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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-03-13 - Orange Coast Pilot.t..:.a~ . .... . --. • • + ... - ' • • • • Boyle Ordered Murders • In ·vMW Bid-Assassin ~ TUESDAY AFTERNOON; MAltCH-13, 1973 • VOL. '6. NO. n. I llCTtONS, • PANS • r • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • Reds Wil·l Free Lon est-held POW l • I 500,000 Workers 10.7% ·Rail ·wage Increase Okayed. Viet Cong Priso:her. ' Since 1964 • SAIGON (AP) -The Viet Cong an- nounced today that an American war prisoner held longer than any other U.S. soldier in history is among those being released Friday. WASIIlNGTON (AP) -A tenaUve wage and fringe benefit setUement covering virtually all the nation's 500,00> railroad workers was announced today. Spokesmen !or the rall Industry and IS Drug Agen ts Find 24 Tons , Of Mari juana 11 • • • WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The govern- ment 8JIDOIDtCed today it seir.ed $19.9 million in illegal narcoUcs 1 includlng 24 toM of marJjuana, in a combined opera- tli> with the Mexican gi>vernment 'that it said crippled a major drug-smuggling Uni on the Arizona-Mexico border. '·:u.s. ol£1cials~d they also -9.3 ·~of he~ and made more than 100 81ft!ts. They "Id they aelied records of ~" "large smuggling conspll'acy responst· ble for bringing tons o! marijuana and ''"ulti-kilos of heroin" . Into the United _states. ••. Details, Including the names of those arrested and where they were aeiud, _,..... not bnmedlately annowiced. . 'I1le street valile of the ielzed mari. juana was put at $11. 7 mllli<ln and the heroin al $2.S mllllon. lfbe amount of lleroln would be enough to supply 182,000 iildicts for one day. ''The results of the Mexican-United '"Slates exercise, called "Oper;itlon Cac-i!Js," were announced at a ,oews eQn.. · "Jerence at ~ exewtlve office of "' ca Control Program l1!1ormallon. '' w enforcement authorities fron\ Mex~· " and tbe stsl• of Arizona attended the The ·-1·...-ra: .. '°"""" unions Involved · in the poet said the agreement would inc!'ea8e wages and benefrts by a total ol 10.7 percent over 11 months beginning July I. Tbb would Include a 4pe1 --...x_. wago In- crease effective nut Jan. I and a -JlE'ISlOll system wbich would put .. ad- ditional $41.~ per month inlo the paychecks of rail -. The lndustrf would pick up the p&11Dl!llls that heretofore bad been pald by the ...rt.n Into the 8eJ!8rllle ' ~ ..itremeot funds that coven rail wurken in lieu ol Social Security. The agreement Is subject to ratilictr tlon by offlclsh of the ts unions, and In one caSe by a membership wte. The single union reqUlring membeirsblp a~ proval Is the Sheet M'etll WOrters. ' The tentathre agl'e<lltent came 31> months abead of contract upiralion dates July I. , Sources said the -was W:tuall1 dictated by the libUy llnanclal coiidttion of the railroad ttliremenl fund. UPI T ..... til Also among. the 32 pr!seners being turned over at Hanoi's Gia Lam Airport is the ranking U.S. civiUan official cap- tured bl' the Communisls. A young Marine supposedly killed In Vietnam and buried by his family lour years ago but who later turned up alive also is coming out. The longest held American captive Is Maj. Floyd Thompson, now S9. He was captured March 211, 1964, in ~ Tri Provin~ just below the Demilitarized Zone, where he was serving as a U.S. ad- viser with South Vietnamese forces. Thompson was then a captain. When released Friday, he wlll have spent 3:zn days as a prisoner of war, five months longer than Navt Lt. Cmdr. Everett Alvarez, the first pilot shot down over North Vietnam. The qn,.~would also inducll>pro. visiom for early retlremeDI and raise muimutQ. lifetime major medical benefits from ll0.000 to IZ!0,000 per • wo.g:r. N tioDal Rallwa Laber Con-TWO INDIANS ON HORSEBACK HE~P Pl\TROL PERIMETER AROUND WOU}ID ED KNEE ference ~ch negotiated for the lndustly F .. nl Apnh 8eof Up T1*r Forces Outside Village Hold fly Nllit1nt Indian• ENCAM PMENT 1'!1e ra_n,klnil: U.S. civilian being relea• ed ts Philip. Manhard, 52, a senior career diplomat with the State Department. Manhard was captured Feb. 2, 1968, when Communist forces seized the former imperial capital of. Hue during the Tet offensive. Also returning Mme will be Pfc.. Ronald L. Hldgeway, wbo the eom. munisls said was captured Feb. 25, 1968. near a U.S. outpost at Khe Sanh. said the proposed -t coven virtually an Class CJae -m the nation exceyt for tOOee, like 1be POIDI Central, invOlved In ... rpnli.iotlm mider Yahlensld Deaths bankruptcy proceedings • . However, Penn1Central worbn·woulid be covered by the improyed retirement . • benefits, wbich muat •be _....-by Cong\'<SS as ameJ1!hnenb to 1hO Railrood. Retrement Act. ' ')1le"1lllllOUllCell said It was tbe lint time in blstory that the~ reacbed agreement: Oil all -with an unloos abead of COD!net explrllloo. • Boyle Ordered Murders • ·For Union-Assassin " Federal ~gents Beef UP--{orces At W ounded Knee What was believed to be the remains of Ridgeway and other members of bis (See POW1, Page Z) I Orange Coast PINE RIDGE, S.D. (UPll -Federel Weather mal'lhals and FBI agents, beefed up with a 300 percent increa1e in manpower and That third storm, expected on · , ERtE; PL (tiPI) -A convicted unioo ind the union's non•ion fund ," saJd heavy equipment, today tightened their Wedne5d.ay, will not make iloo tbe T k T • · I ~ line! around the hamlet of Wounded Oran Coos! lil ......... · r'UC ' rfllR ' ' ID-aald lodat be waa told by two GU y. Knee, aeiled by mllllant Indlsns two ~eg to theuo -Thtber~-~.~ 1 was 1aunclwl early'io ebrUJl.r'Y when -;;;;:;;;;i•~ ~~~~~W~or~lren~~olli~icials~· ~~~"Did~'':iPr~ater;:;~tell~you~~wbo;;;;;iw~an~ted~the~~~·~·~~~~~~.11li'.~~~~~~~~~~~ ••• ~·~~ .,. :': . F'iMlliit -.L Richard A. ;::i~P!))!<C\ll wee;.::_•· W~Y shou·~'"~:~ri,=., ''TaoJ" Boyle mar"'der-ed"' tbe murder ~ "He qid Tooy Boyl< wanted bim kill-Bureau ol lndlan AHalrs, said be knew I.um. IIlgbs at the beacbea In the ·<t>--Uig...,. _. reyeal«t I b a I ~~ quantitieL.ul.llllltlilllna and "" roln were being Introduced · lnto;iiii-!-1110R1ENSE;-, Gi:tDPIJ'LA...,,,... aoioa ipsurreal Jooej>h A. "Jock'' ed n saJd Gillr. · ol no Incidents during the night. low liOs, rising lo 66 ililand. 0v .... -Y-"for lliO ~tJMW; he say wliy!"·llked Sprague. "There waa no r~ u far u I've night lows In the 4'ls • 'tllO dnmoflc testlmorl)1 by Paul Gilly, "As I recalf, It waa f0< the welfare of been told;: Babby aaiO. • ·•• nltec!' $tale$ 110118 1he -·-.Jda-to-Vlqloia~lo; """' Southwesl Arizona, the ~V<nlllltlll with-I* • • can collldod tb I polpwoo_cl trd ··~·addition to the arrestl and con-.-at a croollng um,, ...... S • .J\oelled narcotiao, the aovemment sald It ' cars, kiJliaa the tludr: -l9ll ..-aeiud several private dwtlllnp H injurlpg about two d•••• . aid were uaed as Jmugllng wareholl!es, pal~tbe Ont dsaltmenl of 111 vthlcl .. and weapons. It aaid records captured "wlQ uallt In auto train -a -travel _,. ,a141ng Iha operation of lbla huge drug that allows .,......... to - 11nuggU1111 organlzaUon." their automobiles lboord flat....., Authorilles said the nv .. ...u _... make the trip In c:am1<1rt1b1o tlon Included tho lsteot Jn~ ~uZ :::--.:~ tecbnolOsYi lnclud\na tha use of doteclor their du'INfion: docs. radlo-<Qll!IJl)ed ~... llli'trlft (Seo U 'l'ONS, P111e I) wfit.----to deatb by a tbe-UMW." -said....Gill¥. "Tll!i1 Boyle Bui where in early stsges ol the block-INSIDf TOD/\ l' jon ... llltllQ!ngolY-,blswlfe would bold all the power. Sllous Hud-ade-once !Uled and then fdtor<d -NO!JJ It's Ille l•m of ltoding Md doallllet. come II the trial ol dleston told me To"1 Boyle wu !alf and the fe;jeral men cooflned their sean:h ac-aspirin componiu lo how htad- Wlllilm :i. Pralor, $1, a fonntr 1JKW turned down an offer to atay 00 aa tlvlties cblefly to roadblocks, today tbey ocher. Their adverttmg clail!I' .lfold _.--La Follette, 'l'em. permanent prostdenl of tlfe unloo." vleTe patrolliilg all approeches. haVf been dall<nged by the Gllly aald !1oJ1e -bnpllcated by "Wbe told you Iha!?" asked Sprague. UPI photographer Jim Hubbord at-FTC. See •torv, Page J2. Pnlar and a cool-.! Yablonski "Huddle$1on aDjl Prater.'' saJd Gilly. len>pled an overland entry lo WoUllded ••"'"· Slloal Buddleoton. during at Sprag\le then told Gilly to look . at Knee and was turned back. He reported -lhree meetlnp ~ prior to the Prater. and •sited: oecurlty was "very tight.'' Pee. 31, 1181, 1a-.11oo1. He illld "Is there any doiibl that he Is one of II was possible to leave the Oglala Borlt'a -was montiooed during the Iha men who talked with you and plaMed SIOW< reservation where Pine Ridge and -. held to -the financing the mlll'ders!" Wounded Knee are located, bUt the gov- ml .-to be -In the slsylngs. "No, lllr," replied Giiiy. emment lines barrtd entry to Wounded "I WM told the wantal to Jet rid II was the first public testimony In Ibo Knee where the Indians have declared GI Y-beca ... be'd ~ up Ibo (See BOYLE, Page I) (See INDIANS, Page Z) L.M ... .,.i .. _,. " C"fftn151 l~ M.,._.I hm 1t <•"'"" ............ 4 ,_, .. --. "'"-ll :r::: ,.,, Dt•trl Nttlcet • Mlolt;... 1•11 .. ...,.., ..... • ·-,. 111""1•1nlMllt " -• , .. _ ... W•-• ~"" ....... • --,.,. ...... '*" ,. --• .... ..-. .. ... , ' ' DAILY PILOT .";* .* * 10 ' * * * 'fl. . . · . • I TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 13, 1973 VOL. M. lfO. ft, I l•CTIONS. e ,.MU • • ' • • • • e .Boyle Ordere d Murders In. l!MW B id Assassin • • • • •• • • • • 0 • Reds Will Free Longest-hel d POW \ 500,000 Workers .10 7% Rail Wage t f • " . Increase Okayed WASHINGTON (AP) -A tenalive wage and fringe benefit settlement covering virtually all the nation's 500,000 railroad workers w_as announced today. Spokesmen for the tail industry and 15 Drug Agents Find 24 Tons Of Marijuana WASHINGTON (AP) -The govern- ment announced. today it seized $19.9 mfilion in illegal narcoticS, including 24 tons of marijuana, in a combined opera- tio. with the Mexican government that it ~ crippled a ma)or drug-smuggling ri:Dg on the Arizona-Mexico bo~r. U.S. officials said they also seized 9.3 pounds of heroin and made more than 100 ~ls. They said they seiied records ~f a ;;"large smuggling conspiraq responsi- bl' for bringing tons of man;uana and mulU-kllOI of heroin" into the United Slates. Details, including the names of those arTeSted and where they were seized, were IJOt immediately announced. Ibe street value of the seized mari- juana was put at $16.7 million and the heroin at ~.5 million. The amount of heroin wou1d be enough to supply 182,000 addicts for one day. The results of the Mexican-United States exercise, called "Operation Cac- tus '' were announced at a news con-t~nce at the executive office of Narcotics Control Program Information. LaW' enforcement aulhoriUes from Met- Joo and the state of Arizona attended the -The aJll!OllllC"morit said OperaUoo Cac- unions involved in the pact said the agreement would increase wages and benefits by a total of 10.7 percent over 18 months beginning July 1. This would include a 4 percent wage in- crease effective next Jan. 1 and a revised pension system which would put an ad- ditional $42.75 per month into the paychecks of rail wockers. 1be industry would pick up the payments that heretofore had been paid by the workers into the separate railroad retirement funds that covers rail worten in lieu of Social Security. The agreement is subject to ratifica- tiorr by officials of the 15 unions, and in one case by a membership vote. The single union requiring membership ap- proval is the Sheet Metal W.orkers. The tentative agreement came 3~ months ahead of contract explrat'°'1 dates July 1. Sources sakl the settlement was virtually dictated by the shaky financial condition of the railroad retirement fund. The agreemtnt would also include pro- visions for early retirement and raise maximum lifetime major m e d i c a l benefits from $50,000 to $250,000 per worker. - The National Railway Labor Con- ference which negotiated for the industry said the propoeed agreement coven virtually all C1ass One ratm»ds in the nation except for tho9e, like the Penn Central, involved in reorganization under ~~ngs. --~-, ,, However, Penn Central wonu:n WOUIU be covered by the improved retirement benefits, which mual be approved by Congress as amendm<nts to the RaUroad Retjrement Act. The armouncement said It was the first Ume In his~ that the Industry reached agreement On au issues wtth all unions • ahe$d .. of contract expiration. tus was launched early·in Febnlary 1'hen 11>-·.,ioUJl!l~!'!-> ...,.... re•ealed that • ioilistaiitlal cjtlil-. ~in were being introduced into the. UOl\ed States atoow the Mulcan bonier Ill South,.... Ar!Jol1a, the government Truck, Train Cr0$h Kills 1 ' . HORTENSE, Go. (UPl)-A ~ · ida·l<>1llrgfnia auto lraJn lqoded with lbout 300 _.,... 11111 tlolllr can colllded with a pulpwood ti'lldc at a Cl'OMing today, deraillng lS can, kllllnc -th&o tnlClt driver ml Injuring about two 4 os e • passe!liOn. oakl. and Jn. addition to the amslll ~ filcated nareotics, fhe gc'.)vernmem said tt Ibo aelzed seven! privale dwelltqis lt iald were u9ed as smiiggllng w~ vthiclea and weapons. n . laid records coptunid "will aasllt in endiog the operatloo of lhll bu&• drug smugllng organlzatloo." AuthorlUcs said the five--k _.. Uon Included· the latoat In anll-narcvtlcs technok>tlY. including the ... of delector clop, rod!Hqulppod -· alroroft (set U TONS, Pap I) , II WU the lint derailment of an auto train -a new travel ~ that ~lows puoengen to drive their automoblla aboord Oat can. malct the trip in comfortable raUroad car louDi~· and have the use ~ tbeit auto< when they reach their delllaatl ... Patrol h y Horseba~k " UPI T•lePl!ai. TWO JNDIANS ON HORSEBACK HELP PATROL PE RIMETER AROUND WOUNDED KNEE ENCAMPMENT Federal Agents Beef Up Their Forces Outside Village Held by Militant Indians Yablonski Deaths t Federal Agents Beef Up Forces At Wounded Knee Boyle Ordered Mu rders For Union-Assassin PINE RT()(;E , S D. (UPI) -Federal marshals and FBI agents, beefed up with a 300 percent increase in manpower and heavy equipment, today tightened their ERIE, Pa. (UPI) -A <.'Onvlcied uausin said today he WM told by two former United Mine Workers ofOclals that former UMW President W. A. ''Tony" Boy1e ordered the murder of union and the union's pension fund." said lines around the hamlel of Wounded Gilly. Koee, sci.zed by militant Indians t~·o "Did Prater tell you who wanted the weeks ago. murders done?" asked special prosecutor oAbb d. I h RJchard A s Wyman ua y, area 1rector o t e "}le said ·T~~~~yle wanted him kill-Bureau of Indian ~ffain, said he knew Viet Cong Prisoner Since 1964 SAIGON (AP) :_ The Viet Cong an- nounced today that an American war prisoner held longer than any other U.S. so!d.ier in history is among those being released Friday. - Also among the 32 prisoners being turned over at Hanoi's Gia Lam Alrport is the ranking U.~. civilian official cap- tured by t~ Communists. A young Marine supposedly: killed 1n Vietnam and buried by hi~ family four years ago but who later turned up alive also is coming out. The longest held American captive Is Maj. Floyd Thompson. oow 39. f-le was captured March 26, 1964, in Quang Tri Province just be!Ow !he Demilitarized Zone, "-'here he W!!rl serving as a U.S. ad- viser with South ~tnamese forces. Thompson was then a captain. When released Friday, he will have spent 3,'ll7 days as a prisoner of war. five months longer than Navy Lt. Cmdr. Everett Alvarez. the first pilot shot down over North Vietnan1. The ranking U.S. clvili;in being releas- ed is Philip Manhard, 52, a senior career diplomat with the State Department. 1.1anhard was captured Feb. 2, 1968, ""hen Com1nunist forces seized the former imperial capital oC Hue during the Tet offensi\'c. Also returning home will be Pfc. ' Ronald L. Ridgeway, who the Com-1 munists said WM captured Feb. 25, 1968, near a U.S. outpost at Khe Sanh. What was believed to be 1he remains o{ 1 Ridgeway and other members of hJs (See POWs, Page %) Orange Cou t Weath er l!llloo. J Yabklmfr"lOl' we are oflhe . " sai~CilJt of no lncldents during the night. ·~iie-.ay ~ijlf"asl'i.f~r--··· ·.. ..,~far e.J'.,.. _ "As l recall It was ·ror the weUare of been told , Babby said. That third stonn, expected on \\'ednesday. will not make it on the Orange Coast WltU Thursday, BC· cording to !he weather service. Wednesday should be mostly sunny with slightly wanner tempera. tures. Highs at the beaches in the low &Os. rising to 66 inland. Over- -~J.a~ . _, '!be dramatJc testimony by Paul GIUy, who earlier was sentenced to death. by a Jory for the alaytng of Yablonski, hl•-..1fe and daughter, cazne at the trial of William J. Prater, sz, a fonner lJMW field orpnlzer from IA 0l'oUetto. Ttm. Gilly said Boyle WU lmpllcated by Prattt and a c:onleosed Yablonskl .. aaln, SUoua Haddlelton, during •t )east ~ meetlnp held prior to the Dec. SI, 18, assusinations. He l8kl Boyle's name -mentioned during the meetinga held to dbcusa the financing and met.bod& In be Wied In lht alaylnp. "I WU.told the mlon -lo rid of v.-bocauae he'd meas up lht the UMW," ~kl Gflly. ''Tony Bayle Bul where i~ early slages of the block- would hold all the power. Silous Hud· ade -one. lifted and then. restored - dleston told me Tony Boyle was fair and the federal men confined their search ac- furned down an oiler to stay on as tlvitifs chielty to roadblocks, today they permaJM\llt president of the union." w~JNllrofling all approaches. "Who told you that?" asked Sprague. UPI photographer Jim Hubbard at- "11uddleston and Prater," said Gilly. tempted an overland entry to Wounded Spra,ue then told Gilly to look at Knee jnd was turned back. lie reported Prater. and asbd: security was "very light." "Is tbcre any doubt that he is one of It was pioaible to leave lhe Oglala the men who talked with you and pta.ooed Sioux rtstrvatlon where Pine Ridge and the ml11'4er1?" Wounded Knee Arc located. but the gov- 0No, 1Jlr," replied Gilly. cmment Unes barred '"P°Y to Wounded Jl was the first publk: testimony In the Knee where the Indians have declared (Seo BOYLE, Page II !Seo lNDtANS, Page !) .. > I INSIDt: TODAY Now it's tl1e turn of leaditig a.'J)irrn companle.t to have head- achea:. Tlleir adverti.ting cloim1 ha~ bun challenged bJJ the FTC. See s!ory, Page 12. L. M . MJ'll 11 Cafi.trllll • Cletlll'191111 lt-14 C...-.ltt IS c,.u,..,. u DMftl Nttlfts t lcltl.,,.. ..... • l 11t.rt1ill-t 11 ,lrlll_ •·11 ,.,. .... 111.c.... • "9r91c.,. 14 ...... u....... ,. $ '-· -1', 191> ' .lblle••e .Ft'IMf 0 Viet Cong POWs • Named by U.S. ~· WASH!NGTON (UPI) -'l'be Del..,.. ' llld 6tlfe llepal'tlN;nfe made pUbllc ti> -.i 11'1' ttie fo!l<J"1ni I~t of rr military prJo. ' _. and five clvlJlant to be releued by the Vlei Cong Friday In llanol. /II 'Ille five civillaM were repor1ed cap- ,.1 tur«I during tho Commun!st T>t olfen-· uli :slve al Hue, &Uh Vietnam, OD Feb. 1, ,,, IMS. '· ""'1r cwo Frat1tls G.-Ant.n. 2!t, wt11rnetioro. ,· H.J. 1T 2. ...... Ctlllt. I,,._ 11:.,,IMNI Ara., ,_, .,; ltodlfflW, N.Y ., Mid PtllUCOlt. 1"111, J S. A1'1'1W lc>K, • MldMet flltric;ll: lr1ndl, 1S tt.f .... h Wl!Nwld 11 1-.mllY'I ~. 4 Amir M. s.1. ~ Gof(IOn 9rftl0tl, M. LOlll ltactl, Clllf. S. """" S. Sit. ltoben Pre'9tl ~. U. "¥1\Md, Cr<t, '-Arfn'f $. $81. J-Aleu!lder Daty Jr, 'U, N"" Y9(tt (It?. 1. Armr S. St!, n.i.n.s J-Dawl1, ZS. Eul1ll, •.' Alt. I. Al'lflY Stf, P_,., £d11r.,.i Dr..tlk, U, Union Brldlt, Md. l ":, t. M9rlM P'lf, F~ LOllll AIMr1 Jr., 2$, ,.. &tto!!waod, N.Y. • 10. Air f«09 Col. lMooore Wilttn Gv\I, l.J, ,,., 2. Leary Trial a. llo ...,, Scheduled .•'i\ '"" "''To Commence "' !>). SAN LOis OBISPO (AP) -Despite 1rh delenae pleas for more time to prepare, 1t1 dnla advocate Timothy Leary was set to go to trial today on a charge of escaping from a state prison. ., ~ary'1 attorney, Bruce Margolin of •• ll<>llywood, oomplaioed Monday to Judge • Richan! F. Harris Iba! be needed at least two weeks more to aC\equately prepare because his client "ls an unusual pttSOO." Harris denied the defense's motion for ~Ii· a cootiouance. m' The attorney said he plans to call 1ev-eral psychologists and witnesses from L. Algbanistan during the trial. Leary, ao- .. ......i of escaping from the California Men's c.alony facility near here two f;. years ago, was apprehended in Afghanistan early thi! year and returned Wn lo the United States. .,,1 Leary also faces another trial on drug -<to conspiracy cberges In Orange.County. The district attorney's office said it was ready to begin and opposed any deloY. The judge earlier bad rejected anotbet defense molJon tor more lime. Tho judge scheduled a bearing just before today's opening trial session on a ~":<. defense motion to throw out the jury °< L Margolin contended tbe jurors did ~ta_ ~on of the pm>--muni\Y, The defense also asserted the $· juron lncluded m<>lliers who would sul-J fer hardship In tecurlng and payiog !or babysitters. f Marine Corporal f Draws 4 ~ont~. i On B~tjng Rap I: A Marine corj>oral who. edmltljd be ar-1' ranged the beatlnB.ol p ·private al !Jamp '• ~ Pendletoo bu been sentenced to lour 'i! months confinement at harjf labor. . e Cpl. Garry G. Hutton, 21, o! Pltoenlic, C Ariz.,. was sentenced after pleading guilty • 1t a special cow1-martlal. Ue also was fined '600 and reduced to, the ·rank of private, the Marines IBid MMday. t Hutton was accused of forming a t "workine party'' of black Marines to i beat Pvt. Harold E. Bradley, 19, or Lead· ville, Colo. Testimony received in an earlier trial related how Hutton told members of the . work detail that Bradley, a white !t serviceman, disliked blacks. ._. In the earlier proceedings, GUnnery .-Sgt. Miguel H. Tostado was found in· nocent of ordering Hutton to have Bradley and another private beaten. Hut- tt tcm contended be was following Tostado's ~ ---... -'-- orders. OUH•I COAST 1T DAILY PILOT °"' ar.-Co1.r DAIL 'I' ~ILOT, ..... Ill wtikll lit ~IMd IM N-f'-II llll'Dlkh..i tty .. onllll"' £NII Pub111111"1 ~-S.. .... ,.... "'"'°"' ••• pUl)I!.,.., .......... y "'""""' ffrlMY, fW Colll M-.., M""""°"' aMClt, HlllotM*• IHCNl'oun111!> V1Urt. ~ htdl. lrtlM/~!.i.cl; Md ..... Cllmlfltoai ..,, ~ "'*"""· A •lnOle r.t'-1 etllflllifl It Mli.Md S."'°'91yl. •nd hot"l6tV1. fM ,nr.cic.t ""'(ltftlllf ,c.ot JI, II Uf W9d '"' sm.e. c.i. ~ c.1110rn1t, '111"· lt.0.rt N. Wt.d Prnldenl-PvlltltflW , 1 J1d1 ll Clrl.v w. ~,......,,Md ~·l ~ Tho"''' Kt••ll l!dl"" Tho1111f A. Mtr,.tiiJI• MIN19k'IO 9411W Ch1tf" H. Utot ltl¢htr4 ·r. Nill "'"'"'""' ~ W'9n From Page I POWs.;. patrol caught in a North Vietnamese am- burh were recovered, returned to the United States and buried four years ago. Rldgeway's mother Is Mildred A. Ridgeway of Houston, Tex. The list includes Sgt. Michael Patrick Branch of Highland, Ky., whom Radio Hanoi frequently identified as a deserter, and Maj. Floyd Kushner.of Danville, Va., a medical corps officer to whom antiwar statements were atlributed. over the Communist radio. Also being r<leued Is S g t. All""° Riate, rl, o( Bell Garderui, Calif., a Viet Cong prlsooer siooe 1967 li!led .. killed in action by the Pentagon until his mother received a letter from him just before Christmas in 1971. ~ Another Is Pvt. FTederlck Lewis Elbert Jr., whom the Marine Corps still lists as a deserter. From Pagel INDIANS ••• they no longer recognize the U .S, govern- ment and are setting up one ol their own. "This acUoo was taken bepuse the Indians holdlog Wounded Knee used the period ill' time when they bad free access to the ·area to fortify their positions with more Y,eapc::m and amrnuniUQll," Ralph El;k.Uoo, special assistant to Attorney G<oerat Rlcberd Klelndienat,:sald Mon- day l.Q W ubington. Four young lndians were arrested shortfy after the blockade Was set up, Federal agentl salci.tbey found two t1!les and a band&wl In a search .ill' ·the II> dians' car. The enclrdement o! Wounded Knee came lea than 48 hours alter the govern- ment lifted roadblock!, and pne day after an FBI agent was shot Jn tbe band dur- ing a shootout with 1n9iana. At the height o! tension lut -t. Ollly three annored penomlel carriers were brought to the roadblock on Bigfoot Trail. But today at least 10 carriers were in position as govtrnment forces made their way from •lx nilles outside Wotmded Knee to within two miles of the settle- ment on the Pine Ridge Reservation. At least 2S men, 10 automobiles. trucks and vehicles also guarded the blockade. -"!;~;.jf""q;.;;:':;;~•-"'·n-~ ltfdl: m ,,_1 ,,,_ H\lllt ....... llldl: 11'19 ................. 61111 °""*""' ... ""'"' •I C.rnlM 11.•I • Tt1a,br1r 1114) MJ-4111 CSwWW .,...,. 111 Ml·H11 ,_ c..-...-..... ~ ..... 4t2""4H .,... ..... .,.... ~ CflMI "''MR _, ... =~· ::"' ..=.""'-~' 111::'.i::. wttwlilt . """" .,. ......... , .... "'""' f!llY .. , ... If .... ~ ...-1 -""'*' " ~ ,,,.,,.,. ................ " °""" ..... Ctlllill'MI. .... "". "" UJflW t:l.61 ~1 w tNlt u .11 _.....,, ffllfllln' .................... ·s~Jced' Defense Sea:etary ,Elllot Ricll· anl>on said in a •J>t""h be wu ahockod ~ dit<:Over lhe ;Army bu oaly three minqrl~em­ployea ond no women li Its civilian ex«:UUve job<, said he expected lmprovemen . • Sanity Bid . In Murder Case Begins Teot(malf In the aanlly beariq ol con- Yld<d lliller Thomal a r a d f o r d McCutellen began today In Oranp Cow> ty superior Court with the prooecuUon In· rbtinll that the P.111 Point builder was ln luU posses."lon of his mental faculties wbea be lbot and killed a Laguna Beach woman Sept. S. Prosecutor Nick NOviek said he plans to put at leaat eight Wllnesses on the stand In ~ bid. to Insure that McCutch- en, 50, 331!21 Olinda St., g e t s life im· prlsonment for the killing of Mrs. Vll'glnia Hammett. Jury selection was completed late Monday. It is e;pected that the sanity hearlng for McCutcben will take about two weeks. • • Women Toil in Clai'na The jury that convicted the contractor of first deg~e murder more than a month ago should have immediately returned to Judge Walter Charaoua's courtroom to rule on McCulcheo's men- tal state. Woman technician mans a wrench high atop a pipe- line tower at Tushantzu Oil Refinery in Sinkiang, China. Hsinhua News Agency says worker Is typical of way women are taking their place beside men. Three Hitc1l4ike-rohhery Suspects Held ,by Police 0 From Pagel BOYLE .•. six Yablonski murder trials by Gilly, Huddleston's son-in-law and husband of aoother admltted. murderer, Annette Gilly. But the judge and both lawyers overlooked McCutehen's original plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. Judge Cbaramza was forced to order a new jury to rule on the defendant's sani· ty. McCutchcn was arrested Sept. ' shortly after Mrs, Hammett, ts, of 121 B Wave St. was gunned down on a neighbor's lawn. A -p&ir of San Clemente detectives leh. for Bakersfield this morning to pick up three as-yet unidentified suspects In the weekend holdup of a San Diego youth who was robbed and dumped in a storm drain. The arrests took place in the San Joa- quin Valley late Mon~y as the trio _drove the victim's car which bore no li~ plates, local officers said. Two male suspects -one ol them a juvenile -were held on the inilJal auto the.ft charges, but autboriUes l n Bakersfield had released tbe ~irl In· valved ln the case before discovenng that the three were wanted for armed rob- bery. The case took place last SUDday when Bruce Lee Treadway, 17, of San Diego walked into police headquarters to report the series of incidents. His was the third hitchikker-related Austrians_ Boil As Woman Lauds Hitler on TV VIENNA (UPI) -A housewlle who said she would welcome the return of Nazi dictator Adolf Hiller caused a na- tionwide uproar Mondayl the 35lh an-- niversary of the day be marched into Vienna to receive a hero's welcome. "We got 72 protest caUs," said a spokesman for a television staUon that carried pro-Hitler comments by Mrs. Edith Asberger. "And that's an unusually high number In iA,ustria." Mrs. A.sberger, 49, was a 5Choolglrl who turned out with thousands of other Viennese March 13, 1931, to welcome Hitler. "I would go again to welcome him back-," sa.he said. Mrs. Asberger was Interviewed in the Heldenplatz (Heroes Square), scene of Hiller's triumphant entry after be an- nexed his native Austria. The interview came after a recent festival of. old Nat.i propaganda films, one of tnem showing Hitler's goOse-stepplng arrival In Vitnna, stirred laughter among young audiences . Clemente Woman Facing Charges On Stolen Goods A 42--year-old San Clemente woman faces charges o{ sales o( stolen property today stemming Crom a theft case reported by a Capistrano Beach woman last summer. Police in San Clemente said that they arrested Barbara Jean Kifkpatrict .. 42, of 215 Avenlda Serra Monday, after the woman allege41Y oold lt,100 'Worth ol rings to an untdentlfled.prerson. The woman, who police said is oo pro- batioa for check offf!DICI, waa booked al the local jail, then tramferred to Orange County Jail where she was be.Id on $2,000 bail. Jt is alleged that the rings -a dla· mond wedding aet -were stoled" last June from the home of Mrs. t.taxlne "ffl~ WllS~kt\bf;Lln ' Capistrano Bead! Pllll!ades. 1be reported aa~ of the merchandise Mooda,y was for a price of $200, police l&iil Planes Nearly Hit MADlllD (UPI) -A Belgian alrllner narrowly avoided collldlng with "'hat was believed to be an Americab plane oter Britain Monday, eupioi In a ablrp maneuvu that injured i"l least aeven penons, • Sabelli alrll0t0 spokesman aald. robbery of the weekend. Treadway told officers that he picked up· a girl hitchhiking in San Diego and drove her to an Oceanside apartment where two men joined the group. Once lhe car reached San Clemente the two males choked the youthful driver un- conscious, bbund him, then dumped Treadway into the Linda Lane storm drain area. Tbey tben took Treadway's mooey, $2{1,. and his car. The arrests in Bakersfield mean that two of the three weekend strongarm jobs have yielded suspects. · Ernest Bracey, 25, of Sah Diego, was scheduled for arraignment in South County Municipal C.ourt today on charges of armed robbery stemming from the !heft of cash at knifepolnt last Saturday from a Fullerton man given a ride from the Border Patrol checkpoint at San Onofre. _ Bracey allegedlr robbed tiis passenger, stripped off the ' man's ' clothes ' and ~ped his victim ~ ~II bead· quarteni. •' · . ,~ - He said the methods discussed for the Yablonski slayings included shooting, dynamiting and firebombing. Gilly said Prater also told him "it would have been a goOO thing if I would have got rid oC" Joseph Yablonski, the victim's younger son. From Pagel 24 TONS •.. and helicopters. Agencies involved in the operation in· eluded the Bureau of Narcotic9 and Dangerous Dugs, U.S. Customs, U.S. Im- migration and Naturalization Service, Arizona Department of Public Safety, the Maricopa an::I Pima County sheriff's departments from Arizona, the Yuma Metropolitan Enforcement Group, the Mexican Federal Judicial Police, and the Mexican military, tbe U.S. Attorney for tba.d!Jt<i4 qi Ar~ and. th<> uma Goiinty Dlitrlct 'Atlbrtufy. Vanishing A~t 2 Burglars Escape Dragnet SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Police today called off a 24-hour search of a downtown store where two burglars were believed to have holed up. Police said the men apparently escaped despite the force of officers inside and outside the store and massive tear-gasing of the store. Authorities began pumping the tear gas out of the building. A spokesman said the incident began after officers responded early Monday to a burglar alarm at a Zody's department store and apprehended one man. The man lold officers thal two others re- mained inside. • 1 From dawn to dusk, wQrking in shifts, some 30 officers sur· rounded the store and floo®d it twice with tear gas bombs. Then they went inside, wearing gas qi.asks, and poked around counters, searched the attic and even looked Into air ducts. ' Police said McCutchen told lhem. he was di!tressed because Mrs. Hammett had earlier that day broken o[f her association with him . McCutchen's lawyer argued during the first trial that his client had taken a quantity of sleeping pills shorUy before the shooting and was not aware of the nature of his act. Police Probing Execution Death Of Two Students PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Sherm's deputies are retracing the steps of a young man and his high school sweetheart, found slain in the desert after culling cJassts for a spring outing. Sheriff Paul Blubaum said be believed James Burgoyne, lli.Jilod his f.lancee, Kathy Koger, 17, ~ \0 be gone for the aflernoon when they drove into the desert about 20 miles from their fashionable Camelback Mountain homes. Blubaum said an investigation in- dicated the two were forced to kneel at the desert site, then shot from behind . Burgoyne was shot five times and the girl once, he said. They were found 20 miles northeast of here late Saturday n e a r Burgoyne's sports car by another Couple taking pic- tures of desert flowers. Burgoyne, son of a psychiatrist in suburban Scottsdale, asked a fellow stu· dent to take notes for him Wednesday afternoon at Scottsdale Community College, Blubaum said. "Neither was wearing pro t e ct Ive clothing , indicating they planned to be gone for only the afternoon," Blubaum said. Miss Koger, a blonde, high school senior. was found with her clothing in disarray, the sheriff said, and her body was being examined for evidence of rape. Robbery also was a possjble motive, he said, wilh $15 missing from Burgoyne's billlold. A YARN FOR .EVERYONE • I • " There is no q"'estion that the number one fiber in the carpet ~industry today · is nylo!'· A survey of 2S of the largest carpet . manufacturers revealed the following: sale, • Nylon in_ 1972 accounted for 55.7'Y, •n INCREASE of 4.6 Y,. ·. . of all carpets offered for Woqls deolihed.,flo~IOA 'Y. to 9.1 %. Aorylios Cledined Iron\ 20.1 '/, to 18.5 'Y .. Poly~stels· dec:lined !tom 13.2 % to 12.7'/,. Ole fins declined from 4.5 % to 3 % , These figures are astOuoding b.eause of the fact that the d ... mend for nylon created a tremendous shortage and many mills were looling for ANY kind <>f yam to mal& oarpot from. We have hundred~ of nylon oarpets et Alden's -stop end,.. u" ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. IN COl1A MIU llNel ltl7 COSTA MESA ' 646-4838 Moo. • Tllun. t to 5:30~ frl. t to t: Sat. t :30 to I ' ..... ~, ' • I st l!tJ • st h An pe hlg pr inh key ma an 20 A Ne cal de • its I I . r • • ' I ' I ' ' ' I ' I I • ' • • I ' i ' ' • f • • • I • r • • I I I ' I I I • ' t I t I p ser ur vie "g set pm s ist'• View Usual Cardiac ,Advice Attacked Docton advile patlenb to eat less stop smoking, Jose weight and exercise: ~t no one knows tor certain if these steps actually prevent heart attacks a heart specialist asserted in Anaheim. ' The Point of what is known -and unknown -about the commonly recom- mended cardiac safeguards was made at the California Medical Association's coo· venlion ,Monday by Dr. EUot Corday of lht University of California at Loi Angeles. However, Corday and other heart ex~ perts on a panel did agree that reducing high blood pressure seemed to be a preventive factor in beart attacks. They also said another factor -one's inherited health -also is a heart health key. But they noted that heredity is BadhamPoses Coastline 'Relief' Bills A package ol five bills intended to make it easier on communities, agencies and individuals affected by Proposition 20 has been introduced in Sacramento by Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport Beach). Despite his prior opposition to the so- called Coastline Initiative, Badbam denied his five-part package goes ,fig a inst something no one can c~e. Cortlay, emplwWng that be made his c:omments to u..i-need for ltalber research. stated tllll eo poreent ol - who suffered beart a~ do not •ve a high cbolest<rol lev.~ dlSCOlllltllli _, of lbe value ot a tow.fit die~ "We ean't 1ncrimlnate overweight because there ""' lots ol OV!rWelibl peo. pte with normal circulation," added eor.. day, who.ii a member of lbe ll!de¢ N" .. tiOnal Health Advilory Council and a P,UI pceSidenl of lbe American eon.ce of Cardiology. . "We have become fixed f.o tbe cholesterol prilloiple of making people feel ~y for what they eat," be stated. But, he said it waa possible that atherosclerosis Is a degenerative disease of lhe arteries and not the result of fat deposits on artery walls. Moreover, he said, ''there is no evidence that exercise extends life, although the individual may feel better if he exercises." It may be, he said, that the "risk fac- tor" in heart disease isn't connected with .smoking but is co~ted w i t b nervousness which is a personality trait of smokers -and coffee drinkers. Corday and the three other heart ex- perts on the panel at the state medical convention agreed that advice on living habits stems more· from statist.ical cor- relation than proven fact. Other yet·to-be discovered factors may be even more importantl they said. • its basic intent. Corday added it would "be a great disservice" if doctors give the public im- pression that enough is known about the risk factors to prevent heart attacks if all current advice were followed. ' I • t • • I • ' • r • • ' ' • t ' I • ~ • • f • • I • • • • • • • • • • ' • ' ' • • I • He claimed instead that his urgency proposals will alleviate what he called serious difficulties inherent in the meas· ure. Assemblyman Badham said in an inter- view that his urgency bill package didn't "go against the lntent of Prop. 20," which set up a series or conunissions with veto power over most developments along the coastline. Badbam's bills would: -Require that local agencies must ap- prove proposed development along the coast before regional commissions act on them. -Make the state reiJnburse local com· munities lot the loos to their tax base as a result ol. declining coastal property values callled by pessaa:e of Prop. 20. • t.-Make tltMtlte reimburse individual property ownm Whose land drops in val- ue as a result of Prop. 20: -Permit all developmenls under way by F eb. 1, 1973 to go ahead without coast· line commission permits. The bills are AB 679-683. COUNCILWOMAN TO BE LEGAL? SACRAMENTO (AP) -Female members of city councils in Callfornia would become legally en- titled to style themselves "coun· cilwoman" under a bill introduced by Sen. James Whetmore (fl.Buena Park). The state Senate has no female members. Whetmorc introduced the bill Monday. 'Filh a Need' Although it may be simply a statistkal correlation, Dr. John M. Chapman, al.so of UCLA, stated that his study of 7 ,000 middle aged men indicated that between 75 and 150 heart attacks out of 479 he studied during a 10-year period had a connection to chol~terol, blood pressure and smoking. Dr. Nemat 0. Borhani of the Universi- ty of California at Davis said medical men may have a better answer ln six years, when a federally supported study will be COIJl.pleted that is probing the question of whether reducing statistical risk factors actually lessens the chance of a heart attack. * * * Women Having More Options Society is moving away from the posi- tion that women have only one respec- table choice in life -to·become wives and mothers -says a spokesman for a panel which reported to the Caillomia J\ofedical Association in Anaheim at Its annual meeting. But Dr. Floyd Ander,son, a Los Angeles psychologist. and founder of a family guidance center, added in a statement Monday that marriage Itself ls not out of date. Marriage as it has developed in western nations is a reflection of man'! need to insure survival above all else, he said. Other pane1 members were a Baptist minister, a gynecologist, a feminist and a man who spent two years in a Santa Cruz county commune. ..,_ . ·- WUUam E. La Mothe, e1ecutive vice P"'lldenl of Kellogg foods, describe• u noruense charges by nutrilionw that heavy advertlt- lng of p.......,eelened cereaJa Is creating a generation of .supr.ll•J!P1 children. "Clearly, ready-to-eat ce"'a!J fill ~ need," he aald • •• s DAILY PILOT No Tuition · Allowed, Board Told Even II lhe Saddlebocl< Collqe Boan! ot Trustees wanted to charge tu.fUon , by atate law they could not. Only the atate •• Jegislature can change the tuition policy. This clarlfication was Luued by trustees al Monday night'• boanf meeting after what they sakt had been misinterpretkln in a dl9CUSSion on tul· lion at the last meeting. "We have ab9oluteJy no control over tuitk>n," Tru!ltee Ham VO@:et pointed out. Informally, two trustees -MichMI Collim and Alyn Brannon -say they favor tuition. Hans Vogel and Patrick Backus stand opposed, and the other tNstees say they do not have enough in- formation. Vl"f T ....... te ZSA ZSA GABOR MEETS HER FANS OUTSIDE NEW YORK FEDERAL COURT AFTER HEARING Hufttarian-born Actress Suing Waldorf·Altorfa Hotel for $300,000 Over Robbery In Elevator The discussion began with the Jan. 24 newsletter of the ·Galifornia School Boards Association, Superintendent Fred H. Bremer pointed out. In the newsletter, Ron Myron, ex- ecuUve secretary of CSBA, requested t."Ollege boards opposed to initiating tui- tion to voice their opinions to their state legislators. -Utl Will Host Consumer, Environment Law Session . . A seminar described by its organizeni as the ".Qrat real Attempt to devote ade- quate time to a new and important field of law" will be staged all day Wednesday OD the UC Irvine canlpus. 'lbe California Trial L a w y e r s A.uociation's Seminar on Consumer and Environmental Law will offer 10 sessions on as many topics, all ot them presented in the Fine Arts 'Ibeatre at Mesa and Bridge lloods. • OrKanizers of tbe crLA conventi on which will move '11lursday to the Newporter Inn in Newport Beach for three more days of seminars, panel discussions and conferences, said the UCI sessions are free and open to the public. 1be program opens at 9 a.m. with Robert Alexander, chief of the state Bureau of Auto Repair in Sacramento, discussing. "the Consumer and Auto Repairs." Alexander will be followed at 9:2.5 a.m. by earl Meyer, supervisor of the state's Department of Weights and Measures in Sacramento. Meyer's topic will be "The Consumer and Labeling Practices." James Reed. lbe legislaUl!e advocate of the CalHomia Consumer Federation in Sacramento will discuss, ''The Consumer and Legi!lation," at the 9:50 a.m. session. Seven more topics will be offerred before the seminar closes at 4:30 p.m. They are: -10: 15 a.m. "The Consumer and Governmental Protection," deputy at- torney general Herschel Elkins, con- sumer fraud division. -10:40 a.m. "The Consumer and Criminal Law." professor Gilbert Geis, program in social ecology. -11 :05 a.m. "The Consumer and the Media," Santa Ana attorney Wylie Aitken, moderates a panel drawn from radio, television and newspapers. -1:30 p.m. "Citiznes' Group Action and the Environment," Pomona attorney John McCarthy discusses the "Friends of Mammoth" landmark case. -2:20 p.m. "Tranportation and the Environment," Marian Carpelan or Riverside, president of the Citizens Com· mittee on Freeways and Transportation. -3: IO p.m. "Nuclear Power and the Environment." Santa Monica attorney Brent Rusforth or the "Center of Law and Public Interest." --4. p.m. "Water. Air, Sludge and the Environment," UCI professor Peter S. Dixon, director of the mwseum of system biology. Zsa Zsa Suing Waldorf Hotel After Robbery NEW YORK (AP) -Zsa ba Gabor has starred in another show, this time in Manhattan federal court. The actress is suing the Waldorf· Astoria Hotel for $300,000 for faJllng to protect her from an elevator stickup which she says cost her a small fortune in jewelry. Miss Gabor told a jury Monday how she. her maid and her dog were return- ing from her Broadway sho w, "Forty Carats," early the mornlng of Aug. 19, 1970 to her $3,000.a-month suite in the Waldorf Towers. Two gunmen joined them in the elevator, brandished guns and took orr with her pear-shaped dia- mond earrings and two diamond rings, Miss Gabor said. Elderly Newlyweds Like Togetherness BURNTWOOD, England (UPl)-Cecil Archer, 82, and Ethel Spaul 71i, postpon- ed their wedding until they receive permission to put a dodble bed in their room at a home for the elderly, "We must have a double bed," Miss Spaul said Monday. "All our newlyweds do." Dr. Bremer said after contacting several legislators he had uncovered no move afoot to change the no-tultion policy and thus felt that the dixussion was a dead issue. Collins added, "The ract that the newsletter assumed we were all opposed to tuition irritated me and others on the board ... they seemed to be marching us oU to a non-existent battle." Brando's 'Tango' Okay in Israel JERUSALEM (AP) -Marlon Brando can tango in Israel, the country's film censors decided today. By a 16--0 vote, the censors approved the movie "The Last Tango in Paris•• for showing on Israeli screens. The pic- ture is expected to open soon, with tick els sold to adults only. The censorship board's decision came as a surprise to Israeli moviegoers, who are accustomed to erotic bits being snip- ped out of films. Offices Will Close WASHINGTON" (UPll -Proceeding with its plan to dismantle the Office of Economic OpportuniJy~he Atlmlnlatratlm bu &nl10Uliced tliar an'lo regional offices of the anUpoverty agency will be shut down Aprll 28. Howard Phillips, the acting OEO director, made the annoWtCement Monday. immediate delivery! e V-6 or 2000 series e AUTOMATIC or 4-speed e LOOK WHAT'S STANDARD EQUIPMENT • • Radial ply tires! • Front disc brakes! • Front bucket seats! • FUll ~arpeting! • Rack and pinion steering! SEE ONE ... TRY ONE ..• BUY ONE TODAY! ' Home Of The New Car , • , "'"°'"" r.,..,,.,, ' l son -·--- Rome Of ne New Car-. • • •'Goltle• r ... eh'' 2'2' HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA MISA • $40.5630 • -·-• JXOll Claims FBI Arrests 'rrio On FBI Talk In Stennis Case WASHINGTON lAPI -.t. • I ·1 "'"1<et .... """" ...... --.. -by~ _ _.._,' commltte<41bolnaller ............ 1"111 In private durlni Ille •• a 1 a- ...ugatloa. '!'be affidavit ol tbe -· .- HQl>acl<. Wal -by --~b, a member ol tbe Judi<illy &ms mittee, wbkb is rontridrrilW ._.., oomlnaUoo ol L. Patriet Gnr,J 111 • permanent FBI director. MRS. HOBACK. wu ;ctentj£w1 • tCmt of three Nixon CNDP'i&n ~ .a. uked for private mterv1ewl w.tthebel"&1 alter la~ for the MPQ"ip al ii• the first sealoas. In ~ btlon! the Judicimy Clom- ~. Gray uid that ,_... <m """ three (!)O(jdeDtial ia'1ef'Vieft 'Mft a* -to John w. ~ m. ---1. Alter reodlng Mn. -··-._ members or the Judiclaey --ttiloJ' ... "proceeding ... the .......... -°""" turned the iolomuttloa (lnlm .... private interview) over111ile:911etflk• olbenv:cre." ln _, allldavil, llrL -- tl>ot wUhin .. -d .... ~ ... &erview, she wu coafi1.outet l!i1' ..,.,...., 1wells Parkinooo, a la.,....fnlm<llrJlio- on campaign, Who -1 '1 mar -bave be<n talklai ID Ille rm.• •'TOMY~"'..ibeAi!dill the atndavit, ''I bad not ioh• aftapot ol my interviews with the FlJII and h int.ervieWs were tn •>••fides•e ..:I •tme dse knew:" A spokesman 1or tbr nd!"ti•,... mittee· denied ~ tbe· iafarmatilXI ~ !rem tbe FBI a -... __ .., Ollly questiolled ...... ---ii wanted .io!otmation for II ~ t. v!Stigalioo. \,The fact ill tba1 the ""d'1Ndlinn 1lbll Mfs. -had hl4 a fd'* di8c1JS1ioo with the F.Bl 6' II« C!lllllle lrom FBI"""'"' at all.II.~" 111e:::::r:i:: saki. "U caDle" frca. •11' s• 4 tlle committee wJtb whom Jibe W • r ' lier _... mtervien. ,Je1:.~~ -::.~:-....: · bdQ lDp~on •• rt r ... • aMed. -..... llJol mip>t 't;; d 'uoe Jo Illa --illl ~ wllh tbe civil-· "" w1tb the: Waterpte CUL "'I think tt is Npifit ........ ... she dldn\ r.tl lnlinlilol.. .... .. """""'" of Ill atlol"Dey far a.. .... -· .... did .. foe! ... --aoy retribution as a resWt d hr!r ~ djoculllli<los wilh lht nu..• & •e •J!OI<-uidr ' DIWI, AND hil-...._ .... Yestigation of I.be bQdncrflDI S' •• -beadq-la Uie ... 0 7 baildlng. llas becoale a -..Will ... Judidar,y Cornmltlee.. • d 1 rfire d Gray. Despite Nixon's Gbj6 '"' w, .. _. mltte< ls expected to'*....,•- Dean to t<sllly .. bis .. .-nm, ... Watergate probe. Nlao Im -llo • nOf. let Dean testify, and -I ? , j tl>ol pooition -· Meanwhile, Sen. John V. Tulmey $ CallC.), picked up 1mexperted ..,ar1 far blt nioUon Monday when coumiinat <l\airman James O. Eastland s a i4 k favors iaviting Dean. Prevlou.sly, Tunney bad -hemede< only one ~ vot.e for apprO\'ld b?i' ~ IS-member committee and mclicaed Ji would have to come from the ReptiblirJm 11(Je. As a matter of protoool, Seaa\e can- nli,tees invite witoesses to appear. lf rthr: -lstumed~·-­ mu.st vote again to issue a subpoena. l"iDP><fltNr Wait C1IO Jw ... &oee of Morgantown, \V.Ya., kisses his new bride, the h:twft Pinna St.eeie during their wedding ceremony at the Valley ,_. Gwn;rtr21 e:.ptt.tJ. in Phoenixville, Pa. Monday. The couple had ~ .k ytnr tlltir marrige for more than five years while Rose was w a pillnnn al war by the Viet Cong. 'Rough Road' See11 Ahead For Tijuana After Flood "DW"AU.. !lfaiai (AP) -Nearly IK> ~ .. ~s paved' streets have a..mi 6*updl liiji 11 week of rains, .says -----Bolanos c.cho. ._. tlbn P• fncfe of rain bas left ....,. -Jlilll!d rib era..,. and aaaW ~ ~orm with water as f:bCti • aa: !bat.-About. 500 persons have ( IN SHORT ... ) .... .,.,_ SIFOW !'lfP() -A Hungarian :so.:::.~ ~~;S9~~ •••W • ._. !OutJ, Vietnamese llliD8p w u& srid. tudaJ. Two Viet GliiC: rs 11 ..-appanntly tried to ...._....,.fmwilllmQe:s. but only one ....... , .. 1lllt •wpliee .as. fdmti!ied as Sgt. C a'"* Tr-~ U ~ South Viet, -T "'°" lllU¥Brr SERVICE ......, ..... DliUJ l'tli:lt ·-.... ~ ,.._._....,.._ .......... is .... ~-" - -_, ... , ........... ,....~---;, ... _ ,...__~ "-•--.lilN __ ..,. ........ _.._ .. , __ ~ _,,-~-""'" .. ......,,., .. ... ..:.tt.--Mtll .... _ -_. --Gbillf'JI" ..._ ·-· MJ,.4JJ1 .-i ......... 1.--llWWW ~ le.di 540-T JJO .... Cl~. c..i~ 8..-cft. ..., .-"-c...iu-. 0-.... Piii.in• ......... ~ ........... "..,,.i 4~.4420 nam ese said he was placed aboard a plane out of Saigon en route to Sydney Monday after appealing for political asylum. The Australians confirmed the defection and said he had been allowed to emigrate to Australia . eTornodoes HUBBARD, TeJC. (UPI) Homeowners and businessmen in two central Texa* counties hit hardest by a swarm of tomad-Oe! were eligible for low, interest federal loans today to finance rebuilding their towns. The death toll from the twisters that stunned the state three days ago rose to seven when a man hurt in a San Angelo tornado died Sunday. 1 Six of the deaths occurred in Hubbard, but Burnet, 150 miles southwest, suUe.red tbe worst property damage -at least 200 homes and buildings destroyed. e sweetTalk WASHTNGTON tAP) -The Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and fiuman needs has been told that pre. sweetened dry cereals do not cause tooth decay bul help children obtain necessary nutrition. This testimony came Monday from manufacturers of the cereals. who disputed recent testimony to the com· mittee that the pre-sweetened breakfast foods cause dental decay, provide too much sugar and decrease nutritional in· take of children. "It is important to remember that sugar makes things taste good and therefore makes sources of nutrition palatable ," said Mercedes Bates, vice president and director of General l\.1ills' Betty Crocker Kitchens . • Ass<1ssit1o tlo1u HAMILTO N. Bermuda tAP) -A senior police official expressed con· ltdcncc today that the murders of Gov . Sir Rich~d Sharples and 'his aide-de-- cam p will be solved. Sharples, 57, and Cspl. Hugh Sayers. 25, were ~hol outside the governor's of- fieial residence Saturday n i g h ·1. A massive search for their killer, or kjlJers, has been under way ever since. WASHINGTON (AP) -'lllret yolllli men"""' beld under 1100,tlllO hood today, clwied ID the ~ ol S<o. Johll C. Slenols last Jaiwary. 1be _, of Tyrcme Mar1hall, Ii, John s. Mtnball, 21, and Derid ffoll01'af, 1l. all of Northe11L w~. were ...........i MlilXllY night after -of die mool lnte01he manhunts in J)lstrict of O>Jum.bla blstory. A IO-m111 team ol poll .. and FBI agentl, bad qu'1Uooed hllDdreda of -nm TbEE men were. charged with armed robbery and viotlUng a 11'11 law maJdDf H a federal ctlme to attack a mtmbet of Coogress. 1bey were schedul- ed for malplJ)ent today before a U.S. magiatrate. Sunnis, 71, cbalnnan of the Senate Ai;med Services Committee, was shot twice about 7:40 p.m. Jan. 30 Just after he parked bis car outside his home of 20 years in Northwest Washington. For days his condition was criticaL He still is hospitalized. Nixon Fiin d • Gets Justic e Panel Probe WASHINGTON (AP) -The Justice Department has been asked to look into po11sible vlolations of federal election law in connection with a $200,000 contribution to President Nixon's re-election cam, patgn by a -New Jersey financier. The case was turned over to the Justice Department by the General Ac· counting Office Monday, with a request by Complroller General Elmer B. Staats to also look into the possibility of ad, ditlonal violations of the new Federal Election Law. SUBJECT OF THE investigation is the Finance Committee to Re-elect the President, and involved is whether the committee failed to report as required a cash contribution by financier Robert L. Vesco. received on or after last April 7 when the new election law took effect. A spokeJSman for the cocnmiU.ee described the GAO as irresponsible for referring the case to the Justice Depart· ment. · ''Th@ General Acoounting Office is once more rai sing a question for whkh there is a conclusive precedent supporting the actions of the Finance Committee to Re- elect the President. On that basis, the GAO coocluslon is irrespoosible," the spokesman said. The case revolves around whether the contribution from Vesco was made be.fore or after April 7. Maurice Stans, the former commerce secretary who beaded Nixon's finance committee, con-- tends it wes a pre-April 7 conlribution and therefore did not have to be repurted. A REPORT BY Phillip S. Hughes, dirc.clor of the GAO's Ofrice of Federal Elections, says the money was delivered April JO. three days afler the new law went inlo effect. Stans' argument is based on the premise that the funds had been pledged earlier than April 7, that Vesco made a commitment to Rive it on March 8, 1972, and repeated this on April 3. Stans acknowledges receiving the money in his office on April IO. The Hughes report said. "The money was raised abroad and was not available lo f\.1r. Vesco's representatives in New York until April 6. "AlUtough Mr. Stans was inforn1ed on April 6 that the funds were available in New York. arrangements could not be made for delivery of the funds on that date. The mooey,'! the report said. "was in the custody of Y.esco's representatives during the period from April 6 to April JO. Winter Wallops Rockies Laud Sales Firni Files Petition For Ba1t k ruptc)· Remainder of Li5 .. llostly Spring-like, Much Rain re•perllt•tt:S Mlfl'I LaW ~ AlbWW Y ti Jl2. Cll' All-• 1' ., e9it' !O'llOfl •7 ~' .ti (I! ll11H.tlo tel 'P Cl CMrtnlwl ,. t9 C'-rtott, 1' St """-.. ~ Clroc:ll\Mtl ii J6 ,...,..."" w •1 o.n-.. JI DWh'toll 51 4~ Mof'lalt.ilu IM r1 How"" 11 "' JM J~lle .... ~CITY •7 ).; U1 V.0-l il » Uft.. lltdl 15 .U L#Wll.. •1 '" ...._ . fl' ,~ ~~-::liia n TI " " ... " .. ..... .... .. ~ .. , " " .. .... -~ ~ . ~ .. ,.. • ,.. .ti n G ~· & ----- • -·- Bt.r.IN~Stfbw CU3:"°"""' ,~z.,, M•HO!Jrl. Un-lOO'lllllV mltd 1emoer•h1r11 al'IG e+•!• 11Mwl1111, pllll •n ~bund•nca ol •aln • ...,.. nw ~ M•lenotd IN lolM'lnt l\oOlllflCJ by lwt -.kl, KCl)rO> Ina lo 11111\oflllft, TM Sl«m In fM llotklft ... .,.. =-~ ~ Cfw'T,. u:.~=-i. o:: PHOENlX, Artz. (APJ -A Phoenix, baaed ArUona land firm, whose officers were indicted by • £ederal grand jury on charges ol fraud, Monday filed :i µelilion !or bankruptcy In U.S. District Court. lrQm COIOo'.00 10 N;lf:' O•ko111 tt.t..v·.snow warnl'"I• wm In •11~1 kw ti•• rMUl'llf'lnt ~ '°"'~I Nrlt °' coi.."° ...., ,,. ~tr.i ~·1"' ntE PETITfON wa1 filed b.' Lake ... H-MtJlto. Sro<1'1 Md -~ :_.·~~. W:~ra!t~"."'Mon'r.na~~ 1~ Ha vairu Estates, lnc., stating that the 0i:.,i::i~""· ,.,11 , W•• ..ir Ill', 1801 ot finn 's debtl were larger than Its: cash on ,,__ bi'lnolNI ,,,. 101.i °" ..,. .....-:i hand lilnd the company is unable to ,..,.,, "' n l11Ct1n. 1C1-. h• t'J --'' • d-·-• "°''"""""'" Arll'Qnt .... --" W(lh Sll 1:11y \."loCUltors CUL••uuS. :,.r:io!,""Fltt °' r•fn du•lflo ' 24 llMlr &lmilar petitions were also filed for two T'• 5,.11 lt1v• PrDlld "'"' ft WWld sis ter f"•tm"S ~F'-~rl W-••-~ln r.it1,1n11 an l\tl1Nl9d S,OOll ...,,,k-~ ~w 0:-~~ ·~~ t«-~-7W--==---!'C ~'~ -------~ . ..-.. , .. , ... ._}'Ito r""l'fOI" nor111N11 The petitions contend that Lake 0~ Pi.otfll-. H Est I •• f···-• od s·1~ <¥t•• ~'"' or rlouti" •nd avasu a es was con U.:K.-u a ;:"'..,,~,:r .::=:~. rn.tld 0_. "" associated" with Terrtt-Firm and f't>Mtnl Weat her Wc.!tern Land Wholesalers, Therefore, "the.re may be a mllture. CJ( ldootitlt'8 between aald corporations by reason of common ownenhlp. directors and of- ficer!! l\nd perhaps t'OO.l'ustd boolt- keep1 ng .. P•rlly OMV -,!It! • Clll.roce ol .,_. "" lodrt. u,tll -··* wll'ICh ttlOf'll •ltll IM'nl119 "-" ~ftO _, 1'0 """111wftr t9 fo • Anon li'I ·~~ •oa•v _,,., WM_,., Hi9h tvcMv '5. Coo111l'! twrr.,.raJw .. ''"" h'om U ID 6l I nllflll ~·t-fl.. '""" ., to ·~· ..., ..... "'""""'.,.,,.. "· S1u1, /tl oo". Tides T\lllOAY S.~OPIS llilf!I • •:Jf 11.111. ,.I ~ ICl'W Haf 11-"'-,.1 WIOfilllOt\T Fl"' Jll9ft I:• """' s.t Am .... .... 1,:» p,lft. .... 1 S.COltd """ ''°' ''""' ..._, """ •• •-111 • .., s... s'" ~ .,,_ ...... 11 .. •"'-.... ,,,, '-"'• 'M~ petition, signed by Ronald Lavin or Phoenix, corporate BeCTttru-y, listed oo l&Ael! or, ll1billtlt1. Lavin wu' one or 5even company of· 11<!•1> lndl<1ed. The llCCll!ed compony oUiclals are 9Cheduled to ·be orr.elgned ne1t ~tondev be.fore U.S. Di$1rlct Court Judgo W\lllam Copple. Acting f'BI Dlrtetor L. Patrick G"Y n~ to .......,illll the 1rT'tlt1, llld ry,_ Mar>ball bad been tlUn Into Cumidy earUer Monday oo dlaorderly cooi1u<t charg... The otbm ....... .,.$ re1ted later by FBI egentl and D.C. police. ne relationahlp of the Marshallt was not clarified but they lived at the same local address. DEPUTY POUCE Chief Mahlon R. Pitts said the investigation began to make progress within the last four or five days and a major development oe>- curred sometime after g p.m. Mooday. He dJd not elaborate. Stennis' office estimated rewards total, ed more than $50,000 for conviction of his asaailants. Police Iare last month released a com- posite sketch depicting the man who shot SteMis. They said the senator had ap- proved the picture, wblch showed the assailant to be in his early 20s or 30s. more than six feet tall, weighing 190 to 195 pounds, with medium-dark com- plexion and close-cropped hair. Police said two other men also were being sought. At the time of the shooting police had said two youths, one armed with a small, caliber handgun, held up Stennis and took his 'o\'allet, wristwatch and 25 cents in cash. Stennis later told authorities one youth told him something Jike : ''Now I'm going to shoot you ." AFTER TALKING with neighborhood residents, police said it was possible three persons were involved. Teen 'High on Drugs' Charged In Four Murder s ABINGTON, Pa. (UPI ) A Philadelphia teen-ager was charged Mon· day with the murders of his parents and two brothers whose bloodied bodies were found in their beds, apparently bludgeon- ed or shot-gunned to death as they slept SlUlday night. Police told the coroner the suspect, Kenneth Davenport, 18, "was hlgh on drugs" at lhe time. THE VTCTIMS, Ale.llander Davenport, 5.'i, hls wife, Rowilla, 50, and their two sons, Edm.undr--it. and Peter, t2, were found Monday by another son. Alexander Jr .. 20. who then called police and ac- companied them to tbe family 's modest. tw~story home. Police swore out murder warrants charging Kenneth Davenport with the slaylngs. Davenport. who had been ar· rested Monday morning by Philadelphia police on an unrelated speeding charge. was to be brought here today for ars raignment on murder charges. Dr. John A. Hoffa, the Montgomer;. County coroner. said all four victims were found lying in bed and were ap- parently shot in the bead "by a high· powered gun of some kind." llOFF A SAID police told him the suspect "was high on drugs at the time and didn't know "'hat was going on." Hoffa said au topsies scheduled !or to- day would determine the exact causes of death. He said each of the victims had also sustained severe head injuries and did oot rule out the possibility that they might have been bludgeoned to death. Abington police Capt. Clark CUtting said no motive had yet been established for the crimes. The bodies of the two parents were found in their bed on the first floor of the house, while the bodies or the two brothen were found in separate beds upsta1rs . PANAMA 1.4 P!lU 13.5 South America n • MIL ITARY ~ CIVll?AN POPULATION IN MtlltON$ P e ro.a Vict ory Released Spy Sees Mother In Hosp ital NEW BRITAIN . C<yln. IUPI) - Released after 20 years in a Chinese prison, Korean war spy John T .. Dowuey took hi s ai1ing mother's hand, kissed her and said, "I'm here to stay." His mother. Mary T. Downey. ?S, whose sudden illness sparked an m- temational diplomatic exchange o f messages to expedite her soo's reJease, was understandably elated by his ttlurn. "YOU'LL PROBABLY be a celebrity now, but don't let it go to your bead," she told him Monday. Mrs. Downey was no! told her son had been released Sunday by lhc Chinese at Hong Kong, until just before he ste~ into ber room at lhe New Bnta1n hospital . I Downey was admitted to the hospital in a room near his mother to recuperate from an exhausting night halfway around the world. He and his younger brother. William , planned to hOJa a news con, ference at noon today. Doctors had feared the excitement might be too much for her. but they were relieved with her reaction when she saw hlm. She even wanted to stand up to meet him because she didn't want hlm to see her "flat on my back." Her personal physician. Dr. Raul Lopez. declined and she greeted Downey in a sitting position. WIULE JOHN Downey wa.s visiting with his mother, William held a news conference at the hospital and discussed his brothcr'9 years of mtfmement. ··He felt like he was a prisoner and the treatment was never abtlsivt, but be in- dicated an enormous relief in being a free man.•· When his Air force }et touched down at Bradley International Airport in Wind!or l.1>eks. 22 miles ;:iway from here. Downey was 1 greeted by a boyhood fri end. (~v. Thomas J . Meskill, who when J\trs. Downey became ill had in· 1erreded on her son's behalf with Presi- dent Nixon. Premier Coo En·lai of the People's Republic of China agreed to the release. An official statement Monday from China said Downey was freed because he has served his time and had not been a "bad prisoner.'' Wil.LlAM DESCRIBED his brother's ronfinemenl as one heavy with political indoctrina1ion, including mandatory at· tendance at lectures for hours oo end. ·•n>e education P.rograms they ran· him through were a little lower key tha~ \lo'h~t people usually a s s o c j a I e with brainwashing .. , he said. In his early years in confinement. Downey, who was shot down over ~1.anchuria in 1952. was ''interrogated. yes; tortured, no," his brolhe.r said. Downey \\'as sentenced to life. but that term was commuted to five years begin- ning in 1972. -ARGENTINA 24 The military government of ArgenUn1 declared Hectot"J. C&mpon, a candidate hand picked by exiled fonner President JUJn D. Peron, tile winner Monday of Iha lint presldenUal race In ten yeans Newamap llJustrales South American military and ctvUlao·ruled countria. • 0 tl c q c I 0 a ti w w y i a q d le R v H b I l cl a f d Move to Long Beach Senators Upbraid Plan by Colleges SACRAMENTO (AP! -A plan to move the headquarters o( the California S t a t e Unlvenlty and Colleges to Long Beach wu criticized by members of the Senate Finance C.Ommlttee Monday, who aatd they resented the tactics used by college ad· miniJtraton. No action was taken to block the proposed U'IOVe, althou~h committee members pointedly questioned Chance11or Glenn Dumke bow much it would cost the state to cancel the CSUC contract to build the $4.3 million headquarters. The committee's hearings on the lkampus universitv and college system was con· tinued until Tuesday. thlK is the way to go -the cheapest way of bulldlng - then we don't need to give you · any more money for capita] outlay." Aide's 'Aide' Fil.es Suit In Arrests SANTA MONICA (AP) Jerome A. Pierce, whose reported friendship with Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke's top aide Morris E. CUrrey led to Cur· SEVERAL committee mem-,----------. hers complained they had ( BRIEFS J never heard of the plan to move the college system's "---------' headquarters from its present rented facilities on fashionable Wilshire Boulevard In Los Angeles. At least five of the 13 members of the committee were hostile to the move. Dumke said the J o i n t Legislative Budget Committee was notified of his plans last vear, and that when no ob- Jection was made he went ahead and signed an agree- ment with the city of Long Beach to build the head- quarters on tidelands property donated by the city under a lease-purchase contract. Under questioning f r o m committee chairman S e n , Randolph Collier (0-Yreka) Vice Chancellor H a r r y Harmon said the $4.3 million building would be purchased through a 28-year lease at a total cost of $15.8 millon, in- cluding maintenance cost:s. HE SAID that would include an estimated $5.5 million cost for utilities and maintenance during that time period and $6 million in interest costs . "You consider that a good business deal?'' Collier asked. Dumke gave an elaborate erplanation of building costs being lower in that area. sav- ings in staff time in travel to campuses and other factors which he said made the Long Beach site a good investment. Collier later told Dumke, "If 'Equality' Short-lived? Angeles County SUperior Court branch at Santa Monica Mon· day against Monica Le e Gregorich. a former girlfriend, and David E . Maharam. Pierce said the two had caused him to be falsely ar· rested and imprisoned and also committed assault and battery upon him. e Brain Trust LOS ANGELES <UPI) John F. Kennedy's New Fron· tier brain trust -Arthur Schlesinger Jr., McGeorge Bundy and John Kenneth Galbraith -have come to the defense of Daniel Ellsberg in the Pentagon Papers trial. Schlesinger testified Monday that, far from harming U.S. security, leaking information such as the Pentagon Papers helped the United States by overloading Hanoi's planners with data of little value. e Ag11ew i11 SF SAiV FRANCISCO (AP J With the economy lxloming in the private secto'r, any large increases in federal spending would ri!'lk ·setting off new in- flationary pressures, Vie e President Spiro T. Agnew has warned the Associated General Contractors of America convention. e S11icide Blast SACRAMENTO !AP) EUREKA I At;:) A n Calirornia's ratification of the unemployed electrician and Equal R i g ht s Amendment ranch hand y,·ith knowledge of would be repealed by a resolu-explosives blew himself up by lion now be for c the stuffing his shirt w i th Legislature. dynan1itc, officials say. Ass em b 1 y ma n Floyd Coroner Edward Neilson Wakefield IR-South Gate i. in· said Monday a rambling troduced the measure ~1on· suicide note was found in the day. Wakefield has been a motel room where Arthur vigorous opponent of the pro-Deyo, 51, had been staying. posed amendment lo the u. s. Constitution. which e Ce.iling \'ate would bar abridgement of any SACRAMENTO (APJ person's legal rights on the Gov. Ronald Reagan says he basis of sex. "might as well start getting little 'LObbyists'- surrounded by Sacramento day-care patrons is Sen. Peter Behr (R-Tiburon), being shown support at the Capitol for his resolution to restore funds to the children's progran1s. Clockwise from !lpper left are Don Hudman, Danielle Callahan, Julie Ann Braun and Paul Anderson. Farr Calls 'Absolute' New s Privilege Unlikely SACRAMENTO (AP! Reporters are "going to have to be reasonable" in seeking Jaws to protect them from ar- rest for protecting confidential news sources. Los Angeles Times reporter \Vil!ia1n Farr says. ' ';\Ve're not going to get an absolute privilege law," Farr added In a talk Monday before Sacramento members of the Sigma Delta Chi professional journalism frater nity. Farr also said he hrid hoped ror a Cflmpromise solution to his arrest for refusing to divulge a news sourei!, but he thinks the judge's "myopia of judgment" prevents ii. * -(;: * Bill Bars Retribution SACfiAMENTO (AP) -the news media could editorialize about California c o u r t s without fear of judicial reprisal under a constitutional amendment introduced Mon· day. Ass em b I y man Daniel Bo"atwright (0-Concord \ In- troduced the measurC'. saying in an interview: "Journalists should not have to fear" that courts will take action against them. Boatwright said the measure was prompted by a case in San Andreas where a Justice Court judge cited an editor for contempt for an ed- itoria l crltici7.ing the court. The case was thrown out of court March 2. HE ADDED he believes Superior Court Judge Charles lf. Older "would have no com- punction about seeing me in pri!On for six, seven or 10 years" for refusing to reveal the source of a news story he wrote about the Ch a r I es Manson family d u r i n g Manson's 1970 murder trial. Farr served 46 days in jail on Older's order I as t December and January for contempt of court. He is now free pending appeals. "If I lose all these appeals, I'll be in jail for a long time - literally years -because this judge is favoring under the deJusion that he is going to get the information out of me," he said. "OLDER JS not ttiat bad a guy," Farr added. "The thing is he doesn't see w h y reporters want to protect sources. I've talked to him ..• there is a myopia or judg· ment," Farr said. "I wish there were some way to come to a compromise, but there is no honorable alternative left to me by Judge Older. I just hope there will be no i n c r e a s e d polarization between reporters and tlie judiciary" because of the case, Farr saJd. Speaking of pending legisla- tion to increase the rights of reporters to refuse lo disclose confidential sources. Farr said he has testified in favor of "absolute privilege" laws, but that he recognizes "that is unrealistic." r~.o.,, Manoh.:__::ll~,~1~•7~3~~~~~~~~0~Al=l~V~P~IL_OT,;_IS~ Officers Fonda •Aided Pea~e~ Mourn Activist Says Heroes Hit U.S. Co1id1ict 1 of Own SAN BEJINAROOI() (AP) -Nearly a law enfOl«meat offlol!n from many pub of Southern Callfornla marched SACRAMENTO (AP> Jane Fonda says her Vl.'!it to Buol last year may baYe helped end the war in Yletoam ... thtt than prolong the C8P' d'lity ol American prlsonen:, u tome returning POW• have uid. 10 Hanoi by Mw Fonda .and fOf"DWf' Ally. Gen R&ms.t'V Clark. They said they thou!'ht tht v1slts enc:ouraged the North Vletnam"q-to continue the war and th<lt only the bombing of North V1etn:11n by 8511 Hnally forc<.<d the Com· munlsts to sign thr January cease-fire. tJu-ooch city str..U In I fO<r· She alao said the real helVOS mile funttaJ ptoCltllJon tiO &he amoag the POW's are thole graveside l«Vioet or a wbo "1*1 the guts" lo criticize highway po•-•man ~--· U.S. involvement in Vietnam. UVI • "~ ... _ MISS F01''DA ~aid hl'r f h ·'·'-In MW Fonda. the actress and one o I ree penoos auu.11 a mission to llano1 was tu trv In antiwar activist, said Monday, shooting ,!JWee last Friday. "The fact we were there about create an understand1nj? of ~h·· The services for patrol of-four months befcwe the peace nature of the war and L'S 111 fioer Larry L. Wetterllllg started truly being negotiated volvement in 11. Sh(' said she sort ot be.lies what they say," thvught such efforts b\ ht-r"t•I! came shortly after murder and other ant1l'lar act1\ 1.:.1.s ha I the -1 1..... Some retu"";,.,,. POWs ,have e rges n 11.1ay~ were •• ..._. helped brmg :ibout th l' filed Monday against Jerry said tbey were aware of vi.sits ceasefire Jamts \'oungberg, 3(1, "ll ""'as not we who droppe-d y be --·-~ f the bombs on the prisons in oung rg was °'-"..-:u 0 · 1 December that roultl ha\'e kill· fatally shooting Wetterling, Lt. Engine, 1 ed the prisoners." she told the Alfred E. Stewart of the San Sacramento Prl'Ss ("lu b in re· Bernardino menrrs off'tce and ply to a question. Leo Jenkins, a aerviei! station Cars Derail Miss Fonda said LI was im- \\l\s Juo;t plain wroag. I'm ,J. aheru '" Air t''orce >.taJ fl . K fo"IHber of RJl.ncbo Cordov=; near &lcrammto. satd 11's W<'t'k thar Am~rl can "a.sst!rle<l our UtJ:st•:, In somebody els1"i. bos1nei..s'' b.\ bt:-ing in Vietnam. He al'>o said be did not 01~ pose amnt•sty for ti r ~ f t 1•\·a1ters -a position opnosill' 10 that tnkcn by mo~l or thto rt•h1rned ca11tivt~. 11Us.~ Fonda s~ud sht' lx·liev. (Id the plaru~d YISll (J( South \ 1etnamese Preside1'f, Nl{uyca \ un Thil'u lo JJl"t'sldint Nixon 111 Caltfon11a in ~·,•t"ral "'t~k~ \iolates the ee;i~e-hre agree· mcnl. This. she ~aid . Is because or a b.1n nn forei~n int ('rven!lon in the pol1tlcs nf VIC'ln;un :ind th;-fact that 'iixon dtd nol I'! vJte leader<.; of North \'ictn:11n or the-Viet rong l!J th!" W1 •-;\ern Whitt' JlnU!:il' at the saine 11nu•. employe. portanl that the prisonrrs are comin,i;: home . But. she said, SERVICES for Jenkins, on RIVERSIDE (AP) -An "we n1ust help take thl' focu s ANTI\\' AR groups plan :.in duty at the service station engine and 11 cars or 8 off our prisoners cun1ir1g all -nigh1 \igil at 11earb~· S.111 Where the Spree ended ISO Unkln Pacific freight train • a back" so Americans can Clcn1ente State l'ark tht' ru~ht W·-held Monday s•· rt' jwnped the tracks here . ._.., · u::wa s understand the war i'> not over of April 1 and to pi<·kel thl' ··rvtces were planned f r •A delaying traffic for a time "'" 0 w-until the Nixon tidrnini~tration \V"S\l'l'rl \\'hill' l111u ~· lhl.! d but causing no injuries, , ay . authorities said. is forced to li\c up tu the lollnwltHl d:iv. shl• s~•d Officials said Youngberg, Ail of the derailed cars cease-fire agreement l\1iss Fo11da 1s :_111 Acad1•n1y with a long prison record in were empty and a fire that Of the POWs. she said. •·1 A.,.,·an:!-win111n~ actrC'ss \vhn 1llinois, had fired at the erupted in one was quickly think that in time !hey. like nulrried another ant1"·ar n<'· highway patrolman who had extfngWshed after Mon-everyone else. Y:ill understand tivist. Tnm ll aydcn. last. stopped to offer aid. He had day's accident, in an in-what the war has been all month. The} are expecting a , noticed Youngberg's car was dustriai area north of about." l'hild. di!'labled on lnter.itate 15 north downtown Riverside. a Shl' said the Jndochin.i of San Bernardino, authorities railroad spokesman said. SllE SAID shi' heltevrd the Pl'al'e Campaign. or "hich she said. 'Ibe spokesman s al d heroes among the r('tuming is a IC'ader, wnuld tnlk in the The deputy was killed when cause of the derailment POWs ""'ere thoSf' ""·ho had next three years about the he responded to help the was Wlder investigation. the guts like Flesher 10 stand re\'olut1onary. beginnings o( • highway patrolman. up and say, 'It was wrong. It th(' United States in 1776. Youngberg, who was wound-'===:::•~~~~~ilii~iiiiii~~~~:.;;.iiii~~ii~~~~::__-ed by a r county supervisor! befo re he surrendered, was recove ring at a local hospital. AuthoriUes said the gun used in lhe shooting and the care were stolen last weekend in Las Vegas, Nev. Solon Urges Legislature Move to LA SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Legislature should pull up. stakes and move to the I.As Angeles Basin this fall to acquire some "face-to-face" knowhow about the aru's smog probl:em, a legislator said Monday. Assemblyman Jerry Lewis, a San Bernardino County Republican, introduced a resolution to that effect Mon- day, §'.aying: "Do we really have to wait until 50 people drop dead on the streets of Riverside Cowtty to realize that we must control this man- made plague?" According to L e w I s , breathing, living and working in the heart of California's smog belt for one month "will be long enough for legislators to realize that additional fund- ing for air pollution research and control should be the number one priority." Right now the state's annual air pollution damage figure is conservatively placed at $336 million, Lewis !'laid in a state- ment. OUR YEL LOW BR ICK ROAD TAKES YOU UP THE ESCALATOR TO ANNIVERSARY FUN MARCH IS.17 South Coast 'Plaza 1-~~~~~~~~~~- YOU ARE ALL INVITED TO A of Jack La Lanne's COMING ATTRACTION! NOW SERVING THE COSTA MESA / SANTA ANA COMMUNITY. The California Legislature ready" for the initiative cam- approved the amendment last paign he expects to lead this summer and it has now been summer in an effort to write a, -:::::::::;:;;;::;;:::::::;~;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;::;:::~;::;::~~r;;;;;--::'iJ-J ratified by 28 of the 38 states permanent ceiling on state! , :~~ ~~e~~t:tu~r~~-u_ •• _._,_:_ri_,~-~-i~n-ng ___ in_"'_t_h_._'_1_._•e_'°_n_·, Problems yOI) ·Qeler ~ l"-'~=c=-=-..Iltl'HE,/'IElOC.~HAf'i;;QE:cQMli(iA-; _ This elegant new contoured ladies watch by Omega is in 14 karat y&fiow gold with mo\ching br11<:&fot, $436. Man'• 14 karat yellow gold Omega bracelet watch, $6q5, oO Something Beautiful._ c:Mttt ~ .,.....,.. -AllllWkMI •• ,,,_ ..-...-"'"' ... "'"'" c:11.,.., .... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Slocb 1917 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH ;}644. t 380 Wltl -...io-.t: T""'91'1C». Or ..... , c.tTrlla, U H•lw• Allllt I.an D--.1· I.A V...._ I· • with the ·Ti.-... e· 0 -Tre-ad;.. -~. __,,.,,~Dig!ll; """""" ..,_thC)' nt•, ror .. ti•tl• u• ~ asSl2amonth. • • Oownrighl deflating! You·rc holding Trips to the market .•• "isits with your own in traffic and a tire goes limp. fri ends , •. c.Joctors' appointments .•. That's when those RTD ads come to they're all easy to reach, on the RTI>. riiind, bee: a use you DC\/Cf have to change Carry • timetable and you oem have a tire on the ~tnCar. Half a million to wait. daily riders know it's the dependable, So when you're wi1hout a car, don•t carefree wny to go ... 'frithout worries be a stay-at.home. Let youndi ao on of tires, traffic or parking.,. day a~d your E.xlraCar . Southern California f£Jtnarc'£) RAPID TRANSIT DISTRICT o -o I h . TAKE ADVANTAGE Of OUR SPECIAL PRE-OPENING PHASE #l OFFER. This is the total average cost if you enroll only on a course designed -indlvUl\l-Bll~ IQ! ~OU. -·--.- JACK LA LANIE'S l11uif""" HEALTH SPAS ' COSTA MBA /SANTA ANA ,.~ J611 IOVTM lllSTOL c.~._ ..... ,.,.._. ........ ....,,.. ... CALL NOW 919·4800 • • • DAD.V PILOT EDITORIAL PA_,E Who Should Decide? The Huntlnllon Beach CllY Coundl bu TOied to ban Iba o.-.ck raJe of Iba Loo Angeles rr.. ""'"" in !bat city on &fOW>ds lt constltutee a m..,... to the· moralJ ot minon, though it ii eold from racks in moat other Onnge County communlllM. · Loa of lb• Free Preis wtll bardl,y constitute a cul· !Ural &etbock for Eluntington Beocb. Those who enjoy ill oomewhat raunchy pages wtll lllilJ find it, along wllb even more colorful exampl .. of quasi-pornography, displayed on store counters -which are not Included In lhe ban -and thus available ror peroaal by minors or adults. Tbe oouncil move, however, does nJ.ae certain legal points. Strlctly apeaking, the decision as to wbal consti· ,tules obocene material should be a Jwllcial action, which rwasnot. , Another Loo Angeles underground publication, Tbe star, bas been removed from ~wrty vending machines by a court order, following complaints filed by lbe dia- tr!ct attorney's office. An appeal.of thiJ action iJJ•pend· ing, but It would seem to be follOwtng more formal con, cepts of "due process." than the arbitrary rulllle o( Hunt- ingtoo Beach councilmen. Monlity aside, the question telnalns: who &ball de- cide what the public bas a rigbt to read, and on what grounda? While action of thiJJ type at city council level iJJ lel(2lly doubtful, the real danger is tbat ii could be used effectively to silence publications lacking the financial means to challenge the ruJing in court. The Muddled Mails ' ·\.X Postmaster. General ·Erner T. Klassen~ allmitting that the reorganized U.S. Postal Service is a mess, has assured a Senate Post Office Committee hearing that "lmprovement3 within the next couple of yean will be { ~tial." TlliJJ iJJ smsll oomfort for victims of the reorganiz- allon that was suppoeed to ltrelml.lnt tba wboM • in( pootal operation and lllap ue: efficleDCJ lo & level componble With lhlt at prlnle •• Alm' 20 monlha of elpOllll'e to the new l)ltem. IDOll )JOI! office cwtomero would ..We tor a retiim to Iba olil ...., __ Klaaaen ~bed u "damned poor m-~I" tbe employii>enl 'frttie tllll1 wiped out eome 84,000 DOit office job!, lemng eome otfic9' overataffetl while ollien were obliged lo 'inslllllle mandat0'1'overtime of tip to 20 hours a week, wllh relllltlng deoiorallWlon of pootaJ help. . . It's nice to know llr .. :ia-n II awve ol the !.o- creasing volume of.poll(al "horror llforie&" and.8'en can U>a In a few of his own. · It woold bO more comforting to hear eome oon· cre(e plans for unsnarling lhll !nexcuuble muddle. Tbe only thing lhlt seeD1I ce!Uln right DOW II that SD a.cent stsmp will coot 20 centa by 1984 If everYtbln2 , .. just ftoe. If Dot, ii wtll.<X\ll.38 cents. Tbanka a fot. Poor Examp~e. Orange County's supervison f!nslly are getting the benefit of the $7 ,000 annual pay raise lhey voted them- selves last December. The increase showed In their lasi pay clleckB. The raise, of ~. bad to be approved by Ille federal Wage and Price Board and things. like thla take a little time. It was qui~ ·a bit higher than mbst wage 'increase ~quest. -40 ·perced~ instead of the:5:G per· cent prescr!bedt u suitable fo~ priwte lnd..try. Grant¢. the ~24,liQ(). tile supervisors now earn is not exor!Jjlanl. Ind~ the G~snd Jury and the.Orange County Chamber ot COD11Derce bad suggested an Increase the '32,273 level paid. municipal court Judges. Bui somehow it would have looked belier if the supervisors had seen fit to stretch the increase over, ~ say three years or so -just as a gesture in this time of troubled economics. • ''THIS ~MIN TEEPEE LEAKS.• Confusing Talent and Intelligence ;Dear Gloo_my Gus Not Just W~ 'l'hefl ,Bad in Mind .. Revenue . Plan Calls States' Bluff (SYDNEY J. llAltRI~ TaJeot aod intelligence are quite distioct from one another, and there £s no necessary relaUonship between the two. Tbls insight may not come as a abock to you, but It ts surprising how many people imagine otherwise. I WU reading a piece in Time , mqazlne DOt 1 o n g ago, about Neil • · Sime'• new Broad- \It, '"lllot Sull9hlne Boys." 1n a mock interview with the playwrlghl, tile --writer lnUmated that Si- mco. should and could 'try to do more than ~r come--di,., .• with his talem be could write a genuinely moving and meantng!ul play. Maybe if Postmaster General Klas- sen woold listen to the pleu of the every<lay mailman be might learn something. How do people expect first..clul service at such low-class salaries? Locally our ovm post.. maslers could care 1 ... about good management. I know, I work 1Dere. C. C. M. T1lff ....... ,....,. ,.....,.... ......... _., ... " .. =·· ·-· 14111111 ,_ -"9\19 ... .....,. 0... O.itr ....... waiting world; be is already in middJe age and in full Dower of success. and ha.1 not. y e t cmtrived to . utter a single dramatic statemen\ of ei:ceptional depth or resonance. Nor is there any reason why be sbouJd; a man with comic gifts should not be ashamed that God did not also give him philosophical profundity - he ls lucky enough as it is. But a certain kind of critic ls never contented with the natural limitations of talent; he demands that the creator be stretched on the esthetic Bed of Procrustes until he is distorted into something God did not mean him lo be - like the literary prig who looks down hJs nose at Dickens because hs is not Dos!oyevski. WASHING TON -For more years than can be remembered, the .detached observer at confereqces of the nation's governors bas listened to long, fervJd demands that Wasblqtoo's tyranny ~ ended by returning clmtrol · o f governmental programs to the states and the peo~ 1bis bas ·been the stock·in-trade of Republican and Democratic governors alike for all the decades s i n c e Washington became the power center and fount or funds for all kinds of proj· eel.I and programs once considered d local <r state-wide respoosibility. How often have t h e Rockefellers, Romneys, Wallaces, Deweys, Brtckers, and now a new gen· eraUon of governors, risen to declaim the merits of state responsibility? Well, now these orators are being in· vlted to claim the rights a n d responsibilities they so long demanded, and they do not Ute it one bit. 'lbe recent Winter meeting of the Na· tlonal Goveri>ors Conference ended in a chorus of moaning and groaning over Pl'esldent NlJ:oo's revenue-sharing plan. which has as its primary Jiurpoae reslor- tng to the states and localities the frttdoQl they lost wben the New Deal began tbese 40 years ago. SOME OF the governors UX>ught they had been tricked into supporting Nixon's revolutionary revenue-sharing i de a , although It is hard to see bow any of them ever got lhia notion if they took the trouble to read the staggering volume of prooe on the subject --Nlxoo bas transmitted to Congress. Few legislative proposals in history bave·ever been su~ ported by so many presidential words as the revenue-sharing concept. There was no doubt from the beginning that Nixon intended that the federal government get . out from under responsibility for running these programs. He did not intend that big no-strings-attached federa1 handouts to the states would come on top of ex· I.sting categorical grants so that tbe governors would receive big bonanzas to start new prograim of. their own or reduce taxes. SVQI reproaches, or accusaUoos, have always been leveled against frivolou! wrtters of talent. and In almool all cues lhef in· po1nu... and unjust. For • writer -Noel Coward, as an example - m.,-PoQeSS an Immense talent to en- • tertaiD UI, without in the sligtitest possessing enough Intellectual power to edUy us. NOT ONLY, by the way, ls there no neces8U7 relationship between talent and intelligence, there is hardly any between talent and genius. As someone bas said, if you have genius, you don't even need talent.· Balzac was an execrable writer, by. relined literary standards; but his native genius simply overran his technical deficiencies. Einstein, by all ac· counts, was a miserable arithmetician; all his computations had to be double- checked by someone else. HUI genius was above the mere talent for figuring. The Advertising Only 1 few artists in any a:eneration . are fortunlte enouall to have been en- dowed with the gilts ol talent and in- telliaeoce allk.e. Shaw was one-he. knew whaf was worth saying, and he knew how to express it admirably. But for every Shaw, a dozen dramaUsll with far richer talent.I have floundered in triviali- ty or pretentiousness for want of con- ceptual power•; TBERE IS no reason to believe that Simon bas 1nything worth saying to a People' we forever confusing one at· tribUle with another -like supposing that the talent fof malting money is related to in~lllgentt. W ASlllNGTON -CoonteNdvertlsing is something we bear about from time to time but haven't really seen much of since cigarette commercials were banned rrom broadcasting by act ot Congress. With the pro-and-con-cigarette com- mercials both off the air, the con- sumptioo ol coffm nails has ri88n, thereby tringlng in- to question the idea that the best way to beat an idea like D ' 1'tf B Who smoking is to su~ on t 1riarry a oy · •.• ~;.~i:-: . •• gr ... whisked cipr- 'Wbat kind of boy should a girlJnarry? [ HAL BOYLE ) · ette adverttstog oil That's easy. She should marry the kind tbe tube, the ad she can be reuonabty happy with -and agencies and the broadcasters made bit· whom lbe can keep reoooably happy. l<r 1._l ID retrooped, lldlgb, Jt •J> What kinds of boys ahould she no~ mar· pean that £bef tbemHlves would have ry? Well -loll and lots of kinds. Ba~jhe kicked cigarello out If keeplna them had should take particular care not to marry flrst enter their new home. meant they would also have to nm the ( VON HOFFMAN J reminding the public that millions of Olevvles had potenUally faulty eng_ine mounts and sbould have been brought in to the dealer tor installation of a free safety cable. ON AN01'11ER occasim, Public Com- municat.loo prepared an ad for tbe Medical Oxnmlttee on Human Rights telling people that the American Medical Associatlon bad fotlnd products like Ex- cedrin. Emplrln, Cope, Vanquish, and Bufferin to be "eltber irntJonaJ, not rec- ommended, or llnllOUDd." That one didn't aJr either, althougb television had no dil- ficulty with a Bayer ad that said virtually the same tbln1. Why wou1dn 't televiskln let a group of doctors give th1a: message without plug· IN SHORT, Nixon took the governors at their word because he did not think, either, that every sparrow which fell, every baby who was born, or every human who faltered, cquld appeal to Washington for succor. He meant revenue-sbfilng to take tbe place of direct federal funding'. And later he made that doubly clear by telling the states that if they wanted to continue certain anti-poverty programs he cut back they could do so from revenue-sharing funds. A good many governors apparently did not realize that this would be the case and that is .why they were avidly su~ portihg Nixon's revenue-sharing plan when Congress . showed little interest in it. So lt was· a· "snow job" to Pennsylvania's Governor Milton J. Shapp and a "cruel boax" to Georgia's Governor Jimmy Carter when the mo- ment of truth revealed they were not being permitted to tap a new source of federal funds, but would have to support existing programs from their share of the federal revenue. AS IT IS, some $30 billion is scheduled to go to the states, cities and towns in the next five years, and to assume that this money is to be freely given by a generous federal government shows a tender innocence of how Nixon operates. If Nixon's objectives are achieved, the revenue shares will not be a new bonanza but will go into existing programs of school aid, housing, job training, social services, public-service jobs, rural im- provement, water pollution and public works. Then Washington can get out from under, at least in partial degree, the impossible task of ordering programs in 50 different states, and the prayers or those who tremble at the gates of an all- powerful central government will be answered. f • PROBABLY it will never work out. Congress was already suspicious of the numerous special revenue-sharing plans which Nixon submitted, and now the quahns of the governors will heighten the opposition. Events also have taken ll11 ironic tum. A few years ago it was concluded that Washington was the powerful engine which could generate the revenues the stares needed but could not produce . Now it develops that some of the states are amassing surpluses while Washington wallows in continuing deficits on a smothering scale. How odd it would be If some of the states were now to be asked to share their revenue with the federal government. Credibility Gap ging a product? The answer to that came at a Federal Cbmmunications Commis- sion hearing last March when John B. Summers, general counsel for the Nation- al Association of Broadcasters, explained that "The physicians, because of the position they occupy, have much more credibility with Ille public. The e!fect upon advertisJng is more disastrous." It could work just the .other way. Counter-advertising could re s t or e credibility to both the medium and the advertising industry. M it is now, more and more millions of us are coming to believe that they're all a pack of liars, con artists, and loUd-moutbed deceivers. COVNTER-.dvertising could g!Ye peo- ple a new respect for a medium that en- courages and makes statements that fly in the face of its apparent financial in- terest. Counter-advertising also could police the content rJ. the commercials. Ad agencies would be more careful of their cliert\.'(,. good names if they knew their tricks ~re likely to be refuted by a series of well-produced, effective com- mercials following on the heels of their own. ·~r we-grt. some of this stuff on the air, it's an argument for diminished Federal Trade CommJssion regulation," says Tr icy Weslen, Public Communication's db ~tor. "U you don't prohibit a really open market of ideas. you don't have to regulate." Thus ...counter-commercials could ac· tually n'i'a.ke broadcasting a more believable and effective advertising meditlm whili: at the same time saving its sponsors millions of dollars in lega1 fees for fighting off consumer groups .and government regulatory bodie3. A simple idea but too much for industries dominated by CPAs. the kind of boy who -' Woo'! launder her stocklnp H she coonter-adverttsing. Broadcasting gets 1'blnU he has a perfect right to snap breaks her ann. alarmed if controversy JI let out of. the her garter hall an II jealous even of her girl lrlends. format ol the news show or such di&lnal boor a! he buyw BLOWS cigar smoke rtngs Jn her race programS as Meet the Press, but ,...1s it her a f ateal<. to show he's annoyed with her. ·onl)' as II •WOOlll and lollo in aetup quea- ·Mom, Pop and. Wall St. INSTEAD Public Communication is just -aboUt oot of the counter-commercial business for want of money. 1brougb the, help of donated labor, Westen can make a couple of dozen radio spot.I and four or five TV ~ and distribute them to hun- dreds 11,Jld h\mdreds of statiOOJ an>Wl<I tbe country for what it costs hls op- ponents to eboot one commercial, but the foundations won't kick in. ls wi to prom· Thinks. a woman IooU oul'vl p!ace ex· tiona.. WASHINGTON -Despite a booming i.te ht!' 1nythlng, but · cept In the kitchen or the bedroom. ~TROUGH you've probably never economy and a more stable dollar, the eao't wrlte. htr a Never puts h1s aJ1llS ..round her or -. ~. counter--commereials eootinue atock market ts tumbling. The biggest 1ove Jetter that at kl.saes the back of her neck whlle sbe ii to be made. Tbey, and tho non-profit out· reason, among many, l.5 that I.he small in· 1-oounds llncere. OQOl:l!ig. flt. <alled Public Commun!calloll, Inc.. vestors bave lost faith in Wall Street. lnsiata on lool<Jn& i::an•t wall at • coclttall part1 to tell -.lllch malceo them, get mtteo about This bss atirred the Damboyant flnan- ln • v. r y c!poet •ftrl'body she's now we&rl~ • larger· rlom tJule lo time, bUt --are they cler, -Perot, to the mrue. ile iJ before be 1,..., ber me ginll<. aired. ft ... not tbal the networb or your preparing to launcb apartmeal -just lo be sure lbe 11111 h too prissy to go slclnny dipping with local TV ststioo don1 ha .. the Ume. a million-dollar cam- llldlng • rival there. be< wben 11\ty're alone on an empty Wblle they'll relule to broadcast •• ~·Jpa~lgn~~~sa~ve~:w~all~.--,/.== Donn'! keep bet Jlhoto In his wallet. so beadt during a vacation. 1"ii!"~""""f. ~ even If ~'.lll pj;, ~~-i. ...... rt·...,.,Jt-lo...i.w..u.U....::. "'·"""-llltM 'f>iiii•inm no i'fglitio-lllililfy,'"~oUrC!Oiln. "Mom aod pop 10 oo P.ne trtpo. because they -only for the mole campy Jerk. Smokey the Bear. on the air .-.n't coming to Never wanll. to 10 on • otroll with ber politician with the pn>tliest race. and tbto atlcil their chests out and their Woll -, • y under a full moon. tbumbs In the annbOles ti their vest& more," Perot told us 'lief.-lo 11cJtt the candles il 1be RUSHES out to buy a .. ., toothbruoh If and claim they've cornrnJll<d a public during 1 visit to .... thlnb it would be romanlJc for tbt'm to the u.sea bl! by mistAke. terYice. offices. .. ~ t'm d!M by candl<llftl Holds the lamlly umbrella moatly over -.11 broadout ads remind'•• ..... 10 ....... Wall ~-to --·-· Jt110mnl• b• reading h' -· ~ ·r they ha to 1 ,._ •• ..,, even •• •-.. -·• ,,.~ ........ .-" 1m , .-ata , 1 ve go out n w111 )IOlJ to use your tip code u though that Street to them.'' loff -lie hit bpi from earllu 1trl rain. fir anytblng .i.. woold gel the mall Perot 1-to ac«>mplllh this with a friends. .IJrotm•t mind at all if she maktt more dtllvertd. They'll cooperate wttb the massive inedla campilgn lhllt W'lll II pemctlJI willing to buy W ehsm· on ber Job than he 1loes on hb -Americon C.ocer Society'• terror cam-Include hornlllta on the do't and don'ta J>llllMI on the fin& nlglll of the honey· particularly if lbe apendt the money on paign to frighten wtneeded milli.., ot1t ol of playtiii the atoct market. ·Re ha• .-, but not on the .-..I nlihL blm. I Ille public. but It was no soap When bypa~ lfadlson Av"'ue and authored Clfrlu bl• old pet dot -Jnat.ad or Want! her to bocome the aecood Publlc l»mmunlcallon, JJtc. did a uim-the rorlh<oatlnC' newspaper •ppeals bor .--the Unlltold whftl Ibey mother of his llfe. m<rdal for Ralph Nader'1 r hlmoelr. He hope< b~ campaign will persuade "the little l'IY'' to invest in duPont Glore Forgan, the · prestigious securities finn '-.ldL_!Jl:lllLI' "iDd" ieOOilt -t With iolDS jotalling nearly l80 mlllioo. He now exerciser ao much control that he penooally hires each new member of the 1,500-man finn. THE BANTAM·WEIGHT billionaire - pr<tnlsJn& "straigbt talk and no t.ill" - will stras conservaUve buying on Wall Street. "This b no a:lmmlck." he swean. "The little guy ls our lnstllulion. He has betn teared away from Wall Street becauae It hos forgotten ho" to protect the original money tovesl<d. We'rt goln& to chana• 111 that. Wall Sln!et won't ev"° be Ille ssme 111•~·" ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vttd, Publi1htr ~"l\'ii.'Mt; !'CiiIO'i"- Barbara Krt ibicA Ediloria! Page Editor Til<' t'dltoMAI I""):<' or tht Dally Pik,t ~kJ. to inform and 1Umu- l11tf' tt•den by r~ntins; thf~ rw-w1pap('r'1 opinions and com· mrnta.I") un 1ooie1 of lntcn:st 11nd ~lrnlrlainct'. by JK'O"ldina: a forum ~ t~ Mep1'8Ston of our rca~ tiplnlOM. and by !)rt!M'ntlni: tht• dl\'f'f1t vlf'wi,nlnts nt lnfortnt!d ob. !lf't'Vt't'$ ind 1poki:$mcn on tuples ur the dQ' • Tu.esdly, March 13, 11173 - • ' . ' '· •• \ . ' . • • . . ' . '' ···. ,, ! ''O' -I"#' . ' ' . . " tt ., • . ' "' '"• ... • T......,, M.,.,, ll, 1973 DAILY I'll.fl f • • • .. Honestly! Why should you have to put up with a cigarette that lets " " - I you down? That tastes scratchy ... or cottoily ... or harsh! Think about it. Wouldn't it be worth consider- ing a switch to Salem? Our Natural Menthol Blend comes on fre~h ... stays fresh ... to the last refreshing puff. We insist on using only natural menthol, not the kind made in laboratories. Since our tobaccos are naturally grown, it's ·only natural ourmenthol sho.uld be, too. It is this blend of naturally grown ingredients that turns the taste of coolness into a taste thats "naturally refreshing'.' A taste thats not scratchy or hacsln. A taste that refreshes like Springtime ... everytime yt. I •.. an 1me. · I . ! Salem's Natural Menthol Blend I . ·-•• .. •-.. -.t. L. . ... M :~-.. -·--""~.means ... natur~rJeSn1ng--,Jost, .. ·-~~~ Warning: The . Surgeon Geneial Has Oeterminelf That Cigarette Smoking Is Dange rous to Your Health. J I ... • • l 1 . ~ --·· KING, SUPER KING, 10 mg. "ta(.1.4 m~ nicoti!l~ av. par cip areua. FTC Re;lott AUG. 12. . ' • ' i .. , . ' -.. Oolll.Y"10f .,.....,, Madi u .. 1'7J For the· Record Births Dissolutions Of Marriage Demll Notices ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCUFF MORTUARY U1 E. 17th SI .. Costa Mesa -BALT'l-BfRGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673-t.f5' Costa I\fesa 64 .. ~ • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY UO Broadway, Costa Mesa U~l!I • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1715 Laguna Canyon Rd. Qt.ttl5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemettty Mol'Ulary Clltptl 3$IO PlclOc View Drive Newpor1-11ea<•.-cou1o- '"4IGO • PEER FAMILY COLONIAL F'IJNERAL HOME 'l!tl llolu AV<. Wettmlntlerm.ml • SMITllS' MORTUARY lfl-5L BulJIP!o-·- Suspected Gunman Set For Trial SANTA ANA -One of two men booked on armed robbery charges after $4,500 was taken at gunpoint from a San Clemente market \ has-been ordered lo lace )rial April 9 in Orange Coonty Superior Court. Judge James Turner set the trial date for RaJph James Whittaker, SB, Rosemead , denied ball aod orde1'CI hint returned to the coortroom Marcb 16 for a pretriaJ session. Whittaker was arrested in an Anaheim motel room six months after the Alpha Beta market in San Clemente was held up by two men. Guy Joseph Ouchi, 37, Milpitas, is serving a state prison term or up to fiye years for bis role in the robbery. Burglary charges f i I e d against Whittaker I connection with a breakln at a Westminster bowling alley Del. 15, 1971 will be pressed during the same April 9 trial. Motorcyclist Sues Citv • Talk Tonight On Diabetes OAA!l(ll -Th,ee ..i.u.i. In the field will disct.111 "Diabetes" at 7:00 tooigbl . at. the SL Josq>h llospltal's Town HaU ror Health . Ors. John R. Evans. John D. Ball and Joseph Tirioo will be on the panel al the public mooting scheduled for the auditorium <:1' Mar)'TtlOU.nt College, Balavla and La Vela strecta, Orange. All three physicians will answer quosUons from the au- dience In Ille final phltoo of ll!e 90-mlnute ll!lnioo-. € .... ,, Dec!tfJn' ~-... ' New Health Plan Proposed 11'1 J01111 uun potle!lt .,,..1W ·111 the ~ ·11111i--....... gram. A -af °"-OldolY plo)'lidw ..... ...,....i • W'tlll 1111• .....,, the physi· prepaid bealtb care p-ograrn ciaos would ha'le lo provkle aimed 1t nnWnc JO.oeo compl& nwdical care -m-. ptnOlll in U. llnl ,..,-ci cllldlns '11eeylhing lnlm majcr operatloa. ......,, lo •f< glasses -!or If approved by tbe -all palleoll mn>lled. Deportment af Health Catt No ---........ Services, tbe ....,... ..... little --by the bqln drawing penoos oil Ille ~ the -lee per CUlTelll Orange County Medi-• politnl watld oat Ylll'J l1om a cal rolls lllis May. prean-aneed coolnlcl. 8 y Ulllmately, tbe pttpoid pion -..... -· llie .... could entirtly replace the cur· b'act mmt contain terms that rent Mecli-Otl program. represent an overall s:avlnp of The physicians, orpnU.ed at '"311 10 percent lo the tbrou&h the Foundation for sat<. Medj<al Catt in Onqo Coon-The tbeory is tbal. the pro- ty, woold be poid a Oat gram dlr<ctDrs will have an montbly ,.. for each Medi-Cal incmUw lo provide good ORANGE COllfJl Attorney Gets Delay oll Trial SANTA ANA -N....,.rt Beach attorney Everett Eklon Slone' bas be<n grantal a further delay ci his Orange C.Unly Superior Court Jrial m charges of bribing a witness aod solidting perjury. Presiding Jodgt 8.-Sum- ner ordered the lawyer to return May 14 for trial. Be is free on bis promise to appear. Stone, 41. is appealing a Santa Ana Judicial District court convictioo on lewd con. duct charges filed by a poli<e offacer who testified be was propositioned bl! the lawyer iD the -.-..m ol'a public patL Stooc .... lound guilly. fined $500 and placed ... probation. Cuts Citecl LOS ANGELES (AP) Billy G. Mills. City Council president pro tern. says coun- cil-Ordered cutbacks in print- ing will save $250.000 a year. The cowx::il called a ah~ to printing DOD-e!Sential mater· aod tile prtnting aod circul<b lim of routine ilemL- prevtntaUve medleaf ~·to. roreaiau later major medical wort. In addition. it II hoped that the prepaid program woo.Id eliminate Inflated doc> tor ,._ for the curr"'11 Medi- Cal -am. Al .it DOW operttt-ts, Medi.cat pollea)I llO lo the doctor of tbtir cbo&ce and t e c e 1 t e Whatever aervlce they need. n.. doctor lh<n bill! tho slate for charges. Under . the prepaid plan, a grc:up of. physicians woo~.~ cept oolleclive respons1bil1ty for all Medi-Cal patients under their care. There would be no central cllnic for serviceS under the pre-peld program propoeed 10< But the Grand Jury later ill- oficted hint lor perjury, wbrn it was learned that he alleged- ly offered a witness $1.000 to offer false testimooy in the municipal court trial. Jane Fonda, Russo Talk IS IT TRUE THAT I DO NOT HAVE TO FILE A FEDERAL IN. COME TAX RETURN FOR MY SON WHO WAS KILLED IN VIETNAM? In Fullerto1i OOUllMSTS w --s..taN ....... c-s _ ........... ............. ~ ~ ... ..--. C8ASJ SUPER MARKET 673-3510 3347 E.COAST HW't ORONA on by EUGENE 0. BERGERON •s COUPON THlf c;ol/PON GOOD FOR A 11.-0 DISCOUllf 0. ..... -'1 (orpef llto• d-e4 "'- ,.., .... ii ,...,., .. ,.., •I ''"'• ef l'.Me1t< '"9-u.;, -,_ ,, .. ,,_.,. u.,, 11J1 1n FUUITURE SPKIAU Fifi HYDRA GUARD With furniture cleaning order. Exp. 3/31/73 540·6011 1740 SUPERIOR AVE. Newport & 17111 St., Co•to Mose I Free Estimates ) "Wt TAKE THE ~ DIRT WITH US" fSTAIUSHED 1925 .1m!J ~AA•AAA•AAAAAA4A•4A~ .. ( in the l1Mlijijll1ij ,_ ' ...... ,,,..., ' • ~£S STA .. o " .. ROlll"RT P LEEN LOIS -WM£RE -"' Md)i>WELI-tt4!f,. ~~LL lt." OR -·· -----·J,1'7:) .......J, •f .-..... -·--~· ~T .IS FU -~"" ........... •.,"'"'1-1*" if\ bt-. c ... ""' d11e .el tor- 01ted: " cu , MAIUC A. SIOlte 'M' Tiii _,_ .__. ~ -·--,........,,, .. . -"" p I I I· >-.. Joint Council Urged By McDonnell Chief "1'11.\T I 8 D e e d e d." McDoonell llld, '.'ii a specmc mercb&nllni I« m e s b i n g reduced delenae R a. D doUars with -ol lhe ""l"ir•menlS ol lhe d'flllan .. IJllenl." McDonoell Aid that the propooed federOJ CQUDCil WOUid adjust l*'loritlts and arninge fWldlng. "Tbe general principle of double duty d<lense dollars bas been ,_nlzed by the U.S. congress," he said. "In apptoyin( the request for the advanced medium Sl'OL trall@Ort 11"8f•m. the Senate Armed Services C<>m· mlttee said ttlat it strongly urgea~a program wblch COO· aiders potential application to commerclal transport use. PedonDance lt081a which are unique but ool essential to a military appllcatlon should be avoided." REFERRING TO proposals from other sources t o subsidlr.e U.S. civilian aircraft development, McDonnell said that "through the double duty defense dollars. pr o g r a m , You er• c.ordielly invit.d to an INVESTMENT SEMINAR V/EDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1973 7:00 P.M. SAODLEBACK INN Tr1buco "C" 1660 E. FIRST ST. 1.tfS-.._Pt....,I SANTA ANA This pro9r•m will co"er Reel Estate e T •x writ• offs e T •x Shelter•d income e Equity build up e Appr•c:i•tion RESERVATIONS ONLY-PHONE (714) 547-5941 Refr•1hm•nts will b• Served Sponsored By M. P. KRUSE & COMPANY, INC. MEIMIER PACl,tC COAST STOCK IEXCMANGa ..,_ CJrallr Wiii .. Diltrtllul'9d At Tlllt SendlMr YOURS l minor adjustmenLs could be made in the S20 to $2$ billion deferuse budget that would have greater impact than direct subsidies to manufac· turers in the range of a few hundred million dollars." Fountain Valley resident Floyd Bryant has been .named marketing manager for the control prod- ucts 1narket- ing depart- ment of Bab- cock Elec· tronies. Bryant joined Bab- cock in 1964 and served as Western A assignment. Previ~y he was associated with RCA and Communication Products Co. * Avco FlnanclaJ Services has named six Orange Coast ex- ecutives to the position of assislant vice president. The promotions. announced by the Newport Beach-based consumer finance company's president H. Wallace Mer- ryman, include: \\'aJttt R. Scott, of Newport Beach: Frank Rhodes, Corona de\ Mar; Ronald Bukow , Walter L. CUbbln and Richard Tinlin, all of Mission Viejo and Charles E. Coooa of Irvine. * -Robert 8. Kcn1bte has been ap\)Qinted corporate group vice president or personnel at Dart Industries lnc. He joinl.'d the company in SEVEN ADVANTAGES OUll PAGER OFFERS FINANCE • DAILY PllOT 9 OVER THE COUNTER . ·-------------------- U11 «1.0 ~i i~ VI\ 1•.a Uo 11.J ~ :~:: U• ll..S U• llJ I::: ,,_, ~ ~~ V• t.I "' u U• I.I v. '·' Uo LI V• 1..S Up l .J "' ,, U• l.l LOCAL .EDITORIALS The DAILY PILOT Quite O~en­ Fights City Hall • I Je DAILY P'ILOT $ Ttple•f 1'•1•• Does Advertising When Create Tastes? 1t1 .IOllN CUNNll'F ... __ NEW YORK -Whether adverti.lllng and marbling c:reate ~s or merely ttOect um. U..t •lilt II 1 mool point tbai probably never can be re801ved io a slmplt anner. Bui there IJ no qUffllon whatever that advtrtlllng is ffnsltlve to values and tastes, that adftrljsen are among the abarper obWVers of 60Cial cblnge, lfld that In tearch of succe.u Ibey exploit their fiJld. inp. Ir YOO CAN recall some of the adJ seen in the past few years, )'OU most likely will be able to disCover these un... derlyln:g assumptions: The emergenct of t h e largest middle class in history, with "typical'' middle-class values, including a com· mitment to familism, or the borne, children and clear sex roles. A belief in upward mobility, or the American dream of success. A commitment to t be Puritan or Protestant ethic as the means to acbleve mobility: confonnity, the work ethic, focus on the future aod the virtue of sell-d~ial. Responding lo I h I s in- terpretation, advertisen made inarrlage and the family a major focllS and goal, as- sumed lbat personal deni-1 for the salre of the family was correct and made togetherness an ideal. This, In part, is the analysis presented to a recent meeting of the Association of National Advertisers by Florence Skel- ly, eiecutive vice president of Daniel Yankelovlcb, Inc., a marketing and o p 1 n i o n research firm . BIJT NOW, SAID Mlsi Skelly, whose company con- dUct.s an ongoing stu,dy of .social change, a new climate may be emerging that even- tually will bring into question aome uaumptiOns made by lbe ad people. AHbougb none of t b e dllnaes .,. 11 yet unlvenal, lbc aid. some t.endenelet in vaJu., and Ill• styler llrtady are subslanUal and JfOWinC. Among them : A c:Mnge in the n1ture of famlllsm. marked by female caretrlam, a blurring of the sexu, a challenge to tht trad!Uonal linkaj:e between m""ullnlty and being • good provider and a new attitude about eblldttn. A signllleant ahlft In what constitutes success and bow one signals these acblevementa: to others. Status symbols are changing. More people Will be coneerned with life quality rather -than economlc condJtion alone. A NEW CUMATE of pessimism about the American dream in general, although not necessarily about one's per90nal chances for happiness. There is slreptlcism about business as an fn. sUtution, for example. .A!J a result, Miss Skelly con- cludes that admen probably can rely less on their intuitive sense of bow America lives and wba't ls important. Some assumptions must be ex· am.i.ned "case by' case, brand by brand," she said. Among them: Women want to get a bus.- band and then be Super homemakers, wives a n d mothers. People want to setUe down, establish roots. Su p e r i o r performance ulUmately ls the most com- pelling support for a product irrespeCUve of other factors. Visible displays of climbing the ladder to SUcteSS are im· portant purchase motives. FEAR OF criticism by others is a powerful purchase motive. Looking over the list one wonders: Is it possible that people are rebelling against some of the assumptions made by advertisers seeking to sell them goods? Should that . be the case the question is answered -advert1sing does create tastes. C"Ontmercml Bankers Give Broker Service NEW YORK (AP) -ff you are one of the estranged small invesfon who Oed t,be mRrket in the pest few years because ol poor service from your broker, or no service at all, there is still a Place for you to ljoly and sell. wqere? At the teller's wln- do.., of many commercial banl<s. The banks don't pobliciz.e the service, and some bankers are e v e n unaware of the activity under their roofs. But many in- vestors regu!Jirly buy and sell lhat way. A SAMPIJNG of banks around lhe country indicates lhlt most ol those dealing In atocks do IO •s a convenience. To some of the banks, U is a nuSiance they'd as soon not bave to deill-wllh, but Ibey tn· lend to continue. One reuon is that many commercial banks are com- mitted to fall«rVice or ~ slop banking In w h I c h customers are told their finaJl.. cial needs can be handled under one roof. Another is that, in some areas, the nearest broker may be a considerable distance away, at least for a personal visit. While. the bankers don't offer research and advice, the personal relationship appears to be an attraction. In addition 'to the regular broker's oommisslon, most banks charge a fee ranging from $2 to ~. regardless ol the size of the tramacUon. MANY BANKERS recoil in shock at lhe nollon lbat they might be-competing with broken, who also might be big customers of the bank. They emphasize that, like any other trader, they must channel tbe-ir-o·rders through brokerage houses. SUll, with security regula- tions subject to c h a n g e , espepially regarding in· stltutional membership on ex- chang·es,. lt isn't inconceivable that banks some day could ~evelop an active business In stocks, offering as attractions a vast number of outlets and superior record-keeping. Man1 brokers are far more willing to accept small orden now that they were two or three years ago when they were emerging Crom a fman· cial crisis. There are over 300 highly 1ldUed automo.ive technicians ready to give your car factory recommend· eel wrvlce ot1 Cotta Mesa's Har· bor lolllevard of Cars. a Family Needs a Friend ... • Sylvia Porter company dinners? 09 you find yourself slighting your family's nutritional needs in order to meet financial needs? You can find help with these and many other problems of family finances in Sylvia Porter's column several times weekly in the financial pages of the DAILY PILOT. Yes, Sylvia Porter can be 11 friend of YOUR family. Her nationally syndicated column, "Money's Worth," features im- portant ideas which can relieve your concern over' monetary matters. F~r ex- ample, she will tell you how to save 11 considerable percentage of your gro- cery dollar despite spiraling food costs. Let 11 friend drop in umn and all the other special features the financial pages of the THE ONE THAT MEANS BUSINESS • ·coMPLEfE NEW YORK STOCK UST • 1:1,, J~: r.} ~1~ ~r .:L ••• .. ~~~ I . r ' ·-·. .... :::-~:: . ., " .. - ,: ·. p . • .Monday:s Closing Pri~mplete New York Stock Exchange List " . ~: Stocks Unaff eeted l~ By 'Float~' Pact I •· . .. ' .1, l f ' ...:=-......... ""'--.-.-.--,=-.:-.-.---, ' 197) s DAILY PILaT ' Security Pacific NatlonJ1 Bank has received permission from the Comptroller or Cur· renc.y to estabUsh three oew branches, one each lo Los Angeles. Orange aod San Diego Counties. A branch is planned Jn Southern Orange COUnty near the lnteneclion af Pacific Coast Highway and Selva Drive in Niguel Shores and for thu construction ol another branch in Carlsbad. In L<ls • ngeJes, the bank plan,., to c~truct a branch In lb! City of Industry. Ne,vcastle's Illness Cuts Egg Output Capitol Newt Service RJVERSIDE In I 8 months, more than l O Y:i. milhon laying hens have been destroyed in California in the continuing effort to era dicate the fatal bird virus VVND, or Newcastle Disease. According to Donald Belt of UC's Agricultural Extension Service 1n Riverside County, "The loss of birds ... (Is) only the tip of the Iceberg as far aa the economic effects ol. the disease e1re concerned. The Southern California egg in- dustry includes some 400 farms. \Ve've had to depopulate 157 of these ... 956 flocks have been (lcstroyed since Novijr, 19'71." Such de lation bas put many of t fann!I out of business for slx. to 10 months. J ' • T.....,, -IJ, 1971 J,. ...... Worst rfippers Are Mi]lionaires A """11 roq~ the -cal •venoce of the Qlpe ~ of ... the.Mias America -. Approxi- mately 3&-24-36. •. DID I TELL YOU a -m bas SO-! •. ,WHAT GROCERY il<ms are the lady .._n ID Ille ~ likely to complain about the 'lllOlll! 'Ille let· ''""'• the le'1uce ..• THAT MONl'll in wtlltji the lewell people die in all kinds of occid<nts ts Febiary. • .AN- OTHER THREE WORDS undentood in virtuolly every langwlge in the world 8(0 bus, jWC. and-· ' • QUEENll I .... A STUDEHI' ol far eastern femi· nlnily •ya the moot pronounced pecu- )lartty .... Japonese girls Is ft\elr tendency to moot admire older mttl. '.l1>e USWll young lady in. ~. i,. says, is not at all emborrassod u. her gentleman ltiend is al 1eat 21 ytan Ok119 t-~ ..... ,,,,...,..w ,....---. her senior, but~ proud ol lhal, ln fact. HAQ ll'IPPEJIS· -aocmu.g to a beodwaitor of l<:11gthy expert~. the wont li)>Pen, in order, are rpllllonairea, baseball player&,· muslclans, college men, 'J)C)Uticians and TVcel<l>rillee. "' "Er ... under 'Experience' can.you be a litUe more ·•specific than just 'Oh, boy'?1' SHORTEST WORD conlalning the lint nine letters of tho English alphabet Is "bright-laced." Will you accept a bypi>enated word! Shortest two wordll cootain!ng the first &ix letters are ''tJOldface" and "feedback," I think. ASPIRIN TENDS, to reduce lever. Calfe!ne lerldo to heighten it. 'lbat's why you ought not tal:e aspirin with CXlffee or tea. So advise 9Cbolars at the University ci. Loo- doo's Sdlool of Pharmacy. · Gila Bend Judge- 'Just Doing Duty' WHAT'S CHARM? Debate continues over the nature <1 that thing caUed OOarm. .. It's a sort of a bloom oo e WOllWL," said Maggie, one ol Sir " James BaJTie's char· aolerl. "U you have k, you don' need to have anything else; and if you don't have it, doesn't much matter what ebe you have. SOme women, though few, have charm for all; and lllOsi have dlann for ooe. But some have dwm for none." OJr IDie and War man feels that brief ...,.Yoo the matter to be lairiynilty. Q. "BOW OFTEN does the Jlfanet V eous come close enough to earth ICo cast a !hadow as the evening star?'' A. About every yer and a hall. . Q, "DID YOU SAY the average lioo lives about 70 years?" A. No, that's the average Rotarian. 'l1le average Uon Hves about 10 years. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Bo:t 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. I ANTHONY SCHOOLS HAllOI CINTD 2* MMWr c.t• CatL-M~C~~~i. "' t1'4l ""4m 11t7 l. •NMl!wst SI. AMM!m. C.l '*' 3 Full S.rvlco LocatiOns in Huntington Beach PRESCRIPTIONS ., ....... ~·~ Ul•l"lffllr1:~1 .--t&bs1 . • • t"'- t11 ,. ..... •.• .. ••• ,....., M.i....,.. M•"'9W .. MM6ll I v ·~ a HQ!in-,.,.... ... 1714) 7744100 ~!"1111 ~1!!!"1111~~~~"':.I A Heritage of Beauty .. CURIO TABLE _ - l I I ,, i I ----·-- Glass.top, wood & glass sides, Curio bottom lined with black S6· 995 velour. Ant. fruitwood finish. only 20" di•met1r, 22" high . 1865 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 548-5131 OPIN DAILY' to 5:31 PllDAT' t9 t CLOSID SUNDAY 'llfll fof) b to see that the fury hm all questions ·ans..,ered.' The judge's order that Miss MUes and actor Burt Reynold! must appear at an inquest brought criticism f r o m Phoenll: attorney John Flynn who maintained that such testimony could serve no useful purpose and could only annoy and harass the lri~ ....... FLYNN FURTHER sug· gested thal-Winsor might be leeking publicity by forcing ·the Stars, currently. $ooUng scenes for the picture · "The Man Who L<>ved Cat Dancing" · in southern Utah, to return. 'Ille actors were tlrm Ing scenes near here w b e n Whiting died. "It is unfortunate the in· quest bas been so proiooged, I believe Milet and Reynolds were botb _perfectly willing to amwer questions until MGM lawyers a d v i s e d them ··-~--" o"~·~· THE FEB. %1 inquest was baited when Whiting's mother, Mn. Louise Campbell, ob- tained a court order. She argued the stars should be forced to appear at the hear- ing. A cour.t order earlier blocked their appeanince. A Maricopa COunty Superior Court judge ruled last week that Winsor did not abuse his discretion ln calling the stars to testlry. "'PM NOT trying to em- barrass anyone ," said \fmsor. "My Job b to 9"e that the . JUI')/ Troy Horse Remade ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -A 25--foot-high reproduc- tion of the wooden horse of Troy will be bullt oulslde the Tro,y ruins I n northweatem Turkey, the government C u I t u r a I Department annot.1nced. "So Good ••• It WUI Haunt You TU lc.t Gou.tt Spfrol Sliced 'WJaole or Bait I SMOICIY ... ::•CIAL .. THI .... I CHEDDAR ................ •t•• ..... • RaadT to s.n. with Hon.y '• Spic• Glau e Spiro Sllcod From Top to Bottom • We Pecka,. and Ship from co.st to CNlt • Full S.rvlc. DollcolOIHn • lfllporiod ChffMI and Wino• • Cotorlnt • -·A Sp..:lallty J7N LC.-H.....,., C..... .. M•-•7J.tOlt 1 ........... """'' ............ 1211 S. lr..U"•· An .. rl• Ul-1461 ' • • FTC Sitys .ASpirin Finns Should Air Confessions lloyef It more elfdH la< rellel of mlnor poln' !ban uplrin, Ind ll)at Anocln Is more-ellectl•" for pall) relief than iUln allj)lrfn.' · "1ievea pain -than aspirin; It hal not · been tllablilhad that Bulferio, will cauae gastric dl9comfor£ leal frequently than aspirin; an<! lhat Bufferin wW not relie~ cuum ... ~-.. , -'"-L W N (UPI). - 1111 f'e4oral ~ Con>- mllol"9 -lends ..... of lbt i,tdlI\11 aptrin product. -ln- cJudlna Bufferln, • .B a y e r, Anacin and Escedfln -. have been· uaing false a n d mlsleadlq adverilsing and aliollld begin running counter-oom.-lals to con1 ... their mistakes. · THE JTC ~ that no nervous tension, irritability or advertiaiementa ' for the pro-enable penoos to cope with duels be allowed for two ye 11n the ordinary slre8ies of life." un1ea 1$ percent ol all .,.,,.,., l!lieedrln -"It has not.been mercia!1, In · "11 advertising estab!llbecl ihat Excedrin .ts~==;::!=====~\ media, be devoted excluaively more e!fective for the relief otlr to coolesskm thijt previoua IDinM pain than aspiria or any ad~ wu W!'OllC and other llOll)Jl'l!ICl'iplioo internal 1""' it wu ~ ' ahalgeslcs ; and that t:J<cedrin 'The FTC has ordered cor-wW oot relieve. ner.~ous reclive advtrtis!ng" 111 ,..erol -· anxiety irritability .or other cue., 80me ot "'1tch are enable persons to cope with still ti~ up In adJudlc\"tlon. IM ~!nary stresses of every- KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT ·'Ille F'l'C'1 fomllll complaint Mondv was somewhat weaker thin the cme It pro- ~ noarly a ytaf ago, In that .the final Yei:sJOD \ oJfen the aspirin maken• a possible way out. TREY WOULD not have to run the counte~lals II they could provide ·the Fl'C "1th a survey showlni_ the buying J?Ublic no longer beHev· ed their previous "ad\7i!rtlsing claims. : Bui ooe officlai '8id the. day life." _______ __I'::::=:=:==:=:=:=::=: a~ .case m8rk1 the fir.st time' the llUl'Vey -~ bas l)een. ~ u a way o1 lelieY!ng the eoii>panjes In- volved .ot .thtlr , corrictiy:e advertising responsibilities. ·But the survey wouta have HERE ARE c o r r e c t i v e to be conducted under FTC st.8temenls proposed by the supervision. Fl'C for each of the 'products: The three major drug com· Bufferla -"It has not been panles involved all indicated established that B u ff e r t n they would fight the FTC ac-----------1 ti on. An auto loan and R.0. aeatty.- Special services for special people. .... ' 1 ) I 1 I· ' l I " • • i • the bank for easy financing 0 of cars. And I took 'em up on it and it was just' what they ,said. It was. very ~., .. thing special" is Ready AutoFiMnc1. '"" The plan that gives you the lOi>ll DE --•il1!.l!le very fast and I :.vas very ~ ptea.se . ome•ti>"tiffliJt."'<Ji..it; ' , something special in itself!' · Perhaps for 11011, that "1ome- before you choose the car. . "' ft8m So why not aee us fird for 4" ioiilO _ 1111.ta.lllJln. After all, you already ~11.ft _...,. di 11our=ehl-elrlft11..uv.~,~~~".'..f=:'.'!!-~.,~ Don't11ou1 - '· """ How ll't4f what I !'\'I.If caught ,,.., cci -"'! ,,HI The " storm •DI..,., ( ' ' I J BEA ANDERSON, Edlt..- T.....,, Mlfdil 1S. ltn P-tl THE PHOTOGRAPHER: E; LEE PAYNE • The Antelope Who Can't Elope Cute children ond fr;endly on;mols ot Old MocDonold's Form. The photographer hod on "easy oss;gnment." E-l-E-1-0. But baby antelopes don't go chick,chick-here or oink-oink~ there. They go Jell ond 6ght very qu;ckly w;th sharp hooves. Wha t's o leash fo r, onywoy? ,, It mus t be to keep Mrs. Jim Jarrett in the picture. She's from the Newport Mesa Cosmopolitan Pols and wonts to publicize their Fashion Safari , Saturday, Mor ch 31, in the Airporter Inn to benefit underprivileged child ren . Her son Keith ond Sean Spear come along to smile ond pet the animals. But they d;dn't l;ke pushy, cold wet noses ony better than a ntelopes 'took to cuddling orms. What do you mean best side? An telopes hove two ends. And they don't like to be photographed. No ands, ifs or ·. • . butts. - • • .. ,.Mom Lets Off Steam Aft.er Reading Teen' s Burning . Letter: DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1be letter ll8tn T-er bomed me up. So he has iriO advice fer part11ls, doeo he? Well. .a!f didn't you tell that punt to simmer snow, clean up the basement and keep his trap shut. -NEW ENGLAND MOTHER DEAR NEW ENGLAND' Tlwlb for 1 deceuel ber. In my opln)oa, Ben's re-something at the risk o( offending them? q-...... fair. -s.o.s. _A-.t"'""' DEAR ANN LANDERS· M h"·•·-• DEAR S.O.S.' Tadfully "'U<ll '!' ~~-=-~ -~-!"'e;f:-·••• e ........... ]ta>Jf"'!!! ••·-::1"· ~ L-....:TS-:::'::::;:=====~~'?t;;:;;;;:;_,..._..,,..,~~-;;;a~iW~~-~y ~.m A trtt::cl»'Jid:i · ~---. iii!ilif'liij"!>Wl~F usamed Ibey .. ould appredate the will if you tell me to, but 111 be~ ,you'll pkl•ntt. lt's worth &a.king Ute risk of ol•.__._._ ......... 'WW 1l"1!lr1!IOlh<t 'pi>Jl-brldpt-··· ~nir<t>ID& more silt e11UUed ? Dldni she wort hanl -11 and eapec:tlng !rem )'ft -1alce to bdnC her kldl up! 11 she'• like lhot, ud lhal, ..i !Mt ••• J lll<llber$.yOU COii be .... she did. OW that Mom fl O)der and in I posj. llon to. enjoy We, wll1 -\ llhl? How much Ume doel lhe have left! And Whal u aht la I llJUe heavy! I'd have caught It right In the moulb U I •UC· llUlld to my mother that she 10 plct up Utter In the P.,k to lose weight. The kid IOUnda lite • ~ gocd·for- DOt.hb:lg. He•s old ~nouah to remove storm wlndow1, rake laves. shovel I I I DEAR ~ LANDERS' I om 1 41- year<>ld 11•man, dl90!ctd 1n 1970 rr.m 1 mu wbo left me with three chlldn!n Ind a stack ol unpaid bllla. The /genlleman I am goln& with has asked me to marry hlm, but we are bav· Ing a rew pro!Jlema which I wanr sellled In advance. I told him I was goJnc to write for your opinion. Be aid, "Ann has I good bead CIO ber .tbDWdert. I'm wUllnt DEAit N.P.J.S.: Mm 'tfMr letter I ~rage me-~ go ahead. Here 1 the •~--'"--i:.C pmeub ii yua Cii bilp &be to •bide by whltover she say1." -....., wlill ,.. <OilCl li0Vi',o.t1iils-____,....-kids. Ben wanls to · ~ liiiiil liiilire Ibo oi,MI bills ...i Ibo A lovely couple moved next door a few me 11P • pr . months ago. 1bey came from a A no-nonsense approach to how to deal 1,,...,,,eot whlcb will leave 70 percent of UIJdru -oeed lo be pot lllrwlil col-__ ,.tan cit In I · try Ill his boldlnp to his grown clllknn. lie 1ep. Moreover, ...ntog to Ibo ID-"~""""'' Y 1 ort>gn coun •Ith Ille" most dilficull and moot ls rt and hit children are well oil and MlllCI edalllief, Yta • a v e apo comparabfe to Mlnneapolla or Detroit. rewarding arrangement. Ann Landen' don't need 11\)'tbblC. My dlllclnn .. ...-, Zl..,,. yeon lllead el,_ Their · children are bright. beauUlully booklet. "Marriage_ Whal to Rxpec:I," mueh younger. Two must be put Jhroqb I'm -r I C1A~117 IM 11mo for Bu. mamered and I ooly hope our own will propare you for belier or for ....,._ collefle. 1'o Ian _,. by atate, ...i I suaest children oro as fme whtn they are Send your request to Ann Landen In I think his request la unfair becallM t1W you ...i ,..,. (<11-U friead sit teenagm. I'm not utJnc RIM to sign lll)'lhlnc. --1 llWJ0< ...i .._. -a But two of the tine need Jo have lheir con of the DAILY PIUYI' enclQolni Ill What do you .. ,. Ano! -N(YI' PIOGISll -II -.. Jo, ....... -llll teeth straightened. The prolnldi~ teeth ceilll In coin Ind o. lq, slam~ ...,. JU81' SENSIBLE c~I' • -1et la cw '° pre-actullly IJ)Oil their !cots. Should I 11y --_.iope. ' ,, I .. Gwen' ~00: love tbe Se ·: BY .IOOUON ................. Bd4re moetma Bob Staab, o.... SU.to liod &loriou• dramt abaat Uring on a ranch compltle wltll real live cowboys. Now, Ibo, praetlcally lives on lbe Wll<r with ..U. and the aalt alt u ber companlont. Gwen ii put of an unusual team wblcb featuru two 1enerallanl of b111band-wlle yacht brotm In lhe Harbor Aru. 'l!le Senior Robert Staatses of Harbor Ialand. now reUred lrom lbe bulloal. built the toundatioo for the junior Staat.ses' e-rpandlng brokerage firm on the Pacific Coast Htghway In Newport. Gwen'• role in the business ls that of jack~f-all-trades (and master of all). She orpniJa lhe ofOce, keeps boob, checb In new boat., decorates the interiors of boats for shows, g r e e t s customers and pinch-bits as a aalesman. Generally, she brings a woman's point of view to the brokerage, which , needs a woman's viewpoint w h e n couplet borne to look and bu y. BLIND DATE Gwen, a native ol Anaheim, met Bob on a blind date when she was home on vacation from the Univers ity of Natunl!J, It -a date far • ~ -uld . ....... ..,---· ..... tald. • that'• ~l ol Bob. H ... alwaJI OD I ra<e. Aud WO I picnic basDI -you ..... do tha!," Ibo laucJoM. Durtni the wloter' ,.beD Gwen returned to leboOI, Jlol>. came to Arizona and they whil duck bw1Ung. I n Delenber of !hat year they wn married and Owen finlabod ber educaUon at Caltfoml1 State Unlvenlty, Lons Beach. Al1er tuchinl for three years 11 Newport 11eJCb1o Elementary School, Gwen quit to be • full·tlme mother for her chlldnm Skip and S(lelJey, and began working ....<kenda 1t tbJ br11kerage "getting her feet wet ." When the children ...... In school full·Um• she be(an worklng at the brokerage f\lll. um.. . BABY.Sl1TERS tbe senior Staatses now are plnch-blttera when baby4tUng b needed and Gwen attributes much of her success to their helf In freeing her to work'. I is very important to have a woman on the brokerage team, she feels, because "women often make t he decilion of what boat they will buy, .._ • ' ~rn : Yar.iety ·s~ices Clubs' I Fund-raisers I .. '.·. . :-. GAL ft:• . . :t : Selling Uckets for An Eve-- ~:: •• ning with Lawrence Welk, to .. . ·~:'.·take place in the l;lollywood · • Palladium Saturday, March ... . . ·• 17, are members of G1udance ' .. : 1.&alstan« Leadership. , I::,; The grpup, · • , om·wofil ~ ~ orgaDilaUjlrll, was founded last 1 t year to •provJde community ~ serv1ce·t.0 young wotrien. 14-21 years ol age. The goal of GAL b to Ade, lead and assbl a _ • .vounc woman to be an asset to berlelf and the community • through preventive programs. '!· Tk:k.et lnformat l on Js i ;:. available by calling Mis. Andy ~·: Carey or Jack I>. Armstrong, . :Pl'- 1. YwCA l··: HunUogton Beach and Foun- ; : • lain Valley YMCAs are joining · eflorta on a pancake breakfast · to be aervecl ID Murdy Park, ffuntln&ton Beach rrom • a.m. : to noon llotunlay, March 17. .• ! . Two m~ groupo, the :-: Wild-Ezpress and the ~ ·: ~ l'ravelin Baud will entertain. . " I '•, ' ~y... AAUW . Conswner Fraud will be the .; topic of U . Col. (r<!.) M.S. ,, ·-. •. (Jim) Sbimanoff when he ad- dresses t b e Westminster- Fountain Valley Br a n ch , American Association o f University Wom en. The group will meet at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, March 17, in the Guy Fawkes restaurant, Fountain Valley. Officers will be elected during the business session. Revelers ~ir. and Mrs. Tristan Krogius, newly I n s t a I I e d presidents of Revelers, a couples club which raises funds for South Coast Com- munity Hospital, will open their home for a n e w members potluck Saturday, March 17. New members are lbe Messrs. and Mmes. Thomas Annstrong, James Hetricks, Paul Kelln, GaJe Pike. James Watson and Gerold Williams and Dr. and Mrs. John Debs: Also elected to the board are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lawson and Dr. and Mrs. George Bryant, vice presidents; Mr. and Mrs. Bob D. Hurst, secretary, and Dr. and Mn. Aldon Clark, treasurer. The group, which consists of 20 couples, already bas raised :: Bathroom Barricaded ::· ------------ $2,000 of the 15,000 pledged for pediatrics. Jet Set Jet Set Grandmothers or Huntl.Dgton Beach will prepare and serve a Dinty Moore din- ner Saturday, March 17, from 5 to 8 p.m. ln Odd Fellows Hall. las Bri1as Members of Las Brizas del Mar Auxiliary of Children's Home Society will honor husbands during a dinner Saturday, March 17, in 152.0 A.O. restaurant, Anaheim. Indian Maidens KaJlnele Ta Nation, Indian Maidens of the Orange Coast YMCA, will have a fund-rais- ing Mother-daughter luncheon at noon Saturday, Mareb 17, in the Estancia High School cafeteria. Lion Country Safari will proVide entertainment -Ou.+y Wirigs Fonner airline stewardesses and their guests are l'nvited to atl<nd a Las Vegas Nlibt, sponsored by Dusty Wings, at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, March 17, . ·. :; . Teen's Father All Wet ·~· ·.' : .... -:· By ERMA DOMBECK to school. Around three, I bear ::; AmotherlDOregonsenfme AT the door slam shut and know in the Pytbian Hall, Tustin. Proceeds will go to the Salvation Army Sum m e r Camp f o r underprivileged children. Night Owls Newport Beach Night Owls, Hoot 'n Holler Roost wlll meet at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 18, in the Bethel Towers social center, Costa Mesa. A musewn . The meeting will b e preceded by a docent tour of the current art eihibit. Monday Club llarbor Women's Chorale will entertain the Huntington Beach Monday Morning Club during a luncheon meeting at 11 :30 a.m. March 19 in tbe Sheraton Beach Inn. • :':~hop quartet. will en· FY Association A seascape painting Siste'rhood demonstration by Clair Weldenaar is planned for the The annual Purim Carnival next meeting of the Fountain will be staged by lhe Harbor Valley Arts Association. Refonn Temple Sisterhood at 'nK! group will gather at 4 p.m. Sunday, March 18, (n 7:30 p.m. Monday, March 19, EastbluH Park. 9';lniiitnithe~ Founi.tn Va)ley Com· .. Cente!t. -~ . · BSP Everytbll\g'• Coming VP Daisies fa the theme of the bi- moot.hly meeting of southern California Cowlcil, Beta Sigma Phi whleb will begin at 10 a.m. Sunday, March 18, in the Disneyland Hotel. · FY Friends Reservations are b e i n g taken by Fountain Valley Friend& of the l.Jlrary for a theater party at 7 p.m. Sun- day, March 18. Tile group will be altending tbe presentation of Paddy Cbayevsky's "Mlddle of the Nlgb.t" in the Huntington Beach Playhouse. ' UCI Town, Gown · Linda Algazi 8¢ C&therlne Morgan will Introduce lhe stages of Motherhood to mem- bers of UCI Town and Gown il 9:30 a.m: Monday, March lf, In room 220 of the Social Studies Tower:. Tile duo offer a great deal of expertise on the subject for they are mothers of young children, are schooled In the field of child devek>pment and have recently tauglit Motherix>od Mystique for UC! Extenfilon. Irvine GOP Republican precinct worken will be honored during a 10 a.m. brunch Tue3day, March 20, lo Park Newport. Hosts are members of the Irvine Coast Republican Women's Club. GwOn Sllllll thows Iha of MW Do,_ Otltl, the WH•" yoeht In their line. At rftht, lhe t•k• tho """" "We are ltylng to meet lbe ""'4t o1 both man and wile by ba'finl a 1"lnWl'1 lnll....._ I cu aee It tboagh a woman's e;yee." ' Gwen lllo bu loamed to be • jacW~-tradel -aall-lng with her husband, balh ID raj::U and for. fun. She cqob, belpo In haoclllng th e mainlbeet and does iiwhlt.ever the captain ub." Al Bob's "lint mate .. lhe 11 glad the became a 11Uor ln- llud ol a rancher because ol the tranquility tlo• ,.. offers when &be OCCl'.lona1l7 gels a respite from htr liK· or aeven· day"""'eM<: respomlblllty to the bustness. "You can get away from the bustle and bustle and the telephone," she said. "lt'1 an opportunity to be free. You can get away from people. But she also loves It becaule It Is what ucltes her captain and ll's a traditloo In the Staats family to Jove the sea. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Cancer: Accent Value WEDNESDAY Be speclllc aboul details. Take makes you more atlractlve to nothinl for granted. Get com-othen. You galn added MARCH 14 mltmenls In writing. recognition. People are drawn By SYDNEY OMARR LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): to you. You are going to be Aries women have atrildng Lunar cycle is such that you happier!. facial features . The eyes of can safely take initiative. ·CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. the Aries woman are Strive for greater . in-19): New deaJ where finances magneUc, compelling. Gloria dependence, self-expression. enter t>lcture -this is Swanson and Bette Davis are Get ideas across in direct, highlighted. Mate, pa r t n e r but two examples. The Aries forceful manner. Dis p I a y wants accounting. Be ro- man ls tmlque, pos3e&Slng a qualities of leadership. 'This operative without giving up in- mystique which can win and pays dividends. dependence. Intensified. rela- dominate. Warren Beatty and VIRGO (Aug. %3-Sept. 22): tionshlp gives you new 1ea!e Steve McQueea serve as es:-Face fears. You will be amaz.. on llle. Give and you aJso will amplea.. Man or womau, the ed lo find that you have receive. Leo is in picture . dAriese~"."~ __ lndit, 'vkln 0 _.!l.,.11a anln-d nwnberFof allies behinbod AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. -" ,...,_ sconee. arnUy member w 18): Maintain IQJY..J><Olile. somei\bal or. an enlllJD& aeemed 'to drain you does Withhold" 11na1 ju cr g m e n 1. about-face. You will be ap-pedal •greemenl ta on agen- ARIES (Mareh 21-April 19): predated. flattered and lov~. da. Heed inner voice. Desires Relationships ace intensified. Tha;'s cause for oelebratfon .. are subject to change. If you Nothing ocain in lukewarm LIBRA (Sept. 23--0d. 22): commit yourself prematurely manner. Romantic interests You learn truth about hope~, • you suffer pangs of regret'. dominate. Member of opposite friendJ, ulUmate goals. Key LS Time Ls 08 your side. seJ: confides feeling,. Be to face facts as they exist. responsive. Your own stS'le otherwise, you waste time and PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): and policies are best -don't drain emotional resources. Key now is to be flexible. One permit others to a1ter your SCORPIO '<Oct. 23-Nov. 21): who shares your work, In- principles. Valuables, aspirations, am-terests requests a change. Go TAURUS( April 20-May 20): bltions th es e are along with It. Granting a small Get down lo baslcs. Leave spoWgbted. Sense of direction favor now could lead to speculation to othen. What Is ls sharpened. Some sacrifices substantial re payment Sa&ft- needed now la working room, may be necessary. However, tartan plays prominent role. elbow room - a place not only you are going ID rlghl direc- to bang your bat, but to move Uon. There 1s room for you at about, to make aPPolntments, more elevated position. 1==--U Ff ELL'S declsloos, to set gnals. L1bn SAG11TARIUS (Nov. 22- and Cucer persoos are much Dec. 21 ): You "find" yourself. UPHOLSTERY In plcluro. You come to tenns with GEMINI (May 21-June 20): yourself. You know yoursell Wilm ,.:-:_w• You can have fun expressing and you are yourself. And this ltZZ H.tMr 11¥11. ideu, contacting relatives, c ... w ... -~It settling mino< d!Jpules with ---------~~~~~~~~~~ neighbors.. Sense of hwnor -now leads to sense of fltneSIJ, ~~4Q[~~::.~(,"'.~~~~~tf1~~~.7 .. "'1¥"'f~· :·:a rough draft of her first book, that he ls home and secured. -·~:·c elgbtr,ge.. -e.ffort~called, W/T'S The creature comforts are • ·:"Ralph'• athroom Primer." evident : a radio blaring. a -: · she wrote the . book for Iler f ND telephone cord under the door, New officers of the group are the Mmes. Alfred. Wrobel. president; Betty Phillips, vice president; Marla Bottoms, secretary; Jean Word en , treasurer, and Jan Mason, Margaret Force, Marie Sheets and Velma Koldsbaek, direc- tors. awareness. ne sky 11 the t::: \~• Steph11ns Alumnae llmll Permit creaUve juices q f'll 1 _ _ · . " 'iii' ,_ ... ., -. University Without Walls, a lo flow. ~~ ....11..oo ..... ai St. P•triclc's Day . -··-'t7c 't • ll·ye&Mld llOO who, everytlme and the dog keeping vigil fO< new approach to earntng a col-CANCER (June 21.July Z2): -ir.:-':'"'-HA111.o" CNTr:" t lege degree, will. be the topic Accent ls on finance!, personal ti Cr.J.-Cards & Party Goods co1TA ·""'"' ~ .h6 enters tbe bllbroom, set.a leftover food. ecology blck 10 years. "It's not right," said my LB Affiliates Marie Vartanian, painter, craftsman and creator of delicate lace, will give a lec- ture demonstration for the Af· filiates of the Laguna Beach Art Association at 2 p.m. Mon- day, March 19, ln the of dllCUSllon· by Orange Coun-possesslom, what la of va1ue. ;; s..u.i t ty Alumnae of Stephens ~~<J:.~.f"~~"'°~!IX.~Qf;-&l~}(T.~ COilege who will -at 7:30· '00;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;!;;;;;;;;;;=--------=-=--=--. p.m. Tuesday, March 20, ln,r The tot 11 ther the bathroom. For years, I ; story P ra bought no t b In I but black husband one night. "A boy • .almple. On pqe I, th!ft Is a towels. I put signs all over the should not live by Clearaail ~ sbt.ch of 1 bright, sparkling p 1 a c e , 1 i F L u s H 1 N G alone . . . growing up ln all room with towels hung neatly 0 E v EL 0 p 8 MUSCLES,,, that hurrudity ... never tit- aod that text reeds. "See the "SAVE WATER: Do N • T tin& on a chair with anm on It bathroom, Ralph. It contains a SOAK WHILE SHOWERING" and us slipping buileUna under water closet." and ''DO NOT ASK FOR his door on the.da"len of ha- the llonta Ana home of Mrs. J. B. Robertaon. Speaker will be Elmer A. NuSI, asaoclale director of admlsalooa. Page 3 continues, "See ROOM SERvtCE." achloropbeoe. We've got to 1et .Ralph mlas the water c1oset." him out of there and talk." -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.!j On Page 5, 0 Ralph does not The inevitable still hap-He knocked loudly on tbe'I hll1I up 1he towels. Or take pened. One of our sons went door. "Son, this I! your father. the soap out of the water. Or into the bathroom one night I demand that you come out of (HILDRENS SHOES the water out ol the bathtub. and has literally groWn up in there Uilil Instant." Ralph ls asking for It!" there. He has never seen the We heard him move the ::•.• Finally.onPage 8.we seea seasons change ... or the clothes hamperawayfromthe UNBELIEVABLE PRICES .:::picture of a mother on her door, heard thechaln drop, the !•.' handa and knees. It reads, stars come out ... or flowers bolt slide back, and the key : :. '"See Mother threaten lo send burst into bloom. We took him turn slowly. The door opened. : : . Ralph to the Shell Station." to see a river once and he "That's more like Jt ," said my SALE SHOES •: It isn't the happiest book wanted to know where the husband, putting his arm ! i I've ever read, but then I have bot witer spigot was. round him. "There's more to ONE RACK • 1 alW1)1 contended me picture He is In the bathroom when life .~han a cold shower, son I• of a bathroor:n lnhablted by I get up in the morning. We ; J childr<n ls worth a year's sup. speak through the door. I hear How could I tell my husband BUSTER BROWN • ORTHO'S : j ply of l)lrth control pills. a door sla11121nd know be is off it wasn't our son? • Frankly, l ha.. tr 1 e d • OTHERS everything BqT a primer in• •-::;:'2~;::;:;;:;;:;:::::~~=::::;:===~===~~~1JIL.c~~~~"-"'~ p,.,.~~= ~ -=.,,..:" ~11 ' Ree-'l'o ·-~~-=c :OSI WEIGHT I s~ldro Ne;zs 11/ed NOW $1.00 & $6.00 '"'=~--..!I· ....... -w··1-11 ~~:::1=~:!...=t:...!~.!!!..~W!!!L 1-;;:: i.' I ITTl;f 5 ft. It=: : • :IM-;:::::-::"Odr~ It : ~ :=!:'111~=11~c; .. !· ~-No ~ eurcr ... o.t rW o1 ..., ~ •• f.C ll'ld ... ,...,,.., Odtfna: hll beelt ; • UMd tll0Calf11Ny.,. tltol!Ands •U O'let • "" .-W"' 1' ,..,.. Od-Pion l COlll ,P.ts •nf ,Ult ltfp ICll'IOfl'Y slrt ~ SS.ts. YOO IWltlt loM uclf f•t Of ,.. :_ .No 4tltltlofll 11kd. Acet1t no 111b· •lfMtt. Soll "'"" 11111 fllttltllff bt'i JV!cike your oiun o/lngerie n.1 Mlf(llll .,_ wltt COtnt OV1 lust "91'11 .. ,,. ttltW ttlOo'lul II~ Ttiut.., ANll -at • 1.-Clllf Ill' let , ~ .. Onl1187~ to J.77 wd. ~, .. , tfC .. '·" ...,, 4 Days Only , I l moneywlUbt11fllfidedbwyourd1uultt. nD THRIF ry "'"''· .... Golden 'Tleedle FABA•cs IOUT" C0M1' PLAZA • ~AllllOUllL 1.l\11~ Of'9I 1\11-.oi I llolfCM.1'1 30 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH u1·.1 111~1 -.rowr., ' -• FROM OUR VERSION OF THE "WAUAIEE" RNALLY ARRIVED 1052 IRVINE AVENUE WESTCLIFP Pl.All NEWPORT BEACH l ' • .., J "I 30 FASHION ISLAND -' NEWPORT BEACH I Cl I' .- ' - ' .~ - T .- ' I ' ' 5 9 p 1' E j 15 c 16 s p 17 .. R 18 s 19 F 20 ~· 2 . 24 L -26 R Q 271 29 " .-30 I 33 F ll 37: I 38 ' I 39 , "' I " I ., I ,,. I 4S" 1 46 E I I I I I • ., " ., • -· - I I A .. Lil TUMBLEWEEDS I \ Mun AND JEFF ' FIGMENTS NANCY o AUNT FRITZ/, LET ' = ME GIVE YOU A ~ ROME PERMANENT NO, DEAR, I CAN'T TAKE A CHANCE \ TELL. YOU WHAT ... SINCE ITS 50 COW l'U. T/\KE '>tl<J 11'1 HERE AND BW'IWANEJ>IJ BUT I'VE BEEN GETT/NO SOME P_RACTICE D ID YOU EVER SEE A WAVIER MOP'? PEANUTS by Tom K. Ryan AN' 11'tl 'Efl l!R N! SPONfANE:OUS!! 'by Al Smith by Emie Bushmiller FOR RELEASE TUESDAY, MARC H 13, 1973 I er----,..-, ITS IN 'lllE PAPER!~ THEli'VE ANNOONCEO 'THE WINNEROF™E'OAl5'{ HIU. Plll'!'~ CUI'' ! TODAY'S CRDSSIDRlO PUZZLE .• ACROSS : I 1 H11 • 5 Gem 9 Plant louse 14 Ear par! 15 City of Latvia 16 Sole ol a plow 17 "·- Rhythm" 57 l asso 58 River of France 59 Resort centers 61 Man'!I name 62 Gracie- 63 "MX Friend. 64 Not any Yesterclay's Puzzle Solved: ' 0 ' I'lHINK IM 601N6 1'l FAl~T.. DOOLEY'S WORIJ) • SALLY BANANAS ~ 000 .···(} ' GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ln\E</, WC HAVE TO REMAlll A LITTl.E Brr Fi.E'l(IBl.E .. · "'----.... -----_,,,_., ~--. PO~OOUJ by 'Roger lrodfleld By Charles Banott~ ~-------. YOO BETTE'R <:ive ME ONE' MORE, IE:DDY·· I RE',At.LY NEED IT - ... 'THE</ GA~E ME. 'THEIR WORD ™Ar Ti4El.'1D Cl.EAR QOr /l(i3 SOOll A~ 'WILD KllJ600M' JS OIER • by Roger Bollen by Charles M. Schulz THE GIRLS CIJN'T FAINT! J,!l J·o ) 'f_\.UNK!! ~-~ by Harold Le Doux 18 State:Abbr. 19 F1ench room 20 Vehicles 2.z_ Kind of day: 7: words 65 Consecrat11 66 Neighbor of North Oak. fi1 BOJ{ DO YOU WANT TO 6ET ? ROCKY SILVESTER 15 eiLOWIN(:i THE WH15Tl.!! OKA'Y, WAIVE EXTRADITION AMD A5t<. THE HEW 'VORK AUTHOR- ITIES WMETHER THEY'D )IJ__Jtl -24 Lure -26 Reporter's queslion 27 Isn't able 29 N.Y.'s neigh I!!• .-30 Urgetochase f 33 Foar~s l 1 37 Feminine name 38 Something I special I 39 Clear f .40 Claw -41 Put out l 42 Aces:J words I « Moist 45 Man's I 1 I I • nickntime 46 European city 47 Graves 49 Golf clubs 5.3 Pitcher's accomplish· ment -· - ' DOWN 1 Golf shot 2 Canada's highest mountain 3 Conclude prematurely 4 Garment 5 Small scrap of food 6 Buttress 7 America n V.P. 8 Propert'( ownw 9 Affirm 10 Dentist's creation 11 Parade grounds order 12 Not in use 13 Forest 1nimal 21 lnadequata 23 Provide 43 Female money animal temporarily 45 Kaepukee- 25 Bridge 47 Autoist's buQdtH': Abbi·. _ neeessitie• 28 Plugging of a 48 Preceding: blood vessel Prefix 30 Musical 60 Lively danc• composition 51 Babylonian 31 Metal hero 32 Suga< IOUf'C9 52 More retionef 33 Have room SJ Pitcher'• tor 1 plate ~ Correct ,54 Charge for 1 35 Take it easy service 36 Lubricant :SS Get worked 37 Americaf\S' 1 . Up _ neighbor11 66 Berets' 40 Track I relatives official 60 Egyptian 42 Abode cotton ·I MISS PEACH 4 " (AHl!MI) l WILL NOW 'ftiJN MY ••crw"JE ' j;J.16,u: ""° VIENl,T MAKI Al.CDIQ.., OI< SOMITHI~ LU<• TMA'r. % 'l'HANIC YOt.I . \ I f (, ... ' · .. ~ -. -· 9 CONSIDER A DEAL'. C>IO VOL! Ll!A"N ANV'l'HIN/; F'lfOM 'TMAT, "'""'"' i' by Mell ~ FM ONI! 'T).flNG, ! :t LfAll'NliD I 'l'O <>UP~E '!'Hf J(ll) ,, ~- 4'0Dff71 "II never rails-you spend all morning at the beauty shop and then you pas& somebody going In who loots be«« than you do coming out." DENNIS THE MENACE • -... ,• , . ••• • Dlll.Y Pll.OT Basketball Not as Much Fun ~ymor·..--e ilk es • • • • ·LOS AMCELRS (AP) -~ out ~ ""' bl.I 11-ud l>oU<!tball ~leo Keilb wnm aet throllah ldlool lad *' .. IJl·olJntrican lroDd ol fonrvd ,.. ua.A'• uobeoteo twn. ''11io _,,.. be says, bu been a IOC detoter lhlD be ~ wlleo be and-miod 1n1111 11"'1 ad!oo11n s.n11 Bor6aro. And 111 .... t rtluclanllY be lll>W admits tlQil boskefbaU la tha maJor factor Jn his life. • 'Ille -1-foOCMO, 1115-pounder likes butetball tiut tt11 not u much f\ln as it uoed to be and be admits that bl.I majoc pt la "to graduate oo schedule. That's libJ I'm taking Ii units tbl.s year." ... ... * * * Wooden Not • . · 9J>timistic About Press • ... ' .. ·Los ANGELES (AP) -UCLA bosie~ ball .eoacb John Wooden said Monday be pllllJJ to use \he famed fllll-court UlOe ~ 'llunday •1ainst Arizona state, llli~ added be wasn't that optimistic about .. 1"""51. ._"Dur zone press hasn't been too good tlM 1W," Wooden sakl. "I tbou&hL it tQald ·be better. On many ooc:aslom Ibis ~ I've ·taken It off In the ftnt ball and nem come back with lt." · vCLA meets Arhona State's Sun Dj.'(u. in the ll<COnd game ol \he N~ ti.ii West Regional tournament after Cal ljr.ile (Long Beach) and University of S!ft Francl!co clash in the open<r. .-"'Wooden's zone press was a major ~poo last year, when the Bruins went *'4 and -the naUonll liUe, their 111,fltb in the lasl nine years. ~Wooden aaid-i.salstant coach Frank 4rJ>old scouted Arhona State last -· '"lbeir avards, be !el~ were p(elty good and they ml&ht cause us ...,., trouble. We'll \ry our pressing' 4efeose and if we're having success we'll pQinue with It and if we're not, why, 1ron1 go out of It. i .1ive know our Rt defense is pretty ~It has been for us-all·year1ong. But llM£.!!""' bam't been. I •:flie rWo. the press bu been i<iiiewhat effect.Ive tbil year is that ..._ ._1\ wut to nm with us and libOn Ibey do and they -the """"· lhl1're rtluclant to take Ille -when lbef get in there. 'lbat gives us Ume to fet 'Up our defense. • # 1'But when they take those shots and ~ bltliog them, they can really hurt ,,ou. ne press is a gambJe, after All ... t· Wooden said 6-foot·ll center Bill Walton plays the NO. 5 position -under &M defensive backboard -well, but ad· dM. "J bavea't seen anyone who could ~ the No-5 poaitloo .lite Keith did." bon. now with the Los Angeles led the Bruins to ·theic first N Ue In 1llM and played the deep .,,. in the prs, even though be was on- ly'U. f:lt•1 not 1f>w big you are back there, ll!l how agile and quick you are." ·. @ers-USF Tilt .. .. · Itlay Be Decided On Backboards · LOS ANGELES (AP) -'!be coaches Of the Cal state (l.oog Beacll) and Univer- aity 0( San Frsnciaco basketball teams agiee: tbelr battle Tburaday night In the finlt game ol the NCAA Western Region- als may be decided on the backboards. ..-We match up well with USF" said Long Beach coach JeJTY Tarkanian to betketball writers lllond8". "We're pby!i· cally stronger than we were last year and &o<.-oe futdester hu made us much !tfoo.rer on the boards." .. It boill do w n to stnrJgtb against streogth.'' said USF C06Cb Bob GaiUard in San Jo"rancilco. "We need a stroog re- l:!owtding eUort. We've Uved on second !third efforts and Loog Beach gets ,.,, fbe boards ... ""1ard said l.Gng Beach forward Ed ~~ is •'the mmt unselfish All-Amcrl- 04itl'Ye ever seen -not as flashy as the .... 0( the All-Americans, but ho gets the jj·done." Ta'rkai1ian said Ratleff will play his ~I ptne -aJI over the court. 1\Ve'U play the same way. We'd like ~ to be In all different spots. We like bUi1 to brio« the bell up court once in a wbUe, to go one-on-one Crom the guard ~ we Uke blm to post up, we like him lO lo 1 forward spot and ._ ofr tbe ~=~~;?ii'tiil:1r~~W-Jl'MUe more-dlf· benlt for people to defend him." Tarbotan Jl"'iaed tile Dool' fW!rds. Smith hos lmpro•ed ll'e&Uy roe • lie'• -of tho! fine3t 111ards on --~k ls lhootlnilDUCh bi ~. to6. J!tll Leowd Gray, who oc:ored IS aa Lo!ill s.ch beat Weber Stale last Satlll' <Mt, may be tbe ks' tey player against USI', TarklmM aaid. ''I thouiht Lionard played a great ball ~ game for us aaalnst Weber, e1pecially on dd<l1M In tho soconcl half. We need • Fit! effort !tom blm thta we<k. . ''Of com'lt, ,.. net'd • are•t.eaort !Jorn .. ..,.... Ibis ......... I Included In -If quorier -.... ttlO-ln bll major,"""""""'· and one la For Elltem History. Wllkes grad- lllttd a year abead In blgb scbool and, .... thouCI> he's "'" a junior at UCLA, he's still just 19. The IOD ol. a mini.Iler, Wilkes bl soft,.. oPOken and polite. Only once has be <V<r loot Ills temper on the court -In a re- cent game at Oregon. ;•He was tackled around tbe neck. r don't blame him," said one school official. Wasblngton coach Marv ltarshman has caUed him "the greatest UCLA forward in history," and the NaUonal Associatioo ol llastethall Coacbel recently named bim to Its ftnt AD·Aln<rkln loom. Yet tla youDflllter spooda mod ol bl.I time trying to lreop -off bl.I mind. "I dooi read -pm du:ID& ha> ketball ....... -oOC the _.. page.I. •Dyway. ~ I d1111i think -It too much. Winning ii harder here than at other levels and the -ls fll'!•ler thb year than it was laft. "Last year it was a young team, nKlltly sophomores and Larry Farmer was lhe ooly returning starter and he wa a junior so most people were pessimistic about how we'd do. '''lbill year we're playing more not to lme than we a re to win ... IJPIT.._... THE DODGERS' DAVE LOPES LEAPS AWAY FROM SLIDING RUNNER. Sports In Brief Robinson Breaks Toe; Lake rs , Buff aw Clash PALM SPRINGS -Frank Robinson optimistically says, ''I might be back by this weekend." but . the veteran out· fielder 's broken toe may keep him out until the C8lifornia Angels' regular season begins. Robinson broke the fourth toe on his left root Sunday when he slipped climbing out of the radio-television booth after an Angels extubition game. A t e a m spokesman said Xrays Monday provro the toe was broken. "l know I can't do anything for three or four days," said Robinson, who recently signed a two-year contract call· ing for an estimated $300,IXXl. "But I've been able to play with pain before." New manager Bobby Winkles sald, '''Ibis is a big blow to all of us. I think he'll be ready when the season opens but I don't think he'll play much this spring." RobiMon was obtained in an ofl·sea!On trade with the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Angels expected him to be an OO·thc- f.ield leader. ''This is really disappok\tlng/' said the 37-year-oltt star. "I was just getting to the point where 1 was real excited about my timing." West Gears LA title from Ben Villaflor of the Phitlppines f\fonday night with a unanimous decision. The southpaw ViUaflor opened a cut over Shibata's right eye in the 10th round and drew a steady stream of blood from it in the 13th but the challenger was never slowed by the injury, Dodgers Lose ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -The Los Angeles Dodgers probably don't mind losing ~ibition games if they can learn as much as they did Monday. They learned that Rick Wise and Scipio Spinks can pitch effectively against them in the spring; that Willie Crawford could use a bit more delenslve work; that the team could use some more batting drills. and that Al Downing is o£f to a fine start as a starting hurler. Wise and Spinks HmHed lhe Dodgers to just a single -Lee Lacey 's leadoff hit io the Hrst inning -Monday as the St . Louis Cardinals tripped the Dodgers, 4·3. Evans No. I BUFFALO -Jerry \Vest is be~ and Former llunlington Beach High swim· that makes all the difference to the Los ming ace Clay Evans has now clocked Angeles Lake rs, If nnt because of hi!! U1e fastest coUcgiate time in the nation scoring ttien certainly because of h i s ror the JOO-yard butterfly for the 1973 passing. season. The veteran Lakers guard will lead the delending National BasketbaJI Associa· The Olympic Games veteran who is tion Lakers agains' the Buffalo Braves now performini:i; for UCLA clocked a 50.4, --tooa.&.•--- --"" tile ...... tl lllotll. ... ···111c--· ... -·, dldD' -...,bedJ." Wlll:ol hod Ill a 'a"'ll'll --1 for .the Ont "'"' """ ..,., "l aa'l llD 11but1-u-.,..itor-.• Now he 1n.. ""--la a - •par1ment, .,._ be pi.,. .... • a otereo llDCl studles. He uyi he baa no c1oto lrlendl, ~ bis roommate on the road and the other !Ulting forward- Farmer. Old be ..... """' "" -lbeoal>ts about. cmt1ng to a plaoe u bi&• l.Q.A ! "Yeab._t' But be aya ht .. mw..,.S la "'••"-"-Ito-,., .. ~........,......,._vu __ ... _ --•1&-· lta? npt-ii .. r...,i ..... 1 " canps Ufe and CClh 1 --· a t q . lleoays, "-I a .. -• """'d haft bem llln• .. to•--•n•aablg....._, ... .,..,._ 8ndm ..... cw 1 b ... -a IOC more tun 1D blg!l ll.1Kd, ,,,_ lOU couJd goof around. tlere It'• much more disciplined. I don't know il the winning ls-* it. Bil I sc+a l'I oz et n ltiBa h,_.,~--a. •l tt'a .. 'bem .......... epri- ence." .. .. ~Sall, -.,. .. """so ___ .... _ ..... a· 1:"' mJ .._ -,.,.,•P:loi1 ..a .. ball..,.._ -It. ,.. or fllo ..--aJ. ... _, letli--iodlY. II a :en-lb ltdt5t'1 U1i!. lie_,. -... fGrgtl -u lllfo .... ar. . .,. l'Oiml ftlu. ., tli!Jt it's somethfN tlllt I mlpt not havl run iDlo l..i I -lo aay other place. llol I otlll thlnl< K -aD worth· -"Aft!r I IJlduale I'D pn>l>obq look '**-.. tllil md tee it a little dirfer· ...,_. Pitching Key· for Dodgers; Messersmith Plays Big·Role ... VERO BEACH, Fla. !AP) -Las Angeles banks on a $58,0 Pi1miic iUff for Its 1973 National 1-- pennant bid. .. , think pi~ is .... to he the key," said ma.n.rger Walt A1st. ...,_ hut~ ... the SW1iog lille led die ...... in tea!a qmed-IUltffenlge a "'8' ago with 2.'11. Still the lladgfrs fini-lllird In tbe Nat!onll 'League 'West, 1"' - behind the Cincinnati Reds. Houston edg· ed them for sea>fld. rn a multiple pll}"ft" trade with the California Angels ol the American League , the Dodgers landed ri&fit·huded pitclier Andy MeS!USmith and gave up Bill Singer &-16. MesSS'.SDlilh won 2Q games fer California m. VRl but aily eight last year when .... pllped by in- juries. So for a five-man }>1lrtq Ntltiaa. tbe Dodgers . have ciaUde Ollklel. 'lritla 11 $100,000 contract, Doi. ~ -..0. Messersmith, $71,m, T ; J 'ell.11 , 165,000 and Al no...,.-. Sutton and 'Mesw:rsmidl .aie dte rigbt- handers in the quintet. In the bullpea, tae .DldBen don't have the established streng1h excq>t for Jim Brewer, the king of the Los Angeles ba$eball firemen. 1be Ood,gers hope dlll. a-&e Rough Md Bruce Ellingsen,, --"" irl 58 lhd C games 1 ~ for Albu- querque in a PactfiC'llrmt ·1..eaigue pen· nant wiming campaign. ~ do well in the majors . ¥ou can't overlook Pde Rittlert In the buUpen , but Brewer amd Bidlm can't do the job between them. 'Ibe Dodgers overall have shOMl a rather drastic dlange from last yenr. Gone arc F~ .!obinson, Wes Pa?Vr, Jim Lefebv llmrf W.iJ.li. 'I'.beil' depa rture . plus that of relief pitcher Pete Mikkelsen , '~retired, has altered the outlook. And traded fD the Arlgels were whiz kids BobbJ V4•uti1MP and 8 i I i Grab&Uwitz, P• ntief p&dier Mike Strahler. First base. Vr'it.11 P.arirer gone, shapes up as a battle between BiU Budaler, a Dodger of the last two seasons, and Tom Paciorek, who d~ in 107 Ams for A!tm· querque last sea.mt. Pacioni:: can't be optioned to Ute minen; apin ~ going through the majllr-leque waivers where someone all be tic.id te grab him. A ninth round draft choice of footW~ Jli1iaml Dolphiftll ill ~, Paciorek was .a star basebllll and C.tball ~er at tbe Uaiversity ol .Roust•. In !he Buckner-PMi...S battl' fur tint base, the loser ls e~ t.e be giwn a good shot at 'becomile a ~ out· fielder. At second base, a battle shapes up between Dave Lopes ad Lee Lacy. the !alter very impressn.i, w.ileD be q,s ea.il- ed up to lhe ~ last teUOll. Third base appears a hltlle between ne~er Ron Cey and Ken McMullea, the~ arquired in lhe Mgre1 tndc. College Cage Poll •Y .usocui.Teo PRESS .... Tum,_..... Pb.. T_,_..,. .... l UCLA. M I•) .. 1'. ti. Cl191n&. tt-r 1JI 1 N.C. Slala, V• II) Ja Q. ...._..... ~ •• 11..S Uf JC.I SI. (l.11.), 2W 1/11 l1. ~ ,,._.. 11' • l'T0111dl'!IDL u.i .-Ms~ n-i1 112 ~ MlrQuot!'9, ~ .. 1.$. Ml1.n_ U-l Q 6 l~dlana, lf·S l9I "· Ar1l9111 St., "'1 11 7 SW La., :0.J t 1) 1U 11. ICenlvcky, 19.7 :ti I M.1ryl11'1d, ""' 20t ti. P-9!11 ..... 111-S 2' • ~•11-..1 St .. 22·4 Wf 1'. ,....... .._,, 11-5 27 10 Mm11-.0l8, 2(1.4 17' S.11 Fr111elKO, 22... '11 Olti.t 1111m1 r1<;1itolhos -· 111.t• •.,_be!l-caltv· Jliltlbllme, Brlgh&m Young. Onlll llml>er11, Luu,.vllle, MarsNU, HfW M"lco, Sit. Jo.tl!lrs (P&.J, St .Jcjhn•1 (H.V.I. SC>lllh Caroll,,., y.,,_._, V"Ol"ll Tt<:h. WALT ALSTON Dodgers third basemen last )'e&r c:mn-- mi.tted 53 errors in handling i31 chances. a ,a.mazip.g in11ccuracy of 10 pera!lll. At 24, Bill Rissell owns shortltop. Be is the successor t.e Wills aad the mm who *wed the veteran out vf his pmiliall and i:Dto television announcini. R~ h1l .272 last year, second mt among the National League shortstops. A I o n g with Osteen, the Dodger $lil0,tlflft coothtgtWt iuctadt:s only center At Hentreal 6!!IB Willie Davis who feels '"'lbe Dodlftrs will be much strooger this Y""'·" Duvis, JS. was named the Dodgers cap.. lllil 'for thJs coµllng seasm, while saying 'Tll be the team leader only if they want -.e.·~ Minny Mota, a .m bitter last season, Willie Crawford and Vm Joslua are out· aelll candidates along with Buctner and hdorek Joobua led the PCL with a .:m nerage and Crawford bas been with the Ollllfgers since 1961, never quite achieving 6e success predicted for him. · cltcbing provides a paradox and aome. ooe 1is bound to be unhappy. Etther Steve Yeager or Joe Ferguson will be the starter and both are young. Y~er is one ol. the best defensive receivers the Dodgers have bad in several se.as<m5. In his first 13 games as a Dodger last year, Yeager hit .013. At the end of ttx! season -from Sept. 2 on -he hit .375. If Yeager picks up where he left off, he is the catcher and Ferguson wijl be back in the mimrs. A1stoo wants the second youogsler, whoever be may be, to play every day in the minors. He bas veterans Dick Dietz md Chris Cannizzaro as the back·up receivers. Dietz is the better bitter and Carmizzaro the better defensive catcher. In any event, the Dodgers need more hitting. They moved the fences in about IO feet to help the batters but whether that will be enough remains to be seen. ~ IOC Officials. Happy With New Atmosphere MONTREAL (AP) -Officials say a new and happier chapter has opened in the turbtdent .story of the 1976 Summer OlYqlics at -oal. Members or t~ ~ oqanizing connnMtee report a ~ of at· mo.sphere and focus in the last month. rollo ... mg publication of tbe Games Wdgd amid a cresoendo of controversy. Reports 1hat ctina 1D1;J mn.met· aend-- ing •thleles to -...... -b7' me source as symbolic of bDpes h Games will 11111*.e a miWme in Olympie -.,.. A ipKecrun said, bowe:wr, be 9e(!S Titfle ~ no chance that m.J of the majcr 1111 ewots will be lhifted to Tbraato or otJtcr Cllladian cities, as fnqoently pn>- _.i. Sfpla•rnts in I1!Cenl wecka have ~ed aMlnd qaestil••s reprding facmties and spectAtor seating:, ralhP.r !ban ~r the Games should be held at au. Visiltiall eKperts appl'OWJd plBnned sp11ft1 bciN«ft Wt a pid&lre emerge; of 'W'll'ilus .sortd lederatioos ~ tNili' seprate cllllm for spectatar seating - and this iaVlllhie:s big money. [mis Clllmligey. the argaoidng cmi- D"dttft!'s ~esident for com- 110+ ., .. ,, c i t e d "encwraging" *" ... "'* . *ce I.he Jntematlonal OlYmJllC Committee approved the fi.1orJ. tJ8il plms at a mediQc in i.asnnne, Swit.eriMd, Feb. 4. - Ammg these d~elopments was the re- oeot •••• aue.nt by tbc Canadian Ow••" d Omvnerce that U wl11 sup-- port and vremote tilt Games .. through all pradiclble means.'' Chamber president A. J. Ellis ol Van-- couver opresscd conlideooe m the abili- ty of tbe orgmlzers lo opente the Games witbou.t a deficit and said too ~ bad taken note of Prime Minister Trudeau's assurances that there would be no special financial aid from the federal government. Chantigny also mentioned ~hree officials ti. international amateur sport visited ll\ODtreal recenUy aOO approved preparations and venues in Strll fiekls as rowing, weigbtlifUng and judo. Thomas Keller of Switze.rland, presi· deot of the General ~mbly or Intema· tion3l Federatkn9 and also head " tbe International Rowing F~tion. said Montreal's planning is ahead of Mfxico City'a ror the !968 Olympics or Munich's for the 1972 Games. But Keller complained that the organizers promised only 25,000 Spectator seats for rowing though "we are asking for 40,000." A similar argument in Munich ended in a 38,500 compromise . Chantigny said lt is normal lb.at seating arrangemenl.5 arc a main con· cem or the federalims because of the way Olympic revenue is shared Roughly 40 percent of leleviskin revenue goes to the roe, the world governing body for the Olympics, which after deducting its own needs distributes the remainder among natiooa:l Olympic committees and the sports federalioos. Kings on TV Tonight MINNEAPOLIS -Hoping to keep their non-losing streak alive and stay in the chase for a National Hockey League playoff berth, the Los Angeles Kings take oo the Minnesota North Stan too.igbt (Clannel s. 6 o'clock). 'Ibe Kings have woo four games and Ued one in lhelr last five games and in that span , Rogie Vachon has been the netminder. He has permitted· just five goals in the five games and has scored two shutouts. for Golf · Lead tonight and a Los Angeles viclory would a notc.h ahead of Gary •Iall's 50.5 and wrap up the Pacific l)ivis1on title. lt'.s on well pas! Alan MC!Gregor 's 51.J. Hall is D I radio ~KFJ ) at 6 o'clock. . with Indiana University and McGregor 1·ve T1· ed West missed 11 games with a hanl· swims for Lehigh. . string muscle pull recently bul rtlumed The marks are t:i.hulated by the ~~ :ai t#~~~~"'l:~iilf:~!.;;;~~ef.~;;;,;;;..,;;..,...::;;,,..,..;;;a;""';;:;...;...,.;:;;.,a: five games. His 9COl'ing of 19, 17, 19, 28 and 23 points as well as his assists ol a, IJ , 8, 10 and 11 have made the Lakers strong again. West. bu now pl~yet.I in 892 regular season games and needs to mRke just 47 more free throws to reach 7 ,Im for hb: career: And he needs just 61 more as.s1sll to reach e,ooo. Shiliata Wins f!ONO!,ULU -Flashy Kunl•kl Shibata of Japnn, demonstrating once again his mastery over Jelthanders, took the World Boxing Associltloo's junior lightweight l\fcCarLhy Switches A't_'HENS, Ga. -Jame5 "Babe" Mcd:irt!1y, who Monday left the helm or lhe Dallas Chaparrals ol Ille Amertcnn Basketball Association to return lo col· lege coachin~, says he "starved myseU out nf pro sport!." McCarthy began recruiting Geort1a high shcool basketball stars today. his first full day on the jdb a& head coach at the University of Georl!:la. lie succeeded Kt:n Ro:tf'mond, who &-as !!red Sunday i1fter po:iting a 92·11 l ~ord In eight sea.sons. t Four players took ~el earty- lf'\ .. off tlmcs {o .. pw n s ~1onday for the first round leed ln the V.'ro;.lern Tow.._. OGtf A1+ta•iw'! 10th $25,000 evmt at lbltingtmi Seldill In I lunlfnlton 9e1dl. Mitch Voges of a.ta Vista. .,. a JI. . 3'. Rid< Divel of 1-a Nlguel -)I.. J7. Grq Plucr o! Loi ........... - and Steve ~ of Seattle came II wttt.,.,_ J&:J.1 for e -stroke edKe ._ 6"e others. Havy r1tn1, cold -lllld • outgrowth ot poana arass nwle. the grc'CJUI aoft 1iid bUJ"l'Y and lbe iob\i'. got ' wane as the day wore on. ' E""'7 plls who •towed llO \he l"'flmS made deep i.e... 1 M m the ge'1e1 JOd. There W8!10l a i-t namd in tile last group to tour lbe llilly l ,D4-yard JIN' '72 courtie. SllooU!C 7b •ro Grof Trwilpas of SID Diego. Alu Taple di -..,., l'>C< llld>ade of Slit Diego, Tom Koapp of florissant, Mo., and Jim .And~-.oo 0( ukowood. Tbe ruaged eot.ne which ii dot\td wftll on wells was made ewa 'ft'Ol'Se by lhe poann araa, a weed w'htch oori>es into C.Womia on the shoes of out-of-state gollers and grows fastest In cold weather. l'lnt prize In each of %1 WTG A events Is 15.000. Tba fmal 111Und ,,.. beld today. .. I fltlea 'lllal • In I Moh and Mahl bu! IJbip He Eagl but ' USA I up to th ra gettl Eagl Tas will for and call blac a talk Jng all. be a sid a fi ing dra said the aw Bak car. at end get a lit ma! to the cw yea tor • ' • ,, I ' ' ' • v • . ' I I 11tt~, M1nh 13, 1973 Start Your: Engines! Distance Stars Vie at HB Spikef est No-hits ·.; : ;.; ;~ WITH DEKE HOU lGATE ' . If 1obn Mahler ~·1 win anotber ,.. .. all yoar be Is con- lldml of a repeol vlctoey ID the Ontario F..UVal 500 iurt1e race. '""l lo, be Is II lia turtle down die between now Olld Augwit. 'The pol lhop ....,... wh> pn>Yldes the turtles lor U>e raee flV'1"/ :rem' pn>miaed me l can have AmoJd again," MahJ1r JIJd. Arnold '!Ill be going loc tlvee llraliht. His winning "drl"""" In 1971 was Cole Yarl>on>ugh. There Is • distinct talent when tt "°""" to turtle racing Mahler, clolms. It's sort <JI a penona1 thing between the turtl~ and his driver. "1 take tbis ~ic glass aod bit him oo. the shell just so," Mahler sald, recalling his winning performance with anything bu& h.unllity. "It must set up a vibration inside lhe shell that makes that turtle want to j u m p oot ol his skin. He really moves." Mahler's unorthodox tactics were protested last year by secaJdi>lace l.Joyd Ruby, whose turtle (named Tex naturallv) finished six feet back in the 21-foot race. 'The prot~ was dis- allowed. Ru1es are somewhat lenient in turtle racing. . When the real racing season, the U.S. Auto Club champion- ship one, gets under way Saturday, MaJiler wiU be a spectator. He has been selected t.o drive the Norris Industries backup Eagle ln the three 500-milers. lnt;l.ianapolis, Pocono and Ontario, but the team's plans so far do not include taking in any other USAC champ races. * * * lt'1 a great break for the Iowan, who has never driven an up to date car that Is et1nceded a chance to wl1J since he came to the USAC circuit four seatons ago. After lady tllere -mf&bt be a chance Mahler can run other nces, but un10 tben die team plan Is to bend all efforts toward getting ready for the first Important race. The No. J car, a new Eagle, will be driven by Sam Posey. freshly back from the Tuman series lD New Zealand and Australia. Posey's old car will be rebuilt to 1973 1pedfication1 for rttabler and the plan is for both drlver1 to have equal eq uJpment. l\fahler ls one of the victims of USAC's rt!Stricttve driver interchange policy. Although the club has announced it will al- low Its members to compete In a Jong ll1t of events sanctioned by other bodie1, the Ust speclDcally omits the racing aeries Mahler and several others would like to compete ln. * * * That is SCCA's L&M formula 5000 circuit, which offers more prize money per race than USAC does, not counting the ~ milers. "I've been asking to drive fonnula A races both last season and th.Ls year," Mahler said. "The answer is always unequivo- cally no. Now the new rules are out, end yru can read it in black and white. "There is very strong feeling in Indianapolis that USAC has a patent on open wheel racing in the United 1states. There is talk again that Roger Penske and Mark Doliohue are chang- ing their plans and are going to do the fonnula 5000 circuit after all. ''lf they do, this thing might end up in court, which would be a good thing, because It would settle the issue." Donoo.ue, the Indy 500 champ, and car owner Penske were sidetracked from their preparatioos for the L&M series when a fire destroyed their race car. However, according to Mahler. American Motors has urged Pemke to make a fresh start. He has a new car. and M1C en· gine deveklpment has resumed. There may be a confrontation that would cballenge the top sanctioning body's right to control its drivers after all. Very few drivers are willing to admit their biM toward Penske's cause, as Mahlq~, but most of them Pre pulling lor him. One car owner re~J<eii: "G<iod.. I'm glad Roger is doing it. That saves me from hav· Ing to go w court, maybe." Tough Being a Wosnan She won't admit It, but k's still tough being a woman in drag racing. Paula Murphy, who would just as soon be puttering artiund the house, is on the road this week, starting another tour. You can't imagine what the fastest woman in the world on wheels woo.Id most like lo do. Get married and settle down, she said. "I like to do yard work and crodlet and do handcraft." said the woman wOO beat all other !UMy car drivers in top speed a week ago in one d. the yeer'a biggest meets, the ISth annual Bakersfield Fuel and Gas Qlampioruitips. She was clocked at 218.93 m.p.h. in her STP Plymouth funny car. Twu weeks earlier, driving the Pollution Packer rocket car at the NHRA Wintemationals. she hit 258 miles an hour at the eod of the quarter-mile. Miss Murphy ha!I been a trailblazer for women in motor sport since before anybody ever heard ol Gloria Steinem or Bella Abzug. She was the first wom&JJ to drive an . Indianapolis car around the speedway, first licensed fuel driver in both NHRA and A!IRA, first to drive e jet car and a rocket car, first lo go 2001n a quarter-mlle. So she has done It ell, it wOOld seem. Why doesn't she settle down? •' "I haven't lilet the right man yet," she said. Very, few women in publlc tile, maybe excepting movie stars, get to meet as many men ·as Miss MW'pby does. So maybe she's a little plclcy. There CClfl be no doubt about k, ho'Aw~, the life ol a fe- male drag racer is far from the glamorous whirl it might seem "' i)e. This week she and mechanic Jack Bynum are en route to the NHRA Gatornationals in Florida. She loves Florida. espe- cially the 'beaches, where she used to frolic as a schoolgirl every yea r when her family went on vacation. But in midweek, when she would like to be enjoying Florida, she will Oy to Nevada and oompete in an olf-road race. Then there is the other time on the road, Lraveling from race to race. Area Swim Honor Roll Tract and Dtld !au wbo wltooacd U.. 1972 Soutllm> C<uitles trlcl< and lltld U· travaaanr.a a t Huntlngton Bach High School w I t b dittJ.nce racing at a renith, might not have seen anything compared to this year'• p~ 1pecUve showing. The 52nd annual aUalr will be staged Saturday on lhe Oilers field and two of the iremJere distance stars in prep track clrcles are 1Chedul· ed to make an appearance. Alamito s Harness Results MON11y. March 11, 1'11 Clear & fl11t FIRST RACE -One mlle. Pace. CoMll!on. l & ( year old m1ldtn1. Pur..., i7000. Pok•V Jr.I C II u ck B<lrry 0 fWl!llem1l True DlllCIY (WHl!ams) Time -1 06 4/S ( 1-<1yd1n 1.56 ' 60 2.JO 1.llO •.40 ,... Alto r1cK1 -F. L. Uri, Olamonlt Prince. Bibbie B1bllle, s1eve Time, Fair Dream. 12 °"lt••O•, J.Pok1y Chllc:~ & l·llHrJ O, Plld nt.611. Sl:COHD llACI! -0... mlt•. P1oe1. Cl1lmlng. All 111n bre<I In Calli. Purse SllOO. Sof•enlo T•u 1wn111m1JJ.10 2.60 2 60 Andy1 01hll1 CH1yCMn Jr I 2 IO J.IO R-BIH Tes1 (81yle1sl 3.60 Tlmt -2.0I 215. Ali.o raced -Catch Ml First, Our PIPM Doll, Wlnh Binn, Stormy 0... !lance, Jllt1 Choke. THl•D RACE -0... mll1. Trot. Condllkned. 5 y11r old & under. PurM .,.., Lumber S!1rlet IWllll•m•l l.60 7 IO 2.60 Frr!9ht Ml!ln•I• IRintlll) 3.IO 2 eo Roy-II Go lOennll) 3.00 Tim• -2.06 •ts. Alan rac.a -All~ Ktn. Greil Freight, Crafty Ftll8f', verve Hannver. S..:ralchtd -Chauncey R, FOU•TH llACI! -One mile. f'acr. Cl1lml119. AU egn. f'urH 12000. Andvs Y•"kff (RaPOne) •.«> J.40 2.60 Reeds S111lt (Meyock•l a.00 •.20 Pride 01 Egypt (OelOmer) 3.10 Time -7.07 3/5. Al10 rtcld -Gunnsr Holme, Belovld Liiiy. Jtl 0.,1cer. Final Coon!. Egewood Jtt. FIFTH RACE -ON! mlle. Tror. Cl•lmlng. All a~tl. Purse S2900. Lumber Son (Wlllltms) I DO (.DO J llO Calgary lid (0...nl1l 5 .0 ( .0 Clover O•v (8ayle11l 1 80 Time -2.m vs. A!Ml riced -Ar.,,two tnvlc!a, kellys ~H, Arl•dne, Victors Awerd. Cr1t1y LObell. 51XTH •ACli -~ mile. P1<e. Cltlmlno. All IQft. PUrH SlWO ·A11e1r•• BO\' (WIHltrml 6 00 l Cl 2.ro Erl" Frott !Alch""""°l • 00 2 ro G1mt1 Jeck ITlcllen 2 IO Tlme -2.G.I l/5. Ali.o r1cld -Bav 01 Gold, Hurrying Henry. B•r-11 Ol1M. Como Hanover, Scot1 Siik. ScrllCri.d -SllV V1rlety. Co1msel J1cl1. ss Qlll..ut, .. ,,..ru ..., a Mrl• fir.I, ~Id SH.JO. taVEHTH llACf -One mill. Pace COl'l(JI Horo. All 81191. Purte WOOO. Racily Ed IOen"l1! 1•.IO S.60 1.10 Kor~I• Woollen (01ull001) 5.60 J 80 Mlllord1 Chlet (W!lll1m1) 5 00 Time -7.01 l/J. Aht1 riced -Perlecr We111on, Sllv1r Butler, Tenoerlne, Y1nkn Crffd, 61g Time. No i.cr1tc~1. EIGHTH RACE -One mlle. Pitt. Clalm(ng All 1oe1. Puru WlOO Kor1nul CBoydJ 390 360 180 Cru11.,,.. H1nov.,. (Gr1<1ory) i6.60 1.ao Herm1 B1rry (Wls~1rdJ •.00 Tlm• -2.0! 1 IS. AIMl rj>Ced -Dwvtr Hanover, l-lel· C~Dfl H ... 11111,, MllddleOrook John, EdOeWCICd K.ene, Harrod1b1Jru. Scra1cned -L•rry lime, Jtflenon E~Pr"IH. HINTH RACE -One mrl1. Pit,. Cl1!mlnv. All •!I••· Purw l?«ICI. Dlurmlnv (811llrry ) 6.GG J.j() 4.DO "'-He11Mr (Berknerl t.00 7.20 Covsln A"" ILew111 6.10 Tlmt -1072 5. AIMl rlc.-d Rll/y Rlcll1rd. Specet>lazer' MIU Amy •dlot, Sibert Gill, L1dy Trip. Sc•1lclled -Gr1tetul Be11,r , Glad1lllfl1 B1t>1 $5 E•ldl, •·Dl11rml119 & I-Fr" HH1her, P••~ Slll.50, A1·ea Banque ts Se t Tonight Basketball. wrt>stling and soccer athletes al Edison Hlgh School and Estaneia High's basketball teams will be honored with sports awards banquets tonigh1. Estancia will re1e its 1973 basketball teams al th c Balboa Pavilion ~Tale of the Whale Restaurant~ beginning at 6. The Edison banquet is slated for the sehoo1 cafeteria -------- ~!llE...Allt.E:.:r.li.tGILJHAN QQ SPARKLING, DEPENDABLE, USED CARS FOR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S HARBOR BOULEVARD OF CARS. I I Wbttbl!r Oley \1111 r u n IOinll .:h other 1n headon compe«UOn rw rtmain in dtJ- lmnt eftllls Is DOI 00"1ajn lhi! early In U.. -1<. One tbiDI ii ctrtnin, howevu, ffteet records in the mJle and two--mil<-arc in dlsUnct .jc!opardy as th~ two Mvals warm to the oec11slon. Barry Walllams, a New Zealander by birth and a senior at North Torrance Jligh school, was nipped at 1he tape by Santa Ana's Mari: Genl't a year ago io the large .schools mile run. Wiiliam! powed 1 4:18.6 and later In lhe acuon had a best efrort or 4·06 0. This Is well below the meet standard or -1 IU.6 set a year ago by El Ca~ JOn's outstanding meet athlete, Tt·rrv Collon. I:>i.irlng the recent indoor seRson. \\'llliarm posted an 8 57 2 two-mile. If he eleets to go in the longl'r race. he will Wl- doubtedly face one of Lhe top Spi·kers Sparl~le A pair of ex-Newport. Harbor High athletes have stood out for Stanford's track ~ea1n in early season meets. Shotputter Terry 1\lbritton got off a school record heave of 61-51h: against San Jose State while Matt Hogsett ran a 53.0 for the 440 hurdles against Fresno State. Both are freshmen. ~------- Harness Entries Loi Al 1ntrie1 for Tve, Clear & last. Ber~ev (J Graham) 1"6CiOO llf·Fl•ST RACE. OM mile. Pace l U•ron 8 ll . 011"!10<11 \6000 o,•nionie Pac• !G. HolO sneo ye1r Didi ano unaer 11\Bt """e ntvtr Oiti.I ~An IF . H1ydenl 56000 Wtln $2500. Purse SHOO 1-larlfn l~ (T. T•rtOMI U000 Arwty't Coho (M, c,,en!t'I J1t~ All<11'°" IK. C1rln11l SbOOO Albl0<1 Ellu. Point <K li'otled lU·StXTH llACE. Orie milt' P1c~ M1ffme Outl.l••r IL. RaPl'"~J c1a.m;ng llalldlc1p. An ages 81•it C1rlleu RO<ln~ tG. Longo1 clalm•n<J prlc1 ll1,1'1C PurH lS,YJO, Gr11>11 Timi fG. t1olT) Ol1mon1t King <G. Holl) Ill 000 Mitter Ou Beau ~W. Snort! M001•~n• !R Wl1ll1"'9) SlSllOO TObV't Skipper (l 03UllO'I) lumOtr Brt1 IJ. W11111mll 115.COO Maltl Pr11·1<e (J ~~;i1.,n Good Pt<gn (P. Aoo;c:l\lol lll,7JO l:it.SECOND A.I.CE. 0... mile Pee•. JeH•r'lon Sl>lld IC. lloydl 115 coo Call!. brtd 5 vNr olOs i>~d u..ae• m1lO· Pr-lie• (0 Ack8f'm•nl 121 7$0 ""'-Purse UOOO. Alldv'• Lf\IPr IA. Cr1l11! Sll..000 W1e l(eUv O IC Canpt...ll Jr.1 Qua•tr f ·d (J. Dennis) 110.DOO Timmy Tan CA. W+n'J"'! lll-SfVENTH RACli. ~ mllt Trot. .t.ndv"• Ga'"/ !M C.rt'fliff"l tn~ll~to'n~I Pu•M \10000. Spu1hf'I Mu•.c !R MCGOl'~Ol•l Lutn~· i-<•n<>Vff" tR. WJll01m1! Tht 610 Man (L G'M:Jcry1 A·Ytl!O"ll l(nfl1 IJ. !ltllR'{) Dar" Oftto (M. "-1 Gun~mrrh (0. Ack8f'm1n) ~rffcl Tern!lfl IL Ddulloo~ Jay·~ G•I {T OeNllO C1ls1nd u w;~harO) L11rlr>0 ~'•~ 01 Vin .. K•Yl Ul·THIRD RACE. One mile P1ce. A·Worrt~n~ Dian IJ. 8•lley~ Clalmlng Alt ~oe•. Top 011;1.,,lng prlc• Gunn•• 1r Y/nttltr) 13600. Pur"' 1?000 8uft Off !J Graham) Ro•y Gr~llen IE Sl~warrl SJ600 12'·ElGHTl-t RACE. One mllr. P~r• Miohty Scoirn !R. N111·~ms) 1.1000 Clnlmln<1 n•ndlcap. All 19ft$. Ba~·c Henry 11;;d (L. Brun~! UYHI cl~lm1rq ~·kei IU.OQ0.120.000. H1oh~• Good Cr•rten "A'" (M, Aubin) IJOOO p•icM ara,y tor 01Jl1lde. T°" ~l•lmlno Aevll• Son IS. Vollarol llOOO 11<lc~ 11~ l)t1) Pur&e \S,SQD. L1dv B1lwln !M. Sml!hl $.l6'IO Scotl"h Ot'l•Qn (I( ll•her! IU.000 Sleid'f' ,,.o!e IE CobOl ~ Le Saran IJ BalltVl sn,ooo Clmmy !P Rocchio) UOOO JJllV ,A<1mrral (R WU1l1m•I 116,000 U:Z·FDURTH RACE. 0"9 mllt. Pace Mr fl•o fl IJ. W1!111m1) 111,000 Cla•mlM. All ~c~ Tep (l1lmt11V price P~d r,,,.. IJ Mllt1r1 111,000 "'"°· Put>e 11000 Pw.iy JOUI IJ. Oennl1) 118,0QO Prone• Sam fR. ~trn'lt<"m~n) $31$0 hue l'\~r-.n fl. Wlnel 111,0QO F!i!hY S~y [J TOOdl SJ000 f l<'"•n< fl•'1• (0 Aderman) 111,000 Samp_, Fri..::o !J. Sh•rr~nl IJOOO IU·HINTH RACE. 0fll! mile P•ct. ~ Our Juani•I !A Bahou1hl 11600 ••n• e.J<n '"° ""°'" 1n11 have never Vl1!1 Knox (P Wllllam'I \.j,Jla ,n '5,000 PurM l?IO'J O•l•no Ki:! (G. Holt> 01000 W P "Olo. CR W!lllam1) C1ollot N 40 Moel ~)O')) fltlh•"Y ll•v (G. 1(•1m1lttl .I.My '~ l•!anl ll 0a1J!IO\'I) '1'6CID NI• YI St•e•"' " 0nomfff Ul<l'"I FTH RACE . Orie ..... 1 .. Pl(f o,r«I Ml•!• (J. Grundy) Cl1lml119 ell il!lfl. Tep d1lmi111J pr+'t /.Ir OOUblf 0 (C C1mpt)l/l Jr.I 11100 Pur5f 1'.DJO. P111er Jey "dlOI (N. M1n,1) Ml:.s .-a10 Rav fR. v. l(ey! UJ'OO llle Mid Crffd IL DIUll°"I TOl'1' lD<ll (S. Ofltlmef) S6DQO P1911 R-• !O. sr .... 1111 ~---------- ··························••e••············ •• • • • : WESTERN NATIONAL : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • (DINGHIES TD SAILBOATS) • ~~-~~~~.,-,~-f--"':::.:::....:c:..;.'-'-'--'--"-• • • ' distance Sllll""L 1n Soothfand prep ranks tht.:s yi:ar in Curtr.s Beck or S&n!a Monica Beck set the meet standard aa a junior a year ago at 9:09.9 ttod later Ju.,.,i:rt-tl his ptrsonal best to 8·47.0 A strong runner, he is e.J.· peeled to push the meet record below nine minutes Oii Satur- day and if \\'illlams Ui in lhti race, the duo cou ld seriously threaten Steve Prefontaine's national lntcrscholac;tic record of 8:41.5 set in 1969 at Coos llay. Oregon. Wh1k! the spotlight \\·W bt focused squan!ly on t b e di~tance ractil ln bolh the large und small s c h o o I 1 categories. there are other top performers shlled to compete Sa!,Urday Including Newport Bfach's Jim Neidhart in the shot put. Neldhart placed sctond to Tc:rry A!brhton a year ago in tht 12·pound iron ball event w1lh a 57-4 effort and appea rs well ahead ol all comers thi s llme around . .. Chargers : .. La Quint• . llllh'• Cbetile PhilllP' fired • brilliant no-btt· ter a1 Edison High'& ChJ.r&•tt Monday afternoon ln 1111n· league baseball. leading his mates to a >-0 victory over u,t. visitors. • And Nti wport Harbor Ibo went down to deftat, loslni to in\'ading SuMY Hills , ~I. Phillips struclt out 16 Edllon batters and walked ooly blro. The free passes came In the fir..t inning to Jerry Lopez add Rick Hibbard. After that he settled down and vthiffe<I a do:r.cn Edison batters swing-ing. .· •• ;"-;ewport Harbor 1truck Mr- ly for a run 1n the first inning when Frank ~1cDflnald reach- ed Hrsl on a fielder's cho~ and ~ventually scor~ on :i. \\'i\d pitch. ; But Su1mv 1-lills came up with th~e ln the third stanza with a bloop single causing the most damage for two rbi. Newport pitcher SI e v c Bukich looked sha rp in a relier role, allowing only two hits and no runs In the nnal rour frames. He struck out five in that span. 5111111'1' Hiii• UI "' •II r ~ l-lt\18"'. ct 2 1 •• Ml~ .. N•v•rrO. lb l : : : Matale~. It ~ 0 o a O•nley. P< 2 O O 0 BrlJW!'. C O 11 11 0 Pr1lller. II 2 0 0 0 Ht11UNlll. rt o O O , O Tnomft,rf 2100 C1rr. 311 2 11 Mtr1'V Hlv•rno, 1'I 2 1 I • T Bff"llef"el,S$ ~:O •t, ~;·" 223~·, .....,.,, "',..,. 01 "·-· ·~~2 ""0 Tennis Results R~lllOtl.$S Mc0otl1ld, II O~Uy, rl Fohom, cl Ta~ll, Ill w~u •. p11 Le1t.1. ~ Pier. p11 Frum. lb Pouhch. oh v ....... , 211 Macken, pl\ At>l:lol!, p Bukltn. p Ou~e•, pl\ l 1 0 0 3 0 I • 0 2 0 o. 0 2 O I • O I 0 0 • 0 I 0 O' II 1 0 •. 0 2 0 0 0 o o o·. • 2 O I 0 1 II 0" ·b 1 O o D 1 0 0 . O' I 0 0 0 15 l 5 0 GOltlln Wt$! (1) (l) Sln!I An• S1ng!tl Par~tr (G) Clflt Fo•ltr 6·1, 6·7 Tendll (G! dll1 Gom1I •·6, .. 4, 61 $i(!cr !Sl Cle! ICl'l•to• 6-7. 6·7 Hac-ny (5) def W•lln 1>-l, 6·1. 1oc~ CG) def On!!we•!>O 1·S. •~. ~ 1. Welgmann CGJ Clef Porrl1r 61, 6·1. ........ P1rke-r·Ttnd1! IG) Ml 5"ostfr.C.omll 6-?. 3-t. 6-• ICa•ner·Walsl> (G> won llY 0~11un P mq,.WelQmann IG) oel O"rlv1ro1· Poo•i~r 1-41, 6-4. 6-4 UC lrvlnt tt) !ti OCC Slt19lft cn1ooen Ol e1e1P1-.i1-1, t·•. J~blon•-1 (II Ml 5Ul1Jkl 6·7. It-] wr111n1 11i <lri 1o11o111 lt-0 • ....o !lei:kt!I Cl\ dri llllM (t.], ... J . r ASlmM> c I) def ForDll ""'· 6-1. COMer ill def M~rr1y &.J, •1 ....... Crlpe.Sumr14'1;1'11 !II def Su1ukJ..l1D1!1 &--1, 6-1. E1srm1r1<8eckfft (tj ael l"towden- R.oblns It-I. lt-0 Cor>ger·Elld1I~ fl) dtl For~·Mytrs 6· 1. 6-l V1n.Jty L•gwn1 lt•(h !:Mil (I) W1llmlnJ!.,. s1nv1n Sedefl (LI 11111 C•llanan lt-0: clel 1•111111 6 I d•! J~nl<ln 6-2• def Armrir 6·1 M(Cfuno (l ) lost 5.1; won 1 S, ... 1, 1·6. llul•I 1Ll IOlt Q-fl, •·t. 16, 16. Jay (ll lost J~; WOfl (t-(1; IO•I S·1. 5 1 Doubl11 ~pauldln9·Pt11rso1 CLl drf Foer.cn- Jone~ 6-1. lt-1; de! Marlin<tl·PaytO<! It-Cl. .. Jarl>l>...,.,l••lor Cl! ""'" 67, 67 won lt-7. 6.(1 Vln.lly MtrhMt (111•) It\<) Rtdllnd• lb19let H1ma~~I !Ml lot! !o Aln1n<.1er l·I d" Dereu• 1·Si Cit! Poncle~ltr 64, d" New"'"" lt-0. N·<l'Kt•1on !M) ""'" lt-1. tlld l-4i. ""°" i..1. 6--0 1(1wa•hlma IMI W'Of1 ...:!. 6 l, Hod 6 6 ... ~n 6-0 Coo~ CM• "'°" 6 •, ,.,, lo•t l·6; won .. 0011blt1 1,-\0t',,,..,.~ .... ~•n~y !Ml losl •o G'nman· Btrotr I~. 1·~. ~·• J°""111tt·Bo•~· &-e •·· r~rrv·Zac-IMJ IOI! ,_., 1·6. wort 6 l. 1100 6..1 V1r1Uy Ntwpart c:rn I•) Sunny Hiii• S1'191't1 o·P~illv INI d~! H•~I 6·3, de! 01'1¥11 6·J· de! IC11tm1n It-I> d!I Go·I" 6·1 Mdro1I INl to,i 16 . ...,., 6·1, 6·1. 6·1 P•rlllnt !tll loo! 0~, '~' won ~·4, t 1 Myer~ !NJ !Oii o.t, ._.. o..\; w<111 &·• Doo.111111 J-.·Sman {NI <.1111 11umpllr~s­ My1roor> 7·5, It-I. 1111 Ftr1wo.on-Mllb .. ' &.(I. Spltr•J1coblllfl IHl WOl"I •·l, It-I;"""" 6.(1. &·1. Vt™tJ Sin Cl-I• (U!Jii) (lJl'IJ Cn!I Mftl s1..,1n Htmro !Sl IOI! to Giii.,. 1-6; r~t !o u.rrl\ lt-11 clef Thom""'°" it--1; <lei MUlfVI" •·• L•.Oll• tS) w°" ~. ~: lotl It-I. •~ lt~lltv (5) won '"4 .... 1. •?. • l Wei,11 'SI ......, '4: loll J.4, """" ..... l()ot l_.. ....... Mccoo..,i1.st1Phfn5 csJ 'Pill wll" Klftlllll'IHlfl. M.lndlno ..._ 1·5> *' lo llroro..,..·Sm•llwooO 1-7, 41, Ohon-M1ddocU 1pllt 1>-J, s-11 spCH .. 6, ... ,. V1nnv Edition flt) 110/ Klllll1 lint••• ~ol~ lEl 11e1 Howell 8'J1 del S1uroen 6·J. !!ti W•dt µ); OOI Cur1ls , .• Newm.on (El IOSI W; won lt-0. 6·1, 6• TD!all sc-11¥ ln•lllll ll M if: om 1DO D-J 5 I surinv Hiii• Htwporl 1 00000~1 s .1 . ---ldl-ttl • •• , hftl( l 0 • • 1 0 0. ,0 Nklloh, rt L-L, 7b Ml-nl. U S.lwood. < MtcY. Ill Wtlnberot:r. ti Dft.rosltta. lb McCoy, cl S<:.fll.,,..lllf"I. p 00!'>«1'V. II T•rr1nr, pll lO!ll~ ~ : : ~ 2 D I 0 1 o o a 1 a 11. • • ! ~ : . ~ 1 G d G 1 o o .. a :Ill •• ~. La ~ti ,., .;a.. J. a._..., a ~ ; ?:•t Phltllp1. p ,' ', ,o. ·,' o. Miiia. rl s. Br....,.r, •• ' 2 O' o s~n1n1ri.n. c l I 0 · 0 C1l-.3b Jo1'1 Mini ... lb I 0 1 ' 2 Hoovtr, lb 3 0 1 • 2 o . Miiian. cl D O II ·o Jone1.cl lOQ·I Z~l•r (El lot! 0-4, 5.T, $.1, 24. M1rlln, If I 0 I) 0 El•llr !E) losr 0-4, l..!; won 6·2, ~1. McCarlt!y, JD 1 O O O DOUiiiet lot1l1 'U 5 5 · '5 Ellmort·PCSIO (E) <Ill l(ri(k-llc!>I> It-kOl"I by lnnl"IS • Mll 1. i..Jo def T1U•n·G1roer """ lt-3 Ru..O·E"1lgn 4EI U>ll1 '"'-' 6·'-spll! (. Edl•oo OOI) 000 11-0 O·il' 6, •• , •• ;:=:...:========'·=·=':'":"===""="'=:':"""=:·~·;': LEASE GRAND PRIX ~--~------ -@ ...., ............ -.. \ --..i.. , There's fres h money Jn town-et Commercial Credit's new personal loan office. We specialize in hqtping people overcome 1helt hnanciel problems with personal loans. We're equipped to counsel each of our customers on tlnanc1al matter~ !!nd .h'}lp t~it,m pecJd~. Oll.Jh'! lo.tti!\atte!ir m~'l!Mlrnei!~: Likira 2tid !Mngaoa loan. Or home improvement loan. Or loans to con· sotidale bUls. We helped more than 340,()(X) peopte with over 5430.000,000 through our more than SOO olr~s Jail yeir. We'll be glad lo help you, too. ' • • ~.Commercial Credit NMd Money? Th•l'• what we're here for. Commercial Credit'• new personal loan olllce. 370 Ea.t 17th SLTeet • Pho no: 645-l!700 Cnd!I Ufo Inearuf!I 4.-.Jtaw. '° •HstW. a:.1vt111••t Crollitli._.. • c---.t Cr..ut 1"*8,, TllOl~•fatoN ... " • • •• • . TooooW. -"· 197S TONIGHT'S . TV IDGlllJGHTS XJUJt • 7:30 -~ PleRe. ~ JOlll Cn• ford -a. Olcar .. -~ ot 1945 tw her porVQIJ of U.. -role In Ibis clroma wltb Ann Blyth ~ ZICbary Soott. NBC • 8:00 -''The7 Olll It Kurder." A dlllrlct 11.tonley 1n....ui-• n!mmlng f)OOI mtll'der. Jim Hllllon, Uoy« Bochner, Lslle N!elaen, J...ica Wal· ter. KCIT 9 8:00 -Turning points. A new pro. P.'D .~with ''Reocue ot • River,• trodng the ~ llld airicultunl growth ot Oregon's Wil· om<otte V"1Jey. . . CBS 9 9:30 -"H1wtins on Murder." James Slelnrt ploys a homespun lawyer who ileiends an helras aocuoed in • triple a.ying. Strother Martin, Bonnie BeclelJa. . ABC 8 ll:3Q -Wide World ot Eiitertalnmelil Truman Capote tttuma to San Quentin for a aeeood vilil, intenlewin( convicts and prisonen. :· ._ _______ o::::zm_ .: .. . . .. . • •• '· • '· ~'. .. '• . .. . . , . : .. ... ;:· TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Eveni1111 • llAIOtU ... au111e•m-rn•-..... -u. ..... 1111o ---(1) ... -..... """"' en.Fiii I I ...... ··-( . .•. , .. ,,.,.!Mp ··--l:Jl(I)....,_ ··~(111-.... .... ..... -.. ""') ......... ""' -.-r-.G·Y-'(J)t:n-W-~ 1111 ..... __ ·--en..-·---·=--·---•m••-(l)Y•wo.--· (J)-11-·-·-""" .......... •............ Is_ ... ··-""' ·=-- UCIJ(l)E!)llCT--tCI (IO) "!lo ..... ( ... ) '12 - 0.. Milb, MldlMI CalUltiM. Bill DNnl, MtM GololU. ,. tl· tndht llCldlrcMr pollr:twomM rlsU ... lift •• lures ...... ddll ...-into • tnp. ...... __ ··--ll!l-........ -... m·-.. -.,_,_ ~JOD<llt:n -·-·tCI "°' ................... (d11) 73-.lullS Sttw1rt, Strothtf M11- tla. BoMlt Bldllia. .limes Sttwarl dirt • • 1iomes9un i.w,et wbo dlhlMb 111 helms ICCillM hi •' b1tile ...,.. thlt lfftCOWfl • sllock· h!( l'llidlltl sf family IM llld hllL a-. ., -.,,. llltlC GJ lllct ...... "'Cnlt Mt11 ti c.i.r ·--ll!l-- -· 1111111-"Tho """""' ._.. Mlt* r.-. --• tM imftli&ntioa flom Europe whldl ut1bc1 bltwett 1890 1M World W1t I aM dtclba the hnptet the lmmitranu Ind their ofbpri .. Nwl l11d on tht 111tlon, DCIJ<llED--· M.~ "A fttdt l'lllsusioft" Mllf 1 bM11 wltlt ..... 1'UNlw1 In lbortlol wbldl ....,. Mr unltllt to bllf dlildmi, I )Olllll (lrl comtS lo the Network tilts Secrecy Veil '.From :Pilots 87 1 y llVCI[ HOLLYWOOD (AP) ... n. · televlaion networU have PllJI 1tiadiod I dook ol mystery lo lhe bul'-8 ol -pllOtt. They bave kept lhe com· potllloo lo the dark Ind ~ed lhe element of IUrprlll for the publlc a1 the beginnl:Qg of each new season. But the pressures of rising pn>duetlon costs and the ad· vent of the televisJon movie altertd the practice. The pllol DIJ.llllldof .Soggy Creeh ~ ,. .. .,_*'U*'t . --------------·111 •• NOW PU.YINS. COlll MN CIMIN fl-54MSM Ml.-vi.11 CIH1111 m fftt fll,,... L.,_·~m7 P•llle l?'f"•I,_..~. P..,-. )4S.UIJ '"-1•111 V1ll9y CIMllll 12 Uf.U• _,..w..-~ CtKFOOM! 20.'t,; ' -·.:........ !!.-1(.7.'.'.1 .... -~. _,,_.,_ . andlbo'l'V ___ _ Into I !!!hotp L f ..... the iWtNb were rehdllll to -........... ~ __ .... _.._ dillml. Now NBC 11 lbWlne Hllf all the prdea Md II fn.llJ admitting -ill bet, -motiog -tblt M II pllllloc 11 piloU Oil the air. It -die pullllc lo -tblt the -... pllols. • "WE'llB RBALLY ii> terested ID tbt a•ll~ reec- tloo, • aid Tony ~ NBC's -el pr ... mn O· ..... I DOOttSOf'a1 .. ....... ......,,... ,,. ... ,twy ..,......,.. • ..,er..- ~· .. ., .. , ..... '", ..... ....... Olilt'.~--­Dllft .,.,.. 1 ;It __ ... __ ....,....... CNI •o •£SE•vt:o son lffwAt,....... ..... CINE DOM! 21 ,'::. ' .... -~-·':.'Jt:r:":O.J.~ "Rdcler 0. n.-1oor _,.. -... $fADIUM • t::.:. ''Lady si. .... -- .... '"'''-" llltl' ~·.:. .. '". -.... S 140/UM • 2 .-:;, ' ""'-UU"{".\; C.l >C"':'"'.9 • ,. i' --:.i.or, S!ADIUM ·3 ;.~, o. ..._'.lut•.L;!.!.J1l.!l!;;:• -Ill .. .._. c ,,_.. ''Delva ~ ... .. 1•1 "McCabe & Mn. Miler" "The .. Get•w•y" .. I PG! ... "Prime_ Cut" ''Posekbt Adwetrtwe.. " "" • (l'GJ ··naz .. ... .,_II. ..,,. boll • .,, ..... -111onm11 ... lhe *· 'lllt -di)' our ........ pl .. tlle .... ta-"" -.... al ... flllPll"WJI "We.-ltolrylo~ lflo llUt the --· die~ mew, JO now we to leld K don wUh pllola. Bot -lbal h --• oolld hit, the -.... grown ttlaclaollotooala•- pilol. 'l'be NBC -pUol ..-fl heavily loaded with -ii. Pl>llibly ..... lbe .... di.. ·°""'I I bit 0 f ~ fun In being a <rillc ol • potrntlol series." polloe --111111)' of them tryouts for the "Wednelday lf:r*ry-"'l'hlft 1llo Is a emaherloa of acience ftc. lion, variety Ind comedy. The1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;f;;:;=; network bas' more than • a 11 lo I -period from mlll,Jmuary lo the end ·ol llordi, NBC will air more . -boll ol the 3$ pilotl lt is .._...... fer possible ...res. II lo m uoproc:odenlOd Dl!llber of ploll for .,,, -lo Dw In mcb a tcoceutrated period. For good measutt, NBC is i....,. in a ,.,. grounded pllola from Ibo put ......,_ -ball-hour comedy pilots ••itloi In the wfnp lo .lbore up Its wealtnesa In that ca~. lteegan aaJd be sees no clanger tbat the pUot wW overwhelm or drive out the television movie as an art lorm. Nor does be think !be fact that a movie ls a pDot 4etrac:tJ from 1 t I en- tUtainment value. 0 You loot for good casting, good concept, a strong atory. I LIDO -.~··., 11 l t. '"ti , .. ~. ~ ' ' c ' ' • ,c .U1C AND CBS also are air· Ilic pilot>, but not in the aame IUbbe!' or with the same open ~ of them .. pilots . Al!C In the earli..t years of 111 "Movie ol the Week," used don't think there'• a ny~~C~•;•tt~•;••;•;::s;;•!;•;•;-~·~·~ ... ~~ sacrifice there,'', be said. "'lbe I~ studio Is going lo put Its best effort Into the·show oo that It can sell It as a series." 'Family' Holds Leiid; 'Hawaii Five-0' 2nd . NEW YORK (AP) -CBS' "AD in the Family-" again leads the list of the nation's 20 bigbest-rated television shows. oa:onling to A.C .. N..i..en ratlop made public Monday. 'Ile ratings, for the week of Feb. :l&-Mareh 4, ranked these shows In the following order: ··~·. "Maude" and "Mary Tyler Moore" (both CBS}; "Adam 12" ( N B C ) ; "Gunsmoke", CBS; "ABC Wedn•esday Movie" (ABC). Also, '"Ibe Waltons" and "Bob Newhart" (both CBS and :tied for 11th place): "cannon" (CBS): "F11p Wilson" (NBC): "Ironside" NBC; "Lucy" and "Bridget Loves Bernie" (both CBS and tied for 17th place) "Emergency" (NBC) an d "ABC "Monday Movie." "A BRIWANT FlLM-STUNNINGr' ~erw,,,...,..,..,.,... .... l-.-nte &...USMI! ....... ••-up. ~ RULING CLASS · llJllll ----·-. Slie ..... 7:11_.t:JD ~ ....... s-. ...... WEDNESDAY NIGHT* ..... ._ • MllY W,..... ·--"AVANTl'1 .......... L'9 ..... ._ • . .,. .......... "LITTLE C,ROOK AND ~NNY" ... CM.r c•> r f ' f ··--·--mliDtial sllt ll'lust IUWt NI OW!I , ___________________ _ lift. I .. .. .. :;: •• .· ·. •• .. • '*·------.. Flnt~-w-.- • "'""-Dr.lacla ...... ~"'-·--­__ ... _ ·---··-•a-•-I ID ... ..,_, (11:) "'KAH• ID tM w ...... .,...,..,_.,.-.. .. _.a_ ......... lllHll • 1111111 • lldWn., =..;.,,,. m-- <ll"" k...... ll!l-- ·-S-Clkl -ll:llDBDllJIDED- -(<n) ·-CIJ<IJllll_ .. ___ ·"'--••u•••--(i) ..... Dilll •""' ., a-(<) -w (woo) e...... '44-.loll Mc:CrN, Lhldl O.nell. ........... •Trd•C I I. 11111 e0tss11teu .,.._... .. ·-.. --I&>---·-Ql•k-11:15111-• __ ,.., U.A. CITY CINEMAS e U.OIES DAT TUBD&T-9t I~ & ~ C~U:1f .. 2* P ..... J NOW ~ ~ .. _ ... Mnrrio't ....... !*I ........ "1:1U1Qlnll•-·UIW'j.';(X0 s.t l'-.Y! Tbe most unusual botolli<t snccess of all time! ' .... Wtf1 'JRIGN,....ftlehlto..tClllt.AIDllTw, W• I 'lfnlghlilTecoNJghL YougetllxtHlyDllTllCM for .... 11.IOl lllloWodnudly,drlvetlwufOfa-- .... J'Oll wcm'lforVIL Al pr~n you•a find hlrd IO bl& NEWPORT B~CH SANTA ANA Bristol (Palllldes) at 4th St. end Compus Newport Fwy. TUSTIN R.t Hill Near S.nta Ana Fwy. ~O!tNOfR ,, ' r., 1 j t; T 1llC nutr WltO <All'() OllllllO ~---·--.-....,. -• """-'O ---·- • -I I • I " ··-··-·---·--.. -. Gen ·- Oc y a E pl y •y .. : in .. p ro 29 w And Tbls tom ·- I Cl 0 Oii (71 Everyone H1 Something That s-n• Eln Wente • OAll Y P!lD'r You Cen Sell It, Find It, Trede It With e Went Ad _,.,,. I~· _,.,_ I~ I ---1~ G9Mral Gener ii General .. Ocean front Welcome children in this fan\ily SPLIT LEVEL 5 bedroom, family room·h'ome which features 3 baths, formal dining room,:WET BAR,. laj-ge:coiivenieht kitchen witb all the exfras. Tremendous fenced yard ob dead- end type street. FEE LAND. . ... $81,50!!, Entertaining? ? ? in Ba:r,crest! ! SERVICE tho! only EXPERIENCE can glye Since 1949 BACK BAY . immaculate home. Newly carpeted &: draped. Family kitchen w/lge. eating area. 3 BR., 2 bath home w/2 car garage plus ex· tra storage. Only $38,500 1 YEAR OLD! Beautiful 3 bedroom in quiet area. Large cov- ered p a t i o , electric built-ins. Family room, fireplace. Assumable VA lo an. Easy-care yard. $38,95-0. 54-0-1720 You'll enjoy this lovely FAll)'ILY HOME on a secluded street. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, PAN- ELED family room with double fireplace plus many custom features. Large fenced CAMEO SHORES ... 5 BR., 3 bath home. Better than new in most respects. Spectacular ocean view. Xlnt 2955 HARBOR BLVD. yard and patio. . ............ .-.. $63,500. buy at $112,500 COSTA MESA 540-1720 .. 615-3000 675-30IOl·Ge""~ne=r=a71~~~~~~G~e-n-e-ra~I~~~~~~ [% BAY & BEACl-t REAL I JJnJa SfOl•~G !Ml "001'11 •fl• \•~ti '""" ~ • 81~.CANYON PtlNT!JY fLUB Your c~ance for a gfeat buy! Popular p\an ". ill this l BR home ljy ..BFoadmoo~. Lge lam . ·.:rm, formal dining room.&~ bath's. View of • patios from all rowns. 3 Car garage. Sur- rounded by more expensive home~. $104,900. 29 AUGUSTA LNE OPEN DAILY 1·5 $61,900 BLUFFS REALTY 644-1133 NEWPORT BEACH • "' _ Stop in at 1215 Devon Lane "''Our 21th Year" in Westclitf • This home is WESLEY N. TAY: ·DR 00.;1 Realtors ~'."',"' ~ •. ';".;'.';,,";'. 2111 San Joa~in H{lls Road ~lace, 2 patios. over· "Overlooking Big canyon Country Club" looking large yard w/h & t NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. . 644-4910 ;"/;ifl'.t 'AN~lt,~'9 Generel General 646-.2928 or Eve. 646-4543 We're In A Tiuy Utfle Don House General PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT "Foreclosure Pendihg" 3 Bdrm., 2 Bath Available jmn{edl.ately after small deposit and credit check. Total payment is REA' 'TORS Call Anytime 644-7662 llO!I por month. '""hlY I. painted inside, also new• I ~""""""~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" carpets, modern built-ins General General for Mom. Close to all shop-· I ----------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I ping and '°"'°Is. VA loan °1 5 BEDROOMS 1% annual per rate. $3,500 will tako iL Call $40,500 Macnab-Irvine And .,. dob't tizzy oa•ily. $24 000 This charm l n.g con. 1 Enjoy !be cazy com.tort and _tempora:ey -3 ~m' 3 Br., 2 Ba. security Of )'OUI' own ho1ne. Lachenmyer. Realtor Realty Company "SEA--SAND- SURF-SAi LS" hOme bas everything re..-All polished & shineil. Fan-* 1 ~ * * R.eai'.ton 545-9491 This large 2400 sq. ft., 5 IOKI \ 1 L 01.SO\ . " PE Al fUPj General LA CUESTA "EL DORADO" MODEL SOMETHING SPECIAL VIEW HOME 3. BEDROOM ANAHEIM F1Mll tlmf: on the ma,rlc.et - t'11111il)' Room. 'FonnaJ Din- ing Room and 2 Salhs. Im· nl&cu1ate Move-in C.ondition. Nl"W Carpeting lhrougtiout. B· I Gas Kltdldl. AJl this fur 011ly $30.!:aJ. caJl Atly- 11 m~, 646-0:i66. 4. $29,500 EASTSIDE COST A MESA. 4 lit.•droorns, 1:1.. Baths. Doo- l1lc Car Gar:igc, All 1lus for S:l!l,500. ('a.ti ,\nytime, lo16-0555. dl1I ~V,SIOIAl'I' Of Ut( COlWlU. (0 . ALL OTHER HOMES listOO in Mesa Verde at $29,950. ~ * * * • • NEWPORT HEIGHTS AREA 3 Bdrm + dt·n + 11.~ BA. Best buy at $29,500. Newport at Fairview 641>8111 (1nytlme) flim:nab -hvine associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 1025 W Dolboa 61l-)66J $27,900 ~ 1or happy living. tastic: used brick f~-1B~ Joe D. Allen 0 .,,.._ bed~ 3 bath home is Cho ce Westcliff location ~.._ ·pen "'""'"5• built tor'~•• •·-0 family. 1 . Plenty of land here to grow 24922 M ' I nd •67 I ,._ -• near sehoo_ls and shoppmg your own ve,getableS and urr a s sp. Sharp! Sharp. A few Nocks from one of the "' lhom an !rom "'~ , .... ,. --W=A::..,,.L_L..:::T::.O~­tacular custom 3 BR home. Lovely four hedroom prorcs· !uon.11ly i1('('Qrated home 11·i1 h mt!E's anrl miles of center.1Quiel street -. l.m· fruit-Pay just Sl91 per mo. El Toro Immaculate 4 BR 2 BA most pr'O£T"CSSive schools in mac 9 I ate cond~tion on tbfs~VA resale, You are the 1iinner Of home, large living rm w/ Calif. Ca1J now. \Ve have throughout. Spark l 1 n g 2 ti,..keti; 'fl the .. ~ .... b .ck "-pl '"'°· 842-2535. built-in kitchen -.,roomy FIFTH ANNUAL """""' ri lll-.: ace, pa_n-OPENTILl• ITSFIJNtoBENICEt eled den, SUMY yellow kit· bedrooms. Park-like yard. WESTERN chen! Ncat-as·a-pin. [ ~ The lflst word in suburban Realtors -1_.,. ~ NATIONAL BOAT CAU.645-7221 ~Only $59,500. Call Open Eves & 1743 Weirtcliff Or .. N.B. Plus surprise! Your privat~ bee.ch cottage along!lkle gushing waterfall. Ken & Helen Hartley 642-8235 tFl:iJ Macnab-Irvine 642-8235 I 644--6200 OPENJ'IL9 IT'SFUNTOEEMC$1 EASTSIDE 'MARINE SHOW ,...-Ji.. ~ . 11 DUPLEX ~~~!;~~.~;i.~~ ~21 , ,oosPEAt,NtltlH• •o'••MkE ... ~ ~ , FIXER UPPER ,.our ticket>. <North Coun\Y -~ I I 'EVERY DAY -Large lot and 2 separate ctol~l·frtt~:_n~um~be:;c':..'!!'.:!.54G-"'°'l220=.lc 1--T,~""';;u...-- JUST LISTED *** -REALTORS-./ * * 1505 Mesa •CiM•VerdeDr.Ea!t, P 4.1 , Ontu *--* Costa Mesa. Coktwell,lar*8r ..,21 "'*•••* S61-U30 b ·---· d r' 11 ' .,, Almost New • ~~~';;; u~~~':,,!"".P/.:~J Children Wanted W~STCUFF ~~~'o,:,.~"'.°28.i\ (Open Evenings) OCEANFRONT ~ ESTATE ~II "'AB 000 be cozy cotta,a:e! ! Priced FQf this li>Yely 5 bedroom ..,,.. t -for immed sale 'in ••As Ia" home Toca{ed near scboOI Magnificent 2 story VIP condition -52S.9:5Q. Call and shopping. Beautiful residence with 4 spacious 545-8@1 SOUTI{ Q A ST 18.fle coverE:tl and enclosed I bedrooms, ~ baths, custom REALJ.ORS. patio.. Located on quiet carpeting and drapes. ~ · cul::de-sac street. T o t a I lhan a.,,. otd and ,,..,. NEW BE,\UTY -.. only SOOJ. 841-<n10. l •••lonaily landacapod. $31 5QO Ol'fNTU.O·IT•FIM108EMCEI ~ .. ·~·hly. ~~2~~f ~~ga I 1t~$·111tl kitchen aU In dream ·con- dition -See it -~ Red '- • • "'".?» HERITAGE • • REALTORS Tee Off In Your Own Backyard Super !lbarp Golf CoUnle MNie · ._....,, ·-~1.s,'1tii0""t1- The hoUle may be hut the lot bl.e fireplace, one Is marble. is not. Where else do you Real marble baths. F'ront get blf{ &y & Ocean view patio for prlvac:y. Thli1 b1 for $.50,i(K) fee! Gene really a d re a m house. Vreeland. S45',<XXJ. All 1t.nns. C a 11 • 644-2430 . • 84~'Sl!i. FIVE HOUSES 25,000 BARGAIN CUSTOM HOME Enchanting view. Exclusive CALL 645--722L 5 &drooms In a gracious urea w/private beach. I..ux-17?,.1 Weslcliff Dr., N.B. new home with spectacular uriotl! home w/4 bcclrooms. Last One Left views from cboice canyo11 41e haths. Pool &. thernpy Tho'.• ,.. Oh• m-t 1 __ ,,.,. Jocation. "Old Corona's" pool w/J•'"' .... i· $350 000 " ~ ~ .... ,,,.~ .. .._.... ' . n1"'!<'I i11 \11·"-"1 r)('t Mar, if"s best street of lovely cus1om Cami 1'atum. '"" homes in a beautiful setting. e ~2430 e a :~ bt•t1rn1 ··r· plsn - Call 675-7225. 1 ,.,~~'!"'!"!"l~!!!!J'!~~ Fcfllur1ng M.'parate rn.1ster I' suilc & large fumi ly rm. NEWPORT BEACH Tinc; one has rourtyard en· VA Assumable Loan Payments only $182 ineluding lAXeti arxl iQw lntt>rest rate. ~nest for nt>Wlf\\·eds or rettrement haven for olckrwed& Oo!IC In Eastalde Jocadon. Call today. C WALKE R & LE E Z.farlne Contracting Firm try for udd('IJ privacy pric«I Fll'ICSt '"q u Ip men t & to sell -Nl)w \'acanl -Hur· wat~nt locatiOn. 35 Yr. ry C;dl f-<.~l Ca r p e 1 , old oomJ)l\nj. Sp&<'e ava\1. Realtors 54&-4!640 ''if1'1R~mf~. 1--::;;_;;;;75:im;i;iiA'1:t~-.,.ri".-=~~ 675-6161 FOR $26,500 O\VNER thJ\ld, l.Dvt'ly J Th11t's WX1 u11d<'r lhe V.A bdrm.. 2 baths. Seclud~ 11ppraL-.i1I -s1ill all terms YUr llvlng nn., po.rlo, riln· 11v11U. 1111 f\ J b(-dm1, 2 t:mth Inc rm., bu i It -in ~. with h\11l1-1n. .. , 2 car gar11.Xe. Firt!p1ace. No down terms. hk11·k 1\'8.ll frn«', trt>r 1\iw<I btk Si ,950 979--%)90 st.rrct -HU'l'T)'. av::tll. "°""' 0\fN mu~t 'tell. 3 1:w;trm1.. Ctill Red Carpt.t. Rcalters 2 bat Patio, family r1n., I c0,.;=';.Jl(>Nl-=',.-,=="'°"=--°'I Ailn~ rm. Oi:.eat yard. No c'O!li'UO. F"reneh Quarter, 3 d()wn C .•• Priml' 1U"'en. brk bdrm, 1!:1 IJD_ Pool, dN Realtors 646--ml $34.'r.IO, !MQ-1720 fClU11J;e w Io pen er. lM~ .,, 1 "· HERITAGE 2043 We!rtclilf Drive ~WNER lllJlldl'NI, Brautlful 4 MACUl..ATE. $2l.500. Btkr. You can buy lhls l\OmC, • Open 'UI 9 PM bdtl'Q-a. 'be.~ formal (lln· 1,o;.';c,''=-l=-f30"". =,.,....,..,...,.,,...,...,., ~ ~t~ta ~ )l'~ V.A. REPO. 4 BR., 2 BA, ing rm. F&mlb: rm., primt' ;i SEPARATE ,_., on 1 lot. loea.ted In Cotta Mesa _ $29.500 -$1000 On •• sm Mo. k>catiQn. Many utras. tirk. A n n u a 1 illcf,nnt:, $11,400- n.. ~. I Tak '461!ri0· ~lft) S.l!P,f'XXI Ocean Vie.w Rcalb', ~t v14Y n town e a • •--· -... "'71l ..:.::c:.::c..c:...:.."-":t...---11 •i~i•M ·----""""I loolc: -Call Red ~rpet ... u .a:u t't ......,....,., Need a !'Pad"l Plact an ad! .,, ~ ....,,. fd Ada ••• &42·56'18 Realtors M&...-.o Want ad re1Ulb •.• Ml-5678 1 _,ean""-.!-.:::""-''-----Clasl!;Wt'(I ArlJ . • • 642-5671 • • REALTORS i ' l I llAll.V rlLOT • --• I -·· ~,1.._l .....;-::-=-;__JI~ I -_ .. hat lluff ..._. -·-l',.,.ny "' """""'"" --Tl'Vlf a-It ALL THE THINGS IELOW MARKET OPIN WED. 1.s PRESTIGE AREA $27,500. =. :-=. Fa., :: $23,990 3 IR. : ~~:;.LLE~s5 ~ DISC -Mll = ~.:=..~~ VALUE ~~~v~~~~T. POOL-POOL-POOL a.-v.n.,~.v I =~·'=' ~ 11/J IA. • FOURPLEXES ~~~.: • .:rot - ' -• 21!. --., -· ... -11' • 32' .......... -• -bftoS --_,, -•Ir •• I • IA Ooota -• °"""" dol • all cfuo D11 Box a Aoolo -a tb 1 , t m rA-, c Ii lat t tlb'elt. s b.dnlom J t.tb OIU' t.t bu:11 3 BR. J BA. 1~ IPOCllill CG"Ptlli. I DR • _ __._ l"AU. .. Jn tbe tJr and MD~ Sewnl new 6 e~ Valley (n4) 2 4 2 -s l '• 4 u.-iiout. Sparklln& No.lideO>ttt.M..&.a..r.n'. Cfl'!I, !l'1!eo -Id~ -~.::;,....... ~ --'\:.~"'~""I ~~to -_;Owner~~· --,-=.-:=::ii ldl<bOn. _..., buUWna -''" -Id.-, ,..,. 11<aJ1y °"""""' · root, bloCk wall -. d<o -• ,....:*' -. * NEW * :U... ..,. old "'"' all 615-alOO. • • l!AVE '""""'' we• ilCUiOCf 4llbWalhtt, oven • ranp. Uy rood\ wtrtreplace. hdwd. MJ..1215 MW200 r::':" :::W ~.:,col-TJ4.6l5.0Cil. o.&om view ~ Ip. te:rma: or .ubmit Slt500 down ' 2nd Tnmt Deeds fDt aalt'-=:' ~1.,.•= = .:.,•"""~'t~Eves.l Fountotn volloy l'REMIERSl'ECIAL MINUTES TO ~··,:mi::,:.~-. :::,=:01~~ !IM099 Pt.r1t n .. yard wJth cuaiom :...;:.;==..:.:.='---1 Atrium •• .,, -........,., IEACH si*;oua ' Ip. Ii.tar .. k .. -Deluxe 4 Plex J~ delipcl l>eated p001 with POR SALE BY OWNER Iron pt• wll! lmprea ,.... 'l1le ,.,.. la rleh~ lhe borne A "'1Ul1 rmo. wlbeem mi Down TW~ linallcl'I· I ---t! ----- 3...,.. Mklqi 1115,000. • ""' old Beou\y jUlt N. Ill'""· 3 B"R, 2 BA, Jov.ry ta low\y ck>en and -IY ""1'~ ..._ """'· LOIUC 1-3 BR, 2. I BR, t. l BR. L cau 87:J.&l50. o( Mlle F.qu.are in Fountain drp&, crpt, ec kit, Irs !Am painted. I omcwu ..... • file il dau. Loadl ol n~··-._ _ _.., All amenltln. includln& y /A I '-;;•·~~~;;;~~I IN tfENCEI Valley. 4 lk!drooma down-rm w/wct bar, terraDO 1!!1> c:rpt.athruout,, l.up9Dtkwf storap f.rM.. See-WI a-....,_. .,_._.,... heat blt·fM. trplc1 dab· II QllfHlK.I • llMTO 8-lbot Island starh, 2" Bathrooms, fire-try: 3 ca_r gar, amnd palJo. fhlit b't!a ant ceptionalhomeat•i900. Open Evn wtft. -1?/eoad, ceramic HOUMI Fumllhed 300 •'""'· uiillty .... m. ':!'le l!'W.terraneu ...,... mu. 3 BR 2 BA. = * .,..2"l0 * Newport Heights lilt A .. th. Xll>t loc. WATERFRONT lot. 50x!kt ~~~~p.~0:: ~a-.71::,:r· m· !.iilk8:1:fD 2 bedroom with loo of living CALL 631-5662 w/3lJ' Boat slip, Make offer relatives lnducka eepara~ ' ~ ~i lArae family mom Spa,rU,. J.nvesl.n1ent Corp. to owner. 67l-1770 mtrancl', 2 Bedrcmna lnd :-W9t.3:f.'c':2 ~ tivtng room and fon:nal 6.U-MONi!Y MAKER • * * Woller Welbrock 2113 Newport Blvd. BllbN Peninsula lar&:e living room. $31,150. ..... ... .....,.c:.. ownenbiroom.loc.a~ $71,000 Ft' $7100 ON l'OOL HOME NEW DUPLEX By •ppolntm<nt ooty. P ,Siii Cal """'"'15-12 Total perce-e 3 Bednn home. now···"";'.'· 3 • 4 BR. beo•ni "'""·· 3 "0~~~0~ A BUSINESS..... ~ ~ 1.ito ~'!~ .... El.Mum 91""RE~""'EMEN· s . Newport Beech You are the wlrtner ot 2 llckf:U to the FIFTH' ANNUAL WESTERN NATIONAL BOAT ,, tf'l"Hh paint. enclosed pat.u, frplC"S. Palios. Posh decor. MONTH" . _ .. opportuni1)'. Bulldtr'• polntment to 11ee. :"\IL heated Bluebaven pool. Ac· Quick pos.WSS. $101.,500. supply. Owner moQ.vated. Ol'EJf m. • • rrs Rll' 10 •NICE.I 1..'l"Sl! to rear y/ll'd for boat GEr.M11o--Thia low house payment can MAMA'$ Sale will include trucli:s,. I I , 11 881 Dover Dr., NB 6f5.6100 or c~;· ::;s 11 R~~is°"'' ;wy.~ ~':'.:1..::~:.: a GET·A·WAY FIYIS BEDROOMS ~~;~Mftllill Rul E•~•teWontod_ I~ , •• on 1.,..e lot, EaJ~ldc Coron• del Mar bar, waferfall Jn lhe patio $23:\00 Walk to beodl! ....... en· rome per ,.._.. $142,000. • *· Quick Cash *' 72 plus 3 &"erterous bedrooms. 2 BR 1 IA try, large :1. Uv rm.. tam Price $60.000. Will buy your property. .n MARINE SHOW March 9 -Mareh 11 Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 between 9 and 5 pm ro claim your tickets. (North CoWllY toll-free number is 540-12201 • * • Cbsta l\1esa. $ ,500. &. ~~us today •.. 5J6.~1 Sunshine cl::n & read; for ~~ :, ':.:::.::. IJlll I p 114.1 ' cash wi~ hrs. Call c . ZONE c.;.....,...;: . I ' "RELOCATING" OCCUJ>BDC)', just right "" dbl oven, -...... .,,/TOean --''I. ' ~ . O'.lMMERCIAL LOT b ---d ' ' I i ' If you have, bffn looking for yoU rcnten to get "'8rtetl. -Iara• ,_., REAL ESTATE b --d ~ SY x 290· a REAL BUY, here It ls! =u:tc=~l::ruoog! suite w/open ceillng, pedl-BAY & JETTY VIEW ;111~1 Huntington Beach $37,500 SPANISH SPLENDOR! Beautilul 4 bedroom family .... staD. bed. twice u much ll90 Glenneyre St. Live in China Cove. One _ !._ Roy McCardle Realtor See this red tiled beauty in room home that'1 brand range. Country atmosphere. clolet space as normally 494.9473 549-0316 home away from an almost $125 · SARDINE rrize Mobllii 1810 NewJ:>artnB 29 1vd., C.~1. most deBesira~~;_,,Irv~ Ter.l-~· The owners m~ '!!~11. ~al payments ot $194 pays =· ::i~ ~~· 2 BR new, wder con-privateshowbeacb.b3 fkln:111• 2 1ba ·~ 000 BRa!OIKERSf tNC.h t "u°""m P·d.RIA~. aFteelh.e84be1_~~. .,... race. aULU1.11 aa.Y .... a.u u1 1ll:NI , • , ~#J;} Our beast "--· • itnlction. $46,500. home n y app on y . .,...,, av or pure ase o e• ......,, Ocean View. Beam ceUinp. BKR. UWJ· 2 BR, 2 BA CONDO $98.<nl. To see call lloward apt house, 24 units or e Golden Rentals e OBenly . $U9,000. Tr to n a OWNER trans!. 4 bdnns., 2 IJ beacbfront, $42,.500. ' Wells. larger in Costa Mesa, Hun -BA YCREST rx.m. ,..2,.. e baths. Patio, dining rm.. Realt6rs ~ 5 wrlts on Coast Highway, e 644-2430 e ~ngton hBeacMh or Newport ' Laguna Beach BEST BUY ~ ~ built-ins. Quiet area. No Open Eves. ft&.417I ( - ) ~ •i-$12),(0). e a c . u s t ha v e -~-------1 "'"""'~~"'!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"" down terms availsble. bric. iii=..iiliiii;i;iiiiii...="' '·~~~~-!!'"'~~~...,~·'!'• I R2 land for 8 units. $100,<DI. u---Heights capitalization rate of 10% $J2>/UUI Pd. Bach. Full kit. Custom built FIVE bedroom C>UPLEX $28,!fJO. 962-1313 IMM I' Phooe RED CARPET ,.,.._I'""'' or hlger. Send complete Ocean View! Small pet ok. THREE balh family home OWNER aacrlllce. Attractive EDIATE DESERTED SPANISH REALTORS, 497-1'161. Ask ** $32 950 ** set-up to Cluslfied Ad No. $165-Util Pd. Small, but nice situated on a large comer Comer lot 2 bdnn w/2 bdnn 4 bdrms., 2 bathL Spanish POSSESSION HACIENDA for George or Jim. 4 BR .._ Maid~• or guest rm 617, Daily Pilot, P. O . .Box 1 Br. Beautiful location! lat <.unpletely fenced with rental, trplcs. So, of Hwy. ta: ~· Move ' .--t into .... _ --BY THE SEA _ 3 BR, fonna! THE IDG ONE Pecky panelilJ&', shag carp: l!i60, Costa Mesa, Ca 92626. 5325-2 Br. 2 Ba. Oceanfront! room 'for pool. Lari.e living Wlll be newly painted. accebull •,_; !amil rm: ' .. _. u .... ---a-dining plus 1--a •• rm all Extremely modern Is tic Most outsta....ii..... ...... in WANTED to buy from Yearly. Lovely deck. room and farnlly room have fi4.500 t-...., Y rm., patiO. 4 BR catta&e Neat as a pin ~ • · ....... ""'.J l Child/pet PalDo Verdes otone fir&. MORG N R.EALTY brt< 127,ooo. !m$5 thlok ohag """" in all ..; gl.., prylen ldtdm>. heavy 4-level, 4 BR •. 2"' · ... den N'pt Hg1.o ...._ Better hur-private party B uHs Plµ& A NU VIE. W RENT•LS beam ceilings. adobe ftoor.. home wlboilt-m kitchen Ir: !'1! or K home, write claSsified • " places. Walk-in.. storage. 673-6642 675-6459 OWNER anxious. BeautifUI 4 rma, elec kitcb. big back to.ceiling flttplace, maaive 2 floor-to-ceiling fireplaces. BALBOA BAY PROP. ad No. 6CB, Daily Pilot, P.O. 673-'4030 oe 49f-3248 =~i::n. = By Owner. CdM. a-2• Conv. ~· ~':,~! d= bonn':. = ~~~ ~ red. tile roc;iL CW!tomhed Mstr BR suite w/balh on * 642-7491 * Box Uim, Costa Mesa, Ca. 1 BR hie, garden setting. Cootroll~ gprinlde t single/double 4BR. 2BA. Built irul fittp1. t mil house tM mJrt selling for during building, located on separate level. Ovel' 2600 Ill 92626. parUy turn Sl60 R~· Lowest price FIVEr ~~ D.R. Deluxe F .R (slate ~a~ -s5 J low~ . of $28,950 qUlet cul-de.sac. First ofier-tt of liv area. $55,IXl'.I. • BY OWNER SlOO,<m. -NEED tG invest in I ble s al a r'i e d 'gentleman. home in thiA moll desirable Ooor It uniqtle wet !!!J..> ~ . l, . $.l!i(kl 'total~ down, ~ ing BKR.. 96J.65U_ HIS.SION REALTY 494--0731 Unique 2 Br. 1 Ba home on homes at appraisal value. I "4"'94-111~1'"0'-. ------1 Caren• F .• "'c,!IOOol. -worthy :~·~~ .~~ -'H=u::nt::l ...... :o...._n_Buc __ h __ .-, costs. REPOSSESSIONS c .. ~. ~'~din. ~ R,!~°';,,.';.?'~~~: ==· 4 "":;:'~, Newport BHch ... an 4 &. wlmda. •·•·-_ :"'or infonnatic>n and location rm. b!Uns cpts frplc dbl 673-1658. · .un! · Realtor• 640-0020 of the&e FllA A VA bomes, gar. $38,500. ~ 496-zhs. ~~ area.:~ only. $la! Try Mobile Home LJ.v, Cosio Mesi READY·SET-GO 961-4471 ( ::::1 546-1103 ''"'"' • NEAR EMERALD BAY party Ing. l could be 2 Br. Coou;n., ~~ ~~~":"=: lii:::Z:~Z!:i!i:li!i:li!i:I~ I Real K~!~BIA:.-mN~f""::™ I --Ji1,•j I j~ ':'o~~~R:.~i~~-: Split Level UNMATCHED VALUE 4 Bedroom. 2% Baths, Jarse t.amlly room on lower level, formal cfurtne, .eciuded liv· Nice 3 bedroom home in tng room, new Iha& carpets, good iocation. Has family hardwood Doon. 'nlia up-room and dining room. KJ"&ded home is in mint coo-Close to echools and sbop- ditiob and it ls lieu than a ping. Patio with BBQ. As· mile from the beach. $44.,900. sumable VA loan, or $1450 COATS down. Priced 1or a quiclc & tale. 127,950. Oill 646-TITI. WALL.AC e Ol'£N nc. ' • IT'S Rlf 10 BE NICEr ~ Ji~iRs [llR;$illil SCENIC BEAUTY 200 Aerts near ldtywild, -..... and cool bneu, --·-piced at $2,220. per acre. Total pdce $«15,000. PETE BARRETT -REALTOR-· 64M200 11 UNITS , Eutside ea.ta M t! I a , beautiful, almoet new. Six double garages, 8 COYeftd parldne 9J>ll(.'eL New Ustina; our exclusive, better tJur. ry!! CALL 540-1151 Open Eves. •• Lr. HERITAGE . . REALTORS "NOT 1~ DOWN" Anxious owner sacrificlh&" thll deliilrtful l BR, 2 BA. Fireplace. tam nn, bltns, deep sbaa crpt&". Private fenced yard. GI apprailed at $30,!iOO • .NO DOWN VETS! pon•t miaa .thlll ! J 6G-8400. Z Qff1CES Sffl\l/h!J 'rt!IJ OPEN Tll 9 I V.J:~~·J ASSUMABLE Y.A LOAN MESA VERDE BONUS, BONUS ~cf""'o..:i'. tr'.i,.".' ,t"";r DUTCH HAVEN "HOME PLUS Lido l•I• ttw.1a1 • I BACHELOR uni" NB sso. ·-r Ed'··-HI • beach ~., 4 BR 2 BA, .i · . CM $85, J..a&:. Bch $95, HB ...... ..,.,., • ~ ....... uu... ec DUPLEX'' Mobile Homes (;arage unit $100. Util Pd. Full price only .$35,500. with kit, dshwshr. Lrg covered Located near ciru be·-•-·, F •-1 125 ""' Fee 979-8430 good terms. patio, DIB pool, crptt, drpa, 1ot large enouEh fDr au;:, p Q.I or ~ • Business ._.. . . New Ustlng ~ced '":'.'.;. "'"f"'"'= more units. Owner wants to ~ -"!...~ ' ' I • • . Motor Home Rentals -~Pf'!rtunlty 200 Hou•H Unfurn. xtra aharp 4 BR, eily + mll5f. move. 11~. ~ ~~,500. • · • --Ill'~ .... =.. "::ib.2 ~t;".?':::. S29,950. OWNER muot ... n. "'°' PRESTIGE SALES & LEASING WELCH'S _Ge_n_•_r_•I _____ _ amlc tfle. 2 used ck fire-SUPER .~ 4 BR 2 ~· ttme wtth 4 bdrms., dining ~~.!.?~~R kind.. ,, full service facility Billion dolJPRarO~~~l. •• ~, ., .. elec. blttna, ..... green ocw p&nt. bltiDs. Seller will rm., built-Jn&, pa I i 0. Omar Motor Homes ._., = grounds. 3 car ear. Ja. covd. pay p;>ints tr new kl8n. VA, Fireplace, family rm. On 14 Best Lido addresL $pac:10US now responsible men and patio, walldn& distance to or to suit. Vacant _ lmmed 3 a.ere. bdr. $39.500. 962-5666 nm. Excdlent lloor plan. 3 women to service high vol- all oct>oolt, -& pon. 8"' loc clcoe to tbop-• B<'o + lam/dinmg nn. 2 531-6800 wne bev.,.... routes. beam. Priced tor quick ping & trwy. TI4-8!!3-a5l3. OWNER "'?""W· 3 """"':· 2 hpts. 3 car -· Call Bud LIMITED OPENINGS sale · Call today 962-8B5l. =~ °=~built=: AT 644-2430 e BIG Mobile home 24x65, cust PART OR FULL TIME fire ...... N,..,-. brt1 tum. Nicety lDdlcped, lrg NO SELLING . jfll~,..... ~,til. ~ * EXO..USIVE * ~~nnr by~~; Company establishes com· __ !2.! OWNER desperatL Top 3 4 BdnnL, plus den; 5 bath&. only. Plse call Mar 10 merclo.l or ~actory loca~. BllOKl!llS INC. bdrm. 2 baths, dining rm., 50 n. Nord c 0 r n e r. 839-8800 or 645-6424. No franchlile f.eea. O:im· rear living rm. f'1lmily rm., Miognificent, cimtom home pletely secured investment. built-ins. Pa&, trick trim. $1'10 ~ . BARGAIN 12'x52' Homette, CASH REQUffiED $2396. bric 13),950. 846-0004 ' '!1 .. ~ cond~·_.musttt be &0ld For more information write: ••BEAUTIFULLY RENTALS· SUmm winter ,,._,., or u=• o. er. Adults OWNER tramL 3 bdnrul., 3 A le . er, 642-7841 N.C.B.C .. Inc. SPANISH'' baths! BuUt-~. dJni.l1I rm., L .... IDO. RE•LTY MOBILE name 20x55, Xtras. 1700 Edgewater .. Dr., Suite 725 from the tiled roof IG the red patio. Fireplace, family nn. . _ "" 7850 Slater Space 32 H B Oakland, C~. 94621 tiled courtyard entrance Very sharp. brk $39,900. 3377 Via Udo, Npt Beach 841_1814 an 5, ;ui d·a~ lnclude phone number $23,000 433 W. 11t" COSTA M!IA Thl'sc Are Ju.st A Few Of Our MANY RENTAl...S , • , * SUO -CUTE 1 Br. Dupl~. Stove, crpts, drps. Vacanti * $135 -COZY Cottage. I Br. Encl gar. Yrd for tot. * $150 -ACROSS Crom Beach! l Br. Den. Child/pet. Year- 3BR, 2BA, oversized dbl gar. fncd 60'x100' lot, elec bltln RIO, eatlna' be.r, din rm, !mt Hv rm, FA hi, new wlw erpt11 lr8: muler bedrm BUile. $1200. DN w/payments lea than rent. $23,0CO F . P. here ts a home that c>f:fen 842-6691 67lo7300 wkends. * * all the elegance of a ha· BY OWNER, 2 bouaes on --NiE~lOl~~NGG'' -J,,jiijjiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiil clenda. 4 Spaciout: bed· oorner lot, 3 bd., J% ba., Leslie Dixon * ly. I' 11\age Real Estate 531·5180 ( :m I 531·5IOD ... ~~ ..... ~"""! ...... ' DOLL HOUSE Super 3 BR Ir: family with added on covered patio. Pre- ferTed area of HB! HWTy! $31 ,500. Thia won't last. Call Performance 847·3584 RANCHO LA CUESTA rooms, private study with 2 ear gar. and l bd., Jg. 3 Bdrm&. plus den; 3 baths. 1 ~ 826 Cliff Dr. fireplace and wet bar, fam· 9CT'eeDed patio 1 car gar. ~cula~~dest.gned. RealE~ Laguna i1y room with fireplace, 3 Cub for equity, a.sswne GI LIDO REALTY Genenl You are the winner Gf car garage, plus much klab. 5J6.fof:im. 2 tickets to the ~~~c:t~.~5.1&-1i: OWNER desperate: 3 3377 v1ai;rr:,pt Beach A lo ISO FIFTH ANNUAL BKR. bdrms., 2 baths. Carpeting. creage r ••le WESTERN APPROVED ~':°·;..:::. 1 ~~-~ Ml,.ion Vlelo 5000 ACRES NATIONAL BOAT for goGd ~ G.Lbda:$27,!0>.842--ai9L MUSTSELL-2story,4bd,4 BY OWNER & Assume existing FHA toaii ba, fm. rm. ml sq. ft. Palm Springs Santa Rosa MARINE SHOW or put only 5% dn. 4 Irvine $4.3,00'.>. 83G-1641. Mts, $125.00 per Acre. Write March 9-March 17 Bedrm, 2 baths, builtins 1815 So. El Camino Rea.I, Please call 642-5618, ext. 314 fireplace, covered patio and tffwport Beach San Clemente 92672 between 9 and 5 pm to claim ahag carpets. Only $29.500. HURRYI HURRY! Aparh•Nftfl your tickets. (North County HURRY on this one becauat HURRYI WANTED For Sale 152 *toll-tree num~r is 540-~ * $1Ei -PRIVATE 2 Br. H<Jnl#l. Gar. Fenced tor k1d1/pe,t. * .• $235 • SPACIOUS 3 Br, 2 Ba. Bllns. Fenced tor kids/Ir pet. * LANDLORDS I FREE RENT AL SERVICE BEACON RENTALS * 645-0111 * C••• D• Oro Rlty. 537-3311 Quick getawey to t h I s NEWl'T HEIGHTS pooltable that la included "Valencia Model" 4 BR. with 3 bednm, 1%. b&.ths. Clo&e to Ocean. $48,000 lclt's ~ced right I: really Propertiesdon.'t al.,. oelllngha ., ~ut Your home is wanted by·\-.0..:.:....:=~-:::--:-0:::1 ~---..!._ ___ _.. 'w""· McC •-1 we ways ve time somebody somewhen! Let Income + Shelter PARTNERS, mechanics, to m. au., nc. to advertise them. Nl'W .......... ,.. bro0ke-,. . ..; ..... .:...,,, L E.\S'l'SIDE O'.lSTA MESA -r101-m •-·-· us JUST A FEW OF OUR MANY RENTAL.S • • , e COSI'A MESA $150 Ea.J1· aide. Lrg fenced for chtid· ren_ 2 Br. duplex. StoVe, • Start Your Pyramid , , . with this Nort'htide C.M. triplex. Owner really motl· vated. Aho several other triplexes Ir Jourplexes, C.M. FORTIN CO. Realtor 642-5000 The DAILY · PILOT big bonus rm. Del Cerro Katella Rulty a~a. Seller says, "SEU. 968-3301, 96)-7890 IT" VA or F'HA. 5% dn or --'"B-'Y=OWN'-""'E-'R=- 10% dn. all this for only WALI< 10 BEACH • 4 BR, !37.!IOO. 2 BA lg W-McC1•-Inc. , sep lllITl nn, crpts, .... "9, drps, bl.tins, fpl, near shops * 842-4405 * & achools. $36,900, w/carry OWNER. Superb home, im-2ND. Mwrt see 968-5844. proved to perfection. Beat Mesa Verde area, 3 lrg BR, dressing room, 2 ful1 baths lrg liv Rm & fonnl din rm, frplc, crptlna' t h r u o u t , bltins. prof lndscped, e.nclsd yard $44,600. 5&(197(1. HARBOR HIGH Cream PUtfl 3 Br, tam nn, trailer-boat area. $37,IXX>. Call now! ! ! ! 83l-2'Z24 Pot Contrell Realtor SEACUFF, only home avail on golf COUl'llt', 9th fairway. 2 sty, 4 Br, 2~ Ba. Owner. 536-<i8"l6 By Owner-choice 3 Br, 2 Ba, alr/cond., many x tr as. S29.9XI, $11Dl dn. ntA loan. 833-1103, ~I 642--2312. -Put a llttlei "loot'' in your Lna-sell J, H baubles for "bucks". Qualfted 642-"611. * 842 •••5 * li.sH...... k...,... tvvnin.,. in. .-.. ~ tha ..... :: ._, J-• .. ~ ..-~ ....... •· on .. ...._. eall~. w;~~ 1~;;-ta-have t ""'.J"'r. BY OWNER. PRINC. ONLY & Foreign cars. brks, tune- ''SEVEN BLOCKS something that will please CALL . ~, '''·l4IC 10 lndiv. houites, l BR-+-den up, air, etc. Ground noor TO BEACH'' )OU. 91•• w/pe.tlo I: gar. pool. Lo vac. OpDOrtunlty to join growing ,.,., & nia.int. 9% l"t!turn. Condo co. with new methods, min. Beautiful Gnc story home I red _......., $145 00'.) &16-3764 lnves. $3,000. Sent resume to • l\UDWA Y CITY S115 • ·l With heavy shake root. 4 h·11 R£ALTY pos. • . . Mr J PO Box J•A Br. r.v.,, Cottage. Move rn ~--. ~a1 ~-•-I Ht-•r Nt .. •rl P••I Offit• Commerclel ' erome, · · .... ._.,..., uo::\U\.IUIUll •uuu ......... ,. Stanton, CaJ, 90680. tOOay! """"· benmed oeiling in Proporty ISi MARINE SERVICE family room, prime resi-NEW EXCLUSIVE G NEWPORT BEACJ-1. $120 dential area. Priced to sell REALTY M • 1 Builders Supply 2 Br. furn. All utU pd. , .. 5J&.l551 BKR. A (Dnpany With Vision Bayfront 4 BR., 3 baths Beauty Shop -S2l00 Down Mobile home. Kida wel- VI EW HOME Univ. Parll: Ceder, Irvioe Pier Ir: Slip _ $215,000 PRIME Card/Gift, $12,000 -+-lnven come! Lovely 4 BR. never lived in. ~ ~A>i~'i"'PM LIDO REAL TV COSTA MESA Ceramics · SU. .l/or property Ag!. Fee. 5.17-3311 Bca.uttfut panorama . bilk. 3377 V"la Lido. Npt Beach . . HOLLAND Bus. Sales Newport Beach Overlooking entire area. • ·--·-p•ft-s 673-7300 Paularino and Enterpnse, ITI6 Orangt, CM 645-4170 See c talin from din-u ... , .. i:.zwi' i 11.n.n. two lots 107 x 100 and one Brand new 3 bedroom ing ~ ~ 950 )'OOl' popular PrincekJn model OCEANFRO?IT Duplex W' x 214'. Price lump sum, Investment • & family .......... $315.(1) Call Peric'.irm~ ~rnlum greenbt.Jt loca· 3 BR. 2BA T~ tn $83,000. Ctl.11 n4-546-lfi00 for Opportunity 220 Cute Beach I-louse •• $225.00 963-S621 llOb. Strps to pool 3 BR. 2 front. Bachelor over gVqe further lntonnation. IN· 3 Bedroom, new, I BA, open beams, frplc, iD rear w/ba.._,lt ltilchen. VESndENT DIVISION. YOUNG 0 .C. Pub corp Little Island •.••.• $600.00 Fut results are just a phone u~ thruout. $44.SOO. 10 yrs old. F~ land, 2 car Ol'f/f 1ll t • rrs FUN 10 l1E. NICE/ ~ too fast. Need Harbor View 2 bedroom rehig. Wat.er pd. • MOVE QUICK! Nice 4 bdrm. 2 Ba, block wa.11 fence, hardwood flooni. Askin& $28,fJOO. By owner. Vacant. fl"l'S.3589. <atl away 64H61ll. C I .,.,,,.... 5'i2-89l6. gar. RJght on s.ndy beach. ~-~, ~~ =1to keep paoe. 1114) .l o.n .............. 1395.00 J~=.,:_~~;i~ ~ ltVl'lji~JMon•y to Loon 240 1'°~~:.::.·~oo $@\lei}~ -Ila t,~S• rwmoR VIEW HOMES corona del Mar ~~ ~h:S:.n J~ ~~ ~-2 :r; ~~ The, Pu~le w1'fh th• Bu1'/t In Chuc"e ""'"1ar Mooaoo MO<let 2 Unlqu• 5,ooo "I tt Ovthe ""'15""000 1°' any """"""'· capo. SPACIOUS Mesa Verde I-Jome a BR. 2 BA, trpl, w/w, hUJ{e FIR. A steal 139.950. 551-<346 ..... ...--«J· bedrooms A den, wen dee-Commerelal Building er , on real eltate $25(>-3 BR, Gange. yard, :O~ .... =~.;;.~,...-::;~,,:;....,,:;;..:of;:_;,,,,:;;c:;:;;;:=;;:;:=::;;;~;:=;;;:-orated, shows like a model -+-2 Duplexes and personal property. Call patio, Corona del Mar. four Krtimbled 'WOl'ds ~ home; Large lot, room lot at $275,000 INANCIAVCO $275-2 Br. lrplc, bltns, new bN to fonn foitr simple "°'di. pool. $61.SOO FEE. RealononUca Corp, Bkr. F ....... AL SERVICES 1 r.rpt11, gar, yard. Dana HARBOR VIEW 675-6700 101.,. Harbor Blvd. "nlnt. HOMES LEASED O'.lMM"L "'""·~NM';,. .. helm Blvd642-348-l NU-VIEW RENTALS H 1 P s·o s REAL TY 133-0* Income $GXJ, mo. Ptlced At Anahet~ na sls.ans 613-4030 or 494-3248 OCEANVIEW $!0,000, Will "" "' trnJo lSO S. Euclid St LANDLORDS! l30,<DI equity tor R· 1 ar R-·I Anaheim iis-s250 I OWNER 3 Bd {l·twln dze) 2 •Jzi"§"·~· ~·"'~lg§. -~~· ""~·~· tr~ee~"'f-==J'~.-,1 ... ~'-J.:i..:l. ~ ~ COAST'S leading Marketplace ' Dana Point NEW RESIDENTIAL INCOME Scv!-n 2 Bedroom, 2 b8th units with recreatkm room. A!J un.lts have ocean view. TG be construeted • Plans avallahle for lnspectioo. nnt owntf' depredation. Baatrnmt ~. Ook"C of decor. Ownoer ma,y Catt)' 2nd T.D. ;IM,!IOO. I ~~ Burr White RNltor 2901 Newports.a Deir.It . ., -. r - 1 NEE r.9 j .illJ.JJ I T 0 P H E I ~ Auto owner's """"'°Inf• "I ~ I I I I lust put my mr lfw<>ug~ an • . • . . auto laundry. /Vn I modi All .------....,the-on the~""' I T U F T I 0 lm1111ng.• -7 " 1-....;...=,..:~.:,..:::...~ ... C....ltlo ... -....... • i• I I I r :~~!:.~.::::!'. e :~~i~~eruu r r I' r I' r I' I , ~ ~unm 1? I I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 l units. fUrnlsbpd, just lh!pl Jot. Can add cash. S. W. 200 W! Spedallze ln Newpcrt to beach. You own the land. DanleJ Rea.lb' (%131 '84~.)2.J; G~n 1G::"hlll'lt ~ Beach e Corona del Mu • $62.SOO. Broker, 67$-5ZXI. 2 -.afijotnlng lnconw: prop. 17422 Beach Bhld,. I: Lquna. Our Rental s8r- LlJXUR.JOU'S 3 aory cedar S erties, Nd. C.M. '15,!Xll. Huntlfllton ~ 847~ ~Vila FREE to You! TJl' Br ~1 lone + OV'tf owner. 6C5-mJ I 60-6500 3:117 S. Main St. 1"u· ew' ..,_ l ~ IUXUIY apt. OvplexOlfUnltt s.n1a Ana -338t NU·VIEW RENTAi.$ PWr a shp kr 3 boiltl + 617 w. 17th st.. 6'13-4030 or 494-3143 man;r, man;y extras $191.000 ute 162 Santa. Ana. M7~l •LANDLORDS* WDls R. E. se-rns. DUPLEX by owner 2 bd 6411 WHtmlnater Ave., FREE RENTAL SERVICE ~ near the ocean front. ls 1 'bd rur. ·$67,cm: Wes1mlnster 893-SOOB Call 841-DJT • ~-. m Mari&<>ld. prlnc. ""''·1st TD Loans FOR .. nt, ..... "''"VI<!<, -=+.,=·~·~~~=-I can tor 11.PPOlnlmftrt 2 br 1: den. Stove A ftfr11. BLUFFS CONDO -6~. % INTEREST No peb. llfl0.1108. 3 Bdmu., 2\i ..... Income Prope~ 166 70 """' Q.PiaJI 2nd TD Loans 9u1c1 cAsH TED HUBERT • ASSOC. 2 im!bl l Br. 2 Ba 133.!IOO. 2 • . THROUGH & v ... -..,.::' .-= =-~9 ' Harbor 's.:u'::"M~o'.'°· . 'DAILY PILOT I:.. etr.""" ~Pilot S UN1TS . San Oemrnlt '42·2171 54U611 WANT AD !1111 Via Ullo, N.B, ~ Br. -l t Br. triplex 1 .. ClUotfted Ad. S.Q Idle tteno Whl,. .,.,.,. Yl<w, mo.ooo. s.rvtnr Harbor ,,_ 21 l"L 642 5678 nowt Call llMlm Now! lSlt Ruma Vllta. Apt . l ~die ltl!l'N • , . 642.5678 ----·-----, ( •• I LR Ki Sin . .. ME Ne '"" LR ... fl 30 . Hu 3 el h d le p : :<> 3 B 2 2 2 ' ' 4 u I• I I' l I I I ·-I· I I I I I '. ..,_ -I~ Apt.. Office Ronta1 Pum. or Unfum. 370 360 ·-UnL-····-0 ~-°'' """" Aph,, ..,... ·~ _..,. .. ""'""'" -,.,,._ or Uftlunt. :sit ,...,.. or Unfum. J71I ir"°""'---u_m.._rn_.. __ Jl5;.;..;. I Hout.. Uofvm. -Balbpo Ponl....,1o Hunll-'-"-·-'-Huntl......_ -h 2 BIL AmUy room. 8locli •-'from ~ $1\Slmo. Yev--IMO. Sp&dow: • BR. DELUXE, New, bache- ~ Newport S..Ch ;;;;=·;:;;~·-::::· ..... ~==":::;::;:~·~:::·-·~~==;;:;J~H~u=n~tlNdon~:;;1~0~•~ch;;:;;;~H;unt~ln~,.t;~=•~l~o~•~.Ji==;;;;1~~~~~==== Prestige Executive Waterfront Offices ty !ale ST5--841L $'70,000 brn., beacb, v\ew, • securlOJ. 131-1451 lor unit Includes all ALMOST READY . • HUNTINOTOH BEACH FINEST • utilities 8lld fUmish-SPANISH COUNTRY ESTATE LIVING y ext ~•elttrono Beach Newport 8Hch ings. ,175/mo. c • I l cl CA TIEMPO 2 Acres beautiful part like surroundings. our n :llO to :llOO ft. Alo. or u .... $360 • Brand N"rw 3 Br. Studio, 1\1 Ba. crpt1, drpc, bltaa.. O!ikfn.>1:1 ok. A&t. Fee. M7·12'11- Golden Ronlol1 e $200 Mo .• fltw i BR Duplex, .private yard, 26425 Via :sacrameofo. MJ.61~. Corona del Mir LARGE 4 'bedroom 2 1144-72'10 agt. AJ Sunken pool. Sparkling Spanish foun tains. t umbe Quallhed t•nantt on~ bath, year • around PlO mo. utU pd. 2 Br e Spacious RoolllB e Separate dlnlng room ap , ft f BAY LIDO BOIL ING lease, " block to w_t""1<:;;,:.ru • Quiet """' (just North of SD Freeway at Magnolia ) e Walt in Closets 3700 Newport Blvd,, N.B. 72 ~~ u lo 2 BR /FIRE Ph: Lou Cewla firr>.1220 beach. Nicely decorat-~ · ,.o P • t • • DELUXE 1 w PLACES • Home like kitchen & cabinets ~ ed. $450. RED CAR-2 bib to Ille °""""' , _ • Private Patios • Dishwashers I Bedroom Unturn. '165. Furn. $165 ,... $t~ I!!. 0 0~,!;JL~.\jJ,F •~J p E T REALTORS S.chelot. $~rno. Y~i;: • All Heating Paid • Jacuzzi • Heated Pool 2 Bedroom Un.furn. $185. F\irn. $215 \ll "" A 1 r p 0 rte r 1to1el A 833.-3380 1 adult. no pet&. &t5-lG24. • Recreation Bulldlng • Luxurious Landscaping Townhouse 2 Bdrm., 1 Y.t ba., 1,400 sq. ft.. 1te~tnurant. l Rm .. up to 2 BR 2 BA LRG ••. ,~ • Heavy Pile Shag Carpeting. Furn. $2(-0 2,uoo ..,_ ft. tt. ;,, 1 ... .:.~~~t~ ~!': utU .. ~'.""""'' $125 mo yrly Adults Only e ALL UTILITIES FREE e NO LEASE RF.QUlRED SMALL 3 BR. l BA. Garage. 8 --J ""'6 m u..: STOP BY AND SEE US BEFORE WE 'RE W .... ._1_.,, C The greatest reason• for lmmerl. occupancy. Si!f> at Yard. $250/mo. No pets. 1 luffa. New carpets &: ~1056 aft 5 or wkendt alk to HWAW•~on enter moving 10 Oakwood Garden 2112 DuPont, Rm. 8, lrvlne. sma.11 child.~-dni.pea, Frple. P8 t lo Cott• Mesi FINISHEO-FOR'YOUR CHOICE OF APT. ADULTS NO PETS Apartmenta art the renra, 833-322.l 9 To noon. Cott• Mesa O\Tl'looldng huge greenbtlt 1,;::::.:.:;;.,,:;,:;:;;:,,.____ 8912 Hall Ave., Huntlngton Beach LA QUINTA HERMOSA starting aa low u 1135. :\IEDlCAL Sutte-900 sq. fl. al i.'""'°;'!, ""'"' .. · ':'~~~~ Casa de Oro "'9•-Mr & Mn Elliott 147-4911 16211 PARKSIDE LN (714) 847·5441 '"" ''"' ••• • -•'""' 601 nov.r De. N. R. MESA VERDE wa~ pa • Ull..UK\I. 00-k rea10n1:· Bt·au1lf111Jv d<•1-oral«I, lullv OOPMC)'-1395, Call'°' •PPl ALL ll'l'ILITIES PAID 4 Bl . s. of San Die!o Frwy. on Beach • ' Leaae. Lovely 3 Bdrm, 2 832--0967 Co L.-Aph. Furn. 360 Ant. Unfu 365 1 Blk W f H p k d sw1mmlno pools CllJ'Pl'lc'C'I, In lop condlllon. •--n~ ==="·--~---rnpare .,.,fore you n!nt •...:"-"c.;..;;.cc,;;,_ ___ ..;.;..; = .;. __ ,c;n.;.. __ ...,;;.;: ~~"!'~"'"'"'"'"·..,.,-.,o'!'!'!!'O~t!!to.,."!a!!r~s!!i .,•,...,.,,..~ health cluba 1 ,, .. -ndllioned. Parki"'• In· Bath_, .............., rm, 2 '-lc'a, $1 Cu.tom -r .. turlnE: -·-.. --~ .... .u.-95 • At the Beach! 2 Br. • ivith fu. Newport S..ch Cost• Mesa saunas eluded. All on ground l~·vel. ~e-a~cimv~ to q~J f.1ob. Home. Crpts, drps.. • Spe.eious kitchen with -jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Apt. Unfurn. 365 ~t. Unfurn. 365 tennis courts, pro & pro shop j52-7ll:l schools. ~/mo. 5CHOO. ~e ,Mrig. Util .~Teens • ~:~~~. 8"a OCEANFRONT -2 Br u.p-H 1· n---h N •--.,,,,.1nards I cA=:TTI::=lA""'CTl=v~>7: ~,,,~n-,-m-,.-ce-·ial ~o W" Pl ""· Agt. I'ee. 847-uui. • H ..... -;,...__ ..-.. per. $200 per mo. Avail to HARBOR GREENS un ington u.-. ewport -ch Sunday brunch Builrhn,. fnr 1'1.'n\ 1111111 .,.... • ue easer! 3 Br. e Golden Rentals e ome.WLC ...... .,.e June 15 '7J. &45-8862 alt 5 or I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 0=="'..;;.;.;c:;,;.. ___ actlvltlea director r mfflloa'i bld". Rl 1,. -~Jl 1.,1 Ctpta, drps, gar, kids/pets • Private patios 11 goll driving ranQO -· . ., 1 " ' • ok. Agt. Fee. 847-ra:l7. *Sharp 4 Br, 3 Ba. Townhse o Closed garage w/atorage wknds. GOING FASTI FOR LEASE party room 1:ix:n:I; l..01s 1.Jf 1i:1rk1nt;. ~19 e Golden Rentals e Back Bay. Pool. Sell dean •Marble pullman NEW1 2 BdrmU W $300B /IMN. Ann. Furnished & Choice 2 BR Apt1. :: BR. Bayrront ApL $."..10 Plua bhut1tu1 llngles, one ~i~ilJ>Ort Bh·c1, :\ll. oven, dahwhr, lock garage, • King·sz Bdrms ease. 5 · ay, ewport Unfurnished $144/MO. 2 BR. Nt•ar bcac·h. S395. and two-bedroom•. Fur-=""=·-----~ $165 • Family Affair 2 Br. !~;s11653i;io. 8 3 3 -8 9 7 4 or e Pool • Barbecues • sur-Brocti. Call S. B. 886-4832 ALL UTILITIES PAJD including utilities. nllhed & untumlahed. Sorry, I DESK ~pace n\•!u\ahh.'_ $50 Crpts, drps, gar. Children -~'-"-='-------t rounded with plush land· days or 883-294.1 eves. From $130 to $215 mo VILLA YORBA G.c>Nt• Williamson no chlldren or peta. Models 1no, Wtll provide> furniture ok. Agt. Fee. 847·1207. Year Round! 3 Br. 2 Ba. scapin&. CANAL Front 2 Br, den, ·• open dally 10 to 7. at $5 mo. Answt>r\n" serv\t-e • Golden Rentals • Pool. CrpUi, drps, trplr. Adult living at Us best frplc, lge 8 u n deck, Bache lors e 1 Bdrmt l luntington Beach * r~:a!to7r0 Oakwood 11vailahl.!. 17!!175 Bt.•nrh l!lvd, $-150. Carefree Living! 2 Br. Kids/ pets ok. Agt. Fee. 1..ARGE 1 BR'S190 plr.r/float, garage. S37S. )'l"· 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrms (714) 842-9622 ;r,o-o5 * llun1ington ~ach. f~tl-4121. .Crpts, drps, bHns, pool. 847·13'.17. 2 BEDROOMS $210 ly 67:1-7931 or~-<i.a.rden Apa.rtments 1•1,· IVES'J'CLffF Dlt., '18 • G Id R I N p a l V2 or 2 Full Baths -·.O:iildren ok. Agt. Fee. o en enta S e 0 e Apt. Unfurn. 365 2 Blks brach, attractive Nawport B••e.h Soufl J.u\' N1•11• Dc.'1.""0r. Gardt•n 347·1207. ... 365 W. Wilaon M2-19n . lillins, 2AR, shag crpt & BLUFFS, TENNIS, ltth at lnl.,. OUtLV Suite, 705 s<1. ft . e Golden• Rentals • Brand New Duplex. $30 WEEK & UP Balboa Island Ma51.er size ~!n')Qrns w/ rt'dl'c. $150. Ph alt tipm VILLA Mt.a110 ground floor. Iron! ,i;, ti:1ck OceRn Vu, walk to beach. 3 blgh bcan1 ccihngs. large 536-9638. A I .... "'" 'l'-LRG 2 Br. Farmhouse $140, & 4 B·, no-·· 0• ~u•-·. e Studio & l BR Apts. livi / '~""'7'7--=~==~ ~ BEDROOJ\fS, 211 baths. Newport B••dt North enlr. nip e pr..,~. ""'"· '""'· ' ,.... ... • '"' "'''·" e TV & Maid Servi lL ELEGANT 2 br apt w/gar n~ roon:i 11' ~as ori -WALK TO BEACH ~ S FF Kids/Pets. A 1 s o 646-0384. • Pho Se H" APoolva st"P' •hpg & ~h $300 mo' v.'l'>Od burning ILrcplare. $400. monthly. B.EALTOR, lrvl..e •nd 18th 1617 WE TCLI Singles/Families $150 Bike ne rvice-Id. ' ....... · Convenil'nt laundry area Ne11• l, 2 & 3 BR., cpt/drp.. fM·T270. ''='c::-=.,-----.,----.1 l~ st"J. ft. Crpt, air cond, to Beach! Agl. F' o. HARBOR View, j Br, 2 Ba, e Oilldren & Pet Seclion yrly. Dys 8 3 5-3 4 3 7 ' oil kit h E , __ _. d11'hr Ir I l2S 16th 847 3957 " I pk I . It ~~'30. family rm & dining rm, • s··) Monthlu evetwknch 548-1398 c en. nc...,,,.,... pa· ·· P · · -J'BR, 2BA. ncy,·Iy /urn. crµh•d anip e .::. ut1. Jan or. "'OT""U'"I club/pool. $ 4 2 S. mo. 2376 N " Bl d CM NEW lo d I 3 tlol. 2 swimming pools, 2 BR, 2 BA. Deluxf' poolside', OCEANFRONT 2 Br. 2 Ba. & drped. II!' pd !J3lio, I blk Baun1gru'tlnf'r •UH. 5-11 ·50.12 2 Bedroom house lease $1.85. &ID-l7"". ewport v ·• wer up ex Br ~ s:auna, recreation faclli· nr beach. $155. 2320 Florida. Yrly. $350: 4 BR. 2 ba. 1 "I". bt'ach. $340 mo, )"rly or June Bus•'ness Rental ••s "" 548-9755 or 64a-3967 furn. Yearlu. Wash/ .. --. ....... .. __ ,, ·, d N -'73 ~ I C -(on b"' 1•-1 Oco"pan•" " ""'-'' .,.,... ·X'-· .. n Y "!liar · o ".,..-7""". , ........ ,.k. N••·ly pa!ntod. . J<'1m .... 1s. un um. all " ...... " " BEACH homes. 3 BR, $325; 2 Ad good for $5 on Rent. refrig. $400 + util. 675-1387. .............""'~ ....... .. April 15. 548-6072, E. 19th BR d $3l5 pets. I new lgt• 2 Br apt, 2 Ba. FA Yearly, il50. Mike al 28th St ;\lar!ncr. SEP. 4 room bJdr. + gar, St. Ca •-en, 0 _.,·ty .,.1290 HOLIDAY PLAZA VERY Attractive 1 BR. heal, c1shll'hr. Close 10 Jone11 Realty -Miki" 673-QiOG. pnncling, crpts .V 1lrps, ad- ,. ·~ -DELUXE Spaolo"• I BR. Yearly, $185 plus util. Models Ope 10 111 7 673-<210 =1 1-E WlNTE .. t b $~ MFSA VERDE. 3BR, l~BA. C furn. $1 ,_ 613-!503 n pm ocean. 411 l•llh SI. 53&-0S69 ..., • hN ~vcs. R. S1unmer, Yrl},, .io:n ~ U5Y eorner. _, Newly painted, cpts, built· ondominluma apt. 40. Heated pool. ___ ..::.::..:::::.. ___ 2700 Peterson Way, CM Irvine DUPLEX on the water-Boat Anlta"s Rcntala, Bkr, 2mi ! Ph· 66-~ or f>42-li.l60. . ·~" Unfurn. 320 Ample parking. Adults, no nr Harbor Blvd & 1e;._;,;:.:~-------dock, Jrg patio, 3 BR. 2 BA,l:~W~.~Ba~lbon~~B~lvd~-~m-~m~~:l ~~;:'.£;~~~~~~1 ins, "'""" mo. 979-5294. --ts. Coron• del Mor ,. Ind t I I R I l ... ~ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Adams NEW CONDOMINIUM frplr, wet bar, S425/mo. us r • en a .._,, LRG 2 Br home, CJD, stove. Costa Mesa 1965 Pomona Avf!., C.M. Yo••ly • -... \VIII •·rn f ..... 2 Hr. gar, pool, $210. 497.1342 "' ~......... •u · I ~ ""'· nc" yrd, .... Ad""'· I--------1 BR., Forn., 2 I"'. c1o.,... 546-0370 675--44Zl. ..,.... I _,. MARTIN & ASSOC. $175. 645-2945, 673-6267. .1 BR, 2 ba, bltns & dshwshr. queen size bed, priv. dresa· .-Laguna Beach ~~='------_ - NEW 3 Bdcm. 2 Ba. Now Qftint, crpt5 & drp•. ing cm. xtra leg. room•, ra.~. l ~S~an~C~l~•:m~•!!nl~•;--:---:-1~;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;; 500 DYER RO, S.A. dishwashCT, rrplc, yard. Pool. Contact Mr. Queen at encl. gar. w/storage. Adul ts ..., "!!!!!!!!!!!!'!1!!!11!1!!!!!!!!1!!!!~ FOR a rcw who appreciate CALL 54>8471 ·Kids OK. $295. 548-1309 549-2132. only, 00 pet!. '!! balhe unU.1Ual. l & 2 Bdrm .• 2 2 BR, _2 BA, frplr, close to Rooms 400 F"or Juas..· 4fi(J() s.:1. ft. :i phase iliR. no childI'('n/pets. Over Irvine 2035 Fullerton, C.M. DELUXE ·' custom apls. Large sh0pp1ng &: heach, 1 childll---------'.,. ptJ11'1•r, frn! ~·1•il1n,i.:s, fully -""'"-------ON TEN ACRES APARTMENTS rooms, wide ocean views, OK, $185. mo, 492-7534. or * * * Ju•·ittN.I, Costa J\fcsa . 30 pref. $110. 642-8778. N • 1 Studio Apt. $110 per mo Apts. turn./wilurn. Lease h'llrdens. Space & privacy 522-1590. Clay Men-th EW CONDOMINIUM • Also 1 BR. Apt. $125/mo. Fireplace I priv. patios. Air Cond . frplr's • 3 S1\•im· for considerate, mature ~ Huntington Bea ch 2 Br, gar, pool. SZ10. 497.1342 Util Pd. Private Yard Pools Tennis C.Ontnt'I Bldst. ming Pools· Health Spa· adul!s. Close to beach & Aptt.. 34611 Calle Los Robles Townhou •• Unfum. 335 McNash Re•lty "2-8400 Tennis Cour1s -Game and shopping. Selection of ru'" Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Capistrano Beach 3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, ' ,,... 900 Sea Lan, CdM 644-2Sll Billiard Room. & wallpapers. Part i a 11"'Y You ure th•• 1vtnner or el t · b ill. FA H FURN. 2 BR. Apt. Pool. (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) 1 Brrlrn1. f-"rom $154 furn s= to •= monthl Coron• del Mar ec r1c u ms, untlngton Beach Cl06e Jo shops. Adults, 00 2 Beclrm. F'roin S200 t · ""' ....,.,., Y· 2 tu:kt'l.11 ro thl' heat, w/w carpet! & -,-.-,-B-R:.T_o_wnho--.,,.-,,-N-ew-ly pets. $160/mo. GET IN THE SWIM MEDITERRANEAN 4Y4-46.5.1 DELUXE l Hr garden apt,· FIFTH ANNUAL drapes, double ga rage, pa in 1 ed. Washer/dryer, --;;;,Cl;;,941;;.;Poc::;:mona'C"'"'''--c=.:=M;:---I LIVE IN CdM, in this 2 bed· Mesa Verde newly redec, prlv patk>, WESTERN fenced, ldscpd. $235. crpts, drps. 962-8781. 2 BDRM, util p:I, $170. mo. nn. apt. Swimming pool VILLAGE DL'I: 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba. Encl ocean 1vu b'Om deck. Yrly. NATIONAL BOAT per mo. Agent, 962-4471 TOWNHOUSE-3 BR, 2 BA. NCoostapoMts. 22!7Aa M59a13ple SI, available, walking distance gar. $165 up. RcntaJ Ofc., l-'640--085"-="-·------& NOW LEASING Huntington Bea ch NEW M-1 \140 Sq. ~·L & UI' ltarnillon & Nl•\\Jand 536-9175 or !(~3-0519 LAGUNA NIGUEL Adjal'enl SD 1'~rwy. · c"6-8103 $235 esa, ,,..,.. · to Little Corona. Olllly $190. 3095 !\lace /l.ve. ~1034. Costa Meu MARINE SHOW .pr '" · · Xlnt cond. monlhly. R £:ALTO R, t1 Bdrm, 2 BA, aU bltns, crpts Call 2l3/43()..1!1l4 BEAUT. FURN 2 BR. 644-1'l70. Newport Beach & drps, 2 car garage. Irvine Util Pd. Htd. pool. Adlts, no l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ~lareh 9 • 1'.fareh 17 Commercial or l\1fg"g. l;.;.:.;;.!::;c:..,~~;,_---Please call 642·54iiS, ext. 314 Tukc Avery Pari<'A'fl) to Desirable Glen Mar. 'Valk -~;._______ pets. S42-9520. 3 BR, 214 ba, din rm, 2 ''Rent A Piece * * * bt'lwef'n 9 and 5 pm 10 rl11.in1 2799'2 C&miro C'n1rist.rano. )'OUr tlcketa. INonh County -.,,-=-783~1-.,lliOO~===c 1 to shopping, schools, nr. 2 BR, 2 BA, formal dining, NICE ettcy apt $110. incl. patios, stve, d sh I w sh' of a Palace'' beach, children ok. $2%. cable TV, pool &: park, utiL Mature adult. crpL~. drps, \\'lk to bch, & SPARKLING NEW toll-ftc.,.. number IJ :;40-12>)1 Now M-l Spao:e woth Olli"' * • * 1300-2600 ft 3 phase '2IJSV b-ri.. rll11I ~ * oo.uss * market. Adlts, no pets. $350 ,962-692'1. '"""' new._..., · mo. 673-7078. ~ n.::a1~ :fa.Be~~. 3 :;_ Newport BNch 2 ~~n. ~~-~i:: ~ OCEAN and BAY SHADOWS Apartments Spaciou, Light & Chttry! ATI'RAC .Room. pri be.lb, :zail()-56 F·::i.lrvlcw. S,A. kttch prlvt Bu11ines woman OWntt': 648--i"m, M4-'Z221 Fee. 847.13)'1. Adults Only -Lease Center St. Gq.-5848 e Golden Rentals e 3 BR, 2 ba, bltns, frpic. Faces pool. 2-car gar + Huntin?f_!!' • .!!_a_~~--­ SOUTH OF HWY. -I BEDROOM- $165. MONTHLY O•rr ~l)(l \~11 l•r•• HARBOR VIEW E1ega.nt apartmenhl designed 11•ith a Pt1aster's touch, SU· pcrb house security, exclu· .slve VersaiUes Club and pool 1\•ith unique Aquabar, fountains and formal gar- dens. All part of the South Coast's fine11t apartment commu11ity. I BR'o FROM $157 2 BR's FROM $In or teacher. Non •rnokf'r· FOR rent 1:1 warehOuse &: of- Centrally loc. $22.50 per wk, flee space. Reai;onablt' rent, 646-1979 north of airport. Ca 11 BIKE to Beach!. 2 BR, $135 carport. $300. Al.SO 2 BR, 2 1 Kidsf~ts. Also 2 Br. Horse ba, 2·car carport, $250. Both 644-7270 SPACIOUS 2 BR, 2 ba, frplc, 11n~ 10 •1ft~m' won• w,o!Nt.•11~ f!e.110 ,, ROOMS $15 1\·,.; up lV/kil $.'Ill 5-1·1-2757. wk up apts. Oiildm & pet 10,000 ~q sprinkl('rs. 540-7630 f!. for \c.onsc:, re!~""• •t\11n1· Jor Ranch $16."I. split level. Call R I t r , Agt. Fee. 979-8430. 543--6966. LaOuinta Hermosa pool privil. Nr Ili Sehl. $2j() 2 Bdrm Studio. 11f, BA. Furn. mo. Hal Pinchln, Rltr. your •P•"uu111ww l · ~r 2·~edtoQm ~pJrtmtn1. S"llll P~ls (II. I ro"I ~ \f,~ 1 .. 1n1t11r~ a•~ilJbl~. ~loil-'I• OPf·~ ,, 00 to 6·00 .'JOO 1 ""'''" ~d Co1td M~1a. l'toon~~ !.~~ 1)00, 11ection. 2376 Nl'wport Blvd, Beautiful appointn1cnts In· CM. 548-9755, 645-3967. elude Decorator Fl.replaces. $175. Waterlront 2 Br. Crpls, SPAC 2 BR, 2BA, patio, drps, gar. Chiklrrn/pC'tS ok. bltins shag, I au n dry 'A~t. F'ee. 841·1207. hookup. Quiet adlts. $195. SWI. 2 acres beautiful 675-4392. p a r k 11 k e sum>undlngs. o"::,.O=~~---~ Sunken pool, BBQ's sparkJ. 2 BR., 1 ba., lrplc., sundeck. ing Spanish to u n ta Ins. Yearly, $250. l Bedroom/studios from $195 2 Bedroom from $305 Models open 9 A.M. ti! diu.k Shag Cal"J>('tlng. PrivRtf.' DELUXE. prlv. bath & eft. Patio!ll. Pool . Jacuzzi • Iran~. No !llmokers. Maid Volleyball l'Ourt . CaJ1 scrvu.•('. 6Th-o:no. 54S-TI97. • Golden Rentals • 642-1276 ---~·--Li · . Jones Realty -Mike •ALl."l'ITrL~S PAID 67:Hi210 :.s1-1100 Eves El Puerto Mesa BBQ's. Closrd Gnrag<.-s. G H 415 Adults, No Pc15• uest ome BLUFFS 3 Br. 2 Ba. Like Huntington Harbour new. View. Yearly lease. $475. Call ~5982. Irvine Adults, No Pets DELUXE all ela:t, bltiru! 2 BR $165 16211 Park!lide Lane incl dsh/wshr. Dbl gar. ' Duplexes Unfurn. 350 {714) 847-5«1 ocean vu $350 per. 673-£992. Unfurn. (4 bllcs S. of San Diego Frwy Costa M... All Utilities Paid 2 BR l " ba · I d s-C d I M on Beach, l blk \V. on Holt ·.o-""C..-.="-----Pool &: Recreation ., 711 •• air con . ""'1_or;.,o;,;n;.,•;_;,,;;•;,.,;,.o•;.,r___ • ~ ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT 409 W. BAY St. Costa Me1a Manager Bldg E·103 * 646-3317 * 3 BR .. 2 ba., air/rond S265 l ~to~Parks~~ide~Lanoi!;!~-~)~~~ NEWLY DECORATED 1959 ~laple Ave., CM 4 BR, 21A: bath5 $360 2 BEDROOM un!urn. adult. BEAUTIFUL DELUXE 3 BR. & ram. rm .. 2 baths $240 LOW WEEKLY RATES GROUNDS TOWNHOUSE ~~rom Newport Blvd .. turn at AOUL TS brand new, Turtlel'OC'k $375 494-3661 Executive Suites 2 BR l B Hospital Rond 11 block 4 BR., 2 ba $3851$450 H . 8H h 727 Yorktown Blvd. 10 Minutes to Ocean , ~ A. Bit in· Range. LA COSTA APTS. • BR _ 2, b•th unt1ngton c Close to bus line & stores. Gas Crpts, drps. Priv. patio. above Pacif.ic Coast i!wy) to 1 & 2 n.•room · 1 · ,.n,l. nn., '~ .. ~<)!:: Beach Blvd. at Yorklown Heat & Stove. \Vat er. Encl gani.ge. EXTRA entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, D.-u Turt eroc """" 5•• ••tt Newport &-ach. Ca. 92661), e Carpet!i e Drnpe1 3 BR 2''j ba Deluxe NEW 3 BEDROOM .-..,... Garage. Rec Rm. Laundry CLEAN~ No children, l pet. T e Pool • B~'s Bluifs, N,B.. $500 2 Bath, lacge P't ·-M. encl STUDIOS & 1 BR's. Room included. Air/Cond. $175. 545-6342. elephone: (114) 615-0060 All Utillt1e1 P•id * Prlvoto Room * For Alnbulatory Lady or ?i;tan • Good, nutritious Food. Nice. cheerful atmolphere. * Call 548-4/al ... .:...._= Rent•ls to Shire 430 WANTED: Lady with car 010 share mobile home in Laiiuna. FREE R E N T . -=- 1IOl.· high, Rentals W1nted * REl'TNED, \\.' J D 0 W DESIRES FURN. APT. BAL. P 1-; N N . REJo~. ERENCES /I.VA. 67'"r1320 \\1 ANTE 0 \\'Al!P.l!OUSE, 2000 to 3(.00 MJ. ft. 1n Costa ~1£'sa. 54.~18. YOUNG \\'Oman with dog SCf'kfl unrum. l BR. apt. 10 rent, $150 limll. 49-l-38C6. I~ :1...... e f-~ kitchen & Swim'K" Pool. BACK BAY 2 BR. 2 BR furn apt., 1-·.v. Neat & 2 car pvt garage in duplex LARGE 1 BR. $145 PARK ,NEWPORT 354 Avoc•do St., C.M. clean, over 2."i, frrnalf', building $250. per mo. Man-• Heated pool 2 BR. nti5 & $170 New 4 plex, spacious apls. 642·9708 wants same. Call all ·I. Announcements nger at 313 Osv1ego. Hunt-: ~U:du7i'ti~a:'ities Haclende de Mesa Lrg kitchen. Lndry Rm. 1 APARTMENTS '"""""""'"""""""""""'I 962-0093 * 500 13n b'l ?r ll il. · · - - -1R.e nllor "SINCE 1946" 1st \Vestern Bank Bldg. University Park, Irvine Days 5S2-7000 N;ghll ington Beach. 536-4152. 0 Free linens 160 w. Wllmn No. l, C.M. child. No pets. Locked gar. I 'we., ... BR.U "') FEMALE rooinatc, 011 Close to schools, Bus ser· OR the bay GU u _.. be h 0 /3 I Ne rt Beach • T.V. & maid serv. avail. CASA GRANADA vice. Easlside, C.M. ac wn room. "' rni ~po • Bar.B-Que No Security Deposit 557.1~ or 645-7485 I.uxury apartment Jiving 2 BR 1 BA ii.nlum $190 UCI ~tudentJ.1 til summ£"r. STEPS TO SURF! Brand • Phone service Lovely 2 BR' apt~. with a overlooking the \vater. En· 2 BR l BA furn $220 6Th-332·~1 ------ new. 4 BR & 3 BR. Move in •~1'-'M"i"-l•c,•70,oocc:o'"''C"=---kingsized BR, on beautifully VERY NICE 2 bd unlt, $175. joy $750,000 health spa. 7 Beautiful apts. wfprivatr FEM.ALI'.: roon1matc needed today! $295 up. Hersh, $145 _ $165 landscaped grounds. Gas lrplc, crpt, drp, bltins, swimming pools, 7 ligtited patio11, garage, pool, aria. to share duplex. Balhoa 645-8400. BACHELOR & l BR., patios, lncld in rent. Child up to 3 ~J;:' :~':9, ~~ ~~~ tennis courts, plus mHes of Lu.sh garden &etling. Adu ts, !!'lland. SlOO/mo. 675--1383. frplc's priv. garages -years. No pets. bicycle trails, putting, shul· nn pets, l5l E. 21st · C.11-1. ::n'R,\JG1rr mnlf' 25 to 15 to Divided bath & lots of 400 Merrimac Way 557.grj59 Ana Ave., 6l3-<1395. fleboard. croqUel. Junior l's * 646·S666 * share> n1('(' 2 BR apt. Balboa 2 BR., 1%. baths ...... $225 I J\G ] closets. Rec. hall, pool & NEW <-plex. Spao~·-2 BR. 2 Br. New paint. cpt/kd?l)S, from $189.50 monthly: 800 I Under New Pen. Call 675-7915 days. 2 I" b d $'"' a nartrMnts forRent I •·bl bat .. _ ..,...,, bltna, $145. 1 child o , no _ri.. "L. .... ~m pla•• d M BR, ,. a., alr t'On ...,.,, ...., ..,.... poo "" es, sauna '"'· ..... , _,. klt ~ Ulil ..,,... ..... .,.. ....... uv '"' an ananement SHARE my house in Qran<>t> * Elizabeth Hert• 9654 Toucan Ave. Fountain Valle y \'ou are thl.' wlnn('r of 2 1!(·kel11 to thr F IFTH ANNUAL WESTERN NATIONAL BOAT & MARINE SHOW * $300 . -o-f ----~I 17301 a., .......... '°. Cu..-:n. . l pet. Nr 18th & Pla~ntla . ., t 1 ho ~---• -~ 2 BR, 2 baths ··· ·· ·· ··· ""'"" or -''"""""' · ehlld. No pets. Locked 548-6357 ...-s ory own uses. "' ... ""'. c ,\SA VICTORl/I. with man or y,·oman o\'er <IO, ~lorch 'l. ,\fel"C'h l7 3 BR, 2 baths · .•.. · · · · · S.130 KeeOOn Ln. fl blk W. of garage. Close to schools, Irie kitchens, private pa. "JS I & 2 Br. Fum. A: Unfum. S3S-05.'W Pl II 612 567S 314 ;i BR., 2Y.i: baths •• $325/$395 Apts. Furn. 360 Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). bull aervice. Eastside CM. 2 BDRM. APT. $150 or balconies, carpeting, dra· C d 2:=B~=-~-~.,-~ ~;~::.,,~:19 tuld 5 ~ 1~x~inlm 4 BR, 2'12 baths ........ $1251-"--------M!-11\.18 839-1190 646-4862 or 642-filGO peries. Subten-aoean park· arj)f'Pnot•, I rapes, D!Vi', T\I Rapt to ahan> with male t k t N h C i d h II • * Sl35 _ULTRA NlCE Apt. 6 · lng,with elevators. Optional ant. , etc. Come by & or female. 2 Blcks fro1n )Ollr tr f.' 'ii, I Ort ount)' · · • * $140 up 1pac 2 br/3 br 111.1 •*BEAUTIFUL 1 & :l BR. mald service. Ju.st north or inquire about our Ptlove.fn pier. Jf.R. j.1fT-0917 roJl .free number IA 540-12'))• . re I Damon O.Crow Pools. 4 Gardens. Sauna. Ba I /d I ContempoTII. .... Garden Apts. allowancf> 525 VJ lor"a SI * ... * . Tennis Prtv. pA.tlo. 846-0259. , poo. cpt rp, b In, •.r Fashion Island at Jamboree · c 1 ·1;G;•;r:•~g;H::f;or;;;R;;on;;t;:;;4;3~s 1 ~~~~~~~~~~I 338 L. St. plygmd Patk>!. f~. pool. $16&$190. and San Joaquin Hills Road. at Harbor, CM. 64U970. Balboa Island Lagun• Hills 2212 O:IUege, No 5 642-3813 Call 557. 1· Telephone (n4i 644-1900 TIIB EXCITING ]~ --REALTY You are the winner ot 1996 Maple. No 1 642-3813 NEW 1 BR. $170. 2 BR . $210. lar rental Information PALM MESA APTS. Self Storage--Garages "-------~ 2 BR, 2 BA manor June 14 • N •~ • ho · Adu!'· M' I ~-h A Company With Vision 2 ticket.! to the orl e REAL VALUE! Quiet. 2 r ....... ..,, s pg. .a, no FOR Rent Yearly. $295fmo. MINUTES TO NPT. SCH. rn ..... ra ousts Univ. Parke Center, Irvine FIFTH ANNUAL ~_'.:ru~4· Lelsure W d. BR. Cr pt 1 f d rps, pets. 114 E. 20th St., C.M. Unfurn 2 BR. 2 BA BAY Bach, 1 & 2 BR. Fmm $16 Various 11lzc1 froni $25 mQ 1 _________ •1 Call Anytime. ~.7500 WESTERN stove/dshwr. Pool. Mature 548-0137. DUPLEX. No garagl". Adulta, No Pet!!.. U lock it. U kl'"Pfl tlw> ke-y Office hours 8 AM to 6 Pr.1 NATIONAL BOAT Meta Verde adul ts. no pt"t1. $135. 2295 l BR, stove, rctrig., pe.Uo AdW.1.i. 673-2706. 221 19th L'i61 Mesa. Dr. Oti slle Mgn. 24 hr ncn•i1s. & DELUXE 3 B d I Pacific AV£ .. CM. 548-6878. apt, crpts, rirps, $130. SI., N.B. (5 blka tl'om Newport Blvd.) No move In - R Oney the R., 2 be up ex. ZBR 2BA t ,. d th "l1 \" 18 l h 546-&.0 No move out let.•!! ~IItS. KenllC<I)' Sp Ir 1 I u • I your m MARINE SHOW Dbl gar, frplc, crpl1, drpa. • ap • crp ... , rps, mon · 1 '"'• ' NR Hoag Hosp, lg 2BR, 2BA, Security patrolled mrd\un1 .t ho r fl-~ c n p <' clunesi, Marpest, 3 Br, 2 waahing tac\!. w a 1 king bltlN. stv, C.an be seen 962-8936. blUns, crpts. drps, patio, EXTRA LARGE-1 Br. N.iw llamilton • Ne'A•land St, ttB n.>adin1t 3rtvltlct1 on all af- Ba honll', $275. Av! now . Plea!!a:ll 954~~.h ~-314 distance to 11hopplng &. eves. 557-8726, 54 8-5 212 LARGE 2 story 2 bd, 11-' ba., encl gar. Slfll to $710. Adults crpl, paint. he'll.led pool. 5.li-9175 or 833-0519 f01r11 of hfc By l'f'achlni: 557-9409. between 9 &nd 5 pm to claim schools, Encl rear yard & ~·~"'"-'C'·====-=--=,--,= lndry m1, priv. patio, garg, lnq. 4150 A, Patrtce Rd From Sl.15. Mature adults. I~~'""""''""""""'""""'" "'OmanhOorl hRid realltA!'(I Laguna Beach vour tickets. (North C.Ounty patio. $275. No pets. 3125 ** STUNNING 2 BR, l BA very clefln. ClOlt' to schl1 &: 642-f387. infant ~k. No pets. 1887 SINGLE garage nr or. Coun· ~I\!' had th1· (:00~..:lven toll-frtt nwnber is 541)..l220) Coral. Apt. A. 557-2653. Garden APT. Pool. Rec college. Sl75. mo. 979-7410. 2 il lBRS, 2BAS, lrplcs. Alonrovia, ~2174. ty Airport, free u!il uSl' $2il Jlfl11·cr lo hf·l11 htnnanlty. 1)-Nlce 2 Br. 8 pt· * * • N Be h Rm. NEWLY DECORATED bltl111., 1 yr. Blk trotn bch A: 2 BR. Free Utllltles. mo 54:HI096 Ila." help('(! r<'un111· lht' . w/Octlln & City View' _!.wport ac now. Uth St., C.M. 2 Br w/crirport. SI40. Wtr. 1 h 0 p • g. 833-8370/645-0245 Pool. Eocl gar. D~hwhr. cc.:G~A°'i'°lA"'GO'EO'-cro=n~R~ENT=~ llCparat("d. \\'Ill hrlp you .2!!:1'u'utgPad"'."' ...::. .. -1...,. l Br. Balboa lsl•nd CHANNELFRONT 2 BR, $150, nr. Fairvil"W & pd, 2UrZ "A"' Placenlill Ave. aft 6 241 Avoeado St. C !\I . 918 Palm St. HB v;/y(Jur }uh u.hcr.-. ~ou Mve ~ ... ,_.,.. .... · Ba.k Bltnll ti d Call bt 1 & 5 6..16-4120 64&-U)4 1 !alleil & lhn1\1~h ~lrkner&. Personals S30 hOUllt, So. Lapna. }"nn 2 BR. w/dcck. 2 O 6 '-ii 2 BR, 2 be, room for~· boat er. • Cf'P • rps. wn · · BRAND'\ New ~anfront · Cati 5...16-1678 I No plty ror 1hnM' kill)W\~ , , to.stfc: Vlew! Apolena.. 1-Vn. Ulil. incl. tocluded. $500 mo. Adult& only, no P et 1 · Dana Point Condomlhium. 2 BR. 2 ·BA. Huntington Beach Office Rental 440 1ht1t tht>y an-1n nrt'!I or hc!l1> $350-3 + Den. Fr p 1 c. ~~~';!;'· 6T;.>Q99 or ~ .S<>~~-~------$400 /mo. Year Le&ae, & rtn nnt 1~1h"I•· f<ir 11 tlO 00r ~-Y•rd. ~k. View! ~ UNFURN 2 BR, l'Ai BA. Large 3 BR, 2 8!.'i...~drpt, ~7694. BRAND NEW FULL SERVICE COTifU'l(' h\'r 111th rinl other ChNIUl~/VP'l 1E·W RENTALS DELUXE 2 bd. $225. zno 111 Adultt, no pctt. 610 Apt C cpt.t, small yan!. ~ i · NU Bayfront IJriV bcb & QUO VADIS Ill Westcllff Building n>e1lM' Ono• vt11lt wll Cl'ln or ~ ~~ 15. Pbooe 6'7'r3063 aft, Joann St. C.M. 548-9513'. AlJo large 1 BR $1$. Ca 1 plt.r, 3 BR • .2 ll.A.. S550/mo. Luxury Cank'n AptJ Carntt Wntclilf Dnve & vlnf"'(' )'OU (7141 6'7"".,...€791. ,..... % BDRM., drill, crpt, blt-inl. 49&-'1'19 2 BR, 2 Ba. $496. 979-0631 or ~Only·N2 Pets lrvlne Blvd, New port Pn0Bl.E'1 Pn-anan. J Con 1 3 SR. 4 BA. 2 car Balboa Penlniwl• OELUX Gar. Yard. Yawig cblld, no I E;:;;":::'-=B,;;luf:.;;.1 _____ 1 644--tSlD twt wlu!ml. FRO~ ~135BR'•· l=c'"'~"'""·--'h~. Mcc,r.,,1-C1ow"'ant'-'-~""'~'OIO~l .1 tid i>nt. s) 111 patnr1 ti· I gar. endd r:uo. ~bq, 2 BR., ~ blk to beac.h at 291.h ptm. Call eves. 64.>4229 mar • DELUXE e NEWPORT ISLAND, bl"aut 1.8992 Jo'lorida St. 11'1 blk. \\. lXI Sq. ft. 0tt1ce $.¥.i. rin>gnanry 1·ounllf"llng. Abor· I eompll"tel)' ec.,lld auL 1 Jkodroom 1paclous, St ~ .... 1...,1 kit h 2 Bdnn. Unf\lrn. $160. 3 BR, 2 BA 1 1 new dupln. 3 BR, 2 BA. ofG&rf~ldABeachlil\'dt 600 Sq. tt. OUke. Kil. ILon!c-adopoon~ref . .I oct&n view. No ch rtn or d It b w at her. .. ............ 1 · ~ e """'" c · ._.. mo. Adulll, no pell. , Apt or l"Ul'. fplc, c:prtl, dl1!!f. ltmdeck, &Ba SliS APC'ARE 612-44. ~ pell. Pcnnarrtnl only, $375 carp11tf'd, lat clul. m;;_ dlli/wab, 'lec:t pr door ..,.. C&ll &a--616S 1':1Cld spac. mailer 1ult~. 5300, mo. )"l'ly. ilJ9..eMI Tl4: 847-944tl · · ' rno. call aft 7 pm d-1'00. 1 BJl S1k to Beach! Avail opener, ~ crpll thruaur, 2 Bedroom, l bath dtl\ rm & dbl garage: auto PENlN Duplex· 3 Br 2 BR. 2 BA. $195. Adult O>tt.a Maa e Mf-~~- Laguna Hiii• thru Junt. No pl!tl. ms. + =-~ ~ ':r dbhwuber eltid., pragl", i ~'l'H~ner ar!~11· Pool " pa.rtw'lY tum.,• ., :.sdc~n~~·:· 01t~l~by ~~ ~~':, _ __,_ utU. ~15il Bkr. 67)-9080 1*r/QWM'. kida; o.k. 846-7129. e 1287 • REALTOR go..3850 paUo. 6 Poola. SauM. Trn· Post Of~. 215 R.tvttlkle. I&" 8nlnd New, all •lt:0.;u·1C ~o . •-J '" 1 " D -•-W NB APT I n1 2 BR, ~ Gl2-3:KT ~BR. 2 BA crplJ • drp&. ...-u"'"'"" ..., l.l"f at-n ELUX 2 BR, bltlnl., lrplc, 1 2 BR. Adulta., no pets. BAl'" _. ,,.,,ip llf, or rT • ......,,... nta. MG-m. .'ii""i"-;' ;-:;---,.,..--;--:;-,-Alt/~. O.nct ok. No block to beach 2 Bl'., blk beach/bay.~ per mo. MEADOWS APT . 387 w. Manql'd by 514 J.rvt.ne. Ph.: U'M417 Ot AJsJ lBr. Fu.rn. From Sl?.5 LEASE C-1, amlraJ C.OSla PREC~NANT'! Thi n k 1 n 11b")11J()n7 Know l'lll lht• f111 first ' (All l.lfl-: LINE· hrt., Ml ·S52'1. ALCOHOl~TCS Anonymoti1 Pht'IDI" ~ta-7217 or wrl r o. !lox 1223. Co!ita Mnn.. ,._ f'ncd )'artl. Dbl 11:a.r •. f'nrlh1.y deccn.ttd. 675--85.31. April 111. 6'rr>..3570, 5.14--1429 Bey St. CM. 64tr-OO'r.i W1lLTA.,.I WALTERS CO. 645--4nl. Appohlbnenl only, ).S BR. 2 Ba, SlOO up. Pool, l\leiia Joe. 1150 aq ft $400 all bffullM location A-Vlowl 2 BAOlELOR &ptl on bay 2 BR. E\irn, apt. No chlldn'.n 2 BR. $140 mo. Carpets, TOWNJ:IOUSE * 2 br, hi. ' Unlurn 2 BR duplex.. 1 block -=tudtd. Xlnt ch\lllren·o;: -(OT pa.rt) &f&-tlU. Agt. Swlngl"" slndet 714: ~T. ktcal for nttlnd. \l'r. round. nor pett. 24();1-~ E. 16U1 St, drpet, One child ok. ~. lrpJe. pool. $225, 84!t to beach, Le... )'UJ'ly, ~ 111Sl Mora Kai (E n' • * omee • Store In small Call "Leah" W pm. ~t • UtUe ''loot" tn )'Otll' S65 A $70/mo. 6'73--48. NB. Gt& tG&C. Call ~ = Way. 497·l9TT or Sl'B. S92--tl01 BNch ott ~ldl 962~ '-hop'\:ntl!r, Bolla A lleO. l-=-.,KEY=7-~3344c.,,=-,--< ~ tboA bwu~ lot NEAR ocean. 2 BR. t¥tth 2 BR.. Upper. Walk to beach.I U80. 2 BR. 1'6. be.., sttxllo. Don't afve. up the tNpl UP8TAIR8 2 BR. $145frno. l ~H:;:.B~-~:;132!::::"-,.--.,--Vn1111ir couple1.1.....~.+ ·bUClll'', Clll OaaltOed utUIUes S2Z. mo. 507 E . $275. Incl utll. Ycerl)'. 213: Orp, crpt. 285 0 alt, Fut ....ita are Juat • phone "Lll1." It In dua!.f!!d1~p I bb:k: to llQl'Q A bftnk. 7731 faAI relUltJ an Jull a pfM>ot *360 or~ &O-er7I. Balboa Blvd. B.t. 61W88Q. "7...0. ~. ·2131'58'MZZT. call a,..y . sa.aTI. to Shore RelultJI ~,., Ellil. IO-l&'l. ,c~nl:;l o~w::"'~·:..:-::;:::..., __ t S-3 pm I -----~~--- I .J I I , . • ' • • -u. 1'7J SEW-KNITS HAS-MOVED TO THE CORNER OF FAIRVIEW ~ BAKER ACROSS FROM STATER BROS. MARKET 20% Discount on Regular Priced Fabrics While Enrolled In Our Class•• StlD Offering The Most Experienc:ed STRETCH SEWING CLASSES Morning-.Ct Evening 2975 FAIRVIEW ROAD • COSTA MESA 540-3268 DOC ~ OBEDIENCE SCHOOU . , PRIVATE TRAINING & CLASSES FOR All BREEDS Novice Thrv Utility Also, Schooling For Dog Trainers NEW .CLASSES STARTING MARTI NCR EST KlNNELS 20061 Cypress Santa Ana ean 546-0989 - Trader's Paradise Trede Trust Dffdt fQf' a tree .l clear "°""" .,,,,.bin. 83.1-8lll0 lines times dollars J~[ Schools and Instructions are worth training for •TRAVEL • ADVANCEMENT • SECURITY AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Learn H O\V You Can Qualify Call 543·6655 . 610 E. 17th St., Santa Ana ACCREDITED SCHOOL Interested In A Real Estate Career? IN FOUR WEEKS PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM LICENSING PREPA!tATJON FOR • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Employment Assistance For .¥ Graduates With Leading Brokers. . IP • Day And Evening Classes • Broker Referral Program • $110-Full Course For Information-Brochure Free Guest Lecture ' Newport, 325 No. (Old) Newport Blvd. 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON , Real Estate Edu cation Since 1964 ACADEMY REAL ESTATE ~ONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS GI-Master Charge & B of A '· fhis variety of fine Khooli could introduce CALL 642-5678, m. 325 SADOLEBACK LEAllNING CENTER Afttrnc>Qn Reading ClatMI Ages 7 And Over Enrichment Program For Pr .. School Children Ages 4 thru S . ' Individu~lized ·Program of Instruction Diagnostic Testing & Evaluation Licensed Educatjonal J;'sycbologist All Credentialed Teachers 27601 Forbes Rd, Suite A Laguna Niguel 830-2800 our Pre-School way" Educational program. Mu sic, Arts, Craft,, Number concepts, reading readiness. Open 6:30 a.m. -6.00 p.m. Prof9s,iona/ staff, Individual attention, Saturday pro- gram available. Hot Meals. Full Time pro- gram' & half day sessions. Familj Affair Pre-School 64Dl Worner, Huntlogton B~ Corner-of Womer & Edwards 847-5775 • Janitor'i11 lnter/Exter. Unfurn. inter. spec. price. Free oolor con- sulting & est. Lie. Ins. W..in't be underbid. 642-6005. PROF. painter, honest work, reas. Int/ext, tree esl Refs. 548-2759, 557-7455. PAINTING -Reasooable • E\>es: 675-7307 Days: 979-5840 -Don- Painting-Int., Ext. Aeasonable * 645-5925 * PAPERHANGER * cv1 Rebko . 646-2449 Pla!itler, Patch, Repair *PATCH PLASTERING All types, Free estimates Call 54<Hl825 Plumbing PLUMBING REPAIR No job too small * * 642-3128 * * DRAINS unclogged -$7.50 Sewer line to 100' -$15 * 556.0828 * • Inlerview Hours 10 am to 12 noon Personnel Office 3rd Floor THE BROADWAY ..... , t l[IJ NEWPORT B~ACH ALSO Interviewing Hours Mon thru Fri 1-2 ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS .. Assemblers needed w/PC board & soldering exper. P e rmanent employmel)t. Pleasant surroundings. Cal For Appl. Industrial Relations ( 714) 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Laguna Beech Exec. Sec'ya $600-fNI() NCR 3100 Opr lo 'fl5 Engr Technician ~-ical-br ~~ "' Semi Oonduetor "' 111\. ~"!~~.. ~ l!l!? Girl Ftldl!)' a;) NEWPORT '• Ptrt0n,,.I At•!M=t'. I W Dover Dr., N ... ! 642"3870 TIME FOR !· Wrl!< Claulhod ad •609: DAIL y ~I.OT: ~~ ~· .r~ ~ cLAss1F1E'o Abs Eo9:6·oppor1U111ty .... ..,..,. FOR ACTION • -,• N~ ;.;~'"""'an ad! 642°5678 I r L 2 Ir Fa • • •• ·• • An F . cl F Al H p Fl w c c H .. E I TllHdoy, Mll<lo 13, 197' a ;tu; .... , . .-~ ~1 _ ... _, ... _. ~]~;;1~1 -~-iiiii!i--~l 1-<~ .. ftl oloW1ntod,M&F71D ~leWontoctM~F)'lO HllpW-,M&P710HllpW•nled,M&P710Alltiqufl IOO G•-s.i. 112 Mloc11i.-Ill S.wlngM-=lllnot m '""· Gl-•1 - ~I l[[IJ[ I~! l[Il) I .... a •a·> a E)(P£lllENCDl J. W. Robl.is°~~ Orf'!Gil 11·an•a•r. 10SEl\vtCE Stalloo -Alrii~~b MOvtNG SaJe.S bdrm"''" SfEREO, tm Gan;;;; SINGER "r..-_, .. • ~ 41, " COUtaJ ~~~·~ ~drne~o::'J ~be!~ Y. *a!; SAN Cl.EMENTE 'INN ~~ ~ :,..;:_~-~tn~c FsmemM p~ =:~· e~::ho~; ~ 3156,:'1r~~ .;.. 1 E qua I 0 pp o i' tun 1 t y Newport BNdl Oepo.rttntnt, UOq JlOll)ltal, prefd. )"'ull or p/~ At-c~!:!fbA~t~.' i1. 700 + IQ ft aYOCado snien recelvm", 4 matchln& air UUC adf. pt or . SeWI San Clemlf'lte J!:mp!OYtt'· Hu ()penttc For Newport Beach. pJy Qell ~ 17th A · n 25 earpet.l.ftl, )'OU remove; Bar-suspension speakers, Car lx·autlfully, $50. ~11 YOQ ani tfto wfaott' or EXPERIENCED ulcs firl ORTHODONTIC front otnce, Iivlne, N.B. ' 'f Pliancn 802 b . q u e ; 2 new dbl rard full alzc r.;f; c.Mllal.\r, Sporting Goods 130 1 Ud1et• to the .,.ttd. Call be!teween I Exper. 552 multiple board. cxperitllC.lfd only . Im· VICE STATION At· i'iENMoRE 1._. tj ti": $30 ~~~da; ~~~j ~~8~as~r $-1~~:!. FIFTH ANNUAL 9:30 am for appt. 6*-&183 Pan liml'. Muat be exper. medtate °J:~ ~m,!~ ~:=an~ ~e gas ~rry$55. cE W1rkbcNtrd le: hoop; 1957 $195. Still brand new In bux ~,.~jtITTA~11ENln~~.=~: WESTERN Apply in person 10•5 pm ServLc.-e St Exp. .AoPJ.y Eltt: dryer $50. f'tied. f'ord alr eond &, radlO; & gUar. Tl'mtl. 893-@1. niock'I, 1 doors, rowred en. NATIONAL BOAT Announcing *** FACTORY •• -" !al., NB OVER 30.000 O>evron sWlo<>, IOI .. S. :~:.. $<>~ A [""• 1 'T't Bab~b' e WANTED e try. Orl, llB<l. """ twice, & Equal Op'pot. Employer Dealer, mal!:ltfacturer rep. Coast Hwy, Laguna Ba.ch. 847-8115. . or .ats Q ot _r term. 09 $00. 64 ~. MARINE ~HOW KEYPUNCH Golng businHe'a aeveral SERVICE Station cravtYd R BONE NalJJ(llhyde Early '62·'&f. Ford, Doda:e. 01t>vy Store, Restaurant, lilurcl\ 9 • ?.ilU'ctl 17 Fee paid. Beautiful modern pt.rta of the c 0 u n try m&n. Must be exper. 4 days ent Washers/Dryers Arnerican couch, immac, van. Xln't n.tuning t.'-lnd. Bar 832 Pl<>Wk'! call 642-5678. •~'<t. 314 office located in t be available. Mutt be ~hle to a wk. Apply 3190 Harbor $2. 1\'k. t>'ull ina.iut. S85. 846-2230 alt 6 pm Wiil 1)(1.)' to ~ CASI! bt-lweti11 !I and~ pm to claim beac..1"1 area. MUllt have 6 suwtain JClf for tint three Blvd, CM * liJS.1202 * Please call bct 7 It 8 Phf QUI('}( Salf'ffnitil'. flc-i;tr't1t yvur tit·kels. fN~·rth Cou:nty m 1 .. -• ,,_, • roontbl Some travel SNACK s b A"·-•··1 PllJLCO "·I · 1 ......._ Miscelltrf"KUI 811 AU day weekends '"'U!P ~ Tablt'll, '-•"·. "''"· toU-frf'E' n11r.1be.r is 5"J0-1220) Oil na expenence on v"' NO l'NVESTME.NT op ............. ,, ''"" ng., rosl·u=, ., """'""' v .. * * * OM. Great benefits. Also fee p/time. Ovur 21. 30X> Palm xlnt rond, avocado. Sl.50, REDECORATING For ~7881 etc. 113 l\fonte Vlst11., (1.1 jobs. Call Sally Hart, No gimmicks. Rcl. reqUired. Ave., H.B. Ph. 536-tm Sal ~ h 1 I PRIVATE PARTY TV Rad•'o HIFt' n...s 154 s.4i).fi()S5, Coastal Penonnel Mwrt be bondable. e. v•a~/w t g Rmp, ' ' ' .,'"¥! C TELEPHONE bosteaset, DO RECOND. APPLIANCES $10, Antique Co I on la I Stereo 836 1--"--------I Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., all Mr. Dunca telling, work tor top adver-Del\\•pf't'd -guar, Dunlap's, highboy, orig hardware. m. * AUCTION * --------~ COCK .... poo pupplt~ 511': CM. COVERITE CORP. tl!tlng agency, making 41..,. 1815 Nt>wport, CM 548-7780 Curved sectional good Fine Furniture C b II' St wt'C'lul old-.1 fl'nL 1 rm&lu-- New Lite Industrial Divillon For Women KITCHEN aide morning sh.lit 2814 LaFayette Ave. nt:r reservatioru; by phone. Avocaiio W!th & dry tm. shape, $25, Seascape, $5, & ApplianC(>!I amp e $ ereos protesaionn.lly 5.TOOnu~ and Bevttly M8.001" Conv Hosp. Newport Beach No exp. needed, mature Over 200 washers, d~en \Vrought iron poreti lighl A . """'.i.,.. 7 'Yi NbdY tor a lovint; honl('. Xmt fringe bntfs. 4lli-5786. Phone 673-7825 women --'erred top sal -•->':.:.:..·1 17 3 I be I I u N uctions ., • ........,, :. p.nl. Tht> "l>in1 k1llPr-;, J)ri\'{'' "'"''' Vr:..,, ri>a!IOrutbJc 552-75.52. l ~!!!!!""!'!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'I l''""'" ' • •-=-4:" from $39.95 545-tmll · -go poe amp,..,, u Windy's Auction Barn " ·~ LADIES, need extra money! PBX OPERATOR, answ--!!'!:.""~~. "°,':~·~Rn. •an 1 YH ""~"n del & ,_ pro style dryer $lit, • ,"",,rn h('n', ri~is•-d ,~lsM_vh•'rc. I B~AUTJF'UL black lab pup· ' Notdod lmmodlet1ly start immed. with Sarah ~· •-wir..-t • ,.. nua-v• -' .. ~ ' uo-Riveria chnn hubcaps. $2JJ .. 20751h Newport, C?.1 fW&..8GS6 l-S!nun .. '<1l'r !UOl't' R!!Jff.illl. Plt'i>, not ('('guitt>red $.Zi. Coven ...... \Ve train. Call ing service, experienced. wk =· 24 Ol' 6-9. 5 atall. Ltite mod. all cycle 15" Rims/it) $15. 893-1636. Behind Tony's Bldg ?.tal 'l. ci11 ... ·k uur nL•1vbr....rn pri"••s • \\"iii• fur on their bf>Illes Exptirienced PC Asnmblers Hand Solderers U;J' Pa.rt time eves Apply 657 w--ter Ave., w----Kenmore was.her. 63&2840. t r I '' I ' ' 64=i.ng Consultant \V. 19th,, eosUt Mes a· ~ONE SOLl~';" ~~~VA~, washers. M,.:~~~.votx yr~'Ol~[d. ~'. ~~= &se!u~t1erki~~~n H~;,;;~~'OIJ ;~~-~mf1 .. ·.-· ' ~~~~n tro~~arl 638-9528. B h "OO-=~l~403=. ---..,.-..,,-. --1 Exp'd, atature womani phon-ua~ ... "'" re t, guarn & Stt'reo v.•/2 spkr.i, AM+ FM Harden EnterpriSl's T~1pi• rlf'ck. To i:K> rn"" ~ILK\' T('rrit'r Pupples JI) M,.;,..~l~=~elope:~nt firm PRESSER, tor ptoductton on Ing busineu & professional delvd. 839--Gm:-54&-S218. & Stt>rro t't'COrd player. 2 815 \V. J8lh, C.M. &12-2.'H2 $100.00 • 546-97~ I 1-1'ks. S7:... to $100. Call J~hn, Also Trainee• For Lite lndustrlel Work .._,v dresses & skirts. Top pay, epople only. 3 Hours a day.** NEAR new Sears mo. old S60. GE Washer, Zl" ('f"lLClH TV srr.i. Hl" &,'lj-9422, seeks le8Jlng consultant to 64&-0308. Xlnt pay. 557-1721, Mr. Portahlro ell'l"rric dryer, mlni·baskel, good cond., Mi scell•nKUS pot1able hlk & \vht S39. Buth ·MJXE-=o-~c;..~,m-,,-,~S~h,-,P-,,..-.,, E~t~usfas~~ Pafe~~n~f PRESS OPERATOR Lev.1s. $135. 642~ aft 6 pm. a\l'OCado 645--0743. Wanted 820 ~ood i""Ol"lli ~~7691 Puppll's. SlO . -1 n1a!t', 3 personality, & 2 yr. college Women to Work for plutic TELEPHONE Solicitor. 6-REFRICF.RATOR, good con-DOUGH·BOY Swim n1 i n J.l ----------•••••••••••I !t>nuill'. 5.li-1])5. Industrial Sewing & Wire Wrappers \Vith emphasis on coni· molding plants. 346-3370. 9PM, Mon. thru Thurs. dltion, $3.1. pool 1 ~ years old. Likt' \\'ANTED: 4 barstools. wood ---- municatiorui or speech. REAL ESTATE SALES 9AM-12PM Sat. My office, ~107 af!el' 7 pm rww. 18' x 4' v.•ith I"l'dlvood picnic table & hardtop. tor * * BEAUTIFUL Gerniar\ ln(ection Molding Excellent W\lrking conditions FREE LICENSE CM 545-7663/833-1002 . REFRIGERATOR platforin, tilter ek.~nlng '61 Mercedes Bem lOOSL. rs ~1,1:;~~m.~~~~ AKC. and coznpany benefits. Call TRAINING The Jolly ~~ NeWport lS \\'/separate no-frost frt'ezer. rqulpnicnt, and lest kit_ 645-2816 Fnte to You 1- 644-3389 bty,• 9 & TX>On. F R al E t 1 u-·s taking apphcatiOns for $75 or best offer. 64&-3000 \Vorth S500 new. Must sell, l'A y 5 to lO"-'' more than so • FOR Sale AJ\C Registen.~ ainous e s a e """ · Busboys $300, complete. 531-ltl8. 3 L' 2 T' $2 00 GREAT DANES-12 puppies. LIQUOR CLERK ing Course now available Waitresses GE Table top range <·ailed lop S pa.yen on used 1nes, Imes, • CALL 9'19-0:i48 e Many assignments in the P/Time, Exp'd pref but not thru Tarbell Realtors. Free Cooks & oven. DECORATOR has 175 yards Oriental ru~. 5 4 5-so 7 o Newport Beach, Irvine, San-541H}829 new antique gold heavy eves ta Ana & Costa Mesa areas. nee. Must be 21 yr or older Placement .Service. Free J[ostess/Cashier shag plush nylon car(>("!:. · • Experienced & trainee Call Mon & Tues, 7-9 pm T~ning Program. Earn Bartendc·r P,ullding Materials 806 Also 170 yds new Sunnyvale SET of Sand or Paddlt' tires. Positions. Excellent earn· _o_ru_y~83S---34-7_2_~---while you learn. Call Al Plt'ase apply in pernon 33331.:;;;:...~-"".;c.;;:.;.:;.;;:.;;:....;:.:: yt>l!o"'"" Super va 1 u". 1\lso pair of driving lights. 1ngs. Weekly paychecks. LVN'S Sloan (TI4) 832-5440, on Pacific Coast Hwy, Newport 10,00J sheets plywood $4 -$8. !">'1~54 • 544-3417 • ... _,_1 Weekends (TI4) 832-700J. Beach bet hours of 10 & 5 1/8" rough SI.SO, 3/8" ext. Musical Instruments 822 '1'Q' .)lltl ti 'd' 4x8 f7 60 ,, .. ALPINE playhouse·A·frame, REAL ESTATE SALES Tool Room Trainee f'1:'8 c 51 ing. · · 1' v.·ood, perm bldg, w/floor, 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. Irvine 833.1441 Nt" Orange Co. Airport IMMEDIATE OPENINGS; Factory • Machinist • Mii.chinc operator • Punch Press Oper. ' • Silk Screenl'r "A" • Tool & Die Maker STACO SWITCH 1139 Baker, Costa Mesa 549-3041 An Equal Opportunity Employer F /C BKKPR. Fee pa.id. Gro\\o·ing lirm needs your banking background through tina.n· clal statements. Located in Fashlon lsland. Start $850. Also (ee jobs. Call Helen Hayes 540--6055. C o a s t a 1 LVN'S, full & Part time 3-U shitt. H.B. area. 842-5551 NEED middle aged lady to care for £1derly woman, live-in + salary. Days 536-5233, eves 536-3462. MACHINE OPERATOR Experienced in operating drill press, lathe, mill . Should be able to read micrometer & calipers. Knowledge of basic math. Some tools. Call For Appt. Industrial Relations (714) 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Laguna Beach Personnel Agency, 2790 Equal Oppor. Employer' :Harbor ffivd., C.M. FIBERGLASS, Exp'd Gel MACHINIST Coater. Four day work MUST have experience In "\\-'eek. Apply T r a b a ca model shop \VOrk. ~right . Products, 837 w. 18th st.. ~an will be emplo3 ..... full Costa Mesa ume on prototype de'Vclop· • ment. Day shift only. Bio- FUlL time &: part ~ 1 ~mlcs, 17542 Armstrong shampoo girl. Must have lr ·Ave., S.A. cense. 1610 West Cst H , ..;.:='-"=~M~a~;~.---- Newport Beach. Newport TraveLodge FULL time niahrtenanoe 642-8252 man, ove.r 25. call 496-6137 MA S Tues thru Sat for Appl. ID Steady, Above avg working GENERAL office-part time conds. Needed immed. for li'e' typing, figure aptitude N .B. motel. 642·3030. New· 30 or over. Reply classified port Oiannel Inn, 6030 \V. ad No. 862 c/o Dail)' Pilot. Pacific Coast H\vy, NB. SUCCESS CAREER . . vinyl covered 4x8 $3.20, New or experienced. Join the Im1nediate requirement ~ 20,00(1' used 2x6, 2xS, 2x12 doors, windows, porch. $lf1.J. World's largest and fastest dependable, honest, 111-3xl4. &. otht>r bargains. in your yard 675-6712. growing resale organization tell.lgent, fJst mo v Ing Steamship Salvage Sales R£PAIH.MAN, pvt par!y has with a network., of over 300 traint>e for tool t'OOm al· 4942 Lincoln, Cypress tyl)f''ol-Titers & calculatol'!I. ollices and become a t~ndance & prec:uttlng of 995-3581. Typewriters ne?\V $500. Sl'll member of our Millionaire f1br:rglass material. General ~.~S~U-R_P_L_U_S_B_U_JLD_l_N_G_ $250. CalculatONL new $650., . mllllo d U knowledge of hand tools & • ~"II s~ 962 •015 Club. ~ulti-n O ar names req . Apply only S-lO MATERIAL. lOOO's of NEW -·~-~~·~,,·~~-~~~· ---advertising program. ~ or 2-4 ITE~1S! Doors, lumber, p\y. ORGAN Lowery Sp In et, guaranteed licensing school. Justin Enterprises Inc. ~vood. _nlu1n sh('('!ing, ntold· Ebony. 2 manual, $200, Xlnl Excellent sales training. l:iD30 Gold W c · 1 in ... 11•1ndaws etc cond, fl.lust sctl immed. ~~o:all Virginia Jones \Vestminst:~ est ll'C e sli"ILDERS SURPLUS 673-94ll. RED CARPET TRAINEES 2406 So. i\1ain St.,:--; . .\. WE buy old gold & diamonds . . Mon lhru Sat JO-:l for cash. Costa Me s a Realtors Will train dependable women n4: ~1032 Je~Jry & Loan. 646-7741. to become injection molding REAL ESTATE-operators. Must have own Cameras & SALESMEN -Why not work be bl _ _, f E I I ' .• the hottest area ltun-car, ' a e to stauu on eet qu pmen 808 " enlirc shift if nee. Must t Ing ton Beach/Fountain work t'ither Sat <n" Sun. ALL BRAND NEW FOR $15. Valley and let us train you! Openings on day shift ($1.BO System 4 Developing tank & Call Phil Mc Name e, per hr to start) or 2nd shift reel, by Paterson: one liter VILLAGE REAL ESTATE, ISl.92 ])('r hr to start). Ap-cylinder by Kodak; photo--~96=2~-44=71=."='=:-..,--..,,-,71 ply 9 am to 11 am or l pm graphic th ermometer. RECEPTIONISf, lront desk, 10 3 pm. 642-4420, 642·4321 ext 335 or good typing skills. $375/mo. ORANGE COAST .UG, btwn 9 & 5. 833-8160 PLASTICS Furniture 810 850 W. 18th St. I'-'=""-'---._.;;:..: USED BICYCLES All Types • 642-1Ti2 ROYAL TYPEWRITER Good rendition. Clean! $25. • 644--A581 SHAG CARPET SPECIAL lrom $4.99 yd, inst., guar. 18 yrs. exp. 642-TIOl eve. POOL Tables WHOLESALE Also matlrl'sses, sofabeds & lamps. 541-3338: 544--0466 RESTAURANT Assistant Manager Costa Mesa PECAN Wood r'lining Room sr1. Round tble w/pedesta.l, WILL buy color tv's & late TRNE ASSEMBLERS 4 chrs, Wick~ seats. Buffet model [l(lrtabll's W-Orking or VOLT to match. Beaut cond. art not. 979-7694 Instant Personnel 5:30, 551-5959 BEST OFFi:ll on T •· 1 Ce-..:.•cs-ldln, m o 1 d s . Opportunity for advancement emporary ..... rv ce SACRIFICE! Plush Herculon •G.J•u to Manager. Restaurant 3848 C&mpus Dr .. Suite 106 sofa & L/S. Vinyl sofa $Th0 paints $150. Pigeon's & Cai;e b~d requir~. Full NC\vport Beach 546-4741 worth $400. Also Hldeabed $20. 646-0450, 665 Suit, 01. time position. Excellent Equal Oppor. Employer etc. Priv. Party 5.36-8Trl. Hf DE-a-bed, xlnt c ond. , company benefits. * * * SOFA & loveseat, reas., userl carpeting. Set' UNION BANK never used, both for $170., bet. removed. 545-268.5. Intr:rviewing Hours 10 am to 12 noon Pcrsonn{'I Office 1ras an openlng for an ex· usually hon1e, 968-7910 TENNIS CLUB MEM· i;tt:rienced HOOSIER cabinet ard an.. BERSHrP FOR SALE. PROOF OPERATOR tique oak table. Ph. GT;,-3085 c64<>-S:l:.:::..=":..o:::',..:64::<-.:....::IU!=·-- please apply in person . .,~•~fl~•~'~'~· -------BASSET Crib & changing THE BROADWA y Teresa \Vallas, 610 Newport 'IWIN bed rm suite, chest ts~~l;bst P0~5~ 0 n d . . Cl'nter Dr .. N{'wport Beach, \V/bookcaS('. Xlnt cond. 3rd F1oor 7177 Edinger, H.B. an equal opp or tun it y Call aft s. 644-1161 NE\\/ Coats. Hl8 & Hers, ~•• ~ h' 22 ., MALE employes, clean cut, Equal Oppty. Employer t>n1ployl'l' G S I plastic. quilted Jininu, new, HOSf~!l.$ 1er, yrs to· hOnest, dependable, willing ?.~"""l'~!';"-~~~~li~·Af'iw;;s;i:"i;;;;;~;;~G.ii.l~~·~r!a~g~•~!·~•:._ __ ~8~1~2 11-"""" .,.,-.. ·-e Nights & weekends. Appl,y 10 work. Jack·"-Box. 2235 RN's LVN's Practicals WAITRESS. l\iust be 2L Gal· I-'~,~~·~•:.· ~··c:::.~'"~·~'°'---­ daily 10:31rl1:30 am· Harbor Blvd., C.Af. (maie & female), Privalt' ley Cafe. 829 Harbor Isl Dr. GARAGE ~ale ~I _17th: Sun FOR sale, Ros.s girls 3 gpeecl 4:30-5:30 pm MiCasa Mex·l-"'M"'-'a~na~g~,-m-e~n~l~Tn.i=·~.,..,--duty & staff relief reeded. N.B .. Call .btwn 4 & 6 p.m, 18Th. 16..151 B1,rd1e Lal1C', bike like Re\\' $27.50. Phone P. 0. Box 1560 CM 92626. ~ Rest., 296 E. 17th St., College graduate. Starting Lindsey Nurses, Reg, , for 1111erv1ew. 673-4110. llntg Bch. furniture. 968-lROO BURMESE male 6 mo. Shots. Sat &. Sun 962-0852, WL'i!kdays 778-4800, ext 2)3 Office Fumlturei EquiJ.. 824 EXEC desks 6' /8' $1()5..140 Df1sks f2{)..gj, Drltg desks, exc swvl chr SS.-38 642-3408 SC?.1 OFFICE ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER, like new, SlOO. 673-3850 Pianos/Organs 826 ORGAN HOBBY Don't buy any c gan until you l'an play! Non·playen welcome to attend free work shops. Fo1· information Contact: Tom Dieterich 642-2851 Coast Music Service Newport Blvd. at Harbor Costlf. Mesa. MARCii MARCHES fN -and so does Wa!Hc:hs with a n aiter-inventocy, c I ean out sale. Ul(>d, discontinued, floor samples, many others at deeply diBCOUnteod prices. W ollichs Music City South Coo.st Pla7..a 540-2830 PRIVATE party wants to buy Plano for c as h . 835-2278. CONN ?.finue1 organ, modrl 53.'S'. 'Valnur. Xlnt cornl. $499. 5-15-4367. GUl~BRANSF.:'l SpinrL \\'1th bt·nch. Xlnt. cond. $3;'!0. or best offer. 962~16 * Elech"(lnic piano• Con1bo iiitr -Xlnt condt. s2.·.o -Mfi-2'.l93 1'.:BONY '\'urhtirr piano. Spin!'! morl<'L Xlnt cone!. S400. 644--01:i2. salary up to $1000 . ~or646-4816 WAITRESS HOUSEKEEPER. live-in, for Ambitious aggressive, call RN_ LVN Relief. Park Lido Exper, Must bf> ovrr 21. Ap· 2 children & father who Mr. Black 5<14-9000. super 1 0 r Convalescent plv in person, Suri & Sirloin, ................................................................ . ... travels on job, Must love 24 o 59:\0 w c t H N s • • • • children. Sunflower Apts., MATURE Housek~per. Hospital 642-· l · · oas wy, .. • • : FIND YOUR NAME : CM. 548-1650 Corona de! Mar area. RN'S, full & part time \VAITRESS · EXP'O Varied hours. Some cooking. All shifts. H.B. area. Over 21 . Call btwn 12 & 2 H 0 USE KEEPER, lite Ref req. 521-2703 (ask for ----""='c.:-555='1~---l,.:,P.:,M:;·="'='=--~721°"2".~-~~ " housework, 1 sml boy. Mr. Osmond). 4 ill Call 979·9888 Sales \\/ANTED: male, v.' train. MATURE Woman Personnel Coun. Trnff S2Hr.tostart.~1~stbeable IMMEDIATE NEED w/knowledge of antiques & to speak Spanish. The Regular Organist, F i r s t plants. Must have sales exp. If y~u ~ aggressive en· Thinker Picture F r a m e Church of Christ, Scientist, 673-7290 •lh=c:o~~~ to Shop. Call: 548-3715 San Clemente, Ca., !r.m2. P .• ·"1E"o"'1"c-'A-L-Sc-cy---W-,ell e AOVANCE ON YOUR WANTED: LVN. Private rlu- -, O. Box 433 or caU Chrmn qualified for front office. MERIT ty. 6 hrs day. Call 646-54,tl. 4!)2..5906. Exp'd in bookecping, in· e WORK WITH PEOPLE 6-8 evenings nspector "-'Bnl!XI. to fill surances, etc. Salary open. We will train you for a posi· w~ELCO--M-E=-W-A_G_' 0-N--cx-- penn. position in quality Ph. 642-881)4. Uon in our Irvine oUi~ in paneling in Orange County. assurance dept of world's -'-"'-=~~-----aU aspects ol screening, 540-1m or 545-1408 largest manufacturer or MUST have experience 1n r & 1 t tential 'ailing yachts. ~r. In ln· model sho'l,;"''Ork. The right tes mg eva ua e po \VJG STYLIST ~v<' ··" employees for local, na-spection of fllx'rglass yachts man will employed f1,111 tional &. international com· Exper. $2 to S2.50 hr. Sa.lary or structures & knowl~ time on prototype develop-. C u Pat ... 4 ...... + bonus. EmpI"l'ss, 7800 • · D h'lt I a· panies. a °"'"'" Ed' A · H B • of sailing boats neoess. ment ay s 1 on y. 10-S33-:l700, Dennis & Dennis lngci-\iC', • • • Advancement opportunities Dynamics, 1/J42 Annstrong Personnel Agency of Irvine, WOMEN to work In donut : & xln't col benefits. Call R. Ave., S.A. 2082 11-tichelson Dr. Also shop. Night shilt. No phone • E. J. Poole, 540-7070. An NCR. Mach Proof Opr located San Jose. Long calls please, \Vin ch f! 11 s : Equal Oppor. Employer Beach. Torrance, Sant a Donut Shop, 2947 Harbor • !\1/F To $500 Fee Paid J CM · Also Fee f>05ittons Ana, Anaheim, San Diego & Blvc ., . . : ·p-m ...,.. 0 ,,.,, 11 l.Vestclilf Sherwood Oaks. : ~ PER.50NNB. .'. SERYICES•AGENCY PeNJ:>nnel Agency SEAMSTRESS ·• 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. t.1u!f. be experienced, must I II~. I : (Mark III Centerl be able to do own repairs & Merctr.ndlM · · ·• 542:4836 Maintenance. 4 Day Work -: WIN FREE SHOW PASSES Each DAILY PILOT Winner Gets Two $2 Value Tickets • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ . • • ! WESTERN NATIONAL : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • (DINGHIES TO SAILBOATS) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • BF:AUTIFUL black lab pup- pies, llQf ttgis1et't'(I, \Vb.He fur on their bl•!Hes Re ntie & sn1a.rt 638-952M, Ca r d e n Grove, ADO&\BLE 3 mo. old male pup. Predominantly Ce'rman Shepherd. fret'. S:m...8968 or 540-1652. Bassel Hounrl FM? To good lv:imt' 5'<>-4197 SHORTIIAIR pointt't', femnle, lll'('ds nice family to Jovt'. 536-l!JIG 1 rahbtl '\'Ith cast>. Very Rl'ntle, good with children. ~·13 BLACJ-\ Lal'lrador·Goldcn fle. l.riever Puppies. 8 wks old. 496-4780. .FILL dirt avail. to immrll , callers. Truck loads dcl"d fret'. 494-7204 For that Item undt!r $50. try the Penny Pincher. AFGHAN 6mo, F. AKC Ex· Cfi! ped. TRN, Golden. Blk inask $125. 962-9805 C'OC.1\·a·Poo puppies-6 weeks olrl $10.$25. Others alao. A· Adorable poodles. 642-4818 SELECT quality, AKC reg. Silky Terrien. Call 6'4-2465 days or 548-5484 nltes. AKC registered, house- broken. Bett ofter to good home, 548-0l83. Irish Setter Pups AKC. $100. 831-1400 Spring• Spanlelt. AKC * !<32-4192 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 C(1Jorrul, C't".'l.11.y i·1 Io p $<.jiar;ih•i; 1111 lhru th<• yctu'! I Croch1·1 frn;h\onabli• belted IOflf.M'r. !\.1nkt• 1''1iy 4-lnch I granny "ciuu.rc•K while Yoll watch TV. Use knitting ,. FEE PAID ----'-"'-.;..:.."----· I week. Apply T ra ba c a • Newspaper Product" 837 w. 18to St.. A • 800 : • • • N•nd h1•r to :«<!hOOl al"lll inlo won1h«I. Put!l~r11 l It 0 0 : spnng and 1ummer with fir)(' nll.SM'~· c;i{"s ~-16 included . rlght ~P to !l('vPn nt.•\\' S.E\'T.)o'T\-.f,VE CENTS tln.'SS('S. ~LL Q U l C K I E for l'lich ()ftttern _ add 2:i siylcs v.·1th Ull"· prt'tl!Psl ccni~ r,,r 1•ru'h panern tor dl'talls -contrut atl"'nl.~, Air ~1ail and Special Handl- C"Ollars, pli,1t11. 1 . otherwi.9E' Third-cla55 Se-c .. Eng/mtg e:<p to $000 I ,Trial attorney t1> Slk> K Elec. Sales Engr to Sl2 K I Purchu Agt/Steel 110 K l Buyer/Marine Hrdwr tl4,SOO ,. Tool Crib Attend $520 jecy. Const. to $650 11 Secy /Bkkpr to S550 l\I ecept/Gen'l Ofc to $500 1 • Clerk typlsts lo $500 1 Com.ml. lines rater $500 Rc<;pl/legal G.O. to $500 '1 ty cferk trainee to $425 Free • Fee Pold.tions Costa Mesa. nt1ques • Typist SECRETARY * * * : To pUnch ns Tape ror Lino-SH not nee. Good typing M. H. Sherman : lypes. ExceUent sahtry and 'd. • b-·d -··e bc-•flt•. Ev.... speed & accuracy ttq · 2077 W Coast Hwy • '"" ..... 05 ""' ... -?.,ust like to \\'Ork, Contact • • ning shift. Carol Jameson : Newport Beach : DAILY PILOT International Chemical You are the winner ot • 330 W. Bay St., CM N I C 2 ticketil to lhe • 642--4321, Ext, 309 uc ear orp. FIFTH ANNUAL : Ask lor Andy, Paul "lT'Z7 Campus Vriw WESTERN .. or Dave. lrv~J;"r. NATIONAL BOAT : NURSES Akles, Trainees Equal o Em ~. & wanted. Dver 35 pref. Good ppty Povret' : beneUts Immed openings. MARINE SHOW : ... ... ~~ SECRETARY M•n.'h 9 ·Ma•cb 17 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . ~ : : (INFLATABLES TO CRU ISERS) / ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Pn,nted P11UCTT1 fl 3,.19 : d~illf'ry wfll take lhre(t Child 1 Sli.es 2. 4. 6. 8 • 11.1• 6 w!"'l"k.tl (lr nioN' Send to takes 1318 ynh 3.S-ln.; 11 I AllCt" Brook!!, the DAILY cont~. , · I P" !lT. 10~1. Needlecrtrt St~~l"n\·~ C'F.:-O.'.;~, f'l•·11t .. l;IOx 163, Old Chcl.tM?a for each patlem -n(ld -·1 !'llilion, New York. N.Y. «nts for cnch pattern f11r 1 1rou. Prlnl Namf', Addreu, Air M~fl and Spcicll\l llandl· I Zip. p11tt~rn Nnmber. 'll't&"3505 ~. Ad • For Newport Beach Plt'ase call 6'2-5678, ext .. lt>t • + NURSES' aides, erv· pref., Aaency. All 8kllls lncludlnst between 9 and 5 pm to claim : 1 1 1fJt,. "11• " 411\ n 1f all ahlftl. Bl!ver Y Ma.nor sborthmd. Sharp looltt, long ynur licketa. (North Cou.111y ! I . JUNIOR Salesmen: 10-15. ~=~ ~ H~ hOtn, good pay. toll·lree numbft-la 54().122(1) • 488 E. 17lh Cat Irvine) CM ulte 224 642-1470 The DAILY Pl LOT makes It easy. Just check through· out the classified s.ectlon for "ad s" listing winners' n1me1. If you find your name just calf 642·5678, Ext. 114, between 9 •.m. •nd 1 p.m. to make arrangements to pick up your tickets •t any convenient DAILY PILOT offica. inl(: otherwtl't? thlrtl·rla!I!' I N EE D L E(.'RAF"T 72: deUvc.ry will lake lhret• J ('rorhl'1. knit. etc. ~ Wtt"lui. or more. Send to dil't'ction~. ~. Mllrl~ Martin, t~ DAILY ! tn11tt1nl ;\l1u:nu1w Book. PIUYI. «2, P11tti:rn T)fopt.. Brulic fancy knol'\ pal• 232 \Veit 18th St.. Nl'w r,.111~' St 00 ' i;, Earn $2).$41'1 per week set· 2 OFFICE GIRLS Send Resume:,,.,_. * * * ! '• ~new cuolpm•rs !or the NEEDED 0"c1P"'.0"0i;1_a11ylloxAd~';~ SCRAM-LETS :. I,, --DAO..Y PILOT. 'l'tiia la not o. Radio ·-·~-~ch -t .....,,.per route and -~ ~-M Cal" ~ I not Include collect~ or VllflA~7 i;"~.':,., e ~ ""· u. ·-ANSWERS • I ~~· ~ ,..:: YELLOW CAB CO. SECRETARY-5TENO. =· I 10\ttW after ICboOl and 8 on 188 E. l6th, OJsta. Maa porat~ offices, p I ea 1 11 n t Bi1ll'°P -Ea14!h -Tempo- ) Saturd&t. We have. openings 1-.::;;-=..;;c"'-'===:.... wllh 0111.flf -BUTTONS I "°""'"In Valley • South TIME FOR Auto owoc~• """pl•mt; H'untlrvton Btach &rel'll on- ly. You m... ... ..,, 01 DAIL y PILOT by S PM to ..1.r·-c1..... P~;Tif, CLASSIFIED AD l FOR ACTION ••• ?o1<1"unr...tba-1 CALL 642-5678 t ) • MARINE ART SHOW • •••••••••••• UNDERWAT£R PHOTO York, N.V. 10011 . Pr~nll Jn~iiu.t tirocbet Book - NAME, .A.DORF.~" ~1 11~ I }.('am hy plcture!ll PB!· ZIP, SIZE and ftlT\ t.t. te-· $1 00 NUM.Bf!B '"'" . . SD: MORE Q u l r k I C:on1plek' 1n111tanl Gitt Boo~ F··"-__ , boo -more than 100 gif'hl _,..,..., ....... c II(': 0111· S1 00 C!!,!~ f'rtt. from l'lur ~Pl4'1e Al,elwl Boot -~'7.SUmmE".l' CataJo&:. All $l oo ""ST!~ ~"'ING BOOK 1s' Jin.r Rutt ~ • OOt. • "\ ,~ -" t Boot OI IS Prtte M ...... eew ....... Q. wear ornorro"" 50t': JlrNsr.AH'l' FASH IQ N r:llf Dont 1 • l& pstten., BOOK • . Hundreds o f ~l~ QuJH iook I - laahloa -$1. 00.:. 1'lr that !tam .-.. l50, try Q•I"' "" 7*1'• U•"'" . Ult! l'l!my PJnoh<r. 13 beauUrut .. lffrnl. !IOc. ------------- • 1 I 1 OAILY PILOT T ....... -u,l m ' ~I _ .... I~ i i 990 Autot, u.... 990 :.! 1§1 I~ .iiiil -iiiii .... I@ I llil I ------mA-- MUSTANG ,...1 t:::::~----..:"4;:.;:I -._ Autoo, 1...,...... 970 A""°' Imported c~ -. t wk. o14 S.lo/Rent ,. ALfA ROMEO MG male pu.p, &liCk with trowa. ~.,., <>pcn ru.s, Dbl Alt. llpt FOID darlin& I -blo I plcylul I. -.,. JUnt low ..U.. '71 IJJA Ram"' BttJlna 1pt '18 MG Mldp~ 23,llllo mL, --/ lalh<r D\ll'9 bro<!, (012BWYl1'boao IZT-DlS or sedan. 12,300. 1md A '°" IOP, Mb -· bu llrlt P"f,IJY~ -$1M7G. 8-OuU.~ 4!J6.'1246 ac:all~S'IH350.~~""'-----1 \llC to chr.w.R',.. MovJnc 2151 llarbor, Of. I , .- lal1."t •ll, IJO, $1'lll!. Roni A -HGme I BMW 6' lfGB. noedl •\wine_., TRAIN .4o11 now The $400. Pvt ""1'1>· '-!11!11l. »...n....t 1or vour v-11on LEASE A - -N ... cl.-..... * 531"'80 * PEUGEOT 'l'Uell 1 ~. Tburs 7:• pm. Tran.,.. Trawl 945 ---DALMATIANS 8 wkl Al<C •LARK ~ot Tr&ller, oom- Males -Fem.ii.,, ~w; plete\y aeU ""'lalned. Like CREVIER BMW -.~ .... p•"""' stock. R ea 1 new. He.rdtop. Furnace, s.&:i'n'T ' stove, ref'rig. Sips 6. Private Sales . ~rvtce · LeltlSing -··" ··-. '" ~=. -W. 111 SI.~ Santa Anll AFGHANS-AKC. Xlnt. •-·I ~~~~~-~~.,~~~~1---..;..-~83~5'~3~17~1;;;;;;;;;--~r show. $75. " up. 1 · Vtlllf our _new home! GER. Sllep. pups lldllS, Stud ~-·'-'"-'°'_ .... _~II '41 l 0 serv. Show/pet .. Sound gua.r. --· 547-39'17/l67-l.122. ,________ . DOBERMAN, female. 2 Recreational )'<111'11 ok1. Blaok. gentle, .. v'-'o'-'h-'lc-'I•.;..• ---· 956 ROY CARVER, Inc:. -!30, 34i;..3698. - 1973 BAVARIA Golden Retrievers CORVAIR sandrail & traller 234 E. 17th St. AK'C (n4) 629-6374 clean. Costa Mesa 516-"'4 Call 979"1066 1960 PEUGPX7J' GOOD OONDmON. $150. or otter. * 6'15-1701 PORSCHE · --· PORSCHE '65 C Coupe Tobacco Brown. Black inter- ior. Radials. Osrome whaek Am·Fm. Amber directionals. Beautiful! $2995. Can be seeri at 22'l Nyes PL (ott Victoria & Coast Hwy), Lag. Bch, or call 494-2944. '63 Porsche Conv. clean, radlaa. Wood Btrg whl. $2250 Call Ben ~. 642-7238. BAUER BUICK e CONNELL CHEVRO. LET e COSTA MESA DATSUN e JOHN- SON A SON LINCOLN MERCURY e MIRACLE MAZDA e NABORS CADILLAC e DAVE ROSS PONTIAC e THEODORE ROBINS FORD e UNIVERSITY OLDSMO- BILE e '55 CHEVY $100 '68 Fanl G&Uxlo Fqlbad< 'e lfUSTANG. />(I II $250. 'dr, S -8 cyl:-P/S, Pill, tu •if, Rill, N-bady woril 6 Body ~· 4 new -· Ju nu lxb, • ......,. cytlnder, rodla .... 6'IW3!IO ...,, IL Pri~ tlmi • :u -· Jim--a1t OLDSMOBILE ... El Camino '9116 -No. '11 LTP COuntry SQuire. 9 '69 Toronado T-Call 557-1975 or -Ila wp. f/S P/B, 5 • 8 ... 4 'l .t 2 Banker 1 .tereo, 1111 rack, ~ door I Vlnyl top, power win· Outlel-2151 fk{bor, CM-look, 1$,000 mllet. 968-3565 00w1, tilt wheel, 10 '61 C1IEVELLE 4 dr, radio/ '62 Fal"'ll Waaon Good body mll•agt. (YIM2!). beoter, pwr -.ing. Ve1>1 A nre., SUS-J.Ua ... tack Kelley ~ , .. ad. cood. $800. 557'61114 day• 548-71<7 ISil $2785. "' ~RYSUR GREMLIN $2299 '6&CllRYStER,2 d llTlOO REPOSSESSED Im Full .......-_.u... f-~• ... ,_· Gremlin Good cond. 25,000 ,.....""'~ ..-iw UK; .. """"• milea. Centlnela Bank .4,M/FM, rad1a.I. tiles, ~ &i&-n.21 Make offer. ' dati top. Ofte.owner, iow m1.l-""-'==='='"'---I MUii sell, $13115. &15-2640 JEEP days, 546-6746 nitet. Z480 1-lar'bor Blvd. ea.ta Mesa At Fair Drive 546-tm7 -1 _, t .. . I r • I ....!( I 'I _, I _J I , I I .,. .I . \ •ll r:Je'l DUNE BUGGY, 1964 CAPIU '71 PORSCHE 911 T, Targa, 5spd, Si l ver , mags, Michelin, atl'l/fm, pri pty. $6995. ~2347 '69 CHRYSLER. 2 dt UT 300. '67 Jeep Wagon, 4 wbl drivtt, Full power with JacL 4ir, autl), 327, pe/pb, air, good AM/FM radial• tires Lan· oond. $2000. 557-0086 wkdys; dau ~:One owner, iOw nij. aft 6 It wknds. 492-5041 Must sell. $1395. MS-26'0 l9C5 WllLYS Jeep. Xlnt days, $46.6745 nites. cond. Muat see to believ"' '72 98 OLDS COUP£. Comp. equipped, cruise control, etc. by owner, $4500 . 919-6140 days, 833-4587 eves. ,, 1 [ ....=,=.., j~ A 1:.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;; Truckl 962 Bolts, Gentr•1 900 · '69 ==...;,.;.;..;..; ___ _ Landcruiser 4 wheel drive Hard· top. Kelley suggested retail $2470. CYEC· 592). $2099 '& BRAND NEW '73 CAPRI Order Youn Today $2789 GUSTAFSON POrurHE 912. 1966 w/reblt eng., new tltea, clufcb, paint of YoUr favorite color! Dave 919-4787 1973 PORSCHE 9ll T. ·FM stereo. Mai wheels. Very lo mile. 673-022:? aft 5. '67 Porsche 912, lo mileage, very clean, private 640-0169 VOLKSWAGEN LESS THAN WHOLESAU '69 VW Fastback. Automatic. 61,000 miles. Rum good. l!l50, firm. . • 544-3417 • BUICK Full power, factory air, vinyl top, Gold exterior. (699BUO). Kelley suggested re. tail $2350. CONTINENTAL 0n1~s~34!TRr '68 Continental 4 Wheel drive. $1,250. Call 673-1852 after S pm. LINCOLN 4 Door. Full power,1-------- f&Ctory air, vibyl top. C708Dml. Kelley •U&· gested retail $2235. $1799 ·~ F85 Olds Sta Wag, V8, auto, 'radio. Clean! Best of· fer! '(Runs xlnt). Dave 675-~2 · . I '72 Cun.ASS, lo miles, load· .,, ttl, mW!lt sell. Top cond . I 545-;4523. 557-1678 aft 5 '72 PLYMOU1'1 FUry ID. Air." R/H. P/s. $515. Priv. party. 7;14/557-8651 PINTO 2480 H..W Blvd. LI I Me ,.,;, PORSCHE 912 baadors, V'1'Y ·72 vw fastback, ap1/fm, lo Costa Mesa ftCO n• re_,, attractive exhaust system, mileage. yellow, $19 9 5. $1999 2480 Harbor Blvd. ea.ta M""' At Fair Drive· 546-8017 '72 Pinto RWlll.bout, 200) cc Auto. R&H. Like new $17SO. 642-2307 At Fair Drive 16800 Sea.ch at Warner CWJtom blt 6'ffi.31ill. 640-1798 546-8017 Huntington Beach ,62 PORSCHE / 1 2480 Harbor Blvd. ~ 1~~ .. 'P" .. '!'11 1842-8844 * (213) 592..$544 • w n e w Y '68 VW bug new radial tires. Costa Mesa :" "H of ~ Viki ,, reblt 1600 S eng, $2350 or Xlnt cond. $800. Pvt. prty, At Fair Drive ome 111• ng best otter. 646-0620 aft 6pm 847-7392. 546-8017 I DATSUN RENAULT ·10 vw eamper. Nu ""'" 10 ~!lf'ff"! ... ~I Unc:oln·Merc:ury 1------------------mileage, am/fm, xlnt cond. , 16800 Beach at Warner 1973 DATSUN RENAULT $2100. 213431-rnt . PRiVATE PARTY 842:1~'4':'/'2'1 ti'59!2..s544 ALL MODELS ,, * '67 Convert!, Immac * '72 Buick LaSabre Cust Sport Gleaming white w/vtnyl top. 11Home of th V"kl ,. $1150 Coupe. Air, landau top, Rich red leather i nt . e I ng · IN STOCK SALES A SERVICE am 546-3488 & pm 673-4534 Loadod! 962--07ll2 Alr-<Ond. Crui" ·ca nt. '& lmmedlete O.llv1ry "And We Mean Service" '68_ vw fastbjlck. Good con-·n Riviera. Exec's Auto. Stereo tape. Tilt wheel. dition. Best Qtter over $800. Loaded Immac c ond Trunk release. Full pwt. • 'J\1. lltnrwf ::m_,___ 847-1094 68 000 · . $3 250 968-. 1896 · $4,995. Mr. Taylor. 644-491.0 .,,.~~.': ltlW.tiUn '57 vw VAN • m1. ' . . Dl'.YS 675-7957 Eve. &: Sun. ·~ ..:::,w..::.::'~ $389. CADILLAC ooNTiNENTAL '69. Air. SO GOOD ANDERSON CJ IMPORTS ~ ..... '68 Jaguar XKE Coupe. lm-mac. Low mi., wire wbls, am/fin radio. $ 3 0 0 O. -- " ' 557.5 2 4 2 ... --· 'SUNBEAM '63 SUNBEAM Removable hardtop. ., 544-3417 ., TOYOTA also avttilab1e at SAYINGS DEAN LEWIS !300, e 544-3417 e Full power. 2 Dr. $nKJ. So good is th I . f 1 161 VW, $350. '& Call 644-l597 of this '69 Un':°~ ~r • 646-1377 • CORVAIR and th• low low prire of '68 vw Bug. Completely • only $1889. (759DHK). 10 bull • "·-0'It's a Goodie". Qirvair DAY FREE TRlAL EX· re . t .• ~ new thru-out. CHANGE. $800 "'" ~ -· "'0 0 =2 S h' B• 1961, stick shift. 2-door, xlnt · ~: .... ~ · omet 1ng 1g cond. Call oow 53&-0545 GUSTAFSON VOLVO '68 Cadillac two door. Big CORVETTE ___ ..._ ____ I cac. B:gger valuo. 10 DAY Unc:oln-Mercury '72 y· OLYQS FREE TRIAL EXCHANGE. , , 16800 Beach at Warner . GUSTAFSON 72 · CORVEITE Conv. '8M Hunltpgton 0.ach • m>, All xtras, gOOd oond. 842-8844 * {213) 592-5.144 *FACTORY * EXEX:IJTIVE * DEMONSTRATORS 6 To Choose From Clearan~jl Sore! Huge $GYi11CJS Example: 145 EA station wagon, automatic transmis- sion. air 90nditioning. Jug. gage rack, AM/FM radio, rear speaker, wheel covers, consol.e. #1456364. #104897. '72 List Price WH $51591 SALE PRICE $3959 DEAN LEWIS Unc:oln·Merc:ury $5000. 6'13-rns art 5 pm "Home of the Viking" 16800 Beach at Warner rtuntington Beach FORD MAVERICK 842-8844 * {213) 592..,s544 1------- 1'HtNn• of the Viking'' ~ 1---------'70 Maverick, A/C, auto., '72 Cad Cpe DeVille, gold • -Gold w/deluxe interior. low w/gold inter. Fully equip. miles. Pil: 494-2985. 1 19,ooo mi'•. Pvt •"· 159'oO. MER,CURY ~~0knds 58&-2517• Days EXCLUSIVE '64 Cadillac CdV xlnt concf., You'll find this ~65. Ford Io miles, new f I r e s . Mustang very e~clus1.ve two 642-2756; eve s /wknds d_o?r .hardtop w1th.m .con· 494-4373 d1t1onmg and bargam pnced. ' 10 DAY FREE TRIAL EX· '68 Cad. Sharp ~ DeVille, CHANGE. , nr •••. we. Pvt pty. GUSTAFSON Below whlsle blue bk. $1995. 644-7772. Linc:oln·Merc:ury 1969 FLEETWOOD 16800BeachatWarner Brough~.all extras!..~~~ Huntington Beach mf.. """· Evol/Wltn<ls 842-8844 * {213) 592-5544 962-230l. ''Home of the Viking'' '72 CADIU.AC Coupe de 1---==-=-o-~~1 HOME SOUGHT For this '70 Mercury Mont· erey 4 door. Would like gar· age and tender loving care. (MlDFCJ. Olify $1489. 10 DAY ~REE TRIAL EX· CHANGE. GUSTAFSON PLYMOUTH ~ BARGAIN BASEMENTS I-lave no better price thlll} this '68 Plymouth 4 door hardtop. Less than 50,000 miles for only $889:- (PM43G8F3)1537) 10 DAY FREE TRIAL EXCHANGE. GUSTAFSON Linc:oln-Mercury 16800 Beach at Warner Huntington Beach 842-8844 * {213) 592-5544 ''Home of the Viking:_ '10 Fury Ill H.T. Cpe, V8, air cond., power steer- lng, vinyl top. (709- BBL). Kelley sug. gested retail $2375. $1999 2480 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa At Fair Drive 546-tmi PLYMOUrH 'TI, Fury III 2 dr hrdtop, P/S, P/B, vinyl root, fac air, prl pty. 894--. PONTIAC !T!O!YIC)!T!AI Vill•. All xtns. 1nc1 stereo, '69 Mustang Uncoln-Merc:ury $.5fl50. 493-n77. I VB S k "-h? Mach . , auto-16800 S.ach at w.,,,., peo __.-.enc: JAG V .. 12, '72, brdtop Coupe ™miles, Warr., 12M miles. $7500 Firm. CO c a r . 213-'723-.m' or TI4-644--0785 15' SKI ~dobaker '72 Fonl f:.>XI VB ow.tom _K_A_R_M_A_N_N __ G_H_IA_' 1iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii window SUPER VAN . '69 KARMANN GHIA 1966 Harbor Costa Mesa 646-9303 '67 CORONA. Auto, Radio, beater. $595. 1966 HARBOR COSTA MESA 646-9303 E LD 0 RAD 0 '68, exce~ .matte, power steer· H"·ting· t•n "·ach t''onally cl•an' Many e-· "'' ., DI! You don't have to, to own · ........... 1ng. Kelley sug. 842-8844 * (213) 592.5544 this '68 Pontiac Le Mans. One owner. $2650. 642-45'n. · f~J~rtail $20IO. ''Home of the Vik ing'' The name is French, but CAMARO the body is American 11 Loaded. P/S, P/B. fact [i] air, autom. $3700. 4~2575. I Green $850. 919-4201 ]-'65 CHEVY Van, nu ""''· MAZDA ml! . Good Ma::hanical c o nd • lmiiiiiiiiiiliiiii\iiii~ I Crptod, Radio, S 8 2 5 · * Mazda '73 Rotary * Aircraft 915 963-5350 $66 MONTH 1---------'7l CHEV. Van 350 eng. 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE Aero Club Managers Turbo, air, orange. $2700. Will accept trade-ins I Rotor-Wing Trainer $12/hr 979-5292 or 54&-0969. CALL MR. FRY 842-6666 Avafl to clubs. 557-5510 Autos Wanted 968 Hunt. Beach Campers,Sale/Ront920 WE PAY TOP 1986 Ford "-Ton Open Road-· Chassis r.nount Camper. Shower, no &ell· plus mall)' other extras. $2460. 557-5603. 27' TRAVOO 25' DISCOVERER 20'·22' OONTINEN'l'ALS 20' PRIOE A 30YS VAN CONVERSI J NS :~a • Serv1Qe • Renta!J * Danmar Inc. * -Harbor Blvd., a.a. 5.11-Nesl la G-G. D•IAun CASH MAZDA • Eves 646-0047 TRIUMPH ·n Volw Wagon, auto, super clean, must seU ! $3000. 64lH171. '69 Rally-Sport, air, 4-spd Hurst, am/fm, disc brks, 327 eng. U750. 673-8666 ere. $1699 '71 Mercury beauty. 10 DAY FREE TRIAL EXCHANGE. 2480 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa Ar Fair Drive ~17 Mo••= cu st om · ·USTAFSON power windows, fac· tory air. vtny1 top, • c:ol Merc:ury P"mlum tires. (161-v-'~ ft• COJ). Kell ey sug· Beach at Warner gested retail $3180. tington Beach . $269, 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544 ''Home of the Viking'', 2480 Harbor Blvd. Com Mesa '71 SAFARI; At Fair Drive w 9 ~ .• ' 546-8017 agon. pass . .r\M'it:r steming & brak~ factoty air. Lo, ·lo mileage. (25245JX. 3'9350). Kelley sug. gested retail $3750. $3599 2480 Harbor mvd. Costa Mesa At FaiJ: Drive 5f6..8017 • . ' I I , m m' to JV w dr q ·th pl • • I • • ju w " •• - • • . .1 - " '" ... • • ' San ~lem.ente tJaputran~ EDITION }'OL 66, NO. 72, ,3 .SECTIONS, 42 PAGES • \ . • ORAN6£ ·COU NTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAROf IJ, 1973 TEN CENTS ·saddleback Students Assail Speaker Policy • • .., •• By JAN WORTH '• Ot .. OIW'*'I ... " Complaints from Saddleback College students to Ule bowl of trustees Monday oia)it ebOut Ule school's apeakers policy led to charges that the ICbool js "a sterile fishbowl" and .. ooe big hlgb 5Chool." Wbm Tim Jenson, a 1SOphomore spkesu:tan from , As!9cfated StUdent Govemment, 'told the board of trustees lhet Ule speakers policy discouraged a • Border Ring r,.. flow of lcleti C111 WPpUI, 'l'nllteo Mlcbael ColllPs 'replied, ·~ ... Del malotalned u • forum for r... opeecb. OUr job here ts to educate.'' tbe group of about 10 atudents wu protesllng -clause of .... lour-potpt speal<en provtsloo, wblch llYI that wbeoevtt a «<>-ersial opeaker ap- pears (Jll campus another 1peater represen'llog an oppo,!lDg potpt ol view must be given equal ti.me oo the aame program. • . tbe ltUdentl ul;ed for a nv111oo of tho pollcy reading ''llill -1 ~ time will be provlcled, --1"'Qllttly ..,. questeilf.to ~ ~ 9!ew polPIJ, "°"""r, Del -"b"daring U1e same procram." Alter ID boar ol beat<d clllculsioo on both sides, a commJttee of Tnlstees Don- na Berty, James Marsball, aod Hans Vogel waa cboeeo to meet with three students and try to work. out artQlutioo. Alfr.do Cabrenl; a lltUdePt, i8l<I be felt ' a1 24 Tons of Pot • Seized Ill Raid .l WASHINGTON (AP) -The govern- ment announced today it seized $19.9 million in illegal narcotics, including 24 mos of marijuana, in a combined opera- & with the Mexican government that it Police Hold 3 Suspects In Robbery said crippled a major drug-smuggling ring on the Arizona-Mexico border. U.S. officials said they also seized t.3 pounds of heroin and made more than 100 arrests. They said they seized records of a "large smuggling ""1S]!lracy responsl· ble for bringing tons of marijuana and multi-kilos of beroiP" iP10 the United States. • Detail>, IPcludlog !be name> of U-arrtlttd 'W"-wllilre. tbey were llized. · · · were DOI Immediately ...-. '!be street value of Ule llelzed mari- juana was pul 'al Ill. 7 millloo aod the heroin at $t5 million. The amO\lflt of heroin would be enough to supply 182,000 addicts for one day. Tbe results of the Mexican-United States exercise, call~ "Operation Cac- tus," were announced at a news con- ference at the executive office of Narcotics Control Program Infonnatlon. Law enforcement authorities from Mex- Wulted wi1m told "I _, -to a -~ IPd POI loam. Al -as I CID questiaD. bim I cm .... " Herb Bair, a 15-year-<ld -... reporter for Ule Larill. Ille •• I newspaper, Mid, .. We are not tlll!lfp - we are ldultl, We have ra11•••• ...-, here ... educaUm is "Ori•tintian -.. as academia. Yet all (bey Wlllt to tllk about la football!'' Jeoson said the ~ pollcy lmd cauaed him particular lnloble.in pl• • I -...... ---period ol *' -. ftldoy ._ 11 a.m. 10 ooon, .... 8lleft .. -,,. period is :::=..,.~ .. a .... tor alkampus ''mes .. ...-pnpams. -----lo-with,,.. ~ I'\• •rme diso•sion when __ ,. __ ..,.Mm."Jemoo -. ----lbe-inthe .-·--.. --_... ... ,. ........ _.~ a g. Gpm ._ .,_....... ••~ --- e A pair of San Clemente detectives left for Bakersfield this morning •to pick up three as-yet unidentified suspects in the weekend holdup of a San Diego youth who was robbed and dumped in a storm ~rain. ico and the state of Arizona attended the concerence. ' J • • • Uf't T_... The arrests took place in the San Joa- quin Valley late Monday as the trio drove -the victim's ca;:-which bore no license plate!, local officers said. Two male suspects -one "-them a !uvenile -were be.Id on the initial auto theft charges, but authorities i D Bakersfield had released the girl in- yolved in the case l>efore discovering _that tbe three were wanted for anned rob- bery. The ca.se took place last Sunday when Bruce Lee Treadway, 17, or San Diego walked into police headquarters to report ,the series oJ incMie.nt~. · .•. His was the third hitchikker-related ,robbery of the weekend. 1 Treadway told officers that he picked up a girl bltcbhiking in San Diego aod dtow be:r to an Oceanside apartment · , wber< lwo men joined the group. ~Once tbe car reached San Clemente the ..., males choked the youthful dtiver un- OOPIClous, bound him, then dumped .... 'S'rudway into the Linda Lane storm 4rain area. .. 'Ibey then took Treadway•s mooey, $20, 8lld his car. .... The arrests in Bakersfield mean that two of the three weekend atroogarm jobs 6ave yielded suspects. Ernest Bracey1 2$, of San Diego, was ' (See ROBBERY, Paae l) ! t:Jemente Woman : Facing Charges ' • On Stolen . Goods The 811POUilCeDle1lt laid Operatlob Cac- tua was launched early in February when intelligence IOUJ'CeS revealed th a t substanti.al quntities .,f marijuana and heroin were being introduced into the United States along the Mexican border in SQuthwest ArizclJta, the government said. In addition to the aJTests and con- f iscated narcotics, the government said lt also seized several ,private dwellings it said were used as smuggling wareOOuses, vehicles and weapons. It said records captured "will .usist in ending the operation of this huge drug smuggling organization." Authorities said the five-week opera- tion included the latest in anti-narcotics (See U TONS, Page I) No U.S. Se nate. Position Sought . By Gov .; Reagan SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan ~ today be will nol run for the U.S. Senate in l9'74. 1be U-year~ld Republican chief ex- ecutive · announced bi!: decl.;lon at a Capitol news conference.. Reagao told reporten, "I a m persooally ·nol attracted to the Idea of parlltipalillg IP a legtslatlve body after having held an executive position." He said, ."I have listened to tbo8e who urged me to seek that office. I feel greatly ljonored by their expreulons ol coolideooe and oilers ol aupport. A 42-year-old Sin Clemente woman ••But· I am convinced t ha$'et'a greater , ~cha.rlel of satea of stolen i\roperty responsibility wblcb Is jo devote the oext •• pdaY stemming from a tbelt ..,. two years to achieving the' aeveral goals by a Capiltrano Beach WOllWl our admlntslration has set roe It.ell . it summer. , , , t>qirmlng wiib the llmltltioo ol tu ·• Police IP San Clememe aald lbat they bllnlen borne bf all Californians," be .,,ijmsltd Barbara Jean Klrlq>atrlck, a, 1ald. , . tJ llS Avettlda Serra Monday, alter the Reagao repeated ba would not nm lor "'°"'"" all.,..Uy IOld 11,100 worth o1 a third term.,,.......,... ~to an unldeoillled -· Wbeo. &Wd ''lloea tb1a mean·you wilt TWO fNDIANS ON HORSEBACK,Hft P l'ATROI. PERIMETER AROUHD ~ ICNEE ENCAMPMENT Fodtral Agenb Boof Up 'l'ho!r l'Ol'<Oll Oubido Yollago Hakl 111J --- Sanity Testimony Begins For Dana P~int Slayer Testimmy in the sanity bearing Of ~ victed killer Thomas B r a d f o r d McCutcheo began today in Orange Coufl- ty Superior Court with the prosecution in- slsUng that the Dana Point builder waa ib full possession of his mental faculties ..,.,, be shot and killed a Laguna Beacb women Sept. s. Prosecutor Nick Hovick said he plans to put· at leaJt eight witnesses on the stand iP hJ.s bid to IP>ure that McCutch- f!ll, 50, 33811 Olloda st., g e t a file im· priloomept for the. killing ol Mrs. Virginia kammett. .Jury 1electlon was completed late Monday. It ii expected that the &aPfty bearing for McCutcbeo will take about two weeks. · tbe Jury that convicted tbe contrador of farst degree murder more than a moolh ago should bave lmmedlatel)I returned to Judge Walter 01aramza·s courtroom to rule on McCutcbm 's men- Lal at.ate. But the Ju"'• and both lawyers overlooked McdUtcben's original plea m not guilty by reason of insanity. Judge Charamza was forced to ordrr a new jury to rule on the defendant's sani- ty. McCutcbeo was arTeSted Sept. S ~y after Mrs. llammetl, ti, ol W B Wave St. was cunoed down GD .a neighbor's lawn. Police said McCutcbeo told them ho was distressed bec•nse Mrs. Rammed had earlier lhet day broken off bir auoclaUon with bim. McCutchen 'a lawyer argued during die first trial that bis client Md tMm a quanUly o[ liett>Ul& pills """11y belaro the shooting and waa not. .wwe of Gle nature o( hLs act. Li1nit on II.!d '> .EU. s. Capo C0;_uple to Build Dream Home Mr. aod Mrs. Wyatt Hart of San Juan Caplstraoo Monday won the chance to build lbeir dream home oil <>rw,a Hicbway. But they come clooe 10 lostDfl their rtcbt to bave more lheP two ltlda to IIll thelloule. "I kPow people who would prt -in f0< l4,0IO and atill make ..... pnlil." Chermak Aid. Olenna1t -tbat .... II.st - bave CICiiy -"""'P'"'" at UJ -Ume, othenrlll lhi:J -be ...... off their properly. Federal Agents Beef Up Forees At Wounded Knee Pill!!' lllpGE. s.D. (UPll -Federal llm1lmls _. FBI ..,SS, beded up with a• pau:at maeae in manpower and ...., •P'iz ..... .....,. t!P"""'1 the;r -.-die homl<t ol Woonded tUoee. ...,.. 11J miliUmt ~ two --..,_ -,, ... -tJ the -" -Allain, said be knew ., -i+. -dorinC .... aigbt. -n.n .. • firmg • far as I've -..... -_,aaitl. Bat ...... in omly .._ ol .... block· ..._...,. ____ _ .. "*"ail -.......... tbm" lll!8n:b ac- tmtis diiefl1' to 1..-.cts, today they _.. ........ ·--UPI 1t1t10*"*1 .nm Ratlbud at- ' :'rd• oo:e;.t 1 mtry to W..aled -..... ---Be reporled wwwiC) w "W7 tiCbt-" • ft - ' It .. leew! tbe OgJ.all -I --. Plot Rldp and ·---localed, llul the .... a---m., to WOUPded --. a. --declalfd -....... ra .. p•w die U.S. pem--..... .was-.-ol the;r OWP. ..,.., ____ the -...... ·---the patod .. - -llll:J lmd,,.. -..... -.. ....., -poalU... with ~ M If ..t ••••l!W.," B.alpb DW •-. ..W ' ,_, tD AttomtJ Cr ....... p.trzfl1 Aid lie»- .._ ... 'S • • ~ a , _____ _ '. :; The woman, who police Aid la "' PIO' rm ,for .,.-it" be amlled and Aid ,l"'u'"' for cback oil---.S at u.t-.ao DOI the mwliD& 1>elllnd hJ.s ... Wben the bild, bot spirit<d, -le In Clly Qlolle!l-.r• bjld.qed u., ..... ~ ... -tliola' llld .. bayo • ...,... lliot ~ -boofe, iPlleld of a loally ~u ... 1'1bal'1 ~ birth CICllllrDI. Y• (lleeLDllT, .... I) --_. .......... -IOI op. , looal ,jail, -.. ttmmerrtd to lkqtl ...-t. ,. Couoty Jail when Ille no lleld m.11,000 , !be.......,_ .tiq. decli,lled :_I<> oat tioil. wl>elberlli-miill -• ~ • 111a an....i that the rlPp -•·dla-candidate .In tm, aaylJt& orilf'thil It itlond wedding ael ~ wtre ato1m tut too ear1y to apoculato who mllht ba GOP June from the home ol Mrs. Mulne caodldates lo -PruldePI Nilroo. .. ,Revilla ol 16725 Lu Palmu, Ill the tbe S.O.to aeol of Domocr11 Afan Capistrano Beach Palisades. Cr-Is up next yoar and Cr......, la -Tiit reported Ale of Ule merebandlfe IOUlng a -.i otx-yoar 1erm. • • MOPday WU tor 0 pil .. of IZIJO, pOliCo 1leagaP bu Aid for -Ume · lie ·Aid. • ml&hl cxmlder l'llllllln& for Iba Senate. "f! llut OouncllmeP Edwanl <lMrmak hacl """"" Jong and bani for • ~ -9WfCI liave llmffid t1le Bait"""'" \of<>#"~ Jl.:mil, lilllot.11 the~ "!lie cooiple" of • "'"' 'tab ' -......... ' .. Old Plane Located _..,... ____ _ .... I ,, ... -" tllo Jt>. --· 1111; • •=lrd-•I II ·-1tw lnN!'!.D==\:;.~i.!'!.: ::., uT:-~ --.. -.......... ~ _,..,... __ ..... _ ..... alrcrall with U.S. martfla --~ o - ' • llfel., 111,.y ..... ~ .......... Al ......... -... -.--.,, ....... -v .. II, a. _ _. ..... • CM t t.• ... Pftu,.,.. o( Jadla _ .... IMloJ. lo ., .... I :':: ·-....._, Tnll. ·~ v ...-. - J"'80il replied lhet the .. ii loo mucb compeUtiOn in the eveninp aod there 1r1 no buildinp bl1 mougb to handle • crowd. Outdoor facilities woold ba loo cold, be said. Jenson pointed out that In a survty o/. 13 high schools and community coUeges, he found that Saddltback's speUers policy was the most restrictive. '"lbe hijb schools are letting l~year-01ds have more freedom o( speech than we have," (See SPEAKERS, Page l) ' Tentative Agreement Announced WASHINGTON (AP) -A tenatlve wage '*and fringe benefit setUement cove.ring virtually all the naUon'1 500,000 railroad workers was announced today. Spokesmen for the rail Industry and lS unions involved in the pact said the agreement would increase wages and beoefits t>y a IOtal ol 10.7 perooll over II moolbs beglMlPg July I. --id IPclude • 4 pen:ent -fp. creue dr.ctlve next Jan. 1 aod a - pemton lflltem wblch woold pul "' ad- diUooal. fU.7S f>CI' moath IPlo llw ~ ol rail -bra. tbe t-.,, would pk$ up Ille paymeala that beretolore bad beeP paid by Ule wor- IPto the separate railroad -funds that covers rail wort.en ID lieu of Social Security'. The agreement11.s subject to nttflca. tion by officials oT the 15 unions, and In one case· by a membership vote. The single union ""lulriPg membership ap- proval is the Sheet Meial Workers. The tentative agreement came J \.S months ahead of contract aplratioo dates July I. Sourcet said the setUement ,WU vlrlually dictated by .... sbaky finaDcla1 coodttioo of the railroad retirement fund. Tiit agreement would alao toclude in- visions for early reUrement and raise muimum li(etlme major me d J c • l beoefib from IS0,000 10 SZS0,000 per worker. The Natiooal Railway Labor Con- femice which negotiated for the industry said the proposed agreement coven virtually all Class One railrwds in the nation except for those, like the Penn Central, involved in reorg.alli1.ation under baPltruptcy proceedloga. However, Penn Central workers would be covered by the improved retirement beoefJt!, whkh must be approved by Congress as amendments to the Railroad Retirement Act. The announcement said It was the lint time in history that the industry reached agreement on all issues w:lth all unions ahead of contract expiration. Shrimp Boat Chased NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Tiit Mexican Navy, charging an American shrimp- ing lrawler tnopalSed IP Mexican waters, cbued the f1abini boat away from the Yucatao Peninsula Monday. Weadaer Thal tlUd a!Orm, expected on Wedneoday, will not make It on the Orange Ooast UPlll Thuraday, ac- aml"'& to the weather mvlce. Wedoe&day should be moatly SUMY with slightly wanner tern~ ........ Higb9 It tho beachet In the low lllls. rislPg 10 116 Inland. Ova- nigbt lows IP Ule 40s. INSllll•: TOD,\V Now it11 the twrn of leading Glpirili companlu to llaff h..a. ache1. TMl.r odvcrffring clafm.s lwnl< been clloli<llg<d bit U.. J!TC. Stt 1tory, Pogt 12 • Liii..... ti ~"""'.. ' ~ 1 .... ._. " (........ lf o.e• ,..... • --' •etwtt• • 7 .. ..._. .. n I:: .. -• JMft l4 ...._ u =·--: ............ --. .... t•l7 St.di: Maftnlta """ ·-,. -" -' -----' ~ . \. , _DAILY Pt<CJT SC T-, lllldl 1', 1971 r. lleleae f'!·••· iet Cong POW s Named by U.S. :,. Marine Corporal .... ;; Draws 4 Months On Beating Rap A Marine corporal who admitted he ar- ranged the beatlac of a pn..,ate at Comp Pendlelon baa been ""tenced to lour months conflnement at bard labor. Cpl. Garry G. Hutton, 22, of PboeniI. ·t> Ariz., waa ... tenced Iller pleading guilty ~1 at a special court-rna,tLaL He .iao was lined "°° and roduced to tbe rank of • priwte, the Marines aald Mmdoy. •i. Hutton was accused of tonnlng a • .,,. •worl<iog party" ol blacl< Marines to ,1.f1 beat Pvt. Harold E. Bradley, lt, ollead- ville, Colo. ,,;, T..tlmcmy received In an earlier trial "" related bow Hutton ·told m-. of the <Ii! work delail that Bradloy, a wblte oemceman, dlaUked blacb. FromPqel SPEAKERS. •• he said. Trustee Collins Aid be !ell un- controlled freedom ot speecti wu what bad caused the br.,,lulown In educatloo on campusm across the country, in- cluding e1mp•~1 ln Orange County. "'Iber!''1 a great need to prevent cam- puses from being U8ed as a soapbox. We wW not maintain a soapbox for either Jane Fonda or John Schmiti at the lll· payers' expense," be lakl. Jane Fonda is spraklng at Cal Stele, Fullerton w-. day. '!'be esilllng policy waa adopted In September ol Ul9, wblch trustees pointed out followed a volallle year on college cam-lhnluglioul the countiy. Tbe 5addleblcl: atmoopbere IJ cnating "little conaervatives" out of its students, Herb Bair protested. '1'm bulcallJ I cooservatlve but l bonelUy feel we need oome racllcall In Ibis place to rile tb1np · up. "We are just trying to Inject acme life Into Ibis campus. Aa It Is, Ibo apeaken' policy IJ falling. Kids come to ICbool mid go bnme wltbout ever Interacting. Tiiey could go here two yeara witbqul mal<iog five frimds," Bair Slid. ~ Viet Cong ' To Rel.ease 8-yearPOW SAIC-ON CAP) -The Vitt <;«ii ..,. nouooe<1 today that an America war priloner beld longerclhM ony oilier U.S. ooldler In blltory 1J among those belnl released Friday. AIJO aJllOlli lbe II Pfilonen beln& turned over at Hanoi'• Gii Lam Airport II the ranldni U.S. dvlllllt oll!dal ,.,. lured by Ibo OOmm-A youog Marine ~ killed In Vietnam and burled by blJ family fuur yeara ago but who later turued up aUve aho IJ oomlng out. · The Iooaest beld American capllve IJ Maj. FJoyd 1bompeon, -now 39. He wM captw.d Man:h lil, lllM, In Quang Tri Pnwinco j11't below the Demllttar!Jed 1.ooe, where be was aervin« u I U.S. ad- viser with SOUtb Vt.toanw -· Thom-..... then .• <aptaln. WbeD reloued Friday, be will bave opmt 1,%17 days as a prisoner of. war. -five 1D0Dtbs Iooaer lhM Navy Lt. CDldr. Ever.ti Alvarez, the fint pllo~ thot down over North Vietnam. The ranking U.S. civilian being relea• ed. i.s Philip M~ard, 52, a senior career diplomat with the State Department. Maohanl was caplured Feb. z. 1968, .. when C.Ommunist forces aebe4 tbe- lomier imperial capital of Bue durlq the Tet ofteq.sive. Alao returning home will he Pie. Ronald L. Ridgeway, who the Com-. munisls said waa captured Feb. 35, 1968, near a U.S. outpost at Khe Sanb. What was believed to be the remains of Ridgeway and other members of his patrol caught in a North Vietnamese am- bush wece recovered, returned to the United states and burled !oor years ago. Ridgeway'• mother IJ Mildred A. Ridgeway ol Houston, Tex. T6e lilt incllldes Sgt. Mlduiel P•trlck Brancb ol lligbland, Ky., wllom Radio Hanoi frequently lde!lti!led u a deserter, and Maj. FloY'f Kuslmer ol Danville, Va:, a medical corpo officer to wllom antiwar statements were attributed over the Cooununist radio. Alao being releaaed IJ S g t Allonao Riate, 'Zl, of Bell Gardena, C8llf., a Viet CoQg prisoner since 1967 1lstec! aa killed In aclloo by tbe Pentagon unlll blJ mother received a letter lrom blm just before Chrtstma.s In li'll. Another is Pvl. Frederick Lewis Elbert Jr., whom tbe Marine Cort» lllll lllts as • deserter. . ' CHOSEN TO jOIN ALL.UNITED STATES HONOR BAND Scott Dyke Wiii Tour Nine Europe1n Countrli1 From Pagel 24 TONS ... technology, including the use of detector ·dogs, radio-equipped vehicles, al.raaft and helicopters. Agencies involved in the operation 41· eluded the Bureau of .Narcot.icl and Dangerous Dugs, U.S. CUstoms, U.S. Im· rhlgraUon and Naturalization Service, Ar&.ona Department of Public ~~ty, the Maricopa and Pima County sheriff's de'Mrtments from Ari7.ona, the Y,uma Metfopolitan Enforcement Group, the Melican Federal Judicial Police, and the Mexican military, the U.S. Attorney for the district o( Arizona and the Yuma County District Attornqy . Clemente Music Student Chosen For U.S. Band Scott Dyke, baritone born and trom- bone player in the San Clemente High School music department, ha's been chosen to join the AU-United States Honor Band which will tour nine Euro- pean coontries this summer. Beach Club Hearings To Start :i'be aimmering c1tl%en protest over tbe possible removal of a oorner of. the city lJeacb Oub property t.o make way for a road project will receive Ill !lrst official publJc aldoS Wedneaday -belore city plannhir- Tbe .......... 1 -to retain the present elignrn<nt ol Avmlda Boca de la Playa ~ with c:ommltmelll ol !unda to up- lradlng the sector, DOI changing it -bas drawn hundreds ol supporters In recent weeb. But city councilmen thus far have not . coosidered the Issue. The commis!ion meets at 7:!0 p.m. Wedoelday. Resldenll ol lhe area aroond the Beach Club bave gone citywide for aupport on the petition campaign to stop the jointly- lunded project cootemplated by the city and county. Altbougli' tbe plans bave DOI yet been drawn up by the city engineering staff. residents insist that the on1y way Boca de la Playa couJd be connected to Avenida Estacion is by cutting a section of the Beach Club groundJ a n d eliminating trees. ~ Inltial comments by city staff mem· bers suggest moving the affected trees back. ' But n:sldenll, led by former Hollywood sb.lnt man and contractCI' Hart')' Raven, insist that the cash committed to altering the road be spent, imtead, oo upgrading the area. · Besides the road hassle, comm1ssioners WednesdaY will consider: -A request for a one-lot subdlvision which woold create the -"'1!ity for a 13-unit condominium at 419 Monterey Lane. The projed is propooed by Oceana Sbore Properties. · -A request by local auto dealer Tom Stamp for a use perm.it to allow the sale of trucks and recreational vehicles on property at 103 S. Pallzada. Tustin Marine To Be Released Friday in Hanoi In the airller proc'fedlnp, Gunnery Sgt. Miguel H. Tostado ... loond In- . -ol orderlnC Hutton to bave Bridle, mid another prime beaten. Hat- .••• tan ..tmled be waalollowlnl Toolado'a ......... Trustee Dr. James llmball said be waa ~ with what Ibo lludenta bad to fllY· .. _ there ougbi to be • .., to aolve tbla problem belplul lo eve11,bod7," i. aid. St;>il Transfer Delaye~ ' . . ' ' '. l The 15-year-old sophomore was chosen from more titan :oo applicants to represent California with one other stu- dent. He won on the basis of a taped aucti- tion. T h e 100 • piece band is part of American Music Abroad, a program whlch sponsors two weekly concerts, a recording session and radio a n d television appearances for the group throughout Europe. A 'I'llslln mao Is listed among tbe nen group of American prisoners of war scheduled to be re1eased by lhe North Vietnamese Friday in Hanoi. Marine Maj. Paul Joseph M-Ontague aba been a POW since March 29, 198&, when bis helicopter was shot down oo a missloo over South.VJetuam. ~ ~. • .. l't'e•P"'9 J , • ~~LIMIT ... ~ -·t do tbaU!' -Counclllllan Josh f Gammell. But C>ennat did not yield. "We can't have devlaUom: such as this .j . when tbe dty baa • perledly adei!Uate 1eWer llYllem mid the .....,. run llolig ~ the fn:JDt of tblt man's properly/' be~ ,: slJted. ... l ; 'lllen Mayor James T!>orPe .Joined di!> fi'ty., ·.1. 1 :! "l cirtalnJJ bale Ille thoUgbt of raldln.r ~: Uda: man'• badie to cktemdDe the lllDDber I~ of people Inside Jl,u be saJd. ' ., Chermak eflded liis debate al !bat .... point. ' l: Tbe vote came '°"" aftlrwulla. ~ It was 4-1. I: I: I!: t.: t.: Placentia Trustee Will Address Women Mrs. Jean Pappaa, a trustee In the " Placentia acbool district, will speak about .. Educatkm II Big Business" i: Tburaday before meroben o1 the San I.: Clemmle-<:aplst Bay chapter of the 0: Amerl<an -Uoo ol University > Women. C. The talks will be. at 9:30 a.m. at 304 La ,,.. Rambla, San Clemente. For membership : information, call Marilyn O'Brien al 492- 1 '1347. I ..--~~~~~~~~-, • i • ,. f' J . • • I -• • • !· .. l· ,: ;: !: •• ( • • I ' .. _ ......... DAILY PILOT • . . 14' Oil Due'""" y ~ In Good Shape · By San Juan Couneif ·: " The group will leave June 28 and end the tour ~, ll\Onth later with ~ week· •Jong ; ':Genfvi Youth Muslciil" i'n Switzerland · where bands · f r o m throughout lht"""\\lorld will perform . Montague's wife, Shirley, and their three children live in Tustin. She said to- day that she iJ "overwhelmed and kind of numb at this point -but very, Vt1'f delighted." · . After Scru6bing Fourtem ducb u~.. ... 1 b • ShcWd!!fa COjlntrJ Club loll ...... i-1 bil ,last week by I mlnot oil slic:k-. Were ~ed ID good eondltloa Mcmday alter ~.m:cr.. ~San~ Clemente BJgb ,. "J/irhe bad great -..... with our ducb. N-baa died ind otben !bat were sickly are really llarting to come anJUlld," aald Donald Scbw-a 1C1enco lmtrucl.t at tbe' -'nle llludents C>ptured the ducb Fri-day by lµrlng theln.llllo I ~nest to the·liR. The ---them aod bpi tbe bllds ·In a cage by tbe 1a1<e over the weekend. ~ San Juan Capistrano dty councllmm • M""1ay imposed '!"'tber delay In -.,. •prorlng a plan to haul tbouaancls of cubic 'yum of gpate IOll -freewaJ -llnlctlon.' oolo a parcel wlllcb baa -termed a 1~1howplece for the city." ~ '1be council abo nlltly ftjected a pio- poal lo .....,.. · tbe acreage wblch IJ earmarted for the major landfill Tbe property lies Immediately east ol the Siii Diego Freeway and IJ -locally aa tbe Zaenglein Property. Tbe firm of Suklll·Kouison, wblch is Cllm!Dlly rebuilding the entire Beach Citiea , jnterchange oo the freeway, In Ceplltrino Beac!J, llOllgi>l the alf"'Val for tbe eartbl!ll 00 the p~ --a "" quest wlllch hai been In process ~ce last October. The finn, Jx>wever, drew some.concern Yablonsk.l Deaths Boyk Ordered Murders For Union-Assassin ERIE, Pa. (UPI) -A coavlcted assassin said today he was told by two former United Mine Wor-ken offidals that former UMW President W. A . "Tony.. Boyle ordered the murder ol union insurgent Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski "for the wtlfareof the UMW." The dramatic testimony by Paul Gilly, who earlier was sentenced to death by a jury !or tbe slaying o! Yablonsld, bla wl!e and daughter, came at the trial of Willi.am J. Prater, 52, a former UMW field organizer from La Follette, Tenn. Gilly said Boyle was implicated by Prater and a coofes!ed Yablonold asswin, Siloua Huddleston, during al leaat three meeUnga beld prior to the Dec. 31, 1969, assassi.naUoos. He Mid Boyle's name was mentioned dwin& the meellngs held to di!<USI the llnanc:lng and melhods to be used In the slaylnga. "I was told tbe union WIJlted to get rid of Yablonsld because be'd mess up tbe FromPqeJ ROBBERY ... 8cheduled !or arnlgnment In South County MIDl!dpal Court teday oo dlat(eo of armed ..-y llentmJns r..m lbe tbell ol cult at lmUepotnt lUt llatunloy Iran 1 Pullerton man &i"" a ride ll'ml 'the -1'11"'1 chldpolal al llaa Ooofre. Bracey alleledlJ robbed bll pa•"""str• lll{i_pped o!! Ibo man'I clotbel and dumped· hll -no.ar pollot head-quarters. union and the lDlion's pension fund," said Gilly. "Oki Prater tell you who wanted the mtrden done?'' asked special prosecutor ll1cbard A. Sprague. "He said Tony Boyle wan!i:d blm kill· ed." said Gilly. uDid be say why?" uked Sprague. "As l recall, It was for the welfare of the UMW," 58id Gilly. "Tony llol'le would hold all the power. Silou.s Hud- dleston told me Tony Boyle was fair and turned down an offer to stay on as permanent president of tbe union." "Who told you that?" asked Sprague . ••HOOdJeston and Prater," sak! Gilly. Road Rebuilding Financed Jointly • Recoostructlon of Camino Capistrano in San Juan Capistrano at '"a cost or $373,500 will be unied out by a joint contract between Orange County and tbe dty. • Of tbe tote!' CGll, •140,llllO will oome from Arterial Highwly F I n an c I n i Procram !unds aod tbe bllance will he paid by tbe cllJ, Wort will lncludt right ol way ao- qulallklll, &ndln& and P8vlna. capping. oulaldo c:urll and cutttr, -lrlllk ol&1W ln- llallatloa at om.., lllglJway ancl atorm dnln-Tbe bnpn>veci -y ateoda ~ Ortep Hi&hWIJ to 0oo Rold, a distanCe of over CIDe ml.Je. • from .....Umea Monday be<:ause of plana to 1ostaJ1 a layer o! nu l&-leet tb1cil: • • 'lllt. • ..i. cl tbe pad:COllllcUmen c\elm- ed. would ha.O a ateeP bani< wblch,"°".\'! DRllrude 1n111 tbe lloocl plain and perlifr booxne a ...,.. problem' dorlng bea°Vy llotlda. Several couocUmen said they preferred a mare gradual contouring on the t>atcel Instead ol the abrupt, sharp dropoff. · 'lbe next round of study ror the pro- posal wW c om e as Councilman Josh Gammell and membeni of the city stall alt u a committee to draft a com- promise lo tbe grading plans. ln the rirst action relating to the prop- erty Monday councilmen swiftly n> jected a request to rezooe the acreage from agricultural and "unclassified" to general commercial. . Cooncilmen suggested that instead of a blanket zone change, the applicants re- turn for a land-use permit whlch. woul~ give a stronger indication of a poesible development plan for the property. Dyke plays In tlje )an Clement> High School Symphonic Band, Concert Band, Marching Band and Stage Band. He has participated In the All S o u t h e r n CaUfomla Honor Band and the Orange County Hono~ Band. Intruders Steal School Equipment Tntruders believed by Orange Comty Sheriff's officers to have been juveniles broke Into a San Juan Capistrano school Monday night and carried off a movie camera, a tape recorder, tools and cash. Deputies JRid the burglan smashed a window to gain entry to the Capistrano Elementary School, 31422 Ca m In o Capistrano. They said the intruders then pried open the offices of the prlnclpal and the ja,nllor and .ransacked filing cablnet8 In the adminlstraUOn office. Officers valued the futal'loss aUt50. • The Montague children, Steve, 16; Lin- da, almost 14, and Pamela, 11, are "just out of it," their mother laughed. Pentagon officials called Mrs. Mon- tague to tell her the news at 5:45 a.m. to-daf. She said the waa already up and cooking breakfast. . Although the U.S. return poinl hasn't been announced yet, Mrs. Montague said she is sure her husband will come back to nearby Camp Pendleton in San Diego County. When first told last January tbal Maj. Montague would be released from prison camp, bis wile said she would have a big party to celebrate. Today she added, "Sure we will but just being togetber will he a big reun- ion." Mrs. Montague's birthday ls nen Tues- day. She said today It will he her bap- piest. The gift of neWs of her hw:band's return home ls the "greatest I've ever received," she said. A .. YA}lN FOR EVERYONE • • ... -... .. There is no questibn that the number one fib.tr in the carpel ; industry today is • nylon. A survey of 25 of the largest carpel .. manufacturers re•ealed the following: Nylon in 1'972 oc:c°""ted for 55. 7 ')', of all carpets offtred for sale, on INCREASE of 4.6 ')' •• Wool, declined from 10.4')', to· 9.1 ')',. Acrylics de dined from 20. I ')', to 18.5 % • • . Polyesten doclinad from 13.2% to 12.l%. .; Olefins declined from ·4.5 ')', to 3 ')' •• These figures are' astounding because of the fact · that tho da- mend ' for nylon created a tremendous shortogo ond mony milk wore looking for ANY kind of yarn lo make carpet from. We ha•e hundreds of nylon carpet• ol Alden's-stop and,.. us.' . . ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placfttlo Aye, COSTA MESA 646-4838 . . . • Moa. • TJNn. t to S:IO: Ftt' t lo t: Sort. t:JO lo t • • '' •• -· ~. " -... •• ... "" .... ·-- ... ' 1 I I ... • Joint Council Urged c.owrt......... .... .....=:-~~ .... -----"" _... .... a... C:.-... -A & J """'-fA#CW A NOMI' ... llf'! .~.=-=-= ,.l\HI:, 1111. IW, ......... Cal(. .... ""' ~:' L~~ ...... ~ANY~ *A.._._, S. ..... iM t. ....... L\'Nlf ltfllMOr.iJ ... Ra•1 11 fl M'I' '-;;~t. ~ ~ W 111 ~ WAYllE NlilClft ........,. ..,.. 't•-IM 1crl ; ..na\.IY L M\<altl lM........, ...... • --.-'Tllit If•""""' ftlilll ........ ,._ C-"1 = -::': Y• -~ '""*""'-°""""-L1"1 ~ .... "":""--. r.::r .,. ... ::. WlWlM E. ST J~N. c-ty an. 8" By McDonnell Chief z ttli " ..... .nn. ,...,... ,...,.... tit. •-"'· o.ilMlv. .-..':: ::'-~ Mrt-=.. ~ ,.'"t .. f.T. ,,h•st o.1i. "::. Sptidal te tbl DIUy Pu.t ....,~.,. ..... .,.. ~ ..... ' ' _,, LOS ANGELES -Saltford ~ ..:. ::-:.;,~ PUBUC NO'J1CE N1 Mc.DonMll, prtaldent and ttrlle"•..,. •ts...,.~.....,.,....,!----~~-----chief execuUve ofOcer of •ll'lft'liiJ ........ ~. ICP_, w.,.. .w. •. _. .. ""'*"..... ''nmoua 1u11•cu McDonnell Douglas Corp . , ...., • .,. ....... .,.. ....... .. .. NAMI: 11'1\TIMllJIT called Moaday for t b e • ......... LWft ........... If Tiit foWoWil'lll pettw #• clolnfl o:_ ~::; -...,._ •1 e.stabllabment of a federal WllJ.l.\M • " JOHlil ~ MUTUAWNTltltfl1tlSI, at '"° Sier "c:ou.nclJ or department to ,..... ~ ..., 0-... o.ivtr '~...::I:~~-,.~. , screen •nd select progra'tns IM• ".w.ITQ c.lllorllll Col11t11•1tM. llNI lltr Pitt! tthat would jol.ntly benefit the. • ~ too...,,,., •l"lltnit. ca11tom11. I I I Ptc1~ loutllwfft ~ im mnltarr. and c I v a n w ::0..::"C::.... "'° rtmlrto Ott lltlo kiutri. WM JIS. kl!! ~imtnl.J." om~~ V::O~~ ::C .. ri¥, nmttM ...,."°"-:;_. 0r.,... r-1 o.itr Plklit, ~~~ =~""" °""" McDONNELL made the pro- ,..__., 11 ... Mll'd! .. u. 70. 1t'T.I 'lHTElltl"klSE CONSTl:UCTI~ Polll tn a luncheon address ..._ ' .-.n L~ E. •os.s. P,....... opening tbe Western Metal PV8UC 1;0J'ICE 0tfN: J.,..,_, 1" 1m and Tool Exposition and ... 111""'9ftt m.ci wtll'I 11w c-..., °'"' or Conference al Ute Los Angeles • • llOTIC• INVITI ... •tDI Or1ngt (~ .. F..,._.,. lJ, ,,,,, Convention Center. '.Wlic& II MElll:EIV GIVIH ttllt IN 1Ucur. A. •-. Jr "1:220 ._.,. • T,,..._ "' 1t1t oc-ii v .... ......_ "-& ·0.11...,. Calllnf. his propo.ul "double ~ Dhtrld " .0.:"'99 ~"""""'· ~ "'4f c...,_ Dr1w du •-doll ' M Don 11nittiin ....._ c..1..,,,.11,, w111 ,_.,,. .....,.., .--., c,11....._ ty uo:: ense ars.' c • lllA..., ,_... ....,_ ''* wi11 .,. PUDlllMd Drano-co.st o..11Y '''°' nell pointed out that "most of ~-~--.,:~i:~::,""!,~'ic':!i '*IWY 211, 21 •rd M•rth '· 13.~ the slgnlflCant teChnical gains Ofitrlct, 1'71 w.,_ •-· Hunllnt1on, ___ ==,..,.,,_~~----I that have been made in ~ C.11'°'"""' ,, wlllch """ wSO llklll ..... ..,_ n ,.... ...-ftM pwdltH PUBlJC NOTICE American aviation are Ued (lf...,..SUll!Mles. '" K conlenct w 11 ~•---;::::====c===~--'lb Ulla h' S,.lflutlON -., fli. In rM tfflc. of1 fllCTITKIUl •USIH•H WI m ry sponsors Ip. ... Dl*lcl· NAME ITAT•M•NT "However, military R & D ,-;,.•,..!i': '=~,.tt ::.n:: .!11e to11owtnu P-1111 .. ••• c1o1111 butlMS• (Research and Development) ~lildl and ... llddtr fllllrlH to . A .. c COMMEltCtAL PllOPElltTIES funding has declined in recent tMJikh ilcNlllGnai purdw-fl'OITI flrM to 11 2041 IGl.llti Suun, Stf!ll Ant C.H-..... wttr. Md ptkft tvtr..U'" to Junt forN• ' years," and in some areas ~~ prO'Wldtd ""Wllh n.i. bid .,.11 iu.TN1tVN ALP'HIN 11111 KENT civil aircraft development has uWJIAT JS ·need ed," Mellonn<ll said, "II • specific mercban1sm ftr m e s h i n g reduced def..,. R 6 D dollars with eome of the nqulremenu of the dvlllao MIJD"OI." McDonnell Aid that the proposed federal council "'--OUld adjust priorlUts and arrange flll1dJni. '"!be g.-al Jlrincipl• of double duty defense dollars h., been recognliod by the U.S. Congress," be II.Id . "In approving the request for the adva.Dced medium STOL transJ)Ol't program. the Senate Armed Services C.Om- mitteie said 'Chat tt strongly urges a prograin which con- siders potential application to commercial transport use. PerfontlanCe goals which are unique but not essential to a military application should be avoided." REFERRING TO projXlsals from other sources t o subsidize U.S. civilian aircraft development, McDonnell said that "through the double duty defense dollars program, F Wltll Gcw••111111 COclt s.en-~';°.t.!~i!.' •n SOlllll Suun. moved ahead of military. '9llflrftl• MIM t•w wlll bt In _. CAltNDA PlltDPEll:TIES, • P1r'l1Mr·l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i1 d to ""~ 4110f911. Flcttr•I Ew-W!lp, tin W11'111rt BCMlltv•l'd, ..........,1. dtfo. T&11. .....,.ptkln ctrtlfkt"9 wtll bl M111 .. C•lllor11ta • .......... ff &(lpllC*Nt. Tlllt 1;11,n.1""' 11 ~ 11y 1 Ct!· :W klrd al T~twt -1M lfotnl1 P1rlMnhlp .{iii t. rfitd Mt Mid .. , 1*11, and 111 CAllNOA PlltOPEllTIES, Wt.be efl'l' l"""""ty 11'Mtl11. 1 partntrlhlp ~.0.fod MMdl .S. Im Bv T£LLITE COltPOllATIOH, OCe.t.N VIEW •v lrvlllCll IC.111111 ~. SCHOOl, OISTlllCT Tf\11 111"""""1 1111s fllw:I With tl'!e • ., •w= llotllrt A. KMK Courity Cltl1! of Or•not County Oii Ft~ ,_ c..,_ .t ttw: ru•ry ,._ 1t11 .•,, ao.rd of Tt\ISIMI lfflMJC l"\lbll.lhed 0r9f'llte COMt 0.11'1' Pllol Mardi 6, U. ltn "1·1l V1ttllal 11M1 11-, AH.,..,.. ... ,,,, -------------11• Cffl......, ,,,. aa.t ML lUI PUBUC NOTICE us "....,.. Caflftn&lo tOKP -------------I Publl9'1td Or.,,,.,. Co;o.t 01Ur Piiot, Febfva.ry 20, V, 1nd M1rch 4, 13, 1973 .,,.,, PUBLIC NOTICE You er• cordially invited to en INVESTMENT SEMINAR WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1973 7:00 P.M. SADDLEBACK INN Trabuco !'(" 1660 E. FIRST ST . (eff SOlft AM ....._,, SANTA ANA This pro9r•m will cover Reel Estate e Tex write offs e Tex Sheltered income e Equity build up e Appreciation RESERVATIONS ONLY-PHONE (714) 547.5941 Refre1hm•n+s will be Served Sponsored By M. P. KRUSE & COMPANY, INC. Ml!Mll!ll l"ACl.-IC COAST STOCK EXCMAHOI' Offt""9 Clmlllr Wiii •• Dhtlibvllld Al nt s.mJMr minor adjust1nent1 could be m11de In the $20 to 125 billion def-budget that would have greater impact lhan direct subsidies to manufa~ tureri In the range ol a few hundred million dollars." The landscape and planning finn of Cardou·DU.allo and AIHClates, Inc., has named Robert Richardson DI as vice president of their Costa Mesa ortice. * Fountain Valley resident Floyd Bryant has been named marketing manager for the control prod· ucts market- ing depart- ment or Bab- cock Elec:-- tronlC!I. Br yant joined Bab- cock in 1964 and served as Western • • assignment. Previously he v.•as associated with RCA and Communication Produ.cts Co. * Avco Financial Services has named six Orange Coast ex- ecutives to the position of assistant vice president. The promotions, announced by the Newport Beach-based consumer finance company's president H. Walla ce Met· ryman, include : Walter R. Scott, or Newp:irt Beach: Frank Rhodes, Corona del Mar; Ronald Bukow. Walter L. Cubblo and Richard Tlnlin, aU of Mission Viejo and Charles E. Coons or Irvine. * Robert. 8. Kemble has been appointed corp:irate gr o u p vice president of personnel at Dart Industries Inc. He joined lbe company in SEVEN ADVANTAGF.5 OUR PAGER OFFERS ) ' .. FINANCE ' DAILY PllOT OVER THE COUNTER. ··~ Gah1ers & Losa-• LOCAL EDITORIALS The DAILY PILOT Quite O~en Fights City Hell MUTUAL FUNDS • • IC 'Talking' Coniputer? Incomes, Prices Up -=-.. . ............ DdJPllol BAYWAllD -QonW °""" 'l\leodoy -1ed Uiilt k wUI be&I• For '73 Governor ~·-­II 1111 1rill ea a b I e telepbooe • ..,. to bear Vlllce ......,..., wltb a Yot11bu.IA.ry of Up to 11,000 wordl; when Ibey make Jl>qulrlts IO a computer. The CCKDputer l)'tleml company aald 111 voice raspDllJe conU.U.. cao be ....s· witb • llandard toucb-lcoe telephone ..i ... I dial aet with ac>- C 0 m panylog toucJt.tooe ped "uyw!lere Jn the ,_.,_ .. Ford Says 'No Way' On Smog SACRAMElf!O (AP) Both prlces and incomeo wUI rile !asW In tll7S u..o In .. «Ill years, 8111 Gov. Rooald it..gM In bis a a a u a I ecooomlc ropo<l to t h e letPalot~. The RtP'!l>lfeaa ,....,,., ls!ued the ---.,_.,. Monday, pr<dktlnc continued prosperity rot U'l3. REAGAN SAID tm was a good year !or Callloraians, with record-aetllng -1 income aad employment, but prices aad incomes will both rise alig)JUy laster in 1m. A leveliftg oU ls prodlcted for the coostructlon industry, but Reagan said major ... vironmental legislation would prove not. to be a disaster for that industry, as some have predicted. The report credits Phaae II economic controls of the Nixon administration for a sharp FINANCE reducUon In the number ot strikes in Calllornla dtlring the pa.st year. THE REPGRT alao credits Phase II with holding' price in- creases "substantially below the prior year's experience." WASIUNGTON (UPI) Ford Motor Co. ins.i!ted Tues. day that It wUI be unable to • meet antipollution standards required for 197$ cars in spite of "all good faith efforts" to develop the technology. Federal Approval BofA Unit Seeks Ford Vlce Presldeot Herbert L. M.isclJ testified at an E n v i l'Ollmental Protection Agency bearing that Ford spent $162 million on pollution tedmology in Im without coming up with an answer to meet the requirements. Underwriting Bid UNDER LAW, 1915 model cars must reduce carbon lllODjlxide and hydrocarbon emissions by 90 percent com- pared to 1971! models . , EPA Adminiatrato< William D. Ructelshaus turned down a request by automakers for a one-year postponement of the standard. But the manufacturers weut lo court and a !edei:aI judge ordered EPA to bold new bearinp. MISCH URGED EPA Tues-dai to sel inlerim ltalldA(ds wbidl would reduce auto emWions by -from 191{ levels without the use of Speclat IO lbe DAil. Y PILOT SAN FRANCISCO - Bankamerica Corp. Tuesday reported' tbat it has applied to the Federal Reserve Board for approval to form an insurance subsidiarf to Wlderwrlte and ( ~t~~c) reinsure credit lite a n d disability insurance. The WlderwtiUog would be related to extensions of credit by Bank of &nerica and other affiliates o f Bankamerica Corp. . A. W. Cl4usen, president of B.A.C., said tbat applicatfon for authority to operate such a company woold also be "1ade to the California Ilepattment or · illlurallce. 'l'lie company would be known as B.A. illlurallce Co. Inc. catalytic. converters -eC'ltief'luits mllffier-like devicta. w h l ch . LOS ANGELES (AP) _ A rendto • er auto emissions leas Department of the Interior of-xic. The Industry told EPA it could not yet produce catalytlc converters 'lo guaran~ that every car coming oU the assembly line would meet the antipollution 1taodards. But MllCb said Ford would like to test the catalytic coo-vmen in -one st.ate - Calllornia. General Motors made a llimilar proposal at the EPA bearinC Monday. RUCK II L SHAUS must decide whether to grant tbe -year delay by April 11. He can lift tbe deadline ooly il coovtnced the auto Industry made an all-out effort to com- ply. GM Vice Pmldeot Ernest S. Star1anan contended Mon- day hls firm could be faced with 1 pouible "business cataslrophe" ii the staodardJ are eo!Of<ed. • "It is obvious we cannot meet" the 1975 standards, Starkman teatl!ied. High Auto -Insurance Costs Eyed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - More tban lO pereeot o! those Califorblans :tu r v 'e y e d at- bibuted high auto insurance costs to either .increased repair costs, careless drivers or high medical coats, the California Poll said Tuesday. "The cost of automobile in- surance has gone up steadily, and today it is a very slgnlfi- cant cost item in the operation of an automobile," pollster Mervin D. Field said. ''WREN ASKED to state In their own words why they think automobile insurance rates have gone up, a large proportion of the statewide cross-section of respondents think first of the simple fact tbal with more population there are more car! and more cars mean more accidents," Field aald. In • California Poll of 1,079 persons cooducted by Field, last month, only 10 pert'<llt blamed the cost of insurance on unsafe highway design. There are over 300 hi9hly:· skilled aut-tlve technicians ready to 9lve Ylltll' car factory recommend· ed service ot1 Costa Mesa's Har· bor lo•vard of Can. Fri end~. • Convenient •. Reliable . .. .. --., 40<llllll ~ rMi OllLEllll ... ' • ~ ·, • CCST.t. -SA· CIU.LnS ON . Hi RIOA Ill.VD . IETWEEN SAN ·DfEG.0 FR EEWAY AND NEWrORT llLYO. , • ficial has resigned to head the nation'• first commercial proj- ect to remove oil from shale, the Atlantic Richfield CO. an- nounced. A spokesan for the Los Angeles-based firm said Hollis M. Dole, former interior department assistant secretary, will direct the pr~ gram to be Wlderlakeo by Atlantic Richfield and the Oil Shale Corp. of New York. • Cotton C'ruu SACRAMENTO (AP) S t a t e Agriculture Directoc Charles B. Christensen has ap-- proved an emergency moratorium on t h e en- forcement of state laws_ and regulations governing com- pletion of the cotton harvest. The action, 8llllOllllced M'oo- day, was taken "to save losses to Callfonrla's ~1 million cot- ton drop," the Agricullure Department said. e C'loro:s: OAKLAND (AP) King&ford Co. of Loui1vUle, Ky. has merged with Clorox Co. for aome 1.2 millioo shares of Clorox common stock. of- ficials announced. The uclumge was on the basis of 1 share of Clorox commoo stock for each 2.25 shares o! Kingsford common, Cloro.1: president Robert B. Shetterly said bere Monday. eBoetqC'o. SEAm.E, Wash . (UPI) - The Boeing Co. has sold Its first jetliners to Eastern Europe. 'l1te · firm an- oouoced Monday that it has signed a contract to deliver three 707-320C airtlnen to Romania for $40 million. 'Ibey will be used by Tarom, the Romanian national airline, after delivery in 19'14. 400 Sandwiclies to Nixon DRUMMOND ISLAND, ldlcb. (UPI) -Mn. Sheri Well..-baa man.d tOO peaa\11 butter and jelly lllldwlchet to Pr<sldent Nbon. Tbe '"i'·»l>y~ I*'l• .... addresoed : """81- dent Nixoa; Iha White -; Qloteots -peanut butter aendwicbel, H Tbe -....., the rault of several houn' i. bor br Mn. Weller and a group of "regular1" at ber North-IM 111 thl1 ,.._. Upper Penlnlula bland. Mn. Welk!r, a 17-ylll'Gld rnondmother who 1"11111 the llvem-ftlllaur•nt with bu huslland, instigated. a 0 Me,al· ''" w .. t" camPllan lo pro1<11 rising prlces of meat -eopeclallJ' the rlaO of beef. Silo •7f"lhe lnc:re .... here forted htt lo ratse lh6 price of bambursen 10 cmto to a beefy 7S cent• apiece. • • COMPI,E'fE NEW YORK STOCK LIST • -.. ,....,_a....,ca I • • f-.dq, ...... l.l, 197l Tuesday's Closing Pci~ Cmnplete New York Stock Exchange List ~ .. if~Blue Chips Pace !1 :. ·' ••• • Market's Advance ,..:-.......... .... :-'-... I DAILY~ JJ • • • ' • ) , I OAILV PILOT LM.Borl • Worst Tippers Are Millionaires A -req..,.. the -avenge of the tape rn<aUrements of all lllo Miss America winnero. Approxi- mately ~ •. om I TELL YOU a pQSSUm baa 50 teeth? ••. lfHAT GROOl!RY Items ·are the lady shoppen In tbe ~ likely in complain. about the mc>ol? 1be lei· -· the ~. , .THAT MONTH in which the fewest pecjlle die lo all kinds of eccid«ll.I Is Februpy. . .AN· otUER · TllREE WOllD6 •11d<1 stood In virtually S!VerJ ianguap In the wirld .,,. bus, juice and-. .. -. ·-·:, .... .J .... ; .; ;,_.. J \ --· • .. A ST(m~Gf far eestem rem1. nlnlty .. ys the """" prooounced pecu- liacUx about J-girls 1s their l<ildenc:)' a. -adinlre older men. '!be usual. young lady in Tolcyo, he •ys, is m at all emharrwted if her gentl"'l"" · friend is at lea>!.' 25 years . QUEENIE C . ays !Aspirin Finns ' ould Air COnfessions W N (UPI) • -Bayer la awe effociM !w ,,,. Podnl Tnde C'Amf relief of ~ ,.m -ml-OOD!ends ,..,. of 1be uplrlh, and lllat Anaeln lo INlllll ....... producll -· ::: p~ polo rtlltl d..... Bulletin, B a y e r , ~ •l)CI Excedrin -have THE F1'C ~ lbal no been pslng falae a n d advertisement. for the pro- ..u.... pain faster than uplria; tt bU not - -that Bullerin will oauoe.-ic-~ frequently than ~ and that Bufferln will llo( rolltve nervoua tenalon, lrrltablllty or enable penoas to cope with the ordinary -. of U/e.'' -..:. "It bis not - ----'---....J." CUlilNf fAltll*I ............ -~IS :::~-~:;'J" ffMlll ·--' sdvertlsinl' and dUcts, be allo"!ed lor t'f" yean sboWd · runnln& eounter-tinfea 25 -I o( all com· eom-1s to confess lheir tnerdals, in all adYe(llJing mlst•U.: media, be devoted ekcluolvely establllbed thal Excedrin 1s1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ mon eflec:Uv& for u.e rtlle! of Ir minor palll than uplrln or any other noo..-rtPl!on inlerllal al1,alglJllcs; and that Ezcedrin wftl -not relieve n er v o u 1 1ena1on. ·anmty trritablllty ... enable _. to <ope with the ordinaey llrWes of every- • Tho 1 ronnal complaint to coiifeaslon8 !bat· ~ Monday was 1 o mew bat advertising ~ wrong. aod weabr than the Olje It pro. how It WU lncotred. pooed _,1y s year ago, in '!be FTC llu l>nk!ted ces- that the final version often iectlve advertlstDg In oeveral the uplrln maken a posotble other """"· ;,._ of wblih are .. ay DUI. · still lied up b>sdjudlcation. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN' SATURDAYS IN THE PAIL Y PILOT day life." _ __!'.:===-==~ /' . " " " " her senior, bu!rali>eipniud of ihat, in fact. ·.:Er ... under 'Experience' can .you be a Jiltle more BADTJPPERS-~to a headwaiter .ol,l~hy specific than just 'Ob, boy'?" THEY WOUW not have to .But .ooe ofllclal "'1d the aspirin ,,... nw:u · tbe lttst !"" the counter~ls time. the survey ilevkO bas U they could provide the jM'C been : pto\loaOd u •a . ""1 of with a survey ahQwlng the reliev.IJ:lg the companies in buying public ~ longer t.;ll~-yolved ' of ~ r cornctlv; :i::~ previous adv~_ 1 advertising. responslblUUea:. • • n:peneoce, the wont Uppers, Ul order,·ere'millionaires, • ------------'--------batebell1 players,• mu.sioiana, coUege men, politiciips and TVC<lel>rllies. ' SHORTEST WORD containing the first nine letrers ol the English alphabet ill "brigbt-!aced." Will yoo acceJl( a hyphenated wont? Shortest two ......-ds containing the fi1'11t slx letters are "boldface" and "feedback," I think. ASPmIN TENDS to reduce fever. Caffeine tends to beigblen tt. That's why yoo ought not take aspirin with mlfee or tea. So adVise -91 'the University of Loo· doo's Sdlool of Pharmacy. Gila Bend Judge- 'Just Doing Duty' But the survey would have to be conducted under Fl'C supervision. The three major drug com- paniet involved all indicited they would fight the FTC ac- tion. BERE-AJJ,Ecorrecttve , starements p,..,,.....i by the FJ'C for each of the producta: Buiferba -"It has not been established that B)u ff e.r Jn ~. ' ' I : ' • i' ... I ' l • t, WHAT'S CHARM! Debate cootiDues ov.er the nature of that !bing called charm. "It's a m of a bloom oo • waman," said Maggie, one of Sir James Barrie's cbar- aotien. "U you have it, you don't need to have anything <lae; and K JOO don\ have It, doesi\ much matter what else · yoo. have. Some women,· though few, have charm for all; and most Have dlenn for one. But some have c:harm for none." OUr Love and War man feels that brief eay on lbe msll« to be fairly oilty. Q. "HOW OFTEN does the Jllanet Veous come close enough to earth to cast a !hadow as the evening star?" A. About every year and a half. Q. "DID YOU SAY the average lioo lives about 70 years!" A. No, that's the average Rotarian. '!be average lion ~-al>oul 10 ~ Address maU to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Bo~ 1815, New- porl Beach, Calif. 92660. 3 Full Se'rvice Loc11tions 'in Huntington Beaeh PRESCRIPTlONS •Cllafl9~. ~ ut .. Nffl ,_,,...., ,.. .. , llltlMI ~I - t17 ltlt ,,,.. . • • .. • .. ....,., "~ .................... • .......,.. • "'"'II"" fU4U1 . . ~ ' . A H~ritage of Beauty . CURIO ' . . ' ~ .. • ! ' I l j j \ ' l . -' . I I ' l Gle11 top, wood & qless sides, '"~-------------- • Curio bottom lined with black $ 995 velour. Ant. fruitwood finish . only 6 20" di11meter, 22" high. 1865 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 548-5131 or1N DAILY t te S:JO PRIDAY t tot CLOSID SUNDAY GILA BEND, Ariz. (AP) - 1be jusUce ol the peace ol this small aouthem Arizona com- munity says be doesn't want to harass anyone. "My oniy job is to see that all the facts are pre!ented so the jury can bring ln a correct verdict," said Judge Mulford Winsor. 'M11 jol> b to see that the fur!# hcu all questions ansaeered.' The judge's order that MlSS Mllea snd actor Burt Reynolds must appear at an inquest brought criticism f r o m -attorney Jobn Flynn who-maintJjned that such testim<>oy could serve DO useful purpose· and could only annoy and harass the wit- nes.ses. · FLYNN FUR1',llER sug. gested that .w;.sor might be seetlrlg publicity 'by fQ<Cing tjie' ·~· curlenlly, shooting . scenes for the . picture 'l1be Man Whoj.ovod Cat Daocing" in ooulbel'q· UlaJ!; to ntum. The actots '.were . f 11m1111 scenes oear here w h e:n Whiting died. "lt is unfortunate the In· quest has been· so prolOnged, I believe Miles and Reynolds were both perfectly willing to answer questions unW MGM lawyen advised them otherwise." THE FEB. Z7 inquest was halted when Wlllting's mother, Mn. Louise Campbell, ob. tained a court order. She argued the stan sbould be forced to appear at the hear- ing. A. court order earlier blocked !heir appearance. A ·Maricopa COUilty Superior Court judge ruled.. last week that Winsor did not abuse his discretion in calling the start to tes!Uy. "I'M NOT trying to em- barrass anyone," said Winsor. "My job Is ti> see ihat the jury • Troy Horse Remade ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -A 25-foot.fligh reprodoc- tion of the wooden bone of Troy will be built outside the Troy rulna i n northwestern Turkey, the government C u I t u r a I Department aMOUnced. HAMS Spfrtil Sllee4 Wllole or D•lt "So Good ... II Wiii Haunt YOM 'Ta Its GoM!' ll'•CIM. Of' THI Wl•K --- 1 -*ST SMAO• I CHEDDAR .. .... .... .. .. s1 u ... • RNdy lo Sena wllh Honey '• Spice GI•• • Spiral Sliced From Top to Bottom e We P1ckage and Ship from Co111t to Cot11t • Full Sarvlce O.llcai.1...t • lmportad Cheesa1 and Wine• • Caterl119 ••• A Spac:lallty :11001.c.-.......,,c.....,111.-an ...... 1 •*II ....... c..-......... 1222 S. h-"W1t,Anlill1I• IJl4461 FRANCIS- '\.ORR el ( • ( ' ( ( ( ( '. ' . ' ) ) "' . ' -,\ 'i ' . . • l ~ I •• ·An auto loan and R.0. Beatty. \ Special servic::es for special people. The following i8 an actual transcript of a conversa.tion held with.Mr. R. O .• Beatty. " .. ,yo.u want to feel as if you are a person, an individual, rather than just a number. I bank at Secu· rity Pacific Bank. I sawa brochure in . t\le bank for easy financf1!g of cars. And I took 'em up on it and it was just what they said. It was very simple, very fast and i was very pleased. Come to think of it, that's something special in itsel£' Perhaps for you, that "some- thing special" is Ready Aut0Fi111J11e11. The plan th.at gives 11ou the loa11 before you choose the car. So why not see m firat for a11,1 auto loan. After all, you already lu"' your checking accou11t with "'" Don'l 11our b PACIFIC ING SPEC I " --'!i • ' r • Teday's l'laal N.Y. Steeb • I ' VOL 66. NO. n, 3 SFCTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNJA TUESDAY, MAii.CH 13< 1973 TEN CENTS .. Saddlehack Student A·ssail Speaker Policy - . 87 JAN WORTH ............... eompainb from -COiiege -to the -ol trultoel Monday olgbt -t Ille -·· speal:m policy led lo cllarla that the -la ... sterile filhboWI'' •Ind "ane big .high l(:bool;" . Wheo · Tmi Jenson, a aopbomore .......... from . AMociated Student Clovtrmneat, !old the lioml ol 1rustoel that Ille speaken policy ~ a . ., ' • e1 ' '. Silent Tribute Paid w .Marti.,,, ' A moment of lllence was obaerv· ed by the Festival of Arts bOanl or directors Monday in remembrance of WUllam D. Martin, form.et Lagilna Beach mayor and president of the Festival board, who died Thursd•Y.· "I don \jblnk there i.s anything I could say that hasn't already been said. H.l.s effort.a in behalf of.-the Festival will be long remembered," said O. E. "Bud" Schroeder, board president. Selection of. a new direct« to fill Ille vacancy created · by Mr. Martin'• death will be made alter a 1apoe of some time, a Festival spokesman said. Railway \E.oWiet Win Pay, B_ ... Boost· of 10.7% WASHINGTON (AP) -A tenaUve wage and fringe benefit settlement C:overing virtually all tbe naUon's 500,000 railroad workers was announced today. Spokesmen 10< the nill Industry aoo 15 lmions Involved .lit the pact said the agmment would lncttase wages and benefita by a total of 10.1 percent over 18 months beginning July I. Thil would include a 4 peroent wage in- crease effectl\re nut Jan. 1 di a revised ·pemioo system which would i>ut an ad- ditional "2.75 per mi>oth lnio the j)llydiecb. ol nlil ---,,,. Industry 'would plct up the payments that lieretolore bid been paid by the workers .Into the oeparate railroad 1<tirement ;funds thal coven rail workers in lieu of Social Securit . A spo~ for the Coit of LiVing , Q>tmcll said ioday It ii llkety that th<! oouncil will review the tentative settle- JV<llt lo see ~ It comes wllltln the gov-~t'1 voluntary pay s~. . But the spokesman said CO<llldl-direc-* John T. Dunlop wouJd have no mnr ipelrt: until be reviewed tbe \settlement. 1 .. 'lbe government's pay stanl:tard allows ... wage lncreues of u J>01<0rit • year . .l)iul another 0.7 percent in fringe belle-. .J1ts. But the council-has Indicated the otandard will be applied Duib(y on a t cue-bY-cue basis. • ...:.,(The qreement is subject to ratific> 4loii by oll\clais of the 15 unions, and in ..,. case by a membenbip vote. 1lle slpglo union r<qUirlng membenbip ap- proval la the Sheet Metal Workers. . • 1be tentative a,reement came J'rS .monlba ahead of contract expiration dates July I. .., 'Scouting ~der • Oements Dies Jay W. Clam<ob of 17'1 Hlgb Drive, a ~ -ol Laguna -who ,,poe -ol bla Ille lo the Boy acouta or America, died Monday. free flow of MNa cm ee"'l'Ult TrustM Michael Col1laa npUod, "Camp-.... not mamtai:g 11 a forum for ffte ~o.. benlalo-" ,,,. -of about 10 lludenb - protesting .... -ol the four.point speal:m provlslcloi, wblcil 18YI that whenever a · cootroversial spt.aller ~P' pean on camp11 another speaker ~ an appoalnc point ol view must be given equal time OD the ume program. ; NoDesigm On Senate ·For Reagan SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan 8.DDOWlCed today he will not run for the U.S. Senate in l.974. 'l1ae 62-year-old Republican chief U· ecutive announced bis decisioo al a Capitol news confereDce. Reagan tokt reporten, "I a m penooally nol attracted lo the -of participating In a legislative body an.r having held an executive position." : He.,ud, "t have listened 1o -w1io .... ,_; ---olllce I "'"1 groat!)' -ed 1,-their elJ)r<Alom ol ... .._.. and oilers o1 ll!IPP'l'I. . "But t am tonvlnced I have a greater respon&lbility which ls to devote tbe next two years to achieving the several goals our administration bas set for itself beginning with the limitation of lax burden borne by all Californians," he said. . Reagan repeated he would not run for a third term as goverllOf. Wben' asked "Does this mean you will run fot president?" be smiled and said that was-oOt the meaning behind his an- nouncemenl The Governor bas declined to say whether he mig)lt be<ome a presidential candidate in 1976, saying only that it is too early lo opeculate who mig)lt be GOP candidates to succeed President Nixon.· 1be Senate 1e1t of Democrat Alan Crsmtoo b up next year and Cranston ~ seeking a second six-year term. Reagan has said for some time he mig)lt consider running for the Senate. A number of prospective GOP can- didates have been awaiting Reagan's decisioo so they can decide whether lo try for governor or for the Senate. 'Ibey include former NI.Ion cabinet of· fleer Robert H. Finch and State Con- troller Houston I. Flournoy. Finch said last week he has decided what be will· do. but won't make an an- nouOcemeot for about two months. U . Gov. Ed Rdnecl<e has declared he will run for governor and Atty. Gen. ) (See REAGAN, Page l) Bll!glars Smash Laguna Churches Two taguna Beach chun:hes were broken lnlo by thieves wha kkked In the cburcb -.. In burllarta reported lo Laguna Bead! police Monday. A radio valued at $80 was stolen from the office of St. Macy"s Episcopal Church, tzt Park Ave.l whlle at the Com- munity Pmbyterian Church, 415 Fore!! . ~ve., thieves Jeft apP8'e!lily empty-hancl- eCI after lirealdng tllrouglt the door. Crimes' ..... dlacovered ~y ...,,,,. Ing ud on believed by poll<o lo have oo- curred otemlglll. ' w-burglatJ of • South Laguna cbun:b, ~ -Clwn:h, .... re\I0<1ed IO Onltie C.OZ,ty Sheriff'• Depirtmeat ud 11 llimllar lo the Laguna ---Tbieva -fl5 from the -....-~ -will be 10 a.m. w-., at ""1'• Episcopal Chura, the Jlov, • llalrcl D>flln ofDdatiJtt. 'lbe 1amJ1y nq"'"" that 1o °"" "' Joint Council, CofC -... dcmatlonl be mode II tho 0raap !ln~ C.Uncll of the Boy Sooula of •"'-lea ... the ·-I•'-lo Meet Set Wednesday lloclalJ. . l llr. a.m.nts wu 1 tlra--ve A Ja1ot ........ al the Laguna Bead> !Or the Boy Scouts '"' _,, than 40 (:ll1 Qlundl and Ille Laguoa -JMFI. Ownhtt ol Commeroe will bo bold ••• Survlfon lnclocle hlr -· Lourat p.m. w........, 11 Qty n.o. -Do•ld an4 Oirla; "*" ramald Jllooiotl<!n will -.,. .. the ..,. ..... 'II i.n ol 9"" Dlqt; and -• '°"" ~ dlmate ol the art QJIOD7 ..--. .. ...a ...... -Dlljl bo llkn lo Sbellu Lquna 1ltacb Mortuary ls tmt prolllems wtthiD the bum-com- handliol pr1vat& burial. mmlly, l • • ,,,. !l!ucienll aoliod lar. ol the P'l!k7 NOdlng .... ~ .-iwi1 time Will be pro9lcled, • -Jll'lllel'ly .. qunted, lo -~ view points. i»weftr, not neceaarllJ duriq Ille same Pl'OIJ'lll." After · an hour ol heated dilcu!oion OD beth !Ides, a QOllllDltlel ol Trultees Don- .. Berry, James Mmball, 111d Hans Vogel wu "'-ii lo meel with tbtte students and ll'y lo wwk out a solutioo. Alfredo C.brera, a -~ said be felt • '. , Wied when !old "I can1 listeD lo a -!pOOkor and DOI learn. As loq as I can question blln I can learn. 1• Herb Bair, a ~yeaM>id lltudent and reporter for tbt Lariat, the campus newspaper t J&ld, "We are not sheep - we fire adWts. We have nmpant apathy here ••. educe:tioo is sodalir.aUon as well u ae1demll. Yet all the)' want to talk about II football!" Jenaoo aald the speaken policy had cauaed him particular tn>uble In planning • I J>rOlr&ms for the one "dead" period of the week, Friday from 11 a.m. to noon, when there are no claslel. 'Ibis period is supposedly available for all-campus meetings and special programs. j!Wilb only an hour to wort with, we cannot get an adequate cUscusaion when we have to have two speakers," Jenson said. "Why oot have the programs in the evening, open to the public?" Trustee Patrick Backu.s asked. Jenson replied that there Is too much compelitlon in lbe evenlnp and there ire no buildings big enoqh to handle a crowd. Outdoor faclliUe1 would be too cold. he said. Jenson pointed out th.It in a survey or 13 high 8Cboola and community colleges, he found that Saddleback's speakers policy was the most restrictive. "'lbt high schools are letting l>year-okls have more freedom of speech than we have," tS.. SPEAKERS, Pqe II an 1 Measure In Effec~ Aide Says By JACK CHAPPELL Of !fie DlllY ,Mitt ll•H Laguna Beach's 36-foot height lim~ ,... mains in effect despite a ruling by an 1p- peals court overlllrnlog a height statute enacted by a vote or Lagun.ans. City Attorney Tully Seymour told plan- ning commi.Jsionert Monday lbat • back~ up law still stands slthoqb the court nix· ed the "stop high rise" initiative puled by a J.l mvgin by dttwia In a city wldo electloo In August lflL The bacl< up law contains an t!ll p vitl9o& 41 ti. dU.... -· ... ., •• 1111111_ ~d. ''no vartll!ce~ provilion, Seymour The fall..afe law wu passed through the nonnal legislative channels. and therefore the court declalon does DQt 1p- pear lo apply lo it, the atiomey advised. TWO INDIANS ON HORSEBACK 1iE~1' PATROL PERIMETER AROUND WOUNDED KNEE Fedetal Agenr .. ·a..f ':JP Their ~Orcet Outside Vilf1ge Held &y MiUt1•t lndi1ns UP'IT ..... ENCAMPMENT The main dJrrerence between the two measures, one enacted by the initiative, the other enacted by the city council ls that the councU·passed law, the one that remaina can be ctianged by a vote of thla city council or future councils, while the initiative statute provides for change on- ly by a vote of the people. He aaid a deciJion on whether to appeal the decision rendered by the ~judge Fourth Oiatrid Court of Appeals in San BemanUno has nol yet been made. Sanity TesJimonyBegins • I ' ' ' For Dana Point Slay~ Testimony in the sanity hearing of coo- victed killer 1bomas B r a d I o r d McCutcben began today in Orange Coun· ty Superior Court with the prosecuUon In- sisting that the Dana Point builder was in f'Ull possession of his mental faculties when be sbot and killed a Laguna Beach W(>maD Sepl $. Prosecutor N'ict Novtct said be plans to put at least eight witnesses on the stand in his bid lo insure !bat McCutclt- en, 50, 33lll Olinda st., g e t 1 lite lm- )J{iaomnel)t !« Ille tilling ol Mrs. Virginia Hammett .. Jury selection was completed late Monday. It is expected that Ille aanity bearing for McQ.ltchen will take about two weeks. The jury that convicted the contractor of first degree murder more than a month ago should hive immediately returned to Judge Walter Charamza's courtrocm to rule on McCutchen's men- tal state. But the judge and both lawyers overlooked McCutchen's original plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. Judge Charamza was forced to order a new jury to rule on lhe defendant's sani- ty. McCutchen was arrested Sept. 5 shortly alter Mrs. Hammett, 45, of 111 B Wave St. was gunned down on a neighbor's lawn. Police said McCutchen told them he was distressed because Mrs. Hammett had earlier that day broken off her as90Clation with him. McCutchen's lawyer argued during the first trial that hit client had taken a quantity of sleeping pilla shortly before the shooting and was not aware of the nature of his act. Fears Voieed Festival Officillls Cite Crafts F•an that the Festlvll of Arts may be becoming a lrcraftl ehow" wert ~ced Monday by festlval dlnocion art« leam- hl« lbat nearly fOUl'firlba ol Iba -ex-bl6iton on the groundl will be c:ran..n..t, wtlll nearly ball the -ar-r!Yala being jntiera. Moeem Abel, festival Ir o u. n d 1 .,_, 1oid tlto dln>cion that fGllOW· Ing -""*" -· 2111 hopelul -and crollamen, probably 1be up-per 25 -.14 reoelve a booth II lite Im Festival. Of U-, It ,,. ~ and 11 ti( the -.,.. jowelcn, Abel •Id. ..We'll havt. &o. start ~ a loot It Ulla. J doo't blve lll)'thlni aplnlt cnlta1 but we are !all bocomlnc • .u ona c:taAt Jbow/' takt Dltid Younf', <lialnmla·ol the ......... -IUeo. \ J Ht uld ha wu "pertw'bed" at the situation. Abel wu dincled by the board or dlroclors lo ~ throogh the re<or<la for the put 0.. years, to determine U a '""""' trend of craftsmen Oil the '""""" Is evlcient. "Il you 're eolq' t.o solve thll, It'• going to be on l q u 9 t a l)'Stem," Stuart Purtea, du..tor •Id. y--that ..... Ihm ... f1 jewelers Oil Iba grounds'wlth the new ar- riva)s, ' "Do "" ,...1 Jo Ila)' aa ut lestivsl or ......... en.fl •how!" be-· Abel'' report lrill be i«wlrded lo the groundt -millee wtilcb WU dln!C1ed 1o mn ·-ror.......,. lltlon to the -ol dlrecion. Federal Agents Beef Up Forces At W otinded Knee PINE RrllGE, S.D. (UPI I -Federal marshals and FBI agents, beefed up with a 300 percent increase in manpower and heavy equipment, today tightened their lines around the hamlet of Wounded Knee, aeiz.ed by militant Indians two weekJ ago. Wyman Babby, area director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, said be knew of no incidenta during the night. "There was no firing 1s far as I've been told," Babby said. But where in early stages of the block· ade -once lifted and then restored - the federal men conlined their 1earch ac- tivities chiefly to roadbk>cb, today I.hey were patrolling all approaches. UPI photographer Jim Hubbard at- tempted an overland entry to Wounded Knee and was turned back. H~ reported security was "very tight.'' It was possible to leave the Ogtala Sioux reservation where Pine Ridge and Wounded Knee are located, bul the gov· emment lines barred entry to Wounded Koee where the Indiana have declared they no looger recoinbe the U.S. govern- ment and Mt teitlng up one d tbelt own. "'Ibll ICUon WU tdm beclUle the Jodiaoa holding Wounded Knee used th<! period al lime when tlfeJ bid ,,.. - 1o the aru. to fort111 their potiU-with more weapons and ammunltioft," Ralph Ericltsoo, opeclll usiJtant lo Attorney Gtnersl Rlcbanl Kleindl~ aaid -clay In Wuhlngt<m. FOUT 7oung j;.dJ.},, ftft • 1at.ed llhortly .after Ille blocklcle WU Ml up, Federal agfllb said they f-tn ri11et and • bandcUn In • IUrcb ol the lJ>. dl.anl' car. The challenge to the Initiative ordinance was brought by V e r n Taschner, a realtor, who clafmed that the initiative pn>eess used In paaslng the law had denied due process provided under state building law and guaranteed under the 14th amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Taschner sa.id Monday he fell that he had achieved a victory despite the fact that the 36-foot height bar still remained in one form in lhe city. "They proba~y feel they are quHe safe that they have an ordinance lhey can keep forever," Taschner said. "It remairul to be seen the constltu· tionallty of the case," he said. He said the legal costs Involved In the battle to kill the height l'!strictions In lhe community "have been spread around a little, you know." Taschner aaid he penooally doesn't plan ary high rise prvjecls, but !bat be has properties the Cll"dinance does affect. He said that if the height limit is removed. Upland lodustrta, (owners d. the oow vacant Jandl between the Hotel Laguna and Sleepy Hollow) will he allow· !See HEIGHT, Page Z) Orange Coast Weather That lllird stonn, expected oo Wednesday, will oot make it on the Orange Coast until Thunday, ... oonUog lo the wealber service. Wedneeday llhould be mostly smmy with slightly warmer tempm>- t..... IDgl!a at the beaches In the i... 60s, rising lo 66 Inland. C)ver. nrgbt lowl In Iba 40s. INSIDE TOlti\l' NOtD lt11 the &urn of leadin11 a.rpirin companit• lo have: hcod· ach<1. TMir advtrlfllng c!aimo havt bttn c~d bt1 the: rtC. Set 1torv, Pagt 12. The enclrelement of WGUlldod Knee camo lea than .ia botJn alter the ,.,...,.. ' tn"1I lirted raadblo<la1, and one day an.r .. FBI ·agent WU allot In the band dUI' Ing a 1booiout wllb lltdlaol. ............ 11 ....... • ~ I ___ ..... M ~ 1,.M ••tl9MI ..... f c-.. '' or._ c..., • (.....,.,.,.. 11 ..... ,..., o-• --• ' ............... u ............... I T......... • e........... ,, ~ '' fl.._ Ml ...... ~ ........ ._. I ....._,..._. 1J.M At the heJClil ol leNioo Jut-. ODlJ three armored pencmoel carrltn ...-. brou&ht to Ille -• llllfoot Trail. • - "" 1' ,. ..... .... • ._.._.. IJ '"' 24 Tons of Po Viet Cong To Re'lease • Seized ID Raid 8-yearPOW , WASHINGTON (AP) -The sovem· ,,, ment aDDOllDCICI today It aelzed t19.9 • mllllon bl IU.gal nan:otlcs, Including %4 ,. tons ol marijuana, In a oomblned apera- tio with the Mexican government thiit it &aid crlppied 1 major drug..amuggllng ~ ring on the Arir.ooa-Meilco bottler. : U.S. offlcla~ "id they also 1tlzed 9.3 ii J)OUDdJ of heroin and made mo""e than 100 arrests. They said they seized records of a "large smuggling ;:onsplracy responsi· 1_ ble for bringing tons of n1arijuana and mulU.kJlos of heroin" into the United 1 ... States. ..... Details, including the names of those -i· arrested and where they were seized, were not immediately announced. The street value of the seized mari- juana was put at S18.7 million and the ... heroin at $2.5 mllllon. The amount of .;. • heroin would be enough to supply 182,000 ' addicts for one day. The results of the Mexican-United ~ states exercise, called "Operation Cac-. t... lus," were announced at a news con- . .., ference at the executive office or .;-:~ Narcotics Control Program Inform ation. Law mforcement authorities from Mex- .,.. ico and the state of Arizona attended the .. ·~1 concerence. U"· The announcement said Operation Cac- "'" lus wu launcbod early In February when intelligence aources revealed t b a t ' subotattlal quanlltles ul marijuana and ft heroin were being introduced into the .:~ United States along the Mexican border in Southwest Arilooa, the government sald, ~.Coast Council Bogged Down ~-Over Procedure '!' A procedural ugulaUon swamped , ·1: South Coast Regional Zone Conservation • Commissioners' Ideas of taking action .0 Monday night and delayed the first hear· lnp by five boors. , ~· C-ommissionefs squabbled from 3 p.m. ·'<' to 8 p.m. -wlih a tw<>bour dlnner bre8lt ,,.., -over a state ~on rule that regtooaJ. bodies couldn't vote on ex· emptioa claims wltbout a staff l<CO!n· ' -!Ion lollowtoi • publlc hoarlnc. A 1!lljorlly of the commission wonted to YOie Mooday, delplte pnlteN from ............ staff ....u.n and 'the at· r toney ...,_ ...... --No staff ., :rea>mmendations ware~""' Monday 1tj.gbt , r ¥r-- ·2 'Jeti,., 1'rWcllnm ~>late i.'Uomey ;, ~·· oflke said ad®tei! 'iii!.. ol "" ]ll'OCediJro call !or \cllon dli vested 1fgbtS tfl cues at the next mbsequent meeting following publlc1learlnp. -+A few commWionen, e1peclally James ,Reedy of Santa Monica and Dmald Phllll111 ol Loos Beach were mlHod at the llate roodblock. , But lborUy alter 8 p.m., Reedy .movtd" I to begln the hearlnp and vote nut week. Tbe commission then conducted ze public hearings unlil I a.m. tocla,y .. Reedy sakl 10fM of tbl deveJopen, re- questing exem~,'(l'ere alrald that ii I the comm1ss1oo .vo1ea "'aimt 111 \)Wit ...,.iauona, ii••. iloadiill 1mt1- wouido't ""rJ:till>o vqte• >ali4 and would atlli wl ~ ftlnds. The commission hM jurllflic1lon over building permita wlthlo 1,000 yardl ol the mean bich tide line lo ~-aod ~ Angeles counU... ! Katherine Mcintyre f Of Laguna Succumbs ' Private services in Riverside are scheduled for Katherine Mcintyre of 245 C: Cypress Drive, Laguna Beach, who died ; in ber home Saturday. i Miss Mcintyre, a native or Canada, bad lived in the Art Colony M years after ret1rio& from 30 yean as a public school teachrr in Hawaii. She ii aurvived by a i; nephew, Jack, of Blythe. ~ I } • i I l l I . l f J i 01AJ161 COAST .. DAILY PI LOT Tiit ~ c:.t D.lllLT PILOT, Wllll -.:ti .. .,....,... .. ~ ............ _, .... Or ..... C-t hlll ..... ~ • ....., ,... tlllltloril .... "*......... ,,,,.,.., """""" l'r ... y, ftll" cwi. Mna, ~ hKft. ... fine ... ' 8Mdl/l'.....,,.lll \l•llPr, ut\1111 IMcll. lnlll9/~lllldl .,.,.. s.. <"'"""*' 5111 J-C'~lr•M. A ''"'Ill "91GMI ..i1tlofl It lllUIH'sl!M S.twclln ...., avn.s.~ Tl!il prll>le. ... I '°""""'"' llMI .. •t DI W•I .. , S!l'Mf, C..11 M$, C.tttwnkl, nu.. ltob•tf N. Wied Prwllflllt lftlf Plllllollet J.,. It. CYtl•y Vk• P'911dtoit 1nd o.n.r.1 ~ Tho"'•• K ..... u ·-n. ...... A. Mw,111110 _ ..... cit.J .. H. t..o. _,,,.,,... '· N.11 Alow...t ........ ....,,... --·-t22 F.rut A.,..11110 Molllllf Mt1r•11r r.o. a.-. 6U, t2•12 --~ "'-l DI '::!::T""'-~~I AD ....._. Hwrt"""91t '-"; 11111 h9dl .........,,. -~:-.... 1·~• .. 1 "'······ rn•1 MMUt Cl ...... ~ ... ,....,. ........... AIPr""I_ ... Tahpt1 14~ ~'· 1111. 0...,.. CO.it ~ .... ~. ... ,...,.. .,..... ""'*'"•,.... ~ INlfW 9f Ml'WtiMllMllll Mro1R """ .. ,........ .......... ..-Cift ,... ,,.,.. ., ~ ... . --..... ,..,.,. .. ., tt c.t• ~ c.11..... ..-m"''-" W ..W AM ,.......,, w !Mii u.1r "*"""' m11n.,,. ..,.,., ....... flllfltMr. • U.S. Reveals 32 Prisoners Of Viet Cong WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The Defense and Slate Departments mede public to- day the following list ol 27 mlUlary pris- oners and five civillarul to be released by the Viet Cong Friday in Hanoi . SAIGON (AP) -The Viet Cong an- noun'*1 tod•f that an American war pritooer beld kJi>8er than aey Other U.S. llOldler la blotory 11 llllOOll U-being released Friday, ' Alao ....., the 32 prisoners bemg tamed over at Hanoi'• Gia Lam Airport b the ranlllog U:S. clvlllan otflclal cap- tured by the Communists. A. )'1lUlli Marino au_..tly killed In Vietnam and buried by Illa lamUy four years ago but who later turned up alive aho Is coming oul. The klngest held American captive Is Maj. Floyd 1llompoon, now 19. He W83 eaplund Mardi JS, 11114, lo Quon( Tri Province just below the Dtmllltariud Zone. where bt WU oeninl U a U.S. ad· mer wllli 8oulb v-,....._ 'lbom-WU tben a capllin. When released Friday, be will have spent 1,%77 daya u a prilooer Of war; five months looger than Navy Lt. Cmdr. ,Eve .. 11 Alvarez, the first pilot lbot down. over North Vietnam. The five civilians were reported cap- tured during the Cmnmuni.st Tet offen- sive at Hue, South Vietnam, on Feb. 1, 1968, Historic Tour Outlined The ranking U.S. civilian being releas· ed is Philip Manhard, 52, a senior career diplomat with the State .Department. Manhanl was captured Feb. %, 1918, when Communist rorces seized the forpier imperial capital of Hue during tbe Tet offen.slve. 1. NmV CW0 PT~Glnl Anto11, 29, Wllllllllboro. til,J. t. Mlrfnl Clot. Bruce Rnmonct Archer, )II, RocMltlr, til.Y., and Peni.ecalt, Fl1. S. Arfrrr SMc. 4 MlchM+ P1lr1U l r•l\dl, 2J CWMtow'I\ wlltlheld •I f.mllV'• r-0. 4.. lit"'frlY M. Sil. Hlrwot Gof"dlln lr1ndt, X. lm9 8Mdl, c.111. s. Armv s. s.t. Robirt Prnton c~. is, Porfltnd, c...,. and U.S.-China Friendship Association will sponsor a lecture by them Friday at 8 p .m. in Laguna Beach Women's Club, 286 St. Anne's Drive. Admission is $2 !or adults; $1 for students. Claire Hirsch and Bernie Lusher (center rear) pause with guides and interpreters near early home of Chairman Mao during recent tour through Peking, Shanghai, Nanking, Hangchow, Canton and other major China cities. Orange County Peace Center ~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Also retwnl.na: home wll1 be Pfc. Ronald L. Ridgeway, who the Com-' mmrlstl Said was captured Feb. 25, 1918, 1 near a U.S. outpost~ Khe Sanh. , What was believed t.p be the remains of Ridgeway and other membera of his patrol caught lo a Nokh Vietnamese am-, bush were recovenil. returned to the 1 United Slates aod burlod ro... yun qo. ' '-km'f S. Sii, J-Aleundtr O.lv Jr., 1$, New Yont City. 1, Am1V S. Jg!, TllorNI J-0.\111, ll. Elllllt. ••• .. Amw S.I. p.iw Edwll"d Dr•blc. ti, Ullloll Btfcltl, Mel. t. Mlorinl P¥t. fredlrfdr; l.Gula Alblrt Jr~ U. &t•Ci DOd, N.Y. 10. Air Foret Col. ~ WIMn Giii', a, ~ Atll. • ..,. l!tmllllnl, N.V. 11, MM1n1 Sit. IDIMn llY ltlille, U. TIMda, From Pagel HEIGHT •.• Ohio. ed to construct "economically feast'ble" It. Mlrlrll set. AbM l•rrv ICl\ltMVlltl. M. '*"""• "It~ Mii. PllWd Herold IClllllMr, 21, o-u1e projects, which he said WGuld benefit the •nd Rldlnlot!O. Y•. city's taz: base. 1 .. Annv I . S.I. MlcMtt Robtrt L.ritr, U. Rock· ford, 111. Seymour said the appeal represented a "~~· AntlY' s. s.t. Ju111.11 Wotltfl LoM. 29• Pu1a11r.i, dllference in philosophy between the 16. Annv S. Sii. '""' McMlllln, 25, Orl"tn1, Pl•. I j d 11. Armv s. Set. w1u11m G,,,.. MCM11trw, 21, var ous u ges. TT~~ ~o.:!1:.,~.t.MacpMll, sc, Chelmsford, While Superior Court Judge William S. ~AnnV Pfe. GUstl• Aloi• ~. n. OIJIW, Lee who first ruled in favor of the In· Nib. -Clm01blll iw "" "'"' c.,. •• M1111 '" itiaUVe height limit, declared that the Alnfl'•llfll.. 2:1. MtriN Mii. P11.11 J0111111 MDMH11t, 211. ""' • eJecUoo process contained all the fhony, !Ctn., '1111 TlllHn. C•llf. n."'"'"" s, s.1. 1r:rn. O.•ld b'rltNJ Jr~ 21, safeguards ordered by state building ~ ~Al,_. 1trt Rift., ,,, u1 °'" codes setting public h e a r 1 n g re-~ ::J:'k~'·L.. •klMWw, u. Howf9n. qulrement.s, appeals court JUdges thought Tu. otbenrtse, he said. . • T:;._"""' 5"c. • Jolwl ...,.._ 21. ~ '"'nle kind of public debate on the u. Air hta L ....... A. VOUl'll, :17, W•'*'Mn :merltl of a proposed r.oning measure af-•ftlll~ llL + -. ~ ~. TModorw w1H1-ooe1u. ~ fonled br. the election process, lncluding ~ wilN~•:: ~ ,.,..;,,_. 11, Hw the limited opportunity for the sul>- Mllfrwd, H.J. mlaslon of written arguments to Ule I . The dv!liaa _, __ ldeoW1ed . voters, cannot be equated with a 81:· • · ,.~. ·~• dlspallliooate study,. evaluatloa , and 1:.a.tn1W ll•-•1t •· •"""-v...,•-'l ~~~J...~ol. """• -""· --,. -v ... ~ "';II. -notice •rul '""'"•• l>elore t,..~ Whrin·-;ldftl!i An111tkb nnf' •(Ii; pl~~COmmilsiOO'., ~tiiri feeom- i. PJ111i. w . ....,.., Ii. MC:LNn;0 ..it .. • s111e menffaUon by the planning ,commlsskln e~' offlctr .._ llM ~ ..,..,,. "'' IWll't with reasons for Its recommendation and t.vLP=~~·.:·e:!.'=t. MJmit. ~ notice and hearing betore the legislative L Rlcllml H, IPHldl1111."' Enid, Ok .... Of Ptc.Jfk body," a portion 0 fthe 35-page court Mctt11«11 w £1111IM1B. d · I t ed · 5. E"'""' w11wr, "°· ""'°""'· w11., • cf•Hllll ects on s at . emlllolrld iw .tM u.L Amw 1n '°""' vi.tnem, "Furthermore, it Is comm on :-:::-~ knowledge that election ;campaigriB coat anh... ' money and that the e:xtent to which one Pl ers D 1 may be heard in ai election too often e a y depends on the size of one's pockl!tbook whereas planning commissions and Resta' ur' a· nt 'Bi~ _'j, legislative bodies are required by law to ff ·a!!ord all Interested penoos a lull and · -... ' fair ~ring on tfie merits of their In Laguna Jfeach ::;.ttve claims," tbe decision con- Concern aboOt irarnc noile, pedestrian safety anilparidni ,.t back • propooed $1 million ...tauran~motel conipiex planned for the existing site of the Laguna • Shoals, as the project came before the Laguna Beach Plannini ConuniJsian Monday night. The ~it plan for 1601 S. Coast Highway, owned by Stephen Levinson, was slated for Ua second public hearing before lhe commission. 1be commtaalon had previously commented on Its traffic, noise, pedestrian safety and parking, and said Monday they sUll had quesUom. The matter was continued to March 26 for further study. The project on the coast side of the highway c.alla ror three shops: along the thoroughfare, underground parking, and access to the beach on the ocean side. The plan is by architect and local city councilman Peter Ostrander. A ataff report on the project cited re- cent sound measurements in the areas of lh:! project. From Pagel REAGAN •.. Evelle J. Younger is a probable can- didate. The Governor, first elected in 1968 over Incumbent Democrat Edmund G. Brown, has said for tome time he I.! lncUned to step down from public office during the coming two yean to travel a natk>oal umasbed potato" circuit. He said he would be speaking about what he clalml are "ideologlcal mytlu:" abroad in the land about government. This bu fired speculation that he then would try f0< the R<publlcan presidenliai nomina tion on 1978 although he will be Ill years old when the primary b1tlla art Wlder way. Rqaan made a late, un11JCCeM(ul bid for the presidmcy •I lhe GOf N1Uonal Convention In 1961. PrH...t again today on the pmldenllai lmie, R<agan said, "I'm not diJ<usslna what happens al!tt It'll." A>~ed wby, Reagan added, "I really don 't know. Do any of you feUon: know whal you 'll be ~IJ lour yeara from now ?" rt noted fti!1ber that during the ,elec- tion, poly two alternatives are presented. for eomtderation by voters, approval i;ir rejection, while Jn legislatiye blollings. modifications of the proPQS8.ls can and usually are made. Seymour said the appeal decision rep~sented the turrent tone of thought in higher state courts. He said that if the height limit is to be removed, other grounds will have to be found , because the current case dealt only with the initiative process. He said that during court arguments. Tasclmer's attorneys had hit at the no variance aspect of the law, but that the court did not pass oo that point of the argument Thompson Heads Group in Niguel Jim Thompson. representative of the Crown Valley Highlands Community Association, has been elected president of the Laguna Niguel Homeowners' Asso- ciation. Eightetn rep resentatives from the dozen associations in Lagun a Nig uel also recently elected Pat Mancini of Crown Point to be vice president ; Grover A. Frater of Pacesetter to be treasurer and Betty Emory of Crown Point as secretary. Other new association board members u e H. V, (Red) Williams mt Phil Caruso of Niguel llills; Kei th Sims, Grover Frater and Nick R. Virgal1ito, all of Pacesetter and Belly Emor)I. and Man- cini of Crown Point. Demonstration Slated On Ceramic Painting A domonstrallon of palnllng on bisque (ceramlcl!I) will be given during a meeting of the South Coast China Painters. •t 10:30 a.m. 'I1lursday at 30681 Driftwood Drive, South Laguna . The dolll0l1Strallon \\'ill be &Jven by M,,, Hairy Fagan, nationally known china' palnl!I' and 1ncludod In tho> book, "Great Artist> o! China Decoration" by Pauline Sayler. j • Y ahlonski Deaths Boyle Ordered Murders For Union-Assassin µ!IE, Pa. (UPI) -A convicted aasassln Mid today he was told by two former United Mine Workers officials that former UMW President W. A. "Tony" Boyle ordered the murder of Sewerage System Of . $20 Million Wins Official OK • •J -~~,... >lA ~ rilllllOll ..,..ge~>tlortlie El Toro-Laguna Hills area of central "Orange County has the approval of Ul~ Sarita tpia . Regional Water Quality Con-trot Boi f'4. The board, at J,he request of th& Aliso' Waler Management Agency (A\VMA) Friday declared lhe project "urgent," This will allow the E~ T1>ro Water ' Distrlci to issue up to $S miilior In revenue bonds without an election. The AWMA will apply for $1$ million. in federal funcb to help finance the pro- gram. The A WMA is a cooperative organization of eight agencies handling waste water. , Carl Kymla, manager o! the Moulton Niguel Water District, and c~ of A WMA, sald the $5 million would be the first of several bond Issues to finance major sewage treatment plant ex· pansions, inst~llation of trunk lines and ocean outfall In the south county area. Kymla said the El Toro Water District will CQntrac t to take waste water from Rossmoor Sanitation, Inc. and convey it to the ocean outfall at Aliso Beach. union insUrgent Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski ''for the wellare of lhe UMW.'1 The dramatic testimony by Paul Gilly, who earlier was sentenced to death by a jury !or the aia)'ing o! Yabiooski, his wife and daughter, came at the trial or William J . Prater, 52, a former UMW field organi:.er from La Follette, Term. Reached by telephone by the --ated Press at bis Washington home, Boyle said be would have nothing to say other than to again deny aoy involvement in the slaying& "I have denied repeatedly having any knowledge wbaboever of tbe ~." "°'le -.ilti '4 ..,.,,... abOOllitely -m.. abi>ut any ol thiJ. I don't know any OI these people, I never saw an_y or them and I have nothll:lg to say." 1 1 GWy sakl Boyle was lmpllcated by Prater and a confessed Yabloriikl assassin, Silous Huddleston, during at least three meetingl!I held prior to the Dec. 31, 1969, assassinations. He 1ald Boyle's name was mentioned during the meetings beid to discuss the financing and method,, to be used in the slayings. "I wu told the union wanted to get rid of Yablonski ~use he'd mess up the union and the urUon's pension fund," saJd Gilly. "Did Prater tell you who wanted the murders done?'' as.keel special prosecutor Richan! A. Sjrasue. "Ha said Tony Boyle wanted him liill- ed," said Gilly. "Did be say why?" asked Sprague. "A!!. I recall, it was ror the welfare of the UMW," sald GIUy. "Tony Boyle would hold all the power. Silous Hud- dleston told me Tony Boyle was fair and turned down an offer to stay on as perr1¥1nent president of the union." 11Who told you that?" asked Sprague. "Huddleston and Prater," said Gilly. . ' ' A YARN FOR EVER Rldgeway's moq,er· Is Mildred A, Ridgeway of Hous!On, Tex. The Ult includes Sgt. Michael Palrlck Brancll of ill8bland, Ky., whom Radio Hanoi frequently id.enWled u a deserter, and Maj. Floyd Kushner ol l>anvllle. Va., a medical corp1 officer to whom antiwar atatement.s were attributed over the Communist radio. Also being releaaed •Is S g t. Al!onoo Riate, 'J:T, of Bell Gardena, Calif .. a Viet Cong prisoner since 1967 llated aa killed In action by the Pentagon witll his mother received a letter lrom him just before ChrialmaJ In It'll. From Pagel SPEAKERS. • • be said. Trustee Collins sald he !~It wr controlled freedom of speech wa!I what had caused the breakdown in education OD •CAmpmlM 8Cl'Oll the cogDb j ; ln- Ciuding campuses In Orange County. ''Tbere'•i: great need to prevent cam- puses !roui'l>elllg used u a soapbox. We will not maintain a 110apboi: for either Jane Fondc.or John Schmitz at the tax~ payers' expeft!e/' he saJd. Jane Fonda 111 speaking atXal State, Fullerton Wednes-- day. ' The existing JX>licy was adopted In September --0f 1169, which trustees pointed oul followed a volatile year on collese campuses throughout the country. n.e ~k atmosphere is creating "little cooserv1Uves" out of Its students, Herb Batr protested. "I'm basically a cooservaU•f! but I honestly feel we need oome radicals lo Ibis placo to rile things up. -'" "We 11't ~ trying to loject IOOle me Into Ibis calllpu5. Aa It Is, the speakers' policy Is !aillng. Kids come to school and go home w.!\!"'Ut ever loteractlng. They could go htj two yean Without making five triends," Bair lald. Trustee Dr. James Manhall said he was impressed with whit the students had to say,_:'Sqmewh~ there ought to !le 1 way ~ve tjlll ~ helpful to everybody;~ said. . .. -• ONE · Thero is no q'ues!iOll that ti.. number one fiber in • ~ j 0 industry today is nylon, A survey of 25 of the pet ( · J manufacturers revealed the following: Nylon i" 1972 accounted for 55.7% of an carpets offered f., sole, on INCREASE of 4.6 %, Wools declined from 10,4% lo 9.1 %. AcryUcs declined from 20.1 ~. to 18.5% • Polyostels declined from 13.2~. to 12.7% • Olafins declined fn>m 4.5 ~. lo 3 % , These figures ere astounding because of the fact that tha de- mand for nylon crutwd a mmendous shortage end many mils wife looking for ANY kind of yam to l'Mke c.rpet from. W o hove hundreclt of nylon c.rpels at Alden'• -atop oncl -us. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES • 1663 Plactntla Ave. IN COSTA Mn.A tlHCI 1911 COSTA MESA 646·4831 ltf• •"""' t tw l1JO: l'tt. t te t: Set. t:JO te I • • ; " ' ) • -• , Sadillehaek · VOL 66, NO. 72, l S£CTIONS, 42 PAGES • ORAN6E COUNTY, CAUF'ORNJA • Today'• l'blal N.V. TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1973 TEN CENTS ·saddlehack Student • • Speaker Policy free Dow of ldeu on campu1. 1'ruJtee MlcbaeJ Colllna replled, "Cltnpuaea are not malntalned at a forum for free speed>. Our Job here Is to educate." Tbe group of about 10 ~dents wu protesting -clause of the !our-point ~ provision, which aaya that wheneVer a controversial speaker ap- pears oo campus another speaker representing an opposing point of view must be given equal time on the same program. 'Jlie llludenb uted tor I mllion of the policy noadln( "tllat eqaal -•tog t1mO will be provided, -..... rly .,,. quested, to pretea! -1J>i Vfew poll>W, howevet;", not neeessarDy .,_ the mne program." Al an llour of beolo!I dll<usslon on des, a commJttee of Tnlltees IJoo>. na rry. Jamo Manholl. llld Rans Vogel was cbalen to meet with three students ahCl try to work cut a solution. . Alfredo cabrera, • student,· aald he felt lnslllto4 -told "I can1 llatm to a OllHldod ~r and DOI team. As klog u I can question him J can: learn. n Herb Bair, I 1$-ytaMld otudent and rtporler for the Larta~ the c:ampos newapoper. aald. "We are not lbeep - we are adult&. We have ramJllDl apathy here ••• educlUoo ii 'Oci•Ur.ation u well oa academia. Yet Ill they want to talk about 11 football!" Jemoo aald the apeakera pollcy had caused him portlcu!Jlr trouble In planning programs for the one "dead" period of the week, Friday from 11 a.m. to noon. when there are no claues; 'l111s period is supposedly available for all-campus meetings and special J>l'Oll'M!I. "With only ID hour to wort with, we cannot get ID tel.equate dllcussion when we have to have two spea.ien," Jen.son aald. "Why not have the programs In the evening, open to the publlc:!" Trustee Patrick Backus asked. Rail Wage Hiked 10.7% Tentative Pact Covering 500,000 Workers Told . . UPI T....,... 'SJaockell' 'Defense Secretary Elliot Rich· ~ antson ·said .in a speech be was ; shocked to discover the Army · bas only three ~minority em- ptor.es and no women filling its c!Vilian' executive Jolls. He said 'Ji~ expected iibproveinent. . . "· federal .. Agents Sei.Ze 24 Tons ~Jf Marijuana -WASHINGTON (AP) -The govern- ~! ~ounced today It !IOhed $19.9 iol!JJon Jn Dlegal nareotics, tnctui!lng 11 tons or marlj(ijlna, in a combined opera-*" with ~ Mexi<;an gove~t that it ~k\. crippled a maj9r drug-fll\U~gllng nn' '(" the Arizona-Mexico )>Order· U.S. officials said they also seized 9.3 plliftds of.heroill and made more -too IJ'Tbb.· 'Ibey sOJd they selsed records .of • "large smlJ88llng. C<lllSptracy ,...poos1. 111ft for bringing toos of marijuana and vw.IU-kilos of heroin" into il>e United Slates. ~ petallsf lnclodllig the nam~) of those -led and where they -were ·..tud, '!""" not immediately announced. ' 'lbe street value or the seized marl-Jii-was put at $1t.7 mllllii~ and Ute . "'-"'In at $1.5 million. The am01111t of belOin would be enough to supply 181,ooo ad41cts for one day .. • ~fbe resolts of the Mex~Unifed ~ exercise, called · 110perauon cac- tut;" were announced at a news con--• . derence at the executive office of I:l,arco!lca Control Prostain lnformollon. W enfon:ement authorities from Mex· oleo! Ind the state of Arl2ona atteod<d the oon!erence. WASHINGTON (AP) -A tenative wage and fringe benefit settlement covering virtually all the nat.iOn's 500,000 railroad woikers was announced today. Spokesmen for the rail industry and 15 unions involved in the pact said the agreement would increase wages and benefits by~ total of 10.7 percent over 18 m<inlhs bei!innlng July I. This would iilclude a 4 percent wage in· crease effective next Jan. 1 and a revised pension system which would put an ad- ditional $42.75 per. moillh into the payehec.ts of rail workers. The industry would pick up the payments that heretofore bad been paid by the workers Reagan Says He Won't Run SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan announced today he will not run for the U.S. Senate in 1974. The 62-year-old Republi~n chief ex- ecutive announced his decision at a Capitol news conference. Reagan told reporters, "I a m personally not attracted to the idea of participating in a legislative body after having held an executive position." He said, "I have listened to those who urged me to seek that office. I feel greeUy honored by their expressions of confidenco and offers of support. "But l am convinced I have a greater ~nsibillty which is to devote the next two years to achieving ~ several goals our administration has set for itself begioning with the limitation of tax. burden borne by all Californians," he said. Reagan repeated he would not run for a third term as governor. When asked "Does this mean you will run for president?" he smiled and said that was not the meaning behind his arr nouncement. ,,, The Governor has declined to say whether be might become a presidential candidate tn lt761 saying only that It Is too early to speculate who might be GOP candldatet IO mcceed President Nixon. 'l'he Senate seat of· Democrat Alan cn.oston is up neh year and Cranston is seeking a second six-year term. ~ has said. fDr some time be might consider running for the Senate. A, number of prospective GOP earl" didates have been awaiting Reagan's decision ao they Can decide whether to try f~ gpve~r or for the Senate. 'Ibey Include former' Nixon cabinet of· fleer Robert H. Finch and Stele Con- (See REAGAN, Pi1e 11 into the separate railroad retirement funds that covers rail workers in lieu of Social Security. A spokeaman for the Coat of Living Council sal4 today it Is llkely that the council will review the tenblUve. settle- ment to see if it comea within the gov· emment's voJuntary pay standards. But the spoke~ !8.kt council direc- tor John T. Dunlbp would bav~.no com- ment until he ?e\'.Je'f.ed the settlement. The goveinment's J>aY standard allows for wage increases ot 5.5 percent a year plus another 0.7 percent in fringe bene- fits. But the council has indicated the standard will be applied flexibly oa a case-by-case basis. The agreement is subject to ratlflca- Uon ill' olllclal> of the I~ unions, and In ooe case by a membership vote. 1be single wUon requlring membership ap- proval is the Sheet Metal Workers. The tentative agreement came s~ month!!! ahead ·of contract expiration dates July I. Sources sakl the settlement was vlrtualiy dictated by the shaky flnanctel cooditlon of the railroad retirement fund. 1be agreement would also include pro- vWons for early retirement and raise maximum lifetime major m e d I c a I benefits from IS0,000 to $250,000 per -· The National Railway Labor Con- ference which negotiated for the industry said the proposed agreement covers virtually all Class One railroads in the nation except for those, like the Penn Central, involved in reorganlz.ation under bankruptcy proc<edings. However, Penn Central workers would be covered by the improved retirement benefits, which must be approved by Congress as amendments to the Railroad Retirement Act. The allllOUDCi!ment saJd It was the fll'St time in history that the industry reached agreement on an issue! wlth all unions ahead of contract expiration. 'Instant' School Favored Poruibles .May Splve Ir-pine Crowding Problems --• , I t .. , , ~ .J!?: ' · •'Dr. C'rlib:: '1f1111Y ;.:;.i bn. iiruDTea are now local.a, c.uJd be lhut • - -.... -prove tho Ille bY next ,..,. would be pot-clown. An Instant school built entlrely ol lillle, but would Ibo be very dlffi<ult to The district has formally adopted the portable classrooms, ~Y be one solution do, accordlng to Planning Consultant position that. it would like to close lrvtne ot overcrowding next year in the Irvine David Kina. School, but 1t needs agreement from the Unified School DiM:rict. Second, the trSMfer of portable state that the school is hazardoul. The Truatees learned Monday night that classrooms costs $2,500 to $3,000 per unit. chances of getting state agreements lo residents of the Culverdale area would Corey said the di.strict probably would thls position are Wlknown. welcome such a temporary achoo! and not be able-to afford a cost like this un-"We're giving the possibility of a that it mlgbt be feasible for the district less the old Irvine School, where the (Set SCHOOL, Page l) to resbuffie its existing p or ta b le classrooms to provide it. Other alternatives for housing students included "°"linued use of the old lrVine Schpol, and tbe mixing of all-year students with traditional-year students in the same school buildings. Trustees-made no decisions Monday night. But school officials said recom· mendatioos would he made for rmal decisions at the March 28 board meetings. Meanwhile, school officials will be stu- dying the financial and technical feasibility of the various opOoos. The district might . -Shut down the old Irvine School next January when the new College Park school apens. -Transfer portable classrooms from that campus to a site in the CUlverdale homes area. . -Offer both all-year and tradltiona1 calendar optioos at both College Park, El Camino Real, aod possibly Turtle Rock and Univenity Park as well. However, Superintendent Stan Corey said there are a number of pradical con- siderations that must be thoroughlJ ex· plored lint. The possibility of an "instant" campus at Culverdale is tied to several other problems. First, the district must aaz.uire a atte. At present, it has only one mte It would like to own, and It falls wlthln the flood . Burton Choice? Councilmen to Mull New Mayor for Irvine Tonight By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ... ,,..., ,,.., ''"' Irvine City Council members tonight will reorganize and aources close to the center of city government predict Coun· cilman John Burton will be elected mayor , replacing. WWiam Fischbach. Burton, who headed the cityhood cam· paign 81 chainnan of the Council oE Com· munities of lrvine, was elected to tbe first city councU along with only one of his four running mates of loyal CCI workers. AJ 1 result, in the early days of cltybood Burton Ind E. Ray Quigley Jc. frequently found themselves on the short end of S to 2i votes, partlcu)arly on issues such as Immediate adoption o! the Irvine COmpany General Plan. Opposing IUCb baste were tbe new city's fint mayor -Fischbach -and two others endorsed by the en. viroomental acl.i-On, citizens forum group Irvine Tomorrow. Council worn an Gabrielle Pryor and Councilman Henry Quigley. In recent months, however, the trio of presumed environmentalists have split on many issues. The political results of those splits and the threat of massive reorganization of the city's planning commlaslon are behind tonight's expected shift in city leadership. Councilmen meet at 7:30 in city hall, 4201 Campus Dr:lve. Key votes contributing to the dlsin· tegration of the "environmentalist" ma· jorlty of the Irvine City CouncU, recalled today by observers Include : -·Consideration Toairlat :i Soldiers Die -Mayor Ftscbbach's vote with Burton and Ray Quigley oo Campus Drive, the road and bridge project which borders the city'• only marsh reserve. -Henry Quigley'• vote with Burton and Ray Quigley defeating a strict, in- novative set of standards for en- vironmental impact reports following re-' . .bi Explosion 'Hole' . ' \ ' . . ~t BiirstOw F~rt There " • "hole" .. sm111 .. 1our acres ,and u large u 10.5 acre1 left 1n BARSTOW (AP) -. 'i)l'ee ~~ the Village o1 Vllley View planned com· ~ kDled In an uplooloa \'bile ""'!""' m= ,,iilcll tile Irvine.City Co\meil will '1tll' ol surplus Ann1 exploil,., .. Ft.. ·re..~ loaJ&ht.> ),tjln near bete. Army olflciab a.ltd ~ Last -. Councilman E. Ray Quigley aQ. Jr. proposed muds loWer densities for the ;'fhe blut OCOllTed late M<llday on the 21kcre ... 1ra1 Irvine parcel than were ••i,.cty Fuse Ranae," ll>oul u milts oro"""'1 by the Irvine Company 0< f-the central ..... of the -· nvlsed by Ille planning commission. ' .Authorities m ol • vii> The orl(llnal ...,,_1 called for 1113 • tlmlo u S.St!L Roy · :11..ond SDet. ...., of 1 mli< ol llomes at a ~ of u.alel uelfuo, 13, the 11th "Ei· 1.44 unlit l]l<Old over the IU ...... p9lva ~ !Mr*--1 at Fl. 5cbool --r '"'" eltmentery and .llacArtlllr. Tllelr baaletowno ...... not -lnt.nnedlalo -and :IG ..... o! imnlediately availlble. llObllc pork CDllllltute 19 ..,.... of tho dlf· 'l'be name of tho tltlrd tldlm, I n> lermco between the -ID and net ID llonal auardsman. wunot ...-peoc1-acn OpnlL Slreels llOODWlt for the ,..,_ 1111 noillicotioo ol llla f11nliy. nla1nder oI the lll'OIHel acreqe <lJI- • !l'lte uplool•er had been ~I lo Ft. ference. Irwin fn>m Ft. MacArtltur for d~. Rq Qulalq'I -1 ~teinod Ille AuthoriUer aald Cl ol Ille ..... dovelopment ..,.. tile 113 ..,... at a _..._ --J-1.6-perpwa"'"' • • -j • Ill Valley View (See NEW MAYOR, Prge Z) Lower -mean fe...,. peopltwm live In the Vlllace of Vllley View. Fewtr people · means tlle city caa ... quire the Irvine Comprny lo dedicate fewer acres of port land. In !act. Instead of 20 ..... promlrod by the company, the city may now, ...., oo lts more _.auve (hJ&ber) ea-tes of Valley View l>OPullUon, ~ onlJ ..- quire dedlcatlon.ol u acrer ol lud, city pta_,.-. llmll eald today. In the Jnlllal pr-1 tlle Irvine Com- ...., of!erod to ldd IJ """"' ol ~ port land. Jamer hYJor, dlnelor of ploftnlac 14- -for Ille --aald llolay: •wa -.m..,. cauncllmm to imke the ')llrb nqulnd ill'·tlle dly ......... tho C!ll]J -,,,, .. _ In the city IOO!n&, document. AllYlhlM -that -(tho 9.5 acru) rboufd lla 'COlllldored to be port of the """ ... • tho prefoot,". Taylor Aid. "That meam the U acres ii no longer part ol the ikll -the cbanced dealillos nqun lllDlber design of Valley View. ' Rail Crossing Improvement Set '1'm not rrylng ... 'te not go~ to pro- vide that -pork acreage,' Tiylor Jeffrey Road In the dt7 of I.-will added, P>inUnl out the clwtpd densltiea be lm~ved and lluhtng llgirta and mun a "Cha.ijced program of develop.. automatic gates inltalled at the Santa Fe ment." • Railway croaini 1" Orll!Ce County. From the com111111'1 slandpoln~ he Tbe croulng w11 the rceoe of a fotel aid, K would be unfair for the couocil to accident In December. "lepllte'' the add<d ~ whet> the The city wtll poy f0< -lrn- lllDDller ol lllltl ...-the -of pemenls from 350 !eet oout1I of the tlle" Lind and part ..__. m]j()ll' IJ'ade ........, to 'ilo ieet north. .llrvt -_.,..bar bea> reducod. .Cool ol the '!Wk II eollmoted al MS,000 , Riprdi-J Wbat ilappolll to Ille IJ '· of wlllch the !9l1road will ,_,. $1UOO, tho -of dfdlcllal""' liopr .. ed pork,• =.,111,500 rnd tho State Gntde thera are ....u.r four ..,.. of poCeatlal , holec:llon Fund, $11,IGO. weed patch loll In tlle counc11 .. ppiovtd Tbe dty•t cort !0< rood ~ 11 veitlon of Vllley View. ettlmated at $11,m '111t a ....Wll from the li>1!erlnl Tbe COIO!IY will 11<1 u project 'of'tlle Uon. Pvt dedldttlon lt .... ...,....., -and -"1U,M).l,.l'lp' I) ICtllt. • J eD100 replied that there Is toa much compeliUon in tbt evenings and lhere are no' buildings big enough to handle a crowd. Outdoor facilities would be too cold, be said. Jenson pointed out that in a IW'Vey oC 13 blgb scboob and oommWllty co11...,, he found lhat Saddlebac.k~a apeaken policy wa!I the most restrictive. "'Jbe hJgh schools are 1etlillg 15-year-olds have more rreedom or speech than we have," (See SPEAKERS, Pace !) ""-Flld ... S-ate2' John W. Dean Ill, President Nixon's legal counsel, may be summoned by the Senate Judi· ciary Committee to testify on the nomination of L. Patrick · Gray as FBI director in a cha!· lenge to the President's execu- tive privilege. (Story, Page 4). Federal Agents Beef Up Forces At Wounded Kn'ee PINE RIDGE, S.D. (UPI) -Fedlral marshata and FBI agents, beefed up with a 300 percent increaae in IJllDpowet' and heavy equipment, today tightened their linea arocmcl the hamlet of Wounded ' Knee, seized by mllltanl lndlanl two weeks ago. Wyman Babby, area director ol tlle Bureau of Indlan Affairs, said be knew ol no in<ldeots dlrlrig the night. "There was no firing as far as I've been told," Babby said. But where in early stages or the block· ade -once lifted and then ret1&ored - the federal men coofiDed their search ac· tivitiea chiefly to roadblocks . today they were patroltlng all approaches. UPI phologr1pher Jim Hubbard al· (8« INDIANS, Pqe ti Orpge Coast Weather 11iat third storm, erpected on Wednelday, will not make It on tbe Orange Caul Wllil Thursday, ac- cording to the weather service. Wednelday should be mostly awiny with 1llghtly warmer tempen- tureo. Hlgha at the beachel In tlle low f()s, rising to 6' inland. Over- nJght Iowa In the 40s. INSIDt: TODi\V HOil! W1 tO. tum o/ !tadb'17 a.apfrln companie1 so haw hc<lf'- aclttr. Th~ir odt1ef'tiling clotflu haw bffn chall""l/Od bv 111• FTC. SH llOr!/. Page 12. t..M.o..,. 11 ._ . ..._ -._ " ·-" 0..111 ....... ' --. . ....,.. ........ ,, ,.._ "" ............. ' *"• r ¥1 11 --" ---" ......... ,.... .. --. -..,, .... , ...... ,..,, ,_ ,. -" -. ::::"" -l.111• -. I • • DAILY PILOT IS Sewage Unit • Gets Water Panel Okay '-· -IJ,1973 -• Olirt ....... " tbe -... E1111 '"' JCIM a .. ~ dntlopmlDb. . -"-1 Qm..,, ..... -""""'"' Ille dtf'• ~ plll1 -·--Wlber and llam al Soulli p--- ..... -... ,..-0, blllUd le1low - cl-!or dtpil;llall ---al the ''Ytllm" al ,w~~ra, ' A -mUU r ••· Et wboae llml P~ Iii¢.'llllO · tbe .-on oewage system or ·~ cl\t:Jira<t, looin& II OJI tbd 4 to 1 ..... ~ ll1l1a 1r11 ol cenllal Orange iilllln.< ol the plannhii com· COUnly hu the approval ol the Santa Ana mlulooen iias been ~ to be a Jleclooal Water ~lily control Board. ma)of l'fllllt of the oouncll .-gan1u. 'Rle board, al lbe reqll<ll ol the Alioo lloo. Oouncllmm already llavo wled to Wal<T --1 "'"""" (AWMA) UmJ• ~-•-of __ ,_._ to Ol1I Friday decla...i tbe project ''urgent." • ----....--· ..... '1'1111 wtll allow the El Toro Wat.r Year ~ QI the prutnl four year, " DIJlrlcl to lsoue up to SS mlllloo In staigen!d la'ml. ..... •• ., ... , ·- revenue bondl without an election. Tho Cocnmbilonen nominated by both A WllA will applLilor $15 million In Bwt4n Ille! ll<ory Quigley llave been --moat lreqlllDlb' D>tDUODed federal luods to P finance the II«>-......i ~ ball aa belnc deatlaed lo aet II""" Tbe AWMA 15 • cooperative · UteuewbeotheCOW1cllreapp0mt•com- orglllbatlon ol elgbt aaeoc!ea balldllnc mtlllara In April. wute wat.r. llenry Q!Jlaley'a oouncll raco pulneT •• Cir! Jt.ymla, manager of the Moulton Wayno Clark, who drew a...,..,. twin Niguel Water District, and cba1rman of on the comm•qioa and HrVed a1 ltl first AWllA, said the SS mlllloo would be the cbeil'D>l1J, alrudy bu tenderod a llral o1 aevcll bond !Jlues to llnance (Uignallon efleCl!ve at the end of bla major "Wiie tttatment plant et· term: panalon~ lnatallatlon of trunk Unes Ille! 11onry Shuptrine, Burton's political all- ocean mtfall m the IOUtb county area. viser bu not resigned but ta alao a ooe- K1mJa said the El Toro Water DI.strict year' commissioner, havlng drawn a .• '• will con~ lo lake waste wat.r lrom ahorl lot. .. ,. Roamoor Sanitation, Inc. and convey it Frank Hlll'di Henry Quig]ey's political .. ,., to 1be ocean outfall at Albo Beach. adviser and council race campaign •. ~ before the water quality funager 11 among the lllOlt outspoken ~ board aJJepd that overflows ft'om the of commiakmers and has been privately ·,t -·-Laguna 11111s plant bu entered the aubject cl crlttcllm by Individual ~ Son DleCo Cleat Ille! found Ill way lo councilmen ,.-if u.er-Newport Bay. Additionally, the commissk>n'1 na-E.I Olloa. prealdeul cl Ro-tlnnally-lmown enviromnentallsl author flenltetm, Inc., said tbat Lel.IDre Wwld Wesley Man: bas suggested be will not ,..,, bu 1,000 1lftlllnp Ille! U.000 seek reappointment to the commlsston. ,........,la and woold crow to 14,000 dwell-The late of these lour COIDIJIWlonera lllp 111111 :rJ,Ollll reold"1la _,, Be said and the pola>Ull vacanclea may well n!sl tbe IJ'ltem'I 4IJpoA1 plant CIDDOt handle in the outcome of alliances formed at the ~ elflllent wilhlul the lie-In lonlgbt's reorganization meellng of the -El Ton> Dlllrk:I. city council '~1 It was dilclo*'1: tbal AWMA dins The avaiW>le optioo.I are: .-ally lo m1lerlall7 ealll'ge a fznl· Both <l<!lgleya and Burton joining .. ·- .· .. i:: I:: ,; ,: r= I~ <~~ ,:! ' ... : ... . . .. ' . ' . ' . ' . . ' . . ; .. " • • • ., • " • •• .. . . .. .. . ' :· 1 • . .. .. • ' •• ••• .. • : • • ' •• • l •• v •• : • i, • -plan\ In Allto ~ imd pul a elect Burton mayor -IUlfall llno 1,000 !eel lnlo Ille ocean. -Councilwoman Pryor Flschbeeh and ~ :'1~ f;.!"b~ ~':.i: ~~~deY joining to' r&elecl Mayor Gt OranP CounlY, made up of many con· -Tho unanimoos rt-election of the --Lalolle LO<)I, apealdng , Ir Ille eooll"°" -lhlil the pro)-city ' lint mayor. • ftl woe tltwblle but said tbe group In any event, a staggtrlng list of other bad doubll alMJul lbe atu of the proposal. ~ty council appolnlmenll, tocludlng the • v1ce mayorship and various committee l"'ine Dinner , • Tickets on Sak ,,._ tor lbe MlrCjl S1 fund.rilllng platle-and lalenl lllow OD tlle lawn of. Partero-JJannlOn Of'p. 1n Irvine, are -on..UalSSMCb. Mall onion may be lelll to !nine 11 , , ., lloit !IOI, lrlille.11111. '1liole with • .. • ..... ll!d: •• , "'77r# _return .......... eocl ..... ;,m ,,. ~ and .U.. wtD be bOld for pickup lhe ~of the --benofll. Irvine Is. . " II the organ!Jallon pfan-ninl the dty'• llnt aria Ille! cultural lesttval !or mld·May. • '!be flD\d.<alslng dlnnOt begins at 7 p.m. on March a1 with the entertainment, tocludfo& a brief perlormance by the JniDe rmununlty '!beater, atarUng at 9. ' Thieves Get-Haul Of Scrap Alominb I Thlevea m••li.eir roands ID t~ ahead ii the ocnp man .., his ~ --about 1,IOO poundl of -p alDmlnuJn lrom .. 11-rinO lndll*"1 llrm Monday. • 1 11Db«t J. P-of the Mebol Qlmpeny, !nil AnnstroiiC Ave., told police the haul Included II separate 50 pJlon contalnm stulled with aluminum scrap pieces. '!be total monetary Joos -DOI given In the grand tbell n!porl. AEC Makes Pitch WASlllNGTON (AP) -Tbe Atomic :Energy Commission told COOgraa Mon- day that Jt should be the ooe to decide wbelber floating nuclear power plants are built elf the Allanllc Ille! Pacific coests. AEC Commissiooer James T. RameJ testified at a Senate Commerce subcommittee bearing. DAILY PILOT TIW Or .... C:-1 0..ILY PILOT, wttll wlllctl It ,......, tN ..... ,,,..,,, It 11Ub1""911 1W "" Or-. C-.t ~ '*""*"'· s... .......... -"'*4Wwd, .......... ~ ... ....,., .., c.i. ~. "-' •Nldl. H911HlllMll ~,_..lln '11t'9y, l...- hKfl. lr.tMllMll...._ -t s.~ c...,_... "" ,,_ c.oit•-... Molli• .... '-4 tdll .... It MlllNd S.lillnltYI Mii sww;.\'1- fllt ,,wr,.,.. _.1111"4 111ai11 11 .t m w.1 .. , ltrwf, c.11 IMM, C.lltomlt, n1-. ll:•llert N. W1-4 ~---~ ...... Jee• It. c..1.., Vlcf .,,_...,,, ..... ._,, M..,..., lkM•• ic ... 11 .... n""" A. M11r,tlh11 _,._ °''"" H. L.ot •1ck1'4i r. Nill ....... Mtlwtlftf Mltwl -,_.,.. ._, -W• ... '"'"" ~ ...,., .. N-....1 ........... ~ .... I m "w.tt A-""9•4M; liwlil1 ll'OI 9wlll ......... -~1 -Ntr* .. ~llMI , .. ,e 1 I l"tt '4MH1 Cl .,... "''""*• MJ.U71 .. ct •• ..... ..... hi -...... 491-44• ~-'·.s;--­~ ............. .._.,, ..... ......... .,-.....,.......,.. '*""" ll!ft" ... ..,. ................ ,.,. ... ., .. ..,,,.,.. ... . t::.J-,.., ... ,,.,,, • '-41 MIMt . ~·-... _..., .... lllMll'll11 "' -'I U.11 ,......, ...... ................. ,....,,. ind oounty organization ... ta are part or the reoraanJzation bargaining. l'rot11 Page J SPEAKERS ••• be said. Trustee Collins said he felt un- controlled .freedom of speech was what bad cauaed the breakdown In educaUnn OD ClmP*S acrolS the coonlry, In· cludlllg tam-ID-Orange Com.t,. '"lbeie'• a great need to prevent cam- puses from belnl uaed<aa a ooapboL We will not maintafn a eoapboz ·for either Jane Food& or John Schmitz al the tu· paY,en" eapense," he said. Jaile Fonda Is opeaklng at cat State, Fullerton Wedn.,· day. :The ~ po~cy WU .adopted In Seplelillier cit 196', whldl trustees pointed out followed ' a volatile ·year on college campuses throughout the country. , The Saddtebact atmosphere ii creatlng "little, cooservatives" out of,1ta students, Herb 'l!air protested. '1'm:'baaloally a conservaUve but I honestly )eel we need eome radlc:ala ID this place lo rile lhlnga ~',~are ju!t'teylng tol!ijecl '°'""!He into ·lhll campus. AJ Jt IJ, the opeakera'· poli!:J a~ 1\lcls <4rl>e to ocbool and ·go hOme .iliiu.i& ,.., lnteraclliig. 'Ibex . ...id go· bere. lwo yeara witliol4 11>•UJ' five friends '"Balr said. · . Trustee ilr. James Marahall saUI he was impressed with wha\ the 8tudenl5 had to say. "Somewhere !here oulb.I to be a way to solve this problem heljlful to everybody," he said. From Pagel REAGAN .•. troller Houston I. Flournoy. Finch said last week he has decided what he MU do, but won't make an an- nouncement for aboul two months. U . Gov. Ed Reinecke has declared be will run for governor and Atty . Gen. EveDe J. Younger is a probable can- didate. ~ The Qove.mor, first elected ln 1968 over incwnbent Democrat Edmund G. Brown, has said for aome time he ii Inclined to step down from publk: office during the coming two years to travel a natk>nal "mashed potato" circuit. lte said he would be speaking about what he claims ar& "Ideological myths" abroad In tbe land about government. 11'1ls has (Ired speculation that he then would try for the Republlcan presidentiaJ nomination in 1976 although be will be 65 years old when the primary baUlea are under way . Reagan made a late, unsucce!lful bid for the presidency at the GOP Nalional Convention in 1988. Pressed again today oo the prealdenlial ls!ue, Reagan sild, "I'm not discu&Sing what happen! after 1874." f'r9r9Pagel VILLAG~ ... qu~ al a rate di U ac:ru per l,000 peop1e. Coullcllmen reduced lbe pro- • ·~ population of V.alle1 ~" by a =.::ii:~or to!r;1:.. ID an ·'Ille couocll ml&hl ezpedod to ......ign · 1! lel!t the I r ..,... and posalbcy lbe total 10.1 acrt. to realclentlal usu when It reconskletf the matter tonight In the continuation of the public h<arlng . I U'IT ....... • Viet Cong To Re'lease 8-yearPOW SAIGON (AP) -Tbe Vlei COO& an· l10UllOed todoy lbol an Amedcu war prllooer held tonger lhall any other U.S. anldler In history 11 among tbooe belnl releaaed Friday. A!IO -tho 12 prlJonen belnl lumed ovor a\ llanol'• Gia Lim Airport It the raollna U.S. clvlllan ollldll cap- tured by the ~-. A YOUlll Marine 1Upposedly killed In Vl<Cnam and burled by hit family lour 1ell'I ago but who later turned up alive · also It oomtnir ou~ Tbe loniest held American captive II Maj. floyd Tbompaoo, now Ill. He WU captured March 21, liM, ID Quang Tri Provin<e jull below the Demilitarised l.ane, where he WU serving u I U.S. ad- viser with South Vletoamese lorcea. Tbompo... was then a captain. When releaaed Friday, be will have apenl 1,2TI days u a prisoner ot war, five mootha: longer than Navy U. Cindr. Everott .AlVarez, the first pilot shot 1d0wn over North Vletoam. TWO INDIANS ON HORSEBACK HELP PATROL PERIMETER AROUND WOUNDED KNEE Ftdoral Agonh Bttf Up Thtir Forc11 Outside Villogo Hold By Mllltont lndlans ENCAMPMENT The ranking U.S. civilian being relea1- ed II Pblllp Manhard, llZ, a aenlor career diplomat with the 'state Department. Manhard WU captured Feb. l, 11188, wheli Conununi,t lorceo aetzed the former l/"perlal capital of Hue during the Tel Ol(enslve'. From Pagel INDIANS ••. tempted an overland enlly to Wounded Knee and was turned back. He reported leCUrity was ''very tight." II was possible to leave the Oglala Sioux reservation where Pine Ridge and Wounded Knee are located, but the gov· emment lines barred entry to Wounded Knee where the Indians have declared they no longer recognlrA! the U.S. govern· ment a'nd are setting up one of. their own. '"Ibis action was taken because the Indians holding Wounded Knee used the period of time when they had lree access to the area to fortify their positions with more weapons and ammunition/' Ra1ph EricDoo, special assistant to Attorney General Richard Kleindienst, tald Mon- day In Washington. Four young Indians were arrested shortly after the blockade was set up. Federal agents said they found two rifles and a handgun In a search of the In- dians' car. '!be encirclement of Wounded Knee came less than 4S hours after the govern- ment lifted roadblocks, and one day after an FBI agent was shot in the hand dur- ing a abootout with Indlans. At the beigbl of tension last week, ooly U:ne ~ ~~ers were brnuglil .. tlie niadliTuck iiiilllgfoot Tra11- Bul today al least 10 Carrlen were In position as government forces made their way from six mttes outside Wounded Koee to within two miles of the Bettle-- ment on the Pine Ridge Reservation. Al least 2S men, 10 autoolobl.les, trucks and veblclea aiJo gwu:ded the blockade. ' Talent Contest Set Ma1·ch 23 In Saddleback . ·If you've got a talent for tong-and- dance that's waiting to be dilcovered , and yoo'"' a )'OUOll peraon In the Sad- dleback Valley, Y'OUl' big chance may be just around the corner. The annual Saddlebaclc Valley Ex· change Club's Search fOI' Talent Contest will begin at 7:30 p.m. March 23 at La Paz Intermediate School in Mission Vie· jo. Jr'l Saddleback young people from .&-18 are ellglble. Categorle9 include dancing, vocal numbers and instrumentals. Acts may contain not more than four participants and are limJted to four minutes. Contestants must be enrolled in a school in the San Joaquin or Tustin Unified School Districts and must not be under contract in the ne1d of their talent. The winner of eacll category will com- pete against other clubs in the area for an opportunity to represent the Sad- dleback Valley Club at Lab Tahoe dur- ing the district convention June 19. Kirk Monroe of radio station KAPX Stereo 108 of San Clemente will emcee the contest. Judges will be announced later, Ed Hatter, contest chairman, said. Anyone wishing to participate in the contest should contacl Hatter at 83G4$50 or drop a card to P.O. Box 444, El Toro 9263-0. FromPqeJ SCHOOL •.. school at Culverda1e serious con- i.iderations.'' said Corey . "But thel"f: are more difficulties with' th.is optlon than with any other, 11 he said. If Irvine SChool ls kept in operation and QJ.lverdale does ooi get an tmtant school. students from the north and cen- tral lrVtne areaa would be dlWled betWt<D Irvine, El C&mlno Rell, and College Park tcbools. 11ed Into these dec:islons 11 the question of all.year aclxlolt. Parenta at El Camino Real, Irvine, Turtle RoCt< and Unlveralty Park will have oeon iUr'veyed by Marth ia to determine lbdi prelorences. "We'll do tha best ·we can to offer the options ol e£1.ycar and ttlldltlollal echool· Ing to everyono," ~ l8ld. • U.S. Reveals 32 Names Of Prisone~s to Be Freed WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The Defense and Stale Departments made.public to- day the following list ol 'rl militaty pris- oners and five civilians ·to be released by the Viet Coog Friday In Hanoi. 'Ille five civilians were reported cap- tured during the Communist Tut offen- sive at Hue, South Vietn'am, on Feb. 1, 1968. • l • .Army CWO ~•nt'IJ ""'9 Anton, 2f, Wllllnaboro, H.J. 2. ~''"' C•pf. aroa R•YfllCllld An:Mr, 30. Rod!Hler, N.V .. 11111 Pen!IKOJI, Fi.. 1 Army Spec. 4 Mlchatl P1trldl 8r1ndl, 25 Coast Council BtJgged Down Over Procedure A procedural regulation swamped South Coast ReglonB.l Zon_e ~ation C.lnmw!OiiW~!a~~·ct1on Monday night and delayed ihe first hear· ings by five hours . Commissioners squabbled 1rom 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. -with a two-hour dinner break -over a state cominisslon rule that regional bodles couldn't vote on ex· emption claims without a staff recom- mendation following a public beari.Dg. A majority of the commission wanted to vote Monday, despite protests from commission staff members and the at- torney igeneral's representative. No stall recommendations were prepared Monday night. Jeffrey Freedman of the state Attorney General's office said adopted ru1es of procedure call for action on vested rigbb: cases at the next subsequent meeting following public hearings. A few commissioners, e s p e c 1 a 11 y James Reedy of Santa Monica and Donald Phillips ol Long Beach were miffed at the state roadblock. But shortly after 8 p.m., Reedy1mov~ to begin the hearings and vote next week. The commission then conducted 26 public hearings until 3 a.m. today. (flomlfOWll wllHllld ,, '""llY't l'Mllltf). 4. Ai"mY M. Stt. Kl,,,.., Oardoll lrlf'ICN, ». l..- a..dl, t•llf. 5, Armt S. lft. Roblrt ,.,_ton ~ 15, Por'lt1N1, ~ L Army S. $11. Jamel AltJtlindff 0.IY Jr., U, New York CllY. 1. Army S. lof, T}lclmls Jim• Devi•, 15, f:uf1l1, A11. I. Army 591. Pfttr f:dw•rd Or•bk:. U. Union lrld9e, N!IJ. • a '·Marine PY!. Frtdlr1df Loi.II• Albtrt Jr., 15, 8'M1fwaod, N.Y. 10. Air Porte Col, · ThiDdor9 WlllDll OvY, 4. T11CIDll, Ar1L, 11111 Elmlllinl, H.Y. 11. ~rlnl &11. Jt""'1 l.•'I' Ktlll, M. ToMckl. °" .. 12. Mlrln1 Sp!, Abel L11TT K""""9tl, !4, 0.-, Colo. U. Arm'I Mii. l"loYll H1rolll Kl.lll!MI', :n, 0.11¥111• ilnd llldtfnond, Vt. 14. Army S. kl. Mldliltl Robtrl Lrier, U. Jtldf. ford, Ill. 15. Annr s. kt. JL/11111 WOltM ........ 1"11 .. lkl, v •. 16.. Arm'1 s. s,1. 111111 McMltlMI, 15, Ol"flnil, 1'11. 17. Army $. $91. Wlltl1rn Grws M<M11rr1"1, 21, Tuoon Ind kolllcf1ll. Ar~ lL Army Set. Don Alen Mac:Pfllll, >&,. Olllmsford. M•~ It. Army Pie. Gllllev Alolt Mehrer. U. O<nilfl1, N.it. -0.StTlllld trio' !Ill \lilt C-II blflng .n Auslr11!1n. XI. Mtrlflf Mill. '"" Joiel>h MonlilQlll, 21, An-"'°"'' IC•fL. ilnd T111lln. Cillll. 21. .Arm' I . Stl. Klrw 0.Yld ltl'flOrll Jr., 27, Cl11ca90 111111 Detl'oll. 1:1. Merine $91. AlfonlO RIY Rllll, 27. 1111 Gilr- dM11 itnd Sin!• Rot.I. Clllt . 23, ,,.,.rl111 ~ RmMld L.. Rk191Wer, 1:1, Howlon. Ttlli: ' • ,. h '::l--~-111: """"'~' ...... .,..._ .. a. ........ T-I u. Air Force s, Set. John A. YOW\I, 21, wu .. 111 Ind Cl\leilQo, Ill. _ J 26.. Amw Mii. . T_. Wlllllm Gotlu, :M, Sl'ltt'ld•n Ind Chtyame, Wyo, '17. lvrm'I' ~I. FIDYll J11MS 1lloml*ln. 3t, HIW Miiford. N.J. The civilian prisoners were identified as: i. .Alo1nc1er Hitnd1r10n, "· ot Sorlrw v111w. Clllf .. who hild bll!I ~ In SOulll Vlltn1m by 1 ~t1Y knowll 11 Pil(.lnc Ardllttc:ll ilncl Envll'll:fr .. 2. Pl'llllP W. MJontlilrd, Sl, MC'Lliln,, V1., 1 Sl11'9 DNprtmenl offlctr wlllt hid biltn ""'"' In lovtll VldMm. 1 Rullllt J . ,..., S2. Eli.ert.. Midi .. lft'lpioylld by PKlflc Ardl!Mda _. Envl-1. 4. ltld\lrd H. 5"111d'"9, J6, Enid, Oltlt;., of 'ldlk Ardllltch i11111 El'llllllMrl. S. E-W"""'" JO, KencJllla. W11., ' ctv1U1n entPIO'l'ed tlJ IM U.S. Ar'm'I' In SOllfll Vllllliltn. Two School Districts Plan Joint Meeting Trustees· of the San Joaquin Elemen- tary and the Irvine and Saddlebact Unllled School Dlstrlclo will meet In a ~1!1 joipt session Wednesday to dl>cu .. 1nl!<iol bulldlng progrilln•. Th~ ~ting Wil} l)e at 7:30 p.m. at Los ~ lntmnedlate School In El Toro. Also rehimlng home '"'frill be Pfc. RooaJd L. Ridgeway, who the Com- munlstl said wai.'capUred Feb. 25, 1988, near a U.S. outpost al Kbe Sanh. Whal was believed to be the remalno ol RM!iewaf and olber members of his patrol caught In a North Vietnameae am.- bum were ~Vfftd, returned to the United Statea and burled lour yeara ago. Ridgeway'• D>Olher 15 Mildred A. Rldg<way of Houston, Tu. * * * Tustin Marine To Be Releasea Friday in Hanoi A Tustin man II listed among the next group of American prisoners of war ocbeduled lo be released by the North Vietnamese Friday in Hanoi. · Marine Maj. Paul Joseph Montague abs been a POW since Mardi 29, 11188, when bis helicopter was shot down on a ~ over South Vietnam. Montague'• wife, Sblrley, and their three chlldren live ID Tustin. She aald to. 4'1 that -~ ta ',''v~ and kind of numb al this point -bUl very, •""1 delighted." Tbe Moalague children, Steve, 18; Lin· da, almost lt, and Pamela, 11, are "just out of it," their mother laughed. Pentagon offlclals called Mrs. M'on-- tague to tell her the news at 5:46 a.m. to- day. Sbe said she was already up and cookinJ breakljlst. Although the U.S. rel<l'!I point hasn't been announced ye~ Mn. Montague said she ii aure her husband wlll come back lo nearby C&mp Pendleton In San Diego County • When first told last January that Maj, MDD\igue would be released lrom prison camp, )ilii wife said she would have a big party to celebrate. Todtty she added, "Sure we will but just being together will be a big reun· ion," I Mrs. Montague's birthday is next Tues-- day. She said today It will be her hap- piest. The gift of news of her husband's return. &ome Js the· ''greatest I've ever received," the aald. A· YARN .FOR EVERYONE to I ' ' There is no q!"'slion that the number one fiber in the carpet industry today is nylon. A survey of 25 of tho l1r9asl e<1rpet manufacturers reveoled the following: • Nylon in 197l .ccounttd far 55.7~. of oR e<1rpeh off ... d for an INCREASE 'of 4.6~ •• • Wo~s declined from 10.4~. to 9.1 ~ •• . ' Acrylics declined from 20,1 y, to '1 a.s '/.. P~yeslets declinl!d from 13.21, to 12.7~ •. Olefins decGntd f~' 4.5 ~. to 3 '/. • • These figures art aslounding because of tf11 fact that the d .. mand for nylon created,~ tromenclous shortage and many mils ware looking for ANY kind of yarn to mtkt carpet from. Wt have hund....ls of nylon e<1rptls 1t Aldon's-slop ind -us. • ALUEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plactntfo An. IN COSTA Ml$A llNCI ttl7 COSTA MISA 646-4831 M-. • n..n. t le 1110; l't4. t te t1 s.t. t:JO le I • • • • • lVOL. 66, NO. 72, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . • TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1973 • • • Today's F1aa1 TEN CENTS Tree Replacement Impact Report Reje cted ' . cil: ''('.ould the old uh U... be moved ftom.dly m.ets to dty parka!" "The report Is lncomplele Jn IOllle other ueu alJo," Torn Severn1, the city's director of environmental retOWces saJd. He aiggested the report be sent back to Bigler. Severns aald the report does not clear- ly ~lolo the problem with the !rm, ncr does It compare the environmental q_uallllea ol lbe ash !roe against other ~. 'lbe city's public worta department Uf'IT ......... MEANWHILE-PRISONER EXCHANGE GOES ON IN SOUTH VIETNAM Alllocl Troo.,..Arrl .. ln l ien Hoo W~~IJ111 ~ Viotn1,..... Flog• -• POW H~td for 9 Yea rs ,. To Be R eleased Frma y SAIGON (AP) -The Viet Cong an-'"1e longest held American captive ls notmeed today that an American war • Maj. Floyd Thompson , now 39. He was prisoner held longer than any other U.S. captured March 26, 1964, in Quang Tri soldier in history is among those being Province just below the Demilitarized released Friday. · Zone, where he was serving as a U.S. ad- • Also among the 32 prisoners being viser with South Vietnamese forces. turned over at Hanoi's Gia Lam Airport Thompson was then a captain. When is the ranking U.S. civilian official cap-released Friday, he will have spent 3.277 hired by the Communllts. days as a prisoner of war. five months A young Marine supposedly killed in longer than Navy Lt. Cmdr. Everett Vietnam and burled by h1i family four -Alvarez, the first pilot shot down over years ago but who later turned tip alive North Vietnam. also is coming oul The raDking U.S. civilian being releas- '* * * Tustin Marine l'o Be Released • Friday in Hanoi ' . A 'l\J.stln man is Hated among the next JlOUP of American pri9oocrs : of war icbeduled to be released by the North Vietnamese Friday In Hanol •Marino Maj. Paul ·Jcioepb MOOllglte ohs been a POW since Mardi 29, 1988, ,• bJa bellC"l'ter WRI shot down 00 a 'blon,over SOutb Vietnam. . I • ed' is· Philip Manhard, 52, a senior career diplomat with the St.ate Department. Manhard was captured Feb. .2, 1968, when Communist forces seized the fonner imperial capital of Hue during the Tet offensive. Also returning home will be Pfc. Ronald L. Ridgeway, who the Com- munists said was captured Feb. 25, 1968, near a U.S. outpost at Khe Sanh. What was believed to be th~ remains of · Ridge'ilfay and other members of his patrol caqht in 8 North Vietnamese am- bush were. rt00vered, returned to the United StateJ and buried fow-years ago. Ridgeway's mother is Mildred A. Ridgeway pf Houston, Tu. 'lbe llSt tocludes 'Sf!!. Michael Patrick Branch of llij(bland, Ky,, ,whom Radio (S.0 POWt, Pqe %) wanla In puD out l,!m ..,_., ash 1rees "bich clllt'tDllY nu city pothays. . Public worta olflcllll laJ' the •hollow roots of the abameJ uh art rippln( U(> sidewalta, cracking glllten Ind mlll)it even .af{ect water aoi:l tewr llnu. Bigler, a i.a&llllll 8-11 laodacape archltrt who bu des~eral small parka Jn Hantlngtoo a~ tho trees "1oold •be taken out. He suggests tho trees be ~ '1'M a flv .. year per1bd Jn ordlr not to totally disrupt the cmnmunll)'. Bieler also 1111&· Rail gtll!JI !bat the city plant men trees thin ti lat. out to Jnatre I pod en- vUonmeol. CUnently, the ash trm are planted about one every 50 feet. Bigler wants t,... put In only lO feet apart, He also roc:oounends a wider variely of trees for partw.,.. 'Ille Dialer report IUl(esb that ball the """ -8"oula be Canary Jlland pine, with leman«<nted cum. busily yate, oink lronbark and othe< deep rooted trees lntenpenecl with the pines. Public worb oHielals have estimated the total cosl of pullJng out the ash trees, repairl.n gdamaged sidewalks and plant- ing new trees at about $1.4 million. That's about $10 per city resident. "On a long-term basis, the new trees will provide a bett.,. noise bamcode," Bigler says . Hls report also indicates they wllf provide a better environment for birds and wildllle. Severns is critical of the report becau,,e It does not lndicate how much better. The Bigler report does admit there will be harmfuJ !hon-term effecti due to the lack of trees for a short lime. Bigler's report a1ao does not give any cost figures on the posslbUlty or in- stalling a deep water system which might encourage the a!h tree rootJ to grow deep where they would not disrupt sidewalks. 'MW! environmental review'board, com- posed of city st.aff members, will give Bigler unW March 20 to add the mbsing information to his ~· Jtge Hiked 10.7% Tentative Pact Coverin g 500,000 W orkers ToUl WASHINGTON (AP) - A tenatlve wage and fringe benefit setUement covering virtUauy all the nation's 500,000 railroad wwkers wu announced today. Spo~men for the rail industry and 15 unions involved In the pact said the agreement would increase wages and benefits by a total of 10.7 percent over 18' months beginning July I, This would include a 4 percent wage in- crease effective next Jan. 1 and a revised pension system which would put an ad- ditional $42.75 per month into the paychecks of rail workers. The industry would pick up the payments that heretofore. bad been paid by lbe workers Beach Asked By THOMAS GORMAN Of ... Defir Plitt ..... A nearly blind Huntington Beach col- lege coed Is askl.og the city's Recreation and Parks Commiss.lon to provide greater services for the handicapped. Brenda Premo, a student at Cal State Long Beach, will make bet request to the commission at its meeting Wednesday. Miss Premo said the city bas met state requiremeots in meeting the need• of the handicapped, but it couJd go farther. "lt'l!I not a case or the city not wanting to help," she said. "But it's a case of the city not knowing what should be done." The 21-year-old student beads the Harr dicapped Students Commission for the student body at Cal State Long Beach. Among her snggestioos to the com- mission will be that tbe city provide : -Braille nameplates on restroom doors. -.Praille games, such as Scrabble, for use by blind persons. -Siding on game tables like pine-pong so balls won't fall on the floor. -Training of blind personJ sa they can participate in games. -Wheelchair races and bowllng for (See DISABLED, Page Z) Teachers to Present Requests for Salary Teachers in the Huntington Beach City School District will present their salary requests for the 1973-74 filcal year to district trustees tonight. The 7:30 meeting will be held at the Dwyer School 'Library, 1501 Palm Ave. Into the separate railroad retirement funds that covers rail workers in lieu of Social Security. A spokesman for the Co.!t ol Living Councll aaid today it is likely that the council will review the tentative settle- ment to see if It comes within I.he gov- ernment's voluntary pay standards. But the spokesman sald council direc· tor John T. Dunlop would have no com- ment until he reviewed the settlement. The government's pay standard allows fOl' wage increases of 5.5 percent a year plus another 0.7 percent in fringe bene- fits. But the council bas indicated the standard will be applied Oezibly on a case-by-cue basis. The agreement Is subject to ratifica- tion by officials er the ts unions, and ln one case by a membenhJp vote. The single union requiring membership &fr proval ls the Sheet Metal Workers. The tentative agreement came 31ii months ahead of contract expiration dates July 1. Sources said the settlement was virtually dictated by the shaky financial condition or the railroad retirement fund. The agreement would also Include pnr visions (or early retirement and raise maximum lifetime major m e d 1 c a I baneOts from $50,000 to f!l0,000 per worker. Bea~h Boat Kahali Leads in San Lucas Race --esh!lnds -the ~t Clabo San LucalJ race toward the !inlah at land's eod Joday. AJ the wind hauled northwest at U koots, Ragtime, the scratch boat, moved into the elapsed time lead for the first time with the possibility of finishing tonight. The 1G-Jneter Hilaria, which was previously In tbe boat·ftlr-boat lead, dro~ ped far behind when she broke a main boom during the nigllt. Ragtime was off Magdalena Bay, about 150 miles from the cape, at 8 a.m. today and Hilaria was about 48 miles behind. The handicap positions are about the same as Monday with the Cal-33 Kabali l'ii>df l!llntlllgton Harbour Yacht Club still holding the corrected llme lead. Kahail-1'H the handicap winner In the flnt Cabo race in 1971. Chuck C>tton , the comrnunkations of. ficer aboard the escort vessel Simpatica U, said the boats were experi~lng their first "sleigh-ride" since the race began last Friday. The staDdlngs: OVERALL: first, Kahalli second, Firebrand ; third, Moonday. CLASS A: llrll. Dorothy O; second, Spirit; third, Ragtime. CLASS B: first, Firebrand; second, Moonday; tbi.td, Westerly. CLASS C: first. Kahali; second, Da- mian A; third, Teacher's Pet Ill. Boyle Ordered Murder Of Y ahlonski-Assassin ERIE, Pa. (UPI) -A convtcted assassin said today he was laid by two former United Mine Workers officials that former UMW President W. A. "Tony" Boyle ordered the murder of union insurgent Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski "for the wellare of the UMW." The dramatic testimony by Paul Gilly. who earlier wu sentenced to death by a jury for the slaying of Yablonslti, his wile and daughter, came at the trial of William J . Prater, 5%, a former 1Th1W field organizer from La Follette. TeM. Reachecl by telepllooe by the Associ· ated Press at hiJ Wubingtoa home, Boyle said he would have nothing to say other than to again deny any involvement in the slayings. "I have denied repeatedly havin' any knowledge whatsoever of the crune," Boyle said. "I knew absolutely nothing about any oI this. I don 't know any of these people, I never saw any of them and I have nothing to say.'' Gilly said Boyle was implicated by Prater and a confessed Yabklnsti assassin, Sllous Huddleston, during at least W.O meetings held prior to the Dec:. 31, 1969, assanlnatiom, lie said Boyle's name was mentk>oed during the meetings held to discuss the financing and methods to be used in lhe slayinp. Tba Natlonal Railway Labor Cof>. lerence wbicb negotiated for the lncluslry said the ~ agreement conn virtually aD Class One nillroadl in tho nation except for I.hole, like the Penn c.entral, involved ln reorganization under bankruptcy proceedings. However, PeM Central workers would be COYered by the Improved retlr<ment benefits, which must be approved by Congress as amendments to the Railroad Retirement Act. The announcement said it was the Ont lime In history that the indunry rtadm agreement on all ialues with all unions ahead of contract expiration. Border Raids Net Huge Drilg Cae e WASmNGTON (AP) -The govern- ment announced today it aeized $19.t million ln illegal narcotics, including 24 tolll cf marijuana, In a combined opera- tio with the Mexican govemm~t that tt sakt crippled a majar drug-mnuggllng ring on the Arlzona-Mezlco border. U.S. officials said they also sei2ed U pounda of heroin and made more than 100 arrests. They said they setted records of a "large smuggling conspiracy resporW- ble for bringing tom of marijuana and multi-kilos of heroin" into the United States. Detail!:, including the ru1mes of those arrested and wbere they were seiz.ed, were not immediately announced. The street value cf the seized mari- juana was put at $111.7 million and the heroin at $2.5 milUon. The amount of heroin would be enough to supply 182,000 addicts ftlr one day. The results of the Mexlcan-Unlted States e1.ercise, caned "Operation eac.. tus," were announced at a news ~ ference at the executive office of Narcotics Control Program Information. Law enforcement authorities from Mex- loo and the state cf Arizona attended Ole conference. The announcement said Operation Cac- tus was launched early in February when Intelligence SOt.1rces revealed t h a t substantial quantities vf marijuana and heroin were being Introduced Into the United States along the Mexican border in Southwest Arizona, the government said. In addition &o the arrests and coo- fil!lcated narcotiel, the government said It also seiud oeveral ptivate dwellings n said were Uled u smuggling warehouses, vehicles and weapons. ·Molitague'1 wife, Shirley, and their iliree children live In Tu8tin. She said to- day that she ls "overwhelmed and kind ijf numb at tJlil point -but very, Terf Stubho Wants to Work "I wu told the union wanted to get rid of Yablonski because he'd mess up the union and the union's pemlon fund," said Gilly. Oraage Cout delighted." . 1be Montague children, Steve, 18; Lin- da, almost 14, and Pamela, 11, '!" "just tut of It," thelr mothe~ laughed. " Pentagon officfals called , Mrs:. Moo-. ~ to tell bar the news at S:45 a.m. to- .Y,,Y. She said Ille -•lmdY" up and !l>Oldlli breatlllst. • ' ~Although Ille U.S. Htom polJlt bhn1 loeen llUIOUllC<d yd, Mn, Montague said ihe Is ""' her buaband will oome back It nwl>y C&mp hodleloo ID SU .11ieiO Oounty. I Wbeo flrl\ told Jul January that M.lj. Montag11e -id be releaoed from priloo camp, bl1 wlfo said Ille would have a hie party In celebrate. Today she added, "SUre we wD1 bat t:." beln& toaetbar will. be • bl& ...... Mn. Mootape't blrthclly Is Jml ~ day. She Slid today II will ·be lls bap- ·~ lilt ·ol -o(. -ima-i .. ,,,...,, lioino fl Ibo "-tat l'ft mr ncel'led,M •.us. Newport Councilmen to R econsider Bid by Par ol.ee B7 L. PETER KRIEG Of .. l»ltr ,,... ., ... · Stullbo l'eUnon went dolm hard lour tlj1l<S. • '111e c..t.. M"'I man •YI be wants to get back up and claims Newport Beacb police won't let him bacluae of h~ police r<COrd. Ile wants to drive a cab In the Harbor Aru but N<WJIOl'I Beoch police won't JI .. him a permit Ind the city council _, rugi. INl•lned the denlal. CcMlocllroen left l'etenon witll a gllm- mer of bope, however, 11ylng they'd ,.. -der thotr d«lslon In t.. ... wh<n be ltlmbbel them with a detailed report 1'un bla former probation ofllctr In Sacramtnto. ' Pelenon uld tbll momJnc he'll bave It for them In hro weeb. lllcbard Join "Stubllo" Peterm got h& lllckumo Jn pdooo, where bo bu ..... -otbla adult We. ' Hil fellow Inmates dubbed him ''Stul>- bo" because be bu only one arm. He Iott the other ... when be ,...t down lbe , lint Ume, He wu nine years old when be • fell under the wheels of a Qllcqo trolley. • He went down a UtUe d!Hertnllr nine years later, He.turned blmltH in to Loi Angeles pOIJce end conl..,.cl that bo bad molested a S.year-dd girl. He wu paroled alter IOrvlng IO days Ind placod on Ove yean• probation. Seven months later he was am:Red on a llltutory rape cbarge, but DOI -· ffe WU amated I mooth latll< Ill ....,,.. cloo ol crimes agalnlt dlllclnn lolt IOI con.tcted. , But In OctOber !Ml. be -down bed for tbe third time. He ., tml rn red to San Que>Un on ~ ol N1u1nrJ , rape. child molesUnJ and inbotlon violatloo. lfe WU ponied Ill J-... • It WU I mooth later, almost mldnigb~ wban P-ud BoUod Wayne Beaty atuck up a taco ttand in Garden Grove. Tber both went to priloo. Beaty Is still Ihm aod pnibably Will be for a long Ume. He lbol and tlJled two priloo guardl last yoor. Petenon WU paraled ln Dooonber lr71. lie tried to llDd worl< around Sacramento, "I've worked abpuj lour mooths atoce~ I've been ouL l want to won:. 1 want to aupport my faml!y," ~ married last year, bas a mp- dluallter allll-a bobf of bis owh. Hi i.ni proud o( bit pall. "Bui 1 clon1 fllln'"lt hu lll)'thlaa to c!OwtthwbaU--.·be-. "You're nlllbl1IUiled wball you tp'DW up. It.-.'! ha_11D1ll ,..,_In do It,......,,. ho -, . "I '9d a bid uutilde, 1 cUdn't are. I (Ilea. ITIJ'lllO, l'llp It ' .., "Did Prater tell you who wanied the murders done?" asked special prosecutor Richard A, Sprague. "He said Tony Boyle wanted him till- ed," 881d Gilly. "Did he say why!" asked Sprague. "AJ t recall, It was for the weUal'f!! of the UMW," said Gilly. "Tony S.,le would hold all the power. Slklul Hud~ dleston told me Tony Boyle waa fair and · turned down an afler to ~ OD u pe:rmanent president of the union." "Who told you thst?" -Stngue. (S.0 BOYLE, Pap II Auction Set Saturday By Valley Policemen ' ' . An llllClion will be bald Saturday 11 the Fountaib Valley PoUoe DepOl'tment pert. lnl lot. AtDooC othe poGI Cll tho ..mi. -will be • bleydot, • poUoe ~n uld. Other men:bandltoo; undaltnod lly , !Is ..,,..,., -tools, CU Ill'< dedli and flshinC lackla. l Weather 'lbat third atonn, expected on Wedneaday, wilJ oot make it oo tbe Oran,e Coast witll Thunday, ac- cording to the weather service. Wednesday should be l1106tly llWlny with slightly warmer tempera· lurel. Hlgh.1 II tho baache& In the low Ills, rising to 16 Inland. Over- night lows In the 4'19. iNSIUt: l 'ODi\ l' NOUJ it's the turn of leading aipirin companiea to hczl1C' heoct.- GChe1. Thftr,.adatrtiring claims ,.... b«• cllalungtd b~ the FTC, s .. ttorJI, Page 12. LM....,.. ti ..._ . ' °"""" ..... .,._ .. ~ u D99fll NfNml • --. ...... 1111111 1t ........ "'" ............. NM:e SJ 14 .. .._ u ~ .a ~LY;.._Pll;;;.OT;.._ _ _,_.;c"~-~-n.ou,=' =· ;;;.-=;..;ll::•:...1:.;m~ ~leaef!~ Viet Cong POWs amed "by u.~. , WASRINl}TON (UP!) -Tbe Delenae • and Stata lleplu1Jnenta made public ,._ day the followlbg list ol rl military pm. oom and five ctvilianl to be rdeased by lbe Viet Coog Friday to HanoL 'l1'e five civWana were reported cal>' lured during lbe Communist Tel offen- ; stve It Hue. Sooth Vietnam, <n P'eb. 1, 1116&. 1. Artrrr CW0 l"TllMTI 0.,.. Anllln, 1', Wlhl ... taora. NJ. I. ,Y,,,rti. c.¢. lniu ll:IYn'IO!\d Ar~, JCI 11:"°'91fW, toi.'r., Miii ,...,... .. , Fla. 1 Atmr if>K. • Mlc:t»et P11rlcll. .... lldt, t5 I~ "'lt'llltfll M ,...,ltr'• ........ o. •• Amrw M. "'· Hatv.,. Gordon lf"tt!Oil. ,., \.Dltlll IMdl, C.IU. ' .t. NwtY s. kl. RobWT Pra1"" c~lti. ts. Port'-W. Ctft. r4 .. Amw .S. $91. J-AIG.llldl9f' Olt'I' Jr., U. Hllfl' Yft Ctty. _.I 1. Army .S. Si'f, TtlDrnn Ja<nt1 0.Yla, 2S, Eufel .. ••• •• I. AtmY $It, hfer Cd'RN Dflbk. 2tr. UrD ., ....... ""'· • UPIT ....... • ;,, 'Slleclcell' "" "' Defense Secretary Elllot Rich-"' ardson said in a speech he WU "" shocked to discover the Army ., haa only three minority em- ployesud no women filling its civilian executive-jobs. He said he expected lmprovemenl ... ~~~~~~-"-~~~~~~ ... " '" .... ~·. DettcUille Slated. "'" . . ' : For Basketball" From Pagel POWs ••• Hanoi rroq.-,. identllled U I --· llld Maj. Floyd K1111m<r of Donvllie, V1., a medical ""Jll officer to· -anUwar ltatementa were attributed over the eo-~-· Also rdeased is 8 g I. Allonoo Ri.ate, ft, o Gardena, Calif., a VJet Cong prbooer "! 1987 listed .. killed fit action by lbe Pentagi>ll unW his mother received a letter from him Jmt before Cl1rlstmu In 1971. Anolbei is Pvt. Frederick Lewis Elbert Jr., whom lbe Marine Co<1'S stllJ lllla u a aeserter. ' Liquor Store Hit by Gunman A bandlt Inned with a blue steel• • ·. molver ,and ·wearing 1 ·wide-brimmed black lelt bol IOok t22ll -• .HW>j ·' t~,~-,.:-~r~·~ Part Uquor SIOn!, 17685 ~ jjj;d'., ~ >-Wedll...iay Is the deadline for enby In-IOld polJQI. the lone ~ came 'Iota Lile "' - -sfote alJOilt t·IO p m· -I: =Huntington Beach three-man She said u.O robb,; walked around Lile j: I )eague apolllOnd by tho city counter when! 1be was ltandlng, sbowed r: 00 department. her Lile .11!!!1 JD!I demanded all lbe money f; League play slartl MArtll 20 With-all · ":.-frtJhi bolf;c&.li t<glslers. . . i: pmes ICbeduled Jn tho gymuUluin at Alter,ijiilljad emptied ibe two't!Ds, Lile i-Edison lllgh School. black-hajJOd man fled. the slole oo foot, r:f Teams will be dlvided Into ,.,,.,.le ~ c1..-IOld pollct. \ dl9fsions acconllng to ... Ud h<!llli~ • . ' • . ' . wilh 18 tho mlnlmpin age aDowecl. , . • • • · The rOgislralioo fee' .. 111,,.,. team. s.,.;-n:.;; ... ,_ See~-g Fees and entry : may be !Ubmllled "~'' IStlf, a attherecreatlOOo ,110a0r;A>e. 'Fl~' Fu:& ~ Library . Friend.$ ' , ~l111r=ti,(N'> ,.. Tile p.idenl -t ' I · · -ol Jbe -~ ~ JlOlb' CouDcll ~: Set for The. ate' r II El Camhio CoiJ<ge has fih,d iuit )n. ~ Superior. Coor! ieeking Alwe ol Us ~ funds, frozen by college offtclals alter the Tbe lluntlngtoo Beach Friends of the council endo<!ed 1 coodldate llir the Library will bold Ill second annual board of trustees and donaled ~ IQ his theater party at 7 p.m., Sunday, at the campaign. f,. Hunttngton Beach Playhouse. Thomas Zangrllli, council president of l Sunday's producUon ls "Middle of the the Cerritos collea:e, asserted in the suit i NigbL" by Paddy Chayevslcy, about an Monday thal the freeze o<:curred after J older man who is in love with a younger the council ignored a "threatened'' pro~ J girl. ise by Dean ol Men Henry Kirk thaL Olampagne punch and hora d'oeuvres the council's "existence would be in ~ wiU be served on stage after Liie play. jeopardy" if U endorsed Lile candldale. t Tickets are '3 and the public la invited. The man waa: opposing an incumbent t For tickets, phone Leab Oslan al 8C-trustee. , 4.117. • p ~ t ' ~ ~ t c t t t • • • . ~ • . ~ OIANH COAIT •• DAILY PILOT Thi Or .... C-t DAILY PllOT ..._ Wfltdil .. carM1•· 111t ,..,..., ....... llVDll ..... w ,,_ o.-.. C-11 P"81Wiln0 °"""""· ~ ,..,. tll/1111111 ,,. publ11hell, McJnNy 1'lltowltl ,rNly, fll' C.11 Mno1, ~ 1Mcft. Hl#!fl""°" 8Mcfll,_!llft V1!Wy, Uog-a--. 1...,lntls.11111'-bldt tNI $111 C ....... i..' Sllll J-C.pllll,_ A 1lngltl r"loNI tflllll'I it pUbll1/lelll lflvr'H't"!'. •!Id !.llftd1yi.. JM prlncl!NI Mtltlllflt 1tlllll t• If lJO Wnl .. ., lll"fff, CO.It Miii, C.llfornll, ntlt. Ro!.trt N. Wttd ,,........ ....... ult!itllll' J•dl •• C111rl1y Viet l"mlllMt Ml a.-11 M......,. Thot1111 Ktt•il ldl!W no"''' A. "'"'~" M~'!dltw ct.D H . l.tn . Rich1rl ,, Nill ,.......~ldllWI T.,,., C1¥fll1 WMf en.. '-'' ....... w ............ Ofll'- 11111 l11ct le111t.v1NI M1lllllf MdtllU ,.0 .... 1t0, t1MI --IAWN tMOtr 111 ,._.. "-- c.11 ..,, -... .., ..,..., H""'"" laid': SUI ........... ...,..._.. M1t """'*-' 1U NWt1t Ii Ct"'4M ~ Tt1.,t1• fn4t '4Mllt Cl•IW 4"ll•TI I f 641-1671 ,._ lttt1I ...... ~ """'" -_, ... ~rltflt, llD. Or.,.. c.Kt ftWIWlliil Ofnlllrtr, ... ..... ..... """" ...... .....,.., ,...""' or ........-i""'*"9 ..... _,.. • ~ MtllM ...... ,.. ........._ .. ~ ..... . ._.. ........ , ... ,. ... "''' -.... ~ ~llaii " CMNr .. 1!'·~ ,.....,,, -IMlt u .11 flW!llllW, ~ ---.... 1'IOlflMr. LaLanne Sets Huntington Talk Jack LaLanne, Lile t•levl•lon phy•lcal fitness teacher, will give a free public lecture at 7:30 p.m., March 21, at the Sheraton Beach Inn ln Huntington Beach. LaLanne's Huntington Beach ap- pearance Is sponsored by Real Eatate by McVay, and free tickell are available at . Lile McVay office, 20961 Broo~ St. Individuals lnleresLed In 1tlendlng i,a Lanne's program can alao phone the real estate office, 988-4401, and uk for Omnie Vlasis. Massachusetts U Finalists Chosen BOSTON (AP) -N1111<1 of lhtt< finalists "ICrttned from tlO •pplicanll for Lile post of cllancellor ol the UnlvmlLy of Maasachuadto-Boston will be oubmKLed tod.ay to U M151 trw1l<!el, 1 newspaper rtporta. Tbe Boston Globe 1ald tho U..... 11t IX~ lo be Saul ~~I vk>e --deilf llld "proY<lll d etty U>UO!ll tL lltw Yort: Clrlo Golloo, exeadlve '1oll dlancellor •I UC Rlvmlde, and Donald Reid>, doul at Oberllll Coiltlt. Ollerllll, Ohio. • I 1 ' u •• ,.... .. ,., •• r..-i DlSABLED ••• poni>ltllcL I ' "Wt-~ ....OUU, nnl _..,. 1or lbe -.. -or tbe hlD-dlcapped," Mm Prem6 aid. uwe want Iba cltf lo olftt ID bi1Cfatod pl'Olnlll In wbkb lutndlta~ and llOIHlandlcapped -CBll ~pole llfde by llde."· Sbe Ibo lllll"ted tllal the city Include ooe handicapped penoo 0n the com- m!Llee lhal plans rocrHttoo progams L9 oiler lnllcJit hlto lbe needs of the harl- dlcapped. "Norm Worthy, director of the recrea· tion and parka deportment, Hid some prognms In! requ"ied. Most, "1o<lgh. are. orglllll!ed by deparlmmt o!Dclab and volunteert 'trbo aet • need or desire I« them, be uJd. 11So far we've had nil specific requesl8 for new programs by handicapped pulODS," he said. The city does ofter swimming In- struction on I one-to-one basis for han· dicopped perl(Jlll. women Toll'fn China An averqe of more than 200 ban· dlcapped penons a year h a v e pullcipatod Jn the swimming lesoon• over the course of the last five years, l!Sllmatod !.any Bunch, comultlng in- structor for the bandlclpped IWlmming cie..... It is tho oaly proenom off•l<d by Lile reereattoo departm•nl speciflcally for haDtllcapped perlOllS. , . . ' ·~ ~~' • Woman technician mans a wrench high atop a pipe- 1ine tower at Tushantzu Oil Refinery in Sinkiang, China. Hsinhua News Agency says worker is typical of way women are taking their ,place beQde men. Coo.st Council Bogged Down Over Procedure From Pagel STUBBO ... did what I wanted to do. I never tried to get a job. I was pretty wild. "But a persoo comes to a certain age and be becomes aware of what ls hap- pening. I was lying tn my cell one night llld realized what I was doing wilh my llle. You're not a man just because you turn 21," Peterson ~d. Peters0n said people have no right "to keep oondemning me for what I did when 1 was a k,ld." Newport Beach councilmen and police say that's not the case. "We have an obligation to protect the ~le of this city," said Capt. Richard Hamilton, the man who actually revoked Petersoo's taxi permit. . Peterson has a permit issued by Foun- tain Valley police. He says be bas temprary permits from Costa Mesa and Hwrtlngton Beach police. The permanent ones are due in Lile mail . He needs permits from all four cities to work for Yellow cab in Costa Mesa, wheft olficiab say tbefll hire him if the police say okay. Newport councilmen were divided on Petenon•s appeal Councilman Paul Ryclo)lf argued Oil his bebaU. "It must be noted that our system has .releafed P.e\el'101l. l\'s~oot our decision W~ be sbould be 00 ~· H• Is out. He'has a Deed to.earn a i.ivlog. It·can · be assumed that other communities bave pa.Sled on his ability io drive a cab," Rycliofl !aid. ' "It's been nine years 'since any offense bas1been oOmmitted,:' he added . , -~ A motion• by Ry<ioff to ·overrule the - police was voted dOwn, ft-2. COundlman John Store aided wftli Ryctolf. A motion by 'Wile Mayor Howard;- Rogers to table it decision pending receipt of the complete parole report was ciefealed. 4-3. "'The preliminary teport we have says y<Ml've mode 'marginal adjustment,' " llld Mayor ·DooaJd. Mcinnis. "!L's o tougb sUuatlon, I don'I relish the job of being jlidge and jury. ''l agree with everybody that you have a rigbi CO cam a living. I 'hale to deny !bat rlgb~ w !j:clnnls !aid. • • "A men ""1>1abf• pe"1le report woold easily influence my judgment," he said, "In the meantime, I hope you could find other employnleflt where you would not interface with the commmUty in a way a cab driver would have to." Mcinnis made the motion to deny the appeal. It passed unanimously. Tbis morning, Peterson's Otange Coun· ty parole officer, Charles H. Dean, said he could not argue against the city cow» ell decision. ''They have a legal responsibility," he said. He also said he did not consider Peterson's request to drive a cab as unreasmable even in light of. his police r«>Ord-uu lt were driving an lee cream wagon, it would be more dangerous," he !aid. From Pagel BOYLE ... "Huddleston and Prater," said Gilly. Sprague then told Gilly to look al Prater, and asked: "Is there any doubt lhat he is one or the men who talked with you and plaMed the murders?" "No, sir," replied Gilly. IL wa• Lile first public testimony In the 11• Yablonski murd<r lrlala by Gilly. Huddleston'B ~In-law and ht15band of another admitted murderer, Annette Glf11, He said tho method• dilawed for tho Yablonski slaytngs Included lhoollng , dynamlUng and firebombing. Gilly said Pnlier al .. IOld him "It would hav• been 1 ·gooc1 thing If 1 would have 'ot rid of'' Jooeph Y1bl0111kl, tho vlcUm 1 younger ton. AEC Makes Pitch WASHINGTON (AP) -The ALOmlc Elle'll' C.unmlaalon 101d Congre11 Mon- day Ula! II 1bould be tho ..,. to dedde wbelhm' fioaUng nuclear po-plantl art built oil the Atlantic llld Pa4'11lc oouta. AF£ Commlaiooer James T. Ramty lelU!led al I Senlle ComlllU<O subcommittee beartn1. Beach Planners Consider f ' 'Unclassified' Category A procedural regulation namped ? Huntington Beach Planning Commis- sionen will study an "unclassified use" categozy tonight for such facilities as day care centers, drive-in theaters, parking lots and boarding houses. The commission meets at 7 o'Clock in city council chambers. Under the proposed new ordinance, any special use labeled by the city as "unclassified" could be allowed in any type of zone with a conditional use permit. A day care center, for example, might be built in an industrial area, a com· mercial area or near homes. SQme uses, such as the drive-in theater, however, would be excluded from residential areas, though allowed anywhere else. Uses without their own zone, bUt which could be placed anywhere in the city, in- clude: .~king lots, churches, colleges, univers1Ues, schools, day C8.(e centers, day nurseri!s, public utili.ty substations (an acre or less and not including a switchyard), private recreation areas ~•ngorlJoar<!iiti~ • ' J ~tn --~ the drdlnance, ~ ow~ ~ere except ih resftlditlal' neighbtjrhoods: public and QU.@Bi~publlc ~s· (pl'fvpte clubs, lodges, rest homes, sanltal'iwns, bospi~ls), airports, heUports, amyse- ment ·et)terprlses, tr a n s po r t a t 1-0 n termiriils. ~ , Also.: commerclal hqrse stpbles, a golf dri\'._ing range, miniature golf cour$es, Sacramento Boy ToMeetlstLadv ,, WASHINGTON (UP!) -Peter !toss Stinson, 6, of Sacramento, the National Easter Seal child, will meet First Lady Pat Nixon at the Whl.te House Wednes- day. Peter will be accompanied on the White House visit by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Stinson, and Easter Seal Chairman Ralph Edwards, star of TV's "This Is Your Lile." . SUnson works in the circulation depart· mem of the Sacramento Union. museums, drlve--in·theaters, commerclal recreation uses or centers (excluding a full golf course), radio or television transmitters, recreational vehicle parks, post offices. Planning department officlals say any use allowed in a particular zone would be sub1·ect to the normal rules of that zone. P anners are proposing the ordinance because they say these uses do not necessarily fall into one type of zoning category, and could be used in many areas. Volleyball Play Slated in Beach The Huntington Beach Recreation Department is now forming volleyball leagues. Team entries will be accepted through S p.m., March 20. The entry fee for a team, with a limit of 12 players, i& $30. Each league 'formed wtll consist of slx teams. Trophies will be awarded to league winners. Entry forms may be obtained at the recreation department, 1706 Orange Ave. For further informalion phone 538-5486. $50 Entry Fee For Candidates? Future candidates for the Fountain Valley City Council could be asked iU> file a $50 fee before they can run . Councilman Bernie Svalstad proposed the idea recently and asked that an ordinance be drawn up for council con- sideration. He said it would require future can- didates to demonstrate a "serious in- tention." There Is cUrTently no charge for en- tering a Fountain Valley council race. I n Huntington Beach, there is a non-refun- dable $100 filing fee. South Coa$t Regioiial 1.one Conservation : Commissioners' Idell of laldng 1ctton Monday lligbt and delayed lbe first hear- togs by fiv1 hours. Co~ squabbled from S p.m. "' 8 p.m. -wilh • two-boor dlmler break -over a state commlaslon rule that regional· bodies couldn't vote on ex· emption claims withou~ a staff recom· rnendatlon following •'public bearing. A majority of the commission wanted to vote Monday, despite protests from commission staff members and the at· tomey general's representative. No staff recommendations were prepared Monday night Je!Jrey Freedman of Lile stale Attorney General's office said adopted rules of procedure call for action on vesie,t rights """" at the next !lllbsequ•nl meeting following pubUc beartogs. A few commissioners, e s p e c i a 11 y James Reedy of Santa Monica and Donald Phillips o( Long Beach were milled at the state roadblock. But shortly af~ a p:m., Reedy moved •to begin the beartqp aftd·vote DIUftek. The commlssioh tbelf cOnducied '28 public hearllll/! llfM1 3 llJil. today. . Reedy ~--:same of the developers re· questing1td:~ptlons were afraid that lf the C<iri'itt1Utslon voted against its own regulations, ... the lending institutions wouldn't COWslder the vote valid and would still withhold construction funds. The commission has jurisdiction over building PirP!ts within 1,000 yards ()f the mean hi&tc tj1e line in erange aQd Los Angeles ccnmties. Luncheon to Finance . . . . Musical at School A luncbeOO to llelp finance a musical production by seventh and elgblh grade girls at Mat1ne View School will be held Salurday aL'lhe Mun!y Park Community Center, 7000"Norma Drive. Donation!rof $1.SO for adults and $1 for children wm be asked at the door. The hmcheon will be served at 12:30 p.m. The musical will' be staged in May. A YARN FOR EVERYONE • I ·- There is no question that the number one fiber in the carpet .industry today is nylon. A survey of 25 of the largos! «rpot mam1facturers revealed the following: Nylon in 1972 accounted for 55.7'!. of all carpets offared for Hie, an INCREASE of 4.6 "/ •• Wools declined from 10.4°/, to 9.1°/ •• Acrylics declined from 20.1 % to 18.5 ~ •. Polyesters declined from 13.2% to 12.7 ~ •. Olef)ns declined from 4.5 % to 3 ~ .. These figures are astounding because of the fact that the d .. mind for nylon created 1 tremendous shortage and many miHs wore looking for ANY kind of yam to make carpet from. We h.va hundreds of nylon cerpats at Alden's-stop ind -us. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAP~S 1663 Placentia Awe. IH COITA lllllA llNCI ltS7 COSTA MESA 646-4838 • lit,.,• 'l1!m-t i. l:JO: Fri. t i. t: ht, t1JD i. I i , ! I - I Speelalbt'• VietD • . l r Usual Cardiac I• • ' .. Advice Attacke l Docton advlle pallenll lo eal less, high choleoterol leYtl, dlsceuntlllc p;;,.1 1 stop 1moklai, -wel&bl and uerci.se, of the •&file ol 1 19-.fal d!el. 1 hut no one kDow1 for certafn if these "'We can't lnCrtm!nate overwtlght ~ actually prevent heart altacks, a because ~ ,,. loll ol ovorwetlht poo-j heart -1afl>t aaaerted In Anaheim. Pie wllh oormal clr<ull!loo," added Cilr- 1 Tbe point ol what is known -and day, who Is a memba ol the foderaf N .. unlmown -about Ille commonly recom-Uonal Helf th Advisory Council and a put ~ mended cardiac aafeguards was made at president ol the American COilege ol the Cllllornla Medlcal Association's con-Cardloloo. venticlG Mooay by Dr. Eliot COrday o1 "We have become flHd lo the the Vnivenlty of California at Los cbolest.rol principle of making -lo I Anieles. !eel IJlllly foe what Ibey eat," be atai..1. However, Corday and other heart ex-But, he ukl Jt wu pqsslble that I pertl on • panel clicl agree that reducing alherosclerosll a a dqeoeraUve dlseua high blood pressure seemed lo be a ol the. arteries and not the mull ol !al ;revenUve fador in heart attaW. depOilit. on artery walll. They al.lo said aootbtr factor -one's Moreover be said, 11tbere 11 no inberlted. beafth -also is a heart beafth evidence that exercise ext$dl life, , lley. BUI they noled that heredlly is • &fthough the1ndittdual may feel better If aomethlna: no one can change. be uercisel." Corday, emphasizing that be made his It may be, he said, that the ''risk fae-- ccmments to undel'SCC>re need for further tor" In heart disease lm't connected with "' research, stated that fiO percent of those smoking but is connected w J t b ~ who suffered heart attacks 00. not have a nervousness which is a personality trait • BadhamPoses Coastline 'Relief' Bills A (>ICkap of five bills int.nded to make it easler oo ccmmunities, agencies and lndMduals affected by Propo8IUon 20 baa beeo inlrodlll:ed in Sacramento by A!8emblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport Beach). 1>esplte bis prior opposiUoo to the ,.. called ' r.oastline Initiative, Bad.ham denied his five-part package goes against ill ba!lc Intent. He claimed Instead thal bis urgency propooals wm alleviate what be called 9erioua dlfficulties inherent in the meas· ure. Aaemblyman Badham said in an inter· view that bis urgency bUl (>ICkage mdn't "go q ainat the intent~ Prop. 20," which set up a series of commissions with veto power over most developments aloog the coaatlille. • Badham's bills wooJd, -Require that local agencies must air prove proposed development along the coast before regional commissions act on them. -Make the state reimburse local com- munities for the loss to their tu: base 11 a rosull of declining ....ta! pl'O!lerty ...... -....... l>T-e.ol Prop. •• • -Make the state reimW?se Individual property owners vmo;.r1M19 \!!'PP" In val· ue as a result of Prop.~.-· -Pennit all develo~ts ~der way by Feb. l, 19'13 lo go ~!l.wl!!ioul coast- line commission permits., , 1be bUls are AB~. of smokers -alld coffee drinker&. Corday and the three other heart e1- perts on lhe panel at the stale medical convention agreed that advice on living habits stems more from atatl1tlcal cor- relation than proven fact. Other yet-to-be discoverM factort may be even more important, they said . Corday added it would "be 1 great disservice" if doctors give the public im- pression that enough is known about the risk factors to prevent heart attacks if all current advice were followed. AJtbough it may be slmpl>· a statistical correlation, Dr. John M. Chapman, also of UCLA, staLed that hll study of 7 ,000 middJe aged men indicated that between 75 and 150 heart attacb out of 479 be studied during a 10-year period had a connecUon lo cholesterol, blood pressure and smoking. * * * Women Having More Options Society is moving away Crom the posi- tion that women have only one respec- table choice in life -to become wives and mothers -says a spokesman for a panel which reported to tbe Callfomia Medical Association in Anaheim at its annual meeting. But Dr. Floyd Anderson, a l.()s Angeles psychologist and founder ()f a family guidance center, added in a statt.ment Monday that marriage it.self is not out of date. • Marriage as It bu ,1developed in "'Restem nations Is a reOect.lon of man's need to insure survival above all else, be said. Other panel members were a Baptist minister, a gynecologist, a feminist and a man who spent two years in a Santa Cruz county commune. UCI Wi)l Ho st Consumer, Environment Law Session " A seminar described bf its organizen as the "first real attempt to devote ade- quate time to a new anil bnportant field of law" will be staged all day Wednesday on the UC Irvine campuS: 'lbe Caliromla Trial L a w y e r s Association's Semlriar ~ Consumer and Environmental Law will·9ffer 10 sessions on as many topics, all o( them presented in the Fine Arts Theatre at Mesa and Bridge Roads. _ Organizers of the CTLA convention which will move Thursday to the Newporter Inn in Newport Beach for three more days of seminars, panel discuaak>ns and oonferences, said the DCI sessions are U... and open lo the public. 'lbe program opens at 9 a.m. with Robert Alexander, cltlef or the st{lte Bureau ol Auto Repair in Sacramento, I dlacuaolng "the Consumer and Auto ' Rtpain." [ Alexander will be followed at t :25 Lm. l by Carl Meyer, supervilor ol the llate's I Department ol Welghla and Measures In r Sacramento. ' Meyer'1 topic will be "'!be Omsumer t aod LabeUng Pnet.ices." I James Reed, the leglslaUve advocate I ol the California Consumer Fed.,..Uon In t Sacramento will dilcuss, ''The Consumer • I I and Legislation," at the 9:50 a.m. session. Seven more topics will be offerred before the seminar closes at 4:30 p.m. They are: -10:15 a.m. "''!be Consumer and Governmental Protection," deputy at- torney general Herschel Elkins, con- sumer fraud division. -10:40 a.m. '"Ille Consumer and Criminal Law," professor Gilbert Geis, program in social ecology. -11 :05 a.m. "The Consumer and the Media," Santa Ana attorney Wylie Aitken, moderates a panel drawn from radio, televislon and newspepera. -l:SO p.m. "Cttimes' Group Actioo and the Environment," Pomona attorney John McCarthy diJcusoes the "Frleada ol Mammoth" landmark cue. --2:IO p.m. "Tranportation and tbe EnYiroomen~" Marian Carpelan of Riverside, president of the CIU.... Qirn. mittee on Freeways and Tramportation. -S:lO p.m. "Nuclear 'Power and the Envlrorunen4" Santa Monica attorney Bront Rusforth ol the "Center of Law and Public Interest." -t p.m. "Water, Air, Sludge and the F.nvironment,." UCI professor Peter S. Dtxon, director of the museum of system biology. ' ~ I Vanishing A~t • I • I 2 Burglars Escape Drag-,,.et? I L I I • I r I I I I I • ' SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -Poli<9 l<Mby ~ed oil a 24-bour eearch of 1 downtown llore wheni two burglars were believed to have holed up. Later, they heard noisel In the attic. PoU<9 Aid the men appore11Uy escaped despite the forte of officers hUide and out!lde the store and massive tear-gulng of the stott. Authorities began pumpln( the tear gas out of the building. A spokesinan said the incident bepn after oU!cen reaponded early Monday to a burglar alarm at a Zody's department Ito~ and apprOhended one man. The man told ollicers that two otherl ,.... malned lnJlde. From dawn to dust, working In shilta, some 30 ollicen rur· rounded the store and flooded It twice with tear gas bombs. Then tbey ~I Inside, wearing gas masks, and poked around cowitera, searched the atUc and even )90ked Into alt ducts. ,._, .. ..,~ "· 1'73 H DAil y Pfl.DT 3 "''~ No Des igns On Sen.aw SACRAMENTO !AP ) -Gov. Ronald Reaon announced today he will ~ run far the U.S. Senate in 1974.. The 61-year-old Republican chief ex- ecuUve announced his decllton at a Capitol new1 coofere~. Rea,an told reporten , •11 am penonally not attracted to the ktel ol participating in a legislaUve body 1fter having he ld an e:s:ecutive position." He aaid, ''I have l~tened to thole who urged me lo seek that office. I feel greaUy honored by their expressions of coofldertt and offers of support. '·But I am convinced I have a greater responsibility whicb Is lo devote the next two year1 to achieving the several goals our administration has set for itseJf beginning with the !imitation of tax burden borne by all CalifDmians," fie said. Reagan repeated he would not run for .. a third term as governor. 1 TWO INDIANS ON HORSEBACK HELP PATROL PERIMETER AROUND WOUNDED KNE E Federal Agents Beef Up Their Force1 Outside Village Held Ely Miiitant Indians ENCAMPMENT When asked ''Does this mean you will run for president?" he smiled ar¥t said that was not the meaning behill(I his an .. nouncement. The Governor Ms declined to say whether be might become a presidential candidate in 1976, saying only that it is too early to speculate: who might be GOP candidates to succeed President Nixon. Police Probing Execution Death Of Two Students PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Sherill's deputies 1re retracing the steps of a young man and bis high school aweetbeart, found slain In the desert after cutUng classes for a spring outing. Sheriff Paul Blubaum said he believed James B\il'goyne, 19, and his fiancee, Kathy Koger, 17, palnned lo be gone. for Ute aftemooo when they droYe into the desert about 20 mites from their fashionable Camelback Mountain homes. Btubeum said an inveJUgatlon in- dicated the two were forced to kneel at the desert site, then shot from behind. Burgoyne was shot five times and the girl ODCe, be said. They were found 20 miles northeast of here late Saturday n ea r Burgoyne's sports car by another couple taking pic- tures of desert Oowers. Burgoyne, son of a psychiltrist in suburban Scottsdale, asked a fellow stu- dent to take notes for him Wednesday afternoon at Scottsdale Community College, Bluhaum said. "NeilbK WU ~ JLI' o t .-cl l Te 'l;lO,lhlnr~ ln&ldng they ptannetl lo be gone 'for only the afternoon," Bluhaum said. Federal Manpower Up At Wounded Knee Site . PINE RIDGE, S.D. (UPI) -Federal marshals and FBI agents, beefed up with a 300 percent increase in manpower and heavy equipment, today Ugblened tlteir lines around the hamlet ol WOUllded Knee, seized by militant Indians two weeks ago. Wyman Babby, area director of th e Bureau ot Indian Affairs, said be knew of no incidents during the night. "There was no firing as far tis I've been told," Babby said. COUNC IL WOMAN TO BE LEGAL? SACRAMENTO (AP) -Female members of city coimcils in California would become legally en- titled to style themselves "coun- cilwoman" under a bill introduced by Sen. James Whetmore (&-Buena Park). The state Senate hls4 no femaltr members. Whebnore introduced the bUl Monday. But where in early stages or the block- ade -once lifted and then restored. - the federal men coofined their seareh ac- tivities chiefly to l'Oldblocks, today they were patrolling all approacbe!. VP! photogapber Jim Hubbard at· tempted an overland entry to Wounded Knee and was turned back. He reported security was "very tight." It was possible to leave the Oglala Sioux rese.~auon where Pine Ridge and Wounded Knee are located, but the gov- ernment lines barred entry lo Wounded Knee where the lndians have declared they no Jooger recognhe the U.S. govern- ment and are eetting up one of their own. "This action was taten because the Indians holding Wounded Knee used the period of time wben they bad free access to the area to fortify their positions with . more weapons and ammunition,'' Ra1ph Ericbon, ipecial assi.tant lo Attorney General Rlcbanl Kleindlenst, said Mon- day in Wa..hlngton. Four J'OUDI lndil8\I ·•re crated -.,, a!W tbe ---up. Fe&!ral qenll 181d the1 flJand two rlflea llltl a handgun In a seareb of the ln- dlani1'tar. The Senate seat of Democrat Alan Cranston is up next year and Cranston is seeking a aecood. sil-year term. Reagan has II.id for 11>me time he might consider running for the Senate. A number of ~pecli•e GOP can- didates have been awaiting Reagan's decision'° they can deckle whether to try for governor or for the Senate.. They Include former Nllon Cablnel of· fleer Robert H. Finch and Slate Con- troller Houston !. Floumoy. Finch sal4 last week be baa clecided what be will do, but won't make an an- nouncement fer about two months. Lt. Gov. &I Re.inecke has declared he will run for governor and Atty. Gen. Evelle J. Younger is a probable can- didate:. 1be Governor, first elected In 1161 Oftr Incumbent Democrat Edmund G. Brown, has said for some time he Is incllned to step down from public office during the coming two years to travel 1 national "mashed potato" circuit. He Slid be would be speaking about whal be claims .,. "ideological myths" abroad In tho land about government. This has fired speculation that ~ woold try for tho Republican ~ Uaf nom1nation in 1971 although he will es years okl when the primary battles e under way. Reagan made a late, ---' bid ler'ihtt' .......... at tho <KlP -c.nv.nt1on In Itel. Prtsaed again today"" the ~11 issue, Reagan llld, "I'm not discuMing what happens after 1974." immediate delivery! • e v V-6 Qr 2000 series e AUTOMATIC or 4-speed e LOOK WHAT'S STANDARD EQUIPMENT SEE ONE Rom• OI The Ne• Car , • , "Gold-'.J'OMeW' l • • • • Radial ply tires! • Front disc brakes! • Fron~ bucket seats! • Full carpeting! • Rack and p inion steering! TRY ONE ••• BUY ONE TODAY ! M()nlirp Covnt)/'1 l00tl!JI o] Tine Cart' l, l) l I ' : flome Of The New Cot' • , • ''GoWe• T911ela'' 2'211 HARBOR BL'VD. OF CARS, COSTA MESA fl 540-56311 '• l ' • Claims Quiz On FBI Talk wlsmiroroN (AP) -A campalp wort• hurswom she wu tAlled oa the c:a'1"1 by President N1-'1 rHlecllon cmunlllee 11 boun alter talking to the Fill In prlv•to during Ibo Waterglte Jn. vestigatlon. Tbe allldlvtt ol the worker, Judith llobocll, waa oblllned by Sen. Bird> llllyb, • m<mber ol the Judiciary Com- mituo, whldl II considering Nllon'• oom1nat1on ol L. Patrick Gray ID to be permanent FBI dlr<ctor. 1MRS. HOSACK wu identified u one ol ti... ~ campalp employes who ul;td !or private Interviews with the FBI after lawya11 ror the campaign sat lo on the llrlt wslons. In teltln>oey beloro the Judiciary com- mittee, Gny Mid that reports on the tlifte eonlldentlal Interviews were mllde .;.auabJe to John w. Dean m, White ~ COWlltl. AfW rudlng ?,lrl, Hobaclt'1 alfidavU, __... ol the Judiciary stall eald they -• .....,_...,. oo Ibo asaumptlon that Dean lunled the ln!ormallon (from the prime Interview) OV<r unlell ho te11J UI .othenrile."' JD ber 'lflklavl~ Mrs. Hobock ....... the! wllbln II houri ol ber private ln- wVlew, ........ CClllfmrted by - 1fells --a lny..-bun the Nix- on t1111polln. who otated: ''I hear you µ.....been tilltlna to the FBI." f <'TO lfY KNOWLEDGE,• lhe said In the allldavll, ''I bad aot lnlormec(-"Yone 'ol 111y Interview• with the FBI and the lntervlewl wen In coo!ldence ind no one elaf ·~." . A 1 spokesman ror the rHlectJon com-mit~ dmled llill the tnlormat!On came from tho• FBI ODd Aicl the 'cumnlttee Gilly queotioned Mrs. Hobock bocauae it wm:ited lnform.atloo. for its own J.n.. '.i...i..11on . tTbO f.ci Is that the lnfoilmatJon that )Ill. -bad bad a private dloa-with. the l"BI did DOI come kom FBI IOUk:ea at all." the spokesman Aid. "ll .... frun employ<o ol I b e --wllb whom .,.. bad dllcualed btr _. Jntervlen. 1'"111o _..lltee just wanted to tnow U Ille bad .any addltJooal ln!onnatlm that tqi()tt belp In our owo lnvestJc•ll\tll1" the ~·· ~ "or ,JlllJ loloaJ!ltlon tllill ml&J>t bo bl -.1o,.tltLl&wym In lib.the dvU llUltl connected lllelf~le ... tlllol-'k .. llcnlfbi>\ to llOto lbat • dido.\ feel lnllmlclated by the "lllta of ID attorney for tbe C0JD. in!tteo, IMlr did Ille feel lbat thero WU -rotrlbutlon ula result or her private cllocwaolona with the FBI," the ..,.._ ... Id. DBAN, AND blo conduct duriill the In· ...uptlon of the buQing ol D<mocratie ow-heldquarten In !be Watorpln bulldlnr, baa become a local point In Ibo Judiciary c.mmw.·. ""111dera!ion ol Gray. Delpite lfimil ctbjlctlonl, the ...,.. rnlttoe II e>pec:ted lo -todty lo invite Deln .. le3tlfy ... bis ... """"' the Waterpln probe. NlQa hu Aid be wlH not lei Dun tootlly, ind ... - that palltlon M«tday' ' Manwhiie, Sen. John v. ~y (!). C&llf.), pkbd up unexpected IUJ>(lOrl £or bls . mollon Monday wben committee <llairman James o. Eutland a aid he lawn Inviting Dean. Previously, Tunney hod said he needed only one more vote for approv1l by the 11-member committee and indicated it would have to come from the Republican aide. Al a matter of protocol, Senate com- mittees invhe witnessee to appear. If the request is turned down, a comm.lttee must vote again to lsa:ue a aubpoena. Winter ' UPI T.._.,. Five.year Wait CWO Joseph Rose of ?i1organtown , W.Va., kisses his new bride, the former Donna Steele during their wedding ceremony at the Valley Forge General Hospital In Phoenixville, Pa. .:Monday. The coople bad to postpone their marrige for more than five years while Rose wa s heid a prisoner of war by the Viet Cong. 'Rough Road' Seen Ahead For Tijuana After Flood TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -Nearly 80 percent of Tijuana's paved streets have been destroyed by a week of rains. says Mayor Marco Antonio Bolanos Cacho. More tb'an 111, Inches of rain has left many -pitted with craters and flooded some intersections with water as hi&h u one foot About 500 persons have ( · IN SHORT... ) been evacuated from houses and shacks in the Tijuana River bottom, whkh was inundated J>y water draining from the hills of the 'city. Bolanos ~4 more rain would tlelay in-~ • ~million PrO!Odl ached•led to start ln two weeka, to resurface every main street in the border city and oave some new streets. ' rr · e Reel Ddtttor· ... SAIGON (UPI) -A HlUlgarian sergeant of Uie lntemational Comn1lss\on !or Control and SUPf<Vlslon CICX:,S) has defected to.•Aultralia, South Vietnamese military ....-cea aid today. Two Viet Cvng ~ of war apparently tried to defect today in wild melees, but only one made ii te freedom. 1be Hunprtan was identified as Sgt. Georghlu Wollner, n. The South Viet- DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERYlcv' ... ...., of "" D•~ Pilot h l'IUll'Mlffd ~,...~tiilllrr1 If "' w lllf 11we .,_ ""'.,. Ji • '-'"·· ........ -a.., Wiii " 1Mw1111 i. ,.., c~ .,. i-. •tlil 7:Jt ,.m.. 51""1Slf MMI St111o111r1 II ,._ W ... ,_,._ r-Cll'1 .,., t •·"'· S•lvnllf, .,, I 1,111. S"°"ay, <•ll 1M 1 ~•" .in h ........., 19 r-C•lh ••• 1111""' 1111!M If 1.m.. Telephonts Wallops namese said he was placed aboard a plane out or Saigon en route to Sydney Monday after appealing for political asylum. The Australians confirmed the defection and said he had been allowed to emigrate to Australia. eTornadoes HUBBARD, Tex. (U PI) Homeowners and businesllDen in two central Texas counties hit 'hanfest by a swarm of tornadoes were eligible for low- Interest federal loans today to finance rebuilding their towns. The death toll from the twisters that stunned the state three days ago rose to seven when a man hurt in a San Angelo tornado died Sunday. Si1: of the deaths occurred in Hubbard, "but Burne\. 150 mu·ea aouthwest, auf{eted the worst property damage -'at least 200 homes and buildings destroyed. es-etTalk · WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human needs Im been tqld lhat pre. sweetened dry cereals do not cause tooth decay but help children obtain necessary nutrition. This testimony came Monday from manufacturers of the cereals, who dl&puted recent testimony to the com· mittee that the pre-sweetened breakfast foods cause dental decay, provide too much sugar and decrease nutriUonal in- take of children. "It is important to remember that sugar makes things taste good and therefore makes IOU1'teS of nutrition palatable," said Mercedes Bala, Vice president and dJreclor of General Mills' Betty Crocker Kitcl1ens. eAssasslnatiotu HAMILTON, Bermuda CAP) -A senior police official expressed con- fidence today that the murders of Gov. Sir Richard Sharples and his aide-de· camp will be solved. Sharples, 57, and Capt. Hugh Sayers, 25, were shot outside the governor's of- fioial residence Saturday n i g h t. A massive search ror their killer, or killers, has been under way ever since. Rockies Remainder of V.S. Mostly Spri1ig-like, Much Rai1i • \ - FBI Arrests IBrio I Stennis Case WASllINGTON (AP) -Tbree y-a mm were beld under t)00,000 bond today, dwlecl In the bo~ ol Sen. John C. Stmnis lul Jonuary. 'lbe arreo11 or Tyrone Manball. 11, JQl>n s. Martbail, 11, and Dtrict Holloway, I~ all of Nortbea1t Wublngl<ol, were announced Mollday night lfttt one or the -lntenolve manhunts to Di!lriel ol Columbia blltory. A IQ.man team ol police IDd FBI 1genlx had questioned bundredl or -· TllE 1'llllEE men were ~eel with ormed ~ and violating a 11171 law maldllc II a leclerei crilne to atlact a member fit Congreu. 'Ibey ~te' tchedul· eel lor antignment today before a U.S. maglstrote. SteMia, n, chairman or tho senate Armed Servk:es COmmittee, WU shOt twice about 7:40 p.m. Jan. 30 just after be perked his car outside bis home of 20 years In Northwest Washington. For days his condition was critical. He still is hospitalized. Nixo11 Fund • Gets Justice Panel Probe WASHINGTON (AP) -The Justice Department has been asked to look into possible vk>lations of federal elecUon.i.aw in connection with a $200,000 oon_.ibution to President Nixon's re-election cam- paign by a New Jersey financier. \, The case was turned over to t e Justice Department by the G1meral Ac- counUng Office Monday, with a recjuest by C.Omptroller General Elmer B. Staats to al90 look Into the possibility of ad- ditional vlolaUons of the new Federal Electk>n Law. SUBJECT OF THE investigation is {be Finance Commlttee to Re-elect the President, and involved ·ls whether tbe committee failed to report as required a cash cootrtbutloo by financier Hobert L. Vesco, received on or after last April 7 when the new election law toot effect. A spokesman for the committee described the GAO as irresporulible for refen1ng the cue U> the Justice Depart· ment. "The General Accounting Office is once more nisina '-question klr wbicb there is a conclus1ve precedent supjiOrting ·the actions of the FJnance Committee to Re- elect the Presktent. On that basis, the GAO conclusion is trrespomlble," the spnl<esmBn said. The case revolves around whether the contribution from Vesco was made before or after April 7. r,laurlce Stans, the fonner commerce secretary who headed Nixon's finance committee, con-- tencb It was a pre-April 7 contribution and therefore did n:;:t ha to be reported. A REPORT BY P . S. Hughes, director of the GAO's Office of Federal Elections, says the money was delivered April 10, three days after the new law went Into effect. Stans' argument is based on tbe premise that the funds had been pledged eartier than April 7, that Vesco made a commitment to give It on March 8, 1972, and repeated this on April 3. Stans acknowledges rece.ivlng the money in his office on April 10. The Hughes report said, "The money was raised abroad and was not available to Mr. Vesco's representatives in New York until April 6. "Although Mr. stans was informed on April ~ that tbe funds were available in New York, arT8.ngements could not be made for delivery of the funds on that date. The money,., ti)e report said, "was in the custody fl VHCO'I representatives during the period from Aprll I to Aprll 10. Land Sales Firm Files Petition For Bankruptc)· PHOENIX, Arlt. (AP) -A Pboenix- baMd Arizona land flnn. whose officers were indicted by • federal grand jury on <Mrl" of lroud, MObdlY ffled a petition !or bankruptcy In U.S. Dlttrlct Court. THE PimTION waa ftied by Lake Havasu Estala, Inc., atatlng that the firm'• debtl were larger than its cash on hand and the mmpeny ls unable to oatilfy c:red!ton' demands. Similar peUUon! were also Oled for two alater nrm•a, Tma·Flrm and Western Land Wholesalers. The petitions contend that Late Havuu Estates was "conlwed and usoclattd" with Terra·Firm and Western Land Wholesa'era, 'lberefore, "the"' may ba a miJture ol ldenlitko between ukt corponitkw by ttaJOn o( common ownenhlp, cllrectors and ol· ricers and perhaps conftmed book~ ke<'ping ... The petlllon, atanecl by Ronald Lavin or Phoeni1, corpora1e llCCfetary, llsted no • ... ta or llabllltleo. Lavin Wat mt of JeVen company of. flctafs Indicted. Tile -company ofnclala ore llObedw.d to bo arralan«I neirt Mond~ belore U.S. District Coor! Judge Wllllam Copplt . Adina Fiil Director !.. Patnct Gray m, In onnoundNI the amats, Aid '.l'Yrooe "4nball liad bom W<en ln16 ~ earlier l4ondaY cm clilorderll' OOlljlllCI cbarg.._ Tile others were ar- ...W later by FBI q<nla and D.C. P>ilce. '!'be rol&Uonshlp ol the Manbalil w&I not clartflecl but Ibey llved at the same local address. DEPl1l"Y POIJCE Chief Maliloo I\. Pttts aald the investlgatloo began to mate progress witf'du lbe last four or ftve daya and a dlajol' development no- cumd oometlme after ! p.m. Monday. He did not elaborate. Steonla' olfice estimated TeWlU'ds total· ed "'°"' than jS0,000 foe conviction of bis ass"allants. • Police late last month released a com- posite sketch depicting the man who abot SteMls. They said the senator had a~ proved the picture, which showed the assailant to be in his early 20s or 30s, more than six feet tall, weighing 190 to I~ pounds, wlth medium-dark aom- plexion and close-cropped halr. Police said two other men also were being sought. At the time of the shooting police had said two youths, one armed with a small- caliber handgun, held up Stennis and took his wallet, wristwatchAand Z5 cents in cash. Stennis later told authorities one youth told him something like: "Now I'm going U> ·-you." AFTER TALKING with neighbcirhood resJdenta, police said it was possible three persons were involved. Teen 'High on Drugs' Charge<l In Fom· Murders ABINCTON, Pa. (UPI) A Philadelphia teen-ager was charged Mon- day with the murders of bis parents and two brothers whose ltloodied bodies were found in their beds, apparently bludgeon- ed or shot·gunned to deafh as they slept Sunday ~gbt. Police told the coroner the suspect, Kenneth Davenport, 18, "was high on drugs" at the time. THE VJCl'IMS, Alexander 1>8venport, 55, his wile, Rowilla, 50, and their two sons, Edmund, 14, and Peter, 12, were found Monday by another aon, Alexander Jr., 20, who then called police Md ac- companied them to the family's modest, two-story home. Pollce swore out murder warrants charging Kenneth Davenport with the slayings. Davenport, who had been ar- rested Monday morning by Philadelphia police on an unrelated speeding charge, was to be brought here today for ar· raignment oa murder charges. Dr. John A. Hoffa, tbe Montgomery County coroner, said all four victims were found lying In bed and were ap- parently shot in the head "by a high- powcred gun of some kind." HOFF A SAID police told him the suspect "was high on drugs at the time and didn 't know what was going on." Hoffa aaid autopsies scheduled for to- day wou1d determine the exact causes of death. He Wd each of the victims had also suttalned severe head injuries and did not rule out the possibility that they might have been bludgeoned to death. Abington police Capt. Clark. OJtting said no motive bad yet been established for the crimes. The bodies of the two parents were found in their bed on the first floor of the house, while the bodie& of the two brothers were found In separate beds upstairs. COLOM If A 21 ICUADOR- 6.l PIRU u .s South American Governments I MILITARY CIVILIAN '0'UlATION IN MllllONS Peron Victory Released Spy Sees ~other In Hospita~ NE W BRITAIN, Conn. (UPI) - Released after 20 years in a Chinese prison, Korean war spy John T. Downey took his ailing mother's hand, kissed her and said, "I'm here to stay." His mother. Mary T. Downey, 75, whose sudden illness sparked an in- ternational diplomatic es:change of messages t.o expedite her IOO's release, was understandably elated by his return. "YOU'U.. PROBABLY be a celebrity now, but don't let it go to your bead," tbe U>id him Mooday. Mrs. Downey was not told her son bad been released Sunday by the Chinese at Hong Kong, until just before he stepped into her room at the New Britain bospltal. Downey was admitted to the hospital in a room near his . mother to recuperate from an exhausting flight halfway around the world. He and his younger brother, William, planned to hold a news con- ference at noon today. Doctors had feared the excitement might be too much for her, but they were relieved with her reaction when she saw him. She even wanted to stand up to meet him becaWJe she didn't want him to see her "flat on my back." Her personal physician. Dr. Raul Lopez, declined and she greeted Downey in a sitting position. MULE JORN Downey W89 visiting with bis mother, William held a news conference at the hospital and discussed his ,brolher's years of confinement. . "Be felt like be waa a prisoner and. the treatment was never abusive, but he in- dicated an enormous relief in being a free man ." When his 4if ~orce jet touched down at Bradley· .eernational Airport ln \Vindsor Locks, 22 miles away from here, Downey was ~ted by a boyhood friend, Gov. Thomas J. Meskill , who when Mrs. DdWney became ill had in· terceded on ·11errson's behal! with Presi- dent Nixon. · '.: Premier Coo En-lai of the People's Republic of Cttj.na agreed to 'the release. An official statement Monday from China said Downey was freed because he bas served his tinie and bad not beeo a "bad prisoner." .,. .. WILLIAM DESCRIBED his brother's confmement as'. one heavy with poliUcal indoctrination,'=tncluding mandatory at- tendance at ledures for boors oo end. "The educati9n programs they ran him through were a·tittle lower key than what people usually a s s o c i a t e wttb brain .. hing,'' ·he said. In his earlt years in confinement, Downey, who was shot down over Manchuria In 1952. was "Interrogated, yes; tortured, no," his brother said. Downey was sentenced to li£e, but that term was commuted to five years begin· ning in 1972. URUGUAY 2 ., AIGlNTINA 24 The military iovernment of Argentina declanld Hect.or J, Campora a candlclate hand picked by exiled former President Juan D. Peron, the winner Monday ol the first presidential race In ten yean. Newsmap illustrat .. South American m!litary and civllian·l)lled countries. I f ! I I \ ) I I I ' I \, I a .Y. Stee • 1 VOL 66, NO. n, j 5riCTIONS, 42 PAGES -ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1973 N TEN .CENTS • .I ~Council Rejects Parolee~s Worla Per"lnit T -' 117 L Plmlllt ~ ., .. , ........... -stobbo I!-..e.t down bani tour ~· :. . TilO Cci!ti· v..-man oaya he wanta to . Pt bock up IDd elalma NeWport Boach • pOllce won't le! hhli becaale ot hit pollee .._.i.. . 'He WIDll In drive a cab In the Hart>or Aw but Ne:filOl't Beach pollce """' p. him a pi!rmlt:::and the City """""il v..dar niglll • .._ Ille ""'1al ~ ' . ., Counc:nmen 1o11 P-wltb a allm· mu qt bope, tiqwever, saying they'd re- ccmlder their dedsloo in two weeks when be lumlsbol them with a detailed report from bl! former probatloo olllcer In Sacramento. Petenon said this morning ha'll have it for them In two -· Richard John 11Stubbo" Peterson got tu. ni<tnaJiie In prl!on, where be has spent moot of tu. adult life. His I~ Inmates dubbed him "Stub- bo" boclule be bas ooly one arm. He loll the other oae when he -.! down the !!rat Ume. He wu nine yean old who!l. be fell under the wheel> of a CbJca&o trolley. He went down a Utile dlllmnily nine years later. He turned hlmeelf In to Loe Angeiel police and coaleaed tbat be bad molested a J..year~ld jirl. He was paroled alta-~ 30 daYJ ·and pla<:Od oo ftte ,..n' probation. Seven months later be w arrested on a lllatul\>rl' npe chatp, but not convicted. He WM amsted I month later 00. llilp.I· c.i>n or crimes ap1nsC. cbildttn but not coo'ilclecl. But in Oclober 1981, he went down bard for the third Ume. He was sentenced to San Quentin on charges of statutory rape, chlld mol..Ung and probation violation. He wu paroled ln June 19&4. It was a month later. almost midnight, when Peter3on and Roland Wayne Beaty stuck up a taco ltand la Garden Grove . They both weot to prlloo. 0..ty II still there and' probably will be for I Jong time. He shot and killed two priJon guards last year. Peterson was paroled in Demnber 1'71. He tried to find wort l10UDd Sacnmento. "I've worked about four months since I've been oul I want to wort. 1 want to support my family.'' Peterson married last year, W a step- daU(bter and now a baby of his own. He iso 't proud of his put. "But I don't figure It bas anythlna to do with what I am now," he says. "You're rehabilitated when you grow up. It doesn't happen Wltll you decide to do it younelf," be 11y1. "I had a bed altltude, J d.idn 't care. I did what I wanted to do. I never tried to get • job. I WU pretty wifd. "But a penao comes to a certalQ ace (See STllllBO, Poee JI r Rail Wage Hiked 10.7%: Tentative Pact Covering 500,000 Workers Told . ",.,, ....... MEANWHILE-PRISONER EXCHANGE GOES ON IN SOUTH VIETNAM Allied Troops Arrive In Blon Hoo Waving South l(iftna"'"" Fl191 -. . .. W ASIDNGTON (AP) -A tentative wage and fringe benefit settlement covering virtually all the nation's 500,000 railroad workers""' announced today. Spokesmen !or the rail Industry and IS unions Involved In the pact said the agreement would increase wages and benefit.I by a total oM0.7 pereent over 18 months beginning July, 1. ·This would lliclude a 4 percent wage in- crease effective.next Jan. 1 and a revised pension system which would put an ad· dltional fil.75 per month into the paychecb of rail worken. The Industry would pick up the paymenta that heretofore bad been paid by the worten Transit Unit To Sfudy Two Bay Bt:~~~s POW He for 9 Years --~ .;.,...i Beach 'f °. ·~e' Re,k(ased Friday -' \ . .,--·l AIGON (AP) -The Viet Coilg an- nounced Indal tbat an All\edcan . war prisooer hekl longer than aoy other U.S. -iii hisiory 'Ii ·-~being ~ F.ridaf. • ~ ::i. - Also amoog .:the"llZ prlSOtieK .belrig tq;med over at Hanoi!a Gia· Lam Airport t~ the ranking u,s: Civilian o(liclaj cap- tdfud by'1he c.mm-t.s. ·-· ··"A young Marine supposedlr .killed In Vl$fn&n and buried by tu. lamily tour nm ago but who later·turned lip allve alflo ls coming out. • The longest held American ~ptiv'!. ls Maj. Floyd Thompson, DOW 39; 11• W .. :.. * * * • ['I • • ... Tpstln MaJiine. jl' -q ' '[(,) Be Released F,riday in Hanoi • • -~Tustin man l! listed among ,the next group of American prisoners of war +ied In be released by the North Vietnamese Friday In Hanoi. • Marine Maj. Paul JOt.P~ Montague all' Ileen a POW since March 29, 1918, whop his belloopter waa shol down on a mJoiioo over Sooth Vietnam. caplured1 March 26, 1964, In Quang Tri Province just below the Demilitarized 7.one, where he was serving as a U.S. ad- viser wltl> 8o\ith Vietnamese !on:es. Thompson was then a captain. When released Friday, be wtil have IJl'Ot s,m d4lYI as a prisoner of war, five months longer than Navy Lt. Cmdr. Everett Alvarez, the fint pilot shot down over North Vietnam. The ranking U.S. civilian being releas- ed is Philip Manbard, 52, a se.nior career diplomat with the State Departmeol Manha.rd was captured Feb. 2, 1968, when Communist forces seized the former imperial capital of Hue during the Tel offensive. Also returning borne wtU be Pie. Ronald L. Ridgeway, who the Com- munbll said 'l'a• CIQllure!I Feb. 25, 1968, near a U.S. outpost at Khe Sanh. What wu believed to be the remains of Ridgeway and other members of his patrol caught in a North Vietnamese am· bush were recovered, returned to the United Stat.es and buried foW" yeal'I ago. Rldgeway's· mother ii Mildred A. Ridgeway of Houst.oot Tex. The list lnclUdes igl. Michael Patrick Branch of lltflhland; Ky.,· whom. Radio Haftol ltequedtly Identified as a ci<sert<r. Ind Maj. Floyd Kushner of Danville, Va., a medleal corpe ollieer to whom anUwar statements were .attribUted over the (See PoWa, Page Z) { traffic problems, illcludlng the posaibility of lwo mare Upper Bay bridges, wm be discussed tooigbt by the · Transportation Plan Cili2.ens Advisory COmmlUee. The panei, which has been meeting for a year to prepare the trafDc study por· Uon of the city's general pb.n, will hear recommendations from the city's traffic consultant, Alan M. Voorhees and Associates. During the 7:30 meeting at the Newport Pier1ileguard headquarters, the consultant will unveil a tentaUve draft of the second phase of the three-part traffic study. Recommendations contained in the phase two study include: -At least one and possibly two more bridges across Upper Newport Bay. --Termination of the existing Pacific Coasi Highway at the Santa Ana River bridge in West Newport and rerouting it inland. -Swinging the Newport Freeway acro55 the Santa Ana River and onto coast Highway in Huntington Beach. -Creation of a mas.slve interchlng~ behind the bluffs overlooking West Newport Uniting rerouted Coast Highway with tbe new alignment of the Newport Freeway. --O>mpletlon of the Corona del Mar Freeway by bringing h down to eoa..t Hiftn!aY south o1 Corona del Mar or swinging it into the bills down to Laguna Beach. Phue two of the study, when it is adopted by the city counCil, will provide tltematlvea from which to choose a plan to ~v~ the city's iralfie system. 'lbe Dll8l phase of the study, due to be oompleUd by summer, will conalat of choosiilj: a single plan and starting to im- plement it.~ ~ into the separate railroad retirement funds that covers rail workers in lieu of Socisl Security. A spokesman for the C.ost of Living Council aa.Jd today it is likely that the council will review the tentative settle-- ment to see if it comes within the gov- ernment's voluntary pay standards. But the spokesman said council direc- tor John T. Dunlop would have no com- ment until he reviewed the settlement. The gQvernment's pay standard allows for wage increases of 5.5 percent a year plus another 0.7 percent in fringe bene- fits. But the oouncil has indicated the standard will be applied fiexibly on a cue-by-case basis. The agreement is subject to ratifa- tion by otficlall of the l5 unions, and in one case by a me.p1bership vo~. The single union requiring membership ap- proval is the Sheet Metal Worbn. The tentative agreement came 3\2 months ahead of cootract expiration dates July 1. Sources Said the setUement was virtually dictated by the shaky fmandal condition of the railroad ret1rement fuM. The agreement would al!IO include ~ visions for early retirement and ralse maximum lifetime major m e d I c a I benefits from $50,000 to '2$0,000 per worker. Ra~e Near End Ragtime Leads in Cabo San, Lucas Brisk nortlnvest windl were driving the U.oo,t Qi~tlali Lucai -tba fin@\~~·· ~y. >.. the wind haul<d northwest at 15 knots, Ragtime, the scratch boat, moved 'mto the elapsed lime lead for the first time with the pOsslbility of finishing tonight. The 10.meter Hilaria, which was prevk>usly in the boat-for-boat lead, droir ped far behind when she broke a maln boom during the night. Ragtime was off Magdalena Bay, about 150 miles from the cape, at 8 a.m. today and Hilaria was about 48 miles behind. The handicap positions are about the same as Monday with the Cal-33 Kahali from lhmlinlton llarllour Yadlt a.Ill silll "'ld!nc Ille "'ieded -i• I Kahalf -the bii>dlcap rimor In the first Callo race In 117L Chllclt Colton, the communleatiom of. ficer aboard the1 escort veael Simpa.Uca II, said the boats were experiencing their first "sleigh-ride" since the race began l~t Friday. The standings: OVERALL : first. Kahali; second, Firebrand; third, Moonday. CLAS.S A: first, Dorothy O; seeord, Spirit; third, Ragtime. CLASS B' first , Fi,.brand; """""" Moonday ; third, Westerly. CLASS Co first, Kahali; oecond, Da- mian A; Ulird , Teacher's Pet ID. Judge Describes 'Wedge' In Newport Injury Suit Justice Robert Gardner doffed his judge's robe today, went into an Orange County Superior Court witness stand and vividly ouUined, a.s a veteran body surfer, the perils of "the Wedge"-a strip of beach between the Balboa Pier and the West Jetty. The Fourth District Court of Appeals' presiding justice wu called as an expert witness by lawyers for Donald Raymond Buchanan, an Orange youth who became totally paralyzed seven years ago when high waves tossed him onto the beach at · the Wedge. "OnJy a handful of experts in the world today should be surfing the Weda:e and I'm not ooe of them," the bushy-6rowed jurist commented at ooe point of his teslimooy. And he drew laughter from a delighted jury when he frankly admitted that body- surfing habitues he described as "the exclusive Wedge Set," referred to newcomers as " tourists. Oatlanders. goons or turk eys" -o>rnments cont.ained in a magazine article be wrote for Sports illustrated. Gardner. the.~ of a boot on body surfing that was pubUsbr.d I a st Dec<rnber. cootinned 1or Attorney Miu McCray that surling oooditlona at The Wedge on Aug. 14,..1961, were almost cer- tainly responsible for the injuries suf- fered by Buchanan, then 18 years old. Buchanan wants more tbaa $Z million In damages from the City of Newport Beach for what his la"Ytf dabna ls the city's negligence in permitting a notoriously dangerous beach to remain in that condition. ~goe's wife, Shirley. and their tlfie"~live In Tliatln. She said to- cQY!ihat she 11 ~overwbolmed and kind L of pb at this point -IMll vory, Tfrf d~." .. ·J)ory Inquiry Ordered Gantner. who still practlcee body 11111- lng in the Newport Beach a1'91 wbere be lives. said bl.I memories of the Wedge date back to 1921 when be body surfed In 'l!iiMootague dilldren Steve, 18; Lln- dtflllllmOll H, and p;i;;JA; Jl , are .. 'jlllt oat bttt," their mother laughed. i>enlagon olfidala calle4 ""Mn. M.,,. tape to tell her the newa at l:U a.m. to- da!'-'Ille sal!I she WU alreodJ .UP and ~ breakfast. • • • ~iliOugh the U.S. relum potnl bun, -onnounced yet, Ml'a. Monique aalll lbil'll'"""' her hmband wm come bode t..:~1 Camp peodle(oD 'to Son ~ C<>Unl7-• Wbtri IJnt told Jut JMll&l'1 that Maf, ~~ -be -fn>m prlaool ~'If.;"'~ Ibo -.... bl& 'l'tlc!ay &be added, "Saro WI w11J bat r: .. beln& together wtll be • bis "11 Moolque'• bh1hday Is-'!llet-~ Sbe aid today h will bo -...,. ,,,...Iii! •of -al .... ~. rttuln lioroe II the ".,ateat 1'9t .. ,.. ,..;.ind," ... aid. • Vice .Mayor Charges 'Infiltration by Plio1ties' 'ir1 auppo&ed to be eaucbt from the dorf boell and aold from the dory _,.. be &aid. "lt'a also auppoaed In be caught daily and eokl daily, but there are tome tUtna h bomt and putting It on Ice· for the Dl!lt day," ht said. "We libould have oor otall loot lpto this," be eald. "'ll"Y iihouJd taJt to lbe dory lbbermen and belp police the -!loo. If we don'I, we'll.. lolo a valllable -to Iba cammunfty.• . "lt will '° 4~ and u. the" -ii -• lie &aid. llof!ls ...,..ied • ..,. .......... mlchl be .......... but Cowolbnm Cart K1mla and ltidlarcl C1W1 lndl<aled t11a1 '°'"''"'nut --mlcbt cmlJ make lblilll -· ''Wben -·-.... _ .. Ip_ body, theJ rea11y foul tt ap," crow aaid. ~ llid tt -• group of COllC<n> ed doey)nen who bad brought the prob- lem to his attaiUoa. 'MB10r Donald A. Melnnls skied with Rogers. "That'• a hiltoricll landmark," the mayor 11id. "The only 'NI)' to justify It Is lta blolor1eal llcnlflcance. "U people &A COllllDj!rdil!ztna It. then--· .... .._, Id .. - elallsatioo II""'"" If tt'a ~ td, llJ• dead. • '"Ille whole ldoo, of a ....., boat Inn> lm!na fish to • dory just to be -to shin deleata Iba --·· Meo Inola ea\<I. Qty .i..._ llolllrt t:. Wynn aid he -1d ~ badr to councllm<n u -a ...,.U.lo. \ . (See GARDNER, Pap I) Office Burglar Gets Machines A burglar pried hil way into a Newport BetlCb office early Mooday .-, and made off with 1$,100 -111 of -macbl .... pollee aald today. l'lllllp A. Steam1, proalcleot al Aquarll&il Deftiopm<nt ~. 4111 Codipla Drlve..told ln\oaltpt«s the kla wn dllcover<d wbm ..,.,..,... anlftd !0< wort ll'alidar. omcm cl.lraftred Jll'1 mans cm me JocUd -to the olllce ~ tba burllar ~ lallod to Ill la. slnillar pry mar1i1 _.. a1oo -.., the door bt .,..,,._ ~-- Taken from the ailiai """ Iii calailaling mac:biDol and Una -.irlo typewrilen. -I Tbe National Railway Labor em. ferooee which negotiated for the Industry said the propooed agreement coven vlrlually all Clasa One railroads In tho nation except ror those, like the Pena Central, imoolved In .-ganlzatioa Ullder banknlptcy oroceodings. However, Penn CentraJ workers would be ........ by the improved retirement benefifs, wh.k:b must be app;roved by Congress as amendment.I to the Rallroed Retirement Act. The aDDOUDCement said lt was the ftnt time In history that the Industry reached agreement 00 all Issues with all uniON ahead of contract upiration. Trailer Park Bungalows To Get Ax .The aJlepdlJ llfepJ and ~ buqalon to the Bay Shor< Trailor Part. 11~ W. Coast Hlgliway, wtU be tom down. Newport Beach Community De- velopment Director Richard V. llot!an said Mmday. Hogan announced that be had reached agreement with Marshall Dufiield, op- erator of the pert, and the lrvlne Qxn. pony, which owns the land, to bave the 40 ..-more structuns raud by Doc. st, Hogan uJd about 10 of the buildings. U-that ""'"* possll>ly be brougllt up to mintmaI building code requJ-., will be demolished by June 1. 1 "We wanted to be lair to the people who li...t there, ,.... of them for many ,.an," Hocan told councilmen Mollday U be oullined I detailed list of airrec> lions for the other 100 trailers In the part. He said Duffield bas agroed to order the removal of dozens of illegal cabanu and water beaten that have been 1t- t.acbed by various means to many of the trailers. 'lbe COl'1'eCtion list includes a variety of. other things, ranging from illegal gas and pJumbing connections to numel'OUll cases of faulty wiring. Thi! eooditlona also stloulate thal proo- peclive buyers ol any of. the house trall- ers must be notified that they are sub- ject to ..tensive ropaln. The a........,t does not deal with the fact that Dulfield's lease oo the propert7 expires May 31. IrviDe olfw:ials have Aid tbeJ ewntu.- ally plan to -vtlop the pert area. A compaey opol<eaman llld this mon> ing the leue..bu betn 1 .. lewal and~ company does not --plate -.1 of the lease," lndloattnc the company wtU -the parlt itaell, for • while. Weatlter '11111 third atorm, expected Oii WedneldaJ, wtU not mll<: ii on the 0raop Cout unW Thunday, ac-cordlnfl to the ft&ther oervice. W..m..dar abould he moetly lllMY witb ll1gbtly wa mer tempera.. -IDcl>o at the -In the low .. , rillnC to II In!-Ov.,,. '"chi Iowa In the ... INSllU! TODA V NOU! 11'1 IM hlni of kadfr111 upirlit .,.,..pc1111.. to -heod- oclla. Tll<W adwrilllrl{I elaimt -bcn cJi4Zlc!tgcd bV tM rrc. Stt ,...., Pall< JJ. ..... _ ._ ::="' ----- n • -" " • • " ,.... ... ...... ._,I ... II M --.. • -.. --.. --. --. . -.... .............. , ·-w -"' -. -.. .... 1M-4 ~--4 I lllLY Ill.Cir - Jlele•e fr!!!•I ...... .,.1 Viet Co;ng POWs STlJBBO ••• ....i he bfo:mw .... _ al l bl • peolng. I -lylq ID .,y aoll ... nlpt and "'8liad wbat I ,,.. cloiD& with· mr Ulo. You'" not a man jllll becluoe you tu:rD 21 u •Pttenon aid. Named by U.S. · ~ uld ~ baft DO ri&bl "to lleap COlldtmniDg Ill< for 'l!iiat I did when I WU I kid." Ne"J>9rl J!<ach CCllllCIJmen and police say that's not tbt cue. ' tW~N (uPI) -The'Defenoe • IO!d..5ta(jo Department& made )lllbllc to- clliy tile following u.t al %7 mllitlry pris- oners and five ctvilian.s to be release«\ • by the 'Vitt Coog Friday ID Hanoi. Tiie five dV1llana were nported cep- turecl durll18 the Communl!I Tel oflen· " • live at Bue, South Vietnam, oo Feb. 1, ' ' .. · ;: : Border Raids t i •• • I I :. Net Huge : Drug Cache .. , • WASHING')'ON (AP) -The govem- !r. ~ tntnt announced today it selled. Sl9.9 ~ mUUon ID illegal nareoUcs, lndudlng 21 • 1 tons of marijuana, in a combined opera- 11ir ' tio with the Mes:ican government that it •! ' •id crippled a major drug-amuggllng , ring on the Arlzooa-Mnlco boriler. • U.S. offtdals said they also seized 9.S ~ pounds ol beroln and made more than 100 ,. · anuta. 'lbe)' Ilk! Ibey seized nc:orda of • 'lWI~ amuuJIDg ""18plraey responsi- ble 1or bringing tons a1 marijuana and mulM!loa ()( heroin" into the United states. Delaili, IDdudlng the namea ol lbooe .. aneated aJid Where Ibey W... seized, • ..... not lp>mediately ll1110U11Ced. The 1lln!et value ol tbe seized marl-" ,.. • jUaoa W-8 )1UI 11 .$1U mUUon and the heroin at $3.5 million. The amount ol ~ heroin woold' be enough to aupply 182,000 :• addK:ts for one day. .... :" The result& ol the Mezlean.United v" States eurcise, called u0peratlon Cac-.K: tus/' were, announced at a news con- ; f""'1Ce al the ..-.. olllce ol Nlll'COllca Conlrol Program ln!onnatlon. •• Law mforcement autbor!U.S from Me>:· I!' .• Im and Iba state ol Arlr.ona &t!ended tile I bJnfereoce. ' r ' -~· The -t aald Operatloo cao-' • tus -Jauncbed early ID Febnlary when • intelligence 90Uf'Cel rev.ea.led t h a t • : , 1-.i qoantllfes Of mar1Jiwia and ••• -,,... ~"-Into the , United states aloDg the lolexlcllfborder '" :-Ill -Arimul, the pVOrnment 't ... said. • • 1· . Ill -to Iba -and Cj)l>-• : ; fllcaled nircotl<a, the government ~ )I. ~ ·; aiao ltlzed several private dwellings It ; :: aald were used as smugg)Jng warebooaes, :. :. vebJcles and weapom. . =~ •• • ~ # Newp0rt Co~cil ~ .. ~ ~ Wants 'Control ;{ .. . . 'H ·of Thfuwawavs 1·· ''""·•"\•-iot J - t : : Newport Jleadi -~.Mm­l : : daj they ought to-moi:e c:altriil ...... l :: the dlltrlbutlon of .....an~·~wey ._ .. ; newspapen:. . . :.. They Instructed City At1-y Dennis :; O'Neil to cltalt an ordlnanc:e to prnblblt {. :. distrlbudoo ol the tree newspapers to ~ residents who inform the city clerk's : ! office they do not want them. :r O'Neil told counc11men that the city of ;, Fullerton bu • similar ordlnal1ce that .. : ~ now being challenged in the courts. :~ C.ouncllmeo. said they didn't care. ~ ;~ '1'd still like to see the council move • ·~ ahead. Let Fullerton do our court battles. ~ ~ It'a not costing U1 a penny," aakl Vice Mayor Howard Rogen. . . O'Neil aald be would have the ordin- • ~ ance prepared for conslderaUoo April 9. . -. • .. . . . . . .. .. .. . .. .. . .. . .. .. ·, •' ,, .. . • • • • • • . • - OIAHMCOAIT • DAILY PILOT TM.Clrante (out DAILY l"llOT,"""' lflflld'I la arnblMd flle ............ If JIUbl"'*I by ... Or~ CO.Jt 1>111111..,lftg ~. ~ ,.,. t1111t1DM .,. llillllllt'*ll, ~w ltl""'9fl l'tlfty, for C.I• M~, H""""' I.ell, Hwt!lnfllol! IHdll'Ollrlt•I" V•1'-I!, lAflorl9 8Mcfl. INlrle/saddJflllCit _. S... C~ Mn Jiiin Cl""-A 1'"919 NlllDrllf •ltlOll • -'"""" s.tllrdiTt M$ llll'lllJ:YL llle Jll'lllCllNI ~illllrlt lll#t It •f J,_, WtJt ..., $1/'ft't, c..q ~ C..t~ ... f2tl'. Rob•'' N .• w.H .......,tftl. .... f'vlMllMr J•<k It C1rl1y \'lcl ~ilMM ..W Gl!w•I ~ Tltol'll•I Kff¥11 ·-11tol'ft•• A. Mwphl11• MIMf ...... , .. L.P"" "'"' """""" lffdl Clry Ntw ---• l~JJ Ntw,..n loul•.,•'4 M1lll119 AMm11 P.O. lot 1171, t2WJ --QM'9 AWt:·• .. .., ,,,... ~a.tdl1 1DP_,A...,. --_ ,,,,, ·--..,. """*'1w1 llS ...... l!I C.... .... T .. 1.•1• f7141 MMJll Cl'!'lfW MtWJhkit M2.U7t ~ tm. or..... GiMtf ~ ............... ,""' ......... _.,.. ., ..,.,..,.......... ,..,.... -.. ~..._.,,....,,.. --· ..... 0. ~ Miii ,,, o.t• MIM. =:-·,,r,._.. :.;, :.m•.= ........ ... ...,,,,.,.,, "Wt bav'e on ~tlon to proteet the -le ol thll "city.' said Clpt. Rlc:hl\nl Hamiltoo, Ule man who actually revoked PelerlOn'I taJI pormit. Peterson baa a l>trmit illSUOd by ,_ tatn ValleJ 1lOlfoe.· • .. • He 181' be baa lemporaJ:7 permits ltolll Oolll Mesa llld Hwitlngton J!<ach poJice. The permanent ones a?e· due in the mall. Camper Trtreh ()rasks. ·\r.11C:. . said Steven . J}i~ ui: ·~f 11\311. ·~tiago !;lrive, Newport Beacb eecaped .Wltlftwo cut fingers Moodlly night w~en the CJJiiper trllcj< h•·"'.•• driv· ing failed to make the tw:n from Coast Highway omo-o\d Ne~ Boolevard near the Ardles Over-pass. •The accident occurred about 11:40 p.m. Be needs pt!mljls from all r.... dties to wort for.Yellow .. C8b ID COiia Mesa, where olfldals say they'll hire him H the police say.okay. · Newport coundJmeo were divided on . Peteraon"I appeal . CoundltDan Paul · Ryd<oll lrgued on bis -. ' "It must be noted that our system ha> released Petenon. It's not our decision whether he alioiJ1d be on parole. Be ill out. Be bu a need to eain a living. It eao · be assumed that Other communltiea: have passed on h1s ability to drlVe a cab," , Ryckoll said. 1 • Coast Council. Bogged Down Over Procedure A procedural regulation swamped South c.ast Regional Zone Conservation Commissioners' ideas of taking action Monday nigbt and delayed the first bear· lugs by five bours. From Pqe l ·. '.; GARDNER .•. ;· :. that sector as a 9-year-old·boY. "I've stayed away from that part of the beach ln more recent years," the veteran jurist grinned. And he drew a broad smile from Judge J.E.T. "Ned" Rutter, also a ~ewport Beach resident, and chuckles frQm the jury with the comment: "I think I've been thrown on that beach on every part of· my anatomy." lt Is alleged by Buchanan's lswyen that city negligence and dredging opera· tions that have affected the contours of the Wedge have greaUy increased tile dangers to body surfers In the area. Justice Gardner today repeated]y stressed those dangers and reminded lawyers on both sides that Wedge babitues refer to one section of the beach as "lhe Brutal." "They're shore breakers," be said. "And on many days ot the year you can get a vicious beach breaker that shouldn't be faced by anyone who isn't in tbet hand- ful of experts in the world today." Special Meeting On Beach Erosion Project Slated Commissioners squabbled from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. -with a two-hour dhmer break -over a state c.ommissioo rule that regional bodjes CQUldn't vote on ex- emption dalD1$ without a stall recom-Newport Beach Marine Safety Dlre:tor mendatlqn followinB a public bearing. -Reed ha.9 scheduled a special A m~jOrity of the Commission wanted to vote Monday, despite pri>tests from meeting Thursday at JO a.m. open to all CjO~OD .staff members and the at-residents interested in the nearly com- toiney general'.• r<preaentatfye. No ataH pleted beach eroolna control project. recommendltms were prepare!l Monday "We want to bave this ipeettng !Or lllglit~ "IJ-.-;. ~ '•t ~ ' Jeffrey Freedman of tbe state Attorney onyone affected by the project' to come General's office said adopted ruies of in and make observations while the plQCedU<e call for action oo vested rights equipment Is still here," Reed said. cases at the next subsequent meeting Reed said he want.s to make sure the ....... __ 'ect following public hearing& U.S. Anny Corps d -.... ·-· pro] • .. A few commissioners, e s p e c i a 11 y which included coostructioo of fpur West: James· , R.eedY,· .of ~i, l,l9qlca and Newport groins ~ dumping al 300,000 ~ •l'IWlliw d J.9oi ·!leacb were cubic yards of 118l1d, i1I acceptable to miffed at--\ht state roedblock. everyone. . . , But shohfy after I p.m., Reedy moved He estimates it will take about llX to ~the bearinis and VOi!' next week. more working daya to complete the sand The coijlll!lss!on then Con<l~ 2f public haul and get the beaches back to normal liearin(I until I a.m. today. ~ use. Reedy said 1<>me ol the d•'!elo-re-'!be meeting, wbich will be attended by questlnj U:emptions were afraid the ' : Reed and .spokesmen for the Army and the commtssk>n Voted '.again.st its < , the cootractor, will be held at the New· reguloU11111, t be lending .)11.tUbllloos pon Pier lileguanl' headquarters. wouldr;l 't ~er the vote valld and • · - would.'8111l wltbhold.<c1nslJucUoo funda: . ™ ""riunlssion h .. 1.urlidie11on ove.. B nd , 'T , building ~Is within )l09 yards of the . ra 0 s ango mean high tide Ho~ In Orange and Los · · • Angeles counties. Okay in Israel From Pagel POWs •.. Communllt radio. Abo being released ill S g t. Alfonso Riate, rt, of Bell Gan:.lens, Calif., a Viet Cong prisooer since 1967 llst.ed as killed in action by the Pentagon until his mother received a Jetter from him just before Christmas in 1971. Another is Pvt. Frederick LewiJ Elbert Jr., whom the Marine Corps still Hstl as a deserter. JERUSALEM (AP) -Marlon Brando can tango in Israel, the country's fihn censors decided today. By a lS-0 vote, the censors approved the movie .. The Last Tango in Pails" for showing on Israeli screens. The pic- ture is expected to open aoon, with tickets sold to adults only. The censorship board's decision came as a surprise to Israeli moviegoers, who are accustomed to erotic bits being snip. ped out of films. Newport Council Action Here in brief are major actions taken by Newport Beach city t'OWlcilmen Monday: BAY PRESERVE: Told the Para, Beaches and Rtcrcation Comm.ion to look for waya the public could acquire Jrvine Compgoy prope:i t1 it the north end ol Upper Newport Bay • .-. (' . -'° .... '·~ Boyle O:t~red Murder Of Yablonski"."""Assassin ERIE, Pa. (UPI) - A convicted assassin said today he was told' by two former United Mine Workers officials that former UMW President W. A. "Tony" Boyle ord,ered \be murder of union insurgent Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski '1for tbe welfare of the UMW.'' The dramatic testimony by Paul Gilly, who earlier was sentenced to death by a jury for the slaying of Yablonski, bis wife and daughter, came at the trial of Willlam J. Prater, 51, a fohnei" UMW field organizer from La Follette, Tenn. Reached by telepbOlle by the AJsod. ated Press at his Wash.Ins borne, Boyle said he would have no · to say other than .to again. deny any Jn.Vo vement In the slaylngs. "I have denied repeatedJy bavinJ any knowledge wtiatsoever of the cnme," Boyle said. "I knew absolutely nothina: about any of lhls. I don't know any ol' these people, I 11ever saw any of them and I have nothing to say.'' Gilly said Boyle was implicated by Prater and a confessed Yablonski assassin, Silous Huddleston, during at Austrians Boil -· As Woman Lauds Hitler on TV • • •t ~ ·~ h VIENNA (UP!f -. A bouSelvile wl1o said she would welcome the returp of Nazi dictator Adolf Hiller cauSed ·a na.. tionwid,e uproar Mot¥1ay, the 35th an- niversary of the day he' marched into Vienna to receive a hero's welcome . "We got ,72 protest, ;ealls," sald a spokesman for a teteviston station that carried pro-Hitler comments by Mrs. Edith Asberger. "And that's an unusually high number in Austr,ia." Mrs. Asberger, 49, was a schoolgirl who turned out with thousands of 'other Viennese March l!l, 1938, to welcome Hitler. "I would go again to welcome , him back," sahe said. Mrs. Asberger was interviewed in the Heldenplatz (Heroes SqUare), scene of HiUer's triumphant entry after he an- nexed his native Austria . !be interview came after a recent· festival of old Nazi propaganda films, olie of them showing HJtler'it goose-stepping arrival in Vienna, stirred laughter a~ng young audiences. least three meetings beld prior to the Dec. 31, 1969, assassinations. He said Boyle's name was mentioned during the meetlnp held to discuss the financing and methods to be used ID the slaylngs. "I was told the wtion wanted to get rid of Yablonskl because he'd mess up the union and the unim's pension fund," said Gilly. "Did Prater tell you wl1o wanted lhe murders done.?" asked speclaJ. prosecutor Richan! A. Sprague. "He said Tony Boyle wanted him kill· ed/' said Gilly. •1Dkl he say why?" ~.Sprague. "As I recall, 1t was for the welfare of the UMW," ~ Gilly. "Tony Boyle would hold all the power. Silous Hud-" dleston told ·me Tony Boyle was fair and turned down an offer to stay on as permabent president ol the union." "Who told you that?" asked Sprague. "Huddleston and Prater/' said Gilly. Sprague then told Gilly to loot at Prater, and salted: "ls ll1ere 8l1JI' doubt tbat he Is one of the men who talked with you and planned the murders?" "No, sir," replied Gilly. It WU the first public testimony in the six YabloDSkl munl<r trials by Gilly, Huddleston's too-Jn.law and husband of another admitted murderer, Annette Gilly. Zsa Zsa Sui1ig W aldori Hotel After Robbery NEW YORK (AP) -Zs& Zsa Gabor has starred in another show, this Ume in Manhattan federal court. The actress ill suing the Waldorl- AStoria Hotel for .PX!,000 for falling to protect her froM an elevator stickup whlCb she says cost her a small fortune In jewelry. Miss Gabor told a jury Monday how she, her maid and her dog were return- ing from her Broadway show, "Forty Carats," ear1y the morning of Aug. 19, 1!170 to her $3,00IHMnO!lth suite In the Waldorf Towers. Two gwimeo joined them in the elevator, brandished gm'I! and took off with her pear-shaped dia· mond earrings and two diamond rings, Miss Gabor said "It'• been nine yeara since any offense baa been eommltted," be added. ! A motion by RyckoH to ...mile the '. police was voted down. 5-2. Councilman John Store sided with Ryckoff. 1 A motian by Vice Matar 1foward Rogers to table a decision pending rea!ipt of the complete parole report was defeated, 4-31 "The preliminary repori we bave aay• · you've made 'marginal adjustment,' " . sald Mayor Donald Mcinnis. "It's a · tough situation, I d<ll'f ~ the job of being judge and jury. • "I agree with everybQcly that you have a rlgbt to earn a living, I bate to deny that.right," Mclllnla Ilk!. "A more fa..,.ble parole reporl wooid easily IDfluence .,y judgment,'' be Ilk! • "ID the meantime, I hope you could find other employmeot where you would not interface with the community In a way a cab driver wouJd have to!' Mclllnla made tbe motion to deny tbe appeal. It passed 1manirnously. This morning, Petenoo's Orange C.oun- ty parole officer, Charles H. Dean, said be -·•d not argue against the dty cowr di dkislon. "They have a legal responsibility," be said. He also said be did not consider Petersen's ·:yest to driye a cab as unreasonable ven ID light of bll police 1'lCOn!. "H it w driving an ice cream wagon, it would be more dangerous," be said.. Balhoan Draws Prison< Tcerm-~ .. F 9r' Assault ~!)om Wire Sen1ces TUCSOI!. Ariz. -A Balboa Peninsula man has drawn three years in._ federal prison !Qr assaulting a U.S. cuMoms agent. : : Fr~ C. Naetzel, 30, pleaded guilty to the felony offense here a month ago, when he appeared before U.S. District Court Ju!!se Wllllam Frey. 'nlt '.hltident occurred in November when the customs agent tried to search Nuetzel at the Nogales, Am., border en· try statloo. Nuetzel entered an Innocent plea Mon-. day in a separate appearance before U.S. Magilltrate Raymond T. Terlizzi. Nuetzel is charged in the second case with attacking a federal probation officer during a pre-sentence a~ probation report interview. • A YARN FOR EVERYONE • . ' . . .. _ r-. - There is no question that the number one fiber in tho carpel industry tod1y is nylon. A survey of 25 of tho largest c1rpet m1nufecluren r1ve1led the following: Nylon. in 1972 occounled for 55.7'/. of en corpols offered f0< sale, en INCREASE of 4.6 '/.. .. " Wools dacr.ned from 10.41, to 9.11 .. Acrylics declined from 20.1 '/. to 18.5 '/. • Polyesten doctined from 13.2:'. to 12.7:' .. Oleff~s deer.nod from 4.5 :.'. lo 3 '/. • -'!.;.. · Thes~· figures •,re osfounding because of the lac! thel tho d .. ALCOHOLIC HOSPITAL: Approved ex_lension ~ use pennlt for RaJeigh • Hills Hoopltal In Newport Heights alt.,. councilman Carl Jlymla, who repre- sent• the atta, said the hospital has been a good nelgbb<r. .. . ,. mend for nylon crHlfd • tremendous shoriogo end many milli woro l_ooking for ~NY kind of yam to mike carpel from. PRIVATE DOCKS: Approved construction ol 77 sJlpe and an 861).f!)Cil bulk· heed to front Irvine Company'• Coves condominiums "" Bayside Drlve west of Marine A venue • TAXI DRIVER: Turned down appeal by parolee Richard John "Slubbo" Pete""' ol Costa Mesa to obtain a taxi driver permit pen4lnf receipt d more detailed report from his probation olflcer • THROWAWAY NEWPSPAPERS: Told oily 91tomef b\ draft ordinance prohibiting distrlbutlon ol free newspaperi to resldenta wl1o Ille nollce with city clerk that they do not want them. BAY SUORB BIJNGAWws: Approved a1Jl1,'0111C11t mado by dty offidala to onSei: about 10. bllildlnn..1'! Bay Shore Ti'afler Pm cle1110llsbed by Jwie ~lat the mt atand 1111111 Dl!cember. ,, ' . - DORY FLl!J1:l'i Called ft1r an in-lgaUon Into marUtlng praelkel Jn. voMng the dty'1 hlotorlc dory llod. . .. !1 I. . • '" con• 1111A ~-'"' • • Wo hAve hundreds of nylon corpets at Alden'a-stop anCI SH us. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES . . 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 I I • II•· 'l1lorL fiw l:lO: Pr!. ' te •: 5ot. ':JO te I I - I ' . -- r; \ I I I' I • • " I I \ I Today's Flllal N.Y. Steeb VOL 66, NO. 72, 3 S6CTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1973 c TEN CENTS N~port NiXes Parolee!ts Work Per 1nit • Jl7 L PETBll DlllG . °' ............. • -p...,... -down -r.cir -. 1l!e Cosfa Mesa man 1&)'1 he wlDls to Pt liadt up and claims Newport Beacb jJOliO. wool let him becaule ol his p>li<e ncorcL He wants to dri,ve a cab in the Harber Area but Newport Beach ~ '""'' give bitb a permit and the city couiicil Moncla7 Dig!ll austainec! the delliaL -, • ·. • Coandlmm left l'elel.., wtlb a glim- mer of ~ boweva, AYillc tbeJ'd ""° o••""'er di* derision in two weeks -he fumlabes them with a dolalled repirt from bis former probotfm officer .,-.· Ptt<nol> said tbll ~ he'll have tt far lhem in two -, Richard Jolm "Stubbo" Petenon got his mrtname ib prlaoa. wbele Ile bas ..,.m lllOll of his adult Ille. · His lelJow Inmates dubb<d him "Stub- bo" because Ile bas only on< arm. He loot statutory rape cllarae, but not convicted. the oll\er one lfllen he went down the He wu anestoct a month later on SUJJJI· lint Ume. lie waa -yean old when Ile cJoo of crllnes agalnsi children but not fell under the wlleell of a Cblcago convicted. trolley. But In October 19&1, be went down hard He went. down a Dtde dlffereatly nine for lhe third time. He was sentenced to years 1at<!r. He turned hlmaelf in in Los Sijn Qo«ltin on charges of statuinry Angelea police and· cool.,..... lbat he 1iad rape; -child molesting and probation molested *year~ld girl. violation. He was paroled after aerving 30 days • He wu Plll'oled in June 11164. and .placed on nve years' probation. Irwas a month later. almost midnight, Seven months later be was arrested on a when Peterson and Roland Wayne Beaty stuck up a taco atand in Garden Grove. They both went in pr-. Beaty b still tbele and probably will be tor a long time. He sbot and kllled IWO prison guanls last year, Peterson was paroled In December 1971. He tried to find wort around Sacramento. '1I've worked about fow-months since I've been out. I want to work. I want to support my family.•* Peterson married last year, has a step. daughter and now a baby of bis own. He isn't proud of bis past.' "But I don't figure it bas anythlna lo do with what ram now." he says. "You're rehabilitated when you grow up. It doesn't happen unW you decide to do it yourself," be says. · "I had a bad attitude, I didn't care. I did what r wanted to do. I never tried to get a job. I was pretty wild. "But a person comes to a certain age (See STUBBO, Page Z) Freeway Blo_cked Mesans Find Newport Route Dela y Pleading fa< a speedup in drawing 1ina1 Newport Freeway "blueprints, _a Costa Mesa delegatiOo ..,ent before the State Hlghway 1:ommi'slon today in san Dif&O, Otily •lo learn the city bas oqipan!tltly .aet tlli· its own l&'i;nillion .t<Jadhlodt. . By sticlilng lo a reoeot unanlmousl}'- approved city .......U resolution, on. can- ing for two • ·way frontage roads. .the previous freeway plans would ,.quire major revisions. Highway bperts warned the ...,. tingent led by Mayur Jack Hammett and CllY pouqcihnau Alvin Pinkley lbat such design dw1ges will gravely allect the freewaJ's total -and Uming. '':'lbls is a fine band grenade," Mayor JlamnWott remarted dism&Uy, after ilying his OW)l plane wtlb Oouncilman Pinkley a-back in Orange County Airport. ~laJivea·of Costa Mesa Tomor· row·and other interests which all have a major stake in the freeway timetable and -wtT ....... MEANWHILE-PRISONli~CHANGE GOES OH IN SOUTH VIETNAM Allied TrooPs An1n Ill 9 Wn Hoo Wnintl S.,..h Vleln@II011 Flap --. --POW Held for 9 Years .... To Be .Rele~ed Frida y SAIGON (AP) -The Viet .6iag an-patrol ca1Jll>t In a North Vietnamese am- nouooed inday tbal an American war !Juab were ..........i_ returned in the pnaooe. r lleld I~•er than any ...... U.S. United SI.ales and bariod low years ago. -Rilllleway's mother IS Mildred A. soldier in history is among..~ balng -llldgewQ' o1 Bwston, Tex. rel.,..S FridaJ. -The·lill lncludea SCI-Mlcbael Palrick ' amcmg the IZ pi1-1 boinc' Brw:!i "' UJcNand, Ky., wbom Radio t Hanoi's Gil J4m Alipart -lrequeally Identified as a deserter, U.S. ci,;wm ollldal cap-• (See J'OWa, Pqe Z) lured by the Communists. • its impact on pending d own t ow n redevelopment plans drove to the meeting. "The state engineer threw u p roadblocks no one ever thought of before," lamented Councilman Pinkley, a veteran of highway hassles and bead of the council free:way committee. The key problem ls that the state says it simply does not have the esUmated $6 million it would cost to re-design the (See ROADBLOCK, Page Z) Pay, Benefi~ Hike Reached By Trainmen WASHINGTON '(AP) - A t!Jltative New Look fi'or '73 wage and friJ'81',,.~neli• ~~t. ~ ... Police sge .rm -BlaJ!ock' taker break covering ~~.nation ~lOJ from the -watch eomtnaoder11 desk to look over new rallroa~ wurten ~~ fudaY,-wJPte patrol cars, three of which wenl Into service SpokesmenJorthe rail Industry and 15 today. White Is cooler In summer and more visible. unions involved tn tbe pact said the New twin sonic light bar devices on top are allO ·euler to lff on emergency runa 1114 ln~te a J>llbllc addreta system f<fr 1>0tter commyfilcatlon, poUce S>Y. White cars will replace all 19 black-and- white squad cars within the next month. agreement would increase wages and benefits by a total of 10. 7 pen:ent over 18 rnonlba beginning July 1. This would inclUde a 4 percent wage in- crease effective next Jan. 1 and a revised pens.ion. system #hi.ch would put an ad· ditional fil.75 per month inin the paychecks of ran workers. The Industry would pick · up the payments: that heretofdre bad been paid by the workers into the separate railroad retirement fun<b that covers rail workers in lieu of Social Security. A spokesman for the Cost' of Living . Council said inday ii is likely lbat lbe oouncll will review the tentative settle- ment to see if it come• within the gov· emment's voluntary pay standards. But the spokesman said coim.cil direc- tor John T. Dunlop would have no com- ment until he reviewed the settlement. The government's pay standard allows for wage increases of 5.5 ·percent a year plus another 0.7 percent in fringe bene- fits. But the council b4J indicated the standard will be applied flellbly oo a, case-by-<ase basis. The agreement is subject to ratifica4 Uon by ·officials of tile 15 unions, and in one case by a membershJp vote. The single union requiring membership a~ proval b lbe Sheet Metal Workers. 'lbe tentative agreement came 3"' months ahead of contract expiration dates July 1. Source. said the settlement was Yltlually dictated by lbe ~ financial condition of lbe railroad Tetiremenl fund. The agreement would also Include pro- visions for elp'ly reftrement and raise mu:imum lifetime major med l c ·a I beoeflta from lli0,000 in $250,000 per worker. Ragtime Takes Ove r ~d ,In Caho San Lucas Ra ce Brisk northwest winds were driving the 15-boat Caho San Lucas race toward the finish at land's end today . As the wind hauled northwest at 15 knots, Ragtime, the scratch boat, moved into the elapsed time lead for the first time with the possibility of finishing tonight. The 11}.meter Hilaria, which was previously in the boat·for-boat lead, drop- ped far J:iehind when she broke a main boom during the night. Ragtime wu off Magdalena Bay, about 150 miles from the cape, at 8 a.m. today and Hilaria was about 48 miles behind. • The handicap positions are about the same as Monday with the Cal-33 Kahali from Huntington Harbour Yacht Club still holding the corrected time lead. Kaball was the handicap winner in the first Cabo race in 1971. Chuck Cotton, the communications of- ficer aboard the escort vessel Simpatica II, said tbe boats were experiencing their first "sleigh-ride" since the race began last Friday. The standings: OVERALL: first, . Kahali ; second, Firebrand; lbinl, Moondal'. CLASS A: first, Dorothy O; second, Spirit: third , Ragtime. CLASS 8 : first . Firebrand; second, Moonday ; third, Westerly. CLASS C: first, Kabali : second, Da- mian A; third, Teacher's Pet lll. Federal Agents Seize 24 Tons Of Marijuana WASHINGTON (AP) -The govern- ment announced today it seir.ed $19.9 million in illegal narcotics, including 24 tons of marijuana, in a combined ope.ra- tio with the Mexican government that it said crippled a major drug-smuggling ring on the Arizona-Mexioo border. U.S. officials said they also seiz.ed 9.3 pounds of heroin and made more than 100 arrests. They said they seired records of a "large· smuggling conspiracy resporud- ble for bringing tons of marijuana and multi-kilos of heroin" into lhe United States. Leary on Tr ial. 1 Today; Delaying · Pleas Reject.ed SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -Despite defense pleas for more time to prepaie, drug advocate Timothy Leary was set to go to trial today on a charge of ,eacaplng from a state prison. t.ary's attorney, Bruee Margolln ol Hollywood , complained Monday to Judge Richard F. Harris that be needed at least two weeks more to adequately prepare because his client "is an unusual person." Harris denied the defense's mOttoo for a continuance. The attorney said he plans to can several psychologists and witnesses from Algbanlstan during the trial Leary' ac-(.'llsed of escaping from the Calilomia Men's Colony facility near . here two years ago, was apprehended in Afghanistan early tbll year and ftlUl1led to the United States. Leary also faces another trial on dnig cmspiracy charges in Orange County. The district attomey'a office said it was ready in begin and oppoeed any delay. The judge earlier bad rejected another defense motion for more time. A young -aupposodly killed In Vietnam and bariod by his famllJ -years ago but wbo later turned up allve allO b coming out 'Ille loogeat held Amerlcan eopllve b Maj. Floyd Thom-. -st. lie ~ captured Marcb a, . lllf. In. Qoang -Tri Provine< just below the Demllljarized Zooe, wbere Ile waa serving u •U.S. 111- . ' Dory Inquiry .Ordered Details, Including the namea of ll106e arrested and where they were selied, were not immediately announced. The street value of the seized marl· juana was put at $16.7 million and the heroin at '2.S million. The amount of heroin would he enough in supply 132,000 Weatller viaer wilb South -- Tbompaon was then a coelaln wi. released Friday, he Will baft -"-'Pl days Iii a l!flsooer ol war, !he -Iba ion&er than N•"l' Lt. Cmdr. ·- A)varei. the nnt pilot lbol down -Narlll Vietnam. . Tile rW!ng'U.S. d"tilla bei"l - ed b PbUip lbobatll. 111, • - -diplomat with the SI.ate ~ Manbard was caplurod Feb. I, * wbeo Commuolst ""--1be rormer Imperial capital "' 9le darloc the Tet ollalsi,._ Aho ttturnln& home will .. Pfc. llollald L JUdCeway,• wbo Illa Coa>- mtmlsUI said waa caplund Feb. JS, -near ~ U.S. CIOJlpoll ii Kile Sonh. Wbat wu bellovod lo be the-of Rldpny and alber -"' llitl • l VUie Mayor Charges 'Infiltration ~y Phonies' "!l's supposed to ba caught from the body, Ibey really foul it up," Croul said. addicts for one day. The mulls cf the Meslcan-Uolled dOl')I boats and oold from the dory basis," Bogen said It waa a groop of concern· Stales exercbe, caned "Operation ea.- be said. • ed. dorymen who bad brought the prob-tus," were announced at a news con.- "lt'a alao supposed to he caught daily lem in his attenlion. ference at tile esecutlve olllco ol and oold dallJ, but tbtre are...,. taking Mayor Dooald A. Mcinnis sided with Nar<Ollcs Control Pn>cram lnf<>nnatlou. Law enforcement authorltlea fnll11 Mex-k bome and putting It on ica, for tbe . Rogers. too and tile state of Ariaona attended ••~ next day," be Kid. ''That'~ a b1*ical ' landmark." the wii:: •we abould ., ... ...., 11111 lool<· inlo mayur said. "'J'be. only way in Justify it ~~--1 1&1d n-.11on cac- thll," be •Id. '"llley otiould talk ... the II ill lllifo'dl!al ~. , · -~-I in F~ ben dory fllhermeli,Ollll¥Jp pollct Iba titul-"If peoplO • llft ,......,...IJllzlng It, , :.-:: .... , 111..::/ rev!ai..t t'l. It b. If 1'* .41111'~ ... 11 1oae a "1ihjable tbere midi ba a w8'f .lo nt the _.,.,.. substantial q"""1ltlel vi marlJµana and -to UM communllJ." clallsallon lloPped. If lt'i.eommerclall>-he11>ln ""'° being in~ Into the · "It wUl CO comll)Ol'CW and then tba od, It's dead. ' Uolted states along the Mextcn border ,.._ II -·" he aaJd. • · "The whole Idea of a weer baet trans-In SGulhwtll Arbona, lbe gov0mmen1 &pt1J alfiesled a cit)' -ferrlnc flab in a dory 11111 to-ba rowod to aald. micI>t be in ordet1 JMrt ~ COrl abort c¥eata the wi..i. ~.· Mo-In addlllon in the armls and ...,. Kymla llld RlcllM\I' Croul 111dbled that Innis aald ' !located narcollcl. tba goYen1mmt Aid It .......,,... .....,_ ~ only Qty ~ llobart'L, Wynn aald he alao ~ MYeral private dllelJlnp II tlllb lhllop --Id /report bo\clt •lo <OtlllCllmen aa • Mld'Mjlo 1'oed '•millllllnl w....i.ou.e., "Wilm BO'•-Ip --... pdOlllble. vtllideO and .......... • '!bat thlrd sinrm, expected on Wednesday, will not mate it on the Orange Coast wttil Thursday, ae- cuding to the weather service. Wednesday sbould ba mostly llWlllY with slightly wanner tempera- ture.. Highs at tile beacbea in the low 60s, rising in 66 inland. Over- nigbl Iowa in the 40s. INSIDt: TOPI\ 'Y Noto U'1 tM turn of ltoding !Upirlll companies lo /low htad- acM1. Thtir adwrtilino c;ioiml 1iaw bt•• challtng<d bv 111e ITC. S<t 1tory, Paet 12. Lli!ll....... 11 -. ~ l"M ._ .. ·-u .,.. ......... .............. . ..... 01 cl • ,......,. "" ............. .... "" M ........... , .. ' -. --. --. --. ..... .. .. Mlcll: ........ •tJ T-. -. -. -----. DAILY I'll.OT c , ....... -IJ, 1971 lleleae FrlMI u ietCo POWs amed by U.S. f'rom Page 1 ROADBLOCK. • • Long Way Home • ' r .... r ... i STUBBO ••• ' al lit ....... " ..Ut la ... ,. peUnc. I -IJhll llt my ce11 '"" nt&tJt ud rullud wt..t'I -dolal With mY I We. You're not 1 111111 just l>ecauoe Y"" 1 tum 21,,. hCetoD 11kl. I -lald -11 ba .. p> li&hl "to lteep ctlGdemnlllg mt for what I did - twuakkl." , Newport B<ach CO!Jllcilmen and police aay that's not the case . .. w~ hove an obliptlaa to protect t• people ol this dty," said capt. R!cbord Hamilton, the man who actually -ked Peterson's taxi permit PelerlOll has a permit l!sued by foun· !&In Valley oollct. Ho '"'" b6 lias ~ permils '-Costa Meaa and Hunt1n1100 Beach police. The _permanent onea are due in tbe mail. He needs permits trooa all tour cities to work for Yellow cab in Costa Mesa, wher< officials say they'll hire him ~ ur police say okay. N~ cnunrUmen were divided oo Peter'ICID's appeal. CouncUman Paul Ryckoll argued on his belia!L ''It must be noted fhat our system ttas released Peterson .. Jfs not ·our decision whether be should be on parole. He i.s ouC He bis a nee<t to eam a living. It can be assumed that other communities have pa•ed on his •billty to drivt a cab,'' RyckoH sal~. "It's been nine years since any offense has been committed," he added. 1teeway path so it includes two -way frontage roads. And in any case, such a revamping would delay construcUon several years. Who needs to tread the beaten path h()!J\e from school when there is adventure in the offiog on an old beam bridging a muddy ditch? Certainly not Rudi O~~ Robert Ayres and Kenny Williams (from leti), all nm gradeis at Canyon School in COsta Mesa. A motion by Ryckoff to overrule the police was voted down, 5-2. 'touncllman Jolm Store sided with Ryekofl. A motion by Vi de . Mayor Haward il.ogen to ' table a 'decision pending receipt of the complete parole report was . defeated, 4-3. ~: • . ....... r,,..1 "We need to get those design studies started," the }Dayor empbasLzed. He then turned the testimooY session today over to Councl1man Pinkley, allow- ing the senior dty councilman to outline Costa Mesa's intricate freeway prob- lems . 1be city's freeway advocates coo- dQ!led their barrage of statlstlcal sup- Boyle Ordered Murder Of Yablonski-Assassin. "The preliminary leport we have says ~ )'ou"ve made 'marginal adjustment,• " 1 said Mayor Donald Mclnnis. "It's a tough situation, I don't relish the job or being judge and jury: 1 ~ "I agree with everybody that you have ! a right to earn a living. 1 bate to deny j !hat rtgbt," Mcinnis said. POWs ••• ' I aad .Maj. Floyd Kushner of Danville, Va., ~ a medical cxrs-officer to wbom anUwar statements WS"e attributed over the Communist radio. . Alao belni ttlealed Is S g L AllODOO ,. Rlate, 27, of Bell Gardens, Calif., a Viet CclOlll jlrl!ooer since 1967 listed aa killed ia action by the Pentagon until hlf •mother recelved • letw from him Just ~ before Cbrlatmu 1n tm. Amtller II Pvt. Frederick Lewis Elbert -. ~ Jr .. whom the Marine Corpo llllJ llsta aa 1-i a tl•erter. • # - • ,ji (l * * * Tustin Marine To Be Released port for swift action on the Newport F...way by asking blg)lway com- mlsslonm to make a penooal fn. spectJoo. . Notlnc tbat Costa Mesa is crtsscreesed by thrM r..ew~ -or will be when all are corripleted -Hammett and Pinkley invited them to hold their July meeting here. Mayor Hammett explolned that Costa Mesa will eventually be the bub of ()mtge COunty's Interlinked ftteway oystem wittrthe Son Diego, Newport and Oorma del Illar boewaya. One . more consideraU.. facod by freeway deoigners and bullden Is the fact tbat laod fill tal<en from uadln.< for the aublurlace Newport FreeWay will be noed to baild up righlM>f..,.y !or fn. tettbanges and other coonectors. 'Ibey ... , In ...... -Interlinked when it comes to designing and . o::lll- sl!Uctlng them. ERIE, Pa. (UPI) - A coovicted assassin said today he was told by two former United Mine Workers officials !hat former UMW Prealdent W. A. ''Tony" Boyle ordered the mttrder of union insurgent Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski "for the welfare of the UMW." The dramatic testimony by Paul Gilly, who earlier was sentenced to death by a jury fer the sloylng of YablOl!llld, his wile and daughter, came at tlie trial or William J. Prater, 52, a former UMW Austrians Boil As Woman Lauds Hitler on TV •"'J'bjs would give us a foot in the door • J.. F• 'da • H • to graphically show them ••. " Mayor VIENNA CUP!} - A housewife who n y m aDOl ;Hanupett said of tbe anUctapied July said she would welcome the return of ,., 5 'rci] ... 'lltlll>HlitluuirCemut!--11n1 ~~'1lltllc: ~~­ :A Tllltln mat> It> lilted lllllOlli tbe 1tXt. \Ill Golda loleoa. ' ' T ' tionoilde Opt-Oar, ,MOllday, ·fl!o 35ta a .. -io' gniup of Amerlcanboueflo or war "I ~· "'ery....,.. to bollffe Ibey nlveraary of the d.ay lie marehed Into, ICbedu1ed be ~ by the North wut accept," be predicted. Vienna to receive a hero's welcome. -VletllameM to Friday ill Hanoi Helicopter fllgbls o:;er the city woo Id "We got 72 protest calls," said a i!, Marine Maj Paul Jolepi. Montague N" included ror eommisslonen, along spokesman tor a television station that ~ aha been 1 JlOw lioce March 29. 19A, with detailed map study and briefings on carried tmrHiUer coP11Dents by Mrs. ~ wbell b!a helicopter waa shot down on a the lioeway !slue. Edith ,\sberger. "And !bat's an unusually 5:'e misskm over South V1etnam. .,.r "J. "9Uld .hav,e to~ with that," high number in Austria.." ~ Montague'• wife, Sblrley and ·their ~cilman Plnk!ey'lldded, sa1"ltl com-Mrs. Asberger, 49, was a schoolgirl !C: lllne cblldren llve in Tustb>.:She said 16-~"°~.were quite • friendly to the who turned out with thousands of otber !it' -that abe ls "overwhebned and ttnd :---eitf s J. ... t1on todaf, although not en-Viennese March 13, 1938, to welcome J f: of mnnb at this point -bul very, very . , I Hitler. • deligl:drcl.'' ' . . "I !'~ 11utl a~ 1Gµig to ~ve "I would go again to welcome him : '!be Montague dtlldren, Sleve,'ls; LJn."· IO.Jpale s ·mp to $acr~,menlo and find back," sahe said. (: da, almost 14, and 'Pamela, 11. are ... just out just where we stand, Pjnkley added. Mrs. Asberger was interviewed in the (• out ol t~" tbelr""°lhor laughed. · He said be expected they would coatact Heldenplala (Heroes Square) scene ol • : Pen~ olllejals ealled Mn. Moo-· iop itiila division of highways olfidals In Hitler's triumphant entry aJier be an- tague to tell her l:be-.news at. 5:4$ am. tcr the hope rl 8 meeting in 8 w~k or so for nei:ed bis native Austria. ., day. She sakl tbe was already up and ~ talks on c.osta Mesas freeway The interview came after a recent ~·.·. coating breakfaat. ' • oPUont" .f:.:. · festival ol oid Nail propaganda films, one ~ • Altbougb the U.S. r.ltn polnl -~ . ~-ruwey -added that coun-of them showing Hitler's goo....lapplrig ... \ been 8J~ J'!l,. Mrs. Montague sakl cilmen may be forced in the best m-arrival in Vienna stined laughter among & ,. ahe ii ~ ber huband wW con-.e back terest.s Of Route 55 timing to drop re-udi ' ... .. to nearby Camp Pendleton io San Diego quests for two-way frmtage roads along young 8 ences. :! ; Counly. the freeway. :1, When first told last January that Ma( The one-way routes were accepted •· ~ Montague would be rele.ued from prison three to four yean ago, but ;councilmen camp his wife said she would have a big went aloog with the business com· :-·: party' to celebrate. munity's wishes more recenUy for two-- Today she added, "SUre we will but way ro~ds. • • just being together will be a big r<un· -:. ion." ; Mn. Montague's birthday Is net:! Tues- , day. She said today It will be her hap- • r pielt. , The gift of news of her hw:band's retuni borne la the "greatest I've ever receJved," sbe said. .. .. • • . . •' . ' .. .. . : ,. • • 1: • • .. • .. . • •• • • .. • .. OU.•HCOAST ... .. . DAI LY PILOT TM~ c..t DAILY ,.IL.OT, W1t11 ~ ......................... ~ ... lhe °'*"" ee.tt hlllltfllng ~. s..,.. ,.,. tlllt ... -Ml ...... ~ ,..,...... ~rid.,., lw CMte ~. N'""*1 heel!, HWll'""°" ~ ... Nlft V.i1ty, &......,.. 9-:fl, ltvlMllMl!fltMcll _, .... c---., SM J-c.illilll'-A ........ ~loMI •111111 .. •""-.. ~.,. .,. SUl'ldly\. T,_ ,rlllC .. I ..... llh"'9 pMIK I• II 2JO We.I .. ., Sr,_., C..t1 ~. C.llMrll'-, t2162'. ttobo,f N. Wt.4 P'Nllleflt ..... ,.ubl..,.., Jee.Ii II;. Curfty ... ~,........,l .... ~11.~ n ...... 1( .... 11 .. ... 1\1111n A. Mtrpili111 _ ..... a.or!" H. '-9 l lclM P. Nill ......... Mal\Nllle M!tln .._ __ JIG Wit.t l.y 5tr11t M1iU .. "'4dtet1:'P.O .... lt•O, t2•2' --........ ..... ~ ... .........,~ ...,... *'-'i1 m,,.... ,.....,. .... """"" 9-dl! 11'11 ................. ...~---··c.-....~ , ... ,. {1141 '4J~JJ1 Q11 ..... Alu a ti! I MJ.U7t ""'""'· Im. °'.... C'Mlf ~ °"""""'' ... -• ..,. ""'*' .... ....,"' """" "' .... ,....,,.... --_,, .......... ...,,.. ........ ........ ., Cllll'l'ftfftt ._. ~ cl-...... ...,.. • (M,tf ~~J ~ ............ ~it.. w cwflw -~, " 1'1111 ~.ti """"""' rnlllfW'r ................... fl'Mflfr, • Brando's 'Ta1igo' Okay in Israel JERUSALEM (AP) -Marlon Brando can tango in Israel, the country's film censors decided today . By a 16-0 vote. the censors approved the mavie ''111e Last Tango In Parls" for showing on Israel! screens. The pic- ture is expected to open JOOn, with tickets sold to adults only. The censorship board's decision ca me as a surprise to Israeli moviegoers, who are accustomed to erotic bits being snip- ped out of films. Bandit Holds Up Market in Mesa A lone gunman wbo pulled a I'!volver on a Costa Meu market clerk about 11 p.m. Mooday Oed "" .foot with 11110 . despila swift llgbUng of the &UrTOUnding a ... by • hoverfn4 helicopter. lnvestlvaton aaid the armed roobery occorred at the 11c Toe Market. 1113 Pomona Ave. Cert Muriel J. Bertoli, 22, told offM:en he waa jUlt coming out of the back room lo wait oa the customer when the man drew a rtvolver and. demanded the """"'1· &ort9fl '"" (orced fn.lo JM back room ~i aunpolnt and ordeleol to lie 6n the noor for five m1nutes, at which tlmo his ....Uant feld with Cll!h from both r<gfsten. I ' • Marine Corporal Draws 4 Months On Beating Rap A Marine corporal who admitted he ar- ranged the beating of a private at Camp Pendleton has been sentenced to four months confinement at bard labor. Cpl. Garry G. Hutton, 22, of Phoenix, Ariz., was sentenced after pleading guilty at a special court-martial. He also was fined $600 and reduced to the rank of private, the ~1arines s3ld Monday . Hutton was accused of 'forming a "workin g party" of black Marines to beat Pvt. Harold E. Bradley, 19, or Lead- ville, Colo. Testimony received in an earlier Jrlal related bow Hutton fold members of the work detail &hat Bra&y, a .. white serviceman, disliked blacks . In tbe earlier proceedings, Gunnery Sgt. Miguel H. Tostado was found in· . nocent of ordering Hutton to hav\ Bradley and another private l:italen. Hut• ton contended he was following Tostado's orders. OCC Teacher's Father Succumbs tuneral services were held Monday In Portland. Ore .. for Louis N. Panlan. the elderly father of Orange Coast College 1 history and anthropology Instructor Hen- ry "Hank" Panian. The elder P1nian. 82, wu on a 10-day visit to his son's COi~ Mesa home. when he became Ul and di<;!! FrJcfa,. Mr. Panlan leaves '80lll 'Rqmond lnd Richard both of Portland, li> addition to hla teadiu oon, plua nine grlndchildrcn and II great·grondchlldren. f . ·' field orglnizer from La Follette, Tenn . Reaclied by telephone by· the Assoc!· ated Prelll at hJ.j Washington home, Boyle said he would ba•e oolhing-to say other than to again deny any involvement In the slaylngs. "I have denied repeatedly having any knowledge whatsoever of the crime," Boyle said. "I knew absoltttely nothing about any of this. ·1 don't know any or these people, I never saw any of them and I have nothing to say." Gilly said Boyle was implicated by · Prater and a conlessed Yablonski assassin, St1ous Huddleston, d1ring at least three meetings held prior to the Dec. 31, 1969, assusinations. He said Boyle's name was mentioned during the meetings held to discuss the financing and methods to be used in the slayings. "I was told the union wanted to get rid of Yablonski because he'd niess up the union and the union's pension fund," said Gilly. "Did Prater tell Yl>• ~ wantll'I the murders done?" asbd special prosecutor ~ ~~1~-a~lilin kffi. ed," said GWy: - . ' : uDki be say why?" asked Sprague. ·~M I recall. it was for the welfare af the UMW," said Gilly. "Tany Boyle would bald all the P9Wer. Silous Hud- dleston told me Tony 8oyle was fair and turned down an off* to stay on as permanent president <i the union." "Who told you that'" asked Sprague. "Huddleston and p;..ter," said Gilly. Sprague then told Gilly to look at Prater, and asked: "II there any doubt that be is one of the men who tallied with you and planned the murders?" "No, sir," replied Gilly. It was the first public testimony in the six Yablonski murder trials by Gilly, Huddleston's son-in-Jaw and husband of another admitted murderer, Abnette ' GUly. He said the methods d.i.scus.sed for the Yablonski slayings Included shooUng, dynamiting and firebombing . Gilly said Prater also told him "it would have been a good thing if I woultt have got rid of' Joseph Yablonski, the victim's younger son. 'IUNIGHT UCI LECTURES -"1be Chicano and the Police," pert of series on Morality, Twilight Zone of the Law, Science Lec- ture Hall, 7-10 p.m. Adm. $5.50. "SUb- division Sales and Marketing," part of series on Professional Practices in Hous- ing Industry, Room 178, Humanities Hall, 7-9:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14 INCOME TAX PREPARATION OCC Lec.ture series, Tony Brown lec- turer, "Preparation of the Form," Estancia High School Auditorium, 7:30- 9:30 p.m. SINGLES SURVIVAL -OCC Lecture series, Dorothy Wenck, 0 a t w o o d Apartmenls, Soutb, Newport Beach, 7:311-9:30 p.m.~ ' "THE BASIC TRAINING OF PAVLO HUMMEL" -Soutb Coast ltepertory through Saturday, 8 p.m. SYMPOSIUM ON CONSUMER PRO. TEC!flON, ENVIRONMENTAL AF- FAIRS MID "l'llE LAW -All-day pro- gram, UC{ Fine. Am Village 'theater, .9 a.m . .S p.m. • ~ Fumigator Sued Over Dead Cats Two Costa Mesa extermination com- panies bltve been sued for $36,000 in .damages: by a couple who claim their two cats died in a home that was fumigated without their consent. Gary W. and Donne E. Pierce name Ronald E. Lawson of .Ron'.J..FumigaUoo, Melvin W. Lamb and the COiti'Mesa El<· terminating Company, 2553 Sonia Ana Ave., as defenWujls In the Orange Counly Superior Court a~lon. The Pierces claim that a fumigating tent was placed over their home last Dec. 15 without their permission. They alleged the defendants' actions resulted in the deaths of their cats, "Tinker" and "Leon." "A more favorohie parole report would I easily influence my judgment," he aaid, · "In the meantime, I hope ~ could find otber employment where YoU would oot interface with the comnnmtty lo a way a cab driver would have to." Mcinnis made the motion to deny the appeal It passed wtanlmously. This morning, Peterson's Orange Coon· ty parole officer, CharleJ H. Dean, said be could not argue against the city coun- cil decision. "They have a 1egal responsibility," be said. He also said he did 'not consider Peterson's request to drive a cab as unreasonable even In llgbt of bis police reoonl. '"If it were driving a ice cream wagon, it would be more dangerous,'' be said. 2 Mesa Women Hu-,;t. in Headon '· A·beadpn crash" ... t IWO Coota Mesa women to tbe hoopi\al Monday, wben one apparently blacked out at the-wheel of her car,and it entered oncoming lanea. Norine C. Russell, 55, of 1024 Fullerton Ave., and Viola P. carver, 67, of 21S2 Elden Ave., were boUl listed in fair con- dition at Costa Mesa Memorial HO$pltal. Pa!Nliean Gerry Kochendorfer said Mrs. ltmseu waa driving north on Oiangi lyenue at 20th Stttet when the accident involving Mra. Carver's south- bound vehicle occurred.. He said Mn. Russell said she lost con-sciousness. adding that !¥> evide~ of mecllanical failure couJd be found to iJl. dicate sleering or brake malfunction. Pl~es Nearly Hit MADRID (UPI) -A Belgian airliner narrowly avoided colliding wilh what was believed to be an American piane over Britain Manday, escaping In a sharp maneuver that injured at least seven persons, a Sabena airlines spokesman said. A YARN FOR EVERYONE " • • . • There is no question that the number one fiber in the industry today is nylon. A survey of 25 of the largest manufacturers revealed the following : carpet carpet fllylo~ in 1972 accounted for 55.7"/. of all carpets offered for ··~ ~ . an INCREASE of 4.1> "/.. Wools declined .from I 0.4 "/. to 9.1 "/.. Acrylics declined from 20.1 "/. to 18.5 "/.. Polyest.rs declined from 13.2 '!. lo 12. 7 % . Olefins declined from 4.5 '/. lo 3 "/.. .• . r· -~· • ~·. • ·• Th ... figures aro .astounding becauso of the fact that tho de· -" mand for nylon crear.d • tremendous shortage end many miffs were looking for ANY kind of yarn to mako carpet from • .. COS'IA lllSA """' "" We baye hundreds of nylon carpets 1t Aldon's -slop and '" us. • ALDEN'S OAllPns • DRAPES l 663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • MOIL • ,..... ' to S:JO: Fri. ' to t: s.t. t :IO "' 5 • DAILY PILOT c T~. Mm 1), 1973 •' . • Viet 'Cong POW s Named ·by .U.S. .. I WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Defense • and Stole Departmenll made pobllc to- . day Ibo following 1111 of 27 military pris- Ollefl and fiye civillaruJ: to be released • by the Viet COO~ Friday In Hanoi. ... 1lle bve clvllWl! were report6d cai> . lured durlni the Communlst Tel offen- :•. sive at Hue, South Vietnam, on Feb. I, • 1968. 1. Anw! CWO ,.,Mdl 5-Mtor>, 2', WIU~. N.J. 2. MlorlM Cqt. lrvc.t ~ Arckt«, JO, •· Roct.I._,, N.Y., Wiii II'~, !"IL L, 1. AnrN S..C.. 4 ~ P•lrkk lr•ncti. U ' (hemllilMii Wltl'lltllll It fl!'llllY'I ,,_,...,}, 4. """"" I#. '-'· ... ,.,,.... '**"' ....... ~ LOftl BN<I!, C.Uf. s. Anffy s. 191, ....,, ~ ~. "' Portt-. Crtt. 6. ~ I . hf. ,_ Alenndtf DlllY Jr., 2$ Mtw Y..WCitY. 1. Atwi't 1. lef, 1MmM .Hrn1t DtY11, 25. 1!11111, .... •. """' s.t. ...,.. tt:lf'wnt DnOk. 2J, IJ!lloll lrldllt, Md. - t . .V.ri,. Pvt, l"recltftdl loull A!btrt Jr:, 2!, lt•1IAaod, N.Y. 11. Air Forcit Col. nMdor• Wlllon Gw, 4'.j. T~. Al"l1., tllCI Elml'lunT. H.Y, 11. ~rlM hi, Rotleft Ill\' H1llt, tot, TolMlo. "'"' l:t. M.lrln. SOI. Abtl Lerrv 1C1vtn11111h, 2•, 0111¥1r, ~. Colo. ',, 11. Anrrf Mii. l"loVd H.,.old ICUIM«, 31, D•nvllll .,,cl Rldtmol'ld, Vt, 1'-Atf'fl'f S. i.t. Mld\HI Robltr L ... 91". 25. Rock· ton:I, Ill. IS. Am'IY s. $91. J11flu1 woo ... Lont,' •• Pu1o1.ii1. ""· ,.. NmY $, "'· .... M(;Mlllel'I, "· Gt'.tM, , ••. 17. l\ml'I' $, $ft, Wllll11r1 Gl'ON Mc.Mu'7'1'1', 27, TUCllOl'I •nd l(:othd1l4I, l\rlL 11. Aml'I' $It, Don Ai.ti Mac;pf\IU, 24, CNlmalord, ... ~ lf. Al'rfly "le. GUltlV 1\11111 ~. 2:1. OIMM, Htb. -e.a1bel br tM Vitt Cont .. bllrlt Ill Aum.11111. 1 •' • a. Mwlnll Mii. P1411 JOlotlllh Molttltlll, n. ltJt. 1ftol!Y, ic-., W Twlll'I. C.llt. fl, Nmt Ii. set. KIM ~ •l'Yflf'd Jr., t7, ..; ~ 11111 Detroit. ,. FtofttP .. el , .. POWs ••• and Maj. Floyd Ku.hner of Danville, Va., a medicaJ corps orficer to whom antiwar statements were attributed over the Communist radio. Also being released is S g t. Alfonso Rlate, 27, of Bell Gardens, Calif., a Viet Con& prisoner since 1967 Hsted ·as .killed in acUon by the Pentagon until his nlotber received a letter from him just before Cltrlstnw In 1971. Another ls Pvt. Frederick Lewis Elbert . ., Jr., whom the Marine Corps still lists as a deserter. •• ~ * * * Tustin Marine ~~r. To Be Released '~"'Friday in H~lloi 1r.1 A Tustin man is listed among the next .rn group of American prisoners of war scheduled lo be released by the North ~, Vietnamese Friday in Hanoi. C:! Marine Maj . Paul Joseph Montague f .: ahs been a POW since March 29, 1968, • when his helicopter was shot down on a •·! rru'ssion over South Vietnam. l : Mont.ague's wife, Shirley, aod thelr l : three children live In Tustin. She said to-•" ;. · day that she is "overwhelmed and kind ; , of numb al this point -but very, very delighted." The Montague children, Steve, 18; Lin- da, almost It, aod Pamela, 11, are 1'just out of It," their mother laughed. .. . Pentagon officials called Mrs. Mon- .. · tague to tell her the news at 5:4.5 a.m. to- :: ' day. She said &he was already up and : : cooking breakfast. Although the U.S. return point hasn't been announced yet. Mrs. Montague said • . • . • • she is sure her husband will come back to nearby Camp Pendleton in San Diego County. When first told last January that Maj. Montague would be released from prison camp, his wife said she would have 1 big party to celebr1te. Today sh< added, "SUre we will but ~ · /:. .. belnc loflelber will be a big ....,. ~ Mn. Monique'• blrtbday ii -Tuot- • day. Sbe aid ...., It will be lier ba1> 1 plat. f The 1111 "' ...... al 1-~·· ; : return home 11 the "er-Wiit l'W ever • : recd-...!, .. the aald. . . .. • • • OIA•ICOAD .. DAILY PILOT ... 0.-.. c.... ......... ""°'· ...... ..................... _.. .. _ ...... '"-,,,., .. ~ ..... ....... _.......,. ____ ,, .. _,.. -0.-............ ....... ::.;:::::~ ..... ...... ............... l,_ .. a. . _.,,.,, ... ..,......., _ ............... _....., , ...... -..-... ...... ... .... ~c...---~-. ............... ---\ ...!:!!f=r. ---""--A. M I t l ..._.a; 0...K.l.... ............ ------lMW...t....,_. ........... •o ... •W.tt•1• ---:":'.' :i:..-=-=-.. "n--.:: rnu......, .,., .,, ...... ..:--:t--- FronlPqel ROADBLOCK • • • freeway path so it Includes two • way frontage roads. And in any case, sue~ a revamping would delay construction several years. "We need to get those design studies started," the mayor emphasized. He then turned the testimony session today over to Councilman Pinkley, allow- ing the senior dly councilman to oulline Oosta Mesa's lntricale freeway prob- leml. 'Ibe dty'1 freeway advocates con- cluded their bamge of llatlsUcal '""' port for 1Wllt acttoo on the Newport Freeway by asking highway com- missionen to make a personal ins spedlon. Noting that C.Osta Mesa is crisscrossed by three freeways L or will be when 1'11 are completed -Hammett and Pinkley invited them to hold their July meeting here. Mayor Hammett explained that Costa ?ttesa will eventually be the hub of Orange County's interlinked freeway system wllh the San Diego, Newport and Corona del Mar freeways . ODe more coosideratlon faced by freeway .dosliners and builden ls tbe facl lhat land fJll taken fnlm grading for the subourface Newport F'n!eway will be used to build up righto<ll-way for In- terchanges and other connoct•>ra. They are -In a ...,.. -Interlinked when it comes to designing and con- structing them. "Tb.is would give us a foot in the door to papb\cally sbow them ... " Mayor llafumetf aald of the anUclapted July seiSRlit of the Stale Highway O>lnml9Sion 1n Cost.a Mesa. , .. , ' "I have· every reason to believe they will accept," he predicted. ' Helicopter flights ov~r th~ty would be included for commissioners, along with detailed map study and briefings on the freeway issue. !'I woukl have to concur ,with that," Councilman Pinkley a*1ed, G¥1ng com· niissioners were quite-friend1y to the cit;y'1 position today, although not en- ~= Jack and l ~re~· to have to man a trip to Sac:fa and fmd out ju.st where We stand,,. y added. Ht said be eipeCled Ibey '6'9111d CGlltad top slate diviJlon of hi&)nilJI oflldals In tbe hope of a rneeling in a .week or ao for further talks m Costa 'M11a11 freeway options. Councilman Pinkley addtd that coun- cilmen may be forced in tbe best in- terest! of Route ~ timing to drop re-. quest• for two-way rront1a:e roads aloog the freeway. The one-way routes w e r e aoctpted three to four years ago, but councilmen went along with the business com· munity's wishes more rerently for two- way roads. \ Brando's 'Tango' Okay in Israel JERUSA!Zll (AP) --Brando C1lll lalltll Ill lnal. Ille _,.,.., mm ...-.deddldtoday. 87 a IM ..... tbt ,. __ ,., approved the -"The Lal hDco In Plril" for lllMrinl oo Israeli tcrftlll. Tbe plc- lurt 1:1 e1pitC1ed to optn '°°"• with tldrll sold to 1duh1 only . Tbe ~ip board'• dttllion came u 1 surprilf to Jincll mowtc&oet1, •ho .,. -•mod lo trOtlc bill botoi IDIP' pad out "' fllnu. Bandit Holds Up Market in Mesa A ... i • ....... 1 nwolftr • t 0111a --dart -II ,.... " ,., lied • fool wltla 1100. ...,..._...,...,Ille_, ..... "' ....... """""•· IMudtLll!I llld U. anmd robbttJ WWWIM 11 tlaa Tic 1llC -· lttl Plnwie Att. a..tl fllwlel J. Bortoll ~II, told oflleen llP -11111-. tol • Iha -room to 111111 a 1111 --Ille man ... • ......... Md *'nladtd. the -· ....,. -.,,.,. lllo lbt bod< room al f'i I I ml .... IO lie., Ille flaS lsr 0.. -· 11 wtlicll time bis lolll wllll Clllt !ram both • DAtL Y ,!LOT Sl1ff 1"110!1 Long Way Boane STUBBO ... ad lie beclomel ,..,. ot wbat Is haP' peah>& I Wll Iy~ 1n my cell one nlglll IOd re~llztd what r wu doln& wiU! my Ute. You'ri ool a mao Juat beC&U5e you tum n" ~ uld. •Ito -~ said people ha•• .. rtghl keep ooodemnin& mt for •hit J did when Iw11akid." , . Newport Beacb counclktlen and po1tct; say that's not tbe case. ••we b1ve an obli1ation to protect °1 people of this city',, sald Capt. RI chary Hamilton, the man who actually rtV1lked Peterson's taxi permn . . Peterson has a permit issued by Ji OWl· lain Valley police. .' He says he hal!i temporary permit~ from Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach police. The permanent 'Ones are due 1n the mail. He needs permits £ro1n ull four cities 10 work for Yellow Cab in Costa t.1esa . where officials say they'll hire him if the police say okay. . . Newport councilmen were d1v1ded on Petenon's appeal. C.OUOcilman Paul Ryckolf argued on his bebalf. "It must be noted that our system has released Petersoq. It's not ~r deci!li~n 1 whether he should be on parole. He is , out. He bas a need to earn a living. It can 1 be assumed that other communities have 1 passed on his ability to drive 1 cab," Ryckoff said. "It's been nlne years since any offense has been committed," he added. Who needs to tread the beaten path home from school when ther"e is adventure in the ofling on an old beam bridging a mud<ly ditch ? Certainly not Rudi Ortiz, Robert Ayres and Kenny Williams {from left), all first graders at Canyon School in Costa Mesa . A motion by Ryckoff to overrule the police was voted down, 5-2. Councilman John Store sided with Ryckoff. A motion by Vice Mayor Howard Rogers to tablf' a decision pending receipt of the complete parole report y,•as ~~~~~~~~~~~- Boyle Ordered Murder Of Y ahlonski-Assassin defeated, +3. ' "The preliminary report we have says i i'OU've made 'marginal a,tjuslment,' " said Mayor Donald Mcinnis. ~'It's a ~· tough situaUon, 1 don't relish the )ob of being judge and jury. . "I agree witb everybody that you have a right to eam a llv:t f bale to den~ , ERIE, Pa. (UPI) -A convicted assassin said today he was told by two former United Mine Workers officials that former UMW President W. A. "Tony" Boyle ordered the murder or union insurgent Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski "for the welfare of the UMW." The dramatic testimony by Paul Gilly, who earlier was sentenced to death by a jury for the slaying-of Yablonski, his wife and daughter, came at the trial of William J . Prater. 52, a former UMW Austrians Boil As Woman Lauds Hitler on TV VIENNA (UPl) - A housewife who said .she would welcome the return or Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler caused a na· tlonwide uproar' Monday, the 35th an- niversary or the day Ile marched into Vienna to rel'1:!ive a hero's welcOme. "We got 72 pr*st calls," said a spokesman for a television station that carried pro-Hitler comments by Mn:. Edith Asberger. "And that's ao unusually high number in Austria." Mrs. Asberger, 49, was a schoolgirl who turned out with thousands of other Viennese ~1arch 13, 1938, to welcome Hitler. "I would go again to welcome him back," sahe said. Mrs. Mberger wu Jnterviewet:\ in the Heldenplatz (Heroes Square), scene of IUUer's triumphant entry after be an- nexed his native Austria. The interview came after a. recent feaUval ol old Nazi propaganda films, one of them showing Hitler's goose-stepping arrival in Vienna , stirred laughter among young audiences. Marine Corporal Draws 4 Months On Beating Rap A Marine COi ooraJ wbo admitted be ar- ranged the beltlng of 1 private at Camp Pendleton hu been aentenced to four moolhs con.Onement at bard labor . Cpl. Garry G. Hutton, :12, of Phoenix, Arli., wu sentenced after pleading guilly at a special court·m•rtlal. Ile abo was fined $600 and reduced to the rank of private. tbe Marines said Monday . Huuon was accused of fonning a "working party'' of black Marihes to beat P\1, Harold E. Bradley. 19, of Lead· villt', COio. Testlrnony received In an earlier trial rtlated how HutlOn told membcn Qf tbl · work detail tha~ Bradley, a whltt le'IViceman. disliked blackl. . In the earlier proceedings, Gllllliery Sit. MI&uel H. ,._do waa found .J.. -ol ordlrlllg. llllllm to ... &adley and another private beaten. A'ot-· tm conteoded be was following Tostado's onion. OCC Teacher's Father ·Succumbs Funeral oervlcea were held Momlay In Portland. Ore., for Louis N. Panlan . the elderly father of Orange Coaal College 1 history and Mlhropok>gy Instructor Hen- ry "Hank" Panlan. The elder Pabian, 12, was on a to-day vlslt to hll 111n'1 Cotta M.,. home when Ile became ill and died ~· Mr. Panlan laavea tons llf.ymond and Rlcbard, llolh of l'Grtland, In addition to bis teacher aon, plaa nine grandchildren and 14 gre.al-gnmdchildrell / field organizer from La Follette, Tenn. Reached by telephone by the AS:SOcl· ated Press at his Washington home, Boyle said he would have nothing to say other than to again deny any involvement in the slayings. "I have denied repeatedly having any kno\vledge whatsoever of the. crime," Boyle said. "I knew absolutely nolhing about any of Utis. I don 't know any of these people. I never saw any of them and I have nothing to say." Gilly said Boyle was implicated by Prater and a confessed Yablonski assassin, Silous Huddleston, during at least three meetings held prior to the Dec. 31, 1989, assassinatioo:S. He aaid Boyle's name was mentioned·durtng the meetings held to discuss the financing and metbods to be used In tlie slaying!. ··1 was told the uaion'wa,oted to get rid of Yablonski be<:ause he'd mess up the union and tt\e uni011'a pension fund," said Gilly. "Did Prate~ tell ,you )\'jlo Wanted the murders done?" as1':ed special proiecutor Ricliard A. Spr.&guo. ~ • "lfe said Tony Boyle wanted bim kill- ed." said Gilly . "Did he say why?" asked Sprague .. "As I recall, it was fot the weliare of the UMW." said Gilly. "Tony Boyle would hold all the po\l{el'. Silous Hud· dleston told me Tony Bf.fie was fair and turned down an offer ,.to stay on as permanent president of ~ union." "Who told you that!,, asked Sprague. "Huddleston and Prater," said Gllly. Sprague then told Gilly to tool: at Prater, and asked: "ls there any doubt that he is one of the men who talked with you and planned the murders?" ''No, sir," repUed Gilly. ll was the first public testimony In the six Yablonski murder trials by Gilly, Huddleston's son-in-law and husband of another admitted murderer. Annette Gilly. He said the methods discussed for the Yablonski slayings included shooting, dynamiting and firebombing. Gilly said Prater also to~d him "it would have been a good thing if I would have got rid oC" Joseph Yablonski, the victim's younger son. ' TONIGHT UC! LECiiJRES -"The Chicano and the Police," part ot series on Morality, Twilight Zone of the Law, Science Lec- ture Hall, 7·10 p.m. Adm . $5.50. "Su~ division Sales and Marketing," part of series on Professional Practices In Hous- ing Industry, Room 178, Humanities Hall, 7·9:30 p.m. · WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14 INCOME TAX PREPARATION OCC Lecture se{les, Tony Brown lec- turer, "PreperaUon of the Fonn," Estancia Higb School Audltortum, 7:30- 9:30 p.m. , SINGLES SURVIVAL -OCC Lecture seflel!, Dorothy Wenck, 0 a k w o o d Aparlmenl!I, South, Newport Beach, 7:30- 9:30 p.m. "THE BASIC TRAINING OF PAVLO HUMMEL" -South Coasl Repertory tbrotlih Salurlla1, a p.m. SYMPosruM ON CONSUMER PRO- TE CT I 0 N, ENVIRONMENTAL AF· FAIRS AND THE LAW -AJl.day pro- gram, UCI Fine Arts Village Theater, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Fumigator Sued . Over Dead Cats Two Costa Mesa extenninaUon com- panies have been sued for 136,000 In damages by a couple who claim their two cols died In a bome tbat waa fumigated without their conaent. Gary W. and Doqne E. Pleroe name Ronald E. LaW80D of Rut's FumJgatloo, Melvin W. Lamb and the Coata Meaa Ex· terminating Company, 2553 Santa Ana Ave., as defendants In the Orange County Superior Court action. The Pierces claim that a fumigating tent was placed over' their home last Dec. 15 without their permission. They alleged the defendants' actions resulted in the deaths of their cats, '·Tinker" and "Leon." that rlgb~" Mclnnls . "A men favorable parole ._i would easily inOuence my judgment," ht aaid. "In the meanUme, I bope you could find other employment where you would not interface with the community in a way a cab driver would have to." Mcinnis made the moU<>n to deny the appeal. It passed unanimously. This morning~ Peterson's Orange Coun- ty parole officer, Charles H. Dean, said he could not argue against tlic. city coun· cil decision. "They have a legal responsibility," be said. He also said he did not consider Peterson's request to drive a cab as unreasonable even In llgbl of. his police record. "If it were driving an Ice cream wagon, it would be more daqen>us," Ile aaid. 2 Mesa Women ~Headon. A ltfotiillt crash ,.nt two Costa' Meaa women tcf1he hospital Monday, when one apparenilJ:i>lacked out at the wheel of her car aQl.lit entered oncoming lanes. Norine C;jl111sell, 55, of ~ Fullerton Ave., and:.Yiola P. Carver', 87, of 2152 Elden Ave., were both llsted in fair con- diUon at Colta Mesa Memorial Hospital. Patrolnlllr Gmy KOthendorfer aaid Mn. BoaCI was ddvlng · nOl'.lb on Orange -al 2fllh Slnet "'1tn the accident lnvolvtng Mn. Clrver's lllllil>- bound vehicle occurred. He aald Mrs. Ruaell said lhl lost cot> oc~:,oddll!I that Ill> evidence of ntecbaniciFfalluie could be found to ln- dlcale steering or brake mallunction. Plane,~ Nearly Hit hiADRID.'. (UPI) -A Belgian airliner narrowly ay,otded colllding with what was believed to be ari American plane over Britain Mooday. escaping in a sharp maneuver that injured at least seven persons, a. Sabena airlines spokesman said. A YARN FOR EVERYONE I There is no question that the number one fiber in the carpet industry today is nylon. A survey of 25 of the largest carpet manufacturers re~eeled tho following : Nylon in 1972 accounted for 55.7"/, of all carpets offered for sole, an INCREASE of 4.6 •; •. Wools declined from 10.4 "/. to 9.1 "/., Acrylics declined from 20.1 % to 18.5 % . Polyeste;. declined from 13.2% to 12.7%. Olefins declined from 4.5 % to 3 % . ••• ~ • -• 9 f ' Tho• figuies •N estoundlng b~.aUM of tho feet th.+ the d• mend for nylo~ created • from...dou1 'shortage and many mils were looking for ANY kind of yom to make carpet from, !It COStA MllA llNCI 1H7 We heve hundreds of nyloft carpets et Aid.n's -stop end ,.. us. /. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 ..... • .,..._ ' to S:JO; M ' to '' s'et. ':JO to I \' be m r . ·Fa Utr • w