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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-04-03 - Orange Coast PilotI • · . • ' - . . , .Br. Mcintire SnuJ,bed DAILY PILOT Clemente * * * 10' * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON , APRIL 3, 1973 .__.oas Mesa Blast 'Like Bomb' ·The word "bomb" wa! used most often by witnesses and neighbors of the El Monte Chemical COmpahy explosion 1\1onday WhiCh took two lives, injured dozens more and shattered windows in· a four-block area or east Costa Mesa. "It was like a bomb. There was glass flying all over. people falling all over from the shock." said Willa Laws of Tustjn. She works for Claval Company just across the slreet from the explosion which leveled the chernJcal company· at 819 17th St. Speaking in the Hoag H o s p i t a I emergency room where she and at least 10 others were lreated Monday af- ternoon, Mrs. Laws said the blast scimd- ed "like nothing l've ever heard be!ore." Injured with her by flying glaSs was Michael Ingles of Costa Mesa. He said he was at hi1J desk "when alt of a sudden I heard this boom . . . glass flying like crazy." , El Monte Chemical Company lab technician Paul Gerritz, 22, of Anaheim, suggested uncontrolled rlsing steam pressure and a broken disUUing Co_hl:riin seal must have caused the explosion ·which blew a 20-by-75-foot bole in the roof of the bull4ing. GerrJtz, one of four employes of the (See BOMB, Page Z) Dr. Mcl1itire's Vic~ry Plaque Nix~d by £ie1,s· By JOHN VALTERZA Of IN O.fly Pl• It.rt A snubbed and defeated Dr. Carl • I ' ' '. , ·AERIAL VIEW -This was'.scene at EI .Monte Chemical Company in Costa Mesa shorUy after explosion· ripped the w: 17th Street plant about 3:16 p.m,, Monday .. Water spout .(center). is from plant's -water line, severed by blast. At Up!M;r left across.17th Street is Claval plant, the Western White Ho~e Monday night • YOl.. '6. kO. tJ. J SECTIONS, 31 P.t.O•S • ;_ro • • which was evacuated following the explosion. Industrial building (up. per right) had doors blown out and apartment units (bottom) were shat- tered by e¥plosion. '·. · ' -. . ' ' •• • ' Mea~ Pilfered Boycott Opinions ~Divergent By JOHN ZALLER .. ,!"' ..... ---.... I Some people are calUng thls week's na- tional meat boycott the biggeat protest ln American his!ory. But on the Orange Coast ~'tonday, it seemed something less than that. "Yes, I'm on the meat boycott," said a woman shopper with three pounds of hamburger in her cart. "My collie won't eat anything else so I've got to feed her meat. · "But my five teenagers will be eating ; fish," she said. "Of course I'm in agreement with the boycott," said another shopper at Market Basket in Costa Mesa . "Oh, this ham- burger? "Well, I've always given my husband a meat patty for breakfast and I don 't think I could stop now. But we'll be hav- ing fiSh for diMers." "I haven't really decided yet," said a woman who was lingering in front of the roast section. "I guess J won't buy anything· today. But I have to eat. I don 't know how long I'll hold out." Perhaps because of shoppers like these, Orange Coast meat sellers reported an average sales drop of only 15 to 20 percent Monday . Of the dozen outlets contacted, only Von's Market in Huntington Beach reported a large drop in its sales, and its estimate of a 35 pen::ent fall in sales was still not near the 50 percent drop reported nationwide. Talking-to numerous grocers and shop- pers Monday, two distinct impressions u·ere produced: -?.1arket managers don't like the boycott and don't think it will accomplish much beyond causing meat to rot on the- shelves. "This whole thing was created by the newspapers and the television ,'" • compla ined one man who was typical of -" (See BOYCOTT, Page %) Orange Coast Mcintire stalked away from the gates oL\la}¥g 'Op ---u1{ ov Bout -ietnamese-officials' -·---•5-:l::l:c'=:z'\:il:---::1:+. "refusal to accept a woodeii plaque with the word "victbry" on it. · "It's the word they fear most," said the stonned minister during a hall-hour _ By RUDI NJEDZIELSKI tirade which followed the march to the ot "" o.ttr """ '"" Presidential gates. A mrstakeniy opened vent valve today Blamfug local police officials for "giv-was blamed by fire investigators as the ing Jane Fonda more courtesy than us.'' cause of an induslrial eipbi. which . the New Jersey minister finally led his ripped apart a Olsta .Me.a memical 130 sopPorters l>acl< acrvss a b<idge o .. r · plant, killing' 1"1i -~ind Injuring at the San Diego 'Preeway to an empty lot least nioe others with Us destructive where a nlght·Ume rally coritinued. 1 The evening had been bUled as a b ~ke Chief John Moraball disclosed this celebration in tribute to 'n!leu, and morning that a valve 11which shouldn't ~clntlre cheerfully told bis followers have been turned on" resulted in a1~ that he and the leading members of the overprodu¢on of volaUle vapor at the El South Vietnamese government were close Moote ChemJcal Company, 829 w. 17th friends. ~ St., moments before the Mooday af· "I am confident that we'll prcScnt lhis ternoon explosion. plaque to Prc:ftdent Thieu <>r ,.,me-"li·ii'ied »y-the bliit !fe Elm!! suitable representative t onight , 1 '.... uenert1, 41. of .. tllOO Samar Drive. Costa Mcintire aald early in the evening. Mffll, and his co-worker Randy Riley, 23, Public Safety Director CllUord Murray of Anaheim. Leeneru .. as found boricd was the g<>belwecn, bol later In the under an elgb~incb lhlck concrete tll~op I • (See MclNTIRE. Piii• I) wall and pronouo«d dead at the acene, .. • l • ' Riley died at Hoag MemOrial Hospilal about 6:30 p.m. Monday. · A third chemical workerr Robert Davidson, 57, of Ventura remains In seriavs condition today at Hoag's in· tenslte care unit. , "J[ the doo~~ bad . i.,en open , and file ,Add itional Photos todoy on Page 9. vent hadn't been turned on, the explosion might never have happened," thcorl.ed Ed Lewis, a fire battalion chief. Alter probing the natore of the 3: t6 p.m. blast-which rod<ed the city's w.,t side and created coodiUOM reminiscent of the London blils during World War II , Ure department i.nve$Ugators today have the foUowlng explanatjon for the ex- plosion: t j The three employes had been setting up an exotic methane reclaiming process inside the J>lar&t when steam pressure used to beat the vats became excessive. Afrcr tunting on· the vent valve to reduce P.ressure the tP,~e.e ~Jl closed ' the 1c1oo..S arid° we~! oo!Slcie_"ir'a It ili·g rOr the pressare to dissip ate. Instead pressure began to build inside and the vapors found a source of ignition . Wh8t touched oCf the vapon Is unknown but investigators be1ieve ·it may have been a water heater. Firemen said the blast brought the wall down on Leenerts' body and blew Riley some SO feet \hrougH a wire rein· forced grapellake-fence. Firemen described the mod fl r n chemical plAnL.as "one of lhe best bollL buildings In O>sta Mesa." Ironically, Ila main product was said to be a flame- (See CAUSE! Pop I) l1i M;~sa, Viejo 9ieri£J!lt Ofocers ,in: (y.ro o~~ge 's;ou~ty locatlons li~~~·happY ~ut,fue.ineat,' bo).cott and' they ~m '"t~ ·h~ve a legitimate beef. Weekend raids o.n homes in Mission Viejo and the ·r..osta Mesa area netted burglnrs more than l(M)' pounds of frozen meat and investigators have linked the break-ins to the effect of the nationwide meat lloycott. Deputies S&id burglars broke the lock Sunda)"" on a freezer 'owned bY .. John Henry Ayres. 48, of 1161 IV. Wllsdh St., Olsta Mesa and carried off 60 pounds of recently bUtchcred meat. t Clear skies through Wednesday, but continaed gusty winds of 25 to 30 miles per hour is what 'lhe weather service is predicting. Highs in the 70s at most beaches, rislna: to 75 inland. Lo\~ tonight 50. INSIDE TODA. Y Activist · actress Jane Fonda. 1oi1111er f>f an , Oscar, has been nominated for another award - this u1te from returning prison· ers of wdr. And it1s 1l0t that complim.tntary. Sec story ov Page 4. L.M, Bt\'4 " _, .. .. C11Uftl'lll1 I Miiii:'. '•ll'lft " CllUlllM 11·2f *'Ill I *'ltwl l Ctmkt .. Orlllff Ctlllll\I Cftuwlnl ... s,twt.~ " o.ttll Nl'ltft • ·-· ,,.,, •fll'lrill ..... • Sletll: Milt11th 1•1t ••i.rtal•-1 " T....,IW. " .. _ '''" T11Mi.r1 " ,tr .. •tctnt • w .. _ • ""~ " • ..,..... ....... l>t• --Ltlltlt1'1 II """ -• ' i • ' ( • "% DAil Y PllOT s • April 191.3 •• ~ DAILY l"ILOT l'ilofe lw Tlllm" l"lltnlr Summit Meeting Ends Cordiality Marks Nixon~ I l ' . 1be pottwar .summit c on f e r e n c e right to choose their government in the bet...., the prelideota of the United yeano ahead." States and South Vietnam ended In San Thieu's response to the welcome was CJemente early this afternoon with an similar ln tone lo the PresJdent's atmosphere or cordiality set at tbe very greeting. beginning. Theiu, like Nixon, alluded to previous President Nixon and South VietMm's talks the two he ld four years ago at Nguyen Van Thieu reportedly covered Mid~ay .wbea the first pieces of the y1et· the gamut of issues affecllng their na-nam1za1100 Program were be 1 D g tlona after tbe peace settlem~nt. as;;;e:Mn;~l~sident," Thieu said Press Secretary. Rona ld Ziegler ex· Oriental-French accent 11 e pla.IDed the issues in general terms Mon-hen • t .T,·?.l:::"i.:.: di alt t bri f hicb follow· years ~go, w we met a v. y, _ Y emooo a a e .mg w war was raglng. We laid do her ed an elaborate. receptton for Thieu at the foundations for a prom.ls 90 ution the Western White House to the Vietnam conflict that came to be 1Jegler aald that the two men.. would known as the Vietnamizatlon. dl.scuss U.S. usistance in the redevelop-"This made possible a peace with ment of SOUtb Vietnam and other issues honor ... of mutual interest. . . "While the road to lasting peace is still He would not be more specific, an arduous one," 1'1tieu added, "a page however, stressing that more statements has been turned with the conclusion the would be forthcoming at the conclusion Paris Agreemeht." • or the talks. esswn Tbleu'1 vllit marked the RCOnd Ume a chief of .state from tbe Orient has vlsllod the san Clemente estate, bot UU.. l•test stay Is the only oUlclal state visit ever hosted on the South Coast by Nixon. Early la!Jt year now-retired Prime Minister Elsaku Sato of Japan spent seve,..J days in talks at the ~slde!Ulal coriipound. but the elaborate:; welcome and 2l·gun salute were mlssilig in thlt visit. ~ Thieu dined with the Pres.ldcnt and Mrs. Nixon ·Monday night at La Casa P3cifica and tbe menu showed that the meat boycott was not on the President's mind. Beef was the prime ingredient in the diDDer, althouih fish (tortuava ) also figured on the menu. · Thieu tonight again will dine with a ·leading California Republic;an -thls time at a function hosted in Los Angeles by Gov. Ronald Reagan . RESCUE WORKERS CARRY BLAST VICTIM RANDY. RILEY TO WAITING AMBULANCE Chomlcal Company Employe, 23, Dlod L~lor ol Hoig Momo_•_i•_l _H_os_p_fl_•_I _. ------- Both beads of state were scheduled· to make a joint statement on the talks this aft ernoon. * * * Thieu· Nixon From Page l Medical Unit: The conference -the first such official state visit ever beld'·at t..a Casa Pacifica -began near noon Monday amid a flashy reception geneully seen onJy in Protesters V e1it Anger, Oaths Ouiswe Gates 'IT WAS LIKE A rBOMB ' . • • • No Probation the pation's capital . As SOO Orange County residents looked on as special guests, the two l>residents Jiiin. said all were out!lde at tlietime of \be eJpiosion. 1bm who worked dlrectly ID the area of the distilling column bad left the building fearing an eiplos!Oll but assured that the measure to reduce the steam pressure on the "still" would be enough. "God," Gerril.2 said, "Randy was blown clear through that fence ." Mela! posts for a wooden fence bent at an angle of 45 degrees are all that rema in of the fence tbday. • "He was in bad shape when he left itere,'' Gerritz said of 2.'l·year old Randy _Rile)'. of Anaheim. Riley died aLHQ_a_g Memorial Hospital. Taken with him from the scene to the hospital was Bob Davidson, 57, of Ven- tura . He remains in serious condition to- day. "They haven't round Elmer Leenerts yet,'' Gerritz said Monday at the scene. Saying no more for several moments, he pointed to the concrete rubble where hours later fire rescue crews located the body of Elmer Eugene Leenerts, 41, of 1800 Samar St., Costa Mesa. Gerritz said he was in the lab area at the back or the building when the ex· pl~ion_l!_l}d "all kinds of flam~" rip~d ~rbe building apart from the mdustr1al portion of the 2S by 150-foot, two-story structure. Other eyewitnesses said the explosion was a "slow one" in that the flame could be seen before the blast was heard or felt. Joseph Urquidi, 23, was in unit lZ of an adjacent building when the explosion oc- curred. The blast destroyed P & G Engineering, a motorcycle specialties )hop. : "I was over by the hand saw when I );aw this dark red ball of fire out of the iximer 'Of my eye,'' he said. "It was -,::oming fairly slowly ; it didn't seem in- ;stanlaneous by any means. · "I hld under the drill press. Smoke ~tarted to co1ne in and I could sme11 .an <Scrid smell. l could feel the compression :Wave for sure and then 1 heard the glass -Oreaking everywhere.'' : The explosion was so devastating that ~t ripped off virtually all garage doors :and shattered every window at 817 W. :t7th St., a sme ll U·~haped complex of ap- :Proximately 20 indu,,trial buildings ad- Jacent to the chemical company. : One of 1he buildings, Stress Relief Engineering. was immediately adja cent :to the chemica l plarit. The impact blew ;down an entire wall. : Joshua Rivers, a carpenter a t :Pinecraft Shutter Company, two buildings east on 17th from the chemical . ;,iant, said even his company looked like '° disaster area. : ••Jt looked like somebody had thrown a :OOmb ipto our place," he said. "It was j-eally mangled what with the beams and lights falling." : Ri vers doesn't recall what fell from the ):eiling and cut his head open but he does 1'ecall seeing one whole side of his com- j,any's building go to pieces. OIANGI CO AST .. DAILY PILOT "At first I t60fiiliflfWas a sO'nic"bdom particii>ated in a troop review and then or so methiilg bfit then the Whole aide of watched as a 21-gun salUte filled-the the building Came in," be said. "We F H z · . skies: of the compound with blue-white won't be back in business for a while, I ; or arte J,US sm;~~idenlNixon spoke ftrst, welcomin~ guess.'' Thieu to his "house of peace" (La Casa The atmosphere was majestic and cor· Mary Carnahan was visiting her sister, By T0~1 BARLEY Pacifica) and praising "the courage and dial on the grounds of the Western White Pat Thomas in one of the apartments at or"" o.uv .. ,._. '''" leadership" of Thieu. House Monday as South Vietnam's 833 W. 17th St. when the blast rocked the A state Board <1f Medical Examiners "There are ... difficulties in building a Nguyen Van Thieu arrived for his talks building. The residences are located just · t ha f sed 1 t peace after 25 years of war have tom with President Nixon. loo feet from the industrial area in which comnul ee 5 re u 0 accep a pro-eded but po.al that Ould have Placed D Ebbe your country apart," Nixon cone ' But outside the gates and elsewhere in the Chemical plant was operating. "' r. • w f' d that all of the H rt li f El ba · f f added, ' e now in the nation, some scathing criticism has ''I was <Bitting in a cha ir when we a e us 0 Toro on pro tion or ive American forces have returned and the welled up over the visit by the con- heard this big boom and the ceilinJ came years: and restricted bis use of dangerous people of Vietnam have the streng~h ~o troversial Asian. down," she said. "I picked up tbe ·baby drugs, a member of the committee has defend their own inde~ndence and their One Congressional critic called Thieu a a·nd we-got the other kids out of thefe." advised the DAILY PILOT. "piTate." Penny Wild or Perris, a secretary for The decision by the three survivors or The demonstrators who waved Viet Vance Roofing Company of 837 17th what was once a five·member. panel Frotn Page 1 Cong flags nea r the Presidential com· Street -just two doors west of the ex-pound in San Clemente Mond ay used . plosion site and beyond ~he Thomas' means that Hartelius, 50• now faces a re-BOYCOTf more obscene epithets to condemh Thieu. home-said she.couldn't believe the force opening of the state hearing into charges • • • And a minister who arrived late Mon- of the blast. of moral turpitude and unprofessional of day to praise Thieu , wound up chastising "I was 'Sltting at my desk some 15 feet conduct. many grocers. "But it's a bunch him. instead, after Sout h Vietnamese of- from the front of the one·story office H d .,_ I ba been nl red hogwash." . ficials flatly refused to accept a wooden e an m:1 awyers ve o e ,..--sumers are generally supportive building and talking on the phone. All of -..vi:i plaque with "victory" carved on it. a 'sudden there was a noise like I've to appear April IO in Los Angeles for or the idea of a boycott, but many are not Dr. Carl ~1clntire and l:W followers never heard before and glass hit me in what will be the sixth three-day hearing committed to it. Of the 25 shoppers con· were turned away at the gates in a tense the face," Mrs. Wild said. into charges based m his relationship tacted at Market Basket in Costa Mesa, episode which was capped by the "It sounded like a bomb going off," her with and treatment of two Costa Mesa 10 strongly supported the boycott •. 10 minister snapping, "It (the plaque) has k J k La Bell 43 'd "La women. were either undecided about it or trying one word on it and that's tbe word co-wor er ac e, · sai · "We considered the stipulation put to fmd halfway ground and only five they're all afraid of." Belle_was taken to-: Hoag _ l:foopit(ll fQr before~us-at the March 1-hearing but-we -were· oppoeed to-the idea outr1gbt. Thieu blasts from the House floor. Fiery fem-libber Bella Abzug (D-N.Y. ), picked up the ball and insisted that the joy felt by Americans.at the return of the prisoners of war "has dulled our senses and reaction to {Nixon's) meeting wi th ,!his dictator." · In North Vietnam, obviously, the tone was rough, too. An ·editorial in a leading Hanoi newspaper called the visit to the United States "a scheme lo m a i n t a in (America's) ilw,llvemenl and continue its interventidN the internal affairs of our country." The editorial continued, "After the last American soldier has packed up his bag and gone home, Nguyen Van Thieu set out for his mother count ry to appeal for r&scue." From Pqe l M«:INTIRE ... treatment of face and neCk cuts he said couldn't go along with it," commented "I couldn't fmd anything 1 ~d af-That off hand criticism of Thieu, occurred when the plate glass window Dr. Clarence T. Halburg of Rivenside. ford," said Craig Hill after c~g the however, appeared pale compared to the evening became th e focal point of blew in. . "We want to hear Dr. Harteliu.s' defense meat counter closely. "l );luy 1ust ... ~or tlia~<la~ard from Congressional dt;>ves Mclntire's wrath. 'I11e. force of the blast weakened tbe to th .. .,.. charges." mysell and all the packages are too u1g. Murray contacted White House of· t ct d · 1 ·" f the 1· ...,..... . "I.reject this "'""'""···"'er. I don't want s ru ure an SIX emp 01cs 0 roo mg Defense attorneys Matthew Kurilich h .that part of the oorcott?'' . this pirate to ~~;ooey f.rom our ficials about the intended gift, then those finn were evacuated as were residents of Md T001' Reilly'' bad been scheduled to ""'--were, however, some with strong officials shifted the responsibility over to th bu 1 h tbe 1 st .i.in::ii::: shores,'' declared Rep. Robert F. Drinan e nga ow omes -on Y rue-open their defense of the .Harbor Area opinions both for and against the boyc:ott. the South Vi~tnamese delegation on hand tures between the stucco office building physician in the three-day bearing set for "I can afford any of this I wanted," (~~a~~lburst led off an hour of anti~ for a dinner attended by President Nixon and the blast. that day. said J. J. Wolff, a retired businessman and Thieu. Dick Kilgroe, 38, a professional But both lawyers huddled w I t b who supported the Idea of boycott. "But The South Vietnamese replied that it motorcycle racer and f i be r g I a s s Deputy Attorney General Mark Levin these prices are just out of line. would be "inappropriate" for them to ac- manuf acturer. was away \vhen the ·ex-and Robert L. Mukai in a three-hour "I'm a Republican," he added, "but I R d Rid" le cept. plosion happened. bargaining session that ended with the think President Nixon should have called e s ICU That was the news· that greeted When he came home, his apartment at stipulation hahded. to the three com· a rollback on these prices three months Mcintire a few-dozen yards from the 8.13 W. 17th St. had been blown to shreds. mittee memben. · ago." ~T S gates at a spot where demoiistrators Bob Vallette, 23. who had been staying That stipulation called for Hartellus to "Of course the prices ~e way ,!°° Orture tory must stop and proceed no farther. with Kilgroe', said he had just finished be placed on five years probation during high,". said a woman who diaagreed, SO ) Mcintire told Murray: •11 am rebuilding the engine in his van when the which time his use of certain dangeroll8 you can see I don't have any meat. We SAIGON (UPI) _ Radio Hanoi, detennlned to go to that gate. I have that explosion occurred. drugs would be restricted H the com-can only afford meat two days a week. in a "satirical" criticism of right." "I'd just turned the-ignition key on mittee had agreed to t~ proposal it "But I think a boycott isn't a good American POWs, today accused ''No you doq't," Murray replied. "My when the explosion blasted me r ight out would have been sent to the state board idel. All it will do is throw ~ple OU~ o( some of saying they were tortured instructions are to keep you out and that the door," he said, (aking the event in for final approval . work without doing any good, she said. to earn promotions from the U.S. someone will come out from the White stoic stride. Kurilicb and Reilly must now pu t on Nancy Story, a motberof three, felt so military. House.,, Further west on 17th Street, printer their defense to charges based on the strongly in favor of boycott, that she "What was anticipated by North "He came at me with fire and Dave Stella of Orange said, "l was about state's original allegation that Hartellus stopped her shopping to try to dissuade Vietnamese authorities has hap-brimstone," the weary police official said to cut a sheaf of paper with this cutter enjoyed Improper sexual relationships one woman who was about to make a pened with the release of the last later. h n It went off I thoug ht e were be'tng with two women -Mrs. Reba Vaughn, meat purchase. U.S. POW in Hanoi," said the "I'm sure that It was a matter of honor w e · w 31, and the late Mrs. Wanda Melendrez, "Don't you think that's just too much bombed by North Vietnam. I could have 29, both of Costa Mesa. to pay?" she asked, and the other shop-broadcast. with Dr. Mcintire, because he felt so cer· cut my ann off if I'd slipped it under this It was alleged durt'ng fi've th--'ay per apparently agreed because she '1It bas been expected that, tain that the gift would be received," he knife," he said pointing to a giant paper 1~ baited by the Nixon administration-added. It hearings that HarteUus injected the re,t,umed her meat. ,, staged pompous reception and big "It th d II " M cu er. narcotic Demerol into both women and I hope all thls does some good , !vfrs. was ra er sa ' rea y, urray Mrs. Terry Stewart, also of Orange, an perfonned abortions on Mrs. Vaughn Story reflected afterwards. "I'm willin~ fringe benefits, returned American observed. employe or the print shop said she now while living with the attractive blonde at to eat cheese or beans or whatever it ~~~sfo:~~ ~~~~~ro~~ against But the wooden plaque was not the only believes in miracles. her Costa Mesa home. takes but these prices have got to come gift shunned by the Soulh Vietnamese .in . "A1y new desk _ was supposed to be Mrs. Vaughn testified that Hartelius ..'.d"'o;wn;;·;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;San;:;;;;;C;l;em;en;:;;;te;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;a-delivered this afternoon," she said. "It encouraged the injection habit that led to \Vas to be put right there · · · fa cing the her later incarceration at the state's window and against it. I would have been Norco facility as a narcotics addict. She killed," she speculated pointing to the also testified that Hartelius kicked and knife like shards of glass which lay on beat her on ntimerous occasions. the sidewalk and as far as lS feet back Mrs. Melendrez' mother testified that into the tiny "shop. her daughter received shots from "God was on my side,'' Mrs. Stewart Hartelius and deteriorated to the point si~h~d. that she slept in bed all day and An unidentif~ plate glass salesman neglected her yaung children. She died in THANK YOU, ERASTUS! It occurred to us the other day that we owe a lot to an innovator In our carpet Industry who operated about 150 years ago. Here are some tacts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW : trekking up 17th Street measured the late 1969 and v.·as ruled by the coroner to opening and prorrlisecl the printing firm 's have choked on her food. e Born 1814, W. Boylston, Mass.• Poor famtty, required to work at .•9• ov.·ner the glass would ic replaced by An cx-conV:ict who admitted he was on IO as farm hand end clerk. e G e nius at math and mechanics. • At 23 nightfall. the nt:i at the time from manslaughter ,~. Df•llll• Co••' DAILY l"rLoT, wn11 w1t1c1t Else\1·here in the rour·block area, charges filed in another state also ·years old, invented loom for lace •• • Invented revolutionliry power loom is ""'>t11nec1 m1 Nirw1.Pr1u, i1 Plllll!""ec1 Ir!' busin('sses and homes as far away as testified that he received Demerol from for BRUSSELS end WILTON carpets. This cre ated a domestic carpet in .. tM Or•nv• co.11 Pllbll11tlll8 '-"'· StP'· ~1onrovia Street on the west v.·ere looking J-larteliu's and that he once paid the ..... ldllkHI• •r• pUlll!lllM. MOlld•r '""'"'°" · d boa d physician $100 for the dru ". d.ustry, and virtu•lly eliminated foreign competition. e· Foun8ed BIGE4 Frlcli y, ior co111 Mtsa, New119rt eeldt, · fo r \l'lll ow glass, or V.'Cre r ing up 6 Hun111'19ton 11e1c1t1F"""111n v.1n1v. l•'l\11'11 gaping openings. LOW .CARPET MILLS in Clinton. Mass. • Great econo mist, one of small a .. cn, 1r~lrit/S1dd1eblck •ncl Sin Cle""'11t•I '" "" """"-. """" ........ )':; * * Powe1· Fa1"lm·e group founding MASSACHUSETIS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY at td!!iorl 11 PVt>llllled ''"'"""' Incl &l,ond1y1. - ._ _ __,,_tJM...P!Jne!~ itfll 1'''1.' '"~w~''.'-"-l-----E'f'fmt-l"ftge•-:l---------------=----t·-lt-------lllqollqiltt0ton,,.·•i"it-tl48~6h-9-0ted-l-8-7·9 e1r ''"''· COii• Mn1, C.llfoo"nlt, .,.,. ' . • • .. ~::.::.~~~:t.. CAUSE... • Plagues Miami; J1 c• R. C11rl1r Vici ,-,..Id.,! Incl G9ner1I ~ c M ThomH Koo•il proof resin. a use • ys tery Editor The bui lding featured a lift-off e:ii:· Tllo,.,•• A. Murplrii"• plosion roof, eight-inch thick concrete M11119lng l!dl!O< ~11AMI (UPI) -Five electrical gc neraling plants were knocked out by "problems unknown" today , triggering a mid-morning power failure that1 trapped Chert•• H. Looi Riche~ ·p. Nell \\'alls. and a. special haza rd sprinkler A,.1,11n1 M111191fl8 e:t1ior1 system yet lf"' was completely demolish- Offk• ed. COIN M-1 UO Wtll Bly S1retf NIWPD'l 8ff(fl: U» fl--1 ...... l..,11'1 UOllfM, 8H<fl ~ m l'"Of"tt.I olt- HllltlllltfOrl llllKlll 11'111 lladl &Olli.t11rlf "'1 ("'"'"111 JOI ,,..,111 11!1 C.mlnll 11111 , ......... ,, .. , '41-4111 Clu11f'W u.ertt .... 141-15171 Pmll CMll .. I ArMt Sewtfl .. u,.M ltAdl 4tJ-4411 ,_ Nlrft Or .. C-'Y Ct~lltl 140-lut ''""'"""· 1'7S. °"'"°' ,_, ~ftlllr!t Q>rnM!l'j", No ""'" ..... llhl*l.rlllllll. edl1111rlfl IMttlr ..,. M....,il~ .-· _., .. r•WllUCI •t!llOlll ..,.i. ,.,. ""''WI\ .. """"""' -.• ~ deM 'Nll'"9 Miii ti C11te #MM. C.llf9rflle. ""'°""'le!! ., urrltr IUl ~Mo' "" -11 a .1t '""'""'' Mlllhf• •"1ne111M a 61 ~. Mnrsholl, fire chief of Cost1-1 A1esa for ptople In elevators and caused depan· the past nine yeors, described the ex· ment stores and supennarkl!ts to close plosiou as the "most devastating" blast because their cash registers wouldn't in the city's history. work . "Realistically, you're talking about a The blackout lasted 4S minutes to two Joss or $750,000 to SI mllllon and that hours or more and affected more than doesn't Include the loss of income to two million residents or Dade and those businesses that were dlsntptcd, '' 'Broward counties and tourists ·on the The shock wave of the big blast south Florida Gold Coast. damaged !C!l1ously 25 nearby lnduatrtes, ~· The power went off at-9;37 a"J'T1. and by Including five major companies. Heaviest 10 :15 was back on in dQwntown MJami. damage was al an adjacent lnduslrial Florida Power & Light Co. said that condominium where the destructive force twe>-thirds or the power had been tumbled walls, wrenched· all lhc garage restored by 10:'301 but by noon some doors .. and shattered C\'ery wlndow In suburban areas were :still rcportlng sight~ power outages. I ERASTUS: MY GRANDFATHER THANKS YOU! MY FATHER THANKS YOU !' I THANK YOU! MY CHILDREN THANK YOU! • I Four 9eneration1 in the cerpet bu1ine11 since I 894, thanks to the inventions of Mr. 8i9elow.) p .S. Amazingly, wfthout Erastus , Bigelow CalJMtl have remained an indu5try leader. PleaM 1top In and Me thel~ sparkling -carpet lint. • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 166~ Placentia Ave • COSTA MESA 646°4838 Moo .. Tllm. t lo 5130; Fri. t lo t; Set. t :JO lo I Tut s.day April 3. 1973 5 DAll Y PILOT :f, 400 ,Protest Against 'Thieu -Demonstra rs March Under Viet Corig Ba1111ers on Coast By ARTHIJR R. VINSEL Of 1M OellY Pllet Sleff Chanting b!llngual slogans and .ongs against oontinued l).S. support of the South Vietnamese regime, nearly 400 demonstrators marched on the \Vestem White House in San Clemente Monday be- neatb a sea Of blue and red Viet Cong nags. · Squads of· Orange Coast police tactical orficefs stood at parade resl on the fron· tage road of El Camino Real, about a block from La Casa Pacifica. 'l'bey grim1y marked the end of the three-mile road down which the unex· pectedly large crowd of protesters marched. A gathering of equal size inside the presidential compound \\'as at that mo- ment welcoming South Vietnamese Pres· Aid Boosted ident Nguyen Van ThieJa1 a fonn:ll re-TI1e moreht•rs, shepherded by pclice ·•Fi ve. four . three. two do"'ll With Ni:t· ccplion. and press photographt!rS and reporters on. do\vn "'ith Thieu," they shouted with They were aware of the rally outside \\.'ere ordl'rly as they adv11nced on the rcne\\'ed ze11L spearheaded by actress Jane Fonda and checkpoinl \Vhcrl' they "'ere turned a\vuy A group or thoroughbred horses cor· the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, and began a circular 1narch up and do\Vll rnlcd nearby spooked at all the tumult but it was inaudible inside. the _s.idc\valks. . .. :ind the dazzling red and gold banners A fe\v grotesquely garbed marchers ••Jo'ive, f~r. !~~'C. t"'O .~o,vn \V1th Ni~-1narchers wa\'ed. sending them racing including one ex-GI in a HallO\\'C<'ll mask ou , do\vn '''tlh I hicu · · · they rhythm1-l>.'\C'k and forth ,rithin the renced enclos-- and a coalition or Vietnamese students cally ehanted. ur,•. enrolled in U.S. colleges look part. Banners and signs. depicted Ute Presi· A fe1\' of the demonstrators said they The formal t"'o-page open letter out-dent ~s a nlonster wit~ bloody fangs and l\'Ottld rema in heh.ind to greet :1 right wing lining the Vi~tnamcse students' position co~taine.d slo~;uis ur~uig freedont froni l"OO.lilion of pro-Nixon people led by the on TI1ieu's govem1nent was distribu tr<t Thieu· Nixon . I) ranny in 1~ Sout.h. llev. Carl .~lclnlirc. U "'as due to arrive and a spokes n1an said they hOped lo pass The cha~t1ng beg~n t& die ~\'ttl a fe\!t toniuht. one on to Nixon this afternoon . 1non1ents .i~t('r thl. n1arC'hers reached "' Th ey had led cheers in the Vietnamese the checkpoint. . . .. The only major dissension a m o n g language earlier on a bluff top of San "Let's have a little n1ore f~rc, SCl"t'~m· de1nonstrators outside the \\'estern \\'bite Clemente State Park wa\'ing U.S. and 00 ~ V~ A \Y V('teran v.·ear1n~ a ~lflrch ftouso ~looday occurred when they decid- Viet Cong nags at helicopters making monitors red ar1n band on h1s military ed to c.•jcct a shouting bearded preacher passes along the roast. f:itiguc outfit. of the Gospel. ---- To Sttldents , At College DAILY l"ILOT Piiit. W Peltidl O'o..eli NEARLY 400 DEMONSTRATORS PROTEST MEETING OF PRESIDENTS March Route Ended Monday Near Entrance to Western White House Students' Preferenee . Saddleback' s School To Be Named El Toro The name of the new high school in the Saddleback Valley will be El Toro because a group of sludents want it that Yt'ay Saddlcback Valley Unified School District trustees Monday were ready lo vote on a motion that the high school scheduled to open in September. 1974, be . n~med ,Tprino High School. Suggestton.s had been received from the community. Trustees had taken a poll amongst themselves wi th Uttle unanimity. Their first choices were Torino, which got two votes; Baker, El Toro and Can- yon . Ed Mosbaugh. president of the new Students Advisory Council (SAC), then told trustees "we would like our high school lo be named El Toro High School." SAC is a group of 14 students v.·ho will be in the El Toro high student body next fall when it shares the Mission Viejo High campus for a year of double ses· sions. The students will pick a mascot. school colors. write a constitution and develop activities, hoping to create a separate Brown, Baggi1ig Boozers "Blocked , HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) -Security guards at the Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics are sea rch i n·g \\'orkers' lunchboxes to halt any smug· gling or alcoholic beverages into the shipyard. The crackdown is part or the shipyard's effort to stop employes from consuming alcohol on the job. The Navy was .to review the-finn'.s _ license to handle radioactive materials. Lax shipyard procedures were given as the reason for the Navy's withdra\\'al of the ya rd·s temporary operating Ucense when it came up for renewal in February. Wizard a Fraud? identity from the Mission students. ~1osbaugh said the students feel they should represent the community in the first high sctM?OI in the community. Following the student's comments, board chainnan Chet Briner called for a vote on the motion by Joe Peterson to name the school Torino, which means lit· tle bull . No one, including Peterson, voted for It. He said he listened to what the students wanted. Robert Bosanko, former principal at Mission Viejo High, has been named to lead the district's second high school. Trustees Monday appointed Don Ames as principal at Mission Viejo High to replace Bosanko. Ames is currenUy assistant principal at Mission. Trustees voted to request the Tustin Union High School District board to appoint Ames for the remainder of the school year. They also voted to hire him as principal for the 1973-74 school year. The district received a wide variety of suggestions for the new high school name. Superintendent Will iam Zogg said they included historical names like Jose Ser- rano High School, after a Southern califomia land grant owner in the lBOO's; Dwight Whiting, an original settler in El Toro, and Father Junipero Serra, founder of missions. Other suggestions from the community included those with a Spanish flavor like La Campana, the bell tower; and El Nino, the child; El Toro Negro, the black bull: Rancho Viejo and Fiesta. Activist 'Sorry' Fo1· Garbage CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -Welfare activist Maya Miller has formally apetogized to state legislators for hurling garbage on the floor 9f the Assembly lounge. She rendered the apology Monday to avoid being banned from the Assembly for the rest of the session, but ac· companied it with a criticism of the R01'-1E (AP ) -Antonio Battista, 44. lawmakers far their attitude toward ~resident or ~he lt81ian Association o[ welfare. Financial aid to students at Saddleback College has received a boost from several area groups and individuals, Dr. Fred B. Bremer. superinteodent-presi· dent, announced today. Three organlutions have m a d e specific gifts to the choral program. The Kiwanis Club of Laguna Hills donated $'75, the Sisterhood of Temple Judea or LaguM Hills presented $100, and the Michigan Club of Leisure W or I d presented $20. Mrs. Louis Golan of Cathedral City presented $100 to.the Saddleback student nurses. An anonymous gift of $200 was also presnled to that fund . The Women's Club of Leisure World presented $200,with $100 for the presented $200, with $100 for l he fund. Social Science instructor John P. Clancy donated $100 for two $50 scholarships. Presented to the college eartler, but not previOt.Jsly announced was the con- tribution of $150 to the college's scholarship fund by the California Club or LagWlB Hills. Wall~ce Treated MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) -In his continuing effort to lessen pain, Gov. George C. Wallace had his fourth acupuncture treatment Monday. Wallace aides said there was no word m wheUler any signs of progres! were noted in the needle treatment. Let Them Eat Cod The 26 cheetahs at Lion Country sarari in Laguna Hills liked the tuna, rock cod and salmon fed then1 Monday. The 170 lions were a touch more choosy but they had already each consumed their 10-to-12- pound ration of meat. Lion Country officials Jinked the experimental fish diet to the meat boycott. The price of horse meat, normally fed the carnivores, \Vent frotn 17 to 23 cents a pound recently. \Vbole- sale fish can be had for 10 cents a pound in 7,000- pound lots. A spokesman for the game preserve said their zoologists were not enthusiastic about the fish idea but the accounting department is looking it over. Johnson & son Has Two Goals 1: LOTS OF HAPPY BUYERS 2: NO UNHAPPY O~TNERS Dear Friends of Orange County, We want you to be happy when you buy a new Lincoln or Mercury from Johnson & Son and we want you to be happy while driving it as well. If for some reason you're not, give us a ca ll and we'll do our best to correct the problem. We definitely do not want any unhappy Wizards, was arrested Monday on ~ "I am sorry for the litter, butt cannot 'charges of fraud. tell you I am sorry for my impatience or 1---1-~~~,.+lll!lia:,.JmUL.his..JlromisesJo tbers.,"o~C~nm~¥~~J'"&DSe1Se.~•>lf~~out1tr~~~ge"-'••l-tbe-"i'"1aoce~f..~~~~~- jobs and success in love were not fullill-Nevada does; daily to its poor children~" i----own.,"-~~-------;-----~--------------1-~~ ed. she wrote the lawmakers. Cheers-Hu111bng Liquor Co1ite1it Listing Urged \V ASHING TON (UPI) -The government is considerin g i pro- posal to require that ingredients be listed on lhe labels or beer, wine 'and liquor, an indu stryo[(icial said.Monday. John F. McCarren, general counsel for the Distillers Institute, said I.he Treasury Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Fire- arm·s has had the matter under consideration lor oome time. Distilled spirits now lisr only the percentage of alcohol plus' soine general references to certain Ingredients._ The same generally applies. to tie er and wine, al though-wine additives solllclimes are listed. Asked if lhcre was resistance to the proposal, McCarren replied, "I( by resistance you mean do they like it, I'd say no, lhey don't. But I lhink they've known It was coming for some time." ) ' DICK JOHNSON Hom• 01 Th• N•w Car ; • • • "Golde11 rcnicl." Dick Johnson Vice President ''Orange CoirnttJ'S Tomi~ of Tint Ccrs ~' ohnson & son LI NCOLN MIH CURY -2'2t HARBOR BLVD •• COSTA MESA • 540-5630 • Ji ome Of 'the Ntw Car , • • "GoldeK Touch" 4 O~ILV PILOT Pow-wow E-n te rs 4th. Day in SD PINE RIDGE , S.D. (UPI) OptimJst\c, that the armed confrontation between federal o[ricers and Indians OC· cupylng Wounded Knee can be ended soon, federal negotiators hold an un- precedented fourth consecutive day of negotiations with leaders or the Wounded Knee occupation !Oday. A NEG011.A11NG session was set for" 9 s .m. (PST). It was the rirst time in the 35-day old occupation of the tiny hamlet on the Pine Ridge Oglala Sioux Reserva- tion that neg~'alions have progressed in- to a fourth aight day. Assistant Attorney General Kent Frizzell, the ovemment's top negotiator in ire confrontation, termed Mcmday's negotiating session "the most productive yet." Following the session, Frizzell said • the two sides were only one or two points apart and that a settlement "could come in the next ~wo or three da)'I." }\amon Roubideaux, chief counsel for the American Indian Movement, whose members have occupied Wounded Knee, said he "agreed pretty much" with Frlzzell 's assessment although he· said he was not quite as optimistic as the federal official. "I WOULDN'T disagree with Mr. Frizzell,.. Roubideaux told newsmen after Monday's meeting, "but you knOw how these things go. I'm sUll optimistic that we can have an agreement within a short time." Roubideaux, a Sioux, said the militants inside Wounded Knee would "come out and . go to court" if the goVernment agreed to adhere to the tenns of an 1868 treaty with the Oglala Sioux, granting the tribe recognition in a wide area of what is now we.stern South Dakota. Frizzell said there was a possibility that some persons in Wounded Knee were dead set against an agreement. Newsmen noted that ATM leader Dennis Banks had not attended any of the last three negotiating sessions, but both Frizzell and Roubideaux said Banks' absence did not necessarily mean that Banks would be a holdout on a set· tlement. Mother Thrown Into Well With Iler 4 Clrildren MONTEVIDEO I UPI I -Police today captured Pablo ilernandez Jara, 30, a peasant, and accused him of throwing a mother and four of her children into a 100-foot v"ell . Two of lhe children, aged six and seven, drowned. Police said the crime occur red Satur· day night in a little town 12 miles northeast of Montevideo. 11ernandez threw ~1rs. Ester Gonzalez de Torterolo and her children into the well, tHen ran o{f while they screamed for help. Neighbors rescued Mrs. Torterolo and two of the children. Police captured llemandez when he returned to the scene to watch their efforts to retrieve the bodies or the drowned children. They said Hernandez had no e:s:planation for his action other than "an irresistible de- sire to kill," as he put it. Solon Says FBI Used for Gossip \VASH INGTON {UPI) -President Nix- on's admin ist ration has used the FBI as a "political peeping Tom and gossip col- umnist," a \Visconsin congressman has charged. Rep. Les Aspin (0-\Vis.). Monday cited a confidentia l FBI memorandum in mak- ing the accusation. lle said the me.mo asked FBI agents to collect "items with an unusal twist or concerning prominent personalities which may be of special interest to the Presi- dent or the-attorney gene.rat•· -I Fonda Nominated fo .r 'Gullible Award' lJy-Unltia PrHI liileniattii'iW Rep. R<>bert H. Si«le (Jl.CoM.). stood on the floor of Congress Moo.day and nominated actress Jane Jo'onda, twice un Oscar winner, for stlJl another award. Steele's award for Miss Fonda woul~ be for "the rottenest, most miserabl t! perfonnance by any one individual American in the history of our eounlry." STEELE WAS joined by several recently returned prisoners of war Mon· day in criticizing recent statements by antiwar activists, especially Atiss Fond<J and her husband, Torn llayden, one of the Chicago Seven defcndan1s. Mis.s Food.a -and llayden have been _s ep ical of sTur1es lcitd b)'l'ttlimlng POWs of torture in CommuniJt prison camps. They said their trips to North Vietnam showed I.he prlsoners to be treated reasonably and pointed to news ~torics te11ing of the generally good health of the men when they returned. Hayden said the POWs who told such stories were liars, hypocrites and pawns of President Nixon. CWO Roy E. Zeigler 11, who spent rive years In a North Vietnamese prison, call- ed .. Hay~n "the stupidest, most ig., norant and gullible person I ever heard of" for his remarks. "LIARS, HYPOCRITES and pawns, . I are ef ... -Zeigler said~an open letter wrtUen '""" his born& in Springfield, lit. "You sorry Individual. You don't know what you are talking about. You ar:e without a doubt the stupidest, mo~t ig- norant and gulllble person I have ever heard of. "ri.1en died at the hands or their captors and you have the audacity to s a y we were the best treated prisoners in any war In history. What the hell do you know! Zeigler said he thought Hayden was a pawn of the Communists and on Hayden's claim it was the Pentagon, not the antiwar activists, who prolonged the --war,~he llidl". ~-----------''"!' ihe-1U1&-.ne.ver.. met.-lbe..men...sJl~W--- "l've asked myself what the Pentagon branded,'' Steele said in his con· does, and lbe answer ls that they got me gressional speech. "Can thl.5 pan1pered . home, wh.icb is more than I can say for privileged young actress be so egotlstJcal your organization . . . ThanU for and naive a::i to think that her brie r guid· nothing. We needed you like we needed a ed tour GI North Viet nam qualifies her to hole in the head." speak with more authority on how PO\Vs were treated lhan the men themselves·! • CAPT. JAMES Ray of ConrO<, Tex ., said he had scars to prove the POW statements about torture were true. "I would personally challenge that young lady (Ml55 Fonda) to look at the scars still vislble on my arms from the tortures and tell me to my face that I'm a liar and a hypocrite," he said during a visit to relatives in Loveland, Ohio. ---v "WHERE DOES she get 1\is colossal gall? l wonder if she would dare to make her charges to the races of those men who were beaten with rifle butts in the jungle or to the captured ainnan who was tied down with wire while ants swarmed over his body until he thought he would be eaten alive.'' Bombers Pummel Cambodian Sites U~I T11fff1010 From Wire Services U.S. warplanes, including ever Y availabfe B52 bomber in Southeast Asia gave Communist forces in Cambodia thei r heaviest pounding of the war during the night as part of the Nixon ad- ministration's campaign to force. them~ into a cease-fire, reliable sources reported today. TIIE SOURCES compared the bombing to the altacks on Hanoi and Haiphong last December that were aimed at fore· ing North Vietnam into a peace set- tlement. But the Communists in Cambo- dia are widely dispersed and have none of the industrial concentrations vulner· JTI. President Defends Chile Support Offer THOUSANDS qF ACRES OF ARKANSAS LAND UNDER WATER Mi1si11l ppi Flooding Makes for Wet West Memphis, Ark. WASHINGTON (AP> -Sen. Frank Church says the $1 million "dual· purpose" offer by International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. to support L:.S. government action in Chi I e "represents improper interventioa in Chilean politics." Swrm Hits Gulf States ; Church made the ~o.ffi!mn! ~onf!_ay after the Senate Foreign Relations su!r committee he heads wound up a seven· day hearing on allegations that m at· tempted in 1970 to block the election of Salvador Allende as president of Chile. On _ ·Eastward Rampage l'IT CllAIRMAN Harold S. Geneen , the final witness, denied that ITT, itself, took any steps to block Allende, but confirmed a $1 -million offer to support any U.S. By The AsSociated Press A severe storm \\•hich punished the South\vest \Vilh high winds and dee p snO \V swirled into the Gulf states today. brin g- ing the threat of damaging rain and thunderstorn1 s. 'The sno\vfall in the southern and cen- tral Rockies dimini shed during !he night. leaving DcnVer. Colo. buried under five inclies or fresh snow. Alboqureque, N.l\L . received up to 17 inches of snow dur ing the tv.·CK!ay storm. As the storm system moved eastward. the National Weather Service warned that the Southeast could be for severe thunderstorms and heavy rains. Showers and thunderstorms during the night moistened an area from Oklahoma to western TeMessee and along the Gulf Coast. While the storm diminish ed in the Rockies, travelers warnings st ill were in force and residents battled the effects of the heavy snO\\'S. EFFORTS TO drop hriy to strandC'd cattle in Colorado frorn helicopters \\'ere temporarily abandoned at spots ~1onday because of the new slonn. A spokesman for the Colorado-Dcp.1rlment of Agriculture estimated that 15.000 calves may be losr-in1his severe "}·ea1her. ·rravelers and stockmen's advisories government action . The offer, he said, I f r h d had a "dual purpo••." \l'Cre poslec or parts o t e Texas an .,._ Oklahoma panhandles. Up to four inches .If there was a possibility that a coali· tion could have been formed to help the of snow \Vas expected. Chilean people reach better represen- Winds gusting at 60 to 70 miles per tation, "that ~'Ould have been fine," Ge- hour s\vept the high \Vasatch Mountains necn testiried. just east of the Great Salt Lake in Utah. If that proved infeasible. he said , he thought the government might work out Trees \vere uprooted, trucks and trailers a plan, including .. some socially con- smashed and dama ge was estimated in structive joint private industry and the thousands of dollars. One gust at . , . B · f I U h I ked h government pro1ects, ' to induce Allende, ounti u , ta ·.was c oc at 96 m.p. a Marxist. to pay for expropriated Strong, dry w1n?s bl~\V sand and dust t American properties. ove r Southern Cahforn1a. SHO\VERS ANO thunderstorms ex· tended from southwest Texas into Oklahoma . to Kansas. \\'estem Tennessee and along the Gulf fron1 Louisiana to Florida. An offshore storm produced heavy rains along the New England coast. and flash-flood warn ings \\"ere issued along the Maine shore. Scattered showers also touched thc lo\vcr Great Lakes and the Central Ap- palachians. Flooding of the ~fissjssippi River from Dubuque. lo\va, to New-Orleans. and <Jlong the J\·lissouri River forced ad· clilional persons from their homes J\·lon- clay. Two deaths ha ve been reported. able to air attack that the North Viet· namese had. The sources said they were unable to say just how many strikes U.S. pilots flew or bow many tons of bombs they dropped. But they indicated about 120 B52s were used in the attack, and tfiit could mean a total or 3,600 tons or bombs dropped. The U.S Pacific Command 1 n Honolulu, the official source of in- formation on American air operations in Indochina, made its us w a I un· commllllicative aMouncement that U.S. B52s continued operations over Cambodia Monday for the 27th suC<:i!ssive day. TllE SAIGON command said today government rangers repelled a Com- n1unist attack at an outpost 50 miles north or Saigon that became the focal point a month ago of truce violation charges by South Vietnam and the Viet Cong. Saigon and Viet Cong delegates to the peace-keeping Joint Military Commission met again to discuss the continued fighting at the Tong Le Chan outpost but \'-'OURd up in another deadlock. A South Vietnamese Foreign ~1inistry spokesman blamed the truce supervising force. the four-party International Com- miss ion of Control and Supervision, for "lack of action" in the face or "blatant violations" at the ranger base. l\tEANWIULE, IN Paris, the South Vietnamese accused the Viet Cong of pro- voking military incidents in Vietnam to \\'reek talks on their country's political future. The Viet Cong sa id the United States kept interfertng in Vietnamese affairs . 'I'he charges were exchanged as the two sides met for the fifth time in an ef· fort to break the deadlock in their talks aimed al setting up elections in Sooth Vietnam. UPI Ttl#llOi. Boopf.a Dre •s Designer Pierre Cardin off~s this Japanese 1lanlern-inspired dress in his \Vi nter collection, executed in pastel \VOOls. The above·knee narro\v dress has four hoops that 1nake it bob up and down . Really. Court Finds Highway Fund Impound Illegal ST. LOUIS (UPI ) -The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday that it ~·as illegal for the Nixon administralion to impound money appropriated by Congress to the stales fo r federal highway construction . While the court cautioned the 2·1 ruling and proclaimed the •·new na tion of Nutopia." Nutop ia. as Lennon described it. is a ''conceptual country. lt ha s no land, no boundaries, no passports." Lennon. v.·ho said he was planning on applying for U.N. admission for Nutopia. also displayed the new n11tion's fla g - a white handkerchief which he blew his nose on. Winds Buff et Southland Will Co11tinue Anotlier Da y; 450 Tr ees Do w1i iii LA I /, \ • DA ILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtllwrry of th~ Daily Pilot MtlMltr •'f .. I" If Y•~ dt fttl ftlYI 1'111~ ••11r '' ):JI .. m .• (Ill I"" ,,,,., c••Y win M M"lvtftl 1' ~.... C111, ••• liken lilfl••• _ 7:M •·'"· l1h11t1y Ind 511<1111': II ·.,... te 11111 rKt1vo '"" c1,.,. It ' •.m. S11~••1y, er , '·"'· Stltltl11 Clll Ille I tit' wlll ,.. ... ¥1111 It ~"'· Ctllt ore llMtll llftllt \I 1,m, ' DAIL V PILOT Ii Ex-POWs Exempted Ballance Cwthes . Prompted bf Com11ae11t•? . . less Radin' KMPC Pilot Slain rom ax LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Ballance, a pion<erci "topl ... plan to exempt returned radio," was back '1 the ml~ prisoners of war from state phone Monday, but bis tete- personal Income laxes for the pbooe chats with remal'e call- tlme they were prisohers bu en cqncemed meat prices, not won Sl.O approval ln the state their sez lives. Senate. Ballance's highly auccessful The measure by showhas~tbell\O!lnot- Assemblyman Walter Ksra· able casualty ci the federal blan (l).Monter.y . P a • k ) , government's threats against would al9o exempt men listed stations Indulging ln "topless as missing tn acUon. Estate radio," a name given to radio of AerVicemen who died in the programs that discuss aa. Vlelnam combaJ zone would Dean Burel( chairman ol be exempted · from state In-the Federal Communicatioos heritance ta.tes. • Commission, warned the Na- • '/ti• Seerets' tional Association ci Brood· casten last week that actions LOS ANGELES (AP) -A would be talren against "eleo- go v e r n m e n t lntelllgen~ tronic voyeurism. 11 He said the resesrcber who stsrred m . legal bottle ..,.,. the coostiu- secret Pentagon papers hear·· tional rights of broadcasten ings outside the j u r y ' s vs. ~overnment control shOuld ( presen.ceBRlbl!ll reE, lumedFS to fa)ce :g~' fought over "such gar- THE NEXT DAY, Sto...- Broodca:stin( Co., owner of the panel, telling them he station KGBS, annoonced that adlvsed the JusUce Depart-Ballance's "Fe':minine Forum" ment there were no vital na· show had been kiJled. The tional defense secrets in the broadcasters denJed the sbc>w papers. was indecent, but said there Nwnerous d e f e n s e ob-was no point in adding to the jections prevented WiJliam D:-~-indust.ry!9 ,,..oolems Gerhart from telling the jury with the government over it. that his reports -considered Ballance became a celebrity favorable to defendants Daniel locally with the !llCCeSS of Ellsberc and Anthony Russo °Feminine Forum." Women -were suppressed by the listeners called in a n d dis- government until the judge unearthed them during the series of secret bearings last January. e 11th Vte!tlm Killer -Sane In Teens' Mutilation cu.ad their sex Jives 'With Ballance on the air, uiuolly ming ooly their 111'11 names. Manyllstenerswe"'aaf<lolsh. ed by their cand«. Tho lhow was a rollng bit. It .... oyndlcaled to 30 -111auoos acroos the nation, and Inspired a number ci lrnJta. ton. KGBS and Ballance blame the lmitaton for the federal crackdown, Ballance callinl( them "cheap competl- ton who make me loot bad by their grOl!S lack a(·taste." ALmOVGB the F<X: said In W ashlnJt!oD !bet U roceived •bout l,'IOO ·-plalnta wins! "topless radio" and allegedly Indecent television (ll'OlfllIIl-., ing in February, a spokesman , for KGBS said the station's • "'"':..:.... lawyers examtoed the FCC '~.1. .. ,files and coo)d Dnd ooly 18 • • . complaints against Ballance .• ·· · last yesr. . .. . With television cameras on hand to record the change, Ballance announced to bis Site of Head-on U'IT...,.._ .. listeners Monday that bis dis. Bystanders obServe stacked railroad cars in El cussloo topic far the day was lr1onte -east of Los Angeles, after a collision between "How are you living with the two freight trains caused 14 cars and four l-000mo- meat boycott!" tives to derail. Art least two persons died and four Today's is "what makes were hurt. )'OD!' man pOut!" ---~~--""'·=-==~--~-~=~---~~ Free Press Staffers Freed SAN FRANCl§CO (AP) -The California JERRY REZNICK, a mail clerk at the state LOS ANGELES (AP ) - Comments aired by a popular 11Alrwatch11 pUot-reporter for radio . stallon KMPC could have led to his slaying abosrd a ship 30 minutes before he was scheduled to leave with his wlfe on a cruise to Me1ico, authorities said today. Investigators sali!J the vie· Um, Jim Hicklin, M, of Northrldge was shot and kllled ln his stateroom aboard the ship Italia Monday night. Police said a man ldentlfied as Edward E. Taylor, 46, of Hollywood wa s boo~ed !or in· vestlgatlon ol murder. A small-caliber pistol was taken as evidence, they added. HICKLIN WAS in his com· partmenl with his wife Dolly and a male companion when a man entered, detectives said. According to witnesses, the helicdpter pilot Said he wanted to be alone with the visitor and ordered the olhers to Jeave the room. When the door was closed, loud voices and shots were beard. • WCKl.IN'S body was found slumped against a bunk with two bullet wounds in the bead anaa possible fhirirwouoo1n his shoulder, authorities said. A KMPC !fPOkesman said Taylor was n"amed as defen· dant In a criminal libel suit fil· ed by Hicklin becauSe of a nuf!1ber of letters accusing the Supreme Court Monday reversed CQDvictions attorney general's Los Angeles office, re- of two underground newspaper staff mem· moved a copy of the roster which contained HANOI A.ID hers for receiving stolen property -a list of the names, home addresses and phone num· state naicotics agents they published in 1969. hers of ·narcotics agents throughout the state. OPPOSED It was not marked secret or confidential. The unanimous decision by Chief Justice Remick went to Applebaum with-the roster--SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Donald R. Wright declared there was insuf. but insisted that its source not .be revealed. United States should refuse to pilot-reporter and others of various oUenses. Hicklin, who reported traffic conditions for the station since 1966, had spol<en several tlmes of the fortbtomin& cruise In lilS liniodcdii ..a 'iii<dlOnir:if the ship's name and departure Ume, detectives said. The ltalia's departure scheduled for 9 p.m. was delayed for mare than two hours as police questioned persons on board. Your home has another "built. " -n -: , • One of the bul1t~ln features of your home II the equity you've built up over the years. You can convert that equity Into cash with an Avco~ owner's Loan. Cash for any reason you can think of. And pay It back conveniently over a period of yeera, rather than months Uke most perao1* lOllMi Ifs our business to lend money to homeownera. What you do with the money 19 your bu1lnea. a•vco HOMEOWNER LOANS INAN~ TO $25,000. o-$5,000 ERVI on Real Esttte • 'l\ebdicw:. Pel'IOl}lll_prQPerty m,.. ALAMEDA (AP) -An ap parent 11th· victim ha9 been discovered on the Feb. 1 crash of a Navy fighter jet into an apartment h o u s e , ·officials report. OAKLAND (AP) _ A jury fithacienArtht evidenceGli to support tbeedi jury's finding . He was never profrrtisedh li~ny bupayment or help rebuild North Vietnam 1,1, H•rtMr llv4., Cott• M ............................... MW4M took only 11 minutes to decide l ur ck Kunkin, "tor and owner given any money or I e st t was told until all her rnis$lg men are • H • .t.Mlltlm 11v• .• An•ll•'"' .. . ......................... ,, that Weldon Meade KeMedy, of the Los Angeles Free Press, and reporter there was a standard $20 fee when informa· a:ccounted for and "those :,1s·,=•.,.!;··s:.'.'•:ii:.,··o;.:.;~··::::::::::::::::::::::: ::= Who l•t earli'er conVI·--~..i in the Gerald R. Applebaum, knew that the Bureau lion was used in a story. responsible for tort u r 1 n g 11m •••di 11vo., H1i1n11n1ton ••ecti .................... ur ... n \:u:u On August 8, 1969, the Free Press ran a American prisoners a re 2017 5• M••n 51•• Santa Ana • • • • • · · · • • · • · · • · • • • · • • · · • • • · • • ..,.., Alameda County Coroner Roland Prahl said Monday 1hat a hand, hip bone and but· tocks found In the wreckage and originally believed to belong to the same person had been identified as remains of two different victhN. mutilation slayings of two of Narcotics Enforcement persoM.el roster feature editorializing against secret police punished," California Lt. Gov. ::1ww~.:i:;i:.r":!: .. •~-_,iinin1i;.:·:::::::::·:::::::::::::: :::= teenagers last summer, wasli~w~as~sto~len~w~hen~the~y~p~nn~· ~ted:;i~t.~----~an~d~con:ta~IDI~· ~·n~g~t~he~ros~te~r~v~e~rba~Um~. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~E~d~Re~in~ecke~~sal~d~M~on~d~a~y.i.;~:::~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~:~ legally sane at.the time. As the verdict was an- nounced Monday, Kennedy, 29, leaned forward and to I d jurors: "I want to thank you." Originally aulhorlties believ- ed 10 persons were killed when an A7 Corsair with an unknown malfunction plunged through the roof of the wooden apartment bOlldillg. er-u .. u.:> SACRAMENTO (AP) -The petition drive for Gov. ~aid Reagan's controvers.lal tax UmitaUon plan Is formally tmder way today, and a duplicate measure sponaored by a Democrat l! before the Asaembly. 'fuc Reagan admlnlstratlon filed papers :.!onday to start circulating peUti.:lns f i:o r Republican governor's plan to clamp a COMlitutional lid on spending by future governors and legislature. Gas Dealers To Confer On Rations LOS ANGELES (AP) - Some 50 Texaco Oil Co. dealers who are receiving less gasoline under a rationing pro- gram have scheduled a meeting for Wednesday to pro- test what they consider to be Alameda County Superior C".ourt J.udge AJan Lindsay set ~pril %3 for sentencing. KENNEDY, who bad plead· ed innocent and innocent by reason of insanity, last week was convicted of first-degree murder bl the decapitation slaying of Mario Oliver, 15, of Haywsrd, and the sirangula· tion death of Vicki Iselin, 14, of nearby Union City. The defense argued that KeOneciy felt he was serving Satan and participating in. a ''black mass" when t he youngsters were killed. His tawyer also contended that Kennedy had suffered brain damage from fumes in a dry cleaning plant where he work- ed, and therefore was not responsible for his actions. Kennedy bad been brought here for trial from Washakie County, Wyo., where he was serving a sentence for assault. Judge Bars All Media At Trial unfair lreatment by the New PORTERVILLE (AP) - York·baJed firm. . The press and public have The rationing began Sunday been barred f r o m a and affects about 200 Los preliminary h e a r I n g in Angeles-area stations supplied Porterville jusUCe court for by distributors who b u Y Beverly Hills socialite and an ga!Oline from Texaco, the na· Illinois escaped -convict both tiort's .largest gas o I in e accused of murder. marketer. Another 800 stations judge George Carter Mon- a re supplied directly by the day granted a motion to ex- firm and have sufficient quan· elude the media and spec· tities of fuel, a spokesman for tators from the bearing for the rationed dealers said Mon· Hope Niven Masters, 31, and day. 'Q!rald Walker, 40, both charg· Several of those dealers af-ed with the Feb. 24 shootlhg rected by the rationing have death of Los Angeles ad· predicted shorter w o r k i n g vertising ~ exeCutive William hours and higher . prices as Ashlock, ~l. Ashlock's body supplies dwindle. _ .-was found in the Springville ....... ........ ranch house owned by Mrs. THE Oll. company told lls Masters' father, Beverl)LHilla stributors UU:oughotlt the na· attorne W. Van C".ott Niven. i---t~~~00:;'ii;;nn;.t;~973~ -will be limited to the qoan· tlties they bought In 1972. The distributors In turn limited the amount they will sell to the dealers. Samuel Goldfarb, an at· tomey for protesting dealers, said it Is unfair that some were ·hit with quota.o while those who buy d'rect from Texaco 61Can buy all the gasoline they want." The dealers a r e 0 ln· dependent businessmen who may be forced out of business because Texaco has imposed quotas .In a discriminatory manner/' he aatd. · Company officials refused comment. but a spokesman "know• nothing about the rela· llonshlp bet-n a dlstribulot and the dealers n. serves. That's entirely hi~ bus.lness." WAUIEl\'S altomey, Tulsre County Public Defeoder Jay Powell, sought tbe closed hearing ciUng that It would decrease the chances of a change of venue. He said the hearing proceedings co u Id result 1n possible pnojudlclal publicity. Tulare County district al· torney 's offlc• Indicated the arguments were c e n t e r e d around a defense motion for a continuation. 'Ille district et· tomey's office said it would call 15 wllnesses duri•J the scheduled three-<lay hearmg. Mrs. Masters is free on $50,000 bail.' Walker has been In the CUBtodY of the Tulare lure March II In a suburban north Hollywood m o t e I. Walker was convtcted of at· templed murder in 1169. ~~ ON THEIR 25th ANNIVERSARY ASSOCIATES, I.TC. I MARION' McCOY LE£ S TEVENS OF M IAMI IN C. .... Tannel MiSTER ROBERT NQW I S lHE 1 JHE B-zzzB-zzz ..,,,I;} PMNI:S ¥nIJSTEIN VERDHA l(NtTS JAMAICA FASHION j, ' th rt CE·LEBRATION Our designers and suppliers are helping to make our 25th Anniversary the 9reatast ever. Their contribu· ti on is four beautiful $I 00 wardrobes to be awarded to four lucky-O'Bt:ien customers during the month of April. You will receive one additional coupon for e1i1ery $25 worth of mef(:h1ndi1e you purchase durin9 tha month of April. Drop in today and fill out your fr1e' coupon! 2515 EAST COAST HIGHWAY At ti41cArthur • 673-2990 ' I • • CORONA del MAR • • • < •· I ~ .. • DAD .Y P ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE They used to say that talk is cheap, but the cost of Inter-city "llommunication seems to be going up with the price of beef. A tentative budget 0£ $70,000 approved by mem· bers of the new Orange County Intergovernmental C<>- ordinating Council ~CC) just about doubles the original estimate of costa in the neighborhood of $84,000 a year •. Cost of running the ICC will be footed by its 25 member cities and ttie Orange County Board of Super- visors. II tl>e new budget is adopted April 25, their dues, based on population, will double. Pr~limi~ary dues L!'S~te. rang~ from $315 lot San Juan Ca~IS!Tano to $5,733 for lllmtington Beadl. Any Ulcrease WllI have to be approved by the 'city councils and supervisors: A salary allocation in the $18,000 to $25,00P range for an executive manager, J?lus $8,500 for a secretary and $8,125 for fringe bend1ts is the major item in the )>udget. The rest of the money will pay for office sp equipment, supplies and fees for con~ting tees. The ICC was formed as a forum to ·on of regional problems that extend be city boundaries. It differs from the existing e of Cities .in that it includes county g'overnm representatives.' · The need for · sort of communication is elear, and 1t. doubU uld eliminate a great aeaJ of dupli· cated or ov. ppin_g effort. ~iif]µst why it should 1'0st such a whopping sum orthe cities to talk to each other is less clear. ' Curb for Judges -The power of judges to deal out-unlimited ,jail sentences to persons found guilty of contempt of court would be curbed· by a new law introduced in Sacramento by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (D·Beverly Hills). , The bill would.,;et a 30.day limit on jail terms for persons so sentenced. It also would give the accused person the right to have his case heard before another judge than th'e one "110 cited him for contempt. Attention was focuaed on this UtUe-tnown facet of judicW authority when reporter William Farr was handed one oL the open-ended se.ote!Wl!ll Jpr...refu.sing to identify news sources. I::arr had'.'~ '6 da~ 'jn• jail when Supreme Court Justice WUllam O. Dougltis ordered him released on bail, but he remains under tile threat or a further endless jail sentence. , Sieroty points out that al\ citizens, not just new .. men, are ·subject to these indefinite sentences at .. the whim of a judge under the present Jaw,.thougb the cus. tomary .sentence for most contempt charge$ is live days. While ii-is unlikely the-<1verage judge would-avail himself of )his questionable legal power, a change in the la · · order. · New IR~ Image? As a result o! Senate liearings ·in Washin~on , the Internal Revenue Service may try fu polish up its image a bit -at least lo the extent of easing fts "the tax· payer is a wtential criminal" attitude. Witnesses cqmplained bitterly about lRS run· arounds and arbi!Tary seizures of property,_ including bank accounts, life · inS'urance policies and even pen· sions. Testimony indicated the government tax men are rarely helpful in guiding the inexpert litUe guy through their maze of rules and regu1ations1 routinely clam· ming up instead of advising taxpayers of their rights. This attitude, of course, has resulted in breaks for the taxpayer who "can-afford to hire-his own-experts -lo utilize-the IRS rules to throw the ·book at the tax men. The word now is thal the IRS will try to adopt a more helpful, or at least less intimidating approach. But at the same time we learn new data pro- cessing methods will make-it much easier for them to catch "errors" in returns. So just watch that arith· metic. And don't expect too much too soon. •• •I J 4 " i t • ' • I ·1 -'! ' -; • ' • Ill CIA Shake-up Conspiracies Thwarted By FBI Has Political Tint Dear Gloomy Gus ~-Blac'.K Septe.mher • Ill U.S. ' ·1 ~ \V ASHING TON -Our sources inside the Central Intelligenee Ageqcy are alarmed over an apparent move to politicize its intelligence estimates and evaluations. The craggy new CIA chief, James Schlesinger, is shaking up the Office of .National Estimates, which produces the s up e r -sec r e t studies of world de- velopments. Each September, for in· stance this office completes a pains- lli:king survey of Sov· iet capabilities and intentions. But CIA estimates, unhappily, have often con.Clicted with President Nixon's own concepts. Schlesinger's sha.ke-up, therefore, bas been interpreted within the CIA as an attempt to mak e the in· te lligence analyses conform with the President's thinking. The President's displeasure with the ClA has been no secret inside the agen· cy. In 1971. he issued a detailed "decision memorandum," complaining about in- adequate intell igence and calling for changes. J{e gave his national security adviser, Henry Kissinger, new power lo evaluate intelligence and instructed the CIA director, Richard Helms, to make the esti mating-analyzing operation more responsive to White House needs. SOl\.1E OF the refonns t h e President sought, to be sure, were intended to reduce runaway costs and to increase ef. ficiency. But the cool, competent Helms \\'as reluctant to adopt changes that ntight make the CIA less professional and more political. He believed there should be a diversity, not conformity, .9! inteJligence activities. 11e thought diverse views should be fun· neled to the White House as a check upon p:ie_.riv.aLJnielligence ~service.s. Jf t!Jg_ President' should receive onl.y an in- telligence consensus and this should turn out to be wrong; •Helml..feared, j~ would be disast~ for 1the.J>)iti"". -,. ' --.\If itf'~ H( \ BUT 'I1lE coMef4aUves arOY,D« Nl"xon persuaded him that'the CIA MCI a liberal taint and that the Office of National Estimates, in particula.r, took a dovish view of the Vietnam War. It's true the CIA warned in 1966-67 that Communist strength was aln1ost double what the Joint Chiefs estimated. Sure Wi.,ks - ~--- 11/t('f(S 'Is he CIA or "& 77· When will Ms. start calling a Miic Master a Mix Mistress? -R.E.D. " GloOln'I' Gu$ ctmmenl$ .,.. ..ubmlllff by r••dtl"$ •ncl "" '"'' nee-rllv rlilKI IM Yltw$ Of lh• mtWSfl.IPt!•. S~d your ,,. ~ TO G~Y Gus. D•llY Plloj. WASHINGTON, -Maniacal Black September killers are loose iri the u .s. Since the heinous Khartoum murders last month, t h e re have been two Black September terrorist attempts in this country. , Both were averted by the FBI assisted by local police. One of the thwart- ed outrages was tim- ,... .___ ed {or the arr:ivalof enough the Communists struck with unex· Premier Golda Meir pee.~ po~r durjng the 1968 Tel in New York Gity - holidays. .. ~. '!J " " • a feW' da~ after the° · It'*"' t~-'16.el~lmed that the bqmb-• J!ha~m •ssassll>- in( cl;lilirt.lf. .~ h~ not disrupted afHDl~P o we r f u I the flow of suJipties down the ipfiltration plastic bombs were routes into the South. Sure enough, the found in the trunks of Communists launched an unexpected~ three rented cars parked outside Israeli powerful offensive in March 1972. banks on Fifth Avenue and the El Al , terminal at Kennedy airport. ~~ S TRUE t.he CIA warned that the Literature relating to Black September muung of ~1phong harbor and the was found in the airport auto. renewed bombmg of the North wouldn't keep the North Vietnamese forces frGm getting all the supplies they needed. This estimate, loo, was subsequently verified. Of course, the CIA wasn't always right. lt badly underestimated the flow of Com· munist supplies through the Cambodian port of Sihanoukville and, therefore, dis- counted the need for invading Camb<Xlia. The CIA also upset the White House by disputing Defense Secretary Melviri Laird's statement to Congress in 1969 that the Soviets had succeeded in in- stalling-multqile warheads Qn the giant SS.9 missile, each warhead capable of hitting an fndependent target. The White liouse wanted Congress to believe Laird and vote for more defense funds. In the future , however, it appears that the CIA will be less likely to disagree \vith the White House. Footnote: A CIA spokesman said that Schlesinger's shake-up is intended to reduce unnecessary costs, remove the deadwOfild and increase efficiency. In part, lhis undoubtedly is true. DETONATION of the large quantities of explosives in these crowded areas, FBI experts say, would have killed and injured hundreds of people. The barbarous conspiracy was carried out by a now-identified Arab and an unknown number of presumably "local '1 accomplices. He ls described as j•well- dressed. educated and with no suspicious record." He entered the U.S. on a visa obtained in Canada about a week after Mrs. Meir's sched ule in the U.S. was an· nounced. He registered· in'. a Jersey City hotel where discatded plastic explosives and batteries were found . Whil e it is known the desperado fled the U.S. before Mrs. Meir arrived, the whereabouts or his accessories is con· jectural. The other aborted attempt occurred in the l\fidwest and involved a prominent State Department official. On urgent word from the FBI, he \Vas guarded by heavily-armed p o I i c e throughout his visit. Information had Garageman Battles the Bureaucrats Clai ms Entrap men,t Led to Clia rges Unde r A uto Repair Act (ROBERT S.ALLEN) on their own volition: deportation pro. ,t ceedings are under way against others. -Foreigners passtng through the U,S. -J are no longer allowed to spend up to 10 i days here without visas. Now everyone , enteri ng the country must have a via ,,I been received that the diplomat was to regardless of the length of stay. ·i be .the target of a Black Septelnber ter· -In. t~ ~vent .of a Black September ,! rorist "snatch.·• terrorist meident m the U.S., the FBI has i , . been designated to take charge. All l TO COP.E \Vith the complex worldwide --.-fede ral, state and local security forces . n1enace presented by tlie ~ Palestinian \vi.II function under it. ..1. berserks. a .nwnber . of pro~ective -'-Top govemm~nt officials ~e pow ac· ', n1casurff bave. been h9Pef~llJ ~tll~lf:d: ~ c~PAtll)ed by guards when they travel at, {.I Every secunly agency I'! directly Ill' Jti>qi~ 1i.s well' os jibroad stmilatlY lbe ·J V<iive')} -,-~BJ.' ~~f;~~-qµ. , n'!i\>bef .Of· liiipined "aDd ~1 Posial. lnspectlon SiirvJce';)lft\l!llP:"flclli guards bas bOtn !ncrea!ed·b\ and aniund.j and Na~urahwt1on Serv.tce, Siat.e and the Capitol' and key go v er nm e ft t : local police and other law fon:es: buildings. No one is pennitted to · enter : -The e~erge~cy safegpa~ mclude: the visitors' galleries of the House and .9 -~rr1ng v.isas .to 1ndiv1duals fro:m senate carrylrig a j>acqgeor·any kind. '.!j certan:i countries without approval from · · j' Washington . On this unannounced list are SAYS_ a top security official grimly: . Arab, African and Latin American coun· "The maniacal terrorism now ram- trie9. pant everywhere is a torturous arid ~if· -Arab students and "non-immigrant ficult problem. We're doing everything ·r visitors" in the U.S. are being closely we can in preventive measures, but we checked out. In the past fou r months , have no illusions of what we are up ~ more than 2.000 alien students were against. So we are proceeding on the ~found to be "deportable." around 300 of baSis of expecting the worst and them Arabs. Some of the latter have left prayerfully hoping for the best." Do Shady Politicians Rate Media Protection? •• • •, •' • •• i l think a lot of the public fuss about the "liberties" that modern journalism has begun to take coi11es from a failure to understand that the media are going through much the same transformation .11.s ~YDNEYJ.HARRI~ , other elements in society. The people who story; the essential personality is what is report the news are starting to speak imJX7f'lant about a man, yet traditionally their minds as they only the facts of his background and ac· never did before. tivities may be used as documentation. \Vhen 1 was a re· ,po r t e r some 30 l F WASHING TON COJTespondents years ago, I never could tell what they really knew about dreamed of injecting the -personal characters and habits of my own view or im· many of the men they report on, half the pressions into a "fac· polit ical figures would be hiding, and the tu al" ne,vs story. ( f other half would be suing. Nobody, not did so, of course, but even a member of the Fraud Squad , is as good at smelling out a phony as an ex:· unconsciously. with-perienced newspaperman·, yet by the The lawmakers and the bureaucrats J to get the car to Sacramento. is a hunting license to prey on the public. t '•g to) Somet'1mes 1"t was very ( ou meanu. · conventional terms of his trade, he must here in Babylon should be n1ore con· According to Gillings, the mechanic on Perhaps a law is needed to protect the hard to report with a straight face, when write only what he can document with cemed about the consequences of their RUS WALTON duty refused to service the car, at first. public from the unscrupulous: those who 1 knew that the person I was quoting or the facts. actions. But the motorist pressed his hard luck will nol govern themselves will be interviewing was an arrant fraud or liar. I have never dabbled in the unew Let me give you a for instance. story and fina!ly the mechanic agreed to governed by others. · li " ·t · t hool d I install a transmission. It would cost Btit, there is no 'defense ror chucking THIS journalistic frustration built up JOUma sm ; 1 is no my sc .. • an Late in 1971 the legislature pas.sed and 11 1 y d h 1 f 01 over the decades, and many ne\v young am too ol~ to. m~ke the t~ans1t1on. But Gov. Reagan signed the Automotive Ac\~erl;a~c~e~gs o~i~~~1gst. es!~ct:l~nf yo~ ~~l~\ $350 -parts and Jatx>r. Okay? ~~~rfp':e~~· And, there is no excuse for reporters simply refused to leave ther with every institution changing, from col~ Repair Act. think. Francis Gilli ngs does have a short fuse . own reactions out of lhe news equation . leges to churches to consume~ groups! we .._ ___ Jllat.aCLCStabu:· m· '---,,· ---"The aireclor ~311 CSfa01iSh-prO:-SEVER-. . day8 ater-th dl'iVe And-maybe-that's-good. Whether-this-ts--~ttf""'or-wor!e-in-t~~pet=t that~the-~11 woula be ed the state Bureau ccdurcs for accepti ng coffiplaints from return~ fo pie~. l!P the car -. .11e road· It takes the Gillings of this Republic to long run will have to be left to history to h~~{VIOUS to t~e fresh winds that are or Autoinotive Re· !he public against any dealer or tested 11. gave G1ll1ngs a certified check remind those fellas in Babylon that some decide: but this is what is happenh:ig. 0 ng everyw ere. pair. It requires thet rncchanlc. The director may suggest for $343 .55 and drove off. · of their Jaws can louse up liberty. Realizing that there Is really no such .-------------~ every automobile re· A th l" r· d w II t thing as "obiective" news, t h e young measures that. in the director's 1"udg· no er sa is 1e custoQler. e , no , pair deaJ cr in the ti breed is maki" ... its own Ieelinas plain. rnt!nt. \l'Ould compensate JQr any exac Y· r---B11 Geo.,.e --~ ... • state register with • u Naturally, th is antaiMnizes the great B 0 dainages su ffe red as a result of an alleg· Mr. Gillings ls facing criminal charges o-·· the ure3u. r, go bulk or Establishment fiCres, especially ol · cd violation. lf the dealer accepts the brought by lhe Bureau of Automotive Dear George: out bus1ne!;s. politicians, who had hit been im· Prank Gillings is suggestions and performs accordingly, Repairs on behalf of the people ol I'm beginning to wonder if t mune from such comnlent in news and ho r such fact shall be given due con· Callforni11. That's you. should have allo wed n1y br1"de to one garageman w re uses to sign up. fl".nture stories. Their platitudes and slderation in any subsequent disciplinary According to signed a.ffidavits and in· open up a lot or charge accounts, -, ed · h Giiiings operates an ARCO station at hearing .. , terdepartmental reports of Bu r e tt u or, even, to let her know about the hn?oc"sies have always been treat wit the intersection of 1-580 and Pattt'rson a respect they 'possibly dld not deserve. -··Rd near Tracy' TllAT READS. lt"ke presumed guilt, 10 personnel, the "motorist" was a n1embcr cha rge accounts I already had. ··ca.N v · f th T •· l' d l l t" You 're an old married man, RPCENTLY. in my state, Illinois, a ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Publislter Tho1nas Kecvil, Editor l:lorbara Kreibich Editorial Page Editor me. It reads as though f\.tr. Gillings has a o e r ..... y po Jee epar men ac mg on II;. UE CONTENDS the Act violates his point ..:. or two. behalf of the .state. George. what do you tell your wife • man about.to enter public life came i.n for The cdltorlAI pa~e oc the Dnil)· constitutional right of due process. Uoder Mr. Gillings cla im s entra pment. 1'he about charge account-;? . -· a fusillade of press attacks. on lhc Pilot ~eeks to infom1 and ~tlniu· the Act, he says, if someone complained At :iny rate, he refused to regisJ.er. All Dureau ·says ·'no way." C9nsunicr affair s NED S. grounds that he has a dubious character J1ttc readers by prescntln~ this to the stata about his prices or his work, of which made the boys in the director John Kehoe sayShe would never Dear Ned: and a sleazy background . l~is friends nf!\\'$paper'1; oplnion11 an~ t'On1· he would be forced lo prove· hi s in· automotive repair bureau unhappy. permit any of his personnel to engage in What's a charge account ? (Sec rallied to his cause. eountcr~harging that mcntar:r on to1>J~ or lntcfee1 nnd --n-. '"-at, he claims, discards lite And so on a Sunday afternoon last h I 1 he,·, r••lly a f1'ne phllanlhrop1"c chap, and !l:il\nlflc;ancr. by providinit·n toruni t:----;·~~"ffi;i"iif-ii"'"ii''iii<Weiw.nllii~~riir.--i:rm!!T!IR'i:' -,,,,ri!liW'"rmis' "'t~i!ml>ttl.--'""'iucw;;,ur:n'llo:;iw'ia";r~d~·!icte,v;;it~. ;;-,;oe,...,a;;oo.r+-ih1To:rwri•,,,n!."'ol,,,d-'m"a,.,r.,_r1,,'e,,_d _,m,.,a,,n'-"'"l"-'''-l"'t'-ll-:-1i-mtii~rsmiimcit-ttr1>.m!<!1rrn'm""'-'-ti;"r·f--!or-tbc expression ot nu .. common aw pr111c1p e a · c • e w o c rue us goes o cour . IS betng sob]eclcd tu · perseatlion ;:zy \l1Jinlo~. 3nd by nr+!1ionting lhP dividual is presumed innocent untJJ prov· struggled into Fraru.:is Gillings' gas sta-soon and It seems to me ounngs ha~ the journalistic snipers. dlvtl'!li? \'IE''-''JXlfnts or tnrormCd ob· es1 guilty-tlon. several legitimate gripes. f\Vrile to George. who says his I asked t\\·o newspapermen whose ser ... cr11 and $pokc3n1cn .on topics 11ie bureaucrats In the Bureau of The motorist moaned that he was hav· Sideways Thinking is the univer~l judgments t trust im.plicltly If they had or lhc day. AulOmOlive Repairs -and it s ing transrrtlssioa trouble. He couJdn1t get NO DOUBT many folks have had mad-cure-all. In fa.ct. we keep won· 1net him. "Yes.'' they said as one, "a.nd mothershlp, lhe· l>cpt. of Consumer AI· the car out of low gear. Things were dening experiences with auto repairs. dcring why he's still sick .... ) he's CMrse and crude and slick and r1ir1-say that's hogwash . desperate, he told the 01echs.nic: ·be had Son1e garagemcn do think free enterprise slimy." But nobody can SllY this in a news Tuesday, April 3, 1973 \ ' ' I . . ~ •• • Natural Menthol Blend (means ,naturalfy ·fresh ·taste). Salem's unique blend· features natural menthol; not the· kind ' made in ·labora· l------~---1-....ta~~· ~Li~~ t~oba~·!!M~~·ir_· _!!!l.!!!!:i!!!.l~ 0 !Ill II. J, llnMOt.IS TOIACCO CO. • A Salem is • ·. aHfas.-Oet:eimined-+--~-------...'..__ ____ ~K~in or Su r Kin That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to 'i'our H~lth. . \ KING , 19 mg. "ta!", 1.3 mg.nicotine.SUPER KING, 21mg."taf'.1.S mg. nicotine.av.per cigerene. FTC Repon FEB.13. . . • ' \ • -- • • • ·- I UAILY Pll.U I TUHdtJ, Aprll l , l"·~ .. • .. era"" .. ' ~Low Enmcgh Now' For the Discounted. Bus zszauw Dlssol•tlons Of Marriage ; _ r11" IJCKLE" SON 1w1Nr•• aAr• -1 • 1 W! FF MORTUARY I I .., l!I. Iii St., Cotta Mila I Lill l'llcq Ceotlll• Al •• 91!111111111 lllY•. I 116 1811 C11111 C1'*'11 Ow HUH Wllll EIPAldloNI •_• •-.-e•a.,-nN I MNl!H~•,...1o111 ... ,,,,_1-.i--1w•orn1re -~·..-E .,.,,~ ·O.•~·,,..,.,~--A•T-Lowlf-~-I =-~!~~:::~= 1'~J~.!.!~!~u~J~I ;\11='--U-r-=.Qn-frl ...... 111 ........ ,. cOota M... I.Iii , ti '"34U • ~CK LAGUNA ,,;rt!:,.MORTUARV I IMPa ea.,... Rd. -u • _l'ACIFIC VIEll' MIMORIAL PARK Clllolory Momwy Cbpd ... ~ View Drive N-' t:"~ie Cllllornla -_ . ,..FAMILY COLO!llW; MEl\AL DOME 7911 Bola A\'t. .. Sll)TllS' JtRTUAllV cnMai.111. e'-adtopo ... .... \ .. .. 'ALM IHI AMfMr WlffWAllO HO "°"'-! 0111~.tieAllovt r:Of, rftll ... Nf\~ . \ • Political Notes WI IN1M 17Nl11 • ; Tha~.whv !joined ImperiaJ. I believe in them!' ~:t-4R~l -• "I have dreams, too. Jul! lib you. And m•kll!*.dreams QOmo lfllt tak111 cmfll! plwilq. ·Why not li\.~J!eqple-.flinjieilal S.Wltt T • alvo you a holpins 11«1\d.'1' · I . A Plan for All People • -lo.714/"44-l~I Other ol'lkes in Cl aremont • Downtown Los Angeles • East Puadena • Olendora • Pasadena• lted1ands •Sierra ~1adre • Topanp Ca nyon • Wes1 Covina •Whinier• Woodland Hills. -• lmporlal-Ofter* 1)1 aort• of·•pec:lal Nvllll' {11'81 to help you reach )'Out pI. •. Aa qlaleklY II poulble. ''ii> on reaular puabook UOllllllts uci 11• or hlshet' on fixed torm ICCOUllt• ~th mlntmlila bollllee. ltqporlal al•o often ~ 2,Q ""Pful ~ -most of thorn freo. Alt tor more hlbm-~. Thiro aro over 60.lmportal olllOlli -throuahout the atate, llO tlltre'a 91!t, "·. .. to bo o:io n~ar you. "S*t ~·" . •• ••• A-.OUY OWNED &UBSIOIAAY OF 2.$ ~N DOLLAR IMPERIAL CORPOP;AT ION OF .-.MEl\tCA D nm ..... ' .. ' I \ • -< • . • .... •• ' • J Two Killed i~ Costa Mesa Explosion r DAI LY PILOT PUBUC N<mCE PICTITIOUS aUSIN«SS lllAMI STAT•MINT The followl119 --11 dol119 bwllll:U ••: Ill.IC D ISTlllttBUTOllS, 1n u Hill• Ln .• Hunrl"l!tan B~ Call!. n W Dfvld J, llern1!1ln. 11U1 KefUtl L•., Hunllftllafl 8HCll. C1Ut. ""41 • Tl'lb bulJMu b conducted by en ln-~~:..,._;_.;,;_;_~-:;:'O"""-°"'-__:-.-:'::::~.:_-::::".::::~~~~__.-;-~~~-,,.-:..~~~~--j......,.· -D•vkl J. 81,,•111111 Costa Mesa Scene of Destruction Aeri al view sho\VS damage to El Monte Chemical Co., 829 W. 17th St. in Costa Mesa after distiller exploded r-.·Ionday afternoon, killing two persons and injuring an estimated 11 others. Roof gone and front wall collapsed, funnel of distiller unit ls ex· posed at center of the plant. - -· City Sluiken by Blast Billows of white smoke roll sky\vard rn 01ne11ts after explosion at El Monte Chemical Co. plant on Costa Mesa's \vest side. Residen ts of a wide area in Harbor Area reported feeling bl ast. This view looks \\'CSterl y \\'ilh Bethel Towers tat right. Tio.It 111i. .... n1 w11 n1..:i wl111 tM' c- ty ''''' of °''"'" Countr 1111 M1rCJ1 1'. "n. ·-(l>lltlll"'*f Ol"trio-COlll D1lty ""°'· Aprll l. lD, 11, 14. 1f7' f \&'1' PUBLIC N<mCE "ICTITIOtll IUIUtllS N.t,MO ITATaMllt'T l n1 IO!IOW!llO petSOl'I I• dol ... 11\iil- I t: U.S.A. ST ElllEO. int So. l rl1tol, Sall· U A11t , CA tttln A•lh11r S. T.ndl.,, l](I ~. 1711\ at., Co.I• Mffl , f2'27 Thi• bUllMll 11 cDnduclecl .., I ll ,,,_ dlwldu11. A.r'lhur S. Tt..0!1r Tnl1 •llle..,.nt w11 !Old wlltl tht C-· IV Cllr~ O! Or1119t Covnly Oii Ml rdl ,., '"' ...... Pubtr1tle0 Or1no-COiii Dilly 1'110!, .. pr11, l. 10, u. ,,, "" ... n PUBUC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUI I UllM•n NAMI STATIMINT TM lollow1119 Plf"SOll 11 dol110 lloutl!!e1$ 11: AOG SA.LES a, MA•KETlNG, lt125 Croydtn Ttrr.ac1, lrvlM , C•lll. ttU4 Loul1 J . 0'11.mbroolo, 1f 1U Croydtn Ttr.1c1, trvlnt , C1lll. Tnl1 bu1lntt1 Is COl!ducted by •11 1..- cl!vldu1I. Loul• J. D'An\brOllo T11!1 1t1t1m1nt w11 llll'd wllf'I Ille Covn· tw Clerk of Or1n11t County Oii Mirth 26, 1971. ...... Publhned Or1110• Cb.11 ·Dl!ll' PlloL ,\pdl J, 10, 17, ,~, 1913 .... 7J PUBUC N<mCE l'ICTITU)US BU1 1Nll t NAM• ITATIM•NT lhe rollowl119 perlOll 11 dol119 lwllnt11 I I' PRIVATE AUTO LISTINGS, 1211? llnlOkhurll No. I, (;1rd1n Grov1, Ctltt, t]~. Rot..rt 11...lindl, IUL.C.1IUJt1n, Hun· ll1191C1t1 Btach, (1111. Thi' lwllnttl II COtldllCltd OW ltl l!1-dlvldu1I. lllobl!rt H. S1nct1 lhls 11111m.n1 w11 llltd w11h "'-Coun· iv C l••~ ol Or•r.oe Cou111y ~rch 211, ltJ3. ,.,..,, Pullll~l'led Or11191 C0111t D11lv Pllo!, M1f'Cll ,,, I nd .. pru ). ID, "· 1tn IU·1l PUBUC N<mCE -------------l'ICTITIOUI I UllN•l l NA.Ml ITATIMI NT Tii. lollowlno pe<SOl'I I• dolno bUllntu. I I : OltA.NGE J ULIUS No, t~, ,.,, Harbor B!vcl .. COllll M111, Cllll. fl627 llobbv• Lwn G1bor, .u• 1'1rll; Ntwpoo-1, NIWPOf"f, C1Uf, Tnls bu1lnt11 11 cOl\Clucltd bY 111 In· c11~1c1uel M1. Bobby1 L. G1bor T1111 1t111nMnl w11 fltld with the COVIi· ty Clerk of Or111111 County on Mtrt h t, 191J. ··-Publlshtd Oreno• C0111I Dilly l"HOI, M1rtn 11, 20, 27 •IMI Aprll l. 1m JU·ll PUBUC N<mCE l"ICTITIOUI IUllN•ss HAM• ITAT•MlffT Thi lollOWlllll pet'IOll II dolnt bu1J- li: MARIN& ltl!COVElllY SYSTEMS, 11JJ K1ll•r A..,.111,11, trvlnt, C1111or111.e tms KtnMltl W. Toy, lit DlllftCllllll A-, B1Tboa l1l•nd, C1Ulornl1 tt6'l Thll bualnt11 II COtldUCltd by •11 ln- dlYldutl. IC. W. Toy Thl1 111l11M11! w11 llltd w11tl tM COUll- ty Cltf'k OI OrlllOt Cowoty Of! Mlrdl 1 .. om """ Pullll1'*1 Orlllft COltt DtlW' l"'lklt. Mtrch 20. 27 •net April l, 10, 1rn 1,._n PUBUC NOl'ICE , ____ _ l"ICTITIOUI IU11M011 NAMa ITATIM•MT Thi following Plf'IOll l• dalfll Ml11e11• ••: THE CHALET, 1476 S. C011t Hwy, L•ou111 Buch, C1lllor11l1 "6l1 Lt• K1lhlM11 T1ylor, I'°" Gtl!IMl'"t, A.pl. c . L•llUM ... ch. C•Ufornll fM!I Thl1 bu•IMll 11 cOllCluct.d by '" '"'" dlvlclu•I L11 k1thl"" T1ytor Thia 11111fl'lllll w11 nlld with tlli c- . IV C11rll; OI Of•"ll• County Oii ~fl 141 om l'tUN Publhhtd Orl"OI COlll l O.lly l'llof, Mtrch 211. 27 1nd April s. 10, ltl) ,.._,, PUBUC N<mCE "ICTITIOUI I UllN•ll NAM• ITAT•MINT TM lollow11t11 Ptl'SOl'I 11 dolno bUllntu 11: CONSTR UCTION CAll:WASH CON· SVLTANTS. JOO ClllMY L•n., HIWP!lrt Btach, C1Hlor11f1 rutO J1rnts L. OultOll, XIO CIDfll\' ll,... N...,.port IHch, C1Uf. t'JUO , dl!~:.t~ntll 11 conduclld by •n 11Jt. J'"'" L. llul!IOll Thl1 •t111n11111 !Hid wltll tN COUllty Cl erk ol Or111111 Counll' °" Mtrch tJ, 1m. '"""'* Publf•hed Or1ng1 COllf Di lly l'llot APl'll J, 10, 17, 24, 1rn N7·71 PUBUC N<mCE Mesa Plant lnteri«tr Destroyed DAILY l"ILOT lllft l'llCIM NOTICE IS HEllEl!IY GIVEN lh•I copl11 ot 11111 St<llon oJ Tht CMfttf or: tl)t Cl!y of S•nfa Aii1 pnlPO&fd to be" i~11c1: kl by ftle Clly COIHICll of Mid (tty lly fl•01>01lllon to be 1ubmffl9d •• tl'lt o~ Mv11!clp•I Eltotllon on TueM11y, April a. 1973, mty be 1!1d by eppllc1t11111 ~ •I the ofllCI ol fl'le Cl1rk Cit the C-11. Room IOf, E!11htll Floor, CUy Hall, ,. Civic Ctnltr l"l11t. S1nt1 Ana, C.ilfwnla. City firemen continued to pour water into gutted section of El Monte Ohemical Co. plant after ex- plosion destroyed d!stilllng unit. Exterior damage, such as to auto in foreground, was widespread over west side of city. Glass ''las shattered over a four- block area. FLORENCE I. MALOHE Cltrk of the COUtKll Publ11hed Or•"ft: CM1t Oii" I'll• I "•bfutry 20, 21, "· ti, ''· u. ,., !7, •• 11•1<1 Mtrcl'I 1, t. i •.. s, i6. 1. t, '• lO, n, DAil. Y P'11.0T Stiff !"MM ' Blast Vieti•»'s BDdg Removed Emergency cre\YS roll away the body of Elmer Leenerls, 41, of Costa Mesa who ... Was killed in El Monte Chemical Co. p1ant explosion. \Vhen equipment appar- ently malfunctioned, Leenert.s fled the plant but was caught in tile blast and crushed by a fall in g \Vall. He was one or two fatalities. DAILY PILOT Photos By: Future Cha111p Richard Koehler Pat O'Donnell A·ou1 "'Ire Services after returning from his job at Cortino D'ampezzo, Italy. t~rederlck Bennett II can °do a foundry. * ivc pus -tina-i·.,...-----*·------.Actreg...Maey-Manla wide---~-'h pound barbell with case Tclevison personality Dick ly known for her "Peter Pan"' prett y good for someone 15 Clark ,42, was sued for divorce role, is ending her residency in months old. in Sanla Monica by his wife of Anapolis. Brazil , and will be Rudi Nicdzi'clski nearl y 1 I years on grounds of · th u · ed Stat Freddie is the youngest or irreconcilable differences. returning to e nit es. fi ve childcm or ~1r. and ~frs. Mrs. Loretta-Clark, 37, ask· Her attorney, Da v id t'rederick Bennett of North ed for •'reasonable" support Warshaw, said that · the death S N" and custody of the couple's ol her hW.band ?.farch 3'-----------' yracusc, . 1 . • (~_P_E_O_P_L_E___...J ''I promised myself If 1 ever had a son, I would start him on an exercise program right away.'' said Bennett. children, Duane, 9, and Cindy prompted her dt!Cis ion. Lee, 8. r-.tiss Atartin lived on her -ii'-iiiiP.iiiiiii The ooupfe, ma.rricd in !It Philadelphia ;,, April 1962, had farm in Brazil for three years. been separated since Feb. I, "She will almost certainly 1972, the petition said. not go straight to New York ," * Warshaw said. "This was Midway through a bedroom rather sudden and she's not Jove scene with Elhabttla making any concrete plans." Taylor, German actor Ilelmutfj~;;~;_::;;;;;;_::;=:=:~jl' ----------~--------------112, 13, 1~. 1$, ,., 17, 11, ''· •• 21, 12, .. Adw1rtlHIMfll U. 25• 2'. fl, :ti, 2't, JO, JI Wiii "-"" 1• '· I J, 1rn ....,, Woman Chosen Now Plasti"c Cream HJsuc NOl'ICE SACRAMENTO-(·AP) I t• •• •1F• Artifi • IT th '"'~~~ou:,,:,u:,:,i::: Al Carolyn J. Orona Of Burbank nven 100 or 1c1a ee Tiii followlng i--11 Roi,....,_ has been ap)!Oinled by Gov. '" '""" .,,. "M•••ov••, ,,.. Ronald Regait to· the Com-Artificial Teeth fln'll' Felt th1t.h11 revolufioni1ea denture Anchoreo• W•r. lido .. ~_., Y•cllt mission on the status of ...... _.__, •-a....-wearut1. ~'*'•• """"" •MCti. c.s11en111i ,'. <M ... ..-.. -••• ltlet.youbitehankr,chewbtt· J D I ISMt C I Women. Miss Orona, a Naw.fortbenr1ttime,1Cimceotrena ter, eat more naturally. F•XOOENT '"' • D•u -V• '"'' "11• ti Republican and a 1 9 6 7 plastic a.m that hotCl1 df:ntUtt1111 Ju t• for hours. Rttista moi1turc. T~r:-~r,.~!r~•.J.:1:=::'.., • fJ graduate Of use, fills a VaCan• TIC\'etbefore-form1an daatK:mem• DenturH that fit l l"f: t'S!ie(ltial l O lllCl!Widutl 1rrl brane th1t lklps Mid tl111" lo tlu health. See your denti't fttU)uly. J1., O. D1ut-v i, cy created by the resignation naturol ti111US of yo11r mow/Ir. Jt'1 a Get e1sy-t~u.e Futoo&NT Dentur• Thi• •t11-1 tiled 11r11t1 ""' Ciwfr'( J o[ Deborah A. Fontana of Van wiique dilcovuy called F1xoo1Nt9 Adhesive Cream. Cl.nt ot Ori1119 ~ Mif'dl "'°""" ~ Nuy. '=========================! l"ubUlhed Or•• C011t 0.!17 , ..... ' _ March 20. 1J 1.W April S. 10. 1m 1 .. ": The eml:i.lming--techniques of th encie Eqyptia civili,.tion dand out hi•torically u one of their great.st accompffshments. Why can 't Amercian embalmers match these skills 7. by EUGENE 0. BERGERON 1'1Mi AMoerkoll Fwtsl h1dnny a.ctt btett .UM tflls .. ~o" ti•• ftl1Nih11I .. Mew •111 ecc.,.... ,.-.c .. 1111 ttte ..,....,.llC• of Cltfbtio11 fllnet'ol rftes, Th9N h 110 '""" ot oll why .....,. dcry _..h11ers ce111tOt duplicet9 or •«Hd . tfle preMrt'otlon •,.ch of the l9ypriq .. "'"''-"· Sh1c• Hie birth ef Chrbt, hCIWl'fff, •• hrre °"""'•d • dlfferettt .tfltv• toweltd death. Th• Chrhtlo11 world of todoy co11 lff 110 p1irpow 111 MutllotlACJ tM lto4y ofter deoth to effect In Mllmmlflcatlott. lftlbolMhNJ I• Hie ftlodflll concept 01 proctlcff ot our FuMrol H•me k • 11111,le procnt Jlltndotd to retol11 ttie oppeotollCt ef HI• ff<.ffVd pet"SOfl i11 011 occeptoble mo""' 11111tll fr'"4ft M tolotlvu ho•• 9ethored for o r1ll9lo111 bvrlol Mn'lc.. W• Mn• 110 pr~I ,.,pose i,.yond this loglcol 011d splrltvol fvlfll llr19 conclv.!Ofl to h111non ••lttolte•. If y•11o hflN a "uestlon about f11o11erol Mt•lce, plHSe wrff't' or coll. Wtt.ftt'fff ,oulblo. ..... t1e111 wlll bit OM•lrff h1 thk column. PUBU C N<mCE l'ICTITIOUI •Utllf•t l MAM• ITAT•M•NT The followlno pll'IM le ...,.,.. ...... For \Vcckcuder Advc1·tising Phone The program bega n the day 1---+--t!>H.&by-t&me home·fttnn·the hospltnl. Mrs. Bennett ex· ercised Freddie every mom-... ing for five or six minutes. lier husband would give the infant a IG-minule workout Berger was w1able to go oo. GGGd__Deed lie "" loo11d to be tllmring·•,t1''='?""""''°-==°" high fever. bul doclors blamed make the scene the flu, not Miss Taylor. Sundays ft%•Bet•• e1·0 i F1111e1·al Botne COSTA MESA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA de! MAR 646-2424 673-9450 With Henry Foncf1, Berger 1~~.~,!~~~'· and M'iss Taylor are shooting L---in-the_l 1Lil.j j~f~·~ij!~\1~ll!.J l••m"ii'lllii71ii4iilll1.i'ii''ii"ii"m••\~~~~=~~= lhe . nim "Ash Wednesday" In = ··-- 3 • • \ \ f I --· E M o> DI un s th di . ol C( th " m •l B .. ·re Si l)a! Si I. re d ii fl p .. p s l I .. c ii ' s I I I ' ' ' t I .. • DAILY PILOT Tuttday, Aprtl 3, 1973 ,-·-~ -- TONIGHT'S 4V-HIGHHGKf8_,, ' KIJJ 0 7:30 -"The Story or Three Loves." • • Kirk Douglas, Pier Angeli and Leslie Caron star \" in this romantic drama from 1953. KCET flll 8:00 -Turning Points. Growing con- troversy surroundin g construc:tlon of nuclear po\ver i plants -evidenced by the effec·t of one such facil· r ity in Alidland, 1'1ich. -is examined. ,, ABC 0 8:30 -"family Flight." Rod Taylor and Dina Merrill star in a story of a squabbing famly drawn together in a battle for survival after their 1 plane crashes. CBS 0 9:00 -"A War of Children." A codtemp- orary Belfast family is torn away f~ from their Protestant !riends and then from each other by political and religious e<>nflict. NBC O 10:00 -First Tuesday. The controver· sial issue or amnesty for Vietnam \Var deserters and draft evaders is presented · in a report by cor· respondent Tom Pe_ttit. ' TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening APRIL3 l:OO OOO!Il!DII'JIDN•., ClJ®J N•., 0 lon11ua (i) Gtt Smart 0 1'111 Aflfl ltfl m Tht Fllnbtonu Q)SUrTrtk EE Ml Dukt En1111011ll1 tii) Hocl1epodp lodtt ti) Thret Stoops 5:30 00 Ho1111's H•rHS O Mowit: (90) ""cnic" Put I (dra) '56-Wllilam Hold1n, Kim No· Vlk. @ C3S News W11te1 Cronkite ~ Men Griffi11 Slit• m Doda:et W•rM·Up I Baseball Dodp1s ~. 5'n fr111Cixo Gi1n1s from Pt!oen11 fEl l'Yld H1~v1rs1tional He brew m .IN11111 Carllln Show ai)Nowla m Tiit franl ....,.. (fl Little Rasals 7:000CIJ O!D Nm O Bowllnt tor h llan @ Trll\h If Co11wqu1nca li) Safari tt Actftnturt 0 What's My Lin•? Ql I On1111 DI Je11u1it EE S1111p1t1111t1 M11l1 EE! Th• f1ent11 Chef . Qa Mul'IKI a!) Formt 11 r1 l1b11 m uan' Club EE Sptad Ricer Wednesdoy DAYTIME MOVIES !:30 O '11tt Lldy C:•11blts" (dra) ''9 - 8.Jrball Stanwyc:k. Robert Pruton. IO:OO(D"1:*'4' IKt fft Aflrer" (drl) '59 . 0 "Qperallon H1)'llft'' (adv) '50- 8111 W1Ulams. Ann Ruthuford, 12:00 O "r11l1 Hotieyrnoon" (mus) '3'- 81111 CroMI,. "Min Wllo CriM Wolf" "1rys) 'J7-ltw1s Slant . • of W!ll·lO·llo buslntssm~n puts !ht five.a 1eam into 111 lnvesti11atisJn ol a Jucnlivt b\1ckm1ll openhon. (R) ED l il1 Moyers' h11m1I a!)Nowll g:oo o cas Tu•tdi'I' Movie: 1c1 (90) "A W1r of Child1en" (II) (dra) '72 -Jtnny Agutter, AnthOflY Andrrws. Vivien Mefcllant. krhn Ron•ne, Da~­ ny Fi1111is. A eontempor1ry BeUast hmily is torn IWIY lifst !1om thei1 Protestant friends ind thin !Jom each other b7 pot1tic1I ind 1ellgiocs conllict. ffi Get Sm111 EE Nino ED Behind tht Lines @I) Noches T1p1tia\ 1:45 fJ MD¥it: "Kdlph:" (w!I) '53 - Waid Bond, Sterlln1 H1Y11en. 2:30 m All·PUtl Show: (C) "Thi St1 rictrtcra.," "Ti111e1otr' 3:10 fl MO'fit: °'Sllldl Oat tn 101" (dra) '55 -Frank lavt~, Terry Moore. 1:00 m (C) NM an In lht Saddle" (WtS) '51-R•ndalph Scott. klan lulie. l :JO D Nlht H1bntln(' (dr1) ·63-Julie Ha111,, C11ire Bloom. 3:00 OC (C) "r1p1'1 Dtllcate Condition" Canel. (com) '&5-Jac~ie Gleason, Gl1nis Johns. "Four D1)'19f N1pt11" Pa11 I (dro) '6l-Jean Sort!. O~"Somnrbtrt l'M find 'foll" P1rt I !""'¢at• G1l!tl . 3:30 0 "One Step to Htll", (adv) '68- ly Htrdin. Rossano B"z:rt 4:00 fl "Tht Stflllll!I" (SU$P') '4' - la11111 Youn11. °™in W1llt1. I 4:30 (ljSl1111 '' UIAM liltln1 M•tt o friend! God Is fOt' Y°"I CHANNEL JO l C1 NCM'1 COAPOllllT•OJ\I ,,,,-:) f0UNT Alr1 VAlll Y ow-r$~l ~.;00..-;.u.11" !1 ij,,:;.,, ~ DOOllS 0"1!H 1rOI H••I SI-'• "HEAllTSllEAk KI O'' ... "HOT ROCKI" ..tJl"':JfOUNfAIN \/ALLEY ow f.i:'~D ....,B;oo;;.~\, Al1Uutc.1~ OOo1• Opftl Wl<<IY 1 :1~. S1t·Su~ J:lO s1r11<1 llrtls.."'1 "U" THE SANDBOX" (It) "ILESS THe IEAST5 & CHILDllEN" NOW THRU TUESDAY • CHAllTON HESTON "SKY JACKE D" ph11 lA9UEL WELCH "KANSAS CITY BOMBER" :use vii 1.ido· N~wi-tS....,11 Pbuiw. 613-Jl.350 HELD OVER ~/~ c~.;;.Tillie"J_ I, AM • ._, 1 .... .., _"""" A Ut.llvERSAL P!CTURf ~] TfCl'NICOLOR' • PAN.O.VISION ' ALSO "' larbra Strelsond "UP THE SAND BOX" • Kids Like To Ask Andy VC Irv i11e ·Concert · Dallas Orch~stra Sp id By TO:\t BARLEY Corona del Mar. ling in this analysts with an Its members are women. 01 ..,. oau., ,1 .. 1 s111t orchestral work that closed "I don't give a damn if One or our loeal conductors POULENO'S GLITFERING this concert In magnificent you're male, female or who knows 8 good thing when Concerto Jn D minor is ideal style -St r av ins k y' s 1 • something ebe just so long 8.!I he hears one came back to the stu(f ror duo-pianists and it is 'Flrebltd'' suite. you c;an play the riddle," ~·u 0 ,... 1 T one of the most demanded the typically caustic comment range W.,st rom a ex as works in the whittemore and BRUSILOW, LO W key but of Sir 'l1tomas Beecham on trip last year with glowing reports of the prowess of the Lowe repertoire. And little tremendously effective In the that topic . --l;ol.,._,___._ madonna xxx plll'.I Ste'9 McQHH "JUNIOR BONNER" Dallas Symphony Orchestra. v.·onder; their OCPS audience Stravit~y. got a f I u en t Hear, hear. Maestro He told this critic that the loved it and lapped up with reading from his ensemble In Brusllow must be extremtly'\1~~~~~~~~~~~ Dallas ensemble was vastly equal enthusiasm the Gluck what was by far ~the best proud of those gifted ladiesf improved rroin his earlier ex· and Fritz Kreisler works prchestral errort of the even. who play such _a major ro1e·1n _ . -· posure to the orchestra and delivered with elan as encores ing. his Dallas Symphon y that music diree!Or Anshel by this incre<1\ble and in· This is not to demean the 1_0r_che~s1T-•_· ______ _ Brusilow's ambitious organ. clefatigable (68 concerts a -pre-Intermission Berlioz and I season) team. Strauss; both were im· ization was n ° w a orce To be , .. -, the'·' superb ul I rl ed · hou to be reckoned with in the ....., " " mac ate Y pe onn wit l world of music, ..Poulenc owed a great· deal to e\•er coming; close to the \eve ls the backing of an ore estra aChieved Dy the -s a m e He dld not exaggerate. The that had Brusilow's unerring orchestra in "Flrebird" that Dallas orchestra that so baton between it and tile pair should have had Bursilow delighted him did exactly the who so joyously pounded coming back unti.l midnight to same thing Sunday night for keyboard. It was It !lawless collect the tributes he so an 0 range Co u n l Y performance with, perhaps, richly deserved. Philarmonic Society audience the pianists' wDfk in that in-It was a trilllOph for the that crammed UC Irvine's credibly lovely serond move· Dallas Symphony Orchestra Crawford HaU for the dual at-men( taking pride of place in and women's llbbers are sure traction of Brus i I o w 's this critic's notebook. to forgive me past trespasses orcllestra and those evergreen For all that, the dazzling (I am on their black list) if I keyboard artists, Arthur Whit· Poulenc has to share top bi!-note that no fewer than 15 of temore and Jack Lov.·e. 1---------------~--~---I Whittemore a n d Lowe brought the house tlown v.•ith v.'ork that attained tremendous local popularity, we might -add,-thrOugh st-er Ii n g perfonnan~ by our own Kate nnd Tom \\'hitn{'y of Call TMcrter for S•1tdoy Schedule ... "Play Misty for Me" tl'o1 HUllltYt ENOS SOON "Fiddler On Tho Roof" IOI "Black Momma, White Momma" "Bloody Momma" ( R J ''Deliverance'' .11M11 (R) "McCabe & Mn. Mlft .. " "The ,Getaway" tPGl .... "Lody Sings Tho lluos" C RI "Poseidon Achenture'' .Ind IPG I .. Fuu" RESER~ED SEAT TICKETS ON SALE APRIL 41h NATIONAi GINllAL THEATRES- WINNER l ACADl!MY AWARDS ll!ST fl lCTUltl! IEST ACTOll: llEST -KREENl"L..A-Y- ['!! DAYS 6:45 SAT. & SUN. 12:45 llot.EllT llEDFORO E STEVE Mc:QUEEN • "JEREMIAH "GETAWAY" JOHNSON" JPGI AUO '""' Newn101t "JUDGE ROY BEAN" BARGAIN MATINEE Wednesday, 1 p.m. FREE REFRESHMENTS Adults S 1.00 NEW U.A. CITY CINEMAS LADIES DAY EVERY TUES, 10c AU...-L.ADIES &..SENIOR CJTl1EN5 11:• TO 2:00 ' MON.· FRI.· 7,00& tO PM SAT. -SUN .· HOLS. -1 -4-7-10 · Orange unty ngag1,,.nt torts W BOX OFFICE OPENS APRIL 4th 12 N00Nk>6PMDAILY ALLSE6TS'4.CIOALL TiMES MONOAY lliru i'ffURSDAY 1:00 P.M. FRIDAY. SATURO,t.Y, HOLIDAYS 2:00 P.M. 7:00 P.M. '~"5 P.M, SU NDAY · 2:00 P.M. ·~:OD P.M. i :OD P.M. NATlQNAL GENERAL'S 1414 $. Hc:wbof-CINlMALAND ILVD. 63$·7601 Mail orders accepted --·· '"" ,,. ~ 8 ACADEMY AWARDS BEST ACTRESS • LIZA MINNELLI BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR • JOEL GREY BEST DIRECTOR • BOB FOSSE BEST FILM EDITING BEST ART DIRECTION BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY BEST SOUND Liza Minnelti Michael York Helmut Griem Joel Grey UFE llA l•--0--.. -....... 2nd AT CW "RED SUN" "DIE OF THE .YEAR'S 10 BEST RUISI" lL¥ JACK , 0-·-MAGGll SMITH IN "Travels Wrt:h ffiy Aunt' l!'Ql•-0 NUI ••t lllF IN THIA.TRI TWO ~·····~. EDWARDS Cl\~\I\< ~\HR HA'-:0C~ AT ACAi.A~ 0',TA "'4()A • q7'll 4 14 1 4 ACADEMY BEST i ' douoedeJ .•. the hamburger· hamburger ... two delicious all-meat patties, cheese, tomatoes, leaf lettuce, ketchup, mayonnaise, mustard, pickles all surrounded by a fresh deloctal>le bunHt's got ... Everything we've got!. (Onions ii you asll.) EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ·,1,11 0-fl.0 nn 41 lJ> Pl,J T1.Jll .. 0 ~l~{,'J 0 AWARD NOMS PICTURE "SOU4>ER" __ ... @--···· Jack Lemffion in his most important dramatic role since ·TueD¥of Wine and Roses:· _ .... _,,...., ... ~ NOW TOGETHER ':Jeremiah ohnson·· NOW r • • • • • '• '" . • ·: • • .. s 111tsd1y, April 3, 197) DAILY PILOT J J • •• Arthritics f'a•ll1t Cir~... ""au Keane Regret,s U.S. ·to Recall Diet Drugs i . May Trade Re~rks ~ f--,_~..-_~~--::::.~:::::_~~-)~~~~~~~-~-::~~;::;;;::,,_~_:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~W.ASHlNO'l'()N (AP)-The · 11 1 In Knees r111 1rr ' G h federal government will recaJJ : .. ~ ' .. ra am diet drugs that contain ~ amphetamines because it says SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Elderly people su!l<rlng from arthrlUc knees may soon have ·a pleasant option. They can trade Lhem in on new ones. Dr. Michael A. R. Freeman, director ol biomechanlcs for ~ .... the Imperial Hospital in Great Britain, aays artificial knees ·are still experimental, but in • time they should be com· monplaee. !"11.'l'tollm-N~I) ......... , ·c ~DICINE) He told orthopedic doctors here that tfle 00.minute knee "How many more fingers do I hofta be till I'm as ol~ as Billy?" . operation involves replacing --------------------- ·••. ·( the botforn or the thigh bone and the top or the ·shili borie • :.C with a plastic cpne and : l chromium ball. The cone and ~ ., ball, he said, function much 100 Millio n Autos . . the same as a normal knee. e DrMg Rh1g Used Car Sa l ety ' • l SAN DIEGO (AP) -A big market'"' illegal drugs ex~t.. Tes ts Prop osed among suburban l.4s Angeles __ _ _ housewives,-says a Culver City---. • • • . • l . • . • • . . • . . . physician . Dr. Lawrence Smith says pep pills are being sold regularly to thousands of Southern California women by underground drug salesmen. In addition, "Some of the women will go to doctors ," Smith told a Sharp Hospital seminar. "They will get it In spite of much tightened at· Utudes on the part o f California doctors." e Research Site WASHINGTON .(UP I) - The government has proposed federal safety inspection staJl. dards for the nation's nearly 100 million used cars, in· eluding uniform brake, tire and steei'ing tests. 'The proposal "marks the first Step in establlshing uniform federal motor vehicle safety standards applicable to a_ll used motor vehicles," Na- tional Highway Traffic Safety AdministraUOo said Monday. LA JOLLA (APJ - A 12-bed TO BE Implemented by the .:, unit !Or human d I s e a s e states, the inspection and ~ research will be built at performance standards would ;t S;crlppa Clinic here, a not replace existing state pro- ;, spokesman says. grams that might be more str- ;... The money was donated by ingent, but are designed to set :;. the famil y of the late oilman up a minimum safety criteria (fi William Black. The research far used cars, officials said. ~ center will be part of a $28 But the agency claimed the million facility on Torrey standards would not mean ad· • ..-Pines Mesa . ded cost to the consumer. The spokesman said the "The proposal has been center will-allow researchers-,c:.arefajly_~!!.en tq_ avoi4 cos- .. to stay with a project from tly expense to the states and ~! first e1.periment.s on animals consumers," it said. agency spokesman said . Under ( h e government's rul&making s y s t e m , in- terested persons have until July 5 to. comment on the in- spection standards. After con- sidering the comments, the government can either drop the rule, or issue a final pro- posal. Only 33 states operate used car safety inspections, and the. government's proposal would set "a floor for inspection of brakes, steering, suspension system, tires and wheels,'' an agen cy spokesman said . 111E GOVERNMENT'S in· spectlon standards include: -Brakes -Inspection of brake linings and drums and a brake pressure test "to assure straight upswerving stops." -Steering -Elimination of free play in steerlng wheels, and inspection of both wheel alignment and shock absorbers. MONTREAT, N.C. (UPI) - Evangelist Billy Graham says that his recent statement that rapists sbould be castrated was ''an orthand, ha&ty, spon· taneous remark . . . that I regretted almost as soon a.s J said ii.'' He said ~1onday in a 11tate- menl that reaction to the some are unsare and ~me do not contribute to wetght l0$s. About 480 million dosage units Of the products are sold each year, according to a gove.r·nment spokesman, mak· ing It the largest recall ever Group deter• mines that am· remark lndlcates lho,t some pltetaMfnea la a " e 1 people regard castration more trh•lal effect In serioosly lhan rape, and sug-tre-•I ob sit ges!ed that may be a ,..mptom-_,.. "fl e II· ol ''our pennissive society's ~ sickness." made of controlled substances. GRAHAM'S COl\tMf:NT was THE FEDERAL D r u g made at a news conference in Administration published the South Africa in response to .a order in the Federal Register, · and the Bureati of Narcotics girl who had been gang-raped and Dangerous Drugs, which and "may be a psychological will enforce the order, have invalid for life" as a result. set a target date of June 30 for Although the evangelist in-removal of all such drugs dicated that he did not ac-from the market. tuall y favor such drastic Two kinds oJ appetite punishment for rape, he did ... depressing drugs are to be not indicate what he thought recalled -injectable am· the penalty should be except p h e t a m i n e s and ·am· to say that "ultimately,. the phetarnines combined with .!nlt.wer to CQntroJling crime is such tilings as sedatives, tran-- . . . to effect a change of quilizers and vitamins. m ma.hon am tammes heart." Co b' . pbe . "l i\1EANT to come back to it before the conference was over and correct it, but got sidetracked on other issues," Graham said. are believed .to represent 72 percent of the appetite-sup- pressing drugs prescribed by doctors . THE AC'l'ION is based on • , to final appllcationa l n "NO NEW ded ln-!f tamums. Normally, the, Jll'OO" 1 specUon faJ:;1::.pan comPtex' 'S ess halts at the end of each equipment or training of -:;,,, phase ar,id continues only when operators wlll be needed.'' to ~ oth~r sc1entl1ts read of the ex· implement the proposals an Ft. per1menta, he said. ' ..... Tin!s ~ Inspection of ti.re·~ trea~ ~g for ' matah~ tire size, and "close scrutiny to aasure wheel rims" are oot defonned, or cracked." ~..:i ~:R::: ~~> -A .,_ .. Am.., ... , __ t ... ,r ... _ .. a .... k,., ...... t.o-·I·i-ik ....... ,.,e, __ , • .., ....... ,.., ... , ~ California Department o f I Publi~ Health adviser says California's tuberculosis rate is not declining as fast as in the rest of the nation. t1-David Newberry, speaking ~ at the annual dinner of the it: Tubereulosls and H e a I l h Association of Kern County, said that provisional figures ~ for 1972 show that California ;r had 3,239 new active Ca!les, ~ with 75-M new cases reported each week. <· Ji The eo&t of lhe American .,1 economy from TB is immense, ... I\: Newberry added, saying that It now costs nearly $1 btllion a year to treat and detect the diseaR. The cost has risen from $500 a patient in 1962 to $2,500 In 1972. e S•IU Rise , SACRAMENTO (AP) -The ~ state Health Department has t reported a sharp increase in i medical malpractice suit! con- " eluded In California during ' 1972. Fares in West WASHINGTON (AP) -Amtrak, the National Rail- road Passenger Corp., says il will raise some Western and midwest rares 10 to 12 percent and reduce some fares in other areas as much as · 19 percent April 29. Western fares, which historically have been lower than fcsr other parts of the nation, will increase up to 10 percent, for both ooach 8nd first ·class, on routes between Chicago and Denver, and between Seattle and Los Angeles, Amtrak said . LONG DISTANCE ROUND trip fares in first class and coach class, between the Midwest and the West Coast, will be Increased 6 to 12 percent. The Panama Limited, between Chicago and New Orleans, will offer a 19 percent reduction in coach fare. Reduced fares for groups of 15 or more, for round trips, will be offered throughout the country. Previously these dis- counts varied widely and on rilany of the railroads now in the Amtrak system they were not even available. AMTRAK SAID THAT starting April 29 family fares w:lll apply only on trips starting on ~fondays through Thurs- days. The purpose of this change is to encourage midweek travel and ease the generally heavier travel on weekends ln many sectors. - lbe EtWs.coocJ11slon Iba! the ObeU'.QJ:20; Smlth Kline & ta hljectable form is unsafe and lo'rtnch Labor at or I e s of release tablets and Delcobese that all th8 ingredients in the P h 11 a d e I p h I a , Eskatr()I capswles. ~arious products dQ not coil· spansules, Dexamyl tablets tribute to the claimed weight and Dexamyl Elixir; Lederle SlNGLE ENTITY or at Joas. Labs of Pearl River. N.Y., amp hetamlne preparations A Nattonal Sclences Na· Banadex sequels; and Delco are not affected by the order lion.al Research Council review Chemical Co. Inc .. of ~Jount with th e -exception o1. determined that am· Vernon, N.Y., Delcobese Levam(eta1nlne. phetamlnes have a trivial ef·l;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i feet In treating obesity, that II Jnjectable amphetamines a.re unsafe and that combinations ol amphetamines ""'ilh drug! such as se dati ve s, tran- quilizers and vitamins are no more effective than am· phe\amines alone. In letters to more than 300 !inns marketing the drugs, ae- ting F D A Co.nunissioner Sherwin Gardner and BNDD dlreclor,,John E. lnge..rsoll said he will ~ the finns to cease marketing and recall more than 1,500 products containing the amphetamine com- binations. FDA, BNDD and state drug officials will visit manurac- t u re rs , d istributors, wholesalers and retail and hospital pharmacies to be sure that the banned drugs are ef- fectively removed !ro.m trade channels. Four flnns have requested an FDA bearing !or fi"e com· bination products. These pro- ducts will remain on the market until the agency acts 00 the request. The manufacturers a n d their products are: We'll See You Soon· At A BRIGHT NEW HO WARD'S RESTAURANT & COFFEE SHOP 4001 W. Coast Hlghw1y N•wport S.ach • Watch For GRAND RE·OPENING With All Now MANAGEMENT & MENU! WE APPRECIAT.E YOUR PATRONAGE OVER-THE PAST 18 YEARS, ANO LOOK FORWARD TO SERVING YOU FOR MANY MORE. Mary A. Howard OWNER Obetrol PharmaCeuticals of Brooklyn, N.Y., .Qbetrr~o~l-~10~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4 In a report to the • legislature, the department said the number of malprac- 1 lice suits concluded rose from 202 in 197 1 to 284 in 1972. ''The number of hospitals in- • volved rose from 133 to 154 . One way fares between the Middle West and California will remain unchanged. Coach trips between Southern California and Chicago actually wlll be somewhat less expensive because of elimi· nation of the $5 seat ttservation charge. The reserved seat . charge lllso will be dropped on routes between New York • and Chicago. Big interest at the Big M : A si)okesman said t h e 1 llgures did not reflect the total , nwnber of suits. howeve r, 4 because self-insured hospitals ' re not required by law to 1 _ _.;report settlements. Among the rflHl w=t~strrl!<S-lml!1tal are the state's 19 Kaiser Foun- dation hospitals, the report ·noted. ' ORDER YOllll EASTER HAM N0\1'1 SHORT-DISTANCE METROLINER fares between the New York·New Jersey and the Phlladelphia·Willmington, Del., areas will be increased SO cents and 7S cents, but longer-distance Metro\iner fares betvreetl New York and Baltimore, and New York and· Washington, will be un· changed. · tra~trffllU'CI! bastrnr.-no-ins,,.rtent1a ~une on 10 short-haul and long distance routes in lbe East, Mid- west and West Coast areas, and raised them 5 to 10 per· cent on long-distance .routes in the West and south .. HA "So Good ... It Will Haunt .You 'TU Tts Gone.'' S'IClAL 0111 TMI Wlllt ~ I I OILtCtOUS. T•STY HAI SPREAD.. . ......... 78J "· You can earn this high interest on $5,000 minimum two year certificates. The first year your $5,000 certificate will earn $309.15, and more for each consecutive year that interest is added to the accou nt. You can earn $59.17 on $1,000 minimum one year certificates, and as much as $51.26 on a regular __ passbooksay~untof $1,,,..,,,.,_ _______________________ -1 More interest than banks .. ;more certain than stocks Plus personal servic.e ... experienced and competent sav- ings counselors in each office Plus free services ... safedeposit boxes,p.otary service, travelers cheques, trust deed and note collections, and many more free services are avail- able when you have the required minimum balance in your account at THE BIG M. ~ ~ , ,, ~ ~ ii THE BIG M to assist you in planning your saving program. e Spiro Sllcod From Top to Bottom· !Wbert D. Aaton • Roodr· to Servo with Honey 'n Spl .. Gl11• MUTlJAL $At/ING$ e Wo P1ek1ge ind Sh1p from y;., p..,.;d..i --~-'~it to c._..._,!c;iic.;t.n;;-~~~~---i1i--~~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~':"°:.:'°'"::.:""::~::.,.:::_~~~~--'~::_~~~-~~~~___:B~l'O'.'.'.'.'.Nch'.'.'.::M~a~ .. ~g~er~~~-=::J • Full Sorvlco Dollcoto11en • lmpqrtod Ch""' i nd Wlnits ·-----------Eorona-<lel Mart "''1-Eaet.Coaet Bigbwa#-6-1-s-soio·----- • C•ltrlng ---A Sptcl•llty ' , Other ofricc!t. In Covina. \Vest. Ateadla, P~dcna, Clcndal~, CAn~a Park.Qla1Jiworth aM Thousand Oaks . 3700 L CHlt H~, C...... 411 .._ _ IJJ.fOOO 1 llKll w .. t et 1 c""""' ••t1hrM1t 1W S ........... A l1l111 6Jl·24'1 I ' > • -. 1% DAILV PILOT TUfS\111, A><!I 3, 1973 QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl ttlf11ank you , but I'm not part ottheinv..entory'.'' L. M,. Boyd . How _the Girls Sleep. at Night A survey or 100 married ladies on New York City's upper East Side indicates 64 sleep in nig_btgowns, 22 wear pajamas, 11 recline in the altogether, ana three go to bed in their underwear. Interesting. I'd think a fellow taking a survey like that tnight get beaten to bits with broom· sticks. [)()you know who's voice it was that Flip Wilson pat· terned the delivery of his Geraldine after? Butterfly McQueen's. Come on, you remember her in "Gone With the Wind." Just the voice, not the char· acter, Wilson says. As far as the historical record goos, the first thing ever carved oot of mahogany was a great Christian cross, completed in 1540. It's at the cathedral in Santo Domingo. Still in dandy sllape, I'm told. What are the three sweetest words in the English language? "'Enclosed find check,' I think," contends a feminine client. _ ) The Eskimo is loyal to no ~e tribe, true enough. QUERY -Q. "How come that bathroom fixture is so commonly referred to as 'the john'?" A. Am told that's because a Sir John Herrington of England had something to do with One of its earliest de- signs. Question again arises as to which generally have the better sense of humor. men or women. Scholars at Smith College picked out what they called 100 np~entative jokes, some pointless and some funny, They then sprang same on a sizable sampling of males and females. 'lbe lads laughed louder and longer al practica1\y an. The girls found fewer funn y lines. but those they liked apparently amused them enormously. more so than said few jokes amused the men. The answer? Men ha ve the broader sense of humor, v.·omen the more discerning. Seemingly. TllE JIARD FACTS -Medical studies show the airline pilot is more apt to sulfer backaches than just about any- body else ... Can you think of any other 13-letter word be- sides "subordinately'' wherein no letter is repeated? ... February is also that month in which the fev.·est long dis. tanre phone calls are placed ... Did I tell you China has more Jakes than all the rest of the world combined? ... Calmest hour in day nurseries is said to be about 10 a.m. If the father is a hard-dri ving ambit ious sort of a bloke while the mother is fairly easygoing. the baby is most likely to be a little girl. But if the mother is an energetic social climber \Vhile the father is seme\Vhat relaxed. the baby is most likely to be a little boy. Such is the claim of a research team at JO\Va State University. Interesting, if true. Address moil to L. At. Boyd, P. 0. Bo."C 1875, New· port Beach, Cal if. 92660. I See by Today's Want Ads e \VI C I\: ER \\'0:'\DER· LANOt There's a \\'icker headboard, chests and hooks.belts for sale, all cheap! • SPEEDY. that's this Dal· ,. speed \Vilh :i.ir, :i.m ·rm slt'rro, tape deck :i.nd ne1v 1ires. r-.tany exlras. • llAVE A BLAST in this ·70 Ideal tra'\el trailer. Irs 21.5 ft., like nev.•. 1\,vnings & elCtras, too! For Advertising In "' OUT 'N ABOUT 1----1-~~~~~~0IUIL_~~~.t --- \ Redwood • PICNIC TABLE &. BENCHES· "Buy One Now & Enjoy It All Summer!" •Sturdy redwood set has 5 ft. long table. • B'enches ere 12 inches Wide & ore bra.ced fo r extra strength . 'EaS y to finish, -durable redwood. REG. $26.99 SAVE $7.001 See Our fanta stic Selection of Patio Furniture.&. Sar·B·Ouesf ~,.,.,,, Super Savings! WALL PANELING "Sllght Imperfections Make This A fantastic Value!'' • 4 ft. x 8 ft. paneling is reo9y. to install. • Ra ndom planked & v,grobved. • Choose from light & medium knotty pine or garnet walnut wood-tone fin ishe s. $5.95 IF ~ERFECT $2.99 Panel I ) • • • 5 l!Q,.....C:opper Clad COOKWARE SET . ··~ "lndestniCtlble Stolnless Steel .. , With. fv.ftfifiiqt·Copper Bottomsl" • '! • ' .. 1,;'.~'!.,i;" •~5 pc. set inclUd•i'·I qt. covered saucepan, 3 qt. ·cove red .sauci'Par\10nd 7" .open skillet. (3 •q t. 'cover fito[skill0,1.J ' • An i~I staiter-'tet; a perfect gill. ' . ' •Even cooking,,9,0sy cleaning. ' REG. $19.~ . , . . ··-··· , ... _,-. ' "' • 11. Ot • .. .. * REVERE ··WARE: • • • • .•.. .. ~ OUTDOOR CLOTHES DRYER "Complete ly AJ•embled & Ready To Use/" •...Une heig'ht·wl)en set in ground is 6 ft. •,1\11 li~es:1>9rclJ'1,~·~olhes hong slro ighl. • l-to lds th'ewhO!~.'fomily's wosh ot one time- ·folds cOriipoctlY for storage . . • .On"e pi·ece, heavy duty galvanized · .\t~el tub!J.lar·center pole. • Si.n,gle·Co'ntiJ1\JOus plastic clothes line- So it won 't sog . JUG. $14.99 . . HINGED CAP OUNO SI.EE I l ED 1-gd~~~ ~~# -· -"ff -RIG. DRYER $J]99 $17.99 f • • . . • • • . . • • • • . I • • . • • • ........................... .... ' BEA 1'!11D!RSON, Editor TIHM7ty, ""11 L 1'71 ' ,_ 11• Eulogy For· A • Friend • > DEAR READERS : There will be no Jejiers.and answers in the column today. . ~ My heart ls heavy and I am not up to giving advice. Last pight I lost my lovely • mother· in-law. -Gustie Lederer, of Detroit, ~ .... away-quietly in-her: sieep.:-She -w.as. 81. ' God gave her 11 years .more !hail the Biblical three score and ten which, ac- ' cording to the Scriptures, is the rich, full life. And rich and full it was. Gustie at- ' tended the weddings of n i n e ' grandchildren, and she lived to hold in her anqs 10 great-grandchildren. 1 This· remarkable little woman, only 4- ~ root·lO, was widowed at the age of , 37 ·, when her husband was killed in an ~ automobile accident near .J41!kson, Mich. l t I , She was left. with seven young children. • , My husband, Jules, was her eldest son. , JuJes knew what had to be done and he ' did 11: Jmmediately after his 16th b~ day he left high school to go to work and ! help support the family. ' Gustie was no chicken-soup mama. She •.,...loving and-gentle, but she-wa&-also .' determined that her children be sclf. : reliant and independent There was j neither lbe time. nor mone~ fo~. J>8111.! · ·• ~.....---''md""° ...... _.......,~,.., ~~ ~~~ c * . ~ children today find frustrating. : Everyone did his share. Gustie ·once t told me that she never set up any house • rules and she had 'Very few disciplinary ~ Problems. Her children kne~ what was 1 expected of them and they did it. ! · Not one of the seven went wrong ! although, had they done so, the j psYcbiatr~ts and psychologists could . have come up with many plausible "ex· ! j,Janations." 'Mlc situation was classic - I teenagers without a~ father, severe '! • · 1.. • ...i~b: e•n "We w~ what-, econorruc naiu:u.up, .... t ):ou might call disadvantaged," Jules • once told me "but we weren't actually : poor. We just didn't have any money." • ~ Gustie was my mother-in-law for 34 ~ years, and as God is my judge, we never , exchanged one unpleasant word. Her five ~ daughters, each one blessed witl!_ a : delightful sense of humor, often chided , me about being Gustie's "favorite." It ~ was only natural, they allowed, since I i had the good fortwie to live in Chicago 1 and THEY all Uved in Detroit. ,_ ' Gustie called me "Eppeleh with the A study of lights ' Keppeleh," which in Yiddish . means, i "Little Epple with the goOci heBd." But and prisms is "-tbere was more to our relationship than o appeared on the surface. Apart from the the ehoice of Fritz .! obviou~~ection and man;u ood laughs Westerhout and-Jeff ; -we enjoyed, there was a quiet un- •, derstanding-my unspoken gratitude for Kuhn (top photo, le~ the wonderful son she raised for -me - ' and~ deep appreciation for my being a to right); Cindy Frost i good wife to him. • After her second attack of congestive (above) selects an ·arts ~ heart failure, we knew the end was in project; Kerri .Smull's Mgbt. The time had come for Ann Landers to take so1ne of her own advice. mo~iles are checkeci ) telephoned the doctor in charge and _,,.. , asked Iha\ no extraordinary measures be by Mrs.· Nidola -. used -no needles, no tubes, no machines f--.,.._411at.-m•btdeny~;uns"u......,;~be~.nrig~hl,....w._..m,._~~""''-"'-""'--U..!."'-'t"'-''-"a~n~d,__~~~~- wlth dignity. the I asi..d that she be kepi comfortable Ind left in God's hands. Site was tired and weary, her work wu done. and she .. deserved to go in peace. ":tbe doctor. assured me that. he was in complete ao- cord and he kept hls word. t 16 Fifteen years ago I ran a contest in search of the world's best mother·ln-law. winner v.'ls a woman in Kansas City. •:..=·-oomination WU oent in by her daughter's husband. '!be prlie was a gold edal on which wa engraved, ;6To The .~ orld 's Best Motbel'In-Law." When I sent the Kansas City woman !tor medal. I sent a duplicate medal to interest of Tom Arge · and Steve ' B~rkkarie ·. (below, left to right). ' 1---1--9-"us"'tie Lederer In Detroit. Today, as I old my final farewell to that clear li:c,Ule,.::....~----~-~- pel'300, I was glad I bad done It, because 1111 was, unquest!onibly, lite rell -· • .. -' I ' Exploration: By ALLISON DEERR 01 Tiie 0•11"1' Piiot SllH . • There was a wood-and-glass box that manufactured ''tornadoes." One student took an engine apart. Another did an in.(leplh study of opera. Several boys made detailed scale ,"Jloclels of surfboards. One student accompanied a display on clarinet by playing selections from scv· eralalbwns. · All were projects at the annual fair ·for seventh and eighth grade mentally gifted ~'41Ilinors~.at Horace Enslgn M~e School, ~~ ~~ewi:>9r1 Beach. ,. », ,, l"" , :.R •The rules were simple' Do anything I • Daily Pilot Photos by Richard Koehler A Gifted Idea you want, byt it must be a creative presentation, visually attractive and your own work .. speakers front the community. Topic ideas co1ne rrom . tw1rs. Chai'les, the students, parents and other school staff· DIVERSIT\' crs. Mrs. Nicola Char!Cs, v.•ho calls her self Speakers, field trips, class study are a "facilitator rather than a teacher" for related if possible. For example. a the MGM progra1n at Ensign, explained speaker from F;iirvlew State Hospital, that the project fair is an outgrov.·th of reading of the b6ok on which the movie the diversity or interests among the "Charlie" was based and an interest tour students. of the hospital. Some students will be Each school in the Newport-Mesa __ _,ho,,,,.spital volunteers. trrunea-scliOOT-oistrl~t-Mndtes thTl\tG1it· program in its own way. At Ensign, the CO~lPUTERS program is keyed to language arts or 11Several students are ·practically livinc English. in the computer center at Orange Coast Alon·g with specialized English in-College since our trip theft!. They did struction, there are field trips and guest their fair projec t on _computer PfO"' gramming." Purpose of the program is "to open up avenues where students can explore. 'lbe English class is used because we feel language arts is the umbrella that covers everything else. They need to Jeam to write well, to know and use the structure of their own 1£!.nguage ," she said. The project fair ls a way to let them "do their own work, express their own thoughts," she added. Other examples of the more than 50 projects produced by students were a project on how film is developed, one by an aspiring Olympian on the u.:hniqueo of swimming, models of Newport Beach and the peninsula, poetry and paintings. Students created new games , studied the aerodynamics of gliders and rockets, explained light refraction and prisms, and displayed collections of stamps, rocks and artifacts from China . SHELLS COLLECTED • There was a shell collection that ri· valed some in museums. Several garden- el"3 brought terrariums, cacti, tropical flowers . Other students mapped out chess strategies. The students spend the rest of.lheir. class time on other a c a d e m i c sub- jects available to all students. The MGM program is supplemental. • , , ' . • • J 4 DA" V PILOT Tuesday, AprU 3, 1973 Library Week Saluted Peace of His Mind Argument Cut Short A full menu of activities has 1----.IJe<m-t lanAed hreugln1wt county ror N~tional Library Week Aprll 7·14. including films, plays, luncheons and story hours. And , a new program will be launched by the children's sec· lion of ·the Costa Mesa Library to encourage children to read for recreation throughout the school year as well as in the summer. Colorful decorations in the library streSs the different areas in which a chUd can read, flnd special activities and programs will take place each month. March's theme was mysteries. April focuses on wildlife and MayJeatw:eS adventure. Library week events in Costa Mesa include movies for children at 10:30 a.m. Satur- day, April 7; Chi ldren's Theater Gu i ld play,' "Sneetches" by Dr. Seuss. 11 a.m. Tuesday, April 10, and Frienl:}s of the Costa Mesa Libraries' spring luncheon at 10 a.rn. Wednesday, April II. On Thursday. April 12, there will be a musical story hour and film party at 10:30 a.m. and young adult films at 7:30 p.m. Concluding the week on Saturday, April 14, will be a special program with Ji.i;e- snakes and turtles presented by Tonie Siquitan. At the Mesa Verde library, a Librarians-for-a-day program has been planned for Monday, April 9, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. . A discussion will begin the day which will include luncheon and assistance in various departments of the library. ENTICING MENU -A variety of treats will tempt library patrons during National Library \Ve ek April 7-14, from film showings to a performance featur· ·~ng live snate'es and turtles. Making her selectionS 1s Susan Speaker, a frequent visitor to the Costa Mesa Library. By ERMA BOMBECK Several years ago, the Catholic Church lnsUtuted a gesture of goodwill In their mass whereby parishioners t~ to the person on either side, grasp their bands and say, "Peace!" AT WIT'S END twned. Could I do leis far tliJs pair of ,brown eyes? I put my hand In his and smiled, "Peace." I I b~~ I always seize this golden opportunity to lock my son's ann In a fmn grip, look him squarely in Ute hair, smile, and say, 11Get a ba1rcul'1 ooe. Who Is the .:ther one with ~ 3 Full Service ' hair that long?" 1 .. Locations In In February,h we diidn'tt , · Huntington Beach . I bother to shake ands. JUS ·:1 PRESCRIPTIONS snapped, ••prepare yourself e c,..,.,.~tt •o.1.....,. ·For some strange reason, during the last few years, parents' chose .ihair" as the last frontier of discipline. It was an u..n w_rj t te.JLCO~ miffiCffiien , "Tti.ou slWi mt lose the battle in · t h e barbershop or you lose the war with your children.'.' When parents meet for the first time, it is never, "Hello," but "How long ii your son's hair?" Depending OD ·the answer, ·you can flgUre out if they are a 7, s, or 9 on the permissive gauge. for darkness . Your rubber utu•"'1"""'..._' band just broke." illWWWbll 1 Last week in church, I was 1:::fM preoccupied With a statue that Dl9GG61 . WU-I<> ~g .. The hair was shoulder-Jen,.. .. The bare 11'..Jll' tffftt ... :.:. ... ...., 6•"· H~nllntfM H•"'-•• ........ feet were sandaled. The eyes ,\ eroot.~11 & H•min. N).tm were brown and so full ofl ~~=---~'.:::· ~-~-~-~~~~ understanding and gentlenessl- and love. I found ·myself con- centrating on the eyes and trying to Imagine the man behind them. There was a nudge in my ribs and a hand extended. I ~ FRANCIS- '\..ORR J If they an! a thtte, they have a short-haired son who"=,,_u_F_F_E_L_L_'_S FINE STATIOMERY- uses dental floss and watches F~-Stiffon•rv the Partridge Family. ·u they UPHOLSTERY ----E. A 51"y E R are. a seven, they sired a SOD With shoulder-length balr who W11oo y,. Wmt --,.. ... --c...--~ grows acne against their tft:f_Hiifiir_llff. 2111 l.UUt •qrAt 111·11JI. _..wishes and locks .his brother c...-.._._ 541.oist-tllllA 1u IAl ·t•vtllfn , .... out of the room. U they are ali~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 9, they harbor a pony-tailed - boy who plants beer bottles on the school lawn and wbo Will 11111 Golden Needle's ~~=~~a~l'at~.ve a career In Ill s~ o/ de 'Hied The few moments in church l:!r-'t:!r--=------"--------C F~ld each Sunday have become the "Hair Hour" for my son and me. That Elegant Touch ... Horoscope: Ca ricer's Hopes Fulfilled In June of last y ea r 1 smiled aitd said, "Why can't you look like Julie Andrews like the rest of the boys?" In August, I smiled between fixed teeth and said, "Get a. headband." . .in 100% easy-care polyester Knit Brocades . Reg. 9.98·15.98 • 60 inches wide WEDNESDAY APRIL 4 By SIDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Accent is on what you get for your money. Protect your in- ' terests. Build for security. Cancer is involved. Family Lunch Packed Commemorating t h e 78th anniversary of the founding of Chi Omega will be .the Orange County Alumnae when they present their an· nual Elcusinian lunch- eon at ll a.m. Satur- day, April 7, in the Jolly Roger, Anaheim. Proceeds will be used to purchase camping and backpackin g equip- ment for the Teenage Resource Center of Or- 1----.nge-&mnty:-Sel1'ctin equipment are (left to right) Mrs. Stephen Fairchild a n d Mrs. • Lynn Aase. ' . ~ t MAD ~\Ot.\ .\O~UNTtNGTON llAC-M ·-- CURRl;llT FASHIONS .. DISCOUNT PRICIS ------ member should be consulted. You are on brink of making discovery which will involve travel. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Cycle is such that you can af. ford to be independent. You could win popularity contest. What you fought . for proves worthwhile. Sagittarian is like- ly to be in picture. Highlight \'.ersatility. Accent social in· vitation. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Stick to principles. \Vhat you fear lacks substance. You soon will know how to deal with one who talks behind your · back. You can put together puzzle pieces. Be aware of fine prinL r-------------------1 I -,--- - I ~· I 1 ~\O HOME SEWERS 1 I '\t~ Would You Like To Cul a I I ~ Perfecf Pattern Every Time ? I I· r AITEND OUR 2 HOUR I I PATTERN FITTING CLINIC I I Learn how to-I ll-Paltten..-----14-1 I I I I I I • Adjust Patterns • Flt Any Garment • Make Any Sise Any StJle • Learn Deslrnlnr As Desirners Do It • Cop1 Latest Fashions • Position Darts • Master With No Flrurlnr I No E::rperlence I All Equipment I ,Available At Clinic Admission $3.00 1 1 CLINICS BEGIN AT 10 A.M., 2 and·7 P.M. I I All Clal5es ldenlloal I WIO.< APJtlL 4 I I US ...... ...1..,11• ONl DAY ONLT •I • to I I l 11111, I , ef lOl·l•t. I, S.. ce. ...... r. -·---~111•to• · u11-cu•mr1MN--I IL IRiMSrHrSAa l UC£1Vt ai"iic DRESS'PAITTRI .II ----------~----- ·r Thorough study is required. CANCER'(June 21-July 22 ): In September, I sald, "You are fouling up our septic tank with your hair.'' In Nov~mber, I pleaded, 7.77-11.77 yd. Golden 'needle FABR1cs IOUTH COAIT 'LAZA • C:AlllOUllL LlVEL Of'QI lVEltllfG.I I SUNDAYS Some or your fondest hopes and wishes can be fulfilled. Key is creative approach. Gemini, Virgo persons are likely to be involved. Accent is on reward for professional ef· forts. Basic change will work in your favor. SAGlIT ARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Follow through on recent health resolutions. Be good to yourself. Accent is on exchanging thoughts with one who shares . your interests, concerns. Leo is likely to be in picture. Streamline work pro- cedures. "Why don't you make your 'liiiiiiir7i!'-it;::::::::::;:;::::::::::;;;;::;;;;-mother a rug out of your hair for Christmas?" LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22): Home affairs~could dominate. One close to your fam.iy discusses your abillities and capobilities. Be diplomatic. Realize some who s e e m overbearing are merely trying to hear sound of their own voices. · VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Good lunar aspect now coin- cides with trave1, higher educa t i·on and your philosophical concepts. You Jook inward. You strive to bet .. ter know yourself. You learn and knowledge will be pro- fitably utilized. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) :· Concern with what is hidden is indicated. Proceed through unorthodOx methods. Caprtcom is in p icture. Review joint financial con· cems. One who has something to say about budget is willing to make concession. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Maintain low profile. Let others show their hands. Spotlight is on partnerships, marriage, public relations. Your efforts receive wide at- tention. Persons you resj>ect respond and some confide their problems. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lunar position highlights romantic interests, relations with children, basic changes. Creative resources can be suc· cessfully utilized. Cancer in· dividual shows you the way. Key is to be receptive. Heed voice of experience. J AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Study Capricorn message. Build for security. Avoid flimsy or substitute pro- cedures. Spotlight is on home, family relationships. Be flex· ible. Find out where specific prowty is located. You may be making travel plans. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Obtain Valid hint f r o m Aquarius, Capricorn message. Accent is on short trips, messages, ideas which can be profitably deVeloped. Avoid scattering your f o r c e s . Concentrate on ultimate goal. Don't be confused by relative who talks much about nothing. IF TODAY IS YOUR In lleceinber, I said hoUy, - "When did I say I didn't care as long as you kept it clean?" In January of this year, I sighed, "George carlin makes Nuptials Planned Debra Jean C&ndelaria and Bradley D. Ford are planning to marry Aug. 18 in Sts. Simon and Jude Catholic Church Huntington Beach. ' Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. David Candelaria of Hun- tington Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ford of Garden Grove. · The bride-t<H>e is a graduate of Edison High School and now attends Orange Coast College. Her fiance, a graduate of Rancho Alamitos High School, is a student at California State University at Fullerton. BIRTHDAY you are dynamic, ,.-----------1 determined, a square shooter, frank, at 'times lacking in taCt, but general!] gentle with loved ones. Ne w start this year will be successful, with July your outstanding month of 1973. You are independent, original and a natural pioneer. But you need more confidence. COUPON Done by Dunn Pat Dunn gets things done. Throw her your challenge and see how she handles it in her "At YOUr service" cot-wnn, now appearing every Sunday, Wednesday and Fri· day in The DAILY PILOT. Now at ... ,"'?,---: 11& :·-~ .;.. . : . ··~·--~ ·' J,, -. . ..... . . .. ...:=--..':""o.. • ' . ' .,,..~·' ... ..:-. . .-. """'= . w-. .· . •• ' . ·. , .• -·:-... :·.~· ... :i;::.!";~.', "'l· Part-Skim Milk F!nMEn CHEESE h'1 jun •• v.e1 orlgln11Uy med• In Eur091 by f1rmen for"""" .... "'" 111· ... ...,..., ...... ·v•n. Tho "'''" 0 '""'"I'· S1 69 LB Gr•t tor snack int and Q)(lkJng. • • LET YOUR TASTE BUOSOO THE TALK· INO-.SAMPLE BEFORE YOU BUY. 1rs A WAY OF LIFE AT flftt"'' ''!'!!'· South Coast 'Plua Lowtr C11'0VH I Mill Br11lol lll lhl Sin Diegl l"rwy, COSTA MESA Optn Dilly, Sulldays (lllrr Cllun:h 'Ill s p.m,J 1"11. $4M9f1 lllt!!JC1:$ LWING C!ltESl: SlWS 2-03 OFF ---··--- ANY CARPET CLEANING SHAMPOO Ctea!ll, CJ'Master CAltPlT ANO U'1'HO'Sttlt't' CLlANlltl snAM CUAN BETTER Qu•Uty clttnlnf. Ir· tr1tt1 h11vy 1011, 12 to 24 h,, ilryl1111. Sttrlllsn Urptt. IEST n.1 Ultlm•tt cletrdnt. ~ IX• tr1ctlon pow1r. Qulclt 6 to I ._,, dryint (most c.arp1h), No dtrli* .... Onty the wind tftttrs your ltomt.. , 540-6011 OR 645-1313 FREE ESTIMA ns • ONE DAY SE"RVICE Qfkr .... 4/10/71 Maitercharg• 17-.0 Superior AYenue 1--..(E'"n~a~is itcl l-V2!l'----<H-rr&-17th-St;l-C-·Meta---, .. ' I -=-....__. ··~~-,b A Spring Collection of Easter Dresses . i by ·l----Florenee-Etseman·----{-- • 2-14 ToMt It Coantry, Orang• -(711) 551-R5~~· . Fa•bloo hland, Ne1')1Gfl-Bff<h~(714;11118111 - lluntlngtoo Harbour -(714) 114f.1MI . ,... r - • . Nicklau s Big Favorite To Win ~· as ers Title AUGUSTA, Ga. fAPJ -Old Gene has to play lousy to lose. If he's just Saraien took a long, hard look at the average, he wins. If he's on lop of bis Masters' today-his 34th, dati ng ba ck 40 game, he makes it a runaway." years -and all he could see was the Sarazen, who '"'ith Nicklaus. Ben ·;~wesome presence of Jack Nicklaus. Hogan and Gary Player makes up that • "How can you beat him?" asked the elite club of players Y.'ho have \.,.On every saucy, 71-year-old squire from Florida's major championship, led the small earl y : Marco Island. "He's 16 up on the fie'ld advance guard here for the 31th ?ttasters 'before he starts. There are four par five championship. ~boles and he's the only man who can de-The heavily favored Nicklaus. who pend on reaching them all in l\\'O. prac!iced Sunday, took the day oft li.1on- Greensboro, N.C., where Chi Chi Rodriguez won lhe rai~interrupted pre- f\fasters feature. Old Gene, still \\'earing brown jacket and famili ar knickers and as glib as e\•er, relaxed Wlder Augusta National's spreading ""'bite oak, back of the Colonia l Club HQIJ.Se, and unburdened himself of .opinf&is about his fa vorite game -past, present and future. ' Tuf'°llY April J, 1q;3 OAILV PILOT J • •• Ro sewall Tabs Court Ove1·Riggs r\E\V YORK tAP) -Au stralia'$ Ke11 Rose"·all cJn1e to IO\\'n f\.1onday and among other things. predil.1ed thn1 !\lnrgaret Court ha~ just the game to bc3l a \\'ilY old geezer like Newport l3r:leh's Bobby lliggs. "I don ·11hink any '\'011\Un y.·ould have :i l'iuuu:t' against most Qf the top players on the tour." 1hc little, dark·haired cour! sniper fro1n Sydney said, "bul rd have to ·: "Besides that, he has a computer for a day. Most of the other top tour players - ~"brain: Nicklaus not ogly outhils byt he Lee Trevino, Bil l Casper,. Arnold Palmer "It's a lot different these davs" Saraien said. "Once all the plaYe;s gathered Wl.der this tree and talked. Now you can't get close to a player to make a deal. You have to talk to his lawye r, business agent and publie relations man. ·-bet 00. N.atg.10CL. againit Bobby. '"She"s l'ery s1ti1g and quick and play~ lik~ n man. I fe<>I she 'l\'OUld \\·ear Bobb}' down in thrct• sets:· ~ outthinb-every other player in golf. He _ ~were held over. an exlra day at • . . • ·"Money is great, but I think it's made most of the fellows soft. Bill Casper used to never say more than two 'NOrds. Now he l s all smiles and good cheer. Julius Boros goes around grinning and talking about fishing. 1'hc \\·or\d's lrnnis interest has been \~·helled by a challenge on the part or thr 55-year-old Riggs, onetime king of thi· touring pros. thrt)\\'11 nt \Vi1nbledon chrimp Billie Jean King . \\'hen Billie Jl•an declined to take !hr dnre, ~l rs. Court, \\'ho has 11·on n1ore mo- jor \1·on1en·s charnpionships than an~· present player, <1uickly a e c e p t e d . Jlro1nolers have arranged the match for l\1ay. .· ,. _ -;: :: . : ~ "Where is that killer instinct? Nobody seems to have it any more -nobody ex- cept Nicklaus and a .few others. When this tournament starts, he locks himself in an isolation booth. He y:on't talk to anybody -not even hi s wife." '.• :~ :: . .. ~. '• UPI TeltPllota CHI CHI RODRIQl/EZ RAISES HIS HANDS AFTER BIRDIE CHIP SHOT. Poekets $42,000 No Illusions for Chi Chi Nicklaus, 33, already \\•inner of four f\.1asters, will be_attemptirlg __ ~cr ck the late Bob Jones' record of 13 ma10r t t es. He is a 4-1 favorite in an international field of 85 that includes 60 top U,S. pros, seven amateurs and 18 foreign players, .two of them amateurs. "Nicklaus reminds me a lot of Jones." said Sarazen. who batUed the AUanta Grand Slammer in the 1920s. "I don 't think Jones really liked people much, and .neither does Jack. Jack likes privacy - so did Jones." Sarazen said when he watches the nelv, tough breed of pro golfers on the practice tees, be wonders how any of them can be beaten. "They all have beaiJliful swings," he added. "They are like robots -down the fairway, on the green, one putt, two putts, all alike. But they can't make decisions. That's where Nicklaus excels. He makes decisions." Like a grizzled old handicapper at a race track, Sarazen leaned against the trunk of the oak and gave his O\\'Tl private rundown on. some of the main contenders in the 1973 field : It's Not the Easy ll'ay flfinn csota's Jerry TerrelJ nosedives into third base as llouston's Dave J~oberts av.1aits t he th ro\Y d uring exhibition baseball ~a n1e at 11ouslon 1\1onday. The umpire is !laul l{unge. 1'hc t1\'0 tc;1ms ·star t playing for keeps Friday. Walton May P lay Against Russians Lee Trevino -"I don't give him muCh chance. He kids himself if he thinks he hits the ball high enough for this course." Tom Weiskopf -"The only man who WASlflNGTON (AP) -A1nerica·s in~ series "'ith the H.ussi;ut national .!can1 can hit·even with Nicklaus. But if the pin chances against the Soviet Union'.s , 1~·1thout. fl'ar of rcpnsal or penalty. a·s frrthe-trap;-he'd-go for-it-Too bold-basketball eam -zoomed~Monday-whefl-..Aft.er reading.the message,_t:cy~r said and ~ ~~amental." the National Coll egiate Athletic Associa-\Valtou. the nation's top college player, Chi Chi Rodnguez -"Don't count that . . wantl'CI to play and would call the NCAA win at Greensboro. That was no real te st, h~. Wlder prodding by a House subcom· headquarters in Kansas City requesting playing winter ruJes and all that. This is m1ttee, agreed t.o .ope n the way for college pern1ission to participate. a different tournament." players to participa te. '"l ain delighted tha t the NCAA an d Arnold Palmer -"He has more of a Th~ move m~ans the U.S. t~am could A1\U no'v appear to have put the best in- killer instinct than anybody, even o~ta1n th e services of All·Ainer1ca center !crests of the country and the America n Nicklaus. But his swing isn't natural. He 8111 Walton and other top-notch un-public ahe ad of their own selfish in- has to work too hard for what he gets." derclass~en. . . . , stitutional sc1uabbles," Peyser said. Sam Snead -"These greens are too _\Vallon s part1c1p.at1on, ho~vever'. sl1\1 nerv~wracking. They'll have Sam ready h1~e_s on several lac.tor~, 1nclud1ng ::i for a straitjacket." decision by the UCLA Junior to play. Bill Casper -"Like Palmer, he's over \Valter Byers, exec~t ive direc tor of ~he 40 and has ,.,.00 a million dollars. Not NCAA. told the special House educa tion Sports iii Brief !\:lost trunis observers contend tha1 !\.1argaret -or. for that 1natt.er, any other \\'Otn.-iil player -"'·ouldn'I have a chance against the bandy·legged Riggs . rated a superior court tactician despite his middle age~ - Bui not Rose,v.-ill. .. Higgs rnighl have an edge on cla~·. but on a fnst surface I'd ha\'C to st ring .-.long "'ith !\larj!aret," he said. Al 38. the oldrst and littlest of thr perfo riners on the tour. Rose .... ·all crune to Ne\V York to introduce an American Airlines prog ran1 for 11 series of tennis tours to 23 of the world 's resorts. Kenny \l'>lS signed as the airline's flying tennis pro. As p.-irt of the project. the diminut ivr Australian ace will give a clinic for children from deprived areas around Ne\v York prior tG the U.S. Open Cham· plonships at Fo rest Hills Aug. 30-SCpt. 10, Currently, nosewall, who took t\\'O month s off last fall . is striving to get back into the fig ht for the World Cham- pionship Tennis (WCT) title whieh he won the last two years by beating Corona de! !\.1ar's Rod Laver in the finals at Dallas. "l\.1y play has been depressing so far." he said. recalling losses during the past fe\v 1veeks in Europe to J\.1ark Cox. ?ttarty Riessen and Brian Fairlie. "But 1 hope to qualify and i1nprove before the final s in !\1av." Big time tc1U1is has no one single do1ninant p_!ay.er .at.Jbt..m_omeQb Kenny said, but actually Is ruled by an oligarchy. ··111ere are four players who stand out above the rest," he added. "Of course, Laver is one or them. The others are John Ne\vcombe, Stan Smith and Ilie Nastase. No one can claim to be the.best. I am not up to their leve l yet -note I said 'yet''' tough and hungry enough." su~mmittee. ~is organization .would Bruce Crampton -"Watch out for this sancllon the e1ght·game tour 1f the Australian. He's having a good year. Like s~rs o~ the game. the Am~r.eur Nicklaus, he's always thinking." Athletic Uruon, \VOu ld apply fo r ecrt1hca- ' Despite Greensboro Win Olson Ne'v 49ers Coach; GREENSBORO, N.C. (APl -Lillie Chi Chi Rodriguez has no illusions about extending his wiMing strea k to two \Vit h a victory in the famed f\.tasters this weekend. "Jack Nicklaus will be there," Chi Chi explained. "\\rhen Jack takes a week off (as he did in the Greater Greensboro Open), it's anybody's tournament," Rodriguez said )1onday arter his one-stroke victory over Lou Graham1and Ken Still. . "But Augusta National (the site of the Masters) was made for Jack Nicklaus :,00 Jack Nicklaus was made for Augusta rational." , The 37-year-old Rodriguez, down to a ~iry 120 paunds because or a diet he 'hopes will help mejjv~to..be.140 e.a:r..s ·Clld." came from two strokes off the pace i,rith a five-under-par fJ6 in the rain- elayed fmal and picked up $4 2,000 for 1iis seventh tour triumph in 14 years on <the pro tour. ~ He had a 72 hole total of 267. 17 under i, ar on the squishy, water-logged 7,021 an! Sedgefield Country Club course. r=aham, who had a final 69, was one ke away for the third 'veek in a row. tied at 268 with Ken Still, lvho bolted contention \Vith a last-round 64 that •tcludcd 11 one-putt greens. Buddy Allin -"If a dark horse should lion and the application meets all of the ble that once saw five players sharing the lead. He built the margin to two with a !~foot birdie putt on the 17th hole and took a cautious but meaningless bogey on the final hole. win -and it's possible if Nicklaus has a ·NCAA criteria. bad tournament -this is the boy to An AAU spokesman, Ytho was observ· watch. He's young and determined" ing the hearing. immediately obtained an Vinnie Giles -"The best of the application . Byers said copies of the ap· Ange ls T1~ade Cardenas Behind Graham and Still came Casper and veteran Gay Brewer, tied at 270. Brewer, who has played extretnely \veil this year and is a strong contender at Augusta, closed with a seven.under-par 64. Casper matched RSr 71. rookies. A lot of promise. I am disa p-plication would be distributed to the pointed in some of the other NCAA sanction commi ttee and could he newcomers."' acted upon by Friday or Saturday. Sarazen said recent heavy rains should Rep. John Dellenback. (R·Ore. ). urged increase Nicklaus' built-in advantage the NCAA to act with speed so that over his rivals. underclassmen, now ba rred from playing "The course is so soggy that there is against the Russians, will be able to be practically-no roll at all," the old squire selected. added. "Shots will be all carry. Th.is is a "The team is being pi cked no1v," long ·hitter's course and Nicklaus is the Dellenback said. "It \Vould do no good if longest hitter of them all." the team is selected before the games Lwidin!I ''°'"" •nd mu!lev wlnnin11s in !tie l. d " S2!il,000 Greale<" Grfftlsboro Open QOU 1ourn.,me11I: are sane IOnC . c111 c111 Rodtl\1119<1 s.a.ooo 6t-M-47-66--2a1 Without NCAA certifi c<1tion. the U.S. LOI.I Grell1m Ut,•25 61-6~-67.69-HI FRIARS ADDED Ken srm s1t.•1s 69.ttS-70-lt4-16' ~ team woul d be composed of college .e111v c1si-1t.2«1 67-64'41·11-21a seniors primarily. Al ready selected for G•V Brewer Sl,140 61-68-~270 Bl>bl:lv Nichols ,,,560 6'-11.tt1.tt1-211 TO UCI SCHEDULE the squad are Steve Do"•ning of Indiana; 00ug Sano~·~ '6,ltS 45-6Mt.10-21; E · o ·G · I' • Mt.ke Rod Flll"le!h w,195 6w, ... 10-272 m1e 1 regor10. ro\'1ccnce; Lee Elder u.its 6.t-72-61-61-Vl Edwards. TeMessee, ;,ind Doug Collins. Jim Wlec"-r~ ~040 ll.ft7~t-273 UC I . ill I Pro .,____ u· . s a~_...._.u11 _ ''~°"° ~ .. 1.z.i:61~ rvme w trave to VIUt:ir\.'l:,,_~I~1no1s late. G-~ KnudlOll sJ,,P' t.MMt-11-21• RhOde ISiand or a aate-withtheNCAA yef"! a~fu-"'·iive l'nrfCA"A pr~ Sam S..ud sJ.9:17 6M\7-ni.71-17• • •ty di 6 ' = eo11 oock50n u .tJ7 111-61-7Ml-l7• un1vers1 vision fourth place team, vision that the application had to be sub- 9u•c11 a...1rc1 s3.n1 66>69-7Mf-21• Providence C.Ollege, Saturday, Jan. 12, milted 30 days before the event after Tom Kil• H .:W 71-61 .. S-tl-275 • I 0on SIPS u.2ss J"M1.1U1--11s 1974 1t was earned by the DAILY PILOT Rep. Peter Peyser, (R-N Y.). confrontt'<i Lee Trt¥1no s2,on 71-u.tt.ro-276 today I · ·th J ( lhe N'CAA Hubef't Green s2,rm 67·6'·'•·71-276 • ~ um WI a ru e rom Leoro••d Thomps011 u,on 6'>6f.64l-11-216 Negotiations with Providence were handbook that gave Byers veto power ~~~f~ ~;:~ :~;: :=;t~;: completed on Monday with coach Dave over any punitive action the NCAA Coun- Art wan s2.on 67-71'61-ro--21t Gavitt. cil might take against college players Ar11<11cl P6lmer 11.ot7 69-61-70-.-27• Pr .d I . wl'"-··t r h LONG BC:ACll -Fornier ~tarina High basketball coach Lute Olson has left his job at Long Beach Cily College to take the head coaching reins a~ Cal State {Long Bcattn. The move wa~ originally reported in the f\.1areh JR \Vh ite \Vash colu111n in the DAILY PJLU'f . In that s<i1ne colu1nn ii y.•as reported that Cal State (LB1 l.'01.1ch Jerry Tarka- uinn \Vould beeoint the head coaeh at the lJnivcrs1ly of Nt•vada tl.<1s Ve gas) and Corona de\ Ma r I !igh coach Tandy Gillis "'ould ~Ut"t't'Cd ll1;-;on ;1t LBCC. Olso rfs Long H1·<1th City College learn s posted an overall n111rk uf 104-22 in the four y~ears he \\'as lly.or~ c:i_p!!!_red the _ Slate t11Te once and ,,·ns r11n11t•ru1J 11,·icc. Al !\larina the popula r Olson guided the V1kin~s to nn 8B-6fl rl·rord and <i 1967 co· ch~mpionsh ip in the Sun:.ct Lcacuc. Ile couched at ~1arina six sr.1sons. Olson, 39, resides in Fountain Valley. 1-la los (;c l 1\IcC raw Jim Jami"°" 52.1192 •1-1CH1•72_21, OVl ence, p aymg 1.1a.ru one o l e participating in the Russian cage se ries. M ike HHI 12,091 6M8.tt1-1~216 nation's top rebounders in the person of "I con gra tulate you on your research PAL!\1 Sr->Jtl NGS -The Califon1ia i·" csi!::'~ ;~:~ ['h~-:t:~: J\.larvin Barnes, lost to Indiana in the in the NCAA handbook," Byers t o l d Angels Monday traded !-;hortstop· Le o i~~onw:~~~ :::~: :;i1t::::~;; battle for third place in St. Louis Peyser. Cnrdcnas to the Cleveland Indians for J~rv McGee u,.m '9-61-714'-277 recently. Peyse r also read a letter lo Byers sign· outfielder Ton1 McCraw and minor !l''~:,.~~~ :::\: ~l~!'.;~~: Barnes returns for his final year or ed by 58 senators, urging the NCAA ''to league prospect Bob f\.larcano. John Lli1er n .1n 66·'10·7G-'2-211 competition next season. permit athletes of NCAA member in· Carrlcnas. 34. carne to the Angels from with California had 551 at bats in 150 games. He had a batting ave rage ot .2'23 with six homers and 42 runs batted in. McCraw, 32, last year with the Indians, appearL-'CI in 129 games and batted .258 \vilh seven home runs and 33 runs batted in. He led the Indi ans in triples wilh live and stolen bases with 12. J euseu Leads RIALTO. Calif. -Jim Jensen of Sun- nyvale fired a four-under·par 69 !\1onday to take the first-round lead in the week· ly · tou rnament o! Western Tourna ment Golf Association. George Glickley ' P11lm Desert. Hil l !\ic(;leno..ol-PacfJ* Palisades .and l{ay~ Arin no of Sacramento each shot 71 !\·Ion· day and were tied for second place l{iesseu Wins 1-IOUSTON -Top-seeded ~·1 a r I y Riessen defeated Ray Moore, 7-6, 6-3 f\.1ondny to highlight fi rst round action in thl· ftiver Oaks lt'nni s tournament In olher n1·s1-round singles action . third seedl•tl Brl:in Fairlie defeated Ismail El Sha fci, 6-3, 6-1 ; fourth-seeded Arthur Ashe cll minotcd Gf.ihan1 St.iJwell. 7-5. 6-4 : sixth-seeded Tom Okker •1-Rodriguez and the rest of the fi eld that p eligible for the Masters were delayed Hl---''m!-1!oy-hr-getting to Augu•t~o. - where Nicklau s has been practicing for a 8f<I Kern SI.lit 72-70-6'•'<7D;;";;'--==============,.-. eut1 ooetbr ""'~l' sUtutton&--i.o1M1:rtiei~n-lhe-furtfleom--Mit1ne!OtfHn-t9? , nd in hi!-to11e seftson defea ted Jean Chanfrcau, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4: !Je'lenttHeeded-K-cn-R6!1e'#9lUl-tb"e"•'+---i lfaroon Rahi m. 6-2, 6-0; Vladmi r Zednik defeated f'l"antiszek J>aln, 6-7, 7-6. 6-3 : ¥. eek -by the rains that plagued the umament. caused two postponements nd left the course a soggy, gooey 4uagmlre. -1'-Saturday's round was washed out by a J.5 inch rain. A double round of 36 holes E-verything Going Wrong for . Bulls JE!ff Borowiak del eated Bob Cannichae1, 2-6, 7-6, 6-3, and ninth·seeded Dick Qoea- Iy defeated Torben Ulrich, 6-3, 6-2. • l"_aS scheduled for Sunday, but only half CHICAGO (AP} -Everythi ng is going !\lotLa sendJ the Bulls against the rev-Milwaukee, or a change of the layoff et it could be played and the final round Mght for the Los Angeles Lakers and \"ed-up Lakers in Chicago Stadium Fri· schedule between the Lakers and Bulls. as held over until Monday. most everything is going "·rong for the day night and, possibly the series wind up The coin Oip assigned the Bulls to open Rodriguez started the final round two Chicago Bulls In their Western Con· Sund strokes beck of co-leaders Graham and ference semifinal playoff of the National game ay, contending he is not com-playoff comPeUtion against the Lakcrs Billy Casper. caspcr and Graham both Basketball Association . mi~ted to a purported attractive Seattle instead of the ?tiilwaukee Bucks and then encountered trouble on the front nine, After a four-day l:iyo(f, the Lakers offer. lhe Chicago phnse or the pla}roffs was despite rules that allowed pl\ pla_yers to take a 2.0 series advantage when play f\.lotta h1ts been irked enough by the ctulnged from Tuesday and f'ridny to Un, clean and place the ball in the resumes in Chi cago Frld:iy night Against chain of circumstances Surrounding the fairway and through the green, and Chi the Bulls. whose visit to Los Angeles last Western Conference playo(ls to give r·r1day and Sunday. Chi stonned ~st them on a string or weekend was jolted by a report coach credence to the report he wlU grab a Motta responded 'l\'ith : "The Lake.rs fhree consecutive birdies starting on the Dick Motta was headed for the Sea ttle lucratJve five -year Seattle contract to lost the coin flip, but they \\'on C\"Crything leventh hole. SupcrSonics. become general manager as W§ll as else. They gol to !plit flrst·plat-a moncv ,, Rodriguez came within two feeto( mak-The t.akel"$. who swept) four games coach of the SuperSooics. with the Bucks. 1~hcy didn 't hnvc to g_an ace on the scv~th. cbippcd_in_ior.-rT'QOl_th Bulls In last season's O.QC.,_,n"'in,.__ Motta y,·cnt to L<,!'~les repo!tedly travel to Atllwaukec ror a rcgular·season Ii birdie from 25.:JO lcet on the eighth and pJayolf round, appeared d~silne<f fo r R al\jlerOO tfiilBUJ!i gment a!Cl'nO<r~· pxJa=yO!t7iJl~-(il;,)'got I C.'OnpJC of'dO}"' CX ttached the par five ninl h In two. repeat after Sunday night's 108-93 victory contest an NBA..approved coin Dip which tta rest be.fore the third and rourth Tha~ eave the little man from Puerto following an overtime 107-llM conquest of settled the \Ve.stem Confutnce cham· games in· Chicago " .. Rico a ooe stro~e margin afl<r a -scram· the BuUs f'riday night. plonship between Los Angeles and Concerning the 5ealtle oiler,' Moua I .-- said: "There h:1s lx'en no orticial conlticl between 1nysclr und anybody rrom Seat· tic. It's just tou bad this had to come up rip:ht before our second ga.ine In Los Angeles." • Jr the Dulls make an unexpected come- back llgninst th e Lakers, they .,.,-111 have to somcho'"' mlnlm\1,c the sharp-shooting or Jerry Wc?>t nnd Gnil Goodr1ch and the destroying ploy of \Vilt Chamberlain under the boards. Asserted ?\lottn: "As fnr .'Is I'm con .. l\[aud Ousts Ba1·th t-.1UNlCH -Robert r-.ta~1d defeated Roy Barth, 7-6, 6-4 In the first round o{ the Gmup A \Vorld t:harnpion.ship TeMis series li.1onday. In the opening nlateh J aime Fillo! of Chile routed Andrew Pattison. 6-2, M . then J ohn Alexander beat Crerald Bat· trick, 6-3, 6-3. Shrun 4-1 Choice cemed, \\lest 11 nd Goodrich arc the two RENO -Sh.'\m, winner ol. the $100.00G greatest guards in th e \\-Ot1d. Sunday Santa Anita Derby Saturday, ts now the 'hight. lhcy got 63 poinls belwt.'Cn the1n 4-1 se<.'Ond choice for the Kentucky Derby ts:Hm-f.loodrlth ttnd'16 iol'-Wffi•'b----l rKhe-lut•re-litleffl<asejj-Mooday-·~llie----1 "\\'c ju!<t c::in 't stop them. Every time: Reno Turf Club. ... we play !hem. there they aro. Secretariat remained. the favorite witll ''And \\lilt, he Jwt ate us up·· odds rrom ~ ln even money. \ •• DAlLV PILOT Alamitos Hai·ness ntr1es . '/lllT llACI -Orlt mil•. Pie•. Cl1lmlt19 Ill tOel. For horMt !l\lt ll•v• NM :tr'd or -Mll•r 111 1111 4 \t1rla. (L1ll!'ll11D ptlc:I fHOO. Pl,l!'M JUl)O, 0111t"-t• l'l'W ti lE. 511"11'1) S11nil!IM Jow • G'vnclvl AU K•ved Ult (~. Thorntonl S-tOI" Mlfl l . 8l1ckt11tn) t~v A~ ( Cronk I 0(1l lrv11 J. TOdd l G G "•rktr $. °"°"""'/ .S.l!dll S1ncl CP. ll~clllo AIM ''{1'"' ,.vr.I• LldV IF. !oil .,. Jr.J lt1110 IHI TIH 41. l~llHI llCOND llACI -Ont milt. "It'· CondllloMd 5 v-ar old1 Ind ·vnoer "°" wlnMrl of 2 r.c.1 Cal tw'MI. PurM =1'1 M111lc: Ut . McG11t11illll) "'" m!Jw. s11or11 -.-And.n. f • Grecl:r,: Alldyl I MIC (I.. Crl I '°l'l"llCt T""'" jl-D1vll911I Our P•Dt• Doll f . SMrr111l Jact<ll$ Qi..l,ljn (A. WlnQtd Hirt"" I OY ~MT~I~~) l Vl:V l.v 40. Blttllclll THlllD llAC! -On• mill,· P•c•. Cl1iml1111 Ill 1911. Tori <l•lm "' prJ(I i..oo. Pyrll 11200. lllUV llki..rd fl . R,llPOM ) SccITTl1-h Don (0. Aclo:1rm1nl Mr Vtl ID. fMvoc-11 fA S HtmOl \J . 111n1~l r=:~''o.E(,co,_l ' ~1111"'°" ~ (J. 1i.'1i{1rl' S1lnl E1tl0hol A (J Gr11ndyl Alu IU1IM1 l•d~ Trip <O. 1(11m1l•rl Gl1d1!-11~ IM. Sc1'11nk1) 11ou•nt 11.c.-=-0111 milt. P1c1. Cl1lrnlno 111 1qe1. Tot> cl1lm!no PrlU lf~lS. Plll't• S2IOCI. 11ronns DI•!\• IE. s11wr"' F Slflcout I P. Colemen l'IV V1'1tlv fE. c;_ollbi Atllvt Gent (J. u'Q' enl M1v Adm!r1t u1 Wiii 1 ... 1) Storchl1' W1v• J. lltnntn) Sc•...._r CK M1vn1rd) Jtll«iOn Cr1fn (C. ~"' '! .. El ™9 SklMV 8 tOWll ... W!l l1ml) Ctrnb:IJJlt.r fl, Gord'"'--- l'lt<TH ltACI -Olll milt. "'~'· Cl1lmln11 111 111•1. TOii d alml"9 prk1 ~10,000. PurH \3100. OJ1monl• Pat! (G. Hol!I H1rm1 'l''l J O'Brl•n1 S1ln1 Cl• r l'I ii (It. wm !~' Lumber !Itel (J..__Wllllr:. f1rt• llot< CT. u.nnl1 HtlCVCNI 1+erl11oe (G. ) 8'°9CI SllldOw ID. Acll1rm1n) Como HlllOVtf' fJ. Mlllerl llJCTH llACI -OM mll•. PIC•. Condlllonfll ell 'I''· Non wlnntn UOOO In ltn-73 comb hit hi.,. tl•rted I CH' mor1 11m11 In 1t12-n comb. Pu''' ,,400, Buller llO~(D. 1(11m1l1r) Sir 11111) {1 • l.On!IO) l.1nd fr1 Ill {T ; P1rklnt ! P•tlf' Jev AdlOI (N. Ml,k1) Te-r,v Jetn5 R0<:k1I 4J. Dennlil G1ll1n1 H1r.ov1r (K. C1rtn11) JtOIYI' Ho CS. P11orn1rl , l11nt'WXk MliJ!on tJ.., Gr11ndYI A-.u,11111 '"'" lll:IOll tE. S1ew1r1J 11\llNTH llAu= One milt. P1c1. Cl1lm!no 111 1111_._ Too cl1lmln11 orlct S!1,7SO. Puru uaoo. Alt• Wtl0vtr IGk Retclllord) Proci.lltr (~Ac •rmen) '°'II c111 e. Cobb) l• iron P k co. l onool Mont1n1 (...,. Herplr) Shi"' $l1r (J~lllltYI PIMllnd (G. oJ $lnOll Clobv I . r1n1I llOHTH llACI! -Ont ml11· Ptct. Conditioned 111 1;11. Non w ""'' of uo,000 In 1t7J-n comb AE non wlnn1r1 of 116,000 In 1t7J·72 com11 lh1t 1r1 "°" wlnntrt ot 11500 llril mon1v lft 1151 ~ ~ 111rt1. Purw u..oo. T ht rp CJ. Cr&M} Armbnl Htro JM· Aut>lnj ArmbrP len ( . 0'11rt1n Ou1cl'I Hiii Prine• fJ. ll1!11yl emm•• Jo! 1w. sr.oro T11>111d111 F. Toad Jr.) NINTH llACt: -OM mite. "•~t. c11lmlnq 111 1g"'. Too cl1lml1111 prlc1 S'J50. Pur11 11600. lrb~tm {l. l!lnin•l Ste R•ld IJ;1!11111Y) Wick I HI J, GfVr'ldvJ Frtlf'l'l•n• Or11m (0. Holll Fl1mlnG P1,ktr CJ. O..n11l1) GlnnYl, Otnt 10. Htrdltl ~l~ro,, B'i~1Ai~1 (I(. Tlt~d Alamitos Results ' Mond1y, A1trll l, lt7J Cl11r & F11t FlllST llACE -°'11 mlte. P&ce. Cl1lmlna 111 &git. PlJl"H 11600. l'r1111 M111>1h (Litton) 11.00 7.00 6.70 Knl911t Scemp (H•'l•t'l •.OO 1.IO Ltdy ll.iwln !5m!tlll 7.10 Tl'lll -2.0I. Alto riced -Chloe M1rmln, Hsi StMm, llocktl ltrl, J!111 Cllolc1, Sliver Record. kr1tched -AU Ktyl'd Up, S&ncll1 $1ncl. II 1.-1d1 -S-l'rtni Mli,.h & I· Kfllthl S<lm,, "•Id Ill.to. llCONO llACE -One mrt1. Pace. Condlllon m1ldtn1. ,.u,.e 11900. Mlgl'l!y Atm 1 hurit CO'llrl.nl l . .O JJIO 1.80 Tru. Dandy IW11!!1m1J 5.00 l .•O $1•r AHfi (Grl9DfV1 7.6!) Tim• -2.07 1/5. Alto riced -Sloo Witch, Nttl.,.. au., Short Trtp, 0!1mot1t1 Prtnct, Admlr1r Time. Scr1tc11toc1 -Dutch Hiii lwd, Tol1I Fr•lol'lt. THlltD ltACI -OM ml!•. Trot. Condlllon 1U 1gei. P11rt1 11•00. 1!11l(lwln (811tev) f .40 ~.70 l.IO Crilly FUlor IOr1h1m) 3.60 3 . .0 Centr•I Psrk flloyd ) '·'° Timi -1.0' 11,. Alto rated -verv1 Htnov.r, VlctOft Aw1rd, Mys1.,-y T'lp, 01,nlty C1tc1'1, ROY&I Go. kr•tclltd -Fr.igl'll M1g11111, 11~1t1r T111. l'OUltTN ltACE -On• milt . Pee•. Condlllon 5 & 11ncltt. Pu"' 11000. 1'!'"'"" Tnl1Wll'\ftf)---1'6.00 6:10 l .10 Rockln StO(kln1 !Dennis) 21.00 I.XI Frost FrCMI Oiolll '·00 Tim• -2.07 4/S. A1i.o" raced -8. P. Ad1D!I, Reoln• T11~, 01t1 Philip, 01rn Dllto, Vt'I M1rl. Scraltl'ltd -Pokty Chuc-. .. . . --TH£-GotHWlllG-lt-STILI. A "&WI~''-- Ever IMI lllat JOU'U n-1 .. m Ill pley aoN wonr Doti th•-..--to-be an andlul-atroam of_ ''.Do'•'' and ''Oon'tal'' Dkt you ever identify with th• 10Wer In tho llluatmlon7 I'm sure thot moot·llOlfera mike tM pmo much more compllcotod then "nony 11. Wt think 1bout so many different ch1ckpolnts·1nd k1ypo11tlons1nd basic ..,.... th1t we tend to forpt thlt the toll awing Is, lndttd, still i 1wln1. Don 't let you raeff· 11t trap~ lnto"poralysis from 1n1lysis." M1k1 " your first. 11)(1 foromoot rule to never, 1bsolutely never, think about more than on• thing whllt swln1ln1 1 IOH club. Thie moy ba the· bast, yet most difficult pioce of advice l'va ever alven In thJ1 column. _, · •• . ..... ; . .-..,.._ LOW SCORES! HIGH POWER! Ott plenty of, aoffin1 htlp In Arnold P1lmer'1 booklet, "TM Sholl ind Ftlrwty Woods," written tlC· elusively for rtlldtr• cf this column. A copy 11 you11 for 204 tnd t atllmped, stlf·lddrtlHd en\l'llope aent to Arnokt Palmer, c/O thi1 news~per. · O~ean Fishing Spotty Along Orange Coast Fishing along the. Orange Coast is spotty due t o the streaky weather that has prevailed during the past month but area landing operators are confident the surruner months ahead will bring another good season. A spokesman for Art's Land- ing says, "We're doing pretty good now. We're catching bass. s cu Ip in , sheepshead, mackerel. and a lot of rock and cow cod. W~'re also catching blue perch a t Catalina on the weekends.". Davey's L o c k e r officials aren't quite as confident but looks for good summe r fishing. "It's been a little slow becaus or the win<b -and storms. We're getting some bass and sculpin and a few bonito with our S unda y Catalina charter boat. We limited out on blue perch and opaleye Sunday." From Dana 'Vharf the report indicates "fishing's always good but sometimes the catch isn't too good. We're doing pretty well in between storms, catching mostly bass, a few bonito and some miscellaneous fish." Here's the fishing schedule for the three area landings at the present time with more boats and runs added as sum- n1cr gets nearer: Art's Landing -lfalf-day boats at 6 a.m. and 12: 15 p.m. ($7 ): long range rock cod special on Wednesday. Satur- day and Sunday at 12:01 a.m., returning around 6 p.m. ($18), Three-quarter-day boat Satur- day and Sunday at 5 a.m .. back at 2:30 ($10); Catalina Island boat Saturday and Sun- -day at 2 a.m. ($15). Davey's Locker -Half-day boat daily at 8 a.m. ($7) and on weekends (Saturday and Sunday) 6 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.: Three-quarter-day boat Sunday leaves at 8 a.m. returns at 4 p.m. ($10). Dana \Vharf -Half-day boat daily at 6 a.m. and 10 a.m. with summer schedule in Baseball E•hlbitlot1 ••11illlll effect April 14 to include a third boat at.boon ($7, $4 for children under 12); Catalina Island boat.-SS-till'day and Sun· day leaves at I a.m. ($15, $10 for 12 and under); all.<J.ay boat at 6 a.m. Saturday and Sunday ($10, 16 for children). \llNTUllA -27 ll'IClllfl: 111 rock cod. 1 cow codi ' Uno cod. DANA WHA f' -51 11111l1r1; ,2 und i..1i. 110 rock cod 7 m1tk•r11. IAN Oll!GO 1Mu11ldp1I Pl1r) -16 1n<1ler1: 10 1Nrr1cud1, II? rock cod, 5 c1llco !NII, 14 111111 cod. MAl.l•U ,.IER -11 1n11l1r5; lXI rock cod. "AltAOISI COVI! -71 enolers: '92 rock cod. lll!OONDO -:n 1nci11rt: 71 bDnilo, •O rock <od. N•W,.ORT 1o•w't"1 l Klllr) -lS o~ltrs: 52 (II co bin, I htllbvl, I llng ' . KNAltD -11 1n<1ler1: SM rock ,(Id, I cow cod. LONG IEACH fltlmonl "!tr) -t 1nQltr1: lJS rock cod. 81,ge -!1 1nal1r1: 70 bDnllo. FV Kicker Honored Scott Young or Fountain Valley fli gh School was named to the third team AJl-C IF soc- cer team today while Peter Frede ricksen of West Tor4 ranee \Vas selected player of the year for 1973. Young is the lone Orange Coast area player named to the three teams. Frederick.sen. a junior, is a t .... ·o-time All-Bay Le a g u e selection and \Vas l\1VP in the circui t this season. He scored 26 goals in 14 league and playoff games and scored the winning ·goal in a 1-0 cham4 pionship game victory over Claremont. West Torrance placed t"·o n1en on the fir st team and another of the second team Golf Clinic The public is invited to at- tend a free clinic at Irvi ne Coast Country Club \Ved4 nesday at 2 o'clock when \Vomen's PGA representative l\1arilynn Smith will be on hand. The clinic \Viii be followed by a nine-hole match with club pro Richard 11-fartinez and the t\\·o club champions -Dee Dee 'Yhite and Bill Donovan. l'lt<TH ltACI! -Ont m ile Trot. MOl!dfY"t GfmH Cl1lmlng i..l'ldltlP. ,.UrH sXIOO. Oa~llnd I, Calltor11l1 3 NEWPORT LEASES (L.c•lfy _._ & •,,.,.rHI leasing all Vehicles PltUbvrgh 6, Phllall•ll)l'lll ~ C1lg1ry Lid CO...nlt ) 7,'lO '-80 •.'lO San OltllO s, Miiwaukee 3 Cloy1r D1y (0'11rlt~) S.JO '·fO Chk lQD (A) 9, Tt~BS ' f11t Pay (MUlt•l S.<IO 1(1n1as cnv I, St. LOU!I 2 Time -1.07, Montreat .5, ao11on 1 AllD rattd -Ch1uncev 111 , Fl,.. Tht S•n Fr&n<l!-CD J, Los Angeles 1 645-2202 . CDrl!. HI Emp!ri, L•tlm Em Prti, Balllmort 7, A!t•nl& 3 C1 lnnlng1, Armbro lnvlct1. r1ln) Ht Kr1tcl\t1. ;;~'~";;'•;•"';;;';"~';i'~";'~'·;~;•~•"';;;';.;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;:;.;;:;;;~;;;:;;;;;:;;;.;;:;;;~I . llXTH llACE -OM mfll. P1c1.1;~~~ Cencllllon J & uncltr. Purse 12~00. l(IW[ Avert! CA11bfn) ll.70 1d.70 S.IO 1.,.1111 !O'l r!enl , _ __:':·°'::_':.:·"-.J\-JI ----...l~WPPtL...l.0111Uon,. , Tlmt -2.0.C l/S. Alto •&cld -AdlOt Slre1m. Ml111r 0~ IHV, Al'ldy1 (ollo, Algonquin, G'I PI T!mt. 4 Scrttclled -Pt11ny Otwn, 8ut11' '"· II •11d1 -I-KIWI AY1rll & Z·•tr11. It, ,.,._ MH.Jt. l•'f'INTM ltA('I": ~ mil• Pta Cltlmlftg ... •e-1. P11rs1 "'°°· . I INpl• Hlllt Aclor { II. ' I • I K•V I ' lt.60 1D.OO SA 111111 OlymD11 IB1!11v1 1.00 •.«I PlflOMllly (Ac~lf'm1nl l.IO Tlfllt' -1.03 l /J. Al .. rated -AmpUgy, ll•tM• 1 , lll:C111r1n, floOJl(1r CIM.K.k, Tru. l•ron. krtltllt'll -Kor111ul, Slfllll Colby. llONTN ltACI -Ont mile. ,.tel. eorio1non. P1J1"1e mm. Gino l11110¥tr lMllll! 4.00 1.00 S.00 Swtt A•-/Lfthllllll) S.to J.2G Dtrtno lr.i 101\lltonl S» Tlmt -2.0.. . Alto rl<td -TOl'IV Amleo, Murtll1, St ht•Yft HtMVlr, l lO "Id Mlcl'llM, ,...t.1111.· No teretdltt.. NINTH llACR -Ol\t ~Ill, ,ICI, AT BRITAIN GOLF TOUR, rwo DEPARTURES 17 DAYS July 23, 1973 September ?4, 1973 Pl1y World Famous St. Andrews, Glen11gl1,, Troon, Turnberry, D1lm1hoy and Wentworth. Visit hl1torlc London on the ThamH. Enjoy gourmet dining at its very best. Attend th1 th11tr1. Tour c1stl11, c1thedr1l1, anc:l. univtr· 1lti11. Visit premier shopping center~. • __ ..,....~,~·:i~l~ ~l:: ::: CALL ..:... GOLF TOUR 'IANAGEMENT '~""'*" .J.OO•t-------::::-;;.;r ~ '~'" ""'· ,,,.;~ ··-111 •3c112a •tdnrf• IV' P, C_. T1111. , 1't';J tJ" -. I An teat~ At UCLA · SAV Spikers Blitz Mesa UCI Tennis ForTilt • ., ··\ ,. ' • ARE YOU SUFFERING WITH ARTHRITIS, RHEUMATISM, TIRED ACHING FEET, TOSSING NAGGING HIADACHI 1 Yo.u may be surprised what CHIROPRACTIC cao do for you I Call DR. TAYLOR LOYELL 5911 Hell-Hunllllfl" -· -146-1'68 • -I ' Belted Atlas Pacesettet Our most popular glass-belled polyester cord tire. 410~99 with 4 trade-ins. plus $2.31 Fed. Ex. Tax !or each E78·1 4 tubeless blackwall. 2 SS w;th 2 ltade-;ns plus $2.31 Fed. Ex. -for-Tax tor &ach e1a4 14 • -ulb·e1e-ss btackwall. Atlas Grip-Safe. s1995 l'(lth t'8de-ln. plus $1 .~1 Fed. Ex. Tax tor 600-13 tubeless blackwall, • Low, modern silhouette. • Interlocking tread to grip Atlas Goldenaire radial. • Six pltesof tough Oynacor rayon cord under the tread • • Outstanding mileage, traction and handling ease. III( 11..AC~WJ. ~I ("l!h!r~nt (78-1 4 4for99,00 2for55.00 4farll5.00 f7t-!4 2for60.00 G1t-1• 4farl25.00 Q78-15 21or65.00 H11·14 41arl35.00 Hll-U 21or70.00 Oil change & lube. Includes up to 4 quarts of our Extra Motor Oil. Lube fittings extra if needed. r10. . "" eUh II .. 2.31 ·~ "" w •M '·" Engine tune-u . p. We'll replace points, plugs and condenser. Set timing and dwell. Adjust idle speed.Set fuel mixture. We also check distributor cap, rotor, ignition wiring, PCV valve, air litter. fuel filterandcarburetor. Replacement part a forthese Items the road. li:"--+---------~1-'.a'.:'.dditional, If necessary. for all American· made 6-oeyl.cani." Becausa it's new. retailer stocks are limited. If we don't have your size in stock, we'll be glad to order It for you. New wiper blades and washer service. Includes 2 new wiper blade ref il Is. Check washer system. Ref JI I washer supply. forstandardB-eyl. Fords, Chevya, PJymouths end most Amerlc:an-made compac:t1. (Alr-conctllloned can ttigher.) Look for lhtlt 1lgn1: ValueCenters are Exxon stations that offer a continu- ing program of good vstuea on the things your car needs. ~lght In your neighborhood, you can shop for a 1Jre, gel a tun .. up, have your oll changed end fllf up . with E11xorfgesollnes. Check out all lhe good values this month at the Exxon ValuoCenter near you. Thls blue al n Identifies stations operated by This red ai ~ !t':.t*:.~= r=•m V.llut-?Cf!nter Exxon Company, U.S.A. Price• and offers shown above are available at these atat\ons localed In many metropolitan areas and comruunllles. • • ·. • •• • • • . ' • ' :; ·' .• ·: '• •• • .• ·l ·: ~ ,• • § r. • • I ii . • • ! l • • I • • • ' • • • • • • • ' • • • knit,,. -lllflPlllrl l"r1k .. kotl• Al~ft. l.tnCll~. ·~ ....... _.~ •• ~ ... ~·~·-~ ... ~ ... ~·~··~--~-~--~··~ ... ~-~--~··-··~·~·-~··~ .. ~--~·~··~ ... ~--·'·'. ~---~~------------------------------------~~~--~------------~---~-• • • I \ Jtlm•er1's lt'o1•th Accuracy a Must Tu<ld>y, Aoril J, 1973 DAILY PILOT OVER THE COUNTER NASD Ll1tlng1 for Mondoy, Aprll 2, 1973 --..-. .:... ""--~ .... v I Eati~g Fish Isn't All 'Fha~atriotic- • Tllbl C1llOl•Tlorl•1Eouc E~ )I $J NI MdlCr 11 1~ 11" 5•mtnLI .,\, ll '• ~llY~ EL,!!l:_O ll\11 I~ ~I I~ 4t-kflM'w _31 J1 -----'"""' ... :r. ..... 1 .... ,, c r IE .... , ·~-,. 14( Sdiillln ~-... ~.. ltn. IW U..l '4 N~ G ~l'o l•'il !:!" Inn 1,~ \I'• atf often ltl911 A. N •I 11 1111. lbL G i!-1 1•"-CNilltd -·-•IOI h'I ' N ., I n rl~ " 1 • 20 c:ounlff ~ lq l. PA!nl I ljlll N ~ A ~'"-31'-SCrlpto I ~" -.Cll othw fl ot alt l rw r.:i I-H left I JIVI SM Wrld '-o tklM IEaUetft Farion El Jt~ aoni.,lr ' ~•111 lv M'1"Cll Special lo the Dally Pilot SACRAMENTO -Though lhc Nit.on Administration has declared it "patriotic" to eat fish while meat prices soar, Western consumers aren't out casting nets. J UST AS WELL, say flshlnJ! !odustry executives, who point out there isn't enOugh to go around anyway. But th~go ve r nm en t' s analogy between fish con- sumption -and ''patriotism" has shaken. more than one in- dustry member's s c a I e s , reports California Business. Ohe California Department of Fish & Game official, for example, questions whether it's patriotic for Americans to eat fish al all, noting that half of all fish consumed in this country is caught in ·foreign waters . • THE DOMESTIC industry is flounde ring in an economic net of its own, he says, the result of inerrective·fcderal and state government marketing pro- grams that have opened up markets to foreign nations and hurt thle domestic industry. Americans are eating more fish , he said, but they're "finicky" with tastes leaning more tO\'f'ards s h r i m p , abalone, lobster and salmon (all in short supply) along with California hallbut and sea bass. U.S. per capita consumption or fish 1n 1972 was 12 pounds compared with 11.2 pounds last year and 70 pqunds in the Far East. FINANCE Sniog-free Passe11ger Area Tested By SYLVIA PORTER (Seccnid in a Se ries ) You·re lighting mad and determined to g e t com- pensallon from Lhe d r y cleaner who has ruined your expensive wtnter-coat but refuses even lo admit tho damage. The place for you 10 sue, as lt1onday's column -reported, is lhc small claims court. _ But how do you start a suit in the small claims court? And what do you do? 11:i9.1 T~ -4t-"'•rm Ir t ~ ,.... N~ ~ 10 1m,.tfr ~, ~ -ONCE YOUR compl:iint is :.,.11 '!ti;t""...!~~lk ~r.:r.S" \6 \ ~r,1 ~: sit~~ ~r..1& ~= l~ l" f 'I d the clerk will tell ou dowfl "' comm ~ Fit B01111 o.•w11 w '1'1 1&" . ..,.. ~i I e ' y ,10111 •fld do :t lit TitFh~ '• ;.:: ()(Mn Dr H\' s1•. 5 "'""""" ll ,,.. "'hen \0 return (Or the tr{a) ~II acl ~'~11! lli\• 1tt,a ~M' ~~ Ut;. ~n tr= i~: r and \viii send out the summons .Uif~~l~i'l\ls ~I: ~~~ I \\ 1~ 1i L~ ~ii~ ~}'t IPC-r:v ~" f notjfying the defendant Of the AOt'~t,,, ~~:~r 01 1 ~ ~ ,*'''1 l~~ ,&t~ m..o'v 11 ~t:t 17 d t d I f th h ' '"rok Fosl Grnl ~ w~ 1 C°' Id 90 ' ' · · a e an pace o e earmg. At1ilhnt jj"" 1:1 Fr•"" El , , ,rnon, ; ,i1~ 111 N A~ v. H~ and the nature of the claim ~lt.• •\:jl• t 1':1: ~~t~• 1, 'ilU !l" §.J~vi;..., 3'• •,'· ~t:,.'\ ~·1 1~ 1t1~ . t h' Ali.o ~ 4 F Itch A 1' ·~ l!lt C';rl) tl• lot ~l<w T.,;. ti JI~ agams 1m . "Ile. J \t\11 ,,~ F~ FdE ~H I U l.lt ltlll Br ~J !1 Super El 1,~. ~· \Vhat should you do next -" vn,..!,~ ~ "' F1111er H lt1• l~'; E:'~m 11 1 t1~ ~r: )~ 1l~; 1~ while awaiting the trial ? ~ ... ;'i(,tt 'jll 1i~ F~4':~ '•'~in! P:C~ L:.d S:u ~ t:~~o.~r11 •'• ''• Very often the party being ~mEb ~ .ut; ~ rW"nk 1~ 1,1.o f'•n 0co1 \$l1 1 s~1 111v. 11t•) ~ Fr ' 1...-IS I L J t \ \() Pllll A.•v U \1 lS Tl vlo<' w )ti•~. sued, upon receiving the sum-A.m F:rcn. -1\, J"" !i~o l 11 it•! 1r• .. ~=~~r. P :,. -~ tTJr.~ ;: ~ h~ mons, \viii realize that you ~:ircflf"t:' 1r: '!.... :~:g;. h~ q~~ Pv1•1 C•" 16•:. 11~ TI"'' oc • •'l mean it and Will of£er 10 Settle ~mPf:f.v i'• 'is nfdC-= ~Vi lo'lo ~:c:\. sw l\1 • lt~ 1l:.:f. Ml 1i:; ll~ t ol court. If t Am Wld l\~ l" ~d Med '';1~ 2Vr Pt! HtH tl 2• r•n Csl S 1 OU . you agree 0 Anl'leusr ll't S 4i rNn Ma 1S'i '''• Pttro w IU1 II Trn GasP ISi., I~ the· settlement (try to have it An~en In 4 411 r11>11 sc ,..., t•• Pt1o1n inc: tl !'° Trn Cklfl 11,1~ 1 11 Aoicne E 1114 1u1o 'I/ Ad" lj\• 11;., PlcN Sa" lo 1 14 Trnoh Fn 11'\" include the cour t fee) and are APS 111(11 111.0 11u " SMQ 1 23~. P n-•'11 lit 3M u111 C•111 1~ 11, Ardn M\'1 t1 (\' H•cll Cll S.'11 lit P OMf W t't 1()\Jo Un on Sol It .... 20 1 Make money at A device designed to attack the smog problem from inside the passenger compartment rather than the exhaust pipe outside is being tested in Orange Couhty. FIRST, LOCATE the court in the court district where the person or company you are -suing ' lives, has an office or does busi· ness. In a large city, such as Ne\v York, you can sue eith· er in the dis- trict where you live or paid, lefl the COUrl VOU have Arro A~! 1'1.0 u~ Hahn EW 2j~ 1;:" ~!=:t ~ ll~; ~? 8~-'81k TJ'1 t: 11~~ settled the matter. However, ~~ r ]1~ roll ~:~uF~~ L 34~ Pool• llro 1·1 ·\~ us Trk L ll!1 I 11 Auo Cola :!Cl\ JIV. H1rlyn p ~ 71, POii Cp \}\• 16 Univ Fos 1•1t lt.\1 if the trial date IS 3pproachJn AU Ga LI 1~ ·~ H•ri:>tr A ~ I'• Prof Goll ?l1 ]\lo Unu MoOI 1\1 t AIJIO Tr11 I)\• 131\ tl•wlll Fl ~. l~it Pf'OQrll lll.o I'll~ VMM Ho lJ U andiyou haven't yet been paid. Baird A•o ~ .v. Htciln<I c -is• t 1, PS1'1 C•r 11"'° 12~ Vi nce sn •• 61.o k h he h l•lrd Wr lf6i 20\t Hail~ Ml 10..., Ill• Pul:ll1hr '\7 110. Van Cvli tt n as I e ot r party to put I e 11•11., Ft lit~ !7"" Htsston n" l41.lt P~utfl c.11> •\> ~ V•n Sllc k nu ,,.., terms you've agreed on in ,",IF"",· Mtt' !,'4 ,..•"4 ~~~ c l~~. ,~~ u~t~ ~~ ~: h' ~l~!.0!1s:! 1! 1!., Kevstone Savings is more than a place to save money. lt's a place IQ make money. We're here to mako your money grow. The''Atmosfilter,'' developed by a Colorado-based engineering fir m, operates on the theory that if smog must be with us, we at least ought to be able to Oller it out as we are driving along. . the district in which lhe party AN UNDER-~~ .urut, you are suing lives or \\o"Orks. ___ • the <ievk:_e_ls~to ehrrunate __ To-find-lhe-smaJI claims Nowyou cnn get 525 cash in 5 seconds tile sm.og-fllled air , nbrm~ly court in mosfa.reas:-check the Ltidln introdm:es die IOJ!eY llacbiM. 24 hours a dav. Just insert your drawn m by the car s v_enttla-telephone book for the courts special card in Keystone's Moncl.{ tlon system, heater or rur con-listed under your local. county ditioner. or state govern1ner.ts. In some Machine and out comes your 525• It also removes pollen, dust places. the small claims This is a free service to our and odors. according to Robert courts are often part of other customers who maintain 5500 in their Winkelman, vice president of courts or their functions may regular passbook savings account -Air Purification Systems. the be filled by the local justice or it's designed to save you time and Grand J u n ction , Colo. the peace. ?educe your check \Vriting~xpenses. manufacturer. -Once you have located the Stop by Keystone soon. Open "It's 99 percent effective in court. ask the clerk whether it -your sivin-gs accOuilt, Choose -me:---+..,..""'1Ving-dust-and· pollen-end---can--handle your type"llf ·cJaini knocks out odors almost en-and whether it has jurisdiction tree services you want, and get yout ti rely," he claims. over the party you want to Money Machine care!. You feel rtcherat KeystonB. With good reason. THE PRODUCT is being sold and serviced at va rious au to dealers and independent garages throughout the coun- ty. "\Ve're using Orange County as a test area for the entire country," says Winkelman, "because w~ figure this area has its share of pollution - and cars." sue. -ASSUMING YOUR claim is considered appropriate, you will be asked to pay the modest court fee to cover the cost of the complaint and summons. The fonns filled out by you or the clerk usually in- clude your name and add ress, the complete name and ad· dress of the per.son you are suing, the reason you are suing and the amount you are suing for. . h • 25'' 11... ~. I'll•• 1,..t vr.:°1 5t t\~ ID'• written form and ave a copy g~~~ 11~c:I ~;, ~~ ~:r'Mio 1~ 1 ,, ''"" c11 10\.o 11lt Vol s11oto 111. 11~ "gncd by both Of VOU f"lcd lltrntt H 32 )l Hy11t C 17'• Ir>,-A1Ycm Wt1ll NG 11 1'"' S1 I R 11 F V '' l'"' Hy111r C 2S'1 ,,,, 196 20G W11te Ml SI. )0\1 With the COUrt • ll:~:n 151: 61't llldl WI! 1911 19'1 A11ymO 23'~ 2~'~ Wa•mn I 11':. 11l o . ':!line F l~it s lnO. Nucl 26\ .. 26~ Alt/\.\ Pee 171• 111/o Wflltl At S"~1 6'• ( • c, ' ,., O ' \4 14\i AK OQ EQ Sit 'II Weodtn 'I'• 9'• e r, Lii ,. " n Ofelt ,4 ,~ R•tcf Co 26') 1 \\ Wtl!ll Wl n 23 OTHER\\IISE prepare for K:~I v ,.r~ ~i; ~4j" 1~:::c ~~ 6·~ ~~ Aeo E••~ 1a•o "'' w"unn ~1 •16'1 u i, • • L • ,,, • I I (if 1•10 11 R•lt lnc1> 1(11• 11'j Ws1c,1 Pt I V> ... the trial collect all relevant 8rt!f, ~o ,,, 10, .. 1~1mA11.1m ~. ·~ A•ll uni" 1, 10•"' w~t p,,111 u~. ro•. ' ") f · 'I Or11 u~t 15'. In BkW A 1 •o Rt• Pla1 tl, 101. W11!r Fd 2Ho 21'1 documents -b1l so sales, in· 8 ~d ~ 11,. ,,~; lntru Cp '° XI'\ Aev11 &A .U ·o *~k w1111m1 1 ~. '°'• I " t t t BOO Ell!lf 6'1 If" lrt41nd Iii ~-,\. Alw•I Ml 2•\• tS WI Ml H J U t, 1!', VO ces, rece1p s, e c. -0 Booth NI> n !.;, J•,.,.U, I l .... AQ.\d e~ JS'• JJ\4 Wint P~T ;\11'1 .~ ... b t t' t I · F B nco 1 2•\• •'-1 Jel AlrFr t~ 6'-1 AOOrt 011 I~·~ 1~\lo WI K PLt '"*• 20 su s an 1a e your c &Jm. or ll~nk• 111 l•\'• 15 JO$IYn M 1 ·~ '! Ranlns 11 n it 1s , Woad Lt11 7'7\t 7"• m I ·--pbotogra~· may 11..-11 Ar t \4 t.U Kalfff SI I 'I 1 "" AOllM Co ''" ..... Wwld s... It ... SO e Ca.........,, .,.,., lluckblo 13u l'1~ Kalv•r c ·, • Aow. F111 u\. u Wrlohl w l"i 11. be helplul . If the actual-item Ruck•v 51 ,nt H1:z ~:r1~Tr. ,1:,: ,1,~ =~r·s.~i:~~ ~1r ~~· F~ -~ :.\~ is small be prepll.red~to bring !~IT': M :u Ken -conn It 2 SM!• ""' lMa u,, z1eo1r co 1Dv. 11 ' •IT! Teci 2j 1~ Ktv 01!1 71 .. 7t~ S•litm Cp t.\11 10»• Zions Ulh '1S U to court the item itself that •111 SoW .;. 11 K•v•t Fti 11u. 1~:; figures in your claim -say, ~ ~.~l 1~ l~ ~:~.,er:: 1:10 1s"' JO ltlost Af!t·l.,e f I d i~ PO tt 11\lo IC.MS Ind •~1 •'• the coat you ee your ry •r1e• A \'\ ll Kna11• v1 20'"' 22·~ NEW vo1uc: IUPll _ Thi 1o rnost I h · cd 1111 Co \lo v, Koou Pr f'\• 73'• , c eaner as ru in . .,.. co t lio ..,, Krwoe<"' "'' ''' ocllY• $tocks rr1d..O on !hi OTC m•r~tt Contact all witnesses who hi Br Ir " 6S"1 Ku$tmPe1 1&~ l~'h MDl'lll•~ •• 1uDOl!ed bv NASO. · ht ba k t d hrls Sec 165 177 ~=~•11 '' 1~-~ 21' '• Sieck Vll11ma •1d Aslled ci.., m1g c up your s ory an l!lz u A 39v, ..O\~ Lan(t 11i1 .t.1~1 Pinn Lii• 1'3,.oo •'• sv.-., .• arrange fo r them to appear in i:~ 15"' l~t% ri.90~ ~~~ ~\) A•nk or11 n.soo 11 •.:. 11\'o -11 court with you. If any "''ill not :".c (.~ !lt 21°"' L~•' Pl 11·\ ''~~ .r.m E•11 11,000 ss\o\ SA -l . • ornl Sl!r \lo 211• Lltlte'rlY H 11 l'• Fld Cp VI IJ.Q 6 M-l-11 appear voluntarily -for an-mwj• '" tS\.'o 2161:1 tu ctimo tt1 •1•• B1nk1m '3.«IO ~M ~·· -.. antt II p lt\.'o 11'• Inc 11!.dsl 11 \i I II\ Comb lnlAm !ol.000 1~ 13,,._ ~ stance, .JJ garage attendant aus1n1 n 23l.I; 1on crs~ ''r ,,:• B~•ntzr wn Sl,IOO i11;; 111,1,-'• who saw someone scrat nncto '"" ,,., Loow• co !<:!''I ~s Lltiertv LI!• Jt.300 12\0 oil\\-l t o ch ~ I. 11 1N Laci!~ '"• ' .... f'"'n Ofllll Gs ~.~ 1\'J ,,,._ "" your car but does not want to ~·t inl1 ~t~ lf~ ~:r R~1'v' i~: ii,~ No cent Alrl ~ •"' •'•-'• t In 1 cd ha ~~y M '"°Pot~ /\.l•llckt 15 U''l NASO wlume today 5 7,tAOCI; .Ov•llCH ge VO V -you C8D Ve •rl 9,".,11 ltl'• lt'J. M1rlt Fri 1 t~ 'U'. JM; deellnat 1052: uncii.inQtd lllJ1 IO'!at the court clerk subpoena ·:· G~ .Jt: ,fi?' mrt!:Vk \1\" \~ ,-n='~'c==========:::; them In New York City there ecf• ca nll. 11~1 McQ111v 11~• 11·~1r • ' 0.Clll' In 6Vlt 6~1 Mtdcm It. 16'1/o "1s no charge for the subpoena DK11:1 AR 47'14 4IV1 A1e<111rn •J "' • §il"I ln!I 64• 1 Merld tn •'• 1a~ but you have to pay a Oat $2 11•• c 33\lo 34\~ M•t •' Fr :10 XI'\ • • • /'"' Cr1 Jlli"pe~ Mn too• o'I''" ..._,~ to each witness being required cam Hd 1 , 1 Mc11 Ci•t 12"\ 2211 ll ~k A B • ~ i Mlnn F"b 1'\lo fi'< to attend. To get a S<K:a ed ,,r1 Sd 2n., \\ Mllflul c1> 2:1i.1 '~~. " h 111 311\11 .. ., Molt• In ll !!" expert witness, sue as a tr c..n ,~ ,111 MooA sa 1 u. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT physician, lO testify, YOU 8:."'rO'IS 2'1•~ lf~ ~:~lftCI ~·~ 1! might have to pay as much as s:;i,,"og ~l':. q ~~1 c~:!~ ,~u i'l~ $100 for his time. If a witness Econ L•b 31t• 31•0Na1 Llbtv 11 1. 1 t• '-----------~ can't appear in person, his written statement may be ac-r. ceptable. IF YOU CAN manage it, try MUTUAL FUNDS to watch a session of the court 1 ,.... • , :;,. .. -• .,'-'"""••..,...., OK-EYSTONE -S-AVINGS MADE FROM a pleated. felt·like mate r ia l , the Atmosfilter is insta lled inside a car's intake duct, located ju§t iq frQ!lt oJ !he win~eld. The Atmosfilter does not ar- fect e n g i n e performance, \Vinkelman said and sells for about $30. R e p I ace men t cartridges are about $9 and are !designed to last for six months. Accuracy is important. If, for instance, you list the store you are suing as XYZ Store in- stead or by its complete legal name or XYZ Store. Inc., or you list its wrong address, you may not be able to collect your money. even though you win your suit. Also, a person whom you know as Bob Smit h should be' sued as Robert Smith, if that is his correct name. before your trial date so you v tt =P"ot· "'" G [il It) ~.,.,11 ,, 1.11 1.~ P-s. a1,to ._,. kno\v what ~o ex~t. Per~ps :ii:' 11 ~ 1111 ~ ~t:~~NW TH U'S .L~'S 11J·fj 10·i22 ~~· 5f4 111.u 1~.tt a lawyer £nend Will also g1ve ~ .. lndon ttll~uli:,r•I A~ B 111.21 1.3t w11iti~e i·# t :,i.J" :U ~ AND LOAH ASSOCIATIOW ll:onald W. C.fipers. Ch111rmlll ot: lhc Board lxeeolln ol~ Wesnnl11tlet, 14011 lleach Bh'll., nc.:11 10 tla'Pennv ltln. Phone UJ.249L An1befnt GI Ike: SSS tf. t:ucUd- cipposit~ BrOildw~v·Rnbinson's, f~Cll\e: 77Z·7·HO. ~trport Cent«. Newport olll«: 4:501 MitAtlbuc Blvd.., f'tione 83:S.Ol67 Assets over 560 ml.Ilion. Don't Be Fooled By The Beard, Long Hair, Grandpa Glasses THIS IS NO LIPPY HIPPY you some free advice on l}ow ~~A~ ~iec1 tiv c~11 er ·~~.1 }:tt ,R:'£o,~: ,,.:, .. ,,'· '•'t::°'°" I~ •p;, 'jf t f ornll As 1.7' 5.f. d Ml o .12 • f'd 1i:J4 \! o prepare or your ap-~v omP co 5.2' Z·!i '~~Bl.oi1c1" I r u :)• . pearance in court. Or the Aoru 2· ~riP A•k : ~: lJ 1:tl f.orn"' · ~'~ \~ :~Ai b7ll l.;g court may provide you \Vith Aif/!l~"'LT~;61 5.06 =rd'"" l~1'lj:H 1~1r 11:J1j.13 G~111 °ll'l!ll.c f I I d I d U 1 I 4 oc 4.31 n11n uw 5.39 ·" Plr0'1· ·" .39 Nw Er• ~ f: ree ega a v ce an co nse , ~~ 1·97 9.13 onMt 1n i.14 1.I• G•11w! ~t.fl .lt Nw Hor . includi ng help with fil ing the ~o~•erFd 41:r, :·~ ~1~11 c 1~·ll 1l.11tx:ns·5~ 1~ 7.03 ~~ f~" Ti t' 1 c!aitn Afut!rt I '110:,1 wn Call 6 ~ 1 • ~ROUI" FSl~1 r f'rovfo1 4 i 1 To~orrow : \Vhat to do when ~ffH.,fd 1l~ 1!:~ gi~i\;11t~~ 13:3 ~!.tFs'lt 1fh 11~ ~L1~~ 11: 11T:n in court or when you win. ~J11F~ ~?·:/ 1l·M ROUP: ~'" FAm 4.14 '.ti "~Hos1 •m lvrs l0'.2•11'.19 CK•I 10.7011.ff'/Srthdlnd ll~fll·oi onutr 11.g1121D Am qtv lS1 Jiil Ceiw F IOJOllA 111r 0 .30 4•111 11ullv t 1 flS AM xP1t1s·s · Dll1• T 4.3' s.1' H~mH 0' •,·05 1•111 Gto 15°511101 FUH S· dtVfQll ,.d'j.11 Im r · · Grwtll 11.l:llj.31 Th J~ g11111 • I 0'2 171 ~~ Cp .32 .IJ Ham 1p< lt·tt 1f·73 jr1t 1.31 .OI ree eystone ~~ i:U !~ ~;fis H-Jili:n e:t!v 1:~1 '~ fl!::o F Ii:NltU ' srofk 7 t5 l 69 j!'Yf Fa 1~.tl IJ,n :?fro f·79 t79 Atu1re F • lj 1., Am Grlh !~ 1:s1 ryl LY lJ.621 12 HH•rl IW ,1.t1 20.o,.s Alnlrt lj'.t 11:n Am 1n11n 19 o llM:m .fl 1·6' M•f• .n 11· Sll!'.llll1r 5' Am lriv•I f 5'03 3rd Ctnt f.IO 1 .14 lmor Co 1 ·fi' 1:M Sch<no Fd ''° 1 · Am Miii 11\~ !·'°~&e Mii 3.41 .•1 llm11 1~lm 117.t71~27 Sctiiii So •'.71 10.'6 V A . d AmNt Gr 6Z .u iWo~' .. ],., 1.76 ~ Bott ::.o ,.12 Sf~OOlll 1110 : t a=&~~~ HOWAllD 1 nd FAm .2t 3i61 e"'1f.n'~y IJ·' l'·'' eeps ppo in e fl~",,, \'.!. v. g::~ •p 1:11 :iri 1~~'118 • 'i~ 1u1 ~:;;.. lit. 11:1: .. Grw111 1 • .0 •.•2 !nc"lf F ·t~ l:iG ~: ln~J~ ilJ 1.06 s:c~lllTY ,. ~ ~~~ '·tl fj3 s::f Fd · Inv . aos 12'.+1 13.60 tn~U.:r j-~ W1 Niii 1i.~13:n ~U.03141J 'HVIST OltOUI": Ullr• F 't,'"" "~°" 4 OS 4 (,) Eber51d 10 93 II. I Ci Gm 1:ft SlLICTID f' 1 Jo Ellen Scott, Jeanne ~ nounced the promotions or : 111 F tt4 10:0. i~J::EJ&MP·b111:~;'1 /8~P:' 2:rf f:?2 a:, spd 1f ;·M Bernhard and Nell Robertson Bonnie Baldridge, B et I e HO GMTON · Eotv Gr ,.10 •.1t, ~~~·· la:u r,' ·:1'l ...,s01" Shr1 'I~· !.:,, Ed ' d Sh '!~.. d '""' ' j·" 1·•S Eotv Pr .20 is1 S.ltcl '.st 0 1 !Intl • JO 73 have been appointed vice mun ~· eena n l.~ .an F1.111C1 9 ·'1 •05 J:ir;o!,"'81 13:\11.:U v•r P•v •:0:2 '"' ftrl~ F is 1~:~ . June Bridge r to the positions i~~kSc1 ~~ t£~:11mTrt 11.21 lnlf." 4.t• s.«1i:om•'""DJ.11 1o0 presidents or Keystone Sav-of assistant secretaries or the g~~'" 11.~lf~ E::=~ 1f:B 1fl? orwin 4.24 4.'3 F•~'{"';.4 f:t f'' ings and Loan Association. association t•v~ 1·~ • ~ ~:Pi!n~ F t rl ,:·~f J~r"u1 1·~ 1·'1 t'l::f' L f" ,·n Mrs. &ott, a resident or Keystone·, formed in 1957, :::~~ U. l~~ :&!~ ~: \u.r: lf~ 10;~ 111~,, F~ ~ 1' 11J9 s~\C:11:~,. ,~ti 1~:A: h If . w t "as ter .. 1•r II 11 ·:i11 • lllOILIT'r Iv~ Funo .... £7.94 AOOl'"t !' R\1, S4 Anaheim was previously as 0 1ce6 In es m1 ' e.:: sllr I • t Gll:OU": j P Gwtll r~s lp.4t lncom 1'0 ·r.f assistant' vice president, cor-Anaheim and Newport Beach. ::~$i~n 1~:~ 1f:~ ~=1a1•b ,T·:! lJ·A; j51~' {i: l~:H t~r, s~nvg:,n J!'.d !f:&: Brow" ] ff •.Dl ~tr1 9.'U Joh"liln 26. ».21 Sloe ~Cl 1.::0 I 11 porate secretary and head of •ULlOCK y SStc 1, 9 l .11 klYITOH•: SIGMA "UHOI: • FUHDSI 1 .-••' C t Bl If 112005 C•P Shr 1.f? , ... , loa n servicing at Keystone's Expansion Set &?~ ~3 M:~ q:E =~' ll :~ 11 '° c~ et 112(1~ 21:21 tr:.;, 1:'.n 'ifi Westminster branch. She V.'ill ,,..~~"' 131.tl 11.~ ~~n 1 t:1· 3! l~:?J. ~:;:: :t ':U 1·2 s'fnTi~llf' 11 \&:" 1~::' . . , , . , N'r Vtll I .7112.to ~lem F • · uil 112 140 f.01 SB l&Gr 11.,.11.n mamta1n her respons1b1hhes At lntermark 11gi"F':tnd l ·~ lt:!l ... r:~ci1.(s.0221..).I =: l~ 2:1:21u:JG f<'ws,~~ 12.;: 1~:U as secret&ry and head or loan ~::-r:v. 1.ti i·n ''1~0iMt''~ ... 4,.. l(lJ.• .. "',!', l~:.~nrn G ,lu 1~ u · · ~ "' '" ! Fn llld 1•7 1 41 C111t S.J I. _. DKlr• 0·03 seMrvtci nBg. ha d "d t f Special to the Dally Pilot :g 1'rf~ 1 .J1 l :6 e~, lllC f~ ! 1 ~=10 S4 11! i ~ s~:T~"c 1:.0 t'~ rs. ern r . a res1 en o k .nt s11s 13.~ ''·" 1 tFo v 11:.o 12 P~I••• .11! •.l9 c, •No o•f' Anaheim was assistant vice SAN DIEGO -lntermar n~M/NO · 1111esr • . Knkck'Gth t·~ ~·~~ or:'n1~d l~ ·1' president and manager or Electronics bas expanded its ;~ncid 'r'·I: JI1: 1~1J11:11:1f.n 6.70 f;n~ Fo s:.2 .. s~~rsG~~ 1 ~·":• Keystone's-Anaheim branch. San Diego facility Md nam~ ~~s11t •j·:g !y H ~~ !~-.~ t:tt \~·~~~~1i~~ 1i.'I ~1.f:-~rw ~ ,:. ~:.i She will continue as Anaheim· Dan Busby manager, Pres1· intom ~ ,••,• M,1~V ,:11' 1:1 i~rc"h 1rso 1s.•s s,TEAo1 M ,.~, d Robe t S Th Id Spect . .'6 I .i2 ' tltl!Y Fd 593 6•1 m llCI l < branch manager ent r . roop sa ven~1r 1 t.01 11,or,••,"'!.~••,loHu~,j~ 1 •• lnlv 1·,1 ,.63 As.so F 1 " '·) d CHA ...., · · l},' ~ j 'j 1 45 lnvottt .4' 1 ., Miss Robertson also a resi-l Y on ay. '°' N1 1 •' '"' ,,. , 1 · 5 nc •P _. ,:41 ST8erN 11off l"Mi ' [ ddit" t Sa D" go, F BOf t .lf IOOI Cc U1!I • .O nd 363 11.•nc ~'20I dent of Anaheim was assist· n a ion o n ie Fron ~11 t'" 7.0t 25 Fund ,_,. 6.1• 'I . .. c~~n iii 'f• ant vice presidei1t and man· Intenn&rk Electronics has I~ • 1ji '~£=••s4·'° 5""'tlL1 ~ 1303 u 03 s'i~11:ou~-· 1 • ager of Keystone's Anaheim sales and stocking locations in S~Ji1L10 11 lrwm = s.n 5.,1 L'8i'~·t.~.t·1111 11 1= :·r. l:l branch. She will continue as Santa Ana and San Carlos, )u::,.= 1 11121 ~~ •• 1~'.M li·" AUii•• '6.•t ~E t:~~ ::J: '1~ Anaheim branch .manager. Seattle, Wash., and Denver. 'i::::uv ,J:~~ ,fH 'D\l~:r~ 1~·~ li:ll :~ m 1f:H 1116 ff,\l~ro AF ~1: fi! Ch a r I es Bott omley, Corporate headquarters are in ~rwth t: &·!t ~ltt~LIH t~l1:rn1n 1,.J: l~:li T•tc",..11 ,:~ .:J Keystone president, also an· Palo Alto. ~:'r .-1 43' cNTC 1 •.1s 1oo:i tgg,~~ flur ... ~s:,.u i:J: ~ '1·n '~:~l -:,;;~~~~~~~~~~~.i;;:;ii;i~i;;;;------iiiiiiiiiiim~iioi:ii;;;;i;;;;;;;,iiiioio'"'ji l'ICDITI t.03 f.87 Tr1n C1111 .IO l·ij • PllQrm 9.52 10.«I tr.tvl Eo 1 .'7 l . M•~r1lll!' ~.It I.SI ~~ H 1 .11.1 '·'· For C.l''lorn•"• M GWI 2.61 2.61 .... CG ·" l.Ct M SS CO: ""Ill Cl 4bl 4.11 9M'8 t• .,.._, lndP F . 1.4 l'l "lftd f.~5 ln.•4 I This is Gloomy Gus, Invented by the DAILY PILOT several years ago, when hippy still meant maybe you neded a new girdle. He apJ*afs dail~ on the editorial page where he stars as a sort of ventriloquist's Hf-~"t--iltl111lmy-wlllO"'~<s"only-whet.'90fDe0fle--(-DAJL.Y-J!JLOX readers, in tms instance) puts ~ · ' mouUt. DAILY PILOT readers write every Gloomy Gus message. Date of Offering J1nu1ry 2, I 97l -----1>,-J:AX •:_,. .. ,..ft.tu p,...m lf. f,l n10fled f,4'111 ~7 M•AF 1 . J 12.ee uN1ow •••v1c1: fu"-!!L-------ll•MM~A PNCLm;: ill GB~~~1:11 l'::?Ul:."----< M• 1•· jA Un C•ot 1 A 11.•~ M g '·n 1 .Ol Wllllllll ,,, • ,4.71 MC !· 1'46 UNrTID "UltD!' To invest in . ' He has been saying a mouthful every publication day for years now. Want to know what your neigh- bors are Utinking . _ . what's wrong (or right) wlUt the world, nation. state, community, neighborhood you live in ? Want to give ol' Gus a piece.QI your mind to pass on? You can help him continue to be Ute hippest lip it> town. Write to Gloomy Gus and see your own message ON THE EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE -DAILY PILOT ' t • RSVP: 1714 ) . •' MOBILE HOME PARKS Diversified 9eo9raph ically throu9hout the State of C1 1lforn i• You ere cordially invited to •ttend •n INVESTMENT SEMlNALDINNER of PRUDENTIAL MOBILE HOME PARK FUND THURSDAY -APRIL 5 -6:30 P.M. IRVINE COAST COUNTRY CLUB 1600 E. Co11I 547-594 1 Banquet Highwey, Room Newport Bt ach, Calif. Dinner Serv1d Pro1pectu1 •v•ll•ble Mlltl IY .t , ~ 1.fl l.ij ~re: .... '" ln· 1,:n ~=, :! l·rii·. ,,::i~ ~ 1 .40 12j COl'll ll'IC 1 .A 11 ,!D M I a '* ll tnmm 1 ·"' IJ.'11 ~.~ .. ~ .11 I 1 ~;:a :a Bl M~ I' s:&'! .16 v"AA c1 1f.tt "·'' M n t.1 1 ·j' ~s Gvts 10 H. 10.it Mui ""' lt·'I '!· ! ·~UE ltN• POSI I T" ,0 , LM US j·' n_u I ·~ 10.43 VI Irie 1.77 ·Y flC C lltlj ltAJ Vb:! 9!'! !:ft •:u 5r •.n .• ANC.,... Ori H'!' S.lMOl'•Si '" u·til I: ~r l~ ~:* ::g ~" 3' •. !l J.-• ~" .... liW"IN• ·~ tM v=:-J ·fl t1l ~ \tll \111 ~r..'.l"T ·ll ·~ ~~ 11! 1·.u Vlk!IO Gr f. J.. :t.~r; t:1i y!lr.'-1: un:I: ~Id 1 111 :t~ ri!~•TON .m.... 1· ..... ..... !!j l!-!f .... ·~· · 'I~ ~ ll 11:i; ;~ ,1: ir11 ;;i: ,,· i: it.I . -----~-~--:· M .. P;_,..K,.Ru.,, .. ~ ... er.;!.,.c,...? ... • .. 1N_c_. ------~ "Wtln· ··~~*"';'e~ S C l'f ?'me , . §"' -"J 2100 N. M1i n St., •nt• Ana1 1 1. o c we i • .f! .M,"11 ,0 ~.SS 4 • ___________________________________ .. ,P•11 lltn ll I!., I"' · l"a Mvt M """''"''"• • \f • • • ' Ja DAILY PILOT S Tut!d>y, APfll 3, l97l Decline Seen h1dividual Stock Holders Needed By JOUN CUNNIFF AP Business AnalytC NEIV YORK Th e securitie s Industry is growing increaslngly distressed abouL lhe decline in share ownershJp and trading activity by In· dlvidual invesl0r5. who s e numbers had doubl ed in the deatdc of the 1960s. TllE CONCERN ls shown in advertisi ng progra1ns. i n s1utemcnts by stock exchange officials and In testimony b e r o r e congressional com· mittet's, where the industry hopes to win backing for investor tax h1coot ives. 1'h.e people whose business is now being sought include small' investors, the very ones that many brokers turned down in recent years because of heavy volume and the feel· ing that small accounts !ailed to pay their way. As a result, many Individual investors took their money clsC where. For the 12-month r-period ended-in mid-March, shareowoor population declin- ed by about 800,000, the first such drop since the mid-194-0s. TllE LOSS IS being felt nol only in brokers' pocketbooks but in the functioning or the markets, w-here · ac tivity on some days is made up llirgel~ or institutional trading. There exists a serious loss of li- ting prlce5 to rise or drop sharply. The evidence ls sctn dally In stock price lislinp. James Needham, Ntw York Stock Exchange chairman, conctdes the liquidity pro- blem. "nit securities mp.rkct5 need the individual in\1estor. both small and large," he said in co..(1lmenting on · dC(.lining share ownership. 1''EEOllA;\{ IS a m o n g securities industry spokesman who have testiUed. or plan to testify, before the House Ways and Means Committee, seek· ing legisla!lon to make share. ownership more attractive. While couching t h e i r testimoliy · in idealistic terms. the motive of Industry spokesmen is at least partly that of self-Survival . The NYSE claims the nation's economic and social objectives require broad ownership - but so do the goaJs or stock ex· changes and th~ir members. Another concern in- cre¥ingly expressed . is ~hat the capital needs of American ·corporations might not be met in future years unless 10- vestors are provided with more encouragement. -·-qurcHty. One of Needham 's pro· posals, whlctJ are similar in some ways to others presented or' planned fo r presentation, is to increase to $200 from $100 the dividend income exclusion onJocomeJ..ax..returns. A market is liquid when buy and sell orders are easily mat· ched because there is an abun- dance of traders. In a liquid situation, buy and sell orders are matched without sharp price changes. institutions, however, trade many thousands or share at a lim e, and it is son1etimes im- possible to match buyer and sell ers quickly wilhout permit- that yours may not ! 1 COMPLnE ORANGE COUNTY COYERAGE lnc:l11dl111J: l.oq11fla IHdl Safi Cletrtenf'9, Mlssl o11 Yle!o, Dono Point, CR well CR Lo IHclt oM ll'IOSt of L.A •• MONTH TO MONTH RENTAL IASIS NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED ON APPIOYID CREDIT ONLY Sl7.00 PER MONT TOTAL COST l••llll'llted '"""' NEW COMPACT UNIT SIZE ll '/•114111/2) VOICE MESSAGE PAGEIS ALSO A.IE AYAILAILE 7 FULL FREE MAINTENANCE ORANGE COUN7Y RADl07ElEPHON£ SERVICE'" 71 4 • IJS-llOS tOI SO. SANTA FE, SANTA ANA rom l.1g1m1 8t•ch. Minion Vltlo, 01n1 POlnl, Sin Cl1m1nt1, Sin J~ll! 1pblrlnO, El Toro, c•ll toll ltlt 496-J22J UE WOULD ·also permit commissions pald on purchases arid sales to be treated as deductions against ordinary income. At presenl, such commissions cannot be deducted , a rule Needham considers illogical. A third proposal would permit a limited tax deduction for individuals who buy stock as part of a personal pension plan, providing they are not adequately c o v e r e d by employer-sponsored plans. Another widely sponsored proposal. offered by Needham and others. y.•ould tax capital gains on securities at a rate that would decline wittJ the length or time the securities iire held. Many inve stors are belleved to be locked into stocks in which they have big gains, ttlese securities leaders feel, because to sell would· be to in- cur too large a tax bite. This. they say, damages capital mobility. You might add that it hurts commissions too. TH E CltAIRrttAN'S thesis, it appears. is that the in· di vidual investor is needed for the functioning of free en- terprise, by the corporations which need capital, by the ex· changes which need liquidity, by the brokers who need com- miss ions. The oft-scorned individual investor ought not to forget it. For Sports The DAILY PTLOT is the newspaper for sports along the Orange Coast. .. complete statistics on local home and away gam es, staff coverage, more exclusive stories on Orange Coast sports than any other Io ca 11 y distributed ne\vspapcr. ORDER X 1000 ~eautiful Stick-on ' '· 1 YOURS ~, TODAY! LABELS ' .ME-LESS FACES· NATHAN MIUER HElEN B. SHAFFER -=· ·°"1~: ' . ' • lo:,..) ; i RALPH C. DEANS Think You Don't Know Them? You probaby don't reco9ni1e a single name or face in this group and yet, if you're one of the DAILY PILOT'S very well informed editorial page readers, it j5 this talented team of writers which helps you keep informed. They write the Editori· al Research Reports. Though their own names don 't appear on the articles which are published under the Editor ia l Research Reports heading, these are the real pros -diggers who· go after all the bockround facts which put today's top issues in to perspective -without thought of seekin g the fame that goes with the name when you're a national columnist. They're Your IN FORMERS Yes, they could be your "informers.11 It's features Personalized • Stylish • Efficient t-----~-----------'--------11-like-EditotialResearcUeports whiclt.mako_th I Order For Yourse lf or a Fri•nd· M1y be usod on envolopes as return address l•bels. Aho very handy a s identificatio'1 labels for mark ing personl!l l items suc.h as books, records. photos, etc. L&,bels stick on ' 9l1is end moy be use d for mark ing home c.anned foc.d it ems. All l•bels are printed with styl ish Vogue typo on fine quality white· gummed paper. DAILY PILOT much more !hon just the most im portant homelo•'" newspaper avoilable to .residents along the Oronge Coast, The DAILY PILOT is the total pockage. It makes whotever ha ppens in the world 11local news" and delivers it daily right lo your home. Lot th is team of dedi. cated "informers" help you keep informed. Read Editoriol Res eorch Reports on tha editorial page -ond all the other informative special features in other parts of the ' . COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST Whit ~~ CUl'll -'elllwWl9 •r• •lit•. -.._ ..... , .... e:~) b!fJt Hf.I M t•1 .... t..W.IO.. I I • • " • --, I .. Monda y's Closii1g Pri ces-Complete New York Stock Exchange Li st . . Stocks Fall Again; Nixon Talk Cited NEW YORK (AP) -Tb~ stock market still had a sour taste in its mooth Monday regarding P,resident Nixon's antJ.lnflation spee<b last week. Brokers said the low volume on the New York and American stock exchanges reflected Wall Street's disenchantment with the President's plan•. Investors had hoped he would lake stronger action than merely Imposing meat price ceilings, analysts .said. . "The market ran up in anticipation or t b e · speech .Thursday and let down afterwm:!s," asserted Ted Bukowski, technical analyst with ·E. F. Hulton .. , I 197J 5 DAILY PILOT JV -" I • .. H DAILY PILOT "AMBLER MUTT AND JEFF Tlltl<fay, April 3, 1973 ... ANO WITH ALL TMIS ARMAMENT ON OISP\.A'l/TME REMARI< SEEMEOAPPROPRIATE.-. "GJFTE:D"! TAAT THING?! WITH WHAT?! , .. ~CIY'EVER, I WfTMDR.AW .TMEC~NT,' I • OKAYlGOOOaYE. ... by Tom K. Ryan AN UNCANtl'i ~ACK OF 1NSOM/11A. by Al Smith . ~-' ' ~ ' . . . . . DOOLEY'S WORLL SALLY BANANAS ,. • GORDO l.tiwnk I cam! l:tW I CO/fl! • •• -by Roger Bradfield J>A'f LAI',,., W )(U RY .Ju S1" SfbOO LIP By Charles Barsotti --------, . I ~ by Gus Arriola . 1---_ElGMENIS MOON MULLINS ------------------··---·by_Dale_~_ale __ by Ferd Johnson --- ' l NANCY OH,DEAR-- SUCH TD,iiY 'S CRDSSWDID PUZZLE , ACROSS 1 Wife of Zeus 5 Florentine iris 10 Valley 14 Cool drinks 15 8oxe1's movement 16 Cooled 17 Zigzag barrier: 2 w ords 19 Indian buffalo 20 Sense of 1aste 21 Most adamant 23 V.P. John ·· Gainer 26 Femaoe animal 27 Canine trained 10 guard 30 lamb 34 As buli)' as 35 Pans or ea•s JI ---rule 38 RhodesiJ's Smith 39 Object 41 container 42 Sctectivc Service: System: Abbr. .t3 Causing horror 44 Ahican lake .. 45 Aries: 2 words 47 S1ern1v 50 Numetical prefix . 51 Packaging material 52 Genus of plants 56 Kev fruit 60 Ho1se 61 Adapted 64 Rodents 65 Group of nine 66 Frog·s· rt>la tive 67 No1Jlen1an 6B II woody 1nts G9 rlulers: Abbr. DOWN 1 M otal fastener 2 Feminine riame· 3 True 4--Whh suspicion 5 Outrage 6 Sandpiper 7 1f 10th ofa "" 8 Length unit 9 B11lances 10 C1own 11 Area unit 12 Came1a part 13 Redact • Yesto1day's Puzzle Solved: 18 Greenland t own 22 Meat cut 24 Pigment 2!i Sellish pefSon 27 Pait o! the bocJy. 28 Disconcert 29 l 11ut 31 Use a plumbing liKlU/C _30usincss as 33 Yellowish red 36 Make moist 39 SST,fo1one 40 Deer, e.g. 44 Incinerate a corJ)St!I 46 Eraser 48 C&\ls on 49 City in JlJelah 52 Musical pass<ige 53 Fort····, Q111a1jo 54 Contest SS Tartness 57 Iota 58 Harvest• crop 59 .r otals up 62 Can. Nat'/ Expo. 63 Actf6SS ··• Acn1ick by Emie Bushmiller .THIS f'ARROl" RATED PEANUTS ~E'/, MANAGE~, M~ GLOVE 15 50 STtFF I CAN'T CATCH THE BALL! JUDGE PARKER ., x " 1HAT'5 6€0.<ISE <.txl AAVEN'T USED IT ALL WINTER .. J~ RV681NG A LITTLE NEAT~·fOOT OU. INTO IT ANIMAL CRACKERS ooe51H\5 MfAN llEQ WIU.~To PJl~f' ... lJtlLESS. IT'S.A Fl~ST OFFEll5E •lfl!!IJ lHEC/ ~e1vE A STIFF FlllE ! flJ5GlBL'I- llc5 l!iliffili6 'llQU..1"01C5 """-8• I """"""'D• by Charles M. Sc:hulz ....--.......,~--...-. · ~6ET IT! . I HATE AN~~ WfiERE 'tOll HAVE ltJ TAKE CAAE Of ~OUR E~VIPMENT ! ... by Horold Le Doux 1\00''5 MOT SJOO~/ ., t. -. ,, " " ., , . . • ~~ ·• IN,,, AN OVAi. ?? by Roger Bollen ~-~~~~~---~ HOW LONG WILL YOU &: IN TOWN, 6.ETSy;? MISS PEACH WONDErlFLA~1 A~MU"' ! 'OU DID · 'TkAT EXAMPLE Pl!R:FIC.Tl.'t ! DICK TRACY , THAT BIG LUMP IN MIS TATTEQcO COAT POCKE!T, GRAN NY, LOOK! .... TMAT DOES IT! "by Mell • "What I hate about outdoor furniture is just when you finally get It all fitted into the garage, it's spring again.'' DENNIS THE MENACE ~ .. " l ' • j l ~ • • M 'bJ CNir eveN TRUST AUK/I CAAS NO -AQl£;1)41). ONE-t:WtNClf@iJS!' ~ • • • T"ldat. AP"ll 3, 1973 ~ ••••• ,SOO·S2' The Bluest Marketplace·on the· Oranae· Coast DAILY PllOI CLASSIFIED ADS Autoi110bi!et •••••••• 950. 990 (~ . • • • • • • • 700 . 799 DAILY PILOT % J _Mobile Homts for WI • • , 125 • M9 r..1onoh •••• , , •.•. S2S • S'49 ""' GM Suppies . • • • • , ISO • 899 ltol f Pot9 o.n.mi. . ' . . 150 . '" 1---11-' im.acP I • ,__._. ~-...... ·"'"'-'-"''-II You Can Sell It, Fi It, Trade It With a Want Ad ( 642-5678"]J ne earl service Fast Credit Approval •• JOO . 499 • Houil;'$ for Sole • • • • • • 100 • 124 L~ & Found , , ••• , • 550 -S74 Mt..thood~. • • • • • • • too . 149 ERRORS. Advertisers should chock their 1ds dally & rtport errors lmmedl1tely. The DAILY Pl LOT auumos llablllty for tho flrtl incorrect Insertion only. _,.,_ l~I SPANISH 3 BDRM! I rnmaculate. L o v e I y landscaping. D i n in g room, modern kitchen built-ins with dishwash- er. Family room, fire- place. Quiet cul de sac. Screened atrium with wet bar. ~.800. 540- 1720 FAMILY RM+ BONUS RM I 3 BDRM--$24,9501 Lovely home. Dining room, kitchen built-ins with dishwasher. Fami- ly room, fireplace. Nice secluded patio. Move-In condition. Choice land- scaping. 540-1720. LIKE NEW CONDITION! $36,950. Owner trans-$38,950. Assumable VA ferred. Large h om e loan. 3 bedrooms, 2 with -3 bedrooms. -i ·baths. -Fami!Y' room; ~a~s. Secluded re.ar firei)lace. Large cover- hvmg .room. Fanilly ed patio. Plush carpets. room, fireplace. Dmmg . r o 0 m , built-ins . On M.any special features. quiet cul de sac. Beau-Nicely landscaped. 54(). tiful. 540.1720 1720 2955 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-1720 General General ;i... r.:;'1'fl"""4t<A-'.Slltid-. ~-mians I . REALTORS 2128 USI' CCMST_fflGHWAy__ CORONA DEL MAii, CALIP'. 644·7270 ---LARGE TWO STORY .'... FAMILY HOME - for the large family with a need for many extras. SEP ARA TE family room, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, LARGE kitchen with din- ing area, PLUS a forrilal dining room, two . fireplaces (1 In the upstairs master suite). Large fenced yard for the children. $56,500. WEL.COME A SURPRISE That's part of <iwning this spacious TWO STORY custom decorated home in BACK BAY area -4 Bedroom, FAMILY ROOM, 2 baths, bulltin gourmet kitchen, with many xtras. Pool size yard. See to appreciate. .. . .. . . . . .. .. . .. . .. .. .. .. . .. .. . $52,500. HARBOR VIEW HOMES SOMERSET MODEL Welcome children in this family TWO STORY 5 bee1r&0m, family-room-home-whiclt-fea--· tures 3 baths, formal dining room, WET BAR. large convenient kitchen with oil the extras. Tremendous fenced yard on dead- end type street. FEE LAND. . . . . $81,500. AUSTIN·SMITH, GORMAN .l ASSOCIATES REAL TORS 644-7270 General General ULTIMATE IN BLUFFS . FOREVER BAY VIEW CHOICE END UNIT · 3 BDRM., l'h BATH, SPLIT LEVEL -A ntatchless-ho111 • legant & sumptious: very, very costly custo1n features : MASSIVE CANYON STONE FRPLC .. RICHLY PAN- ELED WALLS Ot' HAND SELECTED EUR- OPEAN PECAN, TOTAL ELEC. GOURMET KITCHEN, SELF·CLEANING 0 VEN S, "SPECIAL RUN" DECORATOR'S DEJi)P PILE CARPET OVER HEAVIEST PAD, MAGNIFICENT LARGE LOUVRED SHUT· TER DOOR THRUOUT. STEP OUT TO LGE. "BAYSIDE" PATIO, EVENING LIGHTS & FIRE RING. Could not be duplicated at this first time offering. f 9,500. Exclusive with: t;.r f~ === Gener.ti Gener.ti Gener.ti ADD MORE UNITS ExceUent Eruits.kle Co 11 a ~1\'sa Fixcr-Uppcor Unil s. Pl'est>ntly 3 each, l Be<!· Schook ond lmt1uC1ion , • , .S7S • Yl9 s.,.,Kn and hpoln . • . . 000 · 099 lron!pOltoticr\. • • • . . . , t!S • 949 · roon1, 2 Bedroon1 and 3 Bcdroon1. Total Lot is 66 x 305. \\"itLVariance Pal'('('! \\'ill Accomodatc Additional 4 Unil,. OH•'""' '°' $'3,900. BACK BAY Call anytin1e, &16·lff6, ROS<' l<1\"rrs • St'<' 1hls \'f'rv Ci)UESTION: iLnnutt·.. ue11 ly , cptd. ,~ "\\'e nf'C'd anothl'a· OOnie. To J d!""J>l'<I homt•. F ::1rn1 styli· sell this one for lhp top ~1t,l·h. I\' Ii;~. E':~llng an'a: doUar there are wmt! things 3 lxtnns.,. 2 has & 1•:..11·11 that should be done such as store~<' 111 111\~ 1 l'ar f;ttl"ili:l'. c.'l.U'J>(!ls and paiul & \\"t' 1\ ~l't•n! N'pl. lk·uch lH.1y for dou·t \\'Ml 10 tak(' the only $.~.500. Tl\Ollcy front our su.vings. SPLENDID JIM HYNDS I lnx b1.'1•n In R~al Estate Sin\'C IOOS. l~e came to Ute r\'al es1a11.• proresslion front a cl.U'l~r In t•ngineering. He h(ls workl'd in new re-W:len· 1 inl salt's Ill "'Mlake vu. \\11cr(' do we get the lllOtX'y BEACH HOME and shOuld .,.,.e do lhe rl'- pairs???" SOLUTION: Take advantage of Col\\"('11 •• , "Call 646-0555 or 615-i2'15 EXCLUSIVE COLLEGE PARK 3 BR + POOL Situated on a quiet street, this holl1l' is In sparkling --rondition· -lnside-1t.nd--ou1 ... Feature! Charn\lng country kitchen with new cushioned floor tiles, upgraded shag CaflX'tlllg In living roo111. and lovl'ly pool, patio and · yard lvith low maintenance Close to g1'('at swin unhll: & la.~c. \\1•st (1f Los AngeJcs su1·fing . 0111)1 $:.'S,!MX> fv1· a 1u1tl in the !!We of invest· really sharp 4 Br., 2 b:1. tn<'nt propt•rty in Loli An· condon1iniu1n \\'ith 2 car t'll· gt•ll'i> and Orang.i Countic!. clOSt.>d garage: Jgc. patio, Ill' \JCCiune a. Real Estatt• etl'. H1'Uker in 19Tl and for U1e c,,11119 ,,11sJt a~~b~~~e~5~j----t 675'-3000 P'~ud of his 1.,11ni: .,..,.,;. ~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~~; i ation wlU1 Thi· R e a I Estatcn; . Please 1:o n1act Jli'.I 11\'NDS BLUFFS to Sl·rvc )"OU In buying or S\\·ccpi11g BAY VIE:\V seUin}:' your hon1e Or in- tron1 this itninnculHle Vl'stnv:nt pl'OPl!rt~es. 3 bcdroon1 BluUs condo 6·'6-TI71 Beautifully d•oora!Od 2 BEDROOM v.•Jth eXpL'llSi\'C' -ca.rpcting~pcs-H""USE'---1·----1 l..arg<', view sunrlPck v·· Private con1n1unily 1•2 LOT """"''°n tadliiy " ASSUME FH ... K\\'ln11ni ng pool fill $68,600 LOAN for full hon1e--living en· ThP Cosla Mesa home with joyment. Priced at $39,900. hcamed ceillna:s. and huge Please phone 5'16-2313 for back yani 11 an ideal at&rt· EXECUTIVE EXTRAVAGANZA -one of additional infor1nntion and c1· 1101nc. Note the 1'"'HA as. the prime view locations in Newport Beach appointment. COM,.ANY ~umnble lolln + R2 re:zon. OPEN TIL 0 • fT'S FUN 10 8£ NICE! REAL TOnS ing., Priced at $25,500. For * * * * '* * (and fee land too!) Hi gh on a bluff overlook-i~-· =' -. ~ SINCE 19H """"' call 646-1111. ing Dover Shores lookin~ea\vard to Cata-_ 673 4400 OPENTJt.O•IT'SFVHTOBENICEr * TAYLOR Co. * ~~':,.~n~!fl~n~~~~~I :i~~c~~"ii,~ • ~; --11~~·11~·~1 spacious floor plan with numerous extra CAMEO r 1 41 ; GALAXY VIEW conveniences. A beautiful residence now pre-~'-'--"~·~~~~~I sented at a reduced $237,500. POOL HOME Hl,GHLANDS .= . BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB • UNl9UI HOlllS OP NIWPOlT HACH .. 5·6500 3 Bcdrm home, now carpet, 3 BEDROOMS I $45 900 -4 Bed~m . .-4-~atb-home-. Beautiful decors......_ ·-Beautiful-custom--quality-in-on&-of--finest-· fresh int enciol>ed ho . . ' to.r furnIShmgs included. Large, covered pool homes in area. Professionally decorated. 4 ca uc nven JlOO • c· living roonl \\•tth Urcplac.-e. with roll back roof $245 000 amil Ith ood ccss to roar yard for boat Quality \V/\\' carpets a.nd Lovely 3 or 4 bedroom 2 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ' · Bdrms, huge f · Y rm W rosew pan· U ...i l()U S: tf() US:~ I or camper. $26,500. drapes. Ou~tanding kit· stor)' llQ1ne on largo lot in BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR . eling, lge dining rm & fully equipped kitchen. ,.... L /T1lL.:9 SIX UNITS •hon. "" .,,,,,.;0 b"lli-ln•. '"''' iramc rree location. Open beam ceilings, lavish tile floor in entry REAL TORS Professionally dt'velopl'd Ne"' dCt'p shag co.rpet. tor- 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, Newport Be.tch hall, loads of storage, auto. sprinklers. All I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... on large lot. Easlside yard with sprinklers. ~111ny nlal dinllll{. custom kitchen tbi I · d $159 500 I~ ' c t ~f 172 500 fine extras. 1\sking: $73,j()(J. and 21~ 11parkllng ba.thL 675•6161 s Pus aU'·COll • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 1 • Gen1r1I General os a csa. ' · Call 673-8:>50. Just Hstcd ot $45,900. Best BIG CANYON COUNTR:V CLUB C ZONE Ol'ENTIL I • IT'S FUN TO BE NICE/ hurry! • CALL 545-8424 General GOV'T FORECLOSURE Exclusive Country area. Popular plan in this GOLF COURSE VIEW • . ! ~ -SOUTll-GOAST-REkLTORS ~o.!a1 h~~Tn;Y i!:t'':'rb.~~~ ~~w n;,'i outstanding 5 BR, 3 ba. Calil.-Contemp. on coM>~1i=' WT ~~~· ~·~{!~!m!:!'A=\~.t!I ·~. all •c S Mesa Verde Goll Course. Owner bldg. new R McC di R It ···-·-. 3 BR & POOL Patios from rooms. ~ ar garage. ur-h t 1 b t •74 500 oy or o oo or . . . 10 133,!\00. Outlllmdmt< ome, wan s ong escro,v; uy now a "' , 18 Blvd c M t ·1 t · \Vestside Costa Mesa new rounded by more expensive homes. $104,900. 1· 10 N~7729 .. · • 3a~e2°ba':h1~ ~~~ Only $1,300 down payment buys this comp l etely r<>furbished Costa Jo.t e s a charn1er. Brrind new paint in and out. Full price only •hag carpel, encl°""'patlo, 29 AUGUSTA LANE OPEN WED. 1·5 FOREVER VIEW-DOVER SHORES ESTATE SIZE room plua ovo»bed mu!U· beaut Bluebaven pool, large "'Ou 21th y ,, Elegant, lge. bay view hom e; 5 BR, 4 ba. -LOT -purpose OOnui. room. fire. lot. Hurry, this won't last r ear START PACKING . place, »hake root & patio. 126,500C.ALL ·-WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors Comp. entertainment center around lge. hid. .,,,,., -•"·ming• nnd den Fant.,t•c ;~ung """'"'Ive $40.llSI Open i-. D"U-lm 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road & filt'd . pool; locked wrought iron gates. u1.... " home features 4 bedrooins. • .OmulV NE.~~c)~';k~1N~~R~·~:a:i Country Cl~910 $166,0(000R. LanBd alvNail.·MAR-TIN -~~~;.~~~~\;f~· ~~~;t~~£~f1l~~~ -~ $23,450. . . C W~ll<ER & LEE Realtors 646-7m 2043 \Veslcliff Drive Open 'till 9 P?t.f "''21 Gener.ti General with electric bit-ins & Plenty roon1 for a pool or ~ REA' ':roRS Call ·An"'lmo 64•7662' •""ciou• b•lght living room 'boat • '"'110' '1-••" -DELUXE HOME FRESH IS THE Choice· Fixer .. ,. .,. .:;;:..t•1 " d'"""' & ,. ft of living ~~.c~: E;'. • C.assi fled Ads . • • 642.5678 General Gener•1 I I VIEW H.V.H. -$74,900 Vacant -move-in condition. Great corner location. View of hills & peek-a·boo of ocean. 3 Bdrms. & family room. Triana Bergin CORONA DEL MAR Fine family hotne -IOaCls ofl'oom. Beautiful- Jocation. New decoration. Take your time- but hurry. $89,950. Appointment? Call Paul Quick PRESTIGE LIDO CORNER Dramatic ·'one or a kind''. Best Lido ad- dress. Spacious rms. Excellent floor plan. 3 BR's. & fam /dining rm. 2 Frplcs. 3 Car gar- age. Ca ll Bud Austin OCEANFRONT ESTATE Enchanting vie\v. Exclusive area w/private beach. Luxurious home w/4 bedrooms, 41.f.t baths. Poo~ & t h er a p y pool w /jac\11.Zi, LOWEST PRICED HOME IN BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB Reduced to below owner's cost! Land includ- ed, $99,500. Howard Wells LARGE LIDO LOT Room lO' garden or expand or for your favorite pet. Three bdrms. & den & charm· ing! Full price $94,500. Gene Vreeland CHARMING CORONA DEL MAR Old Corona del Mar; delightful area, So. of hwy. Walk to beach, park & shops. 3 BR's. & guest. qtrs. Remodeled 1971. $89,950. Cathryn Tennille 133-0700 644-2430 -- 5SO NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. fireplace. 2 ' baths. Floor Uc t fl · ·1 bl MODERA-WORD! 3 BR + Big Lot Generet Gener.ti plan oU<'rs ex c e 11 c n t $:3.~-nancing avai a e. ' 15 BAYCREST $23,500! O Vi VI GIANT 2 S O [;::~~".:"..,::'."'~1;"niu'.~~ • · co~TS PRICE I OKI\ I I. Ol \O\ < ~ ,J ~ EASTSIDE l>A~DY Have you not~ how ditti· cult It ls to find A really fine. ntodem house on the Eaitside recently. al the rigtlt price? The location i1 rleht, the featurea are rteht and the owntr 18.Y• make an offer. 3 bedroom1 with a big family room will be a:re1tt this aummer. Fenced back yard .. Close to schools and sliopptnx. Call 541,j.2J13 NOW! • OK# Tit I • ITS FUN 10 BE NICE1 I ' I ~ CHOICE WESTSIDE FIXER-pen ISta ew T RY Call 613-8550. • Sn many """ l•alUw• '" UPPER! PRICED UNDER Of Catalina . In beautiful FIXER $32,500 OPEN TIL 9 • ""S Fl.IN 70 BE NICE! WALLACE I his 3 bcdroon1 charnirr. 1.tARKET SELLERS llarbor View Hills. ln1· ftl,'i··.·-· REAL TORS 1''ircplace in rozy richly LIQUIDATING! 3 giant maculate 4 bedroom, 2~~ BARGAINS never last • so pno-.•llcd living room, ne\\• bedrootns. Super size k>t. baths. Quality r e r 1 e c: ts TAI<E ADVA..i'lTAGE FAsr. Open Evenings carpeting, trei!h!y painted. Great starter home or JN. throughout this home. Ex· Mammoth 2 story with 4 e 96,. _._.54 e AIM has nn ell>cliic-garage VEm'QR'S BARGAIN! VA pensive wall-to-wall carpets huge bedrooms 2~~ baths, ~~~~~~~~~ ~ door opener and 11roression· BUYERS WE LC O :r.t E ! and custom drapes. family room. FORPt1AL WHY SIT & !!!""'!!!!'!~~~~'!"'!!!' al landscaplnl(. UnbeUev· ONLY $23,500 • take ad· Separate dinilti • lovely DINING. SUNKEN living TW'O NEW abl.y $30,900. IH7-60l0. vantage • "Call 645-0303, bright kitchen. Loads ol room with fireplace. Built· WATCH OPEN r1t. t • "s FUN ro BE MCE.! cupboard• Living room ins, ca""'ts & drapes. polio DUPLEXES ~[._~ ~ I OHi \I I. Ol \O\ with vlcw. P1us • custom k balc.'Ony. NEAR TitE prices, Interest increase. Get CORONA . h led pool d J · BEACH. Only 4 YEARS oU tl)a.t couch and come see ea an acuni. OLD. Redecorate a mansion lhis ·l>eautiful model 00111e. ... ,' ' L -'-' /; Price<! at $US,OOO. Call for yourself. Call early Thafs right, wilh all the ex. DEL MAR 67l.SSSO. (TI4) 962-5585. tru Included. Con\"crted Choose your carpel and In a quiet comer of Mesa Verde. 4 Bedrooms, 2baths,1.::========.. family room and large separate living room . Per1ttt s e t I i n g 'vith beautlM tropical landscai> ing. New on the marl<.ct. CaJl us quick. Priced only TRIPLEX $38,500 $34,SOO. Large studio units with ga.r-- CA·LL 546-~ (Open eves.) ages&. parking on alley. l~ < O§» HERITAGE . • REALTORS BEAT YOUR WIFE 'batbs, washer le dryer area, each unit Pre8Cnt income $490. month. ... ..,.,._ •• P1lrvlow 64641111 (1nytlmo) I om.\ I L Ol \11\ >-:'4L 1 (J-" DIAMONDS MAY SPARKLE to this fantastic: dtal. You \\'On't need much money for this beauty. 3 queen slze bdrms with 2 luxurious!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, ~~~ Mlhl. Full prie<? Is $31,950. H 1..., • \\'Ill\ 5% down It can be Newpo rt e ••• ts )'Olin. Lt_t U! show It to you 2 B<lnns., I balh; frplc.; on by appointment. lgc. matn1enance-free yard, w/Jge. enclOl!cd patio. De· tached 2-car garage plus nn. for boRI It trailer. Realtors ~191 Priced at S37 ,500. Open Eves. Call: 673-3663 642-2253 Eves. HIDDEN COTTAGE associated O~Ol<FAS -RE AL TQqCj 1r1~ W 8olb.,e 1>11 lfilJ BIG LOT Excellent east.tide location, walking distance to ahop. ping • Big 20x50 cone. patk>, ,~Bdnn• . 2 Bath•l"'""""""""""" .. 11!1!-I Macnab-Irvine nc:o.Jty Com~ TURTLE ROCK SIMPLY ELEGANT Beautiful 3 &: Den lor •th BR). "DR. FR. VIE\V home!! Over 2tm sq. h. spacious llvina: ! Creat patio:! Pool. & JXlrk privelettcs! ! Laulo Sharkany (144.GlOO. IJ191 Ma cnab -Irvine garage, air oonditioned, 3 drape! for either of these -p a..t . .i.o $ ~P c.o!ess.lonal]y prinie du Pk'~ under decorated in/out v.'Cl bar. 4 construction. Owner's unlls huge bedrooms and jui;t 2· have 11pncious living 8.l't'all years old. Priced lo sell al. wiU1 -..1 lM..'<lrooms. Income $38.000. Lel'• go! unils urc large 2 bcdroon1, 2 bothg, Both arc ori a "Jove· ly old CdM tree lined 11!reet '''ith partial viewa. $115,000 each. Call 673-Sf(iO. Realtors 54~ Open E\."Cs. INVESTMENT -TIME- s1us now being taken on 5 rental units Costa Mesa, 2 Bedrooms each. Separate a e laun- dries. $150. mo. ncome. Asking SW,500. To make oH<'I', •.. CALL M0-1151. Open Evc:a. ., ~,. HERITAGE . • REALTOR S * NEWPORt OPEN Tit. 9 • frS FUN TO BE NICE' Macnab-Irvine l!e•lty Company LINDA ISLE BAY FRONT ~ Elegant a BR. hon1c-. articu· late In e\·ery tlt1tall. Pro· tretcd la.goon. Dona Chi· cheater 612-8235. fJ23J Macnab-Irvine 642-1235 LIVING* 3 BR • BcautltullY designed I "'"'"""""""""""""""""' 1n1crio• . h"l<c ma.ior . SPARKLING GEM ·1ioge \\'OOd·btlntlng flr~· "'Ith an old f:udlioncd price plaCf' • prof~nlllly land· taa ot s,11,500• Lovcly ttSI· ac:aped, We4tcllff achOolJ & dcntlal fl]'{'a, so nice for !hopping. chlldrc:n. 3 roomy br.droorn1 ()mu and dC1JiRnOO lot fanllty liv- . It. 847-6010. . ~21 Ing. Coll right now to soo OPEN Tit t • tr'S Fl.Jlrl 10 8E NiCEI l.<iol<I llJce model-homo V----1...JtonC l4f.aJS u·t be btantonlyS33,'60-h:luae, •P'>F abe :::;::;::.;;,;i!;,;~MU200=~-:;~ t;::'.733=-w~..,~ct~l~Jk!;!-!m~"~• ~·:· ., Ownen moving out ot Ila.le 4., etc. lhrv a Dally PUol • .. Don't miu It . Red Carpet, 0..Uied Ad. Scll ldle ltem1 ?\eed a "Pad'., Place Mad! Sell idle IU!ml now! ea0 Realto,., 54&-8640. ~noe:w~l_:Cel::!!,l ,::M::Hm::::.:!..!!Now~l-,...;C=:ale:l.,:~o::.=:;;o.---&I~ Now! - I I . O\VNER anxklua. 'EXecutive home. 3 bdnn& .. 3 batla. 1'~tt.rf'ill)'-r-m-:7""form:al-dlnlng rm. Fireplace. 'Nlc roof, Rullt-\ns. Rear living rm. brk S45,i51t540-1720 0\VNER trans. 4 bdrms., 3 btl.th11. BeauUtul. Ranch nrea. Fftmlly nn., fireplace. Dining rm .• built-ins. Chol<'C landM.'aping, brk $50.000. m-:mo O\VNER leavlng. ~autirul Ne\\·port Beach. 3 bdnns., dining nn. Built-ins. F'ireplace. , Patkl. Sundeck, greenhouse . brk $44.500. ~l7~ SCHOOL'S OUT Into thia lho.rp 4 bedroom H1u·bor Hlghlltnda home in ihe deliirabla We1tclltt area. Lovely pool alted E-Z care )'ard wilh h&ll tree&. Qc. cupaney mld.JUM-. $'i6,00\l Call 6T"or0679 Nigel Bailey & Assoc. RLTR. CALIFORNIA LIVING $3'.500 ~a.utiful hotne only 3 yn. irui:c fa m 11 y Caliiornhl kitcMn "'Uh paUo bar, vl\ultfld open beant ct.Uinga, spacious mat1lt'.r suite with private 51:.m:ten atrium • ~ltgAAtly U adf!d. A mttllt • OAllY PILOT * ]~I._ -_ ..... _I~ I Lachenmyer Realtor PLUS A DUPLEX NEWER DUPLEX I~ 1-I ___ ... _ .. _ _. FOR SALE BY OWNER SURFSIDE! 2 bedrooms each. Separate some view BcautUul 8 yr old , 6 bedroom pa1io& -separate garages. Steps lo ocean • best buy on on cul-de·sa.e, just north ot Currently rented to fer· Peninsula. $63,950. Mlle Square in Fountaln tific families for $Z75.00 Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eve11. Valley. Downstairs has 4 • 4 BR 21h BA total monthly payment. Ur bednioms, fireplace, fenced • Double garage cated in Central.Costa Mesa yard, utiU1y room, over· • freshly painted T/O for $51,000. Call for an ap-sized dbl garage, large, all· • Gold \Vall-tc>-wall Turtle Rock Hill• You'll want to check the ex· ltm In thb1 lovely home .. , .ti's loaded! In addition to the 4 bdmu., family rooni. fonnat dining and utility with tub, there's ·a sell· <:leaning oven. a,i.: <.'!'.Jn· dltioning, humldUler, elec- tric garage door opener, wrought iron fencing, gas BBQ and wait, there's more .••• it's hiKhl~~ad­ ed, landscape<!~ lo pcr!Cclion a/Kl. has a breathtaking' view. Every-thing's included for the price of $70,000. '5 6 .7 8 (ired hill . REALTY c A Company With Vision Univ. Pal'k Center, Irvlne Call Anytime, 5.32-7500 Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM GARDEN OF EDEN awaitS you as you leave the lovely gold shag carpeting L ' • PUllUC NOTICZ MOTIC8 TO C••DITO.I ... A, .. 1, PIJlllJC NOl'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE P1CTnaon •usn••N suP•••Oll cou•T °" THI . NA.Ml ITATIMINT STAT• OP CAllPOll.•IA l'OR .. IW"O•ToMIU TM Mowlnt ,.,_. h; dlllnt bullntM tNa COUlrT't' 1Dt' ottAN•• U .. UlllD SCNOOl. DllT1UCT ltt E•l•t. el JOHN ,ELWOOD OIETIUCH, Httiai llMttllf •Ifs KUIA IHCOlt~Te:D. P.O. •ow: o.eteMd. ,NOTICE 1$ HEREIY GIVEN ltllt tt\e 141 HIWIOl'I .. ~ ftMl. 1M6 W. Nc4b 19 llftflt¥ O!vtn 10 crtdllor1 of Botrd~of Ed1,11;1tlon of "" NewJMWt•Mffl ''"'°" lllld .. NIWllOrt 8"dl. "" ....... ......... .....,. ltltt Iii Unlff«I kl"oOI Dlltrk l of°"'~ County, T'*"'t Ml,lrptiy, 124' w. ll•ll:IN ..,.,__ ""'"' d-'""' ... lNlt ... Mid C.Ulornl1, WILi l'*l•IV-... ltd bids vp to llvd .. NtwPOl't Bnch, c.111, ,,.., Olc:...S.U -.,.., ...... m. ~. Wfltl ll!OO A.M. Oii ,.,. ZJrd d•'t' of....,,,,, 1m TMs blnll'ln1 rs condueltd by 1n lit-ti. ""'•lll'Y vouetw: .... In n. oflkt ot et t~ offlet of 'stld khool 01,trlct. dlYldv1I. 11M Cltrlt Of In. ·~ 9!'1htled ~. or loc•ttd 1t 1&51 PllCtntfl Avtnue. Coet1 ThOl\'IU Murpfw IO prtfff'l'I tNf'l'I Wiii! ,.. 111ees ... ry MeM, Clllfornl•. •I wllldl 111'1\t Mid Did• Thi• •l•twntftl -fllld with tN coun-YGUcilers '' file' uncletllollld 11 fll9 ottrce wtll i. PllblldV opelltd •rid rNd for: tv CMrt. of OrMltt COUl'lty Oii Mvcll'IO, of W1ltw W, 1111111', M Rff'l'lfl\ll Grwp Mlldlctil Ind Grout>,' Otnl•I lf73, • Avenue, P.O. 8ox 1.a. Ctf!Oll P1!1C, Calif. lnSIKlllCI CIOYWIOI for'. tmO!oVMS •flf PMMI "'°' wtllch I• 1111 p!1c. Of bl.lslnt11 of tlMI cllopefld1n1s, of the Newport-Mffl Un1tftd Publlthtd °"'""' Cont D•llv Piiot, ur.a....111ntct In 111 m1111rs ptrtelrilnt ui khool District. Mlrch tJ llld ,t.,pr1f 3, 10, 11, 1913 ll1·13 the .. ,,,, of Mid dKtdenl, W1fhh1 four ,t.,U bids ire to Ill' In 1ccord1nc1 wllh monllll 1fltr I~ flr•I publlc1tlon ot !Ills Condlllon1. ln$tr1,11;tJon$ •nd Sp.clflc•llon,, .,.:, .. _ , • ..._--.-..... ~ .. NOl'JCB.----.~1«-... r.'!::-_.._ • ...,, ..... ~-·--'W!llCt! •rt. ~B'l--fil• 1n thl olfl(Jod "•-'" .. O•t~ .......--.:;n. __ ,,.,~ I. R.nfro. Br_..r Of Record of•• . CALVIN H. OWENS. 011trkt, 3lJ N. N1wpotl Blvd., Newport Admlnlllr•tor Wllh II-.. Bffdl. C•lllornle. Wlll·Anntxed Mo lll~r m•Y wlthdr1w hl1 bid fol • l'ICTfTtoUS •u11 .. •11 NAME of thl E•l•t. of "1d dKtdtnf ptrfod of tortY·llYe Cffl d•Y• •"" thl TIW followlng PtrlOl'I hal wllhdr.wn ~· WAL.Tiil W. PANllt d1lt Ml for thl ooenl119 tlllr~. , • ""'*"'' Plrtnlt' fl'om thl Plrtntl"lhlp n• atmmtt A\tfllVll TIM eoard of Educ111on of me Mawoort· OPtf'lllno Ul)dlr' "" 11(1,111-Mlnnt P.O .... In Mesi Unll(ld SCllool Olslrlct l'llMW1 !IHI Ill~ of THE SUPE•MARKET 11 ~121 Cll•fll• Pitt, C•llf •. t'lJOS tlllhl to rtltd Ill)' or •11 blcll, .,..., not Wff lrly Pl1e1, Svl1-~1!, NIWpOrt 8t1tll, Atltit!MY for Mml11l1tr1tor n1e1U1rlly ltctOI 1N ,_., bld, Ind to CA '1664 or::uv ••• 413 20lh SI .. Cott• Wllll "" Wiii AMt•ff WllY• •nv l11form.1/lty or lrregul1rlty In ~nJ:' I. P.O. Box ""· lrvlne. 11,r-oC •riv bid rlCtlvtd. Thi 11ctrllou1 bull/IHI neme 111temtflt Publl$l'IH Orlll\99 C0111f D•llr Piiot, D•f«I April 2, 1f73 . for thl PlrtMrahlp Wll flltd Oii Fl'bruarv M•rcll 27 •nd Aprll 3, 10, 17. ltn ff1·7S ~~~~~T~9~l DISTRICT 2'9, 1'72 In 1"" C°""*f of Or11191, PUBLIC NOTICE of Clnll'IG• County, C11!fomle Full N1mt •nd Addrff• of thl Ptrson a, ""'""' H•rvtY FIJ.hlr Wllhdrewlt19: • Mlchltl w. Mullin, .QS 20th llrfft, KP 111 Pun:h••lllO -""'' COIJ• ~. CA '2627 suPea101t. cou•T~o .. TH• 1>t~uoo $11JMd• Mkhlll w Mvlll11 ITATI! OP CAlllll)ll .. IA 11oa PutiUlhtd-Or1nae C011$I Dilly Pilot . , IL1t111 THI COUNTY Oii O•A .. OI Aprll 3 Ind APl'll 10, 1~ tS5·73 Publllh«I Ore11t1 C0111t Dell'( Piie!, ill .. A•JJfll M•rd! 11, •nd APtll !., 10, 17, 1'73 an-n NOTICI °' MI ARING OI' PITITION llOlt PllOIATI OP Will AND llOa lE"IRS flSTAMINT.UY 1 -----~~~~---- Eslile of SELMA W. STEINBERG, !YA·llSl -------------I 011e111ed. NOTIC I 011 TRUSTa••s SALi PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE - pointmcnt to see this exclt-electric kitchen & dining • Brick fp\ in 30' liv rm. Ing NEW lillting. 646-7171. room. Upstairs hu large, • \~~o beach ()PEN TIL". "'S FUN ro elf. NICE/ finished bonUJ room, 744 sq. • $ ' . I iii~~~'""'"'"'!!''!"'!"'"'""'! tt._includcs ..2__l>e_d.roo~ larWin realty inc. tre~"~"::_t r.:~~t~! ~,.!tio~"".,;..~"=f'.! 968-440;RESTl~~4 hrs.) . '. Swunnung pool. Move-in mother-in-law or Jge. family. ,,_ -in--lha living room and step out onto the ·wooden • deck overlooking a beautilul ar- ray of plants, shrubtL.Jl.nd. greenbelt. 3 bdrms., 21,~ baths, formal dining and bonus room aflord versatil· ity you've never known be- fore. Nearby pool and ten- nis cour ts to keep you flt. It can au be yow'S for only cond. Near all schools. S37,950 .• B~1~ :1Y· 4 BR ~1:.~~~!~s. nr ~~·~OA BAY PROP. I "''"""'"'""""''""""'"'"~ I propo5'd ma.-ioa. 847-85.11. roon1 says "Welcome" 4 * 642 7491 * OWNER sacrifice, 4 bdrms., 11 large bd.rms, 3 ba. form. -2 baths. Exotic landscaping. . _w~.~~ IHI E E R v -A S- S PICJITtoUS IUSINISS NOTICE IS HER_El,YJllV.EN tMI l[WJn No. 1w.,,_~~ KAMI STATIMIENT . Steinberg ~I Oltd 1-..,..ln t petition IOI On Apr!I 16, lt13, 1t 11:00 AJll., ST,1.,N· Thi followlnt periOlll .,. doing P~lt ot Wiii Ind for 1-nu of Lit· SHAW CORPORATION, I C11ifornl1 binlMU ••: '"'' T11t1m.nt1ry to "" PtlllloMr corw•tlon II duly •ppolnltd T"'''" Hydr1 ClNn $y•ltm1, Hydrl Guard, r.,.,._,ct TO wtlleh II midi for fvrtlllr Ulld9f' Ind pursulnl to Deed of Ttu1t -Hvtlrl-Vtc>·H'fdf'•·Sltem;-t740·Svptrior pw.llcul•rl+.-llld-.-lhat_ttw.Jlme..ltld~ol•ee. r11C.Otded..Decembtt..23...lf66..1aJnttr~Mo. __ _ Ave., Ce1l1 Mlle, C•lll. 92627 al ,...rlna lt\t lln'lt tlls betn Mt for April 1m1. In bOOk S135, 11190 306, of Offlclel C~rt" T, SOrv•lc, 2001 Ctntoll• Pl .. 10, 1973, •I f :OO 1.m., In TM 'ourtroom at Rec01d1 In "" office of the c-1y NtwPOrt Beach, C1lll t2MO. Df9,lrlm111I No. 3 of uld court. 11 700 A;ecorder of Oranqe County, St1t1 of Mld'lltf Elbo West, '77f Wo...tllm Dr,. Civic Cln1-r Orlv1 West, In 1111 City ot C111forn11, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUC· Whittler 90602 S1rit1 An1, C1lltornl11. TION TO HIGHEST BIDOER FOR CASH Thi• bu$lnes1 I• conducttd b'( • 011191'•1 D•ltd MlrC'll n. nn lPIYllble at tlrnt1 o1 wl• In 11w1u1 monty p1r!Mr11\!p. WllLl,t.,M E. $T JOHN, of !ht United SlllH) 1t Tiii front entr1nc1 Chllr'" T. $11'V1(( . County Clerk ol Slll'l·SMw CorporltlOI\, 1600 E11t Th11 Olltment wji1 flied wllh the Coun-ROIEltT M. llLVliR M1yf1lr Av1nut, Qr1n09, Cellfoml1 111 Iv Cltrk ol Ot1t111e County on Mllrch 9, AltorMY 11 l.IW, rl9h1, 11111 111d lnl1re.t conveyed to •nd dining and a family room * TWO * near Living rm., family rm. J!!!I_!_. you would oot believe -it is FOUR PLEXES Fireplace. Dining rm., 1----+H.UGEt--.Eus....a....lfi.:.:....x-36:•1--c..,;;c,.S-.-r-ilTr"TA· Mit-ins. Patio.--B..c. POOL. PRIME! 0 ll I Y u. '"' m~"'"' $38,500. 842-0091 $0"2.000 Good Rental Area OWNER anxio"•. 4 bdrm•., 3 GINNY MORRISON Goad T I -erms baths! Lovcly pool. Family •** -R.EAJ:,.TORS-FORTIN CO. rm., fireploce. Dining rm., J' •. m Mesa REAL TORS 642-5000 builr-ins. New ca r pets. _._... v-~-Dr East l~====~=~===~I BBQ. No down terms. brk *~* ~-· ' 3 BEDRMS EASTSIDE 143,000. 962-1373. •--* COlta Mesa R 3 ZONE '*••** 561.4130 -$27,000 . OWNER desperate. 4 Unbelievable value, ~ds fix lxJrms.. 2 baths. }'ormal (Open Evenings) up, Close to shopping -«;X· dining rm., built-ins. Patio. ceUent starter home or in-shake roof. Beautilul con- $290. vestment Call Red Carpet, dition. brk $28,950. 962-5566. Realt ors, 54fr8640. ''OWNER . n1oves you In, scllerpays OUR MOVE! YOUR OP-TDANSFERRED'' all other costs, paymts $226. PORTUNJTY! ·t.nke Forest . ....,... . per mo inc. taxes. No 2nd Ot>ane·built Garden home. l\tust sell tlus 3 ~m TD. AduJt only condo. 3BR Lovingly land scaped & home, cathedral ceilings, a 2BA, all elec RIO. w/w decorated, club & lake priv. fon:nal dining roon1 ~d a crplll & drps, specu)ators $46,000 inclds. many extras. huge ·family room with a delight. 8 yrs new. Won't 830-&199 brick fireplace. Vacant by last. CALL-April 15/prlced below mar- if Ba lboa-1sl1nd----.---·--kel·-..-;--;---53&--2;;51 ·BKR~ I MEAOOW lfome 3 Br, 21h WATERFRONT lot, 50x!K1 Ba, bltns, dshwhr, patio, 9'2-4471 ( =) 546-1103 w/30' Boat slip, Make otter forced air heat, block wall to owner. 673-7770 fence, sprinklers. Xlnt cond. DANDY DUPLEX ~~-l'enln1u11 $37,500 sy ownec. 962-0134 CORONA DEL MAR NEW DUPLEX Garden Grove Just 9 ye~ n£"'.\•, conv~nient 3 & 4 BR., beam ceil's .. 3 to everything, Each unit has frplcs. Patios. Posh decor. -lhrtt-spacious~bedrooms, ~Qulck""possess;-$106;500. "FOUR BEDROOM PLus~peoi." 11)6 baths, built-In kitchen GE·••i.•--& separate laundry room. ,m Enormous shade trees sur· round this neat-as·a-pin homl', shag carpets, panel- ing & loads of closet space, is the dream ot every house- wife . . . the sparkling pool is a bonus for the whole family. Ill health is forcing sale. Call ... 536-2551 BKR. Excellent rental record \.\1ith 1610 W. Coast 1-lwy., N.B. long term tenants. Shown REALTORS 642-4623 by appointment. $82,500. OWNER must sell 2 Ouplex- C. F Colesworthy •·· Xlnt cooo. 1 blk to R It • 64._0 lx>ach. Xlnt income. ea ors _,,, 675-0144. -°"'=°'---~,.--c~ I CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX $64,950 Call today * 64S-8400 ' ' fr'llN 'fOO! OPEN 1/L 9 O\VNER niust sell duplex. Xlnt cond. 1 Blk lo beach. Xlnt inco1ne. Agt. 675--0144. Corona del Mar ''WOW-$27,500.'' I-luge covered patio -Large lot • big, big kitcken -3 generous bedrooms -and just su!X-'r neat. Too good 'to be true, don't wait, call CASTLES Two castles on Ca~tle Cove ... S:i6-2551 BKR. th at na>d neo.v Ki ngs and .:..'-'".""-"""-"'"''----Queens. The view of the Huntington Beach ' kingdom is magnificent I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; from 1hese hillside locations 1md our serfs at Colwell are •VACANT• anxious to go to work for Single-story corner &>ab'Ury you to help you obtain these close to the beach. $36,500. fine properties. Assume 61h% VA loan. 3 ~ BR, elegant entry, paneling ~~II l~•il ~~i~ ;lr:~:rt b:l~~ kitcll appl's, FA hi, w/w A ,;,1 .;.i crpts, drps, patio, oversized ff~· 6 . dbl gar. Xlnt O\\·nership and 5UIU!DIAllY 0, Jll[ COlWfLL co. nbrhood. D.WNER oo e. 3 hdrins .. 2 baths. l·leated & filtl'rcd pool. Dining rm .. built-ins. Jo'amily rm 'l fireplace. brk $ 3 5 , 5 0 0 . 846--0604. O\VNER Is d espe rate. Prestige 4 bdtm. Dining rn1., built-ins. Family rm .. fireplace. Assumabll' VA loan. Won't last. brk $40.800. 846-1383. "RAMBLING HACIENDA" From the red tile roof to the beamed ceilings this 4 bed- room beauty shows true pride-of-OWnership. T h i c k gold shag carpets and a heavy v:ood covered patio are just tv:o of the many "Jcaturcs of this home. It '''on't \ast ... 5.16·2551 BKR. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS FOR ACTION ••• A good want ad is a good ia· vestment. GET A 'CHARGE'. out of your DAILY PILOT and BankAmericanl • DIAL $49,500. REALTY A Company With Vision Univ. Park Center, hvine Call Anytime, 552·7500 Offir..-e hours 8 AM to 6 Pl\1 ffiVINE -By Owner $1500 dn. 3 Br, .2 Ba. frpl. Total pymnt $277. 833-1103 , 675-2018. UNIV. Park. 3 BR. 2~ ba, fam rm. Xlnt cond. $39,950 . 640-0166 or 640-0'227. Laguna Beach NEW HOME Presently under construction in Arch-Bay ·Hts.---Be-·the first to Jive in this luxury + home; spiral staircas leading up to 2 spacio bedrooms with vjew. Wood & glass constn!ction. Huge sundeck v.i th a view to the North of ocean & city that just \\o'On't qUlt. $46,500. -~-Ian REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre S t. 49-1-9473 549-0316 CUSTOM BUILT Close-in walk to town &:. beach. New 4 bdrm., 2 bath lfome \\'ilh Jge. yard, room for pool. ·Heavy shake roof, shingle siding. A s k i n g $69,500. < • 499-2800 • ·= ~-.......,...c- AN OLDE HOUSE Near the sea; around the corner from the beach. 3 BR., oaken Ors., all v.'OOd paneled. Massive !iv. rm. w/frpl. North section of the village. ESTATE PRICE -$47,000. Mission Realty 494--0731 Laguna Niguel * EXCLUSIVE * 4 Bdrms., plus den: 5 baths. . Nord-c·o-r-rre·r . Magnificent, custom home. $170,000. RENTALS: Summer, \\'1nter & leases. LIDO REALTY 3377 Via Lido, Npt. Beach 673-730o BY owner Near new ba)ofront 5 Br, S Ba. $21.S,000. 675-1242 or 847-1181 Minion Vloio F I E \f73 ff22 Hol!YMod 11¥1. Me., ~ IVJW held by 11 u11dll" "'Id Deed of TtUfl lf·J.»t:I HoM'(wood, C1llttralli In fll9 p<"OPierty 1ltu1ted In Hid County Publllhld Or•noe COiia! Dilly Piiot, T•h CflJ) .Wl"'l61 1nd stile dlse.rlbtd e1; M•rch J), 20. 27 Ind April 3, tt13 719·'13 A""""'V for: """'""" lot " ol Tr•'' 32112, IS 11\oWn Oii • PUBLIC NOTICE Publllhed onnoe C~1t 01Uy Piiot, m1p recorded In Book 102. P•llfl M •nd M•rch 27, U, •nd April J, ltn 902·73 50 of Ml1ee1t1neou1 M•Pf.• .-.cord1 of Or1nge Covnly, C1llfornl1 Thi street lddf'flt •nd ollltr CGmman 8 -PUBLIC NOTICE dft~n111on. If •nv. ol tilt rNI propet'ty SUPE•IOll COUllT OP THR dncrlbed ·~ II pUl'porltd to bl: 451 $TATI 01' CAlll'Ott .. IA POa Fr1ncl1eo Orlw1, NIWPOl"I BHch, CA THe COUNTY OP o•ANO• I 424'1 '16'0 Ne. A-1ms NOTICe TO C•IDITOltS Tl-.. Ullder•lllned Tr1,11l" dlsd1lm1 1ny • NOTICI 01' HEARING OP PITITIOW SUPlalOR couaT OJll TMI! ll1b!llty for 1ny lncorredMSS of tllt '''"' POlt Pao•AT• OP WILL AND FOR STATE OF CAllf'ORNIA FOlt address 111d other common Offlgn1non, If lE"l!•S TISTAM•NTAaY TMI COUWTY 01' OltANGI iny, ihown llorlln. ESTAT& OI" SAMUEL H. Hlll$CH, No. A·Jt.wf S11d "'' wUI bl mtde, bul wltlloul [)1'(;91~, E1!1te ol LOAllAINE ROOT. 0.C-ffMCI, COY1111nl or w1rr1nty, t•Pl'esS or lmplled, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11111 EVE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 Ille r19irdl11G tlllt. pos.ulon, or en· Hlll:SCH i.1 Hltd lltreln 1 pellllon tw (Aldltorl of the 1-. 111med dt(ldlnt tumbr1nces to p.r.y 11\t rem1lnl11t1 pr11t- Pr0blt1 o1 Wltl •nd for b1u1nc1 ol lei· llMll 111 person1 lllvlno d•im1 •~inu lllt clpil sum ;.i lhe note i.ecurllll 11y Mid ttr1 ,.ffllmtnttrv to 1111 Pellll-r "Id decedent ,,. tlQUlrllll lo flit 11\em, Deed et Trv1t, to-wit: $$,D .9', wllh lit- reftrence lo wl'lltll II made for furtMr with !ht necessary vouc1>1r1, In the otllct terest 11\erton, •• provided In Mid note. p1rtkul1rs, 1nd ti.t Ille time 1nd pl1ce ot thl clerk ol tt11 lbOYt e11tlllld court, or •d,,•nce•. II 1ny, under Tho t1rlftl of wld of he1rlnt tllt same lwls Ileen sol tor Aprll to prtstnl lflem. with thl nec11"ry Dted Of Trusl. '"'• cl\llr9ff ~ •~PlflKI 10, 1973. tt 9:00 ''"'" In 1111 touMroom ol vouct>lrs, to ll'le undorsl11n-" •l c-o ot the Ttu1!" •nd ot 1111 ltUI" crett«I O.p1rtment Mo. 3 ol 11ld courl. 11 700 RobertJOn, How~r & G1rl1nd, Att01nev1. by w!d Detd ol Trus;1, Clvk Center Drive Wllf, Jn lllt City of 43..o C1mpus Drl,,1, NtwPOrt 811ch, TIM btntflcl•rv undtr Mid Otod of Sant• An•, C1Ufoml1. C11llotnl1, whkh Is th• place of buslnes1 Trust her~ofor1 exl.!Culed •nd dellvered Oiled Mitch 23, 1973 ol the ullderslgM'll In 111 rNtltr1 per· lo thl und1rslgntd • written Doel1ratlon WlLLl,t.,M E. ST JOHN. talnlnt to th• estate ot Hid dktdenl, of o.faull 111d Oftnlnd lor Sale, •nd • D County Clerk wl!hln four monlhs 1tt1r the flril public•· wrlttitn Notlct ot Oef1ult 1nd EIKllon to SAUL RUSKIN tlon ol lhl1 nollct. S~I. The unde ... loroed CIUSld Sl!d Notlc• AttwMV 11 Uw D•ltd M1rch 21, 1973 of Oelault and Elect!on lo Sill lo bl - -rlll"S. l':llm C•.r• DrhM BARB,t.,RA ROOT BARNARD l'e«lrdeG ln-tl'llP --c:ounty )'>'l'llrt lfll.-l'ffl P•lm S1Jf111p, C•llf. '1Ml Admlnlslr•ll'lx Wltn-ft.Wlll proiporlY Is IOC1ltd. 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 D I L y p I Ttl: (714) JIS-2frol7 1nfl9•td of 1M ffllle Of tM D•tt: M1rcll 13, 1913 AftWMV lw: NIU.W • 1bo¥0 nlrntd dlc«leril STAN·SHAW CORl"OllATION, Publllhtd Or•noe COiis! D•Uv Pllot, ROl•RTSOJI, HOWS•R .. GAlllAND • C•Ulornl• Corpor1ll011 Mirth 'lT, 21 •rod Atlrll 3. 1m m-n 04I C•m,.. Drlvt 11 uld Tru1tee N...,., BNcft. Cl llflnlll By M1ur"le Sh1w, Secretary PUBUC NOTICE Tlf: ,...... Avtllorlue! S1111111tur• -------------· JAn.Myl flt .Ull'llrtl11t11r11 Pvbll•htd N.wport H•rbor News Presa ..... NOTICE TO CRl!DITORt SUPERIOR COUAT OP TMI STATE Otr CAllflOllNIA llOR Wltll-lfM>.Wlll ARMXld eomblroed With the Dr1nge COllSI Oally Publlahed Or11191 COllll 01Hy ,.llol, Piiot, Ntwport 8tKh, C1llfoml1, M1rch ~rch 'D and April 3, 10, 11, 1m 184-73 20, 27 111d April 3, lm n4-n TM• COUNTY OI' OaMIGIE N1 • ..1.,1sta 1!.UBUC NOTICE PUBIJ_C NO',J'ICE Esl•ll a1 HENRY DELMONT BAlll· --------------1----,~~cc--=c"-c-cc-- Rl,t.,T, Dtc:nSld. • at1f NOTICll! INVITING BIDS NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN to th• lolOTICll! TO caEDITORS ~otke I! hereby gl~•n thlll tht BOllrd of credllor1 of 1111 lbo\'t n1mld ct«;ld1nt SUPl!RIOa COUaT OJll THI! Tru1lles of Ille Coast Community Coll19t thllt 111 ptrlOOS h1v!no cl1lm1 e;i.tlntt 1111 ITATI! OP' CAllPOtlWlA l'Olt 019trlct ol Orange County, C1llfoml1, Wiii 11ld dtctd111t •r• r1qulrtd to 1111 thlm, TN• COUWTY 01' Ol:A .. 01 receive 1eale<1 bid• llP to 11:00 1.m. With !ht ntc:ns.ry vouc:hlrs, In the ofll<:• .... A·lstM Tl'lursd1y, Ac>rll If, IJ7J, 11 flll P11r,h11· ol I~ Clerk of I~ lbow tnll"ld court, or E•l~k of KATHERINE LOUISE IS,l.,ll· Ing Otpt, of .. Id school dl1trlcl loctltd 11 lo preH11t 11\tm, w1th the nte"Slrv RIA'IT l>lctelld. 1310" Adlll'll Av111ut. COSll Mffe, vouchet"s, lo the Undll'liflned 111111 offkt NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to 1111 C1Utornl1, 11 which llmo Uold bids wtll bl: of ltlotl'\IV, COLONEL HERRING S. creditors of ttw •INw• n1med die.eden! pUbllcly OC)tlltd Ind rud tor PRINTING FRANKLIN, 101 E .. 1 lllh Str"I' Cost• th•! ell per14r11 Mvlf'lll clllms •D•IMI 1118 AND BINDING OF 1973-74 GOLDEN Meu, Cllllornll, which 11 Thi pl14;1 of pld dt<:edent 1r1 r1qulred lo lilt 11\tm, WEST COLLEGE CATALOG. bUslnftt ol the under1l1111td 1n 111 m1lttr1 with Ille necessary 'IOUCM!r$ fn thl otflc• All bids ar• to bl In ecaird1nct with ptrl•lnlno to the Hl1!1 of uld dl<:edlM, of 1111 det'k of Ille •boVI 111ti11ec1 court, or the 1n1tructlon1 1nd Cendlllons •lld within four month• 1ner IM first pvblk•· 10 presitnt. them. w!lh tl'lt nacisttrv SP1Clflc1UOl'll which •~ now on ffle Md tlon of tllll notice. vouchon. to ti-.. uncllrllllntd 11 fhl offl<:t m11y be secured In Tiii offl<:1 of thl Oetm M1rch 30, 1973 of attorne'(, COLONEL HERRING S. PvrcM1Jno Agent.ol Jald schQol district . BA!"K OF A.MERICA NT&SA fRAMKllN, 101 Etit 11th Str"', Coell Eech bl<IW must 1ubmlt with 1'111 bid I Te,.0w~~.:_,E1191 Isch Mesa, C1lifornl1, w!lkh 11 the pllCI of c•shler's chick, certified check, or bld- ru _...n '''''" Executor of buslntu o1 !ht vndel'lllllflld 111 1U ''"""' dor'• bond midi PIYlblt to the order of ftll Wiii of !hi •bovto n•med ptr11lnlno to the 111111 of Mid Ofeld111t, ll'llP C011st Community College Ol1trlct ~t w1ttilri fOUf' months ltfttr !Ill ""'' publlu· loard of Trus;tMI In 1n •mount not les.1 ,C<K.ONll HIRRIN8 S, P•ANKLIN !Ion of !his notice. ll'lln five perc1111 (5~1 of tl'llP lum bid 11 111 ..., in11 Slf"tlt D1t«1 Mtrch 30, 1tn • guar•ntN that lhl bldo:Mr wm 111tor 1n10 C•ta MIMI. C•HI. BANK OF AMERICA. NTt.SA II-.. orQPOM<I contr•ct If 1111 Mint 11 T111 tn4) J41"'1111 8y: W, c. Engl1Ch 1w1rded to him. In Thi ev1111 of f1llur1 UI An..-y tw EIKUlor Trwt Admlnlllrllol' Executor .nt1r Into 1vch 1 contr1ct, th• CN'OCffcls of Publllhtd Or•nge C0111t Otlty • .Pitel, (!(. ttit_WllLolJhl . !."-d!Kk wlll be tll!!_el~, or ln_tbe CIM April 3, 10, 17, U. 1'73 t7f-n •INw• nlmed de«df!\t Of • tiiinil;---ltfo-ftill 1um lholri1ol w111 bl PUBLIC NOTICE COLON•l Hl••• .. o s. JllaANICllN torte/led to .. td school dl1trlC1. 117 •11•1 11tt1 Streit No bldOtr m1y wlfhdr1w his bid for • C•ll MtM, C•lft, period of forty..flvt (ASJ CllVS Iller t~ a G»J TM: Cn4) ,.._1111 d•I• 111 for th• ~n!ng t~rtol •. A'*""" for •xKlllW TIM BOllrd of Truslees rfflrvtt the su~~1;:f:ll Tlo~:~0~i0~i. Pvblllhtd Or•not Cot1t Dlllly Piiot pr!YlllO• of r•l.ctlng eny •nd •II bid1 « STAT• 011 CAl.IPOaNIA l'OR Apr11 3. 10, 17, u. 1f73 tn.ri to WllW .,,., ln"llUtlrttln"" lnfOl'l'Nlllllff THI! COUNTY OJll OllANGI 1-----===-="7='""""....::.:cc1 In •nv bid OI In !hf bhSdlng. No. A·711U PUBLIC NOTICE lSl NORMAN E. WATSON *'~" 8Nrd OI TrUltHI E1lll1 of WESLEY GE 0 R G E(------,::::::::::-------1 Optn: ,t.,prll It, 1t73 . 11 :00 '·"'· STILLWELL, Ot<:e11td. ICP•lll Publlshed Or•~ C1111t O•llr ~lie! NOT1Ce IS HEREBY GIVEN to 111• NOTICI TO calOITORS April 3, 10, ttn tn·73 crfdllors ol thl 1bOY1 111rntld dKtdtnl SUPllllOlt COURT OF THI th.It •fl ptrson1 hiving cl1ims t;i1lnst thl •ITATI Of' CALIFO•MIA POR pld dtctd111I 1r1 required lo fl l• fhtm, TM• COUNTY OP' OllANG• PUBLIC NOTICE with thl 111etturv vovcher1, In 1111 office Me A 1JSU 0( lht d9f'k of the •tNw• 111t1tlld court, or Elfiite of DONALD A GUNOER.SON HOTIC• 0 11 SM.I OP ltlAL PltOf'· to prtll'flt them, w1tll , .... llKOJM'Y Otc11Hd • ' l!RTY AT PRIVATI SAL• IN TMI! "VOUClllr~ 'h!2"""0HE•L"°l''EoRtRJJ"'o""'s' NOTICE IS HEA;EllY GtVEN to fhe SUPl!RIOlt COU•T OP TMll! STATI! ...... , .. ., ._..... ., IN · credllor• o1 the 1bOY1 namtd d"*""I OI' CAllf'OllMIA IN AND FOil TM• ftRAHKllN, 107 E11I lltll $Ir"', Coell ltlill Ill Plftol'll hlovlnv dilms IPlllll f111 COUNTY OP ORANGE l\o\lla, C•llltw'Tlt•. which II fhl plk• ot Mid del:tdtnt ... rtqUlrld to Ill• t111m. CASI! NO. A•J»M " .. -·}m1L~~:i:~~· wll!r111o-'MCftwry-vouctior'S7"ll'MN-effkt 1n_ll\l..Mllf11Lol-thl-.E•l•l11 of MAVME-r l1IJ • ' o1 the cltrk ot the •bcM' 111tlHtd court or MYEllS, decffSlld. within tour monlh1 •flW !ht fin! P\lbllc1· to Pr9Yllf lhtm, >Wllh the -Urv NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN t111t the 1~1~!i,lh,!:.~1~~·1,13 YOUtl'ofrt, to 1111 undor1l11ntd 11 !ht office undtrslDntd Wiii .. u •I prlw111 wl1, lo SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Of her ltlomty: Rol111d $. 81rcume, 610 the l!igllfft •l'ld 11111 blddtr, llll>ltd to FlllST KATIOHAl aANK MtwPOrt C1nler Orlv• E1sl, N1W110rl cOl'lflnnatlon of 1111 ebovt-entlttld Court, • &11ct" C1Htwnr1 9266(1, which 11 the pll<:tl on or 1ft9" Aprll 11, lt73 11 11 :00 1.m .. In By: Chlorl" G. C-•V· of bVslnn• °'"" ul'ldel'llOned In Ill mat· ,,.,. offices of ROY 'E. JUNE llnd ~lc•:;••l~eni:.. Wiii !er• 11trt•lnl11t to the estlfll ol Mid de-R08EA;T L. HUMPHREYS, AllotllfVS 11 otx~ :"bOve nemtd dfcedOlll Ctdent, wllhll'I fOl,W morrtll• •flll' 1111 flrll LI'#, ISOO Adlm1 Aven11t, Suitt 206, Cott• COLOH•L H•••••O s. PllANKLIN PllbllCll"°" of thl• notlct. Ml-II. C~Utornl• 926.16: •II the right, 1111 .. 0.tod Mllrch 21 1973 1nltr11t •nd &sl•le ol Jald dKedent, 11 117 IHI llill Stl"Mf GEORGIA' E GUNDER.SON the tlme of hel' dfflll, ind 111 1111 right, ~=·''c1'r:;"~::~i "':rr AC1mlt1lslr•trl~ llH• •rod lnier.tt lll•f w ld "'''' h•• •c• ' of tM wlll of lhl quired by Tiii or>er1llon of llw or A"-'t' for llll'Clltlr •bOVt n•med deeldent olherwl541, otlltr lh•n or In lddlUon 10 Publt•hod 0r.,,.. Coast O•llv Piiot, a<K.A .. D s IAll:CUMI! 11111 of Mid dtctdenl ., fll9 tlrnt1 of htr Mirth 13, to, 21 •nd Aprll 3..lm 1U.1J ~=,..; Cfftlt Drt.,. ••ti dhth, In 111d lo ell t111t ctrtiln .... 1 . •Mtll i:• tu.I prop9f'1y sltu•lff In "" City ol ll!Yenldt, PUBLIC NO'llCE ''""'11 (714) MMfta County of RIVl,.fclo, Sl•ll ol Celllornl1, A~ tor Mrit11111tr.t111 Incl 111«1 P1nlcul1rly dtscrlbtd 11 Norte• TO caa·DITOltl Publl.ntcl Or•"" C1111st O•llY l"ltot, lollowt;, lO w11 : (Met. 6111 • •111 u .c .t .) M•n:h u .,,., AprH :s, 10, 17 1m '°"73 lot s of Ille rttt,lbdlvr.ion of 1111 A bl.llll lnllllfer, I• 1bout to Ill' medt, ' D•Yldlon lllb!llYlslon, 11 •hown upon 1 TM M""'' 1Rd P·1'••• Ndr PUBlJC-N cert11n_nwip31Jhl.J1..!'.MAPPlll'l..mi.fl .. , __ _ Ille trtMfWor 1r1: DonllJd Rex oonon. l nllii Office-or tfMi County RecOl"dlf', Of 1l idtOW•IM, Bal!IC* Cltllornl•. IVP•••OI: COURT GI' CALll'O.:NIA . ltle COl,lntv ol Rlvt:r1ld1, StM• or l'MltMI •nd 111111-. ~ of COUlllTT OP OflANOI C•ll lornl• In book 6 of Mlp1 It Piil• S6 I,,. •ntlll'H •r•: David OMll Tl'IOn'IM; 111 CMc: C•lw Dl't.,. -.... ttloAof. I Chlptl• No. J, klll• .. ,w.. . ..... -•• -.M·<•'"• -...... Com monly known ., nu MIOflOll• C1lffornl1 "' ,l.,U9111.11, City of Rl"'"'lde, County of All other bullnt1t MIMI afld ~ IUMMOffl CMAll•IA•ll Rlwrsklt. Sl•t. ot Clllfornle. ultd DY 'fie tr1nt,.,._ within ltll'M VMtl In ,.. 1111: mirrl19t ol P1lltlonor; RITA TERMS OF "'LE: C1sh 111d ll#NI l11t Pit! to ltr 11 IU'IOWl'I to fM JACOl!IS CllAV£N Ind Rnpondtnt; m-r ol tllt UriU«I $!Ifft of ,t.,merl<:•, 1r1nsferM ire; non1. •Ol!ll!RT IOWARO CllAVl!N on COftfltmtllon of .. 11, or p,trt <-•11'1 ll'ld TM lo«illon Ind OIMl'•I 6"ttlpt'lon ot To Ille ROlpOl'ldlnl: T~ poll!IOntl' lit' bfll•nc• avldll'\Ctd by Nott or Notti lh• pl"OPfl"IY to IM tr1n1t1trld 111: Stoc:• flle<I • P*llllOll <:Ollclt'lllng 'I'®!' ll'llrtllQt. MCUl'td by Mor'911lt or T"'lt 0..., Of\ 111 !ride, llxfl.tru. tQ ulfll'l'ltftl Mid ltOOd You mer fl._• wrltfwl rtJPOllH Wllllln 30 in. JlfOl)tfty sold. Ttn 11tn:ent 11°"'1 of w111 01 1 (tl'l•ln bffch t111ltl MfnM• 01v1 (II Ille d1tt thll this 1umMON1 It It-.. •mount ol bid to ~ 1111 bid. knOW'l'I IS o. w. 5. R«111I, ,., E ... t'lltd °" vov. II veu 1•11 to fllt. wrllltl'I AH bkll or oflWI mus;f bl In Wtlllng •lld £60ft•ttt, ll•lbol, C1lltornl• rtlPOflM wUlll11 •ut11 llMt, ywr Ql~l1 wtll bl rlCllYld 11 IM •lorttntnttonM ot· The p1.c1, •nd tho Nit on or 1fttr mey bt tni.tlld 11\d ltle court mtV "''" flu, or llft wllh the Admlnhtr1tor wtlh wt\l<:h, tho bUllt tr•n•ftt 11 to Ill' con-• lllCIO"*'' tor1l1lnl11t1 triluncll"' or otlltr tho Wl11 A-.td. of tho "'''' tumlftfltcl .... l Bink of AnwlCll NTt.IA, oro.r• (Ol'af'f'llflO d!WlslOl'I Of prlll)tf'l'f, Plf'Wlllll'(, or IYllV Ill flltO Wiit\ lllt Cltnc S4l4 VI• u.. NIWllOl"I IBMch, c.11torn11, "'°"""' IYPOOfl, (hlld CUllOO'(, c'lllkl aw-of thl •bov.-.nllllld covrt. II •nv ltmt BY owner grea1. view, 2 br, on or •hH APl'll is, 1tn. port, 11iornov•1 ,_., COlfl, •ncl 1udl 1tttr tl'll nrJt 111111Hc1llon of 11111 "°"'' ]'I ba t'•plc c·-·-dra L D•tec1 ~111. lfn. ~ otr..r r.llof •• """ bl or1rited b1 !ht btforo making Mid,..,, ' ' u ' _Y"..,, . Oon•ld ft•ll OOhon. Tr•nst.ror court. DATE01 M1rcJil :M. lm, $29,995. 494-9894. 0.-.ld Offll TflOl'llt .. TtlM..,_ If'°" Wffll .. Miii IN tn!CI., IJI II• RAY WALLACE N ... port - ...... A~ NT&SA ..,...., ·~ 11111 IMtter', ,.. .,..... •• .. ,t.,dmlnlstr1lor llrl1!h I~ Wiil ......... -..Cll I t-' '"""'"'~ '° tMt ,_. ~ ,...,.... II Annt1ed of thl E1t111 o1 P.O. 1011 1111 ....,, Ml"f ......... • 1-. MAYME-MYERS, dt<-MMCI BLU,FS CONDO ,...._, .._, C•Aflnlf• Ottef: NoY. t. 1m. •OT •·JUN•, Attwww"' 0 PUblltfMod Ol"4lltl CO.ti O•Ur Pl!Ot; WILLIAM I, ST JOHN, (ltr\ lht .t.fmfllllllf"Jltor ti fM 3 Bdrml., ~ baths .e.CM11 3. lfn .,..,, .... J•mt1 ~. '*'-'IY ........ MAYMI MY••s ........ Newer ~Plan ' JAMb ........ ,. MIMI Aw11U., Slllt ,.. TED }IUBER ._ A t!rYV" A"'"'9f •• llw <•• _., C•U"'""• ,.,. ~~~~~-~~~~·~=:;;_:::=::j::=K~-fij-:J~-~· ~ll!!J~IC~~-=r~-E:=j:i"':.,~·~-_. •0011T L. ............ """"'' la bldo, N.B. 6 U .,....It .fW .. llfR11rlttNW~M~,..~-...... ;;::::;::::;= Put • "1·•-'1-" ID your y· ·8111,1 C1llaM11 9MM ......._._MAl'Jlll.Jlll!-u ~ -· A k And T•h nlQ •nil 1• AMIM A....., '""' * Levit-sell thosa bt\Uble1 for 8 y A.,._,. tw1 HHlflllW c .... M911. c • ...,. ,... "~·ck•". .-..n Clulitied I PutlfbMll Ofll!Ot coa11 Dli!l'f '"°'' ll'ubll•Nd Ol'•not c1111t 0111y Pl~ w -' !-------------· :.:M:•o\"'::_.,;::.:"c':":.:.:: ""clc":·c":'i':"'::__:...,,"' .uru 3. 1tn .... n 64Ho611. -· • ·. t OPEN TIL t • f1"S FUN 70 BE NK:Et "Mayday· ESTATEHS ~ Mayday" LAGUNA BEACH E lif E R G E N C y ! ! Must 4 Very distinctive retail sacrifice this f " n t a s t I c ~~:=' + 2 houses on So. Ne\'lport Heights 3 BR, 2 \.AHQi H1vy., steps to beac~. BA. $42,950. Submit all of-Store~ are _leasltd-. Beaut1· ers! Hui-cy! ! Call S45-8400. ful ocean v1e1v '!" mcon1e. N 71l."9------..tMlilm: $27;>,()00 REALON01\1ICS CORP. \: E. 1-k"'lJnl & Co. Brokers 675-4j700 Iii>. n ...... (;.nii••oy 2 • adjoining mcon1e prop. erties, cent. C.M. $75,00). owner. 645-2020 I &12-6560 NEWPORT SHORES 4 BR + den + pool rm. Red...:·ooc1 deck faces chap.net Decorator touches. $55,500 CAYWOOD REALTY * 548-1290 * Income Property 166 120 UNIT APARTMENT COMPLEX . HUNTINGTON BEACH CALIF. * To!al ~ty complex * Pnvate patios * Lg mirrored wardrobes 1-IARBOR VIE\V 1101\IES Popular l\1onaco :l\1odel. 2 bed1ooms & den, \\'Cll dee· orated, shows like a model home; Large lot, rooru for pool. $64,500. FEE. . * Jacuzzi & S\vim. pools HARBOR VIEW *Lg re<: facilities HOMES --. P~~Iike. !~pg REAL TY 83J.0780 : ~~~h=!sorung * PENINSULA *--*-ANO MORE! * DUPLEX * fl.800,000. l'UtL PRICE 2 BR, lrpl. ea. unit call !10\Y for appolnlnH!nt Newly decorated If $72,500 1llJge ReJI EstJ te BALBOA BAY PROP. Investment Division * 67:1.7420 * 963-4567 NEW EXCLUSIVE Bayfront 4 BR., 3 baths Pier & Slip -$215,000 LIOO REALTY 3317 Via Lido, Npt Beach 67:1.7300 * THE BLUFFS * ROO:l\-f TO GROW IN ACRES TO Pl.A Y ON 2700 Sq. "ft. 4 BR., 3 ba. fam- ily/kitch. :Fonnal din. Bon· us rm! Tip-top cond. On greenbelt, nr. pool sn ,soo. EASTBLUIT RLTY. 644-1133 BLUFFS CONDO 4 BR, 3 BA, hart! to find C- Model, by o\vner. 673-5569 anytime, or 641-8400 aft 6 pm. Duplexes ne.ir the ocean !\tiles L'lrson, Realtor •6T.?-8.-i6.1 * Newport Heights A GEM Charming 4 BR .. 2 up & 2 dn. Lge. family nn. w/beam ceil. 2'il Bat~. tile & dbl. basins. I...ge: ~i l c h e n \\'/hllins &: birch cabinets. Palos Verdes stone frplc., dbl. door entry, slate floor. Heavy shake roof: clbl. gara~e on all<'Y w/extra parkinit. Only 7 yrs. old. Just $59,500. CALL (!) 646·1414 ,..~ REALTY Nt1r Ntwport P11t OtFlc:e NEWPORT Heights Spanish Rustic. l ~i lots, 3 BR, 2 BA Rec Rm, Min Vu of Ocean, All nu shag c~ &: paint Sundeck & Bar·B·Q, By O\vn· er. 642-3377, 41.a Santa Ana St. Open House Sal & Sun. $5.5.000. Westcliff "Rare Opportunity" Motor Home Rentals I. ~-·-~-~-~_, .. __ l!•I Acre•ge for sale FIVE UNITS ONE DAY Jn emergency "'iih good lille & equity $1,000 to $25,000 NO BALLOON PAYMENT requind Low Payments Easy Terms AAMES HOME LOAN 541-5557 State Llc. Bkr. 18 Yrs. ' 3BR-2BA. Eastslde· Iamily home. Lge rms, redec. Cpls/drps/frp\c. 2 patios, !ncd. rear yd. Dble gar. $280/mo/yrly lse. 642-2'172. l\1ESA Verde Family Home. 4 BR, 3 BA, fornlal din rm., fam rm., Irplc in master BR. $388/mo. Yearly lease. ~2081 aft 4 pm. 3 BR 1 % BA. tp!, dbl car. gar. $225: ... 3 BR, 2 BA. bltins, patio ~-Century ~l. 54&-9521 NE \VPORT S l-IORE S PHONE 642-2015 A-frJ.n1e 2 bdrm. den/loft. {1760 Pomona Ave.I DELUXE 2 Bil.. 1~11 BA 2 Ba, frplc, dsh\\•tir, dbl["'~~~~""""""'~!!!'[ Studio on dcnd-<'nrl street. garage. Pool & tennis privl. $30 WEEK & UP Crpts. drps, pool, blrns, prlv Steps to beach. $365. 1st & • Stuclio . ....& 1 BR Apts. patios. $155. 1 child ok. No last. 646-0968 • TV & Maid Service Aval!. pets. 64~1450 - STEPS TO OCEAN e Phone Service-I-ltd. Pool TO\VNHOUSE DUPLEX e Children & Pet Section 2 + den/Gffice, sundeck, • $120 Alonthly frplc. $275 yrly. 5Zl9-A 2376 Newport Blvd., Cl\1 Rivc1\ 548-85.12, 642-5218. 543·97"'.>5 or S.15-3967 BRAND NEW 2 BR, 2 BA APTS Slli>.:'r -Con1!011abll• -Qu1l't Nca1· N.:>\\'PQl't Baek llny. Ga~ ,i;: \l'atel' Paid . .1\to to i\lo, r1•n11tls $1115--$195. S1111Cr !01· 2 "·orking gals.- Children welcome 21'\2 Elden Ave. • R.'lJ-USQ VILLA PAULA 2 BR-2 FULL BATHS Super ro1· 2 \\'Orkin~ gals, Gas cooldng, heal, 1va!l'r ;ill paid. Loek<'d g11rng1', laund. DI\\', disp;>sal, drapes, shag <'rpts. $180 n1onth lo n1onlh. Children "'elcon1f'. 622 Han1. lllon. 548-2062. OAILV PILOT Z:J Jlunting1011 Bt>!\<'h 1714) 842·9622 • ~IOVE JN 1'0DA \" "* $145 A MO. Spac-. 2 & 3 11R. u\ ·1·plex~ S..•\'('l'i1l avail. ALL Jo:\'.. 1'B.AS. Pool, r t't' bld,e:. 1'id11 \\'l'l<"Onlt'. 1-~ron1 $145. &>t> j\J~.r. lTJ(il J\'.e"'t'lson "A", t blk \\I. of B<-ach Blvrl., off Slat~r. S.J7-42f..O. ~7510. Al.~IOST REJ\DY CASA TIEMPO 01:~ 1 & 2 Br 11·/Frrl Prl P11tios • [>,vhrs -Jnl'U7.zt H!d Pool-Rec Bldg-~hug cpgt !ll'Sl'r\'l' No11•! AdulL.; Only. S912 ilf'i1 AVt>, lffi &J7-4!)g2 GARDEN ll•vrl 2 Bdrm duplex apt. f'l'f'ith paint, crpt!l & DrJll!. $155. Call a[1t•r'6, 96S-t300 WALK TO BEACH New 1, 2 &. 3 Br. cpt/drp, tl"·hr, frpl. 20":1 15 l h. R<\7-3957. OL..\'. 2 &; 3 Br., l Ba. ~ gar. $165 up. Rental Ofc., _3095 Mace Aw. 546-W34. I ·---1 ' 0 DAILY PILOf Tu....,, April l . 197) -l~I ......... I~ I ---llSJ I ---1~ I E ;I; at l[DJ 1 •et; a l[DJ I ][DJ ,-;t:,=·.::Unf=""'=·----365=/Aptt" l ~Ol~f~lce.~Ren~t'.!!al:,__;J.440~i-~l'..,-.ona~:=l ;;==;;:"°:= ::;LOl::;l:......---~$$:;:5 Garclenl"I Jolt WMletl,~ 100 lpWontwcf,.~&.F 11tHolpWenlM.M & F 711 •-Fum. or Unfum. m L_-i)Nl'"~'"~,...~r1~11e;u~ch~:'Oln+-~;~~~~~~~~~;-~~n;;l~ru~:IL SERVICE DRUMMER s;o. REWARD tor tl'WI Set-EXP. Ja,,.,,... Gaoltner DRUMMEI ARCHITECTURAL Boat Manura<turlog r PAIK NEWPORT wporl Boocb W~st~ !.• r m.~ le'. ~ ".i.l:l.e 2u;~~ ... ~:;""'~"2!s:::.!!!r~,l!..,'",:!.1''"!!!-!!!1'2 •• !I.':.. HYouog .... 19, -In..... DRAFTSMAN F lborgl•H TaoUng Irvine Blvd., N t: w p o-r"ltrf';Y;;ouog::::;-::man;::°'J;;;9-,:::,,.,,,::-;:,n:-=are7a.+0ce~~""':!"'!1roSntt.~,J.~~wp!jo';.Jr tr ~~ ElltabU~lhe~d!:;-lll'lt~eri>:l>00tr'";'tletl~~-:':',-,:--J~~-;;:;==d-~-..! APARTMENTS A11.vl-Beach. titr. JI 0 ward ltec.-enU)' moved here from Beach. 615-1484 961r34S6 Indlana..r.;;111 would Uke to firm in N'pt Beach area Expei: in~f.lbertclt boat too · the ba llUlr Ja;Jll 6G-61fll. l~ana~l:OC.::,""'ld like ~ LOST ""all """' poodle. PROFESSIONAL prd<ntr, ";:' clth roc1t poop or in now i:' pllnnod <:"""'ion, ::· n~~p'e~:i"~~-:0--y, J'VW& DESK ipu.ce available: $50 ~,-,w•, b V g~g_or,_., Bluec:oUor.Vle.ofEdi:n&er, tree work. pruninc,-.neai1'~,••·w'!~ talented.~!..~..!. cx,pe_r1encltd M . ..4-Hta ·, ..... .: Wary apirtmcnt living t numbe u ri 11.u c \I · ery ~n =· !"ountain Vlllley. N c e d 1 aprinklen cleanu.p jobll '"""' P ... " fl39.2981. w.ullN:u .. n 11 1 n t er or any 00 • l}l:ll'<'. • ........ ,. overioolrlng Che water. 1-;o. ap r mo. WI provide flJmllure Call Chip Ward. 539-2982. medication. Rno&nl 847·9747 I and I c ~pin I Gcorp'. YOUNG man oCc tud I arch l teclural detailln,f. 1ern1 pro(:l'am. \Yo r Id• s joy $150.CXX> heallh flj'IA, 7 . • :~:St.=;.~~c~~':. • HINDU SPIRITUALIST. ''TOM" A--I 646-5893. Ex-perienctd in ~un:n& S.2860. 250 .fo'tscher, C.P.1. ~est buildcr,.A~f lr~vu' awfmmlng pools, 7 Jtghlec:I Let this ad change Your v•-••uge ma e cat. General coru1trucUon ks ASSEMBLERS Trainees A aalllng yachts . .__.tact • ten 1 court 1 11 1 ~~~ lluntlngt()n Beach. 642-4321. whOle outlOOk on life for the Vic. \\11l&0r1 & Newport NEW Lawna, sprinklers, part.tb:ri , ,.1,.,.,,_.., tee Sail~t bly liam·Wood, J\tgr Production b -n 1 3 ' pus in e$ 0 (Si $t3S 0 NEW cu1t. dee. olc. 1ultc hid bet•-. P-'l-·io· ·-• .,1 •. i~ Blvd. tjil.9702 Anytime. 80d rototilllng. Trees it G .. .J~v-v.r ..... nt. Call exper. assem · Developn\enl ColumbJa ~le trails, putUng, shuf· N B ' •·'-......, '-"' '" ""° uiu '" .. ......., REWARD! shn:abs removed. Com""""l. reg vu"VUU. Openings on all 3 $hlfts. Ap. Yachts 275 M c Co r m I o k tkboard. Cl"O(fUet. Junior 1'1'1 ov.•n . . t:-A<'"'"'''· ,.,.. on Ute. Readlnga dally. 10 96&-2283. ""'" Job W1nted Female 702 ply at gate 7 am. 3 pm -ll Ave C ~f Apply Tues thrU from$189.50monthly; lllr.ol 11q. ft , \~.'Ulxrtitlon, grnd AM · 10 PM. 492 .9136. DALMATlON Pum, vie or ' ~MacGregor Yacht Th" · · • ~ 2-bedroom plnn~ and 1~~\~~st~lft'~ pkg. 1~90MSan312Cre~e~e~amlno r1~~~ m~;e·have ~~~i. ~en!:ne~~de~ MATURE woman wants ,1631Placentla,01 'p~Qppor. Einployerm/r tr~1kf'tc= = ~~~;~ The greatest re110n1 for DESIRE to sh11re otllce VETERANS tached to coUar. 54S:-7048 main. N.B., C.M., le H.B. =n 8:, :Un!ikee~':~ ~~sr=nci::~t!;~:·~ BOY & GIRL or balconies, ca1·pctlng, dra· moving lo Oak'#ood Garden space & receptXlnist In Eam $4.58· to $7.00 per hour $%) REWARD • Part poodle, 45-M>-7373 Cap ab 1 e. Responrlble. willing to \vork. F/llme. CARRIERS perlea. subterranean park· Apartments ire the renta, N'pl/Santa Ana are a. guarantfed by using your l:ilack & Silver. Small, Alale. COMPLETE gardening Phone 673-1789 Opp or tun l t y for ad· }"'QR _ 1· ing with ele'Yt\fO!'t. OpUonnl starting as low aa $135. 96$-'"J467. G.I. Bcncrih; while At· 968-4544 service, also clean-up jobs, NQ:D help at home? We vancement Apply in pe1:aon.! THE DAILY Pl LOT maid 11ervice. Just north of And here ere 8 other great 1617 WESTCLIFF tending Santa Ana College. LOST female Kf&Y tiger cat. new lawiis -planting, eip. have aides, nurse 1 f1•ckborln81 'The -Box, 2235 South Santll Ana &-:North !'::'~ ~~~~l:~tir:!"~':; reuon1: l29<1, T:ii &: ~ sq. lt., ample Call now -'black stripes, vie 16th & reliable. Frtt est, 9fi8.W2. ho u s ekpra, comparuons: ar vd, Costa !ofesa. Costa ?ifesa areu. Vic. Telephon~ln4) 644 _ 1900 swimming pools 1lkg, util, janitor. Baum· S47-9iifil Ex:t 310 Santa Ana, 645-:!933 EXPER. Japanese, main!. llomemaker1 Up john, ASSISTANT Mat,lager. Clean-MacArthur, Sunfiower & tor rentrtl Information healtll clubs ganlner • 104. 541·5032. PREGNANT? T ti inking FOUND OR LOST A l~ETi Cleanue, landscape. Free 541~. cut, dependabll --honest &: },lower. CaJI Dan Ferryman .:~-'-'-="""'==='--,I saunas NICE office space 444 ·Old abortion? Know all I.he fact! Bureau or Lost Pl'U est Im ale s7 53(H333, * DAY WORK * willinK lo work. F/Ume. al the NEW, ocean view; upper 4 tennis courts, pro &pro ahop N£>wport Blvd, 3 blks North fir<lit! Call LIFE LJNE-24 Open 9am-2pm, 636-5685 8a.m-8pm ~neral Cleanifl¥. Reliable 0 Pp or tun it y. for ad· DAILY PILOT BR. 3 ba, 2 frplcs. 1 in =as~~day brunet. of Coast Hwy 1.900 sq It. hrs, 541-5522. LOST Siamese cat. UNIVERSITY Student•. transportation SU-7!J)6 vancement. Apply tn person, • &U-021 • matr. BR. Yearly; $525 $300 ti! ·net "'°"~ PROBLE'I o.-.. ,,._ "'--'-~" bond-' •·-u--' Jack In The Box. 2235 BRANCH MANAGER NE\V 3 BR lo f I actlvltlet1 director · u 1 • .....,,. ... ><Ai. •• • '"&nancy . ....,n. Newport Shores a r e a. ,,,.,_,..,...,, ~. """ n=u, LICENSED NURSE, nursing Harbor Blvd., Costa P.fesa. patio. $425; -yea;l';r: Ill c., golf driving range EXEClITIVE suiles, Jmml'd fident , s Y m pathetic Reward. Ca.II 548--0212. screened. Hrly rat~. Call care, your home, days, pm TRAINEE OCEA!#RONT 3 BR. upper. party room occup. Coasl Hwy at N'pt pregnancy counseling. Abor-LOST dog, terrier, 5 mos. 636·1800, Mon, Wed, Fri. & relief. 54!h1612, 546-81X>7 'f81 Sarah Coventry h8JI opl'nlngs F I, deluxe; $550. Yrly Plus beautlful eJngles, one Blvd. Ample tree P{il'king. lion & Eadoptions ret.6 Black. Vic. Spi1ngdale a.nd EXP. Japanese, main-TYPING fSalor ful+l time Nmao nagcr. ~n Realty 646-7767 and two-bedroo·ma. Fur· 642-4644 APCAR ' tl-4436 Bolsa. 893-4969. ten an c e., c 1 ea n ·up. • , ary comm. exper. nlahed & untumlsh&d. Sotry, FREE y De Ir · Landscape. Frre est. {teas. rates, quick acrvice, necessarv -only ladies who BRAND New Oreanfront lid ~· 600 Sq. Ft. Ol~F'ICE wtkit & oga nions atJOns 8., o .. 2 ,17•9,38. rree pick-up & del ~. -are wub1tio\is & willing to ~--'--I · 2 BR , BA no ch ren or pets . ..,.odela Ra •1:;:;: Al ''"''"' 600 Sq Ft Tues at 10 am & 8 pn1. Yoga 'IM--o"l"t .. I "" ~1 '-'IOUUlll nium • .. • open daUu 10 to 7. '~ ...,. _,,.,.., ' · C 4'15 S HolpW•nted, M It F 710 Auto .. e:::ao:rnc::·..:~c:..:::::4:....----1 $400/mo. Y e a r Lease. , STORE $155, C.M. 646-2130 ~28·1 · E. 17th t., C.M. I I~ EXPER1 · Japanese Gardener. 2 LOT MEN BRIGllT young individual m.7694 Oakwood 4001 D BIRCH NB ·-~......... Compete yard serv. Relia. Deal~-· d"" I allty !!boa • ' ' • S\\llNG ING SING """._ & neat. Free est. 642-.4389. e.,,.,1p experience re-nee "" or qu sa t NE\V BAYJortONT _ Prlv. Garden Apartments $160/Per Mo. 541-5032 LES A better temp. pos.itlon qu1red. Fringe benefits. Ex· n1anuf. as engineering aid Bch & f?lt't. 3 Br, 2 Ba, Busineis Rental 445 Call "Leah" 2-8 pm. JAPANESE Gardener. URGENTLY cellent -working conditions. for drafting, purchasing & $550 /ino. 2 Br, 2 ba, S-195. Newport leach Soulh 5.19-312'l Complete yardwork & I Afinlmum age 18 years old. prod. Typing ability nee. 979-0031 or fi 4 4-4 51 0 1•::~~~"' DESIGN CENTER ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Babysitting cleanup. Free est. 642--3102. I Califon1ia Drivers License Westsall Corp, 1626 Placen- eves/wkcnds. r · 1 ,_ Phone 542-7217 or write _CH_L.,,__C_.::c_. ____ COMPLETE Lawn & NEEDED required. Call Art Mc·, 00ti::,•_::A::•:::•·.c•.::CM:::__~-= Newnt1rt B•ateh Nortrt 1ne ocatiun w/country at-po n-1223 ~--i M I D are. My home. ,,. __ . k " FSR Rent Yearly. $29j/n>0. 'i,;rne Md 10ltl n10Sphere. Ide al for · · cux ' .......,. a esa. Gardening service. Hauling '"""'"'c at BUFFUMS NEWPORT Unfum 2 BR. 2 BA BAY ... ~ ,..,_ -h · t , 1 YOUNG couples cIUD., 18-35 + Snack3.~t lunch. Mon. -& clean-up. Jim 548-0405. Gustafson DUPLEX.. No ga rag c . 1 ,,=.,-------~---1 ~:.O~m~nt~~ u r ~ t ~ J' i ~n; 539-3344 or ~3643 ~~b1:·~~7~~days. PIONEER Enterp Exp. local Unskilled L'-o1" 'M "Now-interviewing for dish- Adu1ts. 673-2106. Z2.3 19th !-'OR lease unfum. plush new. deidgn, advertising_ , Call "LEAH" 2-8 pm soil cond. Flower inst'! & lftC ft• ercury y,•asher & bus boy. E>i:per-St., N.B. -ly decorated 3 Br, 2 Ba con-. 1 _, 1 d Child care, \\'Cekly. ~....., 1 ... -·• 71 , .,2. -•• ience prefelT'ed. Xlnt. com-do. Dbl garage w/elec pubHshing or re at.,.. iel s. Social Clubs 535 J\fy home. J\1esa del r.1ar. care, """""• c eanup, ~. Assemblers · -__.. pany bene!lts. Apply in LARGE 2 BR, fireplace, Step 1260 sq ft at 50c D Wright JAPANESE GARDENER be h P 'lo ......... opener, pool, ~2 mi to ,. ........ ~ · · ' * 979-595-1 * ATTENTION penon, persormet ofiice, to ac . a , y ... u, gar· be -,,~ SINGLE? CM NB AREA arl ,,....,,, ... ,. ach. $325. 637-3296 e' .,.1·796 e lnter'im BOYS & GIRLS No. 1 Fashion Island, NB age, ye Y· ol.>-U9'lll.-~:::::~=='-""'---REAR Sheet Metal bldging RCceive a select number or C t ~ I • 2 BR S •o• s~· Ad Ii SEACLIFI" MaJ\Or Apts. 2 25 '" ·t bl f a1· 'bl h irpen er . • Start that Summertime '""b OiEF -$10CO l'cr Mo. The: " U>J. .<JW. u s, Br. Unfurn $165. Fum $180. approx x..., SUJ a e or qu ity compati e mate cs Personnel Service now!! Work ........ tim .. af~te" Blue Beet, Call 673-9904 rec. & pool, 801 Domingo, plumber, clcclrical, TV from 10CNJ's in your area, l\! IN OR home repairs. General _Se.rvlces vcu' .. • N.B. 644-4767. Avail Aprll 15. Pool, 1525 Repair clc, 82-1~il A. \Vest each w/L.ARGE PHOTO & Plumbing.Carovontrv.Pam· ,.I -"'-''-~-"-"'.;_;_;___ 17581 Irvine Blvd. school and full time this,_a"'f~tcc,r,,.3:-po,m~·~--.,----Placentia Ave. Ask about · 24 ·~ ., •umme• Y-· can make~ •-LDC 19th St, $135 mo, Inquire 8 comprehcnsiv£> profile. ing. Tile. Call 540.5560. TRY the Handl·Andi boys! #115 Tustin •· "" • ~~ I ARE. housekeeping our diSl."OUnt. ~26.r.?. W 19th St. Costa r.1esa ./ Guaranteed & confidential. Home & Apt repairs. Lawn 838-5460 $40 and more per week. You -2 school-age children. WINTER, Summer. Yrly, "THE FACT o R \' • , con· .,,/ Call now & receive FREE _c_i_r'-p-•n_t_o_r _______ 1 installation, boat main . f!lUSt be 12-16 years old and Mon·Fri 1:30 to 7 Pl.I. Pre-Anita's Rentals, Bkr. :zoo; "" sample profile sheet ..... 1 Prepare Apt for new Equal Op~r. Employer hve in t~ f'.le\vport.-O>sta fer somoone w/car. Mu.st " sisting of ~~ un ique stores vu CUSTOl\1 WOOD w o R K, Mesa II •·-B h \V. Balboa Blvd. 673-2().)8 1 s1o perspective INTRA·DATA' tenants. Hauling. 6Ta--0472. • · un .... '6.on eac have RELIABLE references. has shops avail. r /mo. malch. paneling, cabinets, . patios, area. Help us get new Please v.Tile to P.O. Box Apts., Fum, qr Unit.Im. 370 Cott• Mete .. Cannery Village,'' 425 30th i.-en'I re pat r s. Duke TOTAL SERVICES CO. Accounti'n customl'ts fo and SI NB 61' 9006 Agt 71.4-541-3738 213-roS·'~f·A·T-E' D k 64 Pru'nt'g, Plumb'g, •lob•"le . . 9 . , ~our P';lper 494, Corona del Mar. * * * · .. · .r , 24. Hours aDur a 6-7598 846-9-195. \Vtn }antastic Trips andl,.iii;;iiiiiioiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiil I~ &12-8520. I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOii..iiiiiii I All types c.1rpentry Hms Specialist. 641H)977, • Machine Prizes. CAIL To DA y ! i• SPARKLING NEW ..,...,. ~ STORE. Avull Apcii l!t, 690 LOVE WORN La•'ll• or mnall .,..1648 64&-!809. Operator fd'~~66s., ask for Mr . COMPOSER OPR \Vest 19th St, $135 mo. in-Discover DISCOVERY RAIN Cutters Installed. -VOLT BAY SHADOWS R Mc~• 1 ' Free esllmates. 968-2208. For Singor • ooms 400 o Amateur Matchmakers. JOHN 'S Carpet & Upholstery Tempol'iry Service quire 824 West 19th St Costa PROFESSIONALS in a field ,C_•_r_,pa..;..t_so_r'-v-'lc'-o'-----Quality work. Reasonable. ~ Instant Personnel A rt ts 1----------ClITE building with garage. lEst. 19661. Dri-Shampoo free Scot-Hauling Frieden 5~10 • 3S4S Campus Dr., Suite 106 . pa men ROOMS $15 wk up w/kit $30 1,00J sq ft, ldeAI for Beauty (714) 83.'KS85 1213) 387-3.193 chguard (Soil Retardants). Newport Beach 546-4741 Spacious, Light & Cheery! wk up apts. Childrn & pet Shop, Boutique or o!Hccs. Degreasers & all color FATHER & SONS, tree Tl'mporary Asslgn1nenl Equal Oppor. Employer I &R1s FROM $157 st'Ction. 2376 Newport Blvd, $250. 645-20'1ll/~ Trivel 540 brighteners & lO minute \vork, trash, yard &. gar. i~rorn 5 Pt.I on.,..·ard AUTO -.--8~2-8182 To "'T C · b" ·10 'if"" ¥ • -w 2 BR's FROM $1n 0.1. 548-9755, 645-3967. FOR rent small apt for "com· bleach for white CA""'ts. clean -up, Free est. lloors Flexible Transmission & line nteclian II .. • 111o Al' ,.~ ATI'RAC room, both, kitcit. mereial use on Coast Hwy RIDERS "''anted to share ex· Save your money by saving · P _., op ompany 1c com 1nation. ~1ust have , privl. Business won1an or Corona del Ma.r. 67l-3345-. .penses to Oiarleston, S.C •. _me_extra_~. WiU clean 32' Van for short furniture .. • 3 yrs. m~imum experience Controller to $25K Bcautiflll appointmenlJll in- clude Decorator Fireplaces. Shag Carpeting. Private Patios. Pool . Jacuzzi . Volleyball court • Gas BBQ'11. ·---Go&eci Garages. Adults, No Pets. 409 W. BAY St. • Coste Mes• Manager Bldg E -103 * 646-3387 * teacher, non-smoker, cen· lndustrill Rent•I 450 Le_aving 418. Contact before living rm., dining rm. & -hams & garage-c1ean:mg: -Ask for Raehele Mil)' -• Ford, Lincoln 1¥1ercW'Y. R.E., construction &: CPA trally Joe. $100 mo. 646-1979. :.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: 4/a. 548-5678. hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, 54S-1862. DJ IIcaJth & life, dental insur-background. Growth' poten- NE."'W . Unfurn room w/pri • couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. SKIPLOADER & dump truck ancc benefits. ~~.shop uni-liol. Company pays ba. Corona de.I ~tar. Sep en-NOW LEASING exp. is what counts, not ,,·ork. Concrete, asphalt form expenses paid. 5 days Fee/Also Fee Positions. Ir. $115/ma-U.lil pd. H.untin:gtortBt•ch llii14l mc>hod. l do "urk myself. saw;ng, break;ng. 84&-TIIO. week. 7:30 to 5:30. E<ccl-IRVINE 675-2948. NEW M-t ~ Good ref. 531-0101. -5i lent .,..·orking conditions. Call PERSONNEL AGENCY 910 Sq F' & U L & R Carpet-Upholstery Y;Ro,. garage d<:leanups. · • --...· t• ~Ir. Art J\1cCormick al 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) o.r ~,URN Room, idea1 for !'!tu-. . p !louse ''9."".' Sican•-hou"" emovc trees, 1rt, ivy. tatna t C' Gustafson Suite 224 642 1~ denl $60/mo. 2 blks beach! lfomllton & Newland 549. Liv ftnt S2l! Gu;: Drivcwys, grading. 847-2666. ii "' ~ ~'" 1 adult. no pet. 53&-0555. 646-0097 or 833-0519 · Announcements 500 535--03ffi. LOCAL moving & hauling by Temporary Help Lincol"n·Mercury .........,._. ..,,_.. .,,_ GUEST room, nice, Priv. en-C C student. Large truck. Reas. 500 Newport Center Dr. 714-842 ••u * COOKS & trance. & ba. \Vorking nuui. FOR Lease. 1\-1-1, 1,440 Sq. AF'RICA Jnstltule lntroduc-.tment, oncrete 534-1846 or 534-2164. Sult 520 .__ No pets. 642-5392 t't. $165. 3,120 Sq. ft. $3j(). tlon: A free <'vening or CUSTOM co•-tc ,,·o•k. GEN. Hauling._ Tree/Shrub Nev.·port Bea~h 833-3861 AVON WANTS YOU! PANTRY HELP* 1675 Placen tia Ave., Costa training in evolution of con-.,..__.... • 1 .,....;...,...,~ ...... ~ ...... IB E.xpcncnced Good company lleSliBllU OJ LOVELY room , pr iv at c Remove asphalt drive\vays. trin1. Gar & Yd cleanup. 1: e an independent AVON · 2 BR I BA unfurn :90 \:"'ii~T~y•d gentleman [:1~;.,Geo•~· Wood'G.i&-11M ~~";;:!::::•· ci':f."na286Bca~~ Replace w/ccnc""c 60c It. E". 5.11-<.117, 517-<90l. ACCT CLERK ~~se~ta~;~r ,;ar, ~~;~ ::!~~ian:a~i~'.o'boo.'J•r.,,;; 2 BR 1 BA furn $220 -COSTA MESA' Ann'i:;, baguna Be a·<' h , No dell_lYs. free est· Housecleaning_ \VITH FOLl.O\VlNG ho Call \\'ilh salary increases. Apply V.1cation Rentals 425 "" Thurs., Apr. 5, 8 p.n1. For 6~332.r --Jiear~ nie. : in pcrson. Dafla. -PolntJ Beautiful apts. w/private 1300 sq . fl., private oflicc, inforination, 2l'.,·. 4,,-1.1549, FREE E ,. Ce t HOUSE OF CLEAN QUALIFICATIONS: 540-7041 or 5~5341 Casta\\•ay, 2'~1 Dana D•., patios garage pool s a clean unit. Plenty of p!U'k· " s imates, nten A/C pay, AIC rec, payroll,l-;-=""i,,--ci-'-'0:.:0"'.:..:._~ ~ • Lush iarder. selt!ng. Aaufts: n:~ S~\~RSu~m~oclQaycaboi~ '="c,•·c.•=:ct=SOc.·..;•cc12;,,-;.cl4:o8>c.·~~~ Contractor d r Ive w a Y s' F1oors, windO\vs, walls, car· billing & general ledger exp. r\ ~OUNG J\~an To Train As Dana tlnrbor. No J)hone 110 peta 151 E 2 1st C J\I • :-llSJ sidewalks. Jess Anzaldua. pets & drapes. 7 Yrs. area. 10 key add. & typing. Salary \V1ndow \' a~er-Homes _ &,.,;c•;;'ii''i-' ~c-,--;o-,----,-* 646-SooG * • · · \Veek. (714) ~2742. NE\V l'\1-1 Space \Vilh Office Lost Md Found ~55:::"1:..~:::324=.c..:C:::-'c:':..· ----642-6824 or 646-252?. t.'Ontn1ensurate \v/cxp. Ap-Apts .. Shorthatr., ale11 .. Pt1de 1COOK and Counter help, liiiiiiiii ..... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l\VANTED -2 roommates to l300-2600 ft 3 phase 208V iiiiiiii.iiii~I CUSTOM Concret,e, by ="""'~"'-".O.::=:.::..--ply to: of \\orkmansh1p, desire to p/time to I/time. 18 or shr 4 BR hse. \\'/2 olhel's. ~ Falrviev.'. S ·A· Renaissance Co. 6().90 day DAY\VKRS. Univ£> rs it Y DICEON ELEC I C please. Must drive. Apply over, mdngt 10 7 am. e• ADULTS It B 0\\'TK'r: 646-1252, 644-2228 Students. Bonded, i;creened, n betw-n 10·30 & 12 30 R ' · · · area. $80 + util. Found (fr" ads) 550_ !.~a~_·,,i,,r_.:_ avail. F'rec es!. · ... " . · • : , en-week days 10 am-2pn1. no LA COSTA APTS. 962-8668 10,00J Sq. Ft. FOR LEASE. :;,.oo-v..tJJ insured. Hrly rates. Call 18522 Von Karman ta! Readier, 569 \V. 19th, exp. neccs. 3 months local I & 2 Bedroom li11DDLE aged lady \Vilh car Sprinklers. dock high. Call r OUN D ; l\fale dog, PATIOS. v.·aiks, drives. Saw, ~1800' Mon, " 1 e<I, Fri. A -~~ine, Calif. 1 OI. resi., rl<'at app, apply in • Carpets • Drapes to share mobile home in 5-i0..7630· "Cockapoo.. rype . blk, break, remove & replace QUALITY CLEANING * n eqUJ.1 oppty emp oyer BABYSIITER needed 3 pm person. Jack in the Box, •-Pool • B~:s -· La~na Bench. No-pets~ Rentals Wanted 460 y,·/grey; vie. BSth ,!;.: concrete. ~R..S668Jor est. Complete. 5 yrs exp, rcls. ACCOUNTING CLERK _to 12:_!5 am Tues thru Sat. 1201 S. Coast Hwy. L.B. All Utilities P•id F'ree rent. 494-7972 ...,;._;.;;.:.:.__;,_c_;.,;o,:,:;__ _ _;,;;o I Seashore,. N'pt Be· a ch. PATIOS-PLANTERS Free est. ~like Ml-8995. Fee Paid. t.ocal estab. one girl 1S-mOs. No COOK-Graveyaril sltifl, 6 l54 Avoc•do St., C.M. \\/ANT middli:-aged woman NE\V Entployee, Irv l n c ::,•lc;"-..:1:::24;:7~------,\JI Concrete \\'Ori<. 894-J533. D•dic•ted Cleaning manur. firm. Good figure house\\'Orl<. Santa A~ area, days a week. ALSO 642-9708 to share my new apt. Arch Tndustrial Comple" needs 3 BOY'S Stingray bi c Y c 1 e * \\'E DO EVERYTHING * aptitude & lite typing will nr Sunfimver & Fauyiew, Students , part time. l' ... "'!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!"' ... !I •• La Sch D ~"-"'!5 bedroom u11f. house. Wolk-~'OUNDATIONS • Artistic Re(s. Free est. 646-"°"" land th>"s good opportun>"ly. ca.II bef. 3 P~f. 919--0035 APPLY IN PERSON ~.. g. · ay °""'"" , · · 1 1 N found vicinity Bushard & .w.>J THE EXCITING eve. 49-J-5867. ing: dist. e cn1. schoo. l'l'd Toucan, Fountain Va1ley. Planters, concrete & brick llOUSE & APARTMENT Start $500. Also Fee Jobs. BABYSITTER wante<I in JACK-IN·THE·BOX PALM MESA APTS ALE dining area & space for Pie II =o ~o & "d patios, etc. Lic'd 644~. CLEANING. CALL call Jan Page. 541H055, Golden View "-"nbooJ a-·. 1205 Baker St. • i>.1 or female, 2 BR apt \\·ashcl' & dryer. Vn,,el Co. ase ca """'~ · i en-~ ...... ~1INUTES TO NPT BCH to sha 5 bl ks from · V & tify Block \Vlllls -Planters 847-3i:i6 Coastal Personnel Agency, Hunt. Bch. 2 Sehl age Costa Mes• Bach, I & 2 BR. 1'~m Sl-45 H.B. ~I?: pier, Rltrs. 54S.-93·16. I FO=cUo,·N=D-S~a~turd--ay-~M-or-ch Sidewalklll -Driveways Income Tax 2790 Harbor Blvd., C.?11. chilrlren. 847-8tl6 aft 6pm. C k S Cook Adults, No Pets. CO~tf'ORTABLE 2 BR BL IND diabetic r e n1 a I e, 31st. \vhite Sa1uoycd female. 645--8720 morn. or eves. ACCOUNTANTS BAB y SrrrER/Housekcep-~ s -euc~ 1561 M-· Dr. . ba apt, needs roon1 & board, TLC, y · . Ch'ld C C le \I •th great c•per •n t•~c "-h SI •c•n•"ty \Varn r & Nc•"I nd • •-IN OME Tax ~parat'•n er, own transportat n. .• · -• (5 W•·· from Ne•~rt BJ··') priv .. t · 1arc \VI can pay up to •200 mo. Refs. e ~a • •• ~'"' "' food t C JI ~ "'" 9860 ...... vu. congenial person. S37-0057. \\'rile Clnssifi~ ad No. 619, 1-luntington Beach, 847-1678 1----------Reasonable rates. Plse call. Newport Beach Financ· 2:30-7 pm. 64CHJ166 or Fr d 0!';,,rr70010n. a Chef .,...,.. CHILD Care-Lg. yd. Lots ot 67fHi676 for appt. ial Institution has im· 640--0227. e ' O't'I' • •CASA VICTORIA Garages for Rent 435 CDai,ly ,r, ilot, CPO ""'-"Bzx 1560 FmNaDI: ?lonCd~ I eo<pk-ak-poot TLC. ~$25 \Vk. ~. J 't . I mediate openings If ""'' BABYSITTER n--"~ my COOK -Exp only Day shift os a csa. a. J~IU<I· e v1c. ire l' ar .a 64~ -1 aft. 6. 548_3917 an1 or1a · ,I"-=u.,.., Tl c · ' 1 & 2 BR. f'urn & Unfurn. ALLSPACE Main & 12th H.B. l;:"~:.;::~:::.:.'?:..:::.::.::c::::::.._ qualify, we offer you a. home 2:30 _ 7:30 pm. Call ie ottagc Coffee Shop, C ~t 1 D/W TV 1 BR apt or sml house nr 562 W 19th St C t M a.,~ s, l rapes, , 5.16-8751 Contr•ctor OFFICE cleaning, I i c · d, unique v.·ork Cl)vironment 842-9631 before 2 p.m. · • os a esa anL Pool, etc. Conte by & Self Storage beach in CDlif, Balboo, I ;,:==-'?c-"":0---.,,,.--bond d 7 y · & a challenging profes-C t GI I inquire about our ?11o,•e-tn Mini Warehouses i\•antl.'d for mo of April. FOUND: Male Germ. Shep. Comm•I, Indus~ Resid 642~ or ~~.1n area. s· 1 t It BABYSITI'ER needed days, oun er r s Allowanr.<?. 525 Victoria st. v · · 1 &ID-1751 aft 6. vie. Ellis & Bushard. Foun-iona oppor un Y· my home, Htg Beach. P/limc days At Harbor. C.J\!. 642-8970. ~1;:i: i~i~U k~mp ~~'~o.. NEED June 1st, 3-4 lxlrm ' ,:,'•"'7."~V;•::llc'oyC-96""8-"":::569:::..,c,--Ne>.\', remodel, repair. Store P•inting & 5.16-1867 aft 5 p.m. Carl's Jr. Rest•urant ., 1 " OU . Ca fronts. cust. patios, oles etc. Po-rhang'iftft \Ve arc seeking a Jr. & Apply In Pe-·n 1_,,,_ 2 2 BR. FM;! Utilitis5. Pool. On site mgrs . 24 hr. access house. l yr. case. Ne\\'JX)rl 1', ND Siamese t on Lic'd. 962-1961. ' rr-""II Sr. Accounting Special· -'"" "' "" prn Encl gar, dsh\vhr. 241 No 1n0Vl' in -~o move out fee Sch. Distrlcl. 675-2113 Darrell St, Costa M<'sa. isl. \Ve require a min. • Bank BookkHpers &. 5 pm at Carl's, 279 E. Avocado St. Cl\i G4~l»I Security Patrolled I ~~~~~~~:~~ 1 64 .. ;2;.:-53~70=·...,.-=..,..--;o..,..---l'JACK Taulane -Repair CUSTOM PAINTING 2 yrs. business cxper. as e St•tement Clerks 17th St., C.1\1. Open Daily for Inspection ORANGE & \\'hite Cat near rcmod., addit. 20 yn; ~xp. Inter/Exler. Unfurn. inter. J & 4 s .,. Tellers COUNTER help -21 & over. Huntington BHch nwiiilton & Newland St., lfB I~ Laguna High Sch 0 0 1• Lic'd. ~ly \Vay Co. S.17-0036. spec. price. Free color con-!n rAcroun~~ :. a.B~: Min. I yr exp. 4:30 to 10 n.n1. l\Ion-Fri. I BR. Del "''''· Adult poolside 8.33-()~119, tr no ans, 646-0697 '9n0Nls 497-2735 Additions Remodelin&" sulting & est. Lie. Ins. ine" Deg-a must. C t M W I h Apply in person, Adams .... Gerwiek & l!IOn,-Lic!d _\\'on't be underbid~-"'" ont•c : r. • 1 Ave. Donuts, 9089 Adams garden IJungalO\\', near Office Rental 440 FND: ~Ji gr'0\\'11 white cat 673..QMl * 549•7170 Salary 'vill be in accord· ~a.nk of Cost1 Mesa A~B. =•--- ocean. FflJIC., lrg patio, 6 \\.'/blue eyes. Vic. Irvine & No Wasting ance w/expcr & qualili-979-4200 ,..,..UPON SORTERS pool11, saunn, tennis. $160. OFFICE Space/Lease. CdM Personals 530 Clay i.n N.B, 64&-0049 Drafting * WA~~e_A_pER _* catkms. F'or considera· ""'" Em cu 846-JY.:j9. localion 659 sq ft. Can be ...;._;.;.;;;"'-----__;-' \9hcn you call "Mac" flon please send 1'esiime '"""tual Opportunity ployer. N':''Pl-Bch. -!emale, Juli 2 . 3 BR. ?. Ba, $l6.i up. Pool •. divided. 6i:Mi6i6 J.: THANK YOU FOR BIG blue-grey rabbit. Nr. PL.ANNING any size job. 548-1444 646-1nl &. !lalary history to; BARMAID needed -Apply in lime pe1ma.nent. lnfonual THE 1\1UCH-NEEDED Pauline Pl. CM. -646-7002 Free consultation . Ca 11 pe.....-.n-at Mother's 570 •-. \\'Orklng condllions, ~fuch VACATION. R. Lost 555 ~i--0626, ~7-9695. ' Classified ad no. 627 Coast Hwy, Lag. Sch Noon standing. Sl.75 + !!.~ secluded. A1nr children's I NICE room for \\'Orking man PAINTING & Papen'ng 20 ·-' ~ area. 18SS1 lilora Kai {E. or \\'ilh cooking privl. No drink yrs in Harbor a r e a . b sed boll Som '~ Bea<'h oft Garfield ) 962-89!+1 or !ln1okc. ~2-0227 \\lant ad results ... 612-5678 Electric•I Lie/bonded. Refs. furn. c/o Dally Pilot 'til 5pm. a us. £> English BLACK cat "Louie". 10 mo 642-2356. P. o. Box 1560 BARMAIDS \\.·anted in Tustin neccs.<i. Call Beverly &15-5800 $©\t~1'.A-/J,£f/lS .. The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle TEKSIH I I I I 11 TUOA .C I~ ._.._I --'-1 -LI _.I.I __. i SURED I f 1.-~1-.-1 -j,.;....;j_.; " A bakot'• policy: He bakes L::::· :::· =·==·:::-'.___.,mostly "'-late cakes. Thay r don'tshowthe- F 0 T T u l I ~-1 1-~~;-..:...,.:.._:;,__,_~---l G) C_i.., tho """'I• •"""" I I I r I by lilllog ... tJ,e mlalnO -d • .. .. -.. • you Oovelop from sttp NOi. 3 below. • ... SCIAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 I , '· old, vie Thund£>rbird homes, ELECTRICIAN, lic~nsed, Costa Afesa, Ca. 92626 Newport Costa 'lesa Area Dana Point. 493·3720. PAINTING &. -pru·r, 35 VO"C. • " • CREDIT CHECKER bonded. Sinall jobs, main!. '" ''" 6~9711 Workmanship guar. Take ,,... Classified Ads , . _ 642·5678 & repairs, 548-5203. advantage of my e<p. Equal Oppor. Employer Jn depcndcnl finance co. nttd!I 5.1&-7056 ~~~~!"!!..;,~ .... I BEAUTY OPERATOR expedcncoo gh'I le start ADVERTISING SALES = Assist owner ol busy salon, immed. Phone 979-4730 fo1· UP to 75% off on hanging if Orange Counly newtpaper 5 day V.'k. Xln't salary & interview. Trader's Paradise llAVE $13,000 equlty in 132.000 3 DR, 111 bo hcu., In 1'~ountAln Valley, .Trade or units or income prop. crry. 531-2998. TR.ADE dlx. mtn hme, 2 BR. rT'J)lc, oil elect, w/w cplg, b.11n1, ~; 11c lot for TD'a, or bch prop. Owner, P.O. Box 204. La Verne. ca. 91750 SMALL-Mtique-«aan,-Cur- north, Trade lines times dollars SAILBOAT '5', niggod \>Ce&n truLser, value $22.000. equity $14,000. Want motor home or tree &: clear deg. ert., 6 PM. 838-4651. \VANT old l)ollse on R--2 Jot I lnve land & other pro~ erUe1 to extbango. Owncf/Broker DA VIS 833-8160 7U ·St Jam11-P1-,-N.B.,-3. . " ~II , or you buy material from The needs exp e ~I enc e d \\'Orking conds. Ja Cos For1 'iicuiT.:ST=".:::.:;s;OE:;:R"°v~1c=E~~D~E~PT~.·1 llangmen. 547-sMG Classified Advertising ~es Hair, 2M3 Wei1tclifJ Dr. PART·TIME R9F-rpAinl~ n11. Full Jlroe 1hon · - ' k-Quick r reas. lnUext, free est. Ung vacailOq, re e or 50 f I 20 A::ii: outside sales staff and BEAtrl"Y ~pel'l;ltor, male. or ... ~!.. u ~~.n1 over _yn:-Refs. 548-2759, 5.57-7...,,... developing new business. female. Nights & Sunday. ""''="t:U· .-.~. ous exper not * PAPERHANGER * Good opportunity for right Perma Tress, 2300 Harbor, necessary. Carl Rebko · 646-2449 person. Jf interested, send Costa ~1esa. 549--0757 CALL 11-7 $98 w-k. PAINTING • Re8sonable .. resume to Classilled ad No. Beauty Operator Wanted. 59S.m4 547-0913 Eves: 675-7307 Days: 979-5840 55, Dally Piiot, P.O. Box • Gwen's Beauty Shop CUSTODlAN -.:-:-:_..,.-Do~n-7--.:-:-:--.-:-I •;i1i;560iii;' ;ieo.taiiiiiiMii"'"iiiil!ll626iiOii' iii•I 494-mt Pleasant 1urrounding1. Call ' Pl•s.fer, P•tch1 Repair IYCl£NT BILLING &: Collections 4.96-6137 Tues uu·u Sat 8-6 M Oerk. Days, f /Ii me . for 11ppobttment. ' ' *PATCH. PLAsrERlNG Penonncl Dept, Hoag Hosp, DELIVERY f al All types. Fl'ff estimates MARINER NB • cm c w/ca.r, CaU 541)..'825 oo exp nee. Hour pay + ear P lumb"1-BOAT BUILDERS altowru,..e. ~~301~•t hllve unan "• N~....1 . 1_.. car. nq. ... Birch NB ~ exper. tiniaa carpenter, 979--05.70 L.R. O'I'lS PLUMBING Now 1-liring painter le bondt't for qual· :D=ENT'-='A=.;L:-.O~f~----Rcm00~11 & ~· Water ity sailboat manut Wes:tsail Hee need$ ex· he I d'· ·-· W SHERS ~ 1626 Pt ti A pertenced front om"' M~. d•~,::hrs'."~"1.ii~ DISH A O'{'' """' a ve., Varlod duties. 6IH49!1 .-' Bl A. Complete Pf um bin& Daytime, Age 18·71 'DES!GNER-GRAPllJCS Service. ~UICK CASH D1Abt~ed tntM"kn' ne11p PLUMBING REPAJR Apply In Perwon T Firm tn Newport BC!ach No ~b too .,,.a11 ~~-~"ll:. THROUGH A "";,"~o~=i::d~~.-:· ~· * 1-~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~F====I== ~fAl"'...tl"'o a: raoh rllw IJke to tradot Dor Trod•r'• ---W-AlilTAlJ-on:h!Icctunll I n I • r 1 ors • Alttrallont 642.sMS Paradloe column la for you I • 642 56 78 5'!0-l860, 250 Flschl'1', °""' •••••••••••••••••-Ne111 tccur&te. 20 Y8l'I exp. 5 Ii~•. 5 days for 5 bucks-1 _____ • _____ 1.;;M:o'='"::·------- comm tncome for $C5M eq. Mork Ln Rllr. M8-17ll. 16~; trave tr3 er. for propcny. 540-5589 ---... -~- I lut:sda.)', Al)f'il .3, 1~73 DAIL V PILOT !S 111 ,..__• "-· ·~1(11] I ,....,.... IITTJ I ........... l[IlJ ~I i!!!ii"'"'~· ·~l[l~~I _._,,..,_. ~l[Il]~IJ1 ~I ';;;;;'. ';;;;;' ;;;;i ·~·· I~ I -Jr§]![ 1p·W•nloci Ma I' 710 HolpWontod,M:LE.110 Holp-W•ntod, M & F 710 HolpW...W.M_& F 710 HolpW-.M& I' 710 HolpW-. M & F 710 ~!!f!ll•ncn 802 ~M;ls;ce;liilaiinooiiiiiiuii,iiiiii~ii8~18 1 Mi1cellanoous 1:.::;;i:...:.;.;:~;;:;;• ;.;;_;;:..;....:.;~ REAL ESTATE SALES Soc' Diet ........_ TRAIN£!) air! lb1&' ~ "EASY outo wuhor $40. GE , DIGITAL TECH GRADE A MECHANIC MAOllNIST w/model shop; SUCCESS CAREER Y •t""-.. wishes to . r, u; elec ~r $40. Wards auto F~SlfiN'° CEAR. Bir. tw•le<. .. POl..AROID Aulomatlc 103 • -]~ 1_ 1Wfuires exptr, 1n electric, e~e~ needed. p.,,ya New or~DCC!~Joln the . FD: PAID orp.ru.ze ir'OOP washer $65. Kenmore auto hon ol used salhl'fltt'r nnd l.Md camera. Just Ii~ new. _,..,..eo..-!"''!-'""·~u.i -hydreu! n-e tt=n't'tt+f.c · ~--~ ----~IYr-WM-546 88ft ~-wr~a·~•·<-<J•oxa.1 ,.._,,,~.,..,1,~~""--1-'~l.J~l!SJl/l"h!"'1~aro~ld~.-----I digital elcctranJcs IO ual.rt 1 cb1 In-• .,._..,,.,._,......... ..,,,_ or s -'--,_.. _., __ , ...... ..., CuJtar, drummt"r. piano ' •--:SJ ~ \II, • ' 1 self tlmf'r. :r r. eves or enaineer ln RAD Sm&ll IY5 ems, ma De ma Annatrona Ave Santa Ana CfOWl.ag reSale organization .._,..,.,,.. &nUepen•~• ACWfi..r pll.)"tr needed. State age, 847...au.5 uun\ .N up. 1 LI\ l'Xcc · fast crowtn& Oomputer tenanec, mac h In Ing• MAIDS & ~men S2/br wtth a network of OYef' 300 will love 1tle f'reldonl helel e.~p. a: availability. Write, WESTINGHOUSE Auto . lt-nt l~Uion. Plr111y . or nnytlrne wknd.1. riJlhe,r&l co Call Larry welding, & preventative App! t Mrl Evel.Yft neur· omce. and become a Co. pa.jd mecllc&l, vac A clusitied ad No. 6'10, Dally washer. Temp. Cont r 0 1• luret & Jigs. Do\\'n ~eep1ng PLAVllOUSES custom ~ 979-4&M_ mal.Dtenance schedules. Ap-Ex Y :akpr · Ben 8 , ' member ot our M.illionalre hotldays. CaU Kim Clark, Pilot. p 0 Box 1560 Co& Good workl.nl condition. bBJtS, pmpune & gas 11\n· design!! or 1t:indard plans. ~ ' ply in person, at Coast M f · H t i' 3006 C:.S~ Club. Multt-mUUoo doUa.r &'Jl.7100. Also 1',ee Jobs. Ca· 9a626. • ta Jo"'ront-loacl dOOl' seal leaks. terns . N(')\' 131uck 4 Decker A • Fl'8n1c -castle • etc. DISHWASJ:IER, k.1tchen help, Czatamaran, 2028 McGaw, H 0 or ~J; •, .......... advertislna .proCr:am Free Dennls I: Dennis Personntl Mesa, · S39 SSS-Dt2 aft 4 PM mo\vcr $39. 14 fl, fibc';1i'.la5l5 Kits or lnstal!IM:I. bi5-6lU or , see chef, Lagu.!Ja Beach Irvine. Contact Po. u l wy., ._.UMG. guaraDteed licenllnl ·school agency ol Irvine, 2082 · • kynk, w:uer glc!, 3625 \\l, Sth 67~11728. Country Club, 31100 S. Coasl Brebmer or Art Huskey. MAIDS, days, t / l Im e . Excellent sales training'. Mk:hd!on Dr. u RGENTLY • DISHWASHERS, wuhers, St., Santa 1\na. 1 block oU GE StcrL'O Contc mpornry Hwy., S.L. GRADE B MECHANIC Personnel Dept, Hoog Hosp, Please call V1rgin1a Jooes SECRETARY-EXEC. dryePs, reblt, guarn &: itarbo,· Blvd. (t ast) ~:3Q. \Valnut finish, $75. Cold , OOMESI'IC Help • George Requires exper. in expanded Newport Belt. 83>4811. Independent mature person NEEDED delv'd. fl3S..TG:Kl; ~W. 1~6 ~•-·m_._______ print &1fa S20. 615-5074. Allen Byland Aeency, l!Ji.B polystyrene process equip-MAID work ln exchange for RED CARPET with excellent aid.Ila & spell· KENMORE washer/dryer Big acleclion of used salt Mlscell•neous E. 16th St., S.A. 547--0395 meat, hydralic &.newnatic apt. 4 hrs per day, 54S·9755 RNltora Ing needed to work tor dlvi· $79 ea. Over 200 wubers, v.·atcr .!c fte¥h v.·atcr W•nlod Dr's Assistant Youne lady (~28> to assi8l in hHlth spa. WW train, no exp. nee. Apply .in person any aft or eve. 2930 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS Assemblers needed w/PC board & soldering exper. Permanent employment Pleuant IR.llTOW)(llngs. • Call For Appt. Industrial RelatioN (714) 494-9401 mONIC INDUSTRIES L19uno Booch systems, we Id I n g & 2376 Nowport mvd. . s:1icm manager. Aptitude tor dryers. retrl&' trom $39.95. rods, & ret>ls, etc. froin ma in tenance procedures. MAINTENANCE REAL ESTATE SALES 11.gures &: insurance exper. Unskilled 56-0780. Sl.50 up. All in excellent Apply ln person at Coast HELPER FREE LICENSE preferred. Salary comme:n-1 YEAR GUARANTEE oondh.lon. Plenty o1 lutt1 & Ca~. 2026 McGaw, YOUNG MAN OVER 2l, TRAINING surate with ablllty, Uberal I IBOR£RS 111 a y tag~enmore-Wuhen-jigs. Down sleeping ~. Irvine. Contact Pa u I Famous Real Estate Ueens-benefits. Call 842.. 7'151 for LA Propane & gas lanterns. Brehmer or Art Huskey. PART TIME FOR APART; tng Course now available aPPOintznent. 636-2840 * ~1778 New Black k Deeket mov.•f'r Hostess & Cashier MEN1' COMPLEX. -, thru Tarbell Realtors. Free UNI GARD \YifIR.LPCX>L ·n EI e ct. $39. 14 ft. fiix'r glass Kynk, Over 21 Nights only Apply CALL ~ Placement Service ~ INSURANCE lnterfnt . dryer Hardly used must water ~kt, 3625 W. Sth St .. · . u 30· & MAINTENANCE MAN "'-1 .. 1.... n-....--." Earn IL -., -' Santa Ana. 1 block otf dally 10:30 am-' .am ··~-• ·~~ Socrelary $700 Penonnel Service ,. ··~~ llorbor Blvd. «a.st!. 9:~ 4:30 pm-5:30 pm, l-1.i Casa-\VEE KEN D S ONLY. while you learn. Call Al FEE PAID 17511 lrvlno Blvd. Rent Washers/Dryers pm ~;~~~ ~~urant, 296 E. ~ ~ ~ ~ &~~ L 1>~: re:enlsn~h,)83fu.~. on The adrnl:nistrative .aid In $2. \Vk. Full malnt :..*·-7--·-A..,...,U""c=TJ=o=N~*-,--' MENT COMPLEX. this fascinating pos1llon to #115 Tustin * 639-m2 * 110Sl'ESSES & Waitresses-can 546-5025 REAL ESTATE-en I a gin 1 entrepreneur. 838-5460 Building Ma .. rl•ls I06 Fine Furniture & Appliances Banquet. Over 21. Conta~t ~SMEN -Why not work Never a dull moment. Great Equal Oppor. Employer Al Dofla aft 2 pm, Tues-Fri, MAUJE'S WIG & Beauty ~ the hottest area Hun.t-benetlts including bonuses Mesa Verde Country Club, Salon has opening for • 1ngton Beach I F?W1tain for bright anracttve lndiv. 300.l Clubhouse Rd., C.l\1.. beautician, exp In hair Valley and let us train you! Call Kim Clarlc, 833-2700. Housekeeper goods. Salary, comm 6' Call Phil Mc J>l am e e, Also Fee Jobs. Dennis & I vacation. 548-3446 VILLAGE REAL ESTATE. Dennis Personnel Agency of Need He P MAN to work hill time at * 962-44TI * Irvine, 2082 Michelson Dr. Dad & Mom both work & service station. Must be R.E. Salesmen needed Im· SECRETARY vnung skill· have a blg home. Tliey need exp'd. Apply in person. 3599 med. Top comm. Ask for d ' "' • ed someone to live In & take Harbor Blvd at MacArthur, Jack Scott Scott Realty e • ~mpetent. Imm late f th •· & ct •1 """''>e')" ' 'openJJtg. Executive care o e uvme us, os a "esa. wu-o.uu .• • typewriter. Newport Center Ran<ly & Don, ages 6 & 8 Mgr. Tralnoo $650 RECEPTIONIST location. To 16<111. Send yrs. Call & a.sic: for Tony. Cl il!ed Ad N 84, -for mo-inlorma-Ready to start a career w/ Day night resume to ass o. .........,.,, ."' or , no exp. nee, 618 Dall PiJo pa Bo . 968-93S6 large nat'I co. leading to easy, fun job. Will train. no , Y t, • . x tion. · exec. stat11S? Local opening typin shorthand t 1560, Costa Mesa, ,CalU. W1ltNS1ff Over 21, li-fex1can food & cocktails. Apply daily, 10:30 am-ll:30 am &: 4:30 pm. 5: 30 pm, Mi Ca."'8. Mexican ·Restauran~. a E. 17th St., C.M. WAITRESS, exper. over 21. Clean & Neat. Some split shifts. Apply Egg & Ale, 640-.'JllJJ. e SURPLUS BUILDING Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. t.-fATERIAL • lOOO's ot NE\V Windy's Auction Barn ITEl\1S! Doors, lumber, ply. 20751,\ Nl"WPOrt, Ot 646-8686 Yo'OOd , .alum shttt:ing, mold· Behind Tony!s Bldg Mnt'l. Ing, w1ndow10:, etc. BUILDERS SURPLUS 2400 So. Ma.in St., S.A. Mon thru Sat tl}{i. 714: 546-1032 Cameras & Equipment S\VIMMTNG P<X>L. S<'ars 18' x 4'. 1 ~ yrs. old. Red- \VOOd decking, filll'r, <'ICl\11- lng equipment & test kit w/son1e chemicals. Every· thing only $275. OrigtnaUy $520. N~" r.tust sell - l.10VING. 5.U-1218 . HOUSEKEEPER live-in, pv.!_ in... xln'l trainllli:. program, Aw:,;rperson any 'atte ;~ ,:;•=260'26"=~~,--,,,-_,..-,. Equal Oppor. Employer room. TV, Spanish speaking tor sharp fa.st learner. Call eve. at 2930 West Cst Hwy., SERVICE Sta. Attendant, OK. Call aft S:J:> 546-1978 Burt Long. 833-Z700, Dennis N.B. f/tlme . ~. 2 Yn. Lite WAITRESS -Mu.st be 21. Call 673-4110 for interview, Galley Cafe, 829 Harbor Island Dr., Newport Beach. WAITRESS. Carmel's DWng, 628 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. ELEC. Assembler, I/time days. $1.75. Female, no ex- per. necesa. 549-0241 EXEC. SECRETARY If you v.oold like the cha1- lenge of the ad business & have these qualifications, give us a call. • Shorlh1nd • Accuracy •Sharp Look1 e lnltlotlva Insurance Agency Girl & Dennis Personnel Agency mech. exper. Neat In ap- 1''.lust know personal lines of Irvine, :m2 Michelson Dr. RECEPI'. Typist-file clerk. pearance. Apply ,morns. ml rating. Excellent oppty. MED. Receptionist, secretarial qualiftcat:ions Newport m, CM. Salary open. Must be good days/swing. Will tr a In . des'd. Pleasant friendly SERVICE Station Attendant typist. California Insurance, Persnl Dept, Hoag Hosp, voice euen. Sa I com· full or f,/time. Exper. Over Irvine. For interview, call N.B. mensurate w/exper. F.q. 18. App y Brown's Shell, 990 t'ern Nutter, 833-9480. MOLDING mac h In e Oppor. Employer. Mr . E. Coast Hwy. NB 644 4131 Inventory Control operators-Growing company Clark, Richard's Market, SHIPPING Packaging FEE PAID has openings on 2nd &: lrd 34.II Via Udo, N.B. 673-6360. Clerk Trainee, Pal El~ Put your knowledge of prod. shifts. Aceep~ exper'd RECEPTIONISl', attractive, tron1e1 Cbmpany. 6 3 91 control to use. Very spe<.-ial operators & trainees: ·op-dependable, must enjoy West mt n st er Ave, firm seeks sharp indiv. for portunlty to learn while greeting public &: be Westminster this key spot. Fabulous ben-\\'Orking. Apply 9-ll am or capable of handling heavy I -"==s=TU==D-E_NT_S_I __ efits & location a\vait you. 2-4 pm, California Injection phone 1 o ad courteously. / . 133-1670 $650. Call Liz Blake, 833·2700. Molding, 200 Briggs, C.M. $375. mo. 6.f6..-03Jlr --Opentnga for p time conces-1~~~~~~~'!'!!'~~1 Also Fee J obs. Dennis & NEWSPAPER Dellv. af· slon jobs at O.C. Raceway. 1~EXEC. SECRETARY Dennis Personnel Agency ot temxins. N.B. area. Mlllt *RENTAL AGENT* $2 hr. Mr. Parrott, 838-1103. Irvine. 20.S2 l\1ichclson Dr. own depend. car. 64&-8162. For well known growing real TELLER Sales manager needs sell ..:::..::.::::...:===="'-'=-j ,;i;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, j estate co. DJ Laguna Beach. starter w/good skills. Start 11,. .. ,. ... Must have salesman li· PART TIME $625. Call Helen Hayes, """" 'V_.., 91" n 'V NURSING cense. 494-9473. • 540-6055, Coastal Personnel Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., C.M. EXTRA MONEY - A little or a Jot 1elling Shaklee Products. 548-5253. EXP'D Swim wear & cover up sewers needed. Immed. 642-4CM!8 ask for Tom. WIG Styl~u -Exper. fl - $2.50 hr. Sal + Bonus. 'nn> Edinger, Hunt Bch. 820 OLD 0 Rtt:N1'AL RUGS r v.·\U Pit)' s-1o•;c, more than i top $ Pll)'<'ra:. Evei;. ~iO , \\'1\NTED: Several uSt'd , Oriental Rug1 & liAnd Made : Tupestries. Call ~ PRIVATE PARTY \Vlshes to purchase (lld 1 Cl)'Slnl or glnss. 842-2-tZl' ' Musical lnstrumenH 821 CONTi'.:SSi\ G-string st('(') i.tuitnr ,Hohntr. 11ardly used, SGO. 645-5.J.IS. Office Furniture/ Equip. 824 Vlc:I'OR nlldlng mal'h!ne, us- ed • but in xlnt ('Oncl. All n1etnl 1-:l'lll"S -ll(t 1·hea1> plnstlc 1111115. ?rlllk<' "()fft'P, • S42-l 150 eves or •iri,ytlmc \\'kncl!I. ANSAPl.fONE with. remot~ 1.'0ntro!, still under Wl'r· ranty. i,.1i Price. I B 1'1 1y~wrltel', _('ha!_rsL fil~ cabUlOt."I. 673.=2"29. EXEC t;\vvl chrs $1.5125 St..'C ehrn $.~/29 Desks $20/85 OH Sl1pl 867 \V 19 ~1 642-3408 Pia no•/Organs 826 ORGAN HOBBY Don't buy any ".gan until you can play! Non-playt'l'li °"'cloomo to attend free work shof)!t. 1-'"0l' lntonnntion Contact: Tom Dieterich 642·2851 Coa st Music S.rvlc• Ncv,.port Blvd. nl-llarbor Cosio l\lC'u '73 Yo!lmahn E·3-R'., con.wlc, Casettc Call uft GPM , SG-2322 LO\VRY Organ II o I Ida y • niodcl. all latest fcatureL : Sncriflcc, $1500 .. '19&-1020 1 OLD PIANO $110 5'1&0747 Afler 5 P.M. For an ad In Woman•s World Call Mary Both 642-5678, oxl. 330 Cjlulck·Sew Trio 1 Cozy Capes! ' \ • . ' • ,ZS DAILY PILOT TU<ldlY, April 3, 1973 [ _ _. · I~ I -!"' ...... l!H [ .. /~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:;;;;; ,.P;.:.·1.,...=;:f.;.O;.:.r=:ga;;,;n.:•:....._.;:•;;:;:26 Horsn '56 -•-... -.--·---~ -Sale/Rent USED ORGAN SALE! ABSOI.UTELY beautllul, 3 1-----i,ll.i\MMUNiltrl~ okHill), S'"iMr qtl plus ~..tntd, 8 ., $892; llammond 1\.1·! ~. mustang, broke to ride. '72 ford tor rent. $1.S. per '72 TOYOTAS $19'J; Hllmmond A·.100 ebony, gtintle Ir. can be reg. 1.tust day. No milco.l:e cha.ri'l· ~-* FACTORY · $1995; lfemmond C·3 $1195; sell. S375. 549--3735. 58&-Tm llammond Porta·B $1499; HORSE FOR SALE T;;:r:::oc,;11.::er"s-, "'T"'r-ov-e"'1--:9:c4~5 I * EXECUTIVE Allen Spinet $4!t); \Yurlltw" $450. CaU David, 675--2765 ·--· * DEMONSTRATORS spine! $495. 1i1eattand n1any after S. lm TERRY, 23', IC.If COl'lt, FROM THE 10 . n\Ore al: Jou of xtr~•. sacrifice under ORIENT To Choo.,. From Wollichs Mu sic City ooct, 49&-lm. Sou•h coa.81 Pla za 540-2830 II• ,e J ·70 ID~ 21.5 rt. Like new. A spacious "'l'l Datsun ato.tlon Clearalfce Sale . ~ Awnln11 &: extra.. 9fi8..Sl50 v.•agon. E&>norny and room. PRICElSfS'JlART Sliwing Mochlnes 818 Auto Service Ports 949 10 DAY VREE TIUAL EX· $1779 SEE THIS BEFORE YOU Boats, Gene~ll 900 1 CHANGE, BUY! \\'c"re over .!ilOCked --.-~ ..... ,.~...... 4 BECKETT Pa~la Track GUSTAFSON Example: 161)) 2 dr. 4 speed, on good u~ machines &. 22" Tl"JUera.blc Lu g a r 13:00 x 15 Sand Ttr'C!. N~'. Un I M radio, heater, lov.• miles. ''Rl.'UUml, 11riced from $9.95. llouscboat Kit·v.•ith •ink aod $450. pr! pty. 54&-:m8. co ft• ercury TE21.{i10849. All guaranlt'i!<.I. \Ve repair refrigerator. Completely 16800 Beach at Warner 48 months !inanclng o.vailable oil inakes. Serving Costa assembled but needs Huntington BeJCh Con approved credit) Mc'3 lor ove• 11 Y"'· fau•blng. lijOO or off.,, ....,,,._ II ~ 1142-8144 * (213)-5?2--5544 '73 TOJOJAS· Sint-"ere $co\vlng Machine & 548-8838 Plus rpany new It. . 1'Hpme of the Viking'' • Vacuum. 1878 Harbor -u!led boat equip + lumber. :Liao available at s:c~:-""co;~.:;;~~c.-blne~t -Mod-,l~S.-w-.1 801!1, Po.wet 906 Anti 95~ .DATSUN SAVINGS _ ... w. ·11 vru.ow ·vw _ Bwi, EL DORADOS IWU'Oal, 1 pus, "°" °"'" lB61 lo 1172 " bo'il<ts. xtras + • orta 17 TO CHOOSE owner, aerv recordJ, Saw· CO -·~· Ieu $2,-tSO. 830-4141. ' • U.-.,_.,.vi.VERTIBLF..S •10 ·VIV Camper, •ir ·cond .. , , DE . VILLES Poptoj>, Tadio,. tent, }C) mi.. xlilt engine, SUper clean. Dy1 557-9883;. e v e s : 552-8810. '66 VW. New brakes, paint. Looks 11.ke new: runt better. flOO or best otter! 64).3963 aft SPM Wknds a1ter 9Al\t. 'iO VW Squareback, air, good tires, ~ oond., very lo mi., 213:6411000; 714 : 1!3:H118. -- '68 . WI Bug, white. good shape. '900. See at 410 lris, CdM or call bet. 5--ti eves, 673-112t. '66 VW SUNROOF 1966 to 1972 34 TO CHOOSE COUPES SEDANS CONVERTIBLES Many exetllcnt colon; Choice or Interiors (Cloth&: lealherl Factory air rondllioni~ 1',ull poy,.·er · Choi ce of: Stereo .\r!Vf'-f r<JdiC> Cruite control Trunk opener & more All In in1maculate condition Largest selection lJ1 Orange County Nabers Cadillac: ~ GRADE UP! To a '12 Mark IV. Luxury leather with pQWer to boot! 10 DAY FREE TRIAL EXCJ1A:N'GE. GUSTAFSON Lincoln-Mercury 16800 Beach at \Varner 1-luntlngton Beach 842-8144 * (213) 592.5544 "Home of the Viking" COUGAli .,........ 11~1 !i!A VERICK '721 2. 0 O mlle1. lUdl. stltk shltt. xlnt oond. Pvl ""'"'. 548-8!158. MERCURY '&.' ISLAND LOVERS Even better than the' li:IWld of Capri is this •72 Mercuey Capri. Beautiful 10 .IOok. at and tun lo drive. 10 DAY FREE TltJ,~L EXCHANGE. G\151' AFSON Lfnc:oln-Mercliry' 16800 Beach at \Varner Huntington Beach 842-8144 * (213) 592'5544 ''Home of the Viking" iug Machi..,. Equipped for 15 n. Boat, cove•. 40 H.P. ::::;;:c:~:;;:::=;:_..:;!f NEWPICK.Ul9P73 DEAN L£W~S ~· zig zag SC\\•lng, button hole11. Evinrude, lilt !railer. all & so fonh. Sc"11 beaufjfully newly painted, '73 tllf,'S on Complete or Partllil NO DOWN $40. 645-6532 boat & trailer. $550 or ""'t RESI'ORATIONS • ITIOIYIOITIAJ CAT . I.OVERS , ~ AlTTHORIZED DEALER ~HARBOR BL., $450. Call 642-635,; Sporting Goods 830 offer. Trade for ? R53 Production Place $68.23 per mo. ~or 48 mo. • 6.16-52M • NR'pt. Bea~b &46-501 7G Anytime ~~::"~.~~rice $3273.60., • -;---966 H-orbor ::--I"•' th t1,i~ ~69NColTugEar, >lie ,,.. • F~SHINQ GF.AR. Bi(: selec· * 3ll FT. Owens Cruiser • ecreat1ona ~·-------··-.. ·~ "' ... COSTA MESA 5-M}-9100 Open Sunday '72 CPE pEyll.LE Sunrf, blue w/.\l'hite Ip. "All tact o.p-- tions. $6350. 6T.H569' 1961 VW Bug $.175 .. 536-3442 * VOLVO :~~h o~.a~:i n!J~.l r:i~ La~lo6~~ti~~idge · Vehicles 956 )N__r.µipnrt latmm ! Costa M~sa 646-9303 · cat. 10 DAY FREE TRIAL ·HEADS UP! '12 YDLYOS fron1 $1.50 up. All in ex· 494-9727 49&-40W '71 DATSUN P .U.. air, f .~ 1000w. eo.t ._.,_ '& EX~USTAFSON All the hcadi will ho up when ccllenl condition. Plenty of 18, Spoi·tsler Cabin Cruiser. AM/FM, \Ykle tires, with t. ~ ....._, 8wtt MS·MOc_!; • CHEVROLET you drive home with a. '69 lures & jigs. Down sleeping 120 hp M Cruiser 110 like new •71 Six Pac , * FACTORY Lincoln-Mercury· l\otercury. Po1ver, power. 10 bags. Propane & gas Ian-& many ~~lras. Aft.' 5 &. Cabover camper, sleeps 4, n DATSUN PI0< l!P * EXECUTIVE '& 16.SOO Beach at Warner DAY FREB: T.RQLI.: EX· len1s. Nt>\Y Black & Decker weekehds, 963-291>1. lee oox, sink, stove, boot, Air, AM/FM, v.•kle tires NO TOY • DEMONSTRATORS ._-. l-lunlington Beach CHANGE. mower $39. 14 ft. fiberglass step bumper. 496-4123. Bcsl offer above low book. . • • • 6 84•8844 * (213) 592 5544 GUSTAFSON Kyak, 11•atcrski. 3625 \V. 51.h 18 FT. fiberglass deluxe .,,.5 INTERNATIONAL •-·t • • ,496-4123 ** . lsb>'gth1~:1eT,o~~~· ?\0lad,cmfalo•1 r • St .. San!• Ana. 1 block oil boat; 145 HP f/0 w/t.-Ir. ~ ~V" ~-.. w~ To Choose From "Home of the Viking" Uncoln-Mercury llarbor feast) 9: 30-6 p.m. $3500. lmmac. 548-1290. 4X4, reblt eng, nu tires, DATSUN 71 240Z, 4 spd, air price. 10 DAY FREE TRIAL many xtras. Cal l Bill aft~r s cond, am/f~ stereo, tape £.\'.CHANCE. Clearan·ce Sale! FAST IMPALA '70 COUGAR: Air, auto, lGROO Bench at Warner COJ\1PLETE _sct of Golf n--ts, •-~, 909. pm, 5'1!b4.398 _ ~!.· .. ~~;7ires. M_any ex· GUS" AfSON-F t Ih th AM IF A-1 , PS IP B, lluntington n -ach Clubs. Top bag too! Must oo. ~11 u..:a. '1"N""V"-J . '"*".· _ H $a • .~er an e jungle cat~ Michelins, clean. '1950. · ur. St'll this week $100. 494-9963 ---------!Trucks 962 ,69 DATSUN 510 __ .~. L• I M UCJ9 VtftCJS th1s"is a '67 Chevy""lmpala, -OWnr. &ro:-1416-842-8844*-(213).592.JSM 1--• FOwhoR t•"·a"n~~~istaul·caCatedtam""aran·ior , 62 CHEY p U , -pd, ,..,,,.. , 36•.000~ "m• .. ,.. 1nco n• ercury Example: 145 EA station all cooled 1vlth air. 10 DAY ":;;'i"i;f~i'a:;:-:'1i::Ji/s: I ~·~·H~o~m~e_:o~f~lh~e~V~l~kl~ng'!'._"~I ~ "' or:. 16800 1va.i::on, automatic transmis· FREE-TRIAL EXCllA.i~GE. * * '69 Cougar, AIC, p/s, TV, R:1dio, HiFT, Stereo 836 perlormance. Lite weh::hl • • • $1100. 847--&J98. Beach at Warner &ion, air conditioning, lug· GUSTAFSON ~-!~~!ti~ will deal! '7d0 ?\1ARQUJIS .Marauder 2- 18, Cat, must ··e. $1=. l-luntington Beach k AM/FM """" "'' ......,.....,"" r. HT. i;'ul pwr. air vinyl ~ J;JJ 842.a844 * (213) 592 5544 gage rac • radio, 841 °' · ' 615-<866 Pvt party. 11 Ton, "' bed, blown KARMANN GHIA. ,. . • : ,, ,.ar speak.,, wheel covers, Lincoln u-rcury D top. 11600 · ~98· Campbell's Stereos -··· 1 · Home of ~. Vtkong • ...,. ODGE im 'IERCURY "·-"· CATAMARAN B-Llon, all engine, eve.,. ... ,ing e se m '" console •1456364 S1M897 16800 " ,,_,_ Prices were born here gd shape $450 Call after 6 72 Lt'st"Prt'ce-•'• $51591. · Beach at Warner b"""1"ham', ale, full p-, alum & fb"°ls. 20' long, 32' · · · "67 KAR:l\!ANN Ghia. Red '69 TOYOTA Corona, auto, -·H ti gt n. h ·--"' & r.t·--• els-here I I ·• pm 737-M49 un · n on ot:"ac '68 DODGE DART xlnt -nd. $3100. °" ~-_.... mast. $1175 fi'rm. Complete. · · "' xlnt cond. $700. \Verner's air, radkl, heater, S12X> pri SALE ·PRICE 842-8844 * (213) 592 5544 '""" o.>.J-O.>OV Don 't pay S.'~ 10 $1000 for a Xlnl cond. 645-7091 eves. '68 1''0RD Rancbero, beaut. Unkm '76. 16621 Pac Cst pty. 962-8765 · / • $975 Slerro or Quad System. \Ve oond. A/C, p/s, p/b. $1450. Hwy, Sunset Bch. opposite 1969.-"=~TO~Y;OT;.:.,A,-Co~ro-1~13-,-ta $3959 1 HtN'ne of the Viking'' Sports Special. 2 Door. Vinyl have them from 195 to $300, HOBIE 16• 7 mo., New cone.I. Call Tom M c Qu ist on , B of A. wgn-lllOO /·make 0 11 er. 1971 Chevrolet Monte Carlo top, 6 cyl, auto. Good con· name brands. Jlarnian Kar-~! 8•130xtras, trailer.55711 2190 900. 548-Tl23. MAZDA 58&-06'. 2, Lagona Hill• I 350 cld, 2bbl v.s engine tlition. 4 Ne\v !ires. By don, Concord, Dutt!, f'i1ira· j"'-eves; or -•70 TOYOTA pick-up. Lo '' DEAN LEWIS Po'vcr Steering o\vner. 551-ml days. Eves cont, Nikko, Sht'l"\vood. Gar· I =-'"ayo-'--.,"-7--.,....--~ mileage. Xlnt C.'Ond. nsoo.1----------1 TRIUMPtf PO'k"t!r Brakes, Di!K! Front -"::,:"l.;·34::,19"' o,· ,,,.~,=,""~- ran!, E!ectraphonic, Dyna. C-2Q, 5 hp engine,. needs 557-8212 aft 5 pm. * Mezda '.73 Rotary *I·-----_;__;___ AM·FM Radio 1925 DODGE 4 dr. XJnt --·•. MUSTANG '69 ~IUST ANG ?\1ach I. Ex· tras r<.!ust scll/?i-1ake offer. 53&-0605_ OLDSMOBILE -T ak A Sa "'Ork. •"750 or best offer. ~-A' Co d' I · -•N t.'v, e , n1pcx, nyo. ~ V $66 MONTH 1r n it on1ng $1500. Best oUir (n4\ BSR. and many o1h<'l'S. 67fr-0183; 675-7277 eves. ins 963 1968 Spitfire. Good con· Bucket Seals with Console 675-8907 days or ~~2719 Checlc our nc1v b01·n prices ERICSON 29, \Vhcel, loaded, 36 MC?NTl-IS OPEN L:EASE ditlon. Cati 557-8910·Ext. 21G ~ Brand New Whitewall Tires evenings. CUTLASS SUPREME 'TI before you buy! Easy Bristol, $13,950. FORD Van, xlnt cond, mags, \Vilt accept trade-nm between l PM & 3·30 PM Blue Ext. w/Black Vinyl Int.-0 ,68;:..::'0c"ha"'~'-,-,-.-.,-1-p-b,-a-u-to 4-dr HT. Air & power tl'rrns! 601 N. Anaheim Call 67f>-0558 custom int, FM stereo. CALI. MR. FRY 842-6666 ONLY · 45.000 mi. ... wndws. brks & strg. Vinyl. Blvd.. Anaheim. 535-7288; KITE with <-<>ils & trlr. Good $2100. Call Bill after 5 pm, Hunt •. Beach '70 TRIUMPll spit r ire. 1966 HARBOR Showroom Condition. $2695 trans, tape deck, xlnt cond, Xlnt. ?\fust sell. $2600. g1n1 Bolsa Ave., Weslmin-.,.. 549-4398 c---at $1195/oHer. 5.52-7110. 2131579-0 12 7 r1~·~·, t: cond. $425oroffer. 644-1732 Clean, lo mileage. Orig COSTA MESA ~9303 "'"~ ......,.., sl£'r 893-0501. '69 FORD VS deluxe Super owner. 5aJ--0!i60 wkdays, aft DAILY PILOT El\JPLOYEE '67 Dodge Dart 6, rrli, 2 dr, 714/644-4608 eves. Rice's TV Sales/Serv. Boats, $lips/Docks 910 Van can1per. elect. re(rig., MAZDA 5. weekends all day. • VOLVO 1971 Station PARKING LOT good transportation. $450. '68 OLDS Cutlass Supreme 1315 stove, tollet, pop top . o=-.:,;;;.o;;.""'7.'"-'-=, I wagon. \Vhite, auto. Xlnt 330 \V. Bay, Costa Mesa 552-8128 Auto Ir PIS P/B 1 Logan Ave., Costa Mesa LIMIT -22· lot power boat. S.15-3215 aft 5. '65 TRIUMPll Herald. XJn t or ..::=-='------' 0 ' • • formerly Mesa North Center Across from Newport body shape. Needs engine cond. 33•500 mi. S3344·55· Call ?\1argaret Greenman FORD owner Good cond. $1525. • Repair All Makes Island. Call 673-4075. • 1966 1 DODGE .!_,cyl,Cstic1·k1 17331 Beach BJ. 842-li66 wol'k. Sl.50. 673-3.577 Eves. 646-6424 aft 4 pm. e 642--4321 e 962-2073 • Used TV's For Sale van camper. •'NV· a Autos, Used 990 '68 FORD C Sq \\ PLYMOUTH CSEA Atembe.r . rcliablc, SLIP or DOCKING needed 675--8496 evt's or ""knds. '7 2 ?\1 AZ DA RX 2 . VOLKSWAGEN '66 CHEVY 9-pass station ntry r 'agon, f 47· Sch • 27 air, lo miles, warr good un· 1----------1 Orange Co. since 1961. or OOllf'r. Orange/tan int. AJ.t/FM ------~,..-~. -...-. '69 LTD & '5.S Pone.he wgn. 3 VS, Pis, ~lb, rl A •73 0 6 tla ' 5 * 6-14-5207 * A·~ W tod •68 st Xlnt ndio· (21.1) '69 V\V A t ti k 49 ooo · auto. fact air . (N~s 1 Ug ' see to apprec! GTX pen ys,;, lo .. l ~~~~~~~~~~i ~!'.v~·-~~·~n~~rof:'!'~I ·• · co on. . . uo s c. , m1. Make offer. $1290. Call after 6 PM 1 Blek S. or Jlaker 546-ti002 I' ~1778: New brakes. $1000 or offer. '548-3131 or 64&-0357 engine \\'Ork). $275. Call aft .,,,,kdys, .anytime sun. 19n Plymouth GTX, 440 21" color TV. UliF & VJ.IF. I llil WE PAY TOP BUY a Classic -1st Rotary Call aft 6 pm. 644-2117. BUICK ~~.w~ct:;434~r anytime GTa-1824. CJ.O., Au to trans, pwr '95. 21" B&\V TV';'""$2.5. 19'~ Transpoitillift -irh CASH _car !t1 US.A-~1912 R-100. '69 AUTO VW bug, Tune up SQUANDERER$ OF steering, P"T brakes. Ml/ portablt' "'/stand $35. All ~------'· ml Make oller. Call 832-9422 & new brake Ii~. GOod · ....... -~ ·~ •TON Chev~P.U. New ~ -MONEY _¥_.:.. EM/~"?.I stereo. vinyl top. have nice pictures:. 97!}-7~ t ••••••••••I \ MERCEDES BENZ , cond. Make offer. 642-2769 ·~ee~~CK & s~:~~Ws~~~ eng. Trans. rear eM. 348 Squander )'Our bucks on a .49 ?\-lust sell. $3100.00. Pb. B & W 21" cabinet, TV, 1' 1 1----------1 68 VW Bug, reblt cng, runs c 0 n d ., c 1 ea n , x 1 n t ~ii.,1 in. $500. 642-8705 aft Ford. Not $100, not ,150, but l -06750"~'°15=':::27:_al=tc::.r..:6;_· ---~ perfect $20. Call 833..-0863 Campers, Sale/Rent 920 for a.~ cars & trucks, just SQ USED g<;"Xl. '850. 557-6150 ask for mechanical cond. on e two big ones. Call : 673-6607 '66 FURY \vagon. p/brakes evenings ""IMPORT OWNERS calGI us for free estimates. cvcc":o·--------l owner. 548-l-489 aft 5pm. '64 Chevy Nova wagon after 5. & lll~ring, air, 1 owner car we have all size she& 10 ROTH CHEVROLET MERCEDES '71 SUPER Beetle, lo mi's. '71 RIVERIA $2900. Loaded, Never 't~:!: ~r otter. 197'1 GRAN Torino, yellow, $500. 646- 7364 . . Must sell 11'15 · d 68 000 ·1 -.,...='o=~=;.o:---white int. & lop. PIS. AIC, PONTIAC fit your truck. Over 60 ON DISPLAY Cal. I .;.., .. ,69 •968-m~~ ron • ' mi es. ,-;;;61 CHEVY V XJn ~ Ask fo• Sales Mn a """"""""" w:m · an. t con· 8,000 mi. 3,500. John Walsh, I S shells in stock at very lo1v n ger dition. Mag wheels. Call 979-4200 or 979-8527 eves. prices. Call 893..os73. 18211 Beach Blvd. Sharp New Car BAJA Blli -New interior. CADILLAC 642-53.i.3 I'--------' Huntington Beach Trade--ins -.new paint. Extras! $62.i ' 1972 FORD LTD, every xtra, ·n SIX Pac cabovcr, In1port 147•~1 Kl 9-""'I Ph· °'"3612 1951 CHEV. P.U. lmmac.!-1-own-, m .. ---·II-at on-. 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 truck , ••• , stove s•'nk, -ov.:i .).).) Coriling Jn Every Day · "',.,.. · "'' · ..,,, = ..... ....,. '72 CAO Cpe DeVille, gold See lo believe $795. Call (213) 54~2121·, 673-7436. ~~~sGoo~~; !:fcfc:·tr~~~ ~l~P~~W~ Ask About Our Uniqu e FANT:r~ &uNGD ITlON w/gold inter. Fully equip. weekdays after 5. 645'-1;>05. .67 FORD Convertible XL- DOGS: ~Ii Collie1 11i Min for tent trailer. 496-4123 If your car is extra clean. Used Mercedes Le11e $1075 * 673-8732 ~if'1 ii'sMa~ _P~i: t~U:~ CHRYSLER 500. Top cond. $8Ta. 84~1m Shep & 1·mlx, females. f' t Plans "-••91 N C see us irs · \VANTED _ V\Y Bus Body. Eves/v.•knds 586-2517. Days ----------1 or~ eves. Free lo grl home. 522-2413 •w. ustom 29B25AUERboBUICKI House of Imports '00 -'70. Call 64&-0163' after 642-3870 '68 IMPERIAL. Everything * * '71 TORINO Sq. Wagon Free to You 'TI PONTIAC Ventura JI. P/s, A/c Very clean. Z7,000 mi. Xlnt. cond. $2300. 963-2005 or C213) 437-7461 '68 PONTIAC LeMans con- vertible -New valve job. Best off<'r. Eves: 552--8549. RAMBLER 110-2:.30 pn1) Cam-r Shells-$100 Har r B vd. 6862 M ch 6pm on •'t' Runs good clean loaded low mileage below \VALLEY nf'efls home. Limited,..... stock. Get !hem Costa l\1esa 079.2500 an ester, Buena Park1 ,.o'°"'·o,...~-~----TAKE over S210/mo lease $1375 .. 675-3031. 497-2292. . boQk 892 2017 ' C k ho h b k h·1 th I t S93-0S73 on the Santa Ana Frwy '65 V\V. New reblt. engine & pymnt on 19TI all black · · · "63 RAMBLER Stat wgn, Gd 4 ocm~~d~ ~~ild ~!::~~: '1" 1 e ey as · · If'i1PORTS \VANTED 523-7250 !ires. ~lust sell. '5 5 0. Eldorado or buy for $6395. COMET GREMLIN \'."Ork or lL"llnsportation car. &l 4 -40SS Cycles, Bikes Orange County's ·n MERCEDES 280 SL 979-3616. Call 548-7834 or 646--4750. 1----------Sl75/best offer. Lvlng tov.'tl. YEA R old, female rockapoo, 1 __ Sc_oo_t_er_s ____ m..;;;;: BILL ~:;.~~~OTA Metallic blue, both hard & ~·1"'0'-"V100v"--,-.-_-,,,-p-e-,-. -Po~p. '60 & 'til Cadillaes. Both in '62 cor,U:."'T, needs starter, '71 GREMLIN 3 speed, air, Need cash. 963-3912 ·aft soft tops A/C aU dci"-e top/tent Xlnt ""nd ne"· running COM. New rubber. $125. $"95. · _6 ·:<Ptll=· -------Needs fenced y n r d s . 18881 Beach Blv ' · · .... · · '-" ·• I ~ ·" 6 i5-l6.ll4. H. Beach Ph. 847-85.55 reaturt>s. Imm sale to high-f:'tlgill('. Make offer, 833-1318 make ofter. 842-8376. • 963-2607 • ~--*;;.c'::'>--<1"-"1"8::.1..:*:...._ __ Nt><.'d a •·J'ad"? Pla<..'t? an ad! CUTE shuggy '"l-lusky-Poo," JUNK CARS WANTED est offer oMverGWXIB · 497·l!IM A . .:."..:'•;;•::.• .:.N..:e;;w;_ __ ....:..9:.80:...;.A;;u:.;t.:.os::'..;N.:.;:.•w:;.... __ _:9::8.:.0_' .Ac::":.:'"::':..' .;.N;;e.:.w:...._ __ ....:.,98:;0:....:;A;;u;;l::••::·..:N.;.e:.w:_ __ _;,9.:,8::0;;A::::ut.:,o:;;••:...:.:N:::e:w ___ ,.;9:.:l:::OI small. 1 yr. Tntelli~nt & I pay top SS lor junk or lovable. 552-9691. wrecked cars. 714/547-4365.1----------1 4YRotdCocknpoo&.or5mo CZ WANTED -VW Bus Body 1970 ~GB-GT. \Vire ~·heel-;, old cl au go ht c r . Need '00 _ '70. Call 646--0163 aftet ~1?,'~769s~ape. Pri,ced to phlyma1c. j.l&-8791 6 7 pm. , 1 '!AL!' "I • t I I BIC"CLE SALE 69 ?\fGB GT, am/fm radio, " • 1...a }ra,.01-. vr. o 1 • ~ Autos, Imported 970 , .. ,·,-"'hi s, p,·re11,· ,,·-s, .·I••t All sho1s. Lict'n!!f'd: Nt'Cds NE\V 10 SPEED ITALIAN • " .. "' " good home. 642-58!~ BICYCLES $59.95. ll<!aeh AUSTIN AMERICA oond. 6<>--0881. [ ....... _ llB Cits 852 liURi\IF.SE kittens. Sho!s. ll44-2'1!12 ask for Tl:'rry. 675-:IT!G un S:?.O Jllll. Dogs 854 Bicycle;, 800 E. Balboa PORSCHE Blvd., Balboa 6/:)-7282 AUSTIN 69 An1erica '"auto"l---------- 1972 KA\VASAKI 90 Looks Nr. Nu, runs beaut. 1960 PORSCHE Carre ra Only 600 rniles, runs perfect $2700 or mak If M t for stre<.-'l or dlrl. Best ofle•. only 23,000 mi. S 5 9 5. · . e o er. us 837-9696. see to believe (1) 793-7384 Bell helmet. It 6 * 5.51-5151 • BMW o:•::...:;_· -.63~PO-RSCHE-~--- l972 11onda 70cc SL.-Like nu, ---·-·-·-----~-........ ---IGood cond. Call after 5:30, $300. LEASE A 645-4575 1'170 IOOcc Cimalli -$315 19'' Sch\\•inn girls Varsity 'j6 PORSCHE COUPE, reblt tll'S)>d, 110· &15-4203. 1973 BAVARIA ~~pain!. xlnt oond .. SUZUKl 90 . .1700 miles. 8 [-~~------- PUPPY WORLD. 100 Mixal speed, full kil, bell" than CREVIER BMW RENAULT Pups. Buy & !It'll pups, also nc"" 545--0524. Pit Bull 'f('rrif'r, Irish Set· S.i.les. Service· Leasing !er. Cockapoo, Porn, 1972 YMtAHA Enduro -3)8\V,lst St.,SantaAna ~ Chihuahua, T-cup Poodle, 3.000 mi. Xlnt cond. S700. 83S.3171 • . Shepht'rd. Open Eve 5 . Duane Pratt, 962--SSTI. 531-5!127 GIRLS OCl-1\VINN Stingray V:ialt our new home! 6Jhj1~ 11;a1~r ~:~e.Sa~~ci~ ~~~b~. ~s~ ~4~. s t.. & FROM FRANCE dlsposilio11. Nice pct . Needs T\VO '72 llondas CBTh0-4. Is !his popular '71 Renault. roon1 ,i:.: nl!f'n. Goorl home One n1aroon, 1 gold. Low Popular price, too. 10 DAY primary 1..•onttrn, 11rice 2nd. 1ni"s. Call aft 6PM 545-2:"122 ROY CARVER, Inc. FREE TRIAL EXCHANGE. AKC •~g. Call ~15 * BSA 650 * GUSTAFSON OBEDIENCE class to sta11 Good cond. $400. 234 E. t7lh SL L1·ncoln-Mercury in the Newpor1/lr..-ine area Call after ti:30, 536-7490 Costa l\Ie1a 546-4444 \V t'"d n es day·Apl'll 18th, •71 CL 450 Honda CAPRI 16800 Beach at Warner •••••••••••••••• • "AT CUSTOMER REQUEST" • • • • • REPEAT OFFER • ••••••••••••••••••• DON 'T MISS YOU CANNOT . -PAYMORE -THAN: f----117~: 30~m~. ~Oi!·~nit~o~al~l=d~~'t:::::::~·~~~-!'.J~=:i---..::;:~;:----j l{untingtop_ f3cach I over an10.. • • 8 84~2l3).S92..s5441--- AOORABLE n1lniaturc poo. SUPER DEAL on a super 'TI ~ ''Home of the Viking'' THE FOLLOWING CARS APPLY ONLY :· dle puppies 61ii \\-eeks old -Kaw 175. i\1()Vifig rhis week. TOYOTA 3 only $35. ea. ki ·~ • 557--0389 As ng ...,.:>. 67l-4642. * 'n HONDA 350 Cl. * UIASA ...Apoo, rare gold • Supe,..Clean. 7000 mil * BRAND NEW i female. 12 "'kl!. Champ * 642-Sln * "ock, AKC rog. All shoe. '73 CAPRI • st,1-5.158 Moto r Homes STUD available. AKC regiii:. Sa le/Rent 940 Immediate De livery WHAT'S A Peking.,.. Blond "' 'bl>ek .....:;:.;::.:.2.:.J':;T;;R;_A_V_CO__ GUSTAFSON mast< & white markig• Ph ..,,. UIS<.'O VERER Lincoln-Mercury .COROLLA? 642·5.111. ""' •. ·'''" CONTINEN'l'A' 0 T ... , u; u.;, 16800 Beach at \\'arncr hat's 'J:oyota'!'! dcluxe se· Ab~BLE, __ bl,~ck hnlbted ll' PRfl>E &e JOYS fluntlngton BeAch dan, and yml°ll find this '72 •=v pupp~ -eac • VAN CON\t:RSl~NS 842-a44 * (213) 592.5544 model J""t Mgbt fM ,..,.. 552--7552 :'··lt1 e Scivlce e Rentals 10 DA·Y FREE TRIAL EX· ''Home of the Viking" TOY Poodle Female, 20 mo. * Danmar Inc:. * CH~NGE. Chomp i; .... , AKC. 125. .~. H bo RI d G G ·n CAPRI 1600 eng. Med GUSTAFSON 536-492.4 .....-i ar r " " • • metallic brn. Decor inter., 1RJS1t Setter; fem!lle, 1 n10R, Next t!'3b~ D:itsu.n reclining ~ats, n m 11 m Llncoln-Mercury ahow quality. AJ<C, Ohan1p. 1 -,,:;::::;;;_;:_,;:::::..=~!'....-t1lerco. Xln't cond. $1850. 16800 BcAch at Wtn1lt!:r ·~ li5. 645--4374. Ren t A Motor Home 5'18-0454 aft 5 pn1. lluntlrcion Stach UCUSll BUI , D"1'$ l.!j:5t2o55Mf.-- ' I PINTOS IMAVERICKS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' . • THAT'S RIGHT FOLKS ••• $99 OVll DEALER INVOICE PLUS $90 DIALER PREPARATION, FACTORY RmNTION FEE, SALIS TAX & LICENSE I I . 7 • San Clemente Today's Final EDITION VOL. 66, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA TUESDAY., APRIL 3, 1973 TEN CENTS Boycott Cuts Meat Sales on Co.ast O,ily 200/o • By JOHN ZAILER '"But my five teenagers will be eating -.... _QL.,_D61tr l.lllLSltff _____ ~fisb," she said. Some people are calling this week's na-"Of course I'm in agreement with the tlonal meat boycott the biggest protest in boycott," said another shoppef at Market American history. But on the Orange Basket in Costa Mesa. "Oh, this ham- Coa!t Monday, it seemed something less burger? than that. (Related stories, Page 18) "Well, J1ve always given my husband a "Yes, I'm on the meat boycott," said a meat patty for breakfast .and I don't womab shopper with three,~· of think J coul<l stop now. But we'll be hav- hainburger in her cart. "My collie won't ing fiSb for diMers." eat anytlilng els.e so I've got to feed her "I haven't really decided yet," said a meat. woman who was lingering in froot of the "--'Ott AE RIA L VIEW -This was scene at• E~ Monte Chemical Company in Costa Mesa shortly after explosion ripped the W. 17th Street plant about 3:16 p.m. Monday. Water spout (center) is from plant's water line, severed by blast. At upper left across 17th Street is Claval plant, ' . roast section. "I guess I won't buy anything today. But I have to eat. I don't know bow long I'll hold out .~· Perhaps .beca:use of shoppers like these, Orange Coast meat sellers reported an average sales drop of only 15 to 20 percent Monday. Of the dozen ouUets C!lnlacted, only Von's ·Market 'in Huntington Beach · reparted.8 large drop in its sales, and lts estimate or a 35 percent fall in sales:was still not near the 50 percent drop ' reported nationwide, _ · . ~en are_ generaUyy pjlorti<e Tall<ing tO numerous ~ s ud llho]>-oHhe tdltoh boyrott,-J!ot>mllll,)"are not - pers Mooday, two distinct impressions committed to It. Of the ~ shoppers con· wereMprodtetuced: ~· • lit the taeled at ¥artel Buket in Costa Mesa, -ar managen ....,..,. e 0 -1 ed be bo 10 boycott ilnd·dtio'rthinl: it wlll.a«omplilh I stnlli Y support t ycott, muCh beyond.Cl~ meal to rat..,,~ were either wlded ded about it or tryi~g shelves. 0'Tbil: whole thing waa ~t<d to find hallway lfO!llld and only lil'e by the newepapers and ~-b!ievtlioo," we~ oppoced to the idea outrigbt. complained one man·wtwr was~ of "I cOuldo't find anything t could ar- many grocer$/BUI it's a bUnch of ford," said Craig Hill after checking the hogwash." ,..., meat counter closely. 0 1 buy just for n -. . . .. Thieu Gift Refused · By Official By JOHN VALTERZA Of "" o.ttY PW.t JlllH A snubbed and defeated Dr. earl Mclntjre stalked away from the gates of the Western White House Monday night Hvld over South Vietnamese o£ficials' refusal 'to accept a wooden plaque with the word "Victory" on it. . " ~·s ~ word thev tear most " said tJte· liWiiidinlniiltr il~aliill·llour '·lilidt 'lildali.follftM Ille 'march to the Prsldenllil tes. (Rela~ atory Page 3) . -' Blmnli\t """'1 police ofllclals far "glv· Ing Jllllll FO!llja ...,.. courtesy than us." the New Jeney mlnl8ter llnally led his 130 supporter.a back across a bridge over the 'San.Diego.Freeway to an empty lot wi..re a night-time rally oontinued. The evening bad been billed as a celebration In tribute to Thieu. a n d MclnUre cheerfU.lly told hjs foliowers that he and the leadibg members of the South Vietnamese government were close friends. . "I am confident that we'll present this plaque to President 'lbleu or some suitable re;n.sentalive ton i g b t 1 ' ' Mc~e ~d 1arl)'. in the~v~. Public Sl!ety Director Clifford Murray wu the llO"betw.... but later In tbe evening .became the focal point or Mein.tire's ·wrath . . Murray contlct.ed White House of- fici als about the Intended gift, then'those officials shifted the reapoosihillcy over to the South Vietname9e delegation on hand 'for a dinner attended by President Nixon and Thieu. · The South Vietnamese replied that it would be "Inappropriate'' for them to ac· cept. which was evacuated following the.explooion. Iiuiustna1· btii!din'g°,(ltp- per right) bad doors blown out and apartlnent units (bottom)~ ~at· tered by explosion . ' ' ' . · , 1 • That was the news that greeted Mcintire a few-dozen yards from the gates at a spot where demonStratora ·must stop and proceed no farther. , Mcintire told Murray: "I am m,)'SClf and all the packages arc too big. ls thnt part or the-boycott ?" There "'·ere. ho"·cver, some wittl slrong opinions both for and cu;alnst the boycott. "I can affofd any or this I "·anted." , said J . J . \Volff, a retired businessman "'"ho supJ)Orted the idea of boycott. "But these prices are just out of tine. "I'm a .Republican." he added, "but T think President Ni xon should have called !See BOYCOTI', Page 21 u n.Y PILOT llllft. ..... FRUSTRATED AT GAT E Dr. Carl Mci nti re determined to go to that gate. I have that right." "No you don't," Murray replied . "My instructions are to keep you out and that someone will come out from the Whlt e House." "He came at me with fire and 1 brimstone,'' the weary police official said lateL__ "I'm sure that it Wis a ni8tter or honor with Dr. Afclntlre, because he felt so cer-- tain that the gift would be received,'' ht added . "it was rather sad, really," Afurray observ,ed. But !h,e wooden plaque was no t the only gift stiu911ed by the South Vietnamese in San Clemente. One devoted Mcintire follower wenl out to her back yard earlier in the day and picked some or her special tangc lns for President Thieu. Mcfntir e carried the bag of fruit as well as the plaque. But the wold-be recipient from lndochlna didn't want the tangelos, either. * .* * * * * Mesa Holocaust Kills Two T-hieu Atta~ked Survivors of Plant Blast Com fHl re It tO Bomb Orange Coast We ather ClCar skies throufh Wednesday, but continued gusly winds of 25 to 30 miles per hour is -what the weather service is predicting. Highs in the 70s at most beaches, rising lo 75 Inland. Lo1-tonight 50. ' . lNSmE T ODAY Actitrist actress Jatie Fmida, winntr of an O&car, has beetl 1t0tninated for auother award - tl1U une from returning 1)1'i!on· ers of war. And iC's not tha.t complimentary. ~··· stotv on Page 4. " • ll·t• .. " It l Opposing Fac tions Hi t Viet Head ' r '.' , • Thieu blasts from the House floor , Fiery fem·libber Bella Abzug (().N.Y.), picked up the ball and insisted that the joy fcJt by Ainericans at the return of the • prisoners of war "has dulled our senses and reaction to (Nixon's ) meeting with this dictator." ~postwar summit confe r e:nce between the presidents of the United States and SOOth \(ietnaQ'.L ended" in San Clemente early this afternoon with an atmosphere of cordiality set at the verf beginning. President Nixon nnd South Vietnam'I Nguyen Van Thieu · reportedly covered the gamut of issues affecting their na1 • ~MMIC"'I ·---_. .....,... ,... ' ~ 1!'"'11"""'91 II ,.,..nee 11•1t lltf' "" lltctN t S--rt 11-ta S'9dl ~ l~t Tmvbi..t 11 """'" " w .. "'" • preS!ure and a broken distilling column Gerritz .. id he ,,., in the lab area at about 4:afa , . "rrejkrt11Jr'1*tllllndler:-t1lon~:wan seal must have caused the explosion the back or the building when th& ex-' A ~ ellenilcaL Worker, Robert thl5 pirate to take money rrom our which blew a ~y.7~!oat hole In the roof ploslon and "all kinds of flame" ripped Oavidoon, ~7. of Vent11ro rtmalna ' in ahore.s," declmd Rep. Robert F. Drtnan ·ss-Secma11 ftoualltt-"Zl<:.t.riexr--1 plained the IMuea In Jenera! tcrma Mon day afternoon at a b{"eflnK whtch rono'"' Mllttc#t 14 AMI L"'*rs ll . 4 Wl'Mll'I Ntw'I 11·1' ............ or the building. , the building ,apart from the industrial actious coodlUon today at Hoag's In· (ft.Mass.). - Gerrltz, one of four . cmploycs .of the (See BOMBS. Page II ' (~ CAUSE, Pap I) • 1111 outburll led off an hour of anti· ed an elaborate ....,.ptlon !or Thieu at (See TIDEU, Page I) • ' :-1 • 2 DAILY PILOT SC April l973 . Coatsa& Exenaptioa Dana PQin t ./ ~ .... l • -.,_ . ,t ~ 1t1IBg-on ~. T rus tee Won't Run Claim Schedul~d Stephen Smith of Dana Point, trustee or the Capistrano Unified School District since a special election I a s t year, has announced he will withdraw from the April 17 school board election. . An attorney ln Mission Viejo. ~m1th said he wants to spend mo re time 'with hjS law practice and his family. citing re- cent trustee study sessions concerning the sCbool budget, the' upcoming election • and "a 'lot·of·1'ial worku as "collectively -too time-consuming." - He said he will finish the balance or his term which ends in July. His trustee po.~t was vacated by Robert Dahlberg of Dana Point last spring. After Dahlberg's resignation the prob- lem-Plagued Dana Point trustee position ' lay vacant Until a special election late ln the summer of last year resulted in Smith's election. · The lawyer's withdrawal means that two trustee posts will not have incumbent candidates. Veteran trustee Fred Newhart Jr. of San Juan Capistrano is not running, either. • Smith was elected by a strong show of ~ by voters in' bis home district in the special election. . His withdrawal from the race now ' leaves two men seeking the post-which represents Dana Point and the coutal sections of Laguna Niguel. Louis Boitano and H.C. "Chuck" Pierce both will vie for votes in the April 17 d~Oll. I J ' r • • r ·/ I I~ ( • • • . I . ' • • ' . ~ ., By CANDACE PEARSON ot ?flt OtllY f>lltt St... , AVCO C.Ommunity Developers' claim of exemption from a coastal building permit fo~ work. on up to 4.73 acres near Salt Creek Beach in Laguna Niguel will be voted ori. April 16 . South Coast Regional Zone ConserVa- t C.:--..t.ion Board commi&sioners heard a lengthy presentation'by AVCO represen· t3tiv~, t.h·e1r · .supporf1rs and their op- position Monday in Long BeiCh. The commission has jurisdiction over development within 1,000 yards of mean high tide 'line in Orange and Los Angeles counties. It was created by the passage of Proposition 20. . State rules governing the commission require that it have a staff recom· mendation on an exemption application before voting. GUESTS OF HONOR -Soulh Vietnam President state dinner hosted by President and Mrs. Nixon at Nguyen Van Thieu and his wife are guests at a the Western White House in San Clemente. Executive director Melvin Carpenter said Monday following the often con- flicting hearing he didn't have a recom- mendation yet. The April 16 commission meeting will be at 9 a.m. at Long Beach Harbor District headquarters. -~~~~---~-~~~--=---~--~~~~- FromP.agel 'IT WAS LIKE A BOMB' . •• From Pagel THIEU ... Developers can apply for exemption if ----af'fer Nov. 8 and before Feb. l they did substantial work, incurred substantial liabilities and acted in good fai th on a building permit or equally final approval by another agency. Richard Weiser, AVCO executive vice portion of the 25 by 150-foot, two-story believes in miracles. the Western White House structure. "My new desk was supposed to be Ziegler said that the two men "'·ould ~Meats 'lf d Other eyewitnesses said the explosion delivereQ this afternoon," she said. "It discuss U.S. assistance in the redcvelop-Pi -ere ---was-a ~slow...one.'.~ ... in..thaLth e name_could_ was-to-be--put"'i'ight-there·.---..-facing-the--ment-of-Soutb Vietnam and other issues be seen before the blast was heard or window and ag.i'mst it. I would have been of mutual interest. president, told the commission the com- pany considers the entire 16 parcel develop ment one "interrelated"· project. All tracts were included in one ap-- plication. He said all final tract maps had heen approved by the county by Nov. 8 and 10 percent of total development costs, about $10 million of $97 million, had been ex- pended. . ,Jn Home Thefts. felt. killed " sh uJ led . . h Joseph Urquidi, 23, was in unit 12 of an ___ . • . e SPf'.C a poin~g to t e He would not be more specific, adjacent building when the explosion oc-knife J.ike shards of glass which lay on however', stressing that more statements curred. The blast destroyed p & G the sidewalk and as far as 15 feet back would be forthcoming at the conclusion :Jn Mesa, Viejo Engineering, a motorcycle specialties into the tiny shop. • of the talks. Deputy State Attorney General Jeffrey Freedman pointed oU.t there are two parcels AVCO already has sold to others for development and others that it may sell. Freedman said he didn't think AV- CO could apply for vested rights on su~h parcels and that future purchasers would have to apply for their own building permits. shop. "God was on my side," Mrs. Stewart Both heads of state were scbeduJed to Sheriff's officers in t:wo Orange County 'locations aren't too happy about the meat boycott and they seem to have a legitimete beef. "I w.as over by the ban~saw when I sighed. make a joint statement on the talks this saw this dark red b,all of fir_e out of the An unidentified plate glass salesman artemoon. comer or my eye, ' he said. "It was , . , coming fairly slowl y; it didn't seem in· trekking up 17th Street measured the The conference -the first such official state visit ever held at La Casa Pacifica Weekend raids on homes in Mission Viejo and the COSta Mesa area netted burglars more than 100 pounds of frozen meat and investigators have linked the break-ins to the effect of the nationwide stantaneous by any means. opening and proµtised the printing firm's "I hid under the drill press. Smoke oymer the glas..i would be replaced by -began near noon Monday amid. a flashy reception generally seen only in the nation's capital. started to come in and I could smell an nightfall. acrid smell. I could feel the compression Elsewhere in the four·block area, Freedman also q u e s t i o n e d Weiser about the exclusion of 30 acres of townhouse home development lrom the wave for sure and then I heard the glass businesses and homes as far away as breaking everywhere." Monr~vla Street on th~ west were l~king As 500 Orange County residents looked on as speciai guests, the two Presidents participated in a troop review and then -watclfed-'"as -a-21=-gun-salute-ru1~-the exemption. · mer:!t ~yco!~id burglars broke the lock The explosion was so devastating tha t for _wmdow .glass, or were boarding up "Sund:iy-:i-a~· freezer-owned by·-John-JLJipQed_gff _~~~u~ly......,all e~~ag~ doors_ gapmg openings. "If this is an interrelated project, why wasn't that included," he asked. Weiser sa1a-the ·roml)any would, "if1'01.I lik:e:" · Henry Ayres, 48, of 981 w. Wtlson St., and shallered every window at 817 W. -1f ---{( 1f costa Mesa and carried off 60 pounds of 17th .st., a small ~-sha~ co~pl~x of air skies of the compoWld with blue-white receoUy butchered meat. proximately 20 1n~ustrial bu1ld1ngs ad· Intruders had earUer forced open the 1acent to the chem.1c~l company. . garage door at the home of catherine ~e o~ the bu1~d1ngs,. Stress ~ehef Krajnick, 39. of 24782 Sandoval Drive. Eng1neer1ng._ was 1.mmed1a~ly adjacent Mission Viejo and removed 50 pounds of to the chem~cal plant. The impact blew frozen meat from her freezer. down an entu:e wall. Officers said the Krajnik family was .Joshua Rivers, a carpenter at , b t the dinner table while the in· Pt~e<;raft Shutter Company, t '! o 1 t~sJer! were busy at the freezer. bu1ld1ngs. east on ~7th from the chem1~al . , "lf this keeps up," a senior sheriff's in· pla~t. said even his company looked like ' . .d lod .. h 10 a disaster area. , ~esl!gator .sa1 ay , we may a~e "It looked like somebody had thrown a ; steak out every ~ty home with a bomb into our place;" he said. "It was : well-stocked freezer. really mangled whal' with the beams and A ..A. * lights falling." l--l N Rivers doesn't recall what fell from the From Pagel ~BOYCO'IT ... : a rollback on these prices three months : ago." : "Of course the prices are way too : high," sa id a woman who disagreed, •<so : you can see I don't have any ·meat. We : can only afford meat two days a week . ceiling and cut his head open but he does _recall seeing one whole _$~de _of his com· pany's building go to pieces. · "At first I thought it was a sonic boom or something but then the whole side of the building came in." he said. "We won't be back in 1business for a while, l guess." Mary Carnahan was visiting her sister, Pat Thomas in one of the apartments at 833 W. 17th St. when tbe blast rocked the building. The residences are located just 100 feet from the industrial area in which the chemical plant was operating. From Pagel CAUSE. •• smoke. , President Nixon spoke first , welcoming T,hi~u to his "house of peace" (La Casa Pacifica) and praising "the courage and leadership" of Thieu. tensive care unit. "There are ... difficuJties in building a "IJ the doors had been open and the peace after 25 years of war have tom vent hadn't been turned on, the explosion your country apart," Nixon conceded, but · h added, "We now find that all of the mig t never. have happened," theorized American forces have returned and the $13,000 Blaze In San Oemente Blamed on Heater Ed Lewis, a fire battalion chief. people of Viet.nam have the strength to After probing the nature of the 3: 16 defend their own independerice and their A predawn blaze caused by a faulty p.m. blast which rocked the city's west right to choose their government in tbe wall heater heavily damaged portions of side and created conditions reminiscent years ahead... a San Clemente apartment building and of the London blitz during World War JI, Thieu's re!iponse to the welcome ,,,.as could very well have led to Joss of life, fire department investigators today have similar in tone to the President's Fire Chief Ron Coleman said this morn- the following explanation for the ex· greeting. ing. . plosion: Theiu. like Nixon, alluded to previous The $13,000 fire erupted at the five.unit The-three-employes had been setting talks the two held four -years-·ago at building located .. at.105 Boca de la-Playa up an exotic methane reclaiming process Midway when the first pieces of the Viet-shortly after 4 a.m. in Apartment 2 of the inside the plant when steam pressure namization Program· were being structure. The blaze quickly crept assembled through the walls into the unit directly used to heat the vats became excessive. "Mr . President," Thieu said in a thick above, where tenant Jerry Lundy was After turning on the vent valve to Qriental·French accent, "over three asleep. reduce pressure the three men closed yea rs ago, when we met at Midway, the C.Oleman said that the smell or smoke the doors and went outside waiting war was raging. We laid down together awakened the tenant and Lundy then for the Pre ssure to dissipate. the foundations for a promising solution phoned in an alarm· and roused his Instead pressure began to build inside to the Vietnam conflict that came to be neighbors. and the vapors found a source of ignition. known as the Vietnanfization . "Fires like this often result in What touched off the vapors is unknown "This made possible a peace with fatalities, but, fortunately, this time the but investigators believe it may have honor . . . occupant woke up and everything worked been a water heater. "While the road to lasting peace is still out fine," Coleman said. Firemen said the blast brought the an arduous one," Thieu added, "a page Eighteen v o 1 u n teer and full'time wall down on Leenerts' .body and blew has been turned with the conclusion the firefighte rs battled the blaze which was In his presentation, Weiser con- centrated on the dates of tract map atr proval for residential, recreational and commercial developments. Wrell Long o( the . Environmental Coalition of Orange Courity1 charaed that AVCO ·didn't have bulldlng permit& in timtr"and thus didn 't ·have vested rights on at least six projects. Weiser didn't deny the Jack of building permits on .A V:CO!a.,development of..a-34--- acre county beach and ~r~ lob: a-72- acre private recre•tional pro1ect, a golf course, two. commercial areas and one residential tract. Mrs. Long, ·who said the coalition represents 56 groups in Orange County, as~ed ihe coJ'nplission· to deny the ex- eplption on those si.i projects and require AVCO to pay a fine for working without commission approval after Feb. 1. She emphasized the coalition wasn't trying to stop the company from develotr ing its land, but rather whether the com· pany shou!CI. be immune from permit re- quirements. Quality of the project involved-can't be debated in exemption hearings; but can be ~rmit public hearings. 130 Students To Get Trip To_ Capital A group of 130 fifth grade students and their teachers from Concordia and Richard Henry Dana El~lnentary schools Monday won permission to -take a one- day field trip to Sacramento in early June to visit historical landmarks and meet legislators. The trip was approved by Capistrano Unified School District trustees and the blessing marks the first time a district field trip Will be taken by air. Students at both schools have been studying state government, and C.OOcor- dia Principal Charles Bossard, who presented the idea to the board, said it would be a positive method ol ac· QUiifitingycnmgsters with Blrbranaies Of government and would "instill an at- titude of respect and appreciation for our democratic principles.'' The total cost ,of the trip for Concordia students would be $26 per person, Bossard said. A sum which has already been pledged by parents of 75 percent of the individual students. The cemainder, he said, would be rai!"- ed through the efforts of parents in the form of donations and by organizing such fw:id·raising activities as a paper and bot· tie collection drive, a cake walk and other Pl'A activities. Under the state education code, students cannot be excluded from participating in field trips .acbeduled for regular school. days because of the in- ability to pay, according to Bossard. He added that a 14-member-PTA-com· mittee which explored the feasibility of the trip for the students was confident of obtaining the approximately $2,000 need· ed for Concordia. Concordia students have scheduled June 13 and 14 for their trip. Richard Henry Dana leaders have chosen June 7. They will leave Orange County Airport at 7 a.m. and return at 5 p.m. A bus will conduct them through the state capital to the governor's mansion, Sutler's Fort, a museum and to the Capitol building itself where the pupils will see legislative committees in ac-- tion. • "Bui I think a boycott isn't a good : Idea. All it will do is throw people out of • work without doing any good," she said. • Nancy Story, a motherof three. felt so : strongly in favor of boycott, that she : stopped her shopping to try to dissuade : one woman who was about to make a : meat purchase. • "Don't you think that's just too much : to pay?" she asked. and the other shop. · per apparently agreed because she : returned her meat. "I was sitting in a chair when we heard th is big boom and the ceilin._: came down." she said. "I picked up the baby and we got the othe r kids out o( there." Penny Wild of Perris, a secre~ary for Vance Roofing C.Ompany of 837 17th Street -just tY.'O doors \\'est of the ex· plosion site and beyond the Tho1nas' home-said she couldn't believe the force Riley some 50 feet through a wire rein-Paris Agreement." brought under control in 10 minutes. forced grapestake fence . 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;i Firemen described the m o d e r n • •·J hope all th is does some good," Mrs. : Story reflected afterwards. "J'm willing : to eaT cheese or beans~ or wlfatever it : takes but these prices have g9t to come : down." of the blast. "I \Vas silting at my desk some 15 feet · from the front of the one-story office building and talking on the phone. All of chemical plant as "one of the best built bui~dings in Costa Mesa." Iron ically, its main product was said to be a flame- proof resin. The building fea tured a lift-(lff ex· plosion roof, eight·inch thick concrete walls, and a special hazard sprinkler system yet it was completely demolish· ed . THANK YOU, ERASTUS! It occurred to us the otlier clciy tliat -we owe a lot to ail innovator In our carpet industry who operated about 150 years ago. Here are some facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW: •• DAILY PILOT a sudden there was a noise like I've never heard before and glass hit me in the race,'' Mrs. \Vild sa id. Marshall fire chief of Costa Mesa for •Born 1814, W. Boylston, Mass.• Poor famUy, req uired to work at age !he past nine years, described the ex· ''It sounded like a bomb going off." her plosion as the "most devastating" blast IO as farm hand and clerk. • Genius at math and mechanics. • At 23 ' ! • ! I ; ' . ' • . CO--\\'Orker Jack La Belle, 43. said. "La in the ci ty's history. Id • t d J f J e J t d I 1· I 'nl• °''"" coa$1 DAILY P1Lo1 •• 1111 .,.1c.11 Belle was taken to Hoag Hospital for yeors o , 1nven e oom or oce. nven e revo u 1onary power oom 1• comllllltd 1"' Nirws·P•ni, I• Plltllllhd 11v treatment of face and neck cuts he said ''Realistically, you're talking about a for BRUSSELS a nd W ILTON carpets. This created a domestic carpet in· ""°''""co.it Pu1111"'1"' Compt11v. s~ occurred when the plate glass windo\v loss of $750,000 to $1 million and that ,.,. lld111on1 ••• MllsMll, Mot!Cl•Y lflnlvelll blew ,·n. doesn't include the loss of income to dustry, and virtually eliminated foreign competition. • Founded BIGE· Ftlcl•v. for COii• MDI, NtWPOt! 8N(ll, th b . Hunll119ton B•11C111Jtoun11111 v111i.r, uo;i11111 The force of the blast \vcakened the ose usinesses that were disrupted." 1LOW ,CARPET MILLS in C linton, Mass. • Great economist. one of small ::"j!'m.~s;:::~ ~.i:o~. c~io:~ st ructure and six employes or the roofing The shock. wave of the .b!g b!ast group found ing MASSAC HUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY at "'1"'" " .,.11....., •111 d• ,. ,..,...,,._~l--li rm-wei:e.cvacuated.as-wei:e.res.iclcnts..oL_?amag!Rednsrneiin;ou:;;s~ly',;25=ne:;c,;;•r~b:~Y,;'"~dus;;;tr;;•;;;es;;, -~-le------~~;.!:._:. r11e prl11Cl1NI P11b!lt1111111 ·p11n1 11 ., m we11 the bungalOi\' hoines ~ the only struC· 1irctmrii'ig five ma1or co~pan1es., Heiv1~l os on 1nl 861. • D1edl17 a.r strNt, col!• M.w. c.111om11, n.». lures between the stucco office building . damage. ~as at an adJaCent 1ndustnal ERASTUS: • Robtrt N. Wt-4 and the blast. ~condominium where the destructive for~ ''"Id"'' •nd Pw11an., tumbled ,,,.alls, wrenched all the garage J•ck R. Curl1v Dick Ki!groe, 38• 0 professional doors, and shattered every window in vk• Pmldtnl •l'ld G-r•I ,,.,.,,.w motorcycle racer and f i be r g 1 a s s sight MY GRANDFATHER THANKS YOU! MY FATHER THANKS YOU! I THANK YOU ! MY Th°"':;1.!''"" manufacturer, was away '1·hen 'the ex· The explosion also made a shambles or plosion happened. I Thom•• A. Murphin• ive residences next to El ~1onte M•Mtlno E'dllor \Vhen he came home. his apartment at Chen1ical Company and sh.ittered glass Ch•r'•• H. Looi R1Jt.,4 '· N•ll 833 \V . 17th St. had been blown to shreds. nnd se t oft burglar alarms all over the ~~'•en~~~~!!~• Bob Vallette. 23, "'ho had been staying city's wcstside. --~ with Kilgroe, said he had just finished Gu rd d b · d 1r· 1 J nd lOS Nort.h El C•ml110 a,111, t2117l b .1d. he . . hi . a e Y tn us 18 emp oyes a COii• M~>O ~r Strttl Nnrport l .. cll: Jm N..,.ort lolii...tte """""lrlflOll 1 .. e11: 1'*7S •MCll toul1~1rd UICllMlt IMCll: ttt ,_..., A- , .. .,... 17t41 "42-4121 C ... lfle4 Adwrthhlt '414 611 a-c ....... •••••• 1¥l · l t lo44H re u1 1ng t engine 1n s van when the Costa Mesa police against looting, the explosion occurred. blocked-off area today Is being Inspected "I'd just turned the ignition key on by teams or Insurance Investigators. lire when the explosion blasted me right out department officials and building depart· the door." he said, taking Lhe event in ment oEficials. stoic stride. "We had a strtitegy rneeUng today to Further ""'est on 17th Street, printer determine the exact cause of the blast. Dave Stella of Orange sal~ "I was about \Ve want to get into the dlsUllatJon ach' -and--- CHILDREN TH ANK YOU! ' {Four gener•tions in the carpet business since f894., th1n•s to th• inventions of Mr. Bigelow.) P.S. Amazin9ly, witho ut Erastus, Bigelow Carpets have remained an Industry leader. Please stop in and see th ei r sparkling carpet line., - ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES • ·-• enll!t£ont.ofi I thought "'e w.er: . • bombed by North Vietnam. I could have cul my arm off If I'd slipped It under this knife." he said pointing lO a giant paper cutter. source o ~Ilion " a~O'l~J_,sa~ido,..,"-!Tc"h~e+-ll---­ot ers will be ete 1ning the exact loss.'' COST:JlllES;t; 646-4 838 ' . Mrs. Terry Stewart, al.so of Orangcr, an emp)pft or Ibo prlnl shop said she now , One or the bulldlngs 10 sustain major damage was Claval,, a valve manufac- t•rlni plont located dir«tly across the street from the chemical nnn. J., • Moo.' Thm. ' to 5:30: Fri. ' IO •: Sat. 9:30 IO I L I I l • - • j I I I' .. 18 OAILV_ PJLOT SC Power By the Associated Press Consumers appear to be blling into the week-Jong meat boycott with delerminatton, throwing off meat sales by as much as 80 percent In scores or supermarkeJs from coast to coast and slicing some prices 29 cents a pound. "It 's like my meat had some dU!ease, NQbody'll even touch It." complained a m e a t n1ana!i'cr In the New York City area, where a check ief supermarkets showed t h e boycott to be about 80 percent effective on Monday, the first shopping day. A shopping-cart check in &ise, Idaho fow1d 22 out of 50 women bypassed the meat · counter. , · In Albuquerque. N.M., only about a third of the shoppers in one store were taking home meat . A survey or six large Oklahoma City supermarkets turned up no customers at the meat counter in three stores, only one woman at another and me~t buying ' "about normal" in the other two. \Vh ile many retailers were saying it is too soon to tell how successful the boycott would lu6CIQ, Aprfl ), 1~7) of 'the Housewife , 3 Equity Funding New Route Executives Quit For Planes LOS ANGELES (AP j - Continental Airlines says it ¥.'ill begin round trips.. between Houston, Tex. and Miami, Fla. April 'El over a route awarded by the Civil Aeronautics Boa rd in February. LOS ANGELES iAPI - Three top, officers of Equity Funding Corp, of America have resigned after disc!Osure that the Beverly Hills-based insurance giant is the target o{ Red 01iio1i Restaurants ?tcquired Special to the Dally Pilot SANTA MONICA -Hosl International Inc. has an- nounced completion of the ac- quisition of a group of Mex· ican-style---1amHy r~~taur~nts which operate under the name "Red Onion." Howard E. Varner, Host president, said Monday the six Southern California based restaurants will b e in- corporated into Host as a separate Red Onion division. He said three additional sites have been selected and con· struction-on '1.hese units is to begin immediately~ VARNER ESflMATES Red Onion division sales for 1973 in excess of $5 million. He said the acquisition com- plements Host's Ch a r I e y Brown division, which recently announced plans for an ac- celerated expansion program in Northern and Southern California suburban areas. VARl\'ER REPORTED the acquisition was made in ex- change for 256,000 shares of Host International con1 mon stock. three investigations. The company announced Monday the resignations of Stanley Goldblum, president and chairman; Fred Levin, executive vice president-in- surance, operations and marketing, and S. B. Lowell, executive vice pre si dent- operations and finance. Three flights a day from both cities will be offered with a fourth added in the fall, a spokesman for the Los Angeles-based carrier said Monday. It said the company's opera- tions "will be directed on an interim basis by a manage-'------------' ment committee consisting of Loeb. executiv1:. vice president-real estate; R. W. Leob, executive vice president-general counsel, and a third member to be named in consultation with the com· pany's primary banks." The investigations of alleged phony sales of insurance p_oli_cie_s to reirisurers are being made by the California state Insurance Department, the Illinois state Insurance Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission. California Insurance Com- missioner Gleeson L. Payne said its agents seized books and records of the subsidiary, Equity Funding Life Insurance Co., Friday and Js_Jrying to determine assets. "We have developed evidence that leads us to believe '.\'e have a severe pro- blem with this company," he said. "We feel we have the ability to ge t to the bottom of this matter very promptly." Illinois officials said they had undertaken a surprise audit of EqOity Funding Life and had not been ;ible to find more than $20 million in negotiable bonds that the com- pany listed as assets. The subsidiary is based in Beverly Hills along with the parent company but is in- corporated in Illinois. The Securities and Ex· change Commission halted tradin g in stock of Equity Funding on the New York Stock E1change March 'l1 and began an investigation of the company. Price of the stock fell from $24 .88 a share on March 19 to $14.38 on March 27. Repayment Date Given Royal Inns SAN DIEGO (AP) -Royal Inns of America, Inc. is being given 60 days by ci'editors to get into the black after ways to repay the chain's debts were outlined. An unaudited balance sheet distributed . at the meeting Monday showed $13,244,893 in liabilities and $7 ,292,338 in long-term debts. Assets were l.isteO at $5,429,819. HARRY HENKE III, new president of the international chain with 84 hotels and motels, spoke to represen- tatives of 2,700 creditors who set , up committees to help solve the financial problems. Henke said foreclosure pro- ceedings were started but later sto pped on the Royal Inn at the wharf in San Diego .... which was to have been Presi- dent Nixon's re-election head-:. quarters hotel it t h e Republican N a t i o n a l Con- vention had been held in San Diego as scheduled last year. , A LOS ANGELES attorney, Jack Stutman, said 175 entities involved In the Royal Inns operatjog, ingudlng_... limit~ partners an d subsidiaries,· have been paying creditors without problems. Henke took over ~1arch 13, succeeding Earl Gagosian, founder of the chain. Baloney~ They Say that yours may not ! 1--1---tl.-....... ,.,nrr ouwo . COUNTY COVllAGI . " b1clltdlng: LGtt••• ltech SR c.._11te, Mhtlo" Vlei• Dn• hhtt, • .. 11 °' Lo .._._.._.ofL.A. MONTH TO MONTH llNTAL IA.SIS NO DIPOSfT •IQUlllD ON ArrlOYID CllDfT ONLY $11.00 -(!' MONT TOTAL COST , ... __ , NIW COMPACT UNrT SIZI (I V••4s1/J) YOICI MISSAl»I •AGIU ALSO All AYAILAILI 'ULL Flq MAINTIHANCI Ol!ANGf COUNT\' RADIOTFLEPHON£ S!HVICf "' lll1 fO. IANTA ,-., IAHTA AHA Uwnt INtll, Mll'lffl Vlflt 111 hlflt. s-.n CltlM!lft, Jill .till •11lttrt1tt, II r--.. Clll ttll '"'• · 4t ... Jm .. SACRAMENTO, (APJ -A consumer group has presented the Reagan administra· Uon wilh JO pounds ol bologna lo syrnbollte Its unhappiness with Reagan's opposition to this week's meat boycott. Roy Alper of lhe Consumers Federatioo or caufomia said J\.tonday Reagan's state- ment last week ,that 1'acts: of 6od" such as droughl o' floods helped boost meat prices was "a bunch of baloney ... ALPER SAID !allure or lhe governmenl to uforsec the laws of supply aod demand'' and "meat speculators'' were responsible for high meat prices. carrying lhe yard-lonK. 117 bologna saus- age over his shOtJlder like a rifle. Alper marched Into Reaga~·s Capitol ffice to hnnd &backer Angeles. IMI lhe Gol'eillOr ASKED nv a report<r If he wasn't, In elloc~ •iolollng the meal boycolt by dealing • in bologna , Alper said the "symbolic aspects" of the ~logna outweighed the fact It was made of meat products . Alpe\ decided to presenl lhe bologna to John Kehoe, Reagan's consumer affairs direc- tor, but the bologna broke in two on the way to Kehoe'.s office.• Kehoe, holding lhe lwo pieces of bologna, said he v.•otdd see that It was given to a "needy family or needy lnstlluUon." I , • COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST \ .Eating F.ish Isn't ' That Pafr10 IC Spe<lal lo lhe Dally Pilot SACRAMENTO -Though the NiX"on A~1ninlstration has declared it "patriotic" to cat fish while meat prices soar, Western consumers aren't out casllng nets. JUST AS l\'ELL, !SY fishing industry Pxeculive.s, who point out there Isn 't enough to go around anyway. Butthe government's ani.logy between fish con- sumption nnd "patriotism" has shaken more than one in- dustry meplbet's s c a I e s 1 reports California Business. One Callfomla Department or Fish & Game officlat, tor example, questions whether it's patriotic tor Americans lo cat fish at all, noting that hall or all fish consumed_in this country is caught in (oreign Wjtlcrs. THE.OOMES11C industry is floundering in an economic net of its own, he says, the re!Ult ol Ineffective federal and state government marketing pro- grams that have opened up nu,i.rkets to foreign nations and hurt the domestic indwilry. Americans are eating more llsh, he said, but they're "finicky" with tastes leaning more towards shrimp , abalone, lobster and salmon (all in short supply) along with California halibut and sea bass. U.S. per capita consumption or rish in 1972 was 12 pounds compared wllh 11.Z pounds last year and 70 pounds in the Far East. Make money at· Keystone. Kcvstone Savings is more than a place to save monev. It's a "JM ace lo Jnako monev. We're here to 1nake your money grow. leyslm intndw:es tbe Maney Machine. Now you can get $25 cash In 5 seconds 24 hours a day. Just Insert your special card jn Keystone's Money Machine and out comes your 525. This is a !rec service to our customers who main tain 5500 in their zegular passbook savings account- jt's designed to save you time c:1nd reduce your check writing expenses. Stop by Keystone soon. Open your savings account, choose thB tree services you want. and get yout Money Machine card. You feel richer at Keystone. With good.reason. OKEYSTONE SAVINGS AND 1.0AN ASSOCIATION l an11ld W, Caspers. Chaimion ol t11e lloanf iXK•"Vll tll'lkt! WHlmlMtef, 1401 \ Beath RNd .. Til!Xt to Ha.'fcnnv Inn, l'lloml l\YS.?.~91. Al'lllltlm OIUCI!:: !\SS N. tutlilf- OJ!ljl!Kltll BroAdwa~·lObinson·~. fhOT\C 77Z·7~40, /lllpon Cen1er, Nev.'POlt oll\ce: 430l J,t11C/ltlh111; Jllvd., fllon~ 1133·0~67 ' /15Sl:t$ ll\'Ct SfiQ mW to/I. Don't Be Fooled By The Beard, Long Hair,· Grandpa Glasses And 'Message' • FINANCE Smog-free Passen.ger Area · T esred A device designed to attack the smog problem from inside the passenger compartment rathef than the exhaust pipe outside is being tested in Orange County. The''Atmo s fil ter ,'' developed by a Colorado-based engineering firm , operates on the theory that if smog must be with us, we at lea st ought to be able to filter it out as we are drixing a.long .. _ AN UNDEfl..the·hood unit, the device is said to eliminate the smog·flllcd air normally drawn in by the car's ventila· lion system, heater or air coo· ditioner. It also removes pollen, dust and odors, according to Robert Winkelman, vice president of Air Purification Systems, the Grand Junction ; Colo. manufacturer.·-··-·-·-• -·...-· "It's 99 percent effective in removing dust and pollen and knocks out odors almost en- tirely," he claims. THE PRODUCT is being sold and serviced at various auto dealers and independent garages throughout the coun- ty. •;\Ve're using Orange' County as a test area for the entire country," says Winkelman, "because we figure this area has its share of pollution - and cars." l\tADE FROl\1 a pleated. (cit-like ma I er i a I ~ the. Atmos.filter is installed inside a car's intake duct. located just in front of the windshield. The AtmosCilter does not af· feet e n g i n e perfomiance. \\linkelman said and sells for about $30. R ep\ acemen t cartridges are about $9 and are designed to last £o r six months. THIS 15 NO LIPPY HIPPY lgpmy Gus. i!JYented. bx.lhe DAILY £!LOT severijl i·~ar"-'12 i ti 'a e you· n ed a ne\v girdle. He appears daily on the editorial page \vhere he s tars a s a sort of ventriloquist's dummy who talks only \vhen someone (DAILY PILOT readers, in this instance) puts \VOrds into his mouth. DAILY PJL01' readers \vrile every G~oomy Gus 1nessage. He has been ~aying a 1nouthful every publication day for years no\v. \Vant to knO\V what your neigh· bOrs are thinking .. , what's wrong (or right) with the world , nation. state, community, neighborhood you live in? Want to give ol' Gus a piece of your mind to pass on? You can help him continue to .be the blppeSt lip in town. Write to Gloomy Gus and see your own message ON THE EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE • • 11 Pl-L-OI ' ... ~ . . ' ' . Tut!day, April 3, 1973 DAILY PILOT l 'l -Itfmtey's Worth OVER THE COUNTER • Accuracy a Must NASD. Lllllft9' for Monday, .-...u 2, 1973 .. In Claims Court MICIPllH bY tt'lt: N• El Peso l~ r)>,\1=tl!f~ J1 ;,,.-. """' -:.rr of E-.v -e Wi l! "'"''U Co JS'4 Y U "',-w w1t,.•• •'!!?.! I® IA~ Jlf" il'4 N~':f'.,,oE IN """ o~~, llY 1r1:!:;; ~ In o ; Hf~ O 1;1~ W cOUfttu ~•ltln to z"l11n1 ~ I ~it•wn ~ i ii" By SYLVIA PORTER....._ (Second in a Series) You're Oghling mad and determined to g e t com- pensation rrom the d r y cleaner who has ruined your expensive wtnter coat but re£uses even to admit the damage. The place for you to sue, as A1onday's colUrnn reported, l.s the small claims court. But how do you start a w.it in the small claims court·? And what do you do? FIRST, LOCATE the court in the court district where the person or company you are suing lives, has an office or does busi- ness. In a large city, such as New York, you can sue eil h· er in the dis- trict where you live-or the district in which the party you are suing lives or works. To find the small claims court in most areas, check the telephone book for the courts listed under your local, county or state governments. In some places, the small claims courts are often part of other courts or their functions may be filled by the local justice or the peace. -Once you have located the court, ask the clerk whether it can handle your type of claim and whether it has jurisdiction ove r the party you want to sue . -ASSUl\l lNG YOUR claim is considered apprOpriate, you \Viii be asked to pay the modest court fee to cover the cost of the complaint and summons. The rorms filled out by you or the clerk usuall y in· elude your name and address, the complete name and ad· dress or the person you are suing , the reason you are suing and the amount you are suing for. Accuracy is important. I!, for instance, you list the store · you are suing as XYZ Store in· stead of by its complete legal name of XYZ Store. Inc., or you list its wrong address, you may not be able to collect your money, even though you win your suit. Also. a person whom you know as Bob Smith ~hould be sued as Robert Smith, if that is his correct name. Ntft othet" u of •Ir Ll\e f NlelMl'I I \.lo d-lf:Mtwft F•rlM El NOfditr 't '!IM,) TM QllOll· F•rm er I Nw• NIG ~ Jtt': -ONCE YOUR complaint is ::nt. ~~~~~ ~r.:m~ ~tt Ill =rP i: 31, , .. ·filed , the clerk will tell you =~ :/r4 'i:"" ~ f:} l:Jl~ 21~. 2nt ~~'*! ~r 1{1'1 1 * when to return for the tria l :~:rii!m.. aciwi ~,~,:-it~ 1'.r' 1t ~"~ ~~ fi 5' and will send out the summons "~'t,0~V.~~~ll ~I: f:fe~ lh,. 11~ '~vv L2t ll.~ ~ t'f · th d f d t f ti..-MoncWIY FllCl!:1r 11 17\4 F~ y .. 20 no I y1ng e e en an 0 l'e AP<'U 2, 1913 F0t"l OI 2S\\ n\ 11 ~~ \f~l td R'%1' 16W If date and place Of the hearing, -'fushnl tf: ~t~ ~~~kGr~y l&:Jr~ ~~ ; .-1ttl l::.r er!: ff:Z ~~ and the nature of the claim ~1r t~ 1J l~ ~~=·It ?l~ 22~ ~·· NA It ;l; :~ .. •k If~ l'm~' i'.ll against him At: e1Y 3~• 4 Fr t111:11 R 11\}\\tt~ p~I::, c6~ 691.'o 10 11w El ~. ' A U-4 Ttl 11~ 1114 Frll!l' FdE l' 1'"1 p «)V, 'IYI C 1 'II 1~ \Vbat should yo u do next --. 1vn e1 61• ~111':' s H lt~ l'~ p:Ctf.m 1• 1~ l: F: 6'-'I 1v11 while~awaiting the trial? ,, ~"m 1 k 1m ;"'i'·~ 'l Wi UM ~:Cs.. L;~ "• ti! lllY Cut "619 1\(o \fery often the party being ~EL,~P<' .lt; 56 .!rink 1m ftti ~:n 'If~ ll~t li ;;:: w 11'2~1ll~ Sued upon receiving the sum-Am Frnti fi~• is ,,. LtJ '"" Jf .. _ l'~IY P ' ~ T11tcm ti:. ~~ ' Am flln'I Ttl Jlh ~ Cp IVi "' P1vell• .... ,2i.. t!!.!.~"Voc· r"' m'~ mons, will realize that you ~,,GT 1s¥t.' 1611o ~:U"::f. ~~ fi~ ~vt·~ )•• ~ w, +ri~ .. mean lt and will orrer to settle tn Pr..r, ,.12 !~ 1 Ide'= lf' f'* .. ~"' ~ lt\11 lt:; lJ:r. Mr n~ 1 out ol court Ir t ..., ,... 'l~ i;114 d M..:I v. t\'J Pit H•H n 2' +r•n cir s "" . you agree 0 Anheu.,-s \\ s "' #M I~ 16\o\ P11ro ~-II~ 11., l"' g:•P ls-\ 1 • the settlement (try to have it ~~ 1a 1114 1ttt G~Klfll ~ 1~ tt{~ ~W~n s.~ \fl. 1~ i~ ~ ~S lf'• include the rourt fee) and are APs 11K11 1~ 1N Gui SA~ 23\IJ ~~ w :169'\ t~ u~Lwi cW lm_ »Iii paid, tell the court you have :~= ~~ if~ 1~ w.~ fJ:. r~ 2~ ~!::. = ~ ~~ li""1 r.c· ,:i,. ~ ~ settled the matter. However, ::vi:. Hr 1m r~ H:rn11 ~r lllt 3!~ ~=i· el: ,fl) 11.J: ~nlvl1J 14n 1~· UR: lrJ8 le 5 approaC g All G1 Lt 1~ A Herp&r R 1114 p r '" 11¥o lf,~ V~ Ho 14 'u ,.. . Ida ! hln Ano Col• 2011i l'"' H•rlvn P '"" p of Golt ~ ~ U Mobl k16~ 19• and yOU haven't yet been )iaid :t1~d l)~ l~ 1rJ ~~Ft 1ttt m P~ C1r 11l/a I~ \la1K• Sn ~~ ask the other party to put th~ e. rd Wr 1"" 20"' Ht1H11 Ms 10U LU ~~i11l~11 1~~ ~ ~~·~ s~~ ff\.\ B•k•r Ft ~ 17'11 Hn1ton 23 §E" 0 N" 1 1 v fori SI 17 11'. .. terms you've ag reed on in Bildwn L 1714 av. HeMc.~.1~ c 1,"',· 11~~ uakr ri ~ v S_y1 6 ~ \Vritten rorm and have a copy ft~k B~d.1 1 . ~~ ~~e'Mio l~U ii~ R•rnr o 1014 1 ""' vo1 s* 11¥t l"'i Bally Mtt !!--.i Homwu ""1' vetn 1 }J ,. ~-V •ut1 St f~ 10\(& l·~e• b both 0£ OU ('led 1•rne1 H ):I Hv11t C 17"~ lt>\o A.1vcm W111! NG l• 1~ S e " II Y Y I II F 27t' ""' Hyster C ~. 2lo'll 196 200 Wlilt Ml 36 n~ with the court :~,:11 1s" Ul'r 1nc1a we1 1~ 1tt• R1vrnd 231.\o 2''"' W•~mn I 1nlo 1 ~ . Btttlln• F 4'19 s Inds Nucl 2lo'll 14'• RllM Pie 17~. 11'4 Wtobb R• S'~ • -~ Btkln c11 t t 'h lnlore~ 14 1,~., Rec~ Eq 5\i sv, W11d1n t\.O r,:: Bently Ls 21v. J•o;; tnlel Cr11 4-1 'I* RIKt C11 26V. l7"i W•l11t Wt 2:2 OTHERWISE prepare for Btll Prd ~ ~ 43 1n1•rt En 6'~ * ReQ EIK "'• t v. w.u,,.. M xlV.i 7J.to the trial coll~t all relevant g·rn~ L~~ ·~~ 1~ ... !~1'"l1~' 1;~1 1,'ll :~f L~ ~t1• u~ ~:lc\t~Pt im 1t~~ ' b'll ( I · B O rn 1•14 1sii. In ekW A 1 11< R•x Pl1i t'lt 101~ Wlttr 21~ 'ffi' documents -1 S O sa es, in-8 rd ~s ™l 21~., lnlr•• Cp_ 20 201-. R1v11 &R 4S4i 46'4 wu11m J 20-\1 ) · · t tc to Bob Evni 2'\:o 27111 lr•l•nd R S\11 6'4 Rlv11 Ml 24~'r jl Wlltn H 1714 'I , voices, -rece1p s, e • ---eoom NP-22 22" Jin'l9'Sb 11 111.'i 11:• E:11 fl "" v. w1ri1 ,PkT :Mii. l v. substantiate your claim. For =~rn~ 1J i:~ n~ 1:!1v~lr~ 1~~~ lr" ~:fl~. D~s 1l~ I!"' :~ PL'i~ ~~; ~·~ I . hot ph Brown Ar ti:. PU Kaiser St 10\.; !Olo'i ROVM Co 14'lo 14U World Sv If '"' some c aJms, p ogra s may euc:k11e 13v. 1,t• K•lv•r c Ht 6 RllWI Fnt 1•u. 1s wr!Qht w '" 11• be helpful. lf the ac_tua) item guckey SI 2: ~ ~:r~Tk 1bi 111;? ::~'sfu~ n~ iJ,~ ~:frXj F~~ )~ ll:Z is small be prepared to bring e~r.: M 36 37 Ken conn lt 21 S.O:• Ads !Mi 111" ti.a r Co 10\~ n ' , . ~Im T911 26 2~ Kev 0111 7VI 7 ... S.ltrn Cp ~ 10\:o Zions Ufh lS 26 to court the item Jtsel( that •Pi Sow 5~ ~' Kevas FD 1lv. 1~ figures in your claim -say, ~ ~Jl l~ l};~ ~~,,c~,' 14~ 1s\.'.> 10 Most Aetive h r I d ~hm11 Pt II ll:tri KMS Ind ~'• ~~ t e coat you ee your ry IYnc• A 22111 23 Knll(lt VI 20\lf 22\ NEW YOAK IUPI ) -TM 10 most I h ' ed llant Co 1ru 11 111 KoQer Pr 22'i< t'1 c eaner as rum . 11tm co 39111 40.,. KrlleQtr Mi Mi .,11.,.. itoc:u trldld on tM OTC rn1rk•t Contact all witne sses who ~Ill 1Br 1r " .sv. ~11~PE/ lil< lr' MOncJ•v •• av111111.a .,... NASO. . ht ba k t d Ill' I Set 165 1n L:nc1st. ~ 27\'r Sitt-Vel-........ C!19. m1g c up your s ory an cn11 u A 39v. «>~ Linc• l3\'t .:uv. Pinn Life 1'3.«10 ,,,, S\'t-.,, arrange for them to appear in !'ett1lk 1s 1s1t1 L1w1er c 3-IVt,, ¥,,, Rink or11 11,soo 11''\ 11111 -'• . • low Cro 16\i 11\4 Ll'N Bov " • ''"' court wdh you. If any will not oc:1c L• 21 21'11 LiQqet p1 13·1 1(\\ Am E•o 14,000 ll\\t .u .-J . , oml Stir U V. 21"• LlbtrlY H 3''> l~1 Fkl Cp VI 63 «JO 6 ~ )~ appear voluntanly -for 1n-~mwTI P 2S\'1 u1~ Lll C11m11 t\~ 1•1•,· ~ B•nk•m u .Oi ""' .uv. --Mllllt p lt'h llt9 Linc Bdst 1H't •Comb lnsArn .. .000 I"' 13\~ ~ stance, a garage attendant 011Stns 23 23'111 Lion c1s1 6\• ''"' e ..... 11 wn · .s2.«10 1~ 1f'"'-'"' h t h ross Co 17 17=14 l.clc!fte •~'• ~~\', Penn O!ltll G1 "I 1\!a 1'1'--\.'o "' o saw someone scra c ~rulth R 111 t (\o '-°"""' co ~'' .ss L1blrtv u 11 3t •2; • .u1-21-t your car but docs not want to ~~'r ~~111 ~'~ !!~ ~=~ 11:'ftv' i:;~ '1·o No Ctnt Alrl -"-·-'"'' v.-.... ~. t · J ed 0 a hove inly M ttlo fo•.;. Mnlkkf IS 16V'r NASO vol111M IOd•Y S.162,t(l(li ldvln«' ge 1nvo V -Y U C n ~rl Dro 19\/o 19~ Marn Frt '·~ "'-'' :16<1: declln11 1os2; uncti.l!Qtd 11 u1 10111 the court clerk subpoena ::•1 g:~ .J:Z 4~i ~:r~~k ~,,.,]? 3231. them. tn Ne\V York City, there :;0~ 9~ 1~ ':~ ~~u,:_v ~!"' 1t:zl;=;:===========; is no charge for the subpoena, .~~~ .~~ "~ '* ~; '!i• ~~.. KIDS LOVE but you ~ave to ~~a fla.t $2 fi!~·c~ fl.U 13:-z ~loo• r nl~ ~:~ to each \Vttness bemg required Dlern Hd 121'o 13" Mots 01s ~~ n~ UNCLE LEN to attend. To get a so-called 81~~.A~ ~r~ ~'\~~~Fl~ ri~ ~~ SATURDAYS IN t 'in h Ooc:utef"' 311o'i '9V. Molex ln j' "" exper wt ess, sue as a Oollr ..oen tv. 9i~ Moore S• n \li h · · 1 t st·r Don•ld1 2111.o 11"' MOrrlst! 2o1 11 p ys1c1an. o e 1 y, you o-JOiis """ m• Motor c1 13t'< 1• THE DAIL y PILOT might have to pay as much as g~k,n °a 1~ 1! ~~t c~~, 1\* 1~ $100 for his tin1e. Jr a ,vilness lrcM Lati 31\'t 374'N11 Li~tv 1u; 12~i L...----------~ can't appear in person, his written statement may be ac-tT; ,.!'..~.c;l:I· @;:=v:r:;~~-:i.:.t>.,.,.,_·~· ~·""'"""""'"'""'"' ceptable. -· JF YOU CAN manage it. try MUTUAL FUNDS to \.1'atch a ses~ion of the court ~· '?.-Ci.U.: ·,,..:,;._,,·,· -~ ~ before your lr1al date so you York -f'ol·Colum G to (:J Gwth sr 1.11 t·g P1n"' s11 x6.tO '·'° know what to expect. Perhaps 1o!1:' 11 , 1151 ot iOMMC?NWLTM ~~bnc~ Jf?1 •11 =ru•sFd 1,23 1.n a lawyer friend Will also giVC ~~ •ndon ISk'Z.11t~~j :~sir· x1.21 1.3t w111nre f~ l:& ;1::' tre l~:t ID~ you some free advice on how ~~nc1~Ati' fl.:'cc:'ed by c~.,. er ic~.n l~ R:'°e~: 1::~ 1::1~ tf:i•t: ~,'t •.J.S to prepa re for your ap-MoM•ri =~ ~ tg ~:'° ~~i~~Ncr" · /l:l,F11 1k~13~i pearance in court . Or the A111"11 2. 1 !'ci13 Ask =~ ~g 1:1& l:ff 0corn~' ~ll hi ':~t"i11:o \g:ll 11~ court may provi,de you \\'ilh AJ>!!.l:ALT~'. s.06 =:rd1nv lj~ 1~1 lit' tr 11~ ii'B "&~11 •o~ .., free legal advica and counsel tncom ,_83 4.31 "'11n 11w .J9 5.,, Plot 1· ,. ti.w Er• ffj!fl-" ' lnsy,rn t•1 f*3 oroMI In 1,1, I. 4 i"~ :ff "w Hor 32 32.12 including heJp With filing the Adv ill'" •'.le ,:79 on1,r1!1C ,',·" ,1,.l~ll !, S p 39·~ 103 =~ FPdortt r:~ ·1· 1 . •i•n• Fd !·'7 t.IO on rv .so · sic' · ,¥ 11 (t ·claim. ,,. u11ire 1 .51 10.s1 wn 0111 6.90 7. A•ou F ,1 I-" Provldt •· 1 .i. 1 AGE Fd 5 3.1 5 '4 wn Div 5.KI 6.45 lll!X • ~~ et l>rovd Gt 1-IO '-'' TomorrO\\': \Yhat to do when i*.t111ate 13:211,:21 D0•,·~""• .,•,o.u 10 .... ·~:h, F5~ 1f·611i 77 ;~s•'" 10.n 11.n · rt h · Aloi!• Fd ll.1515.l' .AW § FArn it4 5.2f '" M Am ovrs 1 2' 11 It ...... it • · ·"' rd JiO ·0 orivtr 11.01 12 10 Am E~IY ,:s1 s:o1 D•lw F lOJG 11.4 HUIH DA ,:,o i10 lllllty t.01 fll 10 cou or wen you \Yin. Amcao F x ·" ,.oo G,!l •• UI': .,,.,, ... :.\'h Ind ,,.'lll'l '~UNDS: ~t',,.~s~Rt:SS . d~:i..::11 T J~1 J1~ H~ Gr 7.0S 7)0 ~Ill ~l:ll51 l,-y Th J\. Caoi.1' 101 1n DrKI C11 5.l2 5.13 H1m Inc: 6.16 ,.ll Inc: I ,.. t lnc:orn t:U ·~ Ood!ICx 15..tt 15.49 H1rtwel 11.53 I ·fl l11v t l't 10' ree eys One 111vvim 1.11 '· Ore•ei E 11.9S 11.95 H~l,Jv l·~l t·ll VIJtt F 1g:10 11:;i Siwcl 7 S1 1.1 D•IYFUS GIP H ·.,. 1._ Vov1c:i l .:IT 11.21 SIO(k 7'95 169 Orvf Fd 11.6111.72Hldcle ...... y lltvert F llJ •. ,, Arn Grth 601 i"s1 Orvt LY lj.•11 17.ll HerllQe 1.17 .(IS Rlnfrl lj'ts1s·2? Am in~•n s·JO 5·,., so incrn .t3 1.ffHorau 13.11 ty.29mn•r ·ff,.,. Am tnvit s:n s:n 3rd Cent ,,9010.14 /~:'~fll 1,-"t 11·1! hi.I• Fd t: 10:06 _ _ Affl ,v.111 xl.60 t..0 E&.E Mu 3.41 3.41 Int ldAm l)$11s1! h11s Sp f , 5 10.'6 V A d AmNI Gr 2.62 2.&6 E1ql Gr 1.l't 8.16 lnc Bosl 1.50 f l UDDl!lll ~DS: • ANCHO• ~t~°...'lrf' tna FAm ..,, Jill lnlr Inv 11.,7 11.f7 eeps Ppolnte 0,•.~pJ= !il II 8etn fd:xt.6' 10.s.lntQor> 9 ... 10. ~•l•nt lg::;Jt.g "~ '"' I°' u Gw~ F lW 11.25 '"' CO A '3.Sl '" " 1"' l!:., Grwlll I 60 f 42 lncrn• x6.22 6.IO 1"'11 Guld 1.06 1.06 I CU•ITY DS· incorn i 6l 1:.;u SDKU F 1.os 1.90 nv 1nc11c •.27 Eoun/ 46 ·• 01 Vefllur 1°76 960 Sick Fd nv llos l2."4l:l.60 tnv•s or f76 Jo Ellen Scott , Jeanne Bernhard and Nell Robertso~ have been appointed vice presidents of Keystone Sav- ings and Loan Association. Mrs. Scott, a resident or Ana heim, was previously assistant vice president, cor- porate secretary and head of loan servicing at Keystone's Westminster branch. She will ma intain her responsibilities as secretary and head of loan servicing. Mrs. Bernhard, a resi dent of Anaheim, \\'as assistant vice president and manager of Keystone's Anaheim branch. She will continue as Anaheim branch manager. . Miss Robertson, also a resi· dent or Anaheim, was assist- ant vice presi dent and man- ager ot Keystone's Anaheim branch. She will continue as Anaheim branch manager. C h a rle s Bottomley, Keystone president, also an· WI Nill 1i10 u"n X13.D3 l•.24 INVEST Oll:DUP: Ultr11 F 7rr.· •'u A11rori ios i•l Etltt'lld 10.93 11.tt 18i Git 1~ l to laLl!CTaD . ·' nounced the promotions of ~rl'~ " t:u 1o:ot ~~tEMs8Mf3·9:·~:n lo~Pr ~:{i :16 ...,,, s~ 1T 1f~ Bonnie Baldridge, B c t t e Nf~:MTOH =.111 .. ~:~ ~~ ~:~ l:'ri -~!'~~·· ~: .. n·~ Si:t• It" it,, Edmunds, Sheena ~1cGee and F::nc. ~ J .• 1 loi lr::i "m 1~:3l 1~·~ v~r~.v ;:~·;fl mi'rv F 1s:fi i:: June Bridger to the positions i':'ksc1 tY 1:1: ~Hun Trt 11.21 · lnl ~·" '·" SA) !~,fHLo3_r,11:~~ of assistant secretaries of the B!iW'111 J~:~ l~:.io E=Y 1f:fi 111: frwill ~·1J t~ r:r~d s.j:.4T tG · t' 1vroc 1.56 •IM Eoultv F 1.13 t.6S !f..c;r'ut ,:4 · •rtir 95 Jf: assoc1a JOTI. IYric gr S.1' 3:16 F1trf!d 9.1610.01 t~:t $h ll"~" lto1I L 6:l3 : • Keystone formed In 1957 a1&c11 HI lo.30 1 .30 F,m, '•'•N '•'•·"., 10.oi I''~ Fnd 2 :,1 :01 ,P•c• Fd t:2:2 io.oe • 1 BHcon 11,90 11.90 t l.J • • · · Ylf Fund 9, ti HaAll:SON Fr;· has offices in Westminster, B••ier K lljl 11.31 •"•"•"•'•"Y j "'""' (.i. 'I.'' "1 PC>re 1t. jl·" Bir i.hr 4. 4 S.li : iii i=d · i,t,, nc:om 1!· l ~ Anaheim and Newport Beach . R:f"i~n 1~:l! 1t~ ~B;g11~'b 1f]! l~:~~ J~n:'n' !t11 ~11 ·Sf ~1nvg;1n J,:21 1~:,. Brown 3:ff ,03 orotr• t.26 JHin 1• •·n-.J·$ d• Fcl 140 ,·r/ llULLOCK . v SSec 7.113 I.II k'f9V~oH~· ·21 tGMA f'UN~s:" FUNDS: II 6.96 · ,. ,, .... lo Shr ' .~ ' S auu Fd 13.tO 15.tt -~ 11.,7 El/SI Bl '· · nv 1 1 ··• Expansion et Cdn Fd '12,3.13'.~ E,Y!~$1 1,,'i·~, l',·!'.e us.I BI x2!>.33tt.11 Tru 1.5 ir, Div Sllr 3.a1 4.11 11.... ·""' ~st II• I" 9.12 V111t11r 1g.11111, N1twd 10.2211 .20 rurttn F :_,1 '~·~: ::St Kl ;,t t...0 lml/h B I .1710'.17 k NY Vtn 1.7112.90 T:.,,i:.d ·u.02 ,,~ 111>1 K2 '·'° 7.01 : l&Gr H.l't 11,ff At Inle t·n1a1· ~ ~eG"11ir~md lj:tilY·g "'"'AMCIAL . • !Jsl s1 2l.212s.so WI'~~ 11:R1~·n -e11amr lj I' l'ROG•AMS: Ciitl S2 ll.67127t winy G 71 1';Ts 10 l~Y1 2'. J: ~/n ~;Q !·~ !·:t ~"51 fl a 1M t21 ,_. In 11: lt." Special to lhe Daily Pilot :: T~{~ 1l:tt 1lB vFI~, 1~ •,:!.! f•1 .:\10 • 11: 1·11·, l~f11!1'no f:~ ffi 11!1 Shi 13.44 1'-" ilf1 .-Poll,. 4.20 ' i ATI lMD O•"'· SAN DIEGO _ lntermark KAN!lllHG 111Fd V• .!.!:'° 1~~ KnlUr-W 1 ~ (lfn Fd s.j 1·" , UNDS:: f'IUT ~nkr G!1'1 ,.01 117 'IYtllr !. 1' Electronics has expanded its ,,~net} 11.ulj:!: 1~r·s~11:sl.n 6. t1n• Fd ;~u : .. t1'"0r : 1 :. San Diego facility and named ~,t J.:l1 f:ll" ft! F$ 'f, l:lf ~01CL~r"1t:,. 'l.ff Ir ~: ~~ .::ff 'i Dan Busby manager, Pres!-snc«r' {·n ·t? ::: . ~~ .:ff l: ~ 1ij 1s:IJ i'i•P:-"N134..'h~, dent Robert S. Throop said ~rt t:Jo t:OJ f'10..8'1 UfndO,DU~1 20 t~~IY nlV I tJ AUQ Fd l.21 ~ f\.1onday. ~!,1\H: t~ Fnd j:ll j:o1 ~~ : f· J l::i sir' •otf. i# In addition to San Diego, ~~ ~ ;:n 'j~ /i'to"'unc1 1f1~ 1ft: t i lld 3.~ ... ~· •nc ll!:"llf'A::: I lntennark Electronics bas ~~I t 7·Zl l:tl .. {Kaj••• ·'° •t.oL Iii 1 13 s s .-..DU1'1' In .. sales and stocki ng locations in ~~(ifL io:TI 1 ·" 0Grw\'ri : f·tt t'7 ... ~l'X't,.,i:fl 1.:fl nc! t:J' l:ao Santa Ana and san Carlos, ~,. / 12.:.111.21 ~"'=u•I 11: l .U Affiii1 l:!l 'B ~~';!;'~t j'i 1J:I Seattle, Wash .. and Denver. F~v 1i·'°1 ·fi ,r1111s*~ 1,· 1 ·li :~ := , Jtlf: fmr0 " . ·~ Corporate headquarters are in Grwth i:i# 3:tt ~11ia~1N · · l:~~ntn 1,1-y: 10 fNC:hr:0 t: ;:., ' Palo Alto. • tr.trifu', ,:&l 1 .. :Jt PN1c • t.is 10.oi Mµ!:,~r "ul4P,'1•.*' T:;: ~ 1: 101:fl -'· !·'' Tr•n Cto 1110 ,37 !larm t. l r, tr1vl En l~.'7 17,0t Manhlft _ 4. T '· 'IOf"1:'rGH 1. ·ff lj"" Mkl Gwl 2.• 2. 1 ~Ill Cl ~ .CM • --JiW1...1tf..!~~~~------------------~F~o~r. Celiforni• J1nu1ry 2, 197 3 d8te'On A TAX SHELTERED LIMITED PARTNERSHIP To inv•lt in MOBILE HOME PARKS MAil CO: Unified ·111 •.<' ~.:. F H'. lfu mr.1oH llftY1c:•'H!I---+' '?.~;i ""'c~{~ 12.11 °B·~~'fv 11.n 1~.~4 ~~ l~: J jlfi ~11c~fl 1 ::& ,;;n ~=. :1: 1:n u ... ~.D 1r·11~R~ ~a 1' ·f .• Att'm ·~' .l lj.3 11.3 8114 Fd , 4 .'2 Oiversifi.ed geo9r1phic1lly throughout th• St•t• of C11iforni1 Yo14 ar• cordi1lly invit•d to 1tt1nd 1n INVESTMENT SEMINAR DINNER of PRUDENTIAL MOBILE HOME PARK FUND THURSDAY -APRIL 5 -6:30 P,M, IRVINE COAST COUNTRY. CLUB Room 1600 E. Cout Banquet Highw•y, Newport Buch, Ctlil. c. us • l I ~II I RSVP.: ·~17~1~41~54_7_·5_9_4 _1 ----Oinn•r Served M. P. KRUSE & CO, INC. ' ~ P'•ClllC SJlc:I l!Xdllfllt 2100 N. M1ln St.1 S1nt• An•, C1\if. Id "'" .. , I f.on1 -10 1 _ .... "ml . .. -·~ 11 ..... Mii tnG 10.2 11eom 'j·" 'I' I MIF Fd 1.f I. Selene j" MIF Gffl j• Vlf!Qd 1. , t "'= f! J 1 ... us~.gi ~l· , s, "I""' I .,.:1!11 r.~ll'i .. '1•}! ' 111 1{i ~A 1~ ~:j~l: ti ~ ''ffi~~:r .. ~!I 1 ,.ll"l; . l l:ll •It ':" lli f:~ · . .B .::.1:i, !· .... (nNt V•.,.rd. , t..J> OUlb' 16. 17,"3 Vtnl 1ot0 ,. ~[I\ ll, 11.tt V rled I . f :ll N:'uwlr : , : w:ri: Mu I l : S-o,;. · · •1 :I.lb~':°" Nr;rtl 1 l . l , ex':\or M! f~·,f_ lld w.;tl~ . •. .,..,,, • • ' 1 ,~,. i~· ,:~n ~7, J:11·:• 1""'1':11...,... _...., 1.~... 1 ·~ ""~' • ' ! , ~ ; ; E7Gr : . •UI IW 11"'4•~ YI , ~~~~~,;..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.~""" • Mut H1N¥tn• ~ -· . i. • • I . . ~-· . . ...... ~ ...... _ .................... . ' • ' ... -' ..... ·~ ...... ,, .. TUHdll, ~U 3, 1973 Tuesday's' Closing Prices-Complete Ne'v York Stock Exchange list SC DAILY PILOT .ff) • .-- • O Del /lfonte SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Del Monte Corp, Monday reported '16.5 million in earn· Jngs for the nine months ended Feb. 28, up 11.f percent over lhe-m.1-million-..mm"'ied.t-k!n~-th.----I same prif>d last jrear. Per share earnings ad· vanced from $1.23 IO~IJ,'7 a share. - llfl DAILY PILOT AMILER ' MUTT AND JEFF -FIGMENTS Tutsday, April 3, 1973 .. ANDWrTH ALL TMISARMM'ENT ON DlSPl,..,/THE REMARK SEEMED AP'PROPRIAT&,... 'GIFTED"! 'THAI WING?! .WliH WiJAi?! by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith by Dale Hale DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS GORDO l.tiwn.ai /com! ltfwnk I C<Jn1I MOON MULLINS •• .__.I l t ~·. "' 1Koger Bradfield ·-· By Charles Barsotti ~-----....; by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson ---,1.l.aTOF I l•',l JNm MJ (;)(6CUTIVES OVAi?? RSMCit>eL " -rHelR OFFJCes .• _ , NANCY_ by_ ~mie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS by Roger Bollen OH,PEAR·· SUCH TDn,iY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE . A CROSS 45 Aries: 2 Yesterday's Puzzle Solvfld: 1 Wile of Zeus w ords 5 floren11M iris 47 Sternly 10 Valley 50 Numerical 14 Cool drinks prefi• ll 4 ST O ST O W 15 Boxer's 51 Packaging movement malarial 16 Cooled 52 Genus of 17 Ztg1ag plants banier: 2 56 Key fruit . wo1ds 60 Ho1so 19 Indian buffalo 61 Adapted 20 Sense ol 64 Rodents Ht Ste 65 Group of nine 21 Most 66 Frog's· V ICERE!G 11 GR .& adumant rclal1ve !CBR Sll1C8 1/0T 23 V.P John 67 Nohlen1an 3 A T ! D E ~ 0 N r.arnt!I " II woody 26 Femal1:1 tlllS animal 69 ,lulers: Abbr. 18 Greenland 44 lncineratw • 27 Canine DOWN trained to gua1d 1 Metal 30 Lamb tastf!ller 34 As bllSY as 2 Feminine 11ame 35 Parts ol ea1s 3 True 37 •.• rul a 4 W ith 38 Rhodus1a's sus11ic1on Srru!h 5 Outt;iyc 39 Obrect 6 S9nclp1per 41 Conuuner 7 l/10thof.i 42 Selective "" Service 8 l ength unit System: 9 Ba1DJ1ces Abbr. 10 C10Wn town rorpse 22 Meat cut 46 E•ase• 24 P1gn1ent 4R C.1lls on '19 City 1n 25 Sell<Sh .1 .. d11h person 52 Musical 27 Par! ol thc p.tssaue bodV· 53 Fort 28 01sconccrt Ont;uio 29 Taut 54 Contes! 31 Use a 55 Tt111ncss plumbu1g 57 Iota !1~turc 58 Harvest a 32 Business as c1op 59 l o Lais llP 33 Yellowish red 62 Can. Nat"I 43 Causing 11 Area unit horior 12 Camera part l 44 African lake 13 Redact 36 Make moist E•po. 39 SST, 101 or"le 63 A.ttfCSS -- 40 Deer, e.g . Ren1i ck 7 I 9 10 II 12 I 17 JI " 21 22 . " 14 2S 16 ' - v 21 29 JO JI J2 -ll JS J6 ... of9 " " 6l ooe5 T~i5 MEAN 'JlEQ \'Ill.I.. eo To nl!!Oll? -WLESS IT'S.A Fl"1" OfFfl.lSE:-· Ol!!Al lHEQ l!ECfi'IE A STIFl' Flt.lE [ ft6&lflL<,I- llO llUHTIH6 'i•OU•fO~S 'lll'u.. ee / ~trre:o. PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz ...---........ --....... HE'{, .llANAIH, MV 6LOVE 15 SO STIFF 1 CAN'T CATal lHE 6ALL! JUDGE PARKER nw•s 6€CAVSE \!ll HAVEN'T U5EO IT AU. W<NTER .• TRI' Rlle6/N6 A UTilE NEAfS-f<XlT OIL 11(!0 IT l'OR6ET IT! ~~~~~~~~~~~ IT'S SORT OF INDEfll-!ITE! FOR THAT REA50N, THE JUDGE AND HOW L0N6 Will YOU 'BE IN TO't_YN, BETSY ? ,__..:..-4 T:M HERE TO ·':TTLE MY 1 DO THIN K I I WOULDN'T FATHER'S" ES ."E! IT DEPENDS r SHOULD GO TO TH INK OF YOUR HOW QUICKLY SAM CAN ' A HOTEL. • 5TA.'f1N6 ANYWHERE WIND IT UP! j KATHERINE! &UT WITH US! ; l . ' . I HATE AN~~ WHERE . 'IOU HAVE ltl TAKE CME. Of 'ICJ(IR EQVIPMEMT ! by Harold Le Doux SAM, WHILE IT'S STILL LIGHT, WOULD 'fOU M IND DRIVIN6 ME DOWN BY THE RIVER"? I'D LIKE TO SEE WHAT CHANGES HAVE TAKEN jLJ.-.J PLACE SINCE I ™AT'S LEFT HERE! T: E~ACTLY WHAT I WAS IN6 TO 5U(:i6EST ! T~\stlOT aioo~! -<IOU MO&T l!EMEMBER T~AT. SPEi\KltJ6 AS lHE Tl\lie(d!T, G0011e A Brr P12E\llPCED ! i: ., ;~ i~ lZ ·;-, . ; .• ' Ml ~5 PE ACH by Mell "Wbat I bate abou t outdoor rurnlture Is just when you flnaHy get it all fitted into the garage, Jt's·sprlng again." WONDEllFIA~, A~Ml<ll ~ OU DJD 'Jl.<AT EXAMPLE P2RF .. C.TL't ! DICK TRACY THAT B IG LUMP IN MIS TATIERED COAT POCKET, GRAN NV. LOOK! ·' q-J AJO\_ ~,., illJS". by Ch ester Gould SULLIVAN C.~ WAIT, c;lllANM'll. DENNIS YHE Ml:NACE I I .I ~1 •• I _ I 7 -· --.. -· _.,..,,,..~--• Today's Final una Bea~h .Y. StOCJU--- VOL. 66, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ·~ofuGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1973 • TEN CENTS Boycott Cuts~eat . Sales on Coast Only 20o/o By JOHN ZALLER_.,...-~ . Basket in Costa Mesa. "Oh·, this ham· °' 111e oa11r "~ burger? . . Some people ar~lltng this-week's na· "Well, I've always given my husband ·a tional meal !lofCi6tt the biggest protest in mea:t patt>1 for breakfast and I don't Americ;_an-11.lstory. But on the Orange think J could stop now. But we'll be hav- CoasfMonday, it seemed something Jess ing fish for dinners." . "'ihan that. (Related stories, Page 18) "I haven't really decided yet," ;;aid a '1Yes, I'm on the meat boycott," said a woman who was lingering in front of the woman' shopper with three pounds of roast sectipn. "l guess I y,•on't buy hambufger in her cart. "My collie won't ariything today. But I have t(! eat. I don 't eat anything else so I've got to feed her know h$Jw long I'll hold out." . meat. ~ . Perhaps because of shoppers like _ •:But my Civ:e teenagers will be eating these, Orange Coast lJl.eat sellers fish," she $$id. reported an average sales drop of only 15 "0{ course I'm in agreement with the to 20 percent: Atonday . boycott," said another shopper at Market Of the dozen outlets contacted, only Von's P.Iarket in Huntington Beach reported a large drop in its sales, and its estimate of a 35 percent fall in sales was still not near the 50 percent drop reported nationwide. Talking to numerous grocers and shop- pers 1'1onday, tl\'O distinct impressions ~·ere. produced: -Markel managers don't like the boycott and don't think it will accomplish much beyond causing meat fo rot on the shelves. "This whole tbll'lg was created by the newspapers and the_television," complained one man who was typical of many grocers. "But it's a 'bunch of hogwash." • ' --Consumers are generally supportive of the Idea of a boycott, but many are not committed to it. Of the 25 shoppers con- tacted at Market Basket in Co5ta..Mesa., 10 --,strongly supported the boycott. 10 were either undecided about it or trying to find halfway ground and only rive were opposed to the idea outright. "J coufdn't find anything l could af· ford," said Craig Hill after checking the meat counter closely. "J buy just for myself and all the packages are too big. Is that part of the boycott?~ There were, however, some with strong opiniorui both for and against the boycott. "I can af~ord any of this 1 wanted," said J. J. \\1ol(f.1 ~tired businessman 1,1,•ho supported th~ea of boycott. "But these prices are just out of line. ''l'm a Republi can." he added, "but I think President Nixon should have callt•d a rollback on the~ prices lhrct' 1non1hs ago." . ''Of course the prices arc \\'ay too high," said a \\'0111a11 wJib disagreed. ''so you can see l dOn'! have any meat . \\'e can only afford meat l\\'O clays a '''eek. "But I think a boycott isn't a good idea. All iL \\•ill do is thrO\V peoµle..oulof work without doing any good ," she said . Nancy Story, a motherof three. felt so slrO!lilY in favor of boycott , that she slopped her shopping lo try to dissuade ouc \\'On1an "'ho \Vas about to make a 1nea t purrhast'. "Don't you think tha~·s just too much to pay'!" she ask1..'<I. and the other shop- per apparently agreed because she returned her n1cat. ··1 hope all this docs son1e good ," l'\1rs. Story refll'Ctcd aftcr\\'ards. ··rm u•illing to eat cheese or beans or \\'ha.lever It takes but these prices have"got..lo corne dov•n :· !\lean\~'hile. a market manager in San Clemente reported on a phenomenon !hilt 1nay bec<lme more nnd more significant .as the boycott wears on. SOuth Coast ospital Wins ·Exemption- s .. Laguna Expansion Wins Okay ""'"" Coll! COmmllili'" Hos i141 . .,,,.,,,. • ... . p 1l! -·South Laguna Monday _, an e..rnption ' 1riim c:oU!ir buiidlng 'p if m i i ~ q_.ti !or its constructlon of a .MILY ......... .._..,__ CHIEF JOSEPH KELLY PINS BADGE ON B"RUCE PRAET, 19 Becomes Youngest Policeman In Orange County - AERIAL VIEW-This was scene at El Monte Chem· ical Company in Costa Mesa shortly after explosion ripped the W. 17th Street plant about 3:16 p.m. Monday. Water spout (center.) is.irom plant's water line, severed by blast. At upper left, across · 17th Street is Claval plant, which was evacuated follow- ing the explosion. Industrial building (upper right) h•d doors blown out and apartment units (bottom) were $_battered by e?t:plosion. Mesa Holocaust Kills Two Survivors of Pla!it Blast Compare ft-ra Bomb By lhe Dally Pilot stall The 1,1,·ord "bomb" was used most often by witnesses and neighbors of the El Monte Chemical Company explosion Monday-which -toot two lives, injured dozens more and shattered windows in a four-block area of east Costa l'\-1esa. "It was like a bomb. There was glass clear through that fence ." Metal posts for a wooden fence bent at an angle of 45 degrees are all that remain of the fence today. "He was in bad shape when he left (flee BOMBS, Page %1 .A.. .A. .A. flying all over, people falling all over medical clinic and hospital expansion. · The approval of the vested rights claim by--the-South -Coast-Regional Zone Conservation Commission came on an 8-2- 2 vote. 1be comrruss1on created by the passage of Proposition 20 has jurisdiction over building within 1.000 yards of mean high tide line in Or:ange and Los Angeles '"Get to Work~ Counties. Lorell Long, president of the South Laguna Civic Association, objected to the aJ)plicafion for exemption, contending that the hospital expansioo and the doc- tors' offices weren't related projects. Lagu1ia Tee1i You1igest Police1nan "Don't just stand around swinging the stick, get out and get to work." With those tender words of en-B. F. Carr, administrator of the hospital, said the doctors' office-clinic couragement delivered in the staccato had been thought about since lflflO. tongue of Police Chief Joseph J. Kelly. A building pennit for the hospital ex-Patroman Bruce Praet, 19. began his pansion from 163 to 268 beds was ol; first day as a full-Hedged sworn Laguna tained in June of 1971, long before the Beach policeman. Proposition 20 became Jaw. Praet is the .youngt;:St policemjJn in The medical clinic-office building didn't Orange ·Oouaty, 8nd' although no figures get a building pennit until Jan. 17, 1973, are available. he is thought to be the after which grading, foundation and steel youngest in the stale. \\'Ork was done. Dressed in a sharply creased dark blue Mrs. Long asked that the hospital be uniform~ with his policeman's squeaky fined for working after Feb. t, the date new leather utility belt, baton ("stick '' I by which developments had to apply for and service revolver at his side, Praet either exempti6o or permits to cOntlnue. took his oath-from City Clerk Dorothy The attorney general's office has said A-1usfell, at the Monday city staff that the coastal conservation act became meeting in City Hall . law Nov. 8 but that some projects begun After taking lhe oath, Praet's badge after that date might have vested rights was pinned on by Kelly. The chief noted if substantial work, substantial monies that the new officer could expect some were expended and the deVeloper acted people to give him more trouble because i~ good faith <>!' ape.._rov~J by other agen-of h1!J youth. c1es. ""But, Kelly saia -that he expect-ea-Ute Commission executive director Melvin young officer to Cope with the foll range Carpenter recommf!q_ded approval or the. of a patrolman's duties. exemption, stating that the clinic was · Praet ·Wi!ftitrvf'tlndergo ·a""training pro- considered part ot a hospftal TJl¥Ster plan gram e~tabli'stl~ at the department for acted on in different stages in 1967 and new officers. He ha s been a member of 1971. the Laguna ~ch force as a cadet-wo~ Abstaining from voting were Arthur ing primarily as a dispatcher for about a HOimes, ma;lor of San Clemente, and year and a half. (See HOSPITAL, Page %) • Later, he will be sent to the poUce academy at Golden West COilege. He: ls a student at Saddleback C o m m u n t t y College working on Qn associate of arts degree in law enforcement. During his first day, he was given a general orientatloo in the working of !he .department. Later, pe will be assigned to the 4 p.m. to midnight shift and Will ride with another officer untiJ his training is com~ pleted. an indefinite period which varies from individual to individual, Sgt. Al Olson, training officer, said. Praet said there arc "all the classic answers" as tO "why he personally selected law enforcement as a career. "It something where you can get out and work wifll people. It's not an eight: hour office job. There's a little bit of ex· citement, but not all that much. "I like it. There's something about ll that attracts you and there's no getting out of it," he said. ManTs lJody Found : FRESNO (AP) -The body or a man shot through the heart -wns found on a path near the San Joaquin River north of here, the Fresno County sheriff's depart- ment said. The coroner's office identified the victim as Larry F. Baldiver, 26, o( Fresno. Orange C.oast H H H from the shock," said Willa Laws or s Fire. Chief Sa Tustin Sh~ works lor .Clavat Company us ect 22 Gives · u l--~Jlt-~~.....::=:....::!:.:::::....;;:::::::::::::::_:::.::..L.:.S::...~--1i~uswt~a~crreo~ss~l~bLe~s~tre~e~t~!wrl>km"1_~~e~expDl!l!~los~i~on1-_.:::llJ['.f:f!l~t~·LL~~~~~~A..~-·~~~'~~~_:.':__~~~~~~~~L..~~~~~-J-~~-.::~ Ca d 829 171h St. _ • -Mistake use Speaking in the Hoag H 0 s pit a t p . s k emergency room where she and at teast fOJ ect par S 10 others were treated Monda y af-After Cat, Mouse Game Plant Explosio11 _. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of tM DIUY .. Ii.I Stiff A mJstakenly opened vent valve today was blamed ,by fire investigators as the cause of an industrial explosion which ripped apart a Costa Mesa chemical plant. killing two persons and ln]Uring at AdditiOfllll Photos today on Page 9. ternoon, Mrs. Laws said the blast sound-D b ·e<I "like-nothing -I've-ever heard-before.''-e ate in-La!!Ulla Injured v.ith her by Dying glass was CJ Tbe suspect couldn't make up his mind. window to pay his bill in a boisterous l'\11chael Ingles of Costa Mesa . He said he By JACK CHAPPELL One minute be was leading Laguna manner. · · was al his desk "when all of a sudden I °' ""' oa11y .... ,, st1tt.. • Beach police on an hour-and·a·half long He offered her a S2Q and asked if she heard this booln · •• glass flying like In many cities, a $24,000 street realign· chase, involving patrol cars and coOld give him change. Though she said crazy." ' ment wouldn 't cause a raised1 eyebrow. helicoptets. yes1 police report Rogers was angered by El Monte ChemicQl Company lab ln Laguna Beach, the 'Glenneyre-The ne1t, 'he wi1 making contrite calls: a sign that said no change larger than a technician PauJ Gerritz, 22, of Anaheim, Calliope project has become a bone of to police ~adquarters. . five was accepted after midnight She suggPSled uncontrolled rising steam contention. It surfaced again Monday . Finally, 1 friend broufl:ht Robert then gave him bis change, accidentally pressure and a broken distilling column night a1 a meeUng of the city plannlnf Ro<taesi, !2, or 1212 N. Coast liighway, to shortchanging him by a dollar. She said .. .seal must have caused the explosion commi51ion..._ the police statk>n about midnight t..1on· she immediately gave him the missing which blew a 25-by-75-foot hole in the roof "l have perhaps driven the same dip a day. He was booked for assauh with a bill. Weather Clear skies through \Vednesday, but continued gusty winds of 25 to 30 miles per hour is what the "'eatlier service is predicting. lll~h.s in the 70s ot most beaches. rising to 75 inland. Lo• · tonight so. INSWE TODAY Activist actr6SS Jane Fonda, wiltner of a1t Oscar, h<U been 11omiliated for another award - tJ1ls ar1c frorn returning prilo11· ers of war. And it's no& that complimentary. See storu 011 Poge 4. of the building. .minimum of 1,000 times. J have never .deadly weapon. · Police said he tbcn tried to engage the Gerrlti, one of four employ es of the · found il a problem, but . rather a The action began about 10 p.m. at young ~tk in an exchange of profanity. L.M • ...,,. 1} Mtv1tt •• least nine others with Its destructive finn, said all were outside at the time of pleasure, a break Crom the routine of Jack-Jn-The-Box. a dri\'eup hamburgez:._. but she refused nnd-atternpted to close ~r~!:i: 11•11 ~:1'::..'~'::t '! l~=i====~ .. ~·~~~~~j~-~·-~-j~~~F~-1~he~-es;a1es~;""~e.T~e w• mrki~ · . ;::S!~~~~~~~~~~~=~~:~; .. =~!~::;j~~!E:ij'""~"'~;2:~"f=E"'~·-~~,-~~~~·at:1 I d1 losett thts-ilr1he-.,....,ol-the-~l91illing-c0lwmt-h&d 'bite of ""'1guna Bll8eh-i11-whol-oth<iowl • polo~-ll!lege<ll ..,,._.,,. '""'..-1--..J morning that a valve "w lch e iiglearlhl llftfll)to:s1 IYbCGmle-n-G!We.tet't ~ DNvert;-19;-e aitress-lrom-grabbed-the-met-el-eonteine tr.a,ws.-+...;E:=~av :-;',.""m."'iiir-""""'~•;;";--1 have been turned on" resulted in an assured that the measure to reduce the it Laguna Beach ," argued writer Arnold Costa Meaa, suffered a cut forehead and threw It at Miss Deavers, inllicitng ,i.uce 1'"'' TllNttn ,. overproduction of volatile vapor at lhe Et steam pressure on the ''still" would be Hano. after Rodgers reportedly threw a met.al a cut on her he.ad. -Z::.:_.. 1: :: ,..... ,.,,: Monte Chemical Company, 829 W. 17th enough . . Al Theal, director or public work.e, ad· straw container at her. •le then reported ly threatened to bcA t A"" LP'*" 11 ..,. .. '"'" • • " (flee CAUSE, Pqe II ''.God,'' Otrril• said, "llnndy was blown . !See STREET, l'age %1 Miss beber aald Rodiers came lo the !See SUSPECT, roae_,! ,_ __________ __, ' .i' ,. .t • l . >' % ~AJLY PILOT__ LB _____ T_c_und1', ~prll 3, 1973 Lost Diver Searc tviii In Laguna i"telicopter and undcrv.·ater searches have fal!M to locote the body of an Upland diver presum1..>d dro~·ned in La· guna Beaclt Sunday. Lag~na Beach lifeguards, ajsisted by the Ntwport Beach helico pter Monday combed the rock y cove vt'here J<en Fag· gines. 21 . or Upland y.•as lost. Further searches have been suspended . A buddy diver . Steve Guyon, 2.1, also of Upland, was rescued as he struggled in heavy chop just orf Di vers Cove in north Laguna Beach. Guyon was pulled unconscous from the surf and was given immediate mouth-t~ nlouth resuscitatioii and t::xternal heart 'massage by Laguna Beach lifeguards. Guyon was reported still in critical condillQn at the intensive care unit of : SOuth .Coast Community Hospital today. Guards said that if Faggines did drown, his body will surface within several days. He was wearing a bright orange wet suit and had yellow tanks. Patriot Mad Vieu Snub Mcintire Gift By JOHN VALTERZA .Of .. ~,. ........ A illUbbed and defealed Dr. Carl f\1clntlre stalked away from the gates of the \Veslern While House Monday night livid over South Vletnamt.lse officials' refusal to accept a wooden plaque with the word "victory" on It. ''It's the word ~hey tear most," s;:iid the ,stunned minister during a half·hour tirade which followed the march to the Presidential gates. {Related story Page 3) Blaming local police officials ror "giv· ing Jane Fonda more courtesy than us," the New Jersey minister finally led hi s 130 supporters back across a bridge over the San Diego Freeway to an empty lot where a night·llme rally C<lntinued. Th~ evening had been billed ~s a celebration in trlbute to Thieu, and Mcintire cheerfully told his followers that he and the leading men1bers of th e South Vietnamese government were close friends. "I am confident that we'll present this plaque to President Thieu or some- suitable representative t o n i g h t , ' ' Mcintire said early in the evening. DAILY 'ILOT Sltff ..._ Rites Set ForLagu Famlity Arlr.ona authorities today prepared the body of South Lagwian Stephen Todd Davis for transfer to a Laguna Beach mortuary. Funeral arrangements are pending. Davis, 19, was one of three kilted in a head-on colll1ion with a tractor trailer rig over the weekend near Kingman, · Arizona. Another Lagunan, Rooald La Plante, 23, of McAuley Place, was killed in the crash. His body was scheduled to be ship- ped to next or kin in Ohlo, the Van ~tarter-Hale Mortuary in Arizona said. Also killed was Debbie Mar:quand (earlier identified as Debbie Bechtel), 17, of Ohio, an 'Arizona Department of Pub- lic safety official said. Coatsal Exemptima ~-li-ng ·on . ., Claim Schedu·led By CANDACE0 PEARSON ot tM 0.11• PllM St.ti AVCO Community Developers' claim of exemption from a coastal building permit for work on up to 473 acres near Salt Creek Bqch in Laguna Niguel will be voted on April 18. SoUth Coast Regional Zone Conserva· Hon Board commissioners heard a lengthy presen~tion by AVCO represen- tatives, their suppcrters and their op- position Monday in Long Beach. The commission has jurisdiction over development within 1,000 yards of mean high tide line in Orange and Los Angele s counties. It was created by Uie passage of Proposition 20. State rules governing the commission require that it have a staff recom· mendation on an exemption application · before votir/g. about the exclusion of 30 acres of townhouse home devtlopment from the exemption. 1 "If this is an interrelated project, why wasn't that in_cludcd," he asked. Weiser said the company would, "If you like." In hh1 presentaUoo, Weiser con· ceotrated.. on the dates of trBict tnllp •R- proval for resi dential, recreational and commercial developments. Lorell Long o{ the Environmenlal Coalition of Orange County, charged that AVCO didn't have bullding permits in time and thus didn't ha ve vested rights on at least si1: projects. Weiser dldn'L deny the la~ of building pennits on A VCO's development of a 34- acre co~ty beach '¥!d park!ng loi.s, a 72. acre private recreational project, a golf course, l•,.o commercial areas and one residential tract. , Mrs. Long, who said the coalition ~p~ents S6~groups in Oran1e County, asked the commission to deny the ex· emp tion on those six projects and require AVCO to pay a fine for working without--,,,., Guards believe that the two men were diving and ran low on air. At some point, o-~-~lhe,., y became separated underwater. Fagg:ine's wife, was at a nearby cove during the incident , bu t did not know her husDand was missing until Informed by guards. Public Safety Director Clifford Murray wa s the go-between, but later in th e evening became the focal point or Mclntire's wrath. Murray contaCted White llouse of- ficials about the intended gift, then those officials shifted the responsibility over to the South Vietnamese delegation on hand for a dinner attended by President Nixon and Thieu. FRUSTRATED AT GATE Dr. Carl Mcintire Lone survivor in the death crash was Cathy Elizabeth Grommon, 16, of 31496 West St., South Laguna. She was hos pitalized overnight and returned to South Laguna Sunday, Miss Gromrnon said today. A public safety official said the car y.•ith the four passengers was driven by La-P-Jante and was attempting to pass a pickup truck when it collided with the big tractor-trailer rig. The driver was in- jured only sllghUy and was not held. Executive ·1 director Melvin Carpenter said Monday following the often con- flicting hearing he didn't have a recom- mendation yet. The April 16 commission meeting will be at 9 a.m. at Long Beach Harbor District headqua rters. commission approval after Feb. 1. " She emphasized the coalition wasn't trying to stop the company from develop- ing its land, b.u.tr.a U!er..whether the corn-___ , pany should be immune from perm.it re, quirements. Sbe said her husband had been diving 'for about five years. i Laguna Sc4~1 -. Chief Interviews - The South Vietnamese replied , that i1' would be "inappropriate" for them lo ac- cept. That was the news that greeted Mcintire a few-dozen yards from the gates •t a IJ!Qt where demonstrators must stop and proceed no farther. Mcintire told Murray: "l am determined to go to that gate. I have that right." ··No you don't." Murray replied. "My instructions are to keep you out and that someone will come out from the White House." ··He came at me with fire and brimstone," the weary police official said later. "I'm sure tha t it was a matter of honor with Dr. ·~1clntire, because he felt so cer- tain that the gift would be received," he added . "It was rather sad, reafly," Murray observed. "Still Going On Interviews with top candidates for the .Laguna Beach superintendent of schools post wlll continue Wednesday and Satur- day, Wllllam Thom3s, school board _president, said today. FromPqel 'IT WAS LIKE A BOMB' • • • Thomas sald it would be unlikely that here," Gerritz said of 23-year old Randy and shattered every window at 817 \V. . the board would hire a new superin-Riley of Anaheim. Riley died at H08g-......._ 17th .. St., a small ~-sha~ co~pl~x of ap- tend I b lh "d · ed" d di" Tb . . --proximately 20 1ndustr1al bu1ld1ngs ad-en y e es1r ea me urs-Memonal Hospital. jacent to tbe chemical company. day· Taken with him rron1 the &eene to the "Once we get down to one or two finalists, we'll have one or two board hospital was Bob Davidson, 57, of Ven· members go to those communities and tura. He remains in serious condition to- Miss Gronunon said Davis had frac- tured his skull in a motorcycle accident earlier and the fou r were bound for n Kingman hospital at the time of the fatal collision. Fl'Olll Pqe 1 STREET •.. vised the commission that since Glenn· eyre is o n e of the city's major traffic carriers and increasingly heavy traffi c could be expected on the street , the city should move now, before adjacent development, to straighten the road and remove the dip. Theal said that to allow development to proceed without improving the rood would bar future city acUon to level and realign the thoroughfare. · Developers can apply (or exemption if after Nov. 8 and before Feb. t they did substantial v.·ork, incurred substantial liabilities and acted in good faith on a building permit or equally final approva1 by another agency. Richard Weiser, AVCO execu tive vice president, told the commission the com· pany considers the entire 16 parcel development one "interrelated" project. , All tracts were included in one ap.. plication. He said all final tract maps had been approved by the county by Nov. 8 and 10 percent of total development costs, about $10 mill ion of $97 mill ion, had been ex· pended. Deputy State Attorney General Jeffrey Freedman pointed out there are two 1t3rcels AV CO already has sold to others (er development and others that it may sell. Freedman said he didn't think AV· CO could apply for vested rights on such parcels and that future purchasers would have to apply for their own building permits. Freedman also t u e s t t o n e d Weiser Quality of the project involved can't be debated in exemption hearings, but can be in permit public hearings. Main Beach Set for Okay Fro1n Council The Laguna Beach Main Beach Park has entered a final step -again. Acceptance of the final report on the park, scaling down the costs, authoriza· lion of drawings and filing of permits with the Coastal Zone Conservation Com- mission will be sought from the City _ Council at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at CiliY Hall. observe quietly," Thoma s added . day. i.-----A.-.sJate oJ J1 IOR.. fii:ml~t§ hav~-~n:-~''They haven't found Elmer Leenerts split for interviewing. Trustees are still ye /' Gerrif:i sala Mon-day at-the-scene. Council Facing Roolilie Agentla For Wednesday Theal , and an environmental impact report prepared oo the project, said that the dip and curve posed a safety hazard, for motorists, walkers and cyclists. The safety-'tward argumeot was .at- tacked by Hano who said accident 1tatistics gathered over five years refUte the safety hazard claim. --From ~age.J._ The planning commission by a 5 to o vote earlier recommended the plan for adoption. --As proposed, the park. would coot $624,000 and would feature large grassy areas, an undulating board walk and groves of trees. I I interviewing candidates from the first Saying no more foi several moments, he group, Thomas said. pointed to the concrete rubble wher e According to Thomas, one candidate hours later fire rescue crewJ located the \vas interviewed Friday, two on Saturday body of Elmer Eugene Leenerts, 41, of and one Monday night. 1800 Samar St., Costa Mesa. A fifth candid ate is scheduled to be in-Gerritz said he was in the Jab area at terviewed by trustees on Wednesday and the back of the building when the ex· two more on Saturday. "\Ve may have plosion and "all kinds or fl ame'' rippei;i • one or two after that. It depends on how the building apart from the industrial t things go,'' said Thomas. portion of the 25 by 150-foot, two-story Many or those interviewed, he said, are structure. traveling "some distance" to talk about Other eyewitnesses said the explosion the $30 ,000 with board members. "The in· was a "slow one" in that the name could terviewing is going quite well," Thomas be seen before the blast was heard or added. felt. ' • : Laguna Accident Brings Lawsuit A y.·oman who claims her t\~1l small children received serious injuries in a • head-on collision in Laguna Beach has -:-sued a woman driver she names-as· responsible for the accident and the city of Laguna Beac h for $1.3 million. Mrs. Shelly B. Pierce of Torrance names Mrs. June Marie Budd and the ci- ty as co-defendants in her Orange County Superior Court action and identifies Mrs. Budd as the dri ver of a pickup truck tha'.t struck her car Sept. 1, 1972. at the in· tersection of Broadway and Forest Avenue. Jeffrey N. Pierce, 10, and Deborah Pierce, 6. rect!ived serious injuries in the impact. the lawsuit states . Joseph Urquidi , 23, was in unit 12 of an adjacent building when the explosion oc- curred. The blast destroyed P & G Engineering, a motorcycle specialties shop. "I v.·as over by the handsaw when I saw this dark red ball of fire out of the comer of my eye," he said. "It was coming fairly slowly; it didn't seem in- stantaneous by any means. "I hid under the-drill press. Smoke started to come In and J could smell an ac rid smell. I could feel the compression wave for sure and then t heard the glass breaking everywhere.'' The explosion was so devastating th at it ripped t;i:ff ~irtually all garage doors Fro1n Page 1 CAUSE ... Laguna Beach councilmen meeting al 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at City Hall will consider a largely routine agenda in· eluding some discussion of the county's li beralized position of drinking on beaches. The council will also consider ex- tending an urgency ordinance barring new massage parlors, a report on aluminum can· recycling and a statu s report on the Upland Industries coast property plans . Further discussion is also planned on permission given Art-A-Fair to use the old Shell service station site on Main Beach. Vice mayor Roy Holm will present a report on the status of negotiations between the city and Festival of Arts on a new lease for the Festival grounds, The council will also receive a pet ition claiming excessive refuse collection fees are being charged to certain business· resident dwellings. S. Lagu~a Medic Wins Fellowship Pierre V. Haig, a South Laguny, phY.si· cian, today received a fellowship to the American College of Radiology Y.'hich is Hano said a study of all intersections along Glenney?e showed that the Ca1liope had one of the lowest accident rates of all. "Common sense tells me that if you straighten out a road, flatten a dip, you will make it easier to go fast. Common sense also tells me that the higher the speed, the higher the potenti~l accident rate," Hano said. Aside from the safety argument, op- ponents have charged that realigrunent of the road will remove a psychological barrier between the commercial north end of the road and the residentia1 south end. Some residents feel that im- provement there is a harbinger of even· tual widening the length of the street south to Nyes Place. "1£ this happens, what is going to pre- vent the city from going on and taking all our property ?" asked Jack Taylor, a 20- year resident who now lives on Glenn- eyre sooth of the dip. Taylor warned, "This is just the begin· ning," and noted, "we like the dip." Other resi dents have maintained that the proposed road project would wipe out a tranquil park·like area in the canyon and still others charge that the filled in area necessary to bring the road up to grade, would damage the Creek area in the canyon. SUSPECT ... both Pt1iss Deaver and another clerk. They called police. They said Rodgers then bolled. Police tracked Rodgers to his home at 1212 N. Coast Highway, where they said he jumped out a window as they arrived. As helicopters buzzed low over the town in search for almost an hour and a half, Rodgers assertedly eluded captu re and called the police station to apologize and ask if Miss Deaver were hurt. Police said Rodgers was scheduled to appear in court today. Fro .. Pqe 1 HOSPITAL ... Judy Rosener of Newport Beach. Voting againsL the exemption were Commission chairman Robert Roo ney of Huntington Beach and Carmen Warschaw of Los Angeles. Commissioner Ronald Caspers, chair· man of the Orange C o u n t y Board of Supervi sors, said he thought January, 1973, was a "proper and moral date" to get building permits and "do business" on the Orange Coast. He voted for the exemption. THANK YOU, ERASTUS! The Main Beach Park had received "final" approval from the council before last summer. But, wheil bids wer~ returned for construction, they _ were i:J30,000 over estimates. A period of Cost cutting followed t h e reactivated Main Beach Park Committee which believed bids for the trimmed down plans will now come in at estimates. Construction iS scheduled to start in October with completion in June 1974, a year late. Taco Bell Loses $122 to Thieves A theft of $122 from an unlocked safe at the Taco Bell , 695 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach was reported early Mon- day morning. The loss, which occurred sometime during the night, was reported by the owner as he opened the shop. No signs of forced entry were detected by police, and not all the money in the safe was gone. Police sa'id a possible suspect has been listed but not apprehended. • l'\1rs. Pierce charges the city y.•ith r ne-gligence for road t.'Onditions in the area thal contributed to the accident, the lal'.·suit notes. SL. moments before the f\>lo_nday af. holding its SOth aMual meeting in San I -Francisco. It _., th tcmoon exp osion. occur, .... to· us the o er day that we owe a lot' to an innovator in our Killed by the blast were Elm er Dr. Haig, of 220 Monarch Bay. is af- • • OllAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT The 0..~ CNtl DAILY PILOT, wUh Wlllcf! '' clmlt!I~ th• H--..Prn., 11 P!Jlllllhecl by the Ortnot Co.11 P11tHl1hlno Company. s.,.. flt• 9dlllDrlJ ••• P!lllU1l'llld, Morid~1 ll'lro~h l'rkl•1• IDr Cotll Mt$t. HIWllQr1 !IN(h, H11t1t1noron · 8tKhll'011t11tln v111ty. i..t1111a llffth, lr~lr>t!Soclclltllfct Ir.cl sin CIM\en!tl S.n Juen 1"1rn11r1no. A 1!nolt "'illoftal Ll'enerts, 41. of 1800 Samar Drive, Cosla filialed with Orange Coun\y Medical carpet Industry who operated about 150 years ago. Mesa. and his co-worker ffandy Riley. 23, Cenler, Orange; Veterans Administration Here are som• facts about ERASTU6 BRIGHAM BIGELOW: of Anaheri'rli Leencrts "'as found buried Hospita l, Long Beach; St. Jude"s ""' under an eight·inch thick concrete tlll·up Hospital, Fullerton, and University of •Born 1814, W. Boylston, Mass.• Poor family, required to wor~ at age v.·all and pronounced dead at the scen e. Southern California Ptledical Center, Los Riley died at J-loag f\.1cmorial Hospital Angeles. I 0 as farm hand and clerk. • Genius at math and mechanics. • At 23 about 6:30 p.m. Monday. The physician was ciled for his Id • led I f I e I I cl-I 1· lo A third chemical \vorker, Robert "outstanding work in medicine and for years o ' inven oom or ace. nven e revo u 1onary power om Davidson, 57. of Ventura remains in his contribution to radiology." a college for BRUSSELS and WILTON carpets. This created a domestic carpet in .. serious condition today nt llj1<1g's in· spo kesman sai d. duslry, ond virtually eliminated foreign competition. • Founded BIGE .. tensive care unit. · The ACR is a professional medical "If the doors had been open and the soc iety wilh 8.000 member phygicia ns LOW .CARPET Mill,$ in Clinton, Moss. • Greol economist, one of smell l---.;..+-";;ll!On 11 P110U111td $.lolunhyi tnd Sunclar• . ..,,..,~ .... vent hadn'I been tumcd on, lhc explosion who specialize in the use of x-rays and group founding MAISACHUSETIS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY ol m1 flt never Jmvt1" 1'ittppren~hh~eco,;,;,i1.~edd-~·hheOl'~;it>ia.!l!li~·o~~c/.iJ" ~-"!')ll!Mil!<!esL...LILl.1-J.------~ Ed Lewis, a fire batt alion chief. diagnostic and ther3pcutic purpose s. oltcn in""l·-86'~ied-+&7f'l-:-----------------------1---- • • ' ' • •• 8llr l l'ftt. Coto!I Mn., CtlllOtrt!t , '7e1'. Rober! N. W11d 11rnld1n11nc1 Publkne• After probing lhc nature of lhe 3:18 J1c• R. C11rl1v p.m. blast which rocked the city's "·est v1e. ,.,...llJ ... , ..... GeMr11 "'-"'"' side and created conditions remini scent Talent Solt![/•t Tho111;;1!''"u of the London blitz during World \Va r II, u " ERASTUS: MY GRANDFATHER THANKS YOU ! MY FATHER THANKS YOU! I THANK YOUI MY '· ' CHILDREN THANK YOU! . n.0,,.,11 A. Murphin• fire department investigators tod ay htivc O S ......._. .... E•lltw the followlng explanation for the ex· ,. outl· Coast I h b ' h ' h ' I Ch1rl11 H. Looi Richiri P. N.ill plosion: " " I Four gen1retions n t • carpet usiness sine.• I 19•, t 1n111 to t • inventions o .t.u1111n1 MtNtlne ld1iw1 Mr. Bigelow.I ...,._ .._ Office Oust off Your dancing shoes, flex y0ur I "' ''""' •. ,,,. Thrown Kn b B k vocal cords, and polish your saxophone. P.S. AlllCllingfy, without Erastus, Big• ow Carp.ts hav• Nmal!Md an Industry Moili•t Aid .... , •.a. '" .... ""' 0 s rea The annual "Search for Talent Con· leader. Please stop In and ... their sparkling carpet llne. Ott. Offlctl ,VT lest·• sponsored by the Crown Valley Ex· \. • ..\::\'.':!::: ll:;:,".:.!:l' ::;,~... n indows in Laguna change Club is se1 for a p.m. Friday a1 ALDEN'S t1i.1""'1111n lllKll! ,,.,, hKh 1ovi...1r111 the Dana Hdls High School Aud itorium . .... Cltmwl"I JDS Noftll fl t.lrnlfle A"I p . I Antique cut glass doorknobs were aruc pa nts must be stx to eighteen ,.,.,.... 11141 M:t-4JJ1 thrown at t\\'O Lag una BeAc]\... business years old and may enter either in· Clo 1HW .M..,.1-, 64Z·S,7t establishments F'riday night, shattering $trumcntal. vocal or dance calegories in· CARPETS DRAPES '--• AR 0-"-• !heir plale gla" fronl windows nm! dividually or in groups of up lo four, ' • . · '-"'""' ,,,, ~ omcrrtmld . .,okesmen-tai<f..-~ -----·-+-11----~~o ,_.::~*"f:51l::r'S--0lftn1fg~WCl'c~lnc-Pi1Yl~ bu~Ellch-entry-wllH:Jc-placed-tn-une-ofr-l·-l-'----'-- ,,.,.rr'~ ~ ~111 .,. rom11t, 11>40 s. Coasf Hfjhw.1iy, arid the 1hree~c1rmtrlca·ttons -primary. JunJor ,,,.._ ., '*'Y"llllt -· Colony Kitchen Rcs1aurant, 1045 S. Coast or senior. Wlnnti:s In each division will ~..,,:-• .:::-..... ':.., Q~..: ':_'ti •Ughway. Nohone was injured. Police said go on to compete in the area n~t1 April -~· ., -Ii a .11 """"'"' ,..11f 1,, no suspects ave been apprthended ... \\'e U. I ..:Ji"'IM111N .,.., _...,, • haven't found the doors, either," one or-lnt~rtsted persons may call 493-2176 Clcer sald. -for more lnformatJon. , r. \ \ t COSTA MIU. 646-4838 Moo.· TIN11. t to StJO; Ffl, t to t : s.t. t :JO to 5 7 • 7 ' Saddlehaek . . VOL. 66, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ,CALIFORNIA ' TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1973 Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS • ' ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· Boycott C.ut.s Meat es on Coast Only 20o/o ~ J. By JOHN ZAlJ..ER "But my five teenagers will be ealiDJV--TINi:st section. '11 guess I won't buy ot.,. D4111r """ '"" fish," she said. anything today. But I have to eat. I don't Some people are calling this week's na-"Of course I'm 1n agi: with the koow bow long Itll bold out.'' - ti-Ona! meat boycott the biggest protest In boycott," sail! pper at Market Perhapa becauae of shoppers like American history. But on the Orange Basket In Mesa. "Ob, this ham· these, Orange C'AJast meat sellers Coast Monday, it seemed something less bur . reported an average sales drop of only 15 than that. (Related stories, Page 18) ___-0 we11, I've always given my husband a · to 20 percent Monday. "Yes, I'm on the meat boycott," ~ meat patty for breakfast and I don't" Of the dozen outlets contacted, only woman shopper with t ds of think I -could stop now. But 9;e'll be hav-Von's Market in Huntington ,Beach hamburger in her c . y collie won 't ing fish for dinners." reported a large drop in its sales,end Its eat anythl I've got to feed her "I haven't really decided yet," said a estimate" of a 35 percent fall in sales was meat. · woman who was lingering in front of the still not near the 50 pereent drop • reported nationwide. Talking to numerous grocers and sho__.e: pers Monday, two disUncf 'llflpresslon's ""'ere produced: -11-lartet ·managers don'-like the boycott and don't think it will accomplish much beyond causing meat to rot on tbe shelves. "This whole thing was created by the newspapers and the television," complained one man 'vho was typical ·of many grocers. "But it's a bunch of hogwash.'' esa x 0 -SIOD- Mistrial Declared For Magee SAN FRANCISCO IAP) -A mistrial was declared toda>: in the Ruchell Atagee Di'Urder-kidriap trial. Presiding Judge Mortn~ C. ~lvin decla red the mistrial after the jury reported. for a fifth time it was hopeless- ly deadlocked. ~fagee;-34;-a black convict-serving .a· life terrµ at San Quentin, was accuse4 of murdering Judge Harold J. Haley In the ~~pe 'l. at:!ptMarin ~IY. Courthouse The jury, which Included three blacks, deliberated almost 60 hoµrs over eight days ronowlng the four-month trial. At 11:15 a.m., the weary panel sent a note to the iudge saying: "The jufy unanimously believes that it has tried earnestly but in vain lo reach a verdict." Colvin responded: "It appears to the court that the jury is hopelessly deadloc ked and [ will declare a mistrial. I now declare a mistrial and discharge the jury from thi! case." Magee, who looked tired, stared at the judge and jury but said nothing. After 55 hours of debate, jury foreman Bernard Suares Monday told Superior Court Judge Morton Colvin : "There ap- pears to be confusion within the jury as to whether or not the word 'case' has any bearing on our verdicts. The jury has dif- ferences of opinion as to the relationship, if any, between the counts as charged and the 'case in its totality.' " Jurors, who Monday announced for the fourth time they were deadlocked, also asked the judge to define "presumption of innocence and burden of proof." The state Court of Appeals recessed l\fonday without ruling on a petition filed by Magee•s -attorney; Robert Carrow; a!klng that Colvin be ordered to stop deliberations and declare a mistrial . The jury reported late Sunday, without revealing whether it favored acquittal or conviction, that it was deadlocked 11-1 on the kidnap charge and IG-2 on the murder charge. Last Wednesday, the jury reported ''ir· reconctlable differences" but Colvin_ ordered the jury to keep trying for a verdict. -d AERIAL VIEW -This was scene at El Monte Chemical Company in Costa Mesa shortly after explosion ripped the W. 17th Street plant about 3:16 p.m. Monday. Water spout (center) is · from plant's water line,-severed hy·blast. At upper left across 17th Street is Claval plan!, HolocaQst_· Injures 12 More Survivors of-Plii.n r Blast Compare . J r ~o Bomb -Consumers are generally supportive of t~e I~ a box~t.i. but many are not committed to It. or the 2S shoppers con- tacted at Marktt Basket 1n Costa 1.1esa. 10 strongly supported the boycott, 10 ""·ere either undecided about it or tr ying to find halfway ground and only five were opposed to the idea outright. ''l co"uldn't find anything t could <lf· ford," said Craig Hill after checking the nleat coun ter closely. "I buy just for • I Joaquin School Official Hired . ' ---~-- By Saddlehack_ Ri11ker to Ask By the Dally Pl!ot Stall assured that the measure to reduce the Engineering, a motorcycle specialties Richard Welte, now superintendent of The word "bomb"" was used most Oftm steam pressure on the "still" would be sh op. the San Joaquin School Dist rict, has been Cou11cil Advice On Development by witnesses and neighbors of the El enough. "I was over by the handsaw when I d r 1 th. da k II f hired as deputy superintim cnt o n· Monte Chemical Company explosion "God," Gerritz said, "Randy was blown saw is r red ba o fire out of the cl comer of my eye," he said. "It was structional services by the Saddleback A1onday which took two lives, injured ear through that fence." Metal posts coming fairly slowly: it didn't seem in-Valley Unified School District. dozens more and shattered windows in a for a wooden fence bent at an angle of 45 stantaneous by any means. Saddleback trustees took the action, four-block area of east Costa Mesa . :grees are all that remain of the fence "I hid under the drill press. Smoke along with a series of employe matters, "It was like a bomb. There was glass .. ay. started to come in and 1 could smell an Monday. Dying all over, poople fal~g all over H~, was . In ~d shape when he left acrid smell. I could f,eel the compression san Joaquin School District goes out of myself and all the packages are too big. Is lhat part or the boycott?" ~ There ~·ere. however, some with strong , opinions both ror and 8.i•inst the boycott. ~ "I can afford an}' of this t wanted,'' j sai d J. J. Wol!f, a retired businessn1an \1'ho supported the idea or boycott. "But 1 these prices a're just out of line. l "I'm a Republican," he added . "but I i think Pres ident Nixon should have called \ (See BOYCOTT, P•gt t) ~ Valve Set ) ' ' ; By Mistake Said Cause •, By RUDI MEDZIEU!KI Of "'9 Deltr l"llef ll•tf ) A mistakenly opened vent valve tod1y was blamed by fire investigators as the i cause oranliR!iIJtmr erplOSion-wtlleb-; ripped apart a Costa A-1esa chemlc1l . plant, killing tWo pert0n! and injuring at 1 . least nine others with Jts destructive blast. ·re llhief Jotm·Marahalhtiscl•c!-thil morning that 1 valve "which lhouldn'l have been turned on" resulted in p ' overproducUao of volaUle vapor at the El Monte Chemical Company, 829 W. 17tb St.. moment> herore the Monday 11· ternoon explosion. Killed by the blast \\'ere Elmer Leenerts, 41, or l!MlO Samar Drive, Costa Mesa, and his co-worker Randy Riley, 23. of Anaheim. Leenerts wa! found burled under an eight-iocb thick L'OOcrete tilt-up Additionol Photos today on Page 9. •--,,--.,---.,...,.....,..-,,...---J I wall and pronounced dead at the scene. l Riley died at Hoag Memorial HospitaJ , about 6:30 p.m. Mooday. , A third chemical worker, Roberl i Davidson, 57, of Ventura remains· in 1 seriQUs condition today at Hoag's in- tensive care unit. "If the doors had been open and the I vent hadn't been turned on, the explosion I might never have happened," theorized ~ Ed Lewis, a fire battalloo chief. J After probing the nature of the 3:1& p. m. blast which rocked the city1s west I side and created conditions reminiscent of the London blitz durin g World War II. I fire department invesUgators today have 1 the following es.planatlon for the ex-I plosion: ' The' three emplotes had been· Settitig 1 up an exotic methane reclaiming prooess I inside the plant when steam pressure 1 used to heat the vats became excessive. After turning on the vent valve to reduce pressure the three men cloaed the doors and went outside w a I t i n g for the pressure to dissipate . Instead pressure began to build inside . ond the·va:pors found a source of Ignition. , What touched o{f the vapors is unknown .but lnvesUgators believe it may have been a water heater. Firemen said the blast brought the wall down on Leenerts• body and ble\v 1 (See CAUSE, Page JI Orpge Rin ker Development Company tonighL from the shock,". said Willa Laws of here, Gerritz said of 23-year old Randy wave for sure and-tHen l heard the glass business June 30, after which SaddJeback ---i.rn-ed't.-ask-lrvine city councilmetr--'l'uotin~S11e-w«111-r ... -aav.1-Company,__,Beeil~•Y-•l Allllheim. Rilex-diLaLilol!g_b<..i.Jn&.aver.ywllor·8.""-:-------v.11ey-ll!ld-!n>ine-llnili<d-Dlstrlct!-1Rk.e-+---- jusl what type of development the city just acrosslhe street rrom the explosion Memorial ~osp~tal. The explosion was so devasta ting that over operation of area schools. might approve for the 70-act'e parcel which leveled the chemical company at Ta~en with him fron~ the scene to the it ripped off virtual!] all garage doors Welte will have been wHh the San Joa- -..which Is impacted by noise from El Toro 829 17th St. hospital was Bob Davidson, 57, of Ven-and shattered every window at 817 W quin District two years this summer. He Marine Corps Air Station . Speaking in the Hoag Ho IP it a I tura. He remains in serious condition to-17th st., a small U-shaped cornplex of aP: originally came from the Los Angeles Councilmen turned down a bid by the emergency room where she and at least d~~· , proximately 20 lndu.strial buildings ad-area to S:1n Joaquin as an !JSSOClate Harker.Rinker Dcvelopmeot Company -10 others were treated Monday af· '!'!1ey ~vent found Elmer Leenerts jacent to the chemical company. superintendent. a Rinker subsidiary-to rezone the prop-lemoon, Mrs. Laws said the blast sound-yet, Gemtz said Monday at the scene. One or the buildings, Stress Relier Late in 1972. san Joaquin trustees pro- erty to allow developments of 500 ed 11llke nothing-I 've ever heard before." Safulng no more for several.moments. he Engineering, was Immediately adjacent motcd Welte to superintendent while giv· homes. Injured with her by flying &\au was po ted to ~he coocrete rubble where to the chemical plant. The impact blew ing long-time superintendent Ralph Gales Thot decision \\'OS reached last fall Michael Ingles of Costa Mesa . He said he hours later fire rescue crewJ located the down an entire wall. ' the title or Superintendent Emeritus. after months or controversy related to wa.s at bis desk "when all of a sudden l body of Elmer Eugene Leenert.s. 41. of Joshua Rivers, a carpenter at Trustees said they were honoring the noise, jet •afety, Oooding, &clx¥>1 heard this boom ..• glass flying like ' 1800 Samar St., Costa Mesa. Pinecraft Shutter Company, two Gates. who had said he would retire st housing lacks and spot development con· crazy." Gerrlt.z said he was in the lab area at buildings east oo 17th from the chemical the end of the school year. He wos out of ccms or the city aboot the property , El Monlo Chemical Company lab !he haclc of the bulldlng when the ex-plant said even his company looked like town at the tlme. At tonight's study session at 7:!0 In ci-technician Paul GtiT!tz, 22, or Anah<inf, plOlion and "all kinds of flame" ripped a disaster arta. Welle had been Interviewed recently Clear skies thl'OIJ8h Wedneaday but continued gusty winds o1 2S to 30 miles per hour is what the "'eather service is prcd.lctlng Hl~hs 1n the 10s at most beaches rismg to 75 rnJand. Loi" tonlabt 50'. INSIDE TODAY Acthrist actress Ja11e Fonda. winner of an Oscar, hai been 'laminated /or atiother award - this one from retunifng prison· er1 of tear. A.nd it'1 not tll41 complimet1tarJI. See 1torv 0t1 Pagt 4. ty ~all, 42()1 Campus Drive, represen-suggested unControlled rlsing steam the bullclina: •part from the industrial "It looked like somebody had thrown a for superintendent ln the Laguna Beach tatlves of 'Jlinker will ask councilmen pressure and a broken distilling column port.ion of the 25 by J..50.foot, two-story bomb into our place," he said. "It was Untfied School District. That post hasn't L.M • ...,. what other development might be seal most have caused the expl01lOD 1tructure. really mangled what with the beams and been filled yet. ~:.:::; f-::=tl===~~~;:,~~;::::;;u;::=;;uii<ii:iiiiiiii::::lhlch blew a 2S-by·7S:foot bo1 Other eyewitnesses said the explosion Ii ht.s falli!!S·'' . In add.Ilion to the appolntment of Dr. ~::..,. I-reel lies south of Moul the building wu · ver1-'t:fiCill wliit"lell1r&il tbe Welte.. Sa.<ldlebaCklnlSlt'U annotmcfd"stx~ ~· -Parkway near Sand Canyon Aveaue in an • Otrri&1 one-of-four-empklyu-of teen ore Dli bl11[ wUhiiarr"~elU.ng cu ea~ 1 r.perii5iiOM1'rralt~y-&1Jlliblnt~ -:=ii.::-· 11 ,.. area planned by the lrvlnt Company ror firm, sald all were outside at the time of . felt. recall S<tlng one ii!IOlelfcleOftili com-!::Jae , umak r. -,.n-,w.ft'~~·•-+--1 future residential use. the· eiplosion. Three who v.-'Ot'ked dlrectJy Joseph Urquidi, 23, was in unit 12 of an pany•s building 10 to pieces. superintendent In the Tu!lln Union High =.=.:ecn ,: ·:= ._. .. ~ However, the Irvine Company con· In I.he a~a of the distilling column had adjacent building when the explosion oc-"At lint I lbougi' It was a A<>nic boom School District.' as associate superin· """ LMllf• •11 ww .. ...._ 4 !See RINKEi\, Pago 11 left the bulldinJ! rearing au explosion but curred. The blast de8tt0Yed P Ir G !See HO~. Pogo II lilt• WELTE, Page II '------·-· _____ _. ' ' } 2 DAIL< PILOI ts New Appeal - Pr epared Saddleback Valley Unified School Dbtrict tn1Ste.. will a • k the Tustin Unloo fflgh School board to buy band uniforms for Mission Viejo and El Toro blgh 1Cbo$. nie petition to Tustin to reconsider a previous denial or a similar request will go to the high school board at 7:3" p.m. Monday in Tustin. Jim Wehan, president of the Sad· dleback Valley Educators Association and the Tustin Secondary Educators Association, a!lked Saddleback Trustees for their suppart of the request. Mission Viejo High band unifonns are seven ytars old. There are on1y 70 urUforms and 134" students that could be in band if the school had uniforms, band director Terry Newman told the board . Nezt fall, the district will have twG high schools with the El Toro High School. Tustin Union High trustee! In February voted 3 lo 2 against buying b a n ~ uniforms for four district high schools, including Mission and University High in Jrvine. Chet Briner, Saddleback board chairman and a Tustin tru&tee, voted against the purchase. M-eats -Pilfered In Hom e Thefts _From Pagel The Tustin board theh voted 3 to J to buy unlfonna for Tustin IDgh School aoly. 'Briner said l\1onday that It was an emergency sit uation and Tustin wouldn't have been able to have a marching band without the new uniforms. Its uniforms 'IT WAS LIKE A BOMB' • • • were l7 years old. . Iii Mesq., Vie jo or something but then the \Vhole side of the build ing came in," he s a l d. "\Ve 11•ol'i'f be back in business for a whil e, l guess." Wehan objected Monday that Tustin · Sheriff's officers in two Orange County may end the ea •'th f1 !Ilion t It s Mary Carnahan was visiting her sist-er, Y r -..1 m o . locations aren't too happy about the meat million in reserves, some ot which could boycott and they seem to have a Pat Thomas in one ol the apartments at be used for band supplies. legitimate beef. 833 W. 17th St. when the blast rocked the Mission had been requesting 120 Weekend raids on homes in Mission building. The residences are IOcated just uniforms at $18,(.(1(). A parents music booster group reeenUy Viejo and the Costa Mesa area netted 100 feet from the industrial area in which raised $8,600 of which $500 will eo for burglars more than 100 pounds of frozen the chenilcal plant was operating. choral robes and $3,000 for sound shells, meat and investigators have linked the "I was sitting in a chair when we leaving about $5,100 for band uniforms. break-ins to the effect of the nationwide meat boycott heard this big boom and the ceilin. ! came Briner said the Tustin board didn't · ~ regularly buy unJforms and suggested Deputies said burglars broke the lock down,'' she said. "I picked up the baby action be considered a! lhe next meeting. Sunday on a freezer owned by 'John and we got the other k.Jds out of there." That would have meant a delay in Henry Ayres, 48, of 981 W. Wilson St., PeMy Wild of Perris, a secretary for going to the Tustin board until May Coota Mesa and carried o[f 60 pounds of Vance Roofing Company of 837 17th because it meets only once a month. recently butchered ~eat. Trustee Dennis Smith said Briner Intruders had earher forced open the Street -just two doors west of the ex· "lt sounded like a bomb going off," her co-\.\·orker Jack La Belle, 43, said. "La Belle was taken to Hoag Hospital for treatment of face and neck cuta be said occurred v.·hen the plate glass window blew in. The force of the blast weakened the structure and six employes of the roofing finn were evacuated as were residents of the bungalow hoqies ...... the only struc- tures between the stucco office building and the blasl Dick Kilgroe, 38, a professional motorcycle racer and f i be r g I a s s manufacturer, was away when the ex· plosion happened. Fro•P .. el CAUSE ..• South Viet s IUleJ ..... ilO feet \brouC)i a wire tt1n-G1·ve Snub fort«! grape<take fence. -,F.lrt.n...~h d rn chemical olant aa "one of"';t1ie;::";hesl:!'=l1'ib::m.'--"'"---="-'---='-'====::_- bulldlttp In O>lta x ...... IronlcallY, Jt.s main product was said t4 be a J'lame- prool min. The building featured a lift-off ex· ploslon roof, elght·inch thick concrete walls, and ii: special -hazard sprffikler To Mcintire system yet it wa.s completely demolish-By JORN V ALTERZA. ed. Of IN Ody P'191' lt•H _ Marshall , fire chief of Costa Mesa for A snubbed and defeated Dr. Carl the past nine years, described the ex· Mcintire stalked away from the gates of ~ion as the "most devastating" blast the Western White House Monday night In the cJty's history. livid over Soulh VletnaD)ese officials' "Realistically, you're talking about a loss of $750,000 to II million aod that re!U!al to accept a wooden plaque with doesn't include the loss of income to the word ''victory." ,.on U. , those businesses that were disnipted." "It's the word they Jear most," said The shock wave of lhe big blast the stunned minister during a hall·hour damaged seriou* 25 nearby industries, "tirade which followed ~ march to Ute including five major oomparues. Heaviest Presidential gates. (Re1ated story Page damage was at an adjacent industrial 3) condominlwn where the destructive force Blaming local police ottlcials for 11giv· tumbled walls, wrenched all the garage ing Jane Fonda more courtesy than us," doors, and shattered every window in the New Jersey minister finally Jed bJs si~~ explosion also made a shamblis of 130 supparters back across a btldge over five residences next to El Moote .the San Diego Freeway to an. empty lot Chemical Company and shattered glass where a night-time rally continued. The evening had been billed as a and set off burglar alarms all over the celebration in ' tribute to Thieu, a n d city's westside. Mcintire cheerfully told his followers Guarded by industrial employes and that he and the leading m¢mbers of the Costa Mesa police againSt tooting , the South Vietnamese government were close blocked-off area today is being inspected u· d bl f ... 1ens. y earns o 1~.rance tnve~tl~ators, !ire "I am confident that we'll present this departmen_t off1ctals and budding depart-plaque to President Thieu or some ment offk?1als. ·tab! t u · b " ·-uwe had a strategy meetiiig-today ur-sw .e _r.epresen a ve ton I g t • . detennine the exact cause of the blast. Mcln~ said early Jn the e~enlng, We want to get into the dis tillation Public Safety Director Clifford ~urray machinery and probe the plant for the was . the go-between, but tater _in the source of ignition," Marsha ll said. "The even1~ , became the focal point of othets will be determining the exact A1clnhre s wrath. , Joss." Murray contacted White liouse of- One of the buildings to sustain major fic~a~ abo~l lhe intended gift _, .then those damage was Claval, a valve manufac-off1c1als shi~ted the respons!b~1ty over to luring plant localed directly across the the South Vietnamese delegation on hand street from the chemical firm. for a di_nner attended by President Ni.Ion Claval, which employs a work force o! and Thteu. , . . approximately 200 was expected to be The South Vietnamese replied that Jt shut down for abo~t two days until shat-would be "inappropriate" for them to ac- tered plate glass windows, a partly cept. blown-off roof and fallen light fixtures That was the news that greeted have been repaired. Mcintire a few-dozen yards from the Touring the wreckage late Moaday, gates at a sJ)Ot where demonstraton Costa Mesa city councilmen said they must s!?P and proceed no farth:;· were amazed that the explosion had not Mcln!tre told Murray : I am been responsible for more death and detenn1ned to go to lh<it gate. I have that destruction . right." g doo t the h r c th · plosion site and beyond the Thomas' -wanted Mission..Yiejo...tupay.et:Uo~lp l!!:.ge r a ~e o a ~1ne home-said she couldn't believe lhe..force pay tor the Tu•tln High School emergen--xta1nlcl<, 311, Of 24782 San<lwal DrWC.-f lhe bl · · · When he ·came home, his apartment.at &13 W. 17th St. had been blown to shreds. Bob Vallette, 23, wbo had been staying with Kilgroe, said he had just finished rebuilding the engine in bis van when the explosion occurred. ''I don 't know how many of you were in Loodon during the blitz but this place looks just like it had been hit by a 2 000 ~r," said Ma_y.or_Jack_Ha~ett. "This kind of devastation looks typical of the last days of combat. We're lucky we didn't have 100 fatalities. n * * * T1iieu Berated ey and then turn right around and pay Mission Viejo and removed 50 pounds of 0 ast. full cost ot band uniforms at Mission Vie-frozen meat from her free zer. "I was sitting at my desk some 15 feet Jo and El Toro high schools." Officers said the Krajnik family was from the front of the one-story office Smitlt..called tills Wing the 5addlebacl< busy I!!_ th_e_ dinner table while the in· building and talking on the phone. All or Valley residents twice. truders were 6usy at the freezer. a sudden there was a noise like I'.ve Briner agreed the Saddleback board "If this keeps up." a senior sherilrs in-never heard before and glass hit me in !hould eslabllilb a policy about such mat-vesligator s&d today, "we may have to the face," Mrs. Wild said. ters, but said the request or Tustin was 'steak out' every county home with a "stepping a little out ol bounds." well-stocked freezer." The board voted 4 to 1 to ask. Tustin to fund the uniforms. " Power Failure Plagues Miami; fCause Myster y MIAMI (UPI) -Five electrical ,generating plants were knocked out by "problems unknown" today, triggering a -mid-morning power failure that trapped }M'OPle in elevators and caused depart· >ment stores and supermarkets to close l>ecause their cash registers wouldn't work. The blackout lasted 45 minutes to two hours or more and affected more th.an two million residents of Dade and Broward countJes and tourist!: on the south Florida Gold Coast. The power went off at 9:37 a.rn. and by 10: 15 was back on in downtown Miami. Florida Power & Light Co. said that two-Uu.rds of the power bad been restored by 10:30, but by noon some suburban areas were still reporting power outages. The blackout reached from scattered areas of Palm Beach County through the greater Fort Lauderdale and greater Miami areas as far south as~emier in the Florida Keys. The power company said, however, Dade and Broward coun- ties were the main areas affected. OU.N•I COAST .. DAILY PILOT ni. Ore1111t CO..! DAILY P1LOT, wllll wlllcll 11 combl"911 ""' "''-"'"'· 11 PlllllJllMNI w Ille Orlfltt ( .. II Pullllalllnl ~'· s.p.. From Page l BOYCOTI ... a rollback on these pi-ices three months ago." "Of course the prices are way too high," said a woman who disagreed, "so you can see I don't have any meat, We can onJy afford meat two days a week. "But I think a boycott isn't a good idea. All it will do is lhrow people out of work without doin g any good," she said. Nancy Story, a motherof three. felt so strongly in favor of boycott, that she stopped her shopping to try to dissuade one woman who was about to make a meat purchase. "Don't you think that's just too much to pay?" she asked, and the other shop- per apparently agreed because she returned her meat. "I hope all this does some good," Mrs. Story reflected afterwards. "I'm willing to eat cheese or beans or "'hatever it takes but these prices have got to come down." · COLO MBIA QUAKE CAUSES DAMAGE BOGOTA I UPJ) -An earthquake of moderate intensity shook most or Colom· bia today. There were no immediate reports of casualties ·but police I said some damage was reported from the central and southwest sections of the country. The Andes Geophysics Institute said the quake registered 6 to 61,-i on lhe in· ternational scale o{ 12. Vandalis1~, Thefts Probed a t El Toro From Pagel WELTE ••. tendent of administrative services. -Robert Matthew, now assistant superintendent of business services with Tustin, to the same post in Saddleback. -Gary Shinkle, now director of person- nel services in the San Joaquin District, as administrator of personnel services. -Robert Ferguson, now coordinator of special projects in the Tustin Union District, as director of special projects. -Edward Mangan, now director of child welfare and attendance. and pupil personnel services in Tustin Union, as director of school-community services. · -Robert Wisgerhof, now director of adult education in the Tustin Union District. will be principal of adult educa- tion in Saddleback. Wisgerhof has worked directly with the adult education program at Leisure World. Laguna Hills. Tustin Union High School District also dissolves as of June 30. All administrative employes in the outgoing districts are guaranteed jobs for two ye_ars in one of the new unified di stricts. according to the unififcation plan approved by voters last June-: Saddleback Superintendent William Zogg was superintendent of the Tustin Union High District before being hired by th e new unified district. Trustees Monday also approved 4·1 eight positions to be filled as needed, ~despite objections by trustee Dennis Smith that they had no job descriptions or juslificalion of ncec1. He sa.id he was concerned about giving a\\·ay that much authority in hiring. Part of the recommendation \\'as to authoMz.e advertisement and employment for /ap- proved vacanclet. Trustee George Henry said the posts aren't positions available, but sug· gestions. "I'd just turned the ignition key on when·tbe explosion blasted me right-oul the door," he said, taking the event in stoic stride. Further ""-'l OD 17th Street, printer Dave Stella of Orange said, "I was about to cut a sheaf "' paper with this cutter when It went off. I thought we were being bombed by North Vietnam. I could have cut my arm off if I'd slipped it under this knife," he said pointing to a giant paper cutter. Mrs. Terry Stewart, also of Orange, an employe of the print shop said she now believes in miracles. "My new desk was supposed to be delivered tbb afternoon,'' she said. "It was to be put right there · ... racing the window and against it. I would have been killed," she speculated pointing to the knife lil<e sbanh of glass wblch lay on the sidewalk and as far as. 15 feet back into the tiny shop. "God was on my side," Mrs. Stewart siched. An unidentified plate glass salesman trekking up 17th Street measured the opening and promised the printing firm's owner the glass would be replaced by nightfall. Elsewhere in the four-block area, businesses and homerirs far away as Monrovia Street on the west were looking for window glass, or were boarding up gaping openings. Many of those who had been evacuated by police because of the danger of a secor_dary 'etplo!ion· returned during the evenmg hours to remove J)OSSessions from their homes while firemen mopped up the rubble Wlder klieg lights. Although the Oiplosion had the effect of blowing out much of the fire, Bal1allon Chief Robert McClelland disclosed today that flgbtlng the blaze was difficult. Not only was the area inaccessible and the damage widespread, but many chemicals stored inside the building had not been expended, he said. Minor secondary explosions from bar- tE!Js belleved to contain metha.nol and benzene hampered the control effort. But despite these problems, Marshall said the last .glimmer was extinguished by ap- proximately 4:30 p.m. Meanwhile, the emergency room at Hoag Memorial Hospital was kept busy with the treatment of persons injured by flying gla" and debris. Prince Loses Cash LONOON (UPI) -The com· munlcations minister of the oil-rich sheikdom of Abu Dhabi, Prince Moham- med Bin Khalid, told police Monday that $145,'130 in cash was stolen from his Lon- don hotel room during the weekend. The money was taken from a cash box in his room in the Royal Garden Hotel in fashlonable Kensington, police said. THANK YOU, ERASTUS! By Protesters In San Clemente The atmosphere was majestic and cor- dial on the grounds of the Western Whlle House Monday as South Vietnam's Nguyen Van Thieu arrived for his talks with President Ni.Ion. But outside the gates and elsewhere in the nation, some scathing criticism has welled up over lhe visit by the con· troversial Asian. One Congressional critic called Thieu a "pirate." The demonstrators who waved Viet Cong flags near the Presidential com- pound in San Clemente Monday used more obscene epithets to condemn Thieu. And a minister who arrived late Mon- day to praise Thieu, wound up chastising him, instead, after South Vietnamese or. ficials flatly refused to accept a wooden plaque with "victory" carved on it. Dr. Carl Mcintire and 130 followers were turned away at the gales ln a tense episode "'hich was capped by the minister snapping, "It (the plaque) has one word on it and that's the word they're all afraid of." , That off hand criticism of 111.ieu, however, appeared pale compared to the words heard from Congressional doves: that day. "I reject this panhandler. I don't want this pirate to take money from our shores," declared Rep. Robert F. Drinan <R-Mass.). It oc.currecl to us the other day that we owe a lot to an innovator In our carpet industry who operated about 150 years ago. Hen are -facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGnow: •lho ldltltnt 1r1 l'Ulllltllld, M0rl011' lllniiooll f'tld•W. IOI" COS!I Mei.a, NI.... hacfl. Huntlllflofl IHCh1'"-111'L.Yt li.,r, l..,.._ !Moedl, l•w!1Mls..d!llleMO Ind &.n Clt!Mntw/ S111 Ju.on C1pr11r11111. A tlfllll• r.tllll\11 ldltlOn 11 PllDl1'11ed Stlv""n •rd. Sund1ys. 1----1-'ht l!f.lm:!Hle.u!!llHl!nt e1tnt.11,J1tc»O..."tm"-.f-~"'O"'r'°'ang"1 e County Sheriff's officers are in· ••1 ,,, .. ,, c-11 M.,.. c111~...... tHH. ves 1ga ing-aa,or vandihsm a an ' They are principal of continuation school ; directors ot instruction services, pupil persoMel services and plaMing and development ; coordinators of cur- r i c u I um development, instructional ateriaJ!"Unter;-p!)l'ehologtal~stnr•h' =+--1 and special education and research and • Born 181 4, W, Boylston, Moss,• Poor fomily, required to work at oge ,I 0 1s farm hand and clerk , • Genius 1t m1th and mechinics. • At 23 ye1rs old , invented loom fo r lice. • Invented revolutionary power loom for BRUSSELS ind WILTON carpets. This created • domestic corp et in• du stry, and virtu10y eliminated foreign competition. • Founded. BIGE· LOW .CARPET MILLS in Clinton, Moss. • Groat economist, one of small group founding MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY at B.o.siJ>nJ n ~it_d..1879. I Roi..1rt N. w,94 Toro elementary school-in which tools Prnldtft1 11111 P11911111« wt:re stolen by intruders and a number of development. · Fr om Page l RI NKER ... J•etr A. C11rl1v new lighting fixtures smashed. vic. ,,..Id"'' '"' Gentr11 M•Mtw Deputies said Intruders believed to be Th•"'•• l(,,.,.u juveniles inflicted extensive damage dur-Ec111or ing ~e weekend at Santiago Elementary Tho:::..,~ ~;r:,.t.in• School. 25000 Rivtndell Drive. The school Cheif•• H, Looi ~i~ti.,d P. Nill is in its final stages of construction. AMltUlll M.ttlto .... £41 .... • omc.. linues to farm most or the acreage sur· c.." Ma"' "'w ... "f '""' Camei·as, Tools Taken rounding the Rinker property and has Ill· H......,...., a.,<111 »» N...,,., 11ov1 ... •r• ed no zone change reques1s for the Im· L .. IMW Bead!: m For .. , "~ H...i1nt'°" 11NC11! 1111s leech'°"""'"" medlate area . .I.NI C.,_i.: JU ""'""' ~ Cel'lllllt lilnl F c • El T rom ar Ul . 01'0 School district officials liave indicated r.,,,.,., fn4J Ml<4Jtl residences or the type previously sought C.....,... A4t .. ttt111 Mt-1111 Cameras, tools and tape recordings by Rinker would have produced enough s.. c......_ Al hp=•-••: with a total va lue of $494 were stolen children to require at least a half school T1l••b ••• 4tl:f4ZI Monday night from an El Toro man's car be built. , , .,.,.."""" bile the..o.w:ner_was asleep at bis nearby Since the parcel 1.$ located one-mile of! ...,1,.,.1111 ·.,,:;-,., ~':t;;-!';1:llt~•~.:--4f--llO~.aiige e.ounty Sherill' oflkera;_ lhe end.-the. easkweslnulway_ot.EJ_Toro ERASTUS: MY GRANDFATHER THANKS YOU! MY FATHER THANKS YO U! I THANK YO U! MY CHILDR EN THANK YOU ! , I Four gen•r•tion1 in the c1rp1t bu1lness sine• Mr. Bigelow.I 1894, thinks to the inv•ntion1 of P.S. Amazingly, without Erastvs, Bigelow Carpets have remained an industry l90der. Please stop in and see their spculdlng carpet line. ALDEN.'S -fbtY•"-· 1~ ~' _.. ~ · ~. ~~1ar Corp!__Air tatioilAriOii ittJ.c-~ ::. .. "".:': ... · .. c .. ,, M•.., Deputies said the theft was report by pac DY noist rom jets c•1•rciiii1•n,;g'>i.ro"m;rt~t--:-~ Cellflrllll, ........ .,... .,. (llf"'"' n . .s James E. Duncan, 24681 Shadowfax nJghts generated on the. north-south CARPETS e DRAPES _:J663-21acentla.Ar1~-::;=-;:;;;;;;;;;~I=~ C"MESK" ·;.~== 646-4838 ::.~r!..."!'a:'.:n,,,!:;~"·~' "'1111''' Lnne. They said the burglars removed runway, Jt ls not likely a school would be the equipment from Duncan 's unlocked ... bulll Jn the area, due to nol.Je and safely auto. factors. • ( '• t Moo.· 11Mlrs. t hi 5:30: Fri. t hi t: Sat. 9:30 hi I \ ( I Bnutingion _Beaeh -~F-0un:ta· ·:V-&llq~, Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1973 TEN CENTS lloyc9tt Cuts Meat Sales on CQas.t ~Only 20<>/o By JOUN ZAILEll Of .. Delft' , .... s ... Some people are calling this week's na· tional meat boycott the blgg.,t protest in American history. But on the Orange Coast Monday, it seemed something less tba.n that. (Related stories, Page 18) "Yes, I'm on the meat bOyeott,'1 said a woman shopper with three pounds of hamburger in her cart. "My oallie won't eat anything else so I've got to feed her meat. "But ... mt .. Jlte. teenagers will be eating fish,'' she aid. 1'0f course I'm ID agreement with. the boycott," said another shopper at Market J,la•ket in <mta Mesa. "Oh, Ibis ham- burger? 11Welf1 I've always given my husband a meat pellf. 10< beeaklast and I don 't think I could stop now. But we'll be hav· ing fish for .dinners ... ... I haven't really dtcided yet /' sa id a woman who was lingering in front of the rout ""1lon. "I guess I ...n't 1Ju1 anytblnjf today. Bui l have to eat. I doo't know how long I'll bold out.'' Perhaps because of .shoppers lite these, Ol'ange Coast meat aellers reported an average sales drop of only IS to 20 percent Monday. Of the dozen outlets contacted, only Von's : Market • In Huntington Beach reported a large drop id Its sales, and lts estimate of a 35 percent fall in sales wu still not near the 50 percent drop reported natloowidil. Talking to numerous _.,.. and shop. pero Monday, two dlstloct lmprwions "'"'~' ~Markel manqers c1oni like the boycott and c1oni t1mit tt will accomplish , much be!aid ........ meat to rot on the shelves:. ''Thia wbole· .thing wu created by the ne-~ and tlia tetevlsloo," complained one: man who was typical of man~ ......... "But It's • bunch or hogwash." --Owumen art ·generally supportive ot the Idea of a boycott, but many att not committed to tt. Of the 25 shoppers con· tacted at Market Basket In Costa Mesa. JO at""'gly ouppol1ed the boycott, 10 were eU.ber undecided about it or trying to fllld hallway ground and only live were opposed to the idea outright. "! cooldn't !Ind anything l could af- lon!," said Craig Hill alter checking the meat counter closely. "l buy just for myself and all the packages are too big. ls that part of the boycott?" There were. however, some with stronr opinions both for and at;nin st the boycott. "I can afford any of th is [ wanted," said J . J. Wot!f, a retired businwman \~ho SUPPorted the idea of boycott. "But these prices are just out of line. "I'm a Republican," be added, 1'but 1 thin~ Presid.ent Nixon shuuld have called !Ste BOYCOTT, Page ti Cleanup Vowed Officials to Enforce Safety Codes Detctiblng tbe downtown eecllon of Huntington Beach aa a 6re trap, city of. ficlals vowed M<ll\day to enforce building and safety codes they admitted have been ignored in the· sector for the past three years. by Padllc Coast Highway, Lake Slr<et, Olive Street and 8th Street. section of town. I "We Just will go lhrnugh methodically, I doing the same kind or inspections that we do regularly throughout the city . Speaking at a city COWlcil study session, Fire Chief Ray Piccard and Buildlng Director John Behrens said their departmenb are launching an in- spection campaign in lhe area bounded Both men said many of the buildings in that area are suffering from structural · deteriorallon or man~made fire haza rds. Piccard said he believes some of the structures, including police headquarters, will have to be torn down. '"Ibere!s~questlon," Pica rd said, "that when we resume code en- forcement. some of these buildings are · going to have to come down ." : The !ire chief explained that minimal I code enforcement was' carried on In !ht 1 area for the pa.st three years because it ! But Piccard stressed that the in- spection and enforcement campaign ..,.,1'.!Uld not be an all out assault on the old (Ste DOWNTOWN, Page !I i .-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, -s1noking .Oui I But So's Sewing arid Knitting Nixon ~Wins 1st Big Test On Spending _, . . . AERIAL VIEW-This was scene at El Monte Chem- ical Company in Costa Mesa shortly after explosion ripped the W. 17th Street plant about 3:16 p.m. , ~onday. Water spout (center) is from plant's water line, severed by bl ast. At upper left, across 17th Street is Claval plant, which was evacuated follow· ing the explosion. Industrial building (upper right) had doors blown out and apartment units (bottom) were shattered by explosion. ~TON (o\P) -~'Nil· on woo the fint big lest ol tbe year wltll COOgr.,. on federal spending when the -se&te failed today to override his veto ol lbe vocational rehabilitation bill. The VQte in the Senate was 60 to'36, or 4 short ol the needed two-thirds. Sln<e both houses of Coogresa must vote to override Valve 'Opened Mistakenly' a veto, tbe Senate action killed the measure without need for a House vote. 'Ibe action came as a sharp disa~ polntment to De._.tic ~ leaders who chooe the bill aa the vehicle for the )'Mr's first chaDellge to Nixon's cubadJ ol dot,.iic programa. Fire Investigators Blame Action for Fawl Blast 1be vocaUCl\81 rehabilitation me1sure, By RUDI NIEDZIEUIKI 01 ltle Ch!llY Pilot Sltff A mistakenly opened vent valve today was blamed by fire investigators as the cause of an industrial explosion which ripped apart · a Costa ~1esa chemical pl~nt, killing two persons and injuring at least' nine othe rs with its destructive blast. or Anaheim. Leenert.s was found buried under an eight-inch thick concrete 1.llt-up wall and pranounced dead at the scene. Riley died at Hoag h-Jemorial H05pital about 6:30 p.m. l\fonday. A third chemical worker, Robert Davidson, 57, of Ventura remains in serious condition today at Hoag'S in· tensive care unit. a $'1.6 billion authorization setting a ceil- for the pr e ::i s u re to d is s I p a t e . ing subject to later SPefOpriatlons, was Instead preswre began to build inside the l°ll'lt of 12 rne'asuriii-vetoed last year and the vapors found a source of igililion. What touched off· the vapors is unkn~wn by Nixon after co n g r e s s i o n al ad- but investigators believe it may have journment to reach his desk agaln. been a water heater. The new bill was more than $800 Firemen said the blast brought the mi!Jion Jess than last year's but still con· wall down on Leene rts' body and bl ew sidered too expensive by t b e Riley some SO feet through a wire re.in-Administration. forced grapestake fence. Firemen described the m 0 d e r n In the two-hour debate which preceded chemical plant as "one of the best built the Senate vote, Republicans echoed Nix- A ~ 11)11~ ~ Ile ' ~n, and a CoOd cigar a smote, but one .,.., up aplnsllheother Mooday0 night and tbe cigar finished a poor second . . ~ THAT HAPPENED 1!hen smokers Jerry Matney and Henry Puke relented in their fight to smoke clgar3 in Huntington Beach's city council chambers. The two councilmen folded under pressure from fellow couneU members: Jed by Norma Gibbs and voted for a ban on smoking In the council chamber$. MATNEY, WHO CAME to the meeting armed with a (oot·long cigar. rt· taliated later In tbe meeting by '"""'sslully sponsoring a resolution banning "oewing, knitting, crocheting, Cbrt.tmas card-addreuing or peper-gradlng" In counctlchambers. The resolution waa aimed at Mrs. Gibbs who frequently brings band-k to coundl meetings. That measure wu approved 5 to z with Mrs. Gibbs and Mayor Al Coen oppooed. Coen uplalned that he bU tal<en up crocheting. IN AN A'ITEMPT to placate Matney, Mrs. Gibbs earlier preaented him willl two cigars and a note reading "May these bring you as much satisfaction u a good woman." - Viets in Clemente Snub Dr. Mclntire's Offering Fire Chief John Marshall disclosed this morning that a valve "which shouldn 't have been turned on " resulted in an overproduction of volatile vapor at the El Monte Chemical Company; 829 W. 17th St., moments before the Monday af- ternoon explosion. "If the doors had been open and the vent'badn't been turned on, the explosion might never have happened," theorized Ed Lewis, a lire baU.Uon chief. buildings in Costa Mesa." Ironically, its oo's cootentJon that ~ge of the bill main product was said to be a name-would be the first step in a new con-By JOHN VAL TERZA . I that he and the leading members of the South Vielnamese government were close . friends. · ! proof resin. gressimal spending-spree w h l l e °' ... Dtlh' PllM tr.tr The building featured a lilt-of! ex-Democrats defended tbe measure as A snubbed and defeated Dr. Carl After probing the nature of the 3: 16 . Killed by the blast were Elmer Leenerts, 41, of JMJ(I samar Drive, Costa -Meia, iDd liiS co-WOi'kei Randy Riley, 23i Adclitiorwil · Photos today on Page 9, plosion roof, elgbt-incb thick com:i:ete modest and resporu:lble. MclnUre stalked away from thee gates of waits, and a special hazard sprinkler the Western White Houae Monday night system yet it was -completely demolls!); livid over -South V1etnameae officlals1 ed Church in Huntington re!Usal to accept a wooden plaque with --~.p.m.-blut-whicbtl'OCked .the citJ!s west Marsba.11, fire chief of Costa Mesa for the word "victory" on it. S • SJ d side 'and' cleated C!Ondit.ions remUUscent lhe past nine years, described the ex· ff C d"d 11lt1s the word they tear most," said efVICe8 ate or the Loiidoit·bllt;i dUrtng• Worl~ W!ir II, ~losion as 'the "moo devastating" blast 0 8ls an I ates the stunned minister during a hall-bour . . fire department invest,lgators .!oday have iD the city's history. tirade which followed the march to the F Ci a the f~lowlng explanation for, the ex-"Realistically, you"re talking about a A 'candidates night ror the Huntington Presidential gates. (Related story Page Or 0 ty erk ploslon· Jos; ol $750,000 to II million and tha t Beach City (elementary) School District 3) The--lf\ree eqiployes had been setting doesn't include the loss of Income to will be held at 7:30 tonight at Christ Blaming local police officials for "giv· up an exotic methane 1eclalmlng process those businesses fhat were disrupted." Presbyterian Church, 20112 Magnolia St., ing Jane Fonda more courtesy than us." Patil C. Jones inside 'jhe plant when steam pressure The shock wave of the big blast Huntingto'n Beach. the New Jersey minister finally led his used to heat the vats became excessive. damaged seriously 25 nea rby industries, The forum .Is sponsored by the League 130 supporters back across a bri After turning on the vent valve ·to including five major companies. Heaviest of Women Voters. The eight candidates the San Diego Freeway to an e dge over Funeral services will be held Wednes· reduce pressure tha three men c103ed damage was at an adjacent industrial vying for three seats on the school board, where a night-time rally contlnu day in Corona d e.J Mar for Paul C. the doors and went outside w a i t i n g · (See CAUSE, Page %) are elfeciecl to speak. The evening bad been bllled- mpty lot ed. as a Jooes,_1be...H1mtington Beacn..£1'1'--"'"'-"-----------.,.----------------------------'-'dlebnlt.Jan tn1 trlbute-1CL7hlt ·who died Supday. Mclnure cheerfully told his u,...u.• followers Mr. Jones, 63, wbo S)ICCUl!lbed to a Goes to Planners . heart attack. was a native o{ Ohio and had lived In Huntington Beach for 18 years. He had served the city for 13 years as city clerk prior to his death. He was a member ol tbe Huntington Beach Rolary, a pest Patron ol Eastern S I a r and a Mason. . - Beach Okays Market Study 7 Mrs. JOMt was a veteran of both Huntington. Beoch frult stand owners The recent enforcement of this suggtsted councilmen try 11nother ap- \Vorld War I.I and the KoreM Conflict. may have a chrutce to sell their produce ordinance has driven out oLtown the pro-proach ''or drop the mtter altogether." Services will be held at 11 a.m. at in the clty after all. duce vendors who sold from the backs o( O>uncllman Jack Green. who ha! Paciflc Vic\v Chapel with the Rev. That pogsibility was raised at 'Monday their trucks as well as local tanners who adamAnlly baCked the enforcement of Edward Erny, pastor of th e First ni41ht's city council meeting when council brouJl>t Vegetablea and frull s from fields tbe t1istlng fruit s1and ordinance, l!Ui· Methodist Church or Huntingtoo S..ch members agi'eed to let the planni"!I <om-throughout tbe·clty to a rcntral stand. gestcd tbe lanner's market or special and the Huntington Beach ritasonio Lodge, mission study the Institution of " In an eUort to give local f:irmers a z.one. · officiating. farmer'• market &rel\ or special zone break, councJlmen last month ordered He said~ or two locations tn the city Visitation wm be at Smltll's Mort uary , where lreab ptoduce could be sold. Boola to prepare an amendment to the might be t aside under 1 special oom- Huntlngton Beach, to<!•Y until 0 p.m. The action w .. taken after Clly At-ordinance which would allow HunUngton merctal to pennlt the fruit alandJ, ==='1\0Mrs. Jones-Je...,;,..-wileclluth~y..-_told co11ndt-tbal~...lelWhelr-produoc -or the ,clty may want to establlab i111nd:-l\obe1F mf--cfiutli -.-ra; tlii Clt~r-.-11erJ,lil1J1t.atY-11tt11..1~~-lllldJY;:Jor:llle ~ Cat Licensing Plan Deleted - Umcn ches on Huntington Beoclt city counc Monday night put the fini shing tou an animal control ordinance deleted any cat licensinq provlsi which on•. Ina nee Ing con· The rnutlne approval of the onl wa• Ille end of a long·stond troveny over a city propoeal to and neuter all cats m the dty. license y killed keel on "' Duke . ' ' que!yu, all ot Huntington BelCJj. ltlld~table-1tanas woul~ not'11e<t918rlly t-ect~ ,_,_-,,,_.., the-proo Tbt mtasure was f:ffec:Uvel March 20 when the council deadloc tbe:..onllnance_I to i_Qn4..Hen eluaedJo~~ In 'thHnd..-U-....a..n-y...;. 'l'he family suggest.. memortal con-constltutl..at. the produce came from. -1. be aid, -be to .-lr1lllc tributlons to tbe Myasthenla Gravis AJ the city Jaw now stands, ptoduce But Monday night Bonla said ouch "' baianl from the ltarO!s. Foundation, 237 S. C.talina St., Lot can only be 10ld from tbe property in the ordinance would violate the equal pro-Grem'1 -1 !f&a bocked by Mn. Angel ... CAiif., 90004. city where It ls grown. te<!lloo provisions ol the Constitution and (See ·ratJIT, Pqe I) ' • -._..i the ordlnonce wtlhoUI control .,......._ but Issue<! a the cat plea !or cl17 mld"'ts to YOhmtlrlly JJcenae alld neuter their ~· "l am confident that we 'll present this j plaque to Pre.sldent Thieu or JOme auitabl.-representaUve-t-o-n-i-g-b t-.-U----11 M~Jntire said early in the evenlng. Public Safety Director Clifford Murny ""as the go-between. but Jater in the evening became the focal point of Mclntire's wralh. rt1urray contacted \Vhlto douse of- ficials about the intended gift, then those CS.e McINTIRE, Pac• I) OraDg:a . Coast .__ - Weatller Clear skies tllrough Wednesday, but cootlnued gusty winds-of 15 lo 30 mil es per hour Is wbat the weather service Js predJcting. = In tbe 70s at moat beaches to 75 inland. Lor-l<lnlgbt io: INSmETODAY Activtsi octres1 Ja11e Fonda 1oinne r of a~i Oacar. l1n1 bee~ tiomtnated for anoelitr award - this one f rom rtturnhrg prison. trs of war. And ft'a liot that complimeniarv. Page 4. See story on L.M. lk¥tl " -, " C•llltnt~ • M11tNl ,nf• " Ct.till,... .,.,. PWl9MIH.., • Ct1ttlt1 .. Dr-.. (MJrTf f C1111sc:• s..,.. ,,,_ 11 ~':.-f-~11~ . ···~ w- -. ........ 1J.1t • ,......... . ....... . I•& ll'I 1t W......., .... JM~ AM ~ 1J ..,.,. ,,... f ' • • Mistrial Declared -. For Magee SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A mistrial was declared today In the Ruchell Magee mtmlor-kldnap trial. Pr,skllng Judge ~1ortO!'? C. ~tvin declared the mistrial after the jury reported £or a fifth time it was hopel~ ly dtadlocked. Magee, 34, a black convict serving a life term at San Quentin, was accused· or mord<ring iudge Harold J. Haley in the Aug. 7, 1970 Marin Coonty Cou~ escape attempt. The jury, whlch included three black,<, · deliberated almost 80 hours over eight days lollowlng the loor-month trial. At 11 :15 a.m., lhe weary paoel sent a note to the judge saying: . . "The jury unanimously believes that it has tried earnestly but in vain to reach a verdict:" \ ... 'il:i ' • ~· Mi ~·· ~ ••• ~- Recycre Trophy " • Park Area . ,,,.... r.,.e J CAUSE •.• Tf-o-n:ar-o~t~e-s-1---"modom""""'""'jnillllllJWD !'.OO~tnictl='v=e !=oitt'°-------,,1 r . ttnnbled wllla, wr<ncbed all the garage doors, and shattered every window in Archeology A potentially rich archeology site in Huntington Beach will remain Wltouched by developers because city oouncil members Monday oight agreed to . buy the acreage lor a park. Tbe council formally agreed to purchase J.9 acres to go with the 1.6 acres which the Meadow H o m e s developers are required to dedicate to the city in the proposed tract near the in- tersecUon of Ellis Avenue and Newland Street. The site has been the center of debate for the past six .months becauae of a large stand of eucalyptus trees and the pr<SellCe of what arcbeologista bellev<! could be an Indian camp and burial ground dating back 2,000 to 6,000 years. The debate has centered on the preserva- tion of the trees and rnalan site. lfeht. Tht exploslon also made a shambles ol five· residences next t'o El Monte Chemical Company and · &hatJered glass and set oft burglar alanns all over the city's west.side. Guardedoy industrial employta and Costa Mesa police again.st looting, tht blocked-0ff area tOday is being inspected by teams of lnsurnnce investigators, fire department ofliclals and building depart- ment ofDclals. "We had a strategy meeting today to determine the exact cause of the bJ.ast. We want to get into the distillation machinery and probe the plant (or the SOU1<e of Ignition," Mai'shall Silid. "The otbm will be delermlnlni the exact loss." Ooe ol the buildinga to 8Wltain major damage wu Claval, a valve manufac. luring plant located dlrectly across the street·from the chemical flnn. Claval, whic(l employs'a work !orte of approximately 200, was expected to be shut down for about two days until shat- tered plate glass wiridows, a partly blown-pl! roo! and lallen light fixtures have been repaired. Colvin responded: 0 1t appears to the court that the jury is hopelessly deadlocked and I will declare a mistrial. J now declare a mistrial and discharge the jury Crom Utis case." Magee, who looked tired, stared at the __ .i!ldge _and ~ but said nothing. Janet Kamisoto touches up trophy made of soft drink cans that will be awarded to Fountain Valley High School homeroom that collects the most re- cyclables during Earth Week comP.,tition currently under way at the Baron campus. A variety of ecol- ogical eveQts are taking place at the school during Earth Week which runs through Friday. Roger Desautels or Archeological Research Institute said his firm will begin excavating the site Wednesday. But he noted that the excavtaion was planned through an agreement with the developer prior to Monday night's action by the council. ' ~ Tht matter was 6rought before the city council oo ao appeal by the developers 1rom a planning-commission condition which prevented devel()flnent or the 3.5 acres on which the trees and Indian site are located. Touring the wreckage late Monday, Costa Mesa city councilmen said they were amazed that the explosion had not been responsible for more death and destruction. -After 55 hours ordebate, jury COrcmin Bernard Suares Monday told Superior · Court Judge Morton Colvin: "Tbere ap. pears .to be coofll!ion within the jury as to wb,ether or Mt the word 'case' has any bearing oo oor verdicts. Tht jury has dil- • lettoceS or opinion as to the relationship. ii any, betwoen the counts as charged ~ and the 'cue ln its totality.' " Pa1·ents Protest Slated in Valley Over Cox Busing , Thieu Attaeked Tom Shelton ol Alpine avn Engineers, repmeotaUvea of Meadow Homes, told c:ouncllmeo be could not develop the tract unless the city bought the u acres beyood the land required !or parts by the cit "I don't know how many or you were in Loodon during the blits but this place looks just like It bad been hit by a Z,000 pounder," said Mayer Jack Hammett. "This kind of devastation looks typical ol the last days of combat. We're lucky we didn't have 100 fatalities." Jurors, who Monday announced for the fourth time they were deadlocked, also asked thtll jud~ to define "presumption of lnnoce!ce and burden of proof.'' ,,.. Opposing Factio1is Hit Viet Head ~.. a'8111'ed Shelton It bad been their iotantion all along to buy the acreage in order to preserve the site. Many of those wbo had been evacuated by police because ol the danger ol a secondary explosion returned during the evening houn to remove posRSSlon.s Crom lheir homes while firemen mopped up the nibble under klieg llgbts. The atmosphere was majestic and cor- Cooccrn over possible busing or dial on the grounds of the Western White stu~nts away from Cox: School has House Monday as South Vietnam's spark_¢ plans for a mass parent protest Nguyen van Thieu arrived for his talks Thursday at meeting or tPe Fountain with President Nixon. Valley School Boord. B.ut outside the gates and elsewhere in l'ro111 Pqe I DOWNTOWN • • Organizers of the protest acknowledge, the 'nation, some scathing criticism has was assumed tThat the! hepaPrkinl glauthorlltdy though, that the possibility of busing th e v.•elled up over the visit by the con- created by the op o t er P an "''OU h"ld • t r II · n1 " " either buy up or condemn the property. c 1 ren nex a IS 0 Y 3 ~mor. troversial Asian. "Since the Top or the Pier has The Thursdny night protes~ is expected One Congressional critic called Thieu a --~neutralized itself, jt's-our-duty_to_t.!L_draw 300 parents who hve north of "pi.rat~ • reasaume a regular code enforcement Slater Avenuel>t.itwbos--e-bOtncS fa11--. " he dded within the current Cox: School boun-The demonstrators who waved Viet · ~ra:rd poin~ ~ tbat some of the daries, said Mrs. John Luebs, group Coog O_ags near the 'Presidential com- unA(e build.in s In the downtown area spokes man. pound m San ~emente h!onciay u_sed are ovmed by~ dty and he told council C.Ox School is located a block south or more ob.sce.n~ epithets to c~demn Thieu , members lhat those buildings would not Slater on Los Jardines West. And a mini.st~ who &JTJVed late ~~-~ be excluded from the enforcement pro-A district spokesman this morning day to praise 1:h1eu, l!?J!!d up chast1s1 ng gram. denied any plans ror busing, saying it him, lnStead, alter SOutH Vietnamese of- Behrens sa·d a fire inspector and a was too early to know. ficials flatly refused to accept a wooden building ~ would conduct their in-"!bey are very premature in their con-plaque with "victo!}'" carved on it. spections for 17 conditions of hazard that cern," said Dr. Jack M~hnken, assistant Dr. Carl Mcintire and 130. foUowers are autlined in the wiiform building code. supe'rintendent [or administration. "We w~re turned ~way at the gates lD a tense "We will be using 8 visual approach to have absolutely no plans at the present ep.~e whtch. was capped by the . tlrne." mm1ster snapping, "It (the plaque) has look £or damag~, deterioration and J hnk 'd hool bounda · r one word on it and that's the word overstress " he said a en sa1 sc r1es or . A brief 'sidewalk 'inspection made b next fall will not be established until they're all afraid of.". , . . city staff members last week yleldJ; f\.lay, afte r the district learns the fate of That off · hand cr1t1c1sm of Thieu, some dramatic photographic evidence of a proposed school. however, appeared pale C<lm~ to the the hazards described by the two men. The distri~t is hoping that the st~te will words heard Crom Congressional doves Several buildings have windows which agree to budd another school this sum-t~t dar. . , . open onto the adjoining property line. mer. A representative from the state will . I r~Ject this panhandler. I don t want This, Piccard said, i.s a major fire spread visit the district later this month, and the this P'!:ate to take money from . our hazard. Older brick buildings are losing building ven;iict may be reached by h1ay, shores, .declared Rep. Robert F. Orman the mortar around the bricks and in Mahnken said. some cases the bricks have begun to Call However. in reports to the school board out of the walls. made earlier this yea r, district officials Fire exits in some of the buildings are have said they do not believe the district wooden stairways. w111 be eligible for state building fWlds FromP'!flel City administrator David Rowlands for at lea.St two years. said the city "would be reasonable" in H the school is approved, it would not McINTIRE ... requiring necessary repairs of building be ready before a year from Call. owners. "Everything rests on the state's officials shifted the responsibility over to the South Vietnamese delegation on hand for a dinner attended by President Nixon and Thieu. FronaPagel BOYCO'IT ... a rollback on these prices three months ago." "Of course the prices are way too high," said a woman who disagreed, "so you can see I don 't have any meat. \\'e can only afford meat tv>'o days a week. "But I think a boycot t isn't a good idea. All it will do is throw people out of work without doing any good,'' she said. Nancy Story, a motherol three, felt so strongly lo favor of boycott, that she !lopped her shopping to try to dissuade one woman who was about to make a , meat purchase. OIAN•I COAST •• DAILY PILOT Tne Ol'l"llt Co1$1 CAIL Y PILOT w!lfl whk!I ,, com.bl"'" 11>'11 New1.Prt11, 11 PVbUIMO bY 11\e Or1ng1 (0.11 P110ll1~'"9 COfnPtlny, hD9• ••1t edltlool1 Ire 11111>1!1M11, Mondly thrOVOh l'tldfy, tor Co1r1 Mt:K, NtW110tf 8ea1;h, H\ll'ltlnqlon ll~•e~/l'WMtin V•llty, LID\lfll &.ac11, ln"lntl$1d!S!9btck 11'11 Sin Cltme~!•I i11f-. I\ t It r ioNI Mllt!Mo It P1111!11'*" b turdlYI aftd IV .. the prl11CIP9'1 P'*flloll!rll ,C.ftl ff 11 Ill Weit ••v 51rHI, Cftll Mftl, Oollftr11ll, ntlt. Roli1rt N. W114 Pr•""'"4 ....C "ftllllltf' J1c• JI , CvPl1y Vici ~lftlOtftl 1!'1111 C.-r1I MIMOfl' Tlt0fll11 K11¥il Etltot Jll.,..,, A. Mw r11hfft1 . f!'MIO!'I• ff"" C111r/" H. Leo1 IUth1t4 P. Hill M•let1M M.,...lftt l•ltOrt Toi,., Co...illo Wo-t Or'lllOI ~IY lt!lilll Ho ....... IHdOMc. 17175 looc.h kwlo¥•111 M1ltr11i Atfdr111 1 P.O. lo• 790, '1641 ..... -L .. UM IHCIH tn ~ ... I ... .,..,.,.,. Colli M ... I a.lit w.tt .. , Slflff ,...,.,., eo.dl: DH.....,..... 1k1Wln1,. .. II (~!1: JDS NOl'lll f.1 Clfllll!O ... , T•111• 1• C7141 Ml ... 121 C~ MMll .. 64J·lfi71 p,_...,.~c:....,~ decj.sion on whether to build the school,'' f\.fahnken said. Qnly after tha t decision is made WjJl boundary plans be laid for next year, he said. Meats Pilfered 111 Home Tli,efts l1i Mesa, Viejo The South Vietnamese replied that it \vould be "inappropriate" for them to ac- cept. That was the news ti1at greeted ~fclnlire a few-dozen yards from the gates at a spot where demonstrators niust stop and proceed no farther. Mcintire told Murray: "I a rn determined to go to that gate. I have that right." "No you don 't," Murray replied . "My instructions are to keep you out and that someone will come out from the White Sheriff's officers in two Orange County House." ... locaUons aren't loo happy about the meat -"H·e -came at me with fire and boycott and they seem to have a brilTIJitone/' the weary police official said legitimate beef. later. Weekend raids on homes in ~1i~ion "I'm sure that it was a matter or honor Viejo and the Costa f\.1esa area netted v.•ith Dr. Mcintire, because he felt so cer· burglars more than 100 pounds of frozen tain that the gilt would be received,'' he meat and investigators have linked the added. break-ins lo the effect or the nationwide ''It was rather sad, really.'' ~turray meat boycott. observed. Deputies said burglars broke the lock But the wooden plaque was not the only Sunday on a freezer owned by John gift shunned by the South Vietnamese in Henry Ayres, 48, of 981 \V. \Vilson SL, San Clemente. Costa Mesa and carried off 60 pounds of One devoted Mcintire follower went out recently butchered meat. to her back yard earlier in the day and Int ruders had earlier force d open the picked some of her special tangeJos for garage r a ome o Cilliei'i'"ne--ttr=1ifettrnt:lt! . Krajnlck, 39, or 24782 Sandetval Drive, Mc intire carried the bag or fruit as Mission \ricj o ~nd removed 50 poWldS of \\'ell as the plaque. frozen meat from her freezer. But the wold-be recipient from Officers said the Krajnik family was Indochina dkia't want the tangelos, busy at the dinner table while the in-either. trudus i,i,•ere busy at the freezer. "If this keeps up." a senior sheriff's in- vestigator said today. "we mi13 have to . 'steak out' every county borne with a wcll -stockcd !recrer." l'rom Page I FRUIT ... Donald Almay. a local resident who -brought a SO.signature petltlon to the council protesting the clo.•iog of the Convicts Seeking Coed Facilities . SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -Two San Quentin Prison inmates 'vnnt to be transferred to a women's t>rlson because, they sny, all-male lh.°'tltullons arc dlscrlminatorv and roster Mmoscxuallly. Dennis crOwnover, 26, and Jame8 Olosup, rt. both convicted robbers from <R-Mass.). His outburst led of£ an hour of anti- Thieu blasts from the House floor. Fiery lem-libber Bella Abzug (J).N.Y.), picked up the baU and insisted that the joy felt by Americans at the return of the prisoners of war "has dulled our senses and reaction to (Nixon's) meeting with this dictator." Valley Council To Vote on Neiv Officers Tonight Fountain Valley city COUDCilmen. are scheduled to elect new council officers during their first meeting in their new council chambers tonight at 8 o'clock. The chambers were dedicated in ceremonies lest weekeDd marking com- pletioil of the $800,000 civic center ex- pansion. Mayor Al Hollinden, who has presided over all the meetings conducted in the in- terim council chambers in the C<lm- munity center, noted that he will lead the council meeting ju,,t lo_ng enough !or the election of a new mayor. The expansion project included the construction of the new council chambers and officer £or the couricil members as well as expansioJl of all existing city hall offices and the nearby police station. A third phase. of the project wa s the construction of maintenance facilities at the city yard on 'Vard Street. Work is nearly completed, according to City Manager Jim Neal. The council chambers and C<1Uncilmen's offices are ready for occupancy, but the rest of the city hall project will not be ready for oc- cupancy for another two to three weeks, he said. Neal pointed out that the expansion has brought the facilities up to capacity for the maximum development of the city. •·we won't need to expand any more. With this size city hall, we wiU be easily able to handle a city of 63,000," he said. Tbe proposed park and open space lies along the blur! that bisects the 29-acre parcel. No price was setOilthe property although city officials noted land in tilt area has been selling for about $31,000 an acre. Beach Considers Naming Chamber For Paul Jones Huntington Beach city councilmep, ex- pressing their sorrow over the Cleath of long-time city clerk Paul Jones, saJd they would con.sider a proposal to name the new city council chambers after Jones, who died Sunday. Mark Porter, chainnan of the city's Planning Commission, made the sug- gestion at Monday night's council meeting. "ln view of his C<1ntinuous service, I think it would be approrpiate to dedicate the city C<1uncil chambers in the new city hall after Paul Jones as a permanent memorial to his service to the community," Porter said. Council members said they would study the proposal and agreed to forward a message of condolence to Jones' widow. Counci lmen also appointed Deputy City Clerk Ernestina DiMabio acting c i t y clerk. Miss DiFabio, sister of retired Hun· lington Beach postmaster Pete Difabio, joined the city staff in 1960 and became deputy clerk in 1964. A city spokesman sa id the acting city clerk had notified the cilY or her in· tention to retire J.olay 1, but added that the retirement would probably be -delayed until a new city clerk can be round. THANK YOU, ERASTUS! Although the explosion had the eflect of blowing out much or the fire , Battalion Chier Robert McClelland disclosed today that fighting the blaze was difficult. Not only was the area inaccessible and the damage widespread, but many chemicals stored inside the building had not been expended, he said. Minor secondary explosions from bar- rels believed to contain methanol and benzene hampered the control el!ort. But desplta theoe problems, M&'shall said the last glimmer was extinguished by a~ proximately 4:30 p.m. Meanwhile, the emergency room at Hoag Memorial H"'Jlllal was kept busy with the treatment ol persons Injured by Jll'i!!Lg!!ss and debris. Among those treated and released Aionday afternoon Pere: Marioa Flsber 48, o! 51{ Pierpont , Drive, Costa Mesa. 1 , ...... Rlb<Ts, 21, or 'ltJl17 Pomona Ave., Costa Mesa. Adel Straosser, 20, of 2017 S. Parton St., Santa Ana . Victor Levin, 25, Cypress. Lala Alnh:, 25, of 8102 Slater Ave., Hun- tington Beach. Robert LaBeUe, 43, of 2314 Cornell Drive. Co.sta Mesa. 1 Mlcbael Ingles, 26, of 874 Center St., Costa Mesa Willa i..ws, 47, of 13922 Tustin Drive East, Tustin. Raebel Perry, 23, 3804 Seashore Drive. Newport Beach. ~An I Ith victim, Paul Gerritz, 22, o£. Anaheim, an El Afoate C:Jemical Co. worker, WB..! also reportedly injured but , not on the hospital list. Fire department officials said one or their firemen, Robe.rt Campbell. was given emergency treatment at Bristol Park l\.1edical Center after he had step- ped on a nail. Monday's explosion occurred less than a mile away from the site of another in- dustrial blast where two men were in- jured on Sept. 26;1972. That explosion caused $450,000 in damage to the Magnetic f\.fetal C.Ompany on Production Place, just inside the Newport Beach city limits. A faulty cur- ing oven was responsible for that blast. It occurred to us the other day that we owe a lot to an Innovator In oar .carpet industry who operated about t 50-years ago. - Here are some facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGROW: • Born 1814, W. Boylston, Miu. • Poor famny, required lo worlc •I 190 I 0 11 farm hand ind clerk. • Genius at math and mechanics. • At 23 years old, invented loom for lace. • Invented revolutionary power loom for BRUSSELS and WILTON carpels. This created a domestic carpet In· dustry, and virtuaDy eliminated foreign competition. • Founded BIGE- LOW .CARPET MILLS in Clinton, Mass. • Great e<:onomist, one of sm1ll 9roup-fovnd in<J-MASSACi,tUSEm-.INSUTUT.E-OLIECl::WO'l.llOJJG,,..Y.1__.AJ.... ____ -l---I Boston in I 86 I. • Died 1879. ERASl\15: Mlf GRANDFATHER THANKS YOU! MY FA!THER THANKS YOU! I THANK YOU! MY CHILDREN THANK YOU! !Four g1n1r1tion1 int.he ctrp•t business sfnc1 1894, th1nk1 to the inw1nti1n1 of Mr. Bigelow. I P .S. Amazingly, without Erastus, Bigelow Carpets have remained an Industry leader. Please stop In and see th1lr spartdlng carpet line. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPK '-:;::::=!-_fff-J au a-~II"·· ton. ~ c.-t..~-Mrs~Almay-.. 1d she -gathered· the signatU!-e.. lrl ":about 20 m!Dutes, and I only bad one person who dlcln1 want to ~gn. eles, aald Monda)Un-":-i"""'I,-1'!-+--1--.---the ,gtata ~I CorTectio.s·thal tlley deslte to be lranSlerred to tlift Cor- rectJonal Center at Frontera 1<bere there are 300 women inmates. · ~~r. Nt n1JW11 Slll'itlo, ltrwtrtl~ •1t1ri.1 "'*"" ., lft'll1......... Ml'tlft _, ... ~ """""' ....... """ lll'lflllllllll~--· .... w .............. Otlt9 ~! ~ ,_..._. W CM'tltt UM "'*"""'• W -II U .11 fMfrffl1¥'1 l!'l}I~ .. tlMlllM U ,d ~.,. \ "I had oo trooble geltlng tbeae signatures," she lold co u n c fl m c n • "E\·er)·body said you wert \'ery mein. ·• A department spot<man said their pelltllm "has yet to be evalualcd" but suggestod it would be ro}ected. ---·- • IN COSTA MllA llllCI 1917 COSTA MESA 646-41138 ...._ • T11on. 9 IO S:JO: l'tl. 9 IO t: Sot. f:IO to 5 I \ ' ' ' I ' J T"'sd4y, AP'll 3, 1973. H DAILY PIU>T 3 ' Mesa Ex losion ~·. 'Was-· Like ; ' • a · . . I Bomb'. ' - DAil Y PILOT Sl•lf ""°" BLOWN OUT OF VAN Vi sitor Vallette • ' Uy Ille Dally PDol Slaff The word "bomb"' was used most often by witnesses and neighbors of the El ?ifonte Chemical Company explosion 11-1.onday' which took two lives, injured dozen) more and shattered windows in a four-block area or east Costa Mesa. "It was like a bomb. There was glass flying all over, people falling all over [[om the shock," said Willa Laws or Tustin. She works for Claval Company just across the street from the. explosion which leveled the chemical conipany at 829 17th St. ' $pealting In the Hoag II 0 s p 11 a I emergency room where * and at least 10 others were treated M_onday af- ternoon, Mrs. Laws said the blast sound- ed "like riOlbifig I've ever hea_rd before.,. Injured with her by flying glass was Michael Ingles of Costa Mesa. He said he v.•as at his desk "when all of a sudden I heard this boom . . . glass flying like crazy." El Monte. Olemic1'l Company Jab technician Paul Gerritz, 22, oLAnaheim, suggested uacontrolled rising steam pressure and a brokea distilling column seal must have caused the explosion which blew a 25-by-75-foot hole in the roof of the buildlag. Gerritz, one of four employes or the finn, said all were outside at the time or the explosion. Three who worked directly in the area of the distilling column had left the building rearing an explosion-but assured that the measure to reduce the steam pressure on the "still" would be enough. "God," Gerritz said, "Randy was blown clear through that rence." Metal posts for a wooden fence bent at an angle of ·45 degrees are all that remain of the fence today. "He was in bad shape when he left here," Gerritz said of 23-year old Randy Riley of Anaheim. Riley died at Hoa~ ~1emorial Hospital. · San Clemente. Site Nixon-Thieu Meeting Concludes in Cordiality The postwar summit conference between !he presidents of the United States and South Vietnam ended in San Clemen~· early this-artemoonwinran atmospher-e of cordiality set at the very beginning. President Nixon ~nd South Vietnam's Nguyen Van Thieu reportedly covered the gamut of issues affecting their na· lions after the peace settlement. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler ex- plained the issues in general tenns Mon- day alternoon at a briefing which follow- ed an elaborate reception for Thieu al the Western White House Ziegler said that the two men would discuss U.S. assistance in the redevelop- ment of South Vietnam and other issues of inutual interest. He would not be more specific , however, st ressing that more statements would be forthcoming at the conclusion or the talks. _ Both heads of state were scheduled to make a joint statement on the talks this afternoon. The conference -the first such official state visit ever held at La Casa Pacifica -began near noon Monday amid a I nashy reception generally seen only in the nation's capital. As 500 Orange County residents looked on as special gueSfs, the two ~Presi(lents participated in a troop review and fhcn "'atched as a 21-gun salute filled the skies of lhe compound with blue-while smoke. President Nixon spoke first. welcoming Thieu to his "house of peace " (La Casa Pacifica) and praising "the courage and leadership" of Thieu. "There are .•. difficulties in building a peace after 25 years of war have tom your country apart," Nixon conceded, but added, "We now find that all of the American forces have returned and the people of Vietnam have the strength to defend their own ind epender1ce and their right to choose their government in the years ahead." Thieu's response to the welcome was silnilar in tone to the President's greeting. Theiu, like Nixon, alluded to previous talks the two held four years ago at Midway when the fir st pieces of the Viet- namization Program were b e i n g assembled. ~EARLY 400 DEMONSTRATORS PROTEST MEETING OF PRESIDENTS 1 March Rout• Ended Mond1y Near-Entr1nce to Western Wh1te Houw • ' \ Tll:en with him\ llun the scene to the hospitll was Bob 'David1001 57, of Ven- tura. He remains in serious c:ondiUon to- dal. ' ''1bey haven't 'found Elmer Leenerts yet.'' Gerri\& said Monday at the scene. Sayln& no _. for se~al moments, he pGinted to lie conciile rubble where hours later fire rescue Crew.:; located the body of Elm<r Eugene Leenerts, 4t, or 1800 Samar st., Costa Mesa. Gerriti said he was in the lab area at the back of the building when the ex- pk>sion and 11111 kinds of flame" ripped !lie building apart from_ the industrial Portion of-the 25 by JOO.foot, twHtor-y structure. Other eyewitnesses said the e1plosion was a "slow one" in that the flame could be seen before the blast was beard or felt. ' Joseph Urquidi, 23, was in unit 12 of an adjacent building when the explosion oc- cun-ed. The blast destroyed P & G Engineering, a motorcycle specialties shop. "1 was over by lbe handsaw when I saw this dark red ball of fire out of the corner of my eye," he said. "It was coming fairly slowly; it didn't seem in· stantaneous by any means. "I hid under the drill press. Smoke started to come in and l could smell an acrid smell. I could feel the compression wave for sure and tllen I heard the glass breaking everywhere."~ The explpsion wu so devastating that it ripped off virtually all garage doors and shattered every window at 817 \V. 17th St., a small U-shaped complex of ap- proximately 20 indumial buildings ad- Activist 'Sorry' For Garbage • CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -Wellare activist Maya Miller has formall y aptlogized to State legislators for hurling garbage on the floor of the Assembly l0W1ge. She tendered the apology Monday to avoid being banned from the Assembly for the rest of the session, but ac· companied it with a criticism or the lawmakers for their attitude towa rd weir are. "I am sorry ror the litter, but I cannot tell you I am 90rry ror my impatience or my sense of outrage at the violence Nevada does daily to its poor children," she wrote the lawmakers. Wallace Treated MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) -In his continuing errort to !es.sen pain, Gov. Georie C. Wallace had bis fourth acupuncture treatment f.tonday. Wallace aides said there was no word on whether any signs of progress were noted in the needle treatment. DAILY PILOT ll•lf ,..._ APARTMEN'l:..SHREDDEO Cycle R•cer Kilgroe jacent to. the chemicaJ compaay. One of the buildings, Stress Relief Engineeriag, was immediately adjacent to the chemical plant. The impact blew down an entire wall. Joshua Rivers, a ca rpenter a t Pinecraft Shutter Company. two buildings east on 17th from the chemical plant, said even bis company looked like a disaster area. "It looked like somebody had thrown a bomb into our place," he said. "It was Brown Bagging Boozers Blocked HARTFORD, CoM. (UPI) -Security guards at the Electric Boat Division of General O)'l)amics are s e a r c h in g workers' luncbboxes to halt any smug· gliog of alcoholic beverages into the shi pyard. The crackdown is part or the shipyard's effort to stop employes from consuming alcohol on the job. The Navy was to review the finn's li~nse to handle radioactive i;w1-terials. tax shipyard. procedures were given as the reason for the Navy'S Withdrawal of the yard's temporary operating license \Yhen it came up for renewal in February. really mangled what with the beams and tighl• falling." Rivers doesn't recall what fell from the celling and cut his head open but he does rf!oCall seeing one ~·hole side of his com- pany's building go to pieces. . "At first I thought it was a sonic boon1 or something but then the whole side of the building came Jn," he s a id. "\\1e won't be back In business for a while . t guess." hiary Carnahan was visiting her sister. Pat TMmas in one of the apartments at 833 W. 17th 'St. when the blast rocked the building. The---residences are located just 100' feel from the industrial area in '11.'hich the chemical plant was operating. "I was sitting in a chair _whea \\'r heard 1his big boom and the ceilin_! came do\vn " she said. "I picked up the baby and ~e got the other kids out of there." Penny Wild of Perris, a secretary ror Vance Roofing Compnny of 837 17th Street -just two doors \Vest of the ex- plosioo site . and beyond the Thomas' home-said she couldn't believe the force Or the blast. . · "I ~·as sittiag al my desk some 15 fee! from the front or the one-story ofrice building and talking on the phone. All of , a sudden there was a noise like J'vt' never heard before and glass hit me in the face," Mrs. \Vild said. "It sounded like a bomb going off." her co-worker Jack La Belle, 43, said. "La • Belle was taken to Hoag Hos~itfil for _ . .-... ,".:...:.......... ... treatment of face and neck cUts he Said ~~ ' occurred when the plate glass windo\\' f/'~""i blew in. The force or the blast weakened the struclure and six employes of the roofing firm were evacuated as were residents of the ·bungalow homes -tbe only struc- tures between the stucco office building and the blast. Dick Kilgroe , 38. a professional motorcycle racer and f I be r g I a s s manufacturer. was a\vay when the: ex· plosion happened. · When he came home, his apartment at 833 W. 17th St. had been blo\vn to shreds. Bob Vallette, 23, who had been staying with Kilgroe, said he had just finished rebuilding the engine in his van when the explosion occurred. "I'd just turned the ignition key on when the expl0;3ion blasted me right out the door,'' he said, taking the event in stoic stride. Further west on 17th Street, printer Dave Stella of Orange said, "I was about to cut a sheaf -o.)f paper-with this cutter when it went o(f. I thoug ht we were being bombed by North Vietnam. I could have cut my ann off if I'd slipped it under thi s -knife." he said pointing to a giant paper cutter. Mrs: Terry Stewart, also of Oraage. an employe of the. print shop said she now believes in miracles. · "My new desk was supppsed to be dellvered this a'tfemoon," St\e said. "It \Vas to be put right there ... facing the window and against it. I would have been killed," she· speculated pointing to the knife like shards of glass wbich lay on O..ILY PILOT ll•fl Pllttl 'SOUNDED LIKE A· BOMB' Bl15t Wltneu La Balle '· . l ' \ . 1 . I the sidewalk and as far as 15 feet back t into the tiny shop. ~ "God "'as on .my side," M11; Stewart siuhed . An unidentified plate glass salesmaa trekking up 17th Street measured the opening ·and promised the printing ·nnn•s owner the glass would be re placed by nlght(all . ~ Elsewhere in the four-block area, ~ businesses and homes as far away as l Monrovia Street on the west were looking . for window glass , or were boarding up gaping openings. Johnson & son Has Two Goals 1: LOTS OF HAPPY BUYERS • 2:-NO -UNHAPPY-OWNERS DICK JOHNSON :Hom• 01 The New Car • , , · "Goldm rnchl' . ' .Dea r Friends of Orange County, We went you to be happy when you buy a new Lincoln or Mercury from Johnson & Son and we want you to be hoppy while driving it as well. If for some reason you're not, 9ive us a call and. we'll do our best to correct the problem. We definitely do not ·want any unhappy Dick Johnson Vice President ''Orange Count1111 Tomlly o] nnt Cors11 ohnson&son t 1 f\J( l l l N r\.11 !\( llH,Y l. .\I' 1 l I 2t21 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 640·5630 ' I Nome Of The Ntw Car •. • • •'Golde• Touch'' ' I 4 DAILY PILOT Pow-wow T11eMtiy, April 3, 1973 Fonda ,Nominated for 'Gullible Award't I l • ' -----+-~ -- -• ' ----.__..:.. ---._ ----~""'----..,,-""°n~ted""'b,.,==,~-~erna""u~oo=='r----::,k~e~pnu~ca,....o""SlOr!iSlOl re g are we ~ljler "'"'an"'Nopen'"""e""er,--~w=ao.r~.""'•sai•r.ra~,--------~-m.,s~he'"'h"as~.•n;ev.ve~r~m'""filrJ>tfii'"'m~en""'sb:e-hl'~·---~- Rep •• &bertR Steele f!l.Coon.), stood POW•·Of-tol'lure-in ~piaon-wrllleo from bis home In Springfteld, Ill. "fve asked myself whal"lhe·Pentagon branded;" teele said-·i~hiJ - Day .in SD PINE RIDGE, S.D. (UPI) Oplimlltlc that the armed -tatlon between federal officen and lodilol oc-. cupylng Wounded Knee can be eaded soon, federal negouatora hold an wi- prectdtnt.d fourth coruecutlve day of negotiations with leaders ol the Wouoded Knee occupation today. ' A NEGO'IU11NG session was set for 9 a.m. (PST): It was the first time in the 3><1ay old ,occupation ol the tiny hamlet on the Pine Ri~e Oglala Sioux Reserva- tioo that ..gotnitiON liive progreued in- to a fourth straight day. Assistant AUomey C<neral Ken t Frizzell, the government's top negotiator in the C<Jllrontation, termed Monday's negotiating sessior1 "the most productive yet." Following-the session, Frlzuill,aakl · the two sides were only one or two points apart and that a: settlement "could come in the next two or three days." Ramon Roubideaux, chief counsel for lhe American Indian Movement, wboae members have occupied Wounded Knee. said he 11agreed pretty much" with Frizzell's assessment although he said he was not quite as optimistic as the federal official. : \ "I WOULDN'T disagree with Mr. Frizzell." Roubldeaux-totd--newsmen after Monday's meeting, 0 but you know how these things go. I'm aUll opllmlltic that we can have an agreement within a short time." Roubideaux, a Sioux, said the militants inside Wounded Knee would 11come out and go to comt" if the government agreed to adhere to the tenns of an 1861 treaty with the Oglala Sioux, granting the tribe recognition in a wtde area of what is now western south Dakota. Frizzell said there was a possibility that some persons in Wounded Knee were dead set against an agreemenL Newsmen noted that AIM leader Dennis Banks had not attended any of the last three negotiating sessions, but both Frizzell and Roubideaux said Banks' absence did not necessarily mean that Banks would be a holdout on a set· tlement. Mother Thrown Into Well With Her 4 Children MONTEVIDEO !UPI) -Police today captured Pablo Hernandez Jara, 30, a peasant, and accused him of throwing a mother and four of her children Into a JOO-foot well. Two of the children, aged six and seven, drowned. Police said the crime occurred Satur- day night in a little town 12 miles 'northeast of Montevideo. Hernandez threw Mrs. Ester Gonzalez de Torterolo and her children into the well , then ran off while they screamed for help. Neighbors rescued Mrs. Tort.erolo and two 0£ the children. Police captured Hernandez when he returned:to the scene to watch their efforts to retrieve the bodies of the drowned children. They _said Hernandez bad no_explanation for his action other than "an irresistible de· sire to kill," as he put it. Solon Says FBI Used for Gossip WASHI NGTON (UP I) -President Nix· on 's administration has used the FBI as a "politicaJ peeping Tom and gas:si.p col- umnist." a Wisconsin congressman has charged. Rep. Les Aspin ([).Wis.), Mooday cited a confidential FBI memorandum in mak· ing the accusation. on the Ooot ol Congress Monday and campo. They said · their trlpo to North "Yau sony ·lndlvklual. You don't know does, and the answer Is that they got me grwional .speech. ••can tbl& pampered. nominated actress Jane Fonda, twice an Vietnam showed tll6 prilonen to bo what you are talking about. YO. are borne, which is more !ban I can say for privile'ed yowig acn:ess bo aoegotistical O.Car winner, for still another award. treated rtBIOllably and pobMd to news wtthout a doubt the atupidest, most lg-yoW' organizatioo . , . ThanQ for and natve as ta think that her brief guid· .BIAtle'.A .. award 10< Miss Fonda would stories ttlllng ol the g-ruly good noranl and gullible person I have ever nothing . We needed you like we needed a ed tour of North Vietnam qualifies ber to be for "tho rottenest, most miserable health 1! the men when Ibey relunled. bean! of. hole in the bead." speak with more authority oo how POWs performance by any one individual Hayden said the POW1 who told such "Men died al tbe lw1ds ol their captors were tnoated than the men tbemBelves? · American in the history ot our COltllry.1' stories were liars, hypocrttee and pawns and )'OU t.ve the au~ I a y we CAPT. JAMES Ra.y of eonroe. Tex., of President NIJon. were the belt llealed 'po1iooen in any said he bad scars to prove the POW STEELE WAS joined by several CWO Roy E. Zeigler U, who spent five war in biatory. What the hell do you ststements about torture were true. re<:ently n(tUTned prisoners of war Mon-years in a North Vietnamete prlaon, call-know? "I would personally challenge lha.t day In criticizin& recent statements by eel "Hayden "the stupidest, moal ig-• Zeigler said he 'tilouSht Hayden was a yowig lady (Miss Fonda) to look at the antiwar activists, especially MJso Fonda nonnl and gullible penon I ever beard pa of the Coaummlsts ·and on scars still visible on my arms from the ind her husbanil, Toni Hayden, one of or' for his remarks. wn . tortures and 'tell me to my face that I'm the Chicago Seven defendants. · Hayden's clalm 11 wu the Pentagon, not a liar Md a hypocrite," he sald dW'mg a Mist., Fonda and Hayden have been °UARS, HYPOCRITES and pawns, tbe anthyar activists,~ who prolonged the visit to· relatives in i.,veland-. Ohio ..... "WHERE DOES sbe get tbl& -.1 • gall? I wonder II she would dare ta make her charges to the faces of those Dle1! who were beaten with rifle butts in' the jungle or to the captured airman .,who was Ued <\own wl!h wire while ants' swanned over his body until he thought, he would be~eaten alive.-0 - UPI T-""""t THOUSANDS OF ACRES OF ARKANSAS LAND UNDER WATER .Mi11 i11ippi Ftooding Mikes for Wet West Memphis, Arie. ····~·---- Storm Hits Gulf Stares On_ Eastward Rampage By The Associated Press A severe storm which punished the South,vest wilh high winds and deep snO\V swi rled into the Gulf states today, bring· ing the threat of damaging rain and thunderstorms. 1'he snowfall in the southern and cen- tral Rockies diminished during the night, leaving Denver. Colo. buried under five inches of fresh snow. Albuqureque, N.~r.. received up to 17 inches of snow during the tw~ay stonn . As the stonn system moved eastward. the National Weather Service warned that the Southeast could be for severe thunderstonns and heavy rains. Showers and thunderstonns during the night moistened an area from Oklahoma to western Tenne ssee and along the Gulf Coast. While the storm diminished in the Rockies, travelers warnings still were in b<e Md residents batUed the effects of the heavy snows. ·rravelers and stockmen's advisories \Vere posted for parts of the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles. Up to four inches of snow was expected. Winds ·gusting at 60 to 70 miles per hour swept the high \Vasatch Mountains just east of the Great Salt Lake in Utah . Trees were uprooted, trucks and trailers smashed and damage was estimated in the thousan~ of dollars. One gust at Bowltiful, Utah, was clocked at 96 m.p.h Strong, dry winds blew sand and dust over Southern California. Sl-10\VERS AND thunderstorms ex- tended from southwest Tex as into Oklahoma, to Kansas, y:estem Tennessee and along the Gu lf from Louisiana lo Florida. An offshore storm produced heavy rains along the New England coast, and flash-flood warnings were issued along the Maine shore. Scattered showers also touched the lo wer Great Lakes and the Central Ap- palachians. . . Bombers Pummel Cambodian Sites From Wire Services U.S. warplanes, including ever y available BS2 bomber in Southeast Asia gave Communist forces in Cambodia their heaviest pounding of the war during the night as part of the Nixon ad· ministration's campaign to force them into a cease-fire, reliable sources reported today. 'l1IE SOURCES compared the bombing to the attacks on Hanoi and Haiphong last December that were aimed at fore· ing North Vietnam into a peace set- tlement. But the Oommunisls in camoo. dia are widely dispersed and have none of the industrial concentrations winer· ITI President . Defends Chile Support Offer WASHIN_G10N (AP) -Sen. Frank Church says the $1 million "dual- purpose" offer by Internation al Telephooe & Telegraph Corp. ta support V.S. government action in Chile ''.represeots_improper. interv.entjpn _ in Chilean politics." Church made the comment Monday after the Senate Foreign Relations sub- committee he beads wound up a &even- day hearing on allegations that m at- tempted in 1970 to block the election of Salvador Allende as president cf Chile. rrr CHAIRMAN ijarold S. Geneen, the final witness, deitied that rrr, it:self, took any steps to block Allende, but confirmed a $I-million offer to support any U.S. government action. The offer, he said, had a "dual purpose." If there was a possibility \hat a coali- tion could have been formed to help the Chilean people reach better represen- tation, "that would have been fin e," Ge- neen testified. If that proved infeasible, he said . he thought the government might work out a plan. including "some socially con- structive joint private industry and government projects," to induce Allende, a Marxist. to pay for expropriated American properties. THE $1 l\-11LUON, he said, \Vas ba sically "to show serious intent and get attention" from U.S. government 0£- ficiats . But nothing came of it. he sa id. Church (D-ldaho ), told ne\vsmen he believes Geneen 's testimony about the "dual purpose." "But either of these purposes. offered as it was. represents improper in· terventioo 1in Chilean politics," Church said. able ·to air attack that the North Vjet- namese had. The sources said they were tlllable to ·say just how many strikes U.S. pilots new or bOw many tons of bombs they dropped. Bot they indlcated about 120 B52s were used in. the attack, and that could mean a total of 3,600 tons of bombs dropped. The U.S Pacific Command in · HOJ1,olulu, the official source of in- fonnation on American air operations in Indochina, made its u s u a 1 un- communicative announc'.ement that U.S. B52s continued operations over cambodia Monday for the 27th successive day. THE SAIGON command saig today~ government rangers repelled a C.om- munist attack at an outpost 50 miles north of Saigon that became the focal point a month ago of truce violation charges by South Vietnam and the Viet Cong. Saigon and Viet C.ong delegates to the peace-keeping Joint Military Commission met again to discuss lhe continued fighting at the Tong Le Chan outpost but wound up in another deadlock. A South Vietnamese Foreign Ministry spokesman blamed the truce supervising force,-,the··four-part y-·lntemattonai-Gom--,.- mission of Control and Supervision, for "lack of action" in the face of "blatant violations" at the ranger base. UPI T ......... MEANWIULE, IN Paris, the South Vietnamese accused the Viet Cong of pr1> voking military incidents in Vietnam to wreck talks on their cotmtry's political Hoopla Dre•s future. The Viet Cong said the United States kept interfering in Vietnamese affairs. The ch~ges were exchanged. as the two sides met for the filth time in an ef- fort to break the dead.lock in their talb aimed at setting up elections in South Vie tnam. 0 Designer Pierre Cardin offers this Japanese 4antern-inspired dress in his winter collection, executed in pastel wools. The above-knee narrow dress ha1 four hoops that make it bob up and down . Really. Court Finds Highway Fund Impound Illegal ST. LOUIS (U Pl l -The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled M'6nday that it was illegal for the Nixon administration to impound money appropriated by Congress to the states for federal highway construction. While the court cautioned Lhe 2·1 ruling ( IN SHORT ... .) and proclaimed the "new nation ot Nutopia." Nutopia, as Lennon described It, ls a "conceptual country. Ii has no land; no boundaries, no passports." Lennon, who said he was planning on applying for U.N. admission for Nutopia, also displayed the new nation's nag -a white handkerchief which he blew his nose on. e Muskie Response · I ' I I He said Lhe memo asked FBI agents to 'Collect "items with an unusal twist or concerning prominent personalities which may be or special interest to the Presi- t---dent-or the-attorney gerieral/' EFFORTS TO drop hay to stranded cattle in Colorado from helicopters. Ytere temporarily abandoned at spots Monday because of the new stonn. A spokesman for the C o I or ado Department of Agriculture estimated that 15,000 calves -may-be ·lost in-this severe 'veather. Flooding of the Mississippi River from Dubuque, Iowa, to New Orleans. and along the Missouri River foroo:I ad- ditional persons from their homes Mon- day. ·Two deaths have been reported. The chainnan said the subcommittee will m a k e a report on the I'IT-Chile case, involving admitted contacts and a money offer to the central Inte1ligence Agency, before proceeding to another phaie _ot its.. inquiry _int0: tbe. influence of. multinatiooal corporations on U.S. ~oreign policy. is applicable only to the 1968 Federa1·Ald Highway Act, the decision may help to determine the fate of contested ,jrn. pound men ts-by --the.President-of-funds-for water pollution control, rural con- servation and other areas. WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, giving the Democrats' response to President NW>n's Tbursday - lght "television 11ddres!, says· Congress fears the implicatiOns of what he citied· the President's "one-man rule" • I ; Winds Buffet Southland Will Continue Anot1ier Day; 450 Trees Do wn. in LA CHURCH SAID he intends, a result of the l'IT hearing, to introduce legislation to make it unlawfUl. for any corporation or individual to offer money to the CIA . Church said Secretary or State \Villianl P. Rogers has agreed to appear before the subcommittee. He said Rogers responded to a letter from the panel by saying he woold testify at a later phase of The Justice Department· could ask the circuit court to reconsider. the case or could take it to the U.S. Supreme C.ourt. e Beatie I.and NEW YORK (AUPI) -Ex-BeaUe John Lennon, holding a news conference Mon· day in which he said he would appeal a Justice Department order that be leave America, did not stay serious very long "The. President has asked for a fret'" hand -a blank check -so that he can .. decide, and decide alone," the issues of ._, ending the war, natio·oal s~nding • priorities and halting lnfiation," Muskie said Monday night. " e ·Tljuana Rally TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -Police used~l tear gas to disperse a group of about 150·1 demonstrators in front of the Tljuana.r; foot ketch 1n ~·vv .... nNr s111t. the hearing. "We wrote back and said we co1111n1 111and were rncutd MDl!d•v would ask him about Chile then," Church Dl'I s.,, croment• 1s1a1111 to t11t •th, said. ---"""'!-"'~"'•'1-G.Uanl.Mld ... cw,..;:-;;:--.::::.:.::. _____________ -J:1r:1:a; Bt11 Wet!i!r, 3A; Jelitf w.flll", U, hl1 bride of e f.w dl'fll Vldorl•· Gunn. .l C -} MW1icipal Administration Building, of •. anu--.:;iu &n--fi<::t~~1.--:-:-.,,--,c--~---1-: 0fflcers said the demonstraUon ap-· f Uri WI "'11411 f010CAS1. btlow c1ny-. Bvt tlle tu•ts -9fl't •• 'l'OflO t i S111'111iy'1 tile•t1, Which -~.,, .... "'"'• .... Cifl' ollkltll .. ~ UO t,.... -re \Jt>- roolt4 In down~ Lot AtlfflH. fouf' of """' l•lldlf19 fl'I houMS •ro.:I IJ •lrf-1119 Ct•I durf11• ftlt twe wlN!rwtl)I dtvi. Monclty'i tv•li ,,,....,_ mHtU~ II ,. m.0.11. •I ... llllffl•1 20 m,11,11, II llntalftl'I 1$ 10 :JO l!t,ll,l'I, 11 "'°' ?f, t»d Paul HarrfSOfl, 2S, 'tWf'9 ,... PQrlM fo M II'! good tolldlffOll on.r l~lr>g tf'lt 111otit Ol'I • ~.,. Mecll wmellmes used IOI' It"" pracltct by Navy 'lllM. Wlelu patently stemmed from rally a month .. Held by Police ago in which·• group protested the firing , of about 50 women from an electronlcs·e asseml!Jy plant, claiming Mexican labor" In Heroin -Case-1aw• were violated. :· ~11..1H l&~~~;)Ptow ..._ .ur. / '*>WIU ·~ PI Cw TheV $11ld ltttlr 11\t11", Tilt-Atllw, 1os! Its ruddtr SuN11y 111 llffvy tNt •lltt ltlvffllll Ctla111'!e W t11it LO. A~etc hlrbOI'. T.l'lty said they drlNtd '°"' ~V. 1*11'1 In the Ifft rtft. 111.r pled"!I It _, BALTIMORE, Md. (UPI) -A mem~ • hole In tht ~llCI wflflrt tMY *""'' th• 11111111. bcr fl. the Maryland General Auembly Tiie four .,...... 1lgflltd by 1!1t c,..w ........... ..-.. ~ Jell the s•·~ tt-.-ot f '°''"' Gu•rd Pltlltopltl' on t lr•!ft' ,Vl.f .it~U:IY QI~ MUID ~ •110 nioht. Tiit MtrM w•• t•k•n ..,,... in Armapolia late Monday on charges in- d"' tow IO 511!1 DIOOO by t CVllt r. VQlvlng allged distrlbuUOO "' mJ.lllons of Constnl Weather dollars worth of heroin. 1,..;•1~.:;~:"~b1t, w:;<'·-~ James A. "Turk" Sc:lo(t Jr., 37, a BalU· ~O:sl:i """'""'tvru ''""' tram so th& Maryland House .of. Delega~ -SUf.• to .a. lfll•lld tom.Ptr•tv,..s r1"0• trom rendered to U.S. mar8hals after being 4 10 15, W•• temPHel\ll't 60. '11 llllff'l'IOOl'll fOIUY 11111 WltdMWlt'f. High n more insurence brokt!t' and member of SI'" Moolt;~~l~~-~t=t~~~·~~;;;;~~~~l~served~~wi~th~an eight.coont lndlctmen AtlQllloM,l-4 "''""'° o""" •rov.:~~~ifij:{'~~='.':j· ~ .,. hand~ by a SRtdal g,aJ¥!7JJ.!!Y in f1!ft' rl~; 3S 11\.11.fl. t i l~~rl1I ~I!!!!! ~ .USIDA WLJ.i:q,_,-J_ ~ • = ~:-=~:. ,.; soc ow wiDNliD.~1•1 •11.m· o:i 77te PeiiiifN Qllrllt'Jril bad'/"__ • Scott·warattending .. ~tatttnfcb ~ :Ji'!.~ ::,r: ~~ tr•wt Flm r.1on .......... ':40 o,m. •·• -6 a.1•t-...-1-tu -··-··~ 1 of_ lhe House ol Delegates; Re was hand· wom11111 w etl'l'IC*"• •no '''"*" "'"' tow .......... ,._. '·'"· "°" 111 ..... -••ur-r atlfTVV'~ ed a note inside the State Roust at 11 :30 on n'IOll tre.w.'I"' Ste.Ofld fl10fl .......... •1'7 ,..,,_ f,0 • l'"01.1r 1..ot Alll1flt1-1re• mlOfllt• ~lll'ld ~:, S':J;t,M:. :~ t1~·,.!:. by trOUble.' p.rn., got trp wmt ou&slde and was met wflo •Mndol!ed • wlnd-d1m1ped 4-~ •tM6 S:ll 1.m. hh •:S7 r:i.m. by IUth:ll'itieS. \ t I • .----------.;,, DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Del...,. of th< Dallt - is 9ilaranlttd MWff•,tW•ri 11 n. • ... ,._.. ,,.,,. ..,,_, If J:M ""'" <•II •1'111 ""r c...., Wiii ._ ll'fftlilt t. ...... C•ll• lf't I ... Wfil 11• """ • JaNrHr W SN.yi tr yw tit f1tf ,... .. l'"f' Uf'I' ,, , .. ,... kiltl'f•I'· ........... -"'""''' c•n ....,. • ~ w11 -. ..,...... • f", l;:•fb •t .. ttlM NII! !• e,m. -:-T1ltphonts . '4J..U.lt llld W .. lmlM!ef • .,,., • .,.,.. Nortflwet H1111tln9ton lted'I S-40·1221 •111 C1'"1eiil1t, Ctplt1rl!IO.,l1Kt1. Stl'I Ju1n C11111tr•no, Din• "91!'11, $Ol.tltl ~ LMlllN HIOllfl 4f2·4'42I l • " " " rr < 11 I I I ~ • ~ • VOL 66, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES esa Coast Meat Sales Cut Only.20% By JOHN ZALLER Of 11111 0.1,.. 1"11.r Si.ff Some people are calling this week's na- tional meat boycott the biggest protest in American histor)'. But on the Orange Coast l\.1onday. it seemed something less than that. (Re13ted stories, Page 18) "Yes, I'm on the meat boycott," said a \\'Oman shopper with • three -pounds of hamburger in her cart. "My .collie won't eat anything else so I've got to feed her meat. "But my five teenagers will -be eating fish ," sPe said. "Of course I'm in agreement with the boycott," said another shopper at Market Basket in Costa Mesa. "Oh, this ham- burger? "Well, I've always given my husband a meat patty for breakfast and I don't think I coo Id stop now. But we'll be hav- ing fish for dinners." "I haven't really decided yet ," said a woman who was lingering in front of the roast section. "I guess I won't buy anything today. But I have to eat. I don't know· how long I'll bold out." · -·••t.J.g\'a_l>S _ beca~dJ. '®>l'-'!"'_n~~--·t;--1n:.:H::, -urange l .. umn meat seuers ~~ ~· reported an average sa1es drop of only 15 ,, to 20 percent Monday. Of the dozen outlets contacted, only Von's Market in Huntington Beach reported a large qtop in its sales, and its esti1Q.3le of a 35 percent fall in sales was still not near the 50 percent drop reported nationwide. -ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA TUESDAY. APRIL 3, 1973 • • x OSIO.ll I s ~ • _., -· Talking to numerous grocers and shop- pers Monday, two distinct impressions v•ere produced: ' AERIAL . VIEW -This was scene at El Monie Chemical Company in Costa Mesa shortly after explosion ripped the W. 17th Street plant about 3:16 p.m. Monday. Waler spout (center) is from plant's water line, severed by blast. At upper left across 17th. Street is Claval plant, which was evacuated following th~ explosion; Industrial building (up- per right) had doors blown out and apartment units (bottom) were shat· tered by explosion . -Market managers don't like the lx>ycott and don 't think it will accomplish much beyond causing meat to rot on the shelves. "This whoje thing was created by the newspapers and the television,,, complained one man who was typical of many grocers. "But it's a bunch of hogwash." -Consumers are generally supportive or the Idea of a boycott, but many are not committed to it. Of the 25 shoppers con- tacted at ~tarket Basket in Costa l\1esa. 10 strongly supported the boycott, IO were either undecided about it or trying to rind halfway ground and only five were opposed to the idea outright. "I couldn't find anything I could af- ford," said Craig Hill after chec king the meat counter closely. "I buy just for myself and all the packages are too big. ls that part of the boycott?" There were, however, some with strong opinions both for and a&ainst the boycott. "I can aCford any of this I wanted " said J. J. Wolff, a retired businessm~n who supported the idea of boycott. "But these prices are just out of line. "I'm a RepubUcan," he added "but I thin!t President Nixon should hav~ called a rollback on these prices three months ago." · "Of course the prices are way too high," said a""WOman who disagree<!, "So you can see l don't have any meat. We can only afford meat two days a week. "But 1 think a boycott isn't a good idea. All It will do is throw people out of work without doing any good," she said. ·Nancy Story, a motherof three, felt so (See BOYCOTI, Page l) Orange Coast Clear skies through Wednesday, btiC continued gusty·wirids· of 1S to . 30 mlles per hour is what the weather service is predicting. lliglls in the 70S at most beaches, rlsmg to 75 inland. Lo· · tonight 50. INSIDE TODAY Activist actres! Jane Fonda, J wiltner of an Oscar, has been twmlnated for a1iother award - this u1te from retuNting prison· er1 of wc r. ~1td it's not that coni.plimentarU. Sec story on • Page 4. Nixon Wins 1st Big 1973 Test On U.S. Spending WASHINGTON CAP) -President Nix· on won the first big test of. the year with Congress on federal spending when the Senate failed today to override his veto or the vocational rehabilitation bi11. The vote in the Senate was 60 to 36, or 4 short of the needed two-thirds. Since both houses of Congress must vote to override a veto, the Senate action killed the measUre without need for a House vote. 1be aqtion came as a sharp disap- pointmenl to Democratic congressional leaders who chose the bill as the vehicle for the year's first challenge to Nixon's cubacks _oldomestic programs. The vocational rehabllitatioo measure, a._$2.6 billion authoriialioo setting a ceil- ing subject to later i'ppropriations, was the ftr.1t of 12 measures vetoed1ast year by Nixon after congressional ad- joumment to reach his desk again. The new bill was more than $800 million less than l~t year's but still con- sidered too expensive by t h e Administration. · Citizens to Choose -ThrNeWJ>Ol'rlle>< llmlrrtrutS: portation Plan Advisory Committee to-night will begin the process of choosing a solution to the city's future t'raffic problems. The panel meets at ? : 30 p.m. at the Newport Beach Pier Lifegu'ard Headquar- ters. COLOMBIA QUAKE CAUSES DAMAGE BOGOTA (UPI) -An earthquake or moderate intensity shook" most of Colom- L..M. 1t¥4I ,, ~-'-,, bla today. c•111or11•• • "*'""' ,..... 11 There were no j.m,nediate reports of &!n~~"' 11·: ~;!::•C'= : casualties but police said some damage DAILY l"ILOT l"lltf• W ~ .. ,..,.., RESCUE WORKERS CARRY BLA~T VICTIM RANDY RILEY TO WAITING AMBULANCE CMmic•I Comp..,y. Employ•, 23, Died Liter 1t Ho19 Memorl1I Hosp1t•I D .. ec1s1on By L. PETER KRlEG ment ," \Vebster Otis, field represent.a-Ma!Dl1 wasn't especiaUy happy with Of the 1>91tr "'"' •t•ff live for the U.S. Department of the In-that timetable. lrvine Company President William R. terlor said this morning. Disclosing that Assistant Secretary ol Mason .said today he think! Orange Coun-1',1asoo, in his statement ~1onday, urged the Interior Nathaniel P. Reed ha,d prom- ty, the federal and atatc governments the Upper Newport Bay Field Committee ised a decision by the end o! 1972 Milson ought to decide what they are going to to ''expedite cmclusion of its work." said, "Three to six months is plenty suf- do about Upper Newport Bay within six The field Commi.ttee comprised of the Cicient to resolve the maUer. · months:. Interior Department, the State Lands Di· "If they are sincere, they can assign M&3<1'l }.1onday olfered to moke the vision , Oraoge ·COUnty .and the cil.y of people to work on it. 1bot's more than 700 acres of uplands and patent tidelands Newport Beach1 was fried last Septc1n· enough time to solve it. There might that the compeny owns around the bay her. have to be meetings more than once a avallable £or immediate public acqulsl· "My ta.!k is to <»ordinate the efforts month, however,'' Mason said. Cion. • and recommendations of all the agencies One or the major Issues no doubt will But federal oWdals don't think tha't involved on lhe Cield committee and to be the eventual price tag placed on tbe any detjsioos can be made that fast and make a report on what the public wants acreage that the public agencies decide aald, in fact. nothing really has he<n to do about theUpper Bay in theJuture." they want. c~~l<:::,---c"i--';lytNJ!ertw '' was reported from the ceitral and l--=:i==::::l:;:f.1~""''-"'"-"-'•"-:=JOUlllliem:!CctlO!ICl!tlb •11tm•'""""' 11 !!!.'.:" .... ''Ifft 11,• The Andes Geophysics lnstnute said chonged brthe-company's orrcr as ror-mr aald. · • Masoo....!!1!1 be$t boll. s a o _ i'.ilctl'rmlile..Uili:leoLil.:=::Ji.:'iiffir.liO::tQOiiiiii:_;iLC!WiiO'.]j;j!fi"-t~~mpooy_has-foi:..lho..voluo ol tile blllly ol conv•rtlng part of lhe bay into purpooe, the structure or the Liming gov· total 700 acres ls bttw..., $!0 "and $30 ,IMMt 17•1t , .._ ,., me tttwf 1 wt11t1tr • the quake registered 6 to 5'1 on the in· 1 ~,. :; ::r::W ,,.~ tematlonal scale of 12. a wildlife preserve ls concerned. eming its work. Otis said it l\-ould be million based on partial appraisals made "l'm not goi11g to try to make any· at least the end ol tho year before Any in the mld-tll!Os. He declined to rpteu· thing happen as the rtlllil cl their •t•te-rocommendallona could be rorU>comlng. (Set BACK BAY, Page II • < • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks N TEN .CENTS ; --41t WO Valve Set By l\'Iistake Saicl Ca11se -ny RUDI NIEDZIEl.'>KJ Of ftlt DtlW !"Itel ,..,., A mistakenl y opened vent valve today 1 v.·rui blamed by fire investigaton as the · cause of an industrial explosion which : ripped apart a Costa Pt1esa chemical plant, killing tv.·o persons and injuring at least nine others with its destructive blast. 1 Fir~ Chief Jotm Marshall discl08ed this , morning that a valve "which shouldn't · have been turned on" resulted in an overproduction of volatile \'&poi at the El Monte__ Chemical-Company, -829 w:-17th-i St., moments before the Monday af •. temoon explosion. Killed by the blast were Elmer ' Leenerts, 41, of 1800 Samar Drive, Costa ' Mesa, and his co-worker Randy RJley, 23. ! of Anaheim. Leenerts was found buried . under an eight-inch thick concrete Ult-up · wall and pronounced dead at the scene .. Riley died at Hoag A1emorlaJ Ho.5pitaJ · about 6:30 p.m. Monday. , A third chemical worker, Robert : Davidson, 57, of Ventura remain! in J serious condition today at Hoaa:'s in- tensive care unit. ; "Jr the doors had been open and the : Additional Story, Photos, today on P1911 3, 9. vent hadn't been turned on, the exploaion might never have happened," theoriatd Ed Lewis, a !Ire battalion chler._ After probing the nature of the 3: 16 p.m. blast which rocked the city's west side aild created conditions reminiscent of the L<lndon blitz during World War 11, fire department investigators today have the following explanation for the ex-; plosion: ' The three employes had been 1etting · up an exotic methane reclaiming process inside the plant when ateam presaure I used to heat the vats became excessive. After turning on the vent valve to 1 redu~ pressure the three men closed the, dooni: and went outside w a i t i n g for the pressure to dissipate . I Instead pressure began to build inside and the vapon found a source of ignition. ' What touched off the vapors is unknown I but investigaton believe it may hive I been a water heater. j Firemen said the blast brought the ' w~ll down on Leenerts' body and blew 1 Riley some 50 feet through a wire rtin-\ forced grapestake fence. ' Firemen described the mode r n j chemical plant as "one of the best built bui~dings In Costa Mesa." IrooicaJly, Us mam product was said to be a flame. proof resin. The building featured a lift-off ex8 plosion roof, elght·inch thick concrete l walls, and a special haiard sprinkkr ! (See CAUSE, Page l) --. -------. + Harbor ~rustees I To Vote on Rules Parks Unit to Mull Uppe1· Newport Bay The future ol. development on vacant lands around Upper Newport Bay will be the major item of dlscus,,ion before the Newport Beach Parks, Btachr:s and Recreation Co1nmlas:ion at ita meeting tonight. PB&R Director Calvin Stewart 3"id tho !Mlt of this Wl><it" -~ lplJne Company ollcting its-Uppei: lands for public use1 the commlssioo will proboblY e00<cntrate on how best to use it. The metU11g Is at 7:30 p.m. In the C!t1 Council Chambers. ' • ' ... 2 DAILY PILOT N From Page I CAUSE ..• Patriot Mad ~ s)•stem yet it y,•as complettly demolish· ..___.._~~=-...=-~~·~1;s~·nub· H -'-~---r! Marshall, fire chief of ~ta Mesa or c;.., U-J :Trf:Cll11c,r-e-t7f; the put DIDe years, described the ex· Plat!lon as tbt "mOCt devastating" blast By JOHN VALTERZA Of ........ Pt• ,,.,. in the city's hist9cy. "Realistically, you're talking abOut a A snubbed and dereated Dr. earl t Melntlre stalked away from the gates of loss Of $750,000 to $l million and t ult the \Vestern \Vhite liouse ~1onday night doesn't include tbe loss: of income to livid over South Vietnanu!se officials' thMe businesses that were disrupted." refusal to accept a wooden plaque with The Shock wave Qf the blg bla st the word "victory" on It. damaged seriously 25 nearby industries. "It's the word they tear most," said including five major companies. Heaviest the ' stunned minist'er during a half·hGur damage was at an adjacent industrial tirade which followe<J the march to th e condomlnlum where·the dtltructive (orce Presidential gates. (Related story. ,Page tumbled walls, wrenched all !he garAg• 3) · ' dooft, and shattered evel'y window lll Blaming local police o!flcial'IJ (pr· "giv· sigbt. ing Jane Fonda more courtesy than us," The explosion also made a shambles of the New Jersey mlnl!ter finally led his five residences next to El Monte 130 supporters back across a.br idge over Chemical C:Ompany and shattered glass the San Diego Freeway to an e1npty lot and set off burglar alarms all over the where a night·Um~ raJly continued. ·city's west side. The evening had been billed as a · · Guarded by Industrial employ es and celebration in tribute to Thieu, a n d Costa Mesa police again.st looting, the Mclntlte cheerluJly told his followers ;blocked-off area today is being lnspected that he and the Jeadlng members of the 'by teams or insurance Investigators. fire South Vietnamese govermt1ent were close ·:department officials and building depart· frlend,s. -• " "'ment officials. "I am confident that we'll present this "We had a strategy-meeting today to plaque to President Thieu or some · detennine the exact cause of the blast. suitable representative t o n i g h t , ' • We want to get into the distillation Mcintire said early in the evening. , machinery and probe the plant for the Public Safety Director Clifford Murray · source of ignition," Marshall said. "The was the g<rbetween, but later In the · others will be determining the exact evening became the focal point of Joss." Mclntire's wrath. · DAILY PILOT lttff P11tt9 FRUSTRATED AT GATE Dr. Carl Mcinti re • One of the buildings to sustain major Murray contacted White House o!- damage waa Claval, a valve manufac-ficlala a~lit the· liit€ndiagJJt, then-those· brimstone, ''lhe w·eary poll Ce official said ·turing plant located dlrectly across the officials shifted the responsibility over to later. 'street from the chemical flnn. the South Vletname.9e delegation on hand "I'm sure that it was a matter of honor Claval, whlch employs a work force of for a dinner attended by President Nixon with Dr. Mcintire, because he felt so cer· ·approximately 200, was expec ted to be and Thieu. tain that the gilt would be received," he shut down for about two days until shat-The South Vietnamese replied that it added. tered plate glass windows, a partly would be "inappropriate" for them to Ac-"It was rather sad, really," Murray , blown-off roof and fallen light fixtures cept. observed. ·have been repaired. That was the news that greeted But the wooden plaque was not the only Touring the wreckage late Monday, Mcintire a few-dozen yards from the gift shunned by the South Vietnamese In Costa Mesa city councilmen said they gates at a spot where demonstrators San Clemente. were amazed that the explosion had not must stop and proceed no farther. One devoted MclnUre follower went out been rtsponslble. for more death and Mcintire told Murray : "I am to her back yard earlier in the day and de\~~ .. ct~know how,manycof you were in detel111lned to go to that gate. I have that picked some of her special tangelos for right." --r>residenr Thieu. London during. the blitz but this place ''No you don't,'' Murray replied. "My Mcintire carried the bag of fru it as looks jus,t, Uk~ it had been hit by 8 2·000 instructions are to keep you out and that well as the plaque. J>OWlde~, said Mayo~ Jack Hammett. someone will come out from the White But the would-be recipient frorn "This kind of devastation looks typical of ... House" Indochina didn't want the tangelos, the last days of combat. We're lucky we "He. came at me with fire and either. didn't have 100 fatalities." Many of those who had been evacuated by police-because of the danger of a secondary explosion returned during the evening hours to remove poeesslons from their homeT whlle firemen mopped up the rubble under klleg lights. Fro1n Page I BOYCOTI ... strongly in favor of boycott, that she stopped her shopping to try to dissuade F...-PtifeI BACK BAY ••• !ale what the property is worth today. 1 But Norman1~W::::c!''qlf!Cre. of the Stale lands division, llltl tltll....,.. Ing that he tbinU any llklltc price the company pull. on Ill property -even after all tllll updated awaisala are in - ir going to be too much. "I'm sure that our ultimate flgu:rts will be lowtr than what Irvine feels is du~ to them," U-,:ttmore said. Llvennore conceded, however, that he had not even heard any prices mentioned. He did not comment on lbe Irvine of· fer to trade the bay pr6pertle1 for other publicly·held lands. Mason this morning said that offer was made onlY to ·0 open lip the altemattves" to the various; public agencies. "If we simply said, 'we'll take a check: it could ,be a stumbling block. We're try- ing to make it as easy as Possible. Neither Mason nor any of the others who attended the meeting Monday morrr ing in san. Franclaco where the company made Its offer would comment about re- marks made by Second District Super. visor David L. Baker regarding the ap- parent lack of communication within the Orange County Board of Supervisors on the Back Bay issue. Board Chainnan Ronald W. CMpers of Newport Beach has been the coWlty's representative to the field committee but apparently has not reported the progress of that committee to supervisors. "I have no comment," Otts' said. "I really don't understand the polltlcal is- sues involved in Orange County so I'd be off base. "If they haven't been participating ful ly I. don't know why not," Otis said. "I'm only vaguely aware of the local political situation," Llvel111ore said. "I would hope Or8J1ie County would join with the other t~ layers of government to resolve the problem." Newport Council Delays Proposal On Zoning U8e Newport Beach councilmen have put off the introduction of a proposed ordinance forbidding real.dentlal uses in ·commercial zones. Although the explosion had the effect of blowing out much of the fire, Battalion Chief Robert McClelland disclosed tOOay that fighting the blaze was difficult. .Not o~nly _was the ar.e• in.acceJ.Sil}le and the damage wide!:pread, but many chemicals stored inside the building had not been expended, he said. Parents Protest Highway Plans Close to School Councilmen tabled the ordinance after Mrs. Suzanne Rudd, secretary of t b e Newport Shores Homeowners Association, said it was premature beca111e af deUber· ations Involving the eventual use oC prop- erty along West Olast Highway in the one woman who was about to !Jlake a Newport Shores area. Minor secondary ·eiploslons from bar· rels believed tG contain methanol and benzene hampered the control effort. But despite these problems, Marshall said the last glimmer was extinguished by a~ proximately 4:30 p.m. Meanwhile, the emergency room at Hoag Memorial Hospital was kept busy with the treatment of persons injured by flying glass and debris. Among those treated and released Monday afternoon-\'/ere~ 1 Marton Fisher 48, of 514 Pierpont Drive, COsta Mesa. Jothua IUben, 24, of 2207 Pomona Ave., Costa Mesa. , Adel Strausser, 20, of 2017 S. Parton St., SBnla Ana. Victor Levin, 25, Cypress. Lala Alnlz, 25, of 8102 Slater Ave., Hun- tington Beach. Robert LaBe:lle, 43, of 2314 Cornell Drive, C:Osta Me sa. Michael Ingles, U, of 874 Center St., Costa Mesa Wiiia Laws, 47, of 13922 Tustin Drive East, Tustin. Raebel-Perry, 23, 3804 Seashore Drive, Newport Beach. An I Ith victim, Paul Gerri tz, 22, or Anaheim , an El Monte Chemical Co. wGrker, was alsG reportedly injured but not on the hospital list. Pal'e!ltl in Harbor View Hills don't like the idea of a major highway bordering Harbor View Elementary School in New· port Beach. The school's Parent-Faculty Organiza- tion has written school and city Officials opposing proposed <.'ODStruction of ll by· pus route along the Fifth Avenue corri- dor that once was to be the route for the now-defunct Pacific Coa!lt Freeway~ "The Board of Directors of Harbor View Parent Faculty Organization would like to go on record as opposing any use of l''ifth Avenue fGr the same reason that 85 percent of the electorate of Ne\Yp<>rt \vere opposed to the Coast Free,yay \\•hich would have also cut through the resident· ial communily of Corona del Mar along Fifth Av.enue," said Louise Light, cGr· re.ponding secrelary. "The present and future school children at Harbor View should not have to be subjected to air and nGise pollution that would be generated by automobiles and the safety hazard or a major highwl'ly within 300 feet af th eir classrooms," she said . "We respectively request that you pr<r tect the environmental quality of the realdential cbmmunity in the area or our school by selecting 8 plan that \\·ould not U!e Fifth' Avenue," ~1rs. Light said. meat purchase. --''lt"would·remove-the option.of·allowing· "Don't you think that's just too much residential buildings with a use permit," to pay?" she asked, and the other shop-she said, pointing out that the city l.s try· per apparently agreed because she ing to create a specific area plan for the returned her meat. Newport S~es cammerclal at.rip. "I hope all this does some good," Mrs. Mayor Donald Mclnnls, who r:presents Story reflected afterwards. "I'm willing West Newport, agreed and pomted out to eat cheese or beans or whatever it "there are some problems in other areu, takes but these prices have got to come too." He made._,the_mQtloo to.table, __ down." r..tean\vhile, a market manager in San Clemente rePorted on a phenomenon that may become more and mGre significant as the boycott '.\•ears on. "I've already had several men cGme in here by themselves and check out with shopping carts containing meat items only," said the manager. "They say their wives can boycott i! they want but they want their steaks." R eal Cool Show For Disc Jocke )· BAKERSFIELD (U PI ) -Disc joackey Jo hnny Kaye had the coolest show on radio -transmitted directly from a bathtub filled with 700 pounds of ice. Traf fie Study Extension Hit The consultant doing the Newport Beach traffic study wants more time to do the work and the prospect of more delay isn't sitting well with city ·coun- cilmen. "The request for six months to com- plete Phase III upsets me," CoWlcllman JGsn Store said recently. "~specJaHy since the consultant asked for more time to complete Phase II than was originally scheduled.'' Councilmen agreed with Store and told Public \Yorks Director Joseph Devlin to in!orm the consul tant, the Alan Voorhees Company, it had better come in with a firm timetable for Phase 111 "that is shorter than six months" at the next Citizens Transportation Plan Advisory Committee meetlng tonight. Myster ious ~m~l,os . ' DAILY ,ILOT lllH '~" JOINS SCHOOL RACE Wr lle·ln C•ndld•le Liii y Mesa Woman Begins Dri ve , For W rite-i1i By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of "'' ~Ur Plltt 11•n Former Newport-Mesa school trustee Betty Lilly of Costa Mesa today launched a write-In campaign for re-electicin to the school board seat she vacated In 1969. "This wasn't a lightly made dec ision," said the CoUege Park resident. "I've looked at the lethargy of the community toward schools and s·uu feel there is a job to be done ." Beverly Langston, who was chosen ln a special electon to replace Mrs. Lilly in Trustee Area Two in 1969, has announced she will not s~k re-electiGn to the board from that district. Mrs. Lilly, a registered nurse at Fairview State Hospital, was one of the original trustees elected to t h e seven-member Newport-Mesa board in 1965. She left the board for what she calls "personal reasons" but added, "I took some time orf to renew my own ob- jectivity. I think I was losing that after my years on the board." Mrs. Lilly, 56, said she feels more - qualified to do the needed policy-making oo-me ooara than her two ftfale--o~ p<>nents, Orville Amburgey and Charles "Chuck" Bridges. "I am very concerned that, while these men may know ~heir 0'9111 business of management, they aren't well-enough ac- quainted with schoo! board procedures and policy-making,'' she said. "We really need. more. know-ledgeable people-on the board." Amburgey is director o f com- munications for the city of Costa Mesa and Bridges is an insurance company ex- ecutive. Mrs. Lilly said she also thinks there needs to be a good balance of the sexes on the board. ''I'm not a women's lib type or any thing, but 1 do feel ~here has to be a good balance," she said. The former trustee said she has kept informed of developments during her absence from the board. "A lot of the old feelings I had still bold true today," she said. ''I'd like to see the district develop consistent wi th the educational principles we have establish- ed. She thinks she has a good chance of defeating her Gpponents even though she will have the handicap of write-in balloting. "I think the lGw turnout anticipated for this election will be an adva ntage to me," she said. "Most people remember me well enough to write in my name.11 In Miami MIAMI (UPI) .:... Five electrical generating plants were knocked out by "problems unknown•;'°today, triggering a mid-morning power failure that trapped pepple in elevat;Ors and caused depart· ment 1tores and sUpermar~eta· to close because their cash reglatm wouldn't work. ---' The blackout las ted 45 minutes ·to two hours or more and affected more than two mlllion r_esidents or Pa.de and. Broward counties and. tourists-on the south Florida Gold Coast. The power went off at 9:37 a.m. and by 10:15 was back on in downtGwn"Miami. FIC'rida Power & Light CQ. '~id that tw<rthtrds of the power had been res tored by 10:30, but by noon some suburban areas .were slHI rePortlng power GUtages. The blackout reached from scattered areas Gf Palm Beach County through the greater Fort Lauderdale and greater Miami areas as far south as Tavernler in the Florida Keys. The power company sa id, however, Dade and Broward coun- ties were the main areas affected. The blackout came after the morning rush hour, but caught shoppers and businessmen by surprise as they began morning activities. Davidson, a huge shopping center south ot Miami, closed Us doors until power was restored , turning away hundreds of showers from large department stores such as Penney's and Jordan Marsh and from the scores of shops along the mall. On Miami Beach, many visitors in the big hotels were already at beach or poolside enjoying a sunny day, but others were caught in their rooms and a few in elevators. A spokesman for the Fontainebleau Hotel said two ele.vators were caught between floors by the blackout~ but that the people on them were rescued within minutes. Reds Ridicule Torture Story SAIGON (UPI ) -Radio Hanoi, in a "satirical" criticism of American POWs, today accused some of saying they were tortured "-to· earn promotions-from -the -U.S. military. "What was anticipated by North Vietnamese authorities has hap- pened with the relea se of the last U.S. POW in Hanoi," said the broadcast. ''It has been expected that, baited by the Nixon administration- staged Pompous reCeption an<l 1>ig fringe benefits, returned American POWs would actually turn against their former benefactors." Council Dela ys Meter Decision The Newport-Mesa Unified School District wants the city of Newport Beach to pay the cost of a Dew water meter for the Environniental Nature Center at Newport If arbor High School. Newport Beach councilmen don't think too much of the Idea. The meter would cost about $235. City officials said it will cost another $600 to install it. C.OUncilmen objected recently and postponed a decision on the request pend· ing a meeting of the council-school district liaison committee Wednesday. Fire department officials said one or their firemen, Robert Ca mpbell, was given emergency treatment at Bristol Park Medical Center after he had step- ped on a nail. The Fifth Avenue bypass is under study by the Transportation Plan Citl7.E'ns Ad· v!Mlry Committee. It is recommended in one or three proposed traffic solutions submitted by the ronsultant doing the study. • Kaye, garbed in a wet suit, men's pa- jamas and thermal underwear, reclined in the ice bath for three hours to pay off an on-the-air vow made last fall when he predicted Bakersfield would receive mea surable snowfall during the winter. No snow fell at all. THANK YOU, ERASTUS! • Monday's explosion occurred less than a_.mile a\\'.ay fm1n tbe_site..olano.thcrJn.· du strial blast \\'here l\vO men were in- jured on Sept. 26, 1972. J ''M. N ' -·ayeees -· iss ewport -It occurred tou slheotliirdaythor We'"11We a·lot·to-aninno•ator in oar -- carpet lndu1try who operated about 150 years ago. Here are 1ome focts about EltASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW: I I ORANGI COAn • DAILY PILOT n.. .Ol'•f\01 CCMlll OAIL Y l"ILOT, wllll """letl II o:omblfled' Ille Nt .... •Pr .. s, II pVllll......, bV n'lll Or111te CHI! P\>llllthlnt CO,,,,.,,f, !~ ,.,,. lllfll!ON. 1r1 P11bll1"-d, Mondff thro..tll ,rllltf, for C~tl Mt..,, Ntwpittl llt t dl, Race F;xpansion Opposed The Newport Beach Ja ycees \1•ant to 1Yhtre the public \YOUld pay admi ssion, expand their annual Miss Newport Beach according to Tom Simandl, chamber 'v\ce contest into a full-fledged beauty pageant president. but the idea has run into opposition. "\Ve are not trying to tell the Jaycees Hun11no'°" t1e•c~9~n111n v11111" L11111111 Leaders of thr.. Newport •IarOOr what to do." Simand! said . "\Ve're going 1..c:11, 1,..,11111M'ii1t•ut• afld •9n c1'"""111 Chamber of C01nmerce, 11•hich has hel ped to try to iron everything out at a n1ecting Slit J~lt tlPlll!IM A tl~gl• ,..g!on•I .,,11'°" i. ""~u'~"' ~'Uf'd•rt .,,., Slllld•r-· support the contest in past years. arc later this week. PUtSnnrn~• 1111K1 1nn>ii'i~,:i-·I--, hrt!'atmtng to tannhi!'lr baclts lh"ti~c -""'" B°'u"'1~wTe '-'w"'o"'u"JdM<ri6"'!.....,!u"P"i50"t1,....f"ll1!"m..,Ir a.1 '''"'· a.1• MtM, c1111om1t, tnn. Jaycees change the format. they e:<pand the pageant," he said. The )aycees say they y,·ant to raise the "The people here wot1ld like to continue Rob1rt N •. W1td l>ruldtnl Ind l'ilOlllht r Jttlo: A.. Curit'( age limit, now 16-18. to \'.'On1en 111-28. lo have the city represented by a YP(t l"rt1kltr1I '"" r;,~.," M111111r lhom11 l<11vll They say th ey nre going to do it th is yea r \vho leso me y0ung beach-type high school or next. with or without the Chamber's girl." Simandl said. blessings. ,. "Yle'vc never nad a problem '.\•Ith a 1!8111W Thomt• A, M11rpl!1111 MtMlll'IO Edl!Or ''They're a£rAid we'll be losing the high school representative In tht past," quality ol the tyPi cal, sweet AUss he said. Newport Beach found on the beach and in Lar.desman said another objection the the high schools," Jaycee President Den· chamber has voiced ls a fear about the N...,.,. .._, Offl•• nis t..andesrnan said Monday. poten tial national publlclty a local winner )))J Ntwport lo11l1v1rd uJd Under past rules the y,•lnn er would be of the A1iss America pageant wo M1lll11t A:44r"u r.0.1,. ''''· •1••1 picked from "about 2~ or 30 applicants" bring. Oder Offle" y,·ho would be inte rviewed by tht A Miss Neutp0rt Beach y,rould be en- C••'• 111n1 : i» w.tr ••v '''''' Jaycees. Five finalists would be selected tered Jn tbe 11-1isii Callfomla contest. That Lat1111• ltaefl: m F«"' A....,~, Id Ch ~ Ml A l t H111111Ml'Oll .. Kl'I: 1n11 '"'~ 1ov1w.H and they Y.'OU appea r at a am'-"=r winner enters the ss mer ca pagean . .JM CftorMftlli • flffrffl •1 c..m1r1t RMI Commodore 's Club luncheon where they The local winner now enters the . T .. •••••• fJ14t • M1"4Ut "''ould display their musical or other California Junior Miss cornpetltlon. ~-ww M 1aft1t1 1 MJ.U71 talents. "They object to the publicity," Lan- C:OPfr11111. im. or•nu• Cot•t P~ff"'11tt The winner would be announced at the desman said. "They are afraid it would ~•"' ~rr "';" J:',,~'r= --annual -Commodore1~-Ball one ~of bring more peopfe-down-here.,c"~­=i::/ ""7-----··-...-K~c10:Pmnten1~taL~--·lml!ndlJ!imd·111in Is an Ol!JWI n-. -,.,.,.,. """""' 11'• lhat relationship with 'the Cbatn&tr "I don't"believe the city fathers want =:,.:~iT .... 1tr atJ,~~ ~ and the Commodore's elub that · the any nation al recognition," Slmandl said. rM1111111y1 '" .,..,, .. u .•1 lftlflflltri ""111'-" J11ycees wouJd be losin~ If they go to "They even tum down entrls Into the OWl!\llllM ••• """"""'' 1 their plan to have a uU-seale bea uty Rose P11rade because they d<>n t want to pageant at Newpon ltarbor lligh School attra ct people.'' · • " • I 0 Born 1814, W. Boylston, Mass. 0 Poor fam My, required to work at •9• )O ., farm hand and clerk. 0 Genius at math and mecha nics. 0 At 23 years old , invented loom for lace. 0 Invented revolutionary power loom fo r BRU SSELS and WILTON carpets. This created a domestic carpet in· du•try , and virtually eliminated foreign competition. 0 Founded BIGE· LOW .CARPET MILLS in Clinton, Mass. 0 Gr••I eco nomist, one of smell group found ing MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 11 OS n In 86 1. • Die0l8 ERASTUS: MY GRANDFATHER THANKS YOU I MY FATHER THANKS YOU! I THANK YOU! MY CHI LD~EN THAN K YOU! {Four 91n1r1tion1 In the c1rp1t bu1in1s1 sine• 1894, th1nk1 to th e invent-ions oi Mr. 819elow. I , P.S. AlllCllln9ly, wltllout Erastus , Bigelow Carpets have remained an induatry ltader. Plea11 atop In and 111 their sparkling carpet line. ' ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPIS 1663 Place11tlci Ave. ------f:~~~~ Moo •• Tllm. f to l1JO; l'tl, t te ft s.t. t 1JO to I 1 •• J ' - ' ~ .. • VOL. 66, NO. 93, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES esa Coast Meat Sales Cut Only.20% By JOHN ZALLER 01 lho 01llY l'ltot Stiff Some people are calling this y,ieek's na- tional meat boycott the biggest protest in American history. But on the Orange Coast Monday. it seemed something less than that. (Related stories, Page 18) "Yes, I'm on the meat boycott," said a woman shopper ·with three pounds of hamburger in her cart. "My collie won't eat anything else so I've got to feed her meat. ... ·~But my-five-·teenagers-will be eating fish," she said. "Of course I'm in agreement with the boycott," said another shopper at Market Basket in Costa Mesa. "Oh, this ham· burger? "Well, I've always given my husband a meat patty for breakfast and I don't think I could stop now. But we'll be hav· ing fish for dinners." "I haven't really decided yet," said a woman who was lingering in fron t of the roast section. ;'I guess I won't buy anything, today. But I have to eat. I don·t know how long I'll hold out." .. • ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • • • os·1on TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1973 • I . . Today's Final c TEN CENTS .J Valve Set By Nlistake . Said Cause By RUD£ NIEDZlEl.SKll----1 ot flMI Dally ,.l .. t Stoff A mistakenly opened vent valve today \\'as blamed by fire in~estigators as the cause or an industrial explosion Which ripped apart a Costa l\1csa chemical plant , killing two persons and injuring at least nine others with its destructive blast. • Fire Chier John l\1arshall disclosed this morning that a valve "wbiCh shouldn1t have been turned on" resulted in an overproduction of volatile vapor at the El Monte Chemical Company, 8'29 W. 17th/ St., moments before the Monday af· 1 temoon explosion. I Killed by the blast were Elmer Leenerts, 41 , of 1800 Samar Drive, Costa ' Mesa, and his co-worker Randy Riley, 23, l Additional Story. Photos , today on Pages 3, 9. '--~~~~~~~~~~....=!, of Anaheim. Leenerts was found buried under an eight·inch thick concrete UJt-up wall and pronounced dead at the sctne .. Riley di~ at Hoag~emorial Hospital about 6:30 p.m. Monday. I Perhaps because of shoppers like these, . Orange Coasl meat sellers ·-reported-an average·sales drop of only 15 to 20 percent Monday. ..,--.. ·-...-thlnt--t hent1t-arwor1!T,"ll01;0' .t,';;'11~.,C Dlvidson, 57, o£ Ventura rtmalns in 1 Of the dozen outlets contacted, onl y Von's Market in Huntington Beach reported a large dJ:op in Its sales, and its I estimate of a 35 percent fall in sales was still not near ihe 50 percent drop reported nationwide. Talking to numerous grocers and shOp- pers Monday, two diStinct impressions we re produced: -Market managers don't like the boycott and•don't think it \Viii accomplish (See BOYCOTT, Page ZI AERIAL VIEW -This was scene at EI Monte Chemical Company in Costa Mesa shortly after explosion ripped lhe W. 17th Street plant about 3:16 /.m. Monday. Warer spout (center) is from plant's water line, severe by blast. At upper left across 17th Street is Claval plant, Minister Stu:1aned Mcintire Livid; S. Viets Turn Down Gift Plaque By JOHN VALTERZA T\1clntire cheerfully told his followers ot ,.,. o.ny '"11•t 51111 that he and the leading members of the A snubbed and defeated Dr. Carl South Vietnamese government were close Mcintire stalked away from the gates of friends. the Western White Rouse Monday night livid over South Vietnam ese officials' "I am confident that we'll pre.sent this refusal to accept a wooden plaque wiUJ plaque to President Thieu or some the word "victory" on it. suitable representative t ~ n i g h 1 , ' ' "It's the word they fear most," said ·l\lclntire said' early in the evening. the stunned minister during a half-hour Public Safety Director Cliffon:I Murra y tirade which followed the march to the Presidential gates. (Related story Page was the go-between, but later in the. r 'which was evacuated following the explosion. Industrial building (up. per right) had doors blown out and apartment units (bottom ) were shat· tered by explosion. serious condition today at Hoag's in· tensive care unit. "II the doors llad betn open and the vent hadn't been turned on1 the explosion , might never have happened," theorized Ed Lewis, a fire battalJon chief. Aft~r probing the nature of_ the-3: IS p.m. blast which rocked the city's west side and created conditions reminjscent of the London blitz during World War lf, £ire department investigators today have lhe following explanation for the ex· plosion: The three employes had been setting up an eJ:otic methane reclaiming process !See CAUSE, Page ZI · Ex-board Member Lilly Begins Write-in Drive By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of ttMo DlllY '°'lot S!etl Former N~wport-Mesa school trustee Betty Lilly or Costa Mesa today launched a write-in campaign for re-election to the schoo l board sea t she vacated in 1969. "This wasn 't a lightly made decision." said the College Park resident. "I've looked at the lethargy of lhe communit y toward schools and still feel there is a job to be done." 3 evening became the focal point of 1-1--=B~l-am~in-g~loc-a~l -po~li~ce-or~n~c·~,.~1,-r~or~"g~i-v--..,.i!ctnttn•s-wratb. J F d th ,, Murray contacted White. House of· Beverly Langston, who was chosen in a peeial electon to replace ~1rs:-I;;illy-in­ Trustee Area Two in 1969, has announced " ing ane on a more courtesy an us, Cicials about the 'intended ;lift, then those·~ the New Jersey minister finally led his officials shifted the-r:et@Ol1sibllity over fo 130 supporters back across a bridge over the South Vietname!ff! deJ.egaUon on haod the San Diego Freeway to an empty Jot where a nigh .. time rally continued. for a dinner 31-lended by President Nhi:on The evenlrlg. had been billed as a and Thieu. celebration in tribute to Thieu, a n d The South Vietnamese replied that it ,... ' ' ' ·~ 'f ' . ~ D.l!L 'f '°II.OT f'Mfo •v TllMMt '""""' she will not seek re-election to the board from that district. l\1rs. Lilly. a registered nurse at Fairvi~w State Hospital, was one of the original trustees elected to t h e seven-member Newport-1\fesa board in 1965. Coast would be "inappropriate" ror them to ac- cept. That was the news that greeted !\.1clntire a few-dozen yards from the gates at a spot where· demonstrators RESCUE WORKERS CARRY B~AST' VICTIM RANDY RILEY TO WAITING AMBU~ANCE Ch1mic1I Compefty Employ•, 23, pied·L-ater 1t Hoag Memorial Hospital ~-'-~--~~~~~- She left the board for what she calls ''personal reasons" but added, "I took some time orr lo renew my own ob- jectivity. I think l was losing that a£ter my years on the board." Orange must stop and proceed no-farther. Mcintire told Murray: "I am ~-.---J!-detennifl<d.t&-t!o-14rthftl.gat hav .. that h ri ght." \ Weat er Hartelitts "No you don't," ¥iµ-ray replied. "My Clear skies through Wednesday, instructions are to keep·you out and that but continued gusty winds of 25 to sonlCOne "'ill come out from the White By TOM BARLEY 30 miles per hour is what the House." ot "" .,.,.., '""" sittt weather service is predicting. "He came 'at me with fire aod A State Board of l\ledical Examiners HIJJhs In the 70s at most beaches, brimstone," the weary police official said rising to 75 inland. Lo· tonight 50. later. committee has refused to accept a pr~ "I'm sure that It was a matter of honor posal that would have placed Dr. Ebbe INSmE TODAY with Dr. Mcintire, because )le !elt ,. ctr-Hartelius or El Toro oo p°robalion ror live Activist act1'e&s Jane Fonda, tain that the 11ift would be received ," he years and restricted his use .or dangerous winner of an Oscar, has been added. • · drugs, a member of the committee has nominated for another aword -••tt was rather sad, reaUy," '-Iurray advised the DAlLY PILOT. tl1is u11e from returning prison· observed. • The -decision by the three survivors of er.s of war. And it's tiot tl1at But the wooden plaque was not the only what was once a five-member panel complimentary. See story on g!(L.shunned by tho South Vietnamese Jn me;:ns that Hartelius, 5'1 now facts a ro- Page 4. San Clemente. opening ot the state hearing Into charges L.M. ,..,. 11 Mtttlff 1• One devoted l\~clntire follower went out ot moral turpitude and unprofessional co111or111• s -.wm1 """"' 11 to her back yard earlier In the day and """duct.. Clt•llfllll tl·li ,.llilflll Ntwt f "'Y" ~ before us. at the March 7 hearing but v•e coul<f:tl't go alqng with it," commented Dr. Claren.te , T. Haljl<Jrg or Rivers lde. •1\~e Want,.to ~ear Dr. JlartcJius' defense to"thcse Cba raea.'f i · ~ Mense. altorncys Mallliew Kllrilieh alld T,bln Reilly 'bad been sclie<luled to open their dclense of the Harbor Atta physician in the three-day hearing set for that day. Mrs. Lill y, 56, said she feels more ualified to do the n i - on e r l . n r two male OJk- poncnts, Orville Amburgey and Charles "Chuck" Bridges. "l am very concerned that. while these wou ld .have' been sent lo the state board men may know their own business or for fina l app roval. · manage ment, they aren't well-enough ac- ~ ·1· h d R 'II t t quainted with schoo: board oroceq~res ''"ur1 1c an CJ Y mus now pu on and policy-making," she said:1·we really their dcferise to charges ~ on the need more knowledgeable people on the state's originaJ alleg3tton Ul'at ltartelius board." enjoyed Jmptoper sexual relationshi ps Amburgt:y is director or com· wl::. :.Vo women _ lttn. Reba Vaughn, munications for the city of C'.osta Mesa 3t, and lhe late Airs. Wanda Mc.lendrei, and Bridges is an insurance company ex· ecutlve. 29, bqth of Costa Mesa. ' ~lrs. Liiiy said she also thinks there It was alleged during ilve three-day needs to be a good balance of the sexes henrings that Hanellus inJecte'd the on the board. narcollc Demerol Into both women and:-, ·r1•m not a women's Ub type or performed abortions on Mrs, VaugM Rnythin11, hut I do feel there has to bt a whfle. Uvlng wllh the attracll~c blonde at good balance1" she said. co1111c1 H or•~• c"'""' • Plcktd some or her spcctaUana:clo.sJor He and..hlsJawycrs have been ordered 1~-~---1~=-'Nttfm-':-l: hfttr ,,.i! mklent-Thleu.---------•lo>...11,.ppa...,IU' Aptll Q.-in-LoA-Mgele&-1 _ 111119r111 fl••• ·' • st1tt Marit•h 1t-u Mcintire carried the bag of fruit as what will be tlie s\lth three-day hearing But both lawyers huddled w I th Deputy Attorney General l\tark Levin Jtnd Robert L. Mukai in a three-hour bargaining session that ended \vltb the --allpulaUon haOdtd to the three com· mtttce-members. _ he.r Costa Mesa home.-The former trustee 11kl she has kept Mr11,-Vaughn-tcstifled"t""1-HaW) nrormed-or-developm>ntrdur l11ttrt11fMM1!1 It ltllYIMll It b ••sect big ··' ti b' ir111111C1 ,,.,, r11t1ttn 10 well as Jhe plaque. into c nrges vo on· 1~a OM 1p "'' flit • ..,. • •••tMr 4 But the would·bc · recipient from with and treatment of two Costa A1esa ~ lf W-Wt "9-n IJ·I~ ..... L ..... n u wort11 """ • •Indochina didn't W8lll the tanielos, women. ' either. "We ~sidercd lhe sUpulalion put '--~~~~~~~~~~~ ' ~ • ' 'Ibat stl plllatlon taJlcd for HArtelius to· he placed on five year• probatioo during which time his use of .etrtain dangerous drugs would be restricted. If the com- mittee had agreed to the proposal It en~riiged the Injection habit that led to • abscn.,. from the boa:n!. her later incarceration at the state's "A lot of the old fecllngs J had still +. Norco facility as a narcotics addict. She hold true today," she aaid. "I'd Ilk& to see also testified that Hartefius kicked and the district develop COl\$1 ttnt with the beat h r on numerous octasions. (See I.JI.LY, Ptige J) • • B11 lrvitae Co. Swift Decision From Page J BOYCOTI'. · · ~Sought Bay much beyond causing meat to rot on the shelves. '1Thl11 whole thing was cr~at~. -y IJie newsp!!pers an -ihe tole~lsieflf, '---\---'"" complained oDe man who was typical or many grocen. "But it's a bunch of ! ' ' •• I .l . I . .. i ' • ' DAILY PILOT Sl•ff Pl1111' COSTA MESA FIREMEN DOUSE FLAMES AT CONSTRUCTION SITE -Authorities Suspect Arson in Monday Night Incident fLoss to New -Mesa Houses $4,000 From Arso11 Fire A pair of new houses under con· struction on Costa Mesa's northeast side ·sustained more than $4,000 damage early today after an arsonist se t blazes in them. .' One of the wood frame structures at 11103 Visalia Drive in the l\.1esa \Voods 4 development of Heltzer Enterprises Inc .. ; was compleJely enveloped in flames when firemen arrived. The second lwo-story residence, at 1099 Vi salia Drive had only minor damage, : according to arson investiga tor s. Investigators said they estimated 75 percent of lhe most seriously-burned residence was destroyed in the blaze reported shortly after midnight. Soviets Send Up 2nd Scientific Orbital Station Uy L. PETER KRIEG 01 t111 o.nr '"" St•lf Irvine Company President Wlfllam R. Mason said today he thinks Orange Coun- ty, the federal and state governments ought to decide what they -are going to do abOut Upper Newport Bay within six months. on • any decisions can be made that fast and said, ln fact, nothing really has been changed by the company's offer as far as their efforts to detennjne Ute feasi· bility of converting part of the bay into a wildlife preserve is concerned. "I'm not going to try to make any- thing happen as the ,..suit of their state- ment," WebSter Otis, field repreaenta· tive for the U.S: Department of the In- terior said this morning. Mason Monday offered to make.. the · 700 acres of uplands and pateQt tidelands that the corn_pany owns around the bay aVailable for immed.iale pul51ie acquisi- tion . Mason in his stateE!fill_l Mo~y; ~-d __ tlie pper ewport Bay FretacOmmtttee But federal officials don't think that Fr.om Pagel to "expedite conclusion of its work." The field committee -~rised of the Interior Department, the State Lands Di- vision, Orange County and the cit)" of Newport Beach, ~as fanned last Septem· ber. "My task is to coordinate" the efforts and recommendations of~all~th&-agencies· involved on the field committee and to inside the plant when steam press.ure used to heat the vats became excessive. rna~e a rep:>rt oo what the public wants CAUSE .•. After turning on the vent valve to to do about the Upper Bay in the future," reduce pressure the three men closed Otis said. the doors and went outside w a i t i n g He said he foresees no change in the for the press ure to dis s i Pate . purpose, the structure or the timing gov- Instead pressure began to build inside erning its wwk. Otis said It would be and the vapors found a source of ignition. at least the end of the year before any What touched off the vapors Is unknown recommendations could be forthcoming. but investigators believe it may have Mason wasn't especially happy with been a water heater. that timetable. Firemen said the blast brought the Disclollng that Assistant Secretacy of wall down on Leenerts' body and blew the Interior Nathaniel P. Reed had prom-- Riley some 50 feet through a wire rein· ised a decision by the end of 1972 Mason forced grapestak:e fence. · d "Thr · to · tbs · 1 ty --' Firemen described the mod e rn sai • ee SIX mon is Pen .:iw· chemical plant as "one of the best built ficient to resolve the matter. buildings in Costa Mesa." Ironically, its "If they are sincere, they can assign main product was said to be a flame-people to work on tt. That's more than proof resin. . enough time to solve it. Then! miglit The building featured a lift~ff ex.-have to be meetings more than once a plosion roof, eight-inch thi~ concrete month, however," Mason said. walls, and a special hazard sprin~ler One of the major i55ues no doubt will system yet it was complet~ly demolish· be the eventual price tag placed on the ed. .. acreage that tbe public agencies decide o.AILY ,ILOT 51•11 ,ho .. JOINS SCHOOL RACE Writi--in Candidate Lilly From Page 1 -tttt • • • educational principles we have establish· ed . She thinks she has a good chance of defeating her opponents even though she will have the handicap Of write-in balloting. "I think the low turnout anticipated for this election wil! be an advantage to me," she said. "Most people remember me well enough to write in my name." Mrs. Lilly said she plans no massive campaigning but will count on word of mouth and a few brochures to let people know she is available. She said she almost registered to get on the ballot just before the deadline last month but "got half way there and decid· ed to see how things would develop." To be a legal write-in, potential can· didates must officially notify the Orange County Registrar of Voters by 5 p.m. Monday. Mrs. Lilly retistered this morn· ing. Marshall, fire chief of Costa Mesa fpr they want. the past nine years, described the ex-Mason said the best ball park eo«m•tes Mesa Counc:lme1· the company has for the value of the .., .., hogwash." · · ..:...consumers are generally supportive of the idea of a boyCott, bUt many are not commi tted to it. Of the 25 shoppers con· tacted at Market Basket in Cosla Mesa. to strongly supported the ~ycott, . IO were either undecided about It or trymg to find halfway ground a~. only five were opposed to the idea outright. "I couldn't find anything J ~Id af· for.d " said Craig Hill after checking the meat counter closely. "l buy just ~or myself and all the packages are too-big. ls that part of.the.boycott?"· . There were, however, some with strong opinions both for and nf;:ainst the boycott. ''I can afford any of this .I ~anted," -. ...L...lVolif,.A..r~lire.d. busmessn1a_n who supported the idea of oorcott. "Bu these prices are just out of lwe. "I'm a Republican," he added, ubut I thin'.t President Nixon should have called a rollback on these prices three months ago." "Of co11rse the pricelf are way too high," said a worn.an \Vho disag reed, "so you can-see-I don't have ·any-meat. We can only afford meat two days a week. "But I think a boycott isn't a good idea. All It will do is throw people out of work without doing any good," she said. Nancy Story, a motherof three, felt so strongly in favor of ~ycott, that she stopped her shopping to try to di ssuade one woman who wal about to make a meat purchase. A "Don't you think that's just too much to pay?'' she asked, and the other shop- per apparently agreed because she returned her-meat. "I hope all this does some good ," Mrs. Story reflected afterwards .. "f'm .willing · tg eat cheese or beans or whate ver it takes but these prices have got to come down." RTD Directors OK Bus Shelter At Bethel Towers plosion as the "xnost devastating" blast total 700 acres is between $20 and $30 in the city's history. million based on partial appraisals made Bus shelters at Bethel Towers, a Costa "Realistically, you're talking aboui a in the mid-19605. He declined to specu--Set year Study Mesa retirement facility, were approved loss of $750,lm to $1 million and that late what the property is worth today. Monday by the Board of Directors of the doesn't include the loss of income to But Nonnan B. Livmnore Jr., secre-k. B Orange County Transit District. those businesses that were disrupted." tary of the Calllornfa Resources Agency 0Jt s mo tng an A proposal to build a larger sheller in The shock wave of the big blast of the State lands division, said this mom· Santa Ana on the east side of Flo\ver • J Firemen were hampered in reaching the burning houses ·located n ea r ' Sunflower A venue and Fairview Road because streets in th e new tr act ha ve not been finished . MOSCOW (UPI)_ -:I'he Soviet Union launched its second orbital scientific sta· Uon today , the Tass news agency sa id. damaged seriously 25 nearby industries, ing that he thinks ~y asking price the Planning Commission Chairman Jim· Street, north of Santa Ana Boulevard was . . . company puts on its property -even mie Wood's vision of banning the use of including five maJor comp.arnes. Heaviest al!!\,@ the ~~~ .. ~P.er,aj~!~!!! .. !I!.=-_ tobacco-at··publie·board;-commission-and releJiea._t.o _tbe. disJr.k:t.'.s .. iinani:e .. _eom· -·~-·-,-.. ·-···-.. , damage \ta.s._at an adjacent· industrial-~iS going"l.0'1i foo much. cit council meetings in city hall turned mittee. TO IGHT NEWPQRT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Regular meeting. Costa Mesa High Lyceum-Theater., 7:30 p.m. UC l LEC.1'URES -"Orange County Historical Sites," part of series on Archeology and Environment of Orange County, 161 Humanities Hall. 7-9 :30 p.n1. Adm. $5. "from Immigration to Evacua- tion." part of series of Japancse - American Internment During World War II, 178 Humanities Hall, 7-9 :30 p.m. Adm. $4.50. ''Encounter \\1ith Art." Little Theater. Co rona de l Mar High, 7-9:30 p.m. Adm. $2.75. "Energetics -Cure to ._ ___ W.eight-Control," part or series on Con- troversial Issues in Nutrition and Health. 101 Physical &iences Bldg., 7-10 p.m. Adm. $6.50. "THE TEMPEST" -South Coast Repertory Theater. through Sunday, 8 p.m. Reservations 646-1363. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4 "HOUSE OF BLUE LEAVES" -OCC Drama Dept. production, 0 CC Auditorium, April 4. 5, 6 and 7, 8:30 p.nl. ~-·No charge. OlANGI COAST ,. DAILY PILOT Tll• Or....,. Coat! O"ILY PILOT, wlltl ..... l(h ft comDI"*' lh• Newj.Pr•n. i1 JM,lbllV!fod IW l!Ot Or•no-Co•H Publitllln9 ComP11nY. $tll<'· ,.,. .c1111or>1 ••• llUDllJl>ecl, ~.,. ''"°""' Fr;cl•"f, for (Olll Mtw, HtwPOrt l t1<;f>, Hun11ne1on 8eM:ll/FO\lnl•ln Vall.,., L•P""" INCi>, lrvin1/Saddleb9t~ 11111 $In (lt....,,hf S•n JINn CAPl1tr1no. A 1lnol1 r"e"Qlon.I edlllon It Pliblbl>lld Ulurd1y1 Md Sund1yi. tflt; po-lncij)ll pUb!ltlll• pi.nt It 11 )JO WIJI ''The orbital scientific station Salyut 2 was launched todoy in the Soviet Uniori under the program of' space exploration," Tass said. "It was launched for the purpose of perfecting the design, on-board systems and equipment and for conducting scien- tific and technical research and ex· pcriments in space flight." Tass gave no indication when a man- ned Soyuz flight \Viii be launched to link up with the orbital station. 'fhe Soviet Uhion pioneered orbital space stations when it launched the first Salyut on April 19, 1971. On June 6, 1971, Soyuz II was launched with three cosmonauts aboard and linked up with Salyut. A depressurization accident in the Soyuz spacecraft killed the three cos· monauts as they new home from the orbital station and a record..near 24 days in space. Tass said Salyut 2 was orbiting lhe earth every 89 minutes at an angle to the equator of 51 .6 degrees. It was a maximum of 161 miles and a minimum of 133 miles from the earth's surface. On-boar~ systems were w o r k i n g norma lly, Tass said. Real Cool Slio'w For Disc Jocke)· BAKERSFIELD (U PI ) -Disc joackey Johnny Kaye had the coolest show on radio -transmitted directly fro m a bathtub filled \Vilh 700 pounds of ice. Kaye. ga rbed in a wet suit. men 's pa · jarnas and thennal under\\•ear. reclined in the ice bath for th ree hours to pay off nn on·the·alr vow made last ·ran when he predicted Bakersfield \\'OUld receive n1easurablc sno\vfal! during the \Vinter. No snow fe.11 at <ill. condominium wllere the destructive force "I'm sure that our ultimate figures """ our to be a pipe dream Monday night. The Costa Mesa shelters, to be tumbled walls, wrenched all th~ gara~e wiU be lower than what Irvine feels is His "~smoking" resolution went up in purchased from Tubular Products, Inc. <f?ors, and shattered every window tn due~to them,'' Livermore said. a puff or smoke when city cou~cilme~. of Souderton, Pe1m .. will cost $5,000 each sight. . Llvennore conceded, however, that he apparently refusing to consider it · 11 d Ge I M Go d . The ex~los1on also made a shambles of had not even beard any prices mentioned. striously ordered it "studied" for a msta e . nera anager r on five residences next to El Monte • "Pete" Fielding said they should be Chemical Company and shattered glass w~~~ar~mok.ing ban endorsed one ready for the wanner summer months. a~d, set off ~rglar alarms all over the Policemen Flush week ago by unanimous ~ote of the plan· The shelters were selected in coopera· city s west side. · · · Id h ve stopped the · · h Co t M r1· · I G arded by industrial employes and n1ng corru:n1ss1on, wo~ a t1on wit s a esa o 1cia s. eosfa Mesa police against looting, the consumption of all lighted toba~ prod· The district has $16,000 in the 1972.73 blocked-off area today is being inspected Mesa Bartender ucts under the threat 0r a 1100 rme. . budget for bus sbelters which would by teams of insurance investigators, fire "Does this mean we can d ~P, cover the cost of the Costa Mesa and deparbnent officials and building depart· bed Cop~enhagen ?r maybe . che~v tobacco· Santa Ana shelters and architectural ment Off·1c·ials. A Costa Mesa bartender was flus queried Councilman Alvin P1nk_ ley, mak· f hi h whi h had -,.,.,.,. sur h k th t designs for countywide shelters. "l"e had a strategy meet1·ng today to out o s ouse, c utXu • ing a tongue-in-c ee suggestion a a '' The district has received a federal dete rmine the exact cause of the blast. rounded by police, early today after he p!u!f or chewing tobacco might pollute the grant earmarked for c 0 u n t y w i d e We want to get into the distillation all egedly began shooting his bedroom floor, but not the air. shelters. Fielding said he wanted to machinery and probe the plant for the closet door full ol holes. Council~en then . voted _unanimously to engage architects to prepare four con- source of ignition," Marshall said. "The George Washington Bowen, 50, of 1989 have the item st~d1ed until after the 1974 ccptua l drawings as one standard shelter others will be determining the exact , Federal Ave., was eventually arrested city council election . \vould probably not be satisfactory to all Joss.'' and booked on suspicion of disturbing the cities in the county. One of the buildings to sustain major peace. Costa of preparing the drawi ngs \\•as damage was Claval, a valve manufac-Investigators led by Sgt. Gary Shulf Bullet Causes Blast estimated at $2.000. turing plant located directly across the covered all exits of the residence about Preparation of a site plan and dra\v· street from the chemical firm . midnight art.er upset neighbors reported CINCINNATI (UPI) -A bullet ac· ings for the Santa Ana shelter was Clava l, which employs a work force of gunshots could be heard inside. cidentally fired into a gas meter: ap-estimated at $3,500. approximately 200, was expected to be They said they conflSCated severa l parently touched off the explosion that District director Supervisor Robert shut down for about two days until shat-weapocis from the home alter Bowen leveled a three-story apartment building Battin said he thought shelters are un- tered ."pla'le glass windows, a _partly marched out with his hands in the air here and killed seven persons, Fire Chief necessacy .at-this •. stage but· did ·not-op... blown-off roof and fallen light fixtures as ordered and they entered to find Bert Lugannani said Monday. Lugannani pose the Costa Mesa installations. have been repaired. bullet holes in the closet. said a .32 caliber bullet was found m·side Plans for countywide shelters were Touring the wreckage late Monday, No explanation was offered for th e a gas meter in the basement of the delayed as were those for the Santa Ana Costa Mesa city councilmen said they midnight shoot·'em-UP_. buildinK,. shelter. \Vere amazed that the explosion had not -;iiiiiii~i;;iii:iiii;;;iiiii;iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii~~:i;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; been responsible for more death and destruction. "l don't know how many of you were in London during the blitz but th is place looks just like it had been bit by a 2,000 pounder." said Mayor Jack Hammett. "This kind of devastation looks typi cal of the last-days of-combat. We're lucky we didn't have 100 fatalities." Many of those who had been ev~uated by police because of the danger of a secondary explosion returned during the evening hou rs to remove possessions from their homes while firemen mopped up the rubble under klicg lights. Although the explosion had the effect of blo\ving out much of the fire, Battalion Chief Robert McClelland disclosed today that fig hting the blaze was difficult. THANK YOU, ERASTUS! It occurred to us the other day that we owe a lot to an innovator in our ---carpet-fnllustry -who opel'Med ab6urt-so·ye11rs-ago.--- Here are some facts about ERASTUS BRIGHAM BIGELOW: e Bom 1814, W. Boylston, Mass.• Poor family, required to work at age IO as farm hand and clerk. • Genius al math and mechanics. • At 23 years old, invented loom for lace. • Invented revolutionary power loom for BRUSSELS and WILTON carpets . This created a domestic carpet in- dustry, and virtually eliminated foreign competition. • Founded BIGE- LOW .CARPET MILLS in Clinton, Mass. •:Great economist, one of small •---I-'''-'"•":.:·.~:~"'""· .• ._ --1---r "11-=~-=-+'<-::o::-:u=1==1=cuJt C IO ll . Prnld ... I •M Publl1"-r esa '-group founding MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY at Boston in 1861 . •· Died 1879. ERASTUS: J•c ~ R. C11rl1y V>tt Praide11I 11'1(f G~~r1t Mtf'llf .. Tlio1T111 IC11vil Etitet Thom•• A. Murphi~• M1n111!no Edl1or Cil1rl11 H. Looi Rlch1rcl P, N.!I .-.ulJ!•"I M1"•0i"'8 Elllh)f• Cot'-M ... otflu )JO W•lf l1v Str11f M1 i!in9 Adclrttt:'P,0 , 1011 I 560, •2626 Oth9f OfflcH N•-1 Btlci'H )))) NtwPO•I llovltVll'(I UIQ-8tkl'I: :m FO!'tt! Avtftue HUl'>llfl910n lit.ell: 17llJ l .. Q! loUltv••d S.n Cltmtnl1: )C' HOf"I~ El C:.,f'llAIJ Rt•I Tlf ....... 17141 642-4121 Q...,._ Aft"'1'1 .... M1·1671 Here. in capsule form, are the major t1ctions taken by the Costa fl.1 esa City Counci l l\'londay night : GRF~ENBELTS: Rejected a proposed Greenbelt Commission Joint Powe rs tt):l"retmcnt by split s.i vote because the-$6,000 initiation fee would. be better spent on local projects. S~10KING : Ordered a one-year study of a planning commission resolution ~·hich would have banned smoking at public council, commission and board 1nectlngs. ' BOOZ'E': ApprO\'cd unanimously a resolution opposing the sale of alcoholic bevera ges on county parks and beaches. MY GRANDFA THE-R THANKS YOU! MY FA!THER THANKS YOU! I THANK YOU ! MY CHILDREN THANK YOU! !Four generations in the carpet busin11s since 1894, th1nk1 to the inventions of Mr. Bige low.I P.S. AmalingfY, without Erastus, Bigelow Carpets have remained an industry leader. Please stop in and see their sparkling carpet line. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES J J j h• ... It to •• fr w K h• n. 0 0 ti s -- t l s • C91"1"ltfl'. itn. 0 ,1.,.. c.~• "".,..1,11.,,. REDEVELOP~lENT: Approved In prlnclple a $.12,500 contract with con· c.,,..n~. H• ,..... 111>1"1.., 1111111r111om, sullants Wilsey and Ham for ..a downtown ttdevelopment plan and appointed the l'-;_ __ 1_,=.~1~S~~.:.-:: -cttr::sta[f-~a !OJticlu.tatL.of the CostLMCSL.Rede.vCiopmenCA:Pncy--·-1-1 J-..-~- ---~-}iii -,. --• _ ~ 1663 'Placentia Av-'~ ~ 1-..;;..._, .~_-_-_-_-_-_-___ ~osflLMEs • ...._ ___ _;_ ____ , SmN '''" "°" ... "" •t c.,. ~. J>LANNJNG POST: Declared l'K'm.inaUons open for a seat on the Costa ~~·-.~/ .. ::;,~=IR~"~ f\1esa "Planning Commis.sion. The post is held by Commissioner Nathan L. ..,,,...,*'• n.u ll'llfttlttr, Reade and expires Aprll 21 . t ' ( . , • 646-4B3B Moo. -Th•n. 9 to 5130; Fri. t to 9; Sal. 9:30 to 5 , ... • ~ \ r ( l