evolution.
·'But I can1e up \Yi th a fe\\' ans\1·ers or
1ny own on the use of LSD." he said. "I
drcided that sex without love is a bum·
mer. f\olan nt that time is God and woman
is his goddess."
F rom P a gel
ALIENS ...
Jose Lopez Ruiz. 24. or Lynwood and
Raymond Louis Barton, ZJ, of San Diego,
were involved.
The patrolman speculated that scores
of persons entered Camp Pendleton and
others succeeded in crossing the freeway
und headed up the beach around the
checkpoint
Police in San Clemente reported many
alien arrests-through the day . Swancutt
said that J\1arines at Camp Pendleton
\vere attempting to round up more today
on the large reservation.
Moon Bound
Soviets Launch Luna Rocket
MOSCOW (UPI) -The SOviets today hurled an unmaMcd Luna 21 rocket
Into space en route to the moon, the Tass news agency said.
The rirst moon probe launched by lhe Soviets ln 11 months streaked into
ear1h orbit at 9:55 a.m. (10:55 p.m. PST Sunday). Tass said .
"TflE STATION WAS LAUNCllEO lo the moon from the orbit or an nrtl·
ricial sut.cllite or the t!arth And was plaoed oo a trajectory clo'Se to the esli·
mated one." it said.
Tass said only that the purpose or the probe was "Jn acco.rdanet with the
program of &pace-.ltu.cU11:• and gave no details of It! mission.
TUE SOVlETS llA VE yet to. land men on the moon , but two robot moon-
scoopers have been succeaarul in returning lunar soil to earlb. The latest= IAµ\•
lO; f<lifme<lliJt Feb""nwy. -•
•
•
DAILY PILOT It.ff .......
Fro•P._.J
ALL-YEAR •••
would be uttDded lO a full nlne .wetk
quarter and nm all day," Nlcoll sald.
"Tllll --....... but tl woold .&!ft -ao -11Y to 10 .lo "oellool all year and llnilb ahead of Umo
U !beJ' want to.'' he said.
"I think we are still a lonr way from
accepting either of these-because we
have to be sure they get wide :;:J;i
tance.'' Nk!oll ukt. "And the point
be llrased that tbe programs would be
optional." .
Nicoll said the sole purpoae of studyina
ell-year school is to find ways or lmprov·
ing the educational system.
"Our apace netds are more than met
for at ieut the next five years and prob-
ably much longer," Nicoll said. "'We
dOO' nee<! the ill-year conct!pl becBusc
ol any emergency."
Nicoll said he 15 keeping all options
open 81 far as the possibility of starting
such prgrams thb summer.
Flight Center at Orange County Airport were being moved to Fashion
lsland {or a special promotion being con·ducted at the shopping center.
Since there is no p1ace to Jand at Fashion Island, the planes had to 4te
driven there with a police escort.
"We will ask the trustees to adopt a
summer school calendar Jan. lC that will
pennit us to bold classes and activities
all yw-loog," he aald. "If we apt for tbe
all-year scboo1, we will have the autbortty
for it."
Nicoll said specific plans, !UCh as Har-
per's es:tended year, should be in the
board discussion stage by Febru.ary.
From Page l Funeral Se rvices Held COMPLAINTS ...
For T wo Slain Officers Tustin, was seriously wounded and taken tO Tustin Community Hospital along wlth
Capt. Robinette, who died several hours
later. •
Investigators claim Sgt. Baroldi shot
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL about 10 miles away. Capt. Robinette and that Det~ive Gray °' "" O.lty "1191 sa.tt The murder suspect is also charged shot Campise. h1oumlng family members and lawmen A fourth man -who somehow ftgures "'ith critically wounding ,..1iss Vasquez' in the case _ was involved but Tmtin
gathered this morning to pay tribute to a sister Cecilia, 17, who gave a dramatic police have so far declined to identify
pair ol policemen cut down by sub-bedside interview to the DAILY PILOT him or ·hla role. possibly tbal of a
machine gun fire in Midway. City while Friday. , narcoUcs informant.
trying to arrest a double-murder suspect. She reportedly said the gunman who Due to the possibiJity of attack by
Meanwhile, an investigatior. ls under cut down her sister, herself, and Jeffries other prisoners in donnitory-type
way into why a pair of Westminster with a pistol before fleeing told them he cellblocks, Sgt. Baroldi wu booked into
police officers dispatched to aid in the wanti'CI 10 play with ther.: and that she Costa Mesa City Jail, while Detective
planned capture were diverted moments thought it was a toy gun until he opened Gray is lodged in Newport Beach City
earlier by another law enforcen:.ent agen-r J au.
cy. rrAo . by•tander took down lhc getaway Ironically, the S6 million Orange Coun-ty Jail facility built four years ago hun·t Circumstances of the intended ap-, 1· be hi h t ed t car s 1cense num r .,... c was rac o a single cell de•i·gned for spec'·) ma•-prehension may not even have helped the E k t • .,.d c·t ·d ~ • c s rom s 1~1• way I Y rest ence 1·mum secur1·1y prolect1"on. two Wcstniinster officers prevent the h s I w·1 d Del t. w ere g · 1 son an ec ive Tustin Police and Oranae County tragic killings but lawmen want lo know Sci 'd d d b It" I • me1 er were mur ere Y mu 1p e District Attorney's investigators are "'hen. "'hy and by whom they were h 1 d guns o .,..·oun s. handling the case and remain extremely reassigned. Investigators -who said Eckstrom tight-lipped about the multiple factors i.n-Carl Eckstrom, 2.1. of 8251 Flight Ave., retently gave! a classroom speech uring volved.
Midway City, was finally captured after t I · military gun con ro -was wearing a They have said that both JUSpeCt.s
being hit with a shotgun blast fU'ed by an flak jack.el tor body protection when shot claim to have been acting in the line of
Orange County sheriffs deputy. by the deputy after the other \wo lawmen duty during the gunplay at point-blank
Eckstrom, described as a quiet were slain. range that Jell Capt. Robinette dead and
philosophy major at Cal State Long The Westminster officers dispatched on Campise wounded.
Beach, is held in the Orange County a mutual aid call -then diverted -The dead man, a bachelor, lived at
Medical Center Jail ward, charged with were reportedly to ~ave parked some 15742 Williams St., ~. and 11 aurvlv.
fo.W:.:.COUnts of IDurder7 _...,...·"""'_----~dis-:t,.ance~awa~·~ed-by~-tn-Phoe1rl1, Artr.;-ai.,.---
Scores of somber, Jniformed policemen They would thus have been nearby if a cording to El Toro Marine Corps Atr Sta-
in addition to families of Loa ~elu >i<&• -'>Lillnflr~ mlibt eru!>l u_$it~ .tioo,olficlals.
COunty Sherfrrs Office Sgt. Carl E. Wilson and Detective Schneider who had Complaints charging the two lawmen
Wilson and Detective! Donald W. parked in lront of the home tried to take -both suspended from duty pending
Schnelder, 40, turned out for their !he .suspect into custody. outcome of the proceedings -were ex-
funerals today. Due to the ci rcumstances, even if they peeled to be Issued later today.
Eckstrom Is also accused of killing had taJ.:en JX>Sition as originally planned. They would then be arraigned in Cen.
Rosemary Vasquez. 22, and Michael Jef-they might not have been able to save tral Orange County Judicial District
fires. 27, in a shopping center at Cerritos the bullet-riddled pair. Court.
I •
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