HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-03-20 - Orange Coast Pilot•
· 1k a s London • m
.. .· ·TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 20, 1973
VOL. 66, NO. 1', I SICTtottlr•tPAOU
l}A on Beach Ca.se
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;-. Sqi~· .. Attacki.~g
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::: ' By TOM. BARLEY His SUperlOr eourt actloa ruimes u oc-;; · , °' "'I' ~ P19.t st&H aipants of the alleged bawdy house Judy
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White House
Throws .Gray
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To Wolves?
~e q>U!Uy District . Attorney Cecil Ann Klusmeyer, 25, Helen -Marie Ryan, -
ioclay bas • '!aW11Wt fn the woi:ks 37, and Carol Ann ·Domlall, 37. ~~--~1.•-~!!>~mg .. <l<lwn . .a .~untington :-Hicks ~·closure nlie OOu!e ..a
-WAsIDNGTON (UPI) - L. PatriCf
Gr.11' • .W '.saul~ be ha• beeo ~
to. refu.se· some informatlon requested of
him:by the Senate committee we{ghing
his nomination u FBI director.
.,._....._.that lte.clalm8 Ian t a.Jiome. . .. • 9 : 11'clls _,t to court Monday and f~ed sale .of its contents at sheriff's auctiM #t under lb< io-allled.Rod Light Al>fte-ooe year from the date ol the court order, ~ Ad ~an effoot to q~ a Capstone if JI r. apP<o~
Pf!Ye resfd~llCt. he alleges th<ee women · N~gbbqrs ·Jn. the· .ic!nity . "'ve .. 11!-
llPo. ~ '1111., ~~qlll!rt~. for pros-dlca,ted., from , actions of movers, lhat ~ ;~ • • . '\,.~'~ ~ C?·~ents of. !he P~ ·~pear
::i: · 1 • ·•• Judge Robert P. Kneeland ·set APrn 3 ·~ill.••· H 'h' as tbe·date he'will rule oo Hld<s' demllnd ·~·u;w . ' lfg es, l:::'m:n lnjuocliOn that. ~owd close. .the;! -. • -' · • All, three.women have been orderedito · ~ays Nevada appear April 30 In Wea.Orqe•Courity ' ~ .. · '" municiPe.J court\ to i-answer cbar~of t. . prostitution stemiolng from their. '1Je«ed ·
, • ! {j o• ff. 0, l Sttual .:ldlvttieSI 8t.;.tbe Cf.pStOM •Dfiye · op . lClU addresa: niey were arrested ... mu111. -. ·• pie charges after police, alerted to the
• · · · . allesed· situation by .aroused neighbors,
:,PARSON_.cn;v, Nev. (AP)~ Nevada Investigated at• the home and ,. filed .
GOv. Mike O'Callagban said today he met charges baaed on t be experience of with recluse blllionaire Howard Hughes lffidercover officers. ~ Lond England •· I the Statements bf those ollicerl a re at· ~!· on, . =tecf00'!'0•er •.lllChed to the ·avu ••l\<>.D· !Ibey allege • ~ to discuss Hughes Nevada that the defendants IDVlted t11em to pin~ empire. ' partid le In ',_, __ ,_ ............ t ' the ~'CallaWn said Hughe3 who left pa ' ...... ~ ..... ,. •8 -·~ada ,on Thanksgiving '1970, gave , Ca~'l;Jrive bolll9'at ~ chat,ie~ff,,100
_ ~erylndlcalionth'imhe~~toretum ,,w~er.· ... ' . ~f '.1 ,
te::Jievada,"' sald-O'cillogbad. "H~ Ubt o . ~talenltn~. ilfc.10 par~~. In ta. llate" ' . '; :"" ~ "tlt<iaita. al® sappott tlli!· laWiillJl)olnUy
. ~Q'CauAgban declined to 'd I ~c u• 1 !Ded by Ilic~ and the. sf;'lte. J.bW ·.,u a.I-
• ~· personal a ire., terln/ng" ~ to the 11uspipla1r.among ~ for
: ~tlon,a..,. the =ile•s physiCal• Slllll6 tlqle lhat a -"t'!l100<~k!ot was
'-'.-Uuan a."game.'' Bui he saJd "there , belng'ape~ted:from the.ea~ ~1ve ~Do'.-'!n that meetlnc!ol Wll>"Wu ,.i~., '"". · " . : · ··· tlliar iroo~t>ta do.". • , :\Nel8li60rs 'tol~<police that~ were
· ;::'d'dilla1him ·saicr he "°"" ffii.n 'IM • "'*' ~ aoll g<>ftom'tlle hmDe at all · ,Y',....,, Nev. t;y commercial jet FrldJy ~ of _the day and ,night. .
• •au4·retumadito Nevlda late>SUndi,: .·, • " It ,,..,..,. alsO, llO!¢. diat tonslderal!I•
· . .foiompnying the governor was Plitt , quantities of new ~<Jing were ordered
, dWrman of the Nenda Gam-willl.ttng..lie ~ apparently replatlng
Control Boan!. • • !he smaller · bedroom furniture initially
laRhon said tile meeting had been installed'. ~bylilrntod~•Mr.Hoghes', ~· ., .. , ' I • ' . : " .
,.,._ corporate plans wblch ,will affect
~ada." ('
Bucbes owns aeven casinos in Nevada,
1iidudbur she In LU' Vqat ind -In • 8*>. TOgelher, the casinos pull In aome
'ol the Ollltre gaming revenue
COJlnoo In the sto,te "-m-abclll
-Clllf of.a. fotal.Jnll milliai{ In . ::'!We eslabllsbed dlttcl lines of •
:Pfl;IOnll communlcatlon, •• aaid
O'tallaghan. "We cltoqi-""llaflllla' • :o.1Dre O.,,,.rate piano 1llllch wll olltct ~. We did oot dlscul llpl pcob-
111111 qr .. -of Ille put. We .... h ...r aolnelveo only to -_.. llrectl1 relat«I to plllilog. •
'J'hen Hupes left Nevada In 1"" there W. •111 milllon Jn la .. J ' I
Qllnll hlill ... &pl Tool-CC..
;:}. "'°'"'°'the ltlte ~Qin.
nlafon 11fued .. --......... -~!·.:.~u:::=tlan,~ ~ llid 11111 ;;;;;;. Ille
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MAW. ......
ReCall .Diw :
On .Dextrose
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BERKELEY (AP) -Cutter
Labaralnrles,.Jnc. aays It is recall·
Inc 1,IOO boltles ol a -tn-~••enot11-ICllutiaa becauae three
-IU!fered paetaurgery IJ1.. !~Iona at a Mllnotee, Wis.
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One woman died, aoe n>COVtl1lll
_... -is ln crtUcol coodltioft. The Communicable D I I e I I e
Coaler Jn Atlanta, Ga. 'aald it
-all ltlte -health ~ M'oiiilly ~fllle -···~·11.aloo whmllrUI' .ncalle4. ...... of lots ol the ICllutian, In
: lo 1lla ~-..:all al IJOO
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SPltlNG.'S HERE"-Today w8s the fusi'd~y 0of 0prlng. ; . &..a, 0JD.t:.;.i iain 'pTociu~ ,Pt~ati.;.; more uke
It,... suJlPQ9ell toJook like the ~ral scene at picture .atright.'Heliy.ln.goocrweatber and.bod. is '
18ft•with :nowere produced by the ..iason's 15 inches a psychology major: at .Cal !!late FUlleilon., . •
of rain•surroundlng pretty Hedy Harte, 22,.<!f Costa, .,' , , , > •
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·-s ·p·. ring·· Makes· . .-'nig .. ·splash . . ,. . ,M .. . , >" , rf • • f ) • , .. ,\1. f .~ 1 • •e!••t1 'If'-'"··-I"!•"\,.' 1 .........
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. l)ownpour Greets First Morning .oii Orange ·coast
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· · By :JoRN, ZAil.ER • of the Ne'fl'Olt° Free-jray uqder COi)-· re!'l"'sents the co11t ,af ,25 ~nt of Q!e
• oi ,.. -,,., ...,. structlan at llristol Street In Costa Mesa. dlstrlcl's lllDllli aier ~ and.
'llie•Oftllfg'e C68il'l10iflP'8iltY 'aeBRili ~---On ·tbe; paeiti.e~· .,..,... .. "fiilN 'tlil"amo.int c\lll~tiillili .... .:l
coollnued Into the first morning of spring storms have .enabled the Orange County. -~ IOI!& rainy -hal ltath. ,,,...,
today as OO\IStal cities eallected upwards Water District to capture and Ito!;'!. ··• helped· -·"'v ...._,,~--•1.,.. •
I .... · ·• -• In upwards of 25 000 acre· feet of· atorm .,.. .. _., a .... .._ • ..,...~ Ol\9·
.a .•·-Ill~ w ra : • runoff. Coupled with ,rainfall !hat.will Slsaable but ·~ spaeed stom11 are
Na significant flood damage wu lbak dlreclly Into the underground-water CNdlied wlth.l>elping .to ·leacb salts frotn
reported from the oe.w storm, which .table, the district aay11 It hal profited to a.ml)'~ bllt.tlllr'l'lla lw'·-brought the season rainfall average to the tuiie. QI 115• miWan ·rmm this yea;•a ao a moa1h lonlerlbC·-*mal.'Tllil will nearly~ inchea in mast.clUes. • . stann· ......,,; "to dai>'"" That' sum sliaot40-oomow61t'tbe letiath ol thft~w·
But the unusually (oog wet seuan, , , · Ing! aeaaon and pn>babli' 'COit <gr<jW<rt
hlch """" In . narulally' dry mid· • mailef, 8C<'Ordln8 to Harold otl4, •-farm
November and ... 11nuec1 illtmnittently ~easies Law Delayed adviser with the University o1 California fillo the firsl day ol Spring, baa had ~ In Anobelm,
omni aide effedl. SACRAMENTO (AP) _ The llenale ,But the.even spacing ol 1~ ha1110t AJl)9DC them are: helped ever)<>lie.
-"ndrty to IO loot working da)'I, due to vatlJd SU Monday to appn>ve • ~year 'Spoktflllan for construction ~ ..
rlln .,. mad, have cost eout -delay lo a new law req1ilrillc Germon sakl. that the eftec1 '01 rlio ha1 -been a..,... ltm el lhousalidl or dOllara. ,.,,"" '""fl far women :Ing far llllUIUaliy aevero tJils year • preCIJil1
SmiiJ!tr -t.liave'.suflered.111-_.,. U..--boo••-~ '*811• ii bu.been ao evenll lpl<ed, dill~ laooes. lfborpleri~ are not geared to-haiidie,tbe Wark Clll the Newi«t ri..11' bas • -ROlld P'Qjectf have encaunt.red t.11.Jbe. bill wu elllbOrm by> ooo. llolll particularly JWd hie.. ' ·
-JDlq 1111 PIWlf< . ..,.,..., lltlllt-{0.Brierly llllll), "We were lust ~ to go back to dellJed ap to Ill ....U bu been lbillai. uo olitl-wu-alldlOr orilil ~ 'IW. .. ·• (Seel· RAJN1 ,._l)
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'!be-development. came after Sen. John
VI TilllllOY (D-Calil.), expressed beilel
the White House bas "decided to throw
Mr. Grarto tbe'W..lves."
-'G'riy 'i!Oiell'be ·1ntends ta wlthdtaw-as
llOmlnee for the FBI post.
Gray, r<sumlng the witneM chair, told
the Senate Judiciary committee he could
no longer glv:e members full access to
FBI filet or anawer all their questloos.
. 11 .. said be was acting ao the basla .af a
previously' undtJclosed order lssutd Fri-
day by Attorney General Richard G.
Kle\ndlen.st and said he coola answer
"Only'.proCe(luril, not sub3tantive" Que&-
tlons about FBI procedures. ·
Wblti-Hause Press Secretary R<inald
L. Zi~~ replied, "Absolutely not/'
W\ii!li'Hl<ed ~ NJieo :obandoned hope-of
getilnJ·Gi'ay confirmed. ·
·s.nate' llepubllcan leader Hugh Scott ~tl.ld~after a fneeting with Nli:on that
the fn.!aident's aupport of Gray 14ia ex·
~~oo:Tn::n~u ~ when he submitted
·arayrs disclosure of restrictions on bis
teJllt1lony C\111!< when Sen. Birch Bayh
(0.ln!f.), requested that three former
emplayes of tlie FBI and the committee
ta Re-Elect the Preaident be subpoenaed
(See-FBI, Pap I) •
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WelidH!r
Your 'calendat may tell'yoo il's
· 'Pring bl!! the · lfeother service
says mott rain II due oo the Or·
ange Coast i..;nnlog 'lbunday.
~Wednesday. wi!Lbe. pai:tly. ~ ..
with bigbs of IO degre<s at the
beadles, riSfng .. 63 Inland. Low3
In the 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
When Torontoam choou to
tau in a blue movie °" a Friday night-~I-Am-CuTioWI· Y.tllow,"
for e:rample -they netd no
baby sitter Glld no cor. They sim-
ply V>ait until midnight Glld tlln•
in . Cllallncl 79. S.• •lor!I on
Page 9. •
L.M. 1eYt1 1t -Mftlel 11
Clll..,,... f MufMI '•llltl 2t ,,, c......... lt-N ...,._.. lffWI 4
CtM!cl, 11 Ot-Mtt c-9Y I
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O.fll """"' • '""' ,..,. .....,... ,... • hid: ...... ..,,
l1t!lllWIFJ$11FI ~1M1 ,...,.._ U
,._. tMl 'nrlM""' 11 ,.. ,... ~_.. ' w .. "* "
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Tiii* ....... 2Q, 197J
Bedlam at Coast Meet
Salt Creek GradiJ:ig Prorests Thwarwl
B JOHN VALTEllZA .. .. ..
Hundreds of angry resident• of the
Laguna Nlioel and Monarch Bay aius
were thwarted Monday ln their attempts
to protest heavy grading above Salt
Creek Beach aa the South Coast Roglonal
?.one Conservation Comm.111ion refused
to "suspend the rules'' 10 allow a bear-
ing.
And, lnatead ol a full-blown alrlng ol
eat1b l!IOYing by Avco CommunlJy
Developen, the evening wu -of
lnlllntlon and 1'110 for oomo -II
the San Clemtote Community Clu-.
The hundreds of raldentl leamod that
the actual Salt cr..Jt heartnp will be
-Ill In Long Beach. The meeting -anothor mmthon
·-of the J}.membepanel-opmed
llUe 81 I lboutlng match than 0 tonnaJ
Rip Van Lizard
Amphibian Hibernared 100 Years
MOSCOW (UPI) -Geologbta searchlng for gold deposlta In the
Siberian diltrkt of Kolynukaya could hardly believe their ey ...
There, in a piece of Ice extraoted from depth of 33 feet, appar·
en Uy waa a lizard l \!i Inches long.
The men thawed out the Ice and the amphibian came to life,
the government newspaper Izvestia said Monday.
The bead geologist, D. Kolomeitsev, wrote about bis find to N.
Shcberbak, a zoologist at the Ukraine Academy of Sciences In Kiev,
Shcherbak was skeptical.
A montll laler, Kolomeitsev brought the creature to the ocienUst,
who said It was a Siberian uglozub, a type of lizard known to opend
winters in hibernatioo. .
, A ~bon test 0/: the amphibian, produced another BUlllrtse,
Izvestia sild. It showed the ug!ozub was nearly 100 years old.
Huntington Beach Drive
To License Cats Fails
By TERRY COVILLE
Of tN 091/Y ~-ll•lf
Cati will not be collared with man·
datory lieeMes ln Huntington Beach.
The city's controversial cat licensing
Jaw died Monday night when councilmen
deadlocked 3 to 3 on the hotly debated
issue.
It died when Councllmen Henry Du):e
reh.tsed to cast a vote either way.
"I'm not satisfied with um ordinance,"
Duke told fellow councilmen. "I feel
Conquistador~
Statue Missing
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -Gov. Bruce
King has asked state police to assist in
the investigation of the disappearance of
the pricelss La O>nqulstadora statue.
The famed madOMa was d1tc0vered
missing from St. Francis Cathedral 18
clergymen prepared for mau Monday.
The governor said, "All New MexJcans,
whatever their faith, have come to con-
sider La Conqulatadora aa the patron
saint of New Mexico."
He said that betause of ill S48 yean or
"special rell1lous devotkln, .. It ahould be
returned as soon as possible to ill home
at the St. Francis Church.
f'ro1n Page l
RAIN ...
work tomorrow," said a spokesman far
the state highways . deparlmenL '1But
now it look.s like we'll have to watt
another week lor It to dry out."
The freeway had been slated for com·
pletion past Bristol Street to Meaa Drive
in late February. However 80 non-work·
ing daya due to rain or mud alnce the
project was begun in 1971 have pushed
the completion date back to late AprU or
May. ~1ost of the delay has been en·
countered thi! ~ason, the apokeaman
said.
OlANll COAIT IT
DAILY PILOT
The 0P•fl9• (ClllJI DAILY P'ILOT, Wiii! 'fl!lldl
Q COfnblMf 11'9 N ...... Prni, .. publlil'lld ll'f'
ttle 0!'11'41 $:M ii PU'ltll11\l119 CO!ftlllny, ....
... If IClll!Of!I l •t po,1Dllillld, MliiMi'I' 1!1""'911
l'rldlr, for Co11a 111-, N~ &.Kl!,
Hlll'lll"!lloil lle11e11/l'01mt1!" v11i.,, i...,...
S..cll, l•~lne/S1':1dl .... e• Ind &tin C*'-11/
S." Jlllfl C1ptt1r1,.,., A 1~ Nllol\91
Miiiion !1 pUblltlllll iltll'HYI 11111 11uN11rs.
1'1\t P!'lnc:!pal 11111)!111\lng Jlllll Ii 11 D Wnl
.. , lll'Ht, C.t1 Mnl, C.llMnl!ll, ..,. ..
Roi1rt N. WtM
Prlllffrit .nit P' ..... ltMt
J11k l . C11Plt'I'
Vlcit ''*ldtnl INI Otnet1I MIMfW
f 1\1m11 KttYll
""" n. ...... A.. MYf,-1". Mtr>I01"0 !dltor'
Chtrlt• H. L.11 lt!ch1r4 .,, Nill
,_..11t11tt MtMtlftt *<111191'1 -·
there needs to be aome kind of control
but I don't know what. 1 can't vote
tonight."
"When can you vote? snapped Mayor
Al Coen, chief proponent of cat license.
"I don't know. I'm not an expert on it,"
replied Duke.
"Why can't we do something positive
for a change?" aaked Councllwoman
Norma Glbbl, IDOOler 'IUJll>Orhr ol cat
tqs.
"Why is it a1.,ay1 positl'fe to pw an
~el" Duke complained.
Coen, Mn. Gibbs and Jacll: Green firm.
" IUPPQ!1ed 1118 mandalOrJ u ...... Jer-ty llA!niJ, Doilald ShlpleJ and Ted -Jett -"" II to the cheen ol .. era1
cat fw In the audlenco.
"I would favor a vohmtary llcenalng
proeram," ruggelted Matney. 11And we
can cbarp an Impound fee for people
who picll: up their cata, but I Just can't
see a mandatory Uceue."
Green, enraaed over Du 1: e 1 1
abltinance, wed CalUornia Animal Con-
trol llbnaier Donnll Smith H his lfllllC)'
Is roquu.il by law to keep call for IS
!lOun.
"No, we'rt not/' Smith replied. ''The
county'• policy ii tmmedlate destruction.
Thi at.ata looU OD Cltl U wild anlmlis
not pef'IODll property.''
"Why don't we follow the county'•
lead, ... added Green.
After the meeting, Smith llld, his
policy on dllllruclion would dapend on
the ~ avallable for cata.
"We only have about 30 cqu
avallable, oo wt'll try and keep the call
we think 'te can place and will dtlll'oy
the othen," be lllid.
Since CAC took oru the dOf ... tclllng
chorll for the city on Feb. I, the apncy
ha• picked up 119 cata, Smith lald.
"We apend about 10 percent of our
time on cat problema," he told the CO\m-
cil.
1bere wu a Jara• number of resldenta
in lbt audience who vocally ®POied the cat law, but they were not allowed to
speak.
°"81 pointed out the councll had lpOlll
more than two houn oo a public hearinl
on the issue two months before.
Part of the cat law pnipoal Involved
using the llC:eDJe revenue to Mt up 1 low
cost 1pl)'ln( and neutertnc clinic. AU
councUmen agreed any money ralaed by
a voluntary license might still be used
for such a clinJc.
City Administrator David Rowlands
said thll ·moming the mandatory 1icense
is dead, but the city will explore the Idea
of establilhJng a spaying and neutering
clinic.
"We might also consider a voluntary
ticonse, but I don't think \hey'll break the
doors down to get Jt," he concluded.
.f'rotn Pqe l
HUGHES .•.
with Hugj>es bu been held, there ii oo
legal 1'tCluirwnent f0< him to lhow up In
Nevada !or further 1amJn1 matters. He
said an 1ppllc1tlon Crom H • I h el
reganting 1blfta in company officers ta
expected "lhortly."
O'Callagban lald be "had ,.versl dlf·
ferent waya'' of knowlna that the man be
talked to wu Howard Huihet -In-
cluding infonnation from otlier penOlll
who have tetn blm such u "stocb and
bondl people.''
In 1ildltlon, O'Callaghan Aid ba bad ·
phl'aJeol d= or Hupu that ap-pareoUJ ma man ho PIOL"
Neither h not lllhnUlii bad
met Hu&hel before,
O'Callqban Jald lluahM llldlcated be
will retain o""9nbJp of hil Neud& pm-·
Ing e"""', wliich la ... ol the stata'a
larpot employors with t,OllO employtt,
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Roher! Koone
carried on a loud debate with crillcl
from the auclience. .
A COUDIJ-tostalled eouncl syslml did Ul-
tle to llOOlhe tempen. The oom-
mtsstoom' commentl wero Inaudible lo
most of the ltlO persona P'""llt.
Commiaioller• blamed reporll In a
Loa Angeles newapaper wblch had said
earlier Monday that the heartnp on the
Salt ci.et dispute woold be held at the
community clubhouse.
The news account--brought iorth hun-
dreds of retlclenta angry over the
Dllllive grading pnijecl which has
altered the landscape abaft the Soolh
Coast strand which often has been at the
center of controversy.
'Ibat newspaper account drew blasts
from commilsiooers, particularly Loa
Angeles Coonty delegate James R<edy.
"It's not the fault of us on the conr
mlaslon,'' be asserted. "It was the preas
that erred, which ls often the case."
In the middle of the brief dispute -
which amounted to attempts by members
of lhe audience to speak -Orange CotJn.
ty Supervisor Ronald Caspers, a member
of the panel, dropped a note to Rooney
and -left.
Caspers earlier had said he planned to
leave early to serve as a host for U.S.
Sen. Jamea Buckley of New York who
made an appearance in the central coun-
!Y Monday night. · · 'I!le paDel Mcaday cut one poll en the
demands by the public to he heard, a
measure which called for "suspending
the rules" and allowing the public to
speak to the Issue.
It failed by a 6-5 margin, with the
panel'• chairman casting the pivotal
vote.
Angry South Coast residents jeered the
action and many shouted, "wait until the
elections!" -apparently unaware that
the panelists are apPointed. not elected.
The issue which has stirred so much
ire among the residents involved the
grading of more than three million cubic
yards of earth on more than 500 acres
above Sall Creek.
Critics have claimed the grading has
been done assertedly In violation of the
provisions of the Coastal Initiative.
They coold have had their chance to
speak. commlasioners argutd during the
appropriate time Monday.
Roooey and fellow memben insisted
that the public could have walled until
the entire commission agenda was dealt
with.
Public ~ ii the last
category on the lenclhy document.
Monday'• meeting, howover, adjourned
woll Into the earty morning houn.
F ...... P ... l
FBI •••
to appear.
The committee approved the request,
but Gray re!Uaed to offer hi• view1 on
one of the three -Judith lfohacll:, of
Weet Palm Beach, Fla., a former aasb-
tant to the treasurer of the rHlecllon
finance committee.
Miii Hobock prtv1tely aougbl out the
FBI during the Wateriate lnv..Ugation
to communicate informatloa outalde the
preaence of commlttee o!ficlala.
Gray provided the committee with
dalel of the lnterviewl with Miu
Hobaclc, but refused to dilcusa the case
further when Sen. James Eutland (D-
Mill), asked, "How many tlmet did Ille
hide the truth?" .
"Under my onlen from Mr. Klein-
dilllll I can only dllcuu lhll procedural·
J,y and I cani tflve any 1Ubatanco to our
1Dtervtew1 with MJsS Hoback," Gray
uld.
111 nceJved my orders and I hive to
carry lhem out," Gray aald referring to
Klelndlensl.
111 don't think those orden are helpful
to ~ at all," Bayh obaemd.
' I have to tab my orden from the at·
torney 1eneral and the President," Gray
aald.
The commitlff voted to 111bpoena Mill
Hoback; Tbomu Bishop, former FBI
bead of lnveatipUon and mu and public
relations, and 'l\omaa Lumherd, a
former Justico and Treasury Deportment
official who worked on the rHlection
campaign.
Biker Reports
Murder Orders
MARTINEZ (AP) -A Hell's Angel
has testified that an officer of the club
ordered the murder of one of two
Georgis hikera alter the-other wu drug·
ged with LSD and tieaten to doth at an
Angels' party.
Chester "Fe1tu.1" Green aald Monday
he was at a 1971 party In the ll'OUP'•
Richmood, CalU. clubhoule, wben branch
pruident Richard llarlier 1ave the order
to kill Qiariu Baker, !O.
LIZA., DESI SA.Y
THEY'LL MA.RRY ' '
LONDON (AP) -Liza Mlnneill and
0..1 Amu Jr. aald here today they plan
to 1DllT7 -.n. , \
Del4 oon of Lucille Ball and Dal
Amil, aald the wec!dU. ~It "la not iolnl to be kept I MCre~ When ft have
iet tl1t wet date, wt let everybody tnow.• ,.....,,,. 1 • -
Ila and Liza, the --d!nicbllr of .tho late Judy Garlancl and atar of the
ftlnl "Caboni," anived bire lodl!1 for a
fl•Ha, viail.
, ;
•
UPIT .......
DAWN ·PATROL CONTINUES AT WOUNDED KNEE OUTPOST
For Mllltent Indians, Petitions and More Waiting
End Constitution?.
Reservatwn ResUlents
Petitwn for Election
WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (AP) -Ileal·
denta of the Pine Ridge Indian lleaerva·
tion have 1ubmitted a petiUoo to the fed·
era! f0\'0!1llllelll aaldng that It onler an
election oo whether to dilsolve the pr<S-
rnt tribal C0111titutton and .. 1ec1 a new
form of aovenunent for the Ogiala SiOUl.
Interior Department apokemian Jack
Murphy told a .!ftSI hriefinl in Pine
Ridge l\londay that the petitloo bore mll'O
then 1,400 11jplaturea. He aald u WU being
cbeckod to determine wbetber the r<quJr.
eel !O percont of ~ation'• quallfJed
volel'I "'" uking for the election. 'Ibo petition was banded Mbnday to
Bureau o1 Indian Attain Supt. Stanier
Lyman. It asked that the Department ol
the Interior order t be election, which
would decide whether to throw <>II or
keep the prtsent constituUon and tribal
council government.
The mllitant Indians who have been
holding the tiny r_..auon town "
Wounded Knee for 21 days have been de-
manding a new election lo replace tribe!
Chairman Richard Willon.
Tho American Indian Movement (AIM)
has aald the removal ol Wiioon ta a con·
dition for giving up the vlllap. The pell·
uon, however, did not mention Willon.
The Indtanl holding Iha vlliap walled
Monday for word from federal De(otli-
ton on propogall to end lhe coolrontattoo.
NOW, HEAR TIDS!
Tony Boyle
Denies f ,ink
ERIE. Pa. (UPIJ -Tl!DY Bayle,
former president ol' the Uqlted Mino
Workm of America (UM\VA), deniod on
tile witness staod toctay that he ,.tboliz.
ed the transfer of llO,tlllO In union lm1!I>
allegedly used to finanCe the munfer of '
dissident-union officlah ' • J o ct • '
Yabkmki.
"[ never saw them," Boyle Slld 1n
reference to two $10,tlllO depoeii sllpo and
two letten aclmowledglng tranlftr o1
the money from the UMWA's in·
tematiooal treasury to the union's
District 19 in the Kentucky-Tenneaee
ma.,
"'Ibey came from the oecretary-
treuurer's office," Boyle aald.
'lbe union's secretary-treasurer at •the :
lime ol the 1969 murden of Yablonakl, .
_ his wife and daughter was J9hn OWtna, ;
who was deposed aloog Wlfb Boyle In an 1
election last becember. :
Boyle was the ieadoff defense witness !
at the trial of William Prater, ~.
Lafollette, Tenn., fonner field organizer
in District 19, accused by Ibo p.......UOO
as ooe ol two former \JMWA olficlals
who arrangod and paid for the ldllln&•-
Tbe other WlkD official, Albert Pus, as,
Middlesboro, Ky., is scheduled for !rial In
June.
·Defense attorney H. David JlaOnnn
sbowed Boyle a memo urgmg speedy •
lramfer of the secood flO,JW lo Dlatricl
It. The Dl<!lllOcarrled Bayle'•....-..
"1 dcll't recall aver ~ 'that
~" Boyle said. .
Bo'yie said the memo wu wtltten by
h1s e:i:ecuUve secretarY, Sui a nn e
Richard&. Judge Edward Corney r.jected a
defense motioo for dJmnlSMI ol &> ol
the three oounta ol mutder aplnll
Prater.
In bis motion, Rot!Onan ~d ·111e
. evidence wu overwhelmln& lilll l!rater
and Pass "could In no way lie ~ble
for the deaths ol Cbarlolle and "Jll.i\iraret
Yablonski." Margaret was Yabloostl'11
wile, and Charlotte bis daughter.
Previous testimony in the trial showed
they were killed so that no witneues
were left by the killers.
Prooecutor Richan! SpralUO c:ounlered
with the aasertlon, 11Wben you send out 1
pack of rattlesnakes, you're respomible
for what they do."
Boyle, 70, arrived at Erle International
Airport Mooday and WU elCDl1eci to a
downtown motel under heavy oecurity.
Paul Gilly, coovicted In the Dec. !!,
1969, slayings by aJury lhJt set the death
pellaity, teswted las\ week that Prater
and Gilly's father-in-law, Sllous Jlocl.
dieslna, coofesaed phetween tn the
alayinp, told him Boyle or d •red
Yablooski's death.
It wa.s the first time Boyle, who
defeated Yablonski in an eloctloo for the
Wlion's presidency three weeks before his
rival's death, testified at a trial of one ol
the seven llUSpeCll charied In the kfil.
lngs.
LoUery Wins
Beach Backing
A statewide lottery received the
support of the Huntlqton Beach
City Council Mooday nlght.
Councilmen voted & to l sup-
porting a lottery ruolution which
speciliea that any prolita from it
should benefit publlc,educaticn
'The resolution was proposed by
Mayor Al Coen. Councilwoman
Norma Glbbl!, a pro!.-at cal
State, Long Beach, WBI the lone op4
ponent. She did not say why, \
According to th. Pmidtnt'• Councd on Environmental Qti1tity,
it ;, bocomin9 increasingly difficult for anyona to escap1 noile. '
40,000,000 American• risk hearing lmpairm1nt and other phy•ic1I
• and montol affects. 44,000,000 other Amorlc1n1 h1v1 the utility of .
their dwelling• adver .. ly offocltd by nolM from 1ircr1_ff or ti•fflc. ,
21,000,000 American• are 1ff1cttd by constructlan-relatod f!Pt..; . ·
"
' . ' .
Now what does this h1v1 lo do with cerpot? C.rpotl1111 wlll I I
drestically improve accouslics in ony room by quitting your h~,;,:.
environment; making radios, tolevlsion, and tho family sound better.
• Ill ·-·-llllCltKJ
Romembtr, at Alden's, even our LOUD c:atptling ls qui.t.r.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 rtoc•lltlti Awe.
COSTA MlsA -
64MID ~
..... • ,_, .f 19 ltlOt M. t 19 t1 s.t. till 19 I
r • . ,
I • " '
T.....,.,., Morth 20, 197) 5 DAILY PILOT S
2 POWs· Arri"e-•Back Frona the Bead•
A Marino major lroOl Santa Ana IDll I C.lil., and Clark AFB In the Phlllpplnes. munlsts, stepped out in blue bu!lne9S oulll M~t lrom HouslOn, bolh QQCe A fellow u·priooner ol the Viet Cong., and were driven to San Diego · ~avll
ll>l<d as dead oa Ibo botUelleld lo Viet· Marine Capt. James Vincent Dibenw<io Hospital.
nam, returned lo Camp Pmd1eloo Mon-ol Mls,,!on Viejo wu on hand al Mlramar Nearly 150 friends •"!! relaUv .. .,-
da,y. lookiag wan end.Jhin after five rears Naval Air Station in San Diego as their ed. Alexander Henderson, 49, Of neerby
l!!lllltiiL~ol~Comm~~ulli!t~·~c~aptl~vl~IY~·....,,,.,...,.,......,_~A~ir~l'on:e C9 set down. He embrac<d the Spring Valley, accornpenl<d by Richard on•t hive tbe wt1'Cbi tu express the two-men warmtlyye-. ---------Tiic1.-ss.;pa;,u,~ldim·n.,grc,-ll9lio,-oolf-'Enkl;-·01t.;;.,....i...,,..-_.,..:
feelings 1 have," aaJd Maj. Paul J. Mm-"I would like to mit the gravcslte be-captured Jan. 31, ISM alang with H"\'
tague, 38, ol. Santa Ana. cause seven of my friends are there," derson during the Tel offensive.
"God Bless America," Sgt. Ronald L. said h1arine Sgt. RJdgeway Monday· The two civl1tans were employed by Pa.-
Ridgeway said, smiling. The graves. near St. La.Jls, ~lo., hold cific Architects &: Engineers, a Loe Anr
1be two were reunited With rel•Uves the bodies or Marines killed In an ambush geles-ba.sed finn. Henderson gave t h t
and, after meetlng with newsmen, drank !lt Khc Sauh Feb. 25• 1968· Ridgeway, civilian hand-over-the-heart salute to lht
champagne. Mildred Ridgeway of Hou.1· then an lS-yeaN>ld private, was reported U.S. nag as he told the frowd of about 209
ton, Tex., said ol. her 23-year-ald son: "I dead that August after combat bad persons: "I want to thank the anned
never lost my fallh that be was alive. I slackened enough to allow other patrols forces of the United States."
never gave up hope." 'lWo other sons, '° retrieve the bodies. Then he raced to bJs wife Margaret.
Raymond, 18, and James, 6, were with A timeral was held and Rldgeway's One or Henderson 's four aons, Alei:anda'
he mother Mildred attended, insisting all the Jr., 26. embraced his father . He was a r. while that her son was alive, Montague's helicopter wu shot down The prison grapevine got word lo him soldier in Vietnam in 1967 when his father
March 29, 1968, near Phu Bai in Sooth Jess than three weeks ago that he had arrived to work.
Vietnam. been llsted as dead, he said, adding "l A native of Glasgow, Scotland, the elder
Three months after being declared wasn't surpfised. 'Ibings were pretty Henderson lost the tip oC a finger to a
dead, Montague's name appeared on a grim.'' Viet Cong sniper's bullet.
POW list. His wife Sharon was notified As he was driven toward Camp Pendle-"I think we were both pretty lucky,"
in January that he was still alive. ton and a reunion with his divorced said the son.
The Marine Corpe has awarded bJm the mother and brothers Raymond, 19, and "I was back in the states when 1 beard
Silver Star and the Air Medal for hero-James 6, the 2.1-year-old bachelor spoke about dad's capture, anti I volunteered
ism. En route to Camp Pendleton where eagerly of the life awaiting him. to go back to Vietnam but because ol
his, wife, daughter and two sons were "I want to go on liberty as quick ll.S I dad the Army v.'OOldn't let me do it."
waiting, Montague told a public affairs can," Ridgeway said. "I want to see how At Camp Pendleton, Montague a nd
officer: "You think we're a little skinny. society has changed. I'm raring to go. Ridgeway joined Marine S. Sgt. A~0090
\Ve think you're all fat." The thing I missed the most was being Riate, 27, also once believed dead butia--
Montague's voice trembled at the end free to be able to do what I want to do." ter freed and sent to the Marine hospital 1 or the flight from Trnvis Air Force Base, Two civilians, also freed by the Com· Sunday. ~ •
!
State Court Turns Down • ' l
Art School Adds
New Courses
For Teen Kids Leary's Freedom Plea :I
u~1·~i.
'DEAD' MARINE SERGEANT RONALD RIDGEWAY REUNITED WITH FAMILY AT CAMP PENDLETON . .
· Classes for intermediate and high
school students have been added to the
spring curriculum at the Laguna Beach
Sch~l of Art, 650 Laguna Canyon Road.
Clas!es begin March 26.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -'ll>e state
Supreme Court has rejected a bid for
freedom by drug advocate Timothy
, Leary, who contends he was arrested ii·
legally in Afghanistan by a U.S. agent.
Mother, Mildred, Brothers Ray (left) and James Welcome Servicemen 'Byried' in St •. Louis <;emetery The courses, for students 12 through 18
years of age, will be held on Wednesdays
from 3,30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Children's
art classes for ages 5 to 11 are he ld
Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
The high court also declined to halt the
former Harvard University 'professor's
trial in San Luis Obispo on charges he
Teen Girl Slain;
Poliee Hold Boy,
Seek Two Others
OAKLAND {AP) -One youth has been
booked for investiga(ion of murder and'
two.others are being sought after a teen-
age girt waS Stabbed to dt!ath outside1 her
~. high school lunchroom.
Sgt. Warner Smith said Rita King, 17, a
senior at Oakland Technical High School,
\\'as pronounced d e a d on arrival at
Kaiser . Hospital Monday after being
stabbed or:i.ce in the heart following an
argumeut In the cafeteria.
Smith sp.id Miss King apparently quar-
reled with three youths over their places
in the lunch line and later pulled ~ chair
out from under one or them. Witnesses
said the youths chased her down a cor-
ridor where they argued and she fell to
the noor.
A bloody pocket knJfe was found 'in a
mailbox across the street from the caM·
pUs, 8mith said.
He said a JS-year-old male student
from McChesney Junior High School was
booked for investigation of murder.
Smith declined to disclose names of the
youths involved.
•
Girl Wanted Adult courses are offered in the follow-
ing subject areas: design and color, basic
and intermediate painting, landscape and
watercolors, drawing and composition
life drawihgs, sculpture, printmaking,
jewelrymaklng, photogra~. interior
design and ceramics.
Woman Found
Dead After Year
Supervisor Battin Seeks Aide HOUSTON (UPI) -Mrs. Emma J.
Banta a retired 76-year-old maid, died
alone 1n an apparently abandoned apart-
ment a year ago. But no one knew she
died.
"\Vanted: an attractive college girl or
recent graduate, personable, unmarried,
with better than average writing ability;
a young lady wbo would like to
participate in the realities of politics and
help develop progressive and innovative
approaches to government processes."
That is the heart of a letter addressed
by First Dlstriet Supervisor ROOert Bat-
·tin to Orange Coa.st College in search or
a secretary -a position on his staff
:which has had codllider'able turnover.
The letter reads, in part: "I am
desirous of employing a young lady more
on the order of an executive 'Girl Fri-
day.' Secretarial skills are requ~. but
a major part of the j6b is telephone work
to constitutents, resear~hing information
on matters before the board for
decision."
Also listed as attributes, .. CCllstituent
contact through attending o p e n i n g
ceremonies, banquets. etc. involving one
or two evenings a week, either alone,
Utility Service
Takeover Eyed
By Irvine Council
Irvine city councilmen will be
nominating one member each to a com-
mittee urged by Mayor John Borton .. to
study city takeover of utility services in-
cluding water and sewers, gas and elec-
tricity.
At the next regular meeting or the
muncll, nominees acceptable to a ma-
jority ol oouncilrneo will be appointed to
the study group.
Mayor Burton said be believed city
operation of utilities might be one way '
the city could generate revenues to pay
for amenities it seeks, In c 1 u d i n g
greenbelts, open space and est.belie
treatment of the San Diego creek 'fiood
cbannel.
OJancllman E. Ray Quigley Jr. oaid be
did not oppose the Idea but cautioned
courlcilmen not to "kid ourselves into
thinking this will be a way of making
money." ~
An Offer They
Cou'ldn't Refuse
with myselt, or other members of my
staff."
Battin a,dds, ''Although the political of-
fice is a"'non-partisan one, I am an active
registered Democrat."
""Promised are great advancement op-
por\up\lies for the r!gbt pe-.
'Ille letter was found attached to an
Orange Coast College bulletin board. It
was written by Bill Meyer, Battin's chief
assistant.
Spring quarter instructors include
Roger Kuntz. Armen Gasparian, Roger
Annstroog, Ray Jacob, Watson Cross,
P~ter Kuent:r.el, Owla Ilgner, Alex
Cowap, David Bowan an\! John Smith.,
Courses are approved by the Veteram
Administration and the Ca 1 I f o r n i a Department of Education. The acbool of·
fers the bachelor of fine arts degree and
certificates of completion. A brochure
may be obtained by writing the acbool or
phoning 494-1520.
1bis week, her skeleton, elad in a blue
coat, robe and sllp and lying on a bed,
was found 'In the locked apartment that
baCI no gas or electricity.
During the past year, her soo said, he
assumed she waa living with her former
employer. The family that employed her
for l' years thought she was alive and
living with her son.
OUR··Golden tou~h~~ TEAM
MEANS •..
NO UNHAPPY OWNERS
Dear Friends of Orange County,
Our fifty yeors in the automotive business has shown us t~at ,
today's new car buyer wants just a little bit more, so we've put together
our "Golden Touch" progr am for just that purpose. Starting with a fair
and honest deal , we proceed to do everything humanly . possible to
~eliyer that new Lincoln or Mercury lo you the way it should be .••
\uned to perfection • . . beautifully hand polished • • • extensively
road tested and carefully inspected by our se l'Vice management. We
know this will make for many miles of trouble fre e driving pleasure.
.. ., . Come in todey and see for yourself the difference a Johnson and Son
Gold en Touch car means .
..
~
escaped from the Callfomla
Colony there in urro.
Men's ·
The petition tor relea!e was denied
without comment four hours after it was
filed Monday.
Leary, 51, sought aaylum lo Europe ,
North Africa and the Mideast after his
escape. He claimed he was arrested In
Afghanistan ·and. fiown to Los Angeles
earlier t h i s year in vlolaUoo of In·
ternational law, the U.S. ConstituUon and
U.S. laws.
Leary's habeas corpus peUti911 said a
man from the U.S. embusy ptcked up
Leary's passport in Afghanistan and that
Terry Burke, a federal narcotics agent,
offered him Instead a registratkm card
allowing only a return to the United
States. Three other agenla joined Burke and
Leary when their plane . Oew to
Franklurt, Gtrtnany. At a stop In Lon-
don, BrlUsb oUlclala refu!ed Leary'• plea
for asylum before he wu f,Jken to Loa
Angele( ' " j
The petJUon said: 11Abductlon by an
agent of one sovereign within the tef'..
ritorial confines o! Qnother ls <Otttraiy lo
international' law."
MUNICH (UPI) -A boutiQue owner
pJaced advertisements In M u n I c b
-aaylng he would outfit bis
first five customers from head to root,
provided they showed up nude.
Dick Johnson
Vice President DICK JOHNSON
. ..
S'-', Tlllef
U .. I T ........ ,
Tblrty-elght nude men stormed the
oewly opened bouUque Moaday.
Tbe boutique owner, who 9Sld he did
not eipect ...., one man• to take ad-
vantage of the oiler, kept. hlJ promi.
and p.....,ted the other 33 nudes with
pants and socl<s.
Friendly Argument?
-~ ----
, ;:ramoo, the 25-pound gorilla ol
the. Joseph H. Sclteunmann
family at St. Paul, 'Minn. bu
911n1 levned one 1hlng...T11Jai:..-._.1""0XY1LLE. Ien11 -Police
how to raid the !amily refrlg. reported that John 1'111, 96, MU.. Compton, 33, Wt:re ho«pitau..d and era.tor. Jlat wail WI he grows treated Jor pistol WGlllds early today
up. after a shootout at the Ffiendly Tavmi.
• '
.. ,
..
Jromt Of The New Cor , , ,
"Goldn r-N'
.
l
"'0""1n counr~·· '"'"illl •111nt Ca""
ohnson&son
t I'.... i l J l l'J
2121 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA • 640-5830
r·
Home Of The New C~r • , •
''Golden '.Fouch',
\
•
\' j
•11 OAILV PILOT
I I
'
\Sprjng Has
, Sprung-a Leak
. REFLECl'IONS. DEPr. -So 1mt
1 the dawn that dldn1 oome up like
thunder from Newport ocrou the bay. It
' came up ratn. Just another day to llsttn
to the cllcky-<_lacky of the wlndJhleld
wipers a.a: you slush up Pacific Cout
Hllhway.
, Lighta dance of[ 11lck aophalt to break
the monotony of dull gray, Gray sea. ·~ aky. A tononeu or one vll\Ved
,.. wllldahleld 'lllp<r> that go cllcky-
lacky.
'Vagrant early-lhomlng lnlcka speed ~· exhausts roaring angrily at the
~tness and oneness as whistling tires
~Ing plumes or water into the air. And
nto the 'lllndahleld. And the windshield
p<r>. Cllcky-clacky.
J CATCH A GLIMPSE or two of the surf
sweeping Into the beoch. Satisfaclion
or bre1ken lllJl roll uhorl In
g, loaming white; 1 dellance to
· one!leas and grayness of the Orange
this day.
e billboard along the way offers a
oung blltlnl-c:lad maiden 911llllng down
you between clicty-clacky wlpers.
1 She advlaea that you rush right out ror
l'®I' Zappo iunlan oil before the bul'lll of
Crfnl and 11J111mer. But there will be no
~ this day. Just gray.
1 Stop at the Cl'OlllWalk for the elderly
Jlod!', out In the rain. Why would ohe be
qui at an hour like this, de!ylng the tJements? She labors ICr06I th •
IJlll!way, looking for all the world like 1
,iant umlnlla wlth legs, looking for a
$7 p1..,. to bide.
• PUU IN FOR GAS at the water-soak-
ed lltation llland where the young at·
tendant wlth long wet hair neglected to
lp'ing Illa llilcker to work. He 1hudders
'llltb your arrival. While he pumps, check \he morning beldllne1. What ls the news
on a gray March day?
Sacramento -The Senate has delayed
uirtJl Jan. 1 a new law requiring women
to undergo a test for German measles
before they can get marriage licenses.
All rtghl, Ill you glril with Guman
measles. Rush right out now sod get that
license before the deadline, even if it ii a
dull gray day. -
Sacramento -Another law introduced,
this one to require all auto ownen in the
South Coast basin to 1et tuneups at least
once a year to combat smog.
How will they do that! Maybe require
a sticker on the '111ndableld that pro-
clalms, "This car Just Tuned Up." Put
that with the lticker for smog control.
And the one for )'Olr Mexican Insurance.
And the one for your kid'• school. Pretty
soon you won't see at an. And you won't
care II your windlbJeld wipers go clicky-
clacky.
PAY THE BOY with the long wet hair
and hit the road. Lo, you find another
place where the oneness and grayness
cannot prevail. For there above Coast
H1ghway, the wet that has been falling
all these weeks has turned rolling hills of
the Irvine ranch1ands into a sea of lush
green.
Indeed, it hM not been so green in so
many springs. And Is this not the first
day of spring? Soon this wetness and
grayness shall fade like mists of the
morning. And it will be spring for )1!al
and the sun shall dapple upon blue
waters and warm the sands while sea
breezes cleanse the soul .
It shall turn this way. For after all, is
this not the hest or all possible coasts?
Welcome to spring.
Snow•tor:na 'Victims'
Snowmobiler stands atop high drift e.nd talks to two men lllAl'ooned
in Wisner, Mich., bar after a storm. Sno\v was cleared apd the men
were none the worse if or experience.
'
ITT Officials t~ Testify
On Role Played in Chile
WASHINGTON (AP ) -High-ranking
offieials of International Telephone &
Telegraph Corp. were called f o r
testimony today at the opening or a
Senate investigation Into . influence ex-
erted on American foreign pollcy by U.S.
corporations abroad.
Allegations of efforts by ITr to prevenl
Chile's Salvador Allende from taking of-
fice as pre1ident in 1970 were the first
subject of inquiry by a special Senate
Foreign Relations subcommittee.
Chairman Frank Oturch (IHdahoJ,
said the five-member body will "explore
in depth" ITT internal communications
dlSCUS1ing contacts wtUt the Central
Intelligence Agency, the Slate Depart·
ment, and the White HOUie concemlng
plans to foment ecooomic troubles to en-
courage a military coup against Allende.
Allende, a Marxist Socialist, was front-
runner in the presidential election of
Sept. 4, 11170, but failed to get the ma-
jorlty necessary for election. A wave of
terrorism hit . Santiago, the Oillean
capilal, in the two months before the
Congress elected Allende in a runoff Nov,
3.
The m documents that touched off
the Senate probe were made public near-
ly a year ago by columnist Jact
Anderaon. They were later ~ in
booklet form by the government or Chi.le
with a foreword calling on all citizelll to
ponder "the extreme gravity that the
events described in said documents
represent to the independence, !OV'erei&n-
ty and !elf~eterminaUon of our coon--
try."
ITI' denled at the time that It had
partlciP1ted In any plot 11a1nat Allende,
and contends that its concern at all times
was for Its employes and corporate prop-
erty in Chile.
!TI' ad acquired cootrol of the Chile
Telephooe Co. from an Eogllsb !Inn. At
the time of Allende's election, I'IT was
expanding the company and progressive--
ly selling up to 49 percent of Its stocl<
to Chilean interests under a 1967 agree-
ment with the Chilean government. m claimed a 71).percent interest in
Chile Telephone, worth llS3 million,
when it was expropriated by the govern-
ment in September 1971. rrr !WI
operates two hotels in Santiago u part of
the Shlo..raton chain.
The open hearings are scheduled in-
itially for three days this week and three
days next week.
C_onfrontation Looming
On Panama Canal Issue
PANAMA (AP) -'Ibe United States
told the U.N. Security CooncJJ today it Is
ready to promptly ronclude a new lrealy
on the Panama Canal 1.ooe. ,
PANAMA CITY (UPI J -Tb• United
States was reported ready today to tell
the U.N. Security Council meeting here
to keep its hands off the Panama Canal
issue.
A big 'j)OWer confrontation appeared
shaping up with Soviet Russia and China
formally backing Panama's claims to th e
big waterway, and the United States in·
sisting that resolution of the matter
should be left to U .S.-Panama negotia-
tions.
U.S. Ambassador John Scali was mak-
ing his maid en appearance before the
Security Council thi.s afternoon to
reiterate wha t he has said previously -
tha t the U.N. should not attempt to "dic-
tate" terms for settlement of the canal
disput e.
NO OUTSIDERS, he said earlier, can
dictat e terms of negotiations by Panama
and the United States on the Canal Zone
that the United States has controlled
since 1903.
Scali even said earlier that the United
States would cast its third Security Courl-
cil veto if other members tried to impose
terms on th e issue.
Scali's address to the Council, meeting
in its first session in Latin America,
originally was listed as the first speaker
today. Later, officials said hia ap-
pearance was postponed until after
lunch.
lll8 SPEECH come1 alt\!r speeches hy
China and the Soviet Union thet formally
supported Panama's claim of sovereignty
over the Canal 7.ooe.
After four days of discussion, most of
it dealing with U.S. pollcy In the aru
despite the Security Council theme of
peace and ..airily In Latin America,
only Australia has so far supported the
U.S. posttion on the Canal 1.one.
Spring Makes Wet Debut
2,600 Leave Homes in Mississippi Fwods
lot4110N.t.I Wf.t.lMft UtVICf JOllCUT '• 7AM I SI Ji · JI ~ 1~
..
• I 'l
British Announce Plan:
Ireland For Calm • Ill
LONDO!f (AP) -,,_ Jldll* -
,,_ ·--lodaJ a pan lo""' Iii
yelt't ol .W. Ill Nol1llom ·-II pnwldel the --willI Ila 'OIIll ..
-.. •"'17 wllll • --of -~· II allo -Prolett""• !bit'
No1111om Inland wlll -put ol tho u-lqdam .. Joac u Ila ,...,..
wllll It, but 11 lliJ' -C.tballm who want to 1IDll: ap wllb the blllI ,.,tlllc
wlU boYI the opporlllllly for I flfr role
In the pmtodal _.;mm!.
,,,. pllll ailO promilM firm -
toond-'
TllE PllOP08ALI WERE put 1«111 In
a White Paper bJ the Cattaervatlve·
govemment to Par!lammt III I.oodon,
The~ al4 ill plan aimtl II benell the la....iitdlns maJodl1 • ...,, . I.reland'li Pnllelilnil
and Cltbollcl even tbouch ll!eJ' ma7
have oonlllotJnl vlon on ~. ulti-
mate deatlny,
The W)ilte Paper said: "To all thole
who IUpporl the --union 'lllth Britain,-the~ offer firm -
... that thla unlcn will endure and be
defended for aa q u that II the -
ol the IDljorl4' of the -'" "' Northern Ireland.
"TO ALL 'l'llO&& WHO -the unlllcatlon of Inland bJ ....-, but are
genulnel7 propored to -for the welfare of Northern Ireland, the pro-
pollla olffl' th8 -'1mllY to pllj> no
1 ... a port III the Ille and jJubllc allalrl
of Northern 1"'land than II -to their fellow dtizelll.
"To all, whatever their religious vte'liil
or pollUcal beliefs, the ~ extend
ellectlve protecllon agalnlt ony arbitrary
or disa1mlnatory uae of power."
In a referendum earlier this montll on
whether the North IIlloukl link 'lllth the
Jrtsh ,..mile, nearl1 58 p<ret!llt ol the
electorate voted to stay with Britain.
Only 0.6 pe<....t voted lnl' a united I..,.
land. Abatentiollt; ma1nl)r C&tllollcl, to-
talled 42 percmL
AS THE PEACE PLAN was announced
to the Houae of Commons, British troopl
in Northern 1"'land toot up defenalye
positions In rival atroqbolds of catholic
and Protestant militancy. They Were
clearly under orders to bead off violent
protest from either side.
A bomb nonetheleu wrecked the
Parador Hotel oo Bellast'a aouth lide. It
was planted by three armed Ill"1 who
gave atsll and SUUll Ihm minutes to
get out.
In Dublin, the Prvvlalmal and Olllcial 'lllnl• of the lr1sb Republlcan Amly 18id
they wanted to analyze the White Paper
before making any comment on 11.
'Ibe new ustmbly to be elected will
,.place the old ProtestanJ.<lomlnated
Warrants Issued
For Land Firm
Sales Officials
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -A federal
coort judge has Issued a bench warrant
for four Officl.a1a: of. Lake Havasu Es-
tates, Inc., a Pboenb:-based land sales
finn, who failed to appear for arraign.
ment on criminal ~'· U.S. District Oourt J e William
ple 8et b8il at $50,000 or Kenneth°Jt
Lavin, president o1 the firm: Rooald D.
Lavin, treuunr and comptroller; and
Patrlcla L. Lavin, director ol personnel.
Tbe judge aet '10,000 ball for J. Lance
Sinclair director ol properties. ,,,. ioUr ..... scheduled to be Ill' raJsned Mondq with five other defend-
ants ID the cue. All Dine have been lr<e
on their own recognizance since their
1ndlctmmt Mardi I by a federal grand
jury.
Pleadlng hmoc<!nt Monday were Paul
Maholdlic, vice president and marketing
director; Robert Stevens, director of iJ>.
ternatlonal marketing; Edwanl Cass, di-
rector of martetlni in Nevada, and salet-
men Seymour Astern and Vlctol' Lock-
wood.
The Indictment cbarge5 tbe !Inn and
nine penom With 23 counts ol mail lr>ud
and vlolatlon5 of tbe Interstate Sales Acl
in -with the promotion of tale of lots In Mohave County. M The firm ii not connected with Ille ..
cutlock Corp., developers of Lake Ila.,.
asu City localed about 35 miles from. Ibo
lo!f;,. coolenda that the
firm's ~ inwlved nu.......,.
lnudulellt ~ta-to land
buyen.
LA Coroner
Blames Death
On Overdose
GILA BEND, IArl>. (UPI) -Sarah Milea' bullneu manager died of a drug
overdale, not 1'beatlng, a aecoad autoply
baa eonl1nned. A lawyer for Burt
Reynolda called for .. end to lnnuendoo anc1 opecu1aUoa at>oUt the deot11.
,,,. Lao Ancelol Ccuijy medical ...
-· Dr. 'l1lomaa N..,..i.t. cooflrmed that the bod7 ol Dovlll Whltin( contalnecl
"lethal loveil" ol the lleeplna pill -
qualone, Jlllllce of the Pelee Muller<! wtnaor m aald Monday.
II appeared to -that Whitinll
had tabn the ·-alter • 1111 'lllth Miil Mllet.
NOG1Jlall'I REPOl\T, qreetn1 'lllth
thefhlcl!np of the MulaJpa OolDy medi-
cal enml•, will be the lut evldmoe
oullmltled Wedneeday to a cormor'1 jury
conducting .. inquHI Into the de1th of
Whltlng, Wlruon said.
Mill Miles and Reynolda, alter losing a
leglli battle to avoid tettifylng at the In-
quest, appeared before the jury laat
week.
In Beverly Hllla. John Fil'nn, an at-
torney for Reynolds, told a new• con-
f erence Monday he WU 11Sturmed and
.urpised" at inlimatk>nl by officials in
ArUona tllll the whole story of Whiting's
death wia yet to be told.
''1f IS MANIFESTLY unfair to sug-
gest there are unanswered questions by
any of the people Involved In this," FlyM
uid, C3lllng for an end to ''romors,
speculation and innuendo." He said
Reynolds and Mill MilOI bad answered
all ~ put to them hy lnveotigators
and at the Inquest.
Flynn said ArWlna authorities had
looked Into the poulblllly that Whiting
WU murdered. The Ariz.ona State
ileplrlment of Publlc Safety advlaed him
It wu investigating Jbe death as a possi-
ble homicide, Flynn sald.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
°'""" o1 "" o~~ Pl~• i' gqrantffd ,,,, ... ,.........,. " .,.. . "" """ ,_
,.,., .., 11• """' Pll lot'lf r-C..,, Wiii .. ........, " ,,... ea• .,.. ,..... ..... , ... _
........., ... ....,., If ,.. • "' ,_,..
""" s.,., .., ' ...... s...n.,.. ... • • ..... ........ u11 ... ...,. ............ ,.
.,... Celli ......... •Ill ,. e.111.
T tltilhones
The provlnee'• llnk with Btltaln will be
rotalned as lone u the maJortfy of l!t I Ii
mlllloo DOl>Ulatlon .. -. the """" sald. Brtlil& irooi» .....cl Into J'iooleotant
and C.thollc lleCtot'I of Bellasl an hour
before publication of the White Pape!'.
r.nllionwunznnln&~
U•IT ........
Rock11'• Mat1
Robert Wagner, who served
three terms os mayor <>f New
York City, beams as he reads
endorsement for that office
from Gov. Nelson A. R<>drb-
feiler.
Paper Reports
Search Resumes
For D. B. Cooper
WOODLAND, Wash . (UPI) -FBI
agents have rtswned tbe hunt for
parachuting hijacker "D.B. Cooper" In
this farm area where he disappeared 18
months ago, the Portland, Ore., Joumal
says. ~
1be newspaper said Monday several
residents or the Woodland district had
noUfled it that federal agents were again
searching for the skyjacker.
Asked about the report, an FBI qmt
said the search might relate only to "a
part of the cootinulng investigation iD the
'D.S. Cooper' case.' "
A man who signed the flight manliest
as "Cooper" hijacked a SeattJe.boand
jetliner on Tbankagivlng Eve of It'll and
obtained a S200,oo:l ransom. He
parachuted from the back door of the 72'1
without leaving a trace.
Authorities have searched this an:e
across the Columbia River from Oregori
several tlmes in the past without ~·
.Communists Make Pledge
To Free POW s Wednesd~y
SAIGON (UPI) -Tbe Cotn,munllts , have been exchanged for 4,7113 South
promiled today to me port of the last Vietnamese ooldlera.
sroup of American pri....., by Sunday American troop withdr1wal• have been
and the -no later than the following held up, pending the announcement of
W-y. enabling l,!00 more U.S. detalla on the Ona! POW release. About
wvloemen ttationed In Vietnam to go $,300 of the remaining !,!Oii U.S. troops
home. are to be aent home, !Uppoledly by
'11le Commwllaca llill bold 1l6 -28.
Am<ric1ns -HO mllltary prllonen and Allout 1,000 wlU r<maln In Vietnam u
lls c Iv 111an1 -pluo one Canedla• memhe:n of the defenoe attadle olllce
Another 10 Amerlcalls were ,_ied '(D-'O>, the permanent troop cooU.-t
held In Laoo and there hU been.no ~ appro..O under the Parta a1reement.
on wllen they would be freed altbouab-a If wu not clear when the troop
lllaky ceuellre ii In effect In that coun-withdrawals would resume, but ap-
try, Joo. pmnUy not until all the detalll ol the So far, 441 Americans have been lul release have been.Ironed out.
teleaaed, lncludln& 17 c!vlllan8 and two •
!Utn held by a.ma. Ono ll'OUP ol %1 was ~
freed .i Loe N!nb, 711 mu. north of M1· .. _ 1..e'll Tells ~ bu1 aD the JWI, m:ep1 !or the .ICU
lwO~ bJOllna, wm turned over
•
1
Lt, N .... • v1e1 ams doputy Wiretap Okay
-olllcer, uld the Provlalollal == l~ ~~ MIAMI (UPI) -Former U.S. Attomey
bf Sullday. Bonver, be did not ll•• an G<Mrll Join Mltcbell liat told a i...-= =:.-..:. r:::-...r aay bow :'1a~RJ~~ ~
Lt. Cal. Biii Till, opcl<-for. the ~ a wiretap request wlthoul 1iia
North Vlehtmma deleptioo to &be Joint authoriutklll. "
M1lUarJ' l)wnml-(JllC). uld IO'I M1tcba11 lettlfl<d Moac1ay beb1i U.S.
!lrlww wonld bo ......... at llano!'• ~~ J·"'-Wlllllln o. 1o1-~-k • ilia i.m AllJlorl "bJ Ibo tennlnatlan ._. .. , ...... ---daM." , bearing Ordered by tht U.S. Ith ar..tl
·'l1111 memil to MMC11 • -ta the Coort on de!"""' -to -deedllne for the .. tum Of an POW& and evidmoe obtained by w1re1apo Ill
the ult of U.S. lroopl flolll Vlolnam. numerous .,.... lnwlv1n1 chalPI ol
' A Seip ~ uld Ibo South 11111'Q>Ut:1, pmbllna, t I Io rt l 0 ~ ,
.....
7r'i "" ,,,. ,,,,,,. .. blnhdtly ••
~ prl1oner .,_ ~ mflu evuloo. 1-••-_..,.,,1
., 4olJpll6-:.:xnorneyiJai-HOplf,l>ona1d llllrman
ICauered alllql -!be COClllry. and Daniel Pt&Jn> COildUcted the -,,,. Pl'CI 110, -tllreHourths flnllhed,
I It allo riiiiodulod lo end bJ &llldaJ. tiolllllC ol MJtdlell !Ot.J~ 1*1n-.1'alllll:
111 -.,, -.na Oonum1111ta will of 21 de!..,. 1awye,.,
I .,
I '&cret'
Markings
Not-Aide
BRIEFS )
CALIFORlllA
JudgeOkays
'Vampire'
Statements
der-Cl'OIHumlnaUOI\ to-
day 11 the goverUment ,..kl · OAKLAND, (AP) -The
lo prove be Is ""'°' and that munler trial of Weldon Mellde
•1top secret" marktnes are ~ Kennedy whom
portant po)'Ohlatrlsl! say thlnil he's a
J!lqreoce, now 1 coosultant vampire -baa opened with
io · l!enJel EU.berg an d the judge ref\oslng to suppre11
f.nthclny lbjuo, told jurors In 1lawnents the d e re n d an t
their eti>ionage, conaplracy made dpon hll armt.
and theft trial Monday that Kerutedy, 29, of Union City,
the claulficaUOn 1y1tem h11 C&Uf., is charged with the
been ruined by lndlocrimtnate cfocapllatlon &laying last June :l:t ~ '°%':'i :'arr~ of Marlo Oliver, 15, of nearby
eSlrMnBehl
Stm• BiU
~tismog Device
Checks Proposed
_n,. lrom Gov. Ronald
Reqan, 1 1weepina antismog
program bu baen -4
requlrlni annual malnterumce
ol auln lllllllllOll devices In
Soulbem Cal!fomla.
INTllODIJCED M<adlly by
5'11. W. Q-alg Biddle, °(J\.RIV·
erstde) tho bill would require
cor ownen Jn the otate'• south
Ooell Air Baaln to have ex·
hausl emblloO onntrol devices
che<:bd and maintained at
least once each year in 1974
and 1975.
Biddle'• two-year Pilot pro-
gram would alao require the
devicet to be gone fNer by a
mecbenlc whenever the car
waa brou&ht In for a tuneup.
Violatloo would be a m1..i ..
meanor, with criminal punish-
ment.
'Ille South C..st Air Basin
stretcllee from Sanla Barb<lra to tbe San Dle<(o County line,
and east to take In RlvPrrlde
and San Bernardino. It Jn·
nla's pooulatk'!n and ls Its
wwll smog belt.
stickers indlcatlng whether
the vehicle bu bad the anti-
smog triainteoance or ls ex.-
empt.
His bill is only "half a Joaf,"
Biddle says.
''As I work to move th i •
. measure through the legisla·
tive pn>ee50, f Intend to at·
tempt to coovince my col-
leagues and adrnini5tration
officials that stirfer smog pro-
vilions can be activated with
public support." Biddle &aid.
''The bill is hair a loaf I
don 't intend to lose. But I think
we can do better and I am
committed to try," he said.
Vehicles not complying with
the bill's provtslona eould not
be driven or abandoned on the
~hway under the ~aBure,
which is also backed by the
State Alr R<sooroes Board.
CAR REPAIR dealen found
guilty of violaUnit; 'the' bill's
ocovisioos would face poaible
10"$ of their state llcepRI.
u,1~1
'HEART IS FULL'
Aclrou Clooly Tyson
Soloris F ete.
Actress
For Film
The black aclre8' 118ld Iler
"heart Is full'' after she re-
ceived a plaque from tbe law·
makers Monday.
''Sounder'.. haa been noqi-
f....i., ....... 20, 1W3 DAILY PILOT 5 I
Reinecke· Says 'Ragf 1 ,, ,
. l
Gave H1m ·Bad Nam~
"So Good ... It Will
flaun.t You 'Til Its Gone."
1r1c:1AL or TMI WlllC -.:i DILICIOU1, TAJTY IHAI SPREAD ................ .
•
.
' I
L06 ANGELES (AP) -A
brother of the convicted
USUlin of Sen. Robert F.
!!:...,my bas been Indicted by
• federal grand jury on a
charge of making a thttat
agaiMt tbe llfe-of lmleH
Premier Golda Meir.
,Hayward, and tbe throat-slit·
Ung and muU!atlon killing In
July o! Vicki Lynn Iaelln, If,
of Union City.
At the trial's opening Mon-
day, Alameda County Superlor
Courf1udge Alan A. Lindsay
denied a defense motion to
suppress four statements of
Kennedy's to sheriff's officers
after his arrest last Aug. 4 in
Worland, Wyo., where he was
11:rving an assault sentence.
TO BE REGISTERED, ca!'I Biddle's bill !! SB 4'11.
Splral Sllt!ed
Whole or H.rt
inated for tour Academy e Readr to s.rve with Honey 'n Spice Gl11e l
ul G Id' :i~~~ =u: • Spiro Sliced From Top lo Bcttom 1 I 'A • Wo Paekage and Ship f..,m j cap co . 0 • fo~~Peaker Bob e ~i::.;'s.'°.v~'li.ttcotffMn •
Moretti, (0.Van Nu)'!), called e Import.cl ChoOHo and Wine• the film about black share-. •. · · d · • Coloring··· A Spoc:lollty Sharif Bishara Sirhan, 39.
was held Monday u n d e r
$50,000 bond afler his in-
dictment. He was arrested by
the FBI at his residence in
nearby Pasadena ·without ln-
cldenl Lindsay acted after
Wuhakie County, Wyo. ,
Sheriff James P. Warila
testified that Kennedy volun-
tarily made the statements,
which allegedly-Implicate lilm
ID the two !18Jllngs.
Group Butting In ~~l~;;u:r~~~fn:~ J1ao1.c~:.~:.~ .. ~~.~~=,"' .. ,.
· · ~~~~~t~y~"?"~~to~~~~~m.~e~bef~ore~~!!!!!!!!~~~~!!~~~~'~12~J~JiL~•;•ict~•~•~·•i~~•;•illr~~~fi1~1-iu~•~1~~ SACRAME~ (AP) -The head of the Ca!ilornia Mari· I-~r can pu c. ~ ~· !
1
campaign to "decrlm1nalize" JU8J!B .lnl\18tive. -rr-' , e Arralpment
SAN RAFAEL (AP)
Brent Bedayan haa Pleaded in-
nocent to cbarge1 he tilled
three members. of a Aflll
Valley family whose bodies
marijuana in Calilomia has ROBERT ASHFORD said in • F R E E been the target of an at-a news release Monday that 1
tempted "hijack" by a group "a Spf;!Cial interest group
Interested ln the commercial dedicated to the legalization of ,.
exploitation of pot, says tbe marijuana" had tried unsuc·
were found outside their bum--•0011c::1_.., ___ .,.,.,..,,......,,..,._ •• .,w ... a ____ ., __ cessfully to take Ofler the · -~ ..
leadership of the CMl whlch TAX RE T u RN Ing home. '
Bedayan, 22, showed no
emotion during h I r ar-
ralgn~ot M o n d a y In
Mµnlctpal Court other than to
chew his flnaernai!J and
clench hiJ flats. He iJ charged
with murder In the moi,im
deatba of Melvin Schallock,
11; bla wife, Ruth, 56, and aon,
Wet Violator
Council Taking Action
seeks "decriminalJzatioo" of , , • 1 _:, '.,
marijuana but ntt legalir.atibn.
'lbe difference 'between the ,. two is that legaliiaOon Implies
the right ., sell marijuana p RE PAR AT I 0 N ~Ji~~;.::: . . " ' ' '
'Daniel, 19. ..
e Melt!Jalor Rites
LOS. ANGELES (AP) -
Funeral services for tenor
Lauritz Melchior will be held
Mn.. '.l'l!!!r~-· ~fore the
.ashes of the opera, stage and
movie muilcal star a r e
transported lo hll native Den-
mark for burial ln a family
plot.
Melchior died Sunday after
a gall bladder operaUon two
days before his !3rd birthday.
He had been 1 mldent of
nearby Beverly Hills.
e Bril'H! Cue
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -
The f)IOIOCllUon bas rested ill
cue after a Superior Court Judie denied a moUon to
dilml.51 twn ol three bribery
counll aplnst fonner 1inger
Phil Rtgan.
Qelenl" attorney. Frank R.
Crandall made the moUon •
Moriday, based on what he
Wd w11 evidence showing
that Regan never gave any
mone)' lo Supervisor Frank J.
Froltl In any cue, Frost WU
not seated u a oupervlaor< un-
til 1 day aft.r the alleged
payoff to a friend of Froet,
Crandall said.
e N•-11 Cft••fetll
SACRAMEilTO -Th e
CUP~O (UPI) -A ban-tht>rain bfdinanee
passed by this Northent Caillornla town was damp-
ened by drillle Monday and the city council ·I&
<1>nsiderlng legal action.
COUNCILMAN JAMES ·E. Jacbon, an attorney,
said the rain "seemed to oome" from nearby Sara-
toga and Sunnyvale in din!ct vi<>latlon of the law. ~'l'btHll'lllMnce~~ two weeks -ago stated
there j'shall be no more rainfall" within Cupertino's
city limits ·during Mardi and included • warning.
tbat wind·blown rain frQlll adjoining communities
may ~onstiltute " ~olatlon. Jackl!On said that Saratoga and Sunnyvale may
be enjoined from allowing any more rain to fall on
Cd}>ertino.
THE RESOLUTION was passed 'Marth 5, Jack·
son said. because the massive rainfall this season
"bas subot:lntlally lnterfert!d with the econ~ll!Y of
Cupertino, b·as ~riously inronvem~~ced ct~ns
anti bas hd to widespread mbery ind a lot of mold·
ing -not to mention the fact that members of the
city coUllcil have on occasion been thoroughly
eoalred, wi\h a great dangeT to their dignity."
California Deptrtmtnt o f Alrfculture baa o If I ct a 11 y
become the car~omt• llopOrt.
ment of Food and Agriculture.
Dtrtc1or C.B. Oiriotall<n utd i .
the name chantle empball!el ; ' that the basic function of the
department Is to aaaure con· )
sumer• a rtUable 111pply of '
wbolelOIDO, qllllity food.
~ .,
'
•
mArijuani but. does not In-
clude legalization.
~'CMI very strongly opposes
legalization In any f~nn, feel·
ing that by limply removing
criminal penalties for cultiva·
tion and use -not sale -of
marijuana , the com-
mercialization which w~ld
result from legalization can be
avoided ," Ashford sakl.
ASHFORD .SAID an
organization called Aroorphia·
Acapulco Gold recently called
an UQIUtborized meeting or
the CMI l»a:rd of directors for
,. the-purpose of reorgahiziog
the CM!.
Asblbrd said the Amorphia
group was trying to undermine
the CMI because "CMI's
grow ... your-own p r o g r a R\
threatens t.o destroy
Amoiphia's projected multi·
. billicm dollar legal marla!t
·from the sale of marijuana."
/
Get ag-s}larp . -~
1bwn ana C.Ounbjlmife free .this Friday. '
-_, ---,., ,_._....., _ .. _
'lltM MtAn a "°°"" -C"--
COAST
SlfOWJIET ........... ,.., ...
113-3511 ·,
rlM7 l.COAif HWY.
ORONA DELM
•
Jaol waieb for tio Unloa 78
M la l'riday'o pa-ud cllp
tile aoapoL Tallo It to YOVJ'
padolplllas UnloB 78 deal.
er, ••• nu-ap of •l_§•t. 1.i~ lou or_,., a..i .. II tiY•
, .. 7011r & .. bite. C-
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Knlfeorallteak •<nP·
lulr. 884~ 111 a Boulier Kai e, a t SU.., a Ham
81leer, a 1'renola Clief or • contn1Porki....-a11y1194~1--.-..:.~...._~~,--1
()nOI yoa'Yl tft~ )'OV free
blfe, )l'OU'll WUt t~e COIB• • uni -p)ele cdllery •et. 8o dOJl't-
·~1-f •
Put a man with sp&iton~de. TJte
I
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DEPOSIT $3~oob -· 10 • -., 0x11ttnt tlringo account •t Paclflo s..1,.. ......... PR1e
prepntion of your ~ F~ end Stl• tlx rttums: SotM people will Mt t200 to $300 . .,. more In
eccoundno ftM. (Thlt offtr dottn't .ppty to corpotltfon. Pertntnhlp, business or limUar flt&amt.) . ' -. ' PRO fESSIOfllAL -qualified UK counlllon wilt preporo your personal retllmtand mlkuuro that
yOIUtCtJYe_IYtrY_po_ili.bJt.blntfit und• the tlx llW. Eaoh ntum wHI tti9n bt triple-chtcktd for ICGUf'ICY by
hiFIY·traintd _.l!llltt. Alt "°"' h -In tho prtftcv of YOUI' ~ifie tiovlntl ollleo uslnt tho "lined
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Guaranteed Protection. If your return I• questionect by tho Gowommtnt, they wilt
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. ~ 'I
AND -Y1>Urd-1t-6% Pft..ilum Ina twoJoflvtyw ($6,000minlmurril Ctttlfl ... -.unt-Sll.%
pw annum in 1 one td fiw v•r ($1~.l:mlnhnurJtl c.ntfltlte account or 5% per •nnum In t NtUlar P•boofr.:
· 1COOunt, all compounded daily. ThtM"" th. hitt*l "* paid by any insurtd ln•dWdon1.
'
REMEMBER -to quolify fOf thlo freo offil' you Med onlv to mike your deposit. If you hM.lft
ACCOUNT E1SEWHIRE, bring us your plSlboo~ M(wt will nnsfer your money 10 PICific for you. Offtr
te-4 Htff ......-.. &..t My for fllhlto ............... It ....... ll, """ 16, 1 t7S.
S 0 H UR RY -oilko your d~t TODAY -O< call Of otop by our n-t offloo fo< m ... lnfonnotlOft.
Plus -
fREE Fe.deral tax Guide
•.· THI$ OFFICIAL GO\IERNMENf PUBLICATION OFFERS
VITAL tNFORM ... TtON FOR EVERY TAXPAYER
PACIFIC S"Vtll(GS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION h11 pu-1limiud1uppty of -•o!-bookltt1. Tho
booklot I\ IYlilli>I• •l-h .. at r~I pri .... bot It FREE TO ALL at YOlll -offloo of Ncifio $Mlifttp and
Loon _..._ '11111 ollor flOO\I onlY wllllo~ppty i.tL < ' ' •
• •• .. "' ,. ~ Ir
AtL ACCOUNTS INSURED BY FEDERAL SAVI NOS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPCllATION TO $20,000
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' OPEN NIGHT . DAY
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Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M'. to 9:00 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M to sioo P.M.
SOUTH COAST 'LAZA
lristol St. 11 Sato D• F-r, CGt1I Moll
PHONE MIMl&I
THE MALL OF ORANGE
Tlldol ML 11 Meats Avo., 011ngo .
ftlONE li1'41U
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• DA.D.Y P.ILOT EDITO JAL J9AGE I
Ecology Costs Money
•-----,.,,...,,,l>ropoll'iiii<nii1rtrnll0n20;-llie COUlllDe Pi'OteCllon In·
ltlallve, was ]>O...cl by tile voters in November, the bal·
lot measure filcludad a $5 million approprl&tlon to cover
the presuD>ed inilial coct of setting up and operating
llx regional commlaslons and tile statewide commisalon.
Now we learn the llUlte commission b2s tentatively
ado~ a $5.2 million interim budget to cover opera·
tlon mot. for the next 311 years (the extra $200,000 to
come from building permit fees). But some membeni say
tills financing is utterly ln~uate and propose im·
mediate application kl tile U.gislature for additional
lunda.
A South Co..t Region rep""""'tative sug~ the
$5 million figure on the bollot measure was jtiii! "pluck·
eel out ot tile alr" and will not begill to cover the actu.al
cost ot the wwk involved.
......,mblyman Robert E. Badbam says he's "Incens-
ed" by all thls and even goes oo hr "' kl suggest that
most of tile state's $850 million tax surplus eventually
msy bave kl go toward paying for Propooilion 20.
Since l'ropooitioo 20 was many months in p~ra·
Uon, tbere should be no excuse for offering a f1~
just plucked out of the air. Opponent. ot the proposlllOn
have claimed all along. tbaf a mw:b·too-low coot figure
was used just to fool the l~ • .
The U!gblature' should uk ita .respected J..eiis!atlve
Analyst. A. Alan Poot, kl produce' some reasootbly re·
liable figures.
College Joh Outlook
It's geWng to be Job-hunting time tor college sen·
iors and a survey of 100 companies and government
agencies conducted by Changing Tllnes of Washington,
D.C. indicates there will be a tair nwnl;Jer of Jobs avail·
able -and qven more appllcant.s.looti!ng tor them.
''The time wjien graau.Ung seniono could wait for
corporate recruiters kl come to them Is gone," note. the
report.'
Of tile organizations ~ 72 mid they expect
to hive JOliS for new =eerillg il'iduatw. 59 for bUJI. ness an marketing ma on; 48 for 11CCOuntants; 40 for
adence or math l!llJors; 30 for llbenl arts majors and
22 for various spectalties.
TM outlook for educallon majon is less optimistic,
with the National Education AsooclaUon estimating the
teadler IW"pl1111 is reaching tile 300,000 mark.
Peroonnel ~ 81111 rank good grades es e ..
sential attributes for candidates, along with extracurric·
ular acttvtU.-; part time work experience; willingness
to relocate; and <!ear job obje«ives. ·
There'll be plenty ot. competition, but the early bin!
Wbo gets that good resume off kl several potential em·
ployers still has a good chance to start collecting dlvi·
denda on his college education.
Disturbing Nonchalance
Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks com·
miWoners Wt week adopted an $11 .5 million budget
for the next fiscal year with a nonchalance that could
be reganl.ed ao admirable, ot alarming, depending upon
one's ,l>Ointo{ view.
Ii was a little· disturbing to bear one .commissioner
comment that the body really had "no alternative" but
to aocept the budget requests of Jts staff since ''they
know what they need."
· '!bi& probably was intended <IS a compliment to an
t;fflcient and conscientious staft But it does seem the
commissioners, in handling Ibis rather formidable sum
of money, could have seized the opportunity to Inform
themselves by uking a few question& about the reason·
Ing behind the budget requests. The answers also would
have served to worm the public, whose money is be-
ing spent. .
It was at least noted that the bu<lget promises more
and beUer parks for Orange County, with just over ball
the money earmarked for purchase, improvement and
development of park oites. •
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L
Privilege Issue Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Money Crisis Sparks Bitterness
.
Poses Questions
My apologies to John Wayne and
the Cattlemen'! Association for not
taking advantage of California
meat. For the past three month3
I have found it necessary to eon-
tiniie eiperimenting with some ol
the moot delightful meals I have
hod in IS yeers. 'nlese Turklsb,
Greek and Italian delicacies, un-
fortunately, do rot include meal.
Europeans Blame the U.S.
WASlllNGTON -President Nixon's
failure to intervene dinclly to check the
international monetary crisis
ha8 caused bitterness and anger in the
chanceries of Western Europe.
President's economic czar, Treasury
Secretary George Shultz, came to a Paris
monetary conference w i t b o u t in-
structioru:. He merely listened, with
seeming detachment.
WASHING TON -Prelldent Nixon ls
regarded by his Democratic-opponenta as
getting away with constitutionsl murder
on the executive privilege issUe, but who
haan't?
This is one of those issilel approached
from an apriorl poslikln. ll ls a political
issue. How people
feel about It is in·
Ouenced by their
previous convictions,
and the application
of the executive
privilege idea Cp any
particular case.
Some ol U-wl1o
are now incensed
because President
Nixon refusee to let bia subordinates
te1tlry ln the Watrrgate cue
were perfectly .happy when an
Eltenhower version of e 1 e c u t i v e
privilege hurt senator Joseph R .
McCarthy. Executive privilege was deem-
ed to be inviolate when It helped Defense
Secretary Robert S. McNamara eocape
blame in the TFX flaco, or damaged a
hapless federal employe· named otto
OlepkB.
AS FOR there being any setUed legal or
constitutional doctrine on exeaulve
privilege, forget It. Ei:ecutive privilege is
what any chief executive says It is.
President Ni.100 has been on both sides
of the issue. M an investigating con-
gressman when President T r u m a n
asserted executive privilege by denying
committee access to loyalty and securi-
ty records to government personnel, Nix·
on cried "coverup." He wu trying to
prove the Truman administration was
''coddling Communists," and Truman
was not helping him.
1be e1ecutive privilege q u es t ion
mostly rises on supercharged political
issues such as McCarthysism, securtty
risks, defense scandals -and now the
Republican raid on Democratic head-
quarters at the Watergate apartment
complex.
PRESIDENT Nixon's new definition of
executive pri vi lege sounds high-minded
It is only common sense that White
House !laffers and Cahlnet member!
can't be contl!mally called to the iC"pltol
to tell wba\ Nixon said'to them waen big
or Utile d<clslons were made. -H.R.S.
Where Nl.ion11'doctrine fouoden ls on Tlls ,.,.,.. refs.c.. ....._. Nw\ .., tho Den step determ,Q\IUon cSse-nt.. _,." ,._. ., "" -•• •r. ~ We'd when ~tlft .(Jftld'al -.. , ._!""" ................. -__ -_...-_. _______ ._ .. _.
be permitted ,testify, ud to what,be
shall testily, '"! that' im admlnlstra~ · security inwlVl!d. Nor was there even
cannot be menly .ab'l.eJded from •· any clear indication that what was Said
barrusment w1ien no overriding natllJ\31 in the Justice Department conference
interest ls in"'l!yec!. would have helped McCarthy, who, by
WHEN THIS principle bas been ap-that Hme, had lost most of his public and
piled, ll bas had some strange resulls. coogresslonal support "llllyway.. .
President EJJenhower Issued a sweeping Nor ls t~re n~ any ~tear tndlcation
e.iecutive prMlege declaration which of what nattonal interest IS to be served
prevtriled the diltklllre or a Juatice if Whlte House offtcials are protected
Department conference to do in Joe from telling anything they know about
McCarthy in the Army-McCarthy hear· the Watergate case.
inp which led to the Red Hunger'1 down-THE CENTRAL fact is that the
fall. Democratic leadership has. launched a
Exactly what national lnt.erest wu political blitz on tbe Watergate case for
protected was never clear. Certainly the pu.rp<ll5e of imposing maximwn em-
tbere was no qu~tlon ol the nation's barrassment oo the Nixon ad.
ministration. M with Eisenhower and
Truman before him Nil:oo is not giving
•He's busy discussing the
domestic policy. '
his political opponents any help. His
premise is that the White Hoose had
nothing to do with the bugging.
The controlling factor i$ whether or not
a president can get by politically with his
assertions of executive privilege, and the
odds favor that. It is not so much what
Washington or Jefferson did in the early
days of the republic, but how the modem
public ._ts to the reasonableness ol th•
President's as.sertion in any particular
case.
'l1IERE IS no law, no constitutional
precedeitt, but merely massive volumes
of literature, debate and political
polemics on an unresolved problem.
And, one final point: The last word oo
this subject has not been said and may
never be said. Nixon's declaration may
create as many problems as it solves.
Nor, if the issue should make its way to
the highest court, is there any visible
eagemes.. there to reach a definitive find-
ing.
The secret diplomatic dispatches and
intelligence reports from Europe indicate
that feelings against
1930s.
The cause of tire crisis was a sudden
flood of dollars into the exchange
market. This forced European coontries,
particularly West Germany, to buy up
dollars in order to keep their own cur·
the United Statee
haven't run so high
since the end Of
World W&11< IJ. '!be
Prelident's handling
rJ. tb.o. mo n,e tar y
. , rency stable. Twice now, these
~ m the opinion
ol most European
leaden, !hreatens to
pllillge the world Into
-• governments have been caught with their
vaults full of dollars when President Nix-
on bas devalued the dOllar, thus sticking
them with huge losses.
a disastrous trade war. TI11o;result, tlleY.
feOr, could be a world depte,s;on..
MANY BLAME the Unlled Stales, ao-
cording to the Central !nlelllgence Ag<n-
cy, · for triggering the greatest il)--
tematiooal monetary crisis since the
THE PROBLEM, somewhat
oversimplHied, is this : The dollar has
been the backbone of the world monetary
system for tbe pa.$ quarter century.
Western Europe has depended upoo the
United States to bolster the dollar. But
Washington took no finn action to halt
the recent nm oo the dollar. The
Brandt thought his attitude was
senseless, but FrMce's President.
Georges Pompidou coosidered i t
suspicious. The CIA reported that Porn·
pidou, in private, was muttering darkly '
about U.S. ecooomic imperialism.
AS POMPIOOU sees it, acoording to
the CIA, the Unlled Stales is haP!'Y to
dump its dollan: on allied governments.
Tbe chief beneficiaries, P o m p id o u
believes, are the great Amertcan. o:;r.
poraUoos.
The diplomatic repercussions have
been so serious that the Presidt.nt's
foreign policy czar, Henry Kissinger, is
staffing up for a crash study of the
monetary crisis. He wants to have a
voice in setting mooetary policy, wiUt a
view to its impact upoo U.S.-European
relations.
Real 'War' CouW Clean Up Cities
When people talk about ''waglilg a
war" against crime, they 8J'.e ~ the
rlgbl wonb but with the wrong idea:"
They are thinking ol tougber laws ·and
more police and bigger prilJooJ and
longer sentences. Everything 1n history
poinls to the stubborn fact that these will
do little good.
What we need is a
real "war" -like
World War II, in
which we mobilized
our resources a n d
manpower to eradi·
cate the wickedness
and destroctivenes.!
ol Nazlism. Nothing
less than such an el·
fort will restore us to a tranquil aIXi
civilized society.
BY SUt'H a "war" I mean spending
comb'ucUvtly as much as we spent
destructively. I mean Jiterally tearing
down every slcnn In every American city,
and rebuilding ll with liveable homes,
gardens, perks, decent schools, adequate
~YDNEY J. HARRI~
hospitals, and free public tramportation.
I mean waging war not only on the
degrading living conditions of millions of
dispirited citizens, but also on their ig-
norance. their boredom, their frustratkm,
their sense of social injustice, and their
feeling that nobody gives a damn what
happens to them or their children.
I MEAN not just rehabilital~ the
physical environment but changing tbe
whole spiritual envirorunent, by offering
social and economic and educational and
recreational opportunities to e v e r y
citizen.
A grandiose and utopian plan? It may
seem that way, but only because we have
never conceived such a concerted effort
in time ol peace -onQo in tile <rlatl,.pl
war. . ~ And tt ls an aboolute fact that the U.S.
did DOI climb out of the Depression until
we began the war effort, until we started
to spend those untold billion.! for destruc--
tive and non-producUve purposes; how
much more wealth would we then
generate if we spent the same amount
for productive ends - for making all our
people self-supporting, for lifting the
lowest fifth out of the slough of '1 despondency and giving them a genuine
stake in the capitalistic order.
SUCH A WAR on crime would cost no
more than a "real war, and would get to
the rools of disaffection and alienation
and ViDleoc<. It wooid lighten the burden
on our crushing crime and penoiogy
system, and transfer much of the load to
soc1al, medical and educ a ti on al
.-...ources.
For today it ts domestlc dlscord more
than foreign enmity that threatens the
foundations of our commonwealth. U we
could destroy European cititles. we can
rebuild American slums; if we could
reaore Western Europe to prosperity, we
can assure our own cltlzens of a chance
to share in the boonty ol living. Here II a
war well worth waging. 1 ., ..
Audience 'Censorship' Keeps Solid TV off the Air
WASHINGTON -!l"s not true lhal
words don't hurt. The CBS television
network c a n c e 1 e d its prcseotaUon cX. ··sucks and Bones," a play of dramatic
$8Vagery about a veteran from Vietnam
who comes home to a family that
discards him, drives him to suicide, and
throws his body out
with the garbage.
The play isn't a J»-
litlcal allepy M
1-the Nix"' Ad-
mlnJJttatjon d 0 ••
treot Iii'! returning
-· ..Ulllouib re-'"'"" flom our •<l-e,...'~!"!; . pot tt ..._.. ... ,.,..
di•, ; lople .,. goinf to think
CBS acceded to Jl'ltO n..., pne-
llft le .... dnllla -<Ill tbt air. .,,.,,. wtll _.. .. ... moro.<llD
of a ........ toilllcal caofrol al tolerli I 1 , .i w r I~ theftlore, fall 1J ;.#:.::~~ LI* _. • .,. IOOfCtilNI and oa'Ml
that CBS ever dared to come so close to
putting this play oo tbe air. I confess to
some bias here u one who's been
moonlighting regularly for CBS Ne"' for
several yean, but lhe fact remains that
serious drama was cha~ off television a long. long time ago. Thal the network
would hire Joseph Papp, lbe most
creative a n d energetic theatrical pro--
ducer of this period, to naount HSUcks
and Bon~" as well as a number of other
productions, Indicates a laudable, ~ ob-
tuae, understanding of televls.lon's role.
Apparently tbe guy1 In Ibo CBS board
room haven't reconciled themselves to
the fact that Ibey can~ get away with
broadcutlng contemporary wort of
artlsllc 11terlt.
SUre, Ibey Clll do .. occas1 .... 1
Shal;espeare pravlded.i.that11M director doeoo~...J>lsy pmeo mot will allow un-
comloriable pontllell bet,.. th•
.u.m.111 --...id UvJ4"Alllltlr.ii111~
Notblnt! like Moelllrd or -a hllhlY oeUUcil MaolJetJt -be toleritod. h a dude writer lib --ilci 111\<e to be •ID!led with ~care not lo
prowlte. 1M ame holdS true for Shaw
or lllCb "Dully plecol u "Of 1bee I Sing."
\
( VON HOFFMAN J
Even that had to be watered down when
ll was put on fast fall.
can disldentify away from b!Jn. Even
with his IOOf"balred .... 1.,.law· be Is not
quite a caricature from life, but rather a
sllghUy oboofete flguro with his Goodwill
Industries fumlture, a figure from tbe
past wl» never did live.
THE SUPPRE8SION OF the best in
tbe most powerful pulSI meClium Is
DRAMA OF substan<O Jell telovlslon .Aeilber new nor par tic u.I a cl y
just aboot the time the lower-middle-American. 1l>e ancient Romano never
class could afford television Itta. Upper-permitted the cleplotlon </. real people on
mlddle<:lasa culture permit.I I t s their stqe. ID f"act, tbe oo1J thing that
membe1> a cerlaln llmlted conta<t with freed tbe ll'estem theater from what bas
dlstwbln( ldeu, aymboll and emotlooa, happened to "Sllcb and Booes" was II.I
but lower down on our status ladder tbe replacement bf tbe lllOVlu u the 11*1
(ln!SIUl"O to tell people tDCl!y what they ccmpelllnc medium at eatertahwftll It
want to hear Is doee to trreslltlble. was lben the .movt.;s• tum to IU!lei: the
TV drama like Paddy Oioycfrky's same canatralnla until rescued bJ
"Marty" a_,ed n .. t ... tolevfJlon televi.stio. •
tbal in tbe movlte• He ... no mor6 On\r a IOCI~ with a sre1t deal lllQft
ten•l!lo than the terlr"-1"-.. -... then"""' --the WllliAmCcom81C IOIO the ll"flnJ""""" ol d~ ol blfb all on its TV..,...,, ..
the Soulb. W0 are a pt<lj>la Wbo wtre -.sly
CIO'l!DI haft al11&11 been able to pt debalinc. a ....,pie al ,..,. aco -•
awl.I' with _. than b:ottdiW IO a lfflw tbousand llCIJool kids wbo -=
-lll<t "All in the Fam111" ... ' and -.. to tbe -beoome very popular. Yet Ardlle BlmUr overthrow lbe ..,...,,,,,.m. We U..
ls JUll unrealiallc ~ IO that aQ1l>oCIY frl&hler1<!d bf fbt nall<a lbal-11W' COllllry
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will unglue llself and blow up like an ex·
pioding ltar, when ln reality we sufrtr
!nm an overly stable rlgjdlty.
So we uk television to relnforcti our
unity and llod new waye to slJ"tn81hen
our sacred national symbols when
they're too otrong as ll II. "Stieb and
Bonet" would have caused perturbaUon
amon& all thoeo who not only want lo
watch each POW ci>me oll tbe plan• and
cheer, but who grow lurlOU> at the
mlnori\y ol us who recarci this pllter-pol-
ter ot m!lltary r .. t ...,,.. the red carpet
., an avordone, Jlncolstic, laclleymolt,
po_!ltical charlde.
ior.ver meeting with the networu and
e1erting their force ao the natkml
digestive tract Is only "'"'ed cream o4
puree. TV II In safe Umll: . .your own.1
OIANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
Robm N. Weed, Publllher ' Tllo111<11 Keeul~ Editor
Barbaro Krdbl<A
Bdftoli4t Pail• Bdl.,,,.
BVT WHAT~ us the moot about tbt \ ,....,. •• J ' ..... and Boo " ls that The edi otlal. logo o! U.. n.111 -""" .... .-~ es Pllot •kt t4 bi(opn 9.nd sttmu· tbt aovemmmt didn't have to do ll. CBS lat• -t1y -nune thri t(Ol «><rl of line by lbWtlng It C>Xtld tum n<w1po~1 .. inlou an~ com•
the TV ........ for a COUJ!!< ol l)rlel boull mt"'"'> on tnp1e. or lnt.i..t 'ond •· ·~ -•-of .... ant It ... alaDoe(f • gnrna111"f. llYprovt•"" a ml'ilm
w -·~~ _, ""'Wou1Jn•t--!OHM -lbll'i>f"®rno.aen• dowil bJ lit own alllllates. They 't opinto.., and 1w ,._.tin~ th<
pat-ti on . ~.,,..._trlrit1nl0"""1
Yet· Nlml'a JIOl!Ple comptalo, lbat TV """""' 1nd 1pok...,,.,, .., '"""" ,gtlon ownen dtio'I .... w what the ol !ht • ·
nll-u lftld them for~ 00
lhllr -'lltey do -and not j\lst in 'l'ue9da1, Marcil 20, 1973
dramallc ways . tbls. TheJ are
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Tund<J, lllldl 20, 1~73
'iry 'Phll lnfetfandl . Capito~ Dispute Hairy ·· ..
llJ DIClt WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The WasblJllUD JftSS corps
was thrown Jato panic ~y, a
report that a White House aide
pulled a syndlcated1cei..
umnist'a hair Ill a tDovie
theater last spring. •
• Malpr:a~tlee
Lawyers Blamed
By Medical Unit
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
Sacramento County Aiedical
Society says the Jegal pro-
fession is responsible for ris·
ing maJpractlce suits which
are driving doctors from their
practices.
Officers of the medical
society tq!d a news conference
here tbat the threat of
lawsuits has boosted medical
(-THE LAW)
costs by one-third, and is
casting a shadow of fear and
suspicion on doctor-patient
relations,
They recommended Jegisla·
lion to establish a malpractice
arbitration mechanism.
But they added the legal
profesMn dominates t b e
Calif~ legislature, which
has already passed laws they
contended enamage malprac-
Uce suits.
e BMJdog Drops
BERKELEY (AP) -The
backlog in civil and criminal
cases has dropped for the first
time since 1965, Chief Justice
Donald R. Wright has told a
statewide conference of
superior court judges.
"Statistical figures reflect
significant increases in work
output a n d coiresponding
reduction in backlog/' Wright
told the Superior C o u r t
Management Conference here.
He attributed the backlog
reduction to the superior
courts' insistence on "sound
.administrative pracfices" that
Were based o n reco~
Lying Over
Age Okay
For Women
ROME (AP) -The Im-
memorial right of a woman to
lie about her age has been sus-
tained ~w by a noo-
chauvinist male judge.
Actress Cooetta Greco went i, a hosplW !or treatment of
a broken nose, sustained when
her boyfriend threw a glass al
her during a night club quar·
rel. She gave her age at tti;e
hospital as 35. Actually, she
WBB 40.
THE JUDGE acquitted Miss-
Greco on a charge ahe Ued.
As for the boy.friend with the
overly accur11te . arm, the
judge gave him a tw .. month
wspended sentence.
mendations developed at a
similar conference in 1m.
e Bid Defeated
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An
Assembly Committee h a s
decisively rejected a move by
Assemblyman Floyd
wallefield to clamp lighter
controls over state Supreme
Court and state appellate
court justices.
The South Gate Republican's
proposed co nstitutionaJ
amend!Lent to reduce the
terms ol judges and make
them subject to popular elec-
tion died on a U vote in the
Assembly Judiciary Com·
mittee.
"[ think it's high time we
make the courts m o r e
responsive to the people,"
Wakefield said. "They've lost
their respect over the pa.st 15
years. We've had 40 years of
disaster.'!
e Suspension
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
'Ibe california Supreme Court
ordered attorney Harvey B.
Himmel of Sherman Oaks
suspended from practice for
nine montb.S 8.nd placed ·on
probatiori for three years.
Approving a recom-
mendation by the State Bar
Disciplinary Board, the court
found that Himmel's miscon·
duct "amply" warrants the
discipline.
The eourl said that In one
c a s e · IDmmel intentionally
used for bis own needs money
that bad been transferred to
him by a client to settle a
legal dispute. II said In
another case, Hhnmel manag-
ed a client's investment "in an
unprofessional way which in-
duced unnecessary uncertainty
for his client . and unduly
jeopardi1.ed the safety of their ·
money."
e Court'• Piek
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
trial court may select any
competent lawyer to represent
an indigent facing criminal
charges and doesn't have to
name an attorney chosen by
the defendant, the Calilornla
SUJ>reme Court bas ruled.
'!be 4-2 ruling upheld the
Marin County superior Court's .
appointment ol Richard H.
Breiner to represent San
Quentin convict F l e e t a
Drumgo. He was charged with
five counts of murde? after a
prison disturbance in 1971 dul'
ing which tllree guanls and
three inmates were killed in-
cluding Soledad B r o t h e r
George Jackson.
Drumgo asked that Richard
A. Hodge be appointed to
represent him but the eourt
Instead named Brelaer.
Company Fined
ForBadSmell
HOUSTON (UPI) --on said the Olamplon
Papor Co. since 196'1 has espelled three llrong odon -
one smelling lib a olwnk, ooe lib rotttn egp and the
third like decay!n& cabbage.
THE STATE SUED Iii. eompany, "" agr"l'I to oettle wt ol eourt for 1 flOll,000 fine. •
'Anthony Sboperd of the oounty attorney's ofllce said
ll'WU the bighe<t air pollution-·flrthe nation'• bistor;y.
e tO.kt 1111 prevlilua hlah· .,..,.ir!IO;OOO"llllragah!St
American Sm U llcl ' Co of El PllO, Tu.
CHAMPION ALSO AGREED to Install $15 million In
pollution control equiixnent before July 1, 1974.
• Area m1denU said the odors gave them heaclacbeti,
The alleged Incident, related
la the April tssue of AUantic
Monthly, appears to add a~
dimension to ·current
Congressional hearings o n
threata to rr.edom or ·the
press.
rr IS NO secr<t that llWll'l
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j<lumalists hett, Indudlng·col·
umnist Nicholas ~
have let their ~ ~" nther
. \·G-HT!>Jil
\> .SIDE
loog. Has this made them
mcire vulnerable t 0 In-
timldation.byigovernment of-
. congresslonal cooun!U.... ·Ill
the days ahead.
According to ID· artJc1e ' br
David Wise, a locl1 joumllbt
and author, someone grabbed
Tbluune!dl's hair from behind
and yanbcl bis. head back
against the seat while be was
attending a private screening
of '"The Godfather" at the Mo-
tion PictUre Assoclation of
America headquarters.
ficials! WISE IDENTIFIED t b e
That question undoubtedly alleged 1 o ck.tug g er as
will be gi..., ·careful con-Presidential assistant H.R.
&ideration by tbe,appropriate ·Haldeman, about wbom Thim-
meech bad written a
_,.whaL critical profile, ln-
c1Ud1Dg a reference t o
Baldeman's crew cut.
. 1'11bli•ation of the allegatloo
ba_,t to coincide with
~SS!onal hearings o I
legislation to give reporters
the · right to protect the
privacy of their news sources.
Some of my colleagues feel
the legislation should now be
broadened to protect their
tresses as well.
But strict constructionists
argue that such a law would
be au unwarranted extension
o! the ConsUtullon.
THE FlllSI' Amendment on-
ly lnrblds taws abridging
freedom or the press," one
conslltutional expert pointed
llul "It doesn' say anything
about menace lo t b e i r
names."
Other authorities contend
remedies are available
without resort cf congressional
action. Long-haired newsmen
could, for example, keep their
mops out of the clutches of
Administration officials by
wearing snoods to the theater.
' ~~Wide Open''
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Wins~on tastes . good,
hen ' a: ~1garette-slioitld
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...DAJl.Y PILOT
e 1t'S •• J,lttfM••t'ttlACCIC. ..
na~, Joa ol aletp and !act ol appellte.
Warning, The Surgeon peneral Has Determined
That Cigarene.Smoking ls•Oengerous·to Your lfealth.
I SUPER KING, KING, 21,mg. "ter", 14 mg. nicotine, av. per cigtrette, FTC Ripon AUG. '71.
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. I ' DAILY PIUIT
.. ORANGE COUNTY
Ad Claims
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SCIN •• LIKI THIS WILL 11 PlllllNTID AT COTO D• ~A MOQI 100 ...... 11141 lllW. te l'irtltl11tte In Thll'll Ann111I ,,. ~'I"'
Versailles
Developer
Faces Suit
County Horse ShOit ·
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Top Prize $15,000
TIWIUCO CAJ:N -lormattan ~ Preparollonl ore WI)! lft V-1 I) t I e o It ;Lllili
Auto Zone Defense
. Countian A1ks Off Ramp Controls
,5Al!l'A ANA -A Pllllerton
. man who LI 01llnll pabUc
utllttlel tllCh •• 11111 Onnge COunly Trlnllt lll.lttl<t llal •
·plan· ti> IOdU<e aillomoblle
poltullO!l. . .
R. J. Pllelpo coll.I lu plan
. "Zone Defense."
'"I'be~ are a number of areas, oi JMe1 in the Los
Angel•• basin which attnct
very heavy concentraUom of
commuter traffic five day1
_each week," be states. "Jt is a
aictentng uperl.ence to ven-
ture ooto a freeway in me or
these zones at 7 a.m. on a
weekday fer le'leral reascm.
You will be slc~ened by tbe
waSte of space, of manpower
of natural resources , of time
and by the atmosphere itaell
all because most of the hun-
dreds of thousands of
automobiles carry only one·oc-
, cupant."
SANTA ANA -A 4'nwood thlt PllWol •lllftl fol' tha Wonft9. , l~
rtnn wanll Immediate •t· Tlllld Annual COio de c... Hooorory CNltma!I '11111 • . . o1 blll Cl.IUlo Hor• Show, o •11,000 WUllom llllatMr, II
• c.:; Of . Clinic
Under Fire
U-t on 11,11111 In-ro: ·• I ·~ •· telev•J··'I·-••••· T • • '' cllmd tn COMtiotlan with evont ""' """ 0 ·~ ..,p ~ -· "'"' · ~ • C.tllornto. , -·"· wwll Oft the Voraalllu on the The April e throuall 'I ..,.. Acbnlllton to lilo 4111 t
Blull dovelopment or, lallinl peUUan IJ upe<lod io incllldl a.m. to I p.m. ~
that, a OOllrt or4or !or •l• ol 900 horell and rldm in will be " !or adllltti, Wllll
the N ....... a.··• pro_.• _ ol_atlll .. IMorla chll~ Wider II .e.ttllttitt ...... • .... .... .,. -or thll v.lr't coio •ccordlrtl to 1, u • ':S:' • ., The domand 11 conlalned in cit cua Oaulc 'Wiii benefit mn~ Inc., eoo
ew Rape
arge Set
A'llBUCGI 6 ION
WESTCLIFJ' llOa!VAllY
4%7 E. ll~J'ilr~lla ....
BALTZ-dao= FUNEftAL 1
C'.erona del Mar .....
Costa Mesa ...... • BELL IllOAll1fA\'
MOl\TllAllT
11• Bro•mi::• .... • McCORMICi( LAGUNA
BEACH MOl'fVAar llOILa~M.'
• PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
CemtWJ Mortuary
Qapel
3iOO Pacflle View Drive
Nowpot'I Bao<l, Calllonila -• PEEi FAMILY
COLONIAL FllNEllAL
DOME
1111 Bobl Avt.
We1tmfmlerllWl!I • SMITH8' MORTUARY
a'/ Nol.ISL
uanug.Be ...
SANTA ANA -An er.,,.. , O lrmllt llled Monday by the Santa Ana Junior Chamber Cent« Ori,., prodllea . ~ ~m:ur J~ 'f.:l~ ... ~~~t I ~~id ol Oommerd'• dru1 obuoo in· ...,,, dlet~n ~~~in; cl~ar;:m:i
whllt the Slela 8ooN ol Jul June I tor the tnttollatlon es that he raped a Santa
Medkol EumlDerl c!Jlma la ol ornomentol Iron ralllllil •I s .... 1 T F ds G. girl has been ordered lo mlaloadliir advartllbtc by an Iha V .... Ulet •Ito. Kies ax UD J'VeR · a second Orange County or I• n t 1 1 t l 0 n cwrently Named q defendants In the • • _ rior Court trial on ad· -unc tltret a fl h r 1 t I • ectloo ore Dould J. Scholl rape charges that left
cllnlce IA Mutco. and ~. the Mor!Jy To 26 County Citi"es·.· . Ille same jury deadlocked . Jlldlt J1o1>ei1 p Kneeland OOllllnlcllOn Comp• n y, .IUdge Jameo Turner set the
lot lllat dale fW hia rulins on Poctllc Plan lllv.toN Pllnd . , .11111 dare !or Mark David Bell,
Iha laj1mcllon domanded by and ll)e Saloco I1111tronce BANTA ANA 1, -... who will be tried for the tbe llalo -11.inot the ComPl!lY o1 Amrrlco. The ' · -A \Olll of whell <II 1• •CC u r •ta I J ?r'j time on cbar~es he ab-
openllono ol Ar111rllll Clinics omooinl -~ rep .. oenll mora than II.GS mUUon In deler\illned. -" l ~ a waitress' <lu\'.ilde a • =i:::..i· olto ,-aa -.~~Jal~act'~i:,',.,: =nz:t:.: :"ar1:X:: llMtl Ana led the ll ~=r1herBe~cbdri;:t~:;:;an~·
The ·poups opvole 1 n compen7 1 llwytl't clolm. tm and tho llnl qyarter ol Oroftll County cltteo * tington Beach and then W.lo•;.;l
Orange County fr<>m 111'1 W. thll year will be dlltrtbulod to l\tndl rteelved, with Iii, her in the parking lot or "WENDY"
CYBIS PORCELAIN La Palma A Anaheim · t "--··-WbU• 1 '583.MB 811p..a _. Southern California Edison n I• alleg~" 1n tht lla1e Vets Get • cll11 tn Oranp ......,ty thll ,,_ ... pany Wendy and her doll make a beautiful
gift for your·bes~girl. 6\'iinches
tall. $50.
week Mahtlm in aeco~ plaot; He wa~ cleared or charges l:J:~1 c'l!"i!i 1~ ::::~~~ --· N yHMffilc llonup and -Olhtr-clUeo al\dlliert iilll 14 ~ays before the alleged
dlltrtbU!od lbroulhout Orange Claim Form . Otlt Qltlrler I .u n d • be-and "" tu •llotmoolle "' ' . 19 incident he raped an
Collnty lhat 1lcwed phys!· inl hol1dtd Giil bt tht Slete elude: Colla M ... , llU•t eaM!d blonde who told the Cllil.,.. A"""" lllYllH -A""r!Cafl •• ,..HI
....... ,,_lean! -' MllllH' C~•f941, ""'· clano aupervlll trulmont at SANTA ANA -Velero•• • Boord ol Equolllllton ore In-.J'otantain Va 11 e y '114.M!I she wu. sexually assault· he thl"ll Mnt I kmJ ... 11_... ' "'tit at gunpoint atop an em-~111 Teco: l:'rocate, thhourou11hoUt Olyrlftlbee County ~~l:ilth _:~~ ~~ lllln"''"'°" Beach, .ail: ent off Laguna Canyon SLi\ VICK'S
Arthrllll Nogales In Nogal., ' d currtnl Netlvlnl ,,.. a.......,...ont1 •-• 1f'rlne, ll!l,62ll.te; i.-. Jewelers Since 1917
and,\rthrllll Juorez In Juarez. thotr Vet.rona' £11mptlon up lo Ill.I mllllOll Ill all. Beach, l!O,tet; Ne Wf>I rl jury told Judge Herber! 18 FASHION ISLAND
The action olao name board Clolm lorrno well lh advance CIMD up poymonll m tholt Beoch 12 71 5 o e . .llli lands that it was deadlock· NEWPORT BEACH _ ... _ 1180 ~-•-·· Ma Chr! top'h ol tho April 15 nllng deadline. .,.~ •• ••· v·~-, •• ...;;.,_ ' ' ' • t 11 to ooe in favor of ac-0
"' ~..u-n•au x 1 er ton Orange County A 1 1 • 1 1 0 r Q'll w ut1111 .,. -..... --Clemente, $&2,661: Saa '-1 h be ed w1tt1 __..,. •: TOl"I'-.., 0ra.lge, u ctrril06. u H•tlf',. •·1·~·-1 and all th t .,... a on c arges to air ""-• s.,, oie.o 11nc1 ....,, v ...... 11 Ulil ~~1 egea 1 Jack P. V11Jerga, meanwhile , alter all t1nal tahl IN ln and Clptstrano. '34,IOI; - e new trial. ';;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:::;:::;:::;;:;;:::;:::;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;~ OlrUt.opheraon has told in· remlndl 111 veteran1 who own tabUlated for the previous Beach, "5/188. ::
vlftla1t.ora that he la not home1 that they would be wise year'a lut quarter. The one quarter ·-··• ._ • prtperod to Identify the pro-1 th I I ..,. .-. ducl1 uHd to treat arthrttlca 0 uae e r r e I u 8 r The State Board o t diverted from Illes -• ~the three locations in Mex· ~~~:er exemption for tax ~~~~:!!10~hat ~~ch f 11~1~ tu: for depoalt In a local.-..
· 'Ille vet.• exemption la ~ency wW be due lll4 P!l1.I ty t r In 1 po r t I t lo•
Pl)IUC MOTICI 1i000; wltlla !lie roculal el· that, then adl1111a. ~, lllll Niiii Ill
emptlei\ 1• It, !Ill. .amotint eaeb cl!J .1111 cOmJna ..... "9 lil "'-' ,..m'fltei:;~" I l'lf~'fAJ~. =--~! tllf~ ptirtntl'.iilp ril1tl"111 ii m 111111 HEll:IERT . W. KALMIACH, FA:ANK
CHM.ARCO, JA:., JAMES R, KNAPP,
SHEA:WOOO C. CHILLINGWOA:TH •nd
HAROLD BEA:Al, 111\der lllt flcllt!o~ ne.... of PAA:TNERS INVESTMENT
COMPANY, JSO Newport Ce-nl9r Orl\1,
N9WllOl"f leach, C11IU. t2660 Nos bl'9ll
d1Uol'1d by m11!\11I COllMnl.
OATEO November n . ltn. JAMES R. KNAPP,
PAll:TNEll:
AfMW, Mllltf', CwtMfl & hwen
Mlillll Pl-, W""1'11 hdel'ill 1111141111
6N llllrttl Hiii SI'"' &M ......... Cilollf.Ml4 ~·r,.g._ cw•' 0111v ~1oh
Sunday is
Fl1D&AY
NOWI
WE $TAND TO LOSE! SO DO YOU!
Corona del Mar Property Owners!
We Need To Associate Now!
"THERE IS A RIGHT WAY."
CALL: 833-1691
• Yo'ur Voice Is Your Protection
'•ltl fw lly1 Pr. ,191 k, ""' _. Jwt1nY C. HNI, ('111 W"°""' Dr.,....,,.,...._
My daughter and her children ~re. living in Hawaii while
her husband serves in Vietnam. If · something should
happen to him would government funds be available
to return his family to tho Harbor Ar .. ?
by EUGENE 0. BERGERON
I• tM ... n •' • a.1•ry rt11•I"" ,..11111• ...,,...._.. ., .,.. ... ._... tf • Olftff
Stotea s.mc.... fro• _, ._. ., ...... JI ... ..W. ... ._....,.,...-wld p.r th
teta1 ce11 ., relocMNt Ith ~· 1MI • ....,... ..,.... • .,,.u ,. ,.. ,_,n .. ot Mn'k ..
... ceptwH by ....... ,.,_ ............. .., 30 ...... 1.-:
1. ,,_, ....... of .... ~ .llfl te ... .-Mclel N1l•111e ef NConl.
2. n. .... ., .................... -........ MaeltoW -,.... ............ ,..... ..,.,... to NCefN ......
l . n. c• ef 1Wppl11 ... ,..,,..., ~ ...., ...w.&t •• th *-Uy-.. . ,... .......... .,. ,.w .......... .., .... .,....,., .,, ............ , •• ., -
la•_.,, •••••ltlM ,.,_ ... pea 1t Wt k u: 1• et S.CW s.c..tty .._...,.. ............ ,........ n. .............................................. ..
If JM .._. • .-KM ......... ...,.._ ,.... wrtt. ., c.n. W......, ,_sw.,
lp!SU1e• ... ~ ..,.11•4 .. .W. C-...
Balt:·Bergeron FunerCJI ff (Hile
.COSTA MESA 2 LoCATIONS CORONA do! MAI
646-2424 673-9450
;:;-=-~'FROM Fashion Island
Newport Beach
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TunNr, March 20, 197) DAILY PILOT 8 .
· Toronto TV Station Shows Blue Movies
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TOllOlftO (UPI) -Al Ibo p.., lllr -tm. ..i ..... et _.,.. ...., J'rl. • -tDllllii.. ~ ••• ~.Tai-toloohloa ::n=~".~
-... -· bl1l6-babJ budlll but -ultrl-l>lue.
-lb• -cilia • udl...tairr\et'": -aodlm:el ... all the m;n remarbblil b • e a u • e
CITY only ........ aboul
'50,000 boa>ts bacauoe of its
UHF llatUI.
in diarle ol Cornlll!lllity.rala· "I bang up Immediately
tlooa. CIDCO I !mow I '\n beinC tsped,"
"You can say we 're to sbe says. "I mean, this LI dlaJoa1le with the polie<t." beinC blown out o1 proportion. Don't forget the baby blue
ON THE OTHER hand, the movie takes up only two hours
11'1 baby blue fer "Baby
Blue llovle.'' Toronto111 and
' Natlh Amerlca'o, llnl weekly
ll'OClcTVlllm-
Vleteers --·IM!ll •efere
-· ..... .Bhle
''THE PllU.owJNG baby
blue mov11 could have upllcit
aesual _.,. and nudity,
whk:h may offend som e
Ylewerl. II you tb1nlt you may
be offended, w• Ilk that you
chanle the ebannel for the
next two boW'I."
THUS, Tll06ll unaware of Clnadlan Radio and Televlsloo of our total vlewlng time each
tbe baby· blue pbtoomeoon week, and we're on from I
ftnd lbemaelves startled at ~ a.m. to midnJgbt each day."
Friday n!lht par11.. when 'P r .._ I otben IUddet>ly JUlh lo the TV eop fl · CnU 119 SHE SAYS the attention tile There are over 600 ultra modem
service bays and 100,000 square
feet of factory parts facilities on
Costa Mesa's Harbor Boulevard
of Cars.
NO LONGO 1111111 Turan-
tonianl tneonvenltnce
. lhemlel... by lolna lo dty
lhtallra lo Ylew lht like of "I
, Am QJrtom Yellow,11 or 11Nak·
ed. and Free," or 11sbame,
Shame, Eveeybody Koon Her
Name."
ANIMAL
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!'!fl'ec1 ~. ~ = lranlmittlnl Sept. IL
Vlewen ""' warned before efCh Baby Blue film with
r ....... arned b forearmed.
and there are thona1odl, even hundreds ol' lbouaancla of
perlOlll llilllnc lo take the
daro. A recent Buruu of
Broad ca 1 t Measumnent
survey found SIO,Ollll baby blue
1'1tcbett'"1 • Prldly night.
set al midnight lo "aee the eflf!lt odler ha tlte baby blues are getting ts
baby blue!' 1111de.' detracting from the station's
Most ~ and . have been other programs, which are
seen at local the.attn and ~ just as Innovative if In a leS!
nooe ao far bu broken new r.omm1sstoo (CRTC), t b e oensaUonal way.· ~ 10< IUUll upllcltnets. Canadian b r o a d c a s 11 n g The publkily bu also jack-
Station Manager Mo 1 e 5 regulatory bod.Y. has not voic-ed up prices for films the ata·
Znaimer, 30, calla the of-eel any pnilesl about the baby Uoo wants for tile series, she
ferlngs "mildly aalaclous." blues. 'liie CRTC Is appatt11Uy 11y1, adding that the films are
impreased by CITY'• In-ab:eadY In short supply.
. BABY BWE ,.p1an say novatlona In other ..... of In ·fact, ao meager Is the ·Big Delegation
Meets Engelbert
the films In! bea'Y oo nudity ~-supply that tile s1aUon bas bad
and,· (or oqe reuon or Mrs. 'Swiber sayr Znaimer:lijlo~,.~pea~l~ea~ch~fil:m~i:t :ba:sillli~l~l~~~llillll ' another, les_bianism. Ls looking for films of "hlgber shown at least once to fill out
When there have been com-quality" for the series. But the series. This has annoyed
plaints about the movies, they she is quiet to add that no some Viewtrs.
have . J!!OS!ly been about the thought has been given lo
lack ol real C<llllalt and not chopping baby blues.
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"!ff L.OOKf LllCt 'YOU 9 11e nltW Llki Ml\ C>J.oo'I'.'"
Feminists
Register
Advances
SACRAMENTO (AP )
Gov. Ronald Reagan'• omce ia
the &ceno ~f a breattllrou&h
for women'• liberation.
~ detlptlon "Ms.'' has ~ In .. lllllOUlJCmWll
· of a 10Vemor'1 appointee for
the lint lime.
ASSOCIATE Preas
Secretary Clyde Waltball said
hll office wilt uae the . Ms.
dealgnatloo -favored over
M1u or Mrl. by women's
rights IJ'OUP' -whenever
lhat b requested. bf the
woman lnvolvtd.
Waltball aald a newa release
'11yln1 lhlt Ml. Evalyn
Wbltlow of Loo Anleles bu
•been appointed eblel of the
State DlvfalOQ of lndllllrill
RelaUOlll waa the lint Ume he
knew of Ma. beinl used bf his
office.
11It wu no~ dell," he said.
He aildecnie doil!M-ite11an
knew anythlns aboul the
declaion.
Lawyer Named
Attorney Emeol Sdlatl, Jr.
of Newport Beach, bu been
elected U a dJreclor of Leaioo
Lez, ill-1111"00P for Iba U.S.
Law Center.
~-·daring in UM! realms of Such a move would mean a
sexuality. . · serious .. lback·for the ftedg-Fmn Wire Servlceo ""1iel, wu the target of an "I watcl>ed a couple ol them lilll CITY-TV. Tbe baby blues
A •lzahle dalegatlon met ulorlloo plot In which I.. man • w~ Ibey first cama on " uid aro booked aolld In adverUslng
British pop linger Elleelberl offered lo .. n the aelor 1,1rs; Donna Fine, a ~fe, at a rate of '250 a minute -'
Bampenbck when he arrived ''reVeallni photographs" of "aDil I never saw anylhiog double what the etabon gets
at the .airport iii caracas, blmlell, autbor!Ues said. more puerile. for spots on Its other pro-
Venezuela with an entour11e Clark Worthey, 29, an -ams. -..i-....a .... 1 "ALL TREY amounted to .. of nine for a few days vaca-uuell.llft",. ... -esman, wal ar-tion. But It wasn't uacUy a rt11ed on charges be tried to were people chasing each 1BE SERIES bas also won
welcoming committee. eztort fl,000 from Flynn by other In the nude. A !~year-the st a 11 on International n.~. 0w.1~.•-called In aell1ni the actor a 11 e g e d old oo our block saw.them and publicity _ aomelhlng Mrs. ""'°..,.... u il.aa!O 1.1-... 11 wam't im,.-..ised, either." Switzer v1 with "mtsed police, after diloovertnc a pboloa ol ~ In com-~-ews variety of pilla and upsulea in promtslnl pooltlons with ·a Still, the police have visited emotions."
Humperdincl<'s lllggage. 'l'be1 ....,.., The Loo Angeles Znaimer lwo or throe Umes Mn. Swltier, a woman In ~ out to be lranquillws, dlllrlcl allorney'a office 11ld about the baby bules. her !Os and a mother of throe,
vitamin pills and other forma there were no auch plcturos. "There bu been some pre>-says she gets calls from all
of legal medicine. * sure no the police from peo-over the United States, often
"I use them for my throat, n.e JON Umn dance com· ·pie," said Mrs. P h y 11 i 1 from radio stations "Wanting to
$aha'u'Lf;i1h
THE GLOAV OF GOD
Baha'u'llah is the l1test in the success ion of Divfnt Mtt1enpn '
sent by God since the beginning of men's 1xlst1net.
He is the Promlud One of all religions. His coming
ushers in the Age of fulfillment mentioned in 1U tht
prophecies of the r,ast. lah1'u'lli h brings
God's Pl1n for word peece, world justice and world unity.
FDA INFORMATION ' 542°1701
j3~k8,ji1th:
to sing. lo calm my nerves, lo pany opened a l1vHllgbl atay Switzer, one of CITY' s tape her comments no the
.---------. In Moaoow f 0 !low ln-g ~lound~~en~and~its~vi~ce:..!p<~e~sl~den~t~ba~by~b'."'lu~es~. -----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!'!~
( PEOPLE J ~"'!tU:; •. in ,,..1ncrad.
The 15-member troups Is
'--------towing Iba SOvlet Unino as
reel better," explained
Humperdinck.
* Pollce Commluiooer P11r1ek
V. MmpltJ of New York an-
nounced be will quit hll poll
by the eod of the year.
"I will not terVe under
another mayor," Murphy told
newsmen at City Hall.
The commissioner, ap-
pointed by Mayor John V.
Lindsay Oct. 1, 1970, would not
specify when he intended to
resign .
* Singer FnU Slalra will
come out of fttlrement April
17 lo enltrtaln at Presi\l«lt
and Mrs. Nil:on'a 1tate dinDet
honoring Italian Pr Im e
Minister Julio Andreotti, the
White House announced. . * Actress Plltrlee M,a 8 1 e I
collapsea in M'tlwaukee W!i.ile
starring in a matinee
performance pf ''Applause.''
part of the U.S.-&>vlet cultural
eacbange ._tot. * ., CBS Paria correspClldent
Peter U......,. was bot-
ptlallled with • -a1ruD llllffered tn an automobile
accident while en route lo Le
Bourget Airport.
Doclora said Kaltscher' 57'
did not suffer any brain
damage.
* Dr. C. Jacklo!t GraylOD,
former head of the now-
de!Uncl Pbaae Z Price Com-
~ will .. turn t 0
SoutbOrD Melbodisl Unlvtnity
Aptll l.
Grayano w11 a ppoln led
chairman ot the a e v e n -
member comml11ion lD
Odober 1971 and toot an
"indefinite leave-of-absence"
u dean of the university's
School of Business
Administration.
Mia Mn.W ""reported 1o Pape·r Scor"" ! have · been lllfferlng from a ""''
cold'"' OIHlte illn"' since the -Weslmlnster ~ Scbooi•i
pm>looJ week when ptrfonn-"Harvesr' plllCOd ie....i In Ins· the pl.ay ID Ames, Iowa. the litib ecbool -* compelltloo at Iba UD!venlly
Ador Joe F1)'IUI who played of Southern Cllilornla 8cbool
Clot Binghamton in the of Joumallam'a 4ltli annual
"r.lcHa!e'a Navy" television New-Doii Jut Siturday. :~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'--~~~~~-'-'--~~~~~I
•
B. D. Howes & Son Jewelers • .
' request the honor
,• of your presence·· . . •
' at an ex_clusive ~howing .-(
.-
i of .fine jewelry ' ' ' on
March 22, 23, and24, 1973
Elegant and unique, as
only the finest jt'Welfy can ·
be, reflecting tradition'!
• of . pride, qraftsmpnsh~p,.,
and distinctjon .. ·
which have been the formal
• tradition at Howes for 103 years
RD HOWES and SON
..._ ...... _,~---" __ llll_IJIWILI» ~I. THUi 01111.L\UONI
1412 VIA UDO, •Dll'Oll't IWll
67§..2731
fl •
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•
r
I
You can earn this high interest on $5,<XX:l minim.um two year certificates. The first year your $5,<XX:l
certiftcate'willeam $309.15, and more for each consecutive year that interest is added to th~ account.
You can earn $59.17 on $1,<XX:l minimum one year certificates, and as much as $51.26 on a regular
•:passbook savings account of $1,00).
More interest than banks ... more certain than stocks •
' I . Plus free services ... safedeposit boxes, notary Plus personal service ...
experienced and competent sav-
ings counselors in each office
service, travelers cilieques, trust deed and note
collections, and ii.any mote free services are avail·
able when you have the required minimum
balance in your ac~ount at rHE BIG M. ~ r .
. " ~ ~ ii THE BIG M
<
to assist you in planning
' your savings program.
MUTUAL SAVINGS
•
,,
•
ll'llllOlft~iaft
. _ _,,,,,A~el Mar>,.867.Eut ~UU&lu!'"y/~.s-.so•o _
Other ctBlcea lD C.O•ina, Wc::ttArcadla, haldcna, Glc.adalt and Canoa,a liarlc.-Cbew-• •h
I I
•
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Jf DAil Y P~OT T""5q, Mwdl 20, tm
PIJllUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PIJBUC llO'llCll PlllltIC NCmCZ 11)11UC NOTI~ Lincoln's·
P'""'9U'I IUSnrhl P~ 1us11t•lt '1CT1T'°'11 9"tlflll -llAMl ITAT91M'ln' ...a ITATIMllff •AllHl'ITA~ PICtft-J lvtllf .. S NOTICl" IS HP.llV GfilD 1M1
Ttw .....,.,. ,.,..... .,. ..... Tiit .......... ,..._ .,. MMe Tiit lol'"11W ,..._ II .... .._. l&AMll IT~TIMDT ~ fll tt1e MCM1 fl ... 011rW ti ....... •r .,..._ •i K ; n. ........ ,..._ _,. """' City Of ...... Ml ,....... .. -......
Olt.U4H Hl•NL m """"'*"" Hydfll a..it ~ Hydt'• Gvvd. THE CH.t.Ll!T. '"' s. C...t ......,, •'-•: .. w ""' Qty c-11 ..... aw .., atl"Mt. ONft1it.. C.,..,,... ... Hvdl-1 VJ!C:, ~· .-.m. 1'1• ~ UfvM lkec .. c..11 ...... ftUI W S M ENTEal"tllSl!J. 1#! ,,...,, ... 'O M ~ M IW O..lit I. ONll1 W.ttrll s..wit_. • ....... Aw .. C.lt JMM, (MM. '26'1 LH ~ Tl;W, t4A ~, ~ ......... ,,, CMt MfM. ~ I._ • .,_..., ........ l.
_A-. .., WHll,. ,_,.1,,_,_, .._.,,. a.n. T. S.Vak, .. , Ce11"4l1 '1~ A,tt. C. ~ ~ CallfarNt t1Uf C•lllm'IMI n.» ltn, """'I M llld Irr ...,,we.rs.-........
Hill'-tallflmll tnll. ,.....,,..., hKll. c.lli ~ TN1 ........ If. ~ Irr M I• '--......... Wlndlft ..... 1614 llktr. ti flill"""" of tfW CMrlr ti .. c.wd. lo'°"'* H c..t!IN. latf toutll OrNI Mldilllt llM '#Ml, .nt Wonhlftl Of., dlv....i C-i. ....... CMllomll ~ ._. ... EW'ttll Fio-, Clly Hell, 11 ttlMllL MpiM.•Call,.,_ tm'I WMttlW.... lM ICl'tNMl'I Trttor R11pt1 14'11' WlllCMtftf, "°' W. Cl'lk c.Atw i'faui. SAl'll•Ma. C.llfrDnlllo.
J. ...... A. C:.U-. lllM W.. Orfldt Tllit !NtlMM i. ~ Irr 1 ..,....1 Tillt 1t1tl!'IWl'f WM l'ltd ..mft 1t11 (°""" w11.nw., $tlll1 ,.,.._ c..ltfotllifl '270ol ,.l.Ql:lNCI I, MAI.CHI
9'Md Nll'llt. CllllfarW• .... -~· rv ci.r. ., 0..ll'IOt Cownh' -Mardi ·~· Thll ~--Is ~ 11¥ All ~ C"'1C of .,. Coundt
•
• • CN.rlff T. S...11: lffl CGr$11W•k4 .... IMfl I "*,...... OrMtl CO.I 0.ltr l"ttol
4, .. HM. Inc,, • corpwdml, lJll Tllll tl•t.n'lffll w .. flWd 'Wfltl ttit C-n.. Plf'"-'1111•. , ,.-_,-llO, 21, 22. ti. 2'. 25, 2'. t7, llO. = GtMt 9'Nd. ~. Qill ........ ty CWll of °'"'" ,_...,. on /!Mich '· Publltlled o...,,,. -CIMf Dilly Piiot. LE.MEO &AVILll! WIMCHESTElt Wld AMr'ell 1. 2. l. .. l. .. 1, ..•• IO, 11· 81 WILLIAM Gl.OVEfl "TNt • ..,.
1 1
colld .... .... io111t 1m "'--'di 10. t1 n Mfll t. ,., lt7J 1 ... n TN• 111i.rn.M .... 11'-d ._"'"" c--11. 1,,, u, u. , .. u. 11. 1•. 211. 21, tt n N•w YORK (AP) _,_ odd ""'1\n MU a llC I ... -If Clel'tr. of 0..11'1(19 C-.ty Oii ~rdl 2. U. 25, .. V, •• tt, IQ, 11 W Aptl 1. 2. a:. nu
. hJ,. "· eoi11"' ~·~ •• ~-= ~~t~ 1~~1Y :~'°:l PUBUC NOTICE '"'· """ s. im ..._n notion but It worU well -
T'ftll tllft!Ntll WI.I fll-' Wllll #Ml PUl:llllfWll Qr-..,_ Coltl Dtilly PllOI, ' ,_.,, c1w11 ., °""'°' C-ty 1111 • PIJBUC NOTICE ,.ICTtTtOUS 1ut:1N•11 M•rdl ,, 'll. a 21. tm ...,_,, PIJBUC NOT!"° turning loose the characters of
,..etYMY D. 1m NAM• ITATIM•JfT ----=::=::-::::-:-:::=:=::----'l---_'._:'.'.'.'.:'.'.:'._.'.:'...'.:~~'.'.'.~---1 tMI« 'U.. Thi lollowl11t ,...._ 1a ctoh19 111111..-s ·Shakespeare's "Merchant or
"'"'°"o -. 1H1tMANN, Attr. u i ~ PUBIJC NOTICE , ,,CTtr1oos 1u11N1ss -=: ......,.,.., SlllM lfll SUP'lllOI coutf Of' CALlllOllOA MNttNt: RICOVl!"llY SYSTEMS. H1S NI.Ml fTAT'Sl!"l!WI' VeD;)ce" in Felllnt's "Dolce
.... ( .......... ,.,. couwn Ofl O.ANOI ···-··--, .~ ... "'•'J'--'1 t'l70S Tiie lollowl1111 ptlt.1111 11 ................... ,. c1111c c....., °"" .... .......... ..... ~ ......... ll'ICT1T1001 11111N••• Vita" world The u·~y -,._I.,.._ Ori .... Coest 01!ly Pllot, IMll l\M, C..M..,... f21tl KMMtll W. Trw. Jlf Ollfl'ICll'ld Av....... 1tAMf STATM•MT It; ' vci rv· ,..,_., n .... Mll'dl '· IJ. 70, !tli .. ,, CASI NUMlll Oflttl a.tbOI hi and, Cl~ ,,..2 Tiit fol~llll ...,_ .,. dolne GOLDEN Rl!!fllTAU., 1121N e.lldl ductlon by Ibo, Llncoln Center SUMMOltl CMAlllAG•I Tr1h ttull,,... I• ~-Irr -.i ll\o bl/tlllfft ff: 11'4., HVl'!th1fl0ft 9IKh. CllltlM'NI
'" r• '"' """'""°' ol P1llll-; dl~l\t~t. WALTll llU.01!! TH!ATllE 1'01 N. ,.,,,, ~ory Company Is at the 1ANYA l~N .V.ttl)N 1lul TAN'l'A ' It. W, TO"t' Cotti H...,.,.., ,..._ 5 ~ BNcll ~llM P. W1!1P.lf'11, 6'$1 lridll lVMN SIMMONS Md R-.orw:llnl: llAY-Thlt tt.1-1 Wll llltd wOh lht cou.... C1L1~1 "'51, • • Ord•, von. llftdl. C.tlfornlol ..... Beaumont 111eater . • nm MONO WAYNE Mii.ON ""Cllfll "o.. ..... c~ on M•rdl u. w....,~Jt .. -WllkllllAWf!W; TN1 .~e1 ...... It condlK*I br .... m.
IN TMI IUll'D:MMI: COOll'T Ofl TM• To IN ....... l ltn Mlf!NHan IMdl, C..llfarj\I• '°"'" dl~l. The big rub nowadays abwt
ITATI Ofl CALlflOllNIA IN Tiie Ptt!Ti-.... flltd t .-Tlllol'I con-"2*111 Stmuolt H P1tb. Ulll W1lnlll AW MaOtltiM P. W.ittlM the .tMO flOtt T'NI Ut'llilll .,_ fN(rltllf. YOtl m.1y lllt 1 l"Wllthld Or_,. CoH1 0..111' Pllol, Mll'lllattMI ~ C..llfonlM 902M. " Tlllt 1l1*"9rll llltcl wlfll IM Cowlty play, that anti-Sfmitlc
Updated
'Merchant'
PUBLIC NOTICE
cotllfTY Ofl MANO• wrltttft ~ wlttiln tMrty N'($ or ""' M.areh lO, 21 _.... -'M1f a. 10, 1rn 1!-t-n Ultt• H. Sl'rlttt\. l60I No. COM! Ci.nt " OrMltt CounfY 1111 F~ 21. , .... A1tQt ..... ttwl It'll• wrrwMM .. ...,,.. .. 'l'Oll· Hklfwol•Y· ~ IMdl, C1lltomt.. 1'73. '*"" taqrt, is abated in the modem-
OllH• TO t ltOW CAUi• II rou , .. , ,. ""' I ... ,,,.,. rttPOllM PUBUC NOTICE Tlli1 IM1-II eanduCt9d br I tlmlMd Publl1hld ..or .... C-tl Diiiy "'°'· .a....,._ concept, al'""''"' all the Solo Strag-9•-
111 ltlt loVttlt' of"" ~kllloM "'w1Mln *" ttmt. your Mfllollt ""I bl ~rllllftft/p. FlltlnMryf1_111dMl~h'-lS.1D.1m sn-n WC33 ............... ae
Jlott•T PAUi. M(QOWlll 1NI II· ....... 11'111 ttw C-' INl' .,., ... I uclt· PICTfTIOUS IUSIMlll '-"""' H. P'1rll1 lines spok by t''"•
LEEN Lois .McOOWft.l • c11.,... o1 '"""ccin111M1111t1l1Mdt,,. or"""' oroer• M.t.Ma nat11111NT Tiii• ,.,.,_. waa 111ec1 with the c-PlJBUC NOTlCE are en, cu "'6 M..... l;OllC9i"ll'"' dlvl•lon "' """*""'• ..-.1 Tht io1J.oW1t1e P""_,. ,,. 11a1,. rv clt!'t of ar-.,. c-ty 1111 Ftt11"1.11ry the -le of Shyl-k aga' t Spencer -acy ~-m· ''The Old Man ,and the 0
-,"
W HE It EA, I Ill 0 If 11: T p A, UL ~. clllld Clllolocl\I, ct\llcl .-ipport, II· bull-ff• 22, lm. •v "" lDI ll ~~ ~· MC.DOWELL ~ Ell,.El!M l O 1 S ........,., fttt. Cotti. Mel *fl olNr r1lltl MOING;I, 215 Dt1 Mir, S1n Clt1M11l1, P.J:M17 PICTITIOUS IUSINISS traditiooaJ type. In the person the movie version of_ Ernest Hemingway'& Pulitzer
McDOWELL lie.VI llltd • pttlloll for ...... ""'Y bl ........ 11¥ the (O.lrt. C1Ulor11I• "'" P!Jl)ltlhed 0r.,.. C.0..1 O.ltr Pllol, NAM• ITATWM•NT n...:~ . . ........... t . ht t II 30 CBS Ch orci.r CflolnQI,.. """_.,. •lld .,.,, .• _!!.!.M,.wt.a "'Mtlt""' ~"'.,. 11-1np M. SUnOowl•'· ms v11 c ... ftbrulry v-anc1 MMCh '· ll, :zo. 1m. Ttw, fotlowlnu PWtOn 11 0011111 11u1111tt1 of Sydney Wallrer, the abused .--iu.e-Wllllllllg ,,_J• omg a : on 1 an·
1'-1' mi-cnnctr111't wm1rn11 trom ----. tMt fNftr, .,.. ..,..... " " t.om.. hf! c1-11. c.11,,,,.,,11 '2,n 546-n 1•: nel 2 McOOWEll 10 KRAUSE ! ,.........tly .. ...., y-Wt1lttll ,...,.. ... II MOnkl ~. atftlwlf, tlA VII Rot>l111, otlAHGE JULIUS Ho.. lt.C. 1191 usurer looks and talks like a ----·----------------------
IT IS ()ID6RED thlol •II PlftOIH lit-• ...,. '"ll' IM flltill. ti""' ""'· 12. s.n ci.n-11, C•llfornl• f'l6n H1r110r Bl~ .• Coll• """'· C•HI. '2Q1
11r111..t 1" thl! 11Jctft '"1111111 m1111r 11>-D1r•w~11· 1'!:.1m JOH Tiii• bu1111t1t l• ,.1111 corocWctld trr , l'llBUC NOTICE BllbllY• lrn G1l)Or, 4CI P1rk prosperous merchant outraged
ll'tlf Mtorl lhl1 Cllllrt 11 t :OO t .m., Oii ...,.. E. SI N, C11rll: Jllfl-'l:lp. N.wpoff, H1Wp0rt, C1llr. APl'll i. itn. 111 !ht eour11oom of 0tp.tr1. H•rrltt l . ooo.on. Deputy ,.,.. M sulldQvttt Thi• bu1ll\t11 11 eonduc:tld br '" 1,.. by surrowuling decadence as
m'"I l, 11 100 CIYle Ct111..-Orl~I WMI, (SEAL) Tll1t 111ttmtfit fl11d wllh Ille county I 41"41 dlvldY1I SIMI ...... C•lltoml1, •NI .now CIUM. " L. llJOINI MA.\..UT•D Citric tf 0!'111111 Counly on Mtr(h u. 1'11 HOTICI TO CltlOITOll:S M1. eooow l.. Gaber weU as stung by community iny, wtlf tn. ptlltlon tor ci'il~ o1 namt .·~ 11 Llw bY TlltrtM ,M, Wini, Oepuly CCHJnty IUPRl:tOlt COU•T OP THE ITATI Thll 1!1tem111I w11 llltil Wl!h tlW COl.ll'I· ·udi · al thOUld "°'be
9
r1n1•. • .. _ •• llNdl ~"'"'.___. ci.n:: 01" CALll'O•NIA POii: THI ty c11r11 of 0r1119e county on ,µrd! t, preJ ce agamst Jen minor·
Billboard Girl Gets
IT IS FURTH!ll: ORDERED 1hll I ........ ell. c111 ....... 1 "'47 l'mst COUNTY OP Oll.AJ(G• 1m •t e.,-of thlt °'°'' 1o Miow C111H bl cn4) M7·1tn ll'ubllth911 Oftl\9'9 coeit 01ny Ptlot, '"· •BMI ' P4ml J y. publlll'ltd In tlW Or ..... CO.•I D•llY Piiot, AtltrMf' .... I P«ln_. M.-rch 20, t1 ~ AIH'11 3, 10, 1'73 761-73 E$11 .. "' FLOReNCti E. GRAVES, PVbll1hld Or•no• cont [)~ly Piiot, The titu1ar merchant .
1 """""°,_. ot ,._., elrc:UllllOl'I print-' Pllbllthtd Qr-11111'9 C01$1 01llf Piiot, Olct•ttcl. Mlrch U, 10, 27 111d AprU l, 1t73 713-13 '" a...,... c-tY. c..utom1i, lll'ICAI 1 .... Flbnllf'I t1 •1'1111 ~rdl '· 13, xi. ,,,i ... rnuc NOTICE MOTtcE ts HEIEIY GIVEN 10 111e AntOnio, comes on in the tor ,_ wcc.l'MJ,,. ......ii:.1 prior to ,.... S.73 Tl.IU crlldllort of tn. 1~ Mmld dt<ldln!
,.,, Mt for f!Nl'l"ll on "" ,.11t1on. 1"'1 •II ""'°"' twtvl11t e111m1 1911ru1 tr.e •PUBIJC NOTICE person of Josef Sommer as an
Nightly TV Exposure
O.lld: F*u.ry 22, 1tn. PllBUC NOTICE PICTmOOs IUSINISS wld IMoldint •r• rlQUlrld 10 Ill• tr..m.'---~---------I CLA.uoe M. OWENS NAM• STAT•MIMT wllll tn.,.........., \'OUClltrl, fj\ '"-ottlc•• epicene capo ln sunglasses By JAY SHARBt.m Jl>dflt of thl ---Tiit 1ot1owl111 ptrtOn It doing blnlnQI ot lllol dlfll of 1111 Ucw9 tntlllld eoi.wt, or fllCTITIOUI IUSINl!IS lvptrlor C:-1 NOTK• °" TttUST••'I SA.LI ,., IO ~I thlm. wllll ""' lllCMllry NAM• STATEMENT whose affection for young NEW YORK (AP) -Te
MAllC .... SMITN UtO MO. ,.,.,.... c•UISE SHIP "MINERVA". 717 -..clltrt, to 1111 "'*rtlflllld II ""' offle• TM toll-11111 ........ It doing bulllltR I d . Sllllt .,.. TM YI.... Nt. 1612411 A.MhllrtlJI Wty, LIOo Pt1111lnllll• YIChl of •ltorNVI HAHN .. HAHN, 301 I!". 11: Basunio isn't that of a father . a y lS a tall!, bluHyed
... c-v...., ,.l'lcWl'f' °" A,prll ll, 1m, •I 11:00 A.M., CFS AMhor"19f, Ntlfl'llOrl INdl. C•llfornl• Colorldo llvd., S11lf• tOO. PldeltM, " .. J APPLIANCE .. HOMI!" RE· blond 'th lo ··--....... N .... Clllf tM11 SEll:VICE CORPOllA.TION. I C..lllOl'"llll f'2t60 C1ltlomi1 fllOl, wllkh It ""' pll(t of PAlll:, n. s. SP1r. S11111 Arwi, C1llf. for a son. When Commer and e WI a W, uuv..ty
Tl..,._ cni1 111--CCltPOl'lllon, •• Cluff """'°"''" Tr1,t1IM J•Y 0. 0.1,11.ey, 1$)# Crnt1lom• buslne11 of tht UlldlfslflM(I 111 Ill mllllfl ~ ...,.__,_ ol She ts tel .. Alttnllr'I ,... ,..
111
._
1
...,., ..-.11 P11r-nt to Dltd ot Trwt LAM. l• Mlr141, c1utor111a 906.ll P*f1•llll111 to ,.. t1l•t• of .. Id dlcllde"i, Jon "· a, Slllrt.-, s. Myer1. m s. srw. ,,,_w-mtopher Walken, who plays v ce. ge more evis1on
P'uoti'llhtd OrMlll Coe•I Dilly Piiot ,_.611d Fttir1111r-v n. 1tn. •• lntlr. No. Thlt !NtlMSs I• btlng eotlduttld b'I en wt!llln 10Ur mon1111 1n1r ""'11r11 Plltllk•· s..1111 """~ c.111. '2704 the lad intent 00 beferosezual exposure on a nighUy basis
FtDruiry t11n111 Mlrdt., 13 20 1,n sn.n 11m. 111 booll 10010, 11191 s.1, o1 Off1d1! lndlvlelulll tlon of 11111 llOHce. Thi• bullnn1 11 belna eorduc:ted bY •n
-
--'-:c==-c:cc-:"C,::',:C',CC.C..::.:C'l lt"orct. 1n tn. offlc1 o1 t111 c-iv J., o. DMl'f' °''-' hbt'UllY 23. 1m lndlvldult. CCllQUeSt of Portia, must part, than the star of any series or ll:tcordlf' of Qr11191 C_,ly, Sllfw 9f Tl!l1 1111_..1 flltcl w11h Ille Cl)Uflty HARVEY D. GRAVES SHIRLEY S. MYERS the ' · · d · PUBt.,iC NOTICE c1111or"1', wtll SEll AT PU1L1c ALIC· c11f\ of 0r.,... county Ot1 Mlrch u. u11 Exeeutot' or,.... wut Tiii• 1111wmen1 nteo:1 wlth tn. county 1r manner lS gay espatr. news program now on the --c====.,.,=~==--JTION TO HIGHEST llDDE• FOR CASH ,,.,. ol Ille'°""' IWl'lld dtced•nt Cl1rll: of 0r•f191 Counly on Mfirell 2, 1m Director Ellis Raab uses the tube.
SUll'lltlOll COUIT OP TN• CPIYlbll 1t tlm1 of .. 1, In l1wlul ~ Publlthtd Or•noe Co.11 ' 01lly Piiot, HAHN & HAHN Willi.AME. ST JDHN, County Cl1r1i, by .,,.....ne Of -'dn' l'ght masque • ITATI °"' CAl.IPOllN14 l"Oll or lht Vnlltd 111tn! II !Ill South front M•rch 20, v Ind AIJl'll 3, 10, ltn 1~13 ''* Wlltl-s. J ........... Jr. Thlf'nl M. W1rd. DfouT'f. """" .... You see her every night on ntl (OUMTY Of' oaAMO• ...,,, .. 1'1(1 lo 1111 °''"" County old Jill I . CfllnilM l lN ., SI•.... ,2:Ml, dunng' which sh I k ' th NBC T I . . tw k ,.., .usm CourtllouM, c1tv or s.n11 ""'' s11tt of l'UBUC NOTICE P....S.., c..111tn11a tn11 Pllbll"111d Gr•nge co.11 o.uy Pnot. Y o c s e e evL!ton ne o r • o•D•• TO IHOW causa c.111or1111, 1u r~t. 111i. .nci lntff'tsl eon-T•h 1n11 7'HtU M•r(h" u. 20, 11, 1973 •»n daughter, Jessica, elopes with yet you might have trouble
ll'Olt CNANOI 0, MAMI Vl'fed IO Ind "°"' hlkl Ir( n Ul'l!Nr uold .. "_.,. ,., lxecutw Lo I [f berin In Ille Mlltlt °' "" Aoolkltton of DHd of Tr1111 In ti. Pl'"Qfllf'T'f .itwt• In 1uP1110• cou1T DI" CALIPOINIA Publllhed Or•ni>e co.it D•Hv Piiot, PUBIJC NOTICE renm, carry ng o -the remem g her name.
JAMES LE""'• W~GHOll:lt"far c~ Mid c-ny..,., lllM ftlcr1btd at: ' COUMTY Of' Ol:ANO• fllbnlMY 11 "'° Ml,dl '· 13, :zo, 1m, _____________ J family weaJth in a huge safe-Fo~ the record, it's Sharon
of ,..,..., Loi 12 of TrKI No, 72JS, .. ...,-Mlp ,. CMc C ....... Or1vt W•I SQ.nr ' WHEltl!A.S, Ille •.ile1tlon ol JAMES rt<Ol'"ffd tn took 2'l. ,..,... fJ, 21. tt, ... Illa. .. CttlflfN . l'ICTITIOUt IUSl1'US deposit boJ:, for a brilliant ex-Obeck. The's the star of a 3().-
LEMAR WIGHOAST 1or e1111111 or ~ •nd :io of Mlsull1ntou1 M•PI· In tti. ot-cast MUMlltt °"tt' PUBUC NOTICE 'NAM• •YATIMENT travag&nza of indulgent revel second , se"en.n; .. i..•.a.week
IWl1 b-.t1 dl,lly fl11d Wllll 1M dlt'k of thll flee o1 tllol COUnty Rtcor.str Of 111d SUMMONS (MARJllAOIJ Tht folillwlfll S--11 doilv-Wl/MU " '6""' cwrt, Mid It ~rh1&1 from Yid 1p. county. In " 111t m1rrl•oe ot ll'•tlrlOMr: RITA 11: • which gives the entire pro-series called "What's On
pllCIJIM 11111 Mid ~kll'lt dfflrt1 1(1 T"-llrMf MldrHI end olll«" common JACOBS CRAV EN Ind RnpOl'ldenl NOTIC• TO c•&OITORI WIL\..S .. ASSOCIATES, JJ5 '(i, Cent..-d f pd fu) • T h , hl¥t1 Ill• "'"" clllnttcl to "" Ol'CIPOMd 0t1lon1tle11t. II In~. of the ,,,, properry llOll!ltT l!OWARO CJIAVEN !~.·~ ... ig: .<.•,•,.·.•.o,. THI! St .• Cost• M ... , C•llf. mu UC ion rpose mearung. onig t, • which premiered
"'"""'JAMES l l MAll HIJll.IT. Clll(rlbed lboVt II ""'POt1ed fo bl: To"" R11poneltnt1 Tiit pellll-r hli NIA POR 0-.. H. walls. WW N . Hlrbor The after·intennission seg-last Sept 11 and still . g ing
HOW. THlill:l!l"Ol.i. II II lltrtbr ~732 RCll!bur'f' Q(_lwi, trv1 .... C11lfotj\I• flltcl I Pt'iltlon eonurnll!Q 'f'GUt m•rr!1911. TH• cou,.wrv 01'" O•AMGI! 11\'d., Apt. 207, Coll• ~. C.111 ment belongs largely t 0 • IS
0
«dtt'ad and direct• IN! •II '*'°"' '"" TM l.llldtrtlgllld 'Tru11wt dl1Cl1lm• 111y You m1y nl• 1 w1!tten r11ponM within :IC E•I I .. A·7tl4il '* . ' strong, llftsfld In 1M ..id mtlllt ol dllnoe "' H1bllll'f for lll'f' lneorrtclMfl of lllt 1lrtel d•r• Of '"' Cllll 11111 fhl1 1ummons Ii EOW~· ~u~r::M E. BURRI, •k• JOHN This bullMU 1• c:Ol'llkleltd by lrl 111-Portia, and Rosem$IY Harris She is NBC's version -Of
nlmf •pPffr blfart 1ecw. lflt\l*I C-1 iddrHI Ind othlf QllTl!TIOtl dftltrMllorl, II -~ltd on you. II you flH to tll1 I 'Nt'ltl111 8URll OtcHMd •Ill JOHN EDMUND dl¥klllll, cam' 'es 0[[ ,the ass· Jgnement ud 'JJ ' 111 DtHrtlMlll a llltr9ol, loCIMd ,1 190 111y, ti-n 111r1111. · rHJ10t111 w1111111 111C1t """'· your dot1ult • · ~ H w1111 va ev1 ~ s billboard girls,
Cl'l'k c.rttf" Oftw w..1. s."t• Ml. Cli· hid aa11 wlll bl mtctt. Wt "'""°"" m1y bl ant.red •lld "" ewrt may .,,...,. e,:C.~Z!c;E ot'S~EREIY GIVEN to t111 T1sb st•ltmtnt ·...,., ni.:t wtt111i. OM.in· with a quietly entrancing jn.. those ladies who used to go on
lltl'lll• 111 ,... !1'111 ._., "' APrtl. tt7J. it ~"' or w1rr.nty, nprne ot Im. • luCIO"*"' con11lnl119 lnluncllYt or Olller 11111 111 """°"' .,:~ 1™{1Md dlctdtn! ty Cltrk Of or.nQt COUllty Ot1 Mltdl t. terpretation t'n which the too t111 '*""" of t :llll l"c:foca'. A.JI.., tlltt'I 1llld pUlll, rtf!•rdlng tltte. "°""'Jon, or .... ,..,,.... eoricarnlng dl'l'ltkln of property, uold dlCtdlnl v.:...ie 1 m• t0•ln11 tht 1'71. stage bet.ween acts to flip the u.. to lllOW' c.1UM. 11 .,,., r1wy ri....., cum11r1ncn, to PIY 1111 r•millnl"' pr1,.. ~ •llPPO'"'· eNld euttodY. child sue>-""'111 ""' -'"' 10 tilt "*"'• 1'2262' familiar "mercy· " s p e e c h com;•• attractions on •'-bill.
""" "" ""'""llOll ftr dlolr4lf of 1111111 clP1t 1um OI tn. nottl•I securld by .. Id J!Ot1, •llorMY'I ten. eo111. tlld wen of IN .._.....,. voud!t!'J, In IN otflct Pllbtlllwd Or"lll' Cont Delly Pilot, ~-o ~ tllOutd not 111 ,,..,_ Dttd of Trtnt. ~1: 111,7'6.lf, with 1 .... °'""' r.tl•f •• m1r bl 1r111111o:1 bY 1111 10 Pf':!:~.-. entl!llld eourt, or Mlrdl" ii. xi. 21. 1m '51).71 becomes almost a throw-away. signs that told or warned of
IT II FUltTH~ll: OltOElttO tllll t llrttl lhermon. ff Pf'OV1dld '" I.lid court. W1Jt11er fo ttw UI Wltll lht n.tcft...,Y;1-----'--'---~"".';_;_::._ ______ _:;__:_:::,:::::__:-=~:_:=:_:=:_::._.::'.'.,'.'.:'.~
CCIPY of ""' otdtt IW PllbltlfWll I~ tlll llol•ltl. Ml¥~. If •nr· unoer lllt fff'ml II.,.. whls M ... ,.. Ho/let" .. ··-OI 11111' :nwney .. ~o~:i :~~.~ °''""' Coetl O.lit Pli.t, , ~Pit of of uold Dttd of Ttv11, ten, d\lrlltt 1NI twM1 1111 11111 m•lttt, Yfll _....... N te ON "" 1 ·
"'*''1 drc:Wtlon, Pl'itllld n putlll•llld •lfl*IH• of fM Trw1ff •NI of 1111 1ru111 ,,_...,., " 11111 ""' wr1tt. ttltlflltl. If N0:1h T,:::VS su~t• ~· 1~~:'°'~=
In tht City tf c:o.11 Mew, County " crNi.CI b1 Mid OMd ot Tnnl. •Y• ~Y ~ lllM "' "'"'· etw., Irv!~, c.n1orni. wtlldl 1 tbl Otll'lft· lt1ta ., C11t111"11la, Oll(I tKh Tile llotlltflclvy Ull09f" .. Id [)9ld "' Oltall. Nov .•• 1972. pl1c1 of bl,lsl111111 ot ' I WM far ,_ (41 weetllivt weellt prior TP\111 htrllotor. IJIKU'lld Ind e1e11 ...... ...:1 WILLIAM 1!:. ST JOHN, C1trll """"" PtrttllllnO :::-.::-~-In •II
10 tht dtla tOO¥t HI !or fhl ,_'1111 of to 1111 11Mff'sl9111d I wrltttn Otcl1rlllon Ir Ji'"" COrdtH, Otputy dtclodtnf wf!tiln lour monlht' 11of wld .. 1c1 1ptllle111on. ol ~•t.rll •lld O.l'PIMICI lot Slit. Ind I JAMn entlN 111'11 ~lion ot I I It 1111
D•lld M.-rdl J, 1m wrt"'" Nolle• ot Del.ult tlld Elec:tlotl to Atlll"MY •t UW O.lld Febnlary 2': :.~lei.
CL.Al.IOI: M. QWINS Stll. TM t.WWlltned UVMd ... Id NOll(I Kl s. Miii• SI..... JEAN RIC~ADS IURRI
JudOf of Ille ...,,.lot (Wtt ol ~•1111 Ind Eltctlon to Slolt ~ be lull• 211 Extcwfr1ll of lllt Wiii
1.ac r9Cordlld I" tht county Wllff'• tht ,..1 Ot•-· C•~• 916'1 of ""' •btlvt MAIVIY •. COOPlll properly lt IOC•Nd· T"I (714) Of.lift AttOXON AND 11ox'C;N1" decldlnl
64Jt , .... ._..vn. 1tt111 JM 0111: M1rch J, 19'71 AtlorlllY ht1 PllllltMt .. ,,.,....,., .t WW L• ............. C11't..-M1 ""' LO.II No. U.134!it'J.7. SI DES ,.ubll111id Or•llOI Cot1t Dilly P11ot, ...,...... Clllttt NMll T T ......... U1J)""'"" (I'S SE.VICE COll:PO*ATION Mlrd't ». t1 Md Aptll J,. \o. 1m ~73 Stitt. 451 _,
AltlnMY fW 1"911"-a1 tetd Tnn!N 1"'52 MKArthvr llW
l"vbll.ntd °''"" cotrt O.!ly 1>1101. IY WAYNE A. 1toe PUBIJC NOTICE 1m.., c1w1onH •
M1rd'I '· lJ, 20, 'D, 1m "9-7l EllKlltlv• Viet Prffldtflt T.t. tn4) f.U.taJ
A11111otilld Sl9n11urt HOTIC• OP IULK TIAlitSl'•I Altt""rt: fr ......,.
PUBUC NOTICE MU· Plltllllhld Or•llgt C I O ' Publllllld Ntwporl H•rbor Nirwt Priu Iha. ,111-61'1 U, C. C.) Ftbn.ll '11 Nf J °'• I ly Piiot, Comblnld with Olll't PUo! Nl'Wporl Nolle• I• hlrtbY ti"'" to tM Cred'llOl'"I ry • 1 Mlrdl 6, 13, 20, lt73
MOTICI 01" Titll'ITl"•'I SAL• flNch, C1LU0tlll-1 MMd'I ti. 20, 'O, OI DIANA GIBI, llto llllO'Wl'I •• Mrt. .SU.n LNlll N., 611111 1973 '7'-T.I GOROON Gl88, Trtfllllfl!', wtw»,1 PUBUC NOTICE T..l.NI. IQt.n bu1l .... 1 .cidrtH 11 30U E. Co.ti
FA °'(1 INC.•• dUlr ippal111td Tr1111tt PUBLIC NOTICE Hlohw1y. Coron• de! Mir, Ntwportl---::c===-=----=--1 lllldlt fll9 fo$1Qwt/ll ISttcrlbfd dtld ot !IHth, COU"T'f ol Or•llfl•· Stile ol SU,.lllOlt COUttT °" TMI
trlltt Will SELL AT PUlllC AUCTION Cllfloml1, thll 1 llvlk ll'l"lflf b lbol.rl lo STAT• CW CALl~MIA TO THE HIGHEST lllDDER FOR CASH ITA-1TP bf ""'°" lo JEANNE s. BANKHEAD, ..-oa TNI COUNTY °' OU•a•
(P.flllh ii time 9f e.it Ill ltwllll montY NOTICI Ofl TllUST••'I SAL• T1111tt..-M, wNtl buslllflt Mldnns It Ne A,.JM12
OI "" Ullllld Slllftl Ill right, 11111 llld On Aprll 16, it: ~"i~:OIJ A.M .• STAN-~ :,-Nc::::1:;:-·~· c~c:': ofd~=·· MO'TICI Ofl MEARING cw ll'l!TITION
llllff'lll tonve'l'tcl lo Md "°"' lllld Ir(" II SHAW COIPORATIOH, 1 C•Ulornll $1•1• of C•Ufomli. POI: ll'll:OaAT• OP Will. AMO 1"011: = ~ DMd
1
'(..l_MI Ill thl pr0Jllr1't Corporl llon 11 duly 1ppe11119c1 Trwlft Tile ~ to bf tra111ltt1td Is Ll!TTl:ltl TESTAMINTARY (IONO
Tit "t10 dtKt' . unclff' 111d pur1u1nt to Dttd of Tr11it loc•l-' t i Wli E. Cotti H19hw1v, Corona WAIV•O)
Piut'1 S G~it.!,,~"-:J ~-= •nd rec:otdld Dtc...,bff' 23, !Mi, 11 l11tlr. No. dtt Mlf, City of Ntwporf l heh, County E1l1 .. of CHARLES STfPH~N HUTCH-
BINEFICIARY; A111llelm S.vl111• •NI 12ft7, In boolc l llS. ~ 306, ot Offtelat "'°'"'"' lllla ol c1nlor'lll1. tMGS, JR., •Ill CHARLES s. HUTCl-f..
Loen A.IMIC.lilton. 1 CorpotillOll R-dl In fhl offie1 01 Ille County S1ld pnlpll"fy 11 dt«rlbld 111 Ollllfll INGS. OtcM!ed. lt.catdlld Sepl iMt 10 1tn •• llw.tr ltcordtr of Or•no• c-tv. Stell of H! All 11«11 111 ""'· fl•ll/fn 1/ld tQUIP-NOTICE IS HERE!IY GIVEN th1r Miry
No. 70ll In booll-;l'tJ ~ 1'CI ol Otftcl.i Cll\""'1111, WllL SELl AT P\JlllC AUC-rntnl of !Ml bffvlY wlon bllllnt1s knowr1 lt\1111 HvkflllllS twti flied htrtl" 1 119'-
Rtconh In Ille ofllct of lht R1tOl'"Cltt' OI Tl~ TO HIGHEST 8tDDEll: FOii C.\M4 II "Dl-tht H•lnlrnser'' Ind loc1tld t'lllon tor P'roe.!t of Wiil INI !or IUUlllQ
Orll\gt COIHllYJ Hid d"'3 of tnnl (MYtbll •I l!ITll o111i. I" t•wM moM\I' II 302' Etlf Co.11 Hlcrhw1y, Coron1 dl'I o1 L;ftten Tntimtnliry let tht PillllOMr dllCrlbtt 1111 ion-ino pt'Of)l!'ty· ol till UllllM Sllltt) 11 !tit frOlll tnlrtnel Mir, Clry of NtwPOrf INCh, County of fbonCI wlf....Ol rorferenct lo wtlldl 1 m.ci.
Loi M OI T Kl NO. ..., ."'°""" of s1111-Slllw CorPOrl!IOtl 1i00 E11t Or••· Stt .. of Ctlllomll. fot furllle Mil I a M1p rKot:;.., In 11oo1c ·.J: PIOtl '!'; M.-,f1lr a ...... ue. Or•nO•· C1111om11 •II Tilt bl.Ilk tr1111fw ""'It bt coni"""matlld ttmr .....:1 t,: ol cull!", •NI IN! tlW
1NI "" ot MllCl!a.-1 Ml~ record• rroht, llti. 111d l11l1r1~1 eOll~ 1o 111d on or lffltl' lhl Id d•Y o1 April, 1m, 1t _, Ml ,: .. ~11 • hNrl1111 ltM ... ,... 11.-t ' now lllld by 11 unMr uold Ot'ld of Trv•t 30'26 E. Coe1t Hf11hw1y, Coron• det M1r. ,...... ... 1'73, ti 9:00 1.m .. ;"
o1 Ori,... County, C1tllornl1. 111 lhe pr~l'f' flt1.H1tld In wld County NiWl'Off a .. ch, County of Or1ngt, Slit. tht courtroom o1 0el)lrtml11I No. 3 of
•172 llldllln Awinw, S1"I• Al'WI, •lld Stire dtscrlbld 11: of C1Uklr11l•. ..1e1 eovrt, •t 700 Civic C.mar [)rlvt .~illlomll Loi :U of Trtct 3212, 1, ll'IOWfl on a So f•r •• krlowrl to Ille Tr1111ftrH, Ill W•I• In tht City of Sllllt Alll, CIU-
111 • 1trMT Mldt1111 Ot" common mip rec:orOtd '" loot 102 P~tt It Ind bUlln111 ""'"' 11\d lddr1s1n 11Md 11¥ loml1. C1ni9n1tlon 11 Wlown l ilollw, no w•,,1nty ~ of MIKtHIMOUI /IM;.. rt<Ol'"dl tf T,.n1'9f0!' lor fht lhrWI .,..In 1111 Pl-'• If 01114. M1rd! 12, 19n,
b glVl!I ~t to 111 C01T1f)l•l4lllH or C'OI"· Orlllflf COl.ll'ITY, CIHlornll dltt.rtnt from lht 111ovf, 1r1: N-. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN,
rtclnt11). Tht f!rHI tdd'"' lfld otll..-common o.t•: Mlrcl\ 14. ltn. COllO!ly Clerk
Tilt ~l'llflcl1ry und..-tlld Deld of dlllgnltlon, 11 •"'I'· of ttit r"1 IH'099f"IY JN-j, 8111khtld, Tran1flf111 MU•CHISOM & DAVIS
Tru11, by'"'°" ol • brllcil or dtl•ull In dnerlbtd lbOYI 11 """"°""" to bl' ,52 Publ111ltd Orll!Dfl Co.11 Dilly P!tol, AHerneys 11 Lft '
llM ol:lllpllon• 11c11r1d """""""' Frln<.IKo Ori.,. NtwpOrt 11...:h . CA M11rch 20, 1"3 IOS.7' MS4 WI .. '-8I tltfYlotort t!Ctc'llltd 111111 dlfl\'tffd to !ht n660 ' • ,.. wl,, Svltl 401
unotr•lonld • wrlltall Dteltr1!11111 of Tt.. undetlllll*i Ti""" dlselilm• , PUBUC NOTICE '"""" Hiii .. c.tllontl1 Otf1u1t alld Dtmend far S.lt, •NI 'Nt'l!ltfl Hillltlty far any lncOl'T'eclMA ol l!M 11,.:; Tllr (HJ) mi1•
llOllC• of brlKll •rod of tltctlorl to CIUH lddrMI •nd other common dtllo11111on. If AlflrlltyC•I "" ... tll'-r
lht lllldtrtltold to MU Mid proptrty to lll'f', "'-i-.t11. SUP•ttlOI COUll:T 011' THI Publl.ntd Dr~I Co.ii O.tly
utttfy uold colloet1ont, ~ lhll'••lllf lht S.ld 11t1 wlll bl !Mdt. bl.II Wllhoul IT.I.Tl o .. CAlll"ottMIA •Olt Mlfdt l3. 14, 2Q, 1m
lllld..-tlOllld Clllttlll 111d nol1c• ot breech eo\'1111>111 or wMT111ty, nptt'I$ or lmplled, TMI COUNTY 011' OttAMGI •nd °' l'lectlon to bl leconlld NOYtmblr r1111rdlne 11111, PO&Ullllon. .,... .... M .. A-110t PUBUC NOTICE
30, ltn II t111tr. No. 30571 111 boolc 1CM50 cumbrencw, to l)l'f' 1111 ,.melnlng prtn. NOTICI 011' MIAllNO OP ,.ETITION 1-----~:=-;:_:_:::.:_ __ ,
PIOt -of uld Otftcl1I Rtcordl. cll)ll tum ol tht note ..c:urtd by Hid 1'011: PlllOIAT• 011' WILL ANO 1"01 I SCNJI
S11d ~II wlll tit.., ni*, !WI wttlloul Dttd' of Tmt, fo-wt t; U.30t.,., wtth ll\o lETI'EIS T•STAM•NTAIY (IOMD SU,.IRIOO co••T OO -·
co.,.....n or w1rrt11.,. •11prt11or1mp11•. ter•I ""'"'°"· 11 pr<Nt611d 1" 111d "°''• w.1.1veo1 '" r191rdlng 11111, ~Ion. or Ill• 1d\11nctt, If 1ny, under flle t.nn• of .. Id Eillll of SAAA.H PEA.SI o.e ... seci S~T· M CALl .. OlllNIA 1"011:
tumlll'lf'ICH, t. Pl~ Ille r-1111119 prlit-0-1 of Trvtt, tees. ell.-ltrti 1nd ••-Iii NOTICE IS HEJlEIY 'GIVEN thlt E COUNTY 01" 0.ANOI
Clptl 11,1m ot tht llottl•l Mc:\lfld by 111CI of '""' Trwi.t Ind of tht tr1111s Crlllld l•W•tnc:I PelM hi• filed herein I II-M .. A·7ml • Dttd or Trysl, wtltl l11t1r .. 1 '* 111 wlCI lrsl s11d Peld ot Tr\111. 111111 tor Pl"Cltlllt of WHt lt'ld for luu:C. Ett1ti of MAY SCROGGIN SCOTT, "°"' pr!J"'ldtcl, .ldVll'l(tl, II My, !Jlldlf' Ille TN btnlf!CIM"Y uncllf 111d [)Md of ol Len..-. Tt1!11n1j\llry .. "" 1111 Dtcu~. ltttnl of Hid DMd of Tf\111, !Hi. cllotrvn Truil h«tlofor• UICI/ltd iNI dllll_.td (bond wil....OI ~ta 'Mlim'°1 ..:: NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN to tllt
IM •~PIMtt ot ""' Tt\ISIM •lld OI ""' to 11'11 undt""-ned • wrltm Dtcl111tlon for fllrth..-p1rllcuf.n llld 11111 ii:. ti Crwdltors of !hot •bo¥tl nlrMO' dladMt
lf\/lls e•Hltd bY Mid DMd of Tr111.1. ol o.ftu" 111111 Dt!Mnd far ht., alld I llld pltc• ol ... ring '111t .. ,,.. .... .... ""' 111 Plf'ton$ 11rtl1111 dll'"' llOll111t A~lld ~ ~~ ~."11~1111 ~ ~ :.~'!f s:i\~~ ... ~Mlll.!~ E\~,to HI for A.1)1'11 ,, lt73, •I •:OD 1.m., In ti;: :m 111,..,• ,!'< .. ldtf!f -r.<iulf'ld lo fl)t T o S.,. 1 c · ..,_....,,...., c1.._,, ..... Not '' courfr'Oofn of Dlpl~ Ho a of wld ' "' lltCnllry -htn 111 vet ompany, B1llll. of A.m1rtc1 Of Dtl.ut1 •lld El1elle11t to Sell lo be court •I 1'00 Ctvlc c1n1..-Ori~ W•l I IN ofllc. of the ct.rt ol ttit 1bow T-r. 0111 City llvd. W11t. Siii .. 1118, rtcordld Ill "" eou<lty wMr• ""' rNI IM c'try of Slnl1 """ C1lltorn!1 • II lftlllled eourt • .,... lo p.--nl tlMm Wllll O••no•. C•1lloo'"l1. pr-1'111 ltclited. Dl!lld· M•1d'I " 1in . Ille llfCHWry •Clutlllr'a, lo tlll ~lldlr-
D•lcd M1rc11 s, 1t7l O.t.: Miid! 13, 1m WILLIAM E SI JOHN 1Joned 11 tht offlct f1f 111 FAY. Ill(.. STAN.SHAW CORPORATION, County c..rt • KINDEL .. A.NOEltlON, '10:.tlotnln: =~ Mr'do '''S'J'lt'V1ce COMPANY, I C1tnoml1 COl'l)Ol'llklll U.Wll:IJKI •. HAll:'t'IT llr'OICIW1f, Slnll ... ,,.. Cllllol'lll• = A , · . • ... Id Tnlllel Allorrwr 11 Llw whl(ll Ii lllt plllC* °' lluilMQ Of ftw 8~11111 E lrown :Yn::1::1~1Sll.t'::; Secrt11ry !711 e1tt Coe1t IOtllwtY Ulldertlll'fl'd 111 111 ,,,.It..-. Ptl"llll'll• to
A1tl111nt s°ecrtrir-y Publli~ Newport o: rr:: H p ~-· •II Mir, Ctlltwftll f'MU lhe Hl1t1 of UICI dlctdtnl, w1thln fol.Ir
STA.·llU combll\ld with ,,.. or:1111, c=:.~ 0~~: ..,~:.,,!!!4~7:':.?i-;::":!'' •lt•r 1111 ffnt publlcltlon o1 fl'rl• M~~:~1·1~20.o;~1:n COlllt D•ll'f' :i11i ~~";; ~u~"l'mC•lllorn!1, ~:;:,', ... UbJ(M'lld Or""' Coe•I D•!T'f Pilot. D•Mei: Ftbru1ry 2,, lt73 -:::=-==::;;;:::=====.:=======·::::::::::::;;;;:; ••ch 20, Jl, 27, 1t1l tl).13 CA.THERINE MORELAND I Entu!rlx of ll1t Wiii ot
~ " ="' ___ P_u_B_L_1c_N_OT1 __ c_E ___ 1 J•~R •·"=:.1:mtd dt«dttlt
} S TA=R1,GA'ZER:~-l'""1 "' '" • •"""• '"'-"'?" NOTICI TO c•a:OITO"S 1121 Nortll lro1fwey 01" IULK TIAMlfl•ll Snl1 Alli, C1llflrllll ttm
"';:.'; }'{ YOlll'.DaityAdMryGukllt }( -.u:u.. ll«L •111-4111 u.c.c.1 AHl!'N'l'I far Ex1e.trh1
•-' rf "'Y'" •edftl/1tg ,....__ ,..__ y ~ -rf'l HOik• 11 hlrlO'f' oh1.., to tn. (rtd!lort. Plltlllllltd Orl"IWI Co.st Dlll'f ll'Uot,
...-... ,.. '"'9 --..,... ...... ~~ ol Cff..C:M MIMl9'f!Wnl, IM. ck1$ng Fthnllry v tfld Mlrd'I " IS. •• 1m
11-lf>.1 Tode't'tklp n--vtforW•ilnewbf, +I~ bus I 11111 ti Tht Git ConlPllYY·•----------_:"~"~"cJ G-51-63 teodwordstptl410fdlrG;to~ T11n1t1r0tt, wl!oll MIMu tddrn1 1,1· PUBUC NOTICE of'l'(al'.Lx1Ioc6frth•1-IUD Superior Str .. 1. Cotti Miii. ,~,., .1 Unto 31 ,, ...,. 41 ,..~.. 01 Q11noe. s111t ot C11t1orn11, fl'llt 1 bul-1-,J....----,,.,,,,-~----·I ,. ._ trMd..-11 •l:lol.rl to bl rMdl to I 4U7S '\
:ZYGJ'.. J2Truck .QOut Alllllonr IE P ....... Tr-,_, Wllolt MOTICI TO C••OITOIU 3~ 3JOftwt QYOll tllltlnlU .cidr'lu It e/o lilObll"tloft, ..__ SUPIEllOlt C'OUIT OP1TKI
A !'votyAhet 3' ~ "Or a. G1rt1/lld, 040 (lfTllNI P,I,.., NIW'POl'1 STATI 011 CAllflOll:NIA POJ 5 ~ 35,.._. 65,.... 17~ 8NCll. C~ty If Ol'lngt, Stitt of TMI Cj'UNTY 0 .. OlAM••
16 c.oM 36 Mo.ft lid ~"'1~~J!l> C1llf0ml1, IN-. MllM '11\ 37W°" 61Thlt I" Tht ~to be trtnlftrr'ld It Mti!W E ... te <If WESU!Y GE. O ~ IOrt :JIGood .. ot 1t 11.511 SUptl'tor SI...,, Cotl• Mew,, STlllWEll, Dlce1Hd. ,.
I
YPtoopie J91~ 6'...... Cou11tyofOr.,...,St•f<tofC1llronil1. NOTICE IS HERE8'# GIVEN to' 1t11 oa-. ..,o..t 100f hid f"'Optrty •• dtlclibld m .....,, UWttor1 o1 ,,.. .,,. _. ....,.,
11 Ouidt .... Al LJ-.. 71 Ptrolilct •11 All llodl In ,..ldt, flalvttl. «l\llp!Mftl INI Ill Dtt'IGM hl\lltlt .. l lntl t1•1Nt tilt 12~ tfl/.6 '1.HW INI OOOd wlH of ltllil atr tnd llllhld teld ~ ,,. ,_,..., to IUt lllMI,
IJC.. 1 I .a~ n~ rtt.t..,...nt llWlflftll kllOWtl •• Thi Ga wll!l lflt IMlt'tlMrY ¥1111Ctw1, lfl tile offkt 4i'nlt .... ~ )AYor Clmp.lny, Wld hxlltd 11 l»t lllHflot of 1111clriof1111 '"°"' tflllHld COllO't. or
SW. '45~ ,.,,__, Strttl, C•tt Mew.. twntr o1 Orinet to ~ thtm, wllfl !flt '*°''*°' •FtW '4r$.. 1 71M Sllf<t tf C.I~ ' ~ft 1111Vl'ldltlt.ftttd11111t fltlct ?Siourtj "7QI ?7iltd: Tiii 1111111 tr11111-w1ll bf COl!lurnmttM of •llorllfY, COLONEL Wllfl:lN~ S.
llWlll ... ,...._. 7IHofe 1111r1tltr Ille t111 0.., of A.11'11 Im. II FIANK\..IN, 1117 El•! llfh It:;, ·-'trod ... ~ 7' l'o 10:11 A.M. .i ltOMrlloll ~ a, Mtuo, C1111or1111, lfl'lllicll ii 111t fClt ol » ........ T. o.rtan.s. oe c""PUI Dri,,., ,...,,.,.,. Ml,., of ""' uNttll9ntcl In 1 f!'ll19rl
21 ,..., IO~ eo,I !._M__.. OffCl'I. COWITY tf Orlflltt Sii.. "' ~ .. ·'"~-lo tllt alttt "' Mid dlC:ldtnt~
Record values for all
you record collectors.
'
H_.DoMtl-1•""'1
lll' 111 nt-,, l•11T..,..tt•
cri,now11Mot IAJPric• "an. -ot 1111ny Cutt I lOlll I'll WllN tl llJlty t .. lts c*'4n.1111M·1r,_,_
2·NC:Ordo.Uby ..
of your f•vorlte lii11ata.
319 to 399
R.....do
Ult411Do-otn.Mlil-
UJl!B1Tll-otlllt--m11ttr•w.11tf...,..,. •
. ' .,... ........... .... ........... ., ...... -' . '
JCPenney
coming attractions on the bill.
EVERY OTHER Tuesday,
she checks in at NBC here to
tape 14 30-second reminders of
what is facing viewer9 for
each night or the next two
weeks. She ealT\I a good living
doing it.
And the exposure she gets ts
an actress' dream. It held
such allure that t!iO girls ap-
plied for tlle NBC job when it
was announced. Yet Miss
Obeck has no hope her half·
minute of stardom each ni~t
will lead to Hollywood and a
television series.
"I don't think 1 can make a
C<>mmitment to acting now."
said Miss Obeck. a warm,
lively woman who at ftrst
glance appears to be the
classic blonde aristocrat who
is always riding off to hounds
or somesuch.
"l think acting requires a lot
or leaving hOme, and I don't
want to leave home," she said.
"Home and my two children
are m y top priorities. Acting
makes you too transient."
MISS OBECK, . who I s
divorced. has acted iri several
TV series and was a regular
four years ago in "Mr.
Broadway," which expired
after 13 w eeks on \he air.
She lives in suburban Larch-
mont, N.Y., where she l'Wl.1 a
·television commerical a n d
modeling school she helped
found.
She got into show buslness
through television com-
mercials, her first at age 13 on
behalf of Coca-Otta. She
estimates that she's done
about 150 commercials since
then, plus modeling worlt.
She has a weird dream for
som eone of her background.
She said she wants to do a
sports show that <.'Overs the
athletic world from a woman's
point or view, "although I
would never want to do play·
by·play or anything like that."
HER INTEREST in sports
m ay be inherited. Her father
now retired, used to be a N~
York sportscaster. But she
wants to empha9lze the human
side or a thletics, rather than
just the process of winn1ng
and losing in assorted sports
battles.
"J'd also like to re-em-
phaslze the fact that sport& in
this crazy world today is part
of our human d rive, of bet·
tering ourselves," she said.
"It's very healthy."
' 2 Groups
Exchange
Productions
!
i NEw HOPE, Pa, \APl
Stage attd screen actor: Dana
.\ndr,ewS "lll lead a ciilnJlllny
o! 'lldOIW from the 1iuclcl
ColJnty Playhouoe lo £nsland
thJJ nlonlh in an U.OufUaf1 ex• ·~ of regional !heattt
PWP.'· ~w1, his wUe1 actress
Mbr1 Todd, and 11 member;
ol lheBucU County~
here will swap places with ~
~i:=y:i
~~bead, &zrrey,
' 1lle -• -el.Chui&I Mrtllli Man:b M WU~
~ S\ ,._-,,_ C•ltfor-M1. • ... II """ "'°"""Ill« tht nrll pUl)lic..
,. 220.. S2~ llWhol• So,.., •• kllOWM to Ille Tr11111ttM ... llOll of,fhl• notlet . ., %!~.._-" .. -• .., " .. ~-' 11Yt111111t11tmn•ndM11,....wNf11fllt o....,s"""'•'•' 1tn~ ....,_ Tl' ..... lttOrl fOr lht llltM ,...,. lhl .... • O\llH H ALIFOll:NIA
· We know wllat you're loollftg fol'.
<ltt by l<e R. y~ dJrectoj
ol tho U.S. 8JWt> and lf.wl
Vlnr:oot Wallace, ~i..J
dlrtetor of tile Enibii .... "'
1'MI'· •Iler • ""1ea "":l
•• meellllll• . ...-. ,.... • TJle American ttrnp:lny''ilr ,,... MN.itit 15Way' .,..I l'Qll, ' ~1'ST---WATI AL U.N~ ~~~LJiJX.. ~~ _ ~wotth 0.1"~!::~4·,1::; e~·'°"~
21""1' MF.--~= .rwcm •TT"*"""• Extc111ot of lllt Wiii a J!IJ,.... ""*"' ,,,. ff ANTMCHf1'L PALIY Of 1M tlkM ntll!'llCI ~ » ..._., .OW• :fO ""*'iMil<I' ·_ •. t • r.19 ll:Ol.ltTIOM. MOWlll (Of..ONIL MlllllNe S. 1'9'ANICLUI ~ ·al'h ·--· NNI-• ...,.u.._ ,.,,..,,..,s.,.._ ~~-• () ~~--· ..... c.rtaMIM,c..lolt>*21 uo:m. -Nwai ""'" .,.,.,. T111 11111 •nn
,.,.,,.., llHd\. CIMftntl• ""'""" ..,. .-...... l'Vbff.tltd 0rtllll'f Coe1t 0111¥ Pl~. l"lrbllttwd Qr-..... tlrltl ~ ,Llol
M.-m. • 1m •'•·n Mltelt 13. a. n.,... ""11 a. tm n..n
'
Sh'oP. Sunday-noon to•5 P.M. Clt-the.Jolfo.~.toresi~.+.4;per1onn;:.;;;.;,.::. =1!:" .!'-.n--e--.-;
small U.S. Oa!ntmtn1t1.
Tbomdlb 'llmtre -I
ASHION ISLAND, Newport 811ch 17141 644.2113
HUNTIN&TOtl ~TER, HuAllogfon Booch 17141 192-7771
after Dame Sybil 'l1tomdS
lht~-bu
Sheridan'• play, ''The Rl"11.'
•
.rm---.... Ce•st Cmeeert
¥aster Chorale · F{llters
'
"'!'here ..... -· SUn-day -tbe ,Irvine Master
' a.irile came Vf<Y cl°"" to
•
IO Ill elllbuslaam that may be Their !allure wu made ..,.,. upon ltaelf !ell tbat It eoold ~~ -
he a r t w a r m I n g and more apparent by the tact have been better. ~
pral!eworlhy but b merely that Mmes. Melltll a n d Two solid male solnlsts, a ' •
:\U:/:" the thewort" comes to :.i~. To ~iai::i.:; :!~1r:t1 •=:,;a ;,,In :J: .... k di! l\iim ' balf·bearteclness thett, just chorale and a litUe more wort m:E.::~ {A)
ALEXANDER work· the burning d..U.. and com-on that Iona. I a t i g u I n ...,. -"""""
ed. like • fieod 00 the podium plete ability to deliver those 11Credo" might have m1de ''THE HOT ROCKN
to get the kind of Bach Mass glorious Bach arias ln the way the difference on SUndly MATtM•• ...... sDAv -1 ,. ...
r-.,, MMlh 20, 1~73 DAILY PJLDT J(
TONIGIIT'S
TV IDGHLIGHTS
K'I'LA O 8:00 -Laker Baskelball. Cbambm-
laln. Wee! and Company take on the Allan\£ Hawks '
In tl\e Georgi. capital.
NBC D 8:00 -"Police Story." Author-poll.,.
llWl Joseph WambaUJd> ("The New Centurions")
provided 4lie material {or this cops and crooq otory
With Vic Morrow, Chuck Connors, Edword Amer
and Diane Baker.
acblOvtng t!>e """' ol artistrY
al~ at tqta1n earlier con· i:Orta \hat are among this
.a:iUC-'t most treaaured
memor1 ...
be wanted frorq a chorale that the great muter must have eight. '111 =~'.:'•""
w!lllngly worUCI bard and loog wanlecl them coav.yed. 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ~~~~~~~~~II
under hil dir<clloo In the Their duets together and the = weeu prececlhig the coocert. superb liaison eacb artist • ua ••""
ABC U 8:SO -"Beg, Borrow or Steal." Three
bandlce\)ped men test their courage and abilities
by plotting and ell'OCUUng a daring beist after loo-
ing their JObo. Mike ('"Mannix") Connors, lllicbael
("Mod Squad") Cole and Kent t"Adam 12") McCord
are the star..
Music T~che
J• Sets Recita)! , , . A piano recital by Golden
Well College mualc Instructor
Allen Giles will be pruenteel
al S: 15 p.m. Wedneaday in the
college's comrnwlity theater.
1 Giles, the newest member of
the college's music faculty,
wl11 play -by 8ergel Prokollev, qaude Debussy Jnd Franz Liszt. He has ap-
peared as piano solol,st with
the Boeton Pops Orchestra un-
der Ar1l1ur Fielder, the Bui·
falo Pbllbannonlc Orcbeotra,
Amhent Symphony Orchestra
and others.
'lbose moments in the pack·
eel Orange Coast College
aUdltorium alwaya in.eluded
alto Jane Westbrook and
sopr"l'ODarrellyn Me Ii ti i;
both 8.rtists were in superb
voice end b o I h repeat.-
edly dem<lll!lrated their
ability to splendidly 00-
liver a n d interpret their
portion of Bach's massive
Mass in B Minor.
So did the chorale in par·
tions of this complex, swirling
tribute to 0Ur Lord that OC·
cupleel J o b a n n Sebastian
Bach for 14 years of his life.
But all too often, especially in
the later stages of the pro-
gram, artistry was sacrificed
Hil views oo tbe quality of developed with tbe assiduous ~:;:.
the performance bave not Aleunder were worth the
been made kDown to this dmissi at crlUe. But. knowing t h e price of 8 . 00 one.
per!ectioo151 Aluander end THE a!Ol\ALE'S b es I
his metbodt, I would be very moments came in the early
surprised ii Sunday' 1 porlloo ol the program and,
performance saUsfied him. most notably, in the rousing
A major factor in this "Sanctus" thal is one of the
critic's disappointment lay In most inspirational passages
the lnsblllty of the two male ooe will find in this lorm of
soloists to come anywhere music. 1bat and the trium·
near to meeting what are, ad-pbant "Agnus De.i" that closes1~!!1!'J!!~
mittedly, the rigorous the Mass came very close tol -----
deinands of this towering compemating for some of the
Bach score. sJx>rtcomings noted in the
"Credo."
TENOR HAYDEN Blan-It was, to be sure, a good
'Long Day's Journey'
Bombs in Niel.sens
chard,' a late sub6Utute for Bach Mau in B Minor but
Fullerton m u a I c professor those of us who have perhaps
Michael Sells, could at least become spoiled by the stan-
offer that as his excuse for a dards the Irvine M a rt e r
lackluster evenJ.ng. But David Chrale invariably impo&es
Piltmao Jenning, can have no'miOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiiiiiii such explanactloo for a Iii
fragile, hesitant approach to ~·
aolo spots that s!ioold have ''t"r"2!t~ the baritone worth bis salt
NEW YORK (AP)
Desplt. cr!Ucal acclaim, the
ABC televhion version of1
"Long Day's Journey Into
Nlghr' bombed In the national
TV ntlng1, according to A.C.
Nellsen Company Ii g u r e a
maile publle today.
growltng hil ari11 llke the pro.
eel th list verblal Lion ol J\ldeb. ' -aut c."' • That show again I e ~ COIOMA D•L. MM...,.
of the 10 bigbejl-rated TV pro-,F~!i!~!!!~~mill -grarns !or the wee~. lolloweell , Don't Miss It!
by NBC's "Sanford & Son" s..e.y l*lclF:
and CBS' Hawaii Flve-0." ,.._,.
,,/"';)FOUNTAIN ~ALl!Y .,.~.-::~I .....-.;(,o;;;::;~. -;.1,;;-.;;-,.1.
The other top shows, by DOORS OPIM l:U
order of their Nielsen rank· ..,..,. ...,... .. ...,., Cf91t"
lngr, were: "Maude," "Bob p1111
Newhart'" "Ciro! Burnett," HMM ..... wl!Mmlu'' All s..t. 11.00 tm 2:• p.m. , "Mary Tyler Moore/' and ~~!~ m~:~:. ::~: m!m:tll
ABC Wednesday Movie ,' ' ~wk;: 1:41. sat"'-"=•
''A dam -12'' (NBC), P•t.11H';':",,~:'r11t~, ......
'!be Nlel!en ratings !or the
week of Marcb 5-11 .. id the
Eugene O'Neill play was seen
coly In an esltmated 4,%10,000
homes In tho Untied Stales
during Its three-bour broad-
-Cast Marcb 10. uounsmote" CBS), •• The Sit ... Sun. "WfuN .. OI"
Rooues" ( •n~), "Tb e 12::111 Ind 2:311
..
•
' ' '
'"
' ' •
•
,
. A similar lat. was suffered
)ast month by CBS' updalecl
venloo o I Shakespeare's
M nu\.o &1,..111 MlfmM Diiiy II 21 ... 1.•
Wal tons" (CBS), "Walt Dia-I ~~~~~~!lllil!lllil!lllil~~~;;;.::;;:;~.::;;;;;;;;:;;;;; ney'', end "Irooside" (NBC).1-
"Much Ado About Nothing," ---------1
wllicb Nlelaen esltmaled was
_, In approximatel,y U
tnlllion homes.
The latest rstlnr. were good news, however, or the pro-
ducers ·01 CBS' "All In the
Family'' eerles.
"THE LEGEND OF
BOGGY CREEK" ....
"THE HELLSTROM
CHRONICLE"
.
---
-ALSO-
W-Altn
"PLAY fT
AGAIN, SAM"
lotto Cot« Ill
MIE FOIDA•DOlllD SU111ERLAID
PETER BOILE
., *
~ . ~ • SlllLYAl••wcl . ,
\ . . -. ~
Be1&111CUOl"·f• ....... ft. ...... ~c....., '
' (- ' ,, I ~ .,,,,•,', • ' ;,;:t '•' . '• "' ,9 , ..... ~~
U..4-W.ffll-_.._.. ............ lttoC..... ..... ~
... ,... • .,,m:a C:--·-..ri 0...•Ul-cn1
~. 1"1 KIT,.
CCMtnl' •'fw IS
1"1 Kff" -........ ,. . .......
Jaft!s
bd
r ow,.•o,.
• 1\t'il'' t'ltll 1
"" 'o • •w ' ' ...
f •
'
-• c •• -··'"·'" CINEOOME 20 .. '..
' .-... ·:.''.'._ti!' •t.._J
-'I' -.... STADIUM l :::·· . "''""'' ''"''"'.
_,..,. -....
$TAOIUM 'J ·::·
' •'-'"'''-"-'" '.
.... At,.,.... "1cM
11Mcm of La MmclMI" ,.,
MO AISlllV•O SUTS ........ ...,..., Prat
"Fld<I• Oo. Tiie Roof" ,.,
"'DellY..W.C."
~... ,.,
"McCalte. MIL Mtltr''
''Tlte Getawr('· CNJ .....
"Lady_Sllln Tiie lltrn" Ill
"POHfdOll Ac:lw•ture"
111111 CPOJ
"ha"
U.A. CITY CIHIMAS LA.DI. DAY IYllV '1111. lkl
,.,. ............ ~ ,,, ... t1•J . '
•\ \,'.~· -
,. . .
f [) ....... ' ..
CI NEMA VIEJO
-.
I r
.......... . -----------Done by Dunn
Pat Dunn gets thlngs done. NOW rt.AYIN•
UA C:IM•MA ~ MINI ......,.
'°UNTAIM VAUIY C:Mnt It
IUllP-Mllllill"'9M ~
YIUA 'nllltrl or._.
U.Y...:s.t 1.-dt
....... ....... -.......
Throw her your chaJlenge
and see bow she bandies it In
her "At Your Bervice" col·
umn, now a~ every
· SUnday, W~y and Fri·
clay In Tile DAILY PILOT. . .
lllt!J,
WEDNESDAY-NIGHT*
•
M•k• WM1111d111y 11l9ltt yout 11l9ht to ••tout. At 0.1 T111co,
Wedn1td1y 11l9ht It T1co Nltht. Yo11 91t 11• ft•tv 0.1 T1co1
for j111t $1.751 Thit W1dn111'41y, driv1 thr11 for 1 f1"'ily 1i11
m1111I you won't for91t. At pricH you'll find h1rcl to be1t.
NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA
Bristol (Palisades) at 4th St. and
Campus Newport Fwy.
TUSTIN
Rod Hill Near Santa Ana Fwy.
I
. ..
~Ol'NnF"
1$ A
Mll)T
I
CBS U ll:SO -"The Old Man and the Sea."
Spencer Tracy plays an almoet solo perfonnanre
in the movie version of Ernest Hemingway's novel
about a stubborn fisherman. I 1•
KHJ 0 12:00 -"Jesse James." Tyrone Pow· t
er plays the legendary bad man, with Henry Fonda
as bis brother Frank in this 1939 western. .... ~.. '""'"---~,,, ... -_ ..
TV DAILY LOG
Tuescloy
Evening
Wednescloy
DAmME MOVIES
tll 8"l1lt1"'1-"'" l"'I '•~ M1" St~ Robert PnstoA.
IO:IO (]), "11 Ito! to -· (d10) '36-Gterlt R11t.·aC1HUlld,hm11.
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.J 2 IWlY PllOT T~., Mwdl 20, 1'73
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''Lawrence Welk? Fred Waring? Wayne King?
Grandma, don't you have any album• by tho O•·
1--mond Brothers?"
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L. M. Boyd
~1ileage Fraud
Could Be Costly
Young fellow, do you and your wife live in an apart·
melX? How's your marriage working out? Never mind, too
penqnal. Merely wish to mention a recent survey smws
numerous U'olilled couples greatly improved their matri·
monial life by buying houses. Three out of five such teams
queried, in fact, said the new homes saved their marriages.
Or words to that effect. Builder, no gilts, please.
DO YOU KNOW what "4-e've gc:t lots of this month?
Turkeys, beans and peanuts. 1bat's
the grub lii<ed by the government now
as "plentiful."
KISSES ON THE NECK, forebearl
and hands, those are the ooly kind In
be shown on Malaysian television, that
government has decreed. PubUc lip
kisses destroy the morals, it's believed
there.
UNDERSTAND A SELLER of a car now can be sued
for triple damages or $1 ,S<XI, whichever's more, fer lying
to a buyer about said car's true mileage.
QUERIES -Q. "Can a horse see straight ahead and
straigk back at the same time?"
A. Almost but oot quite.
Q. "WHAT COUNTRIES in Europe permit nude sun·
bstbers on pWlic beaches?"
A. Germany, Yugoslavia, France, Italy, Sweden and
Corsica.
Q. •1QUICK, LOUIE, name that television penonality
known t.obJUmates as 'MillM!'."
A. Quick? Tedious lengthy research reveals it's "Gun-
~'s" Milburn Stone.
GOOD MANY ol those merchandisers who market bed-
wetting cures rely on tne fact that even though one out of
evs:y five youngmet"s continues to dampen down the en-
viromnent beyond the ege of 7, almost all outgrow the
thing by the oge of 12.
MosT WORRISOME -Incredible' Acroniing I<> latest
surveys, the 10 big troubles that worry the public roost,
in m:Ser, ere: 1. Rising costs. 2. Increasing violence. 3.
Spread of drugs. 4. Crime in general. s. Truce violations.
6. Wale!' pollution. 7. Air pollution. 8. Medical coots. 9.
Unsafe food and medicines with misleading labels. 10. Solid
waste disposal. I say "incredible!" because"tfte list doesn't
mentkm that awesome threat koown as the energy crUis.
"Doesn't anybody remember, sob, the gasoline rationing
and the blackouts U Wor1d War II?" he inquired, petu-
lantly.
JUST ABOUT the fiercest beast on earth for its weight
and size is the anny ant. And at ·s totally blind . . . A
BRITISH AUTHORITY on dentistry contends one out ol.
every four youngsters in England will have false teeth by
the age of 20 ... IF YOU SWALLOW about 3,000 times a
~y, consider yourself oot superior, not excellent, not good,
Just average. ,
Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875 New-
port Beach, Calif. 92660. '
I See by Today's
Want Ads
,/ al' SKIP JACK F1..Y·
BRIDGE tor sale. It's
got alO HP, FWC, 2 radios,
fatho. bait tank, head and
outriggers.
,/ ENGLISH CHAP: A Brit-
tany Spanie1 that's one
year old is free to a good
home. They make excel-
lent pets.
,/ THINKING ABOlIT 'HIT.
TING the trall 1 This 1966
VW Van camper would
like to go with )'91..1, She
haa a new engine.
This symbol shows we care , ••
It Is the lntematianal Symbol
of Access which tells a handl·
capped person that the bulld·
Ing on which It ls displayed ls
fully accessible by wheel·
c,halr. For a long time our
nation's handicapped have
been unable to enter public
bulldlng• -even houses of
wOOlblp Easter Seals la try·
Ing to ch•nge this. Won't you
help?
Gift to &lltrSaall. MltCll 1 • April 22
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Callfot 11i• Comml•sion . ' .
Budget of $l ·M1llion for~ Seen
A bill aidioled by -s'l.. Arlm the oomm!Mfoo doee WU Ill -~ -la .... ml 11111 -._ Greaorio (p.a.. Mateo) faeipc Senate IJC!lrilYJomanyof--'Jbura. ""wttll malthlac .,_,,...,, pdYOlo COOieiolhisCbristiariSciencel..eclln
Jie-1np In the Dell , ... ~ woold day. -EXI UVE I -tllO Oallfomla Aris Commia-When Omi-a.Irmoa Willlam Only 1111 -did a.e .... mnJio!on · 1\1\U'j JUST ST I
-·· """"'1lllM< budget to '' milHoo. 1<"'11 m of San Fftllldloo finally celled U)!ll guldelineo ,... --dndop. .uvn , • · -• cornn-..rs w""' COid ncallly In fer q-from tbo guos11, the lll'llt mm!, tn """' tbla fUlure fuodlnl.COG><O Ir _., 0, -
Newport· Beach. was w11a1 the commlllloo'• budget and tlmJCll. Eecullve c11retv Albert <;o11o THURSDAY, MAllCH 22 - 8 p.111.
The 15--slale arts coouniasloo 8Jl!>rapriatlon polld<o ..e. -the llalf Is noio. tr,ing I<> ~ a SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENT,ST
condtlded It. monthly meeting In the A """"'1 queolloo wu bow Orange S)'lleol> al' retleilinc 1l>e -grant 3100 P1clflc View Dr .. Coron• clol MAr
lrVine .Q>mpony board room in Newport O>unty resideola lave been alfected by applications tlllt are'.,..lnc In. Clo/Id c .... p, .. i.1..i ~ the cornmlMlon. The commla8lon ssid it Creeled Iri' J1me, I.IQ, the -•tiialdoo I 1.,,'i-____ ..::;;:::,.::;:;.r:::;;;;;;;., _____ _..
For the flrllt 111 ..,.,.,, the sele<:t ha.o been "Impooslble" lo 10 stafb.wide is a -of l!MI mues from the 1-"""------'--~---------
groop of commlsaloriers -each appoint· with many ol Its projectB beoause of Nalioool Enilowmllnt of 1he Arlt!. ·
ed by the Governor -talked among limited flmd& Calif ........ Att c..mcII bu lieea .... . Kids. '.· Li"ke To themselves around 1 table. The oommJalon budg<t In 1973-74 will ridered nlatively lnactive """"'""'1 I<> ~v.. of various Orange be 1247,000, !I Sen. Gregc<io'• bill Is efforts In other states until rooeoH)'.
O>unty art and cU!tund organizalloos sat auccesoful and k would add the differ-Many ol the projeeta i!lacuaOd 'l'lu>
In chain beblnd the boclcl of the com· enoet<>lnu-thebudgettoanevenll day-amuseumt<Mringpr"llJ'llll.aM1t Ask A,,jjy missionen. m.illloo. sic for Youth Jll"Oject. GPe1' and per{011i;
The stale arts aimmission bu been In At least 80 percent of i!lat II million Ing art1 needs aurveYJ and the Calilcltnla
extstenoe fer -10 yean and the under the bill would """' oo go for fund-Dance M.,_nent --'-ore tn re-
$1 million woold be lls ta,..,x budget ing programs and projects. aearch atages, pilot -.-or . ..., In
_ev_.,._._0eop __ 11e_that __ 1ong_""'_·_1y_, _ill8t_wha __ t __ The_co_mm1ss1 __ on funda='-'· pro__:_Jec_ts_tha_t_ar __ • __ lheir_· _finl __ a..,-...,,,..i __ :...1.,,,_·_o1_..,_._S11r~ico-·,'.:':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::_-_-:_·_-::._-:_~-:_t----::..-:_-:_-_-:_-:_-:_-:_-:_-=
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Come to the Nation's I .atcgest Federal
for 16 Free SerVices.
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Plus 5%, 5.75% or· 6% Irirerest.· · · · . .
California Federal Savings gives you
free.services and the nation's highest
interest rates on insured·savings and
All interest is oompounded daily.
,l'reC Scrvlces:Leave ~OOOier inore •
ifiyiiur a~lllit and we'lh~ }'Ollfyee ~,.CA. UFORNIA and loan'11ccounts~ '
6% Ccrtifi.cate Account: Deposit
$5,000 or more. Tenns: 2 to 5 years.
5.15% CerdfiQate Account: Deposit
'$1,000 or more. T~: 1 year or more.
5% Pulbook~t: Deposit any
amount Add or :witl\draw any time. sr. cuaent annual rate.
travelers chei:ks; money oci:lers, n<X,arY·
,service and trust ~eed note collediai. . FE. DERAL Other free semces-for a~ of
any sire include: save-by·mail post;ag'e, 8AlftNGS savings.banks. Monthly Money PI3ri,. ilMWI
gift Check-hold~ and .many nme.
Say, ·"California 'Federal, here I come!" . .
' 4TH ANNUAL CAREERS DAY • Orange Cont C6lloge, April 12, 1973 1 •.
Como hoor llQw noted pt ala11lon1ls '
can help you""-~ your corMr.
7
NO!,_. SAYE ON SA~DAVS l
ot your lolsuro -ot C1llfomlo Pedorol ea.to
Mou offla.' w.· .. -1 o ...... i. 2 """' 1o ..,,. ----1-yoo. No ""'d lo d,.. up.-c-"J'DU"'" In your
Soturdoy c...,.i clothoo.
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AllD LOAll MllOCIATIOll . . . . . . ..
Costa
Mesa
Office"?
2700 H1fbor 80 11 .. «1
546.2300 , •
NOW! OPEN ON
SA TUROA YS 1-0 1'0 1.
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Navy and white can·
provide the
" ·t d" I "'k ~ .unexpe.c e. .. .. O_u. s,..
for moth 'ers-to-be.
: who .choose the
formal look (above·) .. ~ . . ;' ..
or .. ~$~ P,C!~ye.stei: .
'Separ~tes~ · ..
Exceptional Jam \' .
l~bel L~f.t !.; Aia~.
r;;,. , , , . I ·, ,, t ,• . I . . . .
DEAR Aljl( LANDERS: I am ·ask'" · , . ; · .. ·-: • ._ big~ lhls ~;because yru are a . · · 1 ~A7:-~~· ·A' . ,._. ':, : ! . down-~ *noosen&e persm. You , . ~ ' · : · ' ' J , • ' -• ~ --·lo-can be sentimental wlien the occasiori· -.... ~" .. ·
demands but by and iarge yru are ob-' • • • • · ·:. ·
jective. Bere's·-t1¥: situation. 1~µ~' 'Says the' pmqy bel~~ to~
A !onnerbigb school classmate moved .the liiink anci'I bad~ ligbl to'~ IL" ·
to this dty a few weeks ago. We talked · Who, legally and' morally, OWlil ttils
on the phone and !ihe lnvjted me .. er lot-wloable ooin? -·hS.M.
collee yesterday. She easuaily D)<!llti<.aed DEAR L.S.M.: I cleeted wfflo -
tbat she bad a f-YW\,<11<180ll Wbowas an blab la Clllcago, The·Banll, The·ilnl
uexceptional" child. • • Na._. ud ne Upper.i:Avene. Tiiey.ma
" . uid boU lellen llooold DOI be..._,
I assumed, of <OUt!e, .tbay by, es· eoinl wbDe .. lbe Job. If 1 ran ..ia Is ~,, she meant •mn~Oy<smart, or dllCOWll'td, tbe Celltr ._ 80 rtpt 1D lk n =:'..:;.. ~ ~'~chil':jr. belGap to the liiiL At ,1111 -<JI
turned out to be semely retarded. I was ~ boilt-.. tlotl lrlltoe 11
~ for the shod< and did my ,, • belt lo bide my embirTusmeol • The Com.;! .......... lsoto llilf1'tlte
. lJ It fair to' do Ibis to a pmon? Wby
did abe use the word "euepliooal"? Wby
not use the word "retanled" and not play
games! Am I right or "'°!'Ct ~MISS LEA!> IN, MEMPHIS • I
~ MISS: Yoa ore DOI only-·
:-: C'fte~~.e! ----.,.-1Mdedeldldmt .. , -. ...
etplfl l•llfa--loftler to llor 1elaclecl cldld la .11111 woy, w!Qr ..,
Y• -Cha me u iji(liN'louullJ lo ................ -....... -... Irr' •t1et: a.at.-el tM llMlt aew-
1 --ta -_,..n 11
---.. kip -wllll lllelr , ........ u .. fJlllfJd "fte ~ ...... ,,.,...._.,,,,, ............
-to P.O. a. 1'1, -Boy Ama, ....., Mui. 11117. II 1111"'1 ~,
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I -t In a
bank. I happen to be a eo11t eolledor. A
customer came in and malle I depooiL
As I WU putUng the ~ 1W11 I
nqlieed ... al the Coins -a me peo-ny, worth about '900. ....
I pill lbO l*UIY bl oly purse and
....,i.cod It with one al my Own. One
"'aulbority" ~ I mutt call the man
who U.dil the deposit and lillonn him
lhatbis-11...nhl'llO.Anolhor
.,
~ tlotll ..... ·-ol -. If lbe..,..lir -... -.... teller -llllf1lllce, ....
''D~ANN LANDERS: What are peo-
ple IUppOOed 'lo do wbeo unexpedod ...,_
pany drops, in on SUnday and Ills and
sits? My t..b&od and I like to au.ad
cbutd1 servlc;es that begin at .5 o'clock.
We.usua!J.y·bave.a llaht supper finL Liit
·&md.ly we a.sbd llie ~ com-
pany to share our .._ beeal11t II (llil
• on to 8:1li. I bad lo waler' down 1be, -
and thaw out some -cbopl. We.aid
oothlng aboul cllurch, juA didn't I"·
• I wu.DOl•bappy about It but felt I lmd
done the-~ thlDg. My bulbond WU
fllrl<OlS. What Is the proper -
uncjer 8llOh 'l"'di-? --SPLIT DECISION
l>E.IR SPLIT: U••1~ ......
d11!m • .,.ml w111 .a.. It 11
perlectlJ ,..,... to W.. -IAI 1"'
......... -_,.. ..... llley'll ,.__
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Stor-k Market Has Dividends
Ladi_.Jn.waiting will.110 courted when
Hoag Memorial Hospital, .Presbyterian
and Page Boy Maternity pr-..t a
benefit style show Friday, March 30, at
7:30 p.m. in the Lido Bullet ol Roblnson's
at Fashion Island.
Flatlerlng designs ol Elsie Frank!Urt
Pollock will be modeled by women
enrolled in Hoag's expectant parent
education and exercise classe5.
The collection will show bow attractive
mothers-t .. be can look when Ibey browse
at the museum, visit a friend in the coun-
try, shop for an antique crib or entertain
after·lbe !beater.
William Lackey of Dallas will com-
mentate the "unexpected" disguises.
The jumpers, hostess gowris., capes and
long blazers come in a variety of easy
care fabrics and cheery colors to
brighten infanticipetion.
Mrs. Pollock, who is featured in the
curfent ''Family Circle" magazine will
attend the show that she ls cooniinating
with Marjorie Pyle, obstetrics supervisor
at Hoag.
'l1leir seledlons for the nmway will
demoosb;ate bow the last-month look can
be glamori1.ed With ruffles, lace, fancy
stitcher:t or matching stoles.
Proceeds ' will be used to purchase a
Doptone monitoring device lot the
.obs(etrics depertmenL This equipmeol
traces a · baby's heart beat during the
mother's labor to alert doctors to any
danger signals prior to delivery.
Cliampegne and refreshmeots will be
served to the motbens, fathers and
guests.
'IlCkels may be purchased by calling
. HOag Hospital, 645-8600, Ext. 372;
obstetricians' or doctors' offices or the
hospital's cm Box.,
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M is for .matching
stole and pastel
sleeveless dress
that go .most
anywhere in
spring weather.
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His lrlterest-Vested
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.Fllll lnllllonaire Gianol ,\gDelll' bought
lbe-Fe\'rarl ltrm and declded ·be desper-
ateiy,.needed a wine-red leather eoat to matdl the lntericr fl bis Pefsooal ve-
hicle(•). \
ll'lamboyanl Aanelll, with .. a llroog wbbn !Or show, drove stralgbt to Peter
DimHrl,'who eustom-made bis rlch client
a faglan sleeve wrap coat and lined It in
nutria to ward off the chill.
Agne)ll gladly paid the steep bill for the
-ential llleety -f!.000 -becauae
tbe coat, fil:e ...,.ythlng else Dimitri
makes, ls as precisely engineered as
l\lgb prieed em.
Dimitri, lortylsb and superstitious;
says: "When 1, wu in Italy I went to a
clairvoyant wbo pu:edlcled I'd eventually
go to the United Slates and beeome soo-
cessful with the Americans.'·'
Wbeo be was In the proper mood, be
mov!d in the right dlreetjoo,
QUICK DECISION
"One day, when it WU eitremely dif-
floult to gel a visa, I simply walked into
the American Embassy. When I made rill' request the ambassador just looked
up and said, 'Yes, of«>~!' " says
Dimitri. who quickly seld his properties
and hopped the neit jet for New y ort.
The meanlngful move was a cross
belweeo starlt realllf and fantasy.
Al a child, Dlmi~'s greatest "reward"
was permission to see American movies
and: "Wben Fred Astaire danced across
the .screen looking IO elegant, I Im-
mediately equaled &lamor w 11 b
Americanism. I've· aiw.ys wanted to be
part of that picture~ It
CllANGll) PROFILE
Yws Isler, wbeo Dimitri linaily hit
New Yori:, he found his cbllcBlood OS·
His and her suits
plus c:oats and ti•s.
' make the unisex
look classic: in · ' . windowpane check.
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perlences Blood him In good stead -but
there waa one barrier:
"Italian men tend to come in two
packages -very lean wtth no derrlere or
with pronounced xtomach bulges due to
pastMoaded menus. I d 1 s c o v e r e d
American men are both athletic and
m118CUlar.''
Eventually Dimitri worked himself up
to a !500-a·week salary. One fateful day
he borrowed $1,000 !tom a bank and quit
bis lucrative job. His wile almost fainted
from shock at the announcement.
"We bad a terrible row," he says with
an lniperceplible smile.
GOOD START
A1 luck would have ii, Dimitri's lint
"name" client was producer David Mer·
rick, who bougbl a slew of suits with
matching vesls - a look wbidu Dimitri
believes ls the ~ll•me ol IOOdern elegan.
ce. •
0 1 discovered that some men would
spend $15,000 a seuon II the clothes flt
impeccably and the fabrics are tn-
ler<Stlng without gi>in( wild," 11,YS
Dimitri wbo 800ll struck ii rich.
The designer blows to smithereens the
concept of men's tashki being "in'• one
season, "out" the other. 'Ihe lite span of
an Impeccable suit that leans lows'd
classldxm should be elegant !or at least
a five-year period.
11.Americarl men have no self-security, ..
88j'1 Dimitrt. "They are super eonsumers
who Jean.. on what's in their closets tor a
aense of confidence. It's a poor ~
vestment." . "
Part al the ,..,,.. men feel J>&nf' !JI.
~ety about fashion is confusion al
what to wear wllh wbat. Dlm!trl, often
ereates specjlic accessories.
The dashing black aatin evening 11111,
for example, comes equipped wllh Its
owo black satin xbirt. Wben tbe
dark Is retaUvely Informal, Illa
shirt 13 Wll1l outside the tri....r ml
bel~ .
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J4 OA!t.Y PILOT T""""1, Mlll<ll 20, 1'17J
Matter of Life or Death: ~ol:J Be the \ judge
By AUJ!ION DEERR
Of .. Dlitb' • ..... • ••
monlha for jury ,.lectloo
alone. He cited "virulent ~
coverage'' as ooe reaaaa wby
1be M....,. group eould ,,._
gtt • lalt trial anywhere in
Southern Colifomla.
Life Cl' dealh!
Imprisonment for Ille, wllb
1 chaoca far parole in leYeD
)'tin, or the flnaJllJ cl dealb
In Ille .., chamber! ~
'1bue were Ille chol ... of-'= tlJllT 1
fered portldponta In Ille UC! The maaup cl the jury, he
Ellenslon lectUre Ca p I t a I .... rted. waa allo 1 problem
Punishment 1nd the MllllOO for tbe delenae counael.
Trial, lblrd lo tbe oeriel al 10 First, Ille Jarws had to be
l e cture• on Morality: able to afford to 1lt on lbe TwtUcbt 1.one cl Ille Law. jury al only It a day for a
Putting Ille cllaa Jn Ille posl-•trial wblch could last from six
llon of tile jury, P 1 u I to 12 montha. So Ille jurors
Fitzgerald, chlel d e r e n 1 e had to be of 111botantlal means
counael for Ille Manson faml-or wort for a firm large
ly, read excerptl of hLs final enough to pay e m p I o y e 1
f"guments durlng tbe penalty aalariel wblle oo jury duty.
j>baae of lbe trial. Secood, o n I y registered
SeUlnl lbe stage, Fitzgerald voters 0·3 of L.A.'s popula-
sald that Ille trial cl Cl>artes lion) can be seated.
MallSOn and bta llirls for the Third, jurors had lo agree to
Tate-i. Blanca tilllqs luted be sequestered for u long as a
ii> monlha. called 11!0 wit-year with no C011tact willl llll
nesau and required two ouUicie or their families.
Your Ho roscope
fOW1l!. tlley had to be of tile
ttate Ol· 1nfnd !hat Ibey felt
una.!f«ted b1 publlclly.
•'And this, you bite to ad-
ml t,'' FtU:geral~ asserted,
"ha• to be a pretty peculiar
s:roup of people." ln addition,
I.he prosecutor asbd ror tbe
death penalty and ooly those
who would agree to give this
sentence were seated, thus a
"death-prooe jury."
IJFE OR DEAm
Fitzgerald explained that at
the time of the Manson trial
he and his firm, which has
tried 90 percent of the death
penalty cases on the state dur-
ing the past 30 years, didn't
believe the courts would
declare the death penalty un-
constitutional. "We were flab-
bergasted," he admitted.
Speaking to the jury whicb
he described as "looking like
they had a rope in their
pocket," he countered ~
11eculor V 1 n e en t Bugllosl's
final argwnent. .
'He noted !hat BucUosl D101><
tioned murder or rnurdertrs,
2M times; blood or bloody 46
limes; killed or killers, 49
times ; death 17 times, and
words like aavage, cold-blood-
ed and slaughter numerous
times, au to abstract or
dehumanize the defendl)n ts
thus making it "eas.ler to glv~
the death penalty."
Fitzgerald read other el'·
cerpts Including "U Jesus
Christ was a fellow juror row
would he vote?" and "Don't
equate yourseU with Pontius
Pilot. Don't wash your hands
of it."
GAS CILUIBER
His most graphic statement
to the jury wu a step-by-step
description of what death in
the gas chamber wou1d be like
for the Manson girl!:, leaving
Uttle out for the captive
"jury.t'
PtrhaJll u telling o n
llsU!Derl was bis llatemenl,
"The prooeeutor nover told
you how tt will belp tb<se
defeodanta, tl>eaa children to
kill them • • • OI' bow ii will
help 110Ciety ••• or their vic-
tims."
Jim Enrlgb~ an <>range
County deputy prosecutor wilh
13 years in tbe -ton of-
fice, noted that there weft IO
homicldes lut yell' in "nioe,
quiet Orange CounlJ."
He uplained that not every
first degree murder case was
a dealb penallJ cue. "'l1looe
Iba t end wilb lbe dealll
penalty were where someooe
slaughtered someooe else for
no reaSOll at all."
Now lbat lbe dealb peoa!IJ
has been abollabed. 1'lly DOI a
lire sentence without pnssibili..
ty of p!role? ''Too Dl8D1 ~
pie feel Ibis leaves Ille lmnale
Leo: Chance Offered
WEDNESDAY
MARCH 21
By SYDNEY OMARR
Leo has a talent f o r
delegating duUes. T h a t ,
perhaps, ii why many person-
nel dlrecton were born under
this IOdlacal 1Jgn.
AJIIES (,Mareh 21-April 19):
Whal beglna in a mild way
OOJ1}d end in a torrid manner.
. 'l1lll includes 1peclal sltua-
Uons and relatloniblp.1. Don't
start anything unless you ex·
peel lo finial" II. Friends and
money are ·not likely to mix .
' Keep the two areas separate.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201:
You could n.Elll down beneficial
agreement. Key ii to make
contact with o.oe in authority.
If you wait for others, in-
cluding legal representative,
you could wait a long time.
Make known your desires and
abilities.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
You may feel drawn in two
directions. You will know
~
FRANCIS-
\.ORR .I
FINE STATIONERY
Firit Stationary
••• EA STER Cor•-•lfta -l';ud ..
JIJJ l.tlAIT •51WAf 111-1111
CllllA Ill lll ·CH~lll!IJ 'tlllll
which way to go once you at·
tend to details. Build from
bottom to top -don't bypass
essenuals. Older individual
may be stuck with outmoded
concepts. Be true to your own
principles.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Break free from entanglement
whlcb really abould not be
your concern. Slglttartu ii
involved. Young person n:-
pres.ses attitude that may be
distasteful. Sense of humor
belp.1. Avoid giving up
something for n o t h l n g .
Includes money.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
What appears opposition may
merely be intelligent restraint.
Know it and respond ac-
cordingly. Aquarian figures
prominently. Contract. agree-
ment could be offered 'M'hich
represents chance for ex·
pansion.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221:
Barrier to communication Is
removed. Gemini p e r s on
ves an ally. Give ideas a chan-
proves an ally. Give idea! a
FOR
PRESCRIPTION
PRICES
Call ..•
642-4104
[ME:=-~opl
JtG f. 17tt. St. n T .. t111 A•.
Nnt to lolpllll Mkt. -
C:..hl Mno '42-4104
Mon. ll'ln,o Fri, ' 11 6-S.u. ' 1'9 z
Comt in end look us over during our
GRAN D OPENING.
• $50DO of your choii:e of fabric
FREE whh the pu rchasa of new
"Push Button" Pfaff 1111 or 1111,
during our GRAND OPENING.
• 1 pottwn of your choice FREE for
11 months whh either of theabove.
FABRICS
TH COAST PLAZA • CAROUSEL LEVEL
OPEii EVEHINCS t SUNDAYS
•
chance to develop and floor·
ish. Don't bop from one pro~
ect to another-eoncentrate el·
forts. Return ol vitality is in·
dicated.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 221:
'-1oney and home are featured.
Expenditures which he Ip
brighten domestic area should
not be disputed. Make peace
with family members.
Diplomacy now is your solid
ally. Know it and win rather
than force your way.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
You • can get back on solid
ground. Cycle is such that you
are able to uncover decep-
tions. Jntultive intellect is
h o n e d to rawr-sharpness.
MRS. HEMME MRS. STONE
Coast Ceremonie s
~=es~:~ =?:::et ~ V E h d :l~~:r~~~~~ .. :~vilke22; ows xc ange
lost cause turns out to be a
winning proposition. Lo o k
behind the scenes. Don't judge
by vmat appears obvious.
SomfJOl'le leefDl!I detennined to
pull wool over your eyes.
Thwart Ibis by doublHheck· Ing. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19): Frlen'd helps you com·
plete as.'1.gnment. Profit is the
result. You feel better because
you are relleved of burden.
Favor Is returned. Added
recogni tion is featured. More
persons become aware of your
abilities.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Opportunities multiply.
HEM ME-MOORE
Terry Blanche f\.1oore of
Reseda, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Coleman Moore
of-Qirona de! Mar, became
the bride of Victor L. Hemme
du.ring ceremonies conducted
by the Rev. J.R. Stevens in
the Church of the Living
Word.
Maid of honor was Mary
Wyatt , and bridesmaids were
Marcia Soprou, We n d y
Wasner , Brend Hogatt and
Suzie Lohbeck.
Harmon , Mrs. Robert Perry,
Andrea statz, Jan Carstensen
and Laurie Bayless.
Best man waS Bob Atwell,
and ushers were To m
McLaughlin, Tom Fish, &I
Steen, Don Schmuck and
Marshall Harvey. ,
The newlyweds, who will
reside In Costa Mesa, are
graduates or Corona de1 Mar
High School.
OONNELLY-
CALANDRA
Creative ab I 11 ties are The bridegroom, son of f\.1r.
highlighted. Accent is on am-and Mrs. Kenneth Hemme of
bltlon, standing in community,
reward for professional ef-
forts. Leo is in picture. Get
started on project which
enhances prestige.
PISCES (Feb. 1g.Mar<:h 20):
Look ~yond the immediate -
consider the potential. One
who is a natural teacher ex-
presses willingness to share
knowledge. Be receptive. Leo
and Aquarius are featured.
Follow through· on hunch.
Your extrasensory perception
Is ai work.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you have flne
sense of humor, have a
tendency to gain weight easily,
love to travel, are e1pressive
and draw to you many persons
born under Sagittarius.
Bes t Buy
Not Cheap
The cheapest isn't always
the best buy.
This Is especially true in
plumbing fixtures, faucets,
shower heads, piping, valves
and drains, says the National
Association of PI um bing -
Heatlng-Cooling Conlractors.
The cheapest fixtures
usually are undersized and
lose their luster in short order.
And, says the association,
quality products may last up
to 15 years or more but the ln·
expensive ones may break
down within a year.
LOSE WEIGHT
THIS WEEK
Odfintll'0tan help you btcom• the lr1nt
1tlm i>«san yoo w1nt to bt. Odtlnt• b
I tiny !Ible! lrld t11lly IWllJowld. Con•
111ns no d1ntttou1 dfVll. No •Wvlllf.
No IPK'91 1urcl&t. Cit rid of ....
111 1nd lvt tonpr. Odflnu h11 bttn
111td 1uccN1ll1l1Y by ttlou1lfllf1 all over
Ille country for 14 y11r1. Odrlnex Plan
eo,1.s $3.25 ind the l1r1ttc0nomy1tu
4S.25. You .1111111 "9f 1.11ly ftt llf )'OllJ
money wm bi relundtd by rour druqlst.
Ho q111ftlqtlt laktd; Aete•I no 111~
a ti Mn. S6fd ·with lhla fUMlllltt ~
THRIFTY OOC< A"1•
[11\C OU""T ·, "'IH <,
Whittier, asked Don Swanson
to be his best man , and ushers
were Frederick and William
Moore, Eric )\ubel, Lou
Brewer, David Stagno and
Charlie Dole .
STONE-BROWN
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church, Newport Beach was
the setting for the nuptial
ceremonies linking S u s a n
Brown and Jerome Stone.
The Rev. Dr. Charles
Dierenfield perfonned t h e
rites for the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald A. Brown
and the sone or Mr. and Mrs.
William Stone, all of Newport
Beach.
Bridal attendants were Cin-
dy Michaels, Mrs. Dennis
WONDERFUL
S i g ht¥L ight'
THERE'S NOTHING LIKE HI
If you read long into the night •••
or , •• Sew, even "black on black"
here's the lamp
No Gt.. .•• No Squint.
Up to 6 tlrMI ti• lltht
of ~ional ....
F~ ~dfutUblt •. ,
Awlllblt In chokt
of dlc:ot•tut ootm
_1 ... -gJowltw--
,,':
e MASTll CH.Ual
-'
1865 HARBOR B
COSTA MESA 548-5131
OPD DAfLT t,. l tJI
...... , ' .. t
CLOllD lllllPAY
e 1AldAMDICAU
NO FREEDOM
"Yes, but I douht U he'll
.... be • et ,_,. 'Ibo at·
tonlel' DOltd that Ille mean
time sened is I dmm :ytan,
but Ibis doea not fipre lo Ille ,.an semd by those wllo are
neM' rek ~ w ,... beat
about thole wba • r e
prematurely re\?fwd D 0 t
those wllo .... Ille entire
seal<llce.
EQrigbt U!ll!rled Ibid for
-crimes. "the ulllmate
deterrent -be lbett." Is !be death pmally a deU!r-
real !
l!mlght aald. "Yw <anl
pvve it CD a CllHcMal bail.
Bui I know tbat wbm Ille
dealll penallJ is Ii'"'! !be ...
cidence cl Dlllnl<n -ID down. And alter Ille peoallJ
"\ '
... •"·"-Ille ralo -up."
He added, •CM job baa
-lkle to It. We .,. Ille
•lcllm& We bave lo go.,. Ille
dead body." And lllere are
-things -llU tbe -cl a child's voice al Ille other
""' " Ille phone, tbe child of
Ille -victim.
JUVENILES
Another lawyer who deleruls
juveniles in Los Angeles Court
proceedings offered BDOther
facet -lbe banblre juvenile.
"I contend that Ille reason
we have Ille criminal activity
we do ii bect1• of the acrew-
ed up Juvenile COUrl system.
It !-. cslme rather lban
curbing it."
The attorney asserted that 9
out of 10 juveniles arrested in
I.A. are releaaed before they
IOI to court. Of tbe to percent
wllo have petitions filed only 5
out of Ille 10 will make II to
odjudl<atlon. ()ii cl lllil Dve,
cmo will 10 to cautonila Ywth
AutharilJ, Gbe lo f Im II y -u.c «' a rooter home
and lbree lo probation cami>·
ThiJ is I f .... , be uaerted,
stallnl 1169 figu,...: of 1,400
toter!ng the camp program
300 eecaped, 200 were aeot
back to juvenile hall and only
half completed the program.
"Kids lmow U tbey commi t
a crime. They have a 50-50
chance of getllng caught, 1 56-
50 chance ct getting ell on
porole, • -chance ct beating Ille rap In court, and a
56-50 chance of going lo camp
where he'll have it better than
he had ii at home."
So, he asks, "Does the
punllhment fit lbe crime?"
"You can't change 16 years
or living with four months in a
probation camp? We have to
find a new way. C:wles
Manson may have been one ol
tbese kids. II
Swinging Hobby Brings
Some Swell Conclusions
By EllllA -.iECK
The coach cl I ladios' 1100COr
team in -.... mrpriaed recently when si:J: memhtn of
tbe team tumod up pregnant.
Speculation ran the gamut
from fresh air c a u 1 e s
pregnancy lo. recall ol 17,000
bottles cl Gatorade.
A pbeMnenm like ttlis is DO
surprise to me whatsoever. I
suspect it was a case of a
group of ........ sitting around
one night sayiDg, "We've got
to get out of Ille bouse and gel
active again. Why don't we all
join a aoocer team!''
I could have predicted that
fi~e months late!-, the entire
team would be In maternilJ
clothes. l'n!gnancy llalb Ille
defiant women who 1oe1 on a
diet. ~ a aew bolblng lllit.
plam a """"1 boneymooo or
gets a thin, hnHeater sports
car foe her birtbday.
I ba?e a frimil willl liI
unplanned cblldnn. Eldl ODO
ts aplaloed tbn>ugll aome
flagrant display " dismpoct
for Ille god of fertill1Y. -
Rooald: She let ber Blue
Q'Oss lapae.
Rita: In a fit of defiance,
she burnt her maternity
cll>dles.
Leroy: Publicly made fun or
AT
WIT'S
END
wilb pregnancy and didn't pro-
tect beraell by throwing aalt
over ber left shoulder.
Lucy: Got her old job back .
Billy: Became president of
Planoed Pamitbood.
Howard : Threw her fertility
doll oo top of a Goodwill bag.
A few years ago, I deckled
to take golf lessons at the Y.
"Had another one who said
every tlme she signed up for a
class she turned up with child.
So when she signed up for golf
she'd atand in the hallway
every class day and say out
loud, ''I'm going to the
grocery now. I'll be home in a
few hours.' "
"Did it work?"
''She delivered two weeks
ago."
"What do you make of
that?"
"It's not nice to fool Mother
Nature," he shrugged.
It was the Swedish soccer ------------
team all over again. Halfway
through the Season, r i v e
couldn't take salt tablets for
the heat; four couldn't fit
under their steering wheels to
get to the range, and three
couJdn't see their feet, let
let alone the tee up ball.
1 said to the imtructor, "Is
it always like this?"
He nodded . "Sometimes it's
wc:ne. I bad a woman once
who had tried for eight years
to have a baby .. She signed up
f<R' golf and before the course
was over, we had to Jet her
play through.
CUllENT
f.t.SHIONS
AT
DISCOUNT PllCU
ltlSS .w.111n11 at I~
m+nvr• H'lllft tafl• M-.
•nd Nnport Inell
O.lly 10-4 l'rldloy tll t l'M,.
t6M111
a 4G--year-old who came down/r::::--:::===::;::=========:---, Good Scouts SI Golden Needle's
Nearly 60,000 men serve Girl 111111 S ~{ o/ tJe 1fJed I
Scouting In various capacitiesf ~':=:1=7--'-----:....------~F::.
-as cxmultants, as members Th b t f of Girl Soout national, regional e eau Y 0 .
and local boants, and even as u Ii troop leaders. t eve een
Clteese Of Tlte ·week
CITATION
WHEEL SWISS •
• • •
ltegular
'I" U.. : $1'' • . 'Lb.'
OtlW -Mlrdl lt_ tfuv MltCll 21 ........ _ ...... _ ., .................... e11-..--.. .... .. ......... , ..... ~ .............. -1 ..................... ..
• I ., .... _....., ......... na. ......................... ...._.
lfJ 1 1•1 • .,..._ ..... ,,, ..................... bPJI
•
' I
AMBLER
TUMBLEWEEDS
I VOH"I' l(NoW Wit( I 1'111' IJll'
Wl1H V00. YA~
Cl.Oii! "1ilR llRAIN \\OW.P
·FIT IN A 6NA'B tWU!
MUTI AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
NANCY
•
AUNT FRITZ~
I FINALLY
FINISHED THE
SWEATER
rvE BEEN
HOW DID rr
TURN OUT?
j -KNITTING
FOR RELEA SE TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1973
TODAY'S CRDSSIDRD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Hand tool
5 Amusements
10 Radio artist&'
union: Abbr~
14 Fiber r;ource
15 TalkpubliclV
16 Wild animal's
home
17 One eating
out: 2words
19 Careen
20 Blblical
mountain
21 Asian nation:
Abbr.
22 Bothers
2J Religi9us
groups
25 Exclamation
26 All lined up
30 Time ~riod
' • 31 Assemble
'"""" 34 Nostrils
36 Man'• ll8m9
38 Pano! .. to be~
39 Repu\ed
Washington
phrase: 5 wom ~ <C2 Number
I 43 Not napping f 44 SR)all spot
~ 45 Horne of the
Aeslr
47 Tree
48 Pale
J
50 Compass ,,.,..,
51 Quadrupeds ·
53 Swimmers'
platfonn
56 Newfound-
land area: .... _
56 Most
dreadful
61 Land unit
62 Musical
direction
84 Sonny and
66 Inscribed
stone slab
66 Author
unknown:
1 Abbr.
67 Sharp
68 .k:lbs
69 Tums around . """'
OOWN
1 Biblical wcrd
of reproach
2 Winglike •
3 FumltUre
piece
4 look intentfy
5 Facial
adornment
6 M&n'S
nickname
7 Prelude to
divorce:2 -·· 8 Colian
Yesterday's Puule Solved:
9 Request
to go
10 WW II group
11 Fanciful
stories:Z
words
12 Chaoc:e
13 B&chelorof
18 DanCestep
24 Greek ialand
25 Casts
26 Feminine
nome
1;1 Contests'
28 -----
State
29 Old Engf"l!lh
runic letter
31 Singef-
Tonne
J2 Author-~al
33 Smelltng
'""""" 35 Gin
37 Nickel, ~g.
40 Not new
41 Brazilian ttee ..a Nautical
direction
48 Ught anchors
51 FOfTJlet
British cokiny
52 1ide
63 OesUuction: o ...
64 Pein
55 Endur9
57 Genuine
68 Heating
appa111tut
59 HlghWay jlgn
60 Cargo unlta .., ,,_,,
relative
by DMCJ• Wildey
by Tom K. Ryan
6!0~! I 111Wf KNOW GNAl5 HASmtl'~
'
DOOLEY'S WORLD '
SALLY BANANAS
K llJIVI(
11111111(
i!lll,I(
"!HIN
...... ' •
TulNK
1l·ll/IJK
lHINK
THINK
THll-lK
TllHday, March 20, 1'~73 OAJLY PILOT J§
,,_,., ... 1 l>
by Gus Arriola by Al Smith ....-----~"""------------.
·•·
.1 t<'A$
ON!-V 60J.JNA
St/VS 11M
MOUTJ/· 70-M00111 fi!l:SVSCITA~
'"flOJJf •
_o
·~~ ,,_ __ .... ________ ~
MOON MULLINS
by Dale Hale
by Emie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS
I "0-llNK
SUGHT
PEANUTS
1 MADE A
MISTAKE;
JUDGE PARl(ER llJl'•l.mijl_ lllil_ila ___ l'il'l.L·e!TIEo UP FOR
1.fT M.E KNOW WHEN YOU'LL. A COUPl.E OF DAYS,
HAVE A, FR.EE EVENING, SAM! AeaEY ! MAYeE 60Mf
l'D UkE ,TO HAVE THE .JUDGoE PAY Ne,)l.T WEEK?
AHO KATHERIHE.t UP
FOR DINHf_fl!
MISS PEACH
.. J~HLi
' StHOOL
I £A.\1Arit
J ~Otl~1'f
:::i .
W!'"11
C~'!"ING'
OIO: PIJ,Y,
MISS !'fAaM ~
' '
DICK TRACY .
•
·We'VE GOT A llAPINI' MAN,
A L&API~ LADY, AN Ou:>
C.MAIUGTall,ANPAN lNtiN!lf, ,--.......,..-
·=~-, __ .__
by Harold ~· Doux
SAM'S ACTING A LITTLE
STRANGE! FOR THE flRST
tlME, HE'S 6MH6 ME NO
EXPL-"'ATION "5 TO WHY
HE'LL &E TIED UPI
by Chester Gould
rrrr
;\\
I
I
by Ferd Johnson
&VEN MOJ>E 'So ~'""I
WMEN we "ET IT
Ffl/\MEC>.
by Roger Bohn
"Ola dear, whoever tlley want to oxpiala all Ille fine polllta
of .....W.1 belon Ibey tell )'Otl Ille price, tllat ,,,_
you can't afford t&."
DENNIS THE MENACE
~-
•
_J
I I_
"
,
ur1T..,....
,
Basehall~s Biggest Tribute:
, . '
Clemente in Hall of Fame
' I~· PETERSBIJRG, Fla. W'l -
l!'ueb111'1 hllbell tribute, the 11111 ct
Flme, WU a cerialnty for' Robef1o
Clemenleeven as he was •WI IWlnllnc a
magic barlor the Plltsborglt Pirates.
U wu Mly a matter of time.
But, llnce Ibo ftashy Puerto Rican's
dealjt New Year{• Eve in the crash o( I ""'"'>' IUgbt, sttoog attempta have ~'
in molloo to ~the Hall of FlllDO proo. -ess. ' .
Altltougb rule1 opeclly that a retiring
player must wait five years for in-
ductloo. Clemente wu tabbed today
lollo""1r a ai>eclal ·election by the
Baseball Writers Association.
An unprecedented mail ballot was used
lo decide whether Clemente should
receive expms entry into the baseball
shrine. '--,, _
1be Vote was 393. Jn favor to 29
agaIIist, with two absentiOns.
Most of the negative votes were ob-
jec~ons to maldql an excepUon in the
normal voting procedure.
/ROBERTO Cl.EMENTE
UJMS he was a NL all-olar and U tlmts
he wm the Golden Glove u Ibo bell
deleoilve right Helder In the le--
FJgum, lifeless statlsllcs, told only a
portfon or the Roberto Clemente story.
He was a warm man, especially with the
youth of his natkn, and was ldolb:ed
from ·the beaches of San Juaa to the ·~ti "' Pitlsburgh. Donlllonli lor a Clemente _....ia1
!Oiled In alter hlJ death. The Pirate duh
gave f)Oll,000 \lone. A youth oporta
conler will he OOll!tructed In Putrto Rico
and will bear hi• name.
. Roberto was playing llO!tball In a San
Juan league whM Pedro Zarllla, .....,.
ol the Santuree team, was lipped off to
lake a look at the talented youngster.
Zarilla liked him inunedlately and
signed Clemente to a winter baseball
contract. Roberto pockeled a l400 bonus
and looked forward to a $40-a~montb
salary. 1
CARL WALLENDA TAKES A 600-FOOT WALK ABOVE PHILADELPHIA'S VET STADIUM IN EXHIBITION.
Fonner New York Yankees first
baseman Lou Gehrig was honored quick·
ly alter hla disease-ridden body collapsed
in 1939, but that came on a voice vote of
the baseball writers.
Branch Rickey, then operating the '
Brooklyn Dodgers, got word of C1ernente
and forked out·fJ0,000 to sign Roberto.
The 19-year-old prospect was shh>oed to
Montreal, the DodgerS' top minoi league
team.
Mays Eyes
Debatable
'73 Season
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -
Willie Mays is a star-studded , $165,000
question of the New York Mets, but the
41-year-old "Say Hey Kid" insists he
alone will provide the answer.
"If I decide to quit, It will be my
decision, and I'll make it here," Mays
said Monday1 "ll I decide to open the
season, I intend to flnish It."
The veteran outfielder, who has ·554
lifetime home runs, is being handled like
a piece of cbfua at the Mets' training
camp here. He largely is permitted to set
his own pace. His communication with
manager Yoi!;i Berra is limited.
"l want to use him in games back·lo-
back." Yogi said. "That should give me
an idea of bow much he can take."
: May1 gives the impression that he is
anxiow: to play, but be is reJuctant to
force his opinion on Berra. The same was
the case when he was playing in San
Francisco. He refuses to press the issue.
Meanwhile, Berra must decide how
much he should use Mays in center field
and how much of a chance he should give
youngsters Rich Chiles and Dave
Schenck.
"l don't want to drag on and em-
barrass myself or the club/' Mays said.
"l ain't gonna be able to tell in one or
two days . I have to play three or four
games a week to find out how lT!UCh I
can take. I have to know how the knee
L!."
Willie wore a brace on his right knee
when he reported to camp, but recently
he has been working without the brace
and seems non the worse for the wear.
He undergoes a massage and applies hot
linament before each game.
"We try to increase the circulation
above and below the knee," said the
Met.I' trainer, Tom McKenna . Mays uses
!he leather and plastic brace only during
practice, saying it restricts him in
games.
Willie insists he will make his decision
before the start of the season.
HQne thing I don't want)to do ls mess
up the ball club," be said. "Suppose I go
back open up the season and get hurt.
' I f " They haven't made a dea or anyone.
Lakers Battle
Atlanta Tonight
ATLANTA (AP) -Only two teams.
Bostoo and Atlanta, hold seaJOn edges
over the Los Angeles La.ken and the
defending National Basketball Assoola·
lion titlists have a chance to square.
things with the latter team tonight.
The Lakcrs, 56-20, take on tbe Hawks
in a game with Jtttle significance insofar
Ota Tl' To11J91't
Cha1u1el 5.at 6
---~ as• lhe stnndings are cimcemed. The
• Lake rs have won lbe Pacific DlvisJoo ti·
tie and lhc Hawks have clinched second
in 'the Central Division.
Atlanta has a slim chance of tying for
the Central lead if the Hawks wln the
rest of their games. That would make
them 4.9-33. Then, 1f Baltimote lost lbe
rMt of its ga,mes. the Bullet.I wou.Jd be
411-13, loo.
The Laken are al Kansas to play
the KlngJ Ql1 Wednesday nfchl, lhen
mbVe back-home for a Friday night
game agalnsl the Buffalo Bravea.
Happy Halnum II hopefu' •nil so are
Ibo Loo Angolo, IAJten, but the defending
Nallonal S..kelboll ~lation cbamp-
l"'5 Jrel't coundnc <In lhe injured f0<-
ward tor lhe playol/J, which start al lhe
ead of !his mmlb.
'•Happy'• 1tlll und<rpg rchabilila-
llon and bu not -~ed oul wllh the
tam," Jell Tomk1a, a Lat.en official,
aid Mooday. "His lltalUI ii doubtful,
questkr\able ...
-\llNid ............. 'tl..-UICIY ll
-~He ... rrored 1111men1 damag• IJec, 12 tn a plllO al Detroit
• -f
RUTGERS' PHIL SELLERS FINDS GOPHERS EVERYWHERE.
Wild Shot for "'Dama
Minnesota Topples Rutgers, 68-59
Clemente was a native of Carolina,
Puerto Rico, and starred for 18 ...,...
as Pittsburgh's rocket-armed rlght
fielder. His !lnal hit was his 3,00IJth, plac-.
lng him aeveolh In the all-time Natlollal
League ranking.
He woo fwr halting championships. in
1961 with a .351 average, in 1964 with
.339, In 1965 with .329 and in 1967 with
.357.
Obvious love for this glJ'ted athlete ooz.
ed from players, baseball executives and
fans after he died while on a
humanitarian mi!sion to aid earthquake
victims in Managua, Nicaragua.
On the night of Dec. 31, a piston-driven
airliner crashed into the crystal Carib-
bean waters and a Jengthy search turned
up no trace of the Pirates great.
Managerial
Dream Ends
For Ex-Dodger
MJAMI (AP) -Maury W i 11 s ,
baseball's legendary speedster, didn't
have the patience to withstand major
league procrastination in naming a black
manager.
"As far as l'm concerned, the dream
of managing is out for me," says the
retired base-stealing king. "Television is
my game now. I'm delighted about it."
"nle 40-year-old Wills signed a lucrative
contract with NBC TV as a lJaseball
analyst, replacing former Los Angeles
Dodgen teammate Sandy Koufax.
"l could've managed in the Dodgers'
minor league organization," Wills said.
"I could've waited there, just hoping for
the chance of managing in the majors,
but that didn't appeal to me."
Wills relaxed in the spongy chair of a
Miami hotel tavern. He was touring
Florida spring training camps 8s the in-
terviewer rather than the interviflwte.
"I spent 22 devoted seasons in
baseball," said the former shortstop: "To
be honest, this job with NBC is exactly
what I wanted. It was just that the talk
of managing always oversbadGwed it in
the press." ·
Wills relished the television job so
much, in fact, lhat he declined a $300,000,
two-year deal to play baseball for the
NEW YORK (AP) -"There wasn't Fairfield, winners of first-round games Tokyo Flyers.
II • "d GI Sunday. Maury will team with Jim Sirnpsm on any time to ca a time out, ' sa1 erm h ku Sa"•-'••• d · the The quarter-finals begin tonight with ac P games every ..... '""'J' unng
Garrett. North Carolina meeting Massachusetts baseball season while Tony Kubek, a
So Garrett instead took a desperation and Notre Dame against Louisville , all former Yankee shortstop, announces on
shot -and it turned out to be the best first round winners over the weekend. the first team with Curt Gowdy.
thing that Alabama's Crimson Tide could h I "I'll call 'em like I see 'em," Wills Rutgers gave t e muscu ar loth·ranked
do. Gophers a battle for the first IO minutes, said. ''With television being a visual
Garrett's 20-foot shot with one second but finally fell before Minnesota's medium, the fam can see what's going
left in the game prpvided Alabama with overwhelming rebounding strength. on, SO I can't lie about it. If a player
a drama tic 87-86 basketball victory over Trailing 18-17, the Gophers s~ into a goofs, I'll say so."
Manhattan Monday night In the National 29-18 lead on th.ei r J.2..point tear as Niz: Wills doesn't shy from cootroversial
Invitation Tournament . scored six of the points and made ·one stuff, such as pampered slugger Dick
"That's quite far out of my range," steal. Allen of the Chicago White Sox, the
said the Alabama forw ard. "t·m usually The Gophers, with four men in the $225,000 player who is allowed to play by
okay within 15 feet of the basket. .But I slarting lineup at 6-foot-6 and over, had a his own rules.
followed the shot on the way down and it 3l-22 halftime lead and improved on that "My bat's off to the other 24 White Sox
looked like it had a pretty good chance of at '-the start of the second half behind players/' he said. "If these fellows can
going in.,. Clyde Turner. They built their lead to as live With Allen's ~s, then. manager
The ball dropped through the bas ket many ~ 19 points at one stage . Chuck Tanner has no womes aboUt
without touching the rim as the buzzer John Somogyi, who scored 25 point.a dissension."
went off and deflated a highly partisan (lveraJI·for game honors, kept the Scarlet Wills favors special tr.eatment for
crowd of 17,319 at Madison Square Kniihfs wiUlin shooting dist8nce of Mi~ apeclal playen.
Garden. · nisota in the first half when he hit five o "I disagree with managen who at-
That field goal sen t Alabama ~nto his first six shots. tempt to treat all 25 players allke," be
Thursday's quarter.finals against Min-Turner led the balanced Minnesota at· sald. 11All 25 don't treat you alike as t
nesota, which. earlier defeated Rutgers tack with 18 points as the Gophers manager. I'd give breaks and added
68-59. The other quarter.final pairing boosted their season record to 21-4. privtleges~to men ·wbo busted their tails
Thursday matches Virginia Tech against 'Rutgers fi.n.lsbed at 1~11. tor me ·oa the fiGld."
•·we lost him-a,nd we needed him so
bad,'' said Manny Sangulllen, a team-
mate . of Roberto's at Plttsbargb. "He
was the leader. When he went on the"
field, It was Ike someone pushing you.
You felt like going out there to win.
"We feel like he's sllil in right field,"
S&nguillen said recently at the Pirates
camp in Bradenton, Fla. "We ·feel like
he's going to come in, with men On base,
and get a hit."
Pittsburgh's players are wearing a
small, black swatch on their uniform
arms thls season in tribute to the late
Clement e.
Clemente played in 2,433 games, 10th
al1lOll{" ,all-time National Leaguers. He
ranked seventh in at-bats wilh .9,454 and
eighth in total bases with 4,492:
Thirteen times he hit over· .300, 12
Plltsburih scout Clyde Sukeforth wu
on a ~ mission to check out Mon·
treal pitcher Joe Black, wbo later
became a standout reliever for Brookijrn.
But Sukeforth was more impressed' by
the natural ahlllties of Clemente. I
The Pirates sto&e Clemente fer $4,000 in
the next player draft and a legend was
about to take shape at old Forbes Field
in Pittsburgh.
When Clemente ended tile 1972 season,
his 18-year batting avarage of .317"for the
Pirates· was the highest among active
players. He had 240 home runs and 1,D
runs batted in.
He hi1 .320 last summer and played
flawlessly in the outfield, handling 204
chances without an error. His throwtng
ann, as always, was one of the most
respected in the sport's history.
Won't Jump to Pros
Wooden Says Walton
Will. Play Senior Year
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bill Walton
was last reported undecided but UCLA
coach John Wooden said Mon~y his AU-
American jwUor center at thls lime plans
to return for bis senior year next fall in-
stead of turning professional .
"All indications are that Bill plans on
being back in school," Wooden told the
final 1972-73 meeting af the Southern
California Basketball Writers Associa·
lion. "That's what various friends of Bill
have said and what I've got from Bill
bimseU."
However, Wooden added: "Also, l
know that he's at an age where he could
change his mind. There will he no at-
tempt by anyone at UCLA to coerce him.
"Bill is a most unusual man. It's no
put-On that at Ibis moment he's less in-
teres\ed in material things than almost
anybody in this room," Wooden told the
writers.
Wooden indicated that he wished the
pro leagues would not try to lnfluence the
6-foot-11, 20..year-old Walton by waving
huge amounta of money in bis face and
drafting him as· a hardship case before
his college class graduates.
Whether Walton, from a middle class
family in La Mesa, would even qualify
as a hardship case isn't the question,
Wooden said.
"It's difficult, impossible, to validly ad-
minister hardship cases,'' he said, "when
all they have to do is sign a form letter"
·for ,the National Basketball Association.
"And the American Basketball Associa-
tloo doesn't have anything restrictive, I
understand."
Wooden'& Bruins, 23-0, top-ranked in
.. countey and working on a record 73-
game winning streak, leave Friday
morning in quest of their seventh con·
secullve NCAA cbampiooshlp. They play
Indiana in a semifinal game Saturday in
St. Loula.
Wooden lald he had not yet atudied a
recent scouting report on the Hoosiers
"but I know Bobby Knlght. Tba1 was
tremendous foresight -we. had to have
him out here for our coaching clinic."
Wooden said Knight's teams "play
strong. aggressive man-to-man defense.
They do not !One too much and Ibey play
ball control offense. He likes to fast
break when lhe opportunity preoenta
IL9elf."
The way to play UCIA "Is to came
down and-put the baU In the basket,"
Wooden said, thinking back to a 110-83
loss at Illinois that opened the Bruins'
national championship season of 196US. '
"That's not lhe way for Bobby Knight
to play us," Wooden said, "because
that's not his type or game.>)
lt was noted that none of the last three
losses UCLA has suffered involved a ·
stall. "Notre Dame, Southern Cal and
Houston all played their normal game,"
Wooden said.
Other teams "have come close 'With the
stall,'' Wooden noted, "but, I don't mind a
team coming close."
Walton Heads
All-America
Hoop Selection
NEW YORK (AP) -UCLA's BUI Wal-
ton, the "Big Red Machine" of college
bn!kethall, and another Gal~ornla golden
hoy -Ed RaUelf of Cal State (Long
Beach) -were named to The AMoclated
Pres.. 1973 All-Amerlca team Mooday.
The standout UCLA center and the Cal
State (Loog Beach) guard, Ibo only ~
pealen from 1972, were joined In Ibo
select circle by three Eastern lltara -
forward David 'lbornpoon o1 North Claro-
lina State: guard' Ernie DiGregorlo of
Providence and center Kermit Washing-
ton ol American University.
Despite bad kneel, Walton was a nm-
away choice for first team All·Amerfca
picked by the naUoo's sporta wri1en and
broadcasten.
The S-!ool-11 jwlioi:, a bony redhead,
dominated Just about every game lhl1
seaoon lor lhe top.ranked. and unbeaten
Bruins. Walton'• average o( about 20
point.\ and 17 rebounds a game were only
part ol his contrlbuUon to his lel\m. m.. true wortli was measured In lhot·
blocking, lnllmldaUon and as trtager man
In UCLA's pollsbed last·break.
Wooden ·Lauds La Habra SpiJer.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The "skeleton
on a tln roof" was ont of the key fac&ors
for UCLA's unbeaten basketball team
Salurda)I wben lhe Bruins won lite NCAA
Weot R<gional title Ind !heir 73rd game
in a row. ·
Dave r.feyers, a graduate of La
Habra'• Sonora Righ, l.s averaging }UBI
five polnb and three rebounds per game
for coach John Woodal but the head·
master ol the Bruins ID)'S Meyero has
made "steadttr pt"Ogtea than 1ny player rvt....er hl!d. I've llad -• COltfe'. atonr
guickcr, in spurts. but thiJ !YOUn(lter 11
Ju t aclllng botler and bet!":, all the
Ume.''
Meyers, altknamed ••Splt1tr," came oU
lhe Bruins bench In the flrit ball Satur· day to , play •. a smothering deleoae
against lfnl..rstty of San Francllco•1
nne g111rd, Phil Smith. Smith hit Just one
bnskel with Meyers all <!'tr blm.
The sophomore, wh> stand> S-7, had
taken• nasly "lall t"" days earlier, In a
victory """' Arlmnl State, and Wooden
sald Monday:
"This youn~ Is amalln&. He'• a
tougb IO<l.11e iloclD\ look toup bui be
is. He plays bani and I don' moan
rough, Just hard. Now, whet be toot that
fall he hurt bl& hip, his shoulder and bis
wrl.rt all at the woe time. And he just
fell all OYOr, like a skeltlon on a tlD n>ol.
11He'1 pngly but tough. We've got
IOme ,Uy ... who get a Utile paln and
they want to gel Into the hosji!tal but
Dove 4-'t mlrtd a little pain.
"He'• one ol our real Jofs, "1tbout a
doubt. He'1 a WOllderful ywnplet'. 116'1
got 11 brotben and slsten and llt.tt
mtans you've gol to he tough and have
long ~ll'tnl·
"'He'a rerrwkabfe. worka"!ianrand"he'•
golna lo he a fine basketball player.
Effll tbou&h fferJI PkJer 111ret 14 mrt, I ,
lhlnlc he's been happy with his !Ole oom-
111& oll the bench. He'1 reody to coo-
trfbute when be'• Clfied upon/'
Meyers loou Wl<r lbao he la, ••
1latlnt mocb Gary OmnJnabam ald,
''because bi's all 1.,1 and 11m11. I tltlnk
I beolll that be•1 got Ibo 1rm spen OI. a
l1Wl S-11. Tbat doean'~ me."
Woodt• -the lad sportnaly. "'"" lhouch lll'a .... action In It of the
ljrulnl' :II pmes this -· Bui ti. forinrd nnly 2loya fbr more than 20
minutes. ID fact, last Saturday he saw
hll longest stint o! the ye1r -•bout SZ -·
.I i
•
·,
'1
Sports
Oipped
Short
. •
LEASE· GIAND PllX
I
'
Kt;:ONDIKE ICE ·
ARENA'
i
• PU8L ICSKATING • ICE HOCKEY
• FIGURE SKATING • SPEED' SKATING
• PRIVATE & GflOUP INSTA.UCTIO.NS
•..$KATES-SALLES-RENTALS-RE.PAIRS
SPECIAL RATES TO GROUPS
• RESTAURANT
I
NOW
'OPEN
~~
••s••VATIONS •oi CLASS.IS NOW ....... T•KIN
Ol'EN 7 DAV~ A \YEEll.UfO~IQ.AXJl
666 PAULARIND AVE. CO~T· MESA • NEAR SOUTH COAST PLAZA • l'HOl<E (7141 im.mo .. ...
•
'
TUfldli, Mm• 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT Jf
'MV' . s Distance Act
Steals Track -Show
-
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1-MHI -I. WU-{Fl 2. McC-'f
(E) l, H1111HIN1 II!!) Tlmt: f :SS. ..
no HH -,, Ltftll~ I ~1 1. TrClll.U (!")
l. ll:tll•l'ld IFJ Time: !S.3.
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ff) l. T•boM (l"J Tl!M: If,,, ,
•.O ltt'l11y -I. Elllton Tl,,,.: '5"~ .. " Mil• 1t.i..,. -1. Fountilln Y•llf1 Tlme: l ::JO.t ,
HJ -I. McP,,.,_ {E) 2. Hiii CF) l . TrOJ1tll !El .._lgllt:,ff.
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PV-\, ltobutll ('Fl 2. H11mmond fa) 3. l~111 (F) HllOl:!I: 12-6.
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220 -I, CCM!l)ll' IFJ J. Allin (El l. Corntll IE) Tl("': 25.6.
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3. HarnHton (El Tll'l\I: •:,..t. l-MUI -1. Jonts (E) 2. SlromDlft
!Fl 3. Gr1ene (El Timi: 10:5'.0. 120 HH -I. ll:ou (Fl 1. Frl,llh (El 3.
Putn•m (El Tlmt: 11.'-
190 LH -I. IWIMI' CE) 1. 1Cr111111r (F) l. Jonff (El TllM: 22.4.
...0 ll:tl•V -I. Fount11ln Ytlllly Time: ~1.3. MU• ll:l'l•V -J, Fount1ln V•flW Tlmt: l 147,0.
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•nd Colt !El Hlltht: M.
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1320 ~ 1. llUl\I {E) 2. Abrilnlt (EJ S, F~~Hk .!!'1. ~=·~~=~e'i 2. Allin (Fl
:S. Sporoaky (El Tlmt: t .7. UCL LH -I, Molil11 (E) 2. LllHr (El
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HJ -I. Glbion (F) 2. SChntblln 1·· 3, Hf1J PoWtll, Moor1, C1mlnlH ~) Htlgl'll: M i
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SP -I. Tlll'HTlll'Milft {E) 2. T•V40I' {F) 3, P•11tnl·IEJ Dllll11C1: M:it Oltcua '-I. Horbler CEI t. Hott..n.,. {Fl 3. Timmerman IE) Ohl111e1: 112· '"·
UCI Tennis
...... ,.~nJ(~~ d -
.. ::·.~OJ.I 11ce
\\8-utC . .
•
There's fresh money in town-et Commercial
Credit's new personal. loan office.
We speciallze ln helping people overcome thelt
financial problems with personal loans. ,
We're ~uipp&d to counsel eacl'I of our customers
on financial matters, and._ help them decide on the
loan that b;est ffts their needs. Like a 2nd mortgage
loan. Or home impcovement loan. Or loans to COD-
solldate bills.
'We helped more thanl340,000 people with over
"130,000,0dO 't~rough our more t~ 500 offices last year,
Wa'll be glad to help you, too. ' I QcommercialCredlt
-_,., '11111'• """t ...... -for.
' c:-n.rc1111 Credit'• new penonal loan offtce.
\
I'
'
l.i2 !-~:.===·-=""' _ _,..,8'10 EMt 17th Strcct'.-!,•._fllrulJ~Mi:§'.!9.Q. ____ __, __ ,.._I
•
Clre4ll Ut.1...,..tta. AftSllble to BH,tW.. hmlwtr11,t GffQ _...
•~.i Ored.IUM l.n",._t.4
•
Start Your
Engines!
WITH DEKE HOULGATE
IM RldW Im' W..U. kl COIT)' on a 1<q dllculllon obou! II, but he can1 -i lb pt...,... over Ill kq lall g<Ulng
llilRIV<nlde ~ llaoewly, the,_ div<n!lled motor
""*'I t.dlky Ill the ~. lined up wilb tile Amerlcon M<>Cor-
eyde Ami.
~ lll<r ho -ov..-the liOO«re lac!lity 10 yoan qo ~ "'1ked -Ibo AMA obout ~on a rood race, but
I» ••ctlonhc -Jo he talked with .-such wv..llsUc
fiawdlJ dm•-.11 the ClOll\'d'lltioo Wiii ended in I ilarry. "-:!l ... Ibo a-y ol "llon't g<t mad, g<t ._ .. llJch. m theo "' llil Ind with a ...U rood raclni group, the
Amlrfcon Cyde Ami., llld .....,. lpln pidted ilp ihO plxJlle to
p1aoe .-co111o the AMA.
llW, Ibo AMA 1a Ibo world 's largest angle motor rac1ng
<Ml wtlll llllnOChbC In .. _ ol 200,000 member~ '1t ls sup-
ported at -.-leYel by neariy eveey local motorcyde
oport (-.pl ftJr -ACA noces) fur a decade. A~ ol yean oeo Rl.....ide ~a acrambles, on
b own, and tNck dftclall were aUmded on race day to be
lfOOled by more dJan 1,000 riders who 1Wllted to compel•. 11
-llldRr lhlnking about the ~ trade "ll'in. '1llll _,., Riv<ntde, bJme of Qm.Am llld NASCAl\ rac-
lol, will _.·Its !Int AMA race, called Ibo Gttat Bear Grand Pih. 'Ibo lnnge Olunty llbm:ycle Oub, which la 1!ai1nt1 tt,
clalml lo -more than UOO mtrtes. 'Ille date awarded by
AMA eddl a bit ol prestige, lleoauae It II the eame woetrem ea
the -Elalnore ,Grand Prue, die legendary race through
a reoort lown ht once drew an -200,000 spectaWrs in
-and many more on TV.
'Ille a-Bear -RldUr -.... called that .men be ..,. a OolJlomla football bero -'lllll marl< the beg]Ming o/ a
llll'onC AMA OSIOCiallon wtch Rivenide. Already Jn the talking
._ la an AMA road noce, probably !n be held m 'lbaubgiv-
lng -keod u the _, flnBle to tile AMA Grand Natiooal -* * * Rl....ide ... ollo uperlmented wti1I olf.....t...., ud b1
Ille -IOd -tor fodllllet ID pat on a champlouhlp cal~
bor -..__ -.., alto lnffllfl-Ille motor-
<)'de --porll -· DOI ...,.lllrlly lo be l1arled al Ibo ,_..., lllell bat -8>1y al uolller locttloo.
Alamitos
Harness
Entries
'
8laoe lll'Cklvll Onlarlo Motor Speedway bas fllltn on evil
dayt IUdd<r .... -• •llDber ol lnter..ilnt ...... to -
ea Ille ._i ol 111.s -•Y to addlllonaJ men. lllcJit -be
b worltq oa • poulble Mme recreational vehicle allow, t0me-~ Ible llas been tallred abouc 11 Ontario bnl wHboal ever
DAILY PILOT ....... W P1trtct O'DmMel
Corona del Mar F'osh'11 F'l.opper
eom1q1o-.
la addllloo, Ontorto t. Ibo bomo of the Bob Boodorant Sebool
lor mp P.,.,.,.,,,.... Drlvtns, a blghly pllbUdsod en1'rprllo
11111 ......., 1antval drtvlnJ .., a skid pod one! In .. acetdent
1lmllltar • well u bow to be a racer. Quletly, al.molt u U be
""" lr1lnc to bop II a .....i, -bas developed a ldlool for •mW•nce ud otber emergency Yeblcle drtven. Lut 'Week
Iba -snd•ted 111 IDtb papU.
Reglon4" Series Gains
At lint glance, ... ol die Miller mgh Lile 500 al Ontario
-~. 81 far u driven and car OWDerl competing m NASCAll't junior circuit, Grand National West, were con-
Los Alamiws
Harness Results
Slow Play
On Ocean
California Deer Kill
Drops Off From1971
cemed.
lbe !!_d!_ i!~ ll1m wmt $200,000 in pri1.e money. On
....... tho "'lllonol <bamplonohip -bas begun .. pin ground ftJr tllo !Int time in years. Ev"1 -Ille Miller
race -1'tllch wu ...,.. woo by We& O>Ut drivm any..,y -
Ille prise money dD ,.... lope ball • mlllioo -· ~ will be ......, to come. Severll deols are 11ti1J pending
ftJr odd!tlonal new races, 8CCOnling !n GN West 111pervllor Ken Piper.
'111e "'"'" really lltm1ed to mean oomelhing when there were two races at 'Rlvmlde and the bdg one at Ontario W<lrib ......,
than '375,000 alone. Prire money topped the balf million mark
-ol Ille Hockleo l<x-Ole llnt lime Jn 1971 when -three races ancho.t ed the aeries.
Western drivers hive allo pined new reopect. Ray Elder
baa wm two.big races from Rlcbard Petty llld Bobby A1111on
and there are· now fotr 11eot:J4)etitive" West Olut te1ma, n.;
drivers are Elder, Henl>el McGril! Dick Bown and Jack McCoy 0 0>u4k'tit1ve'' means that nobOdy can nm away from tbeni ..,. more.
* * * fte blf MWI oat bere, however, Is a firm Zl-raee scbtdale
OCIR Pro
Series Ends
This Week
,.111a' •.m. It lnctodes two road course events at RlversJde
(one llrad7 beld) IDd two super speedway ratts at Texa1 The All·Pro Olampionshlp
W or Id Speedway. Seven.I otber new bookings are HpeCted series concludes Saturday at
1bortly. Orange County International
Piper hopes to alp a nee to be beld the weekend of Aug. Raceway with $60,000 In prizes
!Wt ea tlle Lapna Stea road coane, and tbe rumon of that and money up for grabs.
•how are alreed1 eruUas • lot of ucHemewt. Stoc.!k can on the Competi tion is aet in top ~-~-al Lqau coalAI eresto lbe most .,cttlng speetacle luel, lunny car and pro stock
-,,__ divisions, and in all but the
.. no -.. tbal tbe -" .. namw and twbty there pro stock category the All-Pro ...,, """" enoap lor Can-Am can oa IL Wbeo tboso 4 eoo. title Is still on lbe line.
lb. _...., •lllrl baqlag away at eocb oilier at Lagano S..,1 Only Butch Leal Jn the pro-
llmolt u)'dda1 can happen. stock dlvislon has a lock on
7'e pos1fbUlty alllO exists for cnadoa of new races at the Utle after winning the last
Pboealz-, Denver and Salt Lake City, bat Piper doem't count on six events in the division at
them to make the 1e&son a success. OCJR. Danny Ongais and Don
Mondloy, M•n:fl lf, 1m
CIHr & l'•N
FIRST llAC• -Oftt' mile. PM:t.
COlldltloft. PurM ID».
Cu1t om 01 1J 11n
(Dlultorll n .60 6.IO l.IO
8•ron Eric fDennlsl 10.60 7.IO
Trut OandY (Wlllltmil 3.IO
Tlmt -2.06 2/5.
Also rkld -S1nd Dl•molld. LIKV
Lu, Si.rndlrflrt, Poll;tv Cflvck, T11t111.
Scr1lthtd -Mtltl Prlnct, P•rftcl
To-
s•COND RM! -OM mflt. Con-2!1i.:~1Yf.:'cM!!:~1 ,,.., !:~ I~ •v~·~~ :"JY,•11• ""' ,:lil
MAii•-'p irro A~l,t~f.!!C!Jr,f,11, ~ -mo'\'im.r: r1ur1 lrtl.
THIRD ltAC• -one ml!.. PIC ..
Cltlmlnq I ll -9. Pl.li'M 11100. Clwlmp Ltfllll Udy ~ ....... ~ '·" l"" 1·a
"'"" I ( ·~} . r. Ed !if.'vl~ Knl ..40 ,
AllKI r -OIO HOllOI', Fr1111 I> ~ket Btrt, Sltvw ll:tcOl'cl. . '· I -11:\lllY ltormdoud.
P:OUllTH llACI -Or... ·!JIJft. Pkt. Cl1lmlna •JI ~. PUtW ilfOU. Mllft\ B r own /Liollfhtll 14.«I 6.IO 4.20 CllTllYll Stir (Gnnlll") f .60 J.ilO
·~r.lvl ltll.I (Dao!Mrl 4.20 I,,.,. -I.OJ 1/S. 10 rKlfd -P1nec11t, S"'1'Wood ICl'!I, MoOll'MI Dr11rn. _kOffYI Llldlf'. krltd'lld -LldY Trio, Frff H .. ttltr. . -
P:l"H llAC• -Oftt' rnllt. Trot.
C11lml1111 111 1<11J. Pvnt 121DD. ~~bro t~y r~ •. c_!!!!rv> 4.IO "it l! "ff: ~;f T'c'Mrt0ek•l 4.Z° me -2. 10 rte: -Fros1v Ud, Tlroort pm, Ari , Huctc F nn. krt~ -JU" Prlde, Vlcton Aw•rd. Too.Ind D.
ll!f!!'_ llACI -=-on. rt11!1. Ptct. ~=~ f~I~ 17.«I 7.20 4.«I Dlrtd M1r\I !Grunctvl 2.60 2.«l Pfltr J1y Adloi CM1rll1J ~.IO * * * Prudhomme are the top con· Most of the actim will be m qlllrter-mile and half·rnile tenders in the top fuel M • B
>VII! where Gmnd Natlooal West drivers are at home. Starting ca tegory with several olher arma anquet
with an April 29 date et AJtamont, Central Callfomiana will get dri vers within s t r i k i n g
the first chance to see the fate model stock an race. distance. Set Tonight
'Ille tour will move Into the Pacillc Norihwest In June Ind Fou ntain Valley's T o m
July, r<tum lo Califoniia in August, swing n0(1b tntn Wuhing· McEwen holds a narrow lead Marlnll High School will
loo Ind Oregoo again in Seplember Ind wind up in Noc1btm over Sush Matsubara ol Los honor ils 1973 basketball
California in November. Angeles in the {unny car with rts -~-Pl ' -~-•u1 be pub ..... , teams a spo awaru11 per 1 ~ e ll18Y li9bed oome thne this ...U. It di vision. banquet tonight In the !Cbool
Im ..........i Incomplete so rar becauae Ille promoten jUBt John Durkee ol Corona del caleteria.
haven't gotten 6n dle habit of signing cm1racts when they are Mar is among aeventy other Festivities begin at 6.
l5 QulntlL1 -KOClntC G. 7·Dlrtel
Mtrl1, 1>1o~fg 1,oo. 11'"' - 2 l /$. lto r -Chol" Pt1mtOM, =J .. ~ ... 'l':';';h °'""· -kr1~~ tl.. fl!~ K ·
Sl\l•NTH RACE -One m!lt. Ptc.e. l"t1lml1111 tllndk10. Pllrst SS»). M/l'f-j•., I Ad"' Ir ~II t .60 •.20 !·" 11:1 ,.,. CMillfr./ ~.611 l.60
M'S I ~62'ii~ ll'nl) 3AI Al:' r"K.ci -b:r1rnonte 1C11111. ~· Colb'f', Jtfftl"ilOll So.td, Sllytl' Bl.llftr N1llm. Str•tm.d -llusy Joul.
•IGHTH RACE -One milt, Pea. \,Ofldllllltl. Pl,lflt S3DOO. COUM Pll'M (lltetun.n) UO 2.10 100
W,r':.'\1.CW~1or1i 3.oo ~:I I"" -'2.M'11s. to rec.d -Gerttlt ~lfl'...}111' E11t,
Mr. Ii= Kiwi A:t'f~i.. of::. -p_. , ,,... Mid
MINTH ltACl""':::_-OM mlle. Pact.
l"l10lm'"" "" -· PurM -i«IO. ~ ~ (lt1llOl'l9l 11.IO LOO 100
Ml1i.t" H<I Sl'lol (C'.it1 U•11) 1.60 2.1111 !'"'° T""' (Mllllf') LIO 1-~2 us. Ill) -IC W G. ll:GkV H, L""4 °"'•n. tvMm am. Ser•~ -Tiiier. Scott , S01Ctb111tr, Miu .l.mv Ad10I.
UCI Kickers
Gain 2-1 Win
. WALNUT -Al Agusto's
goal 20 mlnules in!n the ...,.
ond hall provided tbe whming
margin In Saturday's 90CCel'
clash between lbe winning UC
Irvine squad and the host Mt.
San Antonio club.
Coacb BIU Ashcrolt's team
domln1ted play after that and
got good play lrom goallteeper
Dick Anania, Jerry Kalnwl
and Dave Coziell .
In lhe first hall , the two
teams l/ltUed to a one-all
deodloCk with Pele Krell'•
lllot keeplnji UC lrvlfle above
water.
Krell'• h<>d llflol came just
beloro the hall to knol lhe .......
Angling
Sporlfisblng out ol Orange
Cout &.rta waters has been on
the slow side the put few
days but landings operators
are hopelul the poce l'ill pick
up considerably since the
storm 10 days ago apparently
washed out the usual schools
of fish.
Only rock cod his been
somewhat plontllul.
An oulstandlng Individual
catch wa.s recorded out of
Dana Wharf recently.
Costa Ma&'• Al Belllnier
hooked .. 111'-pound log bar-
racudL It WU lbe larietl of
seven toga caught on the trip
and the smallesl of the barrios
was nine pounds.
And Thursday anglers hook-
ed up on 21 legal halibut oil
tbe hall day-boat from Dana
Wbarl.
Action out of Davey's
Locker in Newport Beach bas
been slow, with only rock cod
hit t 1 n g fairly cmststenUy.
One hall day boat ll llCbeduled
during weekdays, leaving at 8
a.m.
A lf>OClal trip Is lllted lor
midnight Friday wllh the
omplwt. geared towanls lhe
San Clemente Island area.
Art's Landing reporll only
fair 11.shlng the put lew days.
"JI. ·t~l:'l'Jr~~ .. ,11 '11-.-..-,_ n CMIOl -bitl; 12' -roctr;
Clli. " -•1 -im: ff ur~ to. 1 t111Jltiilt;·1a nlCk ..... -~· ·-., I: ~. u -~~ ... ~= rodr; • ~ coc.
The department's final deer
take report for 1972 shows that
'¥1, 487 deer tags were returned
by successful regular season
hunters. On the basis of
353,300 deer taga sold, lbe suc-
cess rate was 10.6 percent.
ID 1971, again on the basis of
deer tag mums, 38,907 buck
deer were taken with an
estimated 395,500 bunters in
the field far a success rate of
10 percent, which was the
same as that for 1970.
According to the DFG, hot
dry westher In combinattoo
with fire closures soverely
lllillred" hunter prmure-..a
succeu · ·ia · tJle. .. o p e ft 1 ·D ·g
weekend of the 1m eorly deer ........
~ wu down u mncb
u 50 percent Jn llOllle areas;
the report 11~
Although the weather WIS
geoeralfy cool !or the late IDd
norlhem seuoo openings !ale
last September, pressure was
generally down. Hu n t e r
pressure .... high In Siskiyou,
Lassen, El Dorado, Amador,
caJaveras and Mono cmmUes,
however.
Tbe -tab by -during Im alto was down. A
total ol 313 tags were nl-ed
by ll'Cben, well below Ille record 42Z tags ,._ In
1971.
In addition to tbe regular
hunll, the Calllontla Fish and
Baseball
IUpp08l!d to. Despite the tact NASCAR late model stoct can put drivers competing for the race Included in the program are
on the moot <"OOS!stently thrilling ._ of any "'"" of racing In purse only. QuallfyJng beginl the naming of most valuable or=----------------------~~ ::.,w~ llliU grouse about the high coot ol <taglng at noon with ellmlnatlon ,..., player and captain for eacb ij ~ ·
Puroeo have gone up. from. minimum°' $3,700. year •110 1-10_11._w_1ng_1rom __ i o_·clock. ____ ci_ ... _i_fica_u .. _. ----1 You can have
to $6,500 this season. One veteran promoter, who announced ' d H ., fll"BJ)lfl.J..i last lall thol he would produce lour ....,., at his track your l'ieam ome now =-~ uled only one ao far. And he complains about the cosi •
..... one,Plperoafd. (and you don't have
Area Sports Calendar
THERE IS A FACTORY AUTHORIZ-
ED DEALER FOR MRY POPULAR
MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD ON
COSTA .MESA'S HARBOR BOULE·
YARD Of CARS.
to move to get it)
t •
Stmllli1••fwtNl.flought-oul ~-'*'""' ·~ onlinlcy homo l1lo ICllllOtlilg 'Mt apoclll.
M addltlonlf niom, I~ 19-dlllgMd l<llchon OI'
bolhroom. •lWimfnlrG pool--.,. hundrlde of "YI Yoll..., upgi1ldo yourjarrjl(a lllelCyfa.
'!be Riil Nllllonlll Bink of Ocqe ~..., help malat yourdllamcoma"~ YN'I&-. ~ plllmPt,
laWOOll homo~'-'° IOoll Nlldal-. .,.,.
11o-,..111111al111floc• Deddtwllll llllCMflcnl1t1
nec1r11ry,1Mn•a.-forWhlll•"'*'*' 11111t1ne1
)'all llqlft
FirSt National Bank ·-""" 1=-= .. -·--~ ~--!~q:-·'-~
Game Commission authorized
21 speclal antlerless and
either-sex deer hunll during
the year.
Gun hunlm pun:lwed t ,654
ol lbe 5,300 permits authorl2ed
·tor the 14 gun hunls and
reported taking 1,380 deer lor
a success rate of 30 percenl
HARLEM
CLOWNS
MARINA
HIGH SCHOOL
HARLEM
CLOWNS
HARLEM
CLOWNS
NOW Al'PllA&lllll AT
MARINA
HIGH SCHOOL
THURSDAY
MAllCH U -1 pa Tl•-h.•-.............. , ........
.... Office 0,.. 7 , ... -.. ....
••••k MAlllllA Hiett It-.,
QUAllTUIACK CLUa o~~--...---------~~o -------
I _,
•
I
•
.
Tucson Bank Hits Finance
Briefs
Lawsuit by BofA ,
TUCSON, Arll. (.IP) -A
lanuit by the llanli cl
..._ ..,.iniltlllnoo de Lu
Am<rlcu, 11 "patheUc aod
hllarioua," uye the small
bank'• ·pretldent. ,
Morrll Jltrtlnr, pmldent or
the lw .. year-old de L I I
Amerlou, llld the Bank ol
America hu admitted 11-
IesoJJUes In court briefs to
support Its cesa.
"Tbli II oot ..,1y pathetic,
but II'• hllarloua to have lhe
Bank ol All)erica admit JllesaJ
deal!ngs In Arbona In order lo
1bow bow a legal entity, the
Banco, Is competing wilb
them,'' Herring said.
Bank or America filed sull
last J111uary agalna I ho
$115,0QO
~embership
Recorded
Sood•l'.I• lbe Dally Pilot
Cl!iCAGO -A membershlp .In Ille Cblcali<> Mercantile J!;x-
cbange was sold Thursday for
$11.510001 a record for any
commodity fuiures exchange.
~eretfe B. Harris, CME
~t .reported.
The buyer was Michael
Siegel ol Hdoold Commodllles
Inc., a aubtlcftary of De Kalb
AG research -and· the ..Uer
was Lmy G. Lambright ol
Mldiand Commodltles Inc.
The lasl previous seat sale
on the CME was for fll0,000
on March 5. The previous
record high was 1112,500 \on
Feb. 23.
1be current bid WU 1100,000
and lbe asked prlee ls $125,000.
Kids Like To
Ask Andy
SEVEN ADVANTAGt;.5
OUR PAGER OFFEl!S
th1t yours moy not J
1 COMPLlll OaAN•l
C:OUNTT C:OYllA•I
lld-: i..--.... ~. Mllll .. Ylef~
~, .......... " ..... .. .............. L. .. ...
2 , MONTH TO MON'!I
HNTAL WIS
3 llO DIPOSIT ll9UllH
ON .amouo CHOIT 4 ONLT 117.00 Pl~ MONTH . 1::.=:...,
5 NEW COMP.ACT UNIT
ltzl (1 V• •·4 • VJ I
6 VOICI MISSAGI PAIHll
AUO All AVAILAILI 7 pULL PID MAlllTIMANC:I
Of/,\Nl;f l'OUNl\°
lt/\lllflTfl l PlltJiiE
SI 11\11([ ,.,1
ff'tM "'--IMdJ, Mii ... Yllte. OIM,....,11111~1111.t ... CllfMltr..., 11 Tift, un fltll ,,..
f14·1Jl4105
1
'l\Jesoi bank, cialming the
llmJIJrity in names wu be~
UIOd to lb• advantage or the
Tucaon bank tor tUllllt com-
petitloa with lhe 111110 bs\llt.
New Irvine Facllitu
Lill weel:, Banco de Lu
Amerlcu, Sl!"nlsh !or "Bank
of the Americu," filed •
eounlersult In U.S. District
Court here, alleiilul antllrust
violations and llfegal practice
ol bwilneN in Arizona by Bank
of America.
The Banco count.suit said ·
although lbe California-based
bank does oot hold an Arizona
bu11nea llctnJe, It has ad-
rnitied In court briefs filed for
Jts own suit Utat it does
buslnesa In Ibo state by lend-
ing Arizona banks money and
buying loans made by Arizona
banks.
B. P. John Furniture is building this 390,000 square foot manufacturin( and
dlstribulion facility iQ Irvine Industrial Complex. The new faoility, built by
ABooclate Construction and Engineering Co. <X San Francis<o, will hire 400 new
employes wben It opens in mld-summer.
Tire ,Kickin' Tiµie
Late-model Used .Cars Hard to Find ....
Flights Up
At Aixwest
Hughes AJrwesi announced
that it.I systemwide
performance last month was
the best for any February In
Its hlsb>ry.
More than 244',000
passengers boarded Sundance
fUghts at the carrier's 74
airport cities.
They new about 89,290,500
miles across the Western U.S.
· as well as in Clnada and Mei:~
ico. The average nwnber of
paesengers flying per mile
(passenger density ) totaled
39.2.
OC Airport
Shows Rise
Total passengers arriving
and departing from Orange
County Airport took a sharp
rise in January with 93,$37.
This is up 54. 7 percent over
the January 1972 figure of
60,450.
Air cargo also took a
healthy jump from 72.4 tons In
1972 to 110.6 tons In January,
an increase of 52.7 percent.
Autoa parked at the airport
Jnc~sed jrom 14,1125 in
Januil;y 1912 to 20,548 this
year, or an increase of 'IT. 7
percent.
By SYLVIA PORTER
II you ar• planning to buy a
used car fQI' this summer,
yoo're already late, The tradi-
tional best weeks for finding
used car bargains have pau-
ed. And now, an extraordinary
situation is developing: a
belleve-lt-or .. not shortage of
good, late-model used cars.
~ere's plenty of ; u n k
aroond there
alWJ}'S i.9.
But as deal·
eD from
coast to
coestre~
ed earlier
this IYl<ll!th to
Business
Week. low·
mileage, late . POltTlll
model can are disappearing.
MORE PEOPLE are driving
their own cars longer, passing
on the cars to other family
·membera rather than trading
in, and selling cars privately.
The new federal law p~
hibitlng tampering w i th
odometers, which went into ef·
feet this month, is eliminating
thcde "low-mileage beautle1n
whkb were Cn!ated merely by
"turning back the clock" and,
by ao doing, ls ralslng the
prices of clean', low-mileage
can by as much rui $300-$600.
In shortest supply· are the
popular compacts, although
bigger, ezpenatve good can
can be found more easily.
What, then, should you de?
-STABT SHOPPING for
your used car at once and go
only to used car dealers you
have thoroughly investigated.
Don't go too far from home or
servicing problems co u Id
You 1r• cordl1lly Invited to •n
INVESTMENT · DINNER
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1973
7;00 ~M.
become a · real nuisance.
Follow up dealers' ads that
sound r e asonable and
believable to you. By all
meansl avoid the peak spring
and summer weeks. when
millions wJll be competlllg
against you for used c8rs.
-Decide in advap what
kind of car you actually need
and bow much car you can af-
ford and don't get talked Into
a bigger car than your budget
can afford -just becan.se Ibo
bigger cars are available.
Look for a relatively recent
Jower·prlcod model with com-
paratively few complicated
extras, to minimize your
repair costs later.
-C.Onmlt the National
Automobile Dealers Assocla·
tlon's Otficial Used Car Gulde
or the Kelly Auto Market
Report (Blue Book), Usting
current average retail car
values for most U.S. and
foreign models, makes and
years. These guides w i 11
dramatize that prices for a
given car can'vary as much at
$500, depending on its con-
dition. Also cons1llt Conaumer
Reports, which regularly rates
used cars. Get a copy both of
Conswners UDlon's '•How to
Buy a Used · Car" and of
Edmund's .. Used car Prices,"
published by Edmund Publlca-
Uons Corp., Great Neck, N.Y.
-' TAXE INTO con-
sideration the fact that a new
car's value drops about 50 per-
cent during the first two years
of !Is llf• -auggeslil1g that
your best buy well may b& a
weJLcared for _two,lo,.tbreo:
year old car. But don't fall for
the salesman'• come<1D, "I'm
losing money on the deal."
How could the dealer stay In
business JI be did lhat?
MILE SQUARE
COUNTRY CLUB
-Have a mecb8l)lc or
diagnosUc clinic cl\eck out any
car you are considering, and
expe1!I to pey $1~ to $2S for the
aervice -well worth it, even
if the cbecA results in your not
buying the car. Test drive the
car or have a trust~d ll~illil~blc test drive ti !or you
r a variety of traffic con-
diUonJ. Do not asmime that,
because a used car bean an
Inspection allcker, ti's in good
mechanical condltlon. Slate
1041 WAR,NER
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Thil progrflm will covtr Reil Estat•
e Tex write off, e T•x Sheltered incom•
• Equity build up e App,..ci1tion
RESERVATIONS ONLY-PHONE !714) 547..5941
Refrethm1nt1 wlll be S1rved ' Sponsortd ly
M. P. KRUSE° & COMPANY, INC.
MIMa•lll f'.,ACl,IC COAIT STOCK tXCMANOI ....,. c~r Wiit .. DbtTI..,... At TM llMWr.
•• --.,..
For Sports
The DAILY Pl!,OT ts the
neWlpaper !or sports along
the Orange Coast. •. complete
stattsUcs on local home and
away game11t ataU coverage,
more exclusive stories on
Orange Coa•t sports than soy
other I o c a II y ·distributed
newspaper.
laws do not in any sense cover
the condiUon of the engine or
transmission.
-D!m'lTE THE fed-
eral Jaw problbl~ l1B1llng
lhe odometer beck, Ignore the
odometer reading. A much
helter gauge cl bow JDa111
miles a used car ha1 been
driven ts to multiply Its ag& by
10,000 to 16,000 (miles per
year). Qi.eek the driver'a &eat
for wear to mate au.re the
mileageontheodome ter
equals ~ ioter1or wear.
<lleck lhe lll<t.
THE ORIGINAL tires on a
car which hu been driven
15,000 miles or leli will sUll
have a good tread, but by
25,000 miles the tread will
probably be well worn. Aa a clue to whether or not tires
ore th& orlglnall, check to see
if all four are cl the aame
brand and sJmJ1ar aerial nmn-bers.
-Take a notebook along
when you lmpeCi cars on each
lot and wben·30U teal drive, to
make notes on each car which
Interests you. Thll will help
you to Jdeotify it as lhe same
one if you return to the dealer.
-AND IF YOU buy' a used
c~ from' a private individual,
try to pay no more than $100
over the wholesale price. And
try to get a money back
guarantee to cover you if the
car fails to live up to the way
In which it WBI repruented to
you.
Disney Aide
Slates Talk-
The National Asaociation of
Accountants, Orange Coast
caJilO\'Dla Chapter will bear
Bruce F. Johnlon at their
Wedneiday meeting in
Newport Beach. •
Jobmon, a1aiatant. con-
trollerol Walt Disney Produo-
Uons since July 1968, bas been
responsible for all corporate
accounting funcllons, Including
COI'JX";8te financial reporting,
design of aooounlJni l)'SlemJ,
formulation of policies and
procodurel •
He will give a survey of the
Disney organlzaUon u II ap-
pears in 1973, the yearof its
50lb annlveraary,
This meeting will b& held
the Alrporter Inn Hotel, 1'700
MacArthur Blvd.
Social bour begins at 6:00
p.m.
Elpac Reveals .
Gas Well Find
EJpac, Inc., reported the
dll<Overy In conjunction wllb
McMoRan E•ploiation Co. of
Dal)p, Texu and . Sundance
on Company of Denver,
Colorado.,of ...... aas well Jn
the Moose Portage Area, near
EdJJlonloo, i\)berta, Canada.
Special lo lhe Dally ot me side, and Jnerea!led pro.
• NEW YORK -Tb<. liq to ductivlty by managemeol on
-oumval u. In the Ibo ~ llde, Jn order to lncn'" I .. " a1""'1at1on meet the t"1ce compeUUoo «
by -Jars• and "'-'11 "":"'!'"llton· m..-iiftra, IN pmklent "Owi nal1on'1 bolanc6 or
of <kneral -llon tnc, paymentl delldt I• r th er
told a D*11nJ of the New empbnm.. t b e tncrwllll
York Society of Security competlUve ix-urea 11..a
Ana!Yllt MmxJn. by maoulactunn who, like It
The ~ Orm II « not, oro litlrally In 11>
1 JeadJq IDIOlllactllnr cl lenlaUClllll -Utlon tor computer bued automailoa -their econ om I c aun:lval,11
syatems. Closhom said. "The rlaln«
Lawreoco A. Goshorn said mat<rlal and labor eo11ts almp-
that the lnflaUooary trend i• Jy emphasize an alroody ob-
crealing havoe In wor1d vlouo fact -that automation
marietl because wlih 1nfi1Uon it rapidly becomJni a ......i-
<amrs cltm~nd_Jqr_ 111-In TirtuallJ miry I&
crease<l ""'" liliOrao Iii< ulliJ."
j
.. '
Tl.W$dor, M\lld\ 20, 197$ DAILY PILOT JI,
OVER TIIE COUNTER
NASO Uat11111 for -..Ny, March 19, tm
I
MUTUAL FUNDS
•
--. ,. •' • I ..,, •' .._ •
DAILY l'ILOT s l-.-IO, 1973
• ... ... South Pioneering When
Computer Banks
liE'W ORLEANS (API -A
,... New Orleans bank with a goal
• of be!ii& as totallv automated
• u poaible already handles all
"' teller-customer trangaclioos at
1 two of I~ branches by clOled· l! clrcutt television . r Allhougl' 9thor ban.U ...
'\: te~lsion, m o 1 t I y !or
••
1 opera Ung drive-in windows,
, International City Bank says it
: , !s the first in the natioo to
$1 h a v 1 t.otal·television in-
1: ltallltionl and expecUI eveD-tual!J to put all Its tellm io
-front of cameras or replace
r
them wlth automatic
machines. ' '
0 WE REACHED into the
future, devek>ped and put into
I proclical opplicolion certain
ideas which may be classed as
innovative, pioneering or just
. blind luck/' says President
Eads Poitevent.
"Our goal is to be as totally
automated as we possibly
can,'' he added.
'Ibe tellerless machines -
linked to the bank's computer
-would enable a customer to
handle the most common
r banking transactJona without
, . any conlact with a bum an. ,, The customer would insert his
oodecl card lnto the machine,
punch in four identification
numbers and make h i 1
depoalt, withdrawal or
wlfatever.
"These units can be placed
in hotel Jobbiea, shopping
centers and, to be absurb,
even street comers," said
• · Poitevent in a recent speech.
'1Anywhere there are people."
Ray Sam uel, senior vice
president in charge o f
· marketing, 11aid in an in-
terview that International City
thioltl ol lt1elf u • "swing-
ing" txi.nk. But he insllt.s
th.at the commitment t o
machines ls not gimmicktr)',
rather sound b a n i. I n g
phllosdphy.
A N D INTERNATIONAL
City'!! drive toward automa·
tion has drawn w:ldl.'lllpread al·
teotioo from other bankers -
BOme. from New Zealand,
Lebanon, South Africa aod
Hong Koog.
"People from all ever the
world come to look at thll "
Samuel said, adding that ~
visits by curiOUJ bankers tak'
a large part of his time.
As in other banks, 1ntema·
Uona1 City's two-way, closed-
clrcuit television system is
coupled with pneumatic tubel
for moving money a n d
dccuments between teller and
cust.omer. What sets the New
Orleans bank apart is the use
of the system to replace the
traditional walk-up windows in
its lobbies.
In a typical installation, a
customer with r o u t i n e
bW1iness walks to a panel with
a 12-loch television screen, a
speaker, a button to summon
tbe teller and a hatch to the
poeurnatic tube. A telephone is
provided in case the customer
wants a private conversation
with the teller. who is in a
sealed, vault-like room and
may be handling two or three
"windows."
EACH TOTAL -television
branch bank still has a
manager, an assistant
manager and one or two other
persons io the lobby to help
with new accounts or other
transactions not n o r m a 11 y
handled by a teller.
Registered Market
Advisers Get Probe
/IY JOUN CUNNIFF
"" elltNu AMlyst
NEW YORK -One or the
Ironic' consequences or the
very real efforts being made
to rebuild confidence in our
securities system is that the
confidence of manf' miaO in-
vutors Is, for the time
being, shot.
Theer ls little doubt about it.
The Small fellow has been
relatively Inactive ln the past
year. He has been redeeming
his mutual fund shares even
when be hasn't got a profit in
them. He's ju.st getting out
and staying out.
Tms BEHAVIOR is un-
deratapdable, because among
the revelations made in hear-
ings before; the Securitit"S and
Exchange Commi!sion is that
things have been far from
proper in this very Image-con-
scious industry. Very im·
proper. in fact.
Some instances: money and
stock left for aafekeeping with
brokers ha's been used as if it
belonged to the broker:
research sometimes has been
none x Is tent; professional
man'agement orten has been
inept.
The past two years have
been excruciatingly painful for
the Industry, as it would have
been for an individual who,
while posing as a citizen of
high motives and conduct, was
PRIVATE TRUST
FUNDS AVAllABLE
fO .. REAL. UTA.Tl LOANS
llf I. 2rMI Tl'IUST DEEDS
$1,.500 To '250.000
UP TO 80'111' lOANS OH
TllUST OEEO COUATEAAL
•EWP0"1' IQUl'l"r fllHDS . NIWpOrt Cent•r ta _Newpott c.n1., 0r1w ~BNch.C.111. (714) 6'""9t.(
forced publicly lo disclose his
moral turpitude.
The eventual effect of SEC
efforts to upgrade standards'
and make the markets safer
and more understandable for
small invt?!ltors will un-
doubt'edly have a more
positive impact some day. But
with the mystery goes the awe
also.
It is now more widely
known, for example, that the
investment adviser w h o
claims to have such insight
and foresight may really be
endowed with litUe more than
great ambition and ego.
BROKERS MUST at a
minimuru pass examinations
administered by either the Na-
tional Association of Securities
Dealen or the SEC. But those
who pedd1e advice ooJy -who
do not also seU stock -need
not prove their competence.
The chJef requ.irements for
be ing an adviser are to
register with the SEC, pay the
fees and keep proper records.
There are no exams that must
be passed or educational
standards that must be met.
The SEC now has a com·
mittee charged with advising
it on a program to better im-
plement present leglslation or
perhaps enlarge its controls
over such advisers, &ime of
which misleadingly but ac-
curately advertise: "Register
with SEC."
A greater number o( people
also are aware of the limita-
tions of mutual funds
managers, whose primary
qu;ilifications for beginning a
fund are that they be able to
pay the registration and lega l
fees and be free or criminal
taint.
The SEC exercises no con-
trol over the quality of funds.
111111 lllLEllll
IF 1111 •
NEW 1973 AUTOMOBILES -ON
DISPLAY AND READY FOR IMMEDI·
ATE DELIVERY -COVER OVER 20
A~RES OF SPACE ON COSTA
MESA'S HARBOR BOULEVARD OF
CARS.
a
Family "
'
Needs
a
Friend ...
•
Sytvlo Porttt
• Do higli food costs cause you to cut
down on the quantity and quality of
company dinners? Do you find yourself
slighting your family's nutritional needs
in order to meet financial needs? You
can find help with these end m·any otlier
problems of family finances in Sylvie
Porter's column several times weekly in
the financial pages of the DAILY PILOT.
Yes, Sylvia Porter can be a friend of
YOUR family. Her nationally syndicated
column, "Money's Worth," features im-
portant ideas which can relieve your
concern over monetary matters. For ex-
ample, she will tell you how to save a
considerable percentage of your gro-
cery dollar clespite spiraling food costs.
Let a friend drop in on you tonight.
Sylvia
pages
Porter can visit you
DAILY PILOT of the
from the
delivered
>
right to your home. You will get your
money's worth from Sylvia Porter's col-
umn and all the other special features in
the financ ial pages of the
THE ONE THAT MEANS BUSINESS
•
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST
...-n=.-......... a:.
'
!· •
:· •
•
.. 1~on'dafiClo8ing ·Pnces-OO~te New· Yorli ·Stoel[ Exchange list .
'
"
~all Street Hit
BJj Interest Hike
NEW YORJt (AP) -6 t o e k ma.rltet pr!°"
droppecl lblllllly Monday as investot11 ~
concern over fhe sharp boost In the prime fendhig rate by oome majorbarik!.
A '>ii percent hike to MO pettellt in this key
lending rate by l!arin<! iMlclland and Manufaetl!IV9
Hanover Trust triggered similar moves In other
banks arGU!ld the coilnto»
"The prime rate Increase brought jll' more sell·
Ing,"' said llonald Coooer, tnlly1t with E. F. Hutton.
He pointed out tliat lm>dtors tended to • ..,,..
look the pooltlve effects ot the lnlA!maallonal mon&>
• tary aereement and the fact that many Issues ........ -• ovenoold.
•• • ~ •
t
• • •I
. l91J
... =----.::
· 'YOU Section'
'111ere'• IOl!lelhlng for YOU
In the "YOU Seetlca" of the
DAILY PILOO' emy llmdq. °'"'* Ila pmonal appeU for
you and '°""'
~
I
J
" '
S BDRM.+ BIO " BEAUTIFUL
' FAMILY RM.I $35,950. Exciting 3 bed-
•"'" ~-S.ltt
~•assoams
.. REALTORS 2aa!A8TCOUTH~Y
COllOHA DELMAlt,CALP.
644·7270
Boy crest
' family ho-
You'llenjoy tbll lovely FAMILY HOME on
a 1ocluded street, 4 bedroom, 2 bath PAN-.
ELED famlly l'OOlll with double fueplace
plua many cuatom features. Largo fenced yard and patio ................... •es,m
Biry
SIX UNITS
•.. oatarplot-
COlla Meta. m,io.
C-ZONE
COMJ4ERCIAL LOT
18' x 290'
13'f.li00
Roy McC•rdlo RHltor
1810 N74a.'Jitvd., C.M.
ALL THE THINGS
A.U~KU:~
DISTINCT POSSIBILITY-It's poulble to
live high on a bluff ovedooklng Dover Shores
with a pooltide view reaching to Catalina
and beyond. Very tllaUnctive, VffrY spaclou•
and very e~clu.s1ve 4 Bedrooai at $246,000.
UMl9111· HOMll OI' MlWPOIT llACH, .. ..,... ............. -
I\ illr ... . ~[--·I~
GREAT
IEACH HOME
-" OPEN HOME
£VERY DAY
1 to 5 All tbII Week • • •
VIEW . POOL. '-. 3 Bai!JL Top Coodilloa. 11411
Alla Vlota. Nowporl llHch.
Offered /ot m.ooo.
An,ytime, &16«65.
BUILDING SITE
PLUS HOME
wrrH VIEW -4 bdnnt., 2 baths,
•nd.1dtll. -• patio, Zooed R-1. -· 2 A<:rtc clole Ill l>oopt Hun-Ol 1.and one-halt w.--lleach t'll1r. "'-"'1m· 01enY Lake1 .'!°'th_ a N ....
mine " -.;,, """' • port !leach "'"'''"'" E>dot· " ""'1'. $28,900 • tumllbed! ... ' Bedtoom, 2 Bath View NEWPORf Home. Sl6lable tor I Addl-11oo11 E>reIUl!ve !hwle _!~CK IAY'-$38,500 l'amlly Dwellinp. oa....s
-.... pleeaant ~ ""::;i; tor $225,000. Call Aeyt!me,
ta . ._ •. r .. laa--· -. 1>u • llJle ••tine ·3 FIXITS area; keeps the kids dtt the •
room at the end of a
• '2(,950. Very nice home. quiet cul-d&-sac. Huge
· Patio, dln1n& room. Gas bonus room. Family
)Jullf..illl with dlsbwasb-room; secluded rear liv-
er. Cozy fireplace, ing room. Flreplaca,
shade trees 6: lovely dlnlng room covered
yard. 540-1720 p a t I o & ' bullf..lus.
You've alyl,)'I wa.ated In a
haol.e ii 1n tb11 be&Utif\ll,
laJ'le 4 bedroom A ~
bath1 . immaculate
~· Spe.rlr:lln&
kttdlen, -bullt·lnl •
U,..IC>UI: ti()M~S
RIAL TORS
---· ---· ---
new carpetin&. The drapes with Land for Three More e. ve ftf!W, 'lb1a ta one Untts. Four wtth 870 Ill· ft..
of the loW'est priced NICE variancf!. No VJCaDCY on
"'""" 111 Newport. exlotintl 11111.._ Set oo almoot
675-3000 ~t~~
540-1720
REDUCED $2250
JUST I YEAR OLDI J.32,500. Prime College · •· Park home with 3 bed-'38,950. A really beau--BAC B Y AREA -3 .Bedroom 21; rooms. On a good s•·-• tJful S bedroom In a bath, built-In kitchen, stone fireplace. FAM-"""' ul H ILY ROOM, community pool & REC ROOMS
' comer lot. Quiet real-q et area. uge cover· Including billiards. Fee land close to every-
dential area. Dlnlng !'4 paFamiltio. Electric built,. thing ........................... $34,500.
!DI. y room, flre-
dlahwuher, oven I: l'IUIJt!· Gerieral General
Vaulted ceUI~ 1n llvingl=i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii room. Woll o! &Jaa· ov"I" 1-the ocean and Jetly. Parle like yard WHh Ct11ton1
deti&ned heated pool with
Jacuzzi. Asking $115,IXXI.
Call 67l-8550.
OPEN Tll. I • IT'S FUN 70 8E NICEI
Second Stoey u.lb will p..
TO A~L AREA REAL TORS h':at ~~ J;'.;!.
Please be informed that infonnatlon In· Call Al»'tlm<. 6*«11'6. .
eluded in our ad on Saturday, March 17th, POETRY ~
1973 pertaining to a certain property on IN MESA ~DE ··~ •• Leewar'd Lant!i could be construed as an ex-wann " -. elusive right to sell listing. This is not the Nice &.sig."' «:~ft£ ..
case. If further information is required, Bujloln .. btnets, ----·
m II.\\ ,\ Ill: \I'll
please contact-)'0\1 will dJg. IUll1DIAlY'Of lttl COLWIUCO.
RANCH STYLE J. w. WOOD, Prosldont ~,::t VACANT AND
CHARMER UNIQUE HOMES INC. You..!:!'~~.. WAITING
$31,900 675-6000 ~'~::::;,.,.won't wt 3 BR +
Cof mpletande with split rall Call 546-ml, DINING ROOM
ence open porch, on And call tt fast!! large Jot • 3 BIG bedrm In pop!l:ar IMne Terrace at
1amlly rm. 2 queen me
1
;Ge;;;;;ner;;;•;;I =;;:;:;;;~~0.;;;-;;•;;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\ OllNTIC.t•fr'SMft>llNICEJ only $57,250. Better huny baths, th1a ll a wifes dream th1a won't last at this low
==""°-----.,,.--,------1 houR! Huny best location. price. Inunac."\date coodi-Gen1r1I Gen1r1I Call Red Cupet Realton OCEANVIEW tton -t Ex<ell.,. -· ' ~ plan, 2lS bathL Out-
l'OOlll, patio; family place. Assumable V.A. AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES
· room. Nicely landscap-loan. Eaay-eare yard. REAL TORS 644-7270
ed. 540-1720 540-1720
* * C -llvtnr room -* * * * BEACH • DUPLEX ustom-designed & bullt with a breath-lak-iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii. I tittpla<e. Nice ldtcben with
2 • Shvv ing view of the Pacific Ocean. Ideal as a bide-BELOW MARKET electric bollt·ln """' and
$52,000 I wait to call on this. Only '89,500. ~f<>F ~.~·
OCEAN DUPLEX . % NICE FAMILY HOME on
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 548-1720 * TAYLO.R co. * ·-· r away or home. Lge. 80xl82 fl:' lot. Don't VAWE rana•. wen dewlaoed
BLOCK 1U NEWFQRT CORB.IN-MARTIN quiet ..,..., 3 ~ 2 """"" ..... ,..,,,,,.,...,., l-Genor--a-l ______ O_a_ner-.l------1 SANDY BEACH! Investors . bath, J(o. aide Cocta Mesa. BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB delight. thli IMMACULATE Ou1rmlh& country kltd>en,
Exclusive Country Club area,•Popular plan 'f~ .. ·be-~GPLUAINs' REALJORS Call Anytime ~-,r ..... w/~~~;
Exceptional 5 bdrm., 3-stA>ry home with pier
& slip. Ma~ent South bay view from all
3 levels. Remodeled kitchen 6: family room.
Price reduced to '210,000
In this 4 BR home by Broadmoor. Lge fam ;;;1~ed'"~.;;"""b:.iroom.i~~~----!!!ll!J!""''""!'"""'"6'"4'"4'"·.76,.682 root-· on1y $29,900. rm, formal dining room & 3 baths. View of 1;; 54M880 I Eves l
patios from all rooms. 3 Car garage. Sur~ ~reafu1o~:! ~8fileM~~ General General ·
FHA
rounded by more expensive homes. $104 900 v.,..., . EXCLUSIVE I
29 AUGUSTA LANE OPEN DAILY' Hi BARGAIN! Call Now · Doy & Night Vlow1
ASSUMPTION * TEN UNITS eeautllulty de«>ra•ec! ,
lndtvidual homes wttb pr-.;;,, ............. ..,,, ...... I bdrm., 2 ba near shoppin& ••Our 28th Yur'' 645--0303. F~~=!1'
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors eomp1e1e1y • etepntty
ages on one acre Eutslde .i= area. Huge sep,. prage, •
C.M. land. "Tait to your GRAI THAT hobbieW deU..ht. $31.SOO. tax man cm 'these fDr )'DlD' Priced right With $259 pa,y·
2111 San Jooquin Hiiia Rood ~~wt~
BILL "RUN DY, REALTOR· "Ovtrlooklllfl Big Canyon Country Club" a.-atlc llldlng roof U NEWPORT CENTER, N.B, 644-4910 --'=::.,.-===::::1 tor,..,. around COOl!ort
HJ n-I'· D 5 I I N B 67' '161 ~-I CASTLES 4
Bedrooms plua vt.w side --Y• -r., u to , • • ---• 0.Mrol formal d1nlna: room
tax "1elter." Ooolll8tant In-PHONE THIS m ... at 711% BM. -Pi\'!Cf660. "" mo. FULL INSTANT .... l'lle. Call
$145 000 Call~ U1 &bout this home
l!o.n.r!'"9'"•"'1.;,,,m,..mm.'!!o.m,,. .. ,•.""1 ...,,,.;;,,;.,.,,,..,.l.;;.;.4:;,;.;B;;E::D:;R;-:0::0::::-M::S:-CORONA P:".=:i~:~
EASTSIDE IY THE SEA $245,ooo
'
• may the -call )'OU Reel--ever m'.ade. You can own Open Eves tbb ....,. 3 bedroom, 21,--..,:;-~,;:;:.:::---1
bath -. for ...,, $29,500. ' $26 500 •• Newport
· • MINI VIEW . OF THINK ABOUT RI
IACK BAY Wouldn't YoU like to move in-
to a wann, friendly 3 BR, 2
BA home near the beach in
COSTA MESA HARBOR lt-
1'1lmow
64Ut11
(•nYtlmtl
IKT.$J1JI. • YA ' ERM OIEN rn. •• IT'S RJH 10 BE NICE/ T s
[llfMIJf:I 1'tdl lovely 3 bedroom home
"" -among lino Iha.de trees In a quiet l'tll· tram the private oecond atnOy ~ foot &.loony. This lupel'
1111..,. Newport RMl!l'll ' be\t&'.OOlh 2 story hu tt all.
A cypress and m~
family room, stone ~
place, concnled wet bar,
eat 1n kHchen, prden patio,
91ate eria,., huge muter
bedroom and extra.I too
numerou1 to mention. Hur-
ry, thla 11 the belt lhlna 1n town at $33,SOO. Call 546-2::n.3
O/l£N TIL I• ff'S fl.JN 70 IE NfCI/
LOW DOWN
• brloht. clean Ioc.. con-PAYMENT ven1ent to llChooh, ahopplna:, park• nr Westcllff area. The Load up the kids and look at prt~ you won't believe thil well kept, Eutslde 1am-
unlesa you CALL. lly hJlne. At $30,000 It won't
645-727l lart Jon,. ean 646-nn for
1733 Westcliff Dr. N.B. an appointment NOW!
COM .. ANY ,REALTORS
SfNCE1M4
673-4400 SEPARATE
BWFFS-CONDO RUMPUS "ROOM
BONUS ROOM BEST WATER VIEW "'th fuoeplace & bath. p1,.
• Your front row center ....-3 BR 1 BA, large llv rm.
capped mountalm. JUlt a Broadway, C.M. Open dally.
de_rrtial area of Garden
Grove. Many fcaturn fn.
clllde lhat cupetlna, tire-
~. double ~' COY• eri<I patio afld a hll&'
fenced yard. Owner bu
bought .....,,.. home and
MUsr SELL! Newly listed.
Ontu BONUS HOUSE ,_ the ~ • the ..... new .,,,... • ..... "15
.,, talnment. The 22 x 23 bonW!I at & not take care ot. Pop-646-3921 or Eve .1..a1: -"
room ls ftnllhed. The Mme ular Trina model wHh eat· • ~l'" · W
IV
21
Th!t is the boo>e far ente,._ pari<-lll<e ......,.It to loolt e CALL ANYTIME e ~ CO.ATS
1,..,,,... a 16 x %1 lamlly mr ma in the klldlell p1ua ALLACE
NEWPORT BEACH room, extra lup Uvtng funnal dininc area. Up. REAL TORS
Marine Conlnctlno Firm room,'1ormal dininc room, 4 graded --limb SCI 4141-Flnett e q u Ip m • n t " Realty eom,,.ny NEWPORT bedrooml, 3 batba. 3 ""' ""'!>etlnK A • ..,,....,. will-(Open Ev1nln9sl
~··· 10~1\1 L 01\0\
CAMEO HIGHLANDS walerf>ont location. 35 Yr. "IT'S NO SECRET" BEACH DUPLEX garnge. All for 153,e:;o. Call popen. 1bne bedn>omt 1 ~'1!"'""!' .... 'l"",_...,,.I Immac 4 bd ho Oce old compan)'. Space avail. w.•u ....,,, .,,1 1 ·-·· ~-. Today 80-2535. . plus 2lS batbs. $'19,900. '"·lboo 1
' rm me. an forboatsalesArepaln 11 3 • o .. ~ _,.. 0 . $49 950 OFE1'0Li•rr'SRM10BENICtl c. F. Colesworth 'DLX. 11 UNITS -l1•nd
view. Acceu to 3 prlvate BILL GRUNDY RL TR Y BR. home on Le.ward C LLEGE PARK • !II ! lll'onny
J.'fAt ,1~
~~~:-sun.
1
_
5 675-6161 ' =~=i64';J. YlOW, TWO STORY. with 21 ~~·each, owner has l!iJlilftill Realtors 640-CI02b ~"= Je!!.r~r!t ~~:Je:.~Bal~
CAYWOOD REAL TY Neal a "Pad"T Place an ad! Walter Kln& ~. cG1s> r::U~~~ ~; ~ ~ :b:t.c~.,ex~\:t i:imiiiil BIG BIG ~tectural deign and ft:· Topaz. $'19,500. Prin onJ¥. * 5'1--1290 * Call 642-5678. family room wtth fireplace condition Income of $6,000.00 • • cePtlonallY \\'ell built. Do ,;,673-;;,;;191910""'==-=_,,~I
General Gentr•I and kltchen ... ting .,..._ aonually 8.3% or g.oes. FAMIUES your maintenance outalde WATERFRONT lot, lllxMl
1;;;.;;=.;:.. _____ .;:;:=;::.-----11642-1235 644-6200 'f~~~t fjj5\ilQ home. Ju't ~en~ i:';wpo"';f c~~ JUST USTED $39 500 ~:'g~ .S';'·~ ~:.,,.,eoo~~ake otter
.... ~lll'"!lllllllllli~=:""!!!!;: .... '!""'C'~:lc.w. 540-U5i '0pen Eves. ~~t, R e alto r • • ~~RAOOM!lv, ~ ~~E. -a~ * 5 Lvge ~ l:!'!~!f'wc:!D i:; !: r: Balboa Ptnln1ul1
0wnl'!r anxiowi. Bea.utifUl 3 G condition with large kltcii~ * 3 Baths • new llstina:. HURRY, lilflrl~~IP,H~ff!~I :.rn:~mp,~n1~ .. ''l't;.•'i:'~: EJ OUT OF THE •nc• 111'ep1ace, '""' uvtni ! ~~Room Call 540.l1$1 0pen Ev... NEW DUPLEX Wet !>a<. Quiet .,..., BRK. RENT RUT room. Located on quiet tree * Call ••• ~K Romn 3 A 4 BR., be"" cell'"· 3 $40 800 540-1 lined cul-de-sae. Priced only now, !PU"......, frpl.ca. Patloa. Poth decor.
' · 720• ' Buy UU. modem home u $34,500. Vacant&.: ready far OPfNnLO• IT'SNN10•MCE1 Quick poaeu. $101,500. ~#~~#EJ:~ ouPLEx ~~ru~~ (~~.) t111111ia . w A L K ~~~~~wy .. ~ GARDEN ENTRY
Tall trees, fragrance of gardenias comprise
lovely entrance for this spec. home with
fam . rm. & den + basement & attic.
Bill Bents.
WHY NOT BUILD?
97 LINDA ISLE Is a good site for your cus-
l<lm bayfront home. One of the last water-
front lols left & only $89,500.
CORONA DEL MAR
Delightful area-big trees, walk to beach,
park, shops. Beautiful deeor. Remodeled
12/71. 3 BR: & guest. $89,500. For app't. call
Paul Quick .
IVAN WELLS-BAYCREST
Lois of charm in this 4 bedroom, formal
dining rm . home. Bright lam. rm. overlook·
ing pool. 3¥1 Ba. Courtyard entry. Lovely
street. Vacant. Mary Lou Marion. .
SUPER NEW 50' BAYFRONT
Bay views from 5 rooms . Lots of parking.
Pier & slip. Room for 3 boats to 45'. 4 Btlnn•., 4¥1 baths, fam. rm. Exel. fin . Fee.
'225,000. Call G. Grupe.
UNIVERSITY PARK
Stay home & relax ID this former model
townhouse ; 2-sty., 3 BR., !am, rm. w/wet
bar; many, many decoral<lr touches-<:all
to see-11Chuck" Lewis
U:l-4700 --Coldwell,Banker
~
550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. •
view. BRK. S41,100. 5'0-17"1. FIXER UPPER baths, ror onty $31.ilOO. DUPLEX. $615 Mo. -0=:. ~s=: rt:.~ Large lot an~ 2 separate :-::;.fT1RM1DEHIOEt VACANT R-2 LOT to~~~t:r:.c:n ~Qr~~~':t~ft
P'onnal dining rm, family homes. M&SS1ve fireplace, ! Prime, level bide. lfte tn tbia lovely 1arze 3 bdrm 2 m-o144 r;r,;f~ ~~ng "3~: tr=:~l;J .. f!1~ l{~tfll\lli ·'PC:it~'~~!,'es ==:$!.~= ~ei=:ci!1 )' eorona ••Mar
con<UtSon • $29,950. Call . --· •••••--NEWPORTHEIGHTS ·N SPACIOUS Corona
Lllce to n-ad<r Ow-Traw'• ~ SOWH co As T 2 11e<1nn. bmna <nice me •***• -1uw:rbas-hllblandl. -e. ' w, 2"
Farad!!; column is for you! l'ORS. Sell ldle Items ... M2-5678 nn1.) on M . lot. Owner •lf!)* 1';0 a.s. bl., tam. rm, study, util mi, o.n...::;;;;;;•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;O.;n;•;'";l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Ge;;n•;r;••=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ must CUTY ht TD at N~! * •Vtrde.Jlr. <t ocean view, prtv. beacl. r HurTYI * * Qa X• Fee llmple, By owner. 512
400£.17:.dbii.fOIALL *•~•~.. .11'1-4111! .:fili;~Mm;;· 11 ~
1
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
POPULAR MONACO MODEL
2 b•drooms & den, w•ll decorat.d, shows like 1
model home; Lorge lot, room for-pool. ~,500 FEE.
CJL ~ !Ope• Evenl(ogs 1811. ocean llde of ~~
Ar-~ Reolty~ ONERiciE :~~~orr.
IMMED. POSSJ!SS. El.u•-& View PLUS S UNITS CJ.i~ t111a\'., 2~~ :l!lOO Custom blt.. dell&httul ~ ''Pr'tldOl'!nt Home'• 1n Tw11e-Shoul ._ ne,r try area, -by roc:kl r--•~··· n• FRI d take.16 unlta. .Pretent point, paper, crpt, drpo, a beautlfUl homes. SPadoUI 3 ......,.......... _, tncom.e Sil*>/mo. PtbM · thutten. Owner ·-.-:, '
bdrm .. 2 batbs. Eweythlng ::..."f ~~ ~Mesa locatloll. $89,000.
c\IStom! Tbll home is -· (G2ll co•---~~UTH Colla Miu perfect fOr enlftWnlrc " ~. REAL1'0~ ;;:;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I °'t!fo~'G~ REALTY 3':;'l,, ~ .. ~ FOUR IEDRM
•n.6641 475-6459 641-mS ..... tr:..:=:.1· ... H4 CONDO
r * EASTS I DE * ,..... 18llt1 J21 li00. Bia. bt1. USO oq, rt .
BAROAINll EASTSIDE Qlnt>d: ~-.. ,........ IRIU. 21' loqr ••
J Bdms., 1!1 bltbl n -TOl'mo1 din, tlen .. 1m mi.
Lari< """ ........... Pool $26 900 u..uu; !pl, Irr klldl, 2 -= ' s. .. m • · f! ........ ,o . l'ORTIN CO. Cllte 3 bedroom, "" 11 1"'I 811 Dow< Dr NB !!!!! · OolY $32.500. /"*'
RHltort '42ofGOO i=: 2::::: ~ ~ * MOW;Oi'i' Heltllttl'k ~. tbl. Wett llilo ol -•
CHARM ---1-tot Qimfktd)o ret11odolod If c1-.. ~ Bia ~ I BR. l tiadio. ·con:A"'-E -....,,....,..,,.,,0, IJiro--•-· ..... .. Ol!Xlbl• terms. ...... tliOdod ..,,.ma 1(111,0!IQ. •• .-NII
$26,950 COA IALIOA IAY PROl'.1------1
On&0f-a·ldod i Bl.'drm • a TS * 60-74" * home on f.,.. lot. Mllll!I U PL£XE$, Cl(, Bltltil. DAILY PILOT ----11~~ .. ~ R~~t~~i~ ~i-,~~ cood. CLASSRD AD
bar, dbl aar. a ... ID -. • H).4454 • -., -~1 oar nwior·a POt AC'ftON ••• -HARBOR VIEW HOMES
-REAt.TY
833.0780 CALL 60.lm Opoft I '·-
Neod a "Pad"t Plaol aa adl _.... ~=~:c1 cALL w-5611
I J •
I
,
'
unLE
DOLL HOUSE
. $24,000 3 BR 2 IA
A!IPolllhed&llblned.Fao-tutlc uaed bric.le &.place Plenty of land here' to grow
YoU1 own vqeta.bles and
fruit. Pay Just $191 per mo.
on th1l VA 1'elale. •
Real.... 545-0465 Open Eve1
3 BR. 210 BA. Condo. Patio,
dbl Pl'· By Owner. $25,450. Prine. Only. m-1832
BEAUT. PoOl home 3' Br, 2
Ba frpl JU' So Coast Plaza, ~.900 by owner, 546-8347.
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
--.... I~ I -"'s. I~ I -"'.. I~ I "="" I~ I _,,,_ l~I
C ~0~1~11~M~,..~·~---· I'""";-;::;::::.:;::-;::;:::-HuntlntfOll 9-11 HuntlnVlon 9-11 Newport looclt RNI e11010 Wontod td 305 ~"' Unlvfn.
ASSUMABLE A HOt:!tE: FOR SEACLIJT. on1y homo ava11 Dlulltxff ,_ ,., OCOOJ\ * Quick Casi! * o.norat '•untoin vonoy
ALL SEASONS 1 'la YEARS NEW .. aoII """"'· 9th lalrway. Mllel I.anon. Realtor Will ~... -All -4 BR. OI' 3 BR " Den. Xlnt, VA LOAN MJnQt,. to 1-. s-. 111,y, 4 Br, 11' Ba. Owntt. * ~ * cash ~1.t'i::' rf".n: ·C&IJ =eov'd patio, attru,
MESA VERDE ,,,...., 2 bathl. Decorator'• 53H8'l6. Nownort Hatghll l6:lo8S:5I • Man>' • t r a•·
dream, .,_, ~ T.0.P. on thls wry titan 3 ""'-' t $! FFER. (I) ~ tr~t!W ~~ ~ ~~~ ~~=';.~F~ s.. R!~Ec.!!~~ru':tic llllit . 3;;:~~ 1-whpmd~I
=n 1:";.o!'inio ~ Price reduced fot quick lnln• ~~tb 2u:.11 ~~~ ~·· RDnKtrRt:t INC. mw tlth COITAMEM .... -~ •-•--t ~ ,.., sale. CAlJ.. ~. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;;; I FA. h •1 pl • •·•b · ,.,,,·· =::::.,..= • .or_wknd_•-·-~---i ·~··~ .. w FRANCISCAN I • . ea• us i-.. Y . 'Ill A J t A F Of -HERE IT Isl Newb' remodeled. Lg ~. $100,000. -NEED to lnwat in ete re us ew Huntington Belch .....,UNTAJNS cov'd. p&t}o & room for homes at appraisal value. Our ~tANY RENTALS .•. 1---"-----~1 rv the bttt ttsdn&: in all ot camper-or boat ttorage. Agent 84T..e612 * 3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths,
Splnl ............ ,.. .... Turtle -Hill£. A klV<l,y IS2.500 185 . INCLUDES Utilities. electric bulltins, FA ~~ann~er,:ostW:t~ !=.··Jieba!~lf0:~ CALL,(i)J '''·l•t•i ir.i :;:tc,'::chelor. You ng beat, w/w carpets & * VACANT * --,~'=='~.,..,...--1 '-plan. , Bedrootn, 3 dining, runny room and itd"41alc. . ,_ . ~ * drapes, double garage,
Must be told this weekend • baths, c~ & drapes. ~t's I~~ to per-R&AY TY $125 • EASY UVING? 2 Br. fenced, ldscpd, $229"
thll newly painted clean as SeU cleaning dect11c oven. can't re!:~ vit!du~~ Near Newp•rt P••t Offlte Mobile home. 2 Ba. Partly per mo. Ageni, 962.-4471
a wttlatle in & out 3 bdrm =~ =~ n;:lo. ~ the land. BY OWNER Businen tum. * 1~or=541>8=~10~3~·· ~......,-,...,..1 home. Only $22,450. nlA· to coll.tee, sbopp1n,g &: free-8 d h•11 Unique 2 Br. l 8a home on Opportunity 200 1155 • WALK TO BEACH! 2 2 BEDROOM, electric VA t e rms . SCOTT ,....,, 1:~1'\ACo r , REALTY, 536-7'33 (C&IJ way. ~ ~· I eorner R-2 lot. Frt>lc. "'ut· SUP COVERING Br. Stove, relrlg. Oilldreo bulltln1. FA hoot,-w/w
anytime). · ters 6 shag crpt. $29,950. welcome. car--t1, double n•r•o•
673-1658. AND * ,..... • * REPOs.sESSIONS * REALTY Duplox-Catollna Dr. DRAPERY SHOP $105 . SECLUDED 1 BR Cot· $20S. rr mo. ~·nt = 8!ii..~;'11~~sse~~ a.A~-~...,1754 u~~~C=.~e Freshly painted inalde. New Take over a going bualness tage. L.rg yard*. Avail Now! 2
9
B
6
U<SW!_
0~~ch ! BR 1 Wills al cu ...... -. ..._ Call Anytime, 552-7500 carpeting, near-new roof. & bldj:., on a C·l lot, South uvm i.>elli 1 '> • RA ty, ~17l9. OWNER transt 4 Bdrrna., 2 Ottice hOOn 8 AM to 6 PM Cop~r plumbing. Call for of 17th St. &: Sateway Mark· $180 • SPACIOUS 3 Br. 2 Ba. BA. Frplc. Patto. Fenct!d.
SPACIOUS Mesa Verde bath!J, Patio, dining nn, appointment to see. el, Costa Mesa. Incl. equip. Nr schls. Kid.I / pet5 I ~/mo. 530-31.0'J, Moro-
Home 3 BR, 2 BA. frpl, bullt-lns QoJiet are a · l'l\llillll====z:. lRVINE by Owner, Extra 675-621Xl Bro:ke:r & Inventory & pl-· worit. singles lniS & eves. Open Sat & w/w, huge FIR. A steal No down terms avallable.11 "'"',!' ' ~ Sun. !MC Tiki Circle. ,~950 557 c"A" Sharp 3 BR, 2BS, b'plc, Nr Santa An• $27,:i>O. -· · --brlc. $28,950. 96~:t.m. $500. 11500 d T W c $235 • NEWPO T HEIGHTS 3 BR, 2 BA. Crpts, drps,
Want ad remits .. 642·5678 OWNER aacrtf1ce, Attractive =nt:s'$217per r:'"e~o3, OWNER, $1Zi0 down, 3 BR. AL,,L e ~ 646"1414 . 2 Br. Encl gar. Huge yard F/A heat, tence<I, dbl aar,
4 bdrms., 2 baths. Spani&h MOVES YOU IN • Seller 675-2018. 2· BA, trplc, Nr South Coa.st tdfl•fllL for kids/pr!. children ok. $240. 897-9383.
accents. Dining rm, btillt· pays all other costs, paymts --------Plua, 1 yr old. Total Rlo\l.TY * Sat. A SUn's or aft~ 5 Pl'n
inl, family rm, patio. brk :>·Tb.r M~~c~J~C:·n:. l'Lo=g,;;.una;;;;..;;BH"'--<11"'----p~ts $277 mo. 833-1103, Nt•r Newport P••I orrlc• LANDLORDSI ,,,w,,,kd~a)'l7'. :::-"""""'=""""'I
$27,0CK>. 962-8865 3 BR, 2 BA, all elec bltins y 552-9503 DUPLEX FREE RENTAL SERVICE $250 -<&BR, 2 BA. Nice. Nr.
OWNER anxious. Beautilul 4 R/O, w/w crpts & drps, EXTRAORDINAR Sip ycur Seashore Soops In BEACON RENTALS ;;f;j'·["ced ,.., "tit Ln
A OON\l!HlrNr SHOPPINQ
SfWtNC CUIOE FOlt THE
'•. r GM. ON TME CO.
bdrm. 3 baths! Huge~ speculator's delight! 8 yrs • , • this 3 bdrm. Englim '~ yourCapeCod Cottage.Coey * 645-.0111 * 5»-m>arnswor '
rm., patio, dining rm. t· new. Won't last · CALL. ttyle home, sits oo 2 lots, MoblleHomll JilP 2 br home w/cedar panel· $235-Nlce 3 Br. 2 Ba. Frplc, WALK to Water-3 Br. $181\
1ns. fireplace, ~ 005: 1, in a very quiet & secluded . ing, fp & shag crpt thniout garage ye.rd. San Juan S 1 tamill UHt pd Prestlgloua. brk. • setting; overlooks ocean, + 1 bdrm garage apt. Great Capo. ' l:o 12 Br CM.es~ -,. '
&U-2561. canyon &:: city.· Spankllw location! By owner, $U,500. $250--3 BR, Garage. yard, •-1-:..ee -;,30 "SIX BEDROOM + POOL" tU.4471 ( ::) 54 ... 1101 clean "wife-pleaser'' kit· Mobile Homes 673-1858. patio, Corona del Mar. ft6'"" ~, • "'ll"'O'I
For 1n ad In Woman's World
Call Mory Beth 642·5678, oxt. 330
Sleek Sensation! His Favorite
• Here is a tnle executive,.,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. I dlen; cozy living room. For Sile 125 $2n-2 Br. trplc, bltns, new $235 -KINGSIDE 3 BR 4
manor, located in a prime !• Hardwood noon. Wood-e Plastics Mfg Co. ' crpts, gar, yard. Dana den. All the extras.
mdential .,.. and v..,. TREASURE HUNT b=!ng llreplace & mud!, Motor Home Rentals • Morino Eng SI• S..rv Pein!. FamU1<1. "'''· Slnirlea ok.
close to the new Mlle See if you can find this "bet· much more. $82,0CK>. • Builders Supply NU-VIEW RENTALS Act· Fee. 847-f207 ~.::~~ 1!= ter than gold" hidden treas· ~~0· I,,, ff SALES & LEASING HOLLAND Bus. SolH 673-4030 or ~ 1165 -2 BEDROOM.
"''uested In a home. 4 bath· .... It has 4 bdnns, 'baths, vro ~k-rq lull service ladlity 6454110 or 540-0608 "''· LANDLORDS! .M KIF~ OK341'.120'! N crowding tireplace, covered patio, gas RE S E ~· « '."'."~a1c: ,;n:~.,., to... ~~=: =~~ AL E TAT Danmar Motor Homes COFFEE Shop -Food cater· w;..~~'"t1tr~ ~i l :R .. ' BA. '1'11>
536-25.51 BKR. only $27,500. lf.g one mile 1190 Glenneyre St. ina service for sale due to I: t.aauna. Our Relltal Ser-.A;t. pe Fee "7-12)'(
"MOVINNORTii''.Il,..'ve from beach, S/Indlacapolls 494-&41'3 M9-0316 531·6800 lllneubyowner.s:ro-1074 vice ta FREE to You! Try · ·
been looking for a REAL &: W/Newland. Good luck on * NEW * lnv•tment Nu-View' $21.0 -2 Pools. 3 BR. 2 BA. BUY ••• check this one! yrur treasure hunt. If you CUstom view home; Ige. SAC. take over our July •n Opportunity 220 NU·Vli::W RENTALS , m . Ideal lot famlliea. Act.
Extra large lot, customhed fbl't find It, call ••• , priv. swim pool. 2 Sty, stuc-dulmus Capri Mobile home, 613-4030 or 49f.!248 Fee. 847•1207.
ttreplace, plulltl carpets & l•rwln realty inc co; heavy !!hake root. <& $15,500. Value $3>,0CK> -YOUNG o c Pub corp 4BR bome, l"-ba, crtpa
drapes. There is al!IO boat t68-440J (l4 hrs) Spacious bdrm.s., Ige. living many extras. 213 -59S-6853 &l'OWina' bx," tart. Need E. ANAHEIM· 3 BR, 1%. BA d:rpl. diahwaaher, 1 ease
& trailer access. Don't let & ta.mily rms. w/beam SACRIFICE Lido . Bay, dbl capital fQ keep pace. <n4.l WIW crpt & drapes. Patio. $235. pb 538-2375
this one get by ' • ' 536-25.51 "A FIVE BED R 0 0 M ceil's. Massive trplc. Lota of wide, 2 Bedrooms, bay 552-8847. Air coDdltloner. $255/mO. fJ!ii • KINGSIZE 3 BR A:
BKR. BARGAIN" -This beauty tile le. glass. Loads of. view. $9500. 673-3817. ~1201, if no ans. 979-7315. Kids o1t.
also offer11 a huge family storage area. See this ex-Money to Loan 240 Balboa Penln1ul1 Act Ftt. 847-~
room, formal living and din-ceptionaJ home at $89,900. ~
lng rooms, walking distance * 499-2800 * I RHI'~ I A BORROW TO $25,000 on the 2 BR. Family room. Block Irvine
to the beaches, tennis _...._.__ . ~I . .g equity in }'Our house. Use from ocean. $335/mo. Year-1;.;;;;;:;;;.;;;;;;,;;;;;.;;;I $1 ,000. coorts, !Choola an! shop-"'"'.._.... iiiiiiiiml the m&ney tar an,y plJl'PO'e. '1 Leaoe. 675-8416. I•
CASH MOVE IN Sell iR ping. • · PLUS a panonm1c ~ .... nrt.... Over $5,0CK> on real estate 2 BR., 1~ ba., aJr/cond. ~
help finance. AMu.m:C ~ view of the new regional ~1§ Acreage for sale 150 and personal property. Call Corona def Mir 4 BR, ~ bathl $380 loan 3 Bedrooms, 2 bath park. It'1 really prltodced to _ _ _ -. AVCO 3 BR. I: tam. nn., 2 bathl
· sell. CAIL us ay. .... ... ...,...c.-~ FINANCIAL SERVICES $275 • 2 + Den. 1 blk-beach. bn.nd new, TurUerock $37' ~do, ~uti.ful to carpeQul:; 1 ;;5JS.;225;l;BKR.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; TilE BIG ONE 160 ACRES 18'19 Harbor Blvd. Beaut cond. Yard, gar, 4 BR., 2 ba $385/$650 w,pes, '""".._,gera r. 11 Extremely modemilldc 4-Costa Mesa 642--3484 Child/pet i BP.., tam. nn., 2~ bath! ~~~.trans-._ $28 • level, 4 BR, 2'12 ba, den 500 N. Anaheim Blvd. $350-3 :SR, 2 ba, frplc, pr, TurtleroCk $i25
B"' """'NTAINE ' e~w/built-ln kl~~~".!.' Riverside 00\lnty on -Anaheim 535-2816 yard, petlo. 3 BR., il!l bO. Deluxe ...-rv uuvi· ..... q.o • ._..... line. ~llent source for 250 s. Euclid St., $?.65 -Lge 2 BR, 2 ba, 2 frplc, mutts; N.B. , $S'.lQ
SHARPEST srARDusr, eX· We have 3 different homes Mstr BR te w/ba.th on rock, .. gravel1, etc. l,OCK> ft Anaheim T16-S2!50 dbl gar. l blk beach. Uni·
terior paint still wet, hard· and locations: to t'boose separate level. CM!r :l6IXl sq. high Pll..E. $385,(XX). Call 12:m Brookhunt St., que. =ty~at ~~ =~ ~~~~: ~g~~00!494.ar.n F,d~ARRETT G4l'Jroa:,~ Bl~ ~IEW !l!N~411
comer tJreplace In living er uppet'S. Uae your VA BY Owner, 2BR, 2BA, newly REALTOR HuntlngtDn Beach 847-00'll · room. Intercom 1hruout. 3 ellgibllity or assume loans. redecorated, Ocean City Vu, --2017 S. Main St. ADULTS only. 3 SR., 2 Ba,
Bedroom, 2 baths. Vacant. can us first. we have them $59,500. Prine only, 745 642-5200 Santa Ana 549-3361 home, beam ce\I'a.; pool.
Huntington llooch
' I L: !1 I 11 1111.
·-. . I : 111 ll11r
~.Pricedrigbt.'CALL an.CALL,
00
893..!533LS. ~~Way, 49 ,.~8635 , ~SantaZ1,.w.17thSt5'7-"Il ~U.otm~ms~.m~i llt;,~-i::"ma,.
7049 1 Acre No. Calif. My equity 641l Weltrn1nlter Ave., adj. 6 2-.BR. apt.I. Great <>Po Untvenlty Parle Irvlno
BY owner, PAC>;SEl'IER 4 & low monthl,y peymenta. Westm!Jlater 893-SXll porlUJllty. 0ranp Coast Do-552-7000 ' Nlvftll Aa..13 $29,900 UP :.,;~~:i:;u-p:: 98'l4m. 1 TD L Real Estate 644-48411 ,.
9349 ""Mefl 4 To.._., from. 3 & 4 bed· lesstonlllt. AvaJl. JIDI ·15, Aporlmonts st oans ~&l[f b~~'\1lch 8: 2 BR;;l'l batht """ $225
SIZES Win hia heart on hia bJrtb. .~..;oo~~~ $42,500. 496--0459. For Solo 152 6%% INTEREST dee. !350 mo. Yr i.e. 2 BR, 114 ba., air mnd $235
terms. VA or 5% _, • Lido lslo 2 d TD L 6'13-1010 2 BR, 2 baths .......... $300
10\S-20Yz ~~~:r;weater Excellent --tori;;.;~--------12Un!ts-GardenGrovell·2 n oans 3BR,2 BA. FRPLC 3BR,2 bathl .......... $330
r.., -t1T • -<IT _, trom °""" down tn one piece. BEACH LOVERS ochool, coHege, abopptna & * EXCLUSIVE * br, 1-3 '!'·an 2\lad.:t' owners Patio. !350/MO. lJ44.0030 3 BR, 2\1 bO. .. -~
'''"""'..,.. ltlM1 ..... U11e 'NOrsted 1n 2 colors. ~. CALL893-3533. 4 Bdnns., plu1 den; 5 baths. :~c!:.·m..oooJn~ ~·Hltrart"M~. o.Oo. Costa Meu 4,BR, 21ii baedtha ····h·····11 Melnly stngle crocbet -rals· TWO STORY $36,500 50 Ft. Nord corn e r • 11411 500 1123 500 Ln -lft. Ct
Start with a sleek and ed rlbstltch bands. Pattern Wln<llng atalrcsae leads ro Msgnlllcen~ custom home. ...Umabl;.' aw.Or, (714i '42-2171 545-0611 MESA VERDI! • I
simple shape then add a 7049: aize1 3642 included. muter suite with vanity $170,<XX>. 5,l9.t{i88 or 645-2'Jl!I. Prine. Serving Harbor area 21 )Tl. Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA. 2 frplc, I 1
wide collar ~nd you have 8EVENTY·nvE CEN'l'8 bath. 4 Huge bedrooms. Old b'l:"M'l"ALS SUmm ··"-t only. Mortgages, Fam Rm, blt!n kltch, iter-' ' •
fashion'• favorite shirt look! for, each pattern -add , 25 "Ranch Style" lam1ly room """"~ • : er, ...... er Income + Shelter Trust Deeds 260 vice porch, encld patio, conv REALTY
Have it tn one or two colors. cents for each pattern for hM a floor·to<ellin& roaring I: leLiOO REAL TY EASTSIDE CO~A MESA to all schll, 2 children, 1 A Company With VWon
Printed Pattern 9349· Halt Air Mall and Special Handl· fireplace. Garden kitchen BY OWNER PRINC ONLY $12,500 2ND T.D. pet ok:. Gardener le water Univ. Parke Center, IrVtne
Sizes lOlit, 12~, 141Ai,' 16~. tng; otherwise r: has builtin eating bar, loadB 3311 Via Udo,_ ~pt. Beach 10 indiv houiea 1 BJi + den on commercial property San pd, on quiet cul de aac, Call Anytime, 562-1500
lSt,i 20%: Size 14~ (bust 37) delivery will ol storage, and pa.tlo pass. "SMART INVESTMENT" _ 673-7300 w/pati~ & gar.' pool. LO vac. Juan C&plBtraoo. P~ble $395. 6 mo lease acceptable, Ottlce boun 8 AM to 6 PM take'.. 1 sis yards 60-inch. ~: B~:oretbe SeD~~ ttiru. Elegant entertainment 'l'hetle 3 bedroom homes are FOR SALE by owner, cute &: maint. 9% return. Condo $125. per mo. incl. 9% due ;.~~~·=-_,...-=,.-~-1:!"'!!!""'!!'"~~~~~1 ~~ .. ·FIVEttem ~25 PILOT, 105; Needleef&ft roomp~--.provAll!deac·arp:~euJt, convenlentlyclosetoachooll u a buttot:t. 3 BR, den, 3 pos.$145,000.646-3764. in 3 yrw, JS% discount. LOVELY 4 BR, fam3 BR., 2 ba., bltns, carp,
wi-caU4 -....,.. n-163 Old Che'··-,.._, and abopp•----~-them BA, 2 Story. fplc in Mstr St:rona: owner. fir lac •-dwris, Newly deioorated. ~ to each pettern for Dept, aua. • ._ draped in decorator colon, .. 16 .......... ,. Comm1rclal <n4l 830-8680 rm, ep e, cpwt. Mo., l1e. Avail now. ~,::~Ma!lranl s~-• ea....n. Station, New York, N.Y. still sm""u ..... brand De'W. ideal for a •tarter home or bednn, loads ot closets, d'ls ~ti /fenced .n.u.· ..,_._, ·~ lOOll. Print Name. ~ BKR. 96i.'55ii a rental unit N 1ce1 y $76,700. Princlpala only, Property 151 RAVE several Well .ecured 1 O W CortM-Martln Rltn ~7662 wr: otherWloe tbltd-clall Zip. Pattem !lamber, landacaped, eovered petloo S'l!rl460 --'-------I 2ttd Truat Deed. IDr sale. Y •in liege Pk. '295 NEW CONDOMINIUM
delivery wlll take three NEED LECRAFT "n• '$1,450. DOWN and thick lhag carpet "" M· 1 PRIME m.-mo. Call Ray Gault at 2 er .. w. poo1 $210. 497.1342 =. ~ihe~AIL~ C)>chet, kn!~ etc. Fn!O Seller Will ..,. all -., juat additional features of. Newport BH<ll COSTA MESA HERITAGE REAL-L•iune Booth
Piwr, 442, Pattern Dept, dJ!:!'tna, ,:--.,..,,, 4 BR 2 BA. Irg lot . ~~·CALI. now •• .5.TS-2551 e THE BLUFFS I p ulat'tno tmd Enterprise I II 11! I TORS 540-llJI.
232 Wett l8tb st., PrlNew Basic fancy~ pat' comp fncd & ldlcpd, beaover· "WHAT A BUY" -4 4 ~ Iota: 107' x 100' and 60! ........... 2 BEDRM. a &arqt ltove A $210 • Nice 2 BR apt w/ York. N.Y. 10011. nt • $100 • sized dbl gar, patio, ut Ultra deluxe, free standing x 2lt'. Price lump llUll'I, . refrigerator tumlihect _ ocean le city view. Bltns, ~&rz:'D!::.SS ~ t::Ot · ~ Book .. ~ ~=-~ ~ = :;:, ~ POO~ ::Jc BA~ F:ic~U:S~ :C ~5:;!600 ~~ ~e: :~ f~ ~~:. s125"·. UtU pd. 1 BR hse. Fan· NU:Mnt:a.. · Learn ~ pictures! ·Pat· oven, master &Uite w/pvt mim>n, beautiful gold shag din rm, two wet ban! Sur· VESI'MENT DMSION. HouHS Fuml1hecl 300 Children OK. $ t 50 / m 0 • tutic ocean view. So.
SEE MORE Q QI ck terns. Sl. ' ba'lh, new shaa: crpts,l rode carpet, and }'OU can even rounded by gT"een open ~"'"TIL •• rr'S Fl.IN ro BE NICE/ AGENT: 64IH811 Lquna.
Faahionl and choose one Oomplete=uJo Gl~Book bikes to bead\. Payments bicycle :S tbe~a~s. Th~ spaces. Just releai;ed at
1
... ""' ! $185 2 ,BR, bltns, 1ar. 50' COUNTRY. Club U·"'-I 5 $350 • 4 BR. 2 ha, frplc,
5. ttem free trom our -1100more -less than rent. $28,950. owntr n re ocat $74,950. Call today! 645-8400. , , ocean N pt. Winter. Br 2 Ba All the ... '6 oceamide hwY w ; beaut •
.Summ«Ca• .. t ...... All • · · and baa priced their home '°'·-·sE·-~-·1 -.. ,1., -· l BR rear hit. Nl.cely · · Mras. v'·w
Only50c. -Com-M .... --m toaell! ltcan'tla!t,CAU. I n-> ""·-.·~=·., ' ' ·;;., • ...iec.CdM. Kkb&Petsok. N'u:v1EW RENTALS INSTANT SEWING BOOK ILOO. 111 today •• .536-2551 BKR. V. !-~.,.,,.!,Co. 1225 • 1 BR, nicely tum. Agt. Fee. 847-1207 S'734J30 or 494-32411
-today, we~.,......,., 1~~':;'~;..5: ' 71 (:;:).146.alOI OWNER mu'1 aelt Pcol . . Gar., petlo, OC<taa view. LRG . OLD 2 Br, fncd, S130.I;::-==-=::....-:-=-= SL 50c borne wtth 4 bdrms., dining $1 ,025.00 LIB'""" ~ta. Alac 3 BR, $160, Lo9uno NIVUol
INSTANT FASHION qQut-l 16pattems OWNER-MU1t..U4BR + rm., bullt·tna. patio. NEW .EXCLUSIVE Leaaedinccmetsnowll.025. NU-VIEW RENTALS Waterfo Water,HB. WIOE °""""view Includes
BOOK -Hundftds 0 t SOc. -• den comR. l't'dec. abag, Fireplace, family rm. On tor these tour stores ln an 673-4030 or ~ Alf:. Fee. 919-6430 IUl'1' breaking on beach, &
tashlon tacts. $1. MulleUID QODt Book t .. ;;nl11 • "wallr)aper and 1/3 3 acre. brk $39,SOO. Alpha Beta center ln Santa Corona dil Mir TWO 1m Pit neied 2. BR Catalina· Ialand. Flit'Ddly
'lbe fastest draw in the West. SOc. much more. ~' trom 962--5566. Bayfront 4 BR., 3 bath!! Ana. The motivated owner hoU8e lot their doc· $160 nla'ht llgbta acrou valley j .Ad.·. • D&11y Pilot Cuail1ed Qa\!'_•u11""1u1-n"' u50c.v1aa • elem achl & pit. -oba~N~? bdrmbull•, .. 2 PliD'08'~efi:'# will carrysala T.D. s30t 8% tor LARGE 1 bdrm. n1ce1y tum, 919-6849 .i.t1p•11poo1 Ible trom this blih hlll 1cca-
i 60-561B. l?i <11:1 P8 ems. Need 8 "Pa.d"t Place an ad! uim ............. rm., t-na, 80% of e, 1ot years. 2 blks beach, U)O, mo/)Tly~ parent&. •• Mountains & Mone.rdl Boy. l C&1J 842-56l8. ~;. Rear llvtng rm., 3377 Via~ Npt Beach Bier. 6'5-7225. Single or cpl. !lo· pets. NEW 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba, Exclualve IU"1'tl6d 1 ate
1. m.~· Near acbools. brk 67).1300 Coron• clel Mar 673--0968 dilhwuher; frplc, yard. residence area. Walk to
: $29, • 846-138$. HARBOR VIEW HOMES UniqUe 5,000 aq ft , Newport BHch Kld1 OK. '295. 54&-130!I beach or ll9e pvt parkina.
:• Popular -.CO Model. 2 Commercial Bulldlng e 2 BR, den. ~. drpe, CommunltY ceni.r, ttwlm _d/l'.l'Q J'I..... f -f) °11 ~Q.e ''TRULY SPANISH" -Ex· bed-.1 A den, well dee· + 2 Duploxea STEPS TO OCEAN dsbwahr. Nice ).Mi. $215 pool, tennla COllrts all paid. -~ J.-"'"U ·~). ~ p~ p clualVEt beach area ... We orated, lhowa like a model at $m,000 Attract. 2 BR avail March 18 mo 8f5.-4871 Golt COUl"lt neub)'. Perfect
roof -4 beclJooml -atudy-home, Large lot, room !or Realonomlct eofp, Bier. ·June IS. $225 mo. Utll tncl. 4 sEoROOlllS, buge den, N. )'NDll.c ~':.J,.. BR,' .!it~ The P11Ule with tlte Built-In Chuc»e lamllf room" 2 -· -pool. 164.500. FEE. 6'l5-'700 646-1875. Costa M-lamllJes on1y lrplc, ~ £all' outtlr
3 car-. Prlcecfto ..Ul HARBOR VIEW 2 • -·~lnlng .._., -BACHELOR Uni~ NB IOO, 1285 mo. m.ma ovm!!'.:_ --ut .
• •-,...,. of. tho .53lf-25lil BKR. HOMES -r-~ "''~·· • ··~ '"" i«omblod -.... • • etdes, cent. C.M. $75,00!. CM $85, Lag. $1111, HB 1 BR, crpt,, clrpl. All util. lndlcPll. mo. .. Jae .
.... to f<wm four ..... i.-. OWNER deaperate. Top 3 REAL TY 833-0780 owner. Ge.~ I 64U560 garage Unit 1100. Utll Pd. pd. l1111S. lit .\ Jut + dep. 49H769.
I bdrm. 3 baths, dining rm., DOLORES PLAN Income Property 166 HAgt. F ... Um-MlOfv ' oott fiT3.4621, l-HI::::LL:,.;:.;V;:o;IEW=.-=-3 ""BR.:::-"'Fam"'° R A II N I D I ,.... Uvlng rm. Family rm., OUIOI n rn. 305 1140 -2 1111. KIDS & PETS Rm. 21' BA. mtna. trplc, I 'I j' J I I built-Ina Patio, brick trim THE BLUFFS 6 UNITS · Ban Clemente OK. patio im. -· -. ~ -• • . brk $30,950. MS-0604. Po P u l a r early ma. White water view' $150,000. General Agt. Fee. 8'7·1207 3 BR.• 2 ba, alt cond. Club
OWNER transl 3 B<tnns., .S Greenbelt A tome ba,yview 1S39 Buena Vi.ta, Apt. 3 SMALL 2 BR l>oulle, tom· 3 BR, 2 Ba, tam rm&: trpJc, prtvl It pool. kar pt. Near
• • • •
• · ·-· · .. • pa-•••Pace, rm. ~ w ~~ · iw lot, 50' x 117', Xtnt · •~ • enan ·~~. -· !Wwoort _,, v..,. ·aborp. brl< $39,900. Broker, 844-usr ~or,.., rttldentlal location to build will Ohm utilld,. wttll ....,_ '240 -ROOM to Roam! 41:;:;:.:;.i...,:;:.;~=;;;...---1 .. I G • M E N 1 1 bathll Bllllt·tna. =""·· 3 Bdrma, 211 ba end unit. Lot• for S..lo 170 =•ly turnlabed. 3 ml trom hrtlwd lloorssbii. Yartls ,,...., 83HlllU -I "1• I I ' '1 . t « "· ~-I Cul •·sac •-··lion. '"900 W •-pd T t te-~ -10 "···•
84MlllL 2 BR Hcmt, 1 bU< 1o ....,,an, 1-unlta. !Sth St Hunt. tr. 1160 me. Avall April 4. BR. 2 BA. KldJ A peta ok. "THE BLUFFS" • .. • •
ji
•• l• ' ' I -t • • •
I REPOSSESSIONS Clom!>lete~ t1an. V•cant. Bch. Clll 49&-1436 a11. s. -· Art-Fet. 847-IJJ'I a ~ 2 ba "Lindo" ~
8 D RT 0 I ~ ~or lnlormnilon aotl location ~$;.500':.'fi ~.Zonal Mountain Do•rt 'r . ~New, all eltctric MESA Vmk. 3 BR, 'iio Ba. En un lfii J!re• Ji ~ I j I I pl~~~ ~1,:"i:.; of th'" FILA & VA bom.,, 11_.c Pia ftal4' Resort ' ' 174 A/:~ BAe:Jllll 0t_ ~.; ~':;~. =· ~ • ~. t· 1 .,+ 2 ~
• • • • • · "'-Ho 1 ha ''" · ,ce · m.m hldea 1n N t'I pell. Fool )'&I'd. Dbl Pl'· D Pol t ,, .... $4lli!IMO-' :t" ust ' -poo. Kf\SADIAN BLUFFS CONDO 60 Ac Mt. ::ir;j' a Beautliu! location ' '11"'1 1"1 " WHloy N T•ylor C:.. I & Y N 8 0 E l kott. .,..,.. Rul E1toto 962~ 3 Bdrms., ~baths =.:.i or 1~~ 5:re !1
: n4: 15M367. Im-OCEAN BREEZE -New R&U.roas
I I• I' I' I O Cottlolota tho dHdle ..-1 -~ -·-~ oelt ~· New• O'l'tan !90 ooolno 00! ttn. tm-mo, Hon~ll&>ch. &l'iitoe. s ltti 1 BR . .,,_. :nu San 1..oequln IUlls ~o J>! .. tt~ h ....... O:\~"O .~. u""= -· ,_ TED ll\lllER'f 4 ASOOC. lHOaml~ Aft· cornls. 1W~, tic. Kim Agt. Fee. 847-1271 Newport ~mer T _..,..... ·-3 ~ home wl~n'i:"'"" ~ 347! Via Lido, N.B. ~ pets. sfnljea ok. All· Fee. $260 FANTASTIC View' 3 LARGE • bedroom 2
• ~~rssUME !,.£J.u~~!lSETTEAS r r .r I' r .I' I ~-hml!)o ~·on·~ WATERFRONT l>oraaln on Roal !11•1• Wonted 114 l'\i1:LDEN RBNTALS Br. -.New home. rriilo. balh, year -8l'Olllld
'0 __ ~-"' _ _ _ ·-• _ • • S ~ brk 139,500, ~ , Lido Bay. ~ wide I BDRM _or I~·-_ homo• G ...... .\it Fee. 847-llC'I lease, 'Ai block to e UNSC'l.MSIE·™ TO I • GET ANSWf! I I I I I I I --OWNER: tnl111:-niai'llii.,"3 :=.111rn. -Newpo<r~ FREE RENT~~YlCE Pountoln vanoy beach. Nicely·decoral>
. . . . . . • bs.llll! Bllllt-tna, ~.rm.. BLUFl'S CONDO With te.,. option to buy or C&1l 847•00 4 BR. 11 bo W ed. '450. RlID CAR-
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN Ca..SSIFICATION 800 ~:· ~-~ii$~ I BR, a l!A, hard 1o llnd c;. ~.~.'~Bo= For that lttm 1Jlldcr llO. try bar. Kl:° ok. ;l,1g'1'1 ti'. ~. ~..! REALTORS
1G-4611 Model. 1'J' ........ -· -7 the Penny -· lll 82M671 or (1) ll2HIOO ..,..,,.,..,
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~ I -.. .. ---1~1---1~ , ....... --1~ [ -I b--1~1 ... ·---I~ I ~~~E!~~t-=---:~~ ..... u..funt. 365Apt. Untwn. 265 Apt """""" 365 Aplo., ........ ~Offlee--.. •.d• .. •, ;;;4441~ .........
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l'..,,...~·;...:..~=--="='".'::-:::-=--='-1'.:.":".:'~:;::~--=1-:::'•::rw.::.•~~"""'""~~~m~.:.F~u~m.:::.!rw~U-...~~-m~ l'IJRNlSll YOUR HOME OR t:.OST -1'1 Mallatd OCE •~ VIEW -II Genorol c..tt MeA -Huntl ......... _,, Huntintlon IMcl\ Plesti-1 Encltiwe Omat -BIG' .jumltutt, !lllclc wbl~ rtnc ......S ~ I -;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;1-;;.~jii:.yr'"i:o;iiXXJm•w •1i;EO = " " '"I -dnpn. tDliqUH neck• color on ~ \Ile. nom aD"'d:, Uv. nn. .1· D i'OC."'"-#'-A lhnl exdustve Wboleu.Je Cabrino I: Santa Ana Ave..
ldl<h. New w. 3 BR. 2 bL ALMOST REA J 'w,:11o ':'':~-,,,,. Y~~ •SP.~~. ICONG=TONRBEAESTCHATEFINLMNEST a• . Watah-1 Offices = ~a~l c.M. -·
-· T~-$420 mo. btwn14 ~83&-020. ~"''" llc<mod cie.&.t;;;' with lop $ISO. REWARD.,.. Wo oo Afmt 675-f15.<0ll CASA TIEMPO Z22fl"B" Plac<nllA i. ... 1145 2 Aerts beautiful like flUJTOUDdin$•· 200 1o :lllOO tt. Mo. or w... expttlmoe " ltnowledaO. 350 Bultac:o ,......., -. ~Y'."P!ii~s.'irJ!: 219'l"A" Plsoe!lta AVf!. $140 Sunken pooL S g SpanWl fountains. Ql!Alllkd lt!lllJ.la ocly. )'OQ'll be clellahted. Q.11 1.., l-18 vuta Pomona apta,
2S66"D" Orange AY<. 1140 e Spacious Roonu e Separate dJning room BAY-LIDO BUILDING 5611636 CM. No queoUooa uked, • ;;:-.:1'"'~3".19~; (j\111 North ol SD Freeway at Magnolia) DELUXE e .Walk.ln .Closeta 3'100 N...,,.... Blvd., N.B. DIVORCED acnlelman. mid· ,;919-4300;::=;,·==:--:'-'='<
llU-ltlil DELUXE I & 2 BR w/FIREPLACES TOWNHOUSE e Home like kitchen 6; cablnela Ph: Lou Cowl& 675-l220 die age, nice look In & • LOST• Doberman, fem., 4 ·
STl!f'S TO OCEAN • Private PaUos • Dishwashers 2 BR, 110 BA. Bit u.. Range. 1 Bedroom Onlurn. $16'. Furn. '185 lmmed. Avolloble aincere, ,.... warm · ..,., Vic. Orange " lT111. ·
'.l"OWNHOUSE DUPLEX • All Heatlnfi:ald • Jacuzzi • Heated Pool Crpll, drpo. Priv. patio. 2 Bedroom Onlurn $185 Furn '215 O.WW. Oo. A"-.._.., rdlafo<>a worn~ for C.M. Bil<. " bnl. -2 .,< Encl garage. EXTRA T • ' ' Irvine So. T_.r new wlle. Write CJuoilled .=~;:;::::,· ,--.=:-;:::::;;:;";;;:-pa&, :C. Z.L = • 8-eatlon lldlng • Luxurious LandJcaptng CLEAN! No children, 1 pet ownbouse 2 Bdrm., 11'2 ba., 1,~ sq. It. '400 Ser « NllY hnlJl'OVed ad "' 8119 c/o ])&iJ;y Plk>t. SILVER ch&rm brac<4el Vic.
lot 11219-A RM -• Heavy Pile Shag Carpeting. 11'15. ""'342. Furn. $UO "' Grubbo • EIJb Co. PO -1560, O>ata M ... , Siz Steak Hs .. K-Mart or '
. r; Adulla Only E p .. ..-M-e ALL UTILITIES FR11:E e Contoot Jom _...., Calli., 821127 P.O. C.M. ~ward. 616-9'125 " * BAYSHORES * STOP BY AND SEE US BEFORE WE'RE 2,...BR.uv $I" Walk to Huntington Center 557-1!IOO * IDNDU SPIRITUALIST* ::E•::c"::o·-.,.....,.-~=:co l
Yem, -· ! BR., 1 b&., FINISHED-FOR YOUR CHOICE OF APT. -ADULTS NO PETS FULL SERVICE Let Ibis ad cbaJ<I• -LOST oma!l '""" !e. -....... nn.. bit ..... lrJ>I<. 8912 Hell Aw., Huntl1'9ton Beech Unfvm. LA QUINTA HERMOSA Westcllff Bulkli"8 be':;, ~r.s:!f ~:: pc l'<>odle. Friendly, t.alher
"C' 'lbomu, Rltr. ,._ Mg r. Mr & Mra Elliott 147""'2 All UtllltlH Peld 162ll PARKSIDE LN (714) 847-5441 Comer WeatclJJf onve • oo We . ..fteadlnp dally. 10 ooUar " Uc. taa. Rewanl.
Brand New Duplex Pool A Recreation 4 "Dn .. S fSan D Frw Irvine Blvd., Newport AM . JO PM. •92·9136 . .;646-~9011=,·;.,----,,-,=I Ocean Vu, walk to her.ch. S 1!159 Mapie Ave CM DIA. • 0 iego Y· on Beach Beach. Mr. Howard $.0034 m No. El camfno LOST gold rnonogramed e&I'-~no pe111 or-. Aph. Furn. 3'0 Apt. Unfum. 36S SPACIOU~EW 1 Blk. W. of Ho1t I<> Parkside 66-6101. Real San Clement•. r1..,. reward. Vic. btwn,
""'"'· ~-. 3 ~, •11 n-. 2 Cotto Mesi lllllboe lalend 2 BR. W /w O'pl. Drapes Apt. Unlum. 36S ,._ NEWPORT 'Beoch. 3 12 3 PALM 1. CARD READINGS 23rd A Hoag Hoopltal, CM ~ •AIU"" IX' • a-. 1---------LoYely Jdtcben. BHn range. ....,. • .., Birch. Dial Bide. Dtlux of· TelJa Put. Present & ;646-~3~123::-..,..,.,.-==.:::::I
!>pies, lncd yd, 1 blk ID WEEKLY-MONTHLY VERY A'l"MlACT!VE. 1 BR. Gange. Lndry room. No Ne.......n a..ch Furn. or Unfum. 370 llco"" avaft. mil ICJ. 11. llOO """"' !2U) &M-13SO Thlly FEMALE lrlJh Seiter. loot
ocean and bay, ~mo. Ex--•lve Suites Y~y. 1185 +Utll. ..-. 1 child ok. u7.1u.o ,_ ,...--· 11q. ft. 50c p@r ICJ. tt. incldl Uc. vie Victoria I: Brookhurst. ~1uh R11y •. 8f2-S400 . 2080 "N::..port Blvd. No Pell. Ph• m-1503 · ;:;;;::;.,. ~ -· -PARK NEWPORT Huntington a..ch crp~ dra, air c:ond, utll. Nr. PROBLEM Pregaancy. 0 ,.. Reward. 642-1079 M~ 549--0m ' · -· 54lh146l! !Iden~ 1 y ni pa I he tic SEALPOINT female, vie 20th
C....l&'lvate,afarklln• co:.:~2~" Coronodel Mor 2 Br.~?= Cll>t>. APARTMENTS ,..:c,RANYadh n1· Im WESTCL1FF o!i:. NB p"""""""counoelin'"~ & Full•rtOO, C.M. may be
elean. 2 BR. BA. cpts, STUDIOS & l BR'S -· bltna, Ind yr d On the ba ,. ~ N8::'t1e °"';; Garde;. tlon t. adoptions rel. hldlng. Reward. 543-1891 ~pr,, $%35. 548-6797 aft w/patio. Wtr. pd, Call btwn Y Luxury Garden Aju ground floor' front :·back APCARE 642-4436 WHITE Male :Min. Poodle,
pm. .• ~ LlneUtlllnti'eo · ~ 1 &: 5, 63&-4Ia:>. l.uxury apartment living 18992Adult8 Only-No Pets entr. Ample p' .......... ~ SEMI retired, neat w/male, Vic: 18th &: Pomona, O>lta
BAYCREST Atta 3BR. 2BA, l!cu:.c. ~ 2439 "F" Orange Ave .•• $100 overlooking the water. En· Florida St."(14 blk. W. • ..... ~ 44, teeb reas attractive Meaa. 6t6--0614
crpta drp1, Jra ynl, $323. By • ~l Kit= NEW 4-PLEX. Spacious 2 ~ $750,000 heaJth spa, 7 of Garfield & Beach Blvd) DESK apace avallatile $50 female companion. 25 to 40. LOST Republic of Olina
appt only. 548-9341 64&-2848 : La:~ Facilities BR Apt. Lrg. kitchen. Util. awumnlng poolls, 7 lighted 714: 847-9448 mo. Wlll provide turnlture Salling occ. dinner. P.O. N 27391 k N
WNtclJff e TV & aid ll. l child. No pet& LOCKED tennis courts, plus miles of 2 BR, 2 BA, $195. Adult at $5 mo. Anawerlq service Box 364,, Dana Point. r:ii~~ 833-l6T'-o.
m serv ava ON TEN ACRES GARA.GE. C1o8e to schools, bicycle tralll, putting, abuf· poolside garden bungalow, avl.Uabl.?. l'lm Bea<$ Blvd. rREGNANT? T'h Inking . '
DARLING sml 2 hr home,
lge liv rm, new I.baa:, new
d&hwhr, pvt patio, pretty
yet, prdner incl. Adults, no
pets. Opp, ~Ing. $225.
mo. W.:1603
• Phone Service Apta. furn,/unfurn. Leue buJ service. Eastside, CM. neboard. croquet. Junior l's near ocean. Frplc. lrg. HunUn&ton Beach. 642-C321. abortionJ Know all the facts
$30 WEEK & UP Fireplace I priv. patloa. 839-1190. trom $189.50 monthly; a19o 1 patio. 6 Pools. Sauna. Ten-NICE office ll:ipe.ce 444 Old firat! Call UFE LJNE.24 [ ·~ ,..R_... [(51 e Studk> Ir: 1 BR Apts. Poolt Tennis ConlJlt'l Bldst. VERY NICE 2 bd unit, $17S. and 2-bedroom plans and nis. ~-Newport Blvd, 3 b1ks North bn.-.5'1-5.522. .---.--
e TV Ir Maid Service Avail 900 Sea Lan, CdM 644-2611 trpl drp bltins 2-story town houses. Elec· Abo 1 Br. Furn. From $135 ot Coast Hwy: 1.900 wq ft. ALCOHdLJCS-Anonymous. e Phone Servl~Htd. PooJ (MacArthur nr Cout Hwy) be.;; ~.patio, adul~ tric kitchens, private pa.:os· Newport Buth s.m. utll lnc:I. 5@.5.300. Phone ~7217 or write I •••••••••I
• Oilldren A Pet Section only, no pets. Rel 2354 Santa or ~conies, carpeting, dra· OFFICE space A suites .p,o, Box 122!, Costa Mesa. 11
Condominium• e $'"1 Monlhly CASA GRANADA 6'13--0395. penes. Subterrano:an park-u b RI Ide A Baby1llll119 -o 2376 Newport Blvd., CM Ana Ave., ing with e~vatora. Optional next ava ' ":f vers .ve. Young couples · 18-35 + -------.-----1
1 __ U;.;nlu __ rn_. ____ ••-548-9155 or 645-3967 Rental ConceUloo $140 up spac 2 br/3 br 1% maid service. Just north of V~Uf Poat Ottice. 215 Riverside. ~or 539.3:w4: BABYSITl'ING my home, 3
H I hach -,..;,;:;.:;:::.,A;;:,.c~::;:;;.,--Lovely 2 BR. apt.I with a Ba, pool, cpt/drp, bltn. Fashion !Aland at Jamboree JV 6f2....3347. 2.-8 pm )'l'I or older. 7:]) am -to
untntton HOLID Y PLAZA klnr1ized BR. On plygmd andSanJoaquinHillsRoad. t umber LEASE C2, central Costa ~singles 5:30pm.$25.aweek.H.B.-
3 BDRMS ' ll DELUXE ~paclous 1 BR. beautifully I ands caped 1996 Maple, No 1 642-3813 Telephone <n4) 644-1900 ap • n ~tesa loc. 1750 aq ft $400 all Call "Leah" 2--8 pm. F.V. area (Bushard&. Ellia) d~ bltin.,11e:Pe:Tvaii fum. apt. f140. Heated pool. grounds. Gat lncl'd in rent. 3 BDRMS, l'n Sa. l'iS car for rental lnfonnatlon -(or part) 64&-8811 Agt. KEY-3344 962-7689
Anril 1 $250 842-2276 Ample parkillf. Adults, no Child up to 3 years. No pell. garage, lge fenced yd. * * Office Ir: Store 1n small YOUNG SET SCHOOL. op@ll
mtlpoolp ,.1%1 ~.'.·~~ki, clcarport, ~J:s Pomona Ave., c .M. J ~~rri~~~ 1iv~~7.JJS.59 ~~s-=~va~~~· .. BR FOR LEASE ~[ $135 J~~ ,~"°1:'.B!!:pJ'k-l!'ce~;.k~•r!._,_ao_is. __ &_H_•_u.15oc:-;;'•:-:l;::C-;lu:bs::;-;:;::::::;;::-53_5 :,n~· ;fie' w~: ~
• cu ... .........,, It to * STUNNING 1 &: 2 BR. SPACIOUS l·Br $185: 2 BR, M • Bayfront Apt. $550 \)I ~ .:: If you w4Jlt Quantity 64&-3706 or 645-1057. •hooPingn $225 mo, ref. "'-·-n 2 BR 2 BA Unfum 2 ba., frplc.: pool privll. Nr. ADLTS only, Irnmac 2BR, 2 BR. Near beach. $395. DEL1UXE ofl!Sance n:11pace ~!or DON'T CAIL US! ....._...._ 64>45 ,,. w • • • • High Schol, $25ll mo. 2BA, quiet, Triplex, nr including utlliUes. ren near ..,,ego r .. -y. u It's Qua1ity ClW..D Care -Loving""'" ...
TownhovM Unfum. 335 ~:'ei:,e~O A&~is~~!: ~~~ H. Pinchln Rltr. 675-4392 shopping Avail April 1. $175 George Willl1mson Call 831-1400. YOu're looking !or tlan home, fenced yard, hot
Huntington Beach
3 BR 'Townhouse. Newly
painted. Waaher It dryer.
Crpts & drpe. !16M781
TOWNHOUSE-3 BR, 2 BA.
$235. Xlnt corxl.
Call 2131430-1914
ADtn.. TS ONLY · LEASE s BR, 2 hll., blma, carp,
drpg. 3 Car gar. Facing
pool, s:IXJ, Also 2 Bdrml., 2
Ba. $250. Rltr. ~
Duplexes Fum. 345
Balboe Penlmult
SPACIOUS. Dlahwaaber.
-· Carpei.d. ht CJau. Ph•~.
Duploxea Unlum. 350
C1pl1trono S.och
Large 2 BR, ocean view
$200. mo, 496-5600
34582 Via Verde, CB.
2 BR duplex, separated by
~a; private yd. 1991
Anaheim St. $150 mo. Call
evenings. 979-9S19
Huntlntton Beech
Mesa mo. 642-1522. Re.tltar 600 Sq. Ft. OJo~flicE wfklt & DISCOVER hmches. any age. FV. * SHADY ELMS . POOL Costa Mn• MESA Verde area -Beaut. 3 * 548-6570 * ~':1~":~tg:t.;=°J':rJ:~ Ba. $155. ALSO 600 ,sq, Ft. DISCOVERY 968-T.m. Br, 2 Ba apt-home. Frplc, A 1 1 th 1 STORE $155, C.M. 646-2130 ''Tbe Something Else" Q>, ANYTIME. Licensed. 1.ota o!
•• ChAdt"td"re' nPoonexlaldt •bl~~~ up 1arg patio, closed double tap~rl men 81 a'8 $9135ren 8' 360 Sq. ft. of oUice space. Call: Mon·Fri 10 am-10 pm RttenUon. Hot meals. ~ ARBOR G E£N gar.·~. 54• '016. NEW BAYFRONT _ Priv. 8 ng aa ow as · • ~ M~ • 177 E 22nd St CM 642-31345 H R S ~., ~ A d h 9 oth 1 New WUdlng, Costa Mesa. 714-835-6885 213-387-3393 <NO""VOO• ' . . ** BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. Bch & Pittr. 3 Br. 2 Ba, re~aon~; are er grea $110. 642-4227. Natlooally Recognized BABYSITTING -Days, ln ,
FURN. 2 BR. Apt. Pool. Cont --~ G~~-n A ts $550/mo. 2 Br, 2 ba, $495. ·~·" I 540 ho • • --and tun Close to shops. Adu1ts, no Furnished & em_. ... ,, """" P · 979--0631 or 6 4 4 -4 s lo swimming pools SML office approx .wl!o..W, Trave my m · ......,vc ·
pell. $160fmo. ~!tloss5~. pool. $165-$100. eves/wkends. health clubs 824% C, $25 mo, Inquire 824: ~ ~-~'1615 ______ _
1941 Pomona, C.M. Unfurnished FOR Rent Yeari . ., ~'>Dt:/mo. saunas West llth St, Costa Mesa Wruu.ll·llSERBV!lldCEI B I S I v ..-... tennis courts, pro & pro ahop OFflCE SpacetLease. CdM \ ¥ e1tc U ng US Mii erv Ce l BR fum, util paid, St.50. From $130 ta $215 mo D1n1 Paint Unfurn 2 BR, 2 BA BAY bllllards location. 659 sq ft Can be COrner Westclitf Drive &
2340 Newport Blvd. Adu111 ;;c.;...;.;_..;..;--'-----1 DUPLEX. No ga ra g e . free Sunday brunch divided. 675-fi676 Iriine Blvd, Ne w po rt Payroll & Bookkeep in& Serv only. 646-~ 548-8333 Bachelors e 1 Bdrma SPAC. New 3 Br/2 Ba $250. Adults. G'f?..-2706. 2'l3 19th actl"llles _._, H-·--" ~~~ .... ,... For small business. Aho, 2 Br/2 Bs. -.n. Balrony. St., N.B. golf.d""lng"'';:-,!! 4001-D BIRCH, N.B. Beach. Mr. """04u~..1.. NE\V 2 BR, $195. Nr. beach. 2 Bd • 3 Bel '#"'JV I~=~------... ·-·-Income tax exper. !J68..4635. No pets, adul1s. 114 E. ~ rml rms VIN·. Garage. CaJi>ort. 4 BR, 2 ba, frpl, sundeck. 1 party room $Hi0f Per Mo. SU-5032
St., CPi,f. 548-0137. 1¥2 or 2 Full Beths Open daily 34132 Amber Blk. to ocean. Yrly $350. Call ptus beautiful alnglet, one -"1°"61"7"w=E"S"T"C"L'l'"F"F~-1r[----,---.,[g] C1rpet Service
1 Br. Trailer. fl1n. Suitable Lantern. 496-6559 Ot' 833-0096. Mike, Jones Realty. and two-bedroom•. Fur-l29-4 ~ •-540 ft a pie Loll and r.-........ Mamer Bile bedrooms w/ East Bluff 6T.H2IO 551-1700 Eves nlshed & unfurnished. Sony, · • '"° "' sq. ·• m JOHN 'S Carpet&. UphoWery for Bachelor. Adults only, high beam ceilings, l•nve no children or_.. Modela pkg, utll, janitor. Baum· . Ori-Shampoo free Scot· no pet!I 646-1809 -c SPAC. 2 BR, 2 BA, petio, ~-ganlner •IM .,., ~ ' Jivin.,. room w/gas or e DELUXE e open dol~ 10 lo 7. · .,.... . .......,..., ch-·n-" (Soil Retardants). • --e bltins, shag, laund h.up. ., F und (I od ) 550 ·~-· 1 U~ ;t·y~' ~.taCo~~:t ~eni:;"1~1:'~repl:e~ 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. Quiet adults. $180/$200, Oakwood Business Rental 44-5 o ,.. 1 == t 10" m=
McNaah Realty 642-8400 off kitchen. Encklaed pa· Incld spac. master suite, 642-1276. . Garden Apartments FND Ring -Vit: Aliso bleach tor white carpets.
tioe. 2 swimming pools, din nn & dbl g~e; auto B'°'RAN="o,._"'N"'ew--.Oce~an-,Jro-nt Beach, around Nov. 1972. Save your money by saving
tl f II' door opener avail. Pool "-Condominium 2 BR 2 BA Htwport Buch Sou8' · Contact ~ Co u n t y xtra trl Will d sauna, I't'Crea on ac 1• Re.!reatlon area. $400/mo. Year 'Lease'. 1111hel1MM WANTED V~table stand, Harbor Patrol _ 1901 me e pa. ean
ties. Security guard. No • $287 • GT:.-7694 642-8170 car rental office, Insurance on .. •ide Dr -NB -834-3800 living nn., dining rm. &:
pets. 865 Amigos Way, NB 1~=~·------office, etc. Small building ~"' hall $1.S. Any nn. fl.SO, L1Qulnt1 Hermos• Managed by ROOMY clean 3BR, 2BA. Newport Beath North on busy street Proeperous TAN/white male collle. Col· couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs.
2 Bdrm Studio, 111.i BA. Furn. Models Open 10 tll 7 pm \VILLIAJ\t \VALTERS CO. bltins, patio, else to beach 1"'1~811i Back Bay area, good aceess Jar, no tag. Vic 21st & Mary exp. is what counts, not
$240. 2 acres bcautUul 2700 Peteraan Wey, CM '""==='-"~=""-=-1 o1· bay, yrly 645-1878 ==~~----~i & parking. 548-4583. A~ Way, Fnd 1 Week qo. method. t do work m)'ICll.
park Ii k e sufT'OUndll'!. H bo Bl d & Huntington Be~h s·~E~E~oce~ .. ~-Jro-m--pa~tio-, WINTER, Summer, Yrly, 645-5244. Good ref. 531--0101.
Sunken pool, BBQ's spa I· nr •Ard r v ;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I upstairs 3BR, 2BA, nu Anita's Rentals, Bkr, DIS VALUABLE envelope Sat PROFESSIONAL carpeting ~r:~=h J~g~ ta ins. ems GOING FAST! rel.rig, S28S yearly 645-1878 w. Balboa Blvd. 673-20CJ8 REAR-Sbee.LMetal bWgtng noon, -2900 ·B&. Carol SL cleaning. Dutch Mainten·
ALL UTILITIES PAID Choice 2 BR Apts. Westminster 3BR, 2ba, !umfunfum, Yrly approx 25x40 suitable for Identify for return. ance Serv. ltlso ftoors &.
AduJts, No Pets 54&.0370 5144/MO. Call Mike at 28th St Marina 1 plumber, electrical, TV 64()...00§, windows. 53'?·'!..5M.
162ll ParlWde Lane ALL UTILITIES PAID DELUXE 1 br spacious, 673-6606 Repair etc, S24;) A, West FND • German Shepherd · L & R Carpet-Upholstery
(TI4) 847-s.Ml I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! VILLA YORBA quiet adult, pool, bltns. $12S. WATERFRONT. pier for 28' ~9thi:, Jf33 ~ ~ulre 824 female, call bet .9 am -2 House $29.~! Steam-houle (4 blk1 S. of San Diego Frwy Call 893--0419. boat. Db. 1-BR., frplc., lge. • pm, Bureau of Lost Pett ·$49. Liv Rm $21! Ouar.
Huntington Beach _,_
on Beach, l blk W. on Holt Huntington Beach A ts patio. ~2699 Agt. StJrrABLE for Dental or 636-5685 535-()3(6.
NEW 3 BEDROOM to Parlalde Laoe.I SOMETHING NEW 17141 842-9622 ~u;n. or Unfum. 370 ~~~~~~~~~I Medical, 100., ft, hu beet FND -Bei&C German l c•-",""me~n-:1,-=co_n_c_r"'et.,--228!~~e~u~~ 1 "'""""'!!11~45!"".~$1~65~-""""'" YOU ASKED FOR IT ""!•"M~O!'!VE~IN~TD~D~A'!!Y"•~'i c-.,..2le::.!.'.M:..e:'.:aa:..:;:::;~:_.::.: ;: -lf:;il :.:=~.~=rt= ~~ .. !~~ l·eu.=1om=...-.Co-ncn!_t_e_W_o_r_k-.1
bullding $ZJO. per mo. Afan· BACHELOR&: 1 BR., patios, 9 -2 bdrm units designed $145 A MO. .~ 673-5990 aft. 4:30. night) 5.57-7268 Remow uphalt driwways.
aaer at 3U Oswego. Hunt· frplc's priv. garages -for families with children. Spac. 2 & 3 BR. in 4-plex. STORE, Avail April lst, 690 DARK brown female cat Replace w/concrete 60 ft.
ington Beach. 536-il52. Divided bath & lots of Al Utllltl1s P1id Several avail. AU. EX· * * * Rooms 400 W~t , 19th St, $13S mo. Jn. wfwhite paws &: stomach No delays. Free e 1 t. closets. Rec. hall. pool & Featuring: Texu \l'alk-in TRAS. Pool, rec bldg. Kids -qutn:!' 824 West 19th St Costa found vie Costa Mesa High. 638-3325.
Newport Beech pool tables. sauna baths. closets, double lavatories, weJcome. From $145, See SPARKLING NEW LOVELY room & bath. Mesa 548-QO& CUSTOM Concrete, by
See for yoorse!l. l730l refrigerator, range, oven, Mgr. lnGl Keelson "A", Spacious closets. Priv. en-ClTJ'E building with garage.1,FNDo=,=:S~la-m---:t-:M"'issio=~ Renaiuance Co. 00.90 day
STEPS TO SURF! Brand ~e:~nl ~k J.1 or~~a:~).of dishwasher, disposal, front ] 'btk w. of Beach Blvd., oU BAY SHADOWS trance Incld garg $85 You 1 i;x:o IQ ft ideal for Beauty Viejo. e~ •• ide tif n financlng avail. Free est. new. 4 BR & 3 BR. Move in Piazzas, garage Yiilh stor· Slater. 8.f74260, !J68.75l0. clean, ·$95-1· clean~ 557-9560 siiop, :eoUtiQue or ofHces. area ' n Y 536-6555.
today! 1295 up. Hersh. .,._,... age.. $211;. ID $215. per 3 Blocks to Beach Apartments alt. 5. $2SO. ~20201642-"'60 alt 6 • 567-2068 PATIOS.PLANTERS 66-8400. MEN, small beach hotel. month. Avail. April 15th. 8 -• 1 2 3 BR ls lnduatriel Rent•l 450 FOUND White Poodle type !~~~~~~~~~ Rooms $21.50 per wk. Apts. Reservations being taken by ra ..... new' ' ' ap , Spacious, Light &: Cheery! ROOMS $15 wk up wfklt $30 I :;:~::==~~=:::::=IJl~•m~o~le~~dog~~a~t ~H~orace~ All Concrete work. 894-3533. r $95 per month. 5.1&-7056. CJS REAL ESI'ATE in 4-plex, $165 up. Bltn11, 1 BR's FROM $157 wk up apt.I. Childrn & pet Enslgn'scbool. Call 548-9749 Contractor
I 1
[9 ] $135 -ULmA NICE .Apt. 6 548-ll68 or 83J.0084 ~~· ~1J.~· ~~ufpl~u~: 2 BR's FROM $177 ~~~.N~~vd, MARTIN ~& ASSOC. GERMAN shepherd, vie.
Apattmtnttfor Rent . Pools. 4 Gardens. Sauna. 49f.832'l (alt 6), or 846·33TI. 500 DYER RD, S.A. tryw Sail Clemente&: Dana Comm'I, lndua, Reaid
Tennis Priv. patio. 846-0259. I "'""'""D!'!!E~L~U!'!X~E!!"'!!!!""' I _:~W~A~L°"K~T.,;O~B;E,;A~C~H~ Beautiful appointments in• ~~~~m~m, pvt CALL 545-1471 Point. 492-l'lSf New, remodel, repair, Stoie: 1•11111•1••••111!311!601! Lido Isle elude Decorator Fireplaces. 645-8636 For Jeaae 4600 Sq, ft. 3 phase FND: Black. Afghan fml. Vic ~~· ~~~· ofcs. etc.: Apts. Furn. APARTMENTS New 1, 2 & 3 BR., cpVdrp., Shag Carpeting Private poWer, foll ce1ling1, fully Bulhard It Yorktown H.B.
Fum. 1 bd, utilities pd Air Cond. Frplc's. 3 Swim· dwhr., !rpl.125 lGth. 847·3957 Patios. Pool • 0Jacuul • LGE room w/kitcben &ibath heated, Costa Mesa. 968--6178 JACK Taulane -Repe.lr
Belboa l1l1nd Garage, l aduJt. no pets. ming Pools. Health Spa. 2 BR., 1% BA. Studio. Patio Volleyball court . Gas :1n~~~ work forl.!~~~~~iii!'!!!!!!!!'l'LCottHi----~~--S555i5 remod., addll 20 yrs exp~
2 Br w/d<.~k. Z>li1i Apolena $185. motyrly. 6'13'--0837 Tennis Courts • Game and & Yard. Gar. $157.SO, Avail BBQ's, Closed Garages. DELUXE, Priv. bath & en-'LAGUNA NIGUEL Llc'd. My"Way C.O. $41-oo36:
Fum. Util incl SZi()fmo or Newport Beach Billiard Room. 4-1. 842-649. AduJts, No Pets. trance. No smokers. Maid Adjacent SO Frwy. ~16 -. Bl'u'elet, yellow Addltibns Rernodelina'
$65/wkl 213 454-4428 I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 Bednn. From $154 2 BR. 2 BA. Deluxe poolside Commercial or Mfi:'g. w/hand painted figures, vie Gerwick I: ton, IJc'd
B lboe 'j. 1' 1 · M2 EBednnE. FromN~EAN nr beach. $155. 2320 Florida 409 W. BAY St. service. 675--0310, 543-W! Take Awry Parl<way ID Harbor 1ll or hadorea ~.t. 6'T.l.oo4l * 549-7l'IU
a en nsu • \VATERFRONT · YEARLY CIT RRA 536-5882. Coste Mes• ROOM Jor rent to employed 21992 CamiM CapUtram. Sentimenal val~. Rewll'd. Dreftlng
On Big Ba,y. 3 BR., 2 ba. VILLAGE 2 Bl.KS beech, attractive Manager Bklg E-103 mature gent or lady or 831-1600 644-417'9 1-BR, house $17S, winter
2 BR. $225 &. $27S yearly
MARSHALL Realty 6Ta-4600
Beacon Bey
l BR Studio, patio, roomy,
private. Mture, single pre(.
Call between 4 & 6, b"lJ...1914.
Coron• def Mer
DELUXE, New, bache-
lor unit includes all
utilities and furnish·
lngs. $175/mo. Ca 11
644-7270 agt. '
2 blkl to Big Olrooa. Lrg.
Bachelor. $1SO/mo. Yearly.
I adult, no pets. 645-1624.
2 BR.; be"" cell., pool. l
a& to ocean. =-Adlts.
Orange Cout R.E. 644-4848
FURNISHED BACHELOR
Sina:le Male, No Pell
Call 675-ttl'I
Cotto tMaa
2 P~R·. 121:: ~ for 35. bltlna, 2 BR, shag crpt & * 646 331J * elderly. 642-238:9 NEW ~ustrial apace !0!'1~LO'=ST~Ir11h.,..,...,·Se"'tter="". v"1c1Dr1a="·""'1. PLANNING any me Job.
boat 00 channelfront $500 2400 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. ~redec~;·~IT,150~. ;536-9638"""°"·--·liz~~=z~~~m ROOM to rent to man, $65 leue. 1300 911. ft. A: up. Can;yon area. Plse phone Free consultation. Ca 11
emn , . near -Y· ., RENTAL OFF1CE mwla e..-u. Meoa. ... .,~ SUlll ·~ .. ~ P . Pt M" 3 BR (714) 567-8020 .. _ v ~-mo 2'IS Flower SI .. Coots Al.SO bldp fol" &a i e •t540-0090~;;;;;;;:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,:.:S5:7--;;;;;;:·;56:7;;~;;;;;· ==,,
2 bathl. $350 ADULTS ~-"'"· ~· OPEN 9•30 AM to 5'30 PM DLX 2 & 3 Br,. 2 Ba. Encl LA COSTA APTS. Rontela lo Shere 430 M·l 140Q.3100 Sq ft, all or associated
BROKERS-REAL TO~S
1 0:1~ W 8olb11<: 1>71 11>1)
VERY nice l BR. in a small gar. f165 up. Rental Ofc., 1 & 2 Bedroom part, 111ltable for otnoes or quiet complex. $ 14 0. 3095 Mace Ave. 546-1034. ROOMMATE wanted, $75 MGF; 1615 Placentia Ave.,
837-9517. No children or • Carpets • DrapH month, incldg utll, yrly, QI, mm>, 6f6.116l
1 Newport Beach e Pool e BBQ'• H B be ~ 5.16-4722 pe '· All Utllltles Paid . ' near a~, ' New M-1 SJ>&c0 with 011ke
$180. 2 llR. lll ba., ltUdlo. "Rent A Ploce 354 A do St C M. WILL shan! beach home 1300-2000 It 3 phaae '¥ifN
Drp, CL'Pt, 285 0 g I e, of • P a l•ce'' voca ., · "' I non smoker, 40 p I u 1. 254o-56 Fairview, S.A."'
DELUXE 548-8301, 2U/SllU227. 642-9708 POOi pr1v Prl room l ba, Owner: 646-IZ>. 814-2'l.lll
'sBR, Bl\itinblk tol~achk lat, 29thh NEW 1 BR $170 • 2 Br $210. OCEAN and . 642-9933. 10,000 Sq. Ft. FOR LEASE.
d:h/wsh, ei".ct' gar ~ Nr bch. No peta. Adults. ll4 UleStiBJIU 21 G•rogH for Roni 435 Sp"!!!'!..era. dock blgb. Coll
··-"-·-.. E. :llth St., CM. S43-0l37. HARBOR VIEW 540-,_ opener, s.,.. crpts uu~I, 2 BR 1 BA unlurn $]90 '
baby gnmd piano, ocean VII. L BR. Ap~ ~. 2 BR. Apt, Elegant apartmenta designed 2 BR 1 BA tum $220 Self Stor...-G•ro... Stor~ 455
$350 yrly 6i.Hi370 0 r $160. Adu.lta, No Pets. CaU wUh a Ma.stet's touch, IU• Beautiful apt.. w/ptlvate Mini w.rehou... I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;11
Trader's Paradise
lines
• • times
dollars
• •
613-9060 bi<r/owner. <W:h5168. perb hou!e IOC1ttil>, exciu· patioe, -· pool, •PO-v1r1o., me. !r0111 $2S!mo NOW LEASING
NEW % Bdrm i:MX)/mo. Ann. * SHADY ELMS · POOL '1ve Venalli.ea Club and Lu.sh -aettlng. Adul(s, u Jock 11 _ u keep the key Huntington a..ch f '---------~------'I lease. 511 w. Bay, Newport • Adults Pool&lde $140 up. pool with WIJqUe Aquaber, no~ E. 21.st, C.M. On Ille Mgn. 24 br aCMS. NEW u 1 'Ill CADUL\C FLEE!'-Trade Trust l>ffdo Beach. cau s. B. 886-4832 • Children next block fountains and .formaJ gar-• • No move tn _ '"" ..-ti=M
days or S!tJ..2943 eves. ln E. 22nd St, CM 642-3645 dens. All part Of tbe South THE EXCITING No move out tees Ml Sq. rt.. ' Up WOOD~ cmd. ~ eq. .(or a tree 1; cleu p~~p~~~fliR~U= ~ 2~<W8ta,~~~BAJ =~l:est. apartment ~ M~S~P~ Hanill~i:=ed$. HB n::~n 0~ = = ~ !~· Trade tor H~hett,
tennis. Adil.II only. S350fmo. Ba)' St CM. 646-0073 1 :sr=~ tr;s $1115 Baeh, 1 A 2 BR. n:om $1«5 535-8115 or m45l9 RMtilt W...... * , ~ * * '!'RADE P.000 equtty In
64<>-1610 2 BR. shog crpl, ....-OCC. Modela open g A.M. til dusk Adulta, No Peta. GARAGE FOR REN!' iO ACRES In -· .. tc. home !or ocHnfnini Casa de Oro DELUX 2 BR. bltins. !>pie, 1 Encl patio, gar. 1159 .... l56l i.r-Dr. 918 Palm Sc HB ATTENTION -io.en. ,_ *" T.D. home or dupJtll. Cali ~--
ALL UT1LITIES PAID blk beach/bay. l2lll per mo. mo. !:Cpl&..7-~:-dra-.~bd, ~~.~ (5 bib In>~ Blvd.) can _. lady Sen. mi-wrs $21.QOO value. day ~ 111 """"· ComJNU'e before you rent April ht. 675-3570, SM-1429 ... ~r ·.--• ___ LAGUNA BEA.Qi GMace, neutered A . de~law•d 5'M1l1 1 ~ 56«11
Ot.slom dMia:Ded. fealurlna: 2 BR. Upper. Walk to beach! I 40. -e CASA VICTORIA drY -downtuwn. l'J5. Siamelt, llO<dl fumb). "'!.v HAW: --Palm U4 -DaiDott. Hwy! e ~iJ!J:" .,.ith m. ::15~~ ut!L Yearly. 213, 2 ~:t';! ,.r::·. crpta, ONAT~~w8.."J'l/S 'c!t!:,it..!::: tXv~ 88110 ~r~ fi':-o max. =.m.:;,~c: ~~:. ~
e Se--•· dhl'I uu YEARLY 1 Br. Furn. apt. Blll>S & trplc. $175. Int. Pool, tic. Come by .l WANTED -c;e,... lo --'Jim. nl $11,0IO e• -· Wut thlo ...._ 111,lllO ftioa. ' ---tnq,.tn. •bolt< our r.1 .... 1n CocU Meaa .,... Ph · , WANTWD 1r1111x; lhla -. 60-'IW. -e HomeJIJre ttlorlp Near N...,,.... pier. 1 •dult FromNewpor!BIYd.itum al -· 525 Vlclor!a SL 64Mri5 or~%1D. • I Br. horn• In Ootltll M,. -·~--~ ~ tmGMCTnlcl<•~--, e Priva pOUoa I $185 mo. ulil pd. ~-1 a, 2 BR. Heeled Pool. $\!) Uoopllai ROQd ( bliJck A1 Harbor, C.M. 64U970. ~-·-I •-N-• B7"l~' l """ -~ ~ Wiii ~~ -•~ : =:;: " -1160. YEARLY. l bdnn apr ~ up. ~·~peu. 1153 a'bolie l'ldliC CoBJI ilwyl lo 2 BR. n.. Utillllo. ""'-~ """' ~ ~ ""': ~ HlUt, S.D. °""'g· ,!!:!: vw . .,;';i'.91~~ ~ Plnlo.
• Klnar-aBdrm!° ~= .:;,:n~4t>tzy. enters =-~~~· Poot Encl pr. Dahwhr. MEDICAL. Sui~900119· ft. •t ~P can is2 .. 31 oi for~ ~-1qii.-Datsun l'ltek Up + '*
e 1'w! • -_ Ila' ~~at!.~~~ Ba ."1.'f; Tel~•• ('ll.{) 6e-Oll60 . 241 AYOCll~'-St·. CM. !>~u"~ h~ted,N .;,~~ AO)ltim<. flit) -mr. ' cult .. 1. fn5.1915 alt 4 pr!ij niunOC!d with p1wtb Jud. NICE l llR. Apt. Private w,... --~-.., ~· ,...., PROF ,.__,. ~ d 111-"''"""~:;;.:,:""'"'=°== petio & carport. April 1 co patio-$160. H ti I a..ch CIU'J)Oled, In lop condition. • -,..,. ~ aau11 CORONA dd Mar 3 BR, 1\0 I.Ale to tra<let OUr Trodef'o ~-~11crt1011 Jul1ht. m-a5:l6. l~ BR opt>. 'JBS-<!bollmar 2811, wllita ....... _.. w un "9 on AJr condlllotw:d. Pufdrc In-dauchter neOd 2 bd !um. ha/pool• -..,.... Parad1¥columnlat<r)'Oll! ~Li.'n'GE\ im lliO Piii a little "loot'' m your Dr. C.M .. 111') mo. 645-4512. ""'~pool, 1e .... $260 ~BR. 2 Ba. $165 ·uJ>. fl>oi, ~5All.., poultcl i..'l!1. ~~ _t-t:!."!~\:'. I :~
2 BEDROOMS l2IO L<vi>-oell ll-huublM.,.. Llk• lo lrldet Our '1\'eder'a 67Hl~ aed.-Xlnt chJldren'a -~ Boecb. ~· •~ ,__v• tw 5_,_ ~1 No P.U ·-"· can a .. &1..,. Parodlee column 1a i..""" A &Cod want adli • -t'I-.,..., lllll81 Mon. Kol rt. n1 JUI -.,. ~ • (lllorle ~~~t~~-~~:l:'":'";a.~U!Mle;;;da11<;;;.iii~iti..;;.;;.-;;;~~-~ 315 W. Wllaon &ellll -· 51Jnea. 5 41)'1 lar 5 Wdtl. --lloech o!l Gerlltld) -coll awoy, -!oo'll llfltl It lo, 01 lllMI ...
4
T,.lday, Mmh 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT 25 't
l[Il]1:1 ~ ... _,~ ... ~~1=··~~1 ~-:1-;~1[11];•~1'1~,~b~ ... _.~.-~=~·d·-··~][§]~ .. , ~[ ·-·-·· ~]~~
~vltlon Ropolr· , HelpWM!ed. M lo fl 710 HolpWonl9d,Mlo f 710 HelpWontod,M & F 710 lpWont.l.M &. F 710 HelpWont..t, M & I" 710 Antiques 800 MllHl\o-ut Ill
!'----J ~ 1 --..-J~I .__ _·,,·___.Jlm I
•t.ctrlcol
a et s
:is1ce~~:,~i7.;. ~=~,t~ ~~ :c,:.E;!'.~!s. f»i" """ """" ·• PERSONNEL For ~=T~ Ad SCRAM-LETS * ~~~!' * 1 ..
lormerl)' ..... _ c..rt.. 1rv1ne °"" s. ad -""' -· ~ IRlllNE PERSONNEl -· All oldllt lncludlniJ ANsw•Rs l Appllancff :='#.~. ~.:.,.~~ :...i~~-:."l::. SERYICES9'AGEtO CLERK ~~-"Iona E. ¢t"d"'·~°''"/30 '"" f>ROt'ESSlONAL eardencr, CSE.A 14tmbe.r -rtUable, BOOKKEEPER F/C Aho, Fee Jobl. Can Rden S.nd Rc1um@: Inward -Mqe -Robot -in y' uc ton arn
Oorden1"1
-......... prunln(, °"""'Co.-· 1961. Experienced. -0.-... H.,..., -· ClDutaJ FEE PAID a ....... Ad''" GU Bygone -INGROWN 201511 N_..., CM~
•P'inklon. cleanup )Oho, °""' 6 doys, 9 .. 5. tion Firm, N...-Beach. !'!_noMeJBlvd -CM ,71901W-Elec:. SOles Enar .. !UK VARIAN DATA c/o Dally Pilot Comment •00.t. peMV· llehhtd Tony" mdg MntL l
la ad 1 c •Pl D & GeorKe. 1 B!ck S. or Baker 54MOl1J 3 r>a,ys lift' week _ your ~· ·• • Purchu Airt/Sttt.I JlOK P. O. Box 1560 pincher: "I'm not $8.Ylng he'i POOl. Tabn \VHOLESALE ~. REPAIR, Buy, Sell since bow'I. Send Jkwm.e on EXP Pack1na, ahlpptnc In-Buyer/Marini! Hrdwr J].4 500 MACHINES Costa P.1esa. Cali(. 92626 t.ilrap. 11<" ju~t ti.s IN-Also mattreMes, aofabed1 " l l:XP. Jl.pahelM! Gardener JJ39. Harold's Rad lo, beclc&roond 6: live refer-.q>eetion, Start $2.50 hr, A;>-Tool Crib Attendant ~ GRO\VN pockel.11. lam~. ~1-3338; 54+-0466
'know how. Trlmtnlnc . ~. 118 Main, HunL emes. ply 8-10,825Weat18tb,a.ta EICl'OW&!c'y toSSOO Hu Immediate "'--1 .. ~ *SECRETARY* OAK dining nn table 60'' ROYAL TYPEWRITER
Oean-up, Small landecap. Bch. Wrlte D!lllldfled Ad #643 Meiia Exec. Sl!crelary to $TOO "pcl"''6 For nutnegen1ent consultant. diam. & 6 solid 0 a k Good condition. Ctettnl ·""'· I ~~~~~~~~~~ I ~ PUot, P.O. Box 1560, Seey/Conatructlon to $675 ln Our Busy Pel'9lMtl omce A secretary wbo hi acl1 rn. ha.nd'"Carvt"tl cha.in;, $19JO. $25. • 64&-8581.
96H486 I [D_] a.ta Mea, CaM. 9El6 Seey/Brola'!rage to $625 for a clerk to assist in a liant, comj>OM' o-.•n l'Or't"Elli· 892-1381 13 Baseball uniforms. Good
Japa.ne1eGardener. I J IJ BOOKKEEPER -To $700. •---..•ncfnn *** RecepVGen'I Ofc to $550 variety ol aulpments iuch ponde:nl.'e, br.iJttlt. iclnt Sll-l.kw"°AN=TE=o,-"c-c--cl,,-.,-conditl{ln, Size• 38-4.'I. ~ Coroplete yard merv. Rella. r.,lri;:cit Xlnt oppor.. Med. Plan. "°""""" • O>stina:a,~ Olstm , .,'° ~ aa .......... insw'ance, records typi~. Reooncile bank , . . ash pad . !or
) A L Free Ht. 60-4389 J ,~· jpj~im.ililliiiiii~~; I LeRwood C(Zl3) 420 ,-.. Typist $500 _ ... _ statementt Ir keep records Earl.Y Amencan and antique offf'r. 830-Jl5T, oea · · Ml-l FACTORY O>mm'l)l.i.nes Rater $500 If the administration of in 1 a:irt ott:lce in Cbror111 fumtture. 49+-9813. STAG HORN FERN
JAPANESE Gardener• Job Want:J, f..,,.j. 7M BUSBOYS -app),y Surety Oerk Trne to $t25 benefits program1. We aft de-I Mar. i:xp 4 ref ~n-ANTIQUE wall phone solul 7 fi. IN DIMfEiER
Complete yardWOl'k &: Bl& Clayon O>unti'Y Club Fl'ee .t: Fee Poll.Uonl ~ !:vi:'~~ lial. 613.oorJ. oak, brass bells $75 or bt'st $.200 ** M8-0869
·:::;:, ~~6G-3l02. NEED help at home? We ci:t!t~ ~rJ!t!r ~ ~~
9
~ T~~ Pi:t~s ~ w:r: p~ e St>c'ys, maey to $900 _01_1'-'-"'-· 1_-mi_· ---~-GIAl\'T Designer Ragedy 1 ~~.~pa'!,;• = No pN:lne cal1I please. A 488 E. 17th (at INine~ CM ~lpful & typing a wtty : ~.~~Y =l·A_,pp_,_i._·•_•_<•_• ____ 802_ Ann's and ~·s. '16.50 .
. ~ •. ~u!1h7ES,. ~~ .. ?...: makers UPJDbn. 547~. CAR WASH e u irlJ Suite 224 642-1470 If you n~t these qualilica: * 100010 FREE * Rent Washers/Dryer• ~~:;:~~;· :·ver~~ ~ ~ PRACTICAL n·-___,_ Full -p/time posftioc-. Good ii ... ... •• n .__ n: N Hom & a.re looking tor a 12 ll'k FuU . t "-Hms Spedallst. 646-0977, ......... ~ pe,y. 5 Locationt. Olance •' ·v• ·•-•v career 'fA•/a growing Cl'anae Liz RE'indf'r's Agency . * 639-. 1_m*alll . by Wallace. 12 place set .... ,.. 1 e...,_~..,,.. job. Priv. patient. C.M. or tor ad JUNJO ,.._,,_ ~u.n .....__ ....._ ~ """"1·"~ an•' 6 pm .,.,,...J.OUi>', cen area. 6'16-7671 OI' \/WlCC!ment. Metro R Salemnen: lG-15. ......,...,ty co. ~ ... an1pus ....... ""' ""'= ·
RAIN Guttet'I l n 1 t a 11 ed. 7'12-2721. Car Wuh, 2950 Harbor Eam $3)-$40 per week get-P~ue Apply In ~ 54-2118 Newport Bea.eh RECONO. APPLIANCES TWIN niattreu, box springs, r
Quality work. Reuonable.1-'"-"='-------Blvd., Costa Mesa. New Llte Industrial t1na new customera for the Monday thru ~ DYNAMIC DUO Oe~1vert!d-guar. Dunlap's, wilh ht'ttrlboonl &: frame,•
Free estimate•. 968-DJS. Help Wanted, M & F 710 CAR Wub Em P 10 ye1 Divildon For Women DAILY .PILOT. Thia ls not a 8:30 -4:30 You .l your exeoellent typintoe ~=~_N_•wpo~-"~· ~CM~548-__ rno~ likf' ne1v, $-IO. 557-7203. J
Hauling wanted fltime. Apply to newspaper route and does skills in the front ottlce of ~rue SI'O'(E. u!i@d. BEAlJTI.FUL Pool Table, 8', , A-~ont Jr -•••-r, Fou:ntaln vau-NHded lmmedlately not include collectln2 or v DM a local brokt ........ , firm'• Just ltke new. $35. or best l yr old. Pertt>et cond. $175. -uu·n• ' • ;;_-:-w.~., ·~·· Ell'· A~" delivertnc. Ttansportatlon ia '" ff M5-7987 842-7623 ,' YARD, garaae cleanups. We are looking for a youna ........ --. .IJAhW .. ve, provided. We work fcur busiest dep!. Salary optn. 0 e-r. ·
Remove trees, dirt, tvy. agg:reaive accountant to F.V. Experienced hours after school and 8 on Call Mrs. Petersen, 644-1890. G.E. Retrigt'rator. 15~ cu fl, WOMAN 'S w~ding ring set. I
Drivewy1, grading. 847-2666. join progressive co. id the C•sh&er..C•r Wash PC AIHmbler1 Saturday. We have opening! Copper, $100. Llkc new, hanily used.
32' Van for abort furniture health care industry. Must * 9t4-.f460 * Hand Solderers for Fountain Valley & South SER.VICE Station Attendant G-IG-238.i \Vhitf:' gold. U1111sual setUng. }
hauls &: garage cleaning. haVe min 2 yn: accounting /;;;iiiiiiiii._..,..,.,._. Huntington Beach areas on· 2m Michelson Dr. expe.r. nte<k>d. 0&.)'tf, Pcm1'. \VESTINGHOUSE rOO:igcra-$75. 96)-3:117 aft. 6 pm. i
548-1862. exper. Fteaae teDd rem:ume **** OdM Realty &:·Con· Also ly. You must be out of Irvine, Californi• 393 E. 17th St., Of. tor, 2 yrs, old, xlnt contl. SLATE coin operated pool '
LOCAL moving&: baullo& by &: salary requ.imnenta to 1tnJction Company seeks Trainees For school by 3 PM t o 833-2400, ext. 336 Best otter. 963-2S2l. tnble & .acccs.sorlcs. $3'00.,
atudent. J.Arge truck. Reaa. controller, P.O. Box: 1Jl8!Kl, young lady wtth retated ex-Lite Industrial Work C:clpe.te. Exr.rlenceJ SERVICE Slatlon H E'I p, Avocado 1\•sh & dry $129. Car phone, 5 (.'hannel. $500
534-1846 or S.U-2164 Santa Ana, Ca. 9271.1. perlence 1n bookkeeping, OOl."~en Pr 0 r 1 t Y · P/tlme weekend days, also Over 200 \\'bheri, dryers, 592-2568
HELP 2 married students, ADVERTl.SJNG SALES -typlna, Jilonea:. etc. Salary Industrial Stwlng Equal Oppor. Employer mect1a.nJc's helper, 1'~/time refrlg froni $39.95 545--0711() PROFESSIONAL AU T 0
hauling, moving, yard Orange c.ounty newspaper open. Call Mr. Welton & Wire Wrap....,rs days . .Arm, 19th &: Newport, LATE model washer tt1x1 BODY WORK FOR LESS.
cleaning. Call Art 5e-1M3 need a ex p er I enc ed ~!tr appt. .f to 6 pm. """' KEYPUNCH PLASTICS & CM. dryer, good condition $4J. WAYNE 615-6261 f"YM.
GEN. Haulln&. ,.,../Sbrob ~,¢;Ii~ CLAIMS CLERK Injection Moldlng SERVICE Station Attondant each. 646-5.148. USED BICYCLES
trim. Gar le yd cl~anup. handling vacation relief for full or p/Ume. Exper. Ovtr $80 1 YR. gua.rn, de! & in-All Types * 643-1!12
Est. 531-6377, 5.57-6904. outaide &ales ltaft and N::~= = :i~ • Many aasignments in the Day Shift FIBE.RGLASS 18. Apply Bro11o•n's Shell, 990 stall. Late mod. all cycle 2 PERSIAN rug~. Rest quail· ;
FATHER &: SONS, tree developing new buslneaa. good phone manner & pleas-Newport Beach, Irvine, San-E. Coast Hwy. NB 644-4131. Kenmo~ washer. 636-2840. pecla)l,y !c decorating I
work, trash, ya.rd &: gar. Good opportunity for right ina: penonaHty. Lite typln&. ta Ana & Costa A-1esa areas. FABRICATOR SERVICE Station gravt>yd •DISHWASHERS, wfl.shers , ~7~ after ~~~-! · clean-up. Free est. 842--8182 person. ll interested, send Sta.rt $315. Call Jan Page, • Experienced & trainee ~ ~bJ~0~!r1:!~!!._ua~ man. Must be exptr. 4 days ~rs. reblt, guam & M=· -1,,1 ~~~---i
PRIVATE, commercia.l prop, ;sume ~ Cla.asitled ad No. S40-6C65, Coastal Penonnel Positions. Excellent earn-Pacific Ocean & N~rt Bi wk. ~pply 3190 Harbor delv'd. 839-7620; 546-5219. 11ce •neous 120
yards, Kar&ces cleaned, tree 1fJ6o D ~ ~ ~ Box Agency, 7190 Harbor Blvd., in.gs. Weekly paychecks. Harbor. If you have at least vd. GAFFERS &: SATI'LER Wanted
\\'Ork, 979-8837. • · CM . 6 mo's actual v.·ork ex· Must have ~ence in lay-SERVICE Sta. SalE's.mW1, GAS STOVE EXTRA PAY 5 to 10~ n10-than ao Apprentic• B•rtender r,:nence on keypun c h, up . of high temperature p/lime eVHJwknda. u ech. ,... ..,.•a.•1, ~.· "'"2589 ~ ,. SKIPLOADER le dump truck o..EANING lady w/own 2061 Bus'ness Ct D --..i........ ~,. ~· ~ .,..,.. .:ailed top S ~non UMd
v.'Ork. Concrete, asphalt ·Bar boy that wants to learn trans Steady~ day Wttk, Irvine i .;;.1~·1 ytape or key disc device, resm v•"'"'"""'· ~Ne~:t_ .&ie~Yc~~rns Building ~1hrlals 806 Oriental rugs. 545-5070
&awing, breaking:. 846-TilO. the correct way to be a Thurs ..-$3 hr 644--4313 y.·c ofter you this unique •--I I P evea. '·~ond•• Part fun ....,, · v•"•· · · Nr . n-....... Co. Airport work environment & a -+'t' Y n erson SERVICE M M t h ==--~-~--•. ucu< .-... e ,., "''"">&"' an-us ave e SURPLUS BUil.DING \VANT to buy '.;JG gal 1
Housecleaning summer, over 21 &: able to ---------!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' [ challeni}ng opportunity. 3333 H1rbor Blvd. mechanical abUlty. We \vill MATERIAL • lCOO's of NEW aquarium or I a r g ~r . i
work weekends., Good pay CLERICAL , F J BERG LASS Mo I d Applv. Pef'SbM(!I Dept. train. 892-8015 ITEMS! Doors, Jumbe1-, ply. 962~7007 -or 5.16--4312. HOUSE OF CLEAN and meals. Apply fn person, 'PV, PIST ..,._ · Costa Mffl, Callf, SERVICE Sta. Salesman, wood, alwn sheeting, mold· WOODY'S -WHARF 111 .ru;pa.mnen, exper. Mon.-Fri, 9 a.m.-12 noon 92626 flt. M h knowled I I I dow t F1oon, windows, W1lll1, car-.,.....0 W N Blvd 642--0542 .., 1me. cc . ge n ng, w n s, e c.
pets & drapes. 7 Yn. area. -.10 -' ewport · Our home otti.ce is sit· EquaJ Oppor. Employer PACIFIC MUTUAL brakes, tune-up etc. 2 Yrs BUILDERS SURPLUS
642-6824. or 646-2527. Newport Beach uated on a bluft over-FOREMAN 700 Newport Center Dr exper. min. Bonus for lie. 2406 So. Main St., S,A. JAPAN~E Lady . Ex-ASSEMBLERS-Trainees & looldngthe Pactlic Ocean Newport Beach not req'd. Neat In appear. Mon thru Sat ]()..$
perlenc@d Hae' cleaning. NO exper. Sailboat aaaembly. & Newport Harbor. It Secondary Machining I ~!'!"'~~!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Apply morn.a, 2590 Newport 714: 546-1032
Traflllp. 2nd & ~ ahiftorlS2nd. Apply at )'OU have good typing ~~= ol su=~ :..~ LEGAL Sec'y Tr & l n e e . =B0olv,.,d,_, -"C"Mo'-. ~----
• 968--0503' • f:"te ;t .. .,"fur lrd &bift~ aldll.$, a:ood figure work, chining, operatiom: d r 111 Young attractive. Good typ-SHOE Salet1ma.n, e x P .1 _F_u_r_n_i1_u_r• _____ a_1_0
let• Dutch M.n MacG~ Yacht C.Orp, &:ttlOmeoM~exper.~~ presses, specia.l application ~~ng~sif.e~t~.nkua~ ~~~~:~e(d?~~o ANTIQUE \\tit rr. Provin-
Cl•an Your Carpets 1631 PlaceDtia, CM ~ ~ent ~ T8"wi~~ ~.shift. be reHabl•. Sta.rt at $300 for .....,,.,., ml.5«) M. Viejo. ' cia.J desk, shelf $5.5. Giant ~ ~ .. ! .... ~lndow537•~:!,00 ASSEMBLERS challq1ng opportuotty. L. M. Cox .... , ... Co., Inc. probationary period. Sl50 Short Order Cook ..,""".'ia'nandte,1"pedttckes185ta1· 3c_;ia•',:
"IU _. ~ .. u~ ·.aJ.11). Apply at 'Clipper Marine ....,,. thereafter w/unllm.lted A Subsidiary Of • • Dedlca. tecl Cleaning Corp 1919 E Occ d tal APPLY IN THE ~E~;'ty~plAnaayer ch an c e for ad· The SUlquehanna CoJti. For snack shop ol pvt coun-$20. Matching clirs. S30 ca. NC Sant~ Ana. ' 1 en St., PEROONNEL ..._...., .... ,, vaDcement Must be willing F.qual Oppor. Employer try club. Exper req'd, hrl Old China lotus carving Sxl' * ~ D!L._ ~~~ * S DE!P FULL time car wash belp. to work & accept ~,be1 .,~~~ .... ~· For appt. $150. Pair Fr. commodes, ~. :r ~'l"I:' Cft • .,.,.,.....,... A SISTA NT The a t e r ARTMENT Apply 510 Ave. Estrella, San "billty Pref n!Si ......, ~;r1. marble top, onnulu, bronze
XI.NT Houaecleanina manager • Must be over 21, Mon-Fri, 9 am-ll noon Clemente. ~ponsi · er • PRESSER, hr production on THE .JOLL y ROGER gallery, $125 eL Fr. co!fee
By Day. Own Transportation clean cut Prior experience dent of Fountain Valley or dreues & slcirts. Top pay table galltry $8S lam
\V ANTED one good tailgate
door tor HUlman Husky iai.
Call ~ or 5*-4478. ·
Music•! Instruments 122
* * MARTIN N -20 Ro!lcwOod Cla.saical Guitar
with cue. $400. 644 •4t>
Dfflc• Furniture/
Equl~. 124
EXEC delka 6' 18' 1106-140
Deakt $20-85. °'""-~!!'!!.
t!XC SW'Vl chr $8-38 .~
Pl1no1/Drgon1 126
ORGAN HOBBY * --·· * -"d. but Mt -·d. A~.. PACIFIC MUTUAL GARDENER -Min. 5 yrs vie. Call Mary Ann, 646-0308. • Newport b taking appl k:a· "'"~ • pe. ~ ,...... -~... .,......, 700 N exper. req'd tor position at 642-%J30. Uons fol': ==~·=----~· t
LM COMPLETE HOUSE ~~~J:"J:~ N==°'· 1'11 pUbllc garden. Only LE VOY'S FASHIONS PRUNERS WANTED e Bu1boy1 MEDITl'ERANEAN otyle Don'!, buy ony c;pn UDtl1
a..EANING SERVICES. 34lOS.Briatol..Colta M.eu.. 1 '!~~-i!!""'!""'!"!"""!' _respon, h ar d-wor ki n g Paf'lyplan.carnec,noroH, e Waitresses g:ame table w/4 hlatH*ck-)'OU CM plQ-1. N~ * 6f&--tiBCl * ~ * I CLrnK _ Jewelry Sain I: pe'r9ool w/gd rel'a nd a~ del J ti 58U727 • Cook ed chain. X1nt condition. wtlcome to attend ti... work Income Ta 1 d 1 ply. CdM. Call; 873-2261 noll ·~era ve, Wholesale Growing -Exp'd • Price $250. Solid bnl!J thoPI. For l.nfbrrnltiOb AUTO BOOKKEEPER re ~te . c e r ~a l 8:3(>-11:30 TUea-Frl. 00 t!l;.'t S.9 am« 5-6 Only. Salary Open. Laguna e Hostess/Cashier fireplace set; $15.' Call Contac\:.Tom 'Ditterich
I·---t~ home. EXPERIENCED aai a:n ments; ert, GENERAL pm. ,Hills area. Call for appt.' e Bartender 545--8157aft.5PM&allday 64••"'1 ,,.....,..., ...... personable, with clerical a~ MAIDS M thru Fri 9 ·~1580 Sat • S ..... Guar. free a t. Comout. PBX DSS INS BILLING titude A typing. NURSERY MEN ' on. " • -· Pleue apply In person • un. c .. at Mu1lc S.rvlco
Tax Corp. ot'Amer. 586--1929 Xlnt working condttkma.. Costa Mtu. Jewelry ?. Apply, Laguna Hills REAL ESTATE SALES 33l3 Paeldc-Coe.st Hwy BED, Kina: Slze,.flnn, still Newport Blvd. at Harbor
INCOME Tax Preparatklll See Mrs. Slauahter Mon-Fri. &: Loan ~a~al~' 23932 pmti° SUCCESS CAREER Newport Beach packaa:ed. $130. Worth $300. poet. Meta
Reuonable rates. Pile call. County Wide Rambler 1838 Newport Blvd., C.M. Wholesale Growing • l yr's or call I~~ s New-o~ expertenced. Jolla U>e TYPISTS -Dictaphone, 60 Usually hOme, will deliver. MARCH MARCHES lN -and
675-i87& for &pp!.-12'l22 Garden~~. Calif. COOK, dinner. Must be all· exp Only Salary open Worlds largest and futest w.p.m. High school diploma 9S3-505:t. 80 doe!! Wa1llcha with a n
J•nltortiJ AUTO around man. Laawia Beach J..aiuna Hilla afta. Call f~ ~4 ~k in ~~ for ~g~ ~'= req'd. Xllltfttna:e benefits & DANISH modern llv. rm. set after-1nventocy c 1 eano u t O:luntry O ub, 31106 S. Coast appt. 58$-15*). ~ni ~r r your omce! and ~ work1n& cands. Apply ln $40., refr\g. '$60, Call aft, aale. Ultd, 'dltc0ntinued,
OFnCE cleanlna:, l l c 'd, C•ntr•ct OMV Girl Hwy., So. t.aauna. GEL Repalnoen, exper. Ap-· · member 0( Olll' Mllllona~ penon, S:30-9:30 am, Safeco 6:30 pm, 5fi8..8339. floor ..:mptes, rnaey otberl!I
·bonded. 7 Yn exp. in afta. Will train Kiri wtth extl!&aive COOK Utlme :J ply at gate' MacGreaor MAINTENANCE Engineer. o b Mul tHnflUoa doll Insurance Co.. 1 7 5 7 0 MAPLE Ml .. lzed bed at ~ dllCOtotnted prices.
64)-6824 or 646--2527. booidceePinl badcgl1ound. Park'.Lido O:nv: :p.~ Yacht Corp. iGn Placentia Mu at b ave Pr~ ve n ~u -. n: Bl'oolcbunt, Fo u n t at n W/rteW mattreaes. . I Weflichs Music City
M Job_.,.,,._.·--•-Fl·-"'p Rd, NB. No phone CM ' background e 1ect r1 ca I , ~·._...__, Valley. Equal Opportunity S55 * 66-0888 . •sonry ·~,...~ _...... '"6°'.. · plumbing, have mechanicaJ l1Cendnl .........ui1. Employer. . ~th Out Plaza 540-2830
taking a.bout de tat I, calla please. GEN'L OFC. Part Ttzne -ability. Apply ln ptftOn. See Excellent aalet tltln1ng. -WAITRESS-* * * SOFA le loveteat, * a.DSE-011I' Brick-Block-Stone ~~ t..i... accurate. Must COOKS wanted for dinner Filing, type. To $3 hr. Mr. Saber. ~~ Beach !J~~. call VIratnla Jone1 Needed neveor Ultd, both for f170., Eltc Tubular Oilmes,
6C5-&l68 Brant at""{~ Call& ~ ah1ft &: oyster b&r. Apply Lakewood (213) 531-7420. IM, 2lll2 Pacific Coast ~J...I.. A 1y In Penon Ulually home, 96&-'1910 3 Itta" $250, $375' $395 ~=p""1~t1-ng"""'&;.-"=----I Lincoln M HunarY Tiger Rettauran~ GIRL Friday, 'l'YPlni & Hwy, Hunt Bch. RED CARPET L'8VE 'S BBQ ANTIQUE oak a.door loe El•c vlbraii.rp .... $325.
: •P:poihonglnt 540-5630. ercur.v. Tel-e 18'1 Weot Sunllawor, S.A. generol o111ce...,..., p/ttme. MANAGERS WANTED RHlton 3CM6 Brlatnl St. box. Pbone, 615-1511alter6. ATl'AOI TO ANY ORGAN
-AVON SAYS COUNTER IPrl for dry 61lHl960 International co. wlolc1 cur· REAL ESTATE SALES enota M,.. DINF:l"t'E f!O, Rofl1& ms. 845-1530 , Newport Qrirana
· CUSTOM PAINTING ' cieanlng~lant. Apply before HAVE at nnce openlna for rentJy In 14 countries ls ex· FREE LICENSE WAITRESS. exp'd Over 2!. ALMOST NEW 552-9146 PRIVATE party ,..m1 to
, Inter/Exter. Unfum. inb!r. :~!* y~~~tn Boss'' noon2 :...... M Harbor, Unit the rlaht men or women tn pandJng lts operatlons to TRAINING Clean 4 Neat (Some -.iu HouMhold Goods 814 buy p I an o for cub. prt Free color coo-.-u.·u an 111u•i..uc o your own, A· • ..__~ ea.. our TV I: Stereo, MaJor Ap-Orange Co. area. Mana&e· · .,.... ~2278. 1 :Ffu,g &· eat. Lie. Im. ~hth...._1-n _ _, your o wn COUPLE, vie Warner & pliance I: FUrnlture Depts. tnent Staff a.round the world ~~~~~ Estate .~'~bins· =Apply Ea ii Ale, 6 PIEC£ Twin '.Bedroom ..et u ~~ ... ~ .. 0-N~D-· ---~ •• -~--" I
W..in't be underbid. 642-600ll. neig IA.lluuuu. Be an AVON goth&rd H B wants wo Looking for a job with a exceedlna: lncomn ot $.10 000 .. 16 .....,....'"" now avciwa 8 · $90• wuhlna hi ~ l nAmm ....,,,_"" -•-· Repreaenta.tive. Call now: 45 «o ~ tO ·clfoan m:~ real future? Apply today. per yr. No e:tper. n~. thru Tarbell Realton. Free WANTED! Carpenter l 0 co~ f7S · Impo~ ~ch~ church model, has tone
, , No Wutine R * stS-6341 or 540-7041. da.y a week, 9 to 5. S2 hr le W.T. Grant Co. 400 Camino Co. training provided.. No Pl~Ci!ment Service. Fne build deck tor 55' Sail Boat com I iace settinp $100· cablnet. SSS.23G7. ~ * WALLPAPE .r , .......................... ;I 1unch. 147-1'16'. De Eltre.lla, San Clemente. selllna: rtq'd. No aa:e limit. ~:rung Tgramca.1~ Write Claaaltled Ad No. 864, Smaf1 leak $10• Maple ctwr Spinet P lano, wfriter. ~ •. ~ \Y!i.~ Ytlll call "~~ITU AUDITOR. DELIVERY of • DA IL y For lnterv1ew, call betwn $i e ~4 e~ Dally Pilot, P .O. Box •1560, $10. 49i-1921. ' $.f1JO * 675-3154 .,._.._...... -HOTEL ho u sekeeper 10&:2pm (714} 716-77'7. oan ( l • on Co1taMe1a.,Ca.92626. • .
I AINTJNG .l Paperlrti, 20 OUr hom> aftice i. lit· PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY~ IU-want>d. Elderly MEDICAL ASSISTANT • Weekends (n4l 832-1000. Wor•hou .. Stock Mon ~ll1nooy1 818 Sporting Good1 830
j )11'1 ln Harboi-as:ea. uated on 8. blu:t! over-:::'G:' m!~~Statton woman preferred. Call for Xlnt typlat To $600 . R~AURANT counter help. Over 21. Apply Carpeterla, STEREO: 1973 Garrard MODEL 572 Remlni\t)n 22
• Uc/bonded. Refs: furn, Jook1ng the Padtic Ocel.n Waeon or Van. 0>Dtact Mr. ap~bnent btwn. 9 am & Lakewood. (213) 531-743). w·~· Apply in rn:on 1n• Newport Blvd., C.Olta Quadraphonic System 200 cal. r\Oe $40. Antique JI.In
I
i ;:..~le WP le l. .... ...1..... :OUN:. w~=·~ Harry Seeley, 530 Weal Bl,Y 3: pm 833--2770 ext. 459• MUST have experience ln ~ eJ::i•~'Me as ee Mf!Sll, Ask for manq:er. Watt, AM I FM I MPX cablhet tl.50, 60-1679
,_.,. ..... ,. this unique wodr: mvtron. St., Calta Men. HOUSEKEEPER, Uve-ln, tor model lhop work. The right RN A• v";lable sa. reoelverlon •• ~.~china; G~ TV, R1dio, HIFI, 3,000 + aampln for borne. ent I: . chaJl ngfng DEN 'I""A L Receptlonllt-man will be employed full ... 1uspen1 1pea11ers, a.r-Stereo IS6
Call 'lbe Hangman, :.m-~ty. chalnlde us!ltant. mature :r.~ :b. fa~ = time on prototype develop-f(kMD~ WE NEED YOU! ratd8 tracklulld~~ ~~r chanift',
I 547-5846. woman. Exp nq. Xlnt children. Sunflower Apta., ment. Day lhltt only. Bio-'"""°' UlllU unclllm· ca· 'bell' St I PAINTING • Reaaonable -\Ve are seeking a field salary. Se:nd reaume to CM. 5«>1650. OynamJcs, 17M2 Annstrona Sales ed. WU over $400. Now mp S 8a'"e{IS
I, Eves: 675-730'1 Days: 97'9-5840 auditor w/a minimum 3 Oasallied ad no. 652, care or HOUSEKEEPER, lull fune, Ave., S.A. Pe rsonn.I Coun. T r nee Tme Assemblen $1.95. Still brand new ln Im
-Dao-, yrs profes:sional e.xper. Daily Pilot.-P .O. BaJc 1500, mature. --' company NEWa>MER I1 you aft ag&resslve en-& IU&l'· Tenna. 893-(S)l.
1 Pelnllng-lnt., Ext. Aooxmtlng or audllln( Coota Me1a, Calli. 1126211. bonetUi. '&v.rt, Mano.-WELCOMING ' Utuoiastlc & want to Clerks BABY fumi""' and clothes.
, Reuona.ble * 645-5925· back:a:X'OOnd w/a lite b\. DENTAL Secretuy, hlahlY. Convalncent H 0 1P 1 ta l, To Callffolp!~lf, ~~eaa • MAKE MONEY Vaccum cleaner, ta p e • ouraace "' or larp oxPITlencecL Good ~. on new • ADVANCE ON YOUR Sr. Typists recorder, lronlni board, ! * PAPERHANGER * oorp. a11o a mtllt In :rn. ""· , typq Lqimo llllls. 83'7-<IXIO. ratdent tamtlleo br!~ MERIT mixer, TV "'· guitar & Carf .. Relth 646-2449 addition eoUere ct...,. .... Call alt 6 pm. HOUSEKEEPER, Cook, live a1fta l civic Info. Good pay e WORK WITH PIDPLE Secretaries cue, Avon cosmetics, many
'
Platter, P•tch, Repair w/accountlna: major fft-MS--4«M. In, for elderly woman, P/time. MUlt have ht.ppy We will train you for a po«!· A.cent Clerks m J s c e 11aneo,u1 ltP.m•. ferred. StJ:ary will bt tn DINING BUI help, male or w/Wbeel chair A walker, A smile ctr typlne ability tion ln out Irvine office in l.1!0-4370, 23522 Dune Mcu,
•PATCH .PLASl'ER.ING accordance w/exper. &: female. Permanent, tun Middle age, handicapped 547-3005. ' ' au aspects of screeni~1 .;;El~T;:°'"c::.,.~~--~-
All cypea. Free esttmatel qualiflcationa. For 000• time, D&f&. A~ 1n son. 546--6950 . ua1a testing It evaluate potenuai VOLT MEDnTERANEAN 1 t y I e
Call 541Hi825 slderadon, pleue at'nd penon, San O emente Inn. HOUSEKEEPER for con-NEED lndlvld w/f!X.-emplO)'ff• tar local, ria· Jnstent Personnel a: a 'tn e tab I e w / 4
resume a: aalary hlstwy DOMESTIC Help -George valeacent Meplta.I. Apply pandJna chemical corp. Top HonaJ &: lntemattona.I con\· T Servi hltb--b'1cked chain. Xlnt
Plumbing , to: Allen Byland Apncy, ]J)6.8 ~ View Conv. Hoe:p. ~ pay U qualltled. Will train. pa.nlea. Call Pat Beran, 3848 Jam::'~ .. Sul~ 100 oonditkm. Prlce $250. Solid
,,• L.R. OTIS PLUMBING, E. 16th St., S.A. 5'7-G395 Thurln St., C.M. 541}-227t), 833-2700, Dennis A Dennis N8)'/POl't Bach 646-474.1. btul fireplace 1et, $15. ~ll
j ""'-modtla A aepatn. Wattr Clualll&l1 Ad No. ~ ELECi'RONfC Part*1 Beyer K 0 u 6 EKE EPER/Prac. Newspaper Pet'IDnnel Agency ot Irvine, Equal 0ppor, Employer 545-8'157 an.. s PM & all day ~ lopoU]a. c/q Dally Pilot l Inveo Ointrol. Som N Sa H 2082 Mlcbelton Dr. Alto Sat & Su•. i ~~~~~ ...J'.·Mo.u..C~ .exp nec".""'Pal ~ Ma~.toru p= :hl'fl: Typist ~,:1 ~,.s Lo~• WEED lo PEST CHAGALL Lllho 14 5.,
B/A. O:unplete Plumblni: """"14 ea, a. fll/Om Com~-~ Wfftmlnlt.e:r 646-6116. To punch 1TS Tape for Uoo-• • a n 1 CONTROL PlculJO Etching $75., Brad-
s.rvtoe. Equal ~. Em"""-Aw, ll8f-330l HOUSEKEEPER needed ,,..... Excellont oaluy and ~:a~ San Dlo~ & LEAD MEN btiry oil It'll;., Doll Lltho
Tht atant killer1, pric8 ~
born here, ralaed eLlewbere.
WestmJnster 11ore 893-«iOJ,
t'heck our MWborn before )'OU bu;)'! I
MORANTZ mode.I 22 am/trn.' 11tereo rece:t .. "et, UO wau.
Dual ~I 1019 atereo turn
table., pr 12" 3 ~
1peake.r1, Xlnt cond.
846-8126 aft 4: :I> pm
2J" COLOR TV $85. :ll" bi11 I wht $25. Both .xlnt eond ..
97'J..769'.
PWllBING REPAIR ~,-Eocrow Cifftcw $IOO ~-· App'fuln penon, broad lrlnae benellts. ,,_ . llSS.. Others. Pvt pty.
N job -·'l v·~-nlng otbll• SALESPEOPLE 2, .. talk ~ 3 Llno1, 2 Tlma1, .. 00 o >tttqo '"-BABYSn lER wantod !or 2 Fao Palll/Alm Fee Jobo ~--• DAILY PILOT 100.t the mo11 orednwo -* * &0-3128 * * year old child. Eves or Wk· Elcper, So. Beach Ana HOUSEKEEPER -babyalt· 3-'1 W. Bay St., CM comm 0 d tty, f:. U It E Wholcult Growlrw -Exp'd PLAYHOUSES -cuatom DRAINS unckaed -17.50 ndl. ~ matu... ,,__!~-ler, part fune, children 9-JB. 6IM!l1, "Ext 309 WATER. No oeUins. Ren-Only. SOluy o..n. Llguna dealant or ltandird 11tans.
8ewe:r' l1oe to-100' -N woman with trans. ~ '185i"'£~~'7°lA. , 49:MJU5. 496-Cll. Ask for And)r · Paul w. only. Extra l1lih com-~~~ Call A:>r appt. ~~ :;.~:.ii.J.4'~ et~r * 9'0828 * 8AB\'Sll1ER wanted In (M&rlc m Center) HOUSEWIVES; Stretch )'OIJl' ar Dave'. m1aionl. Part time OK. WIG STY!JST 61H72!. •-.. ·1-/Al~rot•-1 Golden View School ·-~ -• ~-dollar .l build a Call alt 6 pm. 644-17'9 1~~~-----~ ·~ •• ·-Bllllt. Bch. 2 Sebl -.-. .--~tim. Income. Wrl!e p~·-fune Mo<t-1-::rkeeper, SALES • Stereo • Eleetrortlct E><per. "' ta "'·'° hr. SOluy REP•rRMAN. p'1 party ... SIDE STREET sounQUE ehlldml. 84T~ altlpm. l!xptrlMcM Mochlnlst Clutltled od No. eeo Daily ·-~·• • own CB Ex 2 mfn + bonua Elnpnoq, 1!00 w....rt•n .l calculaton. I $tmt Peady-to-wea~. BABYSl llER needed Mon. • ...-. Pilot. PO Box 1560.' Colt• :=.-~~~ Direct ~~mnt'.f'Ull oL Edin~ Ave, H.B. 'fypeW't'tte!'ll new $SOCI. Seit
'Rprttllzinl in p&ntaultl. tbN Frl, my home, own MKA. Calif. 9'J626. PM 498 -· p/tlme. Laf~tte Store El WOMAN neat • n I f a:. t I c ::>·~~ fll!:W l650 ..
' Eo<Plrt al-tlonl. :1132 E. tnno. 8G-lm. Exec. a ~ INTER DECORATORS Toro, S.UIO. mole! lalllldey ""'1t. No CotBwy~Otr.a!l'o!>-NCR SIOO .. 1625 ~ w' .~ t -·-. 2 Ol'l'ICE GIRLS ""~'!AN led Ml lronbw. I c1a,y week . ROSEN·THAL Oll!ta,
py St.) • BEAUT!' Operator.' fnD er °"1KD ~ ...,;"" ~~ NllDED ~'eommi:.~n 0D ly 4!M-Uk Crystal, la: coffee tbl .
ST. BERNARD , llUle, 2 ""
old w/papen. !Ne to -home. 897-11249.
BEAUTIFUL Calleo cat to
IOCkl IJ:lme. Ji"'eroale, 1payed,
~ yrs. old. 64S-XJ15 -----------
[-... -I~ j lsj~~~ii;' '."°loiiuii1ii1~o~m ~~Lt ~m!!l'J: ~f<looducU ., IUK -tumillillWI ab aw Radio tele-d!Jpot<:h s.ie; "'P· ,...t. Appi,! WOODWORKER tor omall Wrouatrt Iron patio rum. ~tor·~-~ ~SALON,.~ .. J~ tg~~ :ii: ,....,OJoiactllrl.BoU..u, MuotAbo!\~' QalglUnlontll,!Wbor•l boala.Muotb&volmowledge m-317:1 Coh 152 ,_ ,,_ .w-...-.-KO H.B.. itt"QiMJ. Inv Coatrol , ' ~ &M-4911. ppi, b: W1.1T1tr Santa Ana. ot pQMr l001a. Salary BEL.LYBOAJW, xJni cond, ---------I
Calltw.1&1.-. ~'un-OPEltATOR-Full ~ $515 IRRIGATION YELLOW CAB CO. SALES l Inotallallon Part depends on eJ!llltienc:<. No unbreakabl• b<>t< 11 5. PERSIAN stud "lfV1oc, ftd
Att.rotlono 642-5145 time. MUii b&vt cllenlele, -· typlll. "50 LEAD MEN 188 E. 16th, Coota Meu time eves 12 ht' +' Xlnt phone Otlll plffle. Mel-Motn.?.ele helm<!. perfect male. Approv<d. $50. ll! .. t. ucurato. ~ l'"" .. p. -lroo .l bloot>er, J« No. 's.n DI"° Cotlnty PARTS MAN, aln:ratt or for couc..i ,ttidenl. Call Ioi Crall. 'IS8 W. lTlh, CM eond • l74-lM9. M6-9985.
I T•t.•lolon Repolr -"" LTD. 66.mO. Clen'I lodpr .....i $Sl5 marine. lnll4• -·· Retail lntervl.w -Cj)l,llC:K C:ASH CARVED 1tatue1 from ' 'n...--,-----8=54
l BOAT REPAIRMEN Pr:op o..rot -$«lO Wholesale C-Exp'd l Wlllle <l<f>ll', nee. Molt! SALESWOMAN MATURE TH OU"'H A around °!>1 world, 2-.f n. ~ • Tv l\EPAIR, -.... Muoi have W&tmronl boat llfntli ,...t Otnd $«111 ~ Salaey ()pen. .Lq\ml T ... I Wed DDiy p b... Ftttme n<!edat .... ~ R ... ~ $15. J ~"~"· FOR sai. AKC ~
?opalrod In ...... 1t.ote -·· --11 -· lbcl•"''•• NIWPORT ' Hilla ..... Call for 1ppt. ~Tlil. ,. .. elry oales. Ex ..... p«f'd DAIL y PILOT c rrotn • . . GREAT DANF.S • 12 pup-t -· 5.1M&1T ~-~ull ~ Por1011MI ~ -™'! "WOid H a RooP" but not -IL -· SEARS 1 HP paint IP'&Y<' l .....
Lllm .. _, Oar 'fiWil"1 CG "' 10r 'i>o ...... w °""' or;, N.ll. """" ~,... want .. l'l'am -lo -!Jke .. -Oar-· WANT AD "f•· iioo. Antir' """ CALL S1Hl<I Panwlllootilu!Mlllor1""1 llbdlo'o Boal Yard. 64W1JO ..Uf Clulltted ads do tt tum U11m llila-Pan411e..,!umttlalor)'OOI 642 5678 ealnet lUO.-IB lleUll\eold01unbu1d1tenow
; 5 llne, 1 .... l1r 1-. m«ll ..U . coll NOW -Net<! 1 ''l'U''f Pla<O an adl l llnea, 5 di!'! tor I buclat. • W.llt a<! multi • · • fO.aTI .oo•llltl.=------I
·~
, , I
.1
•
r
•
!8 llAll.Y PILOT
19' South Coast built Keel Boat Needs aome work.
$115. 557-128::.
LARK 11. Great buy w/trler
sail I: equipment. Great
da:· ....... S3l0. 6'6-561'.
Boots, Sllo1/Dock1 910
SLIP for 30 to 36' aall or
power. Finell concrete
docks in bay. 6 mo min.
673-6606. 28th St. Martna.
llotts, Spood & Ski 911
-----~~----
r . '
• • , ' >,
'67 Mustang
H.T, Coupe. VS, P .S.,
air~.
sharp. (UYW823J,
$1299
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
At Fair Drive
546-&!17
FOR YOUR
GIRL!
'7'J PONTIAC GRAND
PRIX. loaded, low mi, prlv.
pr1y. $4850. -
'64 PONTIAC
Runa good. $300.
968-00l
'69
BONNEVILLE
4 Dr. H.T. Automatic,
power window1, air
corntitionlng. (YCP-
846) KeDey q-
K"""1 retail $1980,
$1199
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa M.,.
At Fair Drive
546-l!ll17
'68 Tempest
CUstom. 2 Door. VS,
automatic, P.S., air
cond!tlonlng. (WAR-
528) Kelley suggested
Mall $1525.
$899
2480-mvd,
Costa Met1
At Fair Drive
' 546-l!lll 7
, . •
---~ .
San · Clemente ..
Capistrano EDIT10N
* * •
VOL. 66, NO. 79, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
' •
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ,..
• . . .
TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1973
. . •
N.Y. Stocks
,.
TEN CENTS
Tea~hers Ass~il Board Over Salary Position
By J.41< EDWARDS
Of lhl Dlllr PMM Stiff
Wearing red-paper badges shaped as
app1es whieh heralded "Teachers' Day,"
more than 100 teachers j a m m e d
Capistrano Unified School District head·
<j,uai:ters Monday to·protest the trustees•
reaction to their salary and benefit
demands for the coming school yeitr.
tees -to urge re<ognitlon ol teachers. teachers. : · ·
The teachers stood up together at the
beginning of'the regular boaro meeting
as Ch~ Conklin, repmeoting a ma-
jority of district teachers who belong to
the ~plstrano Unllied Educ at o r,s
Association, (CUEA) Said:
splously damaged the spirit of give-and-
take wblch meet lllllkonfer ts based on
• • . " be continued.
Conklln·was referring to' the 'conference
held laSt week be!Ween t,;o board
representatives and teacher represen·
tatlves to discuss teacher salary and
benefit requests wblch in total would
mean an added cost or more than SL
million to the district for the 1973-74
school year.
itudy-se.silon.hcld Feb. 28 trust!<s ·went
oyer each request and sai~ their hands
w~ tied due. to uncertail!Ues ol bow the
property · tax reform, Senate Bill 90,
would aff1!ct the district.
Conklin eo11cluded his brief remarks:
nodded in aclmowledgemeot as the
teachers silently left the room.
"There is some protest intended
because of the board's response to their
request," said Supt. Truman Benedict,
following the meeting.
In explanation of the teachers' actions,
Conklin an English teacher at Dana Hills
Hi~ Scbool, later said:
for the teachers and distributed them to
the schdols and invited all teacliers of the
district to come.
"This was the fJtSt regular board
meeting after o u r meet-and-confer
session la.st Monday and we didn't want
to wait until the nei:t session to express
oor concerns," be continued.
"We really did want to thank them for
Teachers' Day, as well as to demonstrate
teacher solidarity to them and to
The apple badges. commemorated a
day proclaimed by school boards
throughout the state -including the
Capistrano Unified School District trus-
"The teachers would like to thank> the
board for this special day and hope thjs
spirit of recognition can-be tr&Mlated
into something more concrete.
"We feel that the board's response ... 'l'bat conference was private, but at a
"We Wtderstand the board's concern over
the ramifications of SB 90, but we don't
feel It 'should be the basis for denying
v-1id, educationally sound, teacher pro-
poaals.''
When. Conklin had finished, trustees
• The district dld nothing for us today
but proclaim Teachers' Day. So we (the
CUEA) went ahead and made the badgos ourselves." · I
oes o ·
.,
Big Plant Sold?-
Government to Get Niguel · Facility
Orange County Supervisor Ronald Caspers was notified today
by the U.S .. General Services Administration that plans to acquire
the huge North American Rockwell plant in Laguna Niguel are firm
and proceeding rapidly.
IN A LETTER from T. E. Hannon, general services regional ad·
ministrator in San Francisco, it was stated the facility wollld be used
to house federal activities performing a variety of governmental func-. tions.
He estimated total employment at the location at 3,000 to 5,000
persons.
• . . A SOCIQ,econnmic study . .and . an. envirQnm~ntal impact sta\e-
ment are now being prepared, Hannon · said
• Caspers W3S>tbanked by the federal officilll for informatiion pro-·
vided on I(oosing in the vicinity bf the faclli!Y. · -•
ra
Shouting
Dominates
Commission
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tlM' 0.llY l'l•I Stiff
Hundreds of , angry resMents 9f the
Laguna Niguel and Monarch Bay areas
were thwarted Monday in.their attempts
to protest. heavf grading above · 'Sall
Creek Beach asthe South CoasfReglOiial
Zone Qmefvation Commission ref~ to 11lnllrivmlf the rules" to allow a ·bear• ing. 17s-; ...... J ' • '· • ~
Ifie~~~~~ .. $!' t__....~~~~~~-·-=-~~~·-.ll:!:~·.~·~==~~.p;.~··:..-~-~-4~·~~~;/'n1ae .
. ' e···i)> . . ~ll':! and rage fW oinne persW ~)/ ·ci t t. Mull Left. t lbe Siln ci.mente Community Chlbboliae. emen . ·o . IS 'i)ie'bUoilredS of residents 'Ie8med that
the actual Salt ·c:i;eek bearings will . be .C March l$ .in tong Besch. •
lfequ-est o_ri. Sound System ~ .. ~i~~~~-;i=~ seasion. Chairman ·Dr· Rebert lloopey
carried !)D a,) loud debate with critics
· San Clemente city OOWlcilmen will be
brought into the controverSy over J>OSSi·
ble demonstrations at the W e s t e r n
White House late this month as they con-
sider a requeSt Wednesday by a leftist
·group seeking the "use of a SOWld system
on A venlda del Presidente: . fA ~kesman .IOL the ~~ty
"c.hapter of tb.e ~ietpam Vet~~ans Aiainst tile War bas ask'ed:"tbe council to ap(ll'(!:ve
the use of a loucDpea.ker on March 31 ~
A.prtl 1 during demonstrat!Ons against
Vletnamese ·President Ngpyen Van
Thieu.
1be council thus far has not bad any
offidal-overtures-from· fundamentalist
, • I ..
Laguna Murder
cbe Dr Ca I M•'""-bo b from · the •udienci· .• pres r . r ...,..., w · as vow-A county-Installed ~,..,.....,sten: did lit· ed to brtilg bis conservative for:ces to San ~ o;r -Clemente at the same time. President Ue to soothe tempera:. 'lbe com-
Nixon plans to meet with the Asian missioners' comments. were inaudible to
leader at the Western Wblte House on most of the'l!Ol>per...,,ptesent.
April 2 and 3. Commissiooei's :blamed re.POJ1s ' In a
Police in San Clemente.iu:e fearing that Los Angeles· new.spaper wblch had said
the.two:opiioslng,f9J!l:<unay meet on the __ wlier Monday that the hearings on the
street leading to Qresidential ' compo11Dd Salt Creek dispute would be held at the
and poll<!! "9!J!ef Clifford MWTJIY community clubhouse: I
acknowledged thil,week that he has al'-'!be newi account brought forth bun-.
ranged for Concordia Schoo~ the dreds of resiclents • ·ang;y-· oter · tlie
Presiden)'s own polling plaee, to lie used lnaSsfve · grading "Project wblch has
as a command PQSt-fqr-la'!f' ~oro!nent altered the landscape-above the-~SOutb
officers during the ~ that the Coast strand wl1lch ofteo lias beeri at the
'demonstnrtiOnrwift·take place. center' of 'controv~. ~ nat qewspaw . account drew blasts
from .commi.ssioner,s;' ~CU1'1'1Y Los
Aogeles county delegate Ja~ Reedy.
"lt11 not &he fauit of us on the com·
. Psychiatrist Testifies
mission," he asserted. "It was the presa
that erred; which ii often the case."
in' llie lniddle of the brief dispute -
wbll:b amqunted to · attempts by lnembers
of the audience to si>eak -Orange Cowl-
ty SUpervisor Ronald ~.111 a member
ot the panel, droppeil a note to Rooney
.
Killer Not Respo11Sible and: !Qft.. .
. ·~ .. ~ .... ·-. :
SPRING'$ HERE-Today-was the first' day of':llJlt'ing.
It was' suln>osed lo look like lh,e pastoral seene at
le'ft w\th floW,ers produced oy tile season'.-t5,inclies
of rain·sutrounding pretty'Hedy Harte; 2~,.of Costa
:;j . , ' , DAILY '"~ 1"1111 ... W LM ~
Mei;a. lriStead rain pr{\duood aftuatlon more like
'picture. at rlgijt. '"ooy, !rt,· good wOJlher and bad, Is
a :psyc~ology· major1 ,a~ ~al St~\9 Fullerton.
• -·-·· .. , -~-. ..;....· .. ..J..-···--···-·-
• 1 . l
-Downpour Greet.s Fifsi Morning on Orange Coast
.Jly JOHN ZALLER
01 ti. O.llY PUii l .. ff
The Orange Coast's long rainy season
continued into the first morning of spring
toclay as coastal cities rol1ected.upWards
of a half inch of rain. "N~ · significant nOOcI dainige .. , wal
report'ed ftom the new storm, which
brought , the season rainfall average to
ne.arly 15 iqches in most cities,
' ' ' ... . , ram or1 rrtud, hln'e cOst -coast home
dtivelopeis ~tJs.of ':thousands of dollars.
i&ijaller sub;Contracfors have suffered ad·
cUtional loues.
. upwards .of 25,000 act;e feet of stonn
runoff. CCupled ' 'with rainfall that will
. soa~ 4lrectly lntO lj!e underground water
ta~!<,: the dbl!"ct say• 1i has profiled to
the tune ~f $1.S million lrom this year's
storm season' 'to d~te. That sum
r<presents -tbe-.,.,sl ol ~-percent ot the
dbtrlct'i aMual water consumption, and
twice the amount collecteii'J8st winter.
r
By TOM BARLEY
. . . .
Dr. Herman R<>mm told a jury that
must JOOD rule on the Dana Point co·~
tractor's sanity at the tirg,e of the slaying
that MCCu\ch<p, 50, of 3311ZI Olinda SI.,
''was not capable of forming an op'lnion. ''
caspers·earlier had slid•he planned to
l~ve early to .ser.ve as a host for U.S.
.8en. James Buckley or New York who
made an appearance in the central roun.
But the ·unusually !Ong wet season,
wblch began in normally dry mid·
November and continued intennittentlY
into the first day ·.of · Spring, bas bad
several aide effects.
-Road . 'projects· have encountered
simil'\' .,'d~lays. "¥ioog· ,the projects
dela)IMup ~ abrweeks·has been the link
of the N~wport Freeway under con·
structioq a~Brtstol, Street In Costa Mesa.
· --On ,the j>oS;Uv'e side, evenly ~ci!d
storms have' eJiab!ed the 'Otallge . ty
'Waler District ~ captw-e and · re
~The lof!I Z.ainy seuon has both hurt
and helped county agriculture operaUoos.
(SM _RAIN, Pµe %) I
Of tllt Dalty fltM, Stiff ,
A court-appointed l"Ychiatrlst testified
ay 1n Orange County superior Q>urt
ihat , Thomas Bradfota McCutchen was
!)Ot responsible for his actions when he
lhot and killed Mrs. 'Virginia Hammett
last Sept. 5 outside her L;lguila Beach
home.
'
Vandals Free
Rare Parakeets
Intruders believed by Orange
County Sberifi1s officers to have
been juveniles broke into the
backyard or an El Toro home Mon-
day night and relea'!"l a flock nf
; more than 20 rare jiarakeets from
~ the owner's &9'lary.
Officers said oeveral or the birds
were killed by the vandal! as they
flew In panic from the aviary at
: 13391 Devonshire i\oad. , •
' ()wnet: Per Sune ~a(!rSOI\ to!'
officers that the birds are a rare
11rafn and that he had reared most
of lbem blmlelf from the egg
stage, It ts felt they wili not turYive
very blJ,ln..today.'J raillanclcald.
orncers Bald.
ty Monday night.
'!be 'panel Monday caat one poll on the
demands by ljle public to be hearo, a
measure wlilch called for "suspeod!Jlg
(See .SESSION, Page Z)
* * *
Among them are:·
..:Thirty io '60 lost working days, due to
'
Coastal Board. iii .Battle
Nevada G~ernor . .
' ' ·-M,eet.s #u.ghes
In. London Hotel
Dr. R<>mm said he 6ased his opinion Oil'
the mental state in!f'f.ed in McQltchen by .
the drink and. dt)lp he bad taken In the
hours before he Went 1o Mrs. HatnmeU's
home at 121 B '/Nave St. and shot her
twice In the bead a~ point-blank ,ange.' ·
Police called to the aceoe found· Mrs. CA!\SON'CITY, Nev, ·(AP) -Nevada
Hammett's body °" a i neighbor's lawn Gov. Mike O'Callagban said today he met
with McQltchen standing over the 0 N •· I c d · • • with recluse billlooaire Howard Hughea
womanwbOonceshared 'b!IDMilPoinl ; n . 101.1e on OillllllUlll ·lnatondon,Englandbotelroomoverthe
boM;Cutcben has ~ified that he recalla ~ ,..... :.:: _.:i~r,~ Hughes' Nevada
notbing ol the slaying or the hours Im-• O,'Callagl)an '81d 'll\lgbel, who left
media\ely before and after the killing. He 1 A tnalor condominium project pro-Commission staff reporte& that the Nevada on Tliankscivlng tm, gave
is simllary unable to r e c a 11 the Cl"". posed for acr~ge in Laguna Niguel project •• had received grading permits "every lndlcalion thal ba hopet to return
fession he made to Laguna Beach police figured in a pitched batUe for exemption early last spring and that the ·financial ,to Nevada," said O'Callqhan. "He llU:s
wblch was taped at the time by..officm. from rules of the coastal pennil area comnillment bad amounted to more thlln the state."
l'roseclllor Nick Sovick contends that Monday before the Sooth Coast Zone $250,000'thus far. • O'~llagh4n declflied to d I• cu 1 s
McCutchen ,... ... u aware of Whal be Coastal Conwvation Colnmission. .Building .permits were.Issued on . the Hugbea' perllODal awearance, terming
was doitC -'he shot Mn. Hammett. FlnallJ, "'"' • stand by Loo~ Pf9Ject earlier in the, day. ' speculatlOI) over the billlonalrO's physical
Novict Mid b& will ult the Jui7 In : ~ Louis Ncirfll; the claim for • But the staff advlssd •galmhpprovlng ncptton a ~•game.• Bilt lit· taid "there
Judie Walter ~'s """"'-to ~Jock I! ....... WIS upheld · Iha e1eP1ptJo.. .. , • WU no~ In thal metilni Of wbe WIS
mum a Anll1 verdii:t that <:oUld -11\1 1111 ~ , Nowell took <eXception. . • rtlllng who what •to do.''
McCulchen to~~ ,!tr.=, tllr-• _,.. iii-llrlt ol -.i '"Ibis guy got a gi:adlng permit Md to · -O'Ca!laill\an iald be llew . from Las
earlier llnl cleiroO-coo. ...r ..... llMlirtlle ~at Moe-me that ~ coocept approval by the Vegas, Nev. by commeretal jtl Friday
'!be jury has -told that Mc()ilohm dq'a ..ton In s. (!..,.,,ta, and county," lie sai~. • Ind returned to Nevada late suoo.,.
threatened Mrs. lllmmetl wllll 4idi aa -.U foucht hard~I. •• "What yre have ·done ia stoPPld him Acl:ompoaYlni the Co..,_ 1flS Phil
eev.ral occasion11bo1117 befo<e tho Sept. '!be councilman that-the Q.1 (the devefoper) oold. 'rhlt1s rldlc:uious," HAMlfln, chalrma~ pf the Nevadi Gam-
5 killinC, mllllon proJeCt , ~ N ..,. • lie added. , lnl! Controi Board. -
lt bu bo!on lllCCll<full)' olloftd that -J!!I'. • ~~· -'lllt"~lliUdf"!mS bttll ~ -~·c.naghan said the meelln« bad been
McCutchen, ~ by Mrl. Ilaurnett -ll bad vtiled ...,... 1*< and now will be aliowtd to be bulll on ur~ed by b\m to determine "th. Hagbes'
(lite MeCllTl:llF.N, """I) the-oltbe~......,._ · ·land aloni-O'own Vtlle7·Parkway. (S.. llUGHES, Pa;e1) •
I
'.--~~~~..-'~~~~~-..
t' • • ' Orpge •
Your calendar-may tell yw ll's
spring but illO •weather service
says more rain is due on the ~
ange C9oll l>eginning Thursday,
Wecfueiclay will be partly claudy,
with blghs ·ot 60 degrees al the
beadleo, r1alng to 63 Inland. Lows
in the lOa.
INSIDE TODAY
Wh<n Tdroii~ choose to fuke in o'blue mopie an a Fridav
nighl-"l Am CUriow Y,ellot0,~ for c:rample -they nted no
baby ritl<lr and"° cor. They rim-
ply wail until midnight and lime
m Channel 79. See SIOl'l/ 01I
'Page 9.
~~ ·: =,. ... ;: < c...--0.W Ntt!IMI ,.._ 4 CtMke 1J o, .... (Miity I
CMtWWf-· 11 r •~ ,,...,.,, l~ '*" ..... • '""" ,.. •• •111"'"111 P"' I SMl Mlril:tf't .. 1'
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•
"
:: ~AIL.'f l"llUI
·Tony Boyle
Denies Link
-· To Murders
ERIE, Pa. (UPll -Tony Boyle,
former president of the United Mine
Workers of A1nerica (UM WA ), denied on
the witness st.and today that be authoriz·
ed the transfer of *20,000 In union funds
aue,edly uJed lo finruJc< the murder of
dissident union official J o c k ' '
Yablonski.
"I never saw them," Boyle said in
reference to two Sl0,000 deposit slips and
two letters acknowledging transfer cl
the money from the UMWA's in-
ternational treasury to the union's
District 19 in the Kentucky·TeMessee
area.
"They came from the secretary·
treasurer's office," Boyle said.
'I1le union's secn!tary-treasurer at the
time of the 1969 murders of Yablonski,
his wife and daughter was John Owens,
who was deposed along with Boyle in an
election last December. '
Boyle was the leadoff defense witness
at the trial of William Prater, 52,
LaFollette, Tenn ., former field organizer
in District 19, accused by the prosecution
as one of two fonner UMWA ofiicials
who arranged and paid for the killings.
Tbe other union official, Albert Pass, 53,
Middlesboro, Ky ., Is ocheduled for trial In
June.
Defense attorney H. David Rothman
showed Boyle a memo urging speedy
transfer of the second SI0,000 to District
19. The memo carried Boyle's signature.
"l don't recall ever reading that
memo," Boyle said.
Boyle aaid the memo was written by
his executive secretary, Suzanne
Richards.
Judge Edward Camey rejected a
defense motion for dismissal of two of
the three counls of murder against
Prater.
In his motion, Rothman said the
evidence was overwhelming pi&t Prater
and Pass "could ln no way be mpooslble
for the deaths of Charlotte and Margaret
YablODtkl." Margaret was Yablonski's
wife, and Charlotte his daughter.
PrevlOUJ testimony in the trial showed
lhe.y were killed to that no witnesses
were left by the ldllen.
ProteeUtor Richard' Sprague countered
with the assertion, ''When you send out a
pack ~f ratUesnakes, you're responsible
for what they do."
Boyle, 70, arrived at Erie International
Airport Monday and wu escorted to a
downtown motel under heavy security.
Paul GJlly, convicted In the Dec. 31,
1969, slaylngs by a jury that set the death
penally, tesUffed last week that Prater
and Gilly's father-in-law, Sllous Hud-
dleston, confessed BO-between in the
slaytng1, told him Boyle or de r e d
YablOll!kl'a dealh.
San Diego Area,
Tijuana Awash
In Floodwaters
A rainstorm that dumped nearly a half·
inch of rain during San Diego's morning
rush traffic period swept over the ex-
treme south section of californla this
morning.
Scores of traf!ic accidents occurred on
mud and water-flooded st reets of most
communities, while Tijuana was a scene
or devasLation.
California Highway Patrol officers had
to esoort traffic through the heavy
downpour at certain sections of
Southland roadways.
Mudslides cascaded across two streets
in Oceanside and a main Intersection of
Carlsbad was completely flooded during
the heavy rain.
Power was also knocked out in Escon-
dido at the height of the stonn.
Tijuana Police Chief Ernesto V. Gar-
1 rldo described the border city which was
already soaked sodden from 18 days of
rainfall as being a oomplete mess with
deep standing \\'ater in paved and un·
paved streets.
OIANll CO.All K
DAILY PILOT
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M-tl"'ll Editor
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Mission Celebration
Traditional pageant at Mission in San Juan Capistrano saw the
crowning of Jesus Soto as King and Cindy \Villis as queen Monday in
celebration of St. Joseph's Day for which the swallows returned. The
event kicks off a week of community activities. In background is statue
of Fr. Junipero Serra.
FromPa9eI
SESSION ...
the rules" and allowing the public to
speak to the issue.
It failed by a 1).5 margin, with the
panel's chairman casting the pivotal
vote.
Angry South Coast residents jeered the
action and many shOuted, "wait until the
elections!" -apparently unaware that
the panelists are appointed, not elected.
'Ibe issue which has stirred so much
ire among the residents involved the
grading of more than three million cubic
yards of earth on more than 500 acres
above Salt Creek.
Critics have claimed the gradin.8 has
been done assertedly in vlolatie,1'1)f the
provisions of the Coastal lnltt~:UO~.
They could have had their chance to
speak, commissioners argued C!uring the
appropriate time Monday.
Rooney and fellow members insisted
that the public could have waited until
the entire commission agenda was dealt
with.
Public oommunications is the last
category on the lengthy document.
Monday's meeting, however , adjourned
well into the early morning hours.
Forster Students
Visit Dana Higl1
Eighth grade students at Marco
Forster Junior lligh will visit Dana Hills
High School soon to meet individually
with senior high counselors to plan their
classes there for next year.
A total of 450 pupils will be welcomed
Marcl1 26, 27 and 28 to Dana Hills by the
high school pep band , student leaders and
school personnel in the little Theater and
then \\'ill tour the new school grounds.
Their parents are scheduled to hear
about the high school curriculum and
meet school personnel at 7:30 p.m. April
2 in the Dana Hills High Lillle Theater.
Dana Hills counselors \\'i1\ visit the
students April 2 and April 5 at Marco
Forster to individually discuss class
schedules and general orientation in·
fonnat.ion about the school.
Photography Exhibits
Displayed at School
An exhibit of more than 75 photographs
by students of the Capistrano Unified
School District adult e d u c a t i o n
photography class taught by Paul Neevc
of South Laguna will be displayed this
week at El Peon gift shop in San Juan
Capistrano.
The collection or black and white prints
will be donated to the San Juan
Capistrano Chamber of Commerce lo be
used in various community projects after
the current show.
Dana Point Victim
Loses Stereo Gear
Stereo equipment valued by the owner
at $.'KIO was stolen Monday lilght from a
Dana Point home, Qran(c Counl.y Sher·
iff's officers said. Cl!Jrlet Jl.J&91' ~~or 11118! &Jreot or
lh• Blue Lanlem, !Old ci<l"'ilei tlie equ(p.
ment was taken whlle be was abeent
from the home. OOicero Olld then wos no lndlcaUoo of !ordble entry.
• ' •I
Dollar Has Mixed
Day; Markets
Called Unsettled
LONDON (AP) -The dollar bad a
mixed day in world money markets ~
day, moving up in some cente111 and
down in others. Dealers here called the
state of the markets "very unsettJed."
But they said this had been expected
after the adoption in Paris Friday of a
new floating system of intenational ex-
change rates.
This was only the second day lhat /be
marlolts have operated un<Jer the !!l'w
floaUng system.
Despite the lack of deflnlte trends, and
in some centers widely lwinging rates,
there was no sign of the heavy dealing
that touched off th"e world monetary
crisis two months .@gQ..
Trading was light, a sign that many
speculators were still sitting on the
sidelines awaiting firmer .evidence ci. how
the floats would work. The gold markets
were quiet, another sign of returning
stability to money-markets.
The dollar was sharply down in L<ln-
don, Frankfurt and Zurich during the
morning but recovered much of the loss
later in the day. It closed substantially
lower in Paris and Tokyo. It closed
higher, however, in Milan, Amsterdam
and Madrid.
Public Hearings
Oli Co1idominiun1
Projects Slated
Several major condominium projects
along the South Orange Coast were
removed from a blanket-approval, COO·
sent calendar Monday and set for public
hearing, by the South Coast Regional
Zone Conservation Commission.
Among the projects destined for hear-
ings March 26 are a 14-unit apartment
project In the Paliaades proposed by the
Grant Company of Anaheim. The firm,
which is annexing 80 acres to San
Clemente, plans the apartments separate
from a major condominium project.
Yet another major multiple-dwelling
project . - a 3t-unit project at 405
Avenida Granada in San Clemente -
also was set for a hearing on the March
28 date.
The consent calendar is a listing ol
it.ems which can be passed in one single
vote if no one on the panel or in the au·
dienc.e wishes · special consideraUon of
any single Item.
The Panel launchM the ooncept of the
calendar in an allempt to make Its
marathon sessions shorter.
Hearings into both the South County
projects will be held al the Long Bach
Harbor Commission offices.
LIZA, DESI SAY
THEY'LL MARRY
LONDON (AP) -Liza Mlnnelll IJld
Desi Arntz Jr. said here today they plan
to marry soon.
Desi, son of Lucllle Ball and Desi
Arnaz, said the wedding elite 1111 not
e:olni to be kept a secret. When we "-ve
set the exact date, wt "111 let eveeybod.Y
know.'' ·
lie and Liu, the •ctresa dauihter or
tbe lote Judy Gorlallll •nd Illar ol the
lilm "Cabare~" arrlvod hert today for 1
fiv&<lay vlalt.
•
I
Act!ng FBI Chief Mu~
•
Admini.stration -Throws Gray 'To Wolves?'
WA881NGTON (UPI} -L. Patrick
Gray m utd todai be his been ordered
to refuse 10me lnlormatlon requested of
hlm by the senate <0mmlttee weighing
bis nomination as FBI director.
'I_'he development came after Sen. John
V. Tunney (0-Callf.), expressed belief
the White HOUJe has "decided to throw
Mr. Gray to the wolvet."
Gray denied be intends to withdraw 11
nominee for the FBI post.
Gray, resuming the witness chair, told
the Senate Judiciary Committee be could
no longer give mm\bers full access to
FBI files or answer all their questioos.
He 18.id he was acting on the basis of a
previously undisclosed · order issued Fri·
diy by Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst and said he could answer
''only procedural, not substantive" ques-
tions about FBI procedures.
White House Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler replled, "Absolutely not,"
when asked if Nixon abandoned hope of
getting Gray confirmed.
Senate Republican leader Hugh SCOtt
also said after a met;ting with Nixon that
the President's support of Gray "Is ex-
actly the same" as when he .submitted
the nomination.
Gray's disclosure of restrictions on his
testimony came when Sen. Birch Bayh
CD-Ind.), requested that three former
employes of the FBI and the C.Onpnitfee
to Jle.Elect the President be subpoenaed
to appear. •
The committee approved the request,
but Gray refused to offer his \'iew.s on
one of the three -Judith Hoback, <lf
West Palm Beach, Fla., a former assi,s..
tant to the treasurer or the re-election
finance committee.
Miss Hoback privately sought out the
FBI during the Watergate investigation
to communicate infonnatk>n outside the
presence of committee officials.
Gray provided the committee with
dates of the interviews with Miss
Hoback, but refused to discuss the case
rurther,when Sen. James Eastland (0..
Miss), asked, "How many times did she
hide the truth?" .
"Under my orders from Mr. Klein·
dienst I can only discuss this procedural-
County Retarded
Group's Office
Hit by Vandals
Threatened already with a cutoff of
support fuods from the Department of
Health, Education and WelflJ'e, the
Orange County Association for Retarded
Children has again been bit by vandals.
SmMhing of wlndows in their offices at
21.xrl W. Chestnut St., Santa Ana, witl cost
$500, according to Executive Director
Hank Jarboe.
'l11e most recent incident wu the ~
ond window -smashing operation in a
month for the organizatloo and mystifies
the membership and officers.
"We certainly have no enemies,'' said
Jarboe, adding that the organization is
purely charitable and that vandalism
costs only hamper aid to the retarded in
regular programs.
Santa Ana Police Chief Raymond c.
Hill promised lo beef up patrol! In the
area in lhe hope of curbing vandafulm.
From Page I
McCUTCHEN •••
laking court action lo halt bis threaten-
ing phone calls, attempted lo persuade
her estranged husband lo make her drop
the charges and then warned her 011 at
least one occasion: "I'll kill you."
Jy and 1 canit give any -cubstance to our
intel'Vlews with Miss llbba.ck," Gray
said.
"l received my orders and I have to
carry them out," Gray said referring to
Kleindienst.
"I don't think those orders· are helpful
lo you al all," Bayh observed.
"I have to take my orders from the at·
Capo Trustees
Okay Drawing
' Of New School
Arcihtect's drawings for the proposed
Del Obispo Elementary School Jn San
Juan Capistrano won approval Monday
by Capistrano Unified School District -
trustees, and the next step ls a state
review of the plans.
The district plans to pay approx.imately
$5,300 to the state's Office of Architec-
ture and Construction for a routine plan
check. If the plans '1'e approved at the
state level, construct.ion bids may be
sought by the dlstrkt by late May.
Two representatives from I he
Pasadena architectural firm of Flewel-
ling and Moody presented the drawings of
designs which already had been con·
sidered in 1968 and 1969 before a slate
fund freeze in 1970 halted construction
plans.
It is estimated the school will cost
$1,lTl,OOO and i.s proposed for con·
struction at the corner of Del Obispo and
Camino del Avion along the east side of
Marco Forster Junior Hlgh School.
The district already owns the school
site.
Flewelling and Moody also designed
Marco Forster school and Crown Valley
and San Juan elementary schools.
The three buildings aod grounds or the
new school would encompafis 2.5 acres
and provide 25 teaching "stalions," two
1eaming-resource centers and an 85-car
parking lot.
Buildings are to be constructed of the
same materials as the junior high school
and will have the same exterior ap-
pearance. There is no physical barrier
planned between the two schools· they
will be separated only by a walkw~y and
a slight slope of two or three feet on
which the new school will be built.
The original design for the school ex~
eluded several features now included in
the plans. The librazy, food-serving area
music and"mult.i-purpose facilities of th~
junior high school were originally to be
used by elementary school people.
The .4st remainlng funds from bonds
sold several years ago will pay for con-
struction of the proposed school ac·
cording to district administrators. '
Conquistadora
~tatue Missing
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -Gov. Bruce
King bas asked state police to assist in
the investigation of the disappearance of
tbe prlcelu La Oooqulstadora statue.
The famed madonna was di.Jcovered mlssinl from St. Francis C8lhedral as
clergymen prepared for mass Monday.
nie governor said, "All New Mexicans,
whatever their faith, have come to con-
sider La Conqulsladora 83 the patron
saint of New MW co."
He said that because of Its 348 years of
"special religious devotion," it should be
returned as soon as possible to its home
at the St. Francis Church.
forney general an~ the ,el1der1t," Gra y
said. \ .
The committee voted to subpoena f.1iss
Hoback: Thomas . Bishop, former FBI
head of investigation and fi~es and pubH c
relations, and Thomas 'Lu1nbard, a
former Justit:e and Treasury Departmen!
official who worked on the re-election
campaign.
FromP .. el
HUGHES ...
future corporate plans whJch will affect
Nevada."
Hughes owns seven casinos In Nevada.
including six in Las Vegas and one In
Reoo. Together, the caslnos pull in some
14 percent of the entire gaming revenue
take of all casinos in the :state -or about
$U)'l million out of a total $731.1 millioD in
1971.
"We established direct lines or
personal com~ u n I cat lo n , '•said
O'Callaghan. "We discussed Mr. Hughes·
future corporate plans which will affect
Nevada. We did not discuss legal pro~
!ems or events of the past. We ad·
dressed ourselves ooly to tho5e matters
directly related to gaming."
When Hughes left Nevada in 1970, there
were $172 million in law!UJts pending
against him and Hughes Tool Co.
A year ago, the state Gaming Com-
mission refused to approve 1i top-level
change in the HlJ8hes organization, citing
Hughes' refusal of face-t~face meetings.
Hannifin said that because the meeting
with Hughes has been held, theft Is no
legal requirement for him to show up .in
Nevada for further gaming matters. He
said an application from H u g h e s
regarding shifts in company offJCers is
expected "shortly."
O'Callaghan said he "had several dif·
ferent ways" of knowing that the man he
talked to was Howard Hughes -in-
cluding infonnation from other persons
who have seen him such as "stocks and
bonds people ."
In addition, O'Callaghan said he had
physical descriptions of Hughes that ap-
parently matched the man he met.
Neither O'Callaghan nor Hannifin had
met Hughes before.
O'Callaghan said Hughes indicated he
will retain ownership of his Nevada gam·
ing empire, which is one of the state's
largest employers with 8,000 employes.
Fro1n Pa9e I
RAIN ...
Sizeable but evenly spaced storms are
credited with belplng to leach salts from
county farmland, but the rain has gone
on a fVOQttl longer than normal. This will
~horten ~~what the length of the grow-
ing season .. and probably cost growers
money, according to Harold Otto, a farm
adviser with the University of California
extenfilon service in Anaheim.
But the even spacing of storms hu not
helped ~veryone.
Spokesman for construction industries
said that the effect of rain has been
unusually Severe this year precisely
becau9e lt has been so evenly spaced.
Work on the Newport Freeway has
been particularly hard hit.
"We were just ready to go back to
work tomorrow," said a spokesman for
the ,state highways department. "But
now it looks like we'll have to wait
another wetk for it to dry out."
The freeway had been slated for com -
pleUon past Bristol Street to Mesa Drive
in late February. However 80 no&work-
ing days due to rain or mud since the
project was begun in 1971 have puabed
the completion date back to late April or
May. Most of the delay has been en·
countered this season, the spokesman
said .
NOW, HEAR THIS!
•
Accor<lin9 to the Prosidont's CouncU on Enviro~'l'tntol Qu1tity,
it is becoming incrHsingly difficult for onyone to escape noise.
4o,000,000 Amorica"' risk hurin9 impairment and other physical
ind ment1I offocts. 44,000,000 other Americans have the utnity of
their dw111in9s 1dvonely 1ffect1d by nol11 from aircra# or. traffic;.
21,000,000 Amorlc1ns art 1ffecttd .by constructlon-reltttd n~i11. . '
Now what dots this haVI to do with carpet?' Carpelin9 wm
<lrostically improve accouslics in any room by quieting Y"I'' homo; -environment, 111olin9 rodlos, tel.vision, ind tho family sound better.
RtrMmber, 11 'Aldon's, ovtn our LOUD c1rpeting is quieter.
'" COITA llllA
llllCI '"' -
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA M!SA
646-4838
M• •,...,.., t to l:JO; Fri. t to t: Sell. tiJO to I
'Patlaetk, Bii.riou'
Tucson Bank Hits
Lawsuit by BofA
TUCSON', Arh. !Ae) -A
14wsull .by the Bank of
Alllorica'aplmt Blnco de Lu
Amerlcu, ls '1pa.thetlc and
hilarlouJ," aays the IIJ1lll
bank's president.
Morris llerrlllC. president of
the two-ye&N>ld de L a s
Amerlcu, said tbe Dant of
America bu admitted ll-
legllllUes In court briefs to
aupportlb case.
"Tbil Is nol only pathetic,
but It's hllsrlous lo have the
Bank ol America admll Illegal
deallnp In Arizona In onler to
1bow bow • legal entity, the
Banco, Is competing with
them," Herring said.
Bank or America filed suit
last J111U1r7 qainst t h •
$115 ,000
· Membership
•
. Recorded
Spoclal•to tho 'Dady P!lol
Cij!CAGQ -A m.-rshlp
in ~ Chlc;agn MercapUle Ex-
change W8" ~Jd TbU1'3day for
$115,000, a record for any
commodi!y futures exchange.
Everette B. Qarris, CME President, reported.
'!be buyer was Michael
Siegel of llelnold Commodities
Inc., a subsldlary of De Kalb
AG research -and the .. uer
was Larry G. Lambright of
Midland Commodities Inc.
The lut previous seat sale
Oil the CME was for $110,000
oo March 5. The previous
tt<ord high was $112,500 on
Feb. 23.
The current bid was $100,000
and the asked price ls 1125.000.
Kids Like· To
Ask Andv •
SEVEN ADVANTAGF.'i
OUR PAGER OFFERS
1 COMPLm ORANGE • covm COYEU.GI
S..C ......... MW.. -.
...... ,: ...... (9
.,._ ,...,, • Wll -
.... -..... of LA.
2 MONTH TO MONTH
llMt AL U.SIS
l "NO DIPOSIT llOUll
ON APP•OYID CllDR
4 ONLY S17.00 Pll MONTH
TOTAL COST ............ ,....,
5. N!W COMPACT UNIT
SID IJl/411 4 1 1/11
6 VOICI MIUAGI PAGIU
A1.S9 All A.YA.IL.AILI 7 f~Ll HU ~INTINANCI
011.\NC:f l'OUN TV
11\lltfl J fl f Pf!ONf
Sf ll\'ICF 1~1
,,_ "--l tlldl, M.... VI$. °"" """'· .. a.-tt, '811 ,_ Ctlbfr!M't II TN), Ult. ~I ''"
714 •111-lJIS
Tuetoo baDl\. claiming the
similarity in names w., being
used to the advantage of lhe
TUcson bani: for unfair com-
petiUj>n with the large bank.
Lail week,. Banco de Las
Amerlcas, Spanish for 01Bank
of &he Americas," filed a
countersult in U.S. District
O>urt here, ~ anUtrust
violst!oos and illeg61 pracUce
of bosioess in Arizona by Bank
of Amerlea. The Banco countersuit said
altbough the C.lilomla-baoed
bank does Doi bold an Arl2ona
business license, it bas ad-
mitted in courl briefs ftled !or
its own suit that it does
business in lbO state by lend-
ing Arizona banks mmey and
buying loans made by_Arir.ona
banks.
Flights Up
A'.t Airwest
Hughes Alrwest announced
that its systemwide
perlonpance last month was
the best for any February in
ib history.
More than 244,000
passengers boarded Sondsnce
.flights at the carrier's 74
airport cities. (
They flew abOut 89.290.500
miles across the Western U.S.
as well as in Canada and Mex-
ico. The average number of
pwengers flying per mile
(passenger density) 'totaled
39.2.
OC Airport
Shows Rise
Total passengers arriving
and departing from Orange
County Airport took a sharp
~: 1fs ~;11~j ;:n~O~
the January 1972. figure of
60,450 .
Air cargo also took a
healthy jump froni 72.4 tons in
lm to 110.6 tons in January,
an increase of 52.7 percent.
• Autos parked at the airport
increased from 14,925 i n
January 1972 to 20,518 this
, year, or Jl:Q -increase ' of rt .1
J>eF<"•l. ...
New Irvine Facllit!I
B. P. John Furniture ls building this 390,000~uare f o o t manufaclw1nJ. and
distribution facility in Irvine Industrial Com ex. The new faollity, built by
Associate Collstructlon and Engineering Co. San Francisco, will bfie 400 new
employes when it opens in mid'6WDJDer.
Tire Kickin' Time
Late-model Vse d Cars Hard .to Find
.By SYLVIA PORTER
If you are planning to buy a
used car for this summer;
you're 4Iready late. The tradi-
tional best weeks for finding
used car bargains have pa.M•
ed. And now, an extraordinary
situaUon is developing: a
believe-it-or-not shortage of
good, late-model used cars.
There's plenty of j u n k
around-.
always is.
But as deal-
ers from
coast to
coast report-
ed e artier
this month to
Business
Week. low·
mileage, late
model csn are disappearing:
You ere cordielly invited t o •n
INYESTMEKT • DINNER
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1973
7:00 P.M.
MILE SQUARE
COUNTRY CLUB
1041 WARNER
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
This progr•m will cover Reel Estat e
e :r •• writ e off, e Tax Sh eltered income
e Equay build up e Appreciation
RESERVATIONS ONLY-PHONE 1714) 547-5941
Refreshments will be Served
Sponsored By
M. P. KRUSE & COMPANY, INC.
I
•
DAILY PILOT Jt ,
OVER THE COUNTER
NASD L1st11191 for Mondoy, Mltdl 19, 1m
•
I
I • I
I :
I
'
I
Tony Boyle
Denies J,ink
To Murders
ERIE, Pa. (UPI) -Tony Boyle,
former president of the United Mine
Workers of America (UMWA ), denied on
the witness stand today that he authoriz·
ed the transfer of $20,000 in union funds
allegedly uaed to finance the murder of
dissident union official J o c k ' '
Yablonski.
"I oever saw them,'• Boyle said In
reference to two Sl0,000 deposit slips and
two letta'I acknowledging transfer ol
the money from the UMWA's in'
temational treasury to the union's
District 19 ln the Kentucky-Tennessee
area.
"They came from the aecretary-
treasurer's office," Boyle said.
The union's secretary-treasurer at the
time of the 1969 murders of Yablonski,
his wife and daughter was John Owens,
who was deposed along with Boyle in an
election last December. 1
Boyle was the leadoff defense witness
at the tria1 of William Prater, 52,
LaFollette, Tenn., former field organizer
in District 19, ac.cused by the prosecution
as one of two former UMWA officials
who arranged and paid !or the killings.
Tbe other unloo olflclal, Albert PBll, 53,
Mlddlesboro, Ky., II llCheduled !or trtal in
June.
Defense attorney H. David Rothman
showed Boyle a memo urging speedy
transfer of the second $10.00'.I to District
19. The memo carried Boyie's signature.
"I don't recall ever reading that
memo," Boyle said.
Boyle said the memo was written by
his ei:ecuUve secretary, Suzanne
Richard.I.
Judge F.clward Camey rejected a
defense motion for dlamlllsal of two of
the three countl of murder against
Prater.
In hi! motion, Rothman said the
evidence was overwhelming that Prater
and Pass ucould in no way be responsible
for the deaths or Charlotte and Margaret
Yablonski." Margaret was YabloDJki's
wife, and Charlotte bis daughter.
Previous testimony in the trial showed
they were killed to that no witnesses
were left by the klllert.
Prose<utor Richard' Sprague countered
with the assertion, "When you send out a
pack of rattlesnakes, you're responsible
for what they do."
Boyle, 70, arrived at Erie Internatiooal
Airport Monday and was escorted to a
downtown motel under heavy security.
Paul Gilly, cmvlcted in the Dec. 31,
1969, ~lillinP by a jury that set lhe death
penalty, testll(ed last we<k that Prater
and Gilly's father-in-law, Slfous Hud·
dldtoa, confessed &<>-between in the
slayings, told him Boyle o rd • re d
YablMskl's death.
San Diego Area,
Tijuana Awash
In Floodwaters
A rainstorm that dumped nearly a half·
inch ol rain during San Diego's morning
rush traffic period swept over the ex·
treme south section of California thls
morning.
Scores of traffic accidents occurred on
mud and water-flooded streets of most
communities, \Vhile Tijuana was a scene
of devastation.
California H.ia:h,way Patrol officers had
to esco rt -.traffic through the heavy
downpour at certain sections of
Southland roadways.
Mudslides cascaded across two streets
in Oceanside and a main intersection of
Carlsbad wa s complc!ely nooded during
the heavy rain.
Power was also knocked out in Escon·
djdo at the height of the storm.
Tijuana Police Chief Ernesto V. Gar·
rido described the border cily which was
already soaked sodden from 18 days of
rainfall as being a complete mess with
deep standing \\'Iler In paved and un·
paved streets.
DAILY PILOT
~ Ol'•ll9e Co.o~t OA ll V I'll.OT, wllll Whldl
If comb!Md Ille N1w, Prnt. i. Ml"'*I .-,
llw Df1,._ COHt P\lbh11>1r1t Compof!Y. $fH.
rtr. .011'-•re Pllbllthtif, MonUy lhrovgll
Frld•w. •or CWt1 Mftl, N.wport ll••dl.
H"'1!1"1llon ll11d1.1!<1111ntt1n \ll!ley llevnt a.di, ll'Yl-'t.IOolebKt ..... Sin 1:~111
SM! J...., C.pll1r1110. " •Inv.. reglonll
ed!lkln k MlllfteO S.l11rctty1 lfld Sun1Uyi.
TM prlncl1141 llltbllthlno ~Lint II •• bl W.0,1
a.y '''"'· C:O.lt M-. C.lllbrnll, no..
ltob1rt N. W1,d
Prfllhnt •11111 PW1111'19r
Joe\ R. C11rl1y
lfl(.1 Pfflldlrll 111111 ~rtl liUNOtr
T .. 0 11111 IC11 .. i1 ......
Thom1t A , M11111hi111
'''-•1111"9 l•lltor
Ch.riot H. loot Ridoi1rd II. Nill
..... ltllnl Mt ....... ld1""t
S. C'-eN OMc.e
JOS North 11!1 Ctlftino l11I, ,2,72
°""' °'"'" c.,11 "4ftl1 no """' ••Y St•"' H.,.,..,f INcfl· J.m Nt'Wpor! """"Hd
H.-il'"911M 9Mcll: HWJ fll6dl ""'°""' ~ '-di' m ,,_, .. _
Tit.,.... 17141 642o4JJI
Cleulfle4 AMtffd119 "42·1671
S.. C ....... An hp1rt•11h:
To ....... 4t2-4421
CllP't"illfll, 1'7J, OrtflN CG.it '""'Wllnf ~=r-,,:..,· ,...., llDrlb, ttl~trllloni, ..... °' 111""9"""9otl ... lit
Mft' Ito • ...-.....:... ""trlOl/t ..-Cltl "" ""''*' .. ~19111 OWllOf,
..................... ~-Mm Clll~ ~llltllrt W c.rrtw tr 6'
... -.... • ... I .... -II U.IS IMf'ltMiro1 111nlrlry au ,,_1111,.,
OAIL Y PILOT llllf Pllli.
Mission Celebratio•i
Traditional p ag eant at Miss ion in San Juan Capistrano saw the
rrowning of Jesus Soto as King and Cindy \Villis as queen Monday in
celebration of St. Joseph's Da y for which the swallows returned. The
event· kicks ofi a week of community activities. In background is statue
of Fr. Junipero Serra.
From Pagel
SESSION ...
the rules" and allowing the public to
speak to the issue.
lt failed by a 6-5 margin, with the
panel's chairman casting the pivotal
vote.
Angry South Coast residents jeered the
action and many shouted , "wait until the
elections!'' -apparently unaware that
the panelists are appointed , not elected.
'Ibe Issue which has stirred so much
Ire among the residents involved the
grading of more than three million cubic
yards of earth on more than 000 acres
·above Salt Creek.
Critics have claimed the grading has
been done assertedly in vlolatiafl:~f the
provisions of the Coastal Inltt8).Itt. ·
They could have had thelt: ·Chance to
speak, commissioners argued <luring the
appropriate time Monday.
Rooney and fellow members insisted
that the public could have waited until
the entire commission agenda was dellt
with.
Public communications is the last
category on the length y document.
Monday 's meeting, however, adjourned
well into the early morning hours.
Dollar Has Mixed .
Day; Markets
Called Unsettled
LONDON (AP) -The dollar !IM a
mixed day in world money markets to-
day,, moving up in some centers and
down in others. Dealers here called the
state of the markets "very WlSettled."
But they sald this had been elqJeCled
after the adopt!on in Paris Friday of a
new floating system of international a~
change rates. -,
This was only the secood day 'that fbe.
mar~ta ba.ve operaled under the ,.ew
floating system.
Despite the lack of delln!le trends, and
in some centers widely swinging rates,
there was no sign of the heavy dealing
that touched off th'e world monetary
crisis two months-ago. --
Trading was light, a sign that many
speculators were still sitting on the
sidelines awaiting firmer evidence of how
the floats would work. The gold markets
were quiet, another sign of returning
stability to money markets.
The dollar was sharply down In Lon-
don, Frankfurt and Zurich during the
morning but recovered much of the loss
later in the day. It closed substantially
lower in Paris and Tokyo. It closed
higher, however, in Milan, Amsterdam
and Madrid.
I
Acting FBI Chief Mum,
~d1ninistratwn Throw Gray 'To Wol1?es?'
WMHlllG'TOH ~o -L. Patrick
Otay m aa111 ,...,. 11e bu been ordered
to ~,. oome lnlonnatlon requested ol
him by the Senate comrnlttee weighing
bis nomlnalion as FBI director.
'!'.he development came after Sen. John
V. Tunney ([).Calif.I, "!'~ bellel .
the While House has "decided to throw
Mr. Gtay to lbe wolves."
Gray denied be intends to withdraw 11
nominee for the FBI post.
Gray, resuming the witness chair, told
the Senate Judiciary Committee be could
no longer give members full access to
FBI files or answer all their questions.
He said be was acting on the basis of a
previously undisclooed ·order Wiled Fri·
diy by Altorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst and said he could answer
"only procedural, not substantive" ques-
tiOns about FBI procedures.
White House Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler replied, !1Ab8olute1y not,"
when asked if Nixon abandoned hope of
getting Gray confinned.
Senate Republican leader Hugb Scott
also said after a meeting with Nixon that
the President's support of Gray "is ex-
actly the same" as when he submitted
the nomination.
Gray's disclosure or restrictions on his
testimony came when Sen. Birch Bayh
(0..lnd.), requested that three !ormer
e.mployes of the FBl and tbe C.Ommittee
to Re-Elect the Pre.ident be 111bpoenaed
to appear. · •
The committee approved the request ,
but Gray refused to offer bis views on
one of the three -Judjth Hoback, of
West Palm Beach, Fla., a former assis-
tant to the treasurer of the re-election
finance committee.
Miss Hoback privately sought out the
FBI during the Watergate investigation
to communicate information outside the
presence of committee officials.
Gray provided the committee with
dates of the interviews with Miss
Hoback, but refused to discuss the case
further1wben Sen. James Eastland (0..
Miss), sked, "How many times did she
hide the truth?"
"Under my orders from P.tr. Klein-
dienst I can only discuss this procedural·
County Retarded
Group's Office
Hit by Vandals
'11lreatened. already with a cutoff of
support funds from the Department of
Health, Edueatton and Welf~, the
Orange County Assoclation for Retarded
Children has again been hit by vandals.
Sma!hlng ol windows in their offices at
2002 W. Chestnut St, Santa Ana, will cost
$500. according to Executive Director
Hank Jarboe.
The most rectnt incident was the sec-
ond window -smashing operation tn a
mootb for the organizatiM and mystifies
the membenhip and officers.
"We certainly have no enemies," said
Jarboe, adding that the organization is
J>lln!IY charltable and that vandalism
eosts ooly bamper aid to the retarded in
regular programs.
Santa Ana Police Chief Raymond C.
Hill promised to bee! up patrols in the
area in the hope ol curbing vandaltarn.
ty aod 1 can't &ive any IUtiltance to our
lnten1ews with Miss lli>baci:," Gray
aald.
"I received my orders and l have to
carry them out,• Oray aald referrlnl to
Kleindienst.
u1 don't think thOse orders are helpfUI
to ~ at all," Bayh observed.
i ' I have to take my orders from lbe at·
Cap0 Trustees
Okay Drawing
' Of New School
Arcihteet 's drawings for the proposed
0.1 ObisPo Elementary School in San
Juan Capistrano won approval Monday
by Capistrano Unified School Dtatrict
t~ustees, and the next step is a state
review ot the plans.
The district plans to pay approximately
$5,300 to the state's Office of Architec-
ture and Construction for a routine plan
check. If the plans ~e approved at the
state level, construction bids may be
sought by the district by late May.
Two representatives from t h e
Pasadena arctiltectural finn of Flewe~
ling and Moody presented the drawings or
designs which already had been con-
sidered in 1968 and 1969 before a state
fund freeze in 1970 halted construction
plans.
It is estlmaled the school will cost
11,177,000 and is proposed for eon-
struction at lbe corner of Del Obispo and
Camino del Avion along the east side of
Marco Forster J unlor Hlgh School,
The district already owns the school
site.
Flewelling and Moody also designed
Marco Forster school and Q-own Valley
and San Juan elementary schools.
The three bulldlngs and grounds ol the
new school would encompass 2.5 acres
and I?rovide 25 teaching "stations," two
learrung-resource centen and an 85-car
parking lot.
Bulldings are to be constructed of tbe
same materlals as the junior high school
and will have tbe same exterior ap-
pearance. There is no physical barrier
planned between the two schools; they
will be separated only by a walkway and
a slight slope of two or three feet on
which the new school will be built.
The original design for the school ex~
eluded several features now included in
the plans. The library, food·serving area,
music and1'mulli-puf1P08e facilities of the
junior high school were originally to be
used by elementary school people.
The laat remaining funds from bonds
sold several years ago will pay for con-
struction of the proposed school ac-
c.ording to di.strict administrators. '
tlirnef general and the' rffident, '' Gray
old. ,
The committee voted to subpoena Miss
Hoback· TOOmas Bishop , former ret
head of 'ioveslfgatlon aod files and pobUc
relations, and Thomas Lumbard, a
former Justice and Treasury Department
olficial who worked on the re-election
campaign.
FronaPqel
HUGHES ...
future corporate plans which will affect
Nevada ."
Hughes owns seven casinos Jn Nevada,
including aix in Las Vegas and one in
Reno. Together, the casinos pull in some
14 percent of UN! entire gaming revenue
take or all casinos in the state -or about
$102 million out of a total $731.l million in
1971.
"We established direct lines of
personal com l1l u n I cat lo n , '•said
O'Callaghan, "We discussed Mr. Hughes '
future corporate plans which will affect
Nevada. We did not dlscuss legal prob-
lems or events of the past. We ad-
dressed ourselves only to tholle matters
directly related to gaming."
When Hughes left Nevada in 19'1ll, there
were 1172 m!lllon In lawsuits j>endlng
against him and< Hughes Tool Co.
A year ago, the state Gaming Com·
mission refused to approve .a toj>.Jevel
change in the Hughes organization, citing
Hughes' refusal of face-to-face meetings.
Hannifin said that because the meeting
with Hughes has been held, there ·t.s no
legal requirement for him to show up in
Nevada for further gaming tnftten. He
said an application from Hug-hes
reganling shifts in company ofllctra is
expected "shortly."
O'Callaghan said he "had several dif-
ferent ways" of knowing that the man he
talked to was Howard Hughes -in--
eluding information from other persons
who have seen him such as "stocks and
bonds people."
In addition, O'Callaghan said he bad
physical descriptions of Hughes that ap.
parently matched the man he met.
Neither O'Callaghan nor Hannifin had
met Hughes before.
O'Callaghan said Hughes indicated he
will retain ownership of his Nevada gam-
ing empire. which is one of the state's
largest employen; with 8,IXK> employes.
From Pagel
RAIN .••
Sizeable but evenly' spaced storms are
credited with helping to leach salts from
county fannland, but the rain has gone
on A: ·rgo• longer than nonnal. 'Ibis will
shorten somewfi.at the length of the grow·
ing seaSoq~ and probably cost growers
money, according to Harold Otto, a farm
adviser with the University of California
extension service in Anaheim.
But the even spacing of storms has not
Conqm• tad helped E:Veryone. S Ora SPokesllljlll !or construction industriea
said that the effect o! rain bas been
~tatue MisslD• g unusually !ievere this year precisely
because it has been so evenly spaced.
Work on the Newport Freeway has
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -Gov. Bruce been particularly hard hit.
King hu asked sts,te police to assist in "We were just ready to go back to
the investigation of the disappearance of work tomorrow," said a spokesman for
the pricelu La Omqulstadora statue. the ,state highways department. "But
The famed madonna was discovered now it looks like we'll have to wait Forster Students
Visit Dana Higl1
From Pqe J missing from St. Francis Cathedral as another weik for It to dry out."
P bl • H • clergymen prepared for mass Monday. The freeway had been slated for com-
U ic earings McCUTCHEN The governor ssld, "All New Mezicans, pletion pas!. Bristol Street to Mesa Drive • • • whatever their faith, have come to con-in la te February. However 80 non·work-
Eighth grade students al Marco
Forster Junior lligh will visit Dana Hills
High School soon to meet individually
with senior high counselors to plan their
classes there fo r next year.
A total of 450 pup ils will be welcomed
March 26, 27 and 28 to Dana Hills by the
high school pep band. student leaders and
school personnel in lhe Jillie Theater and
then will tour the new school grounds.
Their parents are scheduled to hear
about the hlgh schoo l curriculum and
meet school personnel at 7:30 p.m. April
2 i.n the Dana Hills Hlgh Little Theater.
Dana HUis t:ounselors v•ill vi sit the
students April 2 and April 5 at Marco
Forster lo indi vidually discuss class
schedules and gc ner:il orientation in-
fonnation about the school.
Photography Exhibits
Displayed at School
An exhibit of more than 75 photographs
by studcnls of the Capistrano Unified
School District adult e d u c a t i o n
photography class taught by Paul Neeve
ol South Laguna will be displayed this
week •t El Peon gift shop in San Juan
capistrano.
The collection of blac k and white prints
wll l be donated to the San Juan
Capistrano Chamber or Comm erce to be
used in various community projec ts after
the cWTI.!nl show.
Dana Point Victim
Loses Stereo Gear
Stereo equtpment valued b)' tbe owner
at $:nl was atolen Monday night from n
Dana Point home, or&n1e County Sher·
111'• officers said.
Charles R. Cook, IS, ol 34081 Street of
llie Blue Lihla'ii, Iola depij1J< the equ ip-
ment was l.aken while -he wu 1bllent
from the bomt. Oinetn said there w11
no 1n41cat!oo ol lordble .. tty.
•
0 C alder La Conqulatadora as the patron ing days due to rain or mud since the
Jl Ondominium taking court action to hall his threaten-ssint of New Mezieo." project was begun in 1971 have pullhed
Ing phone calls, attempted to persuade He said that because of Its 348 years or the completion date back to late April or
her estranged husband to make her drop "special religious devotion," it should be May. Most of the delay has been en-PrOJ• ects Slated the charges and then warned her on al returned as soon as po6Sible to its borne countered thi> season, the SPokesman
least one occaalon: .. I'll kill you." at the St. Francis Church. said,
Several major condominJum projects I ~~;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
along the South Orange Coast were
removed from a blanket-approval, con·
sent calendar Monday and set for public
hearing, by the South Coast Regional
Zone Conservation Commis.sion.
Among the projects destined for hear-
ings March 26 are a 14-unit apartment
project in the Palisades proj)Olled by the
Grant Company of Anaheim. The flnn,
whi ch is annexing 80 acres to San
Clemente, plans the apartments· separate
from a major condominium project.
Yet another major mulUple-dwelllng
project . -a 34-unit project at 405
Avenida Granada in San C1emente -
also was set for a hearing on the March
26 date.
The consent calendar is a listing ol
items which can be passed in one single
vote if no one on the panel or in the au·
dience wishes special consideration of
any single item.
The Panel launched the concept of the
ca lend ar in an attempt to make its
ma rathon sessions shorter.
llearings into both the South County
projecl3 will be held at the Long Beach
Harbor Commission offices.
LIZA., DESI SAY
THEY'LL MARRY
LONDON (Al') -Liza Minnelll and
Desi Arnaz Jr. said here today they plan
to marry soon ,
ll<sl, son or Lucille · Ball and Desi
Arna.z., said the weddlna date 1111 oot
going to be kepi I secret. When WO have
set the exact date, we will let everybody
know."" •
He and Liu, the ~tms daughler of
the lete-Jud)'-Gerland and .W. ol the..
lllm "cabare~" arrived ~ 1oo.y for a
llvMlay visit
NOW, HEAR THIS!
AccorC!in9 to the Presklant's Council on Environ.mental Qu1r.ty,
it 1. becoming increosingly difficult for •nyone to escape noise.
40,000,000 Amtticons risk h11ring impairment and other physi .. I
ond mentol offtcls. 44,000,000 other Amoricons havt tho utility of
their dwelling• 1dv1noly effocttd by noise from airer•~ OI". triffid.
21,000,000 Americans ,,. affecttd by construction·reltttd noiso. , I
Now whit does this h1va to do with carpet? Carpeting ~ill
Clrostic1Uy improve accouslics in ••Y room by quieting Y"l'r homo ·,
~
onvironmtnt, m1kin9 radios, television, and tho family sound bolter.
R"""mbtr, at 'Aldon's, even our LOUD ctrpelfng is qvi9ttt.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
166] Plac•ntla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
...... J'lilll, f le l:JO: frL f 10 t: Sit. t:H le S
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'Pllt"laet~, Bilariotd' • · ... h·
· Tuc8on Bank Hits
Lawsuit by BofA
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -A
lawsuit .by the Bank or
Amsica'opimt·Banoo do.La!o
Amtticu, b "pathetic aod
hilarious," says the ..,.U
bank's president.
Morris Herring, president o!
the two-year-old de Las
Amtr!cas, said the Bank ol
America has admltted 11-
legllltles In court briefs th
IUpporl lts case.
"Tilts ls not only patbetlc; ·
but lt'a bilarioos th bave the
Bllllk ol America admit illegal
doallngs In ArtJ:oiJa In oi-der th
show bow a; le.gal entity, the
Banco, is oompetiog with
them," Herring said.
Bank or America filed suit
last JllllW'Y ogainst the . ,.
$115,000
' . Membership
• • ' f
.. lteco-rikd • ' • Specllt lo Ille ·Dally Pilot
CQICAGO -A membership in the Olic;ago MercanUle Ex~
change w~ ~Id 'I'hu..,.iay for
$115,1,)00, a record for any
cqmmodi!Y futures exchange.
Evere!t< B. Harris, CME
Prisiden!, reported.
The bllyer .was Michael
Siegel o! Heinold CO!nmbdities
Inc., a snbsidiaey o! De Kalb
AG reaearcl1 -and the sell<(
was Larry G. Lambright o!
Midland Commodities Inc.
The last previous seat sale
on the CME was !or $ll0,000
oo March 5. Th• previous
record blgb was $112,500 on
Feb. 23. .
The cumnt bid was $100,000
and the asked price Is 1125,000.
Kids Like· To
Ask Andv •
SEVEN ADVANTAGF.S
OUR PAGER OFFERS
'l1lcloli ~ claiming the
similarity in ..,... wu being
used to the advanuge ol the
TuCIOO bank for unlair com-
petlt19n with the large bani<. •
Lalt week, Baneo de Las
Americas, Spanish for ''Bank
of tile Americas," nled a
countorsult in U.S. l>istrlct
Court here, aue.IJut antitrust
viol-• and Ulegiil pracilce
or business In Ari>ona by Bank
ol America.
The Baneo <OUntersult sail!
althougll the california..t>ased
bank does no:t bold an Arizona
business license, it bas ad~
mitted In court briefs filed for
its own suit that it does business In tbe state by lend-
ing Arizonli bank• money and
bu)'ing loans made by Arizona
banks. •
Flights Up
At Airwest
Hughes Alrwest announced
that its systemwide
performance last month was
the best for any February in
its history.
More than 244,000
passengers boarded Sundance
.flights at the carrier's 74.
airport cities.
They new about 89,290,500
miles across the Western U.S.
as well as in Canada and Mex·
ico. The average number of
passengers Dying per mile
(passenger density) 'totaled
39.Z.
OC Airport
Shows Rise
Total passenger& arriving
and departing from Orange
County Airport took a sharp
rise in January with 93,537.
This is up 54.7 percent over
the January 1972 figure of
60,450.
Air cargo also took a
healthy jump from 72,4 tons in
1972 to 110.6 tons in January,
an increase of 52.7 percent.
< Autos parked at the airport
increased from 14,925 i n
January 19'12 to 20,548 thls
, year, t)r 31! increase '·of .-Jfl. ~
percent. ..
Sunday is
FllllE>AY'
New Irvine E'acllitg·
B. P. John Furniture Is building this 390,000 square foot manu!a~ and
distribution facility in Irvine Industrial Comples. The new facill!Y, . built by
.AssoclJKe Construction and Engineering Co. of san Ftancisoo, will hfie 400 new
employes when it opens in mid....,mmer,
Tire ·Kickin' Time
Lat;e-model Vsed Cars Hard .to Find
By SYLVIA. PORTER
lf you are planning to buy a
used ear for this summer;
you•ie already late. The tradi·
Uotial best weeks for finding
used car bargains have pass·
ed. And now, an extraordinary
situation is developing: a
believe-it-or-not shortage of
good, late-model used cars.
There's Plenty of j'U n k
liroUDd there
•lwys ls.
But as deal-
ers from
coast to
coast report.
ed e artier
this month to
Business
Week. low-
mileage , late PORTER
model cars are disappearing.
MORE PEOPLE are driving
their own cars longer, passing
on the cars to other family
members rather than trading
in, and selling cars privately.
The new federal law pro-
hibiting tampering w i t h
odometers, which went into ef-
fect this month, is eliminating
those "low-mileage beauties"
which.were created merely by
"turning back the clock" and,
by so doing, is r:aising the
prices of clean, low-mileage
call by as much as $3i)l).$500.
ID shortest supply are the
popu.Jar compacts, · although
~. eipeuive good cars
can be founa more easily.
What, then, should you do?
become a real nuisance.
FollOW up dealers' ads that
sound reasonable and
believable to you. By all
means, avoi'a the peak spring
and summer weeks · when
millions wW be competing
against you for used cars.
-Decide in advance what
kind of car you actually need
and how much car you can af-
ford and don't get talked Into
a biggei' car than your budget
can afford -just because the
bigger cars are available.
Look for a relatiYely recent
lowei'·priced mod.el with com-
paratively few complicated
extras, to min.imi1.e your
repair costS later.
-Consult the Nailonat
Automobile Dealers Associa-
tion's Official Used Car Guide
or the KeUy Auto Market
Report (Blue Book), listing
current average retail car
values for most U.S. and
foreign models, makes and
years. These guides w i 11
dramatize that prices for a
given car can vary as much as
$500, depending on its con-
dition. Also consult Consumer
Reports, which regularly rates
used cars. Get a copy both of
Consumers Union's "How to
Buy a Used Car" 1and of
Edmund's uused Cal' Prlces,"
published by Edmund Publica-
tions Corp., Great Neck, N.Y.
.-TAKE I N·T 0 COD·
sidt;ration the. fact that a new
car's value drops about 50 per~
cent during the ru:st two y~
-START SHOP!i'ING for of its life -suggesting that
your used car at once and go your best buy well may be-a
only to used car dealers you weU cared for twt>to-three--
have ..thoroughly investigate£L_year old_caz...But:c1on•tJaJl_for_
laws do not in any sense cover
the condition oC the engine or
transmission.
-DESPITE THE fed.
eral Jaw prohibiting turning
the odometer back, Jgnore the
odometer l'eading. A much
better gauge of bow many
miles a use4 car bas been
driven is to multiply its age by
10,000 to 15,000 (miles per
year). Check the driv]t's seat
for wear to make sure the
mileageontheodome ter
equals the interior wear.
Check the tires.
Disney Aide
Slates Talk-in the l1fulij~j(1}j Don't go too far from home or the salesman's come-0n1 °I'm l\~~iiiii~~~~·~··~·~-~·~·~ .. ~-~~servi~·~c1o~g.:;pr~oo~l~ems~~c~o~u~l~d\ losing money on the deal ." II How could the dea1er stay in
You are cordially invited to an business if he did that?
The National Association of
Accountants, Orange Cioa.st
California Chapter wW bear
Bruce F. Johnson at their
Wednesday meeting in
Newport Beacll. 1 COMl'lltl OIAN6l •
COUNJJ COVIU.GI
a.hi1 '1: ....... Hmdt.
S-Cl•••w,...Mhlf"~ ................ ,.
....... mtOlt .. u.
2 MONTH TO MONTH
llllTAL PSIS
3 NO tlUOSIT lll>Ull
ON APPIOVID CllDIT
4 ONLY $17.DO Pll ·MONTH
TOTAL COST , ..... tt.4 ,....,
5 Nl!W COMPACT UNIT
SID 11V•s4a l/t)
6 VOICI MISSAGI PAG-IU
AUO All AVAIL.AILI 7 ~U: FIR MAINTIHANCI
., O~~NGE COUNTY
II Ull07El f PHO~E
S[r!VltF 1,t
1nm e..,.. a.di, Mlllleft ~
01M l'ellllt. '-cttft'lfllff, SU JllM C.llJtr•• II T-. c•ll toll rm
114•1.JS.1105
INYESTMEN.T · DINNER
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1973
7:00 P.M,
MILE SQUARE
COUNTRY CLUB
·1041 WARNER
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
This prqgram will cover Real Estate
e Tax write offs e Tax Sheltered income
• equity bu;!d up
• Appreciation
RESERVATIONS ONLY-PHONE (714) 547-5941
Refreshments will be Served
Sponsored By
M. P. KRUSE & COMPANY, INC.
I
MEMlllR PAc:iFIC CCiAST STOCI( RXCHANOE
"'"" .. (JrClliff WU\ •• oi.trlbclttd At n. 5!"'1isar
-Have a mechanic or
diagnostic clinic check out any
car you are conSJdering, and
expect th pay $15 to 125 for the
service -well w_ortb it, even
if the check results Jn your nqt
. buying the ca(. Test drive the
car or have a trusted
mechanic test drive it for you
under a 'variety of· traffic con-
ditions. Do not assume that,
because a uSfid car bears an
inspection sticker, it's in. good
mechanical conditjon. State
For Sports "
.• The DAILY PILOT is the
newspaper for sports along
the Orange Coast .•. complete
sutlsUcs on Inca! home and
away games, staff coverage,
more exclusive stories on'
Orange Coast sports than any
other 1 o c a 11 y distributed
newspaper.
Johnson, assistant con-
trollirof WaJt Disney Produc-
tions since July 19681 has been
responsible for all corporate
lll:counting !uncilooa, lncludlng
corporate financial reporting,
design of accounting systems,
formulation of policies and
procedures.
Hetwill give a survey .ol the
Disney organization as it ap-
pears in 1973, the yearof its
50th anniversary.
This meeting will be held
the Airporter Inn Hotel, 18700
MacArthur Blvd.
Social hOur begllll!
p.m.
Elpac Reveals
Gas Well Fmd
Elpac, Inc., reported the
discovery in conjunction with
M'cMoRan Exploration Co. or
Dallas, Texas and SUndance
Oil O:lmpany of Denver,
Colorado, of a new gas wen In
the Moose Portage Area, near
EdmOnton, Alberta, Canada.
T_,, Matdl 20, 1973 DAILY PILOt J9,
OVER THE ·coUNTER
NASO L11tl"91forMocwlay,March19, tm
-...-io.1m
Cost of Groceries
I -
To Keep on
'WASlllNGTON (UPI) -,..------,
Grocery prices will probably
<eep golnl up for the re1l ol
this year. tbe government a.aid
Tuesday.
• .,NetDIRSBoss
President Nixon has· ap..
poin!A!d a prominent
Olncinnati tax lawyer,
Donald C. Alexander
as tile new chief of the
lnternal Revenue Serv-• I~ ice,
Lockheed
Acquires
·Murdock ' ' • ; BURBANK -Lockheed
' Aircraft Corp. a n n o u n c e d
Tuesday it had completed the
, acqubllion of the Murdock
• Machine & Engineering Co.
diviJion of C C I Corp. and
~·( -tJ\Kil\'c ).
. _ STOCK _
' Wd it would continue its cur-
t. rent operations u a who Uy
• owned Lockhe<d subsidiary.
'111e company has 7 5 O
employes workin·g in Irving,
Te.1.1 near Dallas.
G. Graham Whipple, cur-
rently presJdent of Lockheed
It said fsrm prices should
l'IJOderate in the su'mmer and
level off by the end of the
year.
IN A WHITE paper on the
spiralling tosl of eating, Ole
Coat of Living Council sa1d
farm pricu should be no
higher al the end of !he year
than tbey were in January.
The rate of overall increase
should be ''near zero" by
year's end, the report said.
Tbe council said retail
prfees which usually "adjust
less dramatlcalJy than farm
prk:es" would continue to rise
throughout the year.
They should "begln to level
off arter mid·year and the rate
ol increase may be near zero
at the end or tbe year'" it
said.
Pre3ident Nixon discussed
the cont~t.s of the report with
Chrysler's
'73 Prices
Will Rise
DETROIT (UPI) -Chrysl<!r
Qrp. has broken lhe "follow-
the-leader" tradition and an-
DOWJCed a price increase on
197s.model cars and trucks a
few hours alter General Mo-
tors said it would freeze 1973
prices.
General Motors Chairman
Richard C. Gerstenberg said
Monday t he world's largest
auto maker would not increase
prices "unless forced to by
major economic events," but
indicated the introduction of
FINANCE
a group of coogruslonal
Republlcans shortly before it
was made public.
REP. LESLIE Arends (R·
Ill.), No. 2 man in tbe House
GOP leadership, told reporters
that administration efforts to
increase production of food
"will alleviate the condition of
inflation in food in a
UCB Names
New Chief
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Norman Barker Jr. was
elected chainnan of the
board of United California
Bank Monday and Robert
A. Barley, 42, executive
vice president, was elected
to succeed him as presi-
dent.
Barker, 50, who joined
UCB in 1957 and because
president in 1968, succeeds
Frank King as board
chairman. King, 7 S •
retired after 23 years with
a bank but will continue as
a director.
'" Propulsion Co., will take on
the additional assignment of
president of Murdock. Whipple
will report to William B. ~· R k le e, executive vice presi-
1974 models would bring price '------------'
hikes.
' dent of Lockhe<d.'
• • ene.,omp
• NEW YORK (UPI) -The
New York Stock Exchange
Monday announced a major
* reorganization of the Ex·
' change aimed at increasing its
:· aervices and preparing for the
f E:tchange's role In the Central • • Markel System. ' •· The new plan consoildates < all the Exchange's regulatory
and surveillance activities,
now divided among five dU:
•· ferent departments into a new
Surveillance and Regulation
Group. lt also separates all
membership se rv ices into a
second Wlit, the Market
.. Operations and Membership
• Services Group. Two more
i groups round out t h e
reorganization. They embody
i' administration and services.
e Trollelodge
Special to the Dally PUot
EL CAJON -TraveLodge
lnternational Inc. repor ted
I>\ Monday that corporate net in-
' oc come ,Increased 41 percent for
11 the Uscal year ended Jan. 31
on increased co r po rate
revenues of 15 percent.
; Net income be for e ex:-
: traordinary items for the year
~ rose to $1,855,738. or 72 ccnls
;. per share from $1,313,628. or
• 51 cents for the prior year, . :: 11ald Roger Manfred, presl·
dent. '
I' -,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij;~ < • ' " "
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PRIVATE TRUST
FUNDS AVAILABLE
fOft ftfAL EITATE LOANS tat • 2ncl TRUST OEEOS $1,$00 Ta S2S0,000
IJP TO 90 ... LO"NS OH
TRUST DEEO COi.LATERAL
NIWPOJn' t:QUlrt' nl•os
Newpo" C•ni.r 1211 N.Wpott C.n!•r Or!" Pftwp0rt h9Gh, C1111. (71') 6«48Z4
A SHORT time later, Chrys-
ler, the third-largest auto mak-
er, announced an averal{e $42
increase. effective April 2, in
the su~ested retail price or
its 1973 m<Xlel c~rs. The aver-
a~e truck increase was $45.
Ford and American Motors
had no comment on Monday's
actions by two of the BiJt Foor
auto ma~ers. but they, too,
were feelln~ the pinch ol add-
ed coots of labor and material.
WITH CHRYSLER moving
contrarv to the usual GM
trend-settine:. it was anvbody's
iniess whether Ford and Amer-
ican Mo\ors would increase
prices on1 1973 modets.
T h e Chrysler hikes r;in'!e
from ~:won the c<1moact Dart
Prid Valiant to ~ on the
Chrysler Imperial . ThP in-
cr~ses werP to t:oike effP.Ct Ot'I
f"H~tome,. ""lie'"'; reC'eived altP,.
mifin(.,h1 Mo,,d:iv. reflecti11'! P
l.?5 nerC""'lt iricrP"<u> in rPl~il
nl'ire i1nr' ~n..,t1'uor I ''i l)"'"f'"'"'
hilt<> ;., +~ .. nri"e nf opti"n11J
P"tE'S!'lorles.
Women Set
Dinner Meet
Uoderstandin,g serority and
how won1en fit Into the securl~
tv picture will be discussed at
the March 27 dinner meeting
of the Orange County Chapter,
National As soc i a ti on or
Women in Construction .
Brian J. O'Connell of
American Protection Indus·
tries \\'ill address the ~oup
at the Anaheim Hyatt ffouse.
Women emolo.vef'! and em·
plo,ves in construction are we!·
come And m'lv mak,.. J"'f'<;erV3·
finrtci H1rotH!'h Mi:1ri Wf'il . 714-
P'l'7-%79 or Pat Ri ch. 714·540-
AR~:l
.. • ' •
' •
NEW 1973 AUTOMOBIW -ON
DISPLAY AND READY FOR IMMEDI· ATE DEUYERY -COYER OYER 20
ACRES OF SPACE ON COSTA
MESA'S HARBOR BOULEVARD OF
CARS.
I
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Six Banks
To Expl.ain
Rate Hikes
WASHING'ION (UPl~-'lbe
govemvi!1\fl\8• '\\mmoned six
ol lbe n9!1ot(s ljfgest banks
lo appear.;here 'Dlursday and
explain thelr. rai.Sing of inter-
est rate;· for prime busines.s
Joans. > ~ .
Led b)' the Manufacturers
HanovW Trust Co. cl N e w York,~~ banks announced in-
creases. in the prime interest
rale Mo~ from 614 lo 61'
percent. Past increases have
nonnally been in increments
of 1/8 or y, point.
ARTHUR F. Burns, chair-
man of the Federal Reserve
Board and also head of t h e
Committee on Interest and
Dividends. which is part of
the government's wage-price
control system, quickly. chal-
len.ited the increases, sayinl!'. it
was not clear they complied
wHh government criteria set
last month .
Burns asked t h e banks to
bring information on costs and
interest rate policies. particu-
larly with regard to loans to
small businefls firms, borne
buyers and consumers.
CHAmMAN Wri'!ht Pat-
man. (0.Tex.) of the House
R11nking Committee denounced
the hank, for raisinl!'. the rate
!'l'I ch11rolv. He accu~ th<>m
of ";t consolracv to violate the
11n1ari1'!t lsiws."
After Mi:in11f Pc:turers H11n-
"Vrr rn11<ie lhe fi~ ~""""'"!CPmf'.,, t~ r>f~P~ {n1}nwffi
~iii · ~·,.•inP 1"1-flontf Jt11"1t r>f
Nrw York. pj.-~f Ni:itln.,11!
Ri:i""' nf J\(l..tm. 'li"i~t Pr>nn~
!i!Vlv<>.,iq f'11.nlr ,.r Phi1•ff .. 1nhli:i,
~·'he"' c"'11rt'll'T\1111. Fi~' NA·
flnr111l B11.,,lc nr 1.mt AnaP.1~ ,. .. n 'Fri:inldin Nation&] Bank of
New York.
WASIDNGTON·(UPI) -Agrlcullun! Secrelaty 'Earl L.
Butt, In • 1enUy worded "ja~" efkort lo b<)p oa{ten
l't«>rd relall be<I prices, Tuesday tdvls<d caltlemm lo
send IClllll ol !heir older beef OOW• lo siJlugjlltt this 1"Rr·
A oatUe Industry lpOkesman ....,I a tlep fllrtller and
urged prodlicers m market aome younger !emale lloct
along wllh older """"· Bun' suggestion lo co«lemen was part ol tht Admh>
l!llntlon pellem of ... king lo dampen food lnOalloll by
Sl>llT1of lnerelset ln cupply nlher than using price -
trob.
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COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST
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T""411, ~ Ill, 197J SC ' DAILY PILOT /fl
Tuesday's Glosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
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3 BDRM.+ BIG & BEAUTIFUL
Gener1T
;i._tt:i'flf"~-~
~ •ASSICllTts
REALTORS
2121 ll"AST COllST--
COllONA on MAR.CALF.
644·72'10
Boycrest
. family home
You'll enjoy thla lovely FAMILY HOME on
a aecluded street, 4 bedrnom, 2 bath, PAN-
ELED family room with double fireplace
plua many cwtom features. Larg., fenced
yard and patio •.................. ~63,500
Buy I: FAMILY RM.I $35,950. Exciting a bed-
: room at the end of a ..,,...-r-"l"'!""'"ll'",
\" $24,950. Very nice homo. quiet cul-clMac. Huge
' Patio, clining room. Gas honua room. Family
bullt-ins with dishwasl>-room, secluded rear liv-
er. Cozy . fireplace, ing room. Fireplace,
shade trees. & lovely dining room, covered
yard. MG-1720 pat J o & built-In.;.
I 540-1720 I 1--------1
REDUCED $2250
JUST I YEAR OLDI
• $32,500. Prime College
: Park home with 3 bed· $38,950. A really beau-
' roorru On a good sized Uful 3 bedroom m a
' come; lot. Quiet res!-quiet area. Hug~ rov~r
' dential area. Dining ~d patio .. Electric built-• . . w. Family room, fire-' room, patio, family place. Assumable V.A.
I room. Nicely landscap-loan. Easy-care yard.
AUSTIN·SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES
REAL TORS 644-7270
0 ..... 1 -
SIX UNITS
• , • on WP. Jot, Eallllcle c..ta Mtsa. 112$). -:C: ·ZONE
CO~).OT
SIT.!O> Roy McC•rdlo RNlt...
1810 N~vd., CM.
ALL THE THINGS
You've ~ wanted tn a
home io in tblll boautiflll.
lup 4 bednlom • 211
b1th1. lmmacul•te
~t. Sparkllnc
-electric bullt·lm •
.
4lNCU:~
DISTINCT POSSIBILITY-lt's poasible to
live high on a bll1ff overlooking Dover Shores
with a poOlalde view reacblng to Catalina
and beyond •. Very distinctive, very spacious
and very exclusive 4 Bedzooln at *245,000.
UNl9ff HOllll OI' NIW>Olf llACH. '4MIH ,. ....... __
U~ IVUI: tl(),..l:S
REALTOJtS
--
d:i.sbwa:liler, oven A ~· Gener11 Gener1I
Vautted cel1ino In IMnl l;jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiii I room. Wall ot g1aa OWl'jl
,_ 1"e ocean and Jotty.
Parle: like ~ wit\) custom
-heat..i pool ... lb
J""""1. -lll5,IOO. Call 673-8550.
OPEN nt. II • "s 1tw 10 E MCEI [llll;lfil
RANCH STYLE
CHARMER
$31,900
Complete with split rail
fence and open porch, oo
TO ALL AREA REAL TORS
Please be Informed Iha~ lnfonnation In-
cluded lo our ad on Saturday, March 17th,
1973 pertalolog to a certain property on
Leeward Lane could be construed as an ex·
cluaive n ght "' sell listing. This is oot Iha
case. If further Information is requirecl,
_please contact-
J . W. WOOD, Presldont
UN19UE HOMES INC:.
675-6000 ---------------large lot • 3 BIG ~. General family rm, 2 queen me Gonorol
, ed. MG-1720 MG-1720 G-..,-.,-0-1------Ge---.-, ------batlta, this II a wiles dream l;;i;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~~~,~=: OCEANVIEW
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fr
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 540-1720
G1ner1I General
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Exceptional 5 bclrm., 3-story home With pier
& sllp. Magnificent South bay view from all
3 levels. Remodeled kitchen & family room.
Price reduced to $210,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR,
675-4161
GARDEN ENTRY
Tall trees, fragrance of gardenias comprise
lovely entrance for this spec. home with
fam . rm. & den + basement & attic.
Bill Bents.
WHY NOT BUILD?
97 LJNDA ISLE is a good site for your cus·
tom bayfront horile. One of the last water·
front lots left & only $69,500.
CORONA DEL MAR
Delightful area-big trees, walk to beach,
park, shops. Beautiful decor. Remodeled
12(71. 3 BR. & guesl $89,500. For app't. call
Paul Quick.
IVAN WELL >-BAYCREST
Lots oC charm in this 4 bedroom, formal
dining rm. home. Bright fam. nn. overlook·
log pool. 31h Ba. Courtyard entry. Lovely
street. Vacant. .Mary Lou Marion.
SUPER NEW SO' BAYFRONT
Bay views from 5 rooms. Lots of parking.
Pier & slip. Room for 3 boats to 45'. 4
Bdnns., 41'.i baths, lam. nn. Exel. fin. Fee.
'225,000. Call G. Grupe.
UNIVERSITY PARK_
!>lay home & relax in this former model
townhouse; 2-sty., 3 BR., lam. nn. w/,.et
bar; many, many decorator touChe.i. call to see-"Chuct" Lewis
'33-0700 ...--
Coldwell, Bank er
~
550 NEWPOR-T CENTER--OR,,-N.B
****** * TAYLOR CO. *
BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB
Exclusive country Club area. Popular plan
in this 4 BR home by Broadmoor. Lge fam
rm, formal dinhlg room & 3 baths. View of
patios from all rooms. 3 Car garage. Stir·
rounded by more expensive homes. $104,900
29 AUGUSTA LANE OPEN DAILY 1-5
"Our 28th Year''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR C:O., Realtors
211 1 San Joaquin Hills Road
''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club"
NEWPORT CENTER , N.B. 644-4910
General
54H640.
I OH I \I L 01 \II\
Rr.A 'uf.'.
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
POPULAR MONACO MODEL
2 bedrooms & den, we ll decor1ted, shows toke •
model home; Large lot, room fo r pook $M,500 FEE.
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
REALTY
833-0780
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MEAT
BEACH HOME
-4 -· 2 """"· ed.~ dbl. ~e 4 i-~
clooo 10 beout. Honttnrtoa
Wdt Park, where swim·
min& I< •ur!ina are super • " ...,, 128,900 -.,_,
. NEWPORT &ACKBAY~
..... " -s bdnn .. 2 ... -.. Itsl&o. llmll1
tltch. hu a 11ne eati.rv area: keeps tbe kkk df! the new carpeting. The drapes
ailo are new. nu. ii ooe
of the lowest pr:iced NICE
boron in Newpcirt.
-675-3000 m II\\ ,\ llL\rll
romY ·
IN MESA VERDE
Warm &: ccc,y,
Nice & Blg.
Built-in cabinets,
,.... will dlg. -..... Qulet-t
Priced $44,900,
You canoot beat.
See it now,
Thia cbartner won't Jut. can 546-ml.
And caH it fast!!
•
()PEN HOME
lVEl'f DAY
lto5AUthllWeet •. 1 VIEW. POOL. •·-aoou• .
3 -'l'op Coodltlol>. .. Alta VIila.,......... ~' Of!8ed far $75.000. uuo
An)'time, St&-Oli5. '
BUILDING SITE .
PWS HOME ·
wrrH VIEW .
Zolle<I R·). -· 2 ~ at Land one-half overlookkll a...,, Lake, .'!Uh a N,...
port Bead> ......,.. ENl-ino 4 B<droom. 2 Bath View
}lome. s.Atable lor 8 Addi-
tional }:xclllllvo Shiate
l'anifly Dwell'-Olfmd *"' #15,ooo. can AnyUmo, -· 3-RXITS
will\ Land for 1bm · 111on
UniU. Four wi1h 810/iq. tt.
variance. No Vacancy .,_
exlslfnl units. Set oo,abnolt
half-acre of Jt.2 groul1i ln
EASrS!DE CQSrA ~
Se<ond Stoey Units wftl live
yoo Golf Coone View!
Great Poteat!al at $4.\900{
CaHAeytlme,646-06!6.. 1111 ··
suaSIDIA•Y Of fHl COl.WGl ~
VACANT AND'·
.>WAITING
)'BR+
DINING ROOM
In poptdar IMne Temtee at
only $57,250. Better hUIT)'
thia won't last at tlds low
price. Immactftte condl·
tion throu&boot. ExceDent
flpor plan, 2% baths. OUt· -"""" ,..... -tireptace. Nice kttchen wtth
electric built-in oven and
range. Wen developed fenced yard. _ .....
CaD ... -6T.H5liO.
()(IEN T7L 9 • trs FUN 70 lfE
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Lag1111 _a · Beaeh
, EDITION
Tetlay's Flaal
-N.Y. Steeb •
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VOL 66, NO. 79, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1973 TEN CENTS
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Top of World Fire Station
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of a. D91W Pi* Ii.ff
Fire .department pel'IOllnel shortages
and a freer.e on expenditure of overtime
fundJ forced closure of the Top of the
World fire.station Mondoy, and will me3l)
sporadic shutdown ·of the facllin" in the
future, fire officia)s said today.
The closure Monday was necessitated
by the hQspltalir.atif)n of one r~man
which left one sh'ift understrength,
Charley Kuhn, acting fire chief sald to-
day.
Chief Ku\ln predict.cl that the man-
power shortage will result In cloeure of
le hilltop sjation next Tuesday, and
April •. and possibly April 10 and U. But
Kuhn noted that scbedUle will bold only
if no ()De else gets lick aod misses work.
"We talked this ovor and felt that ,with
the · rains and e¥erytbing, It would, be
safer shutting it down than running under
,
Big Plant Sold?
Go-vernment to Get Niguel Facility
· Orange County Supervisor Ronald Caspers was notified today
by the U.S. General Services Administration that pmns to acquire
the buge Noith American Rockwell plant in Laguna Niguel are firm
and proceeding rapidly. .
JN A LETTER from T. E. Hannon, general services regional ad·
ministrator in San Francisco, it was stated the facility would be used
to house b!deral activities performing a variety of governmental func-
tions.
He estimated total employment at the location at 3,000 to 5,000
persons.
A SOCIO«Onomie ·study and an environmental impact state-
ment are now beintti!t"Pared, Hannon said. Caspers was ed by the federal official fO<' information pro-
vided on ~ousing in the vicinity of the facility.
-:212 Seel; Superinte dent
Position ·in Laguna Beach
.
As todav's 5 p-01. deadline ipproached,
.a total of 212 applications from persons
seeking lhe Laguna !each si1perintendent
of schools post bad been -received by
'"Wlool cfficialC • '
several additional applications were
expected In the fate JDail delivery this
·afternoon. •
The con9dential papen will be stored
until Saturday wben a three-man screen-
ing comtnlttee will review ~them and
forward to the )!Oard of Education tile
top four to sb.: applications. ' ·
Serving 'on the screening committee
will be RiChard M. Clowes, Los Angeles
County superintendent of schools; Dr.
Hilton Bell of Chapman College, and Dr.
John Stallings of the University of
.• S:luthern Callfomia.
Trusteea will begin a lengtby aert.. of
meetings Saturday at an a a.m. breakfaat
wllb membera of the ~ com-
mittee.
Appllcaliooa will be screeoed down
during Jbe remainder of the day, with the
top candidotes notified Sunday that they
are in the nmning.
'Dr. Harold Kibby, board adviser on
selection of a new superintendent, tol<l
trustees Monday night to reserve the
evenings of March n and March 30 and
\See DEADLINE, Pal• I)
·Laguna .Trustee .Thomas
:Flayed by Citizen Group . ,
By FR'IDERl"K SCllO"MEHL
Of "" a.flY l"tllf ,,.,, fast actions of Willian\ "lbopm; ln-
?'!"benl candidate In the April 17 Laiuna Beach school board election, are
strongly criticized in a new Oler sent out
by the Schools '73 Committee.
:Main Beach ·Plari
Gets 1 Hearing
·More Before OK
The Ol'l!•nizaUoo; wbicb Is "'Pl'Orting
the electioa of Jane, Boyd, Norman
Browne and Michael Sagar, claims
Tbomis "is the man most responsible for
the firing of Dr. William Ullom al a cost
of thousands of dollan to the taxpayer. 11 •
, Thomas said Mooday• that be WOUid
answer the charges In a deiaUed J>r<SS
statement He declined any ltatemeht to-
day, however. '"
·The one-page filer, e11Ut1ed "Schools '73
-These Are the Facts" charges, ''the
Thomas-led board Is reaponslble !or the
highest budget In the history of our
schools, up over 20 percent per student
~ cost in the past tRo years." .
It also .-is that 'nlomas, along wllb
Trustees Patricia Gillette and Ge,.id
By JAN WORTH "•"· "reduced Jbe u.n r e at r 1 c t e d 01 ,._ Dflllr ~ staff --~ reserves from $55,000 to nearly zero.
Ptau for Lagwia Beach~• Main Beadl "Our 'savtnp' are gone/' the stafe..1
Part will creak lhrougb one more oet of ment claimo.
blarlngs In the planning cODlmisslon and . "'lbomu aftll his majorlcy conatantly
cly eouncil before nii.J approtal, lite a 'dllotpllne' P"'blem 1t Lqune
poaibly ending two yeara Ol ledlwn over tchools," the filer coollmtes ''Tiie 'board
uqexpectedly high bldl; design con-approved' Educational Prlorlllel Com-
tnveray, and lwlding efforts. mitlee determined tbal vandalism,
At a joint otudy aession of the conr 1n11ncy and abo<ncel ..., lowtt. Jn
ll1laslon ond coandl ""'1da1o ()innr!J,..n Lagana !hon 111J other ac:hool district Jn
Roy Holm moved lor an end to com· our area."
nn!ty, ~. 1mc1 ,....,.,,.,1 •~ · oa -a&cao11, ·u. ~
w6lCh he oald bu -· · "the Ame claims '"lbomu encl his '"*'111 -le uylng Jbe ume tblap owr and _. the llleclloa by a· prtnto
over and over 1gal.n." arganlutlon ot echool tut., lndadlng
He propooed the Ona! bearing>, 16 be one 'text' by an affiliate of the ~
Mar<h II for the conunlalon and !be Bird! Soctoty."
lint meetinc of April fer the counci~ u • ''Thomae and bis maJoricy ... _.,
the times when "we can all have our Jut alla<lt Top of the Wcrld. Yet JUcbard
... fldpl.!' -Jlalfum. In tht .Lao A.,.i. TlJnn, • "I caa tbb\t of, DOthJnc that bu been writea.i_.'V~_!op of the WfWfd and learn
mono complolely llrod .•. nobody Jiu bow rnnapot A~ 11a .. ·and llalf
(lot MAIN UAQI, Pip I) · (8-l'!llOMAS, .... 11
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strength in our high value districts,"
Chief Kuhn said.
He explained that the Agate Str .. t ata-
tion, wbicb normally has a staff of tbree
firemen, coven tbe hJgh value motel--
hol<I district and the south end of town
inCJuding Arcb Beach Heights.
The main fire stati6n on Forest Avenue
with four men, including one dispatcher,
covers the downtown BJ'l!a and north
Laguna.
'
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Shouting
Dominates
Hearing
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of n. Dfill't Plitt St•lf
Hundreds of angry residents of the
Laguna Niguel and Monarch Bay areas
were thwarted Monday in their attempts
to protest heavy grading above Salt
Creek Beach as the Soutb Coast ,Regional
1.one Conservation Commission refused
'to "suspend the rules,. to allow a hear-
ing. • ,
And, lmtead of a full-blown airing of
the controversy SUJTOl.lDding the massive
earth moving by Avco Communicy ~.Developers. ~ 'evenlng was one of
frustration and'-f<lr amuo _.,at u. S... Q'l11eole Ooalmunity Clubhouoe. 'l1ie hundrj!dJ of relidenta learned that
the actual Sall Creek hearings wlll be
Marcb 26 in Long Beecb.
The mee~ -another marethon
session of th~ U:meniber pal'iel -opened.
more as l~ifcli-than a format
session. Qia1rmaD Dr. Robert Rooney
carried on a loud debate with critics
from the audience. '
A councy-ln!italled llOUDd aysterr. did lit·
lie to soothe tempers. The com·
missioners' commenbl were Jriaudible to
most of the 600 person! present.
Commissioners blamed reports In a
Los AngeleS newspaper whicb had aald
earlier Monday that the'bearings on the
Salt Creek dispute Would be held al the
community clubhouae.
'lbe neWs account brought forth hun-
dreds of tes.ideJits angry over the
massive grading project. which has
altered the landsOape aho"' the SOUlh
Coast strand whi£!> o!leJl..llai bee!! @!Jhe
Cf!?ler of controven:y.
: '!bat newspaper account drew blasts
from commissioners, particularly LQs
Angeles Couocy·delegate James Reedy .
"It's not the fault of us on the com-
mission," be asserted· '·'It was the press
that erred, which is often the case."
In the middle of the .brief diJpute -
which amounled to attempts by members
of the audience to speak -Orange Coun-4' Sllperviaor Ronald Caapera, a member
of the pone!, dropped a note to Rooney
and left. '
Caspers earlier bad sald he planned to
leave early to serve as a host for U.S.
Sea. James Buckley of New York w ..
made an ap~ In the central couft.
ty MODllay Dlghl: ·
The Pinel Mooday cast one poll oo the
demands by the public to be beard, a
measure which called for "suspending
the rU1es'~ anil allowing the public to
apeaj< to the ljlsue.
It failed by a 6.$ margin, with the
panel's chairman casting the pivotal
vote.
Angry lloutb Coast residents jeered the
(See SESSION, Page I)
Kuhn aald the firemen have been told
by Larry Rose, city manager and Tom
Meade, finance officer that funda to pay
overtlme are not available to the de~
menl
there.
Bortlett termed tbe f!nl department
"operation, prelljl marginal If Joa of one
man can force them to clooe ooe third of
tbeir JaelDUes ...
days. He said penooneJ Illnesses on any
of those minimwn manpower daf' could
again cause the station to be clo9ed.
"I doo'l llke to do It, ixlt ll's elljler that
or pay overtime," Kuhn said. '
"The guys would worit JI the funda
were' there." Kuhn said.
Robert Bartlett, preslden\ of the Top of
the World Nelghhor!J!)Od Asaoc,latlon. Aid
today Iha\ the shuldown of tbe hilltop
station was unsatisfactory to residents
Oil<! Kulm said that of the 100 da)'9
left unill the 1tart of the new !l!C8I year,
when presumab\Y addltlonal overtime
funda woulil be made available to the
department,· the department Is running
on minimum manpower for all but 14
The city manager, reached for com-:
ment Monday, tenned the ciOSIJl'O of tile
Station "temporary" and he ·said that the
Top of the World residential area was
adequately covered by the Agate Stree&
station. '
I
o • DAILY PILOT "'* ., l:tl ,._
'Sf'RfNG'fHERE--T'oclaywuthefiratdayt!f~g.. Mesa..~ rain produced iltuation more like
It wu suppoSed to look like the putoral·~at •p1ct~e ~ J'IAt.'Hedy, tn good weather and bad, ls
left with .nowers:produce\! by the season's ur ll!J:lles ! psy~. o~ ~jor at Cal State ~erlAln.' of rain surrounding pretty Hedy· Harte, .22, or Ccilta , , L ' ' ' •· (I SJ>.1,-iJlg .:·M'.~k~~. ~jg·" Splash
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Do~npou~ ·Greets ~ir~t 'JJ0rning on O~O:rig~ Coast
I <' ' ' -( ';, • By JOHN. ZALLER s)lirliar . delays. Among the .J.ll'OJects shorten somewhat the length of Ibo ll'IW•
Cit\.,.. DlffY "IJlt Sttff 4eJayed .uP1to aiJ: '!t!!tks has Deen'UM!Jink ing aei;JOn and probably cost growers
The Orange Coast's long fainy season of -~ Ne-,port Freeway under,,1con--mooey accord!nc to Harold Otto, 1 farm
continued lnio the first inoming of spring alna!tion·ot J!rlstol Street 1n,Costa Mesa. adv~ with ibe University of Ca!Uornl&
today as coutal cities,..collected upward! · , ~ the posjUve *' evt;nIY ~ estemion service in Anaheim. /
of a ball Inch of rain. • atoqns bive enabled ~ Or81!11• COunty But tbe even spacing pf storms has not
No significant 'oooci damage was· Wale~ DtstHct , to c.11pture and ltore helped everyone.
reported from the new storm; ,.,.hicb U[>Warda of 251000 acre feel ol storm Spok'8man 1or conilructlon lnduslr!OJ
brought the season rainfall average 'to rDDQff. Cotlpleo with rainfall that will said that tile effect. of rain has been
nearly 15 inches in mom cities. aoak d.lrectly JJJto the undet1groubd water unusually severe tll1I year prec1selJ .
But the unus~J lo,ng wet aeason, table, 1be itiatrlct saY1·ll hao [>1'9111ed to be<auae il has been ao evenly opaced. I
which _began In nonnally dry mid-. the tune,of •1.~ mllllon lrof!l th~ years Work on the' N•"JIOl'I Fr<eway bu
1
November and continued lntennlltenlly storm -to dale. 'Iba! s~m . (Seo JWN, Pip Z)
Into i~e first day of Spring1 baa · had ,.._.ti' ibe cost of 25 ~l o( the
several pde effectt., . (. • . · . .dtstric1'1 oiDnual water coneampt!llll, "!1d,
Among them are: , twico ti!• atnount coIJecled iUt 1'1itJer'.
-Thirty to 60 loat working days, due to -'111e lpnJ rainy oea..., Jw liotb J\urt' Oruge
rain or mud, haVe cost oout home and helped county agrtculb.lre operaUoos. j
developer. tens of tbousanda of dollars. ,Sluable oo\ evenly 'IJ>OCed 1tol'!M are·
Smaller 111Jlcootractor1 have auUered ad-ciedlled wltb'belpln( to leltCb Ul\a from
ditlonal loales. councy farmland, but the rain bu gooe.
-Road projecta have • encountered oo a month Joacer tll,1m normal. Tllil will
"C::.ut
Criterion Cri1ieized
Village Official Hits Guide for Planner . Choice
Your calendar may ten you 11°1
spring. but Ibo ' .... tber -says more rain 1a dm cm thei Or-
ange. Coast betlnnlng '111uaday.
Wednelday will be parllJ' cloudy,
with hlP of Ill delrea at the
beachee, r1a1ng to a lnland. i.....
In the 40I.
SuggealiODI that the city oouncll ap-
point a penoa familiar with "hlJJ)>e>t and
bell use of land" u a plannlni com-
missioner ba>e-beert taken to tut by
Amold HanO, Vlllatle i...-oteerlna
COOlll1lttee 'film* ...... her of !be
1.C-:: =~=ion. made dur-ing a joint 1llllllli ot tho City Council
and the Clllllllier' of Commen:e and
1<pr_la_ ti tho Board of Realtoi'a
Jut -t. -. a ftlter, made bis
otatemmll bt a.letter directly lo the city
council.
"We bau.lllll .-_.-'--•ltb
planning commlaaiooers'Wl» .. pport lhll
"""'"II< of 'hlcbest' use of land-'-u wl~
.-tho UUaled atlempl bJ a rul etlale
•
•
broker, u chairman of the oommlalm,
to folai -the community a lOl).lool,
ID-<lory hotel ...,. oo tbe ~ •
''l'bal la, I .,_, ljle 'bleboll' -
8JU'UIO bal ever augesled iii ~· 8-"'1d. •
"Jn the ltlboequen\ ~h rile IDr
Jllallve, the for<ea o( ·~Jcbeot· and "'* uae' were l<d by tho 1181DO·real. -te brtbr, a4 a bulkier, a1ao a _, Of
the comrnl8'ton.
"Th6 people declared by .. """' 3-1
vote eUCliY 1'11at they Jbou&ht Of ~ I
,. for our land, and lbe two ~
.. ; .. ~ IUpped.'..dowa' u-\lioll'. -II," 8-, I leader .Jn Ille alop
hip rt.e tnltiatlve oald.
lie said that Ibo blalleOt and t>est use
•
" INSIDE TOliA'Y
When Torat1toans <iloou to
take ill a blue !llOOk! on a Fridau
nlgAt-"I A"' .Curidll& YelJolD,»
/or e:r:amplt -thev nctd no
l>obv tttterOlld no""'· T~~,;,,.. l>lr 10Gll U•tll mfdnfglol ad 11"" i.. 'Clla•nd 7P.' Seo •tbril on
l'oQ• 9.
•
-" --. --. .,,..... C..tr • tYMt..., ,,
-lt" ·--.... t1 T....... 11 -. ._.._,.,4 --.
•
DAILY PILOT
onyBoyle
Denies Link
To Murders
. ERIE, Pa. <UPI) -Tony Boyle,
former president of the United Mine
\Vorkers of America CUMWA), denied on
the ·witness sland todly thlt be autbottz..
ed the transfer ol !20,000 In -llmdl
•Uegedly used to finon<e tile murdu ol
dissident union oUlclal J o c k ' •
Yablonsk.L
"I never saw them," Boyle said in
relerence to two SI0,000 deposit slips and
two letters acknowledglng transfer or
!he money from tile UMWA's In-
ternational treasury lo tbt wllon'1
District 19 in tile Kentucky-Tennessee
area .
·'They came from the secretary·
treasurer's of flee," Boyle said.
The union's secretary-treasurer at ·the
time of the 1969 murders or Yablonski,
his wife and daughter was John Owens,
who was deposed along with Boyle in an
elect.ion last December.
tlkJYle was the leadoff defense witness
at lhe trial of William Prater, 52,
LaFollette, Tenn., former field organizet
in District 19, accueed by the prosecution
as one of two former UMWA offldall
who arranged and paid for the killings.
The other union official, Albert Pass. 53,
Middlesboro, Ky., is scheduled for trial in
June.
Defense attorney H. David Rotlnnan
showed Boyle a memo uritnl speedy
transfer ol tile aeconcl fl0,000 to Dlllrlct
It. The m<mO caITied Boyle'• lllJl&lur<.
"! don't ~I ever rudlng that
memo," Boyle aald.
Boyle uld tile memo was wrilleo by
hit executive aecretary, S u z an n e
Rlchan!J.
Judge Edward cam.y rojected a
defense motlcm for diJlmillal of two of
the ~ oounta ol murder against
Prater.
In bil motion, Rott.nan aaid the
evJdmce wu overwbeJ.m1ng th.It Prater
and Pau io(.IC)llld ln no way be responsible
for tile de/llhl ol Cbarlotle and Margaret
Yabknakl.11 Margaret WU YabJomti.11
wile, and Charlotta bis daughter.
PreYioul i..tlmony In tile trlll llhowed
Ibey were killed 10 that DO wi!oeua
were lefl by tile ldUen.
Proaeculol' lllcharcl Spngue ...mered
with the uaertlon, uWben you send out a
pack ol ratU...U.., ,.u•ro mpomlble
for wbat Ibey dq,'' •
Boyle, 70, arrived al Erie lntemallclllal
Airport Monday and WU e"'°'1ed to I downto"'l __ f under 1Je111 oecurlty.
Paul Gw,y, cmvlcted In tile Dec. 31,
1969, slayings by a Jury that aet tile dealh
penalty, leJtified last week that Praler
and Gilly's fatller-tn-law, Slloua Hud-
dleston, confessed go-between In tile
slayings, told him Boyle o r d e-r e d
Yabkmki's death. '
It was the first time Boyfe, who
defeated Yablooskl in an electloo for tile
union's presidency three weeks before bis
rival's death, testified at a trial of one of
the seven suspects charged in the kill·
lings.
'
Cyclist Injured
Jn Laguna Crash
, A Laguna Beach motorcyclist was in-
ljured Monday night as he collided with a
!car which turned left in front of tum into
lthe one-way alley near the Laguna
Avenue post office.
Michael A. Vuocolo, 30. o( 870 Glenn-
eyre was taken by ambulance to South !Coast Community Hospital. He was
1released arter treatment for a broken
'thumb and many cuts and scratches.
Laguna Beach police reported thal
1Vuocolo oollided with a vehicle driven by )rent Malcom 1\Jttle, 35, of 424 Hilledge
pt;!ve, Laguna Beach.
Officers said the Tuttle car was tum-
wroog way lnto the one-way alley
rear of the post office. 'lllltle
no injuries.
OIMIM COAl'f u
DAILY PILOT
:•
I
I
J .,
I
•• 1,
I'
!•
t
t
t
•
l
•
,
Fte•P .. eJ
MAIN BEACH'" .•
been denied ample opportunity to expms
hll .¥Mt," Bohn Jalcl.
Monday'• meotln& brooglit toaether. ~.,. !Dr !be 1111 limo, tbe ... ol
-...... ba•• "fld8eled'' ..... the
Mat.. Beach proposal• -Ibey ~.,. On! begun In OCtober ol Ull.
Skip Conner, director of !be Depart-
ment ()f the Marine Environment, a.gain
presented his proposals for adequate.
lifeguard towers and facillUes -Jn.
eluding a !Hoot high ceotral facility at
!be aouth end of Main Beach.
· Locadon of this building hu been one
of the persistent eootroversles, but the
Main Beach oommJttee agreed with C.On-
ner that the south end locatk>n is best for
viewing, access, and speedy rescue.
Ken Wood of Lang and Wood ,
landscape architects, presented again
their proposal for planting and paving,
along with all the rejected alternatives
and the reasons for not selecting them.
With Wond was architect Fred Briggs,
who d .. tgned tile meguard faciUties and
gazebo wblch have been rejected., revis-
ed, and remodeled several times in the
reviewing process.
G~ay 'Tol.d'
To Refuse
Quiz Offer
• • WASHINGTON' (UPI) ~· L. Patrick '
Gray Ill saJa tOday~he has been citdered
to refuse some information requested of
' him by the Senate committee weiahing
his nomination as FBI director.
The deveJ'Oprneot came after Sen. John
v. Tunney [(}.Calif.], expre1sec1 'belief
the White House has ·''decl~ to throw
Mr. Gray to the wolves."
Gray denied he intend!: ~ withdraw as
nominee for the FBI post.
Gray, resuming the wltness chiir, told
the Senate Judiciary Committee be cou1d
oo longer give members fUU acceu to
PB! files or answer all'tlletr questloos.
EUROPEAN TOUR WILL LAST MONTH AND MAY BE USED TO OBTAIN COLLEGE CREDITS ·
Jimmy Turner Finds London on Globe; Seated Kim Kunz, Standing Ginger Kunz and Peggy Knapp
Finally, the Main Beacb Part Com-
mittee, an appointed citl.iens' commlttee
made up of attomey William Wllcoxen,
Vemon Spltaleri, Merrill Johnson and
Harry Lawrence, submitted their report.
They were asked to write the report si:1
months ago by the council wben bids for
the Main Beach project came in a whop-
ping $300,000 too high. A budget o(
$624,000 has been set on development of
the park.
He said he was acting on the basis of a
previously undisclosed order ls!uedi Fri-
day by Attorney General Richafll G. 1 Kleindienst and said h•could answer
"only proced.ural, not substantive" ques· '
tions about FBt procedures.
1-month Summer
Tour of Europe
Still Available
Coastal Board in Battle This time, following trimming of the
original plans including less elaborate
plantings, less paving, and a modified
boardwalk., the commi~ members said
they felt the plans were within the
budget.
White House Pr.ess Secretary Ronald ·
L. Ziegler replied, "Absoluteiy not,"
when asked~it Nixon abandoned hopt of
gelling Gray lrmed.
Senate Re Dean leader Hugh Scott
011 Niguel Co11dominium "We took our directive lo be totally
related to the cost problem," Wilcoxen,
committee cairman, told the joint
meeting. uNow, we recomme.nd. to avoid
what happened before, having our pro-
posals analyzed by a cost estimator
before putting them out to bid."
al30 said art a meeting with Nixon that
the President's support of Gray "is ex·
actly the same" as when he submitted
the nominatiOn.
Gray's disclosure of Testrtctions oo his
testllpony came when Sen. Birch Bayh
fD-lnd.), requested lbal •three folmer
employes of !be FBI and lbe Committee
to Re-Elect the Presldeot be aubpoeoaed
to appear.
Spaces are still open for a month-long
llUJlllDer tour of ·Europe organized by an
El 1o1orro Elemeotary School teacher.
Gto&er Kum of Laguna says the trip.
deslpeil for blah ocbool and ooUege
studenta, will begin In Chicago July 1 and
return July 2l. ·
The European ad•eolure will begin In
Greece, followed by a cruile to Italy for
a loot at PompeU, ·Naples, Rome, and
Florence. Austria, France and Eoaland
are also on the itinerary.
Cost for tile trip wiU be 1998 from tile
departure point i" Chicago. Travel ar· 1'81Jiementl and Itinerary are made by
Study-Guild Intematlooal of Sall Late Ci-
ty, Utah. Thole desiring It may obtain
three 1emester units of college credit lbrouih Mouot SI. Mary's College in Los
Angeles.
Mn. Kum is the molber of four
daugbten and bu taogbt for 11 years.
Her family w11 dealgnated an "All-
American FamUy" from Callfornia in
1171. I . She is a former airline mw&rdw and
an ~meed European traveler.
For more lntonnaUOn call"Mn. 1Kum
at 49M022. r1 '1('
:!~i ..
A major condominium project pro-
~ for acreage in Laguna Niguel i:iahred in a pitched battle for exemption
frofu rules of the coastal permJt ma
Monday before tile Soulb Coast Zone
C.OUtal Conservation Commlask>n.
Finally, after-a stand by Los Angeles
Councilman Louis Nowell, the claim for
e:1ernpUon by Jack V. Barnes was upheld
by the commission.
Barnes' was among the first of dozens
of claims dealt with by the panel at Mon-
day's session in San Clemente, and
Nowell fought hard for its approval.
The councUman Insisted lbal the 12. l
million project calling for 56 con-
dominiums was eligible for exemption
because it bad vested interest before
the passage of the Coastal lnitiaUve.
Commission staff reported that the
project had received grading pennlta
PT A Contributes
Oiairs, Table
T~ Sch~i' Center
Art-A-Fair Pmn
To Use B~ach
Park on Agen.da
Upholstered chairs and a round con-
ference table are helping brighten the
social science resource center at Laguna
Beach High ScbOol.
The furnishings were donated to the
student resource center by the Mlgh
... school PTA. Materiala and labor were
donated by Del Upchurch, said Mrs. Jody
McKinney, high school PTA president.
Another proejcl ·now under way by lhe
group, she ·said, is redecoration or the
high school cafeteria.
ConsideraUon of. the rtquest by Art-A-
Fair to use the Main Beach Park for a
summer art festival tops the agenda of
regular business be£ore the Laguna
Beach City Council at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at Cily Hall.
1be city fathers, will al.so give a sec-
ond hearing to the proposed bird sanctuary ordinance, and the
Agricultura1-Recreational zone ordinance.
They al.!IO will hear an opinion of the ci-
ty attorney on the suggested disposition
of the $90,000 in revenue sharing funds
the council wants to hold as a reserve.
The agenda includes a report on the
steps which the city may take on an
emergency basis to ease crowded traffic
conditions, a report on reducUon of the
overtime parking fines from $.1 and
designation of Terrace Way as a ooe-
way street.
Discu.uion is also scheduled on a
report regarding urban e1clusk>n [tom
certain provisions or the C o a s t a I
Conservation Act (Proposition 20), a
report on bicycle trails and ways from
the Thurston Intermedlale School Biology
Club.
AcUon is also slated on a $50 con-
tribution from LilUan N. DuSoe for Main
Belch Park. trees, ln memorial to the
late William D. Martin, former Laguna
Beacb mayor.
Ferguson to Address
Realtors in Laguna
Gilbert Ferguson, executive director of
the Orange County Council for Environ-
ment, Employment, F.conomy, and
Development (CEEED) will address
the breakfast meeting of the Laguna
Beach Board of Realtors at I a.m.
Wednesday al tile El Ntcud Country
Club.
The local Board ol Realton re<enlly
joined CEEED. delCribed 11 a coalltloo
ol coocemed citizens, organlud labor
and business "dedicated lo balaocing tile
desire for a better environment with
a stroog economy."
Fall Kills Dentist
RIDGECREST (AP) -A Navy deotlst
bas died '4 head lnjurla suffered afler
falflnl $0 Itel down a "'"ed 1!ope while
an a deter! alabloeeinf trip, autboriU..
.Jald..-Cept Tbomas-I>, ~bl:n>on ....
died ~ II llld&ocrest Community
lloopltal, where be 6ad bem Down by
Naty bellc<lpler !ram a Moja" Deoert
caayonSUndaJ.
CooUnulng PTA projecta include fund
raising for the annual Senior All Night
Party, band,' athletic~ American Field
Service programs.
Persons interested In joining the Pl'A
are encouraged to attend its second an-
nual meeUng to be held Thursday night
during intermission at the spring pro-
duction of "You're A Good Man Charlie
Brq.wn." The play begins at 8 p.m.
Serving on lhe PTA board Utis year are
Mrs. Gordon Dahlquist, Mrs. Harry Cot-
tam, Mrs. Thomas Berg, Mrs. Jerry
Harris, Mrs. Jack Randall, Mrs. Ray
Bryson, Mrs. Wallace Christle, Al Sim-
mons, Mrs. Aldon Clark, Mrs. Theodore
Beane. Mrs. Jerry Johnson, Mrs. George
Goodall, Mrs. Richard Stott, Mrs.
Charles McCall a, Mrs. Joseph Sweany,
Mrs. John Hartley and Mrs. Jerry Ford.
Further information on the PT A and
its activttles may be obtained by calling
Mrs. Fon!, 494-7295.
Laguna Lecture
By Environment
Authority Slated
Dr. Ian McHarg. an author, planner
and environmentalist, will speak a~ a
special lecture sponsored by the Laguna
Beach Citizen's Town Planning As!ocla-
tion at 8 o'clock tonight at the Forum
Theater on the Festival of Arts ground.I.
McHarg, author of "Design wllb
Nature," is a well-known planning
scholar. His talk will address the topic
of man \rt'Orking with n~ture in architec-
tural planning and landscaping. ·
Tickets are $5 and are still available at
the door. The univenity professor has
been a guest on the television programs,
"Today Sbow,11 '"lbree Young Americana
in Search of Survival," ''The HOUie We
Uve In" and "Muldplr llld subdue the
Earth."
His articles bave appearod In Fortune,
Time. Life, tile Wall Street Journal and
Readert' Digest. '
Couple Found Slain
SAN l>ABU> (AP) -A young San
Pablo ooupla were found shot to death
MOlld>.T and tile.,,... m•r ba~ been robbed, ' poUce Aid. 'l11o bo<l1's of
Antlmy M. Ptrplnan, IJ, and bis wife,
Rae Jane, 111, ...... !ound lace dawn in _...te ....,.. ol lbelr home.
early last spring and that the financial
commitment bad amounted to more than
$250,000 thus far.
Building permits were issued on the
project earlier in the day.
But the staff advised against approving
the exemption.
Nowell took exception.
"This guy got a grading permit and l:O
me that shows concept approval by Ute
county," he said.
"What we have done is stopped him
(the developer) cold. This is ridiculous,"
he added.
The project already bas been graded
and now will be allowed to be built on
land along Crown Valley Parkway.
From Pagel
SESSION ...
action and many shouted, "wait until the
electloos!" -apparently unaware that
!be panelists are appointed, not elected.
Tbe is3ue which ~ I~ so much
Ire amoog the rel!dent. iirfolved .the
grading of more than three million cubic
yards of earth on more than 5(f acres
above Salt Creek.
Critics have claimed the grading hes
been done assertedly in violation of the
provisions of the Coastal Initiative.
They couJd have bad their chance to
speak, commissioners argued during lhe
appropriate time Monday.
Rooney and fellow members insisted
that the public could have waited until
the entire commission agenda was dealt
with.
Public communications is the last
category on the lengthy <iocument.
Monday's meeting, however, adjourned
well into the early morning hours.
From Pagel
RAIN •••
been particularly hard hit.
"We were just ready to go back. to
work tomorrow," said a spokesman for
the state highways department'. "But
now lt looks like we'll have to wait
another week for it to dry out."
The city is still aiming for completion
of the park by wmmer of 1974. Following
final approval from the local bodies, the
program must be approved by the
Coastal Commission established by
Proposition 20.
When Mayor Charlton Boyd asked the
Planning C<lmmission to review the
latest Main Beach Committee report at
their next meeting, John McDowell , com~
mission chairman, reflected a little
weariness over the chore.
"What more could the Planning Com·
mission do that hasn't already been done
by the Main Beach Committee," he ask-
ed. "We woold only be reviewing
ourselves and what we 've heard here."
Front Pagel
THOMAS ...
have realistically balanced economics
with qual)ty educallon.'
"Do you knoW that Top of the World is
our leut expensive school?" ttie state-
ment asks.
Ed Van Deusen of Schools '73 said the
nier was sent to several registered
voters as backup material to telephone
canvasses urging" support of Mrs. Boyd,
Browne and Sagar.
.In its only mention or two other can-
didates, the filer states "Ronald Kreber
is a virtual newcomer to Laguna, and a
strange affairs, except for his
friendship wt m s of the board
majority.
"Dr. Frederic Lud g/' it asserts, "is
a rigid elitist who belittles the voice ()f
the citizen.owner in lnfiueilclng achoo!
policy."
Schools "13, wllb offices at 930 Glenn-
eyre St, ;,, operating under !be direc-
lloo o! Lucille Whitaker and Bob Miller.
Highway Wiped Out
SHREWSBURY, England (AP) -Bri-
tain's AS Highway was blocked for an
hour Monday by 10 tons of toilet rolls.
They spilled from a truck that overturn·
ed on a bend near this Shropshire town.
NOW, HEAR THIS!
The committee approved the request,
but Gray refused to offer hls view1 on
one of !be ~ -Judilb Hoback, o!
West Palm Beach, Fla., a former assis-
tant to the treasurer of the re-election
finance committee.
Miss Hoback privately sought out the
FBI during the Watergate investigation
to communicate information outside the
presence of committee o!ficia'ls.
From Pagel
DEADLINE ..•
all day March 31 for interviews with the
top applicants.
A special committee of school board
candidates Ronald Kreber, Dr. Frederic
IAldwig and Michael Sagar; JCbool
personnel, and students also will evaluata
each of the applicants and forward in-
dividua) impressions of each candidate to
trustees.
Dr."r J{ibfW1 tdvlsed trustees to reserve
the dates ot *prll 8, 7 and 8 for vlslta to
school di$trtcts in which the top can-
didates are ·rocated.
Kibby indicated it might not be possi-
ble to-meet the 1'deslredu April 5
deadline fof, hiring a new superintendent.
He suggf.$te(I, the board call a special
~ting before mid-April to annoonce its
selection for'the $30,000 a year position. ..
Laguna CofC to Show .·
Film at Breakfast
"To Touch .The Sky," a film produced
by the Weyerhaeuser Company, wUI be
!be fealure' ' of the Laguna Beach
O!amber of O>mmerce breatlast al 7: 4.1
a.m. March 28 ln the Hotel Laguna.
Reservations are requested by calling
the Chamber office, Larry Hunt, preai-
dent, said.
Hunt add~ the film attempts to depi.ct
what one big business Is doing to improve
!be quaUty of me. A discussion period
will follow.
According to the Pretident's CouncU on Environmental Qu1r.ty,
it is becoming increasingly difficult for anyone to 01e<1pe noise.
•
•
'40,000,000 Amerlc1ns risk hearing impairment and other physical
and mental effects. 44,000,000 other Americans have the utility of> ' .
their dwellings advertely 1ffectad by noise from aircra(t or tro_ffic.
21,000,000 Americans are alfectad by construction-related noise. '
Now what does this hovo to do with carpel? Ctrpeting wt!!
drastically improve occouslics in any room by quieting your home
environment, making r1di01, t.levision, and the family sound better.
Remember, et Aldon's, evt11 our LOUD carpeting is quieter.
'Jl·:i:.i ~..., r1,
t:·.·> iJ1~~( 11~11.,11 __
I j.~ ·~ . --~
11 ' _., -~~ --.... ~ ' -l--... -.......
IN cost• lll&A U11C11nr
-· ~,...-~··-·--
,
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave •
COSTA MESA
646-4838
Mto.. 'n1n. ! .. 1:10; M. f to t1 s.t. t:JO ,. I
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Saddlehaek-•
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VOL ~. NO. 79, "l SECJIONS, 38 PAGES : ~ ' . .. ! ·~ • J • ' '' '
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .
; • '
TUESDAY, MA!tCH 20, 1973
• . •
'l'eday's Final
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
Enrollment;·
°t ' I 1 ' ' 'I' •
Hike of Only 2QO Seen for UCI
.. ..-~ ; t ', j ' ' ' I '
UC -will a<hiev~ only 4Q ll<"'""t ' .. . . ' , . of;~ _growl!» nut fall, """!qllng
~ newly· re'1ised "'l"llment projections. ·
.The ... vl!D-year-olfl. campus had been.
eJPec1ec1 to add about 500 students to ils
c&nipus p0Jllll&Uon next fall, which would
lyive broilghl total enrollmont to 7,860.
'But lbe.new projections, preseoted to t4e 1JC fteients Friday. predict a jump >"' ' . . . : ~ '
' '
-.....
of less 1ban 200.llOll,laD to a total enroll-
ment 'Of 7,560.
UC Irvine was oae of three UC cam-
-that no longer espects to meet its
original lall 1m enrollmm>t projections ..
campus officials attributed the revised
projections to a fall-off ·in appllcaUons
fromJncoming f'l'sbmen-and· -junior col·
lege, transfer s.PJdents.
Al a ...Wt of the decreasell pro-
jections, the-calDJ>'IS Is still acceptiug
qualified student> Into all major pro-
grams. Last year it turned away some
students from biological sciences and two
years ago It was redirecting hundreds of
students to less crowded campuses in the
UC system.
i;tbool officials speculate4 on tbe
reason !or the decre-In appllcatlons
from new students, but said lbeY couldn~·
pinpoint any .one reason.
''It's a nationwide trend," said Masa
Fujitanl, assistant admlsslons officer.
"I'd bate to put my !Inger oii any ooe
reason."
Among the ' reasons she cited wen
abolishment ollhe draft, the dllliculty ot
getUng financial aid, and a general feel·
Ing among young people that • college
education -may not alw~ be oeceosary,
UC Irvine's fall in enrollment pro-
jections contributed to an overall drop in
projectioos In the UC !l)'slem. It now es·
pe<:IS to enroll ·99,133; compared to an
earlier predlcUon of 100,464.
The new enrollments were released in
c:onjunctloo with a request from the
regents for $10.2 mllJion in additional
state funds to match anticipated federal
cutbacks. However, when the lower pro.
jecUOns were presented, Regents scaled
down their request to $8:4 rnlllioo.
UC President Hitch maintained the
new request was needed for "essential
operating neecb of professional schools
and academic departments."
Acting FBI Chief Mum
Ad1ninistratio11 Throws Gray 'To W ~lves'?
•
WASHiNGTON (UPI) -L. Patrick
Gray III said today he bas been ordered
to refuse some information requeSted of
him by the Senate committee weighing
his nomination as FBI director.
The development came after Sen. John
V. Tunney (D-Oilif.), expressed belief
the White House has "decideil to throw
Mr. Gray to the wolves."
Gray denied be intends to withdraw as
nominee for the FBI post.
Gray, reswning the witne!!ls chair, told
the Senate Judiciary Committee he could
no longer give members full access to
FBI files or answer all their questions.
He said he was acting on the basis of a previously undisclosed order issued Fri~
day by Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst and said he could answer
"only procedural, not substantive" .ques-
tions about FBI procedures.
White House Press Secretary Ronald.
L. Ziegler replied, "Absolutely not,"
when asked if Nt.on abandoned hope of
getting Gray confirmed.
Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott
allO said after a meeting with Nixon that
the Pre.sident's support of Gray "is ex·
actly the same" as when he submitted
the nomination.
Gray's dJsclosure of restrictions on hl s
testimony came when Sen. Birch Jlayh
([).Ind.), requested that three former
employes of lhe FBI and the Committee
to Re-Elect the President be subpoenaed
to appear. •
Spring Makes Big Splash
As Wet Season Continues .
•.. •-J:-,.~1 :7, i1.· •
' By 4Q.HN ZAJ+l!R :· '"" __ But"¥ •""'1 spacing,o'dtorms ·has DOI
Of •:pair; t!l.-t SI•" . helped everjione. • I r
'l:be: Orange, <:Qast'o long rainy ·,..son Spo-.., fpr construction .lndllllrtes
co,ntinued Into the first morning of spring said tbll\ .Ille effect of rain 'has IM\"D
today as coastal .cities collected upwards ~~aµy' aevere this year prec1.1ely
of a hall ineh of-.rain. beca~ae ~ has been so evenly spaced.
N 'gnil' "ood · d Work on the. Nawport Freeway bas _ o , SJ , 1cant~ amage~was-be<irJ>l!rlleularlYJiiri[ Jilr,o------
reported ft,pm ~ new storm,. which "We were· just ready to -go back · to
brought the "'ason rainfall average tO work tomorrow," said a spokesinan for
nearly 15 inches · most cities. the state highways department. ~·But
, But ~tuuusually long· wet season now ft looka like we'll have to Wait
wfilcb liOgsn "in <D~ly, 'tli:y .mi.? another week ·for It to dry out."
November· and · cooUnaed'. intermjttenlly Th& freew•y ·bad ,he\111 slated for cqm·
into' the first· day of Spring, baa. had " (5" IWN{ P~ it" ·
several side effects. . · • '· ' .. ·
,
The commlttee approved the request,
but Gray refused to offer his views oo
one of the three -Judith Hoback. of
West Palm Beach, Fla., a former uais·
tant to the treasurer of the re-elecUon
finance committee.
Miss Hoback privately sought out .tbe
FBI during the Watergate invesUgaUon
to communicate information outside the
presence of committee officials.
Gray provided the committee with
dates of the interviews with Mlsa
Hoback, but refused to discuss the· case
further when Sen. James Eastland (D-
Miss), asked, "How many times dJd she
hide the truth?"
"Under my orders from Mr. KleJn.
(See FBI, Poge I)
Vandals · Free
Rare Parukeetl
Intruders believed by Oranp
Q\unty . Sherill's olficers to have
been Juveruie. broke Into tho
backyard of an El ~oro 11o.._ !!""':
day ~and '"'• a Oi>ct of , more than 20 rait per~ from
the owner's avt,.ry. ,
Officers said ,.veral of lbe blnla
were killed bx lbe,Vandals ai Ibey
new iii panic from !he aviary at
23391 Devonsblre Hoed.
OWner Per-swi.-Al>dol'i0n-to1a-
offlcers that the birds are a rare
strain and that be bad reared most
of them blmseU from the egg
stage. It is felt they will not survive
very long in today's rain and oold,
officers !181d.
'. '
. '· Among them are:
-Thirty to 60 lost working days, due to
rain or mud, have cost coast home .Frustration,. ~ge
developers tens of thousands of dollars.
Smaller subcontractors have suffered ad-
ditional losses. . · -
-Road projects have encountered
similar delays: .AmoQg -the projects
delayed up to six weeks bas been the link
of the Newport Freeway under con.-
. struction at Bristol Street in Costa Mesa.
-On the positive side, evenly spaced
storms have enabled the Orange COunty
Water District to capture • alid store
upwards of 2$,000 acre feet of stonn
ninoH. Coupled with rahifall ' that will
soak directly Into the underground water
table, the district ·says· ft has profited to
the tune of $1.5 million from this year11
storm season to date .• That sum
represents the cost of 25, percent of the
distri~'s annual water consumption, an4
twice the·amount collected last wi.nter. ,
-The long rainy &ea90ll has both hurt
and helped county agriculture operations.
Sizeable but evenly· spaced storms are
credited with helping to leach salta.from
county farmland, but the rain bas gone
oo a month longer than normal. 'lbla will
shorten somewfiat the lengtn of the crow·
Ing ,..... and probably ·cost growers
money, according to Harold Otto, a farm
adviser with the Unlver~ty of California
eltell&i.oh service in Anaheim.
·aig Plan_t Sold?
Government t-0 Get Niguel Facil~ty .,,
Orange County SupervisOr Ronald . Caspers wu notified today
by the U.S. Generar Services Administration that plans to acquire
the huge North American Rockwell plant In Laguna Nlglrel are firm
and proceeding rapidly. . .. . . ... .
IN A Lfll llt from-\:..£: ~~n~ general ljOrviC.; rel!lonal·~d-
mlnlsttator In. frallclloo, il;,l"ll'fta!ed' the faClllly wO\llil.be IJMd, t,o holll!l '*Uvtlies »erfotmlng a vm,ty of g~ernmental func· ~· J.17 .. l ' ' .' -ite'Mlfm~ l!otal.emplo)'lllent afthe locatlOl)~t s;ooot;, 5,000
pel'IJOM. • • '. ' . ... ' ..... ~ .
A SOCJOietonomic 91udy 111d an enritonmental• impact tlate-ment are now beini prepared;-Hannon 'Said. · _.;edc.sper. '!Jlf:t!IUU!I ll1 lbol~.offlcltl for !nfot'll\alioa. pr.'
nu on booslilg:ln Ille ri&ilT.oC~fldllty, ' '
' '
•
.
R·esidentS -Fail · in' Bid
.
To Protest G_rading
By JpHN V ALTERZA
Of "" Diiiy Pillt llJtff
Hundreds of angry r:esidents of the
Laguna Niguel and Monarch Bay areas
were thwarted Monday in their attempts
to ptotest~heavy ilradlng above Salt
Creek Beach as the South Coast Reiionsl
1.one COnservatlon Commission refllied
to "suspend the rtzles" to allow a beat·
ing. ' • '
And, Instead of a full-blowl) airing of
the controversy surrounding the massive
earth movl!lg by Avco Community
Developen, the evening wu one of
frustration and rage for some persona at
the San Clemente Community Clubhouae.
The hundreds of residenta learn<d that
the actual Salt Creek bearings wlll be
March 211 In Long Beach.
The meeting -another marathon
session of the 12~member panel -opened
.more .as a shouting match than a formaf
...Sion. Chairman Dr. Robert Rooney
earrled on I' loud debate with . crtUcs
from the audience.
A county-installed aou'nd systen: did lll·
tie to sootl!e tempers, The com·
mluldpers' comments were Inaudible t~
most of the 600 persons present.
Commissioners blamed repOrts In a
Los Angeles newspaper which had said
earlier Monday thit the hearings on the
Salt Creel< dispute wou1a lie held at the community clubhouse. ,
The oews account brought torth bUJloo
dreds of residents angry over the
ma salve ·grading project which bas
altered the landscape above the South
Coast strand which often bas been at the
center of controversy.
That newspaper account drew blasts .
from commissioners, parUcularly Los
1
(See SESSION, pqe I)
..-------·..:..·-----.,
Orute
Burglar Gets $4,000
In· Stereo EqU:ipm'~bt'
. i cit bUtglar using a bent ,;;,.t tia~
to slip open Ille window of an JrVipe
·man's pa™'\ and looked wn stole neall,y
1 '4,000 tWortb. of atlfto equtpment ·ftOJll LM. ..,.. 1s
the vt!Pcle~ · = ,,.,!
The Joa. almost u much as the value c...-1s
Of the VID •ilaelf, WU ftpQrted M.oaday ~lllltlcw 1:
by WUlllll) ; E. ~w~. or ~ :~..!..!:: 1•11 ~Q1Da St.;_,,.~ to police. ·-...., .eiillplorl SllU~Jbe ~~,-li-"H•...:..-J
eqblpmont wu tabn 1'blle tiJnwlddle'• ... "'*' · u -was plllted in lbe ~'• Jlrlyeyio,y. _ .._ _________ _,
• •
) '
I
I
•
-
DAILY PILI>T IS
·Tony Boyle
Denies Link
To Murders
ERIE, Pa. (UPI) -Tony Boyle,
former president of the United MlDe
Workers of America (UMWA), denled on
the witness stand today .that he aulhori~
ed tbe transfer of m>,000 in union fUnds
allegedly used to fitlance lhe murder of
dissident union off l c i a I "Jock"
Yablonski.
"I never saw them ," Boyle said in
reference to two $10,000 deposit slips and
two letter• acknowledging transfer of
the money from the UMWA's in-
lematlonal treasury to the union's
District 19 in the Kentucky-Tennessee
area.
'"Ibey came from the secretary·
treasurer's office," Boyle said.
'Ibe union's secretary-treasurer at the
time of the 1989 murders of Yablonski,
his wife and daughter was John Owens,
who was deposed along with Boyle in an
election last December.
Boyle was the leadoCf defense witness
at the trial of Wllllam Prater, 52,
LaFollette, Tenn., fonner field organizer
in District 19, accused by the prosecution
as one of two fonner UMWA officials
who arranged and paid for the killings.
The other union official, Albert Pau, 53,
Mlddlesboro, Ky., It scbedllled for trial In
June.
Defense attorney H. David Rothman
showed Boyle a memo urging speedy
tran!ler of the second $10,000 lo District
19. The memo carried Boyle'• signature.
"I don't reca11 ever reading that
memo," Boyle said.
Boyle said the memo was written by
his executive secretary, Suzanne
Rlchanls.
Judge Edward camey rejected a
defense motion for dismissal of two of
the three counta of murder against
Prater.
In bis moUon, Rollmian said the
evidence was overwbelming that Prater
and Pass .iCOl.lld in no way be responalble
for the deathl of Charlotte and Margaret
Yablonski." Margaret was Yablonaki's
wife, and Charlotte his daughter.
Previous testimony in the trial showed
they were killed so that no witnesses
were left by, the kUlers.
Prosecutor Richard Sprague countered
with the auertion, "When you send out a
pack of ratUesoakes, you're responsible
for what they do."
Boyle, 70, arrived at Erie lntemaUonal
Airport Monday and was escorted to a
downtown motel under heavy security.
Paul Gilly, convicted In the Dec. 31 ,
19691 slayings by a jury that set the death
penalty, testlfJed last week UlAI Praler
and Gilly's father-in-law, Silous Hud-
dlesloo, c:onle8'ed go.belween In the
alayings, told him Boyle o r d e re d
Yablooski 's death.
It wu the Orst time Boyle, who
defeated Yablonski in an electlon for the
union's presidency three weeks before his
rival's death, testified at a trial of one of
the seven suspects charged in the kill·
ings.
From Pagel
RED LIGHT. • •
investigated at the home and filed
charges based on t h e experience ol.
undercover officers.
Statements by those officers are al·
tached to the civll action. They allege
that the defendants invited them to
participate in sexual activity at the
Capstone Drive home at a charge o! $100
per customer.
Statements by 30 persons residing In
the area also support the lawsuit jointly
filed by Hicks and the state. They all at-
test to the suspicion among neighbors for
some time that a prostituUon racket was
being operated from the Capstone Drive
address.
Neighbors told police that men were
seen to come and go from the home at all
hours of the day and night.
It was also noted that considerable
quantities of new bedding were ordered
with king·size beds apparently replacing
the smaller bedroom furniture initially
installed.
•
OU.Hal COAST 11
DAILY PILOT
Tiie Or.,.. Con! OAILV ,ILOl,"""' Wflldl
!1 <CW'lbl-t!o• Nt-~rM1, /5 pUbllsMll ~
""' 0r""!le C&a1t ~ublltlllnQ CamNnr. s.p..
•alt .au~ •r• ......,ltl'ltld, MOnd•V ltlroutl'I
F'rldl>'f, tor C0.11 Mtt1, Ntwp0r1 llNdl.
H""""""" INCfl/l'M1l15" v.n.,., LIOllM
a.th, lrvlftt/Stdd!~ 11n111 "" ci..-t•f
'-" J\IM t.pftl,ll'IG. A •lntlt l'90'-1
tdttlon II Pllt>l"1* S.IVtOI" Md Sul'llllys.
The prlr'ICIMI llVbllll'it.., ~ It 9t J3f W..1
.. , Sir"', CM!t Mcu, C.lllOrnMI, tlOf.
Rob1rt N. W•td ''"llltnl •1111 l'vbl!...,...
J1c;li R. C11rl1y
Vici PmlOtrol 11111 G-11 Mt1119«
T1111t11• K11'1il
Edi,...
Thorn•• A. M .,,pf.iRt
Ml"'91n9 ~·-Ch1rt11 H, loo. IUch•rcl P. Nill AM11lat1I Mllllolnl fdl!Orl
C11!1 Meat: UD WM! llV Strtfl NtwWT IHdl: JlU N...-i hv1..,.,.., L"'9-IHdl: m F-1 A-.it Hurdlntfwl l'9Wl1 )1'11J llK!I ........
kl! C~! JOI ~ •t c:.tn1rit ll:HI
, .. .,.... rn 4J MJ"4JZI
CIMllW ..._rtW .. '4J.M71
S.. Cllwte Alf D1p•f1M1t1:
Ttf1,• al 4fZ-MH
~ 1m, ~ C4iMt """"'lflt -... --·-........ ""'""' .. ""'1........ ""* 4r9r .................... ..aot ... _..,.,.._.,, ~ ... . ...... <• ....... ,. ..... ""' .... CllllflwJlr.. ........,..., ft' fMfitr AM
_..,. .. IMll IS.II "*'lltll'rl It!!•,.,... .. """•···~·
•
Tuad.11, M'"'h 20, 1913
DAILY ,ILOT f'MM ~ U. .....
,
Bills Pendi'.!fl
Ar~y Runs Out :
Of War ·victiIDs~
' By CANDACE PEARBON Of.,.. oaiw ,.,.., -...., 1
Bills have been lnlroducod In di.ires•. . . lnc1udlnc oo,e by Rep, Andrew IJin'baW
(!\-Newport Beach), lo ,creole 1 "Tomb
ot Ille UilknQ.wn Soldier" for the Vietnam
War -bill ther. might not be a body lo
put in ll. .
A spokesman for the U.S. Anny said
Monday there are no unldentlfJed
casuaIUes from the Vietnam coofllcl.
However, because there are itll,11,328
men mlastns and unaccounted lor in
Southeast Asia. II It posslble ooe o£ these
may be uoidenWlable, the Army cilfic1a1
said.
One POW (Prisooer of War), Manne
Sgt. Ronald L. Ridgeway of Houston,
Tex., recently came home alive, creating
a mystery.
The bodiei ol lhiee . \lllideftllfied
servicemen -ooe from eech of the
previoua wan -are now entombed 1t
Arlln&lon National Cemetery in the
11Tomb ol. the U n k: n o ., n Soldier."
Coogrea oever bu acled on pr<>p0salt to
change the name to the "Tomb of -the
Unknowns."
Rep. Hinshaw's bill is now befoie the
House c.onimtttee on Vetetant Affain.
II directs the Secretary of o.!<nae lo
bring the remains <lf an unidentified . . American serilcenlan to the U.S; for a
ceremonial. burial In the inemorial
amphlthealer Bl Arllnglon National
Cemetery.
The serviceman to be bwiep must
have lost his life while servlag overseas
during the Vietnam War.~
SPRING'$ HERE-Today was the first day of spring.
It was supposed to loolry like the pastoral scene at
left with flowers produced by the season's 15 inches
of rain surrounding pretty J.ledy Harte. 22, of Costa
Mesa .. Instead rain produced situation more like
picture at right. Hedy, in good weather and bad, is
a psychology major at Cal State Fullerton.
A funeral was held and a body bUrted
in a grave marked as Rldgeway's when
he was once listed as dead. Marine' of-·
flclals will have lo idenWy \bal
serviceman.
The special grave for the Vietnam
~ead would be near the elistlng tomb ,
a<;c<>rdlng lo lllmbaw'• legialallon.
"
Dollar Has Mixed
Laguna Murder
Psychiatrist Testifies
Killer Not Responsible
By TOM BARLEY
Of 11111 O.!ly .. , ... 11111
A court.appointed psychiatrist testified
today in Orange County Superior Court
that 'Mlomas Bradford McCutchen was
not responsible for his actions when he
shot and killed Mrs. Virginia Hammett
1ast Sept. 5 out.side her Laguna Beach
home.
Dr. Herman Romm told a jury that
must soon rule on the Pana Point con-
tractor's sanity at the time of the slaying
that McCutchen, 50, of 33821 Olinda St..
Fro11a Pn9e 1
SESSION ...
~geles County delegate James Reedy.
''It's not the fault of us on the com-
mission," he asserted. "It was the press
that erred, which is often the case."
In the middle of the brief dispute -
• which amounted to attempts by members
of the audience to speak -Orange Coun·
ty Supervisor Ronald Caspers, a member
of the panel, dropped a note to Rooney
and left.
Caspers earlier had said he planned to
leave early to serve as a host for U.S.
Sen. James Buckley of New York who
made an appearance in the central collJl-
ty Monday night.
The panel Monday cast one poll on the
demands by the public to be heard, a
measure which called for ''suspending
the rules" and allowing the public to
speak to the issue.
It failed by a S.5 margin, with the
panel's chairman casting the pivotal
vote.
Angry South Coast residents jeered the
action and many shouted, "wait until the
elections!" -apparently unaware that
the panelists are appointed, not elected.
The issue which has stirred so much
ire among the residents involved the
grading of more than three million cubic
yards of earth on more than 500 acres
above Salt Creek.
Critics have claimed the grading has
been done assertedly in violation of the
provi!ions of the Coastal Initiative.
They could have had their chance to
speak, commissioners argued during the
appropriate time Monday.
* * *
"was not capable or forming an opinion."
Dr. Romm said he based his opinion on
the mental state induced In McCutcben by
the drink and drugs he had taken in the
hours before he went to Mrs. Hammett's
home at 121 B Wave St. and shot her
twice in the head at point-blank range .
Police called to the scene found Mrs.
Hammett's body on a neighbor's lawn
with McCutchen standing over the
woman who once shared his Dana Point
home.
Mccutchen ha.s testified that he recalls
nothing of the 'slaying or the hours Im-
mediately before and after the killing. He
is similary unable to r e c a 11 the coo·
fcssion he made to Laguna Beach police
which was ta~ at the time by officers.
Prosecutor Nick Novick contends that
McCUtchen was well awll'e of what he
was doing when he shot Mrs. Hammett.
Novick said he will ask the jury in
Judge Walter Charamza's courtroom to
return a sanity verdict that could send
?tfcCutchen to stale prison for life on the
earlier first degree murder conviction.
The jury has been told that McCutchen
threatened Mrs. Hammett with death on
several occuions shortly before the Sept.
5 killing.
It has been successfully alleged that
McCutchen, angered by Mrs. Hammett
taking C<Jurt action to halt his threaten·
ing phone calls, attempted to persuade
her estranged husband to make her drop
the charges· and then warned her on at
least one ~asion: "I'll kill you."
LIZA, DESl SAY
THEY'LL MARRY
LONDON (AP) -Liza Mlnnelli and
Desi Arnaz Jr. said here today they plan
to marry soon.
Desi, son of Lucille BaU and Desi
Arnaz, said the wedding date "is not
going to be kept a secret. When we have
set the exact date, we will let everybody
know."
He and Liza, the actress daughter of
the late Judy Garland and star of the
film "Cabaret," arrived here today for a
five-day vis.it.
Coastal Board in Battle
On Niguel Co11dominium
A major condominium project pro-
posed for acreage in Laguna Niguel
figured-In a pitched battle for exemption
from rules of the '" coastal permit area
Monday before the South Coast Zone
Coastal Conservation Commission.
Finally, after a sland by Loo Angeles
Councilman Louis Nowell, the claim for
exemption by Jack V. Barnes was upheld
by the comm1sslon.
Barnes' was among the first of dozen,,
of claims deall with by the panel at Mon·
day's session in San Clemente, and
Nowell fought hard for ils approval.
The councilman insisted that the $2. 1
mUl!on project calling for 5e con-
domhllums was eligible for exemption
becouse II had vesled inleresl before
the paBBage of the Coastal lnlttaUve,
Commiaslon · alaff reported that the
pro)'<{ hod ~~Ci! cbdllli ,pe'rm111
early last spring and that the Onanc!Al
commttment bad llDOUDled lo more thin
$Z50,0ilO u.. l&r.
Bulidinc permits were ltsueCI on the
proJe<:t earUer 1n the day •
But' the atall adviled ag Inst 1pprovblg
the uemptlon.
Nowell took exception.
"This guy got a grading permit aod lo
me that shows concept approval by the
county," he said.
"What we have done ls stopped him
(the developer) cold. This is ridiculous/'
he added.
The project already has been graded
and now will be allowed to be built on
land along Crown Valley Partway.
Lighting, PJ111nhing
Fixtures Stolen
Appliances aod llgbtlng and plwnblnl
fixtures were stolen Monday nlgM by
bllrglal'I who broke lnlo homes under
construcllon In the M1sston Viejo aru,
Orance Cow>ty Sberifl'• ol!lcera cald.
~puU.s said lnlrvdm..wbo.moy boV<I
bod I ~ ~ lo lbe bomea Owned by
the ABC Development CorporaUon II
Aroadlao 1nd Solonlca 11teels carrleCI off
tbelr '4G8 haul bl I pickup truck.
•
From Pagel
RAIN •..
p\etion past Bristol Slreet to Mesa Drive
in late February. However 80 non-work·
Ing days due to rain or mud since the
project was be.gun in 1971 have pushed
the completion date back to late April or
May. Most <lf the delay has been en-
countered thi! season, the spokesman
sai d.
'Corridor' Name
• To Be Requested
For Use on Plan
Orange Counly Board of Supervlaors
Wednesday will be asked to approve a
new "transportation C<lrridor" design&·
tion on legends of the county Master Plan
of Arterial Highways.
The action requested involves adding
the phrase "transportation corridor' 'to
the maps. It doesn't involve any new
roads being added to the county plan.
Orange County P 1 a n n i n g Com·
missioners have recommended approval
of the new, somewhat enigmatic phrase.
Road department officials have declin-
ed to define what a C<lni.dor would be.
They say it could be a variety <lf
transportation methods, including a six·
Jane county expressway, follr·lane roads
with central rapid transit lanes, bus and
fixed rail lanes with bicycle and
pedestrian trails on the side.
The Road Department is initiating a
county-city study in the coastal area to
decide what kind of transportation cor·
ridor could be adopted to relieve traffic
needs there.
From Pagel
FBI ...
dienst I can only discuss this procedural-
ly and I can't a.Ive any substance to our
interviews with Miss Hoback," Gray
said. "I received my orders and I have to
carry them out," Gray said referring to
Kleindienst.
"I don't think those orders are helpful
lo yoo al all," Bayh observed.
The situation is unusual compared1 to
past wara. 'Ibere were 8,532 unidentl.fled
bodies afler World War II and 816 afler
the Korean War.
The Army, which bandlea all funelal
ammgementa for Vietnam cuualU'8.
said the 111e . .of bellooplen lo re<over the
dead and wounded made ii easier lo idiln-
tify bodies. Even when the ldenUficatlon
tag. wu deatrvyed or blown &'fay, the
bodies were not yet deoompooed enough
lo elimlnale Ongerprinta.
A spokesmao esllmaled I b a I
!Jngerprinla were u.sed lo eatabllsb 75 lo
80 ,l"'J'Celll of the idenlilles which might
ottierwlse be questionable. D e n t a 1
records were the second most useful tool.
Modem acience also bas devised
mellloda lo approximate the height,
weight, age and other characteristics
from jll!I a few fragmenta of a badly
mangled body. .
1be bod)es of air crewmen, who C<lor
prise most of the missing, usually can be
identified by the aircraft number if
nothing else works.
A Joint Casualty Resolutioo Center will
be established lo work with Nortb Viet·
nam to bunt the bodies of these missing
airmen. 1be center also will try to get in-
to areas of Laos and South Vietnam
where Americans have not been able to
go to search for. war dead.
The process undoubtedly will take
years.
Bodies mlssing since World War II still are being found. In 1970, the r.maim of
five Marines killed in 1942 were un·
covered on Guadalcanal.
Day; Marke~ .
'1 C.alled Unsettled ·
10!1001! (AP) -T)le dollar had a
mixed daf In world money marketa Ur
day, IDOVing up In some ~ and
down In others. Dealers here called the
state of the markets "very Wl,'lettled."
Bui they said 1hJs had been especled
afler 1he adoplion in parlt Friday of a
new floating systen1 of international ex-
change rates.
Thia WU only the second day that the
markets have operated under the new
floating system. •
Despite the lack of dellnlle ln!nda, and
In some cenlen widely swinging rates,
there was no sign of the he~vy deallng
Ula! touched off the world monetary
crisis two months ago.
Trading was llghl, a sign UlAt many
speculaton were sun sitting on the
sidelines awaiting firmer evidence of bow
the Ooats would work. The. gold markets
were quiet, another sign of returning
stability to money markets.
The dollar was sharply down in \,on·
don, Frankfurt and Zurich during the
morning bill recovered mucll of the loss
laler In 1he day. II closed substantially
lower Jn Pam ind Tokyo. II closed
higher, however, in Milan, Amsterdam
and Madrid. I
Clemente to Mull Leftist
Request on Solll!d System
San Clemente city cotmcllmen will be
brought into the oontroveny over possi-
ble demmstratk>os at the W e s t e r n
White House late this month as they con-
sider a request Wednesday by a leftist
group seekint the use of a sound system
on Avenlda de! Presldenle.
A spokesman for the Orange County
chapter ot the Vietnam Veleraos Against
the War has asked the council to approve
the use of a loudapeater oo March 31 and
April I during demonalralioos against
Vietnamese President Nguyen Van
Thieu.
The ooundl 1hua far has DOI bad any
official overtures from fundamentalist
preacher .Dr. C8.rl MclnUre Who has VOW·
ed to bring.his conservative fC)l"Ces to San
Clemente' 'at the same tlmE. President
Nixon plans to meet with the Asian
leader at.the Western White House <ln
April 2 and 3.
Police iii San Clemente are fearing that
Ibo two opposing fOl'Cel may meet oo the
street leading lo presldenllal compound
and police Chief Clifford Murray
acknowledged lhls week UlAI be bas ar-
ranged for Conoordla School, the
President'• bwn polling place, lo be "8ed
u a oomll!ilnd pOal for law enlorteqlenl
officers during the period UlAI the
demonslralioot will lake place.
NOW, HEAR TlllS! •
•
I
According to the President's CouncU on Environmental Qu1hty,
it is be~oming,increasingly difficult for anyone to escape noise.
40,000,000 AIMricans risk hearin'g lmp1irment end other phyiical
end mental effects. 44,000,000 other Americans have the utility of,
their dwellings adversely affected by noise from aircraft or traffic.
21,000,000 Americans are affected by construction-rei.t.Ji noise. .
' I •,
Now what does this hav• to do with carpet? Carpeting ·will
l
drastically improve accoustic:s In any room by quieting your hoiM
•nvironment, making radios, television, and the family soun'cl' better.
Remember, at Ald•n's, ··~ ":olir LOUD c1rp11ing is quiettr7
'
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentle Av. •
COSTA MISA
646-4131
Ill•• non. t i. 1<10: I'll. t te •: Sot. t:JI le I
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ORANGE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
,
1~ Cats ,,
..
' ' TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1973
• •
Tpday's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
~ '• I
. "I'in not sa~ with this ordin8.nce,''
Duke told fellow COllllCllmeo. "I feel
there ~ to be some kind of control
but I don't know what. I can~ vote
tonight."
11Wben can you vote? !napped Mayor
Al Coen. chief proponent of cal license.
"I don't know. I'm not an expert o6 it,"
replied Dlike.
"Why can't we do something positive
for a change?" asked Councilwoman
Norma Gibbs, another supporter of cat
tags.
DAILY PILOT 111" ..... "Why Is II always posluve to pass an
ordinance?" Duke complained.
Coeo, Mi;f: Gibbs and Jack Green firm.
Jy IUppOl'U!il the. mandatory license. Jer-
ry lolalney, ·llon8ld Shipley and Ted Bart-
lell oi_.i it to the chee!'S of several
cat fans in the audience:
'A WOMAN IS ONLY A WOMAN BUT A GOOD CIGAR IS A SMOKE'
HuntlngtOn Councllmon _Motnoy Enjoys Awful H1blt, Now Binned
''.I wolild favor a voluntary licensing
program," suggested Matney. "And we
earl charge an ·Impound fee for people
who pick up their cats, but I ju.st can't
see a mandatory license."
Couneil ·Bans S111oking
Green, enraged over D u k e ' s
absUnence, asked Callfoinia Animal Con~
trol Manager Dennis Smith il his agency
is required by law to k~p cats for 72
hours.
"No, we're not," Smith replied. "The
county' a policy is immediate destruction.
The· state looks on cals as wild animals
not personal properly."
"Why don't .we~ follow the county's
lead;"· added· Green.
After the meeltng, Smith said, his
policy .on destiuctioo would depend on
the space ·a~alla~e .for,~ts.
uwe I oo}y ha.Ve • a~t 30 cages
l,vf.i!allw.-le we:lj Jry ~'keep !he qfs
we ltiinl<J!e can~ aniJ will i!emoy
Hunttngton Beach councilmen agreed
to clear the air in City C:OUOcil chambers
Monday night.
111.ey passed a "no smokin~ during
council meetings" law 5 to 2, with Jerry
Matney . and .H~ Duke opposed.
"Pretty soon the only place you'll be
able.to smoke is in your own bathroom,"
grumbled Matney, as he puffed rapidly
on a fat cigar.
Matney constantly smokes either a
cigar or a pipe. Duke lit up a cigarette
when the discussion began. .r
"1 think we need to clear up the pollu-
tion factor in this chamber," said Norma
Gibbs, in proposing the smoking ban.
"It's tough to breathe someone else's
smoke."
"Can we study tbls?" quipped Green aa
the six-hour meeting neared midnight.
Mrs. Gibbs sald she wanted the amok~
ing ban because sqme other citles had
adopted a similar p~ure.
"I'll be the first to violate it," laughed
Matney, releasing an extra large cloud ol
smoke.
the ...... ~ oak!. • •
-ll'C' -..... lbe doltetfdllna dlll'rlll lor lhe dlY on Feb. 2, tile agency
""8 iilc~ _ lljl let cats. Smith said.
. .
CAllSCll' Cl'l'Y,.Nev. (AP) -Nevada
Gov. MM O'CalfelJl!an said today lie met
with reel~ 6illioljalre, Howard Hughes
in a London, England hotel room over the
weekend to discuss Hughes' Nevada
gaming empire.
Alir'!ll. •liPl/Cation ln>m ffugbes -· • ·1n 1ddlUon, :o·~· sald i-w . ~ llbllla In ......., olflcera II J>l\Ylfcal descrtplloU 11111 • •elpec ·"lborily.1' parently matched the man' met.
• 0'qa118gbao said he "had aever!l dW-Neither d'Qallaghad n0r Hannifin had ''We ~· abOUt 30 pereent of our
time oD cat probfefns," he told the coun·
cl!.
fert)lrt ways" of knowing that the man he met Hughes before.
talked ' to waa• Howard Hughes -In· O'Callaghan said Hughes Indicated he
Ttiere was a large number of residents
In lhe-audiell<»-who-vocally~owosed-lhe
cat law, bUt they were ·not itllowed to
spOak •.
O'Callagbab . said Hughes, who !ell
Nevada on. .~iving 1970, gave
"every liidiCaUOntb"it DetiOpes to ret1,1m
to. Nevada," said O'Callaghan. "He likes
the state."
eluding information from other persons will retain ownership of his Nevada gam-
who have ·seen him such as "stocks and .ing empire, which is one of the state'•
honcislJOOPJe;" --1/il'geStemployera Wltlr8;000eniPJoy ... -
• Ooen pointed out the council had spent
more than two hours on a public bearing
iin .. the issue two months be(ore.
Red Light Act
' · Part of the caf Jaw proposal' Involved
us!ng ~ license revenue to 111'1 up a low coSI Op.yfug and ~neutering clinic. All
councllmen agreed ally inbiley raised by i1 · voluntarY )kiense mlghl still be 118¢
for such a. clinic.
City Administrator David Rowland•
!aid. Ibis morning the mandatory n.,_
Is dead,· but the. city w!jl explore the idea
oC atablishini ·a spaying and neutering
clinic.
01canaghan declined to d i s c u s s
Hughes' pet.SOnal appearance, terming
speculation OYer the billionaire's physical
condition a •:gam,e." But be said "there
was no doubt in that meeting of who was
telling who what to do." '
Bughes?'public relatiODs representaUve
In Los' Angeles, Richard Hannah, con-
firmed that the .meeting took place anl:l
said; 1'~they discussed· .business matters
as they ·pertain to Nevada ror Mr .. Hughe6
and his ~es."
~A ~ to C~u~t Over :
House in .. Huntington ·.
"We ·mieht also consider a voluntary
license, bu!. I doQ't ·think lhey'llhreak lhe
• doors down ~ get it," he concluded.
O'Callaghim . said .he flew ·fr!>~ ,Las
Vegas,n Nev: by commercial jet Friday
and ret~ to Nevada late Sunday.
Accompanying the governor was Phil
H~nnifin, chairman of the· Nevada Garn.
Ing Control Board.
O'Callaghan said the meeting had been
urged by him t.o deternline "Mr. Hughes'
futwe corporate plans which will' all~
Nevada."
·H~es owns seven casinos in Nevada,
lncllldlng six In Las Vegas and one In
Reno. Together, the·ca.slnos pull in some
14 ,..percent of the entire gaming revenue
take Of·a11 casinos ln the state-or ilbout
$102.milllon· .oot ~tal $731.1 million In 1971. . .
"We establishOcl dltect lines of
perSonal co'ri'l m uD.Ic at Ion,'' said
O'Callaghan. "We discussed Mr. Hughes'
fl1ture oorpc)rate plaruf whl<h will" affect
Nevadli, We did. not diacuss legal proti-
lerils or events of the past. We ad·
dn!ssed Ollrselves only to those matters
directly related to gaining." · .
When Hughea left Nevada.In 1970, lhere
were $172 million in lawsuill pending
agalnsl· hlni and Hllghes Tool Co.
A year ago, ·the $le Gaming Com·
mtss10n-refllsed to approve a top-level
chanp lnJ!le Hugbes organlzaUon, citing
Hughes' refuaal of face-to-fa'ce meettngs.
Hannilln aald ihat because the meeting
/With. llDghes hU been held, there la no
legal requirement for him to show up In
Ne\ildi for fllrlher gaming matters. He
j [ I I ' ' ,
By TOM BA'RLEY ·
Of the D•Hr Piie! Sii~
Orange County District Attorney Cecil
Hicks today has a lawsuit In the works
airQed at closing down a Huntini;ton
Beach house. that he claims isn't a home.
!Ilcks went to court Monday and filed
suit under the ~lled Red Ligbt Abate-
D)ent Act in In effort to close a Capstone
Drive residence he alleges three women
have used .. headquarters f 0 r proo-
Ututlon.
lib superior Court action names as oc-
cupanls of the alleged bawdy house Judy
Ann Klus-er, 25, Helen Marie 'Ryan,
37,-Md·Carol'Ann Domlan, I\-' '
JljcJ<s seeks closure of the house and
sale of its contents at sheriff's auction
on~ year.froin the .date.of the court ordei,
if lt is approved: ~ ·
Neighbors In the vicinity llave In-
dicated, from actiona of moven, that
most of tbe contents of the place appear
to be beds. -· -
Jndge-Robert 11. Kneeland-set AprH-a
-as ttie date be will rule on Hicks~ demand
for an Injunction lhal would close the
home. ,
Afl tl>ree womon have been ordered to
appear April 30 In Weat Orange County
ownlclpaJ court to answer. charges c>f
prosUtu~n,stemming from the~ alleged
SeJ:u8J . aCtivtties at the capgtone Drive
. a~. They were anUted on multi· ·Lotte' _rv w:n· ·s pl .. ~ge& after police, alerted to the • ;J " all~ ·,uuallon by iromed nelahhori.
lnveitlgated at the lioine and lUed
Beach Backing ·-=~~u:,:. 10
• oxperienca "' w 78, N-1.bed StatA1Jnen11 by -olllcm • , e a~ oman, .. <W ' ~·ttlleri!e ,fottety ~ve<J ·the ,!ached to .lhe c!vl\ ·~: Tiii'>' allege
In n_;..1. u'...!:L':...ry . ~ cil 'lhe HunU~.~ach ' ~ ~ ~ Council)londay niglil. . COUndltnen· voted s to H~ . Wallace Gets ~eedles ' ~"'*<OP!)::-PoJico blve .. : a· lottery resolullon Wh!Ch nl!Ji'it'.IIW4d _., on cha!Jea of • that any •P!Ofils from 11. MONTGOMERY; Ala. (vPl\ -Gov.
that the defendants invited the~ to
participate In sexual activity at the
CBRStone Drive home at a cilarge or $100
per customer.
Statemen.ts by 30 persons residing in
the area also suppo~ the laWsult jointly
filed by Hicks and the state. They all at-
test to the susplciOn' among neighbors for
some time that a prosUtution riicket was
~g operated from the Capstone Drive
address.
Nelghbois told police Iha!. men .. were
seen to come and go from the home at all
hours oi the day and nll(bt.
It was also noted that considerable
quantities of new bedding were of.dered
wilh klng·si'I! beds ,app!ifenUy replacing
the smaller bedroom (urnilure lnillally
installed. •,
Orange
Your calendar may tell you It's
11prlng bul Ille -Iller llerVlce
says m~ ram II due <in the <r-
ange CoeBI beginning' TbUESday.
WedaesdJy will, he partly· cloudy,
with higha of'ell'degrees II the
beaches; rising to llf Inland. Lows
In tbe,408. . INSHtt; 'l'OD,\ Y
Wllin TO'rO!ll<>OM c~OOle to
toke In • 6h1e mdvie "" a Frldav
night.,-"!. A!"' Qll"°"' .t •llow,"
for ezamplc -lh«U 11ted no
bobu litter and no cer, Th<I/ nm.
plv wait andl thidnfght and lllne
'In Chantkl 79. ~re 1to711. 011
Page 9.
~lflnl~ 11 =-~ u c ......... ,._Da: ............... 4 lllldlos ,. • fllll ..,. for $1,IGI an.r bi!llefit (liJblle educatloa. Geoiie c. Wallaee ~I his leCOlld
pullllc a-K}'-Jlllol ~.,...._ .,._Tl!t '"°"'tloll .,. .. fl'OPOMd b1 ............ _, treatment ~av, hut -'--""'-. ~·--Al r.-," r-•••"woman ' ~:~·~· ..,
CM!ltt ;: _.:::::: :. ~ . ,_.. ,.,, ;;.:,..r;; ' ... Mnth »11 ,....,... ,..,.,,. .....,. ......~ · ,~.~Id there was Utile chaoge In hll
Mn. Genof, .0. P. Ball wu arreof<!4 ..... G111'!f, a ,,.,_ at Qil • """""""' Dr. Lint·~ n<r!ormed
lhe comer ..i Ille lOol' ~-~~ ~., diF;Jnl u .. It.nip! to ffiface V(jJlaoe'i M9ndti th t.:l? *' lqllljl ~-...,-,· "11\!_1-, .DI" ' 11.needli fmlment, be di.f!aat Mon-
waa recovertlll · aaW. t' 1....:--------...J. peln.
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· ........ ._ ,..11 T......._ 11
....... 1Mt ,,..."" 11 ...... lflCllH • ....._ •
"" u -ll'I .... ,.,. AMI Lf'IW" 1J Wtl1f ...... 4
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Z DAILY PILOl H lws:dlr, ll9dl 20, l97J
FBI Bearing
' Second low
-Gray Silenced
By Klein~ienst
' ' .Delivered
-To Builders
'
WASHINGTON (UPl) -L. Patrick
Gray 111 !aid today he has been ordered
to refuse some Information requested of
him by the Senate committee welCblng
hia nomination as FBI director.
Tho development came an.r Sen. John
V. Tunney (D.call!.), exprel&ed belle!
the White Houae hu "decided to throw
Mr. Gray to lhe wolves."
Gray denied he lntendl to withdraw u
oomlnoo !or the FBI post.
Gray, ruumlng the witness chair, told
the Senate Judlelpy Committee he could
I'
Valley Slaws
Vow Tonight
• On Greenbelt
Fountain Valley city councilmen are
scheduled lo decide tonight whether or
not the city wlll spend 14,llXI lo join the
Santa Ana River Greenbelt Commluion,
When lbe proposal waa brought to
them last month, councilmen voted 3 to 2
to send the matter to the city's planning
commlsaion for study and recom-
mendation.
Accordlng to Planning Director Clinton
Sherrod, the planning commiulon is
recommending the city join with the nine
other local governmental agencies in the
commission to aid in development of the
river.
But the pJannlng commlasion ii only
reoommeodlPg partlclpatloo for one year
with the provision that the city re-study
the commission and ita acUvities at the
end of the year to detennlne If further
participation Is worthwhile.
The recommendation also presumes
"the city's budget share would not ex-
ceed $4,800 for the risca l year ending Ju-
ly 1, 1974."
Opposition to the proposal when it was
brought to the council last month was led
by Councilman Ed Just who said he felt
the development is the responsibility or
lhe county parks department and the
fonnation of the commission would only
1 add to the proliferation of special
I districts "which we've opposed all
r aloog ...
I Councilman Marvin Adler, who has t represented Fountain Valley at the In-
formal group meetings where the p~
posal was drawn up, explained that the
idea w.as to foster a coordinated develop-
ment ot the santa Ana River and San-
tiago Creek by Involving all the local
governmental agencies that either lie
along their banks or are directly involved
with the water ways.
Acoordlng to Sherrod the cities o[
• Anaheim; Huntington Beach, Orange, ! Santa Ana , Villa Park and Yorba Unda
have agreed to join along with the county
of Orange, the Orange County Flood Con-s trol District and the Orange County
[ \Yater District.
: Fire Destroys
l
t Home in Los AI
I
I r A fire early Monday completely
destroyed a Los Alamitos borne and
damaged an adjoining duplex structure,
11 the Los Alamitos police department
reported.
The blaze broke out about 3:30 a.m. in
the Rosanne J . Thomas home, 4362
Howard St. When Orange County firemen
and police arrived on the scene, the
residence was engul!ed in names.
The fire spread to the duplex apart-
ment next door of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Evans, 4364 Howard SL, and did
moderate damage, police said.
Loss is estimated at $12,000. Mrs.
l Thomas' pet dog was trapped in the
burning home and died. Fire department
investigators said a cigarette smolderin g
l
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in a couch was the probable cause of the
blaze.
••
DAILY PILOT
Tl'le Or1np CoH! DAii.'!' f'lLOT With Wflld'I
11 comtr!nlod ftlt M-·P.-.1t. II pUblisllM Ir(
rtM Ortntoe Cwil! f'ubl!lhlng ~. s..,..
r111 ldhloN '" 1111bll1hed, Monc11r ~
Frk11y, IOI" (Olli Mn., Newport ltKfl.
Hunllnglotl B11chll'ount11n 1/11,.y, t..gUlll
INdl, lrvlne/Slddltbllck .,. Sin C""-lt /
Sin Jua11 C111l11t1no. ,t, 11111111 rtgloMI
tdlliOn " PVl>ll111ed 51!\lrdl)'I 11111 SlllllMl)'I.
Ttlt prlnc:l111! PV1>li1Mll\1 Jlllnl II ti 1'D Wtll
•• , sr ..... , Co.I• MQI, C1Hton11t. "'"'
Ro\iert N, W1M
f'rn"ld111t 11111 l'llblll!ltr
J1ck ll. C11rl1y
\tin ''"loett' ~ ~·· M.aMow Thorn11 1<11vil
IEOllOf
Tho11'111 A,, llt11rphi~1
M""'llfll .. ltor
C1111I" H . Looi kich1nf ,, Nill
A11l•T1n1 Mtnt~lfll E•l1tr1
T11ry Ct.,.1111
w .. 1 °''• c-1r EOllof HINlfilttt• .._. OHke
17175 l11ch lo11l1v1f'lf
M1ill"9 At14rtn: ,,0 , 111 7f0, f 2641 ..__
LltWll IM<~· t22 l<ttnl A¥tnW
CO.l• M-..: DO Wn• ••r llfliel Mt'#llllff ltec;ll: W:J .. ....,...., hultYt1'9 1o111 Cllmeftl1: JI» Hwtll fl c;,,,,..,,. llN(
,...,... .. f1141 MMJJ1
C~ AdMfthhlt MZ·l611
"'"" flltrl!I or-.. c.Mr ~-140-1UO
~Wit, 1t7J, °"'"" C0.11 ~lllhlllf ~. Mt -Otrltl, lllWlftt'-o .. ,..,. .. , -n.-1r ..rwi"11.--.. 11tt•
""" .. • .. ....... •llflwl .-i.1 ..,.. ~ .. CllPfr1IM ..-.
.................. "'" .i ""' Mtw, ~ ,.._.. ..... -'*"""r DM ,._.,.,, llr Miii Q,U "'*"""°' ft'llllf'llT _.... ............... _
no longer give memben full access to
FBI files or answer all their questions.
He said he was acting on the baala of a
previously undlsclooed order llsued Fri-
day by Altorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst ind said he could answer
"only procedural, not substantive" que•
Uona about FBI procedures.
White House Preu Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler replied,,. 0 Ablolutely not,"
when asked If Nixon abandoned hope of
gelling Gray confinned.
Senate Republlcan leader Hugh $colt
abo .aid after a meeting with Nixon that
the President'• support of Gray 11ta ex-
actly the same" a1 when he submitted
the nomination.
Gray's disclosure of re1trictlon1 on his
testimony ~ when Sen. Blt<h Bayh
([).Ind.), requested that three former
employea of the FBI and the C.Ommlttee
to Re-Elect the President be subpoenaed
to appear .
'DAIL·Y..J'ILOT f!ll"9I h Lat Pt,_
Builden wbo tried to beat lhe° Proposi-
tion 20 j)ermll Procedure by iecuring a
Huntington Beach building pj!rmit prlo'
to Feb. , J suffered their second setback
Monday night.
City councilmen refused to extend the
IO<toy llf.e pf the !<>Cal permits •. which
means most of them will expire before
they cao be used .
Buildus suffered their first setback
when the state attorney general n.iled
that possession of a building permit from
a city dld not exempt them from the
coutllnt preservation act.
· City Building Director John Bem'.ens
told councilmen the city had issued 330 1
perm.its during the last week of January
for proje(:ts. within the· 1,oOo-yard coastal
zone.
The committee approved the request,
but Gray refused to offer his views on
one of the three -Judlth Hoback, of
West Palm Beach, Fla., a former assis-
tant to the treasurer of the re-election
finance committee.
SPRING'S HERE....:. Today was the first day of spring. Mesa. Instead rain produced situation more like
It was supposed to look like the pastoral scehe at picture at right. Hedy, in good weather and bad, is
Behrens a,nd City Admlnis\ralor David
Rowlands ~sited the council to adopt an
·emergency ordinance which would keep
such permits alive until bullders obtained
clearance through the regional coastal left with flowers produced by the season's 15 inches a psychology major at Cal State Fullerton.
commission. 1 · " of rain surrounding pretty Hedy I-larte,_2_2.:., _0_1 _c,_o_sl_a ______ _
"I'm a little ,Concerned here that we
()f ficials Hold
Water on ()Id
Sunset Tower
P1crehase St1ulied Spring Arrives
In CO<UJt Area
On Moist Not,e
are rewarding "®le wbo we.re tryln1 to
circumvent a 1aW,11 complained Coun-
cilman Henry Duke.
Meadowlark Golf Course
"I agree with Henry," added Jack
Green. 0 Tbey 1ot caught with their
bandJ Jn the cookie jar and I ,.. no
reason to ball them out."
Duke, Green and other councilmen
then approved the lint reading o! an
ordlna-which will give utra · pennit
time to ~ptl'I wbo obtained building permits alter Feb, I.
11Je old Sunset water tower, which
stands like a weathered centurion
overlooking Hunttngton Harbour, won
another reprieve from Huntington Beach
councilmen Monday night.
Studied by Huntington By JOHN WLER
Of "" D.ny l"tllt .....
The Orange Coast's long rainy seuon
conUnued into the first morning of spring
today as coastal cities collected uPwards
of a half inch of rain.
Bebrem aald that so far no building
permits have been requested or ·Issued
For the second time, councilmen refus-
~to declare the tower site surp lus land
so tt could be sold to a private developer.
City Administrator David Rowlands
told councilmen if the site were sold to
the JMC Construction Company, the
tower would be kept and the land saved
as open space.
It would become an open space section
in JMC's 15-home, neighboring con-
dominium project, Rowlands said.
The water tower and well sits on 13,000
square feet at the southeast comer or
Marina View Street and Los Palos
Avenue, near Warner Avenue. 1be well
still pumps water for Sunset Beach and
Surfside, and is expected to keep pum~
lng for another five years.
The developer said he is more than
willing .t9 llive tbe city a free l~ po the wen and leep lhj! Jot as open lb.ice, a
view park. All he wants to do Is clean up
the tower and lot which are next to pro-
posed $65,000 condominiums.
The move, however, was blocked by
homeowners on Marina View.
Mrs. Anne -Conway told councilmen the
homeowners would like to preserve the
entire 2.6 acres (including the con-
dominium site) as a children's park.
She also told councilmen that ac·
cording to the Californ ia Government
Code they didn't have the right to sell
surplus land without asking for public
bids.
City attorney Don Bonfa said he wasn't
prepared to reply to tha t.
Councilmen agreed to delay any action
on the site until details of the proposed
children's park are clear, and Bonfa can
solve the legality of a closed sale.
The matter was continued until April
16. Councilmen did not indicate whether
they are willing to buy the additional
ac reage tor a park, though most made it
clear they would like to preserve the
water tower and the site il is on.
Free Eye Tests
Slated at Clinic
The Huntington Beach Free Clinic will
offer free eye examinations for persons
who cannot afford a private physician,
clinic aides have armounced.
Exams will start next Wednesday and
will be offered from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. the
third Wednesday of each month. Dr. S.
Victor Stella will give the examinations.
The clinic ls located in downtown Hun-
tington Beach at Z22 5th St. For further
Information phone clinic coordinator
Mike Lyon at 536-3333.
Screening children for clear vision will
be the major emphasis of the ex-
aminations, according to Lyon.
HWllington Beach may buy the private,
9&-acre Meadowlark Golf Course.
City councilmen Monday n i g h t
authorized the hiring of an appraiser to
determine the value of the property both
as a golf course and at its "highest and
best use."
The golf cou rse is currently zoned R-1
for single family homes. There have been
several rumors and speculations that the
golf course would be sold soon for a hous·
ing development, but that has never been
confirmed by the owners.
City Administrator David Rowlands
said the consulting finn of Goode and
Goode will be paid $7 ,500 to make the ap-
praisal. The work should be finished in
' I I
U.S. Interior
P a1iel 0 Ks Sale
Of Mile Square
Sale of the 507-acre Mile Square
Regional Park land in Founlain Valley to
Orange County has been approved by the
Bureau or Out.door Recreation of the U.S.
Interior Department, Supervisor David
Baker disclosed today.
Under the pact, Orange County gets
the land valued at $20 million free from
the federal government.
Included in the sale is approval for the
county to lease 52 acres to the city of
Fountain Valley far a recreation area.
The lease will be without charge to the
city.
The county has leased the acreage sur·
rounding the U.S. Marine Corps Mile
Square helicopter practice landing field
since 1967 for $21,000 a year.
More than 200 a.cres of the park has
been developed. to park and recreation
uses including a golf course and a third
area is oow under develapment.
Under the agreement, income from
agricultural leases on the undeveloped
portions ol. the park goes to the federal
government.
Deeding of the land to the county was
expected more than one year ago but the
Mile Square agricultural lease scandal
held up the final signing.
That scandal inVolved what alithoritiefl
allege was an attempt by two Founlain
Valley city officials to obtain a $10,000
bribe from farmer George Murai for the
~lection campaign of Supervisor
Robert Battin. At the time, Murai was
seeking a renewal of his lease on 150
acres which has slnce been granted. The
Board of Supervisors will act on the deed
Wednesday, March 28, Baker said .
Capsule Council Action
Here in cap.mle form are f.be major actions taken !.!onday night by lhe
Huntington Beach City Council:
CAT LAW: Deadlocked 3 lo 3 on !he proposed licensing d cota. "Council-
man Henry Duke refused to voe. ellher way, ther.by killing lhe law .
WATER WEIL: Refused to declare as surp!lll land 8ll old water well and
tower site "'1lch overlooks Hunllngloo Hatl>our. •
GOLF COURSE: Authorized the city administrator lo gel 1n·_.11a1 00
the value of Meadowlark Goll O>urse In csao the city decideO to buy It.
GYPSY FRUIT: Reluaod lo allow a local !armor to Import' fruit !or sale
al bis roodslde stand from outside the city.
PROPOSITION lt: Denied an OJlenlion o! bulldlng pemt!U !or developers
ca ught In the Propoaltlon 20 permit pr<JCtU. The permlll for developer> who
applied be/ore Ffb. J will die by April !. ,
• LO'IT£RY: Suppoi'ted I lo l a aalewide lott«y with the proOll to be \lled
to btnelll public educeUon. Council\WllWI Norma Glbbl ~ the lll!lllOl1.
60-90 days.
The golf course appraisal matter was
not listed on Monday's council agenda . It
was brought up at the last minute by
Rowlands, who handed out a memoran-
dum on it just prior to the meeting.
Rowlands said today that be and Coun-
cilman Henry Duke bad pursued the ap-
praisal matter on their own. without
specifte council direction.
"We didn't start, though, until the joint
proposal for the airport and golf course
was dead," Rowlands said.
That joint proposal would have had the
county and city sharing the cost of
buying both Meadowlark Airport and
Meadowlark Goll Course.
But two months ago, _ccuncilmen turn-
' ed lhumbs d<!JVir Oil ft!rtlle rcfOUdy °'·,llUCb
a proposal and county supervisors
recently did the same.
While councilmen agreed to the golf
course appraisal, they took no action and
made no comments indicating· how
serious they are about the city buying
Meadowlark .
Meadowlark is located between Warner
and Heil avenues and Graham and
Springdale streets in north Huntington
Beacli. There is only one other 18-liole
course, Huntington Seacliff, in the city
and one nine-bole course, the old Seacliff. ·
Rowlands said the city II stlll studying
the posaibility of building a full golf
course In phase m of the central park. A
report on that possibility will be made in
the near future by the consulting firm of
Stone and Youngberg.
Couple Found Slain
SAN PABLO (A.P) -A young S8n
Pablo couple were !ound shot to death
Monday, and the man may have been
robbed, police Sflid. The bodies of
Anlhony M. Perpinan, 19, and his wife,
Rae Jane, 16, were found {ace down in
separate rooms of their borne.
No significant flood damage was
reported from the new storm, which
brought the season rainfall average to
nearly 15 inches in most cities.
But the unusUally, long wet sea.son,
which began In oormally ' dry mld-
NoV<lllber and conltnued intermittently
Into the first day of Spring, has bad
several side effects.
Among them are:
-Thlrly to 60 lost working days, due lo
rain or mud, have cost coast home
i:levelopers te11.1 of thOOsands of dollara.
Smaller subcontrador1 have aullered ld-dltlonai']~· ~1····\f• , v
-Road projects have e~ter..i
slmllar delays. Among the projects
delayed up to six weeka has been !he Uni<
of the Newport Freeway under con-
struction at Bristol Street in C.OSta Mesa. -' -On 'the pos!Uve side, evenly spaced
storms have enabled the Orange County
Water District to capture and store
upwards of 25,000 acre feet of slorm
runoff. O>upled wit!> ralnlali that will
soak dlrectly Into the underground water
table, the dlltricl says It has profited to
the tune of $1.5 million from thb year's
storm season to date. That sum
repreaenta the eo1t of 25 percent of the
dlltrlct's annual water comwnption, and
twice the amount oollected Jut winter'
-Tho long rainy lleUOll hu both burl
and helped county. agrlculturt operaUons.
SU.eable but evenly spaced storms are
credlled with helping to leach sails from
CO<Dlty fannland, but the rain has gooe on a month lonaer than nOrmal. 'lb.la will
shorten somewfiat the length of the grow-
ing season and probably cost growers
money, according to Harold Otto, a farm
advi!er wµh Ille' University or C81Jfomla
utelislon service In Anaheim. ·
I wlth!J\ the ooastal sone since Feb. I. .
Ted Bartlett wu apparently the only
councilman sympithetic to the pre-Feb. l
bullden, but the emer1ency part of the
ordinance was never brought to a vote.
Permits !uued (Srlor to the ....,ailed
deadline ·Will expire naturally after April
I. ... -' '
Dollar Has Mixed
Day;-Markets
CaUed UnsetiiCd
LONDON (AP -Tho dOlllt ~ a n11x..r cr.i, rn '\lor1d -Y riwtitla' r.;: ' day, moving up In aome centero Ind
ciciwn 'ln :i.tben. Dealers here called the ~ .... ~it<·· • • state.of ll:ij markell "very unietlled."
But thl!)' said lhia bad. been expected
alter the' adoption Jn Parts Frida of a
new lloatll!g system. of internatlonal ·ex-
change 'riles.
Thls was Only the ~ day that the
markets .have npenled under the new floating Sjs1em. . .
Despite the laok of definite trends, and
Jn son>! ~lel'J Widely IWlnglng rates,
there was bn sign of the heavy dealing c
!hat toUcbOil oH the -Id monelaJ)I
crisis two -tbs ago.
Trading WU light, a sign that many
speculalorl· ....,.. still sitting Oil the
aldellnes awaiting llrme< evidence of how
the fioall would work. The gold markets were 'quiet, another sign of retumlng
stablllty to mnney markell.
'Ille doll..-was sharply down Jn Iion-
don, Frankfurt and Zurich dllJ'lni the
morning but recovered mucb of the IOIS
later Jn the day. II closed aubstanlW!y
lower in Parts and Tokyo. 11 .ci..ed
higher, however, in Milan,-Amsterdam
and Madrid.
NOW, HEAR TlllS! .•
• According to th. President's Councn on Enviro'llmental Quality,
it is becoming increasingly difficult for enyont to .,..pe noi ...
and
'
~.000,000 Americans risk huring impairment ind other physical
mental effects. 44,000,000 other Americans have the utility of
' their dwellings adversely affected by noise from 1ircr1lt or traffic.
21,000,000 Americans are affected by construction-related noise.
6
Now what does this have to do with carpet? Carpeting wiD
drastically improve occoustics in eny r"!'m by quieting your horn.
environment, making rodios, telavision, and the family sound bettor.
Romember, at Alden's, •-our LOUD cerpeting is quieter.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e D.RAPES
1661 Placentia Av1.
IN
COSTA MBA
llllCI Ul1
COST.II MISA
646-4818
W.. ·"""' t tw lilO; Fii. t tw t; s.t. tiJO tw I
' I >
)
• •
Ul'I T....,._i.
H DAil Y I'll.OT
Residents Thwarted
In Grading Prot.est
By JOHN VAL TERZA
OflM DMIY PIMtt.tt
Hundreds of angry residents of .. the
Laguna Niguel and Monarch Bay areas
were thwarted Monday in their aUPJllpts
lo protest h!avy grading above Salt
Creek Beach as the South Coas\. Regional
Zone Colwervation c.ommission refused
lo "suspeod the rules" to allow a hear-
ing.
And, instead of a full-blown airing of
the controversy surrounding the massive
earth moving by Avco Community
Developen, the eve~ was one of
frustration and rage for 'some persons at
the san Clemente community Clubhouse.
FormerUMW
Chief Denies
, Murder Link
The hundreds of residents learned that
the actual Salt Creek hearings will be
March 26 In Long Beach.
The meetlng -another marathon
sess.ion of the 12-member panel -opened
more as a shouting mat.ch than a formal
session. Chairman Dr, Robert Rooney
carried on a loud debate with critics
from the audience.
A county-installed 10Und systeir. did lit·
tie to soothe tempers. The com-
mlssloners' comments were inaudible to
most of the 600 persons present.
Commissioners blamed reports in a
Los Angeles newspaper which had said
earlier Monday that the bearings on the
Salt Creek dispute would be held at 1111
community clubhouse. ,
The news account brought forth bun-I
dreds of resident s angry over the I
massive grading project which has I
altered the landscape above the South
Coast strand which often has been at the 1
center or controversy.
That newspaper account drew blasts 1
front conimissioners, particularly Los
Angeles County delegate James Reedy.
"It's not the fault or us on the com-
tnission:· he asserted. "lt "'as the press
that erred, y,·hich Is often the case.''
In the middl~ of the brief· dispute -
wh ich amounted to attempts by members
of the audience to speak -Orange Coun-
ty Supervisor Ronald Caspers, a member
of the panel, dr'opped a note to Rooney
and left.
Caspers earlier had said he planned to
leave early to serve aS a host for U.S .
... Sell. James Buckley of New York who
made an appearance In the central coun-
ty Monday night.
The panel 11-ionday cast one poll on the
demands by the public to be heard, a
measure which cal led for "suspending
the rules" and •llowing the publi c to
speak lo the issue.
It failed by a 6-5 margin. with the
panel's chairman casting the pivotal
vote.
'DEAD"MARINE SERGEANT RONALD RIDGEWAY REUNITED WITH FAMILY AT CAMP PENDLETON
Mother, ~ldred, Brothen Ray (left) •nd Jiimes,Welcome Serviceman 'Buri.cl' in St~ Louis Cemetery
ERIE. Pa. (UPf) -Tony Boyle,
former president of the United Mine
\Vorkers of America (UMWA), denied on
the witness stand today that he authoriz-
ed the transfer of $20,000 in union funds
allegedly used to finance the murder of
dlssideot union -off i c i a I "Jock"
Yablonski. .
Angry South COast residents jeered the
action and many shouted, "wait unW the
elections !" -apparently unaware that
the panelists are appointed , not elected.
The issue which has stirred ao much
ire among the residents involved the
grading or more than three million cubic
yards of earth OD more than 500 aau 2 POWs 'Back From Dead'
"I never saw them," Boyle said in
reference to two $10,000 de.posit slips and
two letters acknowledging transfer of
the money from the UMWA's in-
ternational treasury to the unioo's
District 19 In the Kentucky-Tennessee ......
above Salt Creek. _
CriUcs have claimed the grading has
been done assertedly in vtolatloo of the
provisions· of the Coastal lniUaUve.
A Marine major from S&nta Ana and a
Marine sergeant from Houston both
ooce listed as dead on the batt!elield in
Vietnam, returned to Camp Pendleton
Monday, Jooklng wan and thin after five
years of Communist captivity.
, "I don't have the words to express the
, feelings I have," said Maj. Paul J . Mon·
tague, 38, of Santa Ana.
"God Bless America," Sgt. Rooald L.
• Ridgeway said, smiling.
: The two were reunited with· relatives
and, after meeting. with newsmen , drank
cbamJ>lliDe. Mildred Ridgeway ol Hous-
ton, Te•., saJd ol heT 23-year-old son: "I
never lost my faith that. be was all~. I
nevtr gave up hope." Two other sons,
~ lf. and Jameo; 6, were with
her. '
. .Jfillltague's belicJpter WU -down
. Marclr211; 1111, neor, Phu Ba! in South
~ Vfef:liam. r-1(.. ., 1
· Three ftlOnlhs alter ~ declmd
deed, Montaiue;'s name aPPeared on a
l'OW list. Hil ltile Sharon was notified
in January that he was still lllive.
The Marine ~ ha! awarded him the
· · ver 'Sl8r and the Alrlileilifiiir ner..
ism. En route to Camp Pe@etoo whero
his wife, daughter and two sons were waiting, Montague told a pµblic a(fain
Office-: "You tblnk m're a.little sklnily.
1 We think you're all fat."_
MDotague's vpice trembled at the end
of the Olgbt !rom Travis ~ F°""' Base,
Calli., and Clark AFB in the PblliPP.iJ>es.
A fellow a-prisoner ol the Viet Cong,
Marine Capt. James """'""t Dibernardo
of Misaioo Viejo was oo hand. at llllranw
. Naval Air Statton In san Qieeo aa their
Air Force C9 set down. He embraced the
two men warmly.
"l would like to visit the gravesfte be-
cause seven of my friends are there,"
said Marine Sgt. Ridgeway Monday.
'111e graves, near St. Louil!, Mo., hold
the bodies of Marines killed In an ambush
at ·Khe Sanh Feb. 25, 1968. RJdgeway,
then an 18-year-old private, was reported
dead that August after combat bad
slackened enough to allow other petrols
to retrieve the bodies.
A funeral was held and Ridgeway's
mother Mildred attended, insisting all the
while that her son was alive.
The prison grapevine got word to him
less than three weeks ago that be bad
been listed as dead, he said, adding "l
wasn't surprised. Thinga were inttY
~'.' t
• As be·was driven toward Camp Pen,dle-
ton and a reunloo with, biS divorced
molber and brotbe" Raymond, 19, and
James 8, the 23-year-ofd bachelor spoke
eagerly of the life awaiting him.
"I want to JO on liberty.as quick as I
can," Ridgeway said: "I want to see how
~ety 1!8.$ changed. l'ni raring to go.
'Mle thing I mi86ed the most was being
free to be able to do wluit I want to ,do."
Two civilians, also freed by the Com-
munists, stepped out Jn blue bl.lsinesl suits
and • .were driven to San ·Diego ·Naval
Hoepital.
Nearly 150 friends and relaUveo greet·
ed Alezander Hendmcl!l, 49, ol nearbY
Spring Valley, accompanied by Richard
H. &paulding, 36, d Enid, Okla., who was
caplnred Jan. 31, 1968 along with Hen-
d<rson durini'the Tel ofI-ve.
The twu civilian.'J were employed•by Pa·
· Psych.in·trist Testifies
Killer Not Re~ponsible
By TOM BARLEY
Of ... o.llY ..... ,~,,
A court-appointed psyclllatrilt testified
today In Orange County Superior Court
that Tbomu flradlord McCutcben was
DOI l'esponsible for his actions when he
-and killed Mrs. Vlrgiilla Hammett
WI sept. 5 outside her Laguna Beach
'home.
• Dr. Herman Romm told •a jury that
mast ll:OOI\ rule on the Dan8 Point con-
• tractM1• lllllicy a~ the til~t the slaying
• that McCutcl>en, 50, ol 1 Olinda st., : .. wail not capable of lOnntng an opinion."
: ' Or t;°"'m said he base4 hl,tJphiion.on . the tal etate Induced in Mctutdlen by
: tll• ' nk and drqga he bod l;lken in the
:hours before he went to Mis. Hammett's
: borne at Ill B Wave SL and sb<it tier
: twice in ~he beac;I at poln~blank range.
• '
Police called to the scene found Mrs.
Hammett's body on a neighbor's lawn
with McOJtchen standing over the
woman who once Shared his Dana Point
home.
McCutcben has teslll1ed that be ""8iJJ
nothing ol the slaying ... the hours Im-
mediately before and alter the killing. He
ii simllary 11D1ble to re c a 11 t.he. con-
fession be made to LaguJ). Beach podce
wblcb was taped at the tbne by oldcers.
Prosecutor {ilck Novick contends that
McCutcben was well aware of w'bat he
was dOlng when he shot Mrs. Hammett.
Novick said he will ask the Jury in
Judge Walter Charamza's .courtrooni to
rettttn a sanity verdict that count seod
MCCutcl!en to stlit~ prison for Hie on tile
earlier first degree murder conviction.
'
Girl Wanied
\
Supervisor Battin· Seeks Aide -"Wanted: an attracll .. college girl or
' ' .J ,. _ graduate, peroonable, unmarrt..,.
: wllh ~than average writing obillty;
' • young 1ad7 who Joukf lib to
! pohic1pato in the raolltleo o( poliUco and
; help develop p!'Oil'aSl•e •1111 innovaUve
, approaches to covemment proceaes.11
• . 'lllot II the heart ol • letter addresaad
• byll'trst Dieb1ct Supervisor Robtrt Bat· t. tin \'I Oranae Coast College In aearcb 9f
I a ...,..1uy -a poaldnn on his staff
: which has bad considerable turnover.
: Tha letler reada. in part: '!I om
: doltooa of Ol!IJlillytna • .1V11n1Jad.t.J!IOl"t
OD the or'der ol .. enculJVe 'Glrl JJ'ri.
1111.' Socrttartal .AUii are regulnd, but
a IU)lr port of~ JOb 11 leltphooe -1:
•
to constitut<otl, -.rching Information
.._ matlerl be! .tlie bOard for
dedaloo, II
Aloo 1ltlod u 1Urtbuteo, "constilllent
contact throu&b attending open I n g
ceremonlu, )>anqueto, etc. illvolViq one
or tl'Q ·evenings a weet1 either alone,
witb n'l;)'Self, or other memHra of my
stalf." . •
Bottin adds, "Althou&b the polltlcal of·
rice is 1 non•partiaan one, I am an active
registered De~t." •
Promllod an ....,.1 advancement op-
·porlwllUeo for the rl&bt perl\lll ••
'111t..!Jllef waa fOllld ottocbed to an
Or&D(e OouL Coll-.• biilleUn lloolir.l =~by BIJ! ~ez;.Jlaltin'1 chief
f
cilic Architects & Engineers, a Loe An-
geles-based finn. Henderson gave t h e
civilian band-over-th&heart salute to the
U.S. flag as he told the ctoWd of about 200
persons: "I want to thank the armed
forces of the United States."
Then he raced to his wife Margaret.
One of Henderson's four sons, Alexander
Jr., 26, embraced bis father. He was a
soldier in Vietnam in 1967 when bis father
arrived to work .
A native of Glasgow, Scotland, the elder
Henderson lost the' tip of a finger to a
Viet Cong sniper's bullet.
"I think we were both pretty lucky,"
said the sen.
"1bey came from the secretary-
treasurer's office," Boyle said.
The union's secretary-treasurer at the
time of the 1969 mllttfers of Yablonski,
his wife and daughter was John Owens,
who was deposed aloog with Boyle in an
election last December.
Boyle was th~ tUdoff defense witness
at the trial of William Prater, 52,
La.Follette, ·Tenn., form.er field organizer
in District 19, accused by the prosecution
as one of two former UMW A officials
who ammged and paid for the killings.
The other unioo officlal, Albert Pass, 53,
Middlesboro, Ky., is scheduled for trial in
June.
UJOIT ......
Stop, Tldd "I was back in the states when I beard
about dad's capture, and I vollD\teered
to go back to Vietnam• btlt because ol
dad the Army wouldn' lei me do IL"
Defeme attorney H. David RoUlman
showed Boyle a memo urging speedy
tranaler of .t¥· lleCODll .$10,000 to Dlstrtct
19. The memo carried Boyle's signature.
Tamoo, the ~potlll\l gorjl!a_pf
tho Joseph H. Scl!eunmann
: ~~~~10~~U/:~hfr.Z At' Comp •Pi!adl-, 'lf'1tiicue an d
Rldge'oay joined Marine s. SCI-·Alfonso
Riate, 'rl, also once believed dead l!ut la-
ter freed and sent to the Marine hoepital
Sunday.
'
"I don't ~ ever reading that ,
memo," Boyle said.
Boyle saii:l 1he memo was written by
his eiecutive secretary, S u z a n n e
-Richards.
how to raid the fal!\ily refrlll·
erator. Just wait till. he grows
up.
..
OUR ··Golden iou~h'' TEAM
'
MEANS ..•
NO UNHAPPY OWNERS
Dear Friends of Orange County,
Our fifty , yeors i~ the automotive bvsineu hes shown us that
today's riew car buyer wants just a little ·bit more, so we've put together
our "Golden Touch" program for just that purpose. Starting with a fair
and hon,sl deal, we proceed to do every!hing humanly possible lo
deliver that new Lincoln or Mercury lo you the way ii should · be •.•
tuned to perfection • • • beautifully hand polished . . . e~tensively
road tested and carefully inspected by our service 1T1ana9ement, We •
know this wiH make for many miles of trouble free driving .pleasure.
Come in today and '" for yourwlf the difference a Joh.,.on and Son
Golden Touch car means.
They could bave had their chance to
speak, commissioners argued during the
appropriate time Monday.
Sammy Davis Jr. ~
Offers to Help
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Sammy
Davis Jr. has offered to post bond money
for 16 persons, mostly Indians, who were
arrested by the FBI Saturday aa they
drove truckloads of supplies meant for
militant Indians boldlng Wounded Knee,
S.D.
"I reaiize Ibero 11 an-t to
the eovemmen~" satd' Dtvill wJiO cam· paigned for President ' Nlxon' and bu
lle!J;~ guuj,-al the ~to~~ 111'he~l6 welt IJ1'8ffed twbm tlltJ
Cd from Qllllomia Into Nevada, and
charged with croosing a atate llne to aid
and abet a riot.
•
Dick Johnson
v;.. President DICK JOHNSON
,. ~
liomt Of The New Cot • , •
.......... 1'fnfdtl'
'
l
• i
"~ Colntfr'• Fondly oJ Tl~t Car••
ohnson& son
2121 HARBOR BLVD,. COSTA "1ESA • 54"830
,
.Rome Of Th~ Ne• Car , ••
';Golden Touct."
,
ilAILY PILOT
\Spring Has
, Sprung-a Leak
REn.ECl'IONS, DEPT. -So greet
the dawn that dldn' come up like
thunder from Newport acroa the bay. It
came up rain. Jun another day to limn
lo ·the cllcky-clacky of the wlndlbield
wipers as you slush up Pacific Coast
lllglnr1y.
Lig!lll dance oil olick asphalt to break
the monotony of dull gray, Gray sea.
ray sky. A tonened of one viewed
tween windshield wipers that go cllcky-
lacky.
Vagrant early-morning trucks speed
, e:ihau..ts roaring angrily at the
etness and oneneu a1 whistling Ures
plumes of water into the air. And
i""to the windshield. And the windabietd ripers. Clicky-clacky.
CATCH A GLIMPSE o< two of the surf
line 1Weeping into the beach. Satislactioo
• for breakers atlll roll aabore in
urning, foaming wllite; a defiance to
, · ooeness and grayness of the Orange
(
this day.
The billboard along the way offers a
"IY"""' bikini-clad malden smiling down
n you between .clicky~acky wipers.
Sile advlses that you rush right out for
your Zappo suntan oil before the burns or
IPring and summer. But there will be no
9lnburns this day. Just gray.
f Stop at the crosswalk for the elderly
'dy, out In tht! rain. Why wou1d she be
tut at an hour like this, defying the
Jlementst ~ labors across t h e
~ghway, looking for all the world like a
jiant umbrella wJth legs, looking for a
flrY place to hide.
Ip
'j POLL IN FOR GAS at the waleMOak· t1 llltloo Island where the young at-
~ant with long wet hair neglected to
iring his &licker to work. He shudders
ltith your arrival. While he pumps, cbeck
Ile morning headlines. What is the news
~• a gray Man:h dll.f?
Sacramento -'l'lt8'Senate bl.! delayed
W Jan. 1 a new law reqWring women
undergo a test for German measles
fore they can get marriage licenses.
• All right, all you girls with German
111easles. Rush right out now and get that
'
cense before the deadline, even if it is a
ult gray day.
Sacramento -Another law introduced.
is one to require all auto owners in the
th C.oast basin 'to get tuneups at least
ee a year to combat smog.
How will they do that? Maybe require
sticker on the windahleld that pro-
aims, "This Car Just Tuned Up." Put
with the sticker fer' smog control.
the one for your Mexican insurance.
the one (or your kid's school. Pretty fOO'l you won't see at all. And you won't
~"'. if your windshield wipers go clicky·
stacky.
~ PAY THE BOY with the long wet hair
E' nd hit the road. Lo, you find another
ace where the oneness and grayness
nnot prevail. For there above Coast
Highway, the wet that has been falling au these weeks has turned rolling hills of
the Irvine ranchlands into a sea of lush ireen.
Indeed, it has not been so green in so
many springs. And is this not the first
day of spring? Soon this wetness and
crayness shaU fade like mists of the
morning. And it will be spring for real Ind the sun shall dapple upon blue
waters and warm the sands while sea
breezes cleanse the soul.
It shall turn this way. For arter all. is
Ilia not the best of all possible coasts?
, Welcome to sprlng.
I
,
Snowstorm 'Victims'
Snowmobiler stands atop high drift and talks to two men marooned
in Wisner, Mich., bar after a 'Stonn. Snow was cleared and. the men
were none t:he worse for experience. ·
fIT Officials to TestifY,
On Role Played in Orile
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Hlgb-nmlfing
officials of International Tele!liiooe &
Telegraph Corp. were called f o r
tesUmooy today at the opening of a
Senate investlgatk>n into influence ex~
erted on American foreign policy by U.S.
corporations abroad. ,
Allegations of efforts by I'JT to prevent
Chile's Salvador Allende from taking of-
fice as president in 1970 were the fir&t
subject of Inquiry by a opectal Senale
Foreign Relations subcommittee.
Chairman Frank Church (D-ldaho),
said the five-member body will "explore
in depth" TIT internal communications
discussing contacts with the Central
Intelligence Agency, the StaU. Depart-
ment, and the Whtie House cooceming
plam to foment economic troubles to en-
courage a military coup against Allende.
Allende, a Marxist Socialist, was front-
runner in the presidential election of
Sept. 4, 1970, but failed to get the ma-
jority necessary for election. A wave of
terrorism hlt Santiago, the Chilean
capital, in tbe two months before the
C'.ongress eJectea ADende fn a runott Nov.
3.
The m documeoll that touched off
the Senate probe were made public near·
ly a year ago by columnist Jack
Ander90l1. They were later published in
booklet fonn by the government of Chile
with a foreword calling on all citizens to
ponder "the extreme gravity that ·the
events described in said documents
represent to-the independence, sovereign·
ty and self-<letennination of our coon·
try."
I'IT denied at the time that it had
participated in any plot against Allende,
and contends that its concern at all times
was for its employes and' corporate prop-
erty in Chile. m ad acquired control of the Oli1e
Telephone Co. from an English finn. At
the time of Allende's electtoo, m was
expanding the company and p~ve
ly selling up to 49 percent of its stock
to Chilean interests under a 1967 agree-
ment with the Chilean government. m claimed a 70-perceot interest In
Chile Telephone, worth $153 million,
when it was expropriated by the govern-
ment in September 1971. TIT still
. operai... twollotels in Santliio u part of
the SMraton chain:1
The open hearings are scheduled fu.
itially for three days this week and three
days next week.
Confrontation Looming
On Panama Canal Issue
PANAMA (AP! -The Uailed States
told the U.N. Secority Connell today It Is
ready to promptly conclude a new treaty
on tbe Panama Canal Zooe.
PANAMA CITY (UPI) -The United
States was reported ready today to tell
the U.N. Security Cou ncil meeting here
to keep its hands off the Panama Canal
issue.
A big power confrontation appeared
shaping up with Soviet Russia and China
formally backing Panama's claims to the
big waterway, and the United States in-
sisting that resolution or the matter
should be left tci U.S.·Panama negotla·
tions.
U.S. Ambassador John Scali wu mak·
ing his maiden appearance ·before the
Security Council th.is afternoon to
reiterate what he has said previously -
thal the U.N. should not attempt to "die·
tale" terms for settlement of the canal
dispute. ·
NO OUTSIDERS, he said earlier, can
dictate terms of negotiations by ·Panama
and the United States on the Canal Zone
that the United States has controlled
since 1903.
Scali even said earlier that the United
States would cast it! third Security Courl-
cil veto if other members tried. to impose
terms on the ~e.
Scali's address to the Council, meeting
in its first session in Latin America,
originaUy was listed as the first speaker
today. Later, officials said his ap-
pearance was postponed until after
lunch.
HIS SPEECH comes alt.er speeches by
China and the Soviet Union that ·formally
supported Panama's claim of sovereignty
over lhe canal Zone.
After four days of discussion, most of
it .pealing with U.S. policy in the area
despite the Security Council theme of
peace and security in Latin America,
Only Australia bas ao far supported the
U.S. position on the Cmtal 1.ooe.
.Spring Makes Wet Debut
2,600 Leave Homes in. Mississippi Fwods
Temperatures
• I. ' lii:ii'• Cl1¥ '" t41Mlt09 ....
• ' "
British Announce Plan1
Ireland For Cahn • Ill
t.ONDON (Al') -'!be Brilllb govem. meat llllllOllllCOd today a plan to md 3\l
yean ol 1b1/e in Nor1htm lnlml. II
provldel the province wllb Ill .... '°"
IOlt wombly with • wide .,... ol
domeltlc aulbodty. .
It alto ....... -that Northern rr.land wW tmllln put ol the
Ulllled KJncdom ao Joac u Ill people
won\ 14 bu! ti llys Roman CltholiCI who
want to linlt up with the Imb republic
wW ha.. the opportunity for a fair role
in the pmtDdal ... """"""1.
'Ibo plan allo pro!llN firm ~
to end tmmam.
THE PROP0&\18 WERE put forth in
a Wblte Papee by the Colllervatlve
goven>llll!lll to Parliament In 1-.
LA Coroner
"' Bfuma Death .
On Overdose
'Ibo governmeol llld Ill plan aiml at
benefiting the 'law·abidiog majority GILA BEND, LVlz. (UPI) -Sarah
alDOlli Northern Ireland's ~Dll MUeo' business manager died of a drug
and catholics even lltough they may f overdose oot • beating • -aulopoy .
have ainfllcting views on UIJter's ulti· has cenfinned. A 18wyer for Burt'
mate destiny. Reyooldl called for an end to tnnuendoa
'Ille Wblte Paper said : ''To all those and speculaUon about the death.
who auJll)Ort the C011tlm!ed unlon with ni. Loo Angeles County medJcal ••·
Britain; the proposals oiler flrTII assuran-aminer, Dr. Thoma.I Noeuchi. confirmed
ceo that this uolon wW endure and he that the body of David Whiting contained
defended for as loog as that is the wish "lethal levels" of·the oleeping pill mettij. ·
of the majority ol the people of No<tbem · qualone, Ju..Uce ol the 'p~ Mulford
Ireland. Winsor m aald Monday.
"TO ALL THOSE WHO ""'k the
unification of Ireland by coosent, but are
genuinely prepared to wort for the
welfare ol Northern Ireland. the pro-
posals oiler the opporttmity to play oo
less a part lo the me and public affairs
of Northern Ireland than is open to their
fellow citizens. ~
''To all, whatever thqir religious views
or poliUcal beliefs, the proposals extend
effective protection against any arbitrary
or discriminatory use of power."
In a referendum earlier this month on
whether the North should link with the
Irish republic, nearly 58 percent of the
electorate wted to stay with Britain.
Only 0.6 percent voted for a tmited Ire-
land. Abstentions, mainly Catholics, to-
talled 42 pe"""'t.
AS THE PEACE PLAN was announced
to the Hou..e of Commons, British troops
in Northern Ireland took up defensive
posit.ions in rival strongholds of Catholic
and Protestant militancy. They were
clearly under orders: to bead off violent
protest from either side.
A bomb nooelheless wrecked the
Parador Hotel on Belfast's south side. It
was planted by three armed men who
gave staff and gueSts three minutes to
get out.
Jn Dublin the Prov~ and Ol!itjal.
wings ol ~ Irish Republlcao Anny said
they wanted to analyze the White Paper
before making any comment on it.
The new assembly to be elected will
replace the old Protestant-dominated
Warrants Issued ·
For Land Firm
Sales Officials
PHOENIX. Ariz. (AP) -A federal
court judge has issued a bench warrant
for four officials of Lake Havasu Es-
tates, Inc., a Phoenix-based land sales
finn, who failed to appear for arraign-
ment on crimJna.1 charges.
11 appeared to ellabllsh that Whiling
had liken the ovwlooe alter a till with
Miss Miles.
NOGUICID'S REPORT, agreeing with
the findings ol the Maricopa County medi-
cll.I examiner, will he the last evidence
s~tted Wednesday to a cormer's !Ul1'
conducting an inquest into the death of
Whiting, Winson said.
Miss Miles and Reynolds, after losing a
legal battle to avoid testifying at the in-
quest, appeared before the jury last
week.
In Beverly Hills, Johp Flynn, an at·
torney for Reynolds, told a news con-
ference Monday he was "stunned and
surprised" at intimations by officials in
Ari7.orul that the whole story of Whiting's
death was yet to be told.
40IT IS MANJFESTL Y unfair to sug.
gest there are unanswered questions by
any of the people involved in this," Flynn
said, calling for an end to "rumors.
speculation and innuendo." He said
Reyoolda and MW Miles had answer.d
all questions put to them by investigators
and at the inquest.
Flynn said AriJona authorities had
looked Into the pooslbWty that WhiUng
was murdered. The Arizona state
Department of Public.Safety advised him
it was in..,tlgating tlie cteilth u a poul-
ble homicide, Flynn uld.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivfry of lht Dally l'llcrt
Is 9uirantttd
MW1r-~l'W .... , II WU ... Mf 1!111• YMt
,."" IY SlJI ,, ..... , UI/ anf Y9IH" C'll)' Will a.. "'"9111 i. ,..._ C1ll\ tre ll'M 1111111 ,,. """'
5Mwnfly Mii ._...,, II '" e. llff "''I" .,..,., c .. ,,. •r t 1.m.. 1tt.,..1y, .,. 1 •·•· S-1y, c11t ,,.. 1 u.,. wtlt a.. ~ 19 l'"· C•lh 1111 flit• ..rtll Tl ldl'I.
TrlephontS
MGll OrttlOI County Ar"MI · • • &42·4121 11'111 W•tmln&ttr •.•......•.•. ~~t~ BNdl 540-1221 s." c cap1.ir1no lffdl,
S.n J'*' C1p1ltrano, O.N l'olnt,
SOvrtl L.ICl""'9, U9liNWI N(IUll 492°44211
Ul'ITt .....
Roekg'J Man
.Robert Wagner. who served
three tenns as mayor bf New
York City, beams as he reads
endor8ement for that office
from Gov. Nelson A. RDck&-
feller.
Paper RePorts
Search Resumes
For D. B. Cpoper
;, WOODLAND, Wash. (UPI) -FBI
agenis .have resumed the bunt for
parachuUngt bijacker "D.B. Coopel" In
this farm ma where be disappeared 18
mooths ago, the Portland, Ore., Joumal
says. .·
The newspaper said Monday oeveral
residenll of the Woodland district bad
notmea 1!lhaC!eaeraf ageoli were apm
searcbiog for the skyjapker.
Asked about the report, an FBI agent
>aid the search might relate ooly to "•
part ol the continuing investigation In the
'D.B. Cooper' case.' " .
A man who signed the fll&hl maolfesl
as "Cooper''· bijacl<ed a SeatUH>ollnd
jeUiner on Thanksgiving Eve ol 1171 and
obtained a $200,000 J'IDIOl'D. He
parachuted from the'back door.ol tI\e m
without leaving a trace.
Authorities have searched th1a area
across the Qilumbla RJver from Onpl
several times in the past Without success.
U.S. District Court Judl!e Wiiliam Cop-
ple set bail at $50,000 for Kenneth R.
Lavin, president of the firm;Ronata D.
Lavin, treasurer and comptroller; and
Patricia L. Lavin. director of personnel.
The judge oet $!0,000 bail for J. Lance
Sinclairi director ol properties.
The our were scheduled te be ar-
raigned Monday with five other defend·
ants in the cue. All nine hllve been free
on their own recognizance since their
indictment Mareh I by a federal grand
jury.
Communisis Make Pledge-.
To Free POW s'Wednesday
Pleading innocent Monday were Paul
Maholcttlc, vice president and marketing
director; Robert Stevens, director -Of iJr
temational marketing; Edward Cass, di-
rector of marketing in Nevada, and sales-
men Seymour Astern and Victor Lock·
wood. .
111e indictment charges the finn and
nine penms with 23 cotmts of mail fraud
and violations of the Interstate Sales Act
in oonnectlon with the promotion of sale
of lots in Mohave C.ounty.
The fum is not coooected with the Mo-
Cullock Corp., developers of Lake Hav-
asu City located about 35 miles from the
lots.
The ·government cooteuds that the
flnn's lot saJes involved numerous
fraudulent misrepresentations to land
buyers.
'It's for tn. wl/9'• bltthlMy.'
"
SAIGON (UPll -The Comtnunisll
promised today to free part of the last
group ol American prisoners by Sunday
and the rest no later than the following
Wedoeaday, enabling 5,300 more U:S.
servicemen slationed in Vietnam to go
home.
The Commuoisls still hold 14 6
Americans -140 military prisoners ind
six c I v 111 ans -p1111 ooe Canadian.
Another 10 Americana were repor\ed
held in LaOI and there bal been. no 1'<ird
on when they _,Id he freed· altboul!I> a
shaky ceaaellre Is In effect In that coun-
try, too.
So far, 441 American1 have been
releas<!d. lncludlni I'/ dvtllatta and two
fliers lfeld by atlna. One group Of :l'l wu
!reed at Loe Ninh. 75 mlle1 north of
Salgoo, but all the rest, except for the
two releued OJ <ltlna, ware turned over
at Hanoi. ·
u . Nguyen Slob, Via ~
prea officer, llld Ibo
RevoluUooary Government (Vlei Coo()
-.Id -1111 last -of prt_. by Suodaf. aonver. be did not g1ve an
exact date, ploce ol re1eue or say bOw
-...-.. ....., 1tm11...i. N!:u.~~~=·:J.:
Military O>mm-(JMC), uid 14'7
prlaoneno would be reloued at lllDOI'•
illl Lam AIJ1IOl'I "by Iba termination
dale."
This referred to March 28, ""1dl ti the
deadline for the .. -ol tll POWS and
the ..It of U.S. lroopl ,,_,In Vfelllam.
A Sel(oo spokosman said the Sooth
Vietn1mete-Communllt pr I son e r ~1·
change -•m 'ID --1•1 delpll4
ac•ttl>!<d ~ ..... th& eotmlrY· '!be -m, ..,, U.-loUrtho llnlsbed.
Is alto acheduled to end by -., •
11J Sunday, •.m 0>mm1••1t1 ir111
f
have been exchanged for 4,7'3 South
Vietnamese IOldiers.
American troop wtthdrawall have·been
held up, "'°ding the atlllOWlCOIDt!n of
details on the final POW releue. About
5,300 of the remaining 8,300 U.S. troops
are to be oent home, IUppooedl)t by
March 28.
About 1,000 will remain In Vletoam as
mmbers of the delenee attadle olllce
(DAO). the !IOl1llOJ"'1i troop cooUtipot
approved under the Parll qreemenl.
It wu not clear wlleo the troop
withdrawals would HSume, 001. ".t"
parently not unUI au the details ol the
lest roleaae have been lrooed out.
Mitchell Tells •
, r
Wiretap Okay
Mµ1lI (UPI) -Former U.S. Attorney
Geieral Jobi> Ml~bu told. federal
court 'lteartDf that Richard KJelbclJlintt. who 1e1er ~ 11tm 1n o111ce, -
Cpd • wltetap ~ Without ltll
authatllatJoo.
Mlldtell lestlfled Moocliy belOft .s.
Diltrlct Judp Wllllam O. K*-111 a
J>eattng onlered by the U.S. 5lh Qrcult
Court oo dtl-motklltl to _..
evkkmce oiltlllted by wiretap& llt
numerou1 eus 111..tvfna charpl ol
JW'CO!ICI, cambl!ni. • I t 0 t ti 0 D •
ractreteeriog and tu .. ,s1on.
Attomey1 Joy Hogan, Donald llltnnao
artd lllnlet PeaTIOO COGductetl the -tlonlni ol .llltcltoil for 1~ boun .. baltall
of • def .... 1 • ..,....
I j
•
r
• . • •
• .
•
Today's .Flaal
N.Y. Stocks
ORANGe COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 20; 1973 N TEN CENTS
Gray: Told to Clam Up
WASHINGTON (UPI) -L. Patrlclc
Gray ill said todsy be bas been onler«I
to refuse some informaUon request'!(l of
hiJ!l by the Senate committee weighing
his nomination u FBI cli)'ecto<.
The development came alto< Sen. John
v. Tunney (D-Oallf.), exprea.ed .belief
the White Hoose ha. "decided .to throw
Mr. Gray to the wolves."
Gray denied be Intends to withdraw as
nominee for the FBI post.
Gray, resuming the witness ~ir, told
Saw Hughes,
Says Nevada
Top .Official
CARSON CITY, Nev. (~) -Nevada
Gov. Mike O'Callaghan ilnd"todsy he met
with_ recluae blDlonalre Howard Hughe>
in a London, England hotel room over the
w~¥nd to. discuss Hughes' Nevada
gaming empire.
O'Callaglian said Hughes, wllo left
Nevada on Thanksgiving 1970, gave
"every indication that he hopes to return to Neva,.tta," said O'Callaghan. "He like!
the stAte."
O'Calleghan declined to d l s c u as
Hughes' l""sonal appearance, terming
speculation over the billionaire's physical
condition a "game." But he said "there
WU no doubt in that meeting of who WU
telling who what to do."
Hughe>' public relatlona representative
in Los Angeles, Richard ffanMb, COft-
flnned that the' meetiJ>g toot place, and
said, "they discussed business matters
as they pertain to Nevada for Mr. Hnghes
and bis properties.."
O'Callagban said be flew from Las
Vegas, Nev. by co~ J<! Fr14oY·
and returned to Jltvada late Swiday. •
AcCOmpenyb# u.e ~ WU-f.hif
Hamdlbl, ~ of the Nevada a.m-
ing Control lloord. .
O'Callal!iian said the meeting bad been
urged by lilm to detei:mlne "Mr. Hughes'
future corporate plans which will affect
Nevada." ·
Hughea.owns seven casinos in Nevada,
--Including aiz-ln-Las-Yegas and one In
Beno. Together, the cas!noS pull In aome
If. percent of the entire gaming ·revepµe
take of all casinos In the slate -or about
$102 mlllion out of a total)'l31.l million In
WI.
' . ' • . • • • • -.
.. Reservation> Res'identS ·v,, ,1.,. I _;,;, • 'J ~ ·,. , 1 • , ~L I .... ,.,. i > "-• ' '
•.l ,,·o I
-F.etition /or-Election
~ .. '
·~. ' -.
t;•WOUNDED KNEE, $.0. (i'J')~ i)\;ill « the Plne'.RI~ hidian Hes •
:llon hove submitted a petition to th .eel· ~al governm•t .asking' that ~ an
:ilection oil whelher ti> dissolve the pree-:inl tribe! c<insUtutlon and select a new
:IOrm ol 1ovemment for the Oglala Sioux.
·=·Interior Department opoltesman Jaclc
:llurphy told a press briefmg In Pine
i!ldge Monday that th .. pelltloo bore more il1an 1,lllO lignatures. He said Jt wa.<belng
:e..ked to delermlne whether t!Je·""!ujf.
td 30 pei:cent of reselvation's qualifled
'*"·Were aslt!ng!or the eledlon. ·
•l(Untted Press International iepcirted ~, the federal gov:~en~ rev~~
"\ "' . .., ~ .
.Corridor'; Name· -,_. ' . .
'<\ ' 1 I to Be. Re(p.est.ed
or 'Use on Plan • •
today it h .. so!lened Ila stand somewbat
in a new effort' to persuade Ute IDdians
to giv' up.
(It asked local resldentl' and leaders
-Of the American Indian Movement to
"agreee in pQnclple" to broad contours
of a government offer made SizndaY,
UPI said.)
The peUUon was handed Monday to
Buruu ol Indian Affairs Supt. Stanley
Lyman. It asked that the Department ol
·11\1!-ln\efiOl'·acder t,h e elt!Ctlol!, 1'-flich '
'wwld· decide whether to thro• oUt <>r
keep, ·Ille .~ cqistiM!oa .and. lribal
· C9Ulldl JOVmunent. •
The milltent lndiane who have been
boldilll! • the 1iny • r-.atioa. town ol
Wounded Knee !or 21 dayt have been de-JilaJIC!int a neif election to replaCe lribal
Oiairman Richard WUson.
The AmeriCan Indian Move.-t· (AIM)
bas said the rem~~a\ ol Wllll!' la 1 con-
d!Uon for giving pp the vll!ag•. -ptU·
i.l.oo, however, did not mentil)ll Wllaon.
The Indians holding the vlllqe walled
Moad,ay for woi)I h)>m, fedj!nl ·~ ...
ton on proposals to end the conlroolation.
Morphy aaicl It was , hot linmedtately mown bow many voters ,are needed to
hava the eloctlcil implemented. lie oclded
that a delay ol about 30 ~ could be
opected· befor;e lllY ·-crulll be • arranged. '
Ruslell Means, an AIM leador and an
Oglala, baa announced be 'Will be • CllJdl.
date far lribll chairman.
No Incidents ~ repot'Ud Monday u
-1 ..... and U.S. manbols lDliJ>.
--=urllJ roedbloclol at pojnta lead-lnC lllto llle .....,itd vllloge.
Cuba P,act Test Set
"We establilbed _ direct lines of
peraona1 communication,'' said
O:C._l\agban. "We discus>ed Mr. Huglies'
future corporate plans which will affect
Nevada. We dicl not dlsousa te1al prob-
lems or event.I, of the past. We ad-
dresoed ourselves only to thole matters
directly ftlated, to gap'ling." 1
When Hu~ left-Nevada in 1rzo, ·there
were i112 million in lawsuits pending
(See HUGHES, Page Z)
Council Delays
Coast Zone .. Okay
Qn t!do. Village
The ~ zone ,PmDit for Don Koll's
$2.5 million Lido Village In Newport
Beach won't be-acted on-for J:t ·least~
another week.
Facint a sta&gerlng agenda that toot
them Into the wee hours this morning Ill
San c:i.m.nte, . SoiJth Coast Regional
C'A>astaJ. Conservation Commissioners
delayed' action on the project until their meetln8 next Monday In Uong Beach.
11,.; Koll project, which will include 1
five-level parking garage at the comer o(
Central Avenue and Via Oporto, has
already received all needed approvalJ
from the city. ~ coastal commission, which bas
development controls through Proposl·
tion 20 on a five-mile-wide 1trip of.
Southern california coasUine, must ap-
prove the project befora It can be butit.
Besiclu the parlting building, which
will esceed the city's basic height limita-
tion for the Lido Sj>ops area al the city,
Koll ' plans to convert the area Into 1
shopping cenler almllar to San Fran-
clSCO's Ghlrardelli Square. AD of the sbope, offices a n d
apartment 1 between Berbblre'a
Restaurant and Imperial Sav!np and
Loan on Vla OpQrto will be renovated and
I number of piibllc IOCtll WI)'> to the
bayfront will be tnolalled.
Cllmntly, moll of Ille -... -...... ~ ... mm-t along
that llretcb of balldllCf II cloeed to the
ubllc.
The <>ranee ~ Joint -
c.mmrttee lut --the KoD ......, to come to the committee
-Ing next montb with plane for
Mlrtu facilities atone the bay. ~ member& of the commtlieo
.... .......-.. ',..,...i IQ-
. .,. .. Ill .. --of-· ont: _._ ........ 11o1-.
~ti.Cy 16 _,,.. pumpaot la Pl"•
the Senate Judiciary Committee ba could
no longer give memben full aeceu to
FBI rues or answq .all their questions.
He said be was aetlng oo the basis of •
previously undlscl<!'ed acder Issued 'Fri-
day by Attorney General Richard G.
Klelndlenat and said he. could uswer
"only procedural, not substantive" ques.
Uons about FBI procedures. '
White House Press Seoretary ROna!d
L. Ziegler replied, "Ab8olutely not,"
when asked lJ Nixon abandoned hope of
getting Gray confinned,
Senate Republican leldet Huah Scott
also sajd after a meeting with NIJon that
the President's support of Gray "is ex-
acUy the same" u when be submitted
the nomination.
Gray's dLsck>sure of restrictions on his
testltnonJ came when Sen. B1rch Bayh
([).Ind.), requested -that three former
employes of the FBI and the Committee
to He-Elect the President be sub)>oedled to appear.
The commiltee approved the request,
but Gray refused to o(fer his views on
one of the three -Judith Hoback, of
West Palm Beach, Fla., a former assis-
tant to the treasurer of lhe re-election
finance committee.
Miss Hobaclc privately 10Ugh1 out the
FBI during the Watergate investigation
to communicate ln£onnaUon outside the
presence of committee officials.
Gray provided the committee with
(See FBI, Pa1e Z)
. '.
' I ' I • ' • ~ .. ,,~
SPRING'Jl·HERE'"-T:;.{ayowaa'U!efirst daYof sprlng.
It was supposed to Jocjk. l.!Jie the paslm'al scene at
'left with-flowers produced by the season'tl~ ln$as
of rain surrounding pretty Hedy Harte, 22, of Costa
, ~ , MILT ~I""~ 1111 ~ ,_..
Mesa. iD8tead rain produced situaUon .more lib
·picture' at right Hedy, in good weath,.-and ·bad, II
a Jl6YCbolog)' major at Cal State' Fullerton.
'
~pring Makes · Big Splash
Downpour Greets First JJ-1 o~niwg on Orange' f;oast
By-J\)llN' ZALLER
Oftlilt'~,,... ..... ,..,
The Orange c6ast's lo~ rainy season
continued into the first mommg or spilng
tOday ¥ cqistal cjties cOuected: u°pwards
of a half inch of rain. ,
No significant flood damage wu
reported from the · new storm, whlch
brought the . season rainfall average to
nearly 15 inches in mOst cities.
But the ·unusually long wet season,
which began in nonilally dry mid-
l!Ovember and continued lntennlltently
Into the _first day ol spring, baa ·bad
seY.eral side effects.
Among them are:
-Thirty to 60 lost working days, due to
rain Or mud, have cost coast home
~evelopen· tebs ot>thouaands· ol-dollan\
Smaller subcontractors have suffered ad-
ditlonll Iosses. ·
-Road projects_ have . encountered
similar delays, Among the projects
' •
delayed up to slI weeu baa been the llnJr.
01 the lltW!>oli.. ~ay under con ..
1lruction:at I!rl.j{Ot Sthlet In~ Mm.
--On the positive side, eyeoly speCed'
storms 'ha>• enabled ·t!\O Orang~ Cwn'ty
Water District · to capture .and slbre
upwa,rds of IS,000 acre feet ol •torm ~If. Coupled with rainfall 'that ·will
soat directly Into the un<!el'ground waler
table; the district says Ii has pro/i\ed to
th .. tUile of 4u lllllllon from thlJi· year's
st.orm season ·to date. That' ·sum re~resenti the cost of IS pOn;.nt ol Ille
diStrict's annual water consumption, and
twice the ampunt collected last winter.
· -The long rainy ......, ha. both hurl
aiid helped county agriculture operiiUons.
Slr.eable but evenly spaced storms are
credited with helping to leach salts lrom
countr firmland, but the nln baa gone oa a month longer than normal. Thia will
shorten ..,mewbat the lenath of the grow·
Ing aeuon and probably coot growers
money, according to Harold otto, a farm
Lack o.f Unitlentifrod .. ' .
Cmimliks ( Clhulh Bill ' '
•
By CANDACE PE,\JISON
Of ... Dltr ....., ...... .
BUii balie been' Introduced In Congress, .
lncludJng one by Rep. Andrew Hinshaw
(!I.Newport BeaclJ), to creale a "T0111b
of-the Unknown SOidier" for the Vietnam
War -but there mfahl 'not be a body to
put Ill It.
A ~ for the tl.S. Army said
Jllonday there are no unidentified
caaualtlel from the Vietnam conlllct.
However, because there are atlll l,128 men ll)ilalng Ind UMCCOUDtod for Ill
Soathout Alla, It II poaibte ooe o! these
-be unldentiflahle, the Army offiClal
111d.
0.. POW (Priloner of War), Marina
Sgt. iloolld L. Ridgew•y of -· Tu .. rocentiy C.me borne alive, creatmc
a m,atery.
A funtral WU held and a ~ burled
In I 11'"0 morbcl U RldgeWly'I wJien
he ....... -.. dead. -of. fldlilJ ' .... .... to Identify llllt ~-no-• 11 ..a,;i.~to·
·past wan. There were a,532 unidentified
bodies after World War II and 1156 alter ' the Korean War,
The Army, which handles all fuoerol
arrangements for Vietnam casualties,
ll!ld the use ol helico!'l!rs to recover the
dead and wounded made It easier to ideJ>.
Ufy bodla. Even when the. ldentUl!"'Uon
lag was deslN>yed or blown away. the
bodlos were not yet decom[l0¥d eoough
to eliminate flnllerprlnts.
A ~Slllltl estimated I h a t
rmgerprlnts were u.sed to estsbllsb '15 to
1111 pel'CObt ol the ldenUt1's which mlibt
otberwiae be quutionable. ",. n t " 1
~rds were the oecood moot useful tool.
Modem tclence also baa ueV'Kie:J
methods to approximate the height,
weight, •ge and other characterlsliCI
lrom Joa 1 few frAlmenta 9f a 1>1_dly
man&Ied~.
The bocl\et of air crewmen, whet-com-
moot ol the .....,., lllUally CAD be
by tho 1Irmlt number If
( <:A,IUALTIBS. Pie• I)
adviser with tbe University ol California
utenslon 1ervlc6 In Allahelm.
• 11111 the even spoclng of storms bas not
!Jolped evUf<>Jle. I '
Spokuman for construcUon -
said· ttiat the .elfect ·ol rain bas been
unusually severe 'this year 1• precisely
becaute it has been so evenly spaced.
Work on the Newport Freeway has
been particularly hard hit.
"We were just ready to go back to
work tomorrow ,'1 said 1 spokesman far
the stste highways departmenl ''But
now it loots .like we'll have to wait
another week !or It to dry oul"
The freeway bad been slated for com·
pletion past Bristol Street to Mesa Drive
in late February. However M nOn-work-
!!18 dlyt due to raJn or llUld since the.
project was bagua In WI have pushed
the completion dale back to late April or
May. Most of th~ ,delay baa been en-
&nultere<(. lhts aeason, the spokesman
'laid. •
Weat .. er
Your calend• may tell you It's
spring but the ' ,...tiler service
says more rain la due on the Qr.. ang~ Const begirinlng 'f1lunday.
Wednesday will be partly cloudy,
Wilh highs of 60 defll'Otll It the
heacbes,,J'lslng to 113 Inland. Lows
In the IOI.
INSIDt: TOii/\ l'
When 2'orcmtoa"' choow to
take in a blue mouic on a Fridal' !lighl-'<l Am Curiolu Yel!otD,"
tor •:tamplc -thcv need "" bcbw titter and no ccr. Thq rim-
plU ll>Cllt •nlil 111fd>dght and !line
tn Ch4n .. l 79. See •""11 on
Page 9. .... "" ,, .... ,... . ................ _ _,, ' ""'*' ,..,. ,, -..... ........... ..,. ,..,...... ,, -" -. .............. ,,.,. --.
·-
\
•
"
·Chamber Of icials ewport General . Plai;i,1
1 Newport Har1>or Olamber al Com·
-~-, ..... --.... et Ille Newpart lleoch
general plan aud wwed to mab the
Chamber'• voice better bean! aa pro-
poeed rezoolna In the city late. shape.
"W~ should 1000 loam and appreciate
that tU!nc away J"Operly values In one
area al the city b bound to a/lect the
rat of ua," a.kl Chamber President
Richard Stevene. He was reCerrlng to
proposed &>wnzon!ne on the Newport·
Balboo P .. lmula -beloe studied..
.. 1 want to tee more lnvolvtment from
UI," ·he Aid. "When ooa--cmeM fl tbe
popa1a11oo1e11 ·~ ....... -
be beard."
James Parker, chalmum ol the
Chamber'• Governmental Ualaon Com-
mttte<, told tile dlrector11 hll pone! ta
about to complete Its own report OD the
general plan.
"Nobody re a 11 y understand• the
signlfJCaDCt or these actk>NI," Parker
_Big Plant Sold?
Government to Get Niguel Facility
Orange County Supervisor Ronald Caspers was notUled today
by the U.S. Genersl Services AdminiJtratlon that plans to acquire
the huge North American Rockwell plant In Laguna Niguel are firm
and proceeding rapidly.
IN A LETTER from T. E. Hannon, general services reJllonal ad-
ministrator in San FranciS<o, it was stated the facillty wou!a be uaed
to house federal activities performing a variety of governmental func·
tions.
He estimated total employment at the location at 3,000 to 5,000
persons.
A SOCIO«onomic .iudy and an environmental impact state-
ment are now being prepared, Hannon said.
Caspera wu thanked by the federal oUlclal for Information pro-
vided on housing In the vicinity of the faclllty.
fIT Executive Confirms
Pressure Against Chile
WASIDNGTON (AP) -11'1' vice preal·
dent William R. Merriam told the Senate
today · his company preaaured the White
HOUie and the Slate Department to
threaten Chile with economlc collapse.
(Earlier story, Page 4)
Cblle'1 Manist pmldent, 3alvador
Allende "had stolen OW' property without
compeblltloo," he aald.
~ M<nlam, who beaded the Wul!Jniton
' olflca al lnten11tlooal Ttlepbooe " Tel'll'"ph Corp., acknowlqed that the
1-of the prusut8 WU to force All'11111! "to pay us oil."
Merriam added: "That'• all we
,I wanted." . n.m olllclal, now 1tat1ooed tn Italy, ~ ..... the leadoll wltoaa .. ... opecial
. Senate foreJcn relatlonl 1uJ>commlltee
Jaunclled "" JnvestllalJoll of 1111 ~ • exerted on U.S. foreign )!Ollcy 'bf' r.rre ~ American ftnns with vast holdln&t In
t other countries.
The IOft·spoken witne&1 resisted sug-
. gesttons by subcommittee members and ~ lawyers that he did more than exchange f infonnation with William P. Broe, the
I Central tntelligence Agency's top man
for clandestine operations in Latin
t America .
Sen. Charles Percy (R·lil.), asked :
:F. v· . t iremen isit
, Newport Homes
'1 ~ :u:ewi:~b :ao~er ~:~: = =:
}I as part of their aMual fire prevenUon
~ program. i Beginning April 2, firemen will drive
I their big rigs from door to door ex·
; plaining how residents can better protect
I t~emselves.
"We will give them a short talk on
1 home fire safety and we will Identify
V hou!ehold fire dangers," Public Informa·
J tion 0£Hcer Art Morton explained .
Morton said this year the department I i1 trying to reduce lhe time it spends on ! the program.
l "'Ibis interalve effort hopefully will
I keep lire safety In people's mind! longer
~ than if we spread It out," Morton said.
J OlANel COAST tr1
"Old you consider yourself an agent of
the CIA?"
Merriam responded: "Oh, No, Sen.
Percy."
In fact, the witness went on, 1'I had no
ldea then that he wa1 clandestine. We
had luncheons Jn places with 300 to 400
people."
Broe confirmed that he and the CIA of.
flcW txcllan&"1 Information.
"I talked to Mr. Broe many umea, just
wbea WI had llOIDething to tell each
other," be added.
11le !Tr olflclal aaid "the bJihesl peo-
ple we went to" were Arno Id
Nachmanolf, then clliel advller to Henry
Kiiiinger f0< Latin America, and Charles
Meyer, aaafllanl aecre••-al State for
Uitln Alnerlca. -'
H~~r&;r T~~~s
Study Personnel
Rule Revisions
Newport-Mesa achool trustees tonight
will be asked to give preliminary ap-
proval to proposed changes in the district
personnel regulations.
A committee of staff, teachers and ad·
ministrators has worked for the past
year rtviewing all angles of the district's
rules and regulationa and has come up
with a number of recommended
revisions.
SupeTintendent of Schooll John Nicoll
said Items such as the district's
grievance procedures, maternity leave
and !abbaticals have undergone con-
siderable change and some still haven 't
been given final approval of the district's
staff.
The trustees are being asked to give
the package a first reading and set the
matter for final adoption at a later date.
Also on the agenda at 7:30 p.m.
meeting in the Davis Middle School
multi·purpo!e room, 1050 Arlington
Drive, Costa 1'1esa are requests for
transfer of funds to cover unexpected
equJpment expenses and a request for
funding under the Bilingual Education
Act.
Mid. "1'111 boplD( our oommltte< can
deftiop ID owrvfn ol the Ceneral plan
~ .... _ ..... dwell ell the
ll*lfl<O,"
Moo! dlrecton ·-,..... t.bol draatlc changes In 210olng (plannen are
aaklnc all multi·lanilly Iota on the
Penlnlula he zoned R·l.5 limited duplex)
will destroy property values and hence
be Illegal.
Parker aaid lhe Chamber should otand
behJnd an orderly, on-going study of the
•
Enrollment
Drop Seen
For UCI Term
UC Irvine will achieve only 40 percent
of It!: planned growth nett fall , according
to newly revised enrollment projections.
The seven-year-old campus had been
e11:pected to add about 500 students to its
campus population next fall , which would
have brought total enrollment to 7,860.
But the new projections, presented to
the UC Regents Friday, predict a jump
of less than 200 nei:t fall to a total enroll-
ment of 7,560. .
UC lrvlne was one of three UC cam-
puses that no longer expects to meet lta
original !all 111'1! enrollment projections.
Campus olflcJala attributed the revtaed
projectloos to a fall .. lf In appllcaU0111
. from inromln,g freshmen and junlor col·
lege transfer students.
M a result of the decreased p~
Jectlom, the eampuo ta still accepting
qualified students Into all major pro-
graD11. Last year it turned away some
student!: from biological sciences and two
years ago it was redirecting hundreds of
students to less crowded campuses 1n the
UC system.
School officials speculated on the
reuon for the decrease tn appllcations
Crom new students, but said they couldn't
pinpoint any one reason.
"It's a nationwide trend," sald Masa
Fujltanl, uslslant admlsslom officer.
"I'd hate to put my finger on any ooe
rea.aon."
Among the reasons she cited were
abolishment or the draft, the dilllcu1ty or
getting finaociaI aid, and a general feel·
Ing IDIOD('yoting people that a college
education may'Dot always be necessary .
UC ' lrline•o · fall, ln"~I p,,..
Jections contributed tO an Overall' drop in
projections in the UC system. It now ex-
pects to enroll 99,638, compared to an
earlier prediction of 100,464.
The new enrollments were released in
conjunction with a request from the
regents for $10.2 million in additional
state funds to match anticipated f-ederal
cutbacks. However, when the lower pro-
jections were presented, 'Regenti scaled
down their request to $8. 4 million.
UC President Hitch maintained the
new request was needed for '"essential
operating needs of professional schools
and academic departments."
From Pagel
FBI ...
maater plan °"" 1t1tt II ii fdopted.
But Otan>ber -l)r.' Nol4I>
Wiii I IMtJe -ilittCt In his
criticism ol ~ ~ pl111 -to
dale.
"The Olam6er must take a hard stand now, 11 he said. 0 Tbt?re ls'", something
bulcally WICOOllltut1ooal about taking a
guy's land. decreaain& ill. value-'Dd glv.
Ing him nothing In return.'.'
Frlu.elle said the Chamber coJJllllitte<
should recommend that any downionlng
I
not take e!lect untU property ehang Frizielle capped ba<t by aayill( ba
-· -\ ml!y ~•hot the end p!,'lldUCI • Newport lleaclJ City Manager Robert ta l)>lng to be b<jt ''The way Jt ioob now
L. W)>nn. who attended the -.i tt aeems -·" -.,, said the maJorill" of oouncilroeo Stewm urced the c:oounlttee to com-
and pltnDers are 11very ~iotis of pros>-pltte !ts review of the general ~ID aoon
erty valueo." so the Chamber oan adopt boaic policy
8ut be aald open dlJCusslon of~ pros, • sti>tementa fo< Ille city to.J!udy, I ,.
and cons la needed before makJna any , "What I'm -real\y aa)'ID( ·ls tha the
stand ooe wa:; ar the olbe('. bnsinetYr.con:imuolt;y has to exertJta own
"'!1le end product ii going to be good fair share of voke In tbe city," he said.
but gettlnc there iJ tu>in& to be painlul," "Our voice should be heard just u mucb
he· aald. . as lhe homeownen groups."
Ufll T ....... N
City Aides .
Hint Wate1\
' Pressure Dip
Much al\the <;astern haU of Newport
Beach may "' facing 1 noilce1ble drop 1
In household wal<!< ~ this 111m-
mer, city offict&i! reporf.' ' I .
Public Work$. Director 'J~ T. bov·
Un said there ta a cblll)Ce that the l'8n :
Joaquin Hilli .iteeefvoir, pul oul·al IO!"I·
Ice last m0oilt wben hua~ era~.·,,,.
lound in the >!alls, will be on!y ]lirtly
filled during th~ peak aea,..., •
"The problem Is tha\ even p111:t1y
filled, the wa_ter pre.uure will •lUI 'be
lower than naimal," he said. •
San JoaquiB ts nomlaily Uled by-the
city to ·~· 'iti water lines during
the hours of greatest demand -auch 11
on hot summer days. Its waters normal·
ly l!el'Vice Big Qmyon, -View Home. and the Newport Center fiDAncial
and commerelal ceoten.
Durtna the cooler winter !""'tha this year, when San Joaquin wu DOt In aerv·
Ice, llevlln Aid the peaklnjr water WU
drawn directly from the maln water IJne
ol the Meln>polllan Water Dlslrlct
(MWD) oormally used lo DU San Joaquin.
Devlhl aaid there ta lllll no way al
knowing U the presrure from the partly·
filled reservoir will be too low to be
Viewing the Dollar tolerable. .
"But we are hopeful that 1we will be
prepared for any oontlngenc)I, even U the Treasury Undersecretary Paul A. Volcker, just returned from Paris,
assured Congress Monday that the U.S. has devalued the dollar enough
-both for now and into the foresee-able future. In fact, Volcker saw
some chance for upward valuation. Senators were skeptical.
~ .l:1:\!=ra~ ~;,"'~~
there iJ a chance the resemlr may Dot
be filled -even part way --unW at
leu\ mid-SUlll!DU unleaa special pet-
mission from ltie olale b glftn.
From Pagel
CASUALTIES.
llevlln said tf thal ta the ._; there Dollar Has Mixed . willdelinlte1ybeaseverewater~
•• He said ti iJ e w.ater lrqm lllO problem unless r llepl' in.
D M k million gallon-' . cu,.;. ~
nothing else works. ay; ar ets could aervloe the_.. normally peUed
A Joint Casualty Resolution Center will by San Joaquin but K \'QU!d be upslllve.
be established to work with North Viet· Called U · 1 d "'lbo&e areu' are' al 1 'higher ma-
nam to hunt the bodies Of these missing • nsett e,,•,. lioo than Bi~Canr.n !Ulclwa Wool4 llaW! ainnen. ;ho ~Also wU1 Ill' Jo get In-_ ~ , Oljll. "'11ial !;(.: m...i..
to ""'" of i-,enc1 ,,souili Vlelnam !'..oNDON (AP) -The dollar 'hid a 'to :JfP•. 1 • ' '"'f'.-·· where Americans have not been able to n.vlJn aald the ed by ~~ mixed day In world money markets to-""" areas aerv " go~e sepa~!~r :~!~~Y will take day, moving up in some centers and Cih~ . .\W~com'p1?8ing moat of the~ down in others. Dealers here called the of""tlle· d~~ are on a pvtty feed sys-years. state of the markets "very unsetiled." tern; whlch imetn.s no pumping 1s needed
Bodies missing since World War 11 still But they said .... had been ... -.....M to0keept~ P,resJUl'e on tbe 11ines . .-· are being found..._ In 1970, the remains of wuo ~~.,,.,,.. :.wLamLhav:e tw.o~out.Jbere nve Marines killed in 1942 were UR• after -the adoption ' ilf-PariS Fffiiay Ofa ~-d'-'-'•• bl" I~ -•td
lkla" te f I t lional an -•• ,.. any '" ' "~' -covered on Guadalcanal. new ung sys m o n erna ex· pumJ:.o:.ater to the areas normally tate-
The bodies of three unidentified change rates. ing Sill Joaquin " DeYUn said. 'IBut
servicemen -one from ceacb of the This was only the second day that the we fu~f:~;t foresef: what the demand
previous wars -are now entombed at markets have operated under the new willbe.up.iqere."
Arlington National Cemetery in the floating system.
"Tomb of the Unknown Soldier." Despite the lack ol definite trends, and
Congresl never bu acted on proposals to In ·some centers widely swinging rates,
change the name to the "Tomb of the there was no sign of the heavy dealing
Unbowns." that touched off the world monetary
Rep. HIMhaw's bill ts now before the crisls two months ago.
''"°"' Page l
HUG:HES ...
Hoose Commltte< oo Veterans Affairs. Trading was Ughl, a sign that many
It din!cta the Secretary of Defense to speculators were sllll lllllng on ~ against him and HD(hes Tool Co.
•
bring the remains ol an unldenlif!ed sidelines awaiting !Inner evidence of how A year 'ago, the state Gaming o:im.
AmerlCll'I. serviceman to the U.S. for a the floats would work. The gold markets mission ~used to approve a top.level
ceremonial burial in the memorial were quiet, another sign of returning change In the Hughes organization, citing
amphitheater at Arlington National stability to money markets. Hughes' refusal of face-to-fac;ti meetings. date! or the interv:iews with Miss Cemetery. The dollar was aharply down in Lon-Hannifin '8¢d that because the meeting
Hoback, but refused to discuss the. case 'The serviceman to be buried must don, Frankfurt and Zurich during the witbllugDes hai been Jii.ld, there U no
further when Sen. James Eastland (0. have lost hi.5 life while serving overseas · morning but recovered much of the loss legal requirement for hlm to show up In
Miss). asked, "How-many times did she during 'lhe Vletna~ War. later ln the day. It clo!ed substantially Nevada for further gaming matters. He
hide the truth?" The, special grave for the Vietnam lower in Paris and Tokyo. It closed said an apP.Jicatlon from Huch es
"Under my orders from Mr. Klein-dead w6uld be near lhe existing tomb, hlgher, however, in Milan, 4m&terdii.m regarding shifts in company offi~ is
dienst I can on1y discuss this procedural-· according to Hinshaw's Jegislatian. and Madrid. ' expected ''shortly."
ly and I can't give any substance to our -;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1nterviews with Miss Hoback," Gray .•
said.
"I received my orders and I have to
carry them out, 1' Gray said referring to
Kleindienst.
"I don't think those orders are belp!UI
to yoo at all," Bayh observed.
"I have to take my orden from the at·
torney general and the President," Gray
said.
NOW, HEAR · THIS!
Accoriling to the ~sident's Councll on Environmentel Quality,
it is becoming incrHsingly difficult for anyone to escape noise. I
I
I
l
I
r
DAILY PILOT
T1"',0ranpt CMll DAILY ~II.OT, wtlll wllldl
i. CCl!Mlntd Ill• MllWl·,,.r.u, .If Ml.._ W
IN Ortnpe Q)e11 ~l1h1nt ~f. '""'°'
' r•I• lllU11ot!i •ni PlllllllMll, Mend•Y fllt'lllllll
frldt'I', tor COii. Mn., Hews-rt ktdl.
Hunllng!O!I IHdl/!Jounttln Vllltf, l,AfutWI
lftldl, lnol111/&lddlflltcll Mii IN ClitfMn"I
5111 Jvt111 C.pl1! .. M A lllr\olt P911'-1
tl!lllOll II Pllblt'llltd Slturll1'1'1 -.d lvndt.,....
Tiit ,...1M:IP11I 1111blllhl119 plan! 11 11 DI W..1
.. , llf'Mt, Cwl1 Mna. Clllfonlt., HiUt.
Anti-burglar Campaign
Called Bright Success
40,000,000 ~eric1ns risk heering impairment.and .,other physical
end mental effects. 44,000,000 other Americans have the utility of
their dwellings adversely affected by noise from airer•~ or traffic.
21,000,000 Americans ert affected by construction-relotod noi11.
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Robtrt N,. WtH
~relldwtl IN f'ublithtr J•c• R. Cllfl•v Vic• ,,_1111111 W Ckntrtl ~
Tlioll'l•1 ICtt•il
f:fllw
Tlio11111 A. M•r,.hl11• .......... lnl Editor
L Petet ICri-t
~ atldl Cll'I' lllHN
... .,,,.., .... Offiq
JJJ) Newporl lewltvtr4
M1lll1t1 .+444r"ti ,.0 . lo• 1111, 'lUJ --CM• -..1 m '#nl &ey llNll ~ IMCtl: tt1 F-1 A-
twllt"""" llMCtl i 11VS attdl towlw•l'll Jiii c""*'i.1 ., Hortti 11 c.trMet a..1
, ... , •••• (714J 642 .. 121
c ... ,., .......... '4l-1•7t
~ 1'1J, 0r.,... Cooltt '¥111111'1""9 ~-,.. """' •letltt. "'"'"''**"'· .. ,..,,.. ...... .. ..,.,._,. """"'
"'9'1' .. ~ wlltllul ..-111 ....
"""'"" ., Cllll\lf'llllll twMf. ..... cs.. ,.., ...... llt c.a. ....
CAlffilnlll. ....,.,.._ 11r un1tr •M
_...,.,., .... -" tl.11 "'*""'"' ""'""" ............. llM mtrl!flW,
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Claiming remarkable success in cutting
down resktential burglaries, the Newport
Beach Police Explorers wlll aradual!y
end their role3 in the department's yea~
old anti-burglary cam'palgn -Operatlon
ID.
'nle Explorers have canvassed several
secUons of the city, engraving valuable.!
wttb the owntrs' driven lleeue numben
for eaay ldentillcatloo U lheY •re stolen.
Bui after I !Jnal awing through Part
Newport Aparlmenls early Jn April, the
Exploren wOI alt back and let people
come to them.
1be (int Itta covered by Operatkm
ID, l'<rllnaula Point, hu reported II
per<ent leas bw'glarlea since laat aum·
mer, according to Olflcer Stenley Bresa-
ler, the Erploren' ldvtaer.
Bn!aler aald most of the credit for the
ma&aive C!Ul in buralarles lhould lo to
the new Procram. which haa acoretf aim·
llar aucceues In • number ol other clUes
that have tried it. ,
Brealer aald the pnlll'lllD 1180 con-
liJla of O(lualtlng homeowner& lo burt·
lary technlquea, recomliWlillllC 1ec11re
door locb and puUlng an OperlUon ID ,,
sticker in the window to warn off would--
be thieves.
The scouts have also covered 140 bomea
in Harbor View Hills during their cam-
paign and made one run through part al
the Park Newport complea.
"'l'hot place iJ ao big, we decided to
go back one more time and get the rest."
Bresoler said. 0'The kid! have been ·go1nc
ao hard that we thought we'd end oor f.,..
ma! can,.aslng technique after that and
let Interested ~le come to us. 11
Bressler aald the Explorera worted
more than IS boura over two Saturdays
to cover the Harllor View Hilla.
EventuallJ', the Ell]>loren will be
phaaed <Mii ol Operation ID wort altb-
getber, Brel81er said.
..Once the police ~t program getJ
alarled, we'll put tbOm· m II lull·llrne
aad hit the entire city;• Bressler NkL
The cadet corps. for Whlcb lundlnc II
llOUit In llUIJear'a municipal budlet, would conalal tllree IO flv& yoonc .,....
pie worltlnc toward ewntual careera in
law enfMCemenl.
They would wort fuH lime one! be
pa1a rqu1ar ""'"' 11raSJer aald.
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Now what does this have to do with carpet? Carpeting wiR
drastically improve accoustics in eny room by quietjng your home
environment, making r1dios, ttlevision, end the f1rnRy sound better.
Remember, et Alden's, even our LOUD c11patin9 is quieter.
~,
ALDEN'S
CARPETS o DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4138
Ma • Din. t tw l:IO; Fil t te t; Set. tJJO te I
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nge c~!!' ,,_.ay's Flaal
N.Y. Stoeks
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ORANGE COUl'fTY. CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MA'RCH 20, 1973 c: TEN CENTS
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Costa Mesa
Councilmen -,
'Receptive'
'nle first bond electloo in Costs Mesa's
history - a 16.z94 milllon general obllaa-
t.ioo issue for open space -was proposed
to tbe city COllllCil Monday niibt by City
Manager Fred Sorsabal.
Council appeared receptive to his sug-
gestion of a Jiel>l 11 election date b\lt
toOk no ofllcial action other than to
scbedule the propooal for stuely Mll,
Monday nighl
SOrsabal said the bond monies, if ap-
proved by the voten, would add more
than IOQ acres J>1. open space to the city
park system. ' Moot of the funds would be spent on
slll]llus properties plfered ftlr sale by the
32nd Agricultural Distrtct (fair board)
and tbe ' Newport-Mesa uni~ School
District.
A bond study prepared by the city
manager ·allows f,1.~ million for jbe
purchase ol 33 acres ol Orange County
~ =f,f = ~:.;!= immediately adjacent to the · future'
FairVtew Regional ParL
An addliioilal $981,000 would be spent ,
for approidmately 25' acres ol privately
owned properties. 'nlese woold be
distributed in three part zones to -make
up open lpace del!ciencles.
ose
, t DAILY PILOT ,.... ... L4t ,.,.
SPRING'S H,ERE-Today was the first d~y of spring. . Mesa. Instead rain produaMl ai,liiaUon mnre .Ilk•
It wis' s\ippo.e<t·to look lite: the·paSlon,l 'llCODe at · pietur6·at right. Hedy, in gnOd weather and 1-d; Is
loft' with' flowers pr'Oduted by ,the season's 15 illcb~s " ' a psycho\ngy major at. Ca\ State. F)lllerton. . • o~ r~ Slll'l'!>";",din~ pr~lt~ lled~ Harle, 12• of ~a · · " , ·, , , • Tbe overall 15,19t million figure also
> re110cts IUlf. million ftlr Jr;!-acti"'"' ~ ot'iiir~ ~· _ $2Sf,s00 for tllelrliilt~--···inhm.iflce. · ~
-Figurlnf .,,,. fir ........ COiis,
• !20,ooo for publicity ...i f!s,000 ·1or the
election i\self, Sorsll>al J)redlcted tbat
the oomplete !»II of the package
presented to the \'Otera wooild actually be
Sp~i~g. :Males: ·n1g -·Splash ·
$6.580 million.
Projecting a five peretl)I interest rate,
_ tbe bond_el<tjj~ raise CC.ta Mesa
taxes about 20 cents_per,100.of ~
valustion. Cost to an Ind 1 v Id u a I
homeowner, based on a $30,000 house,
-.Id-be approximately llUO per year.
~ suggested a sept. \.1 election
~le because it -.Id allow plenty of
time to sell the issue to the voten" but
be urged tbat tbe sales job llOI be done
by a hired pubHc relati<m firm.
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Downwur Greets Fir.st ~Iorning o_n Orange Coast
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By JOHN ZALLER
Of tt11 Deill'I' 'Jiit ltlff
•· ;;arif'IS hfhes fu most cjtl09_--7 .. :-· cc:-O"-..-·de~v'el~oi>e-rs teDJ .of tbousandl of dollaiii •
But the tinuaually long w.et :1eason, Smaller subcontr'-.c;tora have suffered ado
TIJe Orange Coast',\ lopg ,rainy seaoon
continued iDto ttie first triomlng of spring .
today a> cqastal cities collected UpWards
of a ·half Inch of rain.
No significant ' Doocl . diunage -ivas1 reported from the new storm, which
brough~ the sea.sou rainfall average to.
' . . .... .
which began Jn normally dry mid-dltlonal losses.
No9erilbeJ and continued lnlermlltenlly, · -!Wad projects have encountered
into tbe 'flrat clay ol apring, baS .had· slnillar detays. 11.mong !ht' projects
several side elficu. ' ' 4ela~ up to six 1'eW has been the link
Among them are': f ol the New1>9rt Freeway under coo-
' -TlllrtY to 60 lpst working days, due to •trucUon at Bristql s!!eet in,Colta.M•
rain or mua, have cost coast ~me =-on 'the positive aide, evlil!y SDIC9d
1to!ft1li havo enobled tbe Oraog-Cbmty
' · • • . Waler Dlslri!t to capture and ltore
Tbe city manager recommended tbat
the electioo campaign be nm by a bond ~ compooed of Costa .Mesa
residents. He predicted tbl& would
counteiact the public's leodency ·to
aulomaticaily oppose the bond Issue on
the lbo!orY that.city hall is try1ng•to "put
C ! 1'----' T1.~.1 _ • S j • Uj>'if9,rds of 25,llOO .... feet ., ..... · 011·ncw1len i!Ke teps =~~1~~~=~~. table, the .dlatr!Ct says ii bas 11'0lhod \D
.tbe tuoe of fl.I million from thla ,..r'1
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DAWN PATROL CONTINUES .AT,'WOUNi>ED KNEE OUTPOST
, For Mlli,ont-lnilllris, Polillons •nd Moro W•lting ~ . .. . ... '
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'!Re~~rvation Residen~ :. ,. '" . ~ . .
WetilU,n for Election
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: WOUND!lD KNEE1 S.Dr (AP).-'Re,1-.' <!itii>n for l\VIDl·UJ> ~ vU!qe."Tbe peli-lii-OI lbe l,'lne llldge lodlan ~a-·. tl!li. however, di4 not uientton Wilaon.
l')iOn have submitted a pe\IU6a to the fed-• Tbe lndjans holding the village waited
~I government· askJnc lbat' It:tnfer,Jln -y for -.I from federal negollo-
:election on wbether to dlll!olvetlie pf& ton oo -'8 to end the conlronlatioo.
.,ill tribal conslltutJ«i Jlbd select a .new , ' Murphy Mid it WU not tmmedlately
fonn of government-for lbe <Jtlalil Sioux. . ~ hw Dl8D1 voters are """'led to
Interior Department ~-JJK:)t 1hive tbe election jmplemenled. He ldded
oomething over" "'1 Its cltlJens. ,. , e?.:°1~~vr:~r:::t~:~.:. , Against Pier 11 Oub muruUes, according to Sorsabll wbo •
believes that "C.osta Mesa Js capable of ·
conductin~S: .:'J:."t~ 1'f"1 cam-By RUDI NIEDZIEL'lKI uie custMWy 30<il!Y "grace" Period to,
Of •· Dlltr "" sr.H '[>ler t~ owner• Jerry Owens and Gary
' .. T each:ers Lose . I
Their · Posters
' T~ at Costa Mesa '•
Everett Rea Intermediate School
'1 .; todiy wer~ sitUog around thejr cof-
fee lounge withoUt the customary
visual ~ of inspiration. ·
11. l>w'glar slipped into the room,
police were told Monday, stealing
thr .. psychedelic posters titled or
bearing the slogans: " L 0 I t
Horizon," uKeep on Truckin' " and
"Let's Boogie."
Alter iialening to comolalnls by nearly .Cllapin.'fi>r removal ol Ille zone except\on
a dozen Irate neighbors of lhe Pier 11 vlj>latjops. · , , · _ ; _ · , • • _ ·
tavern, Costs Mesa city CO\ll)cllmen Mon-'nleir determination to lmmedllitaly
day night acted.unanimously to'dnnn the moke tbe j>ert!>lt 'appeared motlvaled.by
popular rock club out ol 'buStness. residents of Church Street and E. ~ SI.
By rescindiog a mning v~ wider 'Wlio turned· OU! to -..... tbe •bor In
wblcll tbe 'beer•* Ind dance ball, hl!d ringing tones . , '
,1-i alloW'ed to O)l"'ale, ~ aft ' , Dtvld BIQWD of 11M Cllurdl St. bluted
hoping to ahut,fpre~ tbe doon of~ Pier 11 customers for coming up to~ Newi>Orl _Boulevald watertna .pof. ·lllde >of bis . house (and .:'golnj! to tbe .Fo~the$to0councllactlon,City . .-"and ""t~,~ prtvllle
'Attorney Roy E. Ji!M sal<t tbaf l'tVOCB· :Pf<lperly to gel to Jbe bOr, •
lion of the permit is eflectl\>e lfti:. ' He ..U jobliJd in bis,... bf.bis wife
medlat.ly and tbat any further operation ·who complained' of petaonal threats, peo.
of Pier 11 is in violation ol llie' law. pte Jl8rllul in tbelr -Y,. damal• to
Tbe COuQcll's second punc:h ii Hpected lheJr I~ and car, and ol nareotlc:i llled
to come May 7 during a l"/bllc. nuisance ari>UJld Pie. U. ' '
abatement Jiearlng, which 'on completion, • Ye~ another oelibl>orbood resident, W.
will allow June to seek a Soperij)J' Court' M. Fa11el11 told councilmen that the.
·injunction against o(leraUon of· the bar. "element" frequenting Pier 11 made
urphy told a preu bHeling in Pliie, that a delay ol about 30 daya could be
)Uclge MO!ldaytbat tbe patltl4M ~ mOte · · eipeded belcn any electlon could be
ban 1,tOll signatures. He aaid;tl wu belog arranged. · ·
ecked td delemiine ~ tbe '"'!"1r:
Invelti.gators said there was no
forced entry. Memllers of tbe colll10li dld not'Htend (SN P,IEll 11;· Pop %)
J!<f 311 percent of .... tldi·· ~ . G. . . . . ,vote.ti were uklnf for the ~ , -~till~=:.. o~e .. nor:
In a oew ellort. to _. Iba ~
tlo --::.;. ' • . . i (It locll ............
10( the ~ 'Jrdllt -·~ • : .. qree. tD ,._.,.., .............
:o1 a ............ Glfer DIOllt ~'
.jlPI said,)
; 1't petJtloo ·-,....., 'lt21 I J to -....... ol -....,. ••• , :L1111111. It ubd. tllit Ille....,_ of
:ibe ~ -1 • • --. wlilcb ~ -wb1llllr II 1kw 1111 er ~ u.p tbe pr11mt e1alitlfilt1 al tltllll..
• OUM:il IQftiNI ...
,,,. nilllant ~ .... -"""' Ille tilU' •• 2 tallon -fl. -w Kaeelwlt.,. ...... b .. ...
Dugh-:s Dn,e Ba~k
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"We ..tablllilled direct -linel of 4ald an appllcation from, Hu g b es
perlODal c om m u n I c-a t Ion.,' : aald ~ ~ID <')lllpany olfloera la
O'Callagbao ''We 1llacu1sed Mr. Hughes' , expeCted "lllnrtly." I , ,.
l'alln' ""lilft!e .J'll* wJik1> !fl\I afr!mt . , '. O'Ca/llllbaA Mid ba .,.hfd.~ .dil' ~· ~1'~ did not ...... legit~ flftn\ ~· ol boowlotl tbal~ Jl!llt,he
i.. ct -11 at 'lhi paal \ti, ""' ta'IW 19 "" Howanf iiuiliai -· m.
... ., ountlftl a;iio'!I' matleri cllldlng ~tlon ~'-.....,..,. ~=~ · ~'im. ~· wbo bove ~ ljlm ~ 11 ·~ ... , ..... 41172 mllllon in ),ainltiilt peodlng bonda pmele. . • '
...... him Md Hagbd'TlJO! Co. IA addlli>Q, O~ said ·11e had ·
A 1'1r '«v. the atali Gaming 0..-pblllcal dOscrtptiOnii ~ ,a..,i... tbat ap-
-ref\)aed to approve , a to!>'level parently mstcbed tbe JIWl be mel
1.ce ~· • me1 1111111eo bollle. -
storm aeaaOD to date. That IUl'D
represents the coil of 25 percent of lbe
district's annual water consumption·, and
twice the amount collected. tut wlntlr.
-The long rainy season bas both hurt
and helped i:ounty agricult~ operations.
Slze!!~le but evenly spao;ed 1torma are
Credited wltb helping to leach aalts from
county farmland, but tbe ralh bas -on a month looler tban normal. 'lllis will
sbo<teii oomewfiat 1be leogtb of the grow-
ing se~ and probably coot growers 'mo~y. ac~rding to Harold otto, a farm
·adviser with ibe Univmlty of Calilornta
extension service 1n Anaheim.
But tbe even spiClng of .tonm bas DOI
helped everyone. •
Spoj<esman. for cqnJtnlptl<n induatrles ' · csee'.,BAJN, l'l&o •> .
I
Weatller
Yourt calendar 'may tell )'°'1 iVI
spriog but• the --..,..,. aaya more ntD.11 due on tbe ~
aoge COUt beglm\inl '11tunday.
Wedoeaday wUJ ·ba ...,..,. •""""'• with hfiha ~ 60 d;.1.'Tiib.
beaches, rts!Dc. lo 13 Inland. Lows
In the40r. '. '
: · INSlltt: Titb.\ \I
, When T01'01llODM choofe It>
fdkc in a blilc movie .,. o Ftidap,
niQ~t.-·1 Am C.nour YrUo.,,'
for i mnpl< -tlMrr Med "'° bobp rittrr and no oar. T~e:i ,.,,..
Jilrvcit vn«I tllldnighl ond NM\·
\flt CiloMI 79, -SU ~ ..
PllQ10 •
~ ... :-1: =.,..... :: c ......... 2HI ~ ........ -~ 11 °'*"'Ill CM1W • 11 ....... ,,..., lt O..• Nttictt I ..... lt-11 ·~ ..... . ·-""""" ,, -=::~·· ~ =:-;r 11lllldq. -,,, ............. llbl
tblinnon lliclMI ......
£ ~n~ttop, cliing Neltbet O'Ca1Ja&114n nor HanDll1n bad
lllil ~'lbel!Mfelliig O'C*Hapan llfd llaafies•lndlctled ht
With )!uglies boo been 'beld, there la no win retaln owilenhil> othlt Nevada gai;n-'
1ei:a1 requinment 1or him to -up rn Lna ~ ~ .11 ono. at u..:11a1e•a I "" ........ -~ *1i a Ull 1t ..._.. ..... l>M ,... ........ , ...... _ 4 1111-.., inlbn llot-(AIM) 1211 llfd ... _ .. ,, ____ __ Neoda for lwtber pmipg JDllter&. He la!'gl!fl employen with $,_000 tftlPIOyes1 .._ ______ ...;.. __ __.
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DAllV PILOT c
Mesa Council Action
~
To Refuse
-CANCEIJ!D " .... Ion I« lllo _q+w .. I'll!' 11 ~
a«er --complalned "' -and lml'llly .-. "' tho ewport -donceciub.
Quiz Offer
-APPROVJ!:ll THE a~ ot $200 I« CooCa M ... '1 membenh!p in
1he Slater aty P...,.m.
WASH!N&TON (UPI) --!.. Patric~
Gray tll said today he has been ordered
to refuse some information requested or
him by the Senate commlttee weighing
hit nomination as FB l director. -REFERRED TO tbe cily attorney for investigation a complaint by Buc-
oola tract resident Albert a.op that deviation from the contractor's grade pWt
has dlmlnlahed the llze ot hi.I beckyanl. The development came after Sen. John
V. Tunney (ll-OIUI.), espreued belief
the White House hu "decided to throw
Mr. Gray to the wolves."
-DELAYED FOR -JO days ICllon m the North CooCa Me11 Sketch
Plan. nie plan, developed by the city plannlng llall In conj_.,.wttb borno-
C!Wllml, caU. for the ieductlon ot dell!lly DOr1lt ot the San Diego F'roeway. Gray denied be inteod.s to withdraw as
nominee for the FBI post. -APPROVED SPENDING 1118,619 m nlgbl llgllt! for TeWlnkle Park. Gray, resuming the witness chair, told
the Senate Judiciary Commlttee be could
no longer give members full access to
FBI files or annrer all \heir quest.Iona:. Counell Not Beady He aaid be wu acting oo the basil of a
prev!..,.ly undlsclooed order luued Fri-
day by Attorney Gtneral Richard G.
Klelndienat· and said he could anner
"only procedural, not substantive" que,..
lions-abotJt FBI procedures.
. Density Vote De~yed
Fourth Time in Mesa
White House Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler re.plied, "Ab!Olutely not."
when asked if Nixon abll!)Cloned hope or
getting Gray confirmed.
•
Action on a plan calling for the reduc.
lion of density In 1 300-acre area north of
the San Diego Freew•y was delayed a
fourth lime Mond1y night wben Colla
Mell city councilmen de cl 1 red
themaelvu not ready for a vote.
PIER 11 .•.
resldenta fear thflr aafely Illa-10:!0
p.m. and that many o1 them bad lo
resort lo the lnitallatlon of bJCh fences,
and purcbaalng (U8nl dop and ~
alarms. r
Other complalnta ot the • reeldenll
ranged from Pier 11 CU1tomer1 tuppoeed-
ly throwh!i beer bo!Uea and whl.oky
naskl ootO lawns, e1ee11lve noise from
the blnda, and copulaUoo In parked can.
'"lblJ la a case where we've gone far
enough," declared Councilman Robert M. willoo. 11:1 eet these people over and over and .,.., again caling me aboul thla ]J!'OI>
Jem 8nd they're always tOOI we'll do
that tomorrow. I move we revoke their
wne exception permll"
Tbe other memben of the council join-
ed Wllaon In voUna; for revocation but not
before each of them had lssued a
penonal condemnation of PJer 11.
Their action was baled legally on Pier
.-11l's ,f.allure to comply with 1even con--
dlllona altacbed lo tbe permit when It
was &ranted ftt' 1'71. 1beli'" inclqded
rauw'e ·IO initaD iri opaque chain link
fl fence on three sides of the property,
• removing trash and debris, striping the
parking lot, enclosing the trash bins and
others. .
r Zoning Inspector Jim Weir admitted
' that progress had been made recently in
I meeting so1ne of the condJtions but that 1 evidence failed to sway the city council. 1 Jo their defense, Pier 11 owners Owens
• and Chapin asserted there was con-
, slderable confusion over the conditions. ~ "The city always wanted a lltUe bit
( more," said Owens and Iu. partner ad·
4 ded that they were UDC<rtaln aboul which
1 thne llldes ol the building were lo be
1 ftnced. ' ~, Neither attempted lo refute "~
( charges of the ne1ghborbood residents
4 but In cross-examloation, made It clear
' lo the cooncll that many of them bad not
!" approached Pier l l management with
;. their concerns.
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From Pagel
; RAJN ...
' said that the effect of rain has been ~ unusually severe this year precisely
~ because it has been so evenly spaced.
1 Work on the Newport Freeway has
• been particularly hard hit.
• "We were just ready to go back to
i! work tomorrow," said a spokesman for
• the state highways departmenl "But
:. now it looks like we'll have to wait
J another week for It to dry out."
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OIANH COAST
DAILY P!LOT
n.t OfMtl C0.11 DJ>IL Y l'IUJ't, wltl'I tllflldl
11 cornolMll 1119 ...,.._,.,..... II "'*'"""' W
.... ()f.nge C:0.1t l'tlb!lllllNI ~ • ..,..
rt1• edlTklnl •re 1111111~. MlniN'I' ~
P'rld1r. '°' CO.II Miii, H...,., •Hdl,
H11t1ll""°" l•tel't!HllllMl!t Yllle'f, Usr11111
IMd'I, 1rv1rw11N111• Mf ltn c~w
Sin Jlltn C.1tl1lre1M. A 111111119 r99'IOMI
.-nlM 11 ,w11111ei1 """'"'' w ......,_, the ,,.1nc1p11 Mlill'tlnf .... nt II 1t:• W9tf
..., lfrMt, (Galt M-, C.IHlnlil. .....
RM.rt N. W_. ,.,...,. .,. l'utltllhW
J•c.k R. C11rl1y
Vk9 """"*'' Ml Oener1l .......
Tltetn•I IClt,11 ...llllf'
llioMtl A. Mw,.hl11•
.......... l!dltw
Girt .. H. U.. Rlc.•1,.I P; N1lf
AMIMtnt MIMlinl .. 1..,1
c:..t. .... OMle
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The North Costa Mesa Sketch Plan was
dra"" In August 1112 by pla1mln1 staff
memben with the asslatance of Mesa
Wood& mlile1111.
Tho )Ian wu dellyed twice by the
plonnlng eotnmllllon and I tblnl time
Feb. 5 by the. city oouncll. In lenoral II
--tho! Ibo oporllpent , IOlllng cumntb' ncoDl!!Jl!tldod by inu.ler plan
be dwlged lo low llld medium den.Illy.
Memben ol Ibo Not1b · OJota Mesa
Hom-.en AnoctaUoo hove pulhecl for
tbe chan1e lo IYOld belll( cj>oked off by
1partment1. '
Although COUDCilmen agreed with the
ho-n about the ultlmale fale of
1evetal porllooa In tbe aru bounded by
the freeway, SUnOower Avenue, Bear
Street and Fairview Road, there Is cph-
fllcti111 thinking over the advtaabUlty of
Including commercial zonlng.
The homeownera do not want any com·
men:lal in the area other than -the
already planned Four Se.,.ns Village
recreauon center io the .IOUtbealt. Some
cou.ncllmen, however, believe that there
lhould be addlUonal comn\erclal i:onlng
either to the west or to the east of the
M ... Woods tract.
Oxmdlmen dela)'Od action 11 their
Feb. 5 meetln1 lo allow the completion of
negotiations between the Segentrom
Family and a nationwide medical in· surance rirm.
'lllal flotllty wu In have been located
on, the west side of Fairview Road but
hM .i-· falltn ~gb,, ~ to 'hlgb·level cltyhafi sources.
Councilmen will again consider the
sketch plan in 30 dafs.
FronaPagel
BOND ...
paigp without the servicea of such a
finn."
He did urge, however, that a public
opinloo poll be conducted before the cam-
paip gets underway to ferret out useful
Information and In develop tecbnlques lo
overcome posslble resistahce.
A slogan, such as "People for Parks"
used in a recem Huntington Beach cam·
palgn, ,,.. alao rocommended by
Sonabal lo belp promole the IS1Ue and lo
inspire enthusiasm.
A1ayor Jack Hammett, who joined
other councilmen in praising Sorsabal for
his detalled bon<1 election stratagem, ask-
ed that the elecUon be placed on every
council agenda from now until the elec-
tion is held.
Specific open space sites included in
the city manager's election package are:
-33 acrt1 on the northeast oorner of
Fair Drive and Fairview Rood. This prop-
erty la part ol the Orange Co u n t y
Fal~.
-A t•aere school site Jn the Fairview
Park lowlands.
-A -..., school Ille In the Fairview
Park lowlands.
-lk<ftl ol sciMJol property north of
the San Diego Freeway.
-A 1._. school site adjacent to lbe
city~ Tanager Park in the new Buc-
cola tract off Adams Avenue.
-Tbree aeperale parcels totaling 24.6
acres In various parts of the city.
The esact location of the parcels and
the amounts city hall administrators e:s:-
pect to pay for them are being kept
under wraps while their prices are being
negotiated.
Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott
also said after a meeUn& with Nllon that
the President's support of Gray "ls ex-
acUy the same" as when he submitted
the nomination.
Gray's disclostU'e of restrictions on his
testimony came when Sen. Birch Bayb
(0.lod.), requested that three . former
employea of the FBI and tbe Committee
1o Re-Elect the Pre!idenl be subpoenaed
to appear.
The committee approved ~ nqueat,
but Gray refused to offer bis views on
one of the three -Judith Hoback, of
Wut Palm Beach, Fla., a former assis-
tant to the treasurer of the re--electlon
finance committee.
Miss Hoback privately sought out the
FtBI during the Watergate investigation
to communicate information oubllde the
Presence of committee official~. .
Gray provided the conuruttee w~th
dates of the interviews with Muss
Hoback, but refused to discuss the case
further when Sen. James Eastland (0-
Miss), asked, "How many times did she
hide the truth!"
"Under my orders from Mr. Kiein-
dleost I can only discuss this procedural-
ly and I can't. give ~y subslan~ to our
interviews with -Miss Hoback, Gray
said .
.. I recalved my orders and I have to
carry them out," Gray said referring to
Kleindlenst.
"I don't think those orders are helpful
to you at all," Bayh observed.
"l have to take my orders from the at-
l«ner general pnd 111" ~~" Gray
said. · ' .
The committee voted to subpoena MLSs
Hoback; Thomas Bi.shop, former ~l
head of investigation and files and public
relations, and Thomas Lumbard, a
former Justice and Treasury Department
official who worked on the re-election
campaign.
Harbor Trustees
Study Personnel
Rule Revisions ..
Newport-Mesa scliool trustee. tonight
will be asked to give prellm1nary a~
proval to proposed changes in lhe district
personnel regulations.
A commiltee of staff. teachers and ad·
ministrators has wOrked for the past
year reviewing all angles of the district's
rules and regulations and has co~e up
with a number of recommended
re visions.
Superintendent of Schools John Nicoll
said items such as the district's
grievance procedures, maternlty leave
and sabbaticals have undergone con-
siderable change and some still haven't
been given fmal approval of the district's
•tall. The trustees are being asked In give
the package a first reiding and set the
matter for final adoption at a later date.
Also on the agenda at 7:30 p.m.
meeting in the Davis Middle ~hoot
multi-purpose room, 1050 Arhngton
Dri ve, Costa Mesa are requests for
transfer or funds to cover uiteJ:pected
equipment expenses and a request for
funding under the Bilingual Education
Act.
Big Plant· Sold?
Gover1iment to Get Niguel Facility
Orange County Supervisor Ronald Caspers was noUfled today
by the U.S. General Service. Administration that pl"!'• lo acquire
the huge North American Rockwell plant ln Laguna Niguel are firm
and proceeding rapidly. '
IN A LETTER from T. E. Hannon, general services reilonal ad·
minlstralor ln san Francisco, it was stated the facility wouJa be used
lo house federal activities performln& a variety ol governmental fun<·
tionsHe estimated total employment at the location it 3,000 to ~.ooo
peroo ...
A SoCIO«onomle 91UdJ: and an envlronmenW Impact state-
ment are now being prepared, lj.annon said.
Cupen wu thanked by the federal oUicial for lnlormatlon pro-
vided on houaln& the Yldnlty of the loclllty.
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'A WOMAN IS ONLY A WOMAN BUT A GOOO CIGAR IS A SMOKE'
Huntington Covn~ll""'n Mltnty E nloyw Awful H1btt, Now Binned '·~ .. ' .. . "I . .. '
Duntington ·uans -s .. 1oking
Huntington Bi:ach councilmen agreed
to clear the air in City Council chambers
Monday nig ht. .
They passed a "no smokin$ dur10g
council meetings" law S to 2, with Jerry
Matney and Henry Duke oppo.sed.
"Pretty soon the only place you'll be
able to smoke is in your own bathroo~\"
grumbled Matney, as he pulled rapiwy
on a fat cigar.
· Matney constantly smokes either a
cigar or a pipe. Duke lit up a cigarette
when the discussion began.
';I t.b.l.Dk we need to clear up the pollu·
lion factor .in this chamber," said N'orma
Gibbs, In propoalng the smoking ban.
"It's t00gb to breathe 50meooe else's
smoke."
"Can we study this ?'' quipped Green as
the six-hour meeting neared midnight.
Mrs. Gibbs sata she wanted the smok-
ing ban because. some other cities had
adopted similar procedure.
"I'll be first to violate U," laughed
Matney, releasing an extra large cloud of
smoke.
Lack of .Unidentified IIT Executive
Admits Pressure
In Chile Threat ·casualties Clouds Bill
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 IM D1llY P'llOI Stiff
Bills have been introduced in Congress.
including one by Rep . Andrew Hinshaw
(R-Newport Beach), to create a "Tomb
of the Unknown Soldier" for the Vietnam
War -but there might not be a body to
put in it.
A spokesman for the U.S. Army said
Monday there are no unidentified
casualties from the Vietnam conffict.
However, because there are still 1,32.8
men missing and unaccounted for in
Southeast Asia, it is possible one of U>c:se
may bt unidentifiable, the Army ol!JCJal
said. .
One POW (Prisooer of War), Marine
Sgt. Ronald L. Ridgeway of Houston,
·Tes., """"'U'1caltie -.-alive, creating
a mystery. .
A funeral was held and a body buried
In a grave marked as Ridgeway's when
he was once listed as dead. Marine of·
ficials will have to idenUfy that
serviceman.
TONIGHT
NEWPORT MESA SCHOOL BOARD -
Regular meeting, Costa Mesa High
Lyceum, 7:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, MARCHI!
BAND AND ORCHES'l!RA FESTIVAL
-Sou.them California School Band and
Orcheitra Festival, OCC Auditorium, 8
a.m,._ 5 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday.
ORANGE COUNTY FAIR BOARD -
Regular meeting, 88 Fair Drive. 8 p.n'i.
The situation Ls unusual compared to
past wars. There were 8,~ unidentified
bodies after World War Il and 856 after
the Korean War.
The Army, which handles all funeral
arrangements for Vietnam casualties,
said the use of helicopters to recover the
dead and wounded made it easier to iden-
tify bodies. Even when the identification
tag wu destroyed or blown awa7, the
bodies were not yet decomposed eooiJgb
to eliminate fingerprints.
A spokesman estimated I h a t
fingerprints were used to establish 75 to
80 percent of the Identities which might
otherwise be questionable. De D 11 I
reconls were the aecond most uaeful looL
Modero .science abo bas deviled
methods' to approximate the ,~1ght,
weight, age and other cbaractenstics
from just a few fragments of a badly
mangled body.
The bodles or air Crewmen, who com-
prise moat of the missing, usually can be
identified by the aircraft number if
' nothing else works. -
A Joint CasuaJty Resolution Center will
be established to wQ.rk wllh · North Viet-
nam to hunt the bodies of these .missing
airmen. The center also will try to get in·
In aress of Laos and South Vietnam
where Americans have not been able to
go lo search for war dead.
1be proc:<sa undoubtedly will take
years.
Bodies mlS8ing since World War ll sllll
are belll( bmd. In 19'10, tbe remaina of
five MarineS ltllled in 1M3 were un-
coven!d m Guadalcanal.
The bodlea of · three unldenUlled
servicemen -one from each of the
previous wars -are now entombed at
Arlington National Cemetery In lhe
"Tomb of the U n k n o w n Soldier."
Congress never has acted on proJ>05als to
change the name to the "Tomb of the
Unknowns."
Rep. Hinshaw's bill is now before the
House Committee on Veterans Affairs.
WASHINGTON (AP) -!TI' vice preai·
dent William R. Merriam told the Senate
today his company pressured the White
House and the State Department to
threaten Chile with economic collapse.
(Earlier story, Page 4) -
Chile's Marxist prWdent, Salvador
Allende "bad slnlen our property wlthoot
compensatioD," he said.
Merrtam, who beaded the Wasblnglon
ofllce of Intematiooal Teleplme " Telegraph. Corp., acknowledged that tbe .
purpose of the presaure WU lo force
Allende "to pay us oft."
Merriam added: "That's all we ·
wauted.11 '
Tbe !TI' officlal1 now staUooecl in ltalf. '
was the leadoH witness as a llHIClil
• Senatli lor<lgn i'datl<!m, aubdemiiiiltee
lailnched an invesU«atloo of the Influence
exerted on U.S. fo,-elgn policy by large
Ame• finns with vut holdings in
·other CCllMtries. · ·
'l1lc sOltpoken witness resisted sug.
gesUons by subcommittee members and
lawyers that he did more than excbang_e
-tn101ifiliUon with Wlmam--P. l!roe, !lie
Central Intelligence Agency's lop man
for clandestine operations in Latin
America.
Sen. Charles Ptrcy (l\.IU.), asked:
"Did you cooslder yourself an a.gent of the CIA?" I
Merriam responded: uOh, No, Sen.
Percy." '
In fact, the witness went OD, 111 bad no
Idea then that he WU ciandellhte. We bad hmcbeOllJI in placa with !Oil In 400
people." •
Broe confirmed Iha! be and tbe CIA of. ·
lictal exchanged lnformaUm.
"I talked In Mr. Broe many um .. , Just
when we had scmethlng In tell each ·
other," he added.
Tbe m official said "the highest 'peo.
ple we went to" were Arno J d
Nachmanorr, then chief adviser to Henry
Kissinger for Latin America, and Charles
Meyer, assistant secretary of State for
Latin America.
NOW, HEAR TlllS!
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Ill
According to the President's Councn on Environmental Quality,
it is becoming increasingly difficult for anyone to escape noise.
40,000,000 Americans risk heering impairment and, other physical
and mental effects. 44,000,000 other Americans have the utility of
their dwellings adversoly affected by noise _ from aircrah or tr1ffic.
21,000,000 Americ1ns 1r• 1ffected by construction-related noise.
Now whit does this have to do with carpet? Carpeting will
dr1stically impro... eccoustics in Any room. by quieting your home
environment, making redios, television, altd the fomny sound better.
Remember, at Alden's, even """·LOUD carpeting is quieter •
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ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia ·Av•.
COSTA MESA ' CIOllAMDA 646-4838 llllCI ""
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